170 
INDEX. 
logical Sketches, and Observations on Vegetable 
Fossil Remains, by Charles Clay, M.R.C.S.E., 
156. 
LITERARY INTELLIGENCE. 
Shuckard’s Elements of British Entomology, Part 
i., 49 ; Clay’s Geological Sketches, 107; Selby’s 
History of British Forest Trees, 107; Bower- 
bank’s History of the Fossil Fruits and Seeds of 
the London Clay, 107; Bell’s History of British 
Crustacea, 107; Newman’s History of British 
Ferns, 107; Turley’s First Lines of Education, 
157. 
SELECT POETRY. 
The Tyrant of the Forest, 50; To the Eagle, 107; 
To a white Crocus, 108; The Carrier Pigeon, 108; 
O! the flowery Month of June, 110 ; Song of the 
VTorm, 110; Song of the Blackbird and Thrush, 
158; The Ant and the Grasshopper, 158. 
CHAPTER OF MISCELLANIES. 
Zoology. —Additional Localities forAmarce, 50; Ni- 
dification of the Starling, 50; The Red-crested 
Pochard in the London Market, 51 ; Singular Cap¬ 
ture of a Hawk by a Fieldfare, 51 ; Secretiveness 
of the Partridge, 51; March of Intellect in the 
Brute Creation, 51; Hydrophobia in the Sheep, 
51; The Royal Court converted into a Poultry- 
yard, 52; Cunning of Birds, 52; Voracity of the 
Eel, 52 ; Anecdote of the Newfoundland Dog, 53; 
Reason in the lower Animals, 53; Eggs of the 
Marsh and Hen Harriers, 53; Localities for the 
Nightingale in Yorkshire, 54; A Jew de Mot, 54; 
Quickness of Ear of the Cat turned to good Ac¬ 
count, 54; Anecdote of the Raven, 55; Wonders of 
thelnsect Creation, 55; Animal Instinct, 56; The 
Dipper on the Yorkshire Coast; 111 ; Courage of 
the Missel Thrush, 111; Aporus bicolor, 112; 
Change of Colour in the Common Fowl, 112; 
Flight of Birds, 112; A Sportsman’s Warning, 
112; The “ Vital Principle” discovered!, 159; 
Arachnoderma , 159 ; Ring Ouzel near Scarbo¬ 
rough, 159; Actions of the Dipper under Water, 
159; Song of the Gold-crested Kinglet, 160; Dis¬ 
tribution of the Rudd in Britain, 160; Crambus 
falsellus, 160; How to make Steel Pens, 160; The 
Toad poisonous, 160; Fidelity of the Dog, 160 ; 
Eagle destroyed by a Weasel, 161; Artificial 
Hatching of Eggs, 161; To procure prolific Ducks, 
161; Domesticated Partridges, 161; Account of a 
tame Starling, 162; Intelligence of the Roebuck, 
162; The Garden Fauvet near Scarborough, 163; 
The Sibilous Locustell near Scarborough, 163; 
Mode of Feeding, &c., of the Hooded Crow, 163; 
Cross between the Hooded Crow and the Carrion 
Crow, 163; The Rook building on Chimney-tops, 
163; A Cat in a Rook’s Nest, 164 ; Swallow’s Nest 
seized by a Wren, 164; The Hoopoe near Scar¬ 
borough, 164; Lesser Spotted Woodpecker shot 
near Scarborough, 164; The Kingfisher near Scar¬ 
borough, 164; The Great Bustard shot near Scar, 
borough, 164; The Quail near Scarborough, 164 ; 
The Blackbird’s Song, 165 ; Management of Bees, 
165; Animal Intelligence, 166; Preservation of 
Birds, 167. 
Botany.— “ Botanical Lichens ” !, 168 ; Production 
of Cotton in England, 168. 
Geology. —Geology and Scripture, 168; Sam. Slick 
on Secondary ^Formations, 168; A new Eastern 
County, 168. 
LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS. 
Admirer op The Naturalist, Shrewsbury, 84. 
Blyth, Edward, Tooting, Surrey, 159. 
Botanical Looker-out, 57, 145. 
Cook, Eliza, 110. 
Dale, J. C., Esq., A.M., F.L.S., Glanville’s-Wootton, Dorsetshire, 112, 160. \ 
E. L., 45. 
Gilfill an, Robert, 110. 
Hall, T. B., Coggeshall, Essex, 29, 79, 126. 
