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The run

John Hay

The Run by John Hay is a work of nature writing and natural history written in the mid-20th century. It explores the spring migration of alewives on Cape Cod, weaving close observation with ecology, local history, and culture. Guided by a reflective narrator and figures such as a blunt, protective herring warden, it portrays the fish’s sea-to-pond journey, its perils, and its long ties to human communities. The opening of this work follows the narrator’s March vigil at Brewster’s Herring Run on Stony Brook, moving from raw “waiting weather” and a watchful muskrat to the first lone alewife and then the mass run. He introduces Harry Alexander, the warden, and shifts between scene and context: the anadromous life cycle, age and size patterns, and the fish’s historical place from Indigenous agriculture and Pilgrim survival to smokehouses, weirs, and today’s lobster-bait trade. Vivid set pieces show crowded ladders, fatal leaps at an impassable chute, and gulls thronging the valley, while chapters mix anatomy and senses with puzzling questions of homing, ocean whereabouts, and environmental cues. He traces the brackish plume at Paine’s Creek, witnesses night entries under gull-filled skies, then a brutal daylight hunt where hundreds of gulls intercept fish on the ebb, and concludes with the fish’s back-and-forth ascent at the estuary threshold as salt gives way to fresh. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The wilderness

Amy E. (Amy Eleanor) Mack

"The wilderness by Amy E. Mack" is a lyrical nature essay written in the early 20th century. Set in a suburban Australian patch of reclaimed garden now overrun by native bush, it celebrates urban wildness—its plants, birds, insects, and nocturnal animals—and argues for the quiet riches of leaving small sanctuaries where nature can thrive. The narrator lovingly traces the seasons in this bush-girt haven: fruit trees mingling with wattles, mistletoe, native cherry, and a beloved white cedar that invites birds to feast and sing. By day the place hums with life—cicadas, butterflies, dragonflies, ants, spiders—and a dazzling array of birds, from bright parrots and honeyeaters to butcher-birds, thrushes, cuckoos, and the gentle mistletoe-bird. At night bandicoots rustle, ring-tailed and big possums travel the treetops, and owls and mopokes hunt in silence, while after rain the creek swells and a comic, exuberant chorus of frogs begins. The piece closes as a quiet plea for keeping such patches wild, showing how even a small refuge in a suburb can shelter a rich, intimate world of living things. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Agricultural zoology

J. (Jan) Ritzema Bos

"Agricultural zoology" by J. Ritzema Bos is a scientific handbook written in the late 19th century. It surveys the animal kingdom with an emphasis on species that harm or help farming, offering clear identification, biology, and practical notes for students and working farmers. The opening of the book sets its purpose and audience in the author’s and translator’s prefaces, with Eleanor A. Ormerod’s introduction underscoring its practical value; a detailed contents list signals broad coverage from vertebrates to protozoa. It then explains zoological classification and binomial naming, followed by a concise primer on vertebrate anatomy and physiology (skeleton, muscles, nerves, digestion, circulation and respiration, reproduction including alternation of generations), and how heart structure differs across vertebrate classes. The text proceeds into applied accounts of mammals relevant to agriculture: cats, dogs, foxes, and mustelids (marten, polecat/ferret, stoat, weasel, mink, otter, badger) with balanced notes on damage versus benefits; insect-eaters (shrews, the mole, hedgehog) largely presented as allies; bats as valuable nocturnal insect hunters; and rodents (hares and rabbits, then mice and rats) with concise identification and their typical harms. This opening portion concludes mid-discussion of mouse and rat species and their agricultural impact. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The garden yard : A handbook of intensive farming

Bolton Hall

"The Garden Yard: A Handbook of Intensive Farming" by Bolton Hall is a practical agricultural handbook written in the early 20th century. It explains how ordinary people can turn small plots, backyards, or suburban lots into productive, profitable garden farms through intensive cultivation. The focus is on practical methods—soil preparation, crop planning, seed selection, pest control, marketing, and co-operative selling—aimed at making a good living near towns and cities. The opening of this handbook sets a clear, down-to-earth tone: the preface promises plain advice for busy, non-scientific readers and urges learning by doing. An introduction by N. O. Nelson champions farm life, proposes colony purchases of land, and strongly advocates co-operation for buying, marketing, and credit. Early chapters then outline the core method: grow garden crops near markets; think first about market access; favor ownership over renting; keep buildings simple; and use brains more than brawn. The text explains soil and subsoil, moisture and mulch, humus and tilth; stresses fertility through green manures and legumes; advises on choosing a location with access to manure, water, and buyers; and covers seed quality, simple germination tests, and practical plant-breeding by selection. It summarizes plant needs (water, air, light, warmth, lime), the value of crop rotation, and the control of weeds, insects, and diseases, before showing how to restore soil with humus, even touching on lawn care. At the start of the working plan, it recommends a modest plot, fall plowing, testing for soil acidity, applying manure wisely, and planting in long rows for easy wheel-hoe cultivation. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Tiervater Brehm : Seine Forschungsreisen : Ein Gedenkblatt zum 100. Geburtstag

Kurt Floericke

"Tiervater Brehm : Seine Forschungsreisen : Ein Gedenkblatt zum 100. Geburtstag." by Dr. Kurt Floericke is a biographical account written in the early 20th century. It commemorates the life and journeys of the naturalist Alfred Edmund Brehm, highlighting his African and European expeditions, his vivid field observations, and his role in popularizing zoology through works like the Illustrated Animal Life. The focus is on travel, adventure, and scientific discovery, woven with character sketches and cultural encounters. The opening of this volume first sketches Brehm’s background: his upbringing under the famed ornithologist Christian Ludwig Brehm, early talent, decisive Sudan expedition with Baron von Müller, later studies, travels, and authorship. A vivid scene in the Renthendorf parsonage shows Müller recruiting the young Brehm amid a technical debate on wagtail subspecies, leading to his departure for Africa. The narrative then follows Nile voyages with scrapes and misunderstandings, a near-fatal crocodile episode, and the dramatic, first-ever European passage of the Wadi Halfa cataracts. Hardships in Kordofan—malaria, thirst, hostile misreadings, and the searing Samum—contrast with rich natural-history observing, oases life, and a homesick Christmas night punctuated by wild elephants’ trumpeting. Brief solo forays bring illness and tension with Müller over collecting results. In Cairo and Khartum, the story moves through sunstroke, an earthquake, sharp portraits of Bedouin virtue, and a makeshift menagerie—centered on Brehm’s tame lioness Bachida—whose antics with a baboon and a formidable marabou reveal both humor and the habits of animals in captivity. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Straußenpolitik : Neue Tierfabeln

Th. Zell

"Straußenpolitik : Neue Tierfabeln" by Th. Zell is a collection of popular zoological essays written in the early 20th century. The work challenges common “animal fables” and anthropomorphic assumptions, replacing them with evidence-based explanations from natural history and field observation. It examines the adaptive logic behind animal form and behavior, from hippos and giraffes to predators, domesticates, and birds, arguing that utility, ecology, and risk—not human-like motives—drive what animals do. The tone is skeptical yet accessible, appealing to readers who enjoy myth-busting about the natural world. The opening of the book sets the program: a brief foreword promises a continuation of earlier myth critiques, then the author refutes “improvers” who claim nature botched the hippo and giraffe, showing why bulk, long legs, and browsing diets are advantageous and why zoo feeding misleads. He distinguishes shame from guilt, arguing animals likely lack shame but may show guilt or awareness, illustrated with dogs, goats, and an ape understanding consequences, while reinterpreting feline “embarrassment” as hunting limits or habit. He explains predators’ caution toward humans as rational risk-avoidance given our unpredictable weapons, not awe of upright posture, and notes how hunger or infirmity yields man-eaters. He disputes that only herd animals can be domesticated, contrasting tameable solitary species (lynx, cheetah) with dangerous or impractical herd species, and stresses danger, temperament, and human utility as the real factors. He recasts equine “nervousness” as justified vigilance of fleeing herbivores shaped by predation, illustrated by zebras, deer startling at sudden events, and the contrasting boldness of defensive bovines. Finally, he questions claims that animals “admire themselves” in mirrors, using a titmouse at a mirror to argue recognition is misread, before the discussion cuts off. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

How and what to grow in a kitchen garden of one acre

E. D. Darlington

"How and what to grow in a kitchen garden of one acre" by Darlington and Moll is a practical gardening manual written in the late 19th century. It lays out a complete plan for designing, planting, and managing a one-acre kitchen garden, from site selection and soil preparation to tool choice, hotbeds, and crop-by-crop instructions, including small fruits. The guide emphasizes efficient layout, rotation and succession, and reliable seed selection, and it recommends specific varieties suited to home use and market quality. The opening of the guide presents an editor’s preface explaining that two prize essays were expanded and illustrated to form a thorough, practical handbook, followed by detailed instructions on how to situate a garden (near buildings, south-facing, well-drained, sheltered from north winds), enrich heavy soils with fall manuring, and plan an east–west, near-square layout with headlands, rotations, and records. A full diagram assigns rows to grapes, brambles, strawberries, asparagus, herbs, melons, peas (followed by celery), sweet corn (followed by turnips), pole beans, cucumbers and squash, tomatoes, potatoes with interplanted late cabbage, and more. The text urges ordering reliable, often northern-grown seed early, then explains building and managing hotbeds and cold frames (dimensions, manure-heated beds, temperature cues, sowing schedules), and outlines essential tools and methods for quick, thorough cultivation. It then begins crop-specific guidance—covering asparagus, beans, beets, cabbages, cauliflower, carrots, musk melons, and celery—with concise directions on spacing, succession, pest control, harvesting cues, and storage methods such as pits, frames, and cellars, plus recommended varieties for earliness, yield, and flavor. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Webster's practical forestry : A popular handbook on the rearing and growth of trees for profit or ornament

Angus D. Webster

"Webster''s practical forestry : A popular handbook on the rearing and growth of…." by A. D. Webster is a practical forestry handbook written in the early 20th century. It focuses on profitable and ornamental tree growing in Britain, blending policy advocacy with step-by-step guidance for establishing nurseries, plantations, and timber production. The work emphasizes species choice, site preparation, and cultivation methods aimed at both commercial returns and landscape value. The opening of the handbook frames forestry as a wartime and postwar necessity, arguing that foreign timber shortages demand large-scale, state-led afforestation of waste lands, with compact blocks to ensure continuous supply and to justify transport, and proposing this work as employment for returning and convalescent service members. It outlines costs, suitable regions, and the economic case for government ownership and planning. The text then turns practical, explaining how to collect, dry, store, and sow seeds (especially conifer cones), offering seed counts and species-by-species timing; how to propagate by seed, cuttings, layers, grafts, and buds; and how to plan and run a home nursery with seasonal tasks. Next it details forming plantations: setting boundaries, laying out roads and fences, draining and levelling, clearing vegetation, pitting vs. notch planting, timing by site conditions, and avoiding too-deep planting. Finally, it begins its list of the best economic trees, describing growth conditions, timber qualities, and uses for oak, ash, beech, sycamore, Spanish chestnut, elm, alder, birch, and the cricket-bat willow. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Winter

Jac. P. (Jacobus Pieter) Thijsse

"Winter" by Jac. P. Thijsse is an illustrated natural history guide written in the early 20th century. The volume closes a seasonal cycle and explores how winter reshapes the Dutch landscape, from dunes and shores to gardens, parks, and forests. It blends clear identification notes with practical advice on observing birds, plants, fungi, and tracks, and even on welcoming wildlife to the garden. This is for curious walkers, gardeners, and young naturalists who enjoy learning by looking. The opening of the book sets the scene with a foreword that frames this volume as the capstone of a seasonal series, then slips into a lively tour of early winter. It describes the first great leaf-fall after autumn storms, children’s play, and the patient wait for true frost, before guiding the reader to late mushrooms and earthstars, and to beachcombing after gales that wash up kittiwakes, auks, puffins, and gannets. Indoors and at garden walls, it highlights winter flowers—chrysanthemums, primulas, cyclamens, a dry-blooming arum, forced bulbs—and outdoor bloomers like winter jasmine and hellebores, plus holly and berry shrubs for birds. It teaches how to tell box from true conifers, and how to distinguish Thujopsis, cypress, thuja, cryptomeria, and various pines and spruces, then shifts onto the ice: skating, peering through clear ice at life below, providing water and food for garden birds, and watching hawks hunt. Tracks in snow lead to a portrait of winter mammals—rabbits, hares, deer, foxes, otter, and mustelids—balancing their harms and benefits. With a January thaw, the focus turns to lichens and true mosses, the beauty of winter seedheads, gall wasps at alder buds, and the alder’s catkins and “cones,” before a bustling chorus of winter flocks—siskins, long-tailed tits, great and blue tits, marsh/coal/crested tits, treecreepers, wrens, and nuthatches—plus occasional rarities like waxwings and nutcrackers. The excerpt closes as crossbills set to work prising open conifer cones. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Zonder geweer op jacht

William J. (William Joseph) Long

"Zonder geweer op jacht" by William J. Long is a collection of nature essays written in the early 20th century. It celebrates observing wildlife without gun or camera, blending fieldcraft, natural history, and quiet philosophy to reveal the daily lives and behaviors of animals in the North American wilderness. The opening of this collection lays out the author’s credo of “hunting without a gun” and then illustrates it through vivid encounters: deer using a lakeshore “playground” of running circles and quick turns; a vigilant big buck wordlessly ending the game; a child calmly accepted by curious deer; close paddles among moose, including a massive bull with velvet antlers; and a twilight scene where ducks lift off at a silent communal signal. Next comes a kingfisher “school,” with parents guarding a riverside burrow, enforcing fishing territories, and teaching fledglings to dive in a stocked practice pool before the young turn their lessons into playful contests. A portrait of the wildcat (bobcat) follows, stressing its unpredictability, patient fishing from logs, rumored whisker-lure tactics, and a striking anecdote of a stolen creel-net found high in a fir with the trapped thief inside. The section closes by turning to animal self‑medication, noting how people—from Native traditions to early Greek medicine—learned remedies by watching what sick animals sought in the wild. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Disease in captive wild mammals and birds : incidence, description, comparison

Herbert Fox

"Disease in captive wild mammals and birds : incidence, description, comparison." by Herbert Fox, M.D. is a scientific monograph written in the early 20th century. It compiles systematic autopsies of zoo-kept mammals and birds to measure how often diseases occur, describe their pathology, and compare patterns across taxonomic orders, with practical guidance for zoo medicine, husbandry, and comparative pathology. The opening of the volume presents a foreword describing the Philadelphia Zoological Garden’s routine postmortems since the early 1900s and their dividends—improved hygiene and disinfection, halted outbreaks, and dramatic reductions in tuberculosis in monkeys and spiropteriasis in parrots—while reflecting on disease in wild versus captive settings and on captivity’s stresses (diet, climate, fear, boredom, loneliness, reproductive challenges). The Introduction sets the scope and method: thousands of standardized autopsies organized by order to track incidence and describe lesions, alongside candid limits of clinical diagnosis and the cautions of extrapolating captive data to the wild. It surveys management factors (diet and vitamins, housing and temperature, flooring), the roles of parasites and epizootics, key differences in avian versus mammalian inflammatory responses, and broad longevity patterns, and it acknowledges the laboratory team and the taxonomic framework. The section closes with classification and autopsy counts and begins the heart-disease chapter, outlining how degenerations, inflammations, and enlargement (muscle bulk versus chamber size) will be compared across taxa. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Het paard : in zijne natuurlijke ontwikkeling

Wilhelm Bölsche

"Het paard : in zijne natuurlijke ontwikkeling" by Wilhelm Bölsche is a popular scientific treatise written in the early 20th century. It explores the natural history and evolution of the horse, tracing its lineage from small, multi‑toed ancestors to the modern, single‑toed runner, and examines its close symbiosis with humans as a domesticated animal. Expect a blend of anatomy, paleontology, and behavioral insight that connects fossil evidence, comparative anatomy, and cultural history to explain what makes the horse unique. The opening of this work sets out its purpose: to tell the full evolutionary story of the horse, beginning with tiny Eocene ancestors and linking them to living forms and domestic breeds. It recaps the rise of mammals from reptile‑like forebears through monotremes and marsupials to early placental groups, highlighting a pivotal Eocene fauna (the “Cernays” forms) from which hoofed animals emerge. The text defines domestication as a lasting symbiosis rather than mere captivity, illustrating the idea with classic plant–fungus and ant–aphid partnerships before applying it to horses, dogs, and livestock. A clear, step‑by‑step anatomical comparison explains how the horse stands on a single middle toe, with splint bones as vestiges of lost digits, and how this design achieves speed, endurance, and load‑bearing. It then sketches the horse’s instincts and signal‑sensitivity (including the “Clever Hans” case) and turns to the fossil record, from Cuvier’s early finds to the rich American deposits, noting that true horses once ranged widely in the Americas before disappearing there prior to European contact. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Blonde duinen

Jac. P. (Jacobus Pieter) Thijsse

Blonde duinen by Jac. P. Thijsse is an illustrated popular natural history book written in the early 20th century. It offers guided rambles through the Dutch coastal dunes, using vivid observation and approachable explanations to reveal how plants, animals, and landscapes fit together. Expect seasonal field sketches that blend storytelling with fieldcraft, encouraging readers—especially the young—to notice, collect, and care about the living world. The opening of the work sets out a friendly preface: these “nature albums” are meant to put good color plates and real outdoor experience within easy reach, so that young people learn nature by seeing. It quickly shifts into lively dune vignettes: a teacher’s cheerful “rabbit hunt” with pupils for skulls becomes a lesson in snares, scavengers, and rabbit life (burrows, frosty signs, rampant breeding, evening grazing). A birch-dale chapter follows with bark and fungus, then moths and larvae as masters of disguise (buff-tip, peppered moth, emerald), plus birds such as nightingale, song thrush, willow warbler, and a few deft plant notes (violets’ self-fertilizing flowers, garlic mustard with orange-tip). A June evening piece captures flowers closing and opening, moth- and hawk-moth pollination, and the arrival of bats, toads, hedgehogs, shrews, nightjars, grasshopper warblers, and stone-curlews. A hot June afternoon rounds it out with hedgerow and dune blooms, June beetles in roses, leafcutter bees fashioning brood cells, climbing bryony, showy ragwort and mullein feeders, and small passerines like tree pipit and whinchat—set against the brood-parasitic cuckoo. Overall, these first chapters read as gently didactic rambles that model how to notice, name, and connect dune life. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Alpine flora of the Canadian Rocky Mountains

Stewardson Brown

"Alpine flora of the Canadian Rocky Mountains" by Stewardson Brown is a scientific publication written in the early 20th century. It is an illustrated botanical manual and field guide to the alpine and subalpine plants of the Canadian Rockies and Selkirks, with identification keys, concise descriptions, habitats, and notes on distribution. The work focuses on plants along the Canadian Pacific Railway corridor between Banff and Glacier, and is designed for naturalists and travelers seeking to recognize the region’s trees, shrubs, ferns, and wildflowers. The opening of the work presents a preface outlining scope and audience, distinguishing the drier, cold-adapted flora of the Rockies from the moisture-loving Selkirks, and noting that grasses, sedges, and willows are omitted to keep the guide practical; it also explains the arrangement by families, with keys and numerous new illustrations. A glossary and a comprehensive family key follow, leading into detailed species accounts that begin with ferns and their allies (e.g., moonworts Botrychium, maidenhair Adiantum, bracken, horsetails Equisetum, club-mosses Lycopodium, Selaginella), then conifers and other woody plants (whitebark pine, Douglas-fir, mountain hemlock, Alberta spruce, junipers, giant cedar, yew). Subsequent sections introduce early-blooming monocots and allies, such as western skunk cabbage, bunch-flowers (Veratrum, Zygadenus, Tofieldia), lilies (mountain-lily, snow lily), and lily-of-the-valley relatives (Clintonia, false Solomon’s seal, twisted-stalk, Kruhsea), each with habitat, elevation, and flowering times, and frequent notes on whether a plant is more typical of the Rockies or Selkirks. The text is systematic, field-oriented, and richly illustrated at the outset. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The giant sequoia : An account of the history and characteristics of the big trees of California

Rodney Sydes Ellsworth

"The giant sequoia : An account of the history and characteristics of the big…." by Rodney Sydes Ellsworth is a natural history and historical account written in the early 20th century. It blends science, travelogue, and advocacy to explain the giant sequoia and coast redwood—their deep antiquity, form, range, and the human history entwined with them, especially in the Mariposa Grove. Readers can expect vivid portraits of famous trees, clear distinctions between the two Sequoia species, accounts of the Sierra Nevada’s making, and a strong conservation message about threats, vandalism, and protection. The opening of this work sets out a popular-yet-faithful synthesis of scientific and literary sources, then traces the sequoia’s fossil-deep lineage, its survival through volcanic cataclysms and glaciations, and its present restriction to California’s coast and Sierra belts. It contrasts the coast redwood’s soaring height and immense timber yields with the giant sequoia’s unmatched girth and longevity, and maps their modern groves—highlighting the Mariposa and the vast southern forests like the Giant Forest. A substantial section recounts Galen Clark’s life: his discovery and early guiding at Wawona, the building of trails and roads, the 1864 Yosemite and Mariposa Grove grant, his long guardianship, fire protection and brush clearing, and the criticism and praise that followed, ending with the commissioners’ formal tribute. The narrative then tours the Mariposa Grove itself—its easy access, compact grandeur, and named specimens (such as the Grizzly Giant, the exceptionally tall Mark Twain Tree, and the symmetrically flawless Alabama Tree)—while explaining fire scars, hollow “chimney” trunks, and great fallen logs like the Fallen Monarch. It condemns wasteful lumbering and exhibition vandalism in other groves but notes that Mariposa was spared, aside from the famous vehicle passages cut through the Wawona and California trees. The section closes with emblematic scenes like the intertwined “Faithful Couple” and the glowing “Sun Worshippers,” underscoring the grove’s majesty and the case for its preservation. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Nature's year : The seasons of Cape Cod

John Hay

"Nature's year : The seasons of Cape Cod" by John Hay is a collection of nature essays written in the mid-20th century. Through month-by-month observations on Cape Cod, the work blends close natural history with reflective meditation on weather, wildlife, and the uneasy overlap between human bustle and the living shore. Expect vivid portraits of birds, insects, tides, and woods as the seasons turn, with themes of migration, adaptation, and attention. The opening of this work follows July through late October as the narrator arrives amid summer traffic and tragedy, then retreats to a hilltop home to attune himself to the Cape’s microclimates and small lives—from a wood peewee’s hunting and periwinkles on tidal rocks to a moon snail’s drill and an afternoon under sail. August dwells on insect abundance and night music (including the temperature-telling snowy tree cricket), a companionable walk with an oven bird, and a wind-swept visit to Crow Pasture where a crippled gull and vigilant terns frame lessons in necessity. Detailed scenes at Paine’s Creek and Monomoy show young terns learning to fish and gather for migration, alongside shorebirds busy on the flats, while September’s clear winds, alewife fry, and dispersing fledglings replace the departing tourists. October turns inward to questions of home and navigation, a venerable box turtle, first frosts, teaching children on a shore ramble, and the season’s colors—mushrooms, Indian pipes, and reddening oaks—before colder winds, squirrels, and shrews signal the harsher change ahead. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Australian insects

Walter W. (Walter Wilson) Froggatt

"Australian insects" by Walter W. Froggatt is a scientific textbook written in the early 20th century. It surveys Australia’s insect fauna in a clear, engaging way while retaining scholarly rigor, with emphasis on classification, morphology, distribution, and practical economic entomology. Intended for both general readers and students, it proceeds systematically through major orders, illustrating distinctive Australian species and their habits. The opening of the volume sets out the aim to marry popular exposition with scientific accuracy, noting the historical difficulty of scattered, obscure descriptions and the rise of field-based, economically useful entomology. It then outlines rules of classification and naming, comments on Australia’s distinctive, climate-shaped fauna and its affinities, and explains insect structure, metamorphosis, respiration, and senses, followed by a brief review of the sparse local fossil record. The systematic accounts begin with Aptera (springtails and silverfish), then Orthoptera, covering earwigs and cockroaches, and giving an extended, illustrated treatment of termites—their castes, royal chamber, mound forms (including “magnetic” north–south mounds), and key genera. Brief sections introduce web-spinners newly recorded from Australia, book lice, and predatory mantids with their egg masses, before turning to phasmids with striking leaf- and stick-mimicry. The opening closes as it enters the short-horned grasshoppers (Acridiidae), describing their anatomy, oviposition, sound-making, and exemplifying the section with the yellow-winged locust. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Bog-trotting for orchids

Grace Greylock Niles

"Bog-trotting for orchids" by Grace Greylock Niles is an illustrated nature travelogue written in the early 20th century. It follows an avid orchid hunter across the bogs, streams, and hills of the Hoosac Valley, blending engaging field notes with local geology, folklore, and a strong conservation ethic. Readers can expect intimate portraits of lady’s slippers and other wildflowers, vivid scenes of Berkshire and Bennington landscapes, and reflective episodes with the author’s trusty hound and curious local children. The opening of this work sets the scope and mood: a preface locates the Hoosac Valley within the Taconic Mountains, notes the richness of North American orchids, and frames the excursions as seasonal searches for both orchids and their companion plants. The first chapters trace the author’s route from New York through New Haven to North Adams, with early field stops featuring walking fern, azaleas, and the dramatic setting of Mount Greylock and the Hoosac Tunnel. She then undertakes strenuous “bog-trotting” along Ball Brook and the Bogs of Etchowog, finding pink and yellow lady’s slippers, pitcher plants and sundews, and naming a lush ravine the Glen of Comus, while describing the hazards of quaking peat and “dead holes.” A local girl leads to the rare Ram’s-Head lady’s slipper, prompting close botanical description; a later episode laments children stripping blooms and the trade in medicinal roots, segueing into concise notes on orchid pollination from Gray and Darwin. The section closes with the first pale blooms of the queenly showy lady’s slipper, sightings of green and white Habenaria, a search for the showy orchis, and observations on the variable yellow Cypripediums. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The book of the cat

Frances Simpson

"The book of the cat" by Frances Simpson is an illustrated compendium for cat fanciers written in the early 20th century. It explores the history, breeds, care, exhibiting, and anatomy of domestic cats, supported by many plates and photographs. Aimed at enthusiasts and breeders, it blends practical guidance with cultural background and profiles of notable catteries and clubs. The opening of the work presents extensive contents and plate lists, followed by an introduction in which Simpson outlines her goal of a readable, experience-based handbook, acknowledges expert contributors (from veterinary care to foreign and American cats, Maine cats, and anatomy), and quotes Harrison Weir’s warm endorsement. Chapter I, “Cats of the Past,” surveys origin myths and the cat’s prominence in ancient Egypt (Pasht, Bubastes, mummification), notes scattered classical references, and contrasts medieval superstition and cruelty with later esteem from writers, artists, and heraldry; it also touches on folklore, nursery rhymes, and art, highlighting Madame Ronner, Eugène Lambert, and Louis Wain. At the start of Chapter II, the text lists cat names across languages, revisits beliefs like “nine lives” with anecdotes of feline endurance and homing, emphasizes the cat’s usefulness in public institutions, mentions the cats’-meat trade and comic asides (census and ping-pong cat), and introduces the organized fancy with a roll of clubs culminating in the National Cat Club’s leadership and aims. (This is an automatically generated summary.)