The Burgess Bird Book for Children

The Burgess Bird Book for Children is a zoology book written in the form of a story featuring Peter Rabbit. Peter learns from his friend Jenny Wren all about the birds of North America, and we meet many of them in the Old Orchard, the Green Meadow, and the Green Forest.

This book was written to supply a definite need. Its preparation was undertaken at the urgent request of booksellers and others who have felt the lack of a satisfactory medium of introduction to bird life for little children. As such, and in no sense whatever as a competitor with the many excellent books on this subject, but rather to supplement these, this volume has been written.

Its primary purpose is to interest the little child in, and to make him acquainted with, those feathered friends he is most likely to see. Because there is no method of approach to the child mind equal to the story, this method of conveying information has been adopted. So far as I am aware the book is unique in this respect. In its preparation an earnest effort has been made to present as far as possible the important facts regarding the appearance, habits and characteristics of our feathered neighbors. It is intended to be at once a story book and an authoritative handbook. While it is intended for little children, it is hoped that children of larger growth may find in it much of both interest and helpfulness.

Mr. Louis Agassiz Fuertes, artist and naturalist, has marvelously supplemented such value as may be in the text by his wonderful drawings in full color. They were made especially for this volume and are so accurate, so true to life, that study of them will enable any one to identify the species shown. I am greatly indebted to Mr. Fuertes for his cooperation in the endeavor to make this book of real assistance to the beginner in the study of our native birds.

It is offered to the reader without apologies of any sort. It was written as a labor of love—love for little children and love for the birds. If as a result of it even a few children are led to a keener interest in and better understanding of our feathered friends, its purpose will have been accomplished.

By : Thornton W. Burgess (1874 - 1965)

00 - Preface



01 - Jenny Wren Arrives



02 - The Old Orchard Bully



03 - Jenny Has a Good Word for Some Sparrows



04 - Chippy, Sweetvoice, and Dotty



05 - Peter Learns Something He Hadn't Guessed



06 - An Old Friend In A New Home



07 - The Watchman of the Old Orchard



08 - Old Clothes and Old Houses



09 - Longbill and Teeter



10 - Redwing and Yellow Wing



11 - Drummers and Carpenters



12 - Some Unlikely Relatives



13 - More of the Blackbird Family



14 - Bob White and Carol the Meadow Lark



15 - A Swallow and One Who Isn't



16 - A Robber in the Old Orchard



17 - More Robbers



18 - Some Homes in the Green Forest



19 - A Maker of Thunder and a Friend in Black



20 - A Fisherman Robbed



21 - A Fishing Party



22 - Some Feathered Diggers



23 - Some Big Mouths



24 - The Warblers Arrive



25 - Three Cousins Quite Unlike



26 - Peter Gets a Lame Neck



27 - A New Friend and an Old One



28 - Peter Sees Rosebreast And Finds Redcoat



29 - The Constant Singers



30 - Jenny Wren's Cousins



31 - Voice of the Dusk



32 - Peter Saves a Friend and Learns Something



33 - A Royal Dresser and a Late Nester



34 - Mourner the Dove and Cuckoo



35 - A Butcher and a Hummer



36 - A Stranger and a Dandy



37 - Farewells and Welcomes



38 - Honker and Dippy Arrive



39 - Peter Discovers Two Old Friends



40 - Some Merry Seed Eaters



41 - More Friends Come With the Snow



42 - Peter Learns Something about Spooky



43 - Queer Feet and a Queerer Bill



44 - More Folks in Red



45 - Peter Sees Two Terrible Feathered Hunters

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