NEW EDITION IN PREPARATION 
OUR WOODLAND TREES, 
BY 
FRANCIS GEORGE HEATH, 
Author of “The Fern World,” “The Fern Paradise,” &c. 
CONTENTS. 
PART I. 
Tne Life of a Tree. — Introductory — The Tree Germ — Early Growth — Structure — 
Development — Perfection — Beauty, 
PART II. 
Some Woodland Rambles. — In the New Forest — At Lyndhurst— Through GlaJe 
and Covert — Where a Norman Fell — By Twilight — On the Uplands— Into the Green- 
wood Shade — Along the Streamside — From Brockenhurst to Lyndhurst — Where the 
Green Leaves quiver — Through a Green Ride — At Midnight. 
PART III. 
Trees at Home. — A Study of Young Limes — A Plea for Trees in Towns— Sylvan 
Streets — London Trees — More Trees in our Gardens. 
PART IV. 
British. Woodland Trees. — The Wavy-leaved Oak— The Flat-leaved Oak— The 
Ilex — The Ash— The Small-leaved Elm— The Wych Elm — The Beech — The Lime- 
The Ivy — The Chestnut — The Horse-Chestnut— The Walnut — The Sycamore — The 
Western Plane- The Oriental Plane — The Maple— The Arbutus The Privet — The 
Mountain Ash — The Spindle Tree — The Guelder Rose — The Wayfaring Tree — Th« 
Black-fruited Cherry — The Red-fruited Cherry — The Pear — The Bird Cherry — The 
Wild Service Tree— The Apple — The White Beam — The Honeysuckle — The Hazel — 
The Barberry — The Hornbeam — The Acacia — The Black Poplar — The Grey Poplai 
— The White Poplar — The Aspen — The White Willow — The Weeping Willow — The 
Birch — The Alder - The Hawthorn — The Blackthorn — The Buckthorn — The Aldei 
Buckthorn — The Dogwood — The Elder— The Box — The Cedar of Lebanon— The 
Pinaster— The Juniper— The Medlar— The Silver Fir— The Yew— The Tamarisk- 
The Stone Pine — The Larch — The Holly — The Scotch Fir — The Spruce Fir. 
SOME PRESS OPINIONS OF “OUR WOODLAND TREES." 
Times. 
“ 'Our Woodland Trees’ is a work inspired by a genuine and wholesome love of Nature 
There is some pleasant reading in Mr. Heath’s pages amid a vast quantity of botanical lore, 
some picturesque descriptions of rural and woodland scenery, and an entertaining smattering 
of historical and traditional gossip.” 
XVI. 
