[Gutenberg 41966] • Tales of a Poultry Farm
- Authors
- Pierson, Clara Dillingham
- Tags
- brothers and sisters -- juvenile fiction , human-animal relationships -- juvenile fiction , families -- juvenile fiction , poultry -- juvenile fiction , farm life -- juvenile fiction , farmers -- juvenile fiction , parent and child -- juvenile fiction
- Date
- 2013-02-01T23:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.75 MB
- Lang
- en
INTRODUCTION
My Dear Little Readers:—I have often wondered why there were not more stories written about Chickens and their friends, and now I am glad that there have been so few, for I have greatly enjoyed writing some for you. Did I ever tell you that I cared for my father’s Chickens when I was a little girl? That was one of my duties, and the most pleasant of all. It was not until I was older that I became acquainted with Ducks, Geese, and Turkeys, and I always wish that I might have lived on a poultry farm like the one of which I have written, for then I could have learned much more than I did.
You must not think that I understand no language but English. I learned Chicken-talk when I was very young; and in the fall,
when the Quails wander through the stubble-fields near my home, I have many visits with them, calling back and forth “Bob White! Bob White!” and other agreeable things which they like to hear. My little boys can talk exactly like Chickens, and sometimes they pretend that they are Chickens, while I talk Turkey to them.
When you have a chance, you must learn these languages. They are often very useful to one. My friend, who drives in his Hens by imitating the warning cry of a Cock, had been a teacher in a college for several years before he studied poultry-talk, and it helped him greatly.
You see, one must learn much outside of school, as well as inside, in order to be truly well educated. You should never look at poultry and say, “Why, they are only Hens!” or “Why, they are only Ducks!” Quite likely when they look at you they may be thinking, “Why, they are only boys!” or “Why, they are only girls!” Yet if you are gentle and care for them, you and they will learn to think a great deal of each other, and you will win new friends among the feathered people.
Your friend,
Clara D. Pierson.
Stanton, Michigan,
March 21, 1904.