( 4 ) 

 A NATURAL HISTORY OF BRITISH GRASSES. 



]5y E. J. Lowe, Esq., E.R.S., F.R.A.S., &c. Illustrated with 74 finely- 

 coloured Plates. In One Volume, super-royal 8vo., price £1 Is. 



This is a work not only valuable to the botanical student for its pictorial 

 accuracy, but of use also to the landed proprietor and the far.ner, pointing out 

 to them those grasses which are useful and lucrative in husbandry, and teaching 

 them the varied soils and positions upon which they thrive, and explaining their 

 qualities and the several uses to which they are applied in many branches of 

 manufacture and industry. There is much interesting matter also in this volume 

 appertaining to the ancient customs and superstitions connected with the subject, 

 which the author brings before his reader in a forcible rather than in a prolix 

 style. 



'It ia very faitliful, and marvellously cheap, consideriug the Vjeautiful manner in which it is 

 produced.' — Literary Record. 



MAUND'S BOTANIC GARDEN. 



Consisting of highly-finished Figures of Hardy Ornamental Flowering 

 Plants Cultivated in Great Britain, with their Names, Orders, History, 

 Qualities, Culture, and Physiological Observations. By B. Maund, F.L.S. 

 New Edition, edited by James C. Niven, Curator of the Botanic Gardens, 

 Hull. With 250 Coloured Plates, giving 1247 figures. In Six Volumes, 

 super-royal 8to., £12 12s. 



BRITISH SEA-WEEDS. 



Drawn from Professor Harvey's 'Phycologia Britannica.' With Descriptions, 

 an Amateur's Synopsis, Rules for Laying on Sea-weeds, an Ordei for 

 Arranging them in the Herbarium, and an Appendix of New Species. By 

 Mrs. Alfred Gatit. Illustrated with 80 coloured Plates, containing 384 

 figures. In Two Volumes, super-royal 8vo., price £2 10s. 



'Those who are acquainted with Mrs. Gatty's "Parables h-om Nature," and especially with 

 her delightful Parable about "Red Snow," need not be told that the literary part has been 

 ably executed by a competent and loving observer. In her present woi-k she has endeavoured, 

 and we think most successfully, to translate the terms and phrases of science into the language 

 of amateurs. Mrs. Gatty's familiarity with the plants themselves has enabled her to do this 

 office without falling into the eiTors to which a mere compiler in separating fi-om the beaten 

 track would be liable.' — Gardeners^ Chronicle. 



ALPINE PLANTS. 



Descriptions and 103 accurately-coloured Figures (drawn and engraved ex- 

 pressly for this Work) of some of the most striking and beautiful of the 

 Alpine Flowers. Edited by David Wooster, joint editor of the latest 

 editions of Loudon's 'Encyclopaedias of Gardening and Plants,' 'Hortus 

 Britannicus,' &c. In One Volume, super-royal 8vo., price £1 5s. 



'The manner in which "Alpine Plants" is produced is creditable alike to author and artist. 

 The literary portion is not the mere dry botanical descriptions often found in such works, but 

 a popular description of the plant, instructions as to its culture and treatment, with any iu- 

 terestmg information in connexion with it that can be obtained. . . . We heai-tily commen<l 

 this work to all lovers of flowers.' — Journal of Borticuhure. 



'Not least among the illustrated Christm;is books should be reckoned this interesting work 

 with its beautifully coloured specimens.' — Sulurdai/ Review. 



'The letterpress is full, no doubt, of the most accurate botanical learning, but what we have to 

 speak of more particularly are the illustrations, aud these strike us as among the best specimens of 

 wood-block printing. There is about them none of that plastered gaudiness, that thick and sticky 

 style in which too often the wood-engraver endeavours to paint the lily. A crocus seems just to 

 have thrust itself through the brown soil which the thaw has softened.'— rime*. 



