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Inmates of My House and Garden

Chapter 2: PREFACE.
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About This Book

A series of personal natural-history essays drawn from close observation of animals kept around the house and garden. Individual chapters treat small mammals, birds, reptiles and insects, household pests, and practical concerns such as feeding and housing, alongside chapters on teaching and methods of study. The narrative blends affectionate anecdote with careful behavioral description and practical detail, reporting specific encounters, care routines, and methods of observation. Throughout, the author reflects on the pleasures and responsibilities of studying living creatures, urging kind treatment and attentive, empirical observation of familiar wildlife.

PREFACE.

ENCOURAGED by the extremely kind reception which has been awarded to my previous books, and by the assurances, which have reached me from the most unexpected sources, that they have been found pleasant and profitable, I am venturing to offer to the same indulgent public a third collection of personal studies of natural history.

I recognise clearly that my little volumes have been received with so much favour, because, in spite of their simplicity and their lack of scientific importance, they are, so far as they go, original. That is to say, I have not much to give, but what I have is of my own gathering. I have not borrowed from other and cleverer writers, but have set down as plainly as I could what I have myself observed and experienced.

It is my privilege to be unusually well placed for the minute study of living creatures, and in that study I find a pleasure so intense that I long to attract others to the same well-spring of pleasure. Unpretending as are the chronicles of the inmates of my house and garden, they are scrupulously true, and every fact that a veracious observer records is a contribution, however small, to our general sum of knowledge.

It only remains to say that a few of these chapters have appeared in Nature Notes and in The Girl’s Own Paper. The rest are now printed for the first time.

ELIZA BRIGHTWEN.