10 
MR. REEVE S LIST OE PUBLICATIONS. 
28. 
E.. M. Stark. 
A Popular History of British Mosses, 
Comprising a General Account of their Structure, Fructification, Ar- 
rangement, and General Distribution. By R. M. Stark, Esq. With 
20 coloured plates. 
Royal 16mo, price 10,y. ^d. 
“ Mr. Stark has given as full and instructive an account of our wild Mosses as can 
well be desired. It is founded avowedly upon the long labours of Sir William Hooker 
in the same direction, and this alone guarantees the soundness of the author’s syste- S 
matic views. All the genera and species of ‘ Moss,’ as that term is understood by C 
botanists, are clearly but succinctly described in the English language ; and to aid t 
the learner in understanding the subject, we find twenty coloured plates admirably f 
executed by Mr. Fitch. When we add that the work has a good index, the reader t 
will require no further assurance that it deserves to be strongly recommended.” .? 
Gaedenees’ Cheonicle. % 
“ ‘ Popular British Mosses ’ is the best book we have seen upon the subject. The ^ 
plates are exquisite, and do justice to the grace and delicacy of the originMs.” | 
Gtjaedian’. I 
Miss Roberts. 
Voices from the Woodlands ; 
Descriptive of Forest Trees, Ferns, Mosses, and Lichens. By Mary 
Roberts. With 20 colom’ed plates by Fitch. 
Royal 16mo, price 10<y. ^d. 
“ 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 in- 
struction 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 eloquently, and tell their respective 
histories and uses.” Beitannia. 
30. 
Joseph. Woods, F.L.S. 
The Tourist's Mora; 
A Descriptive Catalogue of the Flov^ering Plants and Ferns of the 
British Islands, France, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy. By Joseph 
Woods, F.L.S. With a plate. 
8vo, price ISs. 
