364 TJie Study of Animal Life APP. 



RICHARD JEFFERIES (1848-1887). 



See The Eulogy of Richard Jefferies, by Walter Besant (London, 

 1888), and the following works, some of which are published in 

 cheap editions: The Gamekeeper at Home (1878); Wild Life 

 in a Souther ?i County (1879) ; The Amateur Poacher (1880) ; 

 Round about a Great Estate (1881) ; Nature near London 

 (1883) ; Life of the Fields (1884) ; Red Deer (1884) ; The Open 



J. G. WOOD, whom we have lately lost, has done more than 

 any other to popularise natural history in Britain. 



See Life of J. G. Wood, by his son, Theodore Wood (Lond., 1890) ; 

 My Feathered Friends (1856); Common Objects of the Seashore 

 (1857); Common Objects of the Country (1858); his large 

 Natural History (1859-63) ; Glimpses into Petland (1862) ; Homes 

 without Hands (1864) J The Dominion of Man (1887) ; and other 

 works. 



JOHN RUSKIN. See the Eagle's A T est, Queen if the Air, Love's 

 Meinie, Proserpina, Deucalion, and 'Ethics of the Dust. 



JOHN BURROUGHS. 



See the neat shilling editions of Wake Robin (1871), Winter Sun- 

 shine (1875), Birds and Poets (1877), Locusts and Wild Honey 

 (1879), Pepacton (1881), Fresh Fields (1884), Signs and Seasons 

 (1886). 



See also : 



GRANT ALLEN, The Evolutionist at Large ; Vignettes from 

 Nature, etc. 



FRANK BUCKLAND, Curiosities of Natural History (London, 

 1872-77), and his Life. 



P. H. GOSSE. Romance of Natural History (London, 1 860-61). 



P. G. HAMERTON, Chapters on Animals ; The Sylvan Year 

 (3rd ed., London, 1883). 



W. KIRBY AND W. S PENCE, Introduction to Entomology 

 (London, 1815). 



F. A. KNIGHT, By Leafy Ways ; Idylls of the Field (London, 

 1889). 



PHIL ROBINSON, The Poet's Birds (London, 1883); and The 

 Poet's Beasts (London, 1885). 



ANDREW WILSON, Leaves from a Naturalist's Note-Books; 

 Chapters on Evolution, etc. 



