The Nursery, February 1877, Vol. XXI. No. 2 by Various
The Story
Sorry—no epic plot with a hero and a dragon this time. The Nursery, February 1877, Vol. XXI. No. 2 is a small, monthly magazine for kids, written by a group of authors under the generic Various. Each issue packed poems, short stories, puzzles, and lessons. Theme of this one? Basic goodness and everyday wonder. You meet jam-eating boys who have to learn humility, little bird robbers who can’t outfly their conscience, and meadows that teach fine manners by accident. Think of it as a calm, pre-video-game child’s day in 19th-century America.
Why You Should Read It
Full disclosure: it takes maybe forty minutes to flip through. But here’s the charm—this book feels more like a window than a novel. You get firsthand nibbles into what parents thought was brain food back then. Patience? Yes. Self-control? You bet. Love of nature and friendly animals? Absolutely. There aren’t serious conflicts. Instead, there is a soft tension of innocence vs. playful mischief, reminding us of how easy childhood rules once were. The language is pure Victorian sweetness (and slightly formal by modern standards) even for a little reader, which adds authenticity. The mild, fine line illustrations are surprisingly witty—check out the raven trapped by leftovers. For adult readers, it’s quietly funny because you realize how much social training relied on imaginary punishments. Wild to see a culture’s soft soap disguised as story.
Final Verdict
Want something quick that feels like conversation with a polite, long-dead educator? This is for history lovers, nostalgia scavengers, and collectors of cheap time travel—and frankly, anyone who’s taking a break from dark headlines to remember when reading still involved plaster stars and chirping meadowlarks. Not for thrill seekers. Perfect for readers who shiver feeling delight while comparing their own kid’s moral tales to moral tales of yore. Very charming glitch in the library brain's lockstep. Two squirrel stories. No boring long bit.
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