just knocked out; they will begin to lick the first drops of honey which trickle on to the board, and will be led up by the scent of that which you have poured into the combs, to mix themselves with the other Bees.
"They will take to one another when they have helped each other to clean off the sugar with their tongues. The fact of their helping each other in their troubles makes them friends, just as it does grown men, and children, who are small men and women."—p. 68.The entire detail of management is thus unfolded and explained in plain unadorned language; and you cannot resist the conviction that the author is well acquainted with the subject on which he is writing. This cannot be said of many authors of bee-books: these works are for the most part such wretched compilations, that one scarcely ever by chance meets with a paragraph in them worth the trouble of reading. Mr. Cotton, like the rest, has drawn abundantly from other sources, yet it is all fairly done; the original and copied parts of his book stand out distinctly from each other; there is no appropriation of another man's property without acknowledgment: all is fair and above-board even to the "Prelude of Mottoes," extending through five pages; a rare selection in truth, and a fair quiz on a prevailing passion.
We must give one quotation from More's 'England's Interest,'[1] reprinted in 'My Bee-Book;' it includes Queen Elizabeth's receipt for making metheglin, and the author's encomium on that highly prized and ancient beverage.
- ↑ 'England's Interest: or, the Gentleman and Farmers Friend,' &c. By Sir J. More. London, Printed and Sold by J. How, at the Seven Stars in Talbot-Court, in Grace-Church-Street. 1707.