MR. REEVE’S LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 
19 
44 . 
A. R. Wallace. 
Travels on the Amazon and Rio Negro, 
With an Account of the Native Tribes, and Observations on the Cli¬ 
mate, Geology, and Natural History of the Amazon Valley. By 
Alfred R. Wallace, Esq. With Remarks on the Vocabularies of 
Amazonian Languages, by R. G. Latham, M.D., F.R.S. With 6 
plates and maps. 
Royal 8vo, 18s. 
“ Mr. Wallace has given us a most lively and interesting picture of the glories of the 
magnificent river. Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Brazil, six mighty 
States, spreading over an area far more extensive than Europe herself, contribute their 
aid in forming the flood up which he toiled. For twenty-eight days consecutively he 
breasted the stream of the Amazon. . . . He enters, with all the zest of a naturalist, 
into the history of the living things which fly, run, or creep over the surface of the 
country. His sketches of the natives, their appearance, habits, and disposition, are quite 
original.” Britannia. 
“ In the novelty of the scenery and manners ; in the truthful, albeit somewhat literal, 
picture of what the traveller saw and felt; in the quiet earnestness by which obstacles 
were surmounted by Talleyrand’s favourite rule of waiting ; and in the patience with 
which sickness, suffering, and privations were submitted to, ‘ Travels on the Amazon 
and Rio Negro’ remind us of the simplicity of the old voyagers.” Spectator. 
45 . 
Dr. Seemann, E.L.8. 
Circumnavigation of the Globe / 
Being the Narrative of the Voyage of H.M.S. Herald, under the com 
mand of Captain Kellett, R.N., C.B., during the years 1845-51. By 
Berthold Seemann, F.L.S., Naturalist of the Expedition. With 
Tinted Lithographs and a Map by Petermann. 
2 vols. 8vo, price 21s. 
“ With extensive knowledge in geography and its cognate sciences, Mr. Seemann pos¬ 
sesses a close and sober but vivid style, which expresses his ideas not only with clearness, 
but animation.” Spectator. 
“ Mr. Seemann is always a lively and agreeable companion, and has the merit of di¬ 
recting the attention of the general reader to applied natural history rather than to 
questions only interesting to the student of pure science.” Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
