222 THE BOOK OF NATURE STUDY 



means to man. As huntsman, shepherd, fisher, farmer, and in 

 his manifold other practical relations with animals, as explorer 

 and colonist, as poet and artist, physician and priest, man has 

 been closely bound up in the bundle of life with his humbler 

 fellow-creatures. To realise this vividly is the legitimate out- 

 come of Nature Study. 



LITERATURE REFERRED TO. A. E. Brehm, From North Pole to Equator, 

 Translation 1895 ; T. W. Bridge and G. A. Boulenger, Cambridge Natural 

 History, vol. vii., 1904 ; A. H. Cooke, Cambridge Natural History, vol. iii., 1895 ; 

 C. Dixon, Op en- Air Studies in Bird Life ; Sketches of British Birds in their 

 Haunts ; W. W. Fowler, Coleoptera of the British Islands, 5 vols., 1887 ; A. T. 

 Gillanders, Forest Entomology, 1908 ; R. Lydekker, A Handbook to the British 

 Mammalia, 1896; L. C. Miall, Natural History of Aquatic Insects, 1903 ; Marion 

 Nevvbigin, Life by the Seashore, an Introduction to Natural History, 1901 ; 

 A. Newton, Dictionary of Birds, 4 vols., 1893-1896 ; Rimmer, Shells of the 

 British Isles, Land and Fresh Water, 1907 ; R. F. Scharff, History of the European 

 Fauna, 1899 ; D. Sharp, Cambridge Natural History, vols. v. and vi., 1895, 

 1899 ; R. South, The Butterflies of the British Isles, 1906 ; The Moths of the 

 British Isles, 1907 ; J. Arthur Thomson, Outlines of Zoology (4th edition, 1906), 

 p. 797, and in H. R. Mill's International Geography (Macmillans, 1907). 



END OF VOL. II. 



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