NOW PUBLISHING. 
To be completed in about 20 Monthly Parts, each containing 20 Illustrations, price 1 - 
AX 
JUustrateb flfoanual of British ffifvbs, 
By HOWARD SAUNDERS, F.L.S., F.Z.S., &c.. 
Editor of the Third and Fourth Volumes of “ YarrelPs History of British Birds,” 
\th Edition. 
“ Excellent alike in style and matter, it ought to be in the hands of every lover of birds, and should 
take the place of several inferior books on the subject now before the public ."— Annuls o/Xatural History. 
“ The book will do more to popularise ornithology and to inculcate a true knowledge of the subject 
than any book that has issued from the press .” — The Queen. 
In one Volume, containing 1780 Coloured Illustrations painted by hand, £3 3 s. 
BRITISH WILD FLOWERS. 
Illustrated by SOWERBY. Described by JOHNSON. 
The Flowering Plants, Ferns and Club-Mosses found growing in the British Islands are all 
figured, and their habits, heights, habitats and times of flowering are given. 
“ One of the prettiest natural history volumes now on sale.” — Gardeners' Chronicle. 
“An illustrated manual at once pretty, useful and comparatively cheap.” — Guardian. 
THE NATURAL HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES OF SELBORNE, 
In the County of Southamoton. By the late Rev. Gilbert White, formerly Fellow of 
Oriel College, Oxford. Edited by Thomas Bell, F.R.S., F.L.S., F.G.S., &c. 
Professor of Zoology in King’s College, London. With Steel Plate and other Illustra- 
tions. 2 vols, demy 8vo, £1 11s. 6d. 
A few copies have been printed on larger paper, royal 8vo, with the Dlatcs on India paper, 
£3 3 s. 
“Enough has been said to show the general excellence of the entire work, and even those who are 
already familiar with the first portion will, we are sure, enjoy its reperusal, if only for the sake of the notes, 
whilst the second volume is composed, as we have said, of matter almost entirely new."— Athenaeum. 
Svo, cloth, with numerous Illustrations by the Author, 12 s. 6d. 
BIRD-LIFE of the BORDERS. 
RECORDS OF WILD SPORT AND NATURAL HISTORY 
ON MOORLAND AND SEA. 
By ABEL CHAPMAN. 
“Mr. Chapman is a naturalist of Gilbert White’s school in the keenness and accuracy of his percep- 
tions. He sees things for himself and takes nothing upon trust .” — Saturday Revie w. 
“ When the Southern reader lays down this book he feels quite at home among the curlew, the golden 
plover, and the grouse on the moors ; he feels that lie has done the next best thing to a personal endeavour 
to get a sight of those long lines of wild geese on the bleak Northumbrian coast.” — Spectator. 
GURNEY & JACKSON, I, Paternoster Row. 
(Successors to Mr. VAN VOORST.) 
