254 



WOOD NOTES WILD. 



Music in nature. (See also Bird-songs. 



— Inanimate music. — Insect music. 



— Notations.) 2, 4, 117, 120; Ant 

 music, 128; Ape (Gibbon), 129; Ass, 

 129; Carlyle, T., 129; Cricket, 128; 

 Eel, 126; Fish, 126; Frog, 127; 

 Haweis, Rev. H. R. Cuckoo's song 

 nearest approach to, 116 ; Horse, 129 ; 

 Peacock, 129; Sonorous sand, 129; 

 Speech, 129; Stones, 129; Vesper- 

 mice, 126 ; Waters of Niagara, 130. 



Music-loving cows, 141. 



Music of nature, Various notations of, 



203. 

 Musical fishes. See Music in nature. 

 Musical insects. See Music in nature. 

 Musicapa armillata, Viellot. See 



Solitaire. 



Natural history of birds (Harper & 

 Bros.), 142, 236. 



Natural history of English song-birds, 

 181, 236. 



Naturalist's note-book, 230. 



Nature (magazine), 126, 128, 176, 195, 

 236, 238, 239. 



Nature, Music in. See Music in na- 

 ture. 



Naumann, J. F., 236. 



Nehrling, H., 165, 181, 236. 



Nelson, E. W., 236; Bluebird and 

 robin, 145. 



Nelson, H. L., 237; Bird-songs at 

 Worcester, 158; Linnet, 149; Oven- 

 bird, 165; Redstart's song resembles 

 yellow warbler's, 158; Song of Her- 

 mit thrush, wood thrush, and veery, 

 164; Song of robin and tanager, 

 185; Song-sparrow, 146; Veer}', 

 163 ; Wood thrush, 161; Yellow 

 warbler, 156. 



New England magazine, 159, 162, 163, 

 237. 



New Monthly magazine, 135, 141, 

 236, 237. 



New South Wales, Bird-songs in, 209. 



Newness of the field, 1, 113, 120. 



Niagara, Music of, 130. 



Nicols, A., 175, 237. 



Night-hawk {chordeiles Virginianus), 

 66; And whippoorwill, 67; Boom- 

 ing of, 196; Minot, H. D., 167; 

 Samuels, E. A., 107; Wilson, Dr. 

 A., 66. 



Night-jars, 153. 



Night -songs, 159; Chaffinch, 160 

 Chifi-chaff, 160; Cuckoo, 160; Gol 

 den oriole, 160; Gray wag-tail, 160 

 Mocking-bird of Jamaica, 160 

 Nightingale, 160; Reed-wren, 160 

 Ring-ousel, 160; Robin, 100; Sara 

 uels, E. A. Brown thrush, 159 

 Thrush, 160; Water -ousel, 160 

 White-throat, 160; Willow- wren 

 100; Wood-lark, 160; Wren, 160. 



Nightingale, 160, 180 ; And his rivals, 

 179; Barrington, D., 174; Compass 

 of, 181; Cowper, W. Ode to (Song 

 thrush?), 181; Minot, H. D., 181; 

 Notations of: Gardiner, W., 211, 

 Kircher, A., 218, Lescuyer, F., 220, 

 Nuttall, T., 165; Song of blue 

 thrush mistaken for song of, 181; 

 Walton, I., 182. 



Nightingale, American. See Thrush 

 {turdus fuscescens). 



Nightingale, Gray (luscinia pliilo- 

 mela), 115; Golz, Dr. Song can- 

 not be copied, 115. 



Nightingale, Norfolk mock, 180. 



Norfolk mock nightingale, 180. 



North British review (magazine), 176, 

 230. 



Notations. Accentor, Golden-crowned, 

 63 ; Ass, 213; Beckler, D. H. (names 

 of birds not given), 208 ; Bird (name 

 unknown) 148; Blackbird, 211, 217, 

 222; Blackcap, 215; Bluebird, 11; 

 Bob White, 90; Bobolink, 83 ; Bull, 

 120, 206: Bull-frogs, 206; Bumble- 

 bee, 226; Cat, 225; Cat-bird, 52; 

 Chat, Yellow - breasted, 80; Che- 

 wink, 45, 118, 156; Chickadee, 27, 

 123, 142; Clothes-rack, 4; Cock, 

 212, 225; Cock (a passage in ora- 

 torio of the Seven sleepers), 119; 

 Cock chaffer, 226; Colt, 120, 205; 



