414 BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



that, being brought to England, betook itself to the woods of Hampshire, and 

 was shot there as a supposed ' wolf ; ' and (c.) ' A Pet Bear.' 



XCI. MACKELLAR, Mrs. Mary, of Edinburgh, a Highland poetess, of whose 

 life and labours a notice is given by Professor Blackie in his ' Lan- 

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As the wife of a ship captain she has travelled a great deal, and has made 



the best use of her opportunities of observation, equally abroad and at home. 



Letters on ' The Reasoning Powers of Animals,' in the North British 



Advertiser and Ladies' Journal,* one of the best known newspapers of 



Edinburgh for January 1875. 



As a weekly serial this newspaper has always been honourably distin- 

 guished for its literary character ; and, while containing original articles, 

 such as those of Mrs. Mackellar and Miss Clara Kossiter, it also abounds in 

 quotations from all current sources illustrating the sagacity of animals. 

 XCII. MAUDSLEY, Professor, of University College, London, lately editor of 

 the Journal of Mental Science, a well-known quarterly. 



1. 'The Genesis of Mind; ' Journal of Mental Science for January and 



April, 1862. 



2. ' Body and Mind ; ' crown ; 8vo. London, 1870. 



Originally a series of ' Gulstonian Lectures on the relations between 

 body and mind, and between mental and other disorders of the nervous 

 system,' delivered at the Royal College of Physicians, London. 



XCIII. MENAULT, the late Ernest, of Paris. 



1. ' Wonders of Animal Instinct ; ' 8vo. London, 1872. 



2. ' The Intelligence of Animals,' with illustrative anecdotes. Translated 



from the French ; 8vo. Illustrated. London, 1869. 

 XCIV. MOGGRIDGE, the late J. Traherne, F.L.S., of Mentone, France. 



'Harvesting Ants and Trap-door Spiders; Notes and Observations on 

 their Habits and Dwellings ; ' 8vo. Illustrated. London, 1873. With 

 a ' supplement ' published in 1874. 



XCV. MONTAGU, the late Colonel George, a Devonshire sportsman-naturalist, 

 who has been held in the highest esteem by successive generations of 

 British naturalists. 

 ' Dictionary of British Birds,' edited by the late Edward Newman, 



F.L.S., F.Z.S., editor of the Zoologist ; 8vo. London, 1866. 

 Originally published in 1802 and 1813 as the ' Ornithological Dictionary.' 



XCVI. MONTEIRO, the late Joachim John, Associate of the School of Mines, 



London, and Corresponding Member of the Zoological Society of 



London ; a competent Portuguese traveller-naturalist, long resident in 



Western Tropical Africa. 



'Angola and the River Congo; ' 2 vols. 8vo. Illustrated. London, 1875. 



XCVII. MiiLLER, Professor Max, of Oxford, the distinguished philologist. 



1. ' Lectures on Darwin's Philosophy of Language.' Frascr's Magazine 



for 1873, and Contempoiwy Review for 1875. 



2. ' R6sum6 of all that is known of Indian Wolf -children.' Academy for 



November, 1874, and Journal of Mental Science for January, 1875. 



XCVIII. MURRAY, the late Andrew, F.R.S.E., F.L.S., of London, the eminent 



entomologist. 



' Geographical Distribution of Mammals ; ' 4to. ; copiously illustrated 

 by coloured maps. London, 1866. 



X.CIX. ' NATURE,' an illustrated London weekly magazine, edited by J. N. 

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 in the various departments of natural science. 



