MR. T. FISHER UN WIN'S 



History, Biography, 5c. continued. 

 THE WELSH LIBRARY. 



Edited by OWEN M. EDWARDS, Author of " Wales." Each volume 



Foolscap 8vo. 



5. A Short History of Wales. By OWEN M. EDWARDS. 

 1-3 The Mabinogion. 

 4. The Poems of John Dyer. 



TRAVEL 6 DESCRIPTION. 



Travels of a Naturalist in Northern Europe. By 



J. A. HARVIE-BROWN, F.R.S.E., F.Z.S., Joint Author of " Fauna 

 of the Moray Basin," " A Vertebrate Fauna of Orkney," etc., etc. 

 With 4 Maps, 2 Coloured Plates, and many Illustrations. 2 vols. 

 Small Royal 8vo, cloth. 



LIMITED EDITION. 



Uniform with "Fauna of the Moray Basin." 



This work describes the author's travels in the lesser known parts of Norway, in the 

 Archangel region, near the mouth of the Dvina, and in the district of the Pechora River 

 (northern Russia). The object of each expedition was mainly ornithological, and 

 valuable and extensive lists are given of birds and eggs observed in the various regions 

 visited. There is also an interesting section devoted to the Samoyeds. 



There is much in these volumes to interest the sight-seeing tourist, and they will 

 appeal not only to the naturalist, but to the shooter of game and wild fowl. 



The Land of the Horn. 



trated. Medium 8vo, cloth. 



By W. S. BARCLAY. Fully Illus- 



This book treats of a part of the world which, though it has been discovered for more 

 than four centuries, has until recent years been hidden under mists of misconception and 

 ignorance almost as dark as those which veil its rugged shores. The latest geographical 

 knowledge which prevails concerning the little-known interior of the great islands lying 

 between the Straits of Magellan and Cape Horn is combined with a brief topographical 

 sketch of the general conditions of the land. We are taken back to the days when the 

 famous Straits were held to be the Western key to the sea empire of the Pacific, the only 

 water gate by which the Spice Islands could be reached across the Americas ; days when 

 at their narrow entrance the fleet of Portugal laid in wait for Spain, till England under 

 Drake swept both away. The manners, folk-lore, and customs of the different Fuegan 

 tribes which Darwin placed, perhaps wrongly, at the bottom of the human scale have 

 the more interest for us as this remnant of the Stone Age seems destined within a few 

 years to pass altogether from our sight. Tierra del Fuego has been opened up to civilisa- 

 tion practically only within the last twenty years. The conflict between white and 

 aborigine has followed, with results of peculiar ethnological interest. Until but an 



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