4 LIST OF WORKS, 16. EPISODES OF INSECT LIFE. Second Series. One vol. crown 8vo, with 36 illustrations. Price 16s. elegantly bound in faney cloth. Co- loured and bound extra, gilt back, sides, and edges, 2\8. ‘* We have looked forward to meeting our old friend with anticipations of enjoyment, remembering the pleasant hours that we passed with her in former years. Nor have our expectations been disappointed: our gossip is as merry, as instructive, as wise as ever,”’—-ATHENZUM. 17, EPISODES OF INSECT LIFE. Third and concluding Series. One vol, crown 8vo, with 36 illustrations. Price 16s. elegantly bound in fancy cloth. Coloured and bound extra, gilt back, sides, and edges, 21s. “ The work is beautifully printed, and the fi nicely coloured, and will be quite a treasure to any one just commencing the study of this iuscinsting acience.”—West- minster and Foreign Quarterly Review. 18. PHYCOLOGIA BRITANNICA; or, History of the British Sea-Weeds ; containing coloured figures, and descriptions, of all the species of Algs inhabiting the shores of the British Islands. By WiLtiam HENRY Haxvey, M.D., M.R.LA., Keeper of the Herbarium of the University of Dublin, and Professor of Botany to the Dublin Society. The price of the work, complete, strongly bound iu cloth, is as follows :— Tn three vols. royal 8vo, arranged in the order of publication .. . : . . I #7 12 6 In four vols. royal 8vo, arranged systematically according to the Synopsis . . i} #7 17 6 A few Copies have been beautifully printed on large paper. ‘The ‘ History of British Sea-weeds’ we can most faithfully recommend for its scien- tific, its pictorial, and its popular yalue; the professed botanist will find it a work of the highest character, whilst those who desire merely to know the names and history of the lovely plants which they gather on the aea-shore, will find in it the faithful por- traiture of every one of them.’”’—Annals and Magazine of Natural History. ~ “The drawings are beautifully executed by the author himself on stone, the dissec- tions carefully prepared, and the whole account of the ies drawn up in such a way as cannot fail | be instructive, even to those who are wall soquainted with the subject. The greater part of our more common Alge have never been illustrated in a manner agreeable to the present state of Algology.’—Gardeners’ Chronicle. 19. POPULAR HISTORY OF BRITISH SEA-WEEDS. By the Rev. Davip Lanpssorovex, A.L.S., Member of the Weruerian Society of Edinburgh. With twenty coloured plates by Fitch. Second Edition, Royal 16mo. 10s. 6d. “ The book is as well executed as it is well timed. The descriptions are scientific as well as popular, and the plates are clear and explicit. It is a worthy sea-side com- panion—a hand-book for every resident on the sea-shore.’’—Kconomist.