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<h1>LIFE AMONG THE BUTTERFLIES</h1>
<h2>Vance Randolph</h2>
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<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>
<SPAN name="CHAPTER_I"><h2>CHAPTER I<br/> BOOKS ABOUT BUTTERFLIES</h2></SPAN>
<p>Many ancient and mediaeval writers dealt
with butterflies, but the first descriptions of
American species are found in the works of
Linnaeus, the great Swedish naturalist who
wrote about 1750, and invented the system
upon which all modern classification is based.
Pictures of several American butterflies were
published in 1759 by Charles Clerck, who had
studied with Linnaeus.</p>
<p>Johann Christian Fabricius, a professor at
the University of Kiel, published a few more
descriptions in 1796, and Peter Cramer, at
about the same time, brought out four large
volumes on the butterflies of Asia, Africa, and
the Americas. Most of these early books were
written in Latin, and are now so rare and expensive
that few American students have ever
seen them.</p>
<p>Jacob Hübner published his great volumes on
exotic butterflies in the early part of the nineteenth
century. This work was written in
German, and contained more than six hundred
colored plates, but a good copy now costs about
eight hundred dollars, and is of very little use
anyway.</p>
<p>In 1797 Sir James Edward Smith brought out
his two-volume work on <i>The Natural History of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>
the Rarer Lepiodopterous Insects of Georgia</i>,
the first books ever devoted exclusively to
North American species. This work is valuable
chiefly because it contains some drawings
by John Abbot, an Englishman who had actually
lived in Georgia and studied moths and
butterflies at first hand. Some of Abbot’s pictures
were later used in another work on
American lepidoptera by Dr. J. A. Boisduval of
Paris, and Major J. L. LeConte of New York,
who wrote in French about 1833. The books
of both Smith and Boisduval are now practically
unobtainable.</p>
<p>In 1841 the Biological Survey Commission of
Massachusetts published a report on injurious
insects by Dr. Thaddeus William Harris, which
described many New England butterflies. It
is now out of print, the last edition appearing
in 1862.</p>
<p>The Rev. John G. Harris brought together a
deal of information from the works of other
writers, and made a few minor observations of
his own; his compilation was published by the
Smithsonian Institution about 1860.</p>
<p>In 1868 William H. Edwards, an engineer
who lived in Coalburg, West Virginia, brought
out the first volume of his famous work, <i>The
Butterflies of North America</i>—probably the
best book on the subject ever written. Edwards
laboriously worked out the life-histories of many
species, and illustrated the work by careful
drawings and paintings of his own. Two more
volumes appeared later, the last one published
in 1897. <i>The Butterflies of North America</i> is
a magnificent piece of work, produced under all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>
sorts of handicaps, and will always be a classic
to American students of the subject.</p>
<p>In 1886 Dr. Samuel Hubbard Scudder published
his <i>Butterflies of New England</i> in three
volumes; this monograph is superbly illustrated,
and compares very favorably even with
the epoch-making work of Edwards. The works
of Edwards and Scudder are probably the best
books on butterflies ever written in any language,
and must always remain as monuments
of American industry and scholarship. Because
of the excessive cost of reproducing the colored
plates, however, they are both rather expensive;
Scudder’s work retailed at ninety dollars,
while Edward’s three volumes never sold
for less than a hundred and fifty, and even this
price, according to Dr. W. J. Holland, was below
the cost of manufacture.</p>
<p><i>The Butterflies of the Eastern United States</i>,
by G. H. French, appeared about 1886. It is a
good little book, and is still in common use, but
the illustrations are few and unsatisfactory.</p>
<p>In 1891 C. J. Maynard published a <i>Manual of
North American Butterflies</i> with ten colored
plates; the plates are very poor indeed, and the
text not much better.</p>
<p>In 1893 Dr. Samuel Hubbard Scudder, the author
of the three great volumes on the New
England species, brought out a little book called
<i>The Life of a Butterfly</i>. It is a brief and popular
account of the life-history of <i>Anosia plexippus</i>,
the Monarch or Milkweed butterfly,
which is common everywhere. Dr. Scudder’s
<i>Brief Guide to the Commoner Butterflies of the
Northern United States and Canada</i> also appeared
in 1893—a very useful little book.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span></p>
<p>In 1898 Dr. W. J. Holland, Director of the
Carnegie Museum at Pittsburgh, published his
famous <i>Butterfly Book</i>, in which he described
more than five hundred species, accompanying
each description with a sketch of the life-history
and habits in all cases where these details
were known. The magnificent colored photograph
plates are quite equal for all practical
purposes to the hand-colored drawings of Edwards
and Scudder, and enable the veriest tyro
to classify any of the commoner butterflies simply
by comparing them with the pictures. Besides
the detailed description of each species
there is a great deal of miscellaneous information
of interest to the general reader. Because
of the new process of reproducing photographs
in colors the book sold very cheaply—never
more than four or five dollars—and has
done more to arouse a popular interest in butterflies
than all other works together. Many of
the elementary books since 1898 are indebted
to Holland’s book, and the present booklet is no
exception.</p>
<p>In 1905 William Greenwood Wright of San
Francisco, published a book called <i>West Coast
Butterflies</i>. This work is illustrated with colored
plates nearly as good as Holland’s, and is
indispensable to those interested in California
species.</p>
<p>George B. Longstaff’s <i>Butterfly-Hunting in
Many Lands</i> appeared in 1912. The book itself
is of no great interest to North Americans, as
Longstaff spent only two weeks here, and came
no farther south than Montreal. Still, his
chapter of <i>Bionomic Notes</i> deals with butterflies<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>
in general and is well worth reading. The
best part of the book, however, is the appendix,
which contains E. A. Elliott’s translations of
Fritz Müller’s famous papers on scent-producing
organs in butterflies. The most important
of these had never been published except
in some obscure Portuguese journals,
practically inaccessible to the American student.</p>
<p>In 1916, encouraged by the success of his
<i>Butterfly Book</i>, Dr. Holland prepared a pocket
manual called the <i>Butterfly Guide</i>, with colored
figures representing some two hundred and
fifty species.</p>
<p>In 1917 there appeared Clarence M. Weed’s
<i>Butterflies Worth Knowing</i>, with thirty-two
plates in color. This is one of the best of the
smaller popular books, and contains a great
deal of valuable modern material, but is not to
be compared with Holland’s work.</p>
<p>No important popular books on butterflies
have appeared in recent years. The best single
work for the general reader is still Holland’s
<i>Butterfly Book</i>; those living west of the
Rockies should have Wright’s <i>West Coast Butterflies</i>
also.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span></p>
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