NOTICE OF ENTOMOLOGICAL WORKS. 527 



29. Iconographie des Chenilles, <yc. .- par M. Duponchel. 

 Tome I. Livraison 10. Paris. 



30. Icones Historiques des Lepidopttres nouveaux on pen 

 connus; par le Docteur Boisduval. Livraisons 25 et 26. 

 Paris. 



31. Collection Iconographique et Historique des Chenilles, 

 Sfc; par MM. Boisduval, Rambur et Graslin. Livraisons 

 23 et 2\. Paris. 



32. Nouveaux Mhnoires de la Societe Imp'&riale des Na- 

 turalistes de Moscou. Tome III. Moscou, 1834. Notice 

 stir quelques Ltpidopteres des Antilles, avec la description de 

 plusieurs especes nouvelles, par M. Menetries. 



33. The management of Bees,; Sj-c. by Samuel Bagster, 

 juv. Bagster . London, 1834. — This is the most complete, 



concise, and interesting history of bees that we have ever met 

 with : the author gives us no great deal of his own, but in his 

 selections and quotations from the highest authorities in 

 apiarian lore he has shown great judgment. The work is illus- 

 trated with numerous good wood-cuts, and an excellent coloured 

 plate, from a drawing by Mr. Charles Curtis. We have lately 

 been so talkative on bees that we must not say more at present, 

 or our readers will think us infected with a bee-mania. 



34. Sketch of the Natural History of Yarmouth; by C. J. 

 and James Paget. Longman: London, 1834. — An interesting 

 and meritorious publication, and one which has given us much 

 pleasure. All local lists are very valuable, but — we wish we 

 had never to use buts — there is a fault in all local lists that we 

 have seen ; it is this: there is a difficulty in getting the rarer 

 species named at a distance from London, and therefore these 

 go unnamed, and make no appearance in the list. The same 

 objection we made to Mr. Wilson's Entomologia Edinensis, 

 and in making it we were a little misunderstood. Mr. Wilson, 

 doubtless, in his researches, met with many species which it was 

 difficult or impossible to identify ; now these were the very 

 insects about which an entomologist would have felt interested. 



