THE OOLOGIST. 



61 



John Burroughs 



in his introduction to 



The Nature 

 Library 



say?: "To add to the 

 resources of one's life 

 —think how much that 

 means!. To add to 

 things that make us 

 more at home in the 

 world; that help guard 

 us against ennui and 

 stagnation;that invest thecountry with new 

 interest and enticement; that make every 

 walk in the fields or woods an excursion 

 into a land of unexhausted treasures; that 

 make the returning seasons fill us with 

 expectation and delight; that make every 

 rod of ground like the page of a book, in 

 which new and strange things may be 

 read; in short those things that help keep 

 us fresh and sane and young, and make 

 us immune to the strife and fever of the 

 world. These are the words of the "Na- 

 ture Poet," and admirably do they express 

 what the ten superb volumes of THE NA- 

 TURE LIBRARY do for their possessors. Every day adds largely to the number of 

 homes, schools, and libraries now possessing the work, and each new owner becomes 

 a more enthusiastic learner in Nature's School. You will be interested in our descrip- 

 tive booklet. May we send you one of them, with 

 particulars of our present offer. 



DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. 



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 and far more interesting." 



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