BIRDS AND NATURE.

ILLUSTRATED BY COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY.
Vol. X.NOVEMBER, 1901.No. 4

CONTENTS.

[AN AUTUMN EVENING.] 145 [THE PINE GROSBEAK. (Pinicola enucleator.)] 146 [THE ANNUAL NOVEMBER CONFERENCE.] 149 [THE FIELD SPARROW. (Spizella pusilla.)] 155 [DISHRAG VINES.] 156 [A SNOW-FLAKE.] 156 [NEIGHBORING WITH NATURE.] 157 [Gaunt shadows stretch along the hill] 157 [THE CAROLINA WREN. (Thryothorus ludovicianus.)] 158 [THANKSGIVING BY THE NINNESCAH.] 161 [Wildly round our woodland quarters] 164 [THE BLACK-POLL WARBLER. (Dendroica striata.)] 167 [TRAGEDY OF THE AIR.] 168 [OFF FOR THE SOUTHLAND.] 169 [TURQUOIS.] 170 [TO THE MEADOW LARK.] 174 [THE OUTRAGED BIRD.] 175 [NICODEMUS.] 175 [A WEED PICTURE.] 176 [The air is full of hints of grief] 176 [THE STRIPED HYENA. (Hyaena striata.)] 179 [A BIRD INCIDENT.] 181 [GROUSE.] 181 [THE GIRAFFE. (Camelopardalis giraffa.)] 182 [THE FLAG.] 186 [IN THE HOLLOW OF HIS HAND. (From an Ornithologist’s Year Book.)] 187 [SONG OF THE STORMY PETREL.] 188 [THE SPIDER MONKEY. (Ateles hypoxanthus.)] 191 [NOVEMBER.] 192

AN AUTUMN EVENING.

In scattered plumes the floating clouds

Went drifting down the west,

Like barks that in their haven soon

Would moor and be at rest.

The Day sank down, a monarch tired,

Upon Night’s sable breast.