BIBLIOGRAPHY 447 



White, Gilbert 



*Hailes, 1833. 12mo, pp. 316. [Arranged for young persons 

 by Lady Dover.] 



* Chambers, 1833. Small 8vo, pp. 356. [Notes by Capt. 



T. Brown.] 

 *0rr & Smith, 1836. Small 8vo, pp. 418. [Ed. Ed. Blyth : 



chap, by Mudie.] 

 *Arch., Longman, &c., 1837. Pp. 640. [Ed. E. T. Bennett: 



excellent notes.] 

 *S.P.C.K., 1842. 8vo, pp. 328. [This is Lady Dover's 1833 



ed. with extra notes and illust.] 



* Harper, 1843. 12mo, pp. 335. 



*Van Voorst, 1843. Pp. 398. [Ed. L. Jenyns.] 7s. 6d. 

 *Bohn, 1851. Pp. 416. [Jardine's ed., with notes by Edward 



Jesse. ] 



*Routledge, 1854. 8vo, pp. 428. [Ed. J. G. Wood.] 

 *Bell & Daldy, 1862. 12mo, pp. 426. [Notes embodied in 



the letters. ] 



*Macmillan, 1875. Royal 8vo, pp.* 591. [Ed. Frank Buck- 

 land.] O.p. 



[Ditto, 1876. In 2 vols. 4to, pp. 601, 4, 4s. ; and a 



cheaper 1 vol. ed. in 1880, 6s.] 

 Van Voorst, 1877. 2 vols. 4to, pp. 917. [Ed. Thomas Bell.] 



jl, Us. 6d. 



*Chatto & Windus, 1878. Pp. 348. [Ed. Brown.] 2s. 

 *Routledge, 1880. 8vo, pp. 475. [The Jardine ed.] 

 Scott, 1887. Pp. 366. [" Camelot Series": pref. by Richard 

 Jefleries, who speaks of "the little Surrey parish of 

 Selborne."] 

 Routledge, 1886. Pp. 160. ["World Library": ed. H. R. 



Haweis.] 6d. 



*Sonnenschein, 1890. Pp. 583. [Ed. J. E. Harting: ad- 

 ditional letters.] 



Routledge, 1891. Pp. 475. ["Sir John Lubbock's Hundred 

 Books : the Jardine text and notes, with short intro. by 

 Lubbock.] 



Blackie, 1895. Pp. 252. 

 *Macmillan, 1895. 2 vols., pp. 422. [The Buckland text, 



with 17 pp. in trod, by John Burroughs.] 10s. 6d. 

 The following undated on title : 



*Warne, pp. 470. ["Chandos Library": ed. Christopher 



Davies.] 



Cassell. 2 vols. 120, pp. 334. ["National Library": ed. 

 H. Morley.] 3d. 



While I was making a list of editions of this classic a complete 

 bibliography was announced in book form. I intended to give the 

 various editions somewhat in extenso, because, in spite of the modern 

 habit of "smart" naturalists, who sneer at the "slipshod work of 

 poor old Gilbert White," much interest must always attach to the 

 reappearances of a book that has already been issued in something 

 over n've-and-twenty different editions, by almost all the leading pub- 

 lishers, and with at least three naturalists of repute figuring in the list 

 of editors. I abandoned the attempt, however, and the above is the 

 unfinished result. 



