480 
A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF 
[PPJCE 
Grinstead, December 4, 1866, and lived there and at Redhill, 
dying at Shepherd’s Bush, London, July 27, 1893. Her 
earliest work was an anonymous one, under the title of 
The Field , the Garden and the Woodland. By a Lady. (1838.) 
1850. Chapters on the Common things of the Sea-side. London (S.P.C.K.) ; 
1850. 
Collation — 1 vol. 12mo, pp. ix + 345, front, and cuts. 
Seaside birds at pp. 337-55. 
1852. Our Native Songsters. London : 1852. 
Collation — 1 vol. 12mo, pp. 350, with 72 col. pi. 
Idem. London : 1853. 
Idem. Reprinted 1857. 
Idem. (S.P.C.K.) n.d. 
** 
Prentis (Walter), ob. ca. 1903 
The author, a Kentish farmer, observes in his introduction : 
“ That extremely wet summer of 1860 is my excuse, or 
rather my pleasure, for making birds a study. Generally 
at home on my farm in the country my opportunities have 
not been slight for bird observation, at the same time being 
fond of my gun with a predilection for natural history, I 
have followed the pursuit on my own and neighbouring 
farms, including the district from the year 1860 to the year 
1894.” 
1894. Notes on the Birds of Rainham, including the district between 
Chatham and Sittingbourne. London (Gurney & Jackson) : 
MDCCCXCIV. 
Collation — 1 vol. post 8vo, pp. 92. (Pub. 3s. 6d.) 
Preston (T. A.). See Smith (R. B.) 
Price (David Thomas), viv. 
The writer of the undermentioned work, who dates his 
Introduction from Portishead, hopes that his little book, 
“ carried in the pocket through woodland and meadow, may 
prove a knowing companion and simplify the process of 
identifying the many species met with.” The first part com- 
prises a list of birds divided into general sizes, with the 
