By the same Author. 



NOW READY, THIRD EDITION. 



Tastefully printed in crown 8vo., and bound in cloth, gilt lettered, 

 price 5s. ; or with gilt edges, 5s. 6d. 



BY LEAFY WAYS: 



$vte£ (Stub us in the |fook oi Mature* 

 With numerous beautiful Illustrations by E. T. Compton. 



OOnSTTZEHSTTS. 



Tenants of a Season 



A Citizen of the World 



The Promise of May 



A River Path 



By Leafy Ways 



A Rising Generation 



A Cold-blooded Race 



By Quiet Waters 



As Evening Darkens 



A Paradise of Birds 



Sabrina Fair 



All Among the Barley 



The Misty Moorland 



Footprints on the Sands 

 The Parting Guests 

 Flying, Flying South 

 The Return of the Fieldfare 

 The Summer of St. Martin 

 A Great Frequenter of the 



Church 

 Sylvan Minstrels 

 Winter Visitors 

 Adapted Plumage 

 Outlaws 

 Some Bird Myths 

 When Woods are Bare 



A few Large- Paper Copies are still on sale, handsomely 

 bound, price 21s. each nett. 



cSrjmc ©jrinixms oi the #rcss. 



' Cne likes to fancy how Gilbert White would have welcomed Mr. Knight hsd 

 they been contemporaries, and of the talks they would have had together. He 

 would have found a man after his own heart — full of pleasant chat, deeply versed 

 in all the latest literature, gifted with a brilliancy of expression such as the old 

 author never aimed at, even supposing he could have attained it.' — Academy. 



1 Mr. Knight seems to be quite as attentive and sympathetic an observer as 

 the late Mr. Jefferies, and there is much in his essays which is both instructive 

 and eloquent.' — The Globe. 



' A charming book on Natural History, beautifully illustrated, and full of 

 delightful reading. Dealing chiefly with bird life, the work also contains much 

 information about the denizens of English lanes, woods and meadows, written in 

 a very pleasing and agreeable style.'— Newcastle Chronicle. 



1 Mr. Knight has a happy touch in describing the ways of birds and the aspects 

 of the fields, and has a keenness of observation akin to the faculty that was so 

 remarkably developed in the "The Gamekeeper at Home."' — Scotsman. 



' Not the least important feature of these studies is to create a love for all the 

 lower forms of life by showing their usefulness in one particular or another. The 

 book is very beautifully illustrated by Mr. E. T. Compton, and also by photo- 

 gravures of delightful bits of scenery.' — Stockport Advertiser. 



LONDON : ELLIOT STOCK, 62, PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C. 



