by Clara Dillingham Pierson (Author)
Clara Dillingham Pierson's Among the Meadow People is a charming collection of classic children's nature stories about the birds, insects, and small creatures that live in the meadow. Written for young readers, the book gives each creature a lively personality while keeping its habits rooted in close observation of the natural world. Grasshoppers, bees, butterflies, spiders, birds, and other meadow dwellers appear not as abstract lessons, but as little lives unfolding in a shared landscape of work, danger, curiosity, play, and change.
The stories are gentle, educational, and quietly moral without feeling heavy-handed. Pierson uses the everyday activity of meadow creatures to introduce children to animal behaviour, seasonal life, friendship, responsibility, patience, and the consequences of foolishness or pride. Project Gutenberg describes the book as a late nineteenth-century collection of children's stories about insects and meadow creatures, combining entertainment with gentle moral lessons for young readers.
For families, teachers, homeschoolers, libraries, and readers of vintage children's books, Among the Meadow People remains an appealing example of nature writing for children from an earlier age. It belongs with classic animal stories and gentle educational fiction: observant, wholesome, readable aloud, and designed to make children look more closely at the small living world around them.
Number of Pages: 84
Dimensions: 0.2 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: October 22, 2008