AUGUST. 



267 



known them caught in June, and as late as the last of Sep- 

 tember. A friend of mine^, once working in his field, felt 

 something between his trowsers and his thigh, which proved 

 to be a deer-mouse, having run up his leg ; he caught it, and 

 gave it to me. It appears to become torpid during winter : 

 my friend, Mr. H. Bill, has informed me that once, when 

 digging up earth to cover a potato pit, he exposed two deer- 

 mice in a little cavity, about eight inches below the surface 

 of the ground: they were stiff and motionless, but were 

 sleek, and did not appear dead. He carried them into his 

 house, and in the warmth they revived. There was no ap- 

 pearance of a nest, nor any hoard. It was late in the season, 

 as the ground was partially frozen : probably in the month 

 of November. 



DEER-MOUSE. 



(GerbiUus Canadensis.) 



C. — I perceive a large green grasshopper abundant among 

 the grass, which I have not observed before. 



F, — This is more properly a Locust : I believe those 



N 2 



