238 



INDEX 



58 ; shifting his quarters, 108 ; 

 12G. 



Churches in England, 155, 209. See 

 Cathedrals. 



Cities, homely character of Euro- 

 pean, 225. 



Climate, its effect on body and 

 mind, 148, 149. 



Conway, Wales, 217, 218. 



Coon. See Raccoon. 



Cork, Ireland, 226. 



Cows, 86 ; their fondness for ap- 

 ples, 126 ; planters of apples, 127. 

 See Cattle. 



Creeper, brown {Certhia familiaris 

 americuna), 16. 



Cricket, 4. 



Crow, American {Corvus ameri- 

 C(inus), 5, 7 ; characteristics of, 

 9 ; 19, 101, 126 ; notes of, 8-10, 93. 



Crow, carrion, 141. 



Crow, fish (^Corvus ossifragus), 

 notes of, 10. 



Cuckoo, 126. 



Dandelion, 226. 



Dai'win, Charles, 115, 175. 



Deer, in English parks, 168. 



Dieppe, 186, 187, 198. 



Dog, the, a true pedestrian, 36 ; 



and coon, 63-65 ; and turkey, 70 ; 



nose of, 73; smell, sight, and 



hearing of, 74, 75. See Hound^. 

 Dog, farm, fox and, 47, 48, 70 ; 



adventure with a coon, 63. 

 Dogwood, 5. 

 Ducks, wild, 101. 



Eagle, 8. 



Elecampane, 105. 



Electricity in winter, 6. 



Elm, European, 190. 



Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 36, 123, 

 139. 



Emigrants, Irish, 227, 228. 



England, atmosphere and climate 

 in, 1 ; walking in, 29-31 ; the ap- 

 ple of, 114, 171, 207; the first 

 day in, 137-139 ; human quality 

 of the landscape in, 169, 140, 224 ; 

 uninhabited appearance of the 

 country in, 141 , 224 ; abundance 

 of birds and game in, 141, 142; 

 substantiality of the architecture 

 of, 143, 145 ; the bridges of, 143 ; 

 climate of, 148, 149, 172 ; dwell- 

 ing-houses in, 152-154, 224, 225 ; 

 castles in, 154 ; church architec- 

 ture in, 155-161 ; a mellow coun- 

 try, 170-174; subdued appear- 



ance of things in, 170, 174; 

 building-stone in, 171, 172 ; rail- 

 ways in, 173, 174, 215 ; woman in, 

 181-183 ; hotels and inns in, 182, 

 183, 207-209, 211 ; system, order, 

 and fair dealing in, 183, 184 ; ab- 

 sence of barns in, 206 ; field occu- 

 pations in, 206 ; rural towns of, 

 223. See London. 

 English, the, health and physical 

 development of, 148-151 ; cloth- 

 ing of, 150, 151 ; their plainness 

 of speech, 152 ; their accent, 152 ; 

 a mellow people, 170, 172-174 ; 

 manners of, 172, 173, 181 ; sim- 

 plicity of, 174-177 ; at home and 

 abroad, 176, 177 ; brutality of, 



177, 178 ; traveling in America, 



178, 179 ; in crowds, 179-181 ; 

 breadth and heartiness of, 203. 



Finch, purple {Carpodacus pur- 

 jmreus), 19 ; song of, 163. 



Fire, the camp, 18, 19. See Bon- 

 fires. 



Flagg, Wilson, 125. 



Flicker. See High-hole. 



Foot, the human, 23, 28, 29. 



Footpaths, in England, 29, 30. 



Fox, Arctic ( VuJpes lagopus), 82. 



Fox, cross ( Viilpes vulpes, var. de- 

 cttssaius), 44, 82. 



Fox, gray {Urocyon cinereo-argen- 

 iaius), 44, 81-83. 



Fox, prairie, 82. 



Fox, red ( Vulpes vulpes, var. ful- 

 vus), bark of, 44, 81 ; tracks of, 

 45 ; meeting a, 45, 46 ; and hound, 

 46, 47, 68-76 ; and farm-dog, 47, 

 48, 70 ; female and young, 47, 48, 

 79, 80 ; tail of, 48 ; cunning of, 

 48-50, 71, 78 ; trapping, 49-52,78, 

 79 ; abundance of, 67, 68 ; in the 

 poultry-yard, 68, 69 ; a hunt with 

 hounds, 73-77 ; senses of smell, 

 sight, and hearing, 74, 75 ; still- 

 hunting, 77, 78 ; relationships of, 

 80-84. 



Fox, silver-gray or black (Vulpes 

 vulpes, var. argsntatus), 44, 72, 

 82, 83. 



France, the chalk hills of, 185; 

 peasant women of, 186, 187 ; the 

 woman's country, 187 ; the army 

 of, 188 ; appearance of the coun- 

 try, 188, 189 ; sanitary arrange- 

 ments in, 198. See Paris. 



French, the, peasant women, 186, 

 187 ; the Louis Napoleon type, 

 188 ; good taste of, 192-194 ; cu> 



