“How many are so regardless,—take so little note of what passes around 
them, that they would go to their graves without discovering half the beauties 
of Nature, if no one unfolded its leaves for them; thus losing some of the 
purest pleasures the embodied soul is capable of enjoying, for want of an 
interpreter. Such interpreters, while they open to many a new and inex- 
haustible source of pleasure, are of great utility; and we must love and 
venerate the man who employs his talents in thus increasing the amount of 
human happiness.” 
Epwarp DovusBLEepay. 
i ef th 
“ Reader, our companionship ends here. Should the author have persuaded 
thee to follow in his footsteps, to tread the paths which he has trodden, to 
gaze with an inquiring and delighted eye on those things which he has gazed 
on,—it is enough. He bids thee affectionately—farewell |” 
Epwarp Newmay, in ‘Grammar of Entomology.’ 
= E 
“ Read his true nature in his works.” 
