Birds and all Nature, Vol. IV, No 3, September 1898

Birds and all Nature, Vol. IV, No 3, September 1898
In the dying days of the Victorian era, when the natural world still held mysteries for patient observers, this September 1898 installment of "Birds and All Nature" arrives like a small gift from the fields and forests. The magazine bridges science and poetry, offering readers brief, elegant descriptions of birds, animals, and other natural wonders alongside delicate color plates that bring the living world to static page. Here is nature study as Victorians knew it: part scientific inquiry, part spiritual communion, part aesthetic delight. The poems scattered throughout capture the era's reverence for creation, while the factual entries show a world still cataloguing and marveling at the diversity of life. For modern readers seeking a window into turn-of-the-century American nature writing, or for anyone who has ever watched a bird outside their window and wanted to know its name, this periodical offers a quiet, verdant pleasure. It is a relic of an age when people still had time to watch, to wonder, and to record what they saw.
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J. M. Smallheer, Larry Wilson, J. Alan Brown, Lois Beachy Yoder +6 more


























