Nevermore

Home > Science > Nevermore > Page 15
Nevermore Page 15

by David Day


  Columbus, Christopher – 113

  Cook, Captain James – 127

  Cooper, James Fenimore – 172

  Cortez, Hernando – 159

  Curlew – see Eskimo Curlew

  Dampier, William – 71

  Darwin, Charles – 74, 109

  de Carlo Sowerby, Arthur – 96

  de Flacourt, Sieur Etienne – 28

  de Labourdonnais, Mahé – 36

  Delano, Amasa – 72

  Diamond, Jared – 141

  Dodge, Colonel Richard Irving – 162

  Dodo – Raphus cucullatus (1680) – 21

  Du Quesne, Marquis Henri – 34

  Dunlop, William – 173

  Eastern American Bison – see Black Bison

  Edwards, George – 139

  Elephant Bird – Aepyornis maximus (1700) – 27

  Eskimo Curlew – Numenius borealis (1985) – 113

  Floreana Island Galapagos Tortoise – Chelonoidis nigra nigra (1876) – 71

  Foulis, Dr. James – 123

  Frost, John – 174

  Fulinski, Benedyct – 44

  Galapagos Tortoise – see Floreana Island Galapagos Tortoise

  Garefowl – see Great Auk

  Giant Moa – Dinornis maximus (1850) – 65

  Giant Swamphen – Porphyrio albus (1830) – 121

  Gilbert, Captain Thomas – 122

  Gilgamesh Poet – 41

  Gould, John – 85, 154

  Great Auk – Alca (pinguinus) impennis (1844) – 101

  Greenway, J. C. – 130

  Gunther, Albert – 37

  Hamilton-Smith, Lt. Colonel – 110

  Hawaiian Oahu O-O – Moho aplicalus (1837) – 127

  Heath Hen – Tympanuchus cupido cupido (1933) – 179

  Herbert, Sir Thomas – 21, 33

  Herodotus – 47, 53

  Hodgson, C. P. – 79

  Honeyeaters – see Hawaiian Oahu O-O

  Horse, Wild – see Tarpan

  Hough, Arthur Beetle – 181

  Ivory-billed Woodpecker – Campephilus principalis (1972) – 133

  Jennison, George – 97

  Joliffe, Surgeon John – 29

  Kangaroo Wolf – see Thylacine

  Knopwood, Reverend Robert – 83

  L’Estrange, Sir Hamon – 23

  Layard, Sir Austen – 146

  Leguat, Francois – 24, 35

  Lion – see Atlas Golden Lion

  Littell, Eliakim – 55

  Mackay, H. S. – 87

  Mauritian Tortoise – Geochelone inepta (1700) – 33

  McCulloch, Alan – 124

  Mee, Arthur – 89

  Migratory Dove – see Passenger Pigeon

  Moa – see Giant Moa

  Newton, Professor A. – 104

  Nuttal, Thomas – 180

  Onager, Syrian – see Assyrian Onager

  O-O – see Hawaiian Oahu O-O

  Ox – see Aurochs

  Oxley, William – 84

  Packard, Dr. A. S. – 115

  Parkhurst, Anthonie – 102

  Passenger Pigeon – Ectopistes migratorius (1914) – 167

  Peake, Harold J. E. – 49

  Pease, Alfred Edward – 56

  Pernetty, Dom – 108

  Pigeon – see Passenger Pigeon

  Pliny the Elder – 43, 54, 93

  Polack, Joel S. – 65

  Polo, Marco – 27

  Porter, Admiral David – 73

  Quagga – Equus quagga quagga (1883) – 139

  Ridgeway, William – 148

  Roosevelt, Theodore – 136

  Rukh – see Elephant Bird

  Sea Cow – see Steller’s Sea Cow

  Shamanu – Canis lupus hodophilax (1904) – 77

  Sheridan, General Philip H. – 163

  Smith, George – 86

  Steller, Georg Wilhelm – 59, 60, 61

  Steller’s Sea Cow – Hydrodamalis gigas (1767) – 59

  Strachey, William – 168

  Swamphen – see Giant Swamphen

  Swenk, Myron H. – 116

  Tarpan – Equus feras feras (1887) – 47

  Tatton, James – 22

  Taylor, Reverend Richard – 68

  Temminck, Coenraad Jacob – 78, 129

  Thylacine – Thylacinus cynocephalus (1936) – 83

  Tiger, Bali – see Bali Tiger

  Tiger, Tasmanian – see Thylacine

  Toolache Wallaby – Wallabia greyi (1940) – 153

  Toppen, Max – 48

  Tortoise, Galapagos – see Floreana Galapagos Tortoise

  Tortoise, Mauritian – see Mauritian Tortoise

  Vancouver, Captain George – 128

  Vojnick, Baron Oscar – 95

  Wallaby, Toolache – see Toolache Wallaby

  Warrah Wolf-Fox – Disicyon australis (1876) – 107

  Wild Horse – see Tarpan

  Wild Ox – see Aurochs

  Williams, Reverend William – 66

  Wilson, Alexander – 134, 179

  Wolf, Falkland – see Warrah

  Wolf-Fox – see Warrah

  Wolf Japanese – see Shamanu

  Wolf, Tasmanian – see Thylacine

  Wood, William – 169

  Wood Jones, Professor F. – 155

  Woodpecker, Ivory-billed – see Ivory-billed Woodpecker

  Xenophon – 145

  Yakovlev, Petr – 62

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  Many thanks to Róisín Magill for her advice and assistance in the creation of this book. Thanks also to Peter Sanger of the Antigonish Review, Boris Castel of Queen’s Quarterly, Karen Mulhallen of Descant, and Charise Foster of CV2 – all of whom published excerpts from Nevermore in their magazines. And to the late Robert Wagner, who broadcast a sequence of these poems on CBC Radio; as well as to the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, and the Writer’s Trust George Woodcock Fund for their generous financial assistance.

  I also wish to acknowledge my editor Allan Briesmaster for his wise counsel and patience; my designer Julie McNeill for an inspired and creative transformation of the manuscript into this beautiful book; and to the editors and staff of Quattro Books: Beatriz Hausner, John Calabro, Luciano Iacobelli, Sonia Di Placido, Lisa Young and Maddy Curry, for their enthusiastic commitment to this publication.

  ILLUSTRATION CREDITS

  Maurice Wilson – pages 52, 82, 92, 106, 138, 144, 152, 158

  Mick Loates – pages 5, 58, 82, 100, 178

  Tim Bramfitt – pages 20, 26, 32, 64, 70, 132, 166

  Peter Hayman – pages 120, 126

  Augsburg Artist – page 40

  Richard Lydeckker – page 46

  John James Audubon – page 112

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  David Day was born and raised in Victoria, British Columbia. His first book The Cowichan (based on his timber camp journals) was published in 1975. In 1978, Day published A Tolkien Bestiary, the first of his six internationally best-selling books on the works of J. R. R. Tolkien. Day has travelled extensively, and lived in England, Greece and Spain. He currently lives in Toronto.

  David Day’s landmark book on animal extinction, the Doomsday Book of Animals – with an introduction by the Duke of Edinburgh – was selected in 1981 as a “Book of the Year” by Time Magazine, The Christian Science Monitor, The Los Angeles Times, The Observer, and New Scientist. This was followed by the Whale War (1987), Eco-Wars (1988), Encyclopedia of Vanished Species (1989), and Noah’s Choice (1990). Day has also been an environmental columnist for Britain’s Daily Mail, Evening Standard, Mail on Sunday, Sunday Times, and Punch Magazine. His Punch columns became the books True Tales of Environmental Madness in 1990 and The Complete Rhinoceros in 1994.

  In 1996 he wrote the Lost Animals British Channel Four and Japanese NHK TV series of one hundred five-minute documentaries on extinct species. It was narrated by the Oscar-winning actress Greta Scacchi, and later was translated into 20 languages. His Whale War was the basis of a
British ITV documentary.

  David Day has also written six illustrated books of animal stories and three illustrated books of animal poems for children. His Emperor’s Panda was runner-up for both the Governor General’s Award and the National Library Award. His CBC and National Magazine award-winning poems have been praised by both the Canadian poet Al Purdy and the British poet laureate Ted Hughes.

 

 

 


‹ Prev