The Badger: A Monograph

THE BADGER A MONOGRAPH BY ALFRED E. PEASE, M.P. AUTHOR OF THE CLEVELAND HOUNDS AS A TRENCHER-FED PACK, HORSE BREEDING FOR FARMERS, ETC.
LONDON LAWRENCE AND BULLEN, Ltd. 16, HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN, W.C. 1898 All rights reserved
Richard Clay & Sons, Limited, London & Bungay.
Hunting it is the noblest exercise, Makes men laborious, active, wise; Brings health and doth the spirits delight; It helps the hearing and the sight: It teacheth arts that never slip The memory—good horsemanship, Search, sharpness, courage, and defence, And chaseth all ill-habits thence. —Ben Jonson.
I do not know of the existence of any monograph on the Badger, ancient or modern, in English or any other language. Nor have I been able to find any adequate description in any work on natural history or British fauna of this the largest, and by no means the least interesting, of the real wild animals that still exist in England and Wales. So that, however unfitted I may be to write a scientific treatise on the last of the bear tribe that we have yet with us, I have ventured to think that my own observations and researches, with experiences of the chase of this troglodyte, may be of interest to lovers of the animal world, and to not a few sportsmen.
From my boyhood all wild animals have had for me an intense fascination, and though in later years my hunting-grounds have been for the most part in other countries and continents, and among larger game, I doubt if any of the beasts whose acquaintance I have thus made has been a source of greater interest to me than the badger. The charm of an animal for man, where the sporting is the master instinct, appears to be measured by his capacity to elude observation and defy pursuit; and the badger, judged by this test, is a charming creature. I may be mistaken, but to me it appears that the chase in its widest sense is one of the best schools for studying nature. Such knowledge as I have gained of the badger has been due to the indulgence of this brutal instinct, as it is profanely called, and from quiet observation. If the reader will spare a little time, I will show him the manner in which my observations are made, but I warn him that there is nothing scientific about them. I have no microscope and no dissecting-room.

Sir Alfred E. Pease
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Год издания

2011-07-24

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Badgers

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