[234] [See Week, p. 131; Riv. 163.]
[235] [Week, p. 131; Riv. 163.]
[236] [Week, p. 129; Riv. 161.]
[237] [Week, pp. 318, 319; Riv. 395. Tree sparrow = chipping sparrow? The "hair-bird" of Week, p. 317 (Riv. 393), is called tree sparrow in the commonplace-book referred to on p. 438.]
[238] [Field sparrow, Nuttall's Fringilla juncorum. Nuttall gives both field sparrow and rush sparrow as its vernacular names.]
[239] [Week, p. 336; Riv. 416.]
[240] [Week, p. 336; Riv. 416.]
[241] [Week, p. 54; Riv. 67.]
[242] [In Excursions, p. 135 (Riv. 165), these lines are printed as part of a poem beginning, "With frontier strength ye stand your ground." The poem appears also, in extended form, in Week, pp. 170-173; Riv. 212-215.]
[243] [Week, p. 132; Riv. 164.]