4 LIST OF AVORKS. 



18. POPULAR FIELD BOTANY; comprising a familiar and technical de- 



scription of the Plants most common to the Britisli Isles, adapted to the 

 study of cither the Artilicial or Natural System. By Agnes Catlow. 

 Second Edition. Arranged in twelve chapters, each being the Botanical 

 lesson for the month. Royal 16mo. Containing twenty plates. lOs.Qd. 

 colom'ed. 

 " The design of this work is to furnish young persons with a Self-instructor in Botany, 

 enabling them with little difficulty to discover the scientific names of the common plants 

 they may find in their country rambles, to which arc appended a few facts respecting 

 their uses, habits, Sec. The plants are classed in months, the illustrations are nicely co- 

 loured, and the book is altogether an elegant as well as useful present." — Illustrated 

 Lo7idon News. 



19. PIIYCOLOGIA BRITANNICA ; or, History of the British Sea- Weeds ; 



containing coloured figm-es, and descriptions, of all the species of Algaj 

 inhabiting the shores of the British Islands. By "William Henry 

 Harvey, M.D., M.R.I.A., Keeper of the Herbarimn of the University 

 of Dublin, and Professor of Botany to the Dublin Society. The price of 

 the w^ork, complete, strongly bound in cloth, is as follows : — 



III three vols, royal 8vo, arranged in the order •> £,„ ^^ « 



of publication J- ±./ i^ o 



In four vols, royal 8vo, arranged systematically \ pn in o 

 according to the Synopsis . . . J 



A few Copies have been heautifuUij printed on larfje j)aper. 



" The * History of British Sea- weeds ' we can most faithfully recommend for its scien- 

 tific, its pictorial, and its popular value ; the professed botanist will find it a work of 

 the highest character, whilst those who desire merely to know the names and history 

 of the lovely plants which they gather on the sea-shore, will find in it the faithful por- 

 traiture of every one of them." — Annah and Magazine of Natural History. 



" The drawings are beautifully executed l)y the author himself on stone, the dissec- 

 tions carefully prepared, and the whole account of the species drawTi up in such a way 

 as cannot fail to be instructive, even to those who are well acquainted witli the subject. 

 The greater part of our more common Algte have never been illustrated in a manner 

 agreeable to the present state of Algology." — Gardetiers' Chronicle. 



20. POPULAR HISTORY OF BRITISH SEA-WEEDS. By the Rev. 



David Landsborough, A.L.S., Member of the Werucrian Society of 



Edinburgh. Second Edition. Royal IGmo. With twenty plates by 



Ktcb. iOs. (jd. coloured. 



" The book is as well executed as it is well timed. The descriptions are scientific as 

 well as popular, and the ])late8 are clear and explicit. It is a worthy sea-side com- 

 panion — a hand-book for every resident on the sea-shore." — Economist. 



21. A REVIEW OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION OF 1848. By 



Captain Chamier, R.N. Two vols. 8vo. 21*. 



" The most accurate and judicious as well as amusiug History of the Revolution wc 

 have seen." — Quarterly Review. 



