6 LIST OF WORKS. 
was only last January twelvemonths that the Doctor arrived in Calcutta. That he 
should have ascended the Himalaya, discovered a number of plants, and that they 
should be published in England in an almost UNEQUALLED STYLE OF MAGNIFICENT 
ILLUSTRATION, in less than eighteen months—is one of the marvels of our time,”’”— 
Atheneum, 
29. THE RHODODENDRONS OF SIKKIM-HIMALAYA. Second 
Series. By JosrrH Datron Hooxer, M.D., F.R.S. Edited by Sir 
W. J. Hooker, M.D., F.R.S. In handsome imperial folio, with ten 
plates. Price 25s. coloured. 
30. THE RHODODENDRONS OF SIKKIM-HIMALAYA. Third and 
concluding Series. By JosrpH Datton Hooker, M.D., F.R.S. 
Edited by Sir W. J. Hooker, M.D., F.R.S. In handsome imperial 
folio, with ten plates. Price 25s. coloured. 
31. POPULAR BRITISH ORNITHOLOGY; comprising a familiar and 
technical description of the Birds of the British Isles. By P. H. 
Gosse, Author of ‘The Ocean,’ ‘ The Birds of Jamaica,’ &c. In twelve 
chapters, each being the Ornithological lesson for the month. In one 
vol. royal 16mo, with twenty plates of figures. Price 10s. 6d. coloured. 
**To render the subject of ornithology clear, and its study attractive, has been the 
great aim of the author of this beautiful little volume. . . It is embellished by upwards 
of seventy plates of British birds beautifully coloured.”’—Morning Herald. 
32. POPULAR BRITISH ENTOMOLOGY; comprising a familiar and 
technical description of the Insects most common to the British Isles. 
By Maria HE. Catntow. In twelve chapters, each being the Entomo- 
logical lesson for the month. In one vol. royal 16mo, with sixteen 
plates of figures. Price 10s. 6d. coloured. 
“* Judiciously executed, with excellent figures of the commoner species, for the use 
of young beginners.”’—Annual Address of the President of the Entomological Society. 
** Miss Catlow’s ‘ Popular British Entomology ’ contains an introductory chapter or 
two on classification, which are followed by brief generic and specific descriptions in 
English of above 200 of the commoner British species, together with accurate figures 
of about 70 of those described; and will be quite a treasure to any one just commencing 
the study of this fascinating science.”’—Westminster and Foreign Quarterly Review. 
33. THE DODO AND ITS KINDRED; or, the History, Affinities, and 
Osteology of the Dopo, Soxirarre, and other extinct birds of the 
Islands Mauritius, Rodriguez, and Bourbon. By H. E. Srricktanp, 
Esq., M.A., F.R.G.S., F.G.S.; and A. G. Mretvitte, M.D., M.R.CS. 
One vol. royal quarto, with eighteen plates aud numerous wood illustra- 
tions. Price 21s. 
“The labour expended on this book, and the beautiful manner in which it is got up, 
render it a work of great interest to the naturalist. .... It is a model of how such 
subjects should be treated. We know of few more elaborate and careful pieces of com- 
parative anatomy than is given of the head and foot by Dr. Melville. The dissection is 
accompanied by lithographic plates, creditable alike to the artist and the printer.’— 
Atheneum. 
See gia 
