| Prefatory Note N the preface to a 
		former volume1 I have endeavoured to trace the development of the modern 
		animal story and have indicated what appeared to me to be its tendency 
		and scope. It seems unnecessary to add anything here but a few words of 
		more personal application.
 The stories of which this volume is made up are avowedly fiction. They 
		are, at the same time, true, in that the material of which they are 
		moulded consists of facts, — facts as precise as painstaking observation 
		and anxious regard for truth can make them. Certain of the stories, of 
		course, are true literally. Literal truth may be attained by stories 
		which treat of a single incident, or of action so restricted as to lie 
		within the scope of a single observation. When, on the other hand, a 
		story follows the career of a wild creature of the wood or air or water 
		through wide intervals of time and space, it is obvious that the truth 
		of that story must be of a different kind. The complete picture which 
		such a story presents is built up from observation necessarily detached 
		and scattered; so that the utmost it can achieve as a whole is 
		consistency with truth. If a writer has, by temperament, any sympathetic 
		understanding of the wild kindreds; if he has any intimate knowledge of 
		their habits, with any sensitiveness to the infinite variation of their 
		personalities; and if he has chanced to live much among them during the 
		impressionable periods of his life, and so become saturated in their 
		atmosphere and their environment; — then he may hope to make his most 
		elaborate piece of animal biography not less true to nature than his 
		transcript of an* isolated fact. The present writer, having spent most 
		of his boyhood on the fringes of the forest, with few interests save 
		those which the forest afforded, may claim to have had the intimacies of 
		the wilderness as it were thrust upon him. The earliest enthusiasms 
		which he can recollect are connected with some of the furred or 
		feathered kindred; and the first thrills strong enough to leave a 
		lasting mark on his memory are those with which he used to follow — 
		furtive, apprehensive, expectant, breathlessly watchful — the lure of an 
		unknown trail.
 
 There is one more point which may seem to claim a word. A very 
		distinguished author — to whom all contemporary writers on nature are 
		indebted, and from whom it is only with the utmost diffidence that I 
		venture to dissent at all — has gently called me to account on the 
		charge of ascribing to my animals human motives and the mental processes 
		of man. The fact is, however, that this fault is one which I have been 
		at particular pains to guard against. The psychological processes of the 
		animals are so simple, so obvious, in comparison with those of man, 
		their actions flow so directly from their springs of impulse, that it 
		is, as a rule, an easy matter to infer the motives which are at any one 
		moment impelling them. In my desire to avoid alike the melodramatic, the 
		visionary, and the sentimental, I have studied to keep well within the 
		limits of safe inference. Where I may have seemed to state too 
		confidently the motives underlying the special action of this or that 
		animal, it will usually be found that the action itself is very fully 
		presented; and it will, I think, be further found that the motive which 
		I have here assumed affords the most reasonable, if not the only 
		reasonable, explanation of that action.
 
 C. G. D. R.
 New York, April, 1904.
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