FromPictures from Birdland
The Crested Crane
The Toucan
The Gallinule
The Penguin
The Guan
The Ivory-Billed Woodpecker
The Osprey
The Hummingbird
The Cormorant
The Oriole
The Pheasant
The Hang Nest
The Bateleur Eagle
The Owl
FromThe Book of Baby Pets
The Green Tree Frog
Grey Squirrel
Lamb
Guinea Pig
Goldfish
Kitten
Lizard
The "Cordon Bleu"
Tortoise
Chicks
Kid
FromThe Jungle Book
The "Council Rock"
"Akela" the Lone Wolf
Baloo in the Forest
The "Cold Lairs"
The Monkey Fight
"Kaa" the Python
Shere Khan in the Jungle
The Return of the Buffalo Herd
Rikki-tikki-tavi and Nag
Elephant-Dance
FromThe Fables of Aesop
The Hare and the Tortoise
The Oxen and the Axle-trees
The Monkeys and their Mother
The Vain Jackdaw
The Grasshopper and the Owl
The Lion and the Three Bulls
The Eagle and the Beetle
The Goat and the Ass
The Fox and the Crane
The Owl and the Birds
The She-Goats and their Beards
The Eagle and his Captor
FromThe Book of Baby Beasts
The Rat
The Hippopotamus
The Kangaroo
FromBirds and Beasts
The Captive Goldfinch
Strange Adventures of a Little White Rabbit
Misadventures of an Owl
FromThe Book of Baby Birds
The Long-Tailed Tit
The Magpie
The Willow Warbler
The Blue Tit
The Yellow-Hammer
The Gannet
FromHours of Gladness
Catasetum and Cypripediums
Orchis Latifolia
Coryanthes Maculata
Kingcups
FromBirds in Town and Village
Goldfinch and Blue Tit, "The desire for the companionship of birds."
Nightingale, ". . . the medicine of its pure, fresh melody."
Jay, ". . . inquisitve, perplexed, suspicious, enraged by turns."
Wren, ". . . mysterious talk in the leaves."
Heron. ". . . the streams are fished by herons."
FromFabre's Book of Insects
The Sacred Beetle.
The Cicada.
The White-Faced Decticus.
Common Wasps.
The Field Cricket.
Italian Locusts.
The Anthrax Fly.
FromOur Little Neighbours
The Superior Cat
White-tails
The Independent Goat
Ducks' Weather
Mice, Plain and Fancy
FromRainbow Houses
The Spider and the Wasp
"Darling Sugar-Bird, Green and Red"
"Peep, Little Lizard, Through the Grass"
The Praying Mantis
FromThe Arabian Nights
The next day he sat me behind him on an elephant
The rukh, which fed its young on elephants
The wolf changed into a cock, which began picking up the grains