With the hope that it may be the means of increasing the love of nature, and thereby adding to the joys of life, this little book is given to the public.
Laws for the preservation of birds and animals, more than any others, need behind them a sensitive public opinion. With this, the law itself is almost forgotten in its general observance, while without this support a breach of the law comes in time to take on something of virtue instead of crime. Whatever tends to spread the knowledge of nature, and consequently the love of it, makes it harder for the man who _kills_, either for the mere zest of it, for vanity or for purely commercial reasons, and thus each convert becomes, in a limited sense at least, a game warden.
To the lover of Nature, the whole animal and plant world is the quest.
Unlimited time can be spent in photographing insects, birds" nests and birds, endeavoring to catch and display the b.u.t.terfly on the particular plant from which it loves to extract the nectar, the bird"s nest in the tree or the bush in its natural surroundings, the old setter on a staunch point among the stubble; thus by pictorial notes reproducing various events in natural history and creating an interest in the study of botany, entomology, and ornithology--in fact, preserving all the conditions that make up the attraction for outdoor recreation, which the American people so much need. By this indirect method many come to be so instructed in the rudiments of nature that they are led to see in life a myriad of interesting things which they could not otherwise enjoy, and the book of Nature, hitherto sealed to the hurrying mult.i.tude, becomes an open volume to those who, turning aside from the rush of modern life, bring to its reading a sympathetic mind and an ear attuned to catch the melodious voices, and so,
"This our life, exempt from public haunts, Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks, Sermons in stones, and good in everything."
THE END.