INDEX

Previous
ublic@vhost@g@html@files@44127@44127-h@44127-h-6.htm.html#Page_262" class="pginternal">262-264;
  • his mission, 265;
  • his Oliver Cromwell, 211, 212;
  • his Frederick the Great, 211-217, 242.
  • Carlyle family, the, 56-61, 67, 70, 71.
  • Catbird (Galeoscoptes carolinensis), notes of, 117, 120, 125, 129.
  • Cathedrals, Canterbury, 11-13;
  • images in, 15;
  • soil collected on the walls of, 21;
  • Rochester, 21;
  • St. Paul's, 182.
  • Catskill Mountains, contrasted with the mountains of Scotland, 7;
  • scenery in, 38;
  • the valleys of, 149.
  • Cattle, of the Scotch Highlands, 25.
  • Cedar-bird, or cedar waxwing (Ampelis cedrorum), notes of, 115.
  • Celandine, 172.
  • Celts, the, 45.
  • Chaffinch, or shilfa, 133, 134, 191;
  • song of, 79, 90, 95, 129, 133, 134;
  • nest of, 65, 190.
  • Chat, yellow-breasted (Icteria virens), 117;
  • song of, 117, 120, 125.
  • Chewink, or towhee (Pipilo erythrophthalmus), notes of, 118, 120, 125, 129.
  • Chickadee (Parus atricapillus), notes of, 129.
  • Chiffchaff, notes of, 95, 143.
  • Chipmunk (Tamias striatus), 195.
  • Chippie. See Sparrow, social.
  • Cicada, or harvest-fly, 194, 195.
  • Cinquefoil, 17.
  • Claytonia, or spring beauty, 164, 172.
  • Clematis, wild, 17.
  • Clouds, in England, 107;
  • at sea, 269-273.
  • Clover (Trifolium incarnatum), 93, 169.
  • Clover, red, 16, 52.Finches, songs of, 122, 123.
  • Fir, Scotch, 39.
  • Flicker. See High-hole.
  • Flowers, wild, American more shy and retiring than British, 163, 164, 196;
  • species fewer but individuals more abundant in Great Britain than in America, 165;
  • effect of latitude on the size and color of, 168;
  • effect of proximity to the sea on, 168, 169;
  • British less beautiful but more abundant and noticeable than American, 172, 173;
  • British and American sweet-scented, 173;
  • abundance of British, 196.
  • Flycatcher, British, 121, 189.
  • Flycatcher, great crested (Myiarchus crinitus), notes of, 118, 121.
  • Flycatcher, little green or green-crested (Empidonax virescens), notes of, 121.
  • Fog, at sea, 271, 272.
  • Foliage, in England and America, 29-31.
  • See Trees.
  • Footpath, an English, 89, 90.
  • Forget-me-not, 196.
  • Fox, European red, 187, 188.
  • Foxglove, 90, 133, 148, 165;
  • a beautiful and conspicuous flower, 166;
  • in poetry, 166, 167, 196.
  • Frederick the Great, 242.
  • Frogs, 194.
  • Froude, James Anthony, his Thomas Carlyle, 258, 259.
  • Furze, or whin, 169, 170.
  • Gannets, 189.
  • Garlic, hedge, 172.
  • Geranium, wild, 168.
  • Gillyflower, 162.
  • Glasgow, 2, 8, 9, 46, 47, 72.
  • Globe-flower, 162.
  • Goat Fell, 6.
  • Godalming, 89, 91, 92, 101, 102.
  • Goethe, 225, 227.
  • Goldenrod, 18, 49.
  • Salmon, 188.
  • Sandpiper, European, notes of, 40, 115, 141.
  • Sandpiper, spotted (Actitis macularia), notes of, 115, 120.
  • Scotch, the, contrasted with the English, 45;
  • acquaintances among, 46, 47;
  • a trait of, 47, 48;
  • their love for Burns, 48.
  • Scotland, first sight of, 2-7;
  • mountains of, 6, 7, 21-25;
  • tour through, 8;
  • moorlands of, 25;
  • streams and lakes of, 25, 26;
  • plowing in, 53, 54;
  • work of women and girls in the fields in, 54;
  • country houses and village houses in, 62, 63;
  • free use of paint in, 69, 70.
  • See Great Britain.
  • Scotsbrig, 62.
  • Scott, Sir Walter, Carlyle on, 201, 202, 225.
  • Sea. See Ocean.
  • Sedge-warbler, song of, 85.
  • Selbourne, 40, 103-105, 108, 109.
  • Shackerford, 94-102.
  • Shakespeare, quotations from, 42, 69, 78, 147, 161-164, 184;
  • and other authors, 147, 210, 212.
  • Shakespeare's Cliff, 14.
  • Shawangunk Mountains, 37.
  • Shilfa. See Chaffinch.
  • Ship-building on the Clyde, 4-6.
  • Shottery, the fields about, 16, 17.
  • Skylark, 80;
  • in America, 116;
  • at the head of a series of British song-birds, 142, 143;
  • song of, 4, 11, 18, 86, 114, 116, 145.
  • Vervain, 168.
  • Vetches, 196.
  • Violet, bird's-foot, 173.
  • Violet, yellow, 164.
  • Vireo, brotherly love or Philadelphia (Vireo philadelphicus), song of, 129.
  • Vireo, red-eyed (Vireo olivaceus), song of, 118, 120, 122, 127, 129, 143.
  • Vireo, solitary or blue-headed (Vireo solitarius), 120, 122;
  • song of, 129.
  • Vireo, warbling (Vireo gilvus), song of, 122, 143.
  • Vireo, white-eyed (Vireo noveboracensis), 122;
  • song of, 120, 122, 129.
  • Vireo, yellow-throated (Vireo flavifrons), notes of, 129.
  • Vireos, songs of, 122, 128.
  • Virgil, quotation from, 79.
  • Wagtail, water. See Water-thrush, large-billed.
  • Wagtail, wood, or golden-crowned thrush, or golden-crowned accentor, or oven-bird (Seiurus aurocapillus), song of, 124, 125, 127-129.
  • Wales, rock scenery in, 37.
  • Warbler, black-capped. See Blackcap.
  • Warbler, black-throated green (Dendroica virens), song of, 129.
  • Warbler, Canada (Sylvania canadensis), song of, 129.
  • Warbler, garden, 141;
  • song of, 105, 115, 123.
  • Warbler, hooded (Sylvania mitrata), song of, 129.
  • Warbler, Kentucky (Geothlypis formosa), song of, 123.
  • Warbler, mourning (Geothlypis philadelphia), song of, 129.
  • Warbler, reed, notes of, 116.
  • Warbler, willow, or willow-wren, song of, 129, 136, 137;
  • nest and eggs of, 66, 137, 189, 190.
  • Warbler, yellow. See Yellowbird, summer.
  • Water-lily. See Pond-lily.
  • Water-plantain, 168.
  • Water-thrush, large-billed or Louisiana, or water wagtail (Seiurus motacilla), 124;
  • song of, 123-125, 129.
  • Waxwing, cedar. See Cedar-bird.
  • Weasel, 19, 187.
  • Webster, Daniel, TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE

    Variations in spelling and hyphenation have been left as in the original.

    Pages v, 112, 130, 146, and 198 are blank in the original.

    The following corrections have been made to the text:

    Page 83: conscious of the train that passed[original has "paased"]

    Page 103: continue my walk back to Godalming[original has "Goldalming"]

    Page 204: far enough from Carlyle's sorrowing[original has "sorowing"] denunciations

    Page 215: he calls the Dauphiness, is unforgettable[original has "unforgetable"]

    Page 220: pillar of penitence or martyrdom[original has "martydom"]

    Page 230: great composure in an inarticulate[original has "inartlculate"] element

    Page 278, under "Carlyle, Thomas": residences of[subentry title added by transcriber], 49-51, 54, 55

    Page 279, under "Emerson, Ralph Waldo": statement on fields[subentry title added by transcriber], 53

    Page 282, under "Shakespeare": and other authors[subentry title added by transcriber], 147, 210, 212.

    Page 283, under "Tennyson, Alfred": residences[subentry title added by transcriber], 43, 81, 103

    The following index entries have been changed to reflect the spelling used in the main text:

    Page 277: Bloodroot[original has "Blood-root"], 172.

    Page 278: Cranesbill[original has "Crane's-bill"], 53.

    Page 280: Goldenrod[original has "Golden-rod"], 18, 196.

    Page 283: Swordfish[original has "Sword-fish"], 274.

    Page 284: Yellow-hammer[original has "Yellowhammer"], or yellow yite

    Punctuation has been standardized in the Index.


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