JS/L R~i Q S y~^ g 
MACMILLAN & CO.’S STANDARD BOOKS. 
Just Published. New Edition. Crown 8 vo., cloth, 3s. 6 d. 
A YEAR IN A LANCASHIRE GARDEN. 
By H. A. BRIGHT. 
TIMES: — “ It is the true story of a year's gardening, written by an accomplished man, whose flowers 
tell him many stories and pleasant things not to be found in the nursery-man's catalogue. . . . A faithful 
and fascinating garden story.” 
MANCHESTER EXAMINER : — “There is not a dull page in the book, which we recommend with 
all the more pleasure as the story of a year in a garden in this country.” 
ATHENACUM : — “ Those who want a pleasant chatty companion will do well to consult Mr. Bright’s 
pages.” 
By the same Author. 
THE ENGLISH FLOWER GARDEN. Crown 8vo., 3*. 6 d. 
BY THE REV. J. C. ATKINSON, D.C.L. 
Extra crown 8vo. 8s. 6d. net. 
FORTY YEARS IN A MOORLAND PARISH. 
Reminiscences and Researches in Banby-in-Cleveland. By Rev. J. C. ATKINSON, D.C.L., Incumbent of 
the Parish ; Author of “ A History of Cleveland,” “A Glossary of the Cleveland Dialect,” &c. 
DAILY NEWS . — “ A book eminently worthy not only to be read, but to be bought, for it is as full of 
matter as an egg is full of meat.” 
ANTI-JACOBIN . — “Altogether the Danby «of the years of Dr. Atkinson’s ministrations presents a 
picture which has the look of being an admirable presentation of the condition of the whole of rural England 
as it was one or two hundred years ago.” 
MANCHESTER EXAMINER. — “Mr. Atkinson has a good claim 10 be considered the modem 
Gilbert White, for his forty years passed in the parish of Danby have been utilised by him for storing up and 
lecording a mass of observations upon rural life, as fascinating to all lovers of natural history, folk-lore, and 
local peculiarities, as those which have made the work of the Vicar of Selborne the premier authority on such 
subjects. Antiquarians will find a fund of interest in Mr. Atkinson’s book, and readers of less special tastes 
will meet in it with valuable entertaining information on a wide range of topics connected with country life.” 
LEEDS MERCURY. — “ Dr. Atkinson’s knowledge of the customs and characteristics of the dalesmen 
of a past generation is probably unique ; and this book owes more than half its charm to the graphic and 
picturesque descriptions of vanished phases of village life. The book is accurate as well as interesting, and 
its pages throw welcome light on many points of more than passing interest to students of history and lovers of 
the ancient by-paths of English custom and tradition.'’ 
WORKS BY SIR JOHN LUBBOCK, BART, F.R.S. 
THE ORIGIN AND METAMORPHOSES OF INSECTS. By Sir John 
Lubbock, F.R.S. With Illustrations. Crown 8vo. 3s. 6d. 
ON BRITISH WILD FLOWERS CONSIDERED IN THEIR RELATION 
TO INSECTS. By the same. With Illustrations. Crown 8vo. 4s. 6d. 
FLOWERS, FRUITS, AND LEAVES. By the same. With Illustrations. 
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SCIENTIFIC LECTURES. By the same. With Illustrations. 2nd Edition, 
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THE TRANSIT OF VENUS. By 
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POLARISATION OF LIGHT. By 
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trated. 3s. 6d. 
SEEING AND THINKING. By 
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Diagram. 3s. 6d. 
CHARLES DARWIN. Memorial 
Notices reprinted from Nature. By 
Thomas H. Huxley, F.R.S., G. 
J. Romanes, F.R.S., Archibald 
Geikie, F.R.S., and W. T. Dyer, 
F.R.S. 2s. 6d. 
ON THE COLOURS of FLOWERS. 
By Grant Allen. Illustrated. 
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MACMILT,AN 
LIGHT : A Series of Simple, Enter- 
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By A. M. Mayer and C. Barnard. 
Illustrated. 2s. 6d. 
SOUND : A Series of Simple, En- 
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3s. 6d. 
TIMBER AND SOME OF ITS 
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Ward, M.A. Illustrated. 6s. 
ARE THE EFFECTS OF USE 
AND DISUSE INHERITED? 
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