Domestic scenery of New England. -- The primitive forest. -- The ash. -- Animals of the primitive forest. -- The azalea, or swamp honeysuckle. -- The Canadian rhodora. -- The pastoral and romantic. -- The willow. -- Rotation and distribution. -- The weeping willow. -- Vernal wood-scenery. -- The horse-chestnut. -- The catalpa. -- Forms and expression of trees. -- The lilac. -- The barberry. -- The Missouri currant. -- The ceanothus, or Jersey tea. -- Foliage. -- The tupelo. -- The hornbeam. -- The hop hornbeam. -- Insecurity of our forests. -- Orchard trees. -- Wayside shrubbery. -- The American elm. -- The English elm. -- Odors of vegetation. -- The cherry-tree. -- The dreary and desolate. -- The snowy mespilus. -- The chokeberry. -- The mountain ash. -- Relations of trees to water. -- The linden tree. -- Old orchards. -- The kalmia. -- Motions of trees. -- The tulip-tree. -- The magnolia. -- The picturesque. -- The locust. -- Relations of trees to the atmosphere. -- The holly. -- The spiræa. -- The hardhack. -- The hawthorn. -- Summer wood-scenery. -- The oak. -- Trees in assemblages. -- The white oak and other species. -- Homeliness of nature. -- The laurel. -- Clipped hedge-row. -- Trees as electric agents. -- The ground laurel. -- The bearberry. -- The checkerberry. -- Lily-ponds. -- The beech. -- The rustic lane and woodside. -- The chestnut. -- The sentiment of antiquity. -- The hickory. -- Relations of trees to temperature. -- The butternut. -- The black walnut. -- The whortleberry pasture. -- The hazel. -- The button-bush. -- The clethra. -- A summer night in the woods. -- The western plane. -- Beauty in nature. -- The myrtle. -- Relation of trees to the soil. -- The viburnum. -- Autumn woods. -- The cornel. -- Mountains. -- The sumach. -- The elder. -- Rudeness and simplicity. -- The heath. -- The andromeda. -- Trees for shade and salubrity. -- The rose. -- Wood-paths. -- The maple. -- The dark plains. -- The red maple. -- Seclusion and freedom. -- The white birch. -- The canoe birch. -- Relations of trees to birds and insects. -- The black or cherry birch. -- The yellow birch. -- The red birch. -- The Indian summer. -- The poplar. -- Sounds from trees. -- The Lombardy poplar. -- The trout-stream. -- The aspen. -- Relations of trees to poetry and fable. -- The alder. -- The witch-hazel. -- The ailantus. -- Spontaneity. -- Burning-bushes. -- The buckthorn. -- The privet. -- Wood-scenery in winter. -- The larch. -- The hemlock. -- Fine woods. -- The fir. -- Grandeur and sublimity. -- The spruce. -- Relations of trees to ornament. -- The northern cypress. -- The southern cypress. -- Thoreau. -- The juniper. -- The arbor-vitæ. -- The yew. -- Rural life in New England. -- The white pine. -- Agricultural progress. -- The pitch pine. -- Forest conservatories. --
The sentiment of antiquity.
Relations of trees to temperature.
The whortleberry pasture.
A summer night in the woods.
Relation of trees to the soil.
Trees for shade and salubrity.
Relations of trees to birds and insects.
The black or cherry birch.
Relations of trees to poetry and fable.
Relations of trees to ornament.
Rural life in New England.