WORKS PUBLISHED BY 
work is designed for readers who must occasionally be beguiled into learning.” — 
Atlas. 
“ The fair authoress of this pretty volume has shown more than the usual 
good taste of her sex in the selection of her mode of conveying to the young 
interesting instruction upon pleasing topics. She bids them join in a ramble 
through the sylvan wilds, 'and at her command the fragile lichen, the gnarled oak, 
the towering beech, the graceful chestnut, and the waving poplar discourse elo- 
quently, and tell their respective histories and uses.” — Britannia. 
POPULAE FIELD BOTANY ; containing a familiar and tech- 
nical description of the plants most common to the British 
Isles, adapted to the study of either the Artificial or Natural 
Systems. By Agnes Catlow. Second Edition. 
“ The design of this work is to furnish young persons with a Self-instructor in 
Botany, enabling them with little difficulty to discover the scientific names of the 
common plants they may find in their country rambles, to which are appended a 
few facts respecting their uses, habits, &c. The plants are classed in months, the 
illustrations are nicely coloured, and the book is altogether an elegant, as well as 
useful present.” — Illustrated London News. 
* # * In one vol. royal 16mo, with twenty plates of figures. 
10s. 6 d. coloured. 
ZOOLOGY. 
( Under the Authority of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty .) 
ZOOLOGY OF THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. SAMAEANG. 
Edited by Arthur Adams, F.L.S., Assistant-Surgeon, E.N., 
attached to the Expedition. 
Vertebrata. By John Edward Guay, F.E.S., Keeper of the \ 
Zoological Department of the British Museum. 
Fishes. By Sir John Eichardson, M.D., F.E.S. 
Mollusca. By the Editor and Lovell Eeeve, F.L.S. In- 
cluding the anatomy of the Spirula, by Prof. Owen, F.E.S. 
Crustacea. By the Editor and Adam White, F.L.S. 
Complete in one handsome royal 4to volume, containing 55 
plates. Price, strongly bound in cloth, 3 1. 10s. 
