wiH¥iNMHfll^HK^Bw«H HH H gra&HS ■ M SNBmH8i m MHUMHfl «—»w^mHIH T UMI MM M Mi . ,-v - .#' "5 .•s tt. r * . "fe, - "^ / \ v '/ U' # ^ -, ■»;■ w '. "-. .%* "^ V 4 : - ,o ■ o, O ' > I B ^ %4 % '3, ' * ."n ' N \^ : %^ o V \ s ,A "><> ■v rj. ■VI, A , s °o <- *J HER FATHER'S CONSENT. BEST RECITATIONS READINGS, DECLAMATIONS AND PLAYS Original Compositions and Choice Selections of the Best Literature CONTAINING ALSO THE MOST COMPLETE AND MODERN RULES FOR VOICE AND PHYSICAL CULTURE FOR HOME, SCHOOL AND ALL PUBLIC AND SOCIAL ENTERTAINMENTS WRITTEN, COMPILED AND ARRANGED BY RICHARD LINTHICUM THE WELL-KNOWN AUTHOR, JOURNALIST AND CRITIC OF LITERATURE AND PLAYS WITH INTRODUCTION, SPECIAL SELECTIONS AND LESSON TALKS MARVIN VICTOR HINSHAW OF THE CELEBRATED HlNSHAW SCHOOL OF ELOCUTION, ORATORY AND MUSIC Sumptuous I y Illustrated te> i t h 'Beautiful Full Tage Photo Pictures from Life ^ THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, Two Copies Received JUN. 19 1902 Copyuksmt enthy CLASS &/XXC. No. Its 461 13 INDEX .* A Bird Story 352 A Birthday Address 33 A Boy's Wish 377 A Christmas Pantomime 287 A Dream 136 A Farmer Father's Philosophy 131 A Father's Advice to His Son . : 317 A Gentleman 316 A Good Country For All 4 1 A Grove of Historic Trees 180 A Home Where God Is 283 A Human Question Point 90 A Legend of Bregenz 407 A Little Boy's Essay on Kats 351 A Love Song 131 A Memorial Day Exercise 50 A Newsboy in Church 410 A New Year's Talk 46 A Pageant of the Months 153 A Peach Pie 179 A Picture 136 A Private Rehearsal 367 A Race for Life 236 A Sermon In Flowers 354 A Small Boy's Advice 377 A Song for Your Birthday 103 A String of Bird's Eggs 356 A Tale of Whoa 428 A Tenement House Guest 405 A Tragedy of the Plains 402 A Woman's Rights Meeting 195 A Wonderful Discovery 118 About Firecrackers 86 About Ready to Show Off 106 Abraham Brought to Bay 58 Absalom 449 Address for Decoration Day 52 Ain't He Cute? 416 Always Consult Your Wife 311 An April Welcome 355 An Uncomplaining Man 327 Arathusa's Brother Jack 99 Arizony Ray 331 Aunty Doleful Cheers the Sick 364 Baby on the Train 113 Babykin, Boykin no Baby's Opinions 122 Backbiters Bitten 183 Barbara Frietchie 70 Barcarolle 369 Battle Hymn of the Republic 71 Be Careful What You Say 427 Be in Earnest 97 Beautiful Annabel Lee 252 Because She Loved Him 130 Bedtime 328 Ben Hur's Chariot Race 221 Bill and Joe 251 Bill Smith's Courtship 124 Birth of the New South 260 Blaine's Oration on Garfield 257 Bob-o'-link 353 Borrowing Trouble 420 Boys Wanted 112 Brevities 305 Burial Under Fire 69 Cabin Philosophy 340 Calling a Boy in the Morning 117 Canadian Camping Song 314 Casey at the Bat 306 Cassius Against Caesar 233 Cato On Immortality 459 Caudle's Shirt Buttons 115 Charity's Meal 442 Children's Alphabet 371 Chorus of the Flowers 335 Conkling's Eulogy of Grant 259 Consolation 151 Contented Jim 319 Contentment Better Than Riches 433 Couldn't Take the Hint 94 Courtship at the Huskin' Bee 145 Dare and Do 378 Death-bed of Benedict Arnold 459 Death of Little Jo 444 Death of Little Nell 280 De Bugle on De Hill 82 Decoration Day 41 De Cote-House In De Sky 147 Der Drummer 150 Dominion Day 315 Don't 91 "Don't Cheer, Boys; They're Dying" • 81 Drink and Die 267 Drinking A Home 271 Easter 422 Easter Flowers 351 Easter Morning 377 Evangeline on the Prairie 133 Evening at the Farm 98 Exercise in Pronunciation 60 Farmer Ben's Theory 128 Faro Bill's Sermon 60 Fire In the Woods 224 Flag of the Rainbow 79 Forget Me Not 354 Forty Years Ago 248 Fox and Geese 218 Garfield's Tribute to His Fallen Comrades. .. 37 George Washington's Little Hatchet 87 Gettysburg, 1895 78 Going Home To-day ' 379 Good-night, Papa 268 Got Stripes Down His Legs 326 Grandfather's Story 72 Grandma's Knitting Story 397 Grandma's Wedding Day 398 Grant's Heritage 262 Greeting 107 Grind Your Axe In the Morning ■ 421 Flans' Registered Letter 148 Have Only Good Words for All 104 Have You Planted a Tree 43 Henry V. at Harfleur 240 Her First Party 418 Hiawatha 293 Hiawatha's Wooing 59 His Best Prayer 331 INDEX. 15 Hobson and His Chosen Seven. 81 Hobson's Choice 202 Hopper and Bee 357 How Did Dis Yere World Git Yere? 141 How Ruby Played 229 How the Children Are Taught 105 How to Act Shadow Pictures 288 I Have Drank My Last Glass 270 If in If I Were a Flower 352 Immortality , 284 In Liquor 375 In Manila Bay 447 In Many Lands 376 It's My Nature 420 Jack and the Rabbit 93 Jest 'Fore Christmas 39 Jim 336 Jim Bludso, of "The Prairie Belle" 151 Joe 337 John Anderson 246 Katrina's Visit to New York 143 Keep a Stiff Upper Lip 339 Kindness and Cruelty 178 Kit Carson's Ride 322 Kitty in School 100 Labor 49 Larrie O'Dee 416 Leave Old Glory As It Is 449 Lessons From Scripture Flowers 332 Like Other Men 313 Limpy Tim 440 Lincoln on Slavery 258 Lincoln's Address at Gettysburg 256 Little Boy Blue 91 Little Breeches 149 Little By Little 90 Little Dot 108 Little Orphant Annie 95 Little Red Riding Hood 168 Lorraine Lorree. . r. 313 Love's Railway 299 Love's Year 132 Lying In China 422 Mabel and Her Mother 96 Macbeth to the Dagger 228 Making Success 380 Mammy's Hushaby 150 Marching Song of the Rough Riders 82 Mark Twain as a Farmer 413 McKinley's Eulogy of Lincoln 255 Measuring the Baby » 456 Memorial Day 38 Memory 427 Minnie Had a Little Lamb 376 Misled by the Moon 143 Mistletoe 40 Money Musk 300 Morn on the Mountain 355 Mother and Poet 461 Mother Earth and the May Queen 197 Mother's Punkin' Pies 305 Motion Song With the Hands 375 Mr. Meek's Dinner 341 Mr. Pinchem's Clerk 177 Mr. Spoopendyke's Share 57 Mrs. Rabbit's School 89 My Bob Sled 430 My Dear True-Love 373 My First Recitation 392 My Little Sister 378 Nathan Hale 77 Nearer Home 282 Nobody's Child 455 O, Captain, My Captain 426 Old Bob's Life Insurance 117 Old Ironsides 71 Old Mart and Me 307 On the Skaguay Trail 314 On Time — A Farce 186 One, Two, Three 434 Only a Boy 90 Only a Lock of Soft Gold Hair 132 Only Nation With a Birthday 417 Opening A/ldress no Othello's Apology 232 Our Heroic Dead 40 Our Lost Treasure 129 Over the River 252 Over the Telephone 344 Papa's Sum in Fractions 55 Partnership 373 Pat Dolan's Wedding 161 Pat's Excelsior 1 16 Patience Works Wonders 100 Pauline Pauloona 435 Pitcher or Jug 431 Platonic 134 Playing Lovers 129 Poor Adam 374 President Lincoln's Favorite Poem 241 Pretty Groups for Children 298 Quebec 80 Queer English Language 121 Recessional '. 283 Regulas to the Romans 457 Rhoomatiz or Suthin' Else 362 Rock Me to Sleep, Mother 246 Rocked in the Cradle of the Deep 249 Roger and 1 250 Running a Race 374 Sample Rooms 276 Sand 312 Saved By a Song 274 Saving Mother 321 Seth Peters' Report of Daniel Webster's Speech 234 Seven Ages of Man 228 Shake Und Der Vidder 142 She Didn't Want Much 99 Simon Soggs' Thanksgiving 38 Sister Sallie Jones. , . . .424 Somebody 326 Sometime, Somewhere 281 Spoopendyke's Bicycle 67 Sylvy Hook on Clubs and Societies 359 Taking the Census 174 Temperance Speech 269 Thanksgiving in Many Lands 35 That's Our Baby 104 The Aged Prisoner 452 The American Boy 89 The Babies' Bedtime 372 The Bad Little Boys 85 The Bald-Headed Tyrant 86 The Best Sewing Machine 330 16 INDEX. The Bitterness of Childhood 375 The Blue and the Gray 35 The Bootblack 454 The Boy and the Boot 378 The Boy to the Schoolmaster 328 The Brakeman at Church 61 The Bridal Pledge 265 The Broomstick Drill 285 The Brownie's Christmas 43 The Builders 423 The Cat's Bath 107 The Character and Work of Gladstone 261 The Child and the Star 108 The Child Musician 458 The Christmas Ball 371 The Christian Gladiator 388 The Church Choir w 123 The Closing Year 349 The Coming Millions 338 The Countersign Was Mary 451 The Courtin' 429 The "Coward" in Battle 76 The Creeds of the Bells 279 The Dead Doll 113 The Delinquent Subscriber 401 The Dignity of Labor 42 The Doll Queen 92 The Dell's Funeral 92 The Doll's Lesson 85 The Drummer Boy's Burial 396 The Dying Boy 441 The Dying Soldier 391 The Eagle Screams 52 The Eggs That Never Hatch 318 The Engine Driver's Story 238 The Exile of Erin 242 The Fading Leaf 439 The Farmer's Life 96 The Five Little Chickens 104 The Flying Dutchman 308 The Foolish Little Maiden 415 The Fountain of Tears 130 The Girl Behind the Man Behind the Gun... 140 The Good Old Time Religion 426 The Harvest Queen and Her Maidens 194 The Hole in His Pocket 87 The Hurricane 253 The Huskin' 139 The Hypochondriac 361 The Last of the Choir 386 The Little German Mother 384 The Little Hunchback 97 The Little Old Log House Where We Were Born 301 The Little Rid Hin 146 The Little Speaker 108 The Man That Married 317 The Man Who Knows It All 428 The Manger of Bethlehem 37 The Masquerade 365 The May Pole 290 The Meaning of the American Flag 41 The Men Who Lose 310 The Might of Love 404 The Minuet 292 The Mites In the Cheese 431 The Name of Kate 122 The Naughty Boy ,,,,, ,..,.112 The Old Arm Chair 249 The Old Farm Kitchen 31 The Old Oaken Bucket 247 That Old Red Sunbonnet 425 The Old Year and the New 46 The Rail Fence 417 The Regular Army Man 74 The Resettlement of Arcadia 63 The Rough Rider 299 The Ruler Iv the Town 147 The Seasons 106 The Shipwreck 385 The Singer's Climax 446 The Small Boy's Troubles 103 The Soldier's Wife 448 The Song of the Gun 75 The Squirrel's Lesson 114 The Streams of Life 310 The Street of By-and-By 111 The Tables Turned 433 The Three Holidays 45 The Torpedo Boat 79 The True Gentleman 319 The True Story of Little Boy Blue 109 The Two Glasses 272 The Two Great Flags 76 The Unhappy Home 166 The Usual Way 133 The Village Blacksmith 245 The Volunteer Organist 409 The Volunteer's Uniform 346 The Worn Wedding Ring 135 The Wreck of the Hesperus 387 The Young Seamstress 419 Their Preferences 377 There Is No Death 282 There Is No Unbelief 284 They All Sang Annie Laurie 325 They've Stopped Selling Liquor in Town. .. .273 Three for the Tots 376 Through Grandfather's Spectacles 334 To a Mouse In a Trap 302 Too Late for the Train 303 Tramp, Tramp, Tramp 275 Trekking 80 Two Women's Lives 327 Valedictory 94 Valedictories 53 Vat I Call Him 433 Watching Baby As It Sleeps 114 Watching the New Year In 36 Water 432 Washington's Birthday 453 What About the Hired Man 333 What Little Things Can Do 105 When I Built the Cabin 56 When Mamma Cleans House 93 When Pa Begins to Shave 103 When School Days Are Ended 215 When the Spanish War Broke Out 75 Where He Did It 374 Which Loved Her Best 418 Whistling in Heaven 237 Why Betty Didn't Laugh 420 Why He Wouldn't Sell the Farm 394 Why She Didn't Stay in the Poorhouse 320 Willie's Signal for Jesus 383 Yawcob Strauss 152 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Her Father's Consent Frontispiece The Sweetest Story Ever Told n A Plea for Forgiveness 12 Dignity 2I Ridicule 2I Awkward Imitation 22 Discernment 22 Gracefulness 23 The Awkward Salute 23 Surprise 24 Coquetry 24 Cheerfulness 25 Sauciness 25 Fearlessness 26 Fear 26 Anxiety 27 Reproach 27 Innocent Coyness 28 Wonderment 28 The Ideal Poise 29 The Soldier's Farewell 30 Telling Mother 47 Love's Doubts and Fears 48 From the Absent One 65 The Unseen Threat 66 Barbara Frietchie 83 Grandfather's Story 84 Wide Awake 101 A Day Dream 101 The Donkey Express 102 "I Wonder If It's a Valentine?" 119 The Telltale Letter 120 The Proposal 137 "My Love is Like a Red, Red Rose !" 138 The Maypole Dance 155 Children's Drill 156 A Struggle For Life 189 A Dramatic Scene From Darkest Africa 190 A Token of Love 207 The Duet 208 "I Am Innocent; Before Heaven I Declare It!" ! 225 A Dark Plot 226 Sharing A Sorrow 243 The Pledge of Love and Honor 244 The Unhappy Home 277 Fairer Than the Lily 278 Enraptured 278 Our Little Artist (Plate I) 295 Our Little Artist (Plate II) 296 The Letter to Papa (Plate I) 329 The Letter to Papa (Plate II) 330 "When Grandma Danced the Minuet" 347 "Guard !" 348 The First Party 381 The Christmas Ball 382 "Don't Go. For My Sake, Don't Go" 399 The Listeners 400 17 Exercises for tbe Bob^ t5* c5* t5* 1. With body erect and hands at sides, move the head to right and left, and for- ward and backward ; cultivates the muscles of the neck. 2. With hands on the hips, move the upper part of the body to right and left, and forward and backward; this cultivates the muscles of the chest and back. 3. Close the hands, extend the arms in front, and bring the hands together behind the back; repeat at least twenty times. 4. Stand erect, with arms straight at the sides ; move the arms outward from the sides, and elevate them, bringing the hands above the head; repeat at least twenty times. 5. Hold the right arm out horizontally, palm of hand upward ; double the left arm, the tips of the fingers resting on the shoul- der; then stretch out the left arm, at the same time doubling the right arm and placing the tips of the fingers on the right shoulder ; repeat, and then make the move- ments with both arms simultaneously. 6. Holding the arms straight, swing them with a rotary motion, thrusting them forward als they are elevated and back- ward as they are lowered, bringing them to the sides, and then repeat. 7. Lift the hands from the sides to the shoulders, then raise the arms at full length above the head, and also extend them hori- zontally, dropping them at the sides; re- peat. 8. Standing erect, with the hands on the hips, lower the body, bending the knees, the weight resting on the toes, and rise; repeat at least fifteen times, but not too fast. 9. Placing the hands on the hips, right leg forward and left leg slightly bent; thrust the body forward, thus straighten- ing the left leg and bending the right ; then placing the left leg forward, repeat move- ments. 10. With the body bent forward, closed hands between the knees, raise the body and elevate the hands above the head, tak- ing care to keep the arms straight; repeat. 11. Place the hands on the front side of the hips, bend the body forward, and then rise to an erect position, at the same time throwing the head backward; repeat. 12. Steady yourself with one hand on a chair; place the other hand on the hip and swing the leg forward across the other ; then backward; repeat and then swing the other leg in like manner. 13. Steady yourself with one hand on a chair, place the other hand on the hip, and swing the leg forward and backward ; re- peat, and then swing the other leg in like manner. 14. Stretch the body forward, placing the hands on the bottom of a chair; then straighten the arms and raise the body. This must not be repeated so many times as to render the muscles sore and stiff. 15. Extend the arms forward at full length, palms downward ; then move the hands backward and forward as far as pos- sible; this renders the fingers and muscles of the wrist pliant. 16. Stand greet with hands on the hips and light weight on the head ; then rise on the toes and fall. 17. Extend the arms slightly from the sides, close the hands and then rotate them; this cultivates the muscles of the arms. 18 ftbe Hrt of Elocution How to Read and Recite Correctly with Rules for the Cultivation of the Voice t^> £& tgfr ELOCUTION is the art of reading and speaking correctly. Its rules relate chiefly to the management of the voice in the expression of thought and emotion. The vocal qualifications, necessary to enable the reader or speaker to bring out the sense and sentiment of discourse in a pleasing and impressive manner, are: First, a clear, full, resonant voice. Second, a perfectly distinct, and correct articulation. Third, such a control of the voice, as to be able to vary its modulations at pleasure. Ignorance of the right way of using the lungs and the larynx, in speaking, reading, singing, has caused more cases of bronchi- tis and pulmonary consumption among stu- dents, vocalists, clergymen and other public speakers, than all other causes combined. The right use of the breathing apparatus, in connection with the exercise of the voice, ought, therefore, to be the first sub- ject to which the attention of the student, of Elocution is called. Before the pupil is permitted to read a sentence, he must be taught, not by precept, but by example, how to manage the breath while exercising the voice. The person thus trained will speak, read or sing, in a clear, full, natural tone, and will grow up, in a great measure, free from the worst faults and defects in Elocution. BREATHING EXERCISE. Stand or sit erect ; keep the head up and the chest expanded; throw the shoulders well back; place the hands upon the hips, with the fingers pressing upon the abdo- men, and the thumbs extending backward ; inhale the breath slowly, until the lungs are fully inflated, retaining the breath for a few moments, then breathing it out as slowly as it was taken in. Let the chest rise and fall freely at every inspiration, and take care not to make the slightest aspirate sound, in taking or giving out the breath. Continue to take in and throw out the breath with increasing rapidity, until you can instantly inflate, and, as suddenly, empty the lungs. Repeat this exercise sev- eral times a day, and continue it as long as it is unattended with dizziness or other un- pleasant feelings. EXPRESSION". Expression includes the rules and exer- cise which relate to the management of the voice, the look, gesture and action, in the expression, thought, sentiment and passion. Exercises in articulation should be prac- ticed until a good control of the voice has been obtained. A good articulation consists in giving to each element in a syllable its due propor- tion of sound and correct expression, so that the ear can readily distinguish each word, and every syllable that is uttered. A full pure tone of voice, and a good articulation, constitute the basis of every other excellence in reading and oratory. TESTING THE VOICE. To obtain a full, deep, rich tone, the stu- dent must resort to every conceivable ex- pedient for modifying the voice. When- 19 20 THE ART OF ELOCUTION. ever he utters a sound that is very pleasing to the ear, or that impresses his mind as being very striking or significant, he should repeat it, until he can command it without difficulty at his pleasure. The most significant, impressive and pleasing tones of the voice can not be taught, or even described; the pupil, if he ever learns them, must find them out for himself, by careful, persevering practice. In short, he must try every plan, and resort to every appliance that he can command, in his endeavors to perfect himself in the art of reading and speaking with ease, ele- gance and impressive effect. STYLES OF ELOCUTION". One of the most important matters to be considered before engaging in a reading or declamatory exercise, is the style or man- ner in which the piece should be given. In Argument, the style must be char- acterized by directness and earnestness. In Description, the speaker must proceed in precisely the same manner that he would if he were actually describing the thing spoken of. In Narration, he must proceed as if nar- rating some part of his own experience. In Persuasion, he must use those tones, looks and gestures only, which he knows are appropriate to persuasion. In Exhortation, he must appeal, beseech and implore, as the case may require. In pieces of a mixed character, he must vary the style to suit the sentiment and character of the passage. When the reader understands the prin- ciples and rules which have been discussed, sufficiently well to be able to give a cor- rect, practical exemplification of each of them, he ought to select passages for him- self, suitable as exercises in cadence, pause, parenthesis, antithesis, climax, amplifica- tion, repetition and transition; also in pitch, force, stress, movement, quantity, in personation, in style, and in every rule in modulation and expression. He must especially practice in every kind of stress, and with every degree of force, from the most subdued whisper to the shout of enthusiastic exultation. GENERAL RULES FOR THE CULTIVA- TION OF THE VOICE. The only basis upon which a full, firm, pure tone of voice can be formed, is deep and copious breathing. To do this the chest must be well thrown out, the head erect, and the throat and mouth opened so wide that the voice will meet with no ob- struction in its course. The great object in commencing any sys- tematic course of vocal culture, ought to be to deepen and strengthen the voice. To accomplish this, the student must, in his vocal exercises, stretch the muscles about the throat and the root of the tongue, and those that regulate the action of the lower jaw, so as to form the voice lower down in the throat than he is in the habit of doing. COMPASS OF THE VOICE. To increase the compass of the voice, de- claim short passages which require intense force on a high pitch. The pupil will dis- cover, after the voice has been thus taxed to its highest capabilities, that it will per- form its office with surprisingly greater facility and ease on the natural key, and in a lower pitch than he could reach be- fore. The most contracted and superficial voice may soon be made strong and flexible by this kind of exercise ; and it cannot be im- proved in any other way. If your voice is feeble, practice singing, shouting and de- claiming with the utmost force, at the top of the voice, whenever opportunity pre- sents itself, and it will soon acquire suffi- cient strength and resonance. THE ART OF ELOCUTION. 21 Gestures Gesture, to be appropriate and impres- sive, must be natural. When gesture has its origin in the mere caprice of the speaker, it will appear artificial and out of place. The speaker who is unable to manage his Dignity voice, is never easy and graceful in his gestures. If the voice is exercised on too high a key, or in a harsh, aspirated, guttural, or impure tone of any kind, the attitude will be stiff and awkward, and the gestures broken, irregular and difficult. But the speaker who has a good command of his voice, if he understands his subject, and is self-possessed, will speak with ease ; and his gesticulation, if not always graceful, will be appropriate and expressive. Before the pupil can be easy and natural in his action and gesticulation, he must have perfect control of his voice. Any at- tempt, therefore, which he may give to the cultivation of gesture and action, before he has obtained a good control of his voice, will be labor spent in vain. Stand or sit erect, in an easy and grace- ful position, and hold the book in the left hand on a level with the face. Look from your book to the audience, as often and as long at a time as you can, without missing the place. Make but few gestures, and then only when you are looking at your audi- ence. To gesticulate while your eye is resting upon the book is not only inappro- priate, but ridiculous. In didactic or unimpassioned discourse, gesticulation is not necessary, farther than occasionally to slightly change the position and movement of the hands, or to move the head and body sufficiently to look at Ridicule 22 THE ART OF ELOCUTION. your audience from right to left. In dis- course of this character the gestures and movements should be executed slowly, and as gracefully as possible. In stating un- important particulars, or speaking about matters which require a quiet, narrative style, the right arm and hand should be chiefly used. There are three positions in which the hand and arm may rest, and, by slowly changing from one to the other of these positions, stiffness and rigidity in the gest- ures of the arm will be avoided. First : Let the arm hang naturally by the side. Second : Let the hand rest upon the hip, the elbow thrown well backward. Awkward Imitation Discernment Third : Let it rest between the buttons of your vest, on your bosom. In all these positions the muscleo of the arm and hand must be relaxed, so that the attitude may be, at once, easy and natural. Descriptive gestures are those used in pointing out or describing objects. The pupil will soon acquire skill in the use of these, by practicing in accordance with the following instructions : Pronounce the names of a few objects near you, and, as you mention the name of THE ART OF ELOCUTION. 23 Gracefulness each, extend the arm and point the fore- finger or the open hand, in the direction of the object, completing the gesture the mo- ment you utter the accented syllable of the name of the word : thus, i. The gentleman on my right, the lady on my left, the vacant chair before me, the books, maps and pictures all around me. 2. High, Low, Left, Right : on pro- nouncing the word HIGH, raise the hand gracefully above the head ; on LOW, let it fall slowly and gracefully ; LEFT, let the arm and hand be extended to the left ; on the word RIGHT, to the right. 3. Before commencing the gesture al- ways let the eye glance in the direction of the object, concerning which you are about to speak. 4. Do not move the arm and hand to the intended position by the shortest course, but describe a waving line, and let the motion be rather slow, until the position is almost reached, then let the hand move quickly to its place, in completing the gesture. The Awkward Salute 24 THE ART OF ELOCUTION. Surprise When the student has obtained a toler- able command over his arms, hands and lower limbs, let him select for himself short passages suitable as exercises in descriptive gesture and action. i. Their swords flashed in front, While their plumes waved behind. 2. His throne is on the mountain top, His fields the boundless air, And hoary hills, that proudly prop The skies, his dwelling are. 3. Mountains above, earth's, ocean's plain below. 4. Death in the front, destruction in the rear. 5. See through this air, this ocean, and this earth, All matter quick, and bursting into birth. The hanging down of the head denotes shame or grief. The holding of it up, pride or courage. To nod forward implies assent. To toss the head back, dissent. The inclination of the head implies diffi- dence or languor. The head is averted, in dislike or horror. It leans forward, in attention. Coquetry THE ART OF ELOCUTION. 25 THE EYES. The eyes are raised in prayer. They weep, in sorrow. They burn, in anger. They are downcast or averted, in shame or grief. They are cast on vacancy, in thought. They are cast in various directions, in doubt and anxiety. THE ARMS. The placing of the hand on the head, indicates pain and distress. Cheerfulness Sauciness On the eyes, shame or sorrow. On the hips, an injunction of silence. On the breast, an appeal to conscience. The hand is waved or flourished, in joy or contempt. Both hands are held supine, or they are applied, or clasped in prayer. Both are held prone, in blessing. They are clasped, or wrung in affliction. They are held forward, and received, in friendship. THE BODY. The body held erect, indicates steadi- ness and courage. 2G THE ART OF ELOCUTION. Fearlessness Thrown back, pride. Stooping forward, condescension or com- passion. Bending, reverence or respect. Prostration, the utmost humility or abasement. THE LOWER LIMBS. The firm position of the lower limbs, sig- nifies courage or obstinacy. Bended knees indicate timidity, or weak- ness. The lower limbs advance, in desire or courage. They retire, in aversion or fear. Start, in terror. Stamp, in authority or anger. Kneel, in submission or prayer. These are a few of the simple gestures which may be termed significant. Fear THE ART OF ELOCUTION. 27 VOCAL EXERCISE PREPARATORY TO READING OR SPEAKING IN PUBLIC. A beneficial influence is exerted on the voice, by the most vigorous and sustained exercises upon the elementary sounds, and by reading and declaiming with' the utmost force consistent with purity of tone, imme- diately before retiring for the night. The organs of speech are thus rendered flexible for exercise on the succeeding day. Even an interval of only an hour or two, between the preliminary exercise and the subsequent effort, will, in most cases, afford the organs of speech time to rest, and resume their natural state. Anxiety Reproach The best course that can be pursued to prepare the voice for speaking within a short time, is to repeat all the elementary sounds several times in succession ; then declaim a few select passages; first, with ordinary force, in the middle pitch; then, progressively elevate the pitch and increase the force and the rate of utterance; lastly, go over them two or three times in the deepest and lowest tone you can reach. 28 THE ART OF ELOCUTION. Innocent Coyness HOW TO ACQUIRE A CONTROL OF THE VOICE IN EITHER HIGH OR LOW KEY. By exercising the voice with great force, for a short time in a low key — paradoxical as it may seem — you will immediately afterward be able to speak with much greater ease upon a high key ; and by ex- ercising the voice with great force in a very high pitch, you will be able within a short time afterward, to read or speak, with greater ease than before, on a low or very low pitch. NATURAL PITCH OE VOICE. "Every person has some pitch of voice in which he converses, sings and speaks with greater effect and facility than in any other. It should be an object of constant solicitude, with every person who desires to become a good speaker cr reader, to find what is the natural pitch of his voice. Wonderment THE IDEAL POISE. THE SOLDIER'S FAREWELL. National Readings and Declamations Selections suitable for New Year's, Lincoln's Birthday, Washington's Birthday, Easter, Arbor Day, Decoration Day, Flag Day, Fourth of July, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas. •* THE OLD FARM KITCHEN. IN an old New England kitchen, where a warm wood fire burned bright, Sat honest Farmer Ketcham and his wife one winter night. The wind without was wailing, with a wild and woeful sound, And the fleecy folds of the drifting snow lay deep upon the ground; But what cared Farmer Ketcham for the tumult out of doors, For he had foddered the cattle and done the other chores. And snug in the chimney-corner in his easy-chair he sat, Silently smoking his old clay pipe and pooring the purring cat; While plying her knitting-needles, his wife rocked to and fro, Humming a hymn and dreaming a dream of the long ago. Over the old-time fire-place a rusty musket hung, And a score of strings of apples from the smoky ceiling swung. While, back in the dingy corner, the tall clock ticked away, And looked like the sagging farmhouse, fast falling to decay. The knitting fell from the woman's hands, the old man turned about, He took the pipe from his mouth and slowly knocked the ashes out; And, after thinking a moment, he said, with a solemn air — " 'Tis Christmas Eve, but the stockin's don't hang by the chimbley there." The woman sighed, and then replied, in a sad and faltering tone, "The years hev come and the years hev gone, and we are ag'in alone, An', I hev jest been thinkin' o' a Christ- mas long ago, When the winders were frosted over an' the ground wus white with snow; When we sat in the chimbley-corner, by the firelight's cheerful gleam, When our lives were full o' promise, an' the futur' but a dream, When all the rest o' our folks hed gone away to bed, An' we sat an' looked an' I listened to the whispered words you said, Till home from Benson's store came rollickin' brother John, An' a peekin' thro' the winder, saw what wus agoin' on; Then how the neighbors tattled an' talked all over town, Till you an' I were married an' quietly settled down. "While a rummagin' thro' the cobwebs in the garret t'other day, I found a pile o' broken toys in a corner stowed away; An' a lot o' leetle worn out boots a layin' in a heap, Ez they used to lay on the kitchen floor 3i 32 NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. when the boys hed gone to sleep. I looked at the worn-out trundle-bed, an' the cradle long laid by, An' a leanin' ag'in the chimbley there, I couldn't help but cry — Fur the faces o' my children came back to me once more, An' I almost heard the patter o' their feet upon the floor. I tho't o' the'r happy voices an' the leetle prayers they said, Ez they used to gather round me when 'twas time to go to bed. "Of all the earthly treasures we prize in this world below, The ones we love the fondest are the first to fade and go. Of all the beautiful children that came to our fireside, The one we loved most dearly wus our leetle girl that died. How calm in her leetle coffin she looked in her last repose, Ez sweet ez the fairest lily, ez pure ez a tuberose. An' I can well remember the sadness o' the day, When my heart wus well nigh broken ez they carried her away. "The oldest o' our children wus a proud and han'some boy, He wus his father's fondest hope an' his mother's pride an' joy, I used to play with his chubby hands an' kiss his leetle feet, An' wonder ef ever a babe wus born more beautiful an' sweet; An' many a night, by candle light, when he was snug in bed, I've patched his leetle clo's with weary hands an' an achin' head. We sent him away to college; he did un- commonly well, Till he went to live in the city, an' married a city belle — O' all our earthly trials; o' all our worldly care; The cold neglect o' a thankless child is the hardest o' all to bear. His wife "is a woman with only high notions in her head; She couldn't well knit a stockin', nor bake a loaf of bread. 'She plays on the grand pianner, nor works with her lily hands, An' she talks in a foreign lingo that no one understands; Whenever I go to see her, I tell you it makes me smile To see how it hurts her feelin's to look at my country style. "The youngest o' our livin' boys I never could understand; He didn't take to le'rnin' no more'n a fish to land, He wus wayward an' hard to govern, not altogether bad, He wus firm, an' proud, an' set in his ways, but not a vicious lad. An' somehow we couldn't keep him quite under our control, But I know that he had an honest heart, an' a true an' noble soul, An' a mother's prayers will go with him wherever he may be ; God keep him safe an' bring him home in His good time to me. "I miss our children's voices, fur all hev gone away — One hez gone to the better land, an' the rest hev gone astray. I wonder ef up in Heaven, where all is bright an' fair, Ef we will meet our children an' they will love us there?" NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. 33 There was a rap at the outside door, the old folks gave a start; The woman sprang from her rocking-chair with a nutter at her heart; The door swung widely open and banged against the wall, And into the farmhouse kitchen strode a stranger dark and tall. The mother looked at his bearded face a moment in surprise; She saw a quiver about his mouth and a glad look in his eyes; She lifted up her hands to Heaven, she uttered a cry of joy, And bowed her white head lovingly on the breast of her wayward boy. The red flame glowed upon the hearth, the beech logs cracked and steamed; And on the floor and time-worn walls the firelight glowed and gleamed ; That old New England kitchen had never been more bright Than it was to Farmer Ketcham and his wife that winter night. — From "Original Recitations," by Eugene I. Hall. By special permission of the Author. A BIRTHDAY ADDRESS. (Suitable for recitation GENTLEMEN :— Since nobody wishes to die everybody must be glad he was born. It is a good thing to have a birthday, but its pleasure is increased when your friends in this substantial way indi- cate their joy that you came into the world. Artemus Ward said: "It would have been ten dollars in the pocket of Jefferson Davis if he had never been born." But the only limitation upon natal festivities is the necessity of making a speech. The difficulty increases when the occasion has called together such a good company. It is an indisputable fact that the whole people of the United States were never so powerful, or so prosperous, or collectively and individually possessed so much in op- portunity, in liberty, in education, in em- ployment, in wages, in men who from nothing have become powers in the com- munity, and boys who from poverty have secured education and attained compe- tence, as to-day. A young man who can pay a dollar for a dinner and do no in- justice to his family has started success- at any birthday party.) fully in his career. There is scarcely one now present who cannot remember the dif- ficulty, the anxieties and the work of se- curing his first surplus dollar. Everyone of you from that dollar has, because of American conditions, and a true concep- tion of American liberty, become a leader in the pulpit, at the bar, in medicine, in journalism, in art, in the management of industries, in the work of firms and cor- porations and in business of every kind. This assemblage— and its like can be gath- ered in every state, county, city and vil- lage in our country — illustrates that true spirit of commercialism which inspires am- bition and makes a career; that true de- velopment of American manhood which is ever striving for something better in its material conditions, which has time for the work of the church, for politics, for the public service, for the improvement of the home and the pleasures of and for the fam- ily. As we advance in life we appreciate more day by day the value of time. 34 NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. With every revolution of the earth there is less left. We must economize it. We who are active in affairs and must meet many people find out who are the enemies and who the friends of our time. The scatter-brain dissipates and the sure-footed man conserves it. The late Leopold Morse, while a member of Congress, was entertained at a big house on Fifth avenue. A guest said: "Delighted to see you, Morse. Where are you stopping?" Morse replied: "At the St. Cloud Hotel." His friend said: "For Heaven's sake, Morse, don't do that again; that's the San Clou." The next day Morse went into his bank- er's, who said: "Glad to see you, Morse; where are you stopping?" Morse said, "At the San Clou." The banker said: "Come off your perch. That may do in Boston, but here it's plain English, St. Cloud." Morse, much distressed, was stopped on Wall street soon after by an acquaintance, who said: "Morse, I want to come and see you this evening; where are you stopping?" Morse answered: "Hanged if I know." Morse should have been sure of himself and stuck to it. The man who ought to be killed after the first half hour is the one who, having made an engagement, uses thirty minutes in developing a matter in which he knows you are interested and then pro- ceeds, having gained, as he thinks, your confidence, to exploit the scheme for which he came. I always turn that man down. The sure-footed man is a benefactor. In the pulpit he gives your something to take home to think about and talk over at the Sunday dinner; at the bar he makes the jury in a short time think his way and the judge is influenced by his directness and lucidity. He states his business proposition to you so quickly and so clearly that you know instantly whether you can afford to embark in it or not. He dis- misses his board of directors with a ten- minute statement which reveals to them the exact condition and true prospects of the company. He tells a story so that the point punctures and delights you without giving you the horrors of knowing it long before he is through. You sit beside him if you can at dinner, you select him for your companion in travel, you take him into your business if he is free and you make him your executor in your will. My friends, we pass this way but once. We cannot retrace our steps to any pre- ceding milestone. Every time the clock strikes, it is both the announcement of the hour upon which we are entering and the knell of the one which is gone. Each night memory balances the books and we know before we sleep whether the result is on the right or the wrong side of our account. In some measure we can meet the injunc- tion of the poet who said: "Think that day lost whose low descend- ing sun, Views from thy hand no noble action done." There is no cant in this sentiment. The noble action does not mean necessarily anything in the realms of romance or hero- ism. It may be the merest commonplace in business or association, a word of sym- pathy, kindness or encouragement, a little help sorely needed and not felt by the giver, but if it has shed one beam of bright- ness into the life of another the dividend is earned. The older we grow the more we realize that life is worth the living. We think too little of the fun there is in it. We are too parsimonious of laughter. We do not appreciate as we ought the man or the woman who can make us forget while we are amused. We cannot help the past and that man is a fool who lives -in it. To-day is a better day than yesterday, but to-mor- NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. 35 row is the land of promise. Let us walk through our pathways be they rugged or smooth, believing in Browning's beautiful lines: The earth is crammed with Heaven, And every common bush afire with God, But only he who sees takes off his shoes. — Chauncey M. Depew. *5* c5* &5* THANKSGIVING IN MANY LANDS. And an orange a minute as big as their pates, And a little brown monkey to hand round the plates, And bananas are used for potater! Just think about that, little Johnny! THERE'S Thanksgiving turkey for you, little boy, But 'round the North Pole, where it's quiet, They're dining to-day on a slice of roast whale With fricasseed snowballs and polar bear's tail, And the milk is ice cream when it reaches the pail, For the cows have pistache in their diet. Just listen to that, little Johnny! There's a bonny plum pudding for you, little boy, But the little boys 'round the equator Have cocoanut stew and a salad of dates, There's mince pie and doughnuts for you, little boy, But abroad all the children are living On wonderful dishes, I couldn't say what, So queer and so spicy, so cold and so hot! But the best thing of all doesn't fall to their lot— For they haven't got any Thanksgiving! You wouldn't like that, little Johnny! — Juliet Wilbor Tompkins. *£& t&& (5* THE BLUE AND THE GRAY. (The custom of decorating the graves, both of Federal and Confederate soldiers on Decora- tion Day, makes this recitation peculiarly appropriate for Decoration Day exercises.) ■ BY the flow of the inland river, Whence the fleets of iron have fled, Where the blades of the grave-grass quiver, Asleep in the ranks of the dead: — Under the sod and the dew, Waiting the judgment day; Under the one, the Blue, Under the other, the Gray. These in the robings of glory, Those in the gloom of defeat, All with the battle-blood gory, In the dusk of eternity meet: — Under the sod and the dew, Waiting the judgment day; Under the laurel, the Blue, Under the willow, the Gray. From the silence of sorrowful hours, The desolate mourners go, Lovingly laden with flowers, Alike for the friend and the foe: — Under the sod and the dew, Waiting the judgment day; Under the roses, the Blue, 36 NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. Under the lilies, the Gray. So, with an equal splendor, The morning sun-rays fall, With a touch impartially tender, On the blossoms blooming for all:- Under the sod and the dew, Waiting the judgment day; Broidered with gold, the Blue, Mellowed with gold, the Gray. So, when the summer calleth, On forest and field of grain, With an equal murmur falleth The cooling drip of the rain: — Under the sod and the dew, Waiting the judgment day; Wet with the rain, the Blue, Wet with the rain, the Gray. Sadly, but not with upbraiding, The generous deed was done; In the storm of the years that are fading, No braver battle was won: — Under the sod and the dew, Waiting the judgment day; Under the blossoms, the Blue, Under the garlands, the Gray. No more shall the war cry sever, Or the winding rivers be red; They banish our anger forever When they laurel the graves of our dead! Under the sod and the dew, Waiting the judgment day; Love and tears for the Blue, Tears and love for the Gray. ^w ^* t^* WATCHING THE NEW YEAR IN GOOD old days — dear old days When my heart beat high and bold— When the things of earth seemed full of mirth And the future a haze of gold! Oh, merry was I that winter night, And gleeful our little one's din, And tender the grace of my darling's face As we watched the New Year in. But a voice — a spectre's that mocked at love — Came out of the yonder hall; "Tick-tock, tick-tock!" 'twas the solemn clock That ruefully croaked to all. Yet what knew we of the griefs to be In the year we longed to greet? Love — love was the theme of the sweet, sweet dream I fancied might never fleet! But the spectre stood in that yonder gloom, And these were the words it spake: "Tick-tock, tick-tock!" — and they seemed to mock A heart about to break. 'Tis New Year's eve, and again I watch In the old familiar place, And I'm thinking again of that old time when I looked on a dear one's face. Never a little one hugs my knee, And I hear no gleeful shout — I am sitting alone by the old hearth-stone, Watching the old year out. But I welcome the voice in yonder gloom That solemnly calls to me; "Tick-tock, tick-tock!" — for so the clock Tells of a life to be; "Tick-tock, tick-tock!" — 'tis so the clock Tells of eternity. — Eugene Field. NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. 37 GARFIELD'S TRIBUTE TO HIS FALLEN COMRADES. IF silence is ever golden, it must be here, beside the graves of fifteen thousand men, whose lives were more significant than speech, and whose death was a poem, the music of which can never be sung-. With words we make promises, plight faith, praise virtue. Promises may not be kept, plighted faith may be broken, and vaunted virtue be only the cunning mark of vice. We do not know one promise these men made, one pledge they gave, one word they spoke; but we do know they summed up and perfected by one supreme act the highest virtue of men and citizens. For love of country they accepted death, and thus resolved all doubts and made im- mortal their patriotism and their virtue. For the noblest man that lives there still remains a conflict. He must still with- stand the assaults of time and fortune; must still be assailed with temptations be- fore which lofty natures have fallen. But with these, the conflict ended, the victory was won, when death stamped on them the great seal of heroic character, and closed a record which years can never blot. At the beginning of the Christian era an imperial circus stood on the summit of what is now known as the Vatican Mount in Rome. There gladiator slaves died for the sport of Rome, and wild beasts fought with wilder men. In that arena, a Gali- lean fisherman gave up his life, a sacrifice for his faith. No human life was ever so nobly avenged. On that spot was reared the proudest Christian temple ever built by human hands. As the traveler descends the Apennines, he sees the dome of St. Pe- ter's rising above the desolate Campagna, and the dead city, long before the seven hills and ruined palaces appear to his view. The fame of the dead fisherman has out- lived the glory of the Eternal City. Seen from the western slope of our Capitol, this spot is not unlike the Vatican Mount. A few years ago the soil beneath our feet was watered with the tears of slaves. Yonder proud Capitol awakened no pride, inspired no hope. The face of the goddess was turned toward the sea, and not toward them. But thanks be to God, this arena of slavery is a scene of violence no longer! This will be forever the sacred mountain of our Capitol. Here is our temple. Its pavement is the sepulcher of heroic hearts; its dome, the bending heaven; its altar candles, the watching stars. — lames A. Garfield. 10* *£& t2& THE MANGER OF BETHLEHEM. THERE'S a song in the air! There's a star in the sky! There's a mother's deep prayer And a baby's low cry! And the star rains its fire while the Beau- tiful sing, For the manger of Bethlehem cradles a King. There's a tumult of joy O'er the wonderful birth, For the virgin's sweet boy Is the Lord of the earth, Ay! the star rains its fire and the Beau- tiful sing, For the manger of Bethlehem cradles a King! 38 NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. In the light of that star Lie the ages impearled; And that song from afar Has swept over the world. Every hearth is aflame, and the Beautiful sing, In the homes of the nations that Jesus is King! We rejoice in the light, And we echo the song That comes down through the night From the heavenly throng. Ay! we shout to the lovely evangel they bring, And we greet in his cradle our Saviour and King. <5* c5* «5* MEMORIAL DAY. THE cycling years again have brought To us, Memorial Day; The gallant men who bravely fought For us are old and gray. Their numbers, year by year, grow less, And more are laid away, Where we with flowers their graves may dress, On each Memorial Day. Then bring the blossoms fair and sweet, To deck each grass-grown bed, While reverently we all repeat: "Here lie our honored dead, Whose memory we will all revere Till time shall pass away, And sacred keep with every year A new Memorial Day." — Emma Shaw. t£R t&& t£* SIMON SOGG'S THANKSGIVING. LET Earth give thanks," the deacon said, And then the proclamation read. "Give thanks fer what an' what about?" Asked Simon Soggs when church was out. "Give thanks fer what? I don't see why; The rust got in an' spiled my rye, And hay wan't half a crop, and corn All wilted down and looked forlorn. The bugs jest gobbled my pertaters, The what-you-call-em lineaters, And gracious! when you come to wheat, There's more than all the world can eat; Onless a war should interfere, Crops won't bring half a price this year; I'll hev to give 'em away, I reckon!" "Good for the poor!" exclaimed the deacon. "Give thanks fer what?" asked Simon Soggs. "Fer th' freshet carryin' off my logs? Fer Dobbin goin' blind? Fer five Uv my best cows, that was alive Afore the smashin' railroad come And made it awful troublesome? Fer that hay stack the lightnin' struck And burnt to ashes? — thund'rin luck! For ten dead sheep?" sighed Simon Soggs. The Deacon said, "You've got yer hogs!" "Give thanks? and Jane and baby sick? I e'enmost wonder if ole Nick Ain't runnin' things!" The deacon said, "Simon! yer people might be dead!" NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. 39 "Give thanks!" said Simon Soggs again. "Jest look at what a fix we're in! The country's rushin' to the dogs At race horse speed!" said Simon Soggs. "Rotten all through — in every State, — Why, ef we don't repudiate, We'll hev to build, fer big and small, A poor-house that'll hold us all. All round the crooked whisky still Is runnin' like the Devil's mill; Give thanks? How mad it makes me feel, To think how office-holders steal! The taxes paid by you and me Is four times bigger'n they should be; The Fed'ral Gov'ment's all askew, The ballot's sech a mockery, too! Some votes too little, some too much, Some not at all — it beats the Dutch! And now no man knows what to do, Or how is how, or who is who. Deacon! corruption's sure to kill! This 'glorious Union' never will, I'll bet a continental cent, Elect another President! Give thanks fer what, I'd like to know?" The deacon answered, sad and low, "Simon! It fills me with surprise, Ye don't see where yer duty lies; Kneel right straight down, in all the muss, And thank God that it ain't no wuss!" — W. A. Croffut. t£* *2rl c5* JEST 'FORE CHRISTMAS. (Recitation for a boy FATHER calls me William, sister calls me Will, Mother calls me Willie, but the fellers call me Bill. Mighty glad I ain't a girl — ruther be a boy, Without them sashes, curls, an' things that's worn by Fauntleroy! Love to chawnk green apples an' go swim- min' in the lake — Hate to take the castor-ile they give for belly-ache! 'Most all the time, the whole year round, there ain't no flies on me, But jest 'fore Christmas I'm as good as I kin be! Got a yeller dog named Sport, sick him on the cat; First thing she knows she doesn't know where she is at! Got a clipper sled, an' when us kids goes out to slide, from seven to ten.) 'Long comes the grocery cart, an' we all hook a ride, But sometimes when the grocery man is worrited an' cross, He reaches at us with his whip, an' larrups up his hoss, An' then I Laff an' holler: "O, ye never teched me!" But jest 'fore Christmas I'm as good as I kin be! Gran'ma says she hopes that when I get to be a man, I'll be a missionarer like her oldest brother Dan, As was et up by the cannibuls that lives in Ceylon's He, Where every prospeck pleases, an' only man is vile! But gran'ma she has never been to see a Wild West show, Nor read the Life of Daniel Boone, or else I guess she'd know 40 NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. That Buff'lo Bill an' cowboys is good enough for me! Excep' just 'fore Christmas, when I'm good as I kin be! And then old Sport he hangs around, so solemn-like an' still, His eyes they seem a-sayin': "What's the matter, little Bill?" The old cat sneaks down off her perch an' wonders what's become Of them two enemies of hern that used to make things hum! But I am so perlite an' tend so earnestly to biz, That mother says to father: "How im- proved our Willie is!" But father, havin' been a boy hisself, suspicions me When, jest 'fore Christmas, I'm as good as I kin be! For Christmas, with its lots an' lots of candies, cakes, an' toys, Was made, they say, for proper kids an' not for naughty boys; So wash yer face an' bresh yer hair, an' mind yer p's and q's, An' don't bust out your pantaloons, and don't wear out your shoes ; Say "Yessum" to the ladies, an' "Yessur" to the men, An' when they's company, don't pass yer plate for pie again; But, thinkin' of the things yer'd like to see upon the tree, Jest 'fore Christmas be as good as yer kin be! — Eugene Field. *2ft X0& *2rl OUR HEROIC DEAD. O SUN, subdue your splendor; O birds, forget your mirth; O robe of mist so tender, Enshroud a lifeless earth. O sea renew your mourning; O winds, a requiem play; O heart, with grief's intoning, December wrest from May. A nation weeps And vigil keeps O'er her heroic dead. O sun, unsheath your lances; Fling out your rainbow arch; O music that entrances, Sound a triumphal march. O flag by heaven's portals Unfurl your gleaming bars; For there earth's dear immortals Forever placed your stars. A nation's praise Its tribute pays To her heroic dead. (,5* (£• ^* MISTLETOE. WHEN on the chandelier I saw The mistletoe and holly, The one conclusion I could draw Led me straight on to folly. For Marjory, with cheeks aglow And lips, each one a berry, Was smiling at the mistletoe A smile peculiar, very. I watched them both, and when above Her head the green leaves fluttered, I caught and kissed the girl I love And something tender uttered. NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. 41 She blushed, of course; the deed was done. Quoth she: "Since kissing's pleasant, I'll give you just another one, To be your Christmas present." Good lovers all, take note of this, The Christmas prank of Cupid. A spray of mistletoe amiss Were nothing short of stupid. ^» igt* %&fc DECORATION DAY. AGAIN with reverent hands we strew Our heroes' graves with flowers of spring; How swift doth time's increasing flow, These hallowed days around us bring! And as we stand in silence near Their sacred dust, a gift we lay Upon each lowly altar here, That shall not with the flowers decay! For grateful memory twines anew Her offering with the garlands fair, Laid where long sleep the brave and true, Whose honored dust we shield with care. t£* ^* t&* THE MEANING OF THE AMERICAN FLAG. (Recitation for a boy.) THE American flag means, then, all that the fathers meant in the Rev- olutionary War; it means all that the Declaration of Independence meant; it means all that the Constitution of a peo- ple, organizing for justice, for liberty, and for happiness, meant. The American flag carries American ideas, American history, and American feeling. Beginning with the colonies and com- ing down to our time, in its sacred her- aldry, in its glorious insignia, it has gathered and stored chiefly this supreme idea: Divine Right of Liberty in Man. Every color means liberty, every thread means liberty, every form of star and beam of light means liberty — liberty through law, and laws for liberty. Accept it, then, in all its fullness of meaning. It is not a painted rag. It is a whole national history It is the Constitution. It is the Govern- ment. It is the emblem of the sovereignty of the people. It is the Nation. — From a speech by Henry Ward Beecher. t&fr t&* <£r* A GOOD COUNTRY FOR ALL. (For a very little girl. The speaker should wear the national colors, either combined in a dress or as decorations to a white dress.) I WEAR these three colors to-day, The beautiful red, white and blue, Because 'tis the Fourth of July, And I thought I'd celebrate too. I know that our country began (Though I'm sure I cannot tell why), One morning so long, long ago, And that was the Fourth of July. But one thing for certain and sure I've found out, although I'm so small, Tis a country good to be in For little folks, big folks, and all. 42 NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. THE DIGNITY OF LABOR. (An oration for THERE is dignity in toil — in toil of the hand as well as toil of the head — in toil to provide for the bodily wants of an individual life, as well as in toil to promote some enterprise of world-wide fame. All labor that tends to supply man's wants, to increase man's happiness, to elevate man's nature — in a word, all labor that is honest — is honorable too. Labor clears the for- est, and drains the morass, and makes the "wilderness rejoice and blossom as the rose." Labor drives the plow, and scatters the seeds, and reaps the harvest, and grinds the corn, and converts it into bread, the staff of life. Labor, tending the pas- tures and sweeping the waters, as well as cultivating the soil, provides with daily sustenance the nine hundred millions of the family of man. Labor gathers the gos- samer web of the caterpillar, the cotton from the field, and the fleece from the flock, and weaves it into raiment soft and warm and beautiful, the purple robe of the prince and the gray gown of the peasant being alike its handiwork. Labor moulds the brick, and splits the slate, and quarries the stone and shapes the column, and rears not only the humble cottage, but the gorgeous palace, and the tapering spire, and the stately dome. Labor, diving deep into the solid earth, brings up its long- hidden stores of coal to feed ten thousand furnaces, and in millions of homes to defy the winter's cold. Labor explores the rich veins of deeply- buried rocks, extracting the gold and silver, the copper and tin. Labor smelts the iron, and moulds it into a thousand shapes for use and ornament, from the massive pillar to the tiniest needle, from the ponderous anchor to the wire gauze, from the mighty Labor Day.) fly-wheel of the steam engine to the pol- ished purse-ring or the glittering bead. Labor hews down the gnarled oak, and shapes the timber, and builds the ship, and guides it over the deep, plunging through the billows, and wrestling with the tem- pest, to bear to our shores the produce of every clime. Labor, laughing at difficul- ties, spans majestic rivers, carries viaducts over marshy swamps, suspends bridges over deep ravines, pierces the solid moun- tain with the dark tunnel, blasting rocks and filling hollows, and while linking to- gether with its iron but loving grasp all nations of the earth, verifying, in a literal sense, the ancient prophecy, "Every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and hill shall be brought low;" labor draws forth its delicate iron thread, and stretch- ing it from city to city, from province to province, through mountains and beneath the sea, realizes more than fancy ever fabled, while it constructs a chariot on which speech may outstrip the wind, and compete with lightning, for the telegraph flies as rapidly as thought itself. Labor, the mighty magician, walks forth into a region uninhabited and waste; he looks earnestly at the scene, so quiet in its desolation, then waving his wonder-work- ing wand, those dreary valleys smile with golden harvests; those barren mountain- slopes are clothed with foliage ; the furnace blazes; the anvil rings; the busy wheel whirls round ; the town appears ; the temple of religion rears its lofty front; a forest of masts rises from the harbor. On every side are heard the sounds of industry and gladness. Labor achieves grander victories, it weaves more durable trophies, it holds NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS ■13 wider sway than the conqueror. His name becomes tainted and his monuments crum- ble; but labor converts his red battlefields into gardens, and erects significant of better things. monuments -Anonymous. %£& <5* &?* HAVE YOU PLANTED A TREE? (For Arbor Day.) WHAT do we plant when we plant the tree? We plant the ship, which will cross the sea, We plant the mast to carry the sails; We plant the planks to withstand the gales, The keel, the keelson, and beam and knee; We plant the ship when we plant the tree. What do we plant when we plant the tree? We plant the houses for you and me; We plant the rafters, the shingles, the floors, We plant the studding, the lath, the doors, The beams and siding, all parts that be; We plant the house when we plant the tree. What do we plant when we plant the tree? A thousand things that we daily see: We plant the spire that out-towers the crag; We plant the staff for country's flag; We plant the shade from the hot sun free ; — We plant all these when we plant the tree. (5 1 * &?* t5* THE BROWNIE'S CHRISTMAS. (Imagine this a real occurrence, and yourself the giver.) THE Brownie who lives in the forest — Oh, the Christmas bells they ring! He has done for the farmer's children Full many a kindly thing: When their cows were lost in the gloam- ing He has driven them safely home; He has led their bees to the flowers, To fill up their golden comb ; At her spinning the little sister Had napped till the setting sun — She awoke, and the kindly Brownie Had gotten it neatly done; Oh, the Christmas bells they are ringing! The mother she was away, And the Brownie 'd played with the baby And tended it all the day; The Brownie who lives in the forest, Oh, the Christmas bells they ring! He has done for the farmer's children Full many a kindly thing. 'Tis true that his face they never, For all their watching, could see; Yet who else did the kindly service, I pray, if it were not he? But the poor little friendly Brownie, His life was a weary thing; For never had he been in holy church And heard the children sing; And never had he had a Christmas; Nor had bent in prayer his knee; He had lived for a thousand years, And all weary-worn was he. 44 NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. Or that was the story the children Had heard at their mother's side; And together they talked it over, One merry Christmas-tide. The pitiful little sister With her braids of paly gold, And the little elder brother, And the darling five-year-old, All stood in the western window — 'Twas toward the close of day — And they talked about the Brownie While resting from their play. "The Brownie, he has no Christmas," The dear little sister said, And a-shaking as she spoke Her glossy, yellow head; "The Brownie, he hqs no Christmas; While so many gifts had we, To the floor last night they bended The boughs of the Christmas-tree." Then the little elder brother, He spake up in his turn, With both of his blue eyes beaming, While his cheeks began to burn: "Let us do up for the Brownie A Christmas bundle now, And leave it in the forest pathway Where the great oak branches bow. "We'll mark it, 'For the Brownie,' And 'A Merry Christmas Day!' And sure will he be to find it, For he goeth home that way !' " Then the tender little sister With her braids of paly gold, And the little elder brother, And the darling five-year-old, Tied up in a little bundle Some toys, with a loving care, And marked it, "For the Brownie," In letters large and fair, And "We wish a Merry Christmas!" And then, in the dusk, the three Went to the wood and left it Under the great oak tree. While the farmer's fair little children Slept sweet on that Christmas night, Two wanderers through the forest Came in the clear moonlight. And neither one was the Brownie, But sorry were both as he; And their hearts, with each fresh footstep, Were aching steadily. A slender man with an organ Strapped on by a leathern band, And a girl with a tambourine A-holding close to his hand. And the girl with the tambourine, Big sorrowful eyes she had; In the cold white wood she shivered, In her ragged raiment clad. "And what is there here to do?" she said; "I'm froze i' the light o' the moon! Shall we play to these sad old forest trees Some merry and jigging tune? "And, father, you know it is Christmas- time, And had we staid i' the town And I gone to one o' the Christmas-trees, A gift might have fallen down! "You cannot certainly know it would not: I'd ha' gone right under the tree! Are you sure that none o' the Christmases Were meant for you and me?" "These dry dead leaves," he answered her, sad, i NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. 45 "Which the forest casteth down, Are more than you'd get from a Christmas tree In the merry and thoughtless town. "Though to-night be the Christ's own birthday night, And all the world hath grace, There is not a home in all the world Which holdeth for us a place." Slow plodding adown the forest path, "And now, what is this?" he said; And the children's bundle he lifted up, And "For the Brownie," read, And "We wish a Merry Christmas Day!" "Now if this be done," said he, "Somewhere in the world perhaps there, is A place for you and me!" And the bundle he opened softly: "This is children's tender thought; Their own little Christmas presents •They have to the Brownie brought. "If there liveth such tender pity Toward a thing so dim and low, There is kindness sure remaining Of which I did not know. "Oh, children, there's never a Brownie — That sorry, uncanny thing; But nearest and next are the homeless When the Christmas joy-bells ring." Out laughed the little daughter, And she gathered the toys with glee: "My Christmas present has fallen! This oak was my Christmas-tree!" Then away they went through the forest, The wanderers, hand in hand; And the snow, they were both so merry, It glinted like the golden sand. Down the forest the elder brother, In the morning clear and cold, Came leading the little sister And the darling five-year-old. "Oh," he cries, "He's taken the bundle!" As carefully round he peers; "And the Brownie has gotten a Christmas After a thousand years!" (■5* <.£• ^5* THE THREE HOLIDAYS. (For a girl FIRST BOY. OF all the days of all the year," Cried loyal Freddy Bly, "The very splendid-est of all Comes early in July. Think of the fun! the glorious noise! That is the day — at least for boys." SECOND BOY. "Of all the days of all the year," Said little Robin Gray, "The very best, I do believe, and two boys.) Will be Thanksgiving day. A fellow has such things to eat! Thanksgiving day cannot be beat." GIRL. "Of all the days of all the year," Sang pretty Nan, "remember The dearest, happiest and best Is coming in December. What girl or boy, north, east, south, west, But knows that Christmas day is best?" — Annie L. Hannah. 46 NATIONAL READINGS AND DECLAMATIONS. THE OLD YEAR AND THE NEW. RING out, wild bells, to the wild sky, The flying cloud, the frosty light; The year is dying in the night; Ring out, wild bells, and let him die. Ring out the old, ring in the new, Ring, happy bells, across the snow; The year is going, let him go; Ring out the false, ring in the true. Ring out the grief that saps the mind For those that here we see no more; Ring out the feud of rich and poor, Ring in redress to all mankind. Ring out a slowly dying cause, And ancient forms of party strife; Ring in the nobler modes of life, And sweeter manners, purer laws. <5* *£• < w M o R w e JUVENILE GEMS. 103 THE SMALL BOY'S TROUBLES. BEFORE they had arithmetic Or telescopes or chalk Or blackboards, maps and copybooks, When they could only talk ; Before Columbus came to show The world geography, What did they teach the little boys Who went to school like me? There wasn't any grammar then, They couldn't read or spell, For books were not invented, yet I think 'twas just as well ; There were not any rows of dates Or laws or wars or kings Or generals or victories Or any of those things ; There couldn't be much to learn, There wasn't much to know ; 'Twas nice to be a boy Ten thousand years ago. For history had not begun, The world was very new, And in the schools I don't see what The children had to do. Now always there is more to learn; How history does grow ! And every day they find new things They think we ought to know. And if it must go on like this I'm glad I live today, For boys ten thousand years from now Will not have time to play ! — Answers. A SONG FOR YOUR BIRTHDAY. UPON the day each child is born, Each year, so runs the tale, An angel in the early morn Its birthday comes to hail. And for each deed of holy love That last year thou hast done, He brings a kiss from heaven above And seals thee for his own. ^* ^* ^* WHEN PA BEGINS TO SHAVE. WHEN Sunday mornin' comes around My pa hangs up his strop, An' takes his razor out an' makes It go c'flop! c'flop! An' then he gits his mug an' brush An' yells t' me, "Behave!" I tell y'u, things is mighty still — When pa begins t' shave. Then pa he stirs his brush around An' makes th' soapsuds fly; An' sometimes, when he stirs too hard, He gits some in his eye. I tell y'u, but it's funny then To see pa stamp and rave; But y'u mustn't git ketched laffin' — When pa begins t' shave. Th' hired hand he dassent talk, An' even ma's afeared, An' y'u can hear th' razor click A-cuttin' through pa's beard! An' then my Uncle Bill he laffs An' says: "Gosh! John, you're brave," An' pa he swears, an' ma jest smiles — When pa begins t' shave. 104 JUVENILE GEMS. When pa gits done a-shavin' of His face, he turns around, And Uncle Bill says: "Why, John, Yu'r chin looks like plowed ground!" An' then he laffs — jest laffs an' laffs, But I got t' behave, Cos things's apt to happen quick — When pa begins t' shave. — Harry Douglass Robbins. %0* %&fr *£& THAT'S OUR BABY. ONE little row of ten little toes, To go along with a brand-new nose, Eight new fingers and two new thumbs, That are just as good as sugar-plums — That's baby. One little pair of round new eyes, Like a little owl's, so old and wise, One little place they call a mouth, Without one tooth from north to south — That's baby. Two little cheeks to kiss all day, Two little hands, so in his way, A brand-new head, not very big, That seems to need a brand-new wig — That's baby. Dear little row of ten little toes, How much we love them nobody knows ; Ten little kisses on* mouth and chin, What a shame he wasn't a twin! — That's baby. «5* c5* <<5* HAVE ONLY GOOD WORDS FOR ALL. IF anything unkind you hear About someone you know, my dear, Do not, I pray you, it repeat, When you that someone chance to meet; For such news has a leaden way Of clouding o'er a sunny day. But if you something pleasant hear About someone you know, my dear, Make haste — to make great haste 'twere well — To her or him the same to tell; For such news has a golden way Of lighting up a cloudy day. t^» c5* &5* THE FIVE LITTLE CHICKENS. Q AID the first little chicken, O With a queer little squirm, "I wish I could find A fat little worm." Said the next little chicken, With an odd little shrug, "I wish I could find A fat little slug." Said the third little chicken, With a sharp little squeal, "I wish I could find Some nice yellow meal." Said the fourth little chicken, With a small sigh of grief, "I wish I could find A little green leaf." JUVENILE GEMS. 105 Said the fifth little chicken, With a faint little moan, "I wish I could find A wee gravel stone." 'Now, see here," said the mother From the green garden patchy 'If you want any breakfast, Just come here and scratch." «,$* t5* «<5* WHAT LITTLE THINGS CAN DO. A TINY drop of water, Within the ocean lay, A coaxing sunbeam caught her, And bore her far away; Up, up — and higher still — they go, With gentle motion, soft and slow. A little cloud lay sleeping, Across the azure sky, But soon it fell a-weeping, As cold the wind rushed by, And cried and cried herself away; It was a very rainy day. The little raindrops sinking, Ran trickling through the ground, And set the rootlets drinking, In all the country round, But some with laughing murmur, said, "We'll farther go," and on they sped. A little spring came dripping The moss and ferns among, A silver rill went tripping, And singing sweet along, And calling others to its side, Until it rolled — a river wide. And with the ocean blending, At last its waters run, Then is the story ending? Why, no! 'tis just begun, For in the ocean as before, The drop of water lay once more. t<5* *.5* t(5* HOW THE CHILDREN ARE TAUGHT. RAM it in, cram it in; Children's heads are hollow, Slam it in, jam it in ; Still there's more to follow — Hygiene and history, Astronomic mystery, Algebra, histology, Latin, etymology, Botany, geometry, Greek and trigonometry. Ram it in, cram it in; Children's heads are hollow. Rap it in, tap it in; What are teachers paid for? Bang it in, slam it in; What are children made for? Ancient archaeology, Aryan philology, Prosody, zoology, Physics, clinictology, Calculus and mathematics, Rhetoric and hydrostatics. Hoax it in, coax it in ; Children's heads are hollow. Scold it in, mold it in; All that they can swallow. Fold it in, mold it in, Still there's more to follow. Faces pinched, and sad, and pale, Tell the same undying tale — JOG JUVENILE GEMS. Tell of moments robbed from sleep, Meals untasted, studies deep. Those who've passed the furnace through, With aching brow, will tell to you How the teacher crammed it in, Rammed it in, jammed it in, Crunched it in, punched it in, Rubbed it in, clubbed it in, Pressed it in, caressed it in, Rapped it in and slapped it in — When their heads were hollow. t,5* t5* g5* ABOUT READY TO SHOW OFF. KIND friends and dear parents, we wel- come you here To our nice pleasant school-room, and teacher so dear; We wish but to show how much we have learned, And how to our lessons our hearts have been turned. But hope you'll remember we all are quite young, And when we have spoken, recited, and sung, t,?* t5* (5* You will pardon our blunders, which, as all are aware, May even extend to the president's chair. Our life is a school-time, and till that shall end, With our Father in heaven for teacher and friend, Oh, let us perform well each task that is given, Till our time of probation is ended in heaven. THE SEASONS. (This recitation can be made very effective when given by four girls dressed to represent the four seasons.) laughs Spring. — IS this a time to be gloomy and sad, When our mother Nature around, When even the deep blue heavens look glad, And gladness breathes from the blossom- ing ground? The clouds are at play in the azure space, And their shadows at play on the bright green vale; And here they stretch to the frolic chase, And there they roll on the easy gale. And look at the broad-faced sun, how he smiles On the dewy earth that smiles on his ray, On the leaping waters and gay young isles; Aye, look, and he'll smile thy gloom away. Summer. — When summer comes in radiant dress, And sunshine floods the land, And blossoms, buds and butterflies Are seen on every hand, It's quite beyond disputing That, far more than the rest — The winter, spring, and autumn — I love sweet summer best. Autumn. — There's music in the air, Soft as the bee's low hum; JUVENILE GEMS. 107 There's music in the air, When the autumn days are come. Fairies sweet, your songs we hear, At times you're sad, then full of cheer; Come out! come out! we know you're near, By the music in the air. Winter. — Old winter comes forth in his robe of white ; He sends the sweet flowers far out of sight; He robs the trees of their green leaves bright; And freezes the pond and river. We like the spring with its fine fresh air; We like the summer with flowers so fair ; We like the fruits we in autumn share, And we like, too, old winter's greeting. ^* t5* v5* THE CAT'S BATH. (A "Little Folks' " song.) AS pussy sat washing her face by the gate, A nice little dog came to have a good chat ; And after some talk about matters of state, Said, with a low bow, "My dear Mrs. Cat, I really do hope you'll not think I am rude ; I am curious, I know, and that you may say — Perhaps you'll be angry — but no, you're too good — Pray why do you wash in that very odd way? Now I every day rush away to the lake, And in the clear water I dive and I swim; I dry my wet fur with a run and a shake, And am fresh as a rose and neat as a pin. But you any day in the sun may be seen, Just rubbing yourself with your red lit- tle tongue; I admire the grace with which it is done — But really, now, are you sure you get yourself clean?" The cat, who sat swelling with rage and surprise At this could no longer her fury contain, For she had always supposed herself rather precise, And of her sleek neatness had been somewhat vain; So she flew at poor doggy and boxed both his ears, Scratched his nose and his eyes, and spit in his face, And sent him off yelping; from which it appears Those who ask prying questions may meet with disgrace. t5* <^* ^* GREETING. KIND friends, we welcome you to-day With songs of merry glee ; Your loving smiles we strive to win, Each face we love to see. Sweet welcomes then to one and all, And may your smiles approve; And may we never miss the light Of faces that we love. 108 JUVENILE OEMS. THE LITTLE SPEAKER. (To be spoken by YOU'D scarce expect a boy like me To get up here where all can see, And make a speech as well as those Who wear the largest kind of clothes. I think it was in olden time, That some one said in funny rhyme, "Tall aches from little tie-corns grow, Large screams from little children flow." And if that rhymer told the truth, Though I am now a little youth, a very small boy.) Perhaps I'll make as great a noise, As some who are much larger boys. I will not speak of Greece and Rome, But tell you what I've learned at home. And what was taught me when at school, While sitting on a bench or stool; I've learned to talk, and read, and spell, And don't you think that's pretty well For such a little boy as I? But I must leave you — so good-bye. *2/i £& t&& LITTLE DOT. (The touching incident that gave rise to the following lines occurred in one of our large cities. Crouched upon the curbstone in a blinding snowstorm there was a little match- girl apparently not more than six years old. Attracted by her sobs, an old gentleman approached her and kindly asked, "Who are you, my little girl, that you are here in this storm?" Raising her large brown eyes, brimming with tears, she sobbed, "Oh, I'm onlv little Dot!") CROUCHING on the icy pavement, Sobbing, shivering with the cold, Garments scant around her clinging, All her matches yet unsold; Visions of a cheerless garret, Cruel blows not soon forgot, While through choking sobs the murmur, "Oh, I'm only little Dot!" Deeper than the icy crystals, Though their keenness made her start, Is the hungry, aching longing In the little match-girl's heart. No kind voice to cheer and comfort; Ah! by fortune quite forgot, Who can wonder at the murmur, "Oh, I'm only little Dot!" Far above the clouds and snowstorms, Where the streets have pearly gates, In that home a sainted mother, For the little match-girl waits. By the throng of waiting angels, Little one, you're ne'er forgot; In the home of many mansions There is room for little Dot. i3& t&& i3"i THE CHILD AND THE STAR. SHE had been told that God made all the stars That twinkled up in heaven, and now she stood Watching the coming of the twilight on, As if it were a new and perfect world And this were its first eve. She stood alone By the low window, with the silken lash Of her soft eye upraised and her sweet mouth JUVENILE GEMS. 109 Half parted with the new and strange de- light Of beauty that she could not comprehend, And had not seen before. The purple folds Of the low sunset clouds, and the blue sky, That looked so still and delicate above, Filled her young heart with gladness, and the eve Stole on with its deep shadows, and she still Stood looking at the west with that half- smile, As if a pleasant thought were at her heart. Presently in the edge of the last tint Of sunset, where the blue was melted Into the faint golden mellowness, a star Stood suddenly. A laugh of wild delight Burst from her lips, and putting up her hands, Her simple thought broke forth expres- sively, "Father, dear father! God has made a star!" —N. P. Willis. «5* &?* t5* THE TRUE STORY OF LITTLE BOY BLUE. LITTLE Boy Blue, as the story goes, One morning in summer fell fast asleep, When he should have been, as every one knows, Watching the cows and sheep. Now all of you will remember what Came of the nap on that summer morn; How the sheep got into the meadow-lot, And the cows got into the corn. Neglecting a duty is wrong, of course, But I've always felt, if we could but know, That the matter was made a great deal worse Than it should have been, and so I find in my sifting, that there was one Still more to blame than Little Boy Blue. I am anxious to have full justice done, And so, I know, are you. The one to blame I have found to be (I'm sorry to say it) little Bo-Peep; You will remember, perhaps, that she Also was minding sheep. Well, little Bo-Peep came tripping along — (The sheep she tended were running at large)— Where little Boy Blue sat singing a song, And faithfully watching his charge. Said little Bo-Peep, "It's a burning shame That you should sit here from week to week. Just leave your work, and we'll play a game Of — well — of hide and seek." It was dull work, and he liked to play Better, I'm sure, than to eat or sleep; He liked the bloom of the summer day; — And he liked — he liked Bo-Peep. And so, with many a laugh and shout, They hid from each other — now here — now there; And whether the cows were in or out, Bo-Peep had never a care. "I will hide once more," said the maiden fair, "You shall not find me this time, I say — Shut your eyes up tight, and lie down there Under that stack of hay. 110 JUVENILE OEMS. "Now wait till I call," said Miss Bo-Peep, And over the meadows she slipped away, With never a thought for cows or sheep — Alas! Alas! the day. She let down the bars, did Miss Bo-Peep — Such trifles as bars she held in scorn — And into the meadows went the sheep, And the cows went into the corn. Then long and patiently waited he For the blithesome call from her rosy lips; Pie waited in vain — quite like, you see, The boy on the burning ship. And by and by, when they found Boy Blue In the merest doze, he took the blame. I think it was fine in him — don't you — Not to mention Bo-Peep's name? And thus it has happened that all these years He has borne the blame she ought to share. Since I know the truth of it, it appears To me to be only fair To tell the story from shore to shore, From sea to sea, and from sun to sun, Because, as I think I have said before, I like to see justice done. So, whatever you've read or seen or heard, Believe me, good people, I tell the true And only genuine — take my word — Story of little Boy Blue. (£• $?* &5* OPENING ADDRESS. I AM a tiny tot, And have not much to say; But I must make, I'm told, The "Welcome Speech" to-day. Dear friends, we're glad you've come To hear us speak and sing. We'll do our very best To please in every thing. Our speeches we have learned; And if you'll hear us through, You'll see what tiny tots — If they but try — can do. t5** t5* &?* BABYKIN BOYKIN. DID the baskety woman a-sweeping the sky Discover the Babykin there? Did she tumble him down from his nest on high Through all of the sky-blue air? Did she find there was never a room to spare In the toe of her sister's shoe? Surely that was enough to scare The Babykin Boykin-Boo! Did the moony man give him half a crown And tell him he'd better be born? And with Jack and Jill was he tumbled down One summery, shiny morn? Or did Babykin Boykin come to town On a cow with a crumpled horn? Did the Babykin lie on his back asleep On a mattress of genuine hair? And did Simon the Simple and Little Bopeep JUVENILE OEMS. Ill Come skipping along to the fair? Did they blatantly blow a terrible blare On the horn of the Little Boy Blue, To wake him up with. an awful scare? Poor Babykin Boykin-Boo! But if Babykin Boykin now will stay, We'll feed him on victuals and drink, And the Muffety maiden will give him some whey And a pat of her curds, I think. And the toes of the Banbury dame shall play, And her fingery bells go "chink!" And the hey-diddle cow shall jump in the air As high as she used to do. Oh, dear me ! but she must not scare Our Babykin Boykin-Boo! — /. Edmund V . Cooke. IF. IF I were a man," said the restless lad, "I'd never give up and be still and sad. Were my name but known in the lists of life I'd never say die till I'd won the strife. But who will challenge the steel of youth, Though his heart be brave, and his motto 'truth'? There's work to be done in this life's short span, But, alack-a-day! I am not a man." "If I were a boy," says the toiler gray, "I'd fashion my lot in a better way. I'd hope and labor both day and night, And make ambition my beacon light. Were my bark but launched upon youth's bright stream I'd bend to the oar, nor drift nor dream, Till I reached the haven of peace and joy — But, alack-a-day ! I am not a boy." c5* c£* «t/* THE STREET OF BY-AND-BY. "By the street of 'By-and-By' one arrives OH! shun the spot, my youthful friends, I urge- you to beware ; Beguiling is the pleasant way, and softly breathes the air; Yet none have ever passed to scenes en- nobling, great and high, Who once began to linger in the street of By-and-by. How varied are the 'images arising to my sight Of those who wished to shun the wrong, who loved and prized the right, Yet from the silken bonds of sloth, they vainly strove to fly, at the house of 'Never.' " — Old Saying. Which held them gently prisoned in the street of By-and-by. A youth aspired to climb the height of Learning's lofty hill; What dimmed his bright intelligence — what quelled his earnest will? Why did the object of his quest still mock his wistful eye? Too long, alas! he tarried in the street of By-and-by. "My projects thrive," the merchant said; "when doubled is my store, How freely shall my ready gold be show- ered among the poor!" 112 JUVENILE GEMS. Vast grew his wealth, yet strove he not the mourner's tear to dry; He never journeyed onward from the street of By-and-by. "Forgive thy erring brother, he hath wept and suffered long," I said to one, who answered — "He hath done me grievous wrong ; Yet will I seek my brother, and forgive him ere I die; — " Alas! Death shortly found him in the street of By-and-by! The wearied worldling muses upon lost and wasted days, Resolved to turn hereafter from the error of his ways, To lift his groveling thoughts from earth, and fix them on the sky: Why does he linger fondly in the street of By-and-by? Then shun the spot, my youthful friends; work on, while yet you may; Let not old age o'ertake you as you sloth- fully delay, Lest you should gaze around you, and dis- cover with a sigh, You have reached the house of "Never" by the street of By-and-by. — Mrs. Abdy. £fc tO* t0*> BOYS WANTED. BOYS of spirit, boys of will, Boys of muscle, brain and power, Fit to cope with anything. These are wanted every hour. Not the weak and whining drones, Who all troubles magnify; Not the watchword of "I can't," But the nobler one, "I'll try." Do whate'er you have to do With a .true and earnest zeal ; Bend your sinews to the task, "Put your shoulder to the wheel." Though your duty may be hard, Look not on it as an ill; If it be an honest task, Do it with an honest will. In the workshop, on the farm, At the desk, where'er you be, From your future efforts, boys, Comes a nation's destiny. (5* fe5* ^* THE NAUGHTY BOY. ONCE I was naughty — ran away To see what I could see; It was a horrid poky day — My mother punished me. She didn't whip me — wisht she had, So hard she left a mark! She shut me up for being bad: The room was big and dark. It was so dark I thought I saw Strange creatures' awful eyes, And I was scared and couldn't draw My breath for screams and cries. I wisht something would gobble me, And so I didn't stir; Then I'd be gone, and mother, she — Guess that would punish her! — William S. Lord. JUVENILE GEMS. 113 BABY ON THE TRAIN. EVERYBODY restless, Grumbling at the dust, Growling at the cinders, Pictures of disgust. Axle hot and smoking, Train delayed an hour, How the faces lengthen, Sullen, wrinkled, sour. Sudden transformation — Passengers in smiles — Scowls and frowns have vanished — What is it beguiles? Grimy face and fingers, Mouth all over crumbs, Smeary wrist contrasting Pink and clean-sucked thumb. Round head nodding, bobbing, Blue eyes full of fun, Wind-blown tresses shining Golden in the sun. Everybody cheerful, No remarks profane, Magic change effected — Baby on the train. ^w t2* t2& THE DEAD DOLL. YOU needn't be trying to comfort me, I tell you my dolly is dead! There's no use in saying she isn't With a crack like that in her head. It's just like you said it wouldn't hurt Much to have my tooth out that day. And then when the man most pulled my Head off you hadn't a word to say. And I guess you must think I'm a baby When you say you can mend it with glue ! As if I didn't know better than that; Why just suppose it were you! You might make her look all mended, But what do I care for looks; Why, glue's for chairs, and tables, And toys and the backs of books. My dolly, my own little daughter! Oh, but it's the awfullest crack! It just makes me sick to think Of the sound, when her poor head went whack Against that horrible brass thing That holds up the little shelf. Now, nursey, what makes you remind me? I know that I did it myself. I think you must be crazy, You'd get her another head? What good would forty heads do her? I tell you my dolly is dead! And to think I hadn't quite finished Her elegant new spring hat, And I took a sweet ribbon of hers To tie on that horrid cat! When my mama gave me that ribbon, I was playing out in the yard. She said to me most expressly, "Here's a ribbon for Hildegarde." And I went and put it on Tabby, And Hildegarde saw me do it. But I said to myself, "O never mind, I don't believe she knew it." But I know she knew it now, And I just believe, I do, That her poor little heart was broken, And so her head broke, too; 114 JUVENILE GEMS. Oh, my baby, my little baby, I wish my head had been hit, For I've hit it over and over, And it wasn't cracked a bit. But since the darling is dead She'll want to be buried, of course. We will take my little wagon, nurse, And you shall be the horse. And I'll walk behind and cry, And we'll put her in this, you see, This dear little box, and we'll bury Her then under the maple tree. And papa will make me a tombstone Like the one he made for my bird, And he'll put what I tell him on it, Yes, every single word. I shall say, "Here lies Hildegarde, A beautiful doll who is dead. She died of a broken heart And a dreadful crack in her head." c5* ^* fe?* THE SQUIRREL'S LESSON. T WO little squirrels, out in the sun, One gathered nuts and the other had none; "Time enough yet," his constant refrain; "Summer is still only just on the wane." Listen, my child, while I tell you his fate: He roused him at last, but he roused him too late; Down fell the snow from a pitiless cloud, And gave little squirrel a spotless white shroud. Two little boys in a schoolroom were placed, One always perfect, the other disgraced; "Time enough yet for my learning," he said; "I will climb, by and by, from the foot to the head." Listen, my darling; their locks are turned gray; One as a Governor sitteth to-day; The other, a pauper, looks out at the door Of the almshouse, and idles his days as of yore. Two kinds of people we meet every day: One is at work, the other at play, Living uncared for, dying unknown — The busiest hive hath ever a drone. <&& t0& t&& WATCHING BABY AS IT SLEEPS. SLEEP, baby, sleep! Thy father watches his sheep ; Thy mother is shaking the dreamland tree, And down comes a little dream on thee. Sleep, baby, sleep! Sleep, baby, sleep! The large stars are the sheep; The little stars are the lambs, I guess; And the gentle moon is the shepherdess. Sleep, baby, sleep! Sleep, baby, sleep! Our Savior loves His sheep; He is the Lamb of God on high, Who for our sakes came down to die. Sleep, baby, sleep! 9#« h ^ Choice Humor H H •«ee$4 Humor is the sauce of all literature. The humorous selections in this department are of sufficient variety to supply the sauce for any program or form of entertainment. (^* «,?* h M H n & o CHOICE HUMOR. 121 for its own muzzer; that's a toody-woody; that's a blessed 'ittle 'ump o' sugar." Thus conjured, the heir opened its mouth sufficiently for the father to thrust in his finger, and that gentleman having convinced himself by the most unmistak- able evidence that a tooth was there, im- mediately kicked his hat across the room, buried his fist in the lounge, and declared with much feeling that he could lick the individual who would dare to intimate that he was not the happiest man on the face of the earth. Then he gave Mrs. Jones a hearty smack on the mouth and snatched up the heir, while that lady rushed trem- blingly forth after Mrs. Simmons, who lived next door. In a moment Mrs. Simmons came tear- ing in as if she had been shot out of a gun, and right behind her came Miss Simmons at a speed that indicated that she had been ejected from two guns. Mrs. Simmons at once snatched the heir from the arms of Mr. Jones and hurried it to the window, where she made a careful and critical examination of its mouth, while Mrs. Jones held its head and Mr. Jones danced up and down the room, and snapped his fingers to show how calm he was. It having been ascertained by Mrs. Sim- mons that the tooth was a sound one, and also that the strongest hopes for its future could be entertained on account of its coming in the new of the moon, Mrs. Jones got out the necessary material and Mr. Jones at once proceeded to write seven dif- ferent letters to as many persons, unfolding to them the event of the morning and in- viting them to come on as soon as possible. £ £ je QUEER ENGLISH LANGUAGE. WE'LL begin with a box, and the plural is boxes, But the plural of ox should be oxen, not oxes; Then one fowl is a goose, but two are called geese, Yet the plural of moose should never be meese; You may find a lone mouse or a whole nest of mice, But the plural of house is houses, not hice; If the plural of man is always called men, Why shouldn't the plural of pan be called pen? The cow in the plural may be cows or kine, But a bow if repeated is never called bine, And the plural of vow is vows, never vine. If I speak of a foot and you show me your feet, And I give you a boot, would a pair be called beet? If one is a tooth, and a whole set are teeth, Why shouldn't the plural of booth be called beeth? If the singular's this and the plural is these, Should the plural of kiss ever be nicknamed keese? Then one may be that and three would be those, Yet hat in the plural would never be hose, And the plural of cat is cats, not cose. We speak of a brother, and also of brethren, But though we say mother, we never say methren ; Then the masculine pronouns are he, his and him, But imagine the feminine she, shis and shim. So the English, I think, you all will agree, Is the queerest language you ever did see. 12» CHOICE HUMOR. THE NAME OF KATE. (For a school entertainment.) THERE'S something in the name of Kate Which many will condemn; But listen, now, while I relate The traits of some of them. There's Deli-Kate, a modest dame, And worthy of your love; She's nice and beautiful in frame, As gentle as a dove. Communi-Kate's intelligent, As we may well suppose; Her faithful mind is ever bent On telling what she knows. There's Intri-Kate, she's so obscure Tis hard to find her out; For she is often very sure To put your wits to rout. Prevari-Kate's a stubborn maid, She's sure to have her way; The cavilling, contrary jade Objects to all you say. There's Alter-Kate, ,a perfect pest, Much given to dispute; Her prattering tongue can never rest, You cannot her refute. There's Dislo-Kate, in quite a fret, Who fails to gain her point; Her case is quite unfortunate, And sorely out of joint. Equivo-Kate no one will woo; The thing would be absurd, She is so faithless -and untrue, You cannot take her word. There's Vindi-Kate, she's good and true, And strives with all her might Her duty faithfully to do, And battle for the right. There's Rusti-Kate, a country lass; Quite fond of rural scenes; She likes to trample through the grass And loves the evergreens. Of all the maidens you can find. There's none like Edu-Kate; Because she elevates the mind And aims to something great. t.5* «(5* c5* BABY'S OPINIONS. [The following selection can be made very humorous if the person reading it assumes the tones of a very little child, and in appropriate places imitates the cry of a baby.] I AM here. And if this is what they call the world, I don't think much of it. It's a very flannelly world, and smells of paregoric awfully. It's a dreadful light world, too, and makes me blink, I tell you. And I don't know what to do with my hands. I think I'll dig my fists in my eyes. No, I won't. I'll scratch at the corner of my blanket and chew it up, and then I'll holler; whatever happens, I'll holler. And the more paregoric they give me, the louder I'll yell. That old nurse puts the spoon in the corner of my mouth, side- wise like, and keeps tasting my milk her- self all the while. She spilt snuff in it last night, and when I hollered, she trotted me. That comes of being a two-days-old baby. Never mind; when I'm a man, I'll pay her back good. There's a pin stick- ing in me now, and if I say a word about CHOICE HUMOR. 123 it, I'll be trotted or fed; and I would rather have catnip-tea. I'll tell you who I am. I found out to-day. I heard folks say, "Hush ! don't wake up Emeline's baby" ; and I suppose that pretty, white-faced wo- man over on the pillow is Emeline. No, I was mistaken; for a chap was in here just now and wanted to see Bob's baby; and looked at me and said I was a funny little toad, and looked just like Bob. He smelt of cigars. I wonder who else I belong to! Yes, there's another one — that's "Gamma." "It was Gamma's baby, so it was." I declare, I do not know who I belong to; but I'll holler, and maybe I'll find out. There comes snuffy with catnip- tea. I'm going to sleep. I wonder why my hands won't go where I want them to! &5* «5* t5* LITTLE BREECHES. (A Pike County, Missouri, view of Special Providence.) 1 DON'T go much on religion. I never ain't had no show ; But I've got a middlin' tight grip, Sir, On the handful o' things I know. I don't pan out on the prophets And free-will, and that sort of thing — But I b'lieve in God and the angels, Ever since one night last spring. I come into town with some turnips, And my little Gabe came along — No four-year-old in the country Could beat him for pretty and strong. Pert and chipper and sassy, Always ready to swear and fight — And I'd larnt him to chaw tobacker, Jest to keep his milk teeth white. The snow came down like a blanket As I passed by Taggart's store ; I went in for a jug of molasses And left the team at the door. They scared at something and started — I heard one little squall, And hell-to-split over the prairie Went team, Little Breeches and all. Hell-to-split over the prairie ! I was almost froze with skeer ; But we roused up some torches, And sarched for 'em far and near. At last we struck horses and wagon, Snowed under a soft white mound, Upsot, dead beat — but of little Gabe No hide nor hair was found. And here all hope soured on me Of my fellow-critters' aid — I jest flopped down on my marrow-bones, Crotch-deep in the snow and prayed. 150 TOLD IN DIALECT. By this the torches was played out, And me and Isrul Parr Went off for some wood to a sheepfold That he said was somewhar thar. We found it at last, and a little shed Where they shut up the lambs at night. We looked in and seen them huddled thar, So warm and sleepy and white. And thar sot Little Breeches and chirped, As peart as ever you see, " I want a chaw of tobacker, And that's wat's the matter of me." How did he git thar ? Angels ! He could never have walked in that storm ; They jest scooped down and toted him To whar it was safe and warm. And I think that savin' a little child And bringin' him to his own, Is a derned sight better business Than loafin' around the Throne. MAMMY'S HUSHABY. HUSHABY, hushaby, HI' baby boy, Shet yo' eyes tight an' drap off ter sleep ; Mistah Coon was a-pacin' at a mighty jog When he seed a 'possum curled up on a lawg: "Howdy, Brer 'Possum, I'se glad you a'n't a dawg" — Hushaby, HI' baby boy. All de HI' mawkin' birds a sleepin' in dar nes', When night comes den sleepin' is de bes', Tek up m' honey boy an' hug him ter m' bres', Hushaby, HI' baby boy. Hushaby, hushaby, HI' baby boy, Watch dawg bark an' booger man run ; Down in the medder HI' bunnies race, Frolickin' an' jumpin' all about de place — Jess yo' quit dat laffin' right in yo' mam- my's face — Hushaby, HI' baby boy. Oi' brindle cow's a-callin', "goo' night, goo' night," she said, Time all HI' chilluns fer ter be in bed ; Tight shet go dem bright eyes, down drap dat curly head — Hushaby, HI' baby boy. — Richard Linthicum. f&pt t&& Iffr DER DRUMMER. WHO puts oup at der pest hotel, Und dakes his oysders on der shell, Und mit der frauleins cuts a schwell? Der drummer. Who vas it gomes indo mine schtore, Drows down his pundles of der vloor, Und nefer schtops to shut der door? Der drummer. Who dakes me py der handt und say, "Hans Pfeiffer, how you vas to-day?" Und goes vor peeseness righdt avay? Der drummer. Who shpreads his zamples in a trice, Und dells me, "Look, und see how nice?" Und says I gets "der bottom price?" Der drummer. TOLD IN DIALECT. 151 Who dells how sheap der goods vas bought, Mooch less as vot I gould imbort, But let's them go as he vas "short" ? Der drummer. Who says der tings vas eggstra vine — "Vrom Sharmany, upon der Rhine!" Und sheats me den dimes oudt off nine? Der drummer. Who varrants all der goods to suit Der gustomers ubon his route, Und ven dey gomes dey vas no goot ? Der drummer. Who gomes aroundt ven I been oudt, Drinks oup mine bier, und eats mine kraut, Und kiss Katrina in der mout? Der drummer. Who, ven he gomes again dis way, Vill hear vot Pfeiffer has to say, Und mit a plack eye goes avay ? Der drummer. t5* t5* ^* CONSOLATION. 9 r T** AIN' no matter what yoh does, 1 Ner to whah yoh strays, T'ings'll make yer wish dey wuz Dif'unt, lots o' ways. When I's done de bes' I can, Weary ez kin be, Wisht I was some yuther man, 'Stid o' being me. But, when mawnin' fin's me strong, Ready foh de day, Strikes me dat I may be wrong, Pinin' dat-a-way. Ef folks changed aroun' so free. Comfort might be slim; P'raps I'd wish dat I wuz me, 'Stid o' bein' him. t5* <■?* *5* JIM BLUDSO OF "THE PRAIRIE BELLE." WALL, no ; I can't tell where he lives, Becase he don't live, you see; Leastways, he's got out of the habit Of livin' like you and me. Whar have you been for the last three year That you haven't heard folks tell How Jimmy Bludso passed in his checks The night of the Prairie Belle? He weren't no saint — them engineers Is all pretty much alike — One wife in Natchez-under-the-Hill, And another one here, in Pike. A keerless man in his talk was Jim, And an awkward hand in a row, But he never flunked, and he never lied — I reckon he never knowed how. And this was all the religion he had — To treat his engine well ; Never be passed on the river ; To mind the pilot's bell ; And if ever the Prairie Belle took fire — A thousand times he swore He'd hold her nozzle ag'in' the bank Till the last soul got ashore. All boats has their day on the Mississip, And her day come at last — The Movastar was a better boat, But the Belle she wouldn't be passed. And so she come tearin' along that night — The oldest craft on the line — With a nigger squat on her safety-valve, And her furnace crammed, rosin and pine 153 TOLD IN DIALECT. The fire burst out as she cleared the bar, And burnt a hole in the night, And quick as a flash she turned, and made For that wilier-bank on the right. There was runnin' and cursin,' but Jim yelled out Over all the infernal roar : "I'll hold her nozzle ag'in' the bank Till the last galoot's ashore." Through the hot, black breath of the burnin boat Jim Bludso's voice was heard, And they all had trust in his cussedness, And knowed he would keep his word. And, sure's you're born, they all got off Afore the smokestacks fell — And Bludso's ghost went up alone In the smoke of the Prairie Belle. He weren't no saint — but at jedgment I'd run my chance with Jim, 'Longside o' some pious gentlemen That wouldn't shook hands with him. He seen his duty, a dead-sure thing — And went for it thar and then ; And Christ ain't a goin' to be too hard On a man that died for men. — John Hay. t5* «5* &5* YAWCOB STRAUSS. 1HAF von funny leedle poy, Vot gomes shust to mine knee ; Der queerest schap, der createst rogue, As efer you dit see. He runs, und schumps, und schmashes dings In all barts off der house: But vot off dot? he vas mine son, Mine leedle Yawcob Strauss. He dakes der milk-ban for a dhrum, Und cuts mine cane in dwo, To make der shticks to beat it mit, — Mine cracious dot vas drue ! I dinks mine hed vas schplit abart He kicks oop sooch a touse : But nefer mind; der poys vas few Like dot young Yawcob Strauss. He asks me questions sooch as dese: Who baints mine nose so red ? Who vas it cut dot schmooth blace oudt From der hair upon mine hed? Und vhere der plaze goes vrom der lamp Vene'er der glim I douse? How gan I all dose dings eggsblain To dot schmall Yawcob Strauss? He get der measles und der mumbs, Und eferyding dot's oudt; He sbills mine glass off lager bier, Poots schnuff indo mine kraut. He fills mine pipe mit Limburg cheese, — Dot vas der roughest chouse; I'd dake dot vrom no oder poy But leedle Yawcob Strauss. I somedimes dink I schall go vild Mit sooch a grazy poy, Und vish vonce more I gould haf rest, Und beaceful dimes enshoy ; But vhen he vas ashleep in ped, So guiet as a mouse, I prays der Lord, "Dake anyding, But leaf dot Yawcob Strauss." — Charles F. Adams. W — <••••§••• 9999 0Q 9 99 99 99Q & Q9M GQQ&* G\ \£> Modern Dialogues and Plays M9%&G*9**e9Q G 99*9 Q 9999 GQQ &9 9 9 9 M 9999 9 9m Characters. Gentlemen — Ladies — January. February. March. April. 'July. May. August. June. October. September December November. Any dialogue or play in this department can be presented upon any platform or stage erected in the school-room, church or home with little trouble and cost. All of the costumes are easily and inexpensively made. They embrace a wide variety suitable for every occasion both for adults and children. t£* c5* (2& A PAGEANT OF THE MONTHS. Robin, why don't you come and fetch your crumb ? Here's butter for my bunch of bread, And sugar for your crumb; Here's room upon the hearth-rug, If you'll only come. In your scarlet waistcoat, With your keen bright eye, Where are you loitering? Wings were made to fly! Make haste to breakfast, Come and fetch your crumb, For I'm as glad to see you As you are glad to come. {Two Robin Redbreasts are seen tap- ping with their beaks at the lattice, which January opens and throws out crumbs to birds. A knock is heard at the door. Jan- nary hangs a guard in front of the fire, and opens to February, who appears with a bunch of snowdrops in her hand.) January. Good-morrow, sister. February. Brother, joy to you ! I've brought some snowdrops; only just a few, But quite enough to prove the world awake, Robin Redbreasts; Lambs and Sheep; Nightingale and Nestlings. Various Flowers, Fruits, etc. Scene: — A Cottage with its Grounds. {A room in a large, comfortable cot- tage; a tire burning on the hearth; a table on which the breakfast things have been left standing. January discovered seated at the tire.) January. Cold the day and cold the drifted snow, Dim the day until the cold dark night. [Stirs the tire.] Crackle, sparkle, fagot; embers, glow; Some one may be plodding through the snow, Longing for a light, For the light that you and I can show. If no one else should come, Here Robin Redbreast's welcome crumb, And never troublesome; to i53 154 MODE EN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. Cheerful and hopeful in the frosty dew, And for the pale sun's sake. (She hands a few of her snowdrops to January, who retires into the background. While February stands arranging the re- maining snowdrops in a glass of water on the window-sill, a soft butting and bleat- ing are heard outside. She opens the door, and sees one foremost lamb, with other sheep and lambs bleating and crowding towards her.) February. O you, you little wonder, come — come in, You wonderful, you woolly, soft, white lamb: You panting mother ewe, come too, And lead that tottering twin Safe in: Bring all your bleating kith and kin, Except the horny ram. (February opens a second door in the background, and the little Hock files through into a warm and sheltered com- partment out of sight.) The lambkin tottering in its walk, With just a fleece to wear; The snowdrop drooping on its stalk So slender, — Snowdrop and lamb, a pretty pair, Braving the cold for our delight, Both white, Both tender. (A rattling of door and windows; branches seen without, tossing violently to and fro.) How the doors rattle, and the branches sway Here's brother March comes whirling on his way, With winds that eddy and sing. (She turns the handle of the door, which bursts open, and discloses March hasten- ing up, both hands full of violets and anemones.) February. Come, show me what you bring; For I have said my say, fulfilled my day, And must away. March. (Stopping short on the threshold.) I blow and arouse, Through the world's wide house, To quicken the torpid earth : Grappling I fling Each feeble thing, But bring strong life to the birth. I wrestle and frown, And topple down ; I wrench, I rend, I uproot; Yet the violet Is born where I set The sole of my flying foot. (Hands violets and anemones to Febru- ary, who retires into the background.) And in my wake Frail wind-flowers quake, And the catkins promise fruit. I drive ocean ashore With rush and roar, And he cannot say me nay: My harpstrings all Are the forests tall, Making music when I play. And as others perforce, So I on my course Run and needs must run, With sap on the mount, And buds past count, And rivers and clouds and sun, With seasons and breath And time and death And all that has yet begun. (Before March has done speaking, a voice is heard approaching accompanied by a twittering of birds. April comes along w o «i R W o w W p 1-1 M « P P p p H MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 157 singing, and stands outside and out of sight to finish her song.) April. (Outside.) Pretty little three Sparrows in a tree, Light upon the wing; Though you cannot sing, You can chirp of Spring: Chirp of Spring to me, Sparrows, from your tree. Never mind the showers, Chirp about the flowers, While you build- a nest: Straws from east and west, Feathers from your breast, Make the snuggest bowers In a world of flowers. You must dart away From the chosen spray, You intrusive third Extra little bird ; Join the unwedded herd! These have done with play, And must work to-day. April. (Appearing at the open door.) Good-morrow and good-bye: if others fly, Of all the flying months you're the most flying. March. You're hope and sweetness, April. April. Birth means dying, As wings and wind mean flying; So you and I and all things fly or die; And sometimes I sit sighing to think of dying. But meanwhile I've a rainbow in my show- ers, And a lapful of flowers, And these dear nestlings, aged three hours ; And here's their mother sitting, Their father merely flitting To find their breakfast somewhere in my bowers. (As she speaks April shows March hep apron full of flowers and nest full of birds. March wanders away into the grounds. April, without entering the cottage, hangs over the hungry nestlings watching them.) April. What beaks you have, you funny things, What voices, shrill and weak; Who'd think anything that sings Could sing -with such a beak ? Yet you'll be nightingales some day And charm the country-side, When I'm away and far away, And May is queen and bride. (May arrives unperceived by April, and gives her a kiss. April starts and looks round.) April. Ah, May, good-morrow, May, and so. good- bye. May. That's just your way, sweet April, smile and sigh; Your sorrows half in fun, Begun and done And turned to joy while twenty seconds run. At every step a flower Fed by your last bright shower, — (She divides an armful of all sorts of flowers with April, who strolls away through the garden.) May. And gathering flowers I listened to the song Of every bird in bower. The world and I are far too full of bliss, To think or plan or toil or care; 158 MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. The sun is waxing strong, The days are waning long, And all that is, Is fair. Here are May buds of lily and of rose, And here's my namesake-blossom, May; And from a watery spot See here, forget-me-not, With all that blows To-day. Hark to my linnets from the hedges green, Blackbird and lark and thrush and dove, And every nightingale And cuckoo tells its tale, And all they mean Is love. (June appears at the further end of the garden, coming slowly towards May, zvho seeing her, exclaims:) May. Surely you're come, too early, sister June. June. Indeed I feel as if I came too soon To round your young May moon. And set the world a-gasping at my noon, Yet must I come. So here are strawberries, Sun-flushed and sweet, as many as you please ; And there are full-blown roses by the score, More roses and yet more. (May, eating strawberries, withdraws among the flower beds.) June. The sun does all my long day's work for me, Raises and ripens everything; I need but sit beneath a leafy tree And watch and sing. (Scats herself in the shadow of a labur- num. ) Or if I'm lulled by note of bird and bee, Or lulled by noontide's silence deep, I need but nestle down beneath my tree And drop asleep. (June falls asleep; and is not awakened by the voice of July, who behind the scenes is heard half singing, half calling.) July. (Behind the scenes.) Blue flags, yellow flags, all freckled, Which will you take? Yellow, blue, speckled ! Take which you will, speckled, blue, yel- low, Each in its way has not a fellow. (Enter July, a basket of 'many-colored irises swung upon his shoulders, a bunch of ripe grass in one hand, and a plate piled full of peaches balanced upon the other. He steals up to June, and tickles her with the grass. She wakes.) June. What, here already? July. Nay, my tryst is kept ; The longest day slipped by you while you slept. I've brought you one curved pyramid of bloom, (Hands her the plate.) Not flowers, but peaches, gathered where the bees, As downy, bask and boom In sunshine and in gloom of trees. But get you in, a storm is at my heels ; The whirlwind whistles and wheels, Lightning flashes and thunder peals, Flying and following hard upon my heels. (June takes shelter in a thickly-woven arbor.) July. The roar of a storm sweeps up From the east to the lurid west, MODEBN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 159 The darkening sky, like a cup, Is filled with rain to the brink; The sky is purple and fire, Blackness and noise and unrest; The earth, parched with desire, Opens her mouth to drink. Send forth thy thunder and fire, Turn over thy brimming cup, O sky, appease the desire Of earth in her parched unrest; Pour out drink to her thirst, Her famishing life lift up; Make thyself fair as at first, With a rainbow for thy crest. Have done with thunder and fire, O sky with the rainbow crest; O earth, have done with desire, Drink, and drink deep, and rest. (Enter August, carrying a sheaf made up of different kinds of grain.) July. Hail, brother August, flushed and warm, And scathless from my storm. Your hands are full of corn, I see, As full as hands can be: And earth and air both smell as sweet as balm In their recovered calm, And that they owe to me. (July retires into the shrubbery.) August. Wheat sways heavy, oats are airy, Barley bows a graceful head, Short and small shoots up canary, Each of these is some one's bread ; Bread for man or bread for beast, Or at very least A bird's savory feast. Men are brethren of each other, One in flesh and one in food ; And a sort of foster brother, Is the litter, or the brood Of that folk in fur and feather, Who, with men together, Breast the wind and weather. (August descries September toiling across the lawn.) August. My harvest home is ended ; and I spy September drawing nigh With the first thought of Autumn in her eye, And the first sigh Of Autumn wind among her locks that fly. (September arrives, carrying upon her head a basket heaped high with fruit.) September. Unload me, brother. I have brought a few Plums and these pears for you, A dozen kinds of apples, one or two Melons, some figs all bursting through Their skins; and pearled with dew These damsons, violet-blue. (While September is speaking, August lifts the basket to the ground, selects vari- ous fruits, and withdraws slowly along the gravel walk, eating a pear as he goes.) September. My song is half a sigh Because my green leaves die ; Sweet are my fruits, but all my leaves are dying; And well may Autumn sigh, And well may I Who watch the sere leaves flying. My leaves that fade and fall, I note you one and all; I call you, and the Autumn wind is calling, Lamenting for your fall, And for the pall You spread on earth in falling. 1G0 MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. And here's a song of flowers to suit such hours : A song of the last lilies, the last flowers, Amid my withering bowers. In the sunny garden bed Lilies look so pale, Lilies droop the head In the shady, grassy vale; If all alike they pine In shade and in shine, If everywhere they grieve, Where will lilies live? (October enters briskly, some leafy twigs bearing different sorts of nuts in one hand, and a long, ripe hop-vine trailing after him from the other. A dahlia is stuck in his button-hole.) October. Nay, cheer up, sister. Life is not quite over, Even if the year has done with corn and clover, With flowers and leaves; besides, in fact, it's true, Some leaves remain, and some flowers too, For me and you. Now see my crops. [Offering his produce to September.'] I've brought you nuts and hops; And when the leaf drops, why the walnut drops. (October wreathes the hop-vines about September's neck, and gives her the nut twigs. They enter the cottage together, but without shutting the door. She steps into the background; he advances to the hearth, removes the guard, stirs up the smouldering fire, and arranges several chestnuts ready to roast.) October. Crack your first nut, light your first fire, Roast your chestnuts, crisp on the bar, Make the logs sparkle, stir the blaze higher ; Logs are as cheery as sun or as star, Logs we can find wherever we are. Spring, one soft day, will open the leaves, Spring, one bright day, will lure back the flowers ; Never fancy my whistling wind grieves, Never fancy I've tears in my showers ; Dance, nights and days ! and dance on, my hours. [Sees November approaching.] October. Here comes my youngest sister, looking dim And grim, With dismal ways. What cheer, November? November. (Entering and shutting the door.) Nought have I to bring, Tramping a-chill and shivering, Except these pine cones for a blaze, — Except a fog which follows, And stuffs up all the hollows, — Except a hoar frost here and there, — Except some shooting stars, Which dart their luminous cars, Trackless and noiseless through the keen night air. (October, shrugging his shoulders, with- draws into the background, while Novem- ber throws her pine cones on the fire and sits down listlessly.) November. The earth lies fast asleep, grown tired Of all that's high or deep; There's naught desired and naught re- quired Save a sleep. I rock the cradle of the earth, I lull her with a sigh; MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 161 And know that she will wake to mirth By and bye. (Through the window December is seen running and leaping in the direction of the door. He knocks.) November. (Calls out without rising.) Ah, here's my youngest brother come at last: Come in, December. (He opens the door and enters, loaded with evergreens in berry, etc.) Come in and shut the door, For now it's snowing fast; It snows, and will snow more and more ; Don't let it drift in on the floor. But you, you're all aglow ; how can you be Rosy and warm and smiling in the cold. December. Nay, no closed doors for me, But open doors and open hearts and glee To welcome young and old. Dimmest and brightest month am I ; My short days end, my lengthening days begin ; What matters more or less sun in the sky, When all is sun within? (He begins making a tvreath as he sings. ) Ivy and privet dark as night I weave with hips and haws a cheerful show, And holly for a beauty and delight, And milky mistletoe. While high above them all is set Yew twigs and Christmas roses, pure and pale; Then Spring her snowdrop and her violet May keep, so sweet and frail ; May keep each merry singing bird, Of all her happy birds that singing build: For I've a carol which some shepherds heard Once in a wintry field. (While December concludes his song, all the other months troop in from the garden, or advance out of the background. The tzvelve join hands in a circle, and begin dancing round to a stately measure as the Curtain fails.) — Christina G. Rossetti. t£& t" l2f* PAT DOLAN'S WEDDING. Characters. Nicholas Neverslip, a modern hus- band. Patrick Dolan, an Irish lad. Matilda, Neverslip's wife. Miss Spyall, a gossip. Biddy Crogan, a domestic. Scene : — A drawing room. Time, even- ing. Table and two chairs, C. Nicholas discovered standing near L. E. with cane and gloves in hands: he calls to his wife, who is supposed to be up stairs dressing for the opera. Nicholas. — My dear, it is half-past sev- en ; do hurry ; I am sure we will be late. Matilda. — I am coming — be with you in one minute. Has Biddy fastened the back gate? Nicholas (aside). — I know we'll be late (calls), Biddy! (crosses to R. E.) Biddy. — I'm here, sur. [Enter Biddy R. E.] What do you want wid me, sur? Nicholas. — Biddy is the back gate fast- ened? Biddy. — I'll see, sur, (turns to go.) Nicholas. — Biddy ! 163 MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. Biddy. — Sur ! Nicholas. — Biddy, I am going to the opera; that is, we are, Mrs. Neverslip and myself. Matilda (calls). — Nicholas! Nicholas. — Well, what's the matter? Matilda. — Where did you lay my fan? Nicholas. — I never touched your fan. (looks at his watch.) It is twenty minutes to eight ; I declare we will be late. Biddy (aside). — I wonder if he means to keep me shtandin' here all night? Nicholas (to Matilda). — I am going! Matilda. — Here I come. Nicholas. — It is time you were coming. Matilda. — Oh, dear! Nicholas. — What's the matter? Matilda. — Oh, you've hurried me so I've gone and dressed without my fichu; I can never go without it. Nicholas (aside). — Confound her fish- hook, (aloud) Snails and turtles! are you never coming? Biddy (aside). — I'm nather a gate post nur a clothes prop, (aloud) Mr. Never- slip, I'll be goin' to the kitchen; I lift the banes on the sthove; I think they're burn- in'. [Exit Biddy R. E.] Nicholas. — For mercy sake do come. Matilda (singing). — I am coming, darling, coming Nicholas. — How provokingly cool you are. [Enter Matilda L. E.] Matilda. — Now, my dear, we'll be off. [Both start toward L. E.] Why, where's your hat? Nicholas (feels his head). — Good gra- cious ! It is up stairs — Matilda, dear, will you get it for me? Matilda. — You cruel man (knock heard from without.) Both. — Horrors ! Some one at the door ! Nicholas. — Biddy ! [Enter Biddy R. E.] Biddy. — Ay, sur! Nicholas. — Biddy, we're out. Biddy. — Yer what? Nicholas. — We're out; that is, we soon will be. We do not wish to see anyone — you comprehend? Biddy (angrily). — Don't want to see anyone. I comprehend ! Sur, I'm an hon- est Irish girl, and I niver comprehend any- body, (arms akimbo) Niver! [Prolonged knock at the door.] Nicholas. — Go to the door and say we're out! Biddy (aside). — The man is surely out of his head. [Exit Biddy L. E.] Matilda. — Oh my! we'll never get off. Nicholas. — My dear, it's all your own fault. Matilda (puts handkerchief to eyes). — Dear, dear! Nicholas. Hark! Miss Spyall (from without). — Take this card to Biddy (from without). — They're out, mum. Miss Spyall. — Then I'll just step in a moment and write a line or two. Biddy. — But they're out. Matilda. — Oh grief! It is that awful Spyall; good-bye opera to-night. Nicholas. — We might as well give up now. [Enter Biddy L. E. walking backzvard follozved by Miss Spyall.] Miss Spyall (aside). — Out of the street; ah! I understand! (Extends hands to Nicholas and Matilda) — (aloud) How delighted I am to see you ! What ! going out? Biddy. — Yis, out ; they're out — outward bound, I forgot part of the wurruds. Nicholas. — Silence, Bridget ! MODEEN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 163 Matilda. — We need you no longer, Biddy. Biddy. — Indade, ye'H give me two wakes' notice. I'll not lave now. Matilda. — I mean we do not need you here. You may go to the kitchen. Oh, bother! My hair is coming down. Biddy get me a hair-pin, quick ! [Exit Biddy R. E.] Miss Spyall. — What a beautiful dress; is it all silk? Nicholas. — Part muslin, Miss. Matilda. — Nicholas, you shock me. Nicholas (Pulls out watch and starts to go). — Oh, oh, oh! Miss Spyall. — Going to church? Nicholas. — No, not to church. Miss Spyall. — Oh, I see; the museum. Nicholas. — We have an engagement. Miss Spyall. — A wedding ? That's it ! I know. Who is it? Do tell me if it is Nancy Beadle? I thought she and John — Matilda. — My husband and I are about going down town on important business, it is time we were there now. Miss Spyall. — Anything important ? You know I can be trusted. Nicholas. — Gone! gone! gone! Miss Spyall. — Hey? Matilda. — Miss Spyall, you will please excuse me this evening, we must go at once. [Enter Biddy R. E. with clothes-pins in each hand.] Nicholas (pointing to watch). — We've lost our seats. (Matilda and Miss Spyall take seats.) Biddy (to Nicholas). — Niver moind me; still, I'll bring two chairs from the dining- room if ye insist. (To Matilda) Here's the puns, mum. Matilda. — Stupid girl, these are clothes- pins. Miss Spyall. — What a silly creature. Biddy (aside). — The spalpeen! Nicholas. — Excuse me. I must get my hat. [Exit L. E.] Matilda. — Oh, he's a darling man ! Miss Spyall. — Spe-len-did ! (A crash is heard.) Matilda. — What have you done? Nicholas (groans). — Broken my shins, smashed my hat and upset your toilet stand ! Matilda. — You wretch — edly unfortu- nate man. [Enter Nicholas L. E. limping with smashed hat in hand.] Miss Spyall. — I must be going. Matilda. — We are going to the opera. Nicholas. — To hear the final chorus. Miss Spyall. — How delightful ! Matilda. — Biddy, keep a sharp look out. [Exit all except Biddy L. E.] Biddy. — Yis, I'll kape a sharp look out. I'll first take a look at the back gate. Poor Pat's been waitin' at that same gate for a whole hour; faith he's stharved wid the cold (starts and listens) Arrah, what's that? Sure some one's in the kitchen. I hear a brogan on the stairs — the saints pro- tect me. [Enter Pat R. E., looking around cautiously.] Oh, Pat Dolan ! How dare ye frighten me loike that? How did ye enter the house ? — What if the folks had been in ? Pat. — Whist, me darlin' ; I saw them lave by the front door, and in the wink of an eye, it's meself that lepped over the fence; I thried the back door, it was un- latched, and here I am, Biddy dear ! Biddy. — Niver do the loikes of that again. You might be shot for a burglar or a dynamiter. Pat. (sitting at table). — Niver fear, Biddy dear; go ye and bring a crust of bread and sup of — of something stronger than tay, if yer have it ; sure I've room here 1G4 MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. for a loaf, and I'm thrimblin' wid wake- ness Biddy. — I'll see what's lift in the pantry. Be aisy till I come back. (Starts to go.) Pat.— Biddy ! Biddy. — What, darlint? (Pauses.) Pat. — Do ye hear anything? Biddy. — It's the Niverslips! Run for your life ! Pat. — Be aisy; it's me poor heart beat- in'; and nothin' more. It always bates whin I see that face. Biddy (Looks over her shoulder). — What face? I see no face! Pat. — Don't be a greenhorn. I mane your own lovely countenance. Biddy. — Oh, ye blarney ! [Exit R. E.] Pat. (Rises from chair and walks up and dozvn the stage). — Humph! this is a very foine house. It lacks the comforts of a home, howiver, for there's not the sign of a pipe or a 'bacca bowl about the room. They're evidently mane people. [Enter Biddy R. E. carrying tray, on which are loaf of bread, a knife, a black bottle and two glasses.] Look at that now! If that isn't the tip of hospitality my name's not Patrick Dolan. Biddy (places tray on table). — Now, Pat, ye must not trifle over the sup, (fills glass from bottle) but drink it at once. It would niver do to have the folks foind ye here. Pat (takes glass). — Here's to our wed- ding day (drinks), Oh! ah! (jumps to his feet and runs about stage holding his throat) I'm pizened, I'm kilt. Biddy (following him about). — Shpeak, shpeak, me darlint Pat. Pat (gasping and pointing to bottle). — Look — look — look at that! What's in the bottle? Biddy. — Sure I can't read. (Hands bot- tle to Pat.) Pat. — Saint Patrick defind me! (reads) "Pure Jamaica Ginger," Oh! it's atin me up! (Noise heard without.) Biddy. — Hark! (Both listen.) Nicholas (from without). — We should have taken an umbrella ; hurry in or we shall be drowned with the rain. Pat (agitated). — Put me away! hide me ! cover me up ! Biddy. — Run! No — shtop — they're here! get under the table. Pat (crawls under table). — Bad luck to the rain ! Biddy.— Arrah! What shall I do? He's opening the door wid the noight key. Kape shtill, Pat. Nicholas. — Walk in Miss Spyall; it is only a shower. [Enter Never slip, Matilda and Miss Spy- all L.E.] Miss Spyall (aside). — Refreshments, as I live! (Aloud) I feel real chilly! If I were home I'd have a bowl of hot tea, or something warm. Biddy. — I was thinkm', mum, that ye might be cold. Matilda.— What's that, Biddy? Biddy. — I thought ye'd need a warrum drink and a bite, so I've the bottle and bread handy for yez. (Points to bottle.) Nicholas (takes bottle). — Jamaica Gin- ger. Matilda. — The idea! Bread and gin- ger. Why, Biddy, you are certainly be- coming insane. Miss Spyall (aside). — I thought they were too mean to have cake and wine, I thought it was a pound cake. How disap- pointed and hungry I feel. (Aloud) I won- der if it still rains? Nicholas. — Be seated, ladies. Biddy, go to the door, and see if it has stopped MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 165 raining. — (Matilda and Miss Spy all take seats at table). I will see if I can find an umbrella for Miss Spyall. [Exit L. E.] Pat. — (Pat's head rises slowly from be- hind table). Miss Spyall. — Does Mr. Neverslip smoke much? Matilda. — Never at all. Why do you ask? Miss Spyall. — I thought I detected a strong odor of an old pipe. Pat (aside). — Ye spalpeen! (Pulls her ear and stoops behind table.) Miss Spyall. — Oh! (indignantly). Don't do that again. I dislike such famil- iarity. Matilda (astonished). — Why, what's the matter with you? Miss Spyall. — I guess if I were to pull your ear you would know how it feels. There ! ( They turn their backs to each other angrily). (Pat peeps from under table and pulls Matilda's ear). Matilda (springing to her feet). — You impudent gossip! How dare you? (Rubs her ear.) If you want exercise, try pedes- trianism ; I will excuse your presence. (Points to door). Miss Spyall (rising and backing off). — I am shocked beyond expression, (aside) If I only get out — the woman's surely mad. [Enter Nicholas L. E. with umbrella'] Matilda. — My dear, give Miss Spyall the umbrella; she is surely ill and should get home with all possible speed. Miss Spyall. — Not at all, not at all, sir ; it is your insolent wife who needs your at- tention. Nicholas. — What is the meaning of such singular language? (Picks up bot- tle.) You have not been tampering with this? [Enter Biddy R. E. holding shawl in her hands.] Biddy. — Look at me shplendid shawl! An illigant present that oi've just received. (unfolds shawl and advances towards rear of table). Nicholas. — Some other time, Biddy; we are engaged at present. Miss Spyall (aside). — The whole fam- ily are certainly crazy. Matilda. — I'm in no humor to look at shawls ; I prefer taking a dissolving view of somebody's back. (Looks at Miss Spy- all.) Biddy (holds up shazvl with both hands). — Pat, get behind the shawl. Pat. — (crawls behind the shawl, screens himself from view, and moves off with Biddy). Biddy (backing towards the door). — It shows better at a distance, mum. Nicholas (advancing to Biddy). — This must cease. Biddy. — Don't come too close; ye'll shpoil the effect. Matilda. — Take the shawl from her. Nicholas. — Let me have it. (Pulls shawl from Biddy, exposing Pat to view). Pat (bozving). — Yez'll pa r don me, but I was always bashful. Nicholas. — Explain yourself, at once! Matilda. — Look after the teaspoons ! Miss Spyall (aside). — Here's a nut to crack! Here's a scandal. Biddy (crying and holding apron to eyes). — I'll tell yez the truth. Patsy and meself are engaged to be married, and seein' as I was to be lift alone in this big barn of a house, an' bein' timid, the poor man jist happened in to kape me company for a few minutes. Pat. — What she says is intirely true, your honors; it's meself that can bring a reference the lingth of me arrum. 166 MOVE UN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. Nicholas. — Enough. Biddy is too good a girl to be guilty of even a wrong thought. Our spoons are safe, and I (all advancing to front) have but one suggestion to make, that in future you entertain him in the kitchen, where you will not be likely to be disturbed by unwelcome visitors. Matilda. — If I thought I would be free from unwelcome visitors (looking at Miss Spyall) I'd go to the kitchen too. Pat. — The nixt kitchen we mate in will be the kitchen of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Dolan ; how do you loike that ? Miss Spyall (aside). — Well I'm sup- plied with a lot of fresh news anyhow. (All take positions.) Nicholas. — And as there appears to be a wedding near at hand, we must prepare for it ; so we'll say good night — and dream of getting ready. [curtain.] — Geo. M. Vickers, i&i t5* (^* THE UNHAPPY HOME. A TEMPERANCE PLAY. (Characters — Man and his wife; Nellie, a daughter, ten years old; Friend, dressed in a man- of-the-world style; A. and B., two young men, dressed in business suits.) Scene I. MR. L. and his wife on Jie stage; Mr. L. dressed for his work, and about to go.) Mrs. L. — Albert, I wish you would give me seventy-five cents. Mr. L. — What do you want seventy-five cents for? Mrs. L. — I want to get some braid for my new dress. Mr. L. — Haven't you something else that will do? Mrs. L. — No. But, then, braid is cheap ; and I can make it look quite pretty with seventy-five cents. Mr. L. — Plague take these women's fashions. Your endless trimmings and thing-a-ma-jigs cost more than the dress is worth. It is nothing but shell out money when a woman thinks of a new. dress. Mrs. L. — I don't have many new dresses. I do certainly try to be as econom- ical as I can. Mr. L. — It is funny kind of economy, at all events. But if you must have it, I sup- pose you must. (Takes out his purse, and counts out carefully seventy-five cents, and puts his purse away angrily. He starts to go; but when at the door, he thinks he will take his umbrella, and goes back for it. Finds his zvife in tears, which she tries hastily to conceal.) Mr. L. — Good gracious ! Kate, I should like to know if you are crying at what I said about the dress. Mrs. L. — I was not crying at what you said. I was thinking of how hard I have to work. I am tied to the house. I have many little things to perplex me. Then to think — Mr. L. — Pshaw ! What do you want to be foolish for? (Exit.) (In the hall he zuas met by his little girl, Lizzie. ) Lizzie — (holding both his hands.) Oh, papa, give me fifteen cents. Mr. L. — What in the world qo you want it for ? Are they changing books again ? Lizzie — No. I want a hoop. It's splen- did rolling; and all the girls have one. Please, can't I have one? MODERN DIALOGUES AXD PLAYS. 1G7 Mr. L. — Nonsense ! If you want a hoop, go and get one off some old barrel. (Throws her off.) Lizzie — (in a pleading tone.) Please, Papa? Mr. L. — No, I told you ! (She bursts into tears, and he goes off muttering, "Cry, then, and cry it out.") Scene II. (Albert and Wife enter.) Mrs. L. — I am glad you are home thus early. How has business gone to-day? Mr. L. — Well, I am happy to say. Mrs. L. — Are you very tired? Mr. L. — No; why? Mrs. L. — I want you to go to the sew- ing circle to-night. Mr. L. — I can't go; I have an engage- ment. Mrs. L. — I am sorry. You never go with me now. You used to go a great deal. (Just then Lizzie comes in crying, drag- ging an old hoop, and rubbing her eyes.) Mr. L. — What is the matter with you, darling? Lizzie — The girls have been laughing at me, and making fun of my hoop. They say mine is ugly and homely. Mayn't I have one now? Mr. L. — Not now, Lizzie; not now. I'll think of it. (Lizzie goes out crying, followed by her mother. A friend of Mr. L. enters.) Friend — Hello, Albert! What's up? Mr. L. — Nothing in particular. Take a chair. Friend — How's business ? Mr. L. — Good. Friend — Did you go to the club last night ? Mr. L. — Don't speak so loud! Friend — Ha, wife don't know — does she ? Where does she think you go ? Mr. L. — I don't know. She never asks me, and I am glad of it. She asked me to go with her to-night, and I told her I was engaged. Friend — Good ! I shan't ask you where, but take it for granted that it was with me. What do you say f 01 a game of billiards ? Mr. L— Good! I'm for that. (They rise to go.) Have a cigar, Tom? Friend — Yes. (They go out.) Scene III. (Two men in conversation.) B. — Billiards ? No, I never play billiards. A.— Why not? B. — I don't like its tendency. I cannot assert that the game is, of itself, an evil, to be sure. But, although it has the ad- vantage of calling forth skill and judgment, yet it is evil when it stimulates beyond the bounds of healthy recreation. A. — That result can scarcely follow such a game. B. — You are wrong there. The result can follow in two ways. First, it can lead men away from their business. Secondly, it leads those to spend their money who have none to spend. Look at that young man just passing. He looks like a me- chanic ; and I should judge from his ap- pearance that he has a family. I see by his face that he is kind and generous, and wants to do as near right as he can. I have watched him in the billiard saloon time after time, and only last night I saw him pay one dollar and forty cents for two hours' recreation. He did it cheerfully, too, and smiled at his loss. But how do you suppose it is at home? A. — Upon my word, B., you speak to the point ; for I know that young man, and what you have said is true. I can furnish you with facts. We have a club for a lit- erary paper in our village. His wife was very anxious to take it ; but he said he could not afford the $1.25 for it. And his 168 MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. little Lizzie, ten years old, has coaxed her father for fifteen cents, for a hoop, in vain. My Nellie told me that. B. — Yes ; and that two hours' recreation last night, would have paid for both. It is well for wives and children that they do not know where all the money goes. l^rt ^* ^* LITTLE RED RIDING-HOOD, or THE WICKED WOLF AND THE VIRTUOUS WOOD-CUTTER. Characters : Jack, the woodcutter, zvho rescues Red Riding-Hood from the Wolf, quite by ac- cident. The Wolf, a wicked wretch, zvho pays his devours to Little Red Riding-Hood, but is defeated by his rival. Dame Margery, mother of Little Red Riding-Hood, a crusty role, and very ill- bred. Little Red Riding-Hood, a fascinating little pet, so lovely that you are not likely to see two such faces under a hood. The Fairy Felicia, a beneficent genius, versed in spells, and quite au fait in magic. Granny, an invisible old girl, by kind permission of the Prompter. [The dresses are easily enough made, with the exception of the Wolf's. A rough shawl or a fur jacket will answer the purpose, and the head can be made of pasteboard. There is always someone in a community, however small, with ingenuity for such work. The Butterfly in Scene II is affixed to wire held at the wings. The Prompter reads the part of Granny, standing close to the bed, in order to assist in getting rid of the Dummy when Wolf is supposed to eat it.] Scene I. The outside of Little Red Riding-Hood's Cottage. Enter Red Riding-Hood's Mother. She runs about the stage look- ing for her child. M OTHER. Red Riding-Hood! Red Riding-Hood, I say! Where can the little monkey hide away ? Red Riding-Hood! O dreary, dreary me! Provoking child, where ever can she be! [Looks off on both sides.] She is a shocking disobedient child, Enough to drive a loving moth- er wild ; But stay ! where are the butter and the cake That to her grandmother she has to take? Fetches basket from cottage and shows cake and butter. Here is the cake, and here's the butter, see ! The nicest cake and butter that could be. These in the basket I will neatly lay, A present to poor Granny to convey. They are not tithes, though given to the wicker; Puts them in basket. Bless me, I wish the child were only quicker! Red Riding-Hood, Red Riding- Hood! Dear, dear! Enter Little Red Riding-Hood. R. R.-H. Here I am, ma. MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 169 Mother. You wicked puss, come here! Take this to Granny ! Poor old soul, she's ill; Give her my love and these tid- bits. R. R.-H I will. Won't it be nice? Through wood and field I'll walk, And have with Jack, perhaps, a little talk. Dear Jack ! At thought of him why quickly beat, heart? Dear Jack! he's no Jack-pud- ding, but a sweet-tart! Won't I catch butterflies and gather flowers ! Mother. Mind you don't dawdle and be gone for hours, But go straight there and back again with speed, And do not loiter in lane, wood, or mead, Or else a great big wolf shall come to eat you; At any rate your loving moth- er'll beat you! Threatens R. R.-H. with stick. Enter Jack, at back. Jack. Where is Red Riding-Hood, my heart's delight? La, there's her mother! What a horrid fright! Mother. What are you doing here, you rascal Jack? Be off, or I will hit your head a crack. [Strikes at him, but misses.] Jack. Before your hits, ma'am, I pre- fer a miss; Bows to R. R.-H. So blow for blow, I mean to blow a kiss. [Kisses hand to R. R-H.] Mother. Kisses to blc Jack. Hush ! don't be coarse and low : If you don't like my company, I'll go; Your words are violent, your temper quick, So this young woodcutter will cut his stick. He and R. R.-H. exchange signs, blow kisses, etc. Exit Jack. Mother (to R. R.-H.). That spark is not your match, and you're to blame. To take delight in such a paltry flame. Now go ; and lose no time upon the road, But hasten straight to Grand- mother's abode. R. R.-H. I will not loiter, mother, by the way, Nor go in search of butterflies astray. Instead of picking flowers, my steps I'll pick, And take the things to Granny, who is sick. Good-by, dear mother. Mother (kisses her.) There, my dear, good-by. R. R.-H. See how obedient to your word I fly! Mother. A one-horse fly! What non- sense you do talk! You have no wings, and so of course must walk. You go afoot. How now, miss? Wherefore smile? R. R.-H. Why go afoot? I've not to go a mile ; That was the reason, mother, why I smiled. Mother. That joke's so far-fetched, that it's very miled. [Exeunt. IT'O MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. Scene II. A Forest Glade. Enter Red Riding-Hood. R. R.-H. How nice the wood is, with its cool green shade! I must sit down and rest here, I'm afraid ; Though mother would declare I'm only lazy. I'm very tired and weary. [Yawns, then sees flower and starts.] Lawk! a daisy! [Picks flowers.] It can't be wrong some pretty flowers to pull; With them I'll fill my little apron full, And take to please my poor old granny's eye. Butterfly flies across the stage. O, isn't that a lovely butterfly? [Runs after it.] Stop, little butterfly, a moment, do. Tries to catch it, and runs into the arms of Jack, who enters. I've caught it. Jack. Beg your pardon, I've caught you. [Kisses her.] R. R.-H. Don't you be rude, sir! Fie, why treat me thus ! Jack. You thought to take a fly, I took a bus. I love you, pretty maid ! Sup- pose we say That we'll be married? Just you fix the day. [Em- braces her.] R. R.-H. You're very pressing, sir! Well, let me see : Next Wednesday a wedding's day shall be. Jack. An earlier date far better, dear, will do; Say, why not Tuesday as the day for two? Another kiss! R. R.-H._ A kiss? O dear me, no! Farewell. To poor old Granny's I must go, For mother has commanded me to take The poor old soul some butter and a cake. Jack. I'm off to work, then. R. R.-H. Whither you go pray? Jack. I'm not quite sure, but mean to axe my way. [Exit. R. R.-H. Now I must hurry off to Granny. Fairy appears. Law ! How lovely ! such a sight I never saw. Fairy. I am a fairy, and your friend, my dear; You'll need my aid, for there is danger near. Your disobedience to your mother's will Has given bad fairies power to work you ill. R. R.-H. Thanks, beauteous fairy. But no harm I meant, And of my disobedience much repent. Fairy. I know it, and will therefore prove your friend ; You shall o'ercome your troubles in the end. Remember when your case my help demands, You've naught to do save simply clap your hands. Exit Fairy. R. R.-H. How very sorry I am now that I MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 171 Was disobedient: let the time slip by, Neglected Granny and my mother's words, To gather flowers and list to singing birds, To hunt the butterflies. 'Twas wrong, I fear — But, goodness gracious me, what have we here? Enter Wolf. Wolf. O, what a very pretty little girl ! Such rosy cheeks, such hair, so nice in curl! (Aside.) As tender as a chicken, too, I'll lay; One doesn't get such tidbits ev- ery day. (To R. R.-H.) What brings you wander- ing in the wood like this, And whither are you going, pretty miss? R. R.-H. I'm bound for Granny's cot- tage, but I fear I've strayed from the right path in coming here. I'm taking her a currant-cake and butter ; So nice, their excellence no tongue can utter. Wolf (aside). However excellent, I'll bet I lick it ; As to the cake, I'll gobble pretty quick it. (To R. R.-H.) And where does Granny live? R. R.-H. Not far from this; It's near the river. Wolf (pointing off). Then, my little miss, Along that path you have but to repair, And very shortly you will find you're there. R. R.-H. O, thank you; now I'll go. [Exit. Wolf. And I'll be bound You'll find that same short cut a long way round. The nearest road to the cottage take, And of old Granny I short work will make, And then I'll gobble you up, little dear. I didn't like to try and eat you here; You might object to it — some people do — And scream and cry, and make a hubbuboo; And there's a woodcutter, I know, hard by, From whose quick hatchet quick-catch-it should I! Here goes to bolt old Granny without flummery, A spring — and then one swal- low shall be summery ! [Exit. Scene III. Interior of Grandmother's cottage. On the right hand, close to the wing, a bed with a dummy in it zvith a large night- cap. Wolf is heard knocking. Granny (spoken from the wing close by the bed). Who's there? Wolf (imitating R. R.-H.) Your little grandchild, Granny dear. Granny. That child has got a shocking cold, that's clear. Some carelessness — she's got her feet wet through With running in the rain or heavy dew, Perhaps without her bonnet; and, of course, 172 MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. The little donkey is a little hoarse. Her words she used not croak- ingly to utter — What do you want? Wolf. I've brought you cake and but- ter, But can't come in, the door my strength defies. Granny. Pull at the bobbin, and the latch will rise. Enter Wolf. Granny. How are you, little darling? Wolf. Darling ! Pooh ! You didn't bolt your door, so I'll bolt you ! Granny. O, mercy! murder! what is this I see? Some frightful spectre must the monster be! Wolf. Don't make a noise, for you're a hopeless hobble in; I'm not a ghost, but soon shall be a gobble-in' ! Wolf flings himself on the bed; shrieks and growls are heard. The dummy is removed without the audience being able to see it, as Wolf is in front of it. Wolf (coming down). Yahen ! yahen! yahen ! yahen ! yahen ! I've finished her ere she could angry be with me. I didn't give her time to dis- agree with me. Now for a night-gown (takes on^) and a night-cap (takes one). Good! [Puts them on.] How do I look as Grandma Riding-Hood ? Gets into bed and covers himself up. A knock is heard at the door. Wolf (imitating Granny's voice). Who's there ? R. R.-H. Your little grandchild, Granny dear; I have a cake and butter for you here. Wolf Pull at the bobbin and the latch will rise. Enter R. R.-H. R. R.-H. Good morning, Granny! here are the supplies. Sets down basket. Wolf. Good morning, dear, come sit beside my bed. I'm very bad indeed, child, in my head. R. R.-H. sits on the side of bed. R. R.-H. Why, Granny, what big ears you've got? Wolf. My dear, That is that Granny may the better hear. R. R.-H. And, Granny, what big eyes you've got! Wolf. Dear me! That is that Granny may the better see. R. R.-H. Then, Granny, what big teeth you've got? O, la! Wolf. To eat you up with all the better. [Springs out of bed and strikes an attitude.] Ha! R. R.-H. screams, and runs away; Wolf pursues her round the table. Enter Jack. Jack. As I was passing by, I just dropt in. [To Wolf.] Shall I drop into you? Wolf. O, pray begin ! Jack. You hideous brute, your wicked game I'll stop. Hits Wolf zvith axe. How do you like that, monster? Wolf. That's first chop ! Jack. That isn't all — another chop to follow ! MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 173 Strikes him again. They struggle. Wolf falls with a loud cry. Don't halloa, sir! Wolf. I must — I'm beaten hollow; You've felled me to the earth. Jack. Yes, I'm the feller! I'll beat you black and blue. Wolf (aside). Then I'll turn yeller! Goes into convulsions, shrieks, and feigns to be dead. Jack flings down axe, and embraces R. R.-H. R. R.-H. You've saved my life, dear Jack! What can I do To show my love and gratitude to you? Jack. Sweetest Red Riding-Hood, say you'll be mine, To jine our hands the parson I'll enjine. Wolf creeps behind them, and secures the axe. Wolf (leaping up). That en-gine won't assist you, tender pair ; Snatches up R. R.-H. with one arm, brand- ishing axe. If that's your line, why I shall raise the fare. Jack. He's got the axe — O, here's a nice quandary! R. R.-H. (claps hands). You'll raise the fare? Then I will raise the fairy! Fairy appears at the back. Enter R. R.- H.'s Mother. Mother. You wicked child, where have you been? Oho! You're listening to the shoot of that young beau ! But I'll forbid it, and I'll have my way. Fairy comes forward. Fairy. Excuse me, but your orders I gainsay. Mother. Who are you, madam, I should like to ask? Fairy. I am the Fairy of the Wood, whose task It is to aid the weak against the strong, And set things right when they are going wrong. You, Master Wolf, please keep that hatchet ready; For that sad jest of eating the old lady, You shall die, jester, by that very tool! Dame Margery, you have acted like a fool. Mother. Good Mistress Fairy, why, what have I done? Fairy. Jack is no peasant, but a prince's son, Stolen from the crib by an old cribbing gypsy, When he was little and his nurse was tipsy. Mother. You don't say! Jack. I a prince! R. R.-H. Good gracious, mother! Is he that 'ere? Fairy. He's that heir, and no other. Your mother won't reject his house and lands, Though she did him; so here I join your hands, With blessings, from the Fairy of the Wood, On brave Prince Jack and fair Red Riding-Hood. 1U MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. TAKING THE CENSUS. Scene — A farm house. Characters — Mrs* Touchzvood at the washtub being quizzed by the census taker. CENSUS TAKER— Good morning, madam. Is the head of the house at home ? Mrs. Touchwood — Yes, sir, I'm at home. C. T. — Haven't you a husband? Mrs. T. — Yes, sir, but he ain't the head of the family, I'd have you to know. C. T. — How many persons have you in your family? Mrs. T. — Why bless me, sir, what's that to you? You're mighty inquisitive, I think. C. T. — I'm the man that takes the census. Mrs. T. — If you was a man in your senses you wouldn't ask such impertinent questions. C. T. — Don't be offended, old lady, but answer my questions as I ask them. Mrs. T. — "Answer a fool according to his folly!" — you know what the Scripture says. Old lady, indeed ! C. T. — Beg your pardon, madam; but I don't care about hearing Scripture just at this moment. I'm bound to go according to law and not according to gospel. Mrs. T. — I should think you went neither according to law nor gospel. What busi- ness is it to you to inquire into folks' affairs, Mr. Thingumbob? C. T. — The law makes it my business, good woman, and if you don't want to ex- pose yourself to its penalties, you must answer my questions. Mrs. T— Oh, it's the law is it? That alters the case. But I should like to know what the law has to do with other people's household affairs? C. T. — Why, Congress made the law, and if it don't please you, you must talk to them about it. Mrs. T.— Talk to a fiddle-stick! Why, Congress is a fool, and you're another. C. T. — Now, good lady, you're a fine, good-looking woman; if you'll give me a few civil answers I'll thank you. What I wish to know first is, how many are there in your family? Mrs. T. — Let me see [counting on her fingers] ; there's I and my husband is one — C. T. — Two, you mean. Mrs. T. — Don't put me out, now, Mr. Thinkummy. There's I and my husband is one C. T. — Are you always one? Mrs. T.— What's that to you, I should like to know. But I tell you, if you don't leave off interrupting me I won't say an- other word. C. T. — Well, take your own way, and be hanged to you. Mrs. T. — I will take my own way, and no thanks to you. [Again counting her fingers.] There's I and my husband is one ; there's John, he's two ; Peter is three, Sue and Moll are four, and Thomas is five. And then there's Mr. Jenkins and his wife and the two children is six; and there's Jowler, he's seven. C. T.— Jowler! Who's he? Mrs. T — Who's Jowler! Why, who should he be but the old house dog? C. T. — It's the number of persons I want to know. Mrs. T. — Very well, Mr. Flippergin, ain't Jowler a person? Come here, Jowler, and speak for yourself. I'm sure he's as personable a dog as there is in the whole State. C. T. — He's a very clever dog, no doubt. But it's the number of human beings I want to know. MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 175 Mrs. T. — Human ! There ain't a more . human dog that ever breathed. C. T. — Well, but I mean the two-legged kind of beings. Mrs. T. — Oh, the two-legged, is it? Well, then, there's the old rooster, he's seven ; the fighting-cock is eight, and the bantam - is nine C. T. — Stop, stop, good woman, I don't want to know the number of your fowls. Mrs. T. — I'm very sorry indeed, I can't please you, such a sweet gentleman as you are. But didn't you tell me — 'twas the two- legged beings C. T. — True, but I didn't mean the hens. Mrs. T. — Oh, now I understand you. The old gobbler, he's seven, the hen turkey is eight ; and if you'll wait a week there'll be a parcel of young ones, for the old hen turkey is setting on a whole snarl of eggs. C. T. — Blast your turkeys! Mrs. T. — Oh, don't now, good Mr. Hip- perstitcher, I pray you don't. They're as honest turkeys as any in the country. C. T. — Don't vex me any more. I'm get- ting to be angry. Mrs. T.— Ha ! ha ! ha ! C. T. [striding about the room in a rage.] — Have a care, madam, or I shall fly out of my skin. Mrs. T. — If you do, I don't know who will fly in. C. T. — You do all you can to anger me. It's the two-legged creatures who talk I have reference to. Mrs. T. — Oh, now I understand you. Well, then, our Poll Parrot makes seven and the black gal eight. C. T. — I see you will have your own way. Mrs. T. — You have just found out, have you! You are a smart little man! C. T. — Have you mentioned the whole of your family? Mrs. T. — Yes, that's the whole — except the wooden-headed man in front. C. T. — Wooden-headed? Mrs. T. — Yes, the schoolmaster what's boarding here. C. T. — I suppose if he has a wooden head he lives without eating, and therefore must be a profitable boarder. Mrs. T. — Oh, no, sir, you are mistaken there. He eats like a leather judgment. C. T. — How many servants are there in the family? Mrs. T. — Servants ! Why, there's no servants but me and my husband. C. T. — What makes you and your hus- band servants? Mrs. T. — I'm a servant to hard work, and he is a servant to rum. He does noth- ing all day but guzzle, guzzle, guzzle ; while I'm working, and stewing, and sweating from morning till night, and from night till morning. C. T. — How many colored persons have you? Mrs. T. — There's nobody but Dinah, the' black girl, Poll Parrot and my daughter Sue. C. T. — Is your daughter a colored girl? Mrs. T. — I guess you'd think so if you was to see her. She's always out in the sun — and she's tanned up as black as an Indian. C. T. — How many white males are there in your family under ten years of age? Mrs. T. — Why, there ain't none now; my husband don't carry the mail since he's taken to drink so bad. He used to carry two, but they wasn't white. C. T. — You mistake, good woman; I meant male folks, not leather mails. Mrs. T. — Let me see; there's none ex- cept little Thomas, and Mr. Jenkins' two little girls. 176 MODE EN DIALOGUES AND FLAYS. C. T. — Males, I said, madam, not fe- males. Mrs. T.— Well, if you don't like them, you may leave them off. C. T. — How many white males are there between ten and twenty? Mrs. T. — Why, there's nobody but John and Peter, and John ran away last week. C. T. — How many white males are there between twenty and thirty? Mrs. T. — Let me see — there's the wood- en-headed man is one, Mr. Jenkins and his wife is two, and the black girl is three. C. T. — No more of your nonsense, old lady ; I'm heartily tired of it. Mrs. T. — Hoity toity! Haven't I a right to talk as I please in my own house? C. T. — You must answer the questions as I .put them. Mrs. T. — "Answer a fool according to his folly" — you're right, Mr. Hippogriff. C. T. — How many white males are there between thirty and forty? Mrs. T. — Why, there's nobody but I and my husband — and he was forty-one last March. C. T. — As you count yourself among the males, I dare say yOu wear the breeches. Mrs. T.— Well, what if I do, Mr. Im- pertinence ? Is that anything to you ? Mind your own business, if you please. C. T. — Certainly — I did but speak. How many white males are there between forty and fifty? Mrs. T. — None. C. T. — How many between fifty and sixty ? Mrs. T.— None. C. T. — Are there any between this and a hundred ? Mrs. T. — None except the old gentle- man. C. T. — What old gentleman? You have not mentioned any before, Mrs. T. — Why, grandfather Grayling — I thought everybody knew grandfather Gray- ling — he's a hundred and two years old next August, if he lives so long — and I dare say he will, for he's got the dry wilt, and they say such folks never dies. C. T. — Now give the number of deaf and dumb persons. Mrs. T. — Why, there is no deaf persons, excepting husband, and he ain't so deaf as he pretends to be. When anybody axes him to take a drink of rum, if it's only in a whisper, he can hear quick enough. But if I tell him to fetch an armful of wood or feed the pigs or tend the griddle, he's as deaf as a horse-block. C. T. — How many dumb persons? Mrs. T. — Dumb! Why, there's no dumb body in the house, except the wooden- headed man, and he never speaks unless he's spoken to. To be sure, my husband wishes I was dumb, but he can't make it out. C. T. — Are there any manufactures car- ried on here? Mrs. T. — None to speak on, except tur- nip-sausages and tow cloth. C. T. — Turnip-sausages? Mrs. T. — Yes, turnip-sausages. Is there anything so wonderful in that? C. T. — I never heard of them before. What kind of machinery is used in making them? Mrs. T. — Nothing but a bread-trough, a chopping-knife and a sausage filler. C. T. — Are they made of clear turnips? Mrs. T. — Now you're terrible inquisitive. What would you give to know? C. T. — I'll give you the name of being the most communicative and pleasant woman I've met with for the last half-hour. Mrs. T. — Well, now, you're a sweet gen- tleman, and I must gratify you. You must know we mix with the turnip a little red MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 177 cloth, just enough to give them a color, so they needn't look as if they were made of clear fat meat ; then we chop them up well together, put in a little sage, summer savory, and black pepper; and they make as pretty little delicate links as ever was set on a gentleman's table ; they fetch the high- est price in the market. C. T. — Indeed ! Have you a piano in the house ? Mrs. T.— A piany! What's that? C. T. — A musical instrument. Mrs. T. — Lor, no. But Sary Jane, down at the Corners, has one. You see, Sary got all highfalutin about the great Colu- shun down to Bosting, and down she went ; an' when she came back the old man got no rest until she had one of the big square music boxes with white teeth — 'spose that's what you call a piany. C. T. — You seem to know what it is, then. Mrs. T. — Yes, sir. Have you anything more to ax? C. T. — Nothing more. Good morning, madam. Mrs. T. — Stop a moment; can't you think of something else? Do now, that's a good man. Wouldn't you like to know what we're going to have for dinner; or how many chickens our old white hen hatched at her last brood ; or how many — C. T. — Nothing more — nothing more. Mrs. T. — Here, just look in the cup- board, and see how many red ants there are m the sugar-bowl ; I haven't time to count them myself. C. T. — Confound your ants and all your relations. [Exit in bad humor.] t&fc t5* ^* MR. PINCHEM'S CLERK. Scene. — An office with a desk or table on which are an inkstand, a pile of ledgers and some extra sheets of paper. Mr. Pine hem, with gray wig and whiskers and spectacles, sits in his office busily en- gaged in figuring up his accounts. He does not look up from his paper, but keeps on figuring while his clerk enters and takes a seat near the table in such a position as to both face the audience. Clerk. Mr. Pinchem, I — I — Mr. Pinchem. Have you got those goods off for Kalamazoo? Clerk. Yes, sir, they are off. Mr. Pinchem, I — Mr. P. And about that order for starch ? Clerk. That has been attended to, sir. Mr. Pinchem — Mr. P. And that invoice of tea ? Clerk. That's all right, sir. Mr. Pinchem, I have — Mr. P. And that cargo of sugar? Clerk. Taken care of as you directed, sir. Mr. Pinchem, I have long — Mr. P. What about Bush and Bell's con- signment ? Clerk. Received in good order, sir. Mr. Pinchem, I have long wanted — Mr. P. And that shipment to Buffalo? Clerk. All right, sir. Mr. Pinchem, I have long wanted to speak to you — Mr. P. Ah! speak to me? Why, I thought you spoke to me fifty times a day. Clerk. Yes, sir, I know, but this is a private matter. Mr. P. Private? Oh! Ah! Wait till I see how much we made on that last ten thousand pounds of soap — six times four are twenty- four; six times two are twelve 178 MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. and two to carry make fourteen ; six times nought are nothing and one to carry makes one; six times five are thirty, seven times four — ah! well go ahead, I'll finish this afterwards. Clerk. Mr. Pinchem, I have been with you ten long years, — Mr. P. Ten, eh ! Long years, eh ! any longer than any other years? Go ahead. Clerk. And I have always tried to do my duty. Mr. P. Have, eh ? Go on. Clerk. And now I make bold — Mr. P. Hold on! What is there bold about it? But, never mind, I'll hear you out. Clerk. Mr. Pinchem I want to ask — ask — I want to ask — Mr. P. Well, why don't you ask then? I don't see why you don't ask if you want to. Clerk. Mr. Pinchem I want to ask you for — for — Mr. P. You want to ask me for the hand of my daughter. Ah ! why didn't you speak right out? She's yours, my boy, take her and be happy. You might have had her two years ago if you had mentioned it. Go long, now, I'm busy. Seven times six are forty-two, seven times five are thirty-five and four are thirty-nine, seven times eight — Clerk. Mr. Pinchem — Mr. P. What! You here yet?' Well, what is it? Clerk. I wanted to ask you for — Mr. P. Didn't I give her to you, you rascal ! Clerk. Yes, but what I wanted to ask you for was not the hand of your daughter, but a raise of salary. Mr. P. Oh! that was it, eh? Well, sir, that is an entirely different matter; and it requires time for serious thought and earnest deliberation. Return to your work. I'll think about it, and some time next fall, I'll see about giving you a raise of a dollar or so a week. Seven times eight are fifty- six and three are fifty-nine — (Curtain Falls.) ^* c5* c5* KINDNESS AND CRUELTY. (For a big boy of twelve PAUL — Are you the boy who called me names the other day? Charles — If you are the boy who threw stones at a toad, I am the boy who called you cruel. P. — Then I shall give you a beating. C. — I do not see how that would change the fact. You would still be cruel. P. — Are you not afraid of me? C. — I am just about as afraid of you as I am of our big rooster when he jumps on a fence and crows. P. — I am larger and stouter than you are. and a little boy of eight.) C. — So a hawk is larger than a king- bird; but the king-bird is not afraid of him. P. — Why did you call me cruel for ston- ing an ugly toad? C. — Because it is a cruel act to give need- less pain to any living thing. P. — Would you not like to have all the toads put out of the way? C. — By no means. The toad is of use, and does us no harm. Four or five toads will keep a garden free from bugs, worms and flies that would spoil the leaves. A MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 179 good gardener would rather have you strike him than kill a toad. P. — I never heard before that a toad was of any use. C. — Probably all the creatures in the world are of use, in some way, though we may not yet have found it out. But what harm did you ever know a toad to do? See how he tries to hop out of your way as soon as he hears your step. P. — It is true ; I never heard of a toad's doing any harm. What is your name? C. — My name is Charles Larcom. P. — Charles Larcom, I have been in the .wrong, and you have been in the right. Will you shake hands with me? C. — Gladly; I'd much rather shake hands than fight. P. — I was cruel in stoning the toad, and you said no more than the truth about me. C. — I think we shall be good friends. Come and see me; I live in the white house by the brook, near the old willow tree. P. — I know the house. Will you go and picK berries with me next Saturday after- noon ? C. — That I will ; and my brother would like to go, too. P. — I'll call for you at three o'clock ; till then, good-bye. C. — Good-bye, Paul Curtis; I'm glad to have met you. fe5* c5* ti?* A PEACH PIE. Characters — The Baker, A Little Girl. (As the Curtain Rises the Baker is Seen Arranging His Goods.) (Enter Little Girl.) GIRL — Do you sell pies? Baker — Yes, my little girl. Girl — My mamma said you sold pies. How much are they? BAKER---Ten cents apiece. Girl — Give me a peach pie. Baker — (looking over wares). I am all out of peach pies. However, I have some nice mince pies. Girl — But I want a peach pie. Baker — Well, I am all out. Girl — My mamma said you kept peach pies. Baker — Well, so I do, but just now I am out of them. Girl — I am willing to pay you for one. Baker — Yes, I know, but I haven't any. Girl — My mamma said if I gave you ten cents vou would give me a peach pie. Baker — So I would if I had any. Girl — Any what? Baker — Peach pies. Girl — That's what I want. Baker — Yes, but I haven't any. I have nothing but mince pies left. Girl — But I don't want a mince pie. I want a peach pie. Baker — Well, I haven't any. Girl — You sold mamma a peach pie yesterday for ten cents. Baker — Yes, I had peach pies yesterday. Girl — How much do you want for peach pies? Baker — If I had any to sell, I would let you have one for ten cents. Girl — I have got ten cents in my hand. Baker — I don't doubt it, my little girl. Girl — And I want a peach pie. Baker — I haven't any peach pies; I'm all sold out. Don't you understand? Girl — You sold my mamma a peach pie yesterday for ten cents. ISO MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. Baker — Of course I did. I had some to sell yesterday, and if I had any to sell to- day, I would let you have it. Girl — This is a baker shop, isn't it ? Baker — Of course it is. Girl — And you sell pies and cakes ? Baker — Of course I do. Girl — Then I want a peach pie. Baker — Little girl, go home. I shall never have any more peach pies to sell. Do you hear ? Never any more peach pies ! (Curtain.) t3& <&& <5* A GROVE -OF HISTORIC TREES. (Arbor TREE planting on Arbor Day, for economic purposes in the great West, has given to the prairie States many thou- sand acres of new forests, and inspired the people with a sense of their great value, not only for practical purposes, but for climatic and meteorological results as well. The celebration of Arbor Day by the public schools in several of the older States by the planting of memorial trees, as origi- nated at Cincinnati, in the spring of 1882, and generally known as the "Cincinnati plan," has done much also to awaken a widespread interest in the study of trees; and this annual celebration promises to be- come as general in the public schools and among the people as the observance of May Day in England. "Whatever you would have appear in the nation's life you must introduce in the public schools." Train the youth into a love for trees, instruct them in the elements of forestry, and the wisdom of this old German proverb will be realized. First Pupil. Scattered here and there over this beau- tiful land of ours are many prominent trees that have been consecrated by the presence of eminent personages, or by some con- spicuous event in the history of our coun- try. Second Pupil. Perhaps the best-known tree in American history is the "Charter Oak" in Hartford, Day.) Conn., which was prostrated by a Septem- ber gale in 1848, when it measured twenty- five feet in circumference. It was estimated to be six hundred years old, when the first emigrants looked upon it with wonder. Sir Edmund Andross was appointed the first governor-general of the colony of Con- necticut, and arrived at Boston in Decem- ber, 1686. He immediately demanded the surrender of the charter of Connecticut, and it was refused. In October, 1687, he went to Hartford with a company of soldiers while the as- sembly was in session, and demanded an immediate surrender of their charter. Sir Edmund was received with apparent re- spect by the members, and in his presence the subject of his demand was calmly de- bated until evening. The charter was then brought forth and placed upon the table around which the members were sitting. Andross was about to seize it, when the lights were suddenly extinguished. A large concourse of people had assembled without, and the moment the lights dis- appeared they raised a loud huzza, and several entered the chamber. Captain Wadsworth, of Hartford, seized the charter, and, unobserved, carried it off and deposited it in the hollow trunk of a large oak tree fronting the house of Hon. Samuel Wyllys, then one of the magistrates of that colony. The candles were relighted, quiet MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 181 was restored, and Andross eagerly sought the coveted parchment. It was gone, and none could, or would, reveal its hiding- place. Ever after that tree was called the "Charter Oak." Third Pupil. The "Washington Elm" still stands at Cambridge, Mass. It is on Garden Street, a short distance from the colleges, and is a large, well-preserved tree. It was this elm that shaded Washington on that July 3d, 1775, when he took command of the American army at Cambridge, and began that long public life in which he exhibited such brilliant talents, and won for himself the deserved title of "Father of his Coun- try." We have been an independent nation for more than a century, but this tree still stands, and its massive trunk and wide- spreading branches form a fitting emblem of the prosperous nation that started out, as it were, from beneath its shade; and in it are centered fond remembrances of our Revolutionary fathers. Fourth Pupil. In the middle of Eighteenth Street, Chi- cago, between Prairie Avenue and the lake, there stood until recently a large cotton- wood tree ; it was the last of a group which marked the spot where the Indian massacre of 1812 took place. Fort Dearborn stood at the mouth of the Chicago River, about one and one-half miles from the clump of trees. In August an army of Indians at- tacked the fort, and the garrison being weak, the commandant offered to surrender on condition that the force might withdraw without molestation. At nine o'clock on August 15th, the party, composed of about seventy-five persons, advanced from the fort along the Indian trail, which follows the lake shore. When the little band had reached the cotton-wood tree, a volley was showered by the Indians. All were killed except twenty-two, who surrendered and were spared. To-day an imposing monu- ment marks the spot, that takes the place of the tree that was blown down. Fifth Pupil. Who has not heard of the elm at Shak- amaxon, under the spreading branches of which William Penn made his famous treaty with the Indians, which was never sworn to, and which stands alone as the only treaty made by the whites with the Indians which was never broken? For more than a century and a quarter this tree stood, a grand monument of this most sin- cere treaty ever made, and then it was blown down, and a monument of marble now but poorly marks the spot where it stood. Sixth Pupil. "The Cary Tree," planted by the road- side in 1832 by Alice and Phoebe Cary, is a large and beautiful sycamore standing on the turnpike from College Hill to Mount Pleasant, Hamilton County, Ohio. As these two sisters were returning from school one day they found a small tree in the road, and carrying it to the opposite side they dug out the earth with sticks, and planted it. Seventh Pupil. It was the custom of our ancestors to plant trees in the early settlement of our country, and dedicate them to Liberty. Many of these "Liberty Trees," con- secrated by our forefathers, are still stand- ing. "Old Liberty Elm" in Boston was planted by a schoolmaster long before the Revolutionary War, and dedicated by him to the independence of the colonies. Around that tree, before the Revolution, the citizens of Boston and vicinity used to gather and listen to the advocates of our country's freedom. Around it, during the 182 MOD ESN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. war, they met to offer up thanks and sup- plications to Almighty Gocl for the success of the patriot armies, and after the terrible struggle had ended, the people were accus- tomed to assemble there year after year, in the shadow of that old tree, to celebrate the liberty and independence of our country. It stood till within a few years, a living monument of the patriotism of the people of Boston, and when at last it fell, the bells in all the churches of the city were tolled, and a feeling of sadness spread over the entire State. - Eighth Pupil. At the southern line of Fort Mercer, on the Delaware River, close by the bank, are the remains of the hickory tree which was used as a flagstaff during the battle which occurred there in autumn of 1777. There stood, until 1840, near Charleston, S. C, a magnificent magnolia tree, under which General Lincoln signed the capitulation of that city in 1789. Incredible as it may ap- pear, the owner of the land and of the house shaded by the tree, wherein he and his mother were born, subsequently felled it for firewood. At Rhinebeck may still be seen an interesting memento of the lamented General Montgomery. A day or two before he left home to join the army under Schuy- ler he was walking on the lawn in the rear of his brother-in-law's mansion with the owner, and as he came near the house Mont- gomery stuck a willow twig in the ground, and said, "Let that grow to remember me by." It did grow, and is now a willow with a trunk at least ten feet in circumference. On the banks of the Genesee River stood an oak believed to have been a thousand years old, called "The Big Tree." Under it the Seneca nation of Indians held coun- cils; and it gave the title "Big Tree" to one of the eminent chiefs of that nation, at the period of our Revolution. It was twenty-six feet in circumference. It was swept away by a flood in the autumn of 1857. A pear tree that stood on the corner of Thirteenth Street and Third Avenue, in New York City, bore fruit until i860, when it perished. It was planted in his garden by Peter Stuyvesant, the last Dutch gover- nor of New Netherlands (now New York), in 1667. Ninth Pupil. Other trees of historic interest are the ash trees planted by General Washington at Mount Vernon. These trees form a beautiful row, which is the admiration of all who visit the home of the "Father of his Country." The weeping willow over the grave of Cotton Mather, in Copp's burying-ground, was taken from a tree that shaded the grave of Napoleon at St. Helena. Copp's bury- ing-ground is so near Bunker Hill battle- field that a number of gravestones can be seen to-day which were pierced through by bullets fired by British soldiers in that battle. Tenth Pupil. But besides historical trees there are many others that attract our attention from their great size. Among these are the won- derful trees of California. They are about five hundred in number, ninety-five being of enormous size. There is one fallen mon- ster, which must have stood four hundred and fifty feet in the air, and had a diameter of forty feet. Another engaged the efforts of five men for twenty-five days in cutting, and on the level surface of the stump thirty- two dancers find ample room. "Old Go- liath" shows the marks of a fire, that, ac- cording to surrounding trees untouched, must have raged a thousand years ago. The diameter of the largest is thirty-three feet ; the circumference of the largest, five feet above the ground, sixty-one feet. This MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 183 is tfte only one more than sixty feet in cir- cumference. So much larger are those immense trees than those we ordinarily see, that a com- parison is about the only way in which we can correctly measure them. Shortly after they were discovered, the hollow trunk of one of them was forwarded to New \ ork, where it was converted into a grocery store. In one of these groups of trees a stage- road has been cut under the trunk through the roots, and immense coaches, drawn by six horses, pass directly under the old giant. Eleventh Pupil. I will tell you how George P. Morris came to write the poem, "Woodman, Spare That Tree." Mr. Morris, in a letter to a friend, dated New York, February I, 1837, gave in substance the following account : "Riding out of town a few days after, in company with a friend, an old gentle- man, he invited me to turn down a little romantic woodland pass, not far from Bloomingdale. "'Your object?' inquired I. 'Merely to look once more at an old tree planted by my grandfather long before I was born, under which I used to play when a boy, and where my sisters played with me. There I often listened to the good advice of my parents. Father, mother, sisters — all are gone ; nothing but the old tree remains.' And a paleness overspread his fine counte- nance and tears came to his eyes. After a moment's pause, he added: 'Don't think me foolish. I don't know how it is; I never ride out but I turn down this lane to look at that old tree. I have a thousand recollections about it, and I always greet it as a familiar and well-remembered friend.' These words were scarcely uttered when the old gentleman cried out 'There it is !' Near the tree stood a man with his coat off, sharpening an axe. 'You're not going to cut that tree down, surely?' Yes, but I am though,' said the woodman. '.What for?' inquired the old gentleman, with choked emotion. 'What for? I like that ! Well, I will tell you. I want the tree for fire-wood.' 'What is the tree worth to you for firewood?' 'Why, when down, about ten dollars.' 'Suppose I should give you that sum,' said the old gentleman, 'would you let it stand?' Yes.' You are sure of that?' 'Positive!' 'Then give me a bond to that effect.' We went into the little cottage in which my companion was born, but which is now occupied by the wood- man. I drew up the bond. It was signed and the money paid over. As we left, the young girl, the daughter of the woodman, assured us that while she lived the tree should not be cut. These circumstances made a strong impression on my mind, and furnished me with the materials for the song." *2& ^* t^w BACKBITERS BITTEN. A Dialogue for Four Girls. Characters. Miss Marvel, Miss Gad, Miss Slander, Miss Upham. MISS MARVEL. Who would have thought it, Miss Slander? Miss Gad. You don't say so, Miss Slan- der! Miss Slander. Oh, but it is quite true. It must be. Besides, my brother William heard it at the barber-shop. 184 MODE EX DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. Miss M. Well, now, I always had my suspicions; there was always a something — a what-do-you-call-it sort of a look about the Uphams that I never liked. Miss S. They say it is all over town — at least brother William says it must be. But, whether or no, that's the fact. John Upham's store was shut up this morning. Miss G. Well, well, it is no more than I always said it would come to. Miss S. They certainly always lived above their station. As my brother William often said to me, "Nancy," says he, "mark my words ; for all that them Uphams hold up their noses like conceited peacocks, as they are, pride will have a fall," says he, "pride will have a fall !" Miss M. And such goings-on, Miss Slan- der, to be sure — such goings-on! Parties, parties, parties, from Monday till Saturday — the best joint at the butcher's, the nicest loaf at the baker's, always bespoke for the Uphams. Well, they must be content now with poor people's fare ! Miss S. If they can get even that! for my brother William says they will be sold out and out, — down to the baby's go-cart. Dear me, dear me ! Miss G. Only think of it. How different it was this time last year, Miss Slander, — Miss Upham with her new velvet dress, the finest Genoa, Mr. Upham with his new phaeton, Master Upham with his new watch, and little Emma Upham with her new fancy hat ! Miss M. But everybody could see what was coming. It could not go on so forever. That's what I said. But Upham was always such a proud man. Miss S. Never would take anybody's advice but his own — there ! it was no later than Wednesday week, when my brother William civilly asked him, in the most neighborly way in the world, if he wanted a little conversation with a friend about his affairs, as they appeared to be going back- ward; and what do you think he said? "William," said he, "you and your sister Nancy go chattering about like a couple of human magpies, only the bird's instinct is better than your reason." That's just what he said, the vile brute ! Miss M. Brute, indeed, Miss Slander; you may well say that. Bird's instinct, for- sooth ! Miss G. Set him up to talk reason ! Had he reason enough to keep himself out of the constable's hands? Miss M. I should not be surprised, Miss Slander, if he were to take to drinking. Miss S. And, for that matter, my dear, Thompson told Green, who told Lilly, who told our Becky, who told William, that Upham was seen coming out of Tim Smith's saloon this very morning. Miss G. Drunk, of course. Miss S. Well, I don't know, exactly ; but I think it is much more likely that he was drunk than that he was sober. Miss M. Well, well, 'tis poor Miss Up- ham that I pity; I'm sure I sha'n't have a wink of sleep all this blessed night for thinking of her. Miss G. Poor girl ! I'm sure I feel for her. Not that she was ever much better than he. They do say — but I don't know of my own knowledge, and I'm the last person in the world to slander anybody behind their back — but they do say that, before they came here, there were reports, you know, insinuations, stories like, though I don't exactly know the rights of it, but they do say something about Miss Upham's being guilty of stealing a nice gold watch! But, I dare say, it is all nonsense; only, of course, there are some people, you know, that will talk. Miss M. There, now! who would have MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 185 thought it? Did you ever? But. there was always something very sly about Miss Up- ham — I've seen it often. Miss G. What I hope is, that little Emma won't take after her aunt — poor thing ! Miss S. Oh, as for that, bless you, like aunt like niece — but I say nothing, not I. No, no! nobody ever heard Nancy Slander go beyond the line in that way. Mum is my word, — mum, mum ! What I say is, that people ought to keep people's tongues be- tween people's teeth ; that's all. Emma Up- ham ! — ha, ha, bless you ! Miss M. Hush, hush, if here is not Miss Upham herself. Enter Miss Upham. Miss G. My dear Miss Upham, I am very sorry, indeed. Miss M. I could almost shed tears for you, Miss Upham. Miss S. But, my dear Miss Upham, there is one consolation for you — you are not without a friend in the hour of mis- fortune, you know that. Miss U. I must beg you to explain your- selves, ladies. Miss S. Well, Miss Upham, I do not think you have any reason now to put on those proud airs. Miss G. It is hardly worth while to keep a secret that is known all over the town. Miss S. You would do better to remem- ber that pride will have a fall, Miss Up- ham, pride will have a fall ! Miss U. Well, ladies, I must ask you once more to explain yourselves. Miss M. Well, Miss Upham, does not your brother's store look very different to- day from what it did yesterday? Miss S. And did not my brother Wil- liam find, this morning, the door of your brother's store locked? Miss G. And would not some people get some very queer answers if they were to ask you, Miss Upham, why your brother's store was shut up this morning? Miss U. Well, I believe it is a very com- mon thing for merchants to take an account of stock at certain seasons of the year ; at least, that is the reason why my brother's store was not open quite as early as usual, this morning. He is taking an account of stock. Miss M. Taking an account of stock ? Miss U. Yes, Miss Marvel. Miss G. And that is the reason why the door of your brother's store was shut this morning ? Miss U. Yes, Miss Gad. Miss S. And you are not to be sold out and out? Miss U. Not that I know of, Miss Slander. Miss M. I wish you a very good even- ing, Miss Upham. Miss U. Good evening, Miss Marvel. [Exit Miss M. Miss G. I hope no offense given, Miss Upham ? Miss U. Not in the least, Miss Gad. [Exit Miss G. Miss S. Give my love to your sweet niece, Emma, Miss Upham. Miss U. With great pleasure, Miss Slander. [Exit Miss S. There go Marvel, Gad, and Slander ; how full of spite and mischief they are ! May I take warning from them, and keep alto- gether from gossiping and misrepresenta- tion. 186 MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. ON TIME— A FARCE. Copyright, 1900, by the Lyceum Publishing Company. ROBERT C. V. MEYERS. (Used by Permission.) Characters. Jerry Earley, who fearing to be late, is just in time. Claude Latterly, who, intending to be early, is a little behind time. Mr. Ferment, who effervesces early and late, but comes to time. Katharine, his daughter, who de- termines that Earley must be in time. Mrs. Campbell, the housekeeper, who early makes a mistake, but rectifies it in time. Suggestions as to Costumes. — Earley, ragged coat, afterward frock coat, with fashionable dress. Latterly, ragged coat, clothing disar- ranged, hat smashed. Ferment, old-fashioned clothes, bald wig, spectacles. Katharine, white gown and ribbons. Mrs. Campbell, black silk dress, cap, spectacles. Scene — Parlor in Ferment's house; en- trances, right and left; Mrs. Campbell discovered as curtain rises. MISS CAMPBELL (with grip-sack). Of all the impudence I ever saw ! Mr. Latterly sends his grip by a boy, so as not to lose time. I'd time him if I had anything to do with him. (Shakes grip, then throws it on floor.) Enter Ferment, left. Ferment. What's all this uproar, Mrs. Campbell? What is that (pointing to grip) ? Mrs. C. Mr. Latterly 's grip, left by a boy, who fairly threw it at me and rushed off without a word, except to say that he must see a fight. Ferment. Latterly's grip, eh? Then Latterly is not far off. Good ! Would you mind taking the grip to his room? It has his wedding coat in it, I suppose. Mrs. C. I'd like to have a word with you, Mr. Ferment. Ferment. Now, Mrs. Campbell, I have no time for words. I am excited. Mrs. C. I've had charge of Katharine ever since her mother died, fifteen years ago Ferment. You wanted a word with me ? This sounds as though you wanted the whole dictionary ! Mrs. C. A dictionary wouldn't hold all the words I should like to say. Ferment. Don't say 'em. Take one let- ter at a time. Mrs. C. I will. The letter K, Kathar- ine. So she is to be married this morning ! I am sorry to hear it. Ferment. Everybody has a right to be sorry. Mrs. C. But she hasn't a right to be sorry this way. Mr. Latterly is not her choice. Ferment. He is a choice young man — he is my choice. Mrs. C. A girl has a right to her own choice. Ferment. Meaning Mr. Jerry Earley? Mrs. C. She says he is a splendid young man. Ferment. Katharine shall marry the man I pick out for her. It is my theory that a girl should be guided by her father. Will you kindly take that grip to Mr. Latterly's room? Mrs. C. (kicking grip out.) Very well. [Exit, right. Ferment. Shall the daughter of Henry Ferment, author of that book, "The Degen- eracy of the Young," marry a man simply because he is her choice ? Never ! The young should be guided by the old, that's my theory. Why, I've never seen this man MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. 18', Earley. No, she marries Latterly as soon as he arrives. It was a stroke of genius to nab the minister and lock him in the study, so that the wedding should take place as soon as Latterly arrives — for I distrust Katharine, she might give me the slip. Enter Katharine, left. Katharine. Father ! Ferment. What is it, my daughter ? Katharine. I have followed you to tell you I will not marry Mr. Latterly. Simply because he is the son of your old school friend cannot make me like him. Ferment. You've never seen him. Katharine. Neither have you. He writes you that he admires your book, and on the strength of that you determine that he is fit to be your son-in-law. Ferment. I am upholding the theory of that book — the young should be guided by the old. Mr. Earley comes too late if, as you say, he writes you that he comes this morning to ask me for your hand. Every- body has a right to be happy, and so have I. My theory shall be upheld. [Exit, left. Katharine. I marry a man I do not know ! Never ! Oh, if Jerry only comes in time ! If he will only make haste ! Mrs. C. (entering). Mr. Latterly's wed- ding coat has arrived. I've just kicked it into his room. Don't you dare to marry that man ! Katharine. But what shall I do if Mr. Earley does not arrive in time? Mrs. C. He's not fit to be called Earley if he is late. But I am sorry your father has never seen him. A man likes to marry his daughter to a man he knows. Katharine. He doesn't know Mr. Lat- terly, except through his father. Mrs. C. That's something, though your Aunt Anna writes that he is a mere fortune- hunter, and you say Mr. Earley is not that. Katharine. Indeed, no ! If father only knew him ! Mrs. C. Your father refuses to know any young man. Katharine. Consequently I had to meet Mr. Earley at Aunt Anna's when I visited there last winter. Mrs. C. I think your father is scandal- ous. But you needn't marry if you don't want to. Katharine. And the minister is locked up in the study, and Mr. Latterly's coat in his room. Oh, if Jerry would only come (going to windoiv) ! Mrs. C. I've taken care of you for fif- teen years, and you shall not be made mis- erable now. Mr. Latterly has never seen you. Suppose I waylay him and pretend I am you ? That ought to make him hesitate. Katharine. If he is what Aunt Anna says he is, he will hesitate at nothing. Mrs. C. But I am old enough to be his mother. Katharine. But father is rich enough to be his father-in-law. Oh, if Jerry would only come ! Ferment (entering). Mrs. Campbell, will you please leave us? Mrs. C. Very well (shaking fist back at him)! [Exit, right. Ferment. I won't have any more non- sense, Katharine. You've got to make Lat- terly a happy man — everybody has a right to be happy. Let us reason together? Katharine. Reason! You don't know what reason is. Booh ! [Exit, right. Ferment. She said "Booh!" to me. This is degeneracy in the young with a ven- geance. A girl to say Booh to her father. I thought she couldn't say Booh to a goose. Now she shall marry Latterly. I am an up- right man (pitching over chair). Oh, oh! (Gets up, rubbing his leg, as pounding is heard.) That's the minister. He don't get 188 MODERN DIALOGUES AND PLAYS. out till Latterly gets in. That's what he gets for coming here to tell me my book is all wrong. But I must go and pacify him. [Exit, right. Enter Earley, left; coat is ragged, collar and necktie hanging. Earley. I am in time. That's all I want, time, and the last tap I gave Latterly he didn't come to time. Now to find Kath- arine and run off with her. Katharine {entering, right, screaming). Oh, Jerry ! What is the matter ? Earley. What do you see is the matter ? Katharine. Your condition. Such dis- arrangement ! Earley. The disarrangement arranged itself. I've had a difference of opinion with Mr. Latterly. Katharine. Mr. Latterly! What has he done to you? Earley. You'd better ask what I've done to him. Katharine. What have you done? Earley. I've done him, after he tried to do me. Katharine {Hying to him). He has in- jured you? Earley. Wait till you see him. Katharine. Tell me about it, tell me ! Earley. We came here in the same car. I recognized him by your Aunt Annie's de- scription of him. He didn't know me. At the station he was in such a hurry that he scourged me. I am not the man to be scourged. I pushed him. At that he struck me. I threw my grip to the platform. He threw his, and yelled to a boy to carry it here. But the boy took mine in mistake. Then Latterly grappled with me. I left him getting plastered up by the trainmen. That gives us a few minutes start of him. Now come, we'll get out of this, come ! Katharine. Oh, Jerry, the minister is here to marry me to Mr. Latterly. Earley. Then we have no time to lose. Come! Noise heard outside; Ferment calling, "Katharine! Kath arine !" Katharine. There is papa. He must not find me here. He does not know you. Pretend you are somebody else. Tell him you are a book-agent. I will see you in a few minutes. [Exit, left, running. Earley. Pretend I am a book-agent ! Do I look like one? {Ferment, calling, "Kath- arine! Katharine!") No, I am not the man to pretend. I meet him as myself. Ferment {entering, right, calling; then seeing Earley). What, here! You are in time. My dear boy, I am delighted to see you {shaking Earley violently by the hand). Earley. Delighted to see me ! Sir — sir —I Ferment. You are in time ; in fact, you are early. Earley. I certainly am Earley. Ferment. I feared you would be late. Earley. I — I do not understand. Ferment. I've captured a minister. He came to argue with me about my book. I simply locked him in my study. My theory shall be upheld. Earley. But listen to me, sir. I am here to see your daughter. Ferment. And she will see you. Earley. I do not understand. Ferment. My theory shall be upheld. Earley {angrily). I have no objection to your upholding anything, except an ob- jectionable aspirant to Katharine's hand — Ferment. Who shall be — ha, ha! held up if he appears ? Earley. Oh, I've attended to that. Ferment. You ! What do you mean ? Earley. Sir, I must tell you the truth. Ferment. You'd better not tell me any- thing else. Earley {angrily). Give me a chance. Pboto by Byron, N. Y. A STRUGGLE FOR LIFE. H « Ph w M. a o w n o H Eh O hi PM s < DRAMATIC READINGS AND RECITATIONS. 227 I blush to think upon it yet That I was such a fool; But young folks must learn wisdom, sir, In old misfortune's school. One fatal night, I thought the wind Gave some unwonted sighs, Down through the swamp I heard a tramp Which took me by surprise. Is this an earthquake drawing near? The forest moans and shivers; And then I thought that I could hear The rushing of great rivers; And while I looked and listened there, A herd of deer swept by, As from a close pursuing foe They madly seemed to fly. But still those sounds, in long, deep bounds, Like warning heralds came, And then I saw, with fear and awe, The heavens were all aflame. I knew the woods must be on fire, I trembled for my crop; As I stood there, in mute despair, It seem'd the death of hope. On, on it came, a sea of flame, In long deep rolls of thunder, And drawing near, it seem'd to tear The heavens and earth asunder! How those waves snored, and raged, and roared, And reared in wild commotion! On, on they came, like steeds of flame Upon a burning ocean. How they did snort, in fiendish sport, As at the great elms dashing; And how they tore 'mong hemlocks hoar, And through the pines went crashing; While serpents wound the trunks around, Their eyes like demons gleaming, And wrapped like thongs around the prongs, And to the crests went screaming! Ah ! how they swept, and madly leapt From shrinking spire to spire, 'Mid hissing hail, and in their trail A waving lake of fire! Anon some whirlwind, all aflame, Growled in the ocean under; Then up would reel a fiery wheel And belch forth smoke and thunder! And it was all that we could do To save ourselves by flight, As from its track we madly flew, — Oh! 'twas an awful night! When all was past, I stood aghast, My crop and shanty gone, And blackened trunks 'mid smouldering chunks Like specters looking on! A host of skeletons they seemed, Amid the twilight dim, All standing there in their despair, With faces gaunt and grim; And I stood like a specter too, A ruined man was I, And nothing left, — what could I do But sit me down and cry? A heavy heart indeed was mine, For I was ruined wholly, And I gave way that awful day To moping melancholy; I lost my all, in field and stall, And nevermore would thrive, All save those steers, — the devil's dears Had saved themselves alive. Nor would I have a farm to-day Had it not been for Molly, She cheered me up, and charmed away My moping melancholy; She schemed and planned to keep the land, And cultivate it too; And how I moiled, and strained, and toiled, And fought the battle through! 228 DRAMATIC HEADINGS AND RECITATIONS. Yes, Molly played her part full well; She's plucky, every inch, sir! It seemed to me the "deil himsel' " Could not make Molly flinch, sir; We wrought and fought, until our star Got into the ascendant; At troubles past we smile at last, And now we're independent! — Alexander M'Lachlan. (0& t5* te** MACBETH TO THE DAGGER. IS this a dagger which I see before me, The handle toward my hand? Gome, let me clutch thee — I have thee not ; and yet I see thee still. Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible To feeling, as to sight? or art thou but A dagger of my mind? a false creation Proceeding from the heat-oppressed brain? I see thee yet, in form as palpable As this which I draw. Thou marshal'st me the way that I was going; And such an instrument I was to use. Mine eyes are made the fools o' the other senses, Or else worth all the rest. I see thee still; And on thy blade and dudgeon, gouts of blood, Which was not so before. There's no such thing! — It is the bloody business, which informs Thus to mine eyes. Now o'er the one-half world, Nature seems dead, and wicked dreams abuse The curtained sleep: now witchcraft cele- brates Pale Hecate's offerings; and withered murder, Alarmed by his sentinel, the wolf, Whose howl's his watch — thus with his stealthy pace, Toward his design moves like a ghost. Thou sure and firm-set earth, Hear not my steps, which way they walk, for fear The very stones prate of my whereabout; And take the present horror from the time, Which now suits with it. While I threat, he lives — I go and it is done ; the bell invites me. Hear it not, Duncan; for it is a knell That summons thee to heaven, or to hell. — Shakespeare. <£* t5* o5* SEVEN AGES OF MAN. ALL the world's a stage, And all the men and women merely players : They have their exits and their entrances, And one man in his time plays many parts, His acts being, seven ages. At first, the infant, Mewling and puking in the nurse's arms. Then the whining school-boy, with his satchel And shining morning face, creeping like a snail Unwillingly to school. And then, the lover, Sighing like a furnace, with a woeful ballad Made to his mistress' eyebrow. Then, a soldier, DRAMATIC READINGS AND RECITATIONS. 229 Full of strange oaths and bearded like a bard, Jealous in honor, sudden and quick in a quarrel, Seeking the bubble reputation Even in the cannon's mouth. And then, the justice, In fair round belly, with good capon lined, With eyes severe, and beard of formal cut, Full of wise saws and modern instances : And so he plays his part. The sixth age shifts Into the lean and slippered pantaloon, With spectacles on nose and pouch on side ; His youthful hose, well saved, a world too wide For his shrunk shank, and his big manly voice, Turning again towards childish treble, pipes And whistles in his sound. Last seen of all, That ends this strange, eventful history, Is second childishness, and mere oblivion; Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything. — Shakespeare. %&& t5* ^* HOW RUBY PLAYED. Jud Brownin, when visiting New York, goes description of WELL, sir, he had the blamedest, big- gest, catty-cornedest pianner you ever laid eyes on; somethin' like a dis- tracted billiard-table on three legs. The lid was hoisted, and mighty well it was. If it hadn't been, he'd a tore the entire inside 1 * clean out and scattered 'em to the four winds of heaven. Played well? You bet he did; but don't interrupt me. When he first sit down, he 'peared to keer mighty little 'bout playin', and wisht he hadn't come. He tweedle- leedled a little on the treble, and twoodle- oodled some on the bass — just foolin' and boxin' the thing's jaws for bein' in the way. And I says to a man settin' next to me, says I, "What sort of fool playin' is that?" And he says, "Heish!" But presently his hands commenced chasin' one another up and down the keys like a parcel of rats scamperin' through a garret very swift. Parts of it was sweet, though, and re- minded me of a sugar squirrel turnin' the wheel of a candy cage. "Now," I says to my neighbor, "he's showin' off. He thinks he's a doin' of it, to hear Rubinstein, and gives the following his playing. but he ain't got no idee, no plan of nothin'. If he'd play me a tune of some kind or other, I'd — But my neighbor says, "Heish," very impatiently. I was just about to get up and go home, bein' tired of that foolishness, when I heard a little bird wakin' up away off in the woods, and call sleepy-like to his mate, and I looked up and see that Ruby was begin- ning to take some interest in his business, and I sit down again. It was the peep of day. The light came faint from the east, the breezes blowed gentle and fresh; some more birds waked up in the orchard, then some more in the trees near the house, and all begun singin' together. People began to stir, and the gal opened the shutters. Just then the first beam of the sun fell upon the blossoms a little more, and it techt the roses on the bushes, and the next thing it was broad day ; the sun fairly blazed, the birds sung like they'd split their little throats; all the leaves was movin', and flashin' diamonds of dew, and the whole wide world was bright and happy as a king. 230 DRAMATIC READINGS AND RECITATIONS. Seemed to me like there was a good break- fast in every house in the land, and not a sick child or woman anywhere. It was a fine mornin'. And I says to my neighbor, "That's music, that is." But he glared at me like he'd like to cut my throat. Presently the wind turned; it began to thicken up, and a kind of gray mist came over things; I got low-spirited directly. Then a silver rain begun to fall. I could see the drops touch the ground; some flashed up like long pearl earrings, and the rest rolled away like round rubies. It was pretty, but melancholy. Then the pearls gathered themselves into long strands and necklaces, and then they melted into thin silver streams, runnin' between golden gravels, and then the streams joined each other at the bottom of the hill, and made a brook that flowed silent, except that you could kinder see the music, specially when the bushes on the banks moved as the music went along down the valley. I could smell the flowers in the meadow. But the sun didn't shine, nor the birds sing; it was a foggy day, but not cold. The most curious thing was the little white angel boy, like you see in pictures, that run ahead of the music brook and led it on, and on, away out of the world, where no man ever was, certain. I could see that boy just as plain as I see you. Then the moonlight came, without any sunset, and shone on the graveyards where some few ghosts lifted their hands and went over the wall, and between the black, sharp-top trees, splendid marble houses rose up, with fine ladies in the lit-up windows, and men that loved 'em, but could never get a-nigh 'em, who played on guitars under the trees, and made me that miserable I could have cried, because I wanted to love somebody, I don't know who, better than the men with the guitars did. Then the sun went down, it got dark, the wind moaned and wept like a lost child for its dead mother, and I could a got up then and there and preached a better ser- mon than any I ever listened to. There wasn't a thing in the world left to live for, not a blame thing, and yet I didn't want the music to stop one bit. It was happier to be miserable than to be happy without being miserable. I couldn't under- stand it. I hung my head and pulled out my handkerchief, and blowed my nose loud to keep me from cryin'. My eyes is weak, anyway. I didn't want anybody to be a-gazin' at me a-snivelin', and it's nobody's business what I do with my nose. It's mine. But some several glared at me, mad as blazes. Then, all of a sudden, old Rubin changed his tune. He ripped out and he rared, he tipped and he tared, he pranced and he charged like the grand entry at a f circus. 'Peared to me that all the gas in the house was turned on at once, things got so bright, and I hilt up my head, ready to look any man in the face, and afraid of nothin'. It was a circus, and a brass band, and a big ball all a-goin' on at the same time. He lit into them keys like a thousand of brick ; he gave 'em no rest day or night ; he set every livin' joint in me a-goin'; and, not bein' able to stand it no longer, I jumped, sprang onto my seat, and jest hollered: "Go it, Rube!" Every blamed man, woman, and child in the house riz on me and shouted, "Put him out! Put him out!" "Put your great-grandmother's grizzly- gray-greenish cat into the middle of next month!" I says. "Tech me, if you dare! I paid my money, and you just come a-nigh me!" DRAMATIC READINGS AND RECITATIONS. 231 With that some several policemen run up, and I had to simmer down. But I could 'a' fit any fool that laid hands on me, for I was bound to hear Ruby out or die. He had changed his tune again. He hop-light ladies and tip-toed fine from end to end of the key-board. He played soft and low and solemn. I heard the church- bells over the hills. The candles of heaven was lit, one by one I saw the stars rise. The great organ of eternity began to play from the world's end to the world's end, and all the angels went to prayers. * * * Then the music changed to water; full of feeling that couldn't be thought, and be- gan to drop — drip, drop — drip, drop, clear and sweet, like tears of joy falling into a lake of glory. It was sweeter than that. It was as sweet as a sweetheart sweetened with white sugar mixt with powdered sil- ver and seed diamonds. It was too sweet. I tell you the audience cheered. Rubin he kinder bowed like he wanted to say, "Much obleeged, but I'd rather you wouldn't in- terrup' me." He stopt a moment or two to ketch breath. Then he got mad. He run his fingers through his hair, he shoved up his sleeves, he opened his coat-tails a leetle further, he drug up his stool, he leaned over, and sir, he just went for that old pianner. He slapt her face, he boxed her jaws, he pulled her nose, he pinched her ears, and he scratched her cheeks, until she fairly yelled. He knockt her down, and he stampt on her shameful. She bellowed, she bleated like a calf, she howled like a hound, she squealed like a pig, she shrieked like a rat, and then he wouldn't let her up. He ran a quarter-stretch down the low grounds of the base, till he got clean in the bowels of the earth, and you heard thunder galloping after thunder, through the hol- lows and caves of perdition, and then he fox-chased his right hand with his left till he got way out of the treble into the clouds, whar the notes was finer than the pints of cambric needles, and you couldn't hear nothin' but the shadders of 'em. And then he wouldn't let the old pianner go. He for'ard two'd, he crost over first gentle- man, he chassade right and left, back to your places, he all hands'd aroun' ladies to the right, promenade all, in and out, here and there, back and forth, up and down, perpetual motion, double-twisted and turned and tacked and tangled into forty eleven thousand doublebow knots. By jinks! it was a mixtery. And then he wouldn't let the old pianner go. He fecht up his right wing, he fecht up his left wing, he fecht up his centre, he fecht up his reserves. He fired by file, he fired by platoons, by company, by regiments, and by brigades. He opened his cannon — siege guns down thar, Napoleons here, twelve- pounders yonder — big guns, little guns, middle-sized guns, round shot, shells, shrapnels, grape, canister, mortar, mines, and magazines, every livin' battery and bomb a-goin' at the same time. The house trembled, the lights danced, the walls shuk, the floor come up, the ceilin' come down, the sky split, the ground rokt — heavens and earth, creation, sweet potatoes, Moses, ninepences, glory, tenpenny nails, Samp- son in a 'simmon tree, Tump Tompson in a tumbler-cart, roodle-oodle-oodle-oodle — ruddle-uddle-uddle-uddle — raddle-addle- addle-addle — riddle-iddle-iddle-iddle — reedle-eedle-eedle-eedle — p-r-r-r-r-r-lang ! Bang!!!! lang! per-lang! p-r-r-r-r-r! Bang!!! With that bang! he lifted himself bodily into the air, and he come down with his knees, his ten fingers, his ten toes, his el- bows, and his nose, striking every single, 232 DRAMATIC EEADINGS AND RECITATIONS. solitary key on the pianner at the same time. The thing busted, and went off into seventeen hundred and fifty-seven thou- sand five hundred and forty-two hemi- demi-semi-quivers, and I know'd no mo'. When I come to, I were under ground about twenty foot, in a place they call Oyster Bay, a-treatin' a Yankee that I never laid eyes on before, and never expect to again. Day was br'akin' by the time I got to the St. Nicholas Hotel, and I pledge you my word I did not know my name. The man asked me the number of my room, and I told him, "Hot music on the half-shell for two!" ^* ^v (5* OTHELLO'S APOLOGY. M OST potent, grave and reverend seigniors : My very noble, and approved good master ; That I have ta'en away this old man's daughter, It is most true; true, I have married her: The very head and front of my offending Hath this extent ; no more. Rude am I in speech, And little blessed with the set phrase of peace: For since these arms of mine had seven years' pith, Till now some nine months wasted, they have used Their dearest action in the tented field; And little of this great world can I speak, More than pertains to feats of broils and battle; And therefore, little shall I grace my cause, In speaking of myself. Yet, by your patience, I will a round, unvarnished tale deliver, Of my whole course of love; what drugs, what charms, What conjuration, and what mighty magic — For such proceedings I am charged withal — I won his daughter with. Her father loved me; oft invited me; Still questioned me the story of my life, From year to year: the battles, sieges, for- tunes, That I had past. I ran it through, e'en from my boyish days, To the very moment that he bade me tell it. Wherein I spake of most disastrous chances; Of moving accidents by flood and field; Of hairbreadth 'scapes, in the imminent deadly breach; Of being taken by the insolent foe, And sold to slavery; of my redemption thence, And with it all my travel's history. All these to hear, Would Desdemona seriously incline; But still the house affairs would draw her thence, Which ever as she could with haste despatch, She'd come again, and with a greedy ear, Devour up my discourse. Which I observ- ing, Took once a pliant hour, and found good means To draw from her a prayer of earnest heart, That I would all my pilgrimage dilate; Whereof my parcels, she had something heard, But not distinctively. DRAMATIC READINGS AND RECITATIONS. 233 I did consent; And often did beguile her of her tears, When I did speak of some distressful stroke, That by my youth suffered. My story being done, She gave me for my pains, a world of sighs. She swore in faith, 'twas strange, 'twas passing strange; 'Twas pitiful, 'twas wondrous pitiful; She wished she had not heard it; yet she wished That heaven had made her such a man. She thanked me, And bade me, if I had a friend who loved her, I should but teach him how to tell my story, And that would woo her. On this hint I spake ; She loved me for the dangers I had passed; And I loved her, that she did pity them. This is the only witchcraft which I've used. — Shakespeare. %cfc f&& t&fc CASSIUS AGAINST CAESAR. HONOR is the subject of my story, I cannot tell what you and other men Think of this life ; but for my single self, I had as lief not be, as live to be In awe of such a thing as myself. I was born as free as Caesar; so were you; We have both fed as well ; and we can both Endure the winter's cold as well as he. For, once upon a raw and gusty day, The troubled Tiber, chafing with its shores, Caesar says to me — "Darest thou, Cassius, now Leap in with me, into this angry flood, And swim to yonder point?" — upon the word, Accoutred as I was, I plunged in, And bade him follow; so, indeed he did. The torrent roared, and we did buffet it ; With lusty sinews, throwing it aside, And stemming it, with hearts of contro- versy. But ere we could arrive the point proposed, Caesar cried — "Help me, Cassius, or I . sink." I, as ^Eneas, our great ancestor, Did from the flames of Troy, upon his shoulder The old Anchises bear, so, from the waves of Tiber Did I the tired Caesar; and this man Is now become a god; and Cassius is A wretched creature, and must bend his body, If Caesar carelessly but nod to him. He had a fever when he was in Spain, And when the fit was on him, I did mark How he did shake: 'tis true, this god did shake; His coward lips did from their color fly; And that same eye whose bend doth awe the world, Did lose its luster; I did hear him groan, Aye, and that tongue of his, that bade the Romans Mark him, and write his speeches in their books, "Alas!" it cried, "give me some drink, Titinius." Ye gods! it doth amaze me, A man of such a feeble temper should So get the start of the majestic world, And bear the palm alone. Why, man, he doth bestride the narrow world, 234 DRAMATIC READINGS AND RECITATIONS. Like a Colossus, and we petty men, Walk under his huge legs, and peep about, To find ourselves dishonorable graves. Men, at some time, are masters of their fates : The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, But in ourselves, that we are underlings. Brutus and Caesar! What should be in that Caesar? Why should that name be sounded more than yours? Write them together: yours is as fair a name; Sound them: it doth become the mouth as well; Weigh them: it is as heavy; conjure with 'em: Brutus will start a spirit as soon as Caesar. Now, in the name of all the gods at once, Upon what meats doth this our Caesar feed, That he hath grown so great? Age, thou art ashamed; Rome, thou hast lost the breed of noble bloods. When went there by an age, since the great flood, But it was famed with more than with one man? When could they say, till now, that talked of Rome, That her wide walls encompassed but one man? Oh! you and I have heard our fathers say, There was a Brutus once, that would have brooked The infernal devil, to keep his state in Rome, As easily as a king. — Shakespeare. t3& £& t5* PETERS' REPORT OF WEBSTER'S SPEECH. OLD Seth Peters once heard Daniel Webster deliver an oration at an agricultural fair way back in the forties. This oration made such an impression upon Seth that he has talked about it ever since. And every time he talks about it, he see new beauties in that speech. The oration that the God-like Daniel delivered grows more and more wonderful to him ; and so every time he describes it, he tells a new story more extravagant and grotesque than the last. I once heard him describe this speech, in a country store. This is the way he did it: "Want to hear 'bout Dan'l Webster's gret lectur' I heerd at the county fair, do ye? Don't blame ye. There ain't no man alive to-day who can throw language an' sling words like Dan'l could. There ain't no man now, I say, nor never wuz, nor never will be till eternity dies of ol' age. "Wall, the only time I ever heerd Dan'l wuz at our county fair w'en I wuz a young- ster. Lemme see, thet wuz goin' on fifty year ago nex' tater diggin'; but I got elerkunce 'nough thet day to las' me all the rest er my life. I hain't never heerd a speech since then. Dan'l sp'ilt me for any other kiner speech, lectur', sermon, pr'ar- meetin' an' everythin' else. Every speech I have ever heerd sense, falls ez flat on my ear ez a hunk er putty on a pine slab. They all soun' jes' ez if you hit a feather bed with a snow shovel. There ain't no ring, no roar, no rumble, no rush, no ring-tailed thunder to 'em, the way ther wuz to Dan'l's stuff. Dan'l, I tell you, wuz a six-foot-an'-half seraph with pants on; an' w'en he opened DRAMATIC READINGS AND RECITATIONS. 235 his mouth the music er the spheres stopped playin', fer nobody wanted to listen to sich fool, fol-de-rol music, w'en Dan'l opened up his flood-gates an' jest drowned the worl' with elerkunce. "I remember jes' ez if it wuz yes'day, w'en Dan'l riz up there on the ol' plank plat- form, bordered with punkins, at the ol' county fair. He riz an' riz, an' every time he riz, he let out another j'int, jes as you do in the new-fangled fishin' poles. Sez I to myself, 'He'll never git thro' risin' ;' but bimeby, after he had shot up inter the heavens a long ways, he suddenly stopped and stood there like Bunker Hill Monimunt in a garding er cabbages. "Dan'l warn't in no hurry 'bout be- ginnin'. He jest stood still, it seems to me, 'bout half a nour, an' looked aroun' with them awful eyes of his'n. They seemed like two mighty souls lookin' out of the winder at a worl' thet wuz afraid of 'em. I jes' hung down my head an' wouldn't look at 'em. I knew they could look right inter me, an' through me, an' see what a miser- able little cuss I wuz. So Dan'l jes' stood an' looked at his audience until he froze 'em into their tracks. The Durham bull stopped blartin', an' jest' stood and gawped at Dan'l. The prize hog stopped eatin' his corn, an' there warn't a rooster crowed— they all knowed if they did they'd drop dead. Dan'l stood still so long I got awful nervous fer him. I wuz 'fraid he'd forgotten his speech. But bimeby, he opened his mouth an' words begun to rumble out like low thunder frum underneath the groun'. They come kinder slow at first, but every one on 'em wuz sent like a cannon ball, an' struck every man, woman an' child there right over the heart. Then they come faster, an' then we all knowed thet the universe wuz a big music box, an' Dan'l wuz turnin' the crank. The hull dictionary wuz a big gin filled with apple sass, honey, an' stewed quinces, an' Dan'l jest stood there jabbin' both hands into it way up to the elbow, and scatterin' the sweetness over the worl'. I jest threw out my arms an' legs like a frog in a mill- pond, an' swum through the ocean of sweet sass an' honey thet wuz sloshin' all about me. I div down to the bottom, an' brought up hundred thousand dollar pearls in my mouth, an' splashed about like a crazy luna- tic in a sea of glory. W'en Dan'l smiled it seemed ez if the sun hed been whitewashed with a mixture of melted gold, silver, jasper, saffire, emerald, chrysolite an' stuff, sich ez St. John seen on the foundations of the new Jerusalem; it seemed ez if the sun had been whitewashed with these things, an' then smiled on the earth, jest like a lovesick feller onto his best gal. W'en Dan'l frowned the sun grew ez black ez a black ink spot on a black cat hidin' in a coal bin on a dark night. Hope lef the worl' an' went on an everlastin' vacation; the bottom tumbled outer natur', an' I jest opened my mouth an' bawled like a baby. An' I jest kep' on bawlin' until Dan'l smiled agin, we'n I wuz so happy an' light thet I could hev walked on the air without bustin' through the crust, clear from here way up to the north star. "Wall, bimeby Dan'l got 'excited. He threw out his right han' an' pulled the mornin' star from the bosom of the sky ; he threw out his left han' an' snatched the trailin' robes from the sunset an' flapped them over the cattle shed. He threw up his head an' the sun dodged; he stamped his foot an' the earth trembled; and the prize hog give a gasp an' dropped dead. DanTs eyes now looked like two suns in two uni- verses; and if he only shet them once, we knew that darkness would cover the face of the deep, an' the world would roam about in the dark parsture of the universe 236 DRAMATIC READINGS AND RECITATIONS. like a stray cow, an' git lost. Oh, them eyes! them eyes! they'll shine into mysoul after the sun goes out, an' after the stars have dropped like loose buttons from the jacket of the sky. "But still Dan'l kep' on. Thet son of thunder stood there surrounded by punkins, and I verily believe the angels bent over the railin's of heaven an' listened to him ; an' I only wonder thet they didn't lose their bal- ance an' come a-fallin' down an' sprawl out like celestial lummuxes before his feet. They might hev for all I know. We shouldn't hev noticed 'em. We wouldn't hev paid any attention to an earthquake or an Odd Fell'rs purcession. If Gabrul had blown his trumpet right then an' there, an' tooted until he wuz red in the face, we wouldn't hev heerd it any more than we could hev heerd a watch tick in a biler fac- tory. Gabrul himself would hev dropped his horn an' stood an' listened to Dan'l. We couldn't see nothin' but Dan'l, we couldn't hear nothin' but Dan'l, an', — well, there warn't nothin' but Dan'l. He filled up the whole bushel basket of the universe an' then spilled over onto the floor. "Wen Dan'l stopped, I wanted to die ; an' I almost wish I hed, for I hain't heerd a de- cent speech sense his day, an' I never ex- pect to agin until I hear Dan'l spoutin' from the platforms of paradise." t^* &5* t5* A RACE FOR LIFE. A GUN is heard at the dead of night — "Lifeboat ready!" And every man, to the signal true, Fights for place in the eager crew; "Now, lads! steady." First a glance at the shuddering foam, Now a look at the loving home, Then together, with bated breath, They launch their boat in the gulf of death. Over the breakers wild, Little they reck of weather, But tear their way Through blinding spray. Hear the skipper cheer and say: "Up with her, lads, and lift her! All together." They see the ship in a sudden flash, Sinking ever, And grip their oars with a deeper breath; Now it's come to a fight with death, Now or never! Fifty strokes, and they're at her side, If they live in the boiling tide, If they last through the awful strife. Ah, my lads, it's a race for life! Over the breakers wild, Little they reck of weather, But tear their way Through blinding spray. Hear the skipper cheer and say: "Up with her, lads, and lift her! All together!" And loving hearts are on the shore, Hoping, fearing; Till over the sea there comes a cheer, Then the click of the oars you hear, Homeward steering — Ne'er a thought of the danger past, Now the lads are on land at last; What's a storm to a gallant crew Who race for life, and who win it, too? Over the breakers wild, Little they reck of weather, But tear their way Through blinding spray. Hear the skipper cheer and say: "Up with her, lads, and lift her! All together!" DRAMATIC READINGS AND RECITATIONS. 227 WHISTLING IN HEAVEN. YOU'RE surprised that I ever should say so? Just wait till the reason I've given, Why I say I shan't care for the music, Unless there is whistling in heaven. Then you'll think it no very great wonder, Nor so strange, nor so bold a conceit, That unless there's a boy there a-whistling, Its music will not be complete. It was late in the autumn of '40, We had come from our far Eastern home Just in season to build us a cabin, Ere the cold of the winter should come; And we lived all the while in our wagon While husband was clearing the place Where the house was to stand; and the clearing And building it took many days. So that our heads were scarce sheltered In under its roof, when our store Of provisions was almost exhausted, And husband must journey for more ; And the nearest place where he could get them Was yet such a distance away, That it forced him from home to be absent At least a whole night and a day. You see, we'd but two or three neighbors, And the nearest was more than a mile ; And we hadn't found time yet to know them, For we had been busy the while. And the man who had helped at the raising Just staid till the job was well done ; And as soon as the money was paid him, Had shouldered his axe, and had gone. Well, husband just kissed me and started, I could scarcely suppress a deep groan At the thought of remaining with baby So long in the house all alone ; For, my dear, I was childish and timid, And braver ones might well have feared, For the wild wolf was often heard howling, And savages sometimes appeared. But I smothered my grief and my terror Till husband was off on his ride, And then in my arms I took Josey, And all the day long sat and cried, As I thought of the long, dreary hours When the darkness of night should fall, And I was so utterly helpless, With no one in reach of my call. And when the night came with its terrors, To hide ev'ry ray of light, I hung up a quilt by the window, And almost dead with affright, I kneeled by the side of the cradle, Scarce daring to draw a full breath, Lest the baby should wake, and its crying Should bring us a horrible death. There I knelt until late in the evening, And scarcely an inch had I stirred, When suddenly, far in the distance, A sound as of whistling I heard ! I started up dreadfully frightened, For fear 'twas an Indian's call ; And then very soon I remembered The red man ne'er whistles at all. And when I was sure 'twas a white man, I thought were he coming for ill, He'd surely approach with more caution — Would come without warning, and still. Then the sounds coming nearer and nearer, Took the form of a tune light and gay, And I knew I needn't fear evil, From one who could whistle that way. Very soon I heard footsteps approaching, Then came a peculiar dull thump, As if some one was heavily striking An axe in the top of a stump; 238 DRAMATIC READINGS AND RECITATIONS. And then fn another brief moment, There came a light tap on the door, When quickly I undid the fast'ning, And in stepped a boy, and before There was either a question or answer, Or either had time to speak, I just threw my glad arms around him, And gave him a kiss on the cheek. Then I started back, scared at my boldness, But he only smiled at my fright, As he said, "I'm your neighbor's boy, Elick, Come to tarry with you through the night. "We saw your husband go eastward, And made up our minds where he'd gone, And I said to the rest of our people, 'That woman is there all alone. And I venture she's awfully lonesome, And though she may have no great fear I think she would feel a bit safer If only a boy were but near.' "So, taking my axe on my shoulder, For fear that a savage might stray Across my path and need scalping, I started right down this way ; And coming in sight of the cabin, And thinking to save you alarm, I whistled a tune, just to show you I didn't intend any harm. "And so here I am at your service ; But if you don't want me to stay, Why, all you need do is to say so, And should'ring my axe, I'll away." I dropped in a chair and near fainted, Just at the thought of his leaving me then, And his eye gave a knowing bright twinkle As he said, "I guess I'll remain." And then I just sat there and told him How terribly frightened I'd been, How his face was to me the most welcome. Of any I ever had seen ; And then I lay down with the baby, And slept all the blessed night through, For I felt I was safe from all danger Near so brave a young fellow and true. So now, my dear friend, do you wonder, Since such a good reason I've given, Why I say I shan't care for the music, Unless there is whistling in heaven ? Yes, often I've said so in earnest, And now what I've said I repeat, That unless there's a boy there a-whistling, Its music will not be complete. tc* ^* t3* THE ENGINE DRIVER'S STORY. WE were driving the down express — Will at the steam, I at the coal — Over the valleys and villages ! Over the marshes and coppices ! Over the river, deep and broad ! Through the mountain, under the road ! Flying along, tearing along ! Thunderbolt engine, swift and strong, Fifty tons she was, whole and sole ! I had been promoted to the express; I warrant you I was proud and gay, It was the evening that ended May, And the sky was a glory of tenderness. We were thundering down to a midland town; It makes no matter about the name — For we never stopped there, or anywhere For a dozen of miles on either side : DRAMATIC READINGS AND RECITATIONS. 239 So it's all the same — Just there you slide, With your steam shut off, and your brakes in hand, Down the steepest and longest grade in the land At a pace that I promise you is grand. We were just there with the express, When I caught sight of a muslin dress On the bank ahead ; and as we passed — You have no notion of how fast — A girl shrank back from our baleful blast. We were going a mile and a quarter a minute With vans and carriages down the incline, But I saw her face, and the sunshine in it, I looked in her eyes, and she looked in mine As the train went by, like a shot from a mortar, A roaring hell-breath of dust and smoke ; And I mused for a minute, and then awoke, And she was behind us — a mile and a quarter. And the years went on, and the express Leaped in her black resistlessness, Evening by evening, England through. Will — God rest him! — was found, a mash Of bleeding rags, in a fearful smash He made with a Christmas train at Crewe. It chanced I was ill the night of the mess, Or I shouldn't now be here alive ; But thereafter the five-o'clock out express Evening by evening I used to drive. And I often saw her, — that lady I mean, That I spoke of before. She often stood A-top o' that bank : it was pretty high — Say twenty feet, and backed by a wood. She would pick the daises out of the green To fling down at us as we went by. We had got to be friends, that girl and I, Though I was a rugged, stalwart chap, And she a lady ! I'd lift my cap, Evening by evening, when I'd spy That she was there, in the summer air, Watching the sun sink out of the sky. Oh, I didn't see her every night : Bless you! no; just now and then, And not at all for a twelvemonth quite. Then, one evening, I saw her again, Alone, as ever, but deadly pale, And down on the line, on the very rail, While a light, as of hell, from our wild wheels broke, Tearing down the slope with their devilish clamors, And deafening din, as of giant's hammers That smote in a whirlwind of dust and smoke All the instant or so that we sped to meet her. Never, oh, never, had she seemed sweeter! I let yell the whistle, reversing the stroke Down that awful incline, and signaled the guard To put on his brakes at once, and hard — Though we couldn't have stopped. We tattered the rail Into splinters and sparks, but without avail. We couldn't stop; and she wouldn't stir, Saving to turn us her eyes, and stretch Her arms to us ; — and the desperate wretch I pitied, comprehending her. So the brakes let off, and the steam full again, Sprang down on the lady the terrible train — She never flinched. We beat her down, And ran on through the lighted length of the town Before we could stop to see what was done. Oh, I've run over more than one ! Dozens of 'em, to be sure, but none 240 DRAMATIC READINGS AND RECITATIONS. That I pitied as I pitied her — If I could have stopped, with all the spur Of the train's weight on, and cannily — But it wouldn't do with a lad like me And she a lady — or had been — sir? Who was she? Best say no more of her ! The world is hard ; but I'm her friend, Stanch, sir, — down to the world's end. It is a curl of her sunny hair Set in this locket that I wear. I picked it off the big wheel there. Time's up, Jack. Stand clear, sir. Yes ; We're going out with the express. — W. Wilkins. c5* %5* «5* ONCE more unto the breach, dear friends, once more; Or close the wall up with our English dead. In peace there's nothing so becomes a man As modest stillness and humility; But when the blast of war blows in our ears, Then imitate the action of the tiger; Stiffen the sinews, summon up the blood, Disguise fair nature with hard-favored rage; Then lend the eye a terrible aspect; Let it pry through the portage of the head Like the brass cannon; let the brow over- whelm it, As fearfully as doth a galled rock Overhang and jutty his confounded base, Swilled with the wild and wasteful ocean. Now set the teeth, and stretch the nos- tril wide, Hold hard the breath, and bend up every spirit To his full height. Now on, you noblest English, HENRY V. AT HARFLEUR. Whose blood is fetched from fathers of war-proof; Fathers, that like so many Alexanders, Have in these parts from morn to even fought, And sheathed their swords for lack of ar- gument : Be copy now to men of grosser blood, And teach them how to war! And you, good yeomen, Whose limbs are made in England, show us here The mettle of your pasture ; let us swear That you are worth your breeding, which I doubt not: For there is none of you so mean and base That hath not noble luster in your eye ; I see you stand like greyhounds in the slips, Straining upon the start : the game's a-foot ; Follow your spirit; and, upon this charge, Cry, Heaven for Harry, England, and St. George. — Shakespeare. < Treasure Trove— World Favorites O w This department includes those immortal writings that won favor throughout the world and are as popular to-day as when they were first written many years ago. They belong to "Auld Lang Syne," and are old acquaint- ances that shall never be forgot. i2rl t0* && PRESIDENT LINCOLN'S FAVORITE POEM. The brow of the priest that the mitre hath worn, The eye of the sage, and the heart of the brave, Are hidden and lost in the depths of the grave. OH, why should the spirit of mortal be proud? Like a fast-flitting meteor, a fast-flying cloud, A flash of the lightning, a break of the wave, He passes from life to his rest in the grave. The leaves of the oak and the willow shall fade, Be scattered around and together be laid; And the young and the old, and the low and the high, Shall moulder to dust and together shall die. The child that a mother attended and loved, The mother that infant's affection that proved, The husband that mother and infant that blessed, Each, all, are away to their dwelling of rest. The maid on whose cheek, on whose brow, in whose eye, Shone beauty and pleasure, — her triumphs are by; And the memory of those that loved her and praised, Are alike from the minds of the living erased. The hand of the king that the sceptre hath borne, The peasant whose lot was to sow and to reap, The herdsman who climbed .with his goats to the steep, The beggar that wandered in search of his bread, Have faded away like the grass that we tread. The saint that enjoyed the communion of Heaven, The sinner that dared to remain unfor- given, The wise and the foolish, the guilty and just, Have quickly mingled their bones in the dust. So the multitude goes, like the flower and the weed, That wither away to let others succeed; So the multitude come, even those we be- hold, To repeat every tale that hath often been told. For we are the same that our fathers have been; 241 242 TREASURE TROVE— WORLD FAVORITES. We see the same sights that our fathers have seen, — 'We drink the same stream, and we feel the same sun, And we run the same course that our fath- ers have run. The thoughts we are thinking our fathers would think; From the death we are shrinking from, they too would shrink; To the life we are clinging to, they too would cling; But it speeds from the earth like a bird on the wing. They loved, but their story we cannot un- fold; They scorned, but the heart of the haughty is cold; They grieved, but no wail from their slum- bers may come; They joyed, but the voice of their gladness is dumb. They died, — ay, they died; and we things that are now, Who walk on the turf that lies over their brow, Who make in their dwellings a transient abode, Meet the changes they met on their pil- grimage road. Yea! hope and despondency, pleasure and pain, Are mingled together like sunshine and rain; And the smile and the tear and the song and the dirge Still follow each other, like surge upon surge. 'Tis the wink of an eye, 'tis the draught of a breath, From the blossom of health to the paleness of death, From the gilded saloon to the bier and the shroud, — Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud? t5* t5* «5* THE EXILE OF ERIN. THERE came to the beach a poor Exile of Erin, The dew on his thin robe was heavy and chill; For his country he sighed, when at twilight repairing To wander alone by the wind-beaten hill. But the day-star attracted his eye's sad de- votion, For it rose o'er his own native isle of the ocean, Where once in the fire of his youthful emotion He sang the bold anthem of Erin go bragh. "Sad is my fate," said the broken-hearted stranger, — "The wild deer and wolf to a covert can flee; But I have no refuge from famine and danger, A home and a country remain not to me. Never again in the green, sunny bowers Where my forefathers lived, shall I spend the sweet hours, Or cover my harp with the wild-woven flowers, And strike to the numbers of Erin go bragh ! SHARING A SORROW. o o « > o o o Q Pi W a TREASURE TROVE— WORLD FAVORITES. 245 "Erin, my country! though sad and for- saken, In dreams I revisit thy sea-beaten shore ; But, alas ! in a far foreign land I awaken, And sigh for the friends who can meet me no more! Oh, cruel fate! wilt thou never replace me In a mansion of peace, where no perils can chase me? Never again shall my brothers embrace me? They died to defend me, or live to de- plore! "Where is my cabin door, fast by the wild wood? Sisters and sire, did ye weep for its fall? Where is the mother that looked on my childhood? And where is the bosom friend, dearer than all? j» Oh, my sad heart! long abandoned by pleasure, Why did it doat on a fast- fading treasure? Tears, like the rain-drop, may fall without measure, But rapture and beauty they cannot re- call. "Yet all its sad recollection suppressing, One dying wish my lone bosom can draw: Erin, an exile bequeaths thee his blessing! Land of my forefathers ! Erin go bragh ! Buried and cold, when my heart stills her motion, Green be thy fields, sweetest isle of the ocean! And thy harp-striking bard sings aloud with devotion, — Erin mavourneen! Erin go bragh!" — Thomas Campbell. THE VILLAGE BLACKSMITH. UNDER a spreading chestnut tree The village smithy stands; The smith, a mighty man is he, With large and sinewy hands; And the muscles of his brawny arms Are strong as iron bands. His hair is crisp and black and long; His face is like the tan; His brow is wet with honest sweat; He earns whate'er he can, And looks the whole world in the face, For he owes not any man. Week in, week out, from morn till night, You can hear his bellows blow; You can hear him swing his heavy sledge, With measured beat and slow, Like a sexton ringing the village bell When the evening sun is low. And children coming home from school Look in at the open door; They love to see the flaming forge, And hear the bellows roar, And catch the burning sparks that fly Like chaff from a threshing-floor. He goes on Sunday to the church, And sits among his boys; He hears the parson pray and preach, He hears his daughter's voice Singing in the village choir, And it makes his heart rejoice. It sounds to him like her mother's voice, Singing in Paradise. He needs must think of her once more, How in the grave she lies; And with his hard, rough hand he wipes A tear out of his eyes. 2-iG TEE A SURE TROVE— WORLD FAVORITES. Toiling — rejoicing — sorrowing — Onward through life he goes; Each morning sees some task begin, Each evening sees it close; Something attempted — something done, Has earned a night's repose. Thanks, thanks to thee, my worthy friend, For the lesson thou hast taught! Thus at the flaming forge of life Our fortunes must be wrought; Thus on its sounding anvil shaped Each burning deed and thought. <•« & y* JOHN ANDERSON JOHN Anderson my jo, John, When we were first sequent Your locks were like the raven, Your bonnie brow was brent; But now your brow is bald, John, Your locks are like the snow; But blessings on your frosty pow; John Anderson my jo. John Anderson my jo, John, We clamb the hill thegither, And mony a canty day, John, We've had wi' ane anither: Now we maun totter down, John, But hand in hand we'll go, And sleep thegither at the foot, John Anderson my jo. — Robert Burns. .£ £ <£ "ROCK ME TO SLEEP, MOTHER." BACKWARD, turn backward, O Time! in your flight, Make me a child again, just for to-night! Mother, come back from the echoless shore, Take me again to your heart, as of yore ; Kiss from my forehead the furrows of care, Smooth the few silver threads out of my hair; Over my slumbers your loving watch keep — Rock me to sleep, mother, rock me to sleep! Backward, flow backward, O swift tide of years ! I am weary of toil, I am weary of tears ; Toil without recompense, tears all in vain, Take them, and give me my childhood again! I have grown weary of dust and decay, Weary of flinging my soul-wealth away, Weary of sowing for others to reap; Rock me to sleep, mother, rock me to sleep! Tired of the hollow, the base, the untrue, Mother, O mother! my heart calls for you! Many a summer the grass has grown green, Blossomed and faded, our faces between; Yet with strong yearning and passionate pain, Long I to-night for your presence again; Come from the silence so long and so deep — Rock me to sleep, mother, rock me to sleep! Over my heart, in the days that are flown, No love like mother-love ever has shone. No other worship abides and endures Faithful, unselfish, and patient, like yours; None like a mother can charm away pain TEEASUUE TUOVE— WORLD FA VOEITES. 247 From the sorrowing soul and the world- weary brain; Slumber's soft calm o'er my heavy lids creep; Rock me to sleep, mother, rock me to sleep! Come, let your brown hair, just lighted with gold, Fall on your shoulders again as of old; Let it fall over my forehead to-night, Shielding my eyes from the flickering light; For oh! with its sunny-edged shadows once more, Haply will throng the sweet visions of yore; Lovingly, softly its bright billows sweep — Reck me to sleep, mother, rock me to sleep ! Mother, dear mother! the years have been long Since last I was hushed by your lullaby song; Sing them again, — to my soul it shall seem Womanhood's years have been only a dream ; Clasp to your arms in a loving embrace, With your soft, light lashes just sweeping my face, Never hereafter to wake or to weep; Rock me to sleep, mother, rock me to sleep ! — Mrs. Elisabeth Akers. t2& t&& t&* THE OLD OAKEN BUCKET. HOW dear to this heart are the scenes of my childhood, When fond recollection presents them to view! The orchard, the meadow, the deep-tangled wildwood, And every loved spot which my infancy knew; The wide-spreading pond, and the mill which stood by it, The bridge, and the rock where the cataract fell; The cot of my father, the dairy-house nigh it, And e'en the rude bucket which hung in the well. The old oaken bucket, the iron-bound bucket, The moss-covered bucket which hung in the well. That moss-covered vessel I hail as a treas- ure; For often, at noon, when returned from the field, I found it the source of an exquisite pleasure, The purest and sweetest that nature can yield. How ardent I seized it, with hands that were glowing! And quick to the white-pebbled bottom it fell; Then soon, with the emblem of truth over- flowing, And dripping with coolness, it rose from the well; The old oaken bucket, the iron-bound bucket, The moss-covered bucket, arose from the well. How sweet from the green mossy brim to receive it, As, poised on the curb, it inclined to my lips! 248 TREASURE TROVE— WORLD FAVORITES. Not a full blushing goblet could tempt me to leave it, Though filled with the nectar that Jupi- ter sips. And now, far removed from the loved situation, The tear of regret will intrusively swell, As fancy reverts to my father's plantation, And sighs for the bucket which hangs in the well; The old oaken bucket, the iron-bound bucket, The moss-covered bucket which hangs in the well. — Samuel Woodzvorth. t&& i£& t5* I'VE wandered to the village, Tom, I've sat beneath the tree, Upon the school-house play-ground, that sheltered you and me ; But none were left to greet me, Tom; and few were left to know, Who played with us upon the green, some forty years ago. The grass is just as green, Tom; bare- footed boys at play Were sporting, just as we did then, with spirits just as gay. But the "master" sleeps upon the hill, which, coated o'er with snow, Afforded us a sliding-place, some forty years ago. The old school-house is altered now; the benches are replaced By new ones, very like the ones our pen- knives once defaced; But the same old bricks are in the wall, the bell swings to and fro; It's music's just the same, dear Tom, 'twas forty years ago. The boys were playing some old game, be- neath that same old tree; I have forgot the name just now, — you've played the same with me, On that same spot; 'twas played with knives, by throwing so and so; FORTY YEARS AGO. The loser had a task to do, — there, forty years ago. The river's running just as still; the wil- lows on its side Are larger than they were, Tom; the stream appears less wide; But the grape-vine swing is ruined now, where once we played the beau, And swung our sweethearts, — pretty girls, — just forty years ago. The spring that bubbled 'neath the hill, close by the spreading beech, Is very low, — 'twas then so high that we could scarcely reach; And, kneeling down to get a drink, dear Tom, I started so, To see how sadly I am changed, since forty years ago. Near by that spring, upon old elm, you know I cut your name, Your sweetheart's put beneath it, Tom, and you did mine the same. Some heartless wretch has peeled the bark, 'twas dying sure but slow, Just as she died, whose name you cut, some forty years ago. My lids have long been dry, Tom, but tears came to my eyes; TREASURE TROVE— WORLD FAVORITES. 249 I thought of her I loved so well, those early broken ties. I visited the old church-yard, and took some flowers to strew Upon the graves of those we loved, some forty years ago. Some are in the church-yard laid, some sleep beneath the sea; But few are left of our old class, excepting yqu and me; And when our time shall come, Tom, and we are called to go, I hope they'll lay us where we played, just forty years ago. t£w t^* d?* THE OLD ARM-CHAIR. I LOVE it, I love it; and who shall dare To chide me for loving that old arm- chair? I've treasured it long as a sainted prize; I've bedewed it with tears, and embraced it with sighs. Tis bound by a thousand bands to my heart; Not a tie will break, not a link will start. Would ye learn the spell? — a mother sat there ; And a sacred thing is that old arm-chair. In childhood's hour I lingered near The hallowed seat with listening ear; And gentle words that mother would give, To fit me to die and teach me to live. She told me shame would never betide, With truth for my creed and God for my guide ; She taught me to lisp my earliest prayer As I knelt beside that old arm-chair. I sat and watched her many a day When her eye grew dim and her locks were gray; And I almost worshiped her when she smiled, And turned from her Bible, to bless her child. Years rolled on; but the last one sped — My idol was shattered; my earth-star fled; I learned how much the heart can bear, When I saw her die in that old arm-chair. 'Tis past, 'tis past, but I gaze on it now With quivering breath and throbbing brow. 'Twas there she nursed me ; 'twas there she died; And memory flows with lava tide. Say it is folly, and deem me weak, While the scalding drops start down my cheek; But I love it, I love it; and cannot tear My soul from a mother's old arm-chair. (5* t5* «58 GREAT ORATIONS. unfaltering front he faced death. With un- failing tenderness he took leave of life. Above the demoniac hiss of the assassin's bullet he heard the voice of God. With simple resignation he bowed to the Divine decree. As the end drew near his early craving for the sea returned. The stately mansion of power had been to him the wearisome hospital of pain, and he begged to be taken from its prison walls, from its oppressive, stifling air, from its homelessness and its hopelessness. Gently, silently, the love of a great people bore the pale sufferer to the longed-for healing of the sea, to live or to die, as God should will, within sight of its heaving billows, within sound of its mani- fold voices. With wan, fevered face ten- derly lifted to the cooling breeze he looked out wistfully upon the ocean's changing wonders ; on its far sails, whitening in the morning light ; on its restless waves, rolling shoreward to break and die beneath the noonday sun ; on the red clouds of evening, arching low to the horizon; on the serene and shining pathway of the stars. Let us think that his dying eyes read a mystic meaning which only the rapt and parting soul may know. Let us believe that in the silence of the receding world he heard the great waves breaking on a farther shore, and felt already upon his wasted brow the breath of the eternal morning. t5* <5* c5* LINCOLN ON SLAVERY. (Delivered at the Republican State Convention at Springfield, 111., in 1858.) I BELIEVE this government cannot en- dure permanently half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dis- solved; I do not expect the house to fall; but I do expect that it will cease to be di- vided. It will become all one thing, or all the other. Either the opponents of slavery will arrest the further spread of it, and place it where the public mind shall rest in the belief that it is in the course of ultimate extinction ; or its advocates will push it forward till it shall become alike lawful in all the states, old as well as new, North as well as South. Have we no tendency to the latter condition? Let anyone who doubts carefully contemplate that now al- most complete legal combination piece of machinery, so to speak, compounded of the Nebraska doctrine and the Dred Scott de- cision. Let him consider not only what work the machinery is adapted to do, and how well adapted, but also let him study the history of its construction, and trace, if he can, or rather fail, if he can, to trace the evidences of design and concert of action among its chief architects from the beginning." During the course of his second inaugu- ral address, delivered on March 4th, 1865, but a short time before his assassination, President Lincoln said: "Neither party (North or South) ex- pected for the war the magnitude or the duration which it has already attained. Neither anticipated that the cause of the conflict might cease when, or even before the conflict itself should cease. Each looked for an easier triumph, and a result less fundamental and astounding. Both read the same Bible and pray to the same God, and each invokes His aid against the other. It may seem strange that any men should dare to ask a just God's assistance in wringing their bread from the sweat of GREAT ORATIONS. 259 other men's faces ; but let us judge not, that we be not judged. The prayer of both could not be answered. That of neither has been answered fully. The Almighty has His own purposes. 'Woe unto the world because of offenses, for it must needs be that offenses come, but woe to that man by whom the offense cometh.' If we shall suppose that American slavery is one of those offenses which, in the providence of God, must needs come, but which having continued through His appointed time, He now wills to remove, and that He gives to both North and South this terrible war as the woe due to those by whom the of- fense came — shall we discern there any de- parture from those divine attributes which the believers in a living God always ascribe to Him? Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword; as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said, that 'the judgments of the Lord are true and right- eous altogether.' "With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphans, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and a lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations." t5* t<3* <5* CONKLING'S EULOGY OF GRANT. W (Nominating General Grant for President at HEN asked what State he hails from, Our sole reply shall be, He comes from Appomattox, And its famous apple tree." Continuing Senator Conkling said: "New York is for Ulysses S. Grant. Never defeated in peace or in war, his name is the most illustrious borne by living man. "His services attest his greatness, and the country — nay, the world — knows them by heart. His fame was earned not alone in things written and said, but by the ardu- ous greatness of things done. And perils and emergencies will search in vain in the future, as they have searched in vain in the past, for any other on whom the nation leans with such confidence and trust. Never the Republican National Convention of 1880.) having had a policy to enforce against the will of the people, he never betrayed a cause or a friend, and the people will never desert or betray him. * * * "His integrity, his common sense, his courage, his unequaled experience, are the qualities offered to his country. The only argument, the only one that the wit of man or the stress of politics has devised is one which would dumfounder Solomon, because he thought there was nothing new under the sun. Having tried Grant twice and found him faithful, we are told that we must not, even after an interval of years, trust him again. My countrymen ! my countrymen ! what stultification does not such a fallacy involve ! * * * "He was the arch-preserver of his coun- try, and not only in war, but twice as Civil 260 GREAT ORATIONS. Magistrate, he gave his highest, noblest ef- forts to the Republic. Is this an election- eering juggle, or is it hypocrisy's masquer- ade? There is no field of human activity, responsibility, or reason in which rational beings object to an agent because he has been weighed in the balance and not found wanting. There is, I say, no department of human reason in which sane men reject an agent because he has had experience, mak- ing him exceptionally competent and fit. From the man who shoes your horse, to the lawyer who tries your case, the officer who manages your railway or your mill, the doctor into whose hands you give your life, or the minister who seeks to save your soul, what man do you reject because by his works you have known him and found him faithful and fit? "What makes the presidential office an exception to all things else in the common sense to be applied to selecting its incum- bent? Who dares — who dares to put fet- ters on that free choice and judgment which is the birthright of the American people ? Can it be said that Grant has used official power and place to perpetuate his term? He has no place, and official power has not been used for him. * * * "This convention is master of a supreme opportunity." t<5* c3* '5* BIRTH OF THE NEW SOUTH. (Delivered before the New England Society of New York in 1886.) THERE was a South of slavery and se- cession — that South is dead. There is a South of union and freedom — that South, thank God, is living, breathing, growing every hour." These words, deliv- ered from the immortal lips of Benjamin H. Hill, at Tammany Hall, in 1866, true then, and truer now, I shall make my text. * * * We of the South have found out that in the general summary the free negro counts more than he did as a slave. We have planted the schoolhouse on the hill top and made it free to white and black. We have sowed towns and cities in the place of theories, and put business above politics. We have challenged your spinners in Mas- sachusetts and your ironmakers in Penn- sylvania. We have learned that $400,000,- 000 annually received from our cotton crop will make us rich, when the supplies that make it are home-raised. * * * We have established thrift in the city and coun- try. We have fallen in love with work. We have restored comfort to homes from which culture and elegance never departed. We have let economy take root and spread among us as rank as the crab grass which sprung from Sherman's cavalry camps, un- til we are ready to lay odds on the Georgia Yankee, as he manufactures relics of the battlefield in a one-story shanty and squeezes pure olive oil out of his cotton seed, against any down-easter that ever swapped wooden nutmegs for flannel sau- sages in the valley of Vermont. Above all, we know that we have achieved, in these "piping times of peace," a fuller independence for the South than that which our fathers sought to win in the forum by their eloquence, or compel on the field by their swords. * * * But what of the negro? Have we solved the problem he presents, or progressed in honor and equity toward the solution? Let the record speak to the point. No section GREAT ORATIONS. 261 shows a more prosperous laboring popula- tion than the negroes of the South; none in fuller sympathy with the employing and land-owning class. He shares our school fund, has the fullest protection of our laws, and the friendship of our people. Self-in- terest, as well as honor, demand that they should have this. Our future, our very existence, depends upon our working out this problem in full and exact justice. We understand that when Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, your victory was assured; for he then committed you to the cause of human liberty, against which the arms of man cannot prevail ; while those of our statesmen who trusted to make slavery the corner stone of the Confederacy doomed us to defeat as far as they could, committing us to a cause that reason could not defend or the sword main- tain in the sight of advancing civilization. — Henry W. Grady. c5* t5* «5* THE CHARACTER AND WORK OF GLADSTONE. (Delivered in the Canadian House of Commons, May 26, 1898.) MR. SPEAKER:— Everybody in this House will, I think, agree that it is eminently fitting and proper that in the uni- versal expression of regret which ascends towards heaven from all parts of the civil- ized world we also should join our voice and testify to the very high sense of re- spect, admiration, and veneration which the entire people of Canada, irrespective of creed, or race, or party, entertain for the memory of the great man who has just closed his earthly career. England has lost the most illustrious of her sons; but the loss is not England's alone, nor is it confined to the great em- pire which acknowledges England's suze- rainty, nor even to the proud race which can claim kinship with the people of England. The loss is the loss of mankind. Mr. Glad- stone gave his whole life to his country ; but the work which he did for his coun- try was conceived and carried out on prin- ciples of such high elevation, for -purposes so noble and aims so lofty, that not his country alone, but the whole of mankind, benefited by his work. It is no exaggera- tion to say that he has raised the standard of civilization, and the world to-day is un- doubtedly better for both the example and the precept of his life. His death is mourned, not only by England, the land of his birth, not only by Scotland, the land of his ancestors, not only by Ireland, for whom he did so much, and attempted to do more ; but also by the people of the two Sicilies, for whose outraged rights he once aroused the conscience of Europe ; by the people of the Ionian Islands, whose inde- pendence he secured ; by the people of Bul- garia and Danubian provinces, in whose cause he enlisted the sympathy of his own native country. Indeed, since the days of Napoleon, no man has lived whose name has traveled so far and so wide over the surface of the earth; no man has lived whose name alone so deeply moved the hearts of so many millions of men. Where- as Napoleon impressed his tremendous per- sonality upon peoples far and near by the strange fascination which the genius of war has always exercised over the imag- ination of men in all lands and in all ages, the name of Gladstone had come to be, in the minds of all civilized nations, the liv- ing incarnation of right against might — the champion, the dauntless, tireless champion, 262 GREAT ORATIONS. of the oppressed against the oppressor. It is, I believe, equally true to say that he was the most marvelous mental organiza- tion which the world has seen since Napo- leon — certainly the most compact, the most active, and the most universal. This last half century in which we live has produced many able and strong men, who, in different walks of life, have at- tracted the attention of the world at large ; but of the men who have illustrated this age, it seems to me that in the eyes of posterity four will outlive and outshine the others — Cavour, Lincoln, Bismarck, and Gladstone. If we look simply at the mag- nitude of the results obtained, compared with the exiquity of the resources at com- mand — if we remember that out of the small kingdom of Sardinia grew the United Italy — we must come to the conclusion that Count Cavour was undoubtedly a states- man of marvelous skill and prescience. Abraham Lincoln, unknown to fame when he was elected to the presidency, exhibited a power for the government of men which scarcely has been surpassed in any age. He saved the American Union, he fran- chised the black race, and for the task he had to perform he was endowed in some respects almost miraculously. No man ever displayed a greater insight into the mo- tives, the complex motives, which shape the public opinion of a free country, and he possessed almost to the degree of an in- stinct the supreme quality in a statesman of taking the right decision, taking it at the right moment, and expressing it in lan- guage of incomparable felicity. As a statesman, it was the good fortune of Mr. Gladstone that his career was not associated with war. The reforms which he effected, the triumphs which he achieved, were not won by the supreme arbitrament of the sword. The reforms which he ef- fected and the triumphs which he achieved were the result of his power of persuasion over his fellowmen. The reforms which he achieved in many ways amounted to a revolution. They changed in many partic- ulars, the face of the realm. After Sir Robert Peel had adopted the great princi- ple which eventually carried England from protection to free trade, it was Mr. Glad- stone who created the financial system which has been admitted ever since by all students of finance as the secret of Great Britain's commercial success. He enforced the extension of the suffrage to the masses of the nation, and practically there he made the government of monarchical England as democratic as that of any republic. He disestablished the Irish Church ; he intro- duced reform into the land tenure, and brought hope into the breasts of those til- lers of the soil in Ireland who had for so many generations labored in despair. And all this he did, not by force or violence, but simply by the power of his eloquence and the strength of his personality. — Sir Wilfrid Lauricr. GRANT'S HERITAGE. (From an oration delivered at Galena, 111., on the seventy-eighth anniversary of the birth- day of General Grant.) IN the long run every great nation instinctively recognizes the man who peculiarly and pre-eminently represents its own type. Here in our country we have had many public men of the first rank — sol- diers, orators, constructive statesmen and popular leaders. We have also had great philosophers who were also leaders of GREAT ORATIONS. 26f popular thought. Each one of these men has had his own group of devoted follow- ers, and some of them have at times swayed the nation with a power such as the fore- most of all hardly wielded. Yet as the gen- erations slip away, as the dust of conflict settles and as through the clearing air we look back with keener vision into the na- tion's past, mightiest among the mighty dead loom the three great figures of Wash- ington, Lincoln and Grant. There are great men also in the second rank; for in any gallery of merely national heroes, Franklin and Hamilton, Jefferson and Jack- son, would surely have their place. But these three greatest men have taken their place among the great men of all nations, the great men of all times. They stood supreme in the two great crises of our coun- try, on the two great occasions when we stood in the van of all humanity and struck the most effective blows that have even been struck for the cause of human freedom un- der the law. Washington fought in the earlier strug- gle, and it was his good fortune to win the highest renown alike as soldier and states- man. In the second and even greater strug- gle, the deeds of Lincoln, the statesman, were made good by those of Grant, the soldier, and later Grant himself took up the work that dropped from Lincoln's tired hands when the assassin's bullet went home and the sad, patient, kindly eyes were closed forever. Grant and his fellow soldiers who fought through the war, and his fellow statesmen who completed the work partly done by the soldiers, not only left us the heritage of a reunited country, and of a land from which slavery had been banished, but left us what was quite as important, the great memory of their great deeds, to serve forever as an example and an inspiration, to spur us on so that we may not fall far below the level reached by our fathers. The rough, strong poet of democracy has sung of Grant as the man of mighty days, and equal to the days. The days are less mighty now ; and that is all the more reason why we should show ourselves equal to them. We meet here to pay homage to the memory of our illustrious dead; and let us keep ever clear before our minds the fact that mere lip loyalty is no loyalty at all, and that the only homage that counts is tfie homage of deeds, not words. It is but an idle waste of time to celebrate the memory of the dead, unless we, the living, in our lives, strive to show ourselves not unworthy of them. If the careers of Washington and Grant are not vital and full of meaning to us, if they are merely part of the storied past, and stir us to no eager emulation in the ceaseless, endless war for right against wrong, then the root of right thinking is not in us ; and where we do not think right we can not act right. I shall ask attention, not to Grant's life, but to the lessons taught by that life as we of to-day should learn them. Foremost of all, the lesson of tenacity, of stubborn fixity of purpose. In the Union armies there were generals as brilliant as Grant, but none with his iron determination. This quality he showed as President no less than as general. He was no more to be influenced by a hostile majority in Con- gress than he was to be influenced by check or repulse into releasing his grip on be- leagured Richmond. Grant's supreme virtue as a soldier was his "doggedness" — the quality which found expression in his famous phrases, uncon- ditional surrender and "fighting it out on this line if it takes all summer." He was a master of strategy and tactics, but he was also a master of hard hitting, of that "con- tinuous hammering" which finally broke 261 GREAT ORATIONS. through even Lee's guard. While an armed foe was in the field it never occurred to Grant that any question could be so im- portant as his overthrow. Grant was no lover of fighting for fight- ing's sake. He was a plain, quiet man, not seeking for glory; but a man who, when aroused, was always in deadly earnest and who never shrank from duty. He was al- ways slow to strike, but he never struck softly. His promise squared with his per- formance. His deeds made good his words. He did not denounce an evil in strained and hyperbolic language; but when he did denounce it he strove to make his denuncia- tion effective by his action ; he did not plunge lightly into war, but once in he saw the war through, and when it was over it was over entirely. Unsparing in battle, he was very merciful in victory. There was no let-up in his grim attack, his grim pursuit, until the last body of armed foes surrend- ered. But, that feat once accomplished, his first thought was for the valiant defeated — to let them take back their horses to their lit- tle homes, because they would use them to work on their farms. Grant, the cham- pion whose sword was sharpest in the great fight for liberty, was no less sternly insistent upon the need or order of obedience to law. No stouter foe of anarchy in every form ever lived within our borders. Grant, in short, stood for the great ele- mentary virtues — for justice, for freedom, for order, for unyielding resolution, for manliness in its broadest and highest sense. His greatness was not so much greatness of intellect as greatness of character; includ- ing in the word character all the strong, virile virtues. It is character that counts in a nation as in a man. It is a good thing to have a clean, fine intellectual develop- ment in a nation, to produce orators, artists, successful business men; but it is an infinitely greater thing to have those solid qualities which we group together under the name of character — sobriety, steadfast- ness — the sense of obligation towards one's neighbor and one's God, hard commonsense, and combined with it the gift of generous enthusiasm towards whatever is right. These are the qualities which go to make up true national greatness, and these were the qualities which Grant possessed to an eminent degree. To do our duty, that is the sum and sub- stance of the whole matter. Not trying to win glory, not trying to do anything bril- liant or unusual, setting ourselves vigor- ously at each task as the task arises, and try- ing to face each difficulty as Grant faced innumerable and eminently greater difficul- ties. The sure way to succeed is to set about our work in the spirit that marked the great soldier whose life we this day celebrate; the spirit of devotion to duty, of determination to deal fairly, justly and fear- lessly with all men, and of iron resolution never to abandon any task once begun until it has been brought to a successful and tri- umphant conclusion. — Theodore Roosevelt. The selections in this department have been made with a view of impressing upon the minds of all hearers the lessons of temperance by picturing the happiness and pros- perity of abstainers and the misery and poverty of drunkards. t&* tcr* *&& THE BRIDAL PLEDGE. ( l Y^ LEDGE with wine — pledge with 1^ wine!" cried the young and thoughtless Harry Wood. "Pledge with wine," ran through the brilliant crowd. The beautiful bride grew pale — the de- cisive hour had come, she pressed her white hands together, and the leaves of her bridal wreath trembled on her pure brow; her breath came quicker, her heart beat wilder. "Yes, Marion, lay aside your scruples for this once," said the Judge, in a low tone, going towards his daughter, "the company expect it; do not so seriously infringe upon the rules of etiquette; — in your own house act as you please; but in mine, for this once please me." Every eye was turned towards the bridal pair. Marion's principles were well known. Henry had been a con- vivialist, but of late his friends noticed the change in his manners, the difference in his habits — and to-night they watched him to see, as they sneeringly said, if he was tied down to a woman's opinion so soon. Pouring a brimming beaker, they held it with tempting smiles toward Marion. She was very pale, though more com- posed, and her hand shook not, as smiling back, she gratefully accepted the crystal tempter and raised it to her lips. But scarcely had she done so, when every hand was arrested by her piercing excla- mation of, "Oh, how terrible!" "What 265 is it?" cried one and all, thronging together, for she had slowly carried the glass at arm's length, and was fixedly regarding it as though it were some hideous object. "Wait," she answered, while an inspired light shone from her dark eyes, "wait, and I will tell you. I see," she added, slowly pointing one jeweled finger at the sparkling ruby liquid, "a sight that beg- gars all description; and yet listen; I will paint it for you if I can: It is a lonely spot; tall mountains, crowned with ver- dure, rise in awful sublimity around; a river runs through, and bright flowers grow to the water's edge. There is a thick, warm mist that the sun seeks vainly to pierce; trees, lofty and beauti- ful, wave to the airy motion of the birds; but there, a group of Indians gather; they flit to and fro with something like sorrow upon their dark brow; and in their midst lies a manly form, but his cheek, how deathly! his eye wild with the fitful fire of fever. One friend stands beside him, nay, I should say kneels, for he is pillowing that poor head upon his breast. "Genius in ruins. Oh! the high, holy looking brow! Why should death mark it, and he so young? Look how he throws the damp curls! See him clasp his hands! hear his thrilling shrieks for life! mark how he clutches at the form of his companion, imploring to be saved. Oh! hear him call piteously his father's 2M TEMPERANCE SELECTIONS. name; see him twine his fingers together as he shrieks for his sister — his only sister — the twin of his soul — weeping for him in his distant native land. "See!" she exclaimed, while the bridal party shrank back, the untasted wine trembling in their faltering grasp, and the Judge fell, overpowered, upon his seat; "see! his arms are lifted to heaven; he prays, how wildly, for mercy! hot fever rushes through his veins. The friend beside him is weeping; awe-stricken, the dark men move silently, and leave the living and dying together." There was a hush in that princely parlor, broken only by what seemed a smothered sob, from some manly bosom. The bride stood yet upright, with quiver- ing lip, and tears stealing to the outward edge of her lashes. Her beautiful arm had lost its tension, and the glass, with its little troubled red waves, came slowly towards the range of her vision. She spoke again; every lip was mute. Her voice was low, faint, yet awfully distinct; she still fixed her sorrowful glance upon the wine-cup. "It is evening now; the great white moon is coming up, and her beams lie gently on his forehead. He moves not; his eyes are set in their sockets; dim are their piercing glances; in vain his friend whispers the name of father and sister — death is there. Death! and no soft hand, no gentle voice to bless and soothe him. His head sinks back! one convulsive shudder! he is dead!" A groan ran through the assembly, so vivid was her description, so unearthly her look, so inspired her manner, that what she described seemed actually to have taken place then and there. They noticed, also, that the bridegroom hid his face in his hands and was weeping. "Dead!" she repeated again, her lips quivering faster and faster, and her voice more and more broken; "and there they scoop him a grave; and there, without a shroud, they lay him down in the damp, reeking earth. The only son of a proud father, the only idolized brother of a fond sister. And he sleeps to-day in that dis- tant country, with no stone to mark the spot. There he lies — my father's son — my own twin brother! a victim to this deadly poison. Father," she exclaimed, turning suddenly, while the tears rained down her beautiful cheeks, "father, shall I drink it now?" The form of the old Judge was con- vulsed with agony. He raised his head, but in a smothered voice he faltered — "No, no, my child, in God's name, no." She lifted the glittering goblet, and let- ting it suddenly fall to the floor it was dashed into a thousand pieces. Many a tearful eye watched her movements, and instantaneously every wine-glass was transferred to the marble table on which it had been prepared. Then, as she looked at the fragments of crystal, she turned to the company, saying: "Let no friend, hereafter, who loves me, tempt me to peril my soul for wine. Not firmer the everlasting hills than my resolve, God helping me, never to touch or taste that terrible poison. And he to whom I have given my hand; who watched over my brother's dying form in that last solemn hour, and buried the dear wanderer there by the river in that land of gold, will, I trust, sustain me in that resolve. Will you not, my husband?" His glistening eyes, his sad, sweet smile, was her answer. The Judge left the room, and when, an hour later, he returned, and with a more subdued manner took part in the enter- TEMPERANCE SELECTIONS. 267 tainment of the bridal guests, no one could fail to read that he, too, had determined to dash the enemy at once and forever from his princely rooms. Those who were present at that wed- ding can never forget the impression so solemnly made. Many from that hour for- swore the social glass. tJ?* f&r* t&* DRLNK AND DIE. (By a young lady, who was told that she was a monomaniac in her hatred of alcoholic liquors.) GO, feel what I have felt, Go, bear what I have borne; Sink 'neath a blow a father dealt, And the cold, proud world's scorn; Thus struggle on from year to year, Thy sole relief the scalding tear. Go, weep as I have wept O'er a loved father's fall; See every cherished promise swept, Youth's sweetness turned to gall; Hope's faded flowers strewn all the way That led me up to woman's day. Go, kneel as I have knelt; Implore, beseech, and pray, Strive the besotted heart to melt, The downward course to stay; Be cast with bitter curse aside — Thy prayers burlesqued, thy tears defied. Go, stand where I have stood, And see the strong man bow, With gnashing teeth, lips bathed in blood, And cold and livid brow; Go, catch his wandering glance, and see There mirrored his soul's misery. Go, hear what I have heard — The sobs of sad despair, As memory's feeling-fount hath stirred, And its revealings there Have told him what he might have been, Had he the drunkard's fate foreseen. Go to a mother's side, And her crushed spirit cheer; Thine own deep anguish hide, Wipe from her cheek the tear; Mark her dimmed eye, her furrowed brow, The gray that streaks her dark hair now, The toil-worn frame, the trembling limb, And trace the ruin back to him Whose plighted faith, in early youth, Promised eternal love and truth, But who, forsworn, 'hath yielded up This promise to the deadly cup, And led her down from love and light, From all that made her pathway bright, And chained her there 'mid want and strife, That lowly thing — a drunkard's wife! And stamped on childhood's brow, so mild, That withering blight — a drunkard's child ! Go, hear, and see, and feel, and know All that my soul hath felt and known, Then look within the wine-cup's glow; See if its brightness can atone; Think if its flavor you would try, If all proclaimed — 'Tis drink and die! Tell me I hate the bowl — Hate is a feeble word; I loathe, abhor — my very soul By strong disgust is stirred Whene'er I see, or hear, or tell Of the DARK BEVERAGE OF HELL! 268 TEMPERANCE SELECTIONS. "GOOD NIGHT, PAPA." THE words of a blue-eyed child as she kissed her chubby hand and looked down the stairs: "Good-night, papa; Jessie see you in the morning." It came to be a settled thing, and every evening, as the mother slipped the white night-gown over the plump shoulders, the little one stopped on the stairs and sang out, "Good-night, papa," and as the father heard the silvery accents of the child, he came, and taking the cherub in his arms, kissed her tenderly, while the mother's eyes rilled, and a swift prayer went up, for, strange to say, this man who loved his child with all the warmth of his great, noble nature, had one fault to mar his manliness. From his youth he loved the wine-cup. Genial in spirit, and with a fas- cination of manner that won him friends, he could not resist when surrounded by his boon companions. Thus his home was darkened, the heart of his wife bruised and bleeding, the future of his child shadowed. Three years had the winsome prattle of the baby crept into the avenues of the father's heart, keeping him closer to his home, but still the fatal cup was in his hand. Alas for frail humanity, insensible to the calls of love! With unutterable tenderness God saw there was no other way; this father was dear to him, the purchase of His Son; He could not see him perish, and calling a swift messenger, He said, "Speed thee to earth and bring the babe." "Good-night, papa," sounded from the stairs. What was there in the voice? was it the echo of the mandate, "Bring me the babe"? — a silvery plaintive sound, a linger- ing music that touched the father's heart, as when a cloud crosses the sun. "Good- night, my darling;" but his lips quivered and his broad brow grew pale. "Is Jessie sick, mother? Her cheeks are flushed, and her eyes have a strange light." "Not sick," and the mother stooped to kiss the flushed brow; "she may have played too much. Pet is not sick?" "Jessie tired, mamma; good-night, papa; Jessie see you in the morning." "That is all, she is only tired," said the mother as she took the small hand. An- other kiss and the father turned away ; but his heart was not satisfied. Sweet lullabies were sung; but Jessie was restless and could not sleep. "Tell me a story mamma;" and the mother told of the blessed babe that Mary cradled, fol- lowing along the story till the child had grown to walk and play. The blue, wide- open eyes filled with a strange light, as though she saw and comprehended more than the mother knew. That night the father did not visit the saloon; tossing on his bed, starting from a feverish sleep and bending over the crib, the long, weary hours passed. Morning revealed the truth — Jessie was smitten with a fever. "Keep.her quiet," the doctor said; "a few days of good nursing, and she will be all right." Words easy said; but the father saw a look on the sweet face such as he had seen before. He knew the message was at the door. Night came. "Jessie is sick; can't say good-night, papa;" and the little clasping fingers clung to the father's hand. "O God, spare her! I cannot, cannot bear it!" was wrung from his suffering heart. Days passed; the mothef was tireless in her watching. With her babe cradled in her arms her heart was slow to take in the TEMPERANCE SELECTIONS. 269 truth, doing her best to solace the father's heart: "A light case! the doctor says, 'Pet will soon be well.! " Calmly as one who knows his doom, the father laid his hand upon the hot brow, looked into the eyes even then covered with the film of death, and with all the strength of his manhood cried, "Spare her, O God! spare my child, and I will follow Thee." With a last painful effort the parched lips opened: "Jessie's too sick; can't say good-night, papa — in the morning." There was a convulsive shudder, and the clasp- ing fingers relaxed their hold ; the messen- ger had taken the child. Months have passed. Jessie's crib stands by the side of her father's couch; her blue embroidered dress and white hat hang in his closet; her boots with the print of the feet just as she last wore them, as sacred in his eyes as they are in the mother's. Not dead, but merely risen to a higher life; while, sounding down from the upper stairs, "Good-night, papa, Jessie see you in the morning," has been the means of win- ning to a better way one who had shown himself deaf to every former call. t£* e^* ^* COUNTING THE COST. (A glass of wine may be held in the hand and then dashed SUPPOSE the young man who holds the first glass of intoxicating liquor in his hands were to hold it there for five minutes, counting the cost of a burning brain ; counting the cost of a palsied hand ; counting the cost of a staggering step; counting the cost of broken hearts and of tear-stained pillows; counting the cost of a blighted home; counting the cost of the up to the words "slow poison of death," to the floor.) self-respect which oozes out at the finger tips as they clasp the sparkling curse; counting the cost of the degradation and disgrace of a ruined body and a lost soul. What young man could soberly count the cost of that one step, and not be strength- ened against the temptation to sip the slow poison of death? (^* ^* %2& TEMPERANCE SPEECH. {WISH to say a few words on temper- ance. I suppose you'll say the sub- ject is too deep for boys, and that this speech is altogether too old for me. Now, I will be honest with you, and say, in the first place, that these are not my words, or, rather, the thoughts are not really mine; but it is what I think of other people's thoughts. And as for the subject being too deep for me, that is all mere nonsense. Small as I am, I have seen people drunk a great many times. And they are not men alone; I have seen women and chil- dren drunk, more than once; and every time I see it, I feel sorry. When I see men going into a lager beer saloon, day after day, or women carrying home liquor in a pitcher or bottle, then I think of the time when I saw them drunk on the sidewalk, or quarreling with a lamp-post, or staggering home to beat their wife or children, and I know that 270 TEMPERANCE SELECTIONS. one is the beginning of the other. That is not what somebody else says; for I know that of myself. I have been to temperance meetings some, and have heard about the best means of promoting the cause of temper- ance — and they tell about taking away the liberty of the people! I confess, I don't understand this; but I want to; for I want to be intelligent enough to vote one of these days, which some men are not, they say. But I'm going to tell you what I think about it, from what I do know. I think it is a strange liberty that men want — liberty to get drunk, and reel around the streets, and frighten children, and be made fun of by the boys, and to go home at two o'clock in the morning, and get into bed with their boots on and not know the difference. Then, they say it is no sin to drink, but it is a sin to get drunk. Now, my father and mother teach me that it is just as wrong to steal a pin as to steal money, and they would punish me just the same for it. If it is a sin to drink ten glasses of whisky and get drunk, it is a sin to drink one glass; for some people can get more tipsy, disagreeable and dangerous on one glass than if they drank many and grew helplessly drunk. Take a boy's advice and don't touch it yourself and don't sell or give it to others. t£*t <5* (5* I HAVE DRANK MY LAST GLASS. N O, comrades, I thank you — not any for me; My last chain is riven — henceforward I'm free! I will go to my home and my children to- night With no fumes of liquor, their spirits to blight; And, with tears in my eyes, I will beg my poor wife To forgive me the wreck I have made of her life. I have never refused you before? Let that pass, For I've drank my last glass, boys, I have drank my last glass. Just look at me now, boys, in rags and dis- grace, With my bleared, haggard eyes, and my red, bloated face ; Mark my faltering step and my weak palsied hand, And the mark on my brow that is worse than Cain's brand; See my crownless old hat, and my elbows and knees, Alike, warmed by the sun, or chilled by the breeze. Why, even the children will hoot as I pass ; — But I've drank my last glass, boys, I have drank my last glass. You would hardly believe, boys, to look at me now That a mother's soft hand was pressed on my brow — When she kissed me, and blessed me, her darling, her pride, — Ere she laid down to rest by my dead father's side: But with love in her eyes, she looked up to the sky, Bidding me meet her there, and whispered "Good-bye." TEMPERANCE SELECTIONS. 271 And I'll do it, God helping ! Your smile I let pass, For I've drank my last glass, boys, I have drank my last glass. Ah! I reeled home last night — it was not very late, For I'd spent my last sixpence, and land- lords won't wait On a fellow, who's left every cent in their till, And has pawned his last bed, their coffer's to fill. Oh, the torments I felt, and the pangs I endured ! And I begged for one glass — just one would have cured. — But they kicked me out doors ! I let that, too, pass, For I've drank my last glass, boys, I have drank my last glass. At home, my pet Susie, with her rich golden hair, I saw through the window, just kneeling in prayer ; From her pale, bony hands, her torn sleeves were strung down, While her feet, cold and bare, shrank be- neath her scant gown ; And she prayed — prayed for bread, Just a poor crust of bread, — For one crust, on her knees my pet darling plead ! And I heard, with no penny to buy one, alas ! But I've drank my last glass, boys, I have drank my last glass. For Susie, my darling, my wee six-year-old, Though fainting with hunger and shivering with cold, There, on the bare floor, asked God to bless me! And she said, "Don't cry, mamma ! He will ! for, you see, I believe what I ask for." Then sobered, I crept Away from the house ; and that night, when I slept, Next my heart lay the Pledge ! You smile ! let it pass, For I've drank my last glass, boys, I have drank my last glass. My darling child saved me ! Her faith and her love Are akin to my dear sainted mother's above ! I will make my words true, or I'll die in the race, And sober I'll go to my last resting place ; And she shall kneel there, and, weeping, thank God No drunkard lies under the daisy-strewn sod! Not a drop more of poison my lips shall e'er pass, For I've drank my last glass, boys, I have drank my last glass. DRINKING MY homeless friend with the ruby nose, while you are stirring up the sugar in that ten-cent glass of gin, let me give you a fact to wash it down with. You say you have longed for years for the free, independent life of the farmer, but have JC A HOME. never been able to get enough money to- gether to buy a farm. But this is just where you are mistaken. For several years you have been drinking a good improved farm at the rate of one hundred square feet a gulp. If you doubt this statement, figure QiyO TEMPERANCE SELECTIONS. it out for yourself. An acre of land con- tains forty-three thousand five hundred and sixty square feet. Estimating, for con- venience, the land at forty-three dollars and fifty-six cents per acre, you will see that this brings the land to just one mill per square foot, one cent for ten square feet. Now pour down that fiery dose, and just imagine you are swallowing a strawberry patch. Call in five of your friends, and have them help you gulp down that five- hundred-foot garden. Get on a pro- longed spree some day, and see how long a time it requires to swallow a pasture large enough to feed a cow. Put down that glass of gin! there is dirt in it — one hundred square feet of good, rich dirt, worth forty-three dollars and fifty-six cents per acre. But there are plenty of farms which do not cost more than a tenth part of forty- three dollars and fifty-six cents per acre. What an enormous acreage has gone down many a homeless drinker's throat! No wonder such men are buried in the "pot- ter's field"; they have swallowed farms and gardens and homes, and even drank up their own graveyard. t&& t£fc t5* THE TWO GLASSES. THERE sat two glasses filled to the brim, On a rich man's table, rim to rim, One was ruddy and red as blood, And one as clear as the crystal flood. Said the glass of wine to the paler brother: "Let us tell the tales of the past to each other; I can tell of banquet and revel and mirth, And the proudest and grandest souls on earth Fell under my touch as though struck by blight, Where I was king, for I ruled in might ; From the heads of kings I have torn the crown, From the heights of fame I have hurled men down: I have blasted many an honored name; I have taken virtue and given shame ; I have tempted the youth with a sip, a taste That has made his future a barren waste. Greater, far greater than king am I, Or than any army beneath the sky. I have made the arm of the driver fail, And sent the train from the iron rail; I have made good ships go down at sea, And the shrieks of the lost were sweet to me, For they said, 'Behold how great you be! Fame, strength, wealth, genius before you fall, For your might and power are over all.' Ho! ho! pale brother," laughed the wine, "Can you boast of deeds as great as mine?" Said the water glass : "I cannot boast Of a king dethroned or a murdered host; But I can tell of a heart once sad, By my crystal drops, made light and glad ; Of thirsts I've quenched, of brows I've laved, Of hands I have cooled, and souls I have saved; I have leaped through the valley, dashed down the mountain, Flowed in the river and played in the fountain, Slept in the sunshine and dropped from the sky, And everywhere gladdened the landscape and eye. TEMPERANCE SELECTIONS. 273 I have eased the hot forehead of fever and pain; I have made the parched meadows grow fertile with grain; I can tell of the powerful wheel of the mill, That ground out the flour and turned at my will. I can tell of manhood debased by you, That I have lifted and crowned anew. I cheer, I help, I strengthen and aid; I gladden the heart of man and maid; I set the chained wine-captive free; And all are better for knowing me." These are the tales they told each other, The glass of wine and the paler brother, As they sat together filled to. the brim, On the rich man's table, rim to rim. c^* &5* t^* 1 THEY'VE STOPPED SELLING LIQUOR IN TOWN. HERE'S good news for you, mother." the old farmer said, As he paused where his good wife was moulding the bread, "I've been talking awhile with our friend neighbor Brown, And he says they've stopped selling liquor in town. "I just took off my hat and shouted huzza, When he said men had got to live up to the law, And I knew it would make your heart happy to know They have dried up the fountain of madness and woe. "Now the town will be peaceful and safe once again, And the street won't be crowded with wild, drunken men ; And the boys won't be tempted to smoke, drink and fight, To gamble all day and carouse all the night. "There's Kate, bless her heart, she will dance like a top, For she can go back now and sew in the shop, It won't be unsafe for her now I am sure, For though she is thoughtless the child's heart is pure. "You needn't buy things at the corners no more, For I'll send Sam to town to the big dry goods store ; He won't come home drunk, with the buggy broke down, For I tell you they have stopped selling liquor in town. "There's Jim, he won't study, and don't take to work, We can let him go now and hire out for a clerk, It will do the boy good, he'll find out it ain't play, And there ain't any grog-shops to lead him astray. "And there's little Peter, you know how he learns, And how he saves up every penny he earns To buy a new book, and the boy's got a plan, That he'll be a lawyer when he is a man. "So if you are willing to venture, I think We will send him to town now — he won't learn to drink. They've got a good school, and he'll learn very fast, I am glad they have stopped selling liquor at last." 2: i TEMPERANCE SELECTIONS. He paused, and the wife of his youth made reply, While joy sent the tear-drops like pearls from her eye, "Heaven bless the pure hearts that have put the curse down, Thank God they have stopped selling liquor in town." —Dell M. Mason. t&& t5* d?* A GLASS OF COLD WATER. (A stirring Temperance oration. When the tw the audience a g WHERE is the liquor which God the Eternal brews for all his children? Not in the simmering still, over smoky fires choked with poisonous gases, and sur- rounded with the stench of sickening odors, and rank corruptions, doth your Father in heaven prepare the precious essence of life,, the pure cold water.- But in the green glade and grassy dell, where the red deer wanders, and the child loves to play; there God brews it. And down, low down in the lowest valleys, where the fountains murmur and the rills sing; and high upon the tall mountain tops, where the naked granite glitters like gold in the sun; where the storm-cloud broods, and the thunder-storms crash ; and away far out on the wide, wild sea, where the hurricane howls music, and the big waves roar; the chorus sweeping the march of God: there he brews it — that beverage of life and health-giving water. And everywhere it is a thing of beauty, gleaming in the dew- drop; singing in the summer rain; shin- o last words are spoken raise and hold before lass of water.) ing in the ice-gem, till the leaves all seem to turn to living jewels; spreading a golden veil over the setting sun; or a white gauze around the midnight moon. Sporting in the cataract; sleeping in the glacier; dancing in the hail shower; fold- ing its bright snow curtains softly about the wintry world; and waving the many- colored iris, that seraph's zone of the sky, whose warp is the rain-drop of earth, whose woof is the sunbeam of heaven; all checkered over with celestial flowers, by the mystic hand of refraction. Still always it is beautiful, that life-giv- ing water; no poison bubbles on its brink; its foam brings not madness and murder; no blood stains its liquid glass; pale widows and starving orphans weep no burning tears in its depth; no drunken, shrieking ghost from the grave curses it in the words of eternal despair; speak out, my friends, would you exchange the demon's drink, alcohol, for this? &* £?* tt/* SAVED BY A SONG. NEARER, my God, to Thee," What, can it be I hear aright That sweet old song in such a place — Beneath the bar-room's glittering light? Listen; it is a woman's voice That drifts upon the breeze to me, From yonder gilded, gay saloon, "Nearer, my God, to Thee." Where have I heard that song before? Memory adown the long years speeds; I hear once more those precious words, TEMPERANCE SELECTIONS. 21 iO And then the preacher softly reads A few lines from the book of life; Then some one softly strokes my head And whispers, oh, so tenderly: "Poor little boy, your mother's dead." Oh! how it all comes back to me! Those whispered words, that tender song; My boyish heart was well-nigh broke'; I cried for mother all night long. I see the cozy sitting-room, The straight-back chairs 'ranged in a row — The moonlight stealing thro' the blinds, The jessamine swaying to and fro. And there my mother's rocking chair, From which a sweet face often smiled, As with her Bible on her lap She turned to bless her darling child. But that was years and years ago; What am I now? A wretch to shun, Going down the road to ruin fast, I'm on the drunkard's "homeward run." Somehow that song has reached my heart And seemed to pierce it thro' and thro', And called forth feelings that I'm sure Naught else on earth could ever do. My throat is parched from want of rum, My head seems growing wild with pain ; But, mother, hear your boy to-night: I'll never touch a drop again. (£?• t£* *(5* TRAMP, TRAMP, TRAMP. TRAMP, tramp, the boys are marching; how many of them? Sixty thousand! Sixty full regiments, every man of which will, before twelve months shall have com- pleted their course, lie down in the grave of a drunkard! Every year during the past decade has witnessed the same sacri 7 fice; and sixty regiments stand behind this army ready to take its place. It is to be recruited from our children and our chil- dren's children. Tramp, tramp, tramp — the sounds come to us in the echoes of the army just expired; tramp, tramp, tramp — the earth shakes with the tread of the host now passing; tramp, tramp, tramp — comes to us from the camp of the recruits. A great tide of life flows resistlessly to its death. What in God's name are they fight- ing for? The privilege of pleasing an ap- petite, of conforming to a social usage, of filling sixty thousand homes with shame and sorrow, of loading the public with the burden of pauperism, of crowding our prison houses with felons, of detracting from the productive industries of the coun- try, of ruining fortunes and breaking hopes, of breeding disease and wretchedness, of destroying both body and soul in hell be- fore their time. The prosperity of the liquor interest, covering every department of it, depends entirely on the maintenance of this army. It cannot live without it. It never did live without it. So long as the liquor interest maintains its present prosperous condition, it will cost America the sacrifice of sixty thousand men every year. The effect is inseparable from the cause. The cost to the country of the liquor traffic is a sum so stupendous that any figures which we should dare to give would convict us of trifling. The amount of life absolutely de- stroyed, the amount of industry sacrificed, the amount of bread transformed into poison, the shame, the unavailing sorrow, the crime, the poverty, the pauperism, the 270 TEMPERANCE SELECTIONS. brutality, the wild waste of vital and finan- cial resources, make an aggregate so vast — so incalculably vast, — that the only won- der is that the American people do not rise as one man and declare that this great curse shall exist no longer. — F. G. Holland. ^* t5* (5* SAMPLE ROOMS. SAMPLES of wine, and samples of beer, Samples of all kinds of liquors sold here ; Samples of whiskey, samples of gin, Samples of all kinds of bitters. Step in. Samples of ale, and porter, and brandy; Samples as large as you please, and quite handy; Our samples are pure, and also you'll find Our customers always genteel and refined; For gentlemen know when they've taken enough, And never partake of the common stuff. Besides these samples within, you know, There are samples without of what they can do ; Samples of headache, samples of gout; Samples of coats with the elbows out, Samples of boots without heels or toes; Samples of men with a broken nose, Samples of men in the gutter lying, Samples of men with delirium dying, Samples of men carousing and swearing, Samples of men all evil daring ; Samples of lonely, tired men, Who long in vain for their freedom again ; Samples of old men worn in the strife, Samples of young men tired of life; Samples of ruined hopes and lives, Samples of desolate homes and wives : Samples of aching hearts grown cold With anguish and misery untold; Samples of noble youth in disgrace, Who meet you with averted face ; Samples of hungry little ones, Starving to death in their dreary homes. In fact, there is scarcely a woe on earth But these "samples" have nurtured or given birth! Oh! all ye helpers to sorrow and crime, Who deal out death for a single dime, Know ye that the Lord, though he may delay, Has in reserve for the last great day The terrible "woe," of whose solemn weight No mortal can know till the pearly gate Is closed, and all with one accord Acknowledge the justice of their reward. Photo by Byron, N. Y. "DON'T GO. FOR MY SAKE, DON'T GO.' ft w H < hi w H No program is complete without a religious selection, and those contained herein are among the grandest and most beautiful in the English language. <,$* ft$* ufi THE CREEDS OF THE BELLS. In Concert. HOW sweet the chime of the Sabbath bells ! Each one its creed in music tells, In tones that float upon the air, As soft as song, as pure as prayer ; And I will put in simple rhyme The language of the golden chime ; My happy heart with rapture swells Responsive to the bells, sweet bells. First Girl. "In deeds of love excel ! excel I" Chimed out from ivied towers a bell ; "This is the church not built on sands, Emblem of one not built with hands ; In forms and sacred rites revere, Come worship here ! come worship here ! In rituals and faith excel !" Chimed out the Episcopalian bell. Second Girl. "Oh, heed the ancient landmarks well!" In solemn tones exclaimed a bell ; "No progress made by mortal man Can change the just eternal plan; With God there can be nothing new ; Ignore the false, embrace the true, While all is well ! is well ! is well !" Pealed out the good old Dutch church bell. Third Girl. "Ye purifying waters swell !" In mellow tones rang out a bell ; "Though faith alone in Christ can save, Man must be plunged beneath the wave, To show the world unfaltering faith In what the sacred scripture saith : Oh swell! ye rising waters, swell!" Pealed out the clear-toned Baptist bell. Fourth Girl. "Not faith alone, but works as well, Must test the soul !" said a soft bell ; "Come here and cast aside your load, And work your way along the road, With faith in God,* and faith in man, And hope in Christ, where hope began ; Do well ! do well ! do well ! do well !" Rang out the Unitarian bell. Fifth Girl. "Farewell ! farewell ! base world, farewell !" In touching tones exclaimed a bell; "Life is a boon, to mortals given; To fit the soul for bliss in heaven ; Do not invoke the avenging rod, Come here and learn the way to God ; Say to the world farewell ! farewell !" Pealed forth the Presbyterian bell. Sixth Girl. "To all the truth we tell ! we tell !" Shouted in ecstasies a bell; "Come all ye weary wanderers, see! Our Lord has made salvation free ! Repent, believe, have faith, and then Be saved and praise the Lord, Amen ! Salvation's free, we tell ! we tell !" Shouted the Methodistic bell. 279 280 RELIGIOUS READINGS. Seventh Girl. "In after life there is no hell!" In rapture rang a cheerful bell ; "Look up to heaven this holy day, Where angels wait to lead the way; There are no fires, no fiends to blight The future life ; be just and right. No hell ! no hell ! no hell ! no hell !" Rang out the Universalist bell. Eighth Girl. "The Pilgrim Fathers heeded well My cheerful voice," pealed forth a bell ; "No fetters here to clog the soulj No arbitrary creeds control The free heart and progressive mind, That leave the dusty past behind. Speed well, speed well, speed well, speed well !" Pealed out the Independent bell. Ninth Girl. "No Pope, no Pope, to doom to hell !" The Protestant rang out a bell ; "Great Luther left his fiery zeal Within the hearts that truly feel That loyalty to God will be The fealty that makes man free. No images where incense fell !" Rang out old Martin Luther's bell. Tenth Girl. "All hail, ye saints in heaven that dwell Close by the cross!" exclaimed a bell; "Lean o'er the battlements of bliss, And deign to bless a world like this ; Let mortals kneel before this shrine — Adore the water and the wine ! All hail ye saints, the chorus swell !" Chimed in the Roman Catholic bell. In Chorus. "Ye workers who have toiled so well, To save the race !" said a sweet bell ; "With pledge, and badge, and banner, come, Each brave heart beating like a drum ; Be royal men of noble deeds. For love is holier than creeds ; Drink from the well, the well, the well !" In rapture rang the Temperance bell. — George W. Bungay. t&* t^fr ta& DEATH OF LITTLE NELL. SHE was dead. No sleep so beautiful and calm, so free from trace of pain, so fair to look upon. She seemed a crea- ture fresh from the hand of God, and wait- ing for the breath of life; not one who had lived and suffered death. Her couch was dressed with here and there some win- ter-berries and green leaves, gathered in a spot she had been used to favor. "When I die, put me near something that has loved the light, and had the sky above it always." Those were her words. She was dead. Dear, gentle, patient, no- ble Nell was dead. Her little bird, a poor slight thing, which the pressure of a finger would have crushed, was stirring nimbly in its cage; and the strong heart of its child-mistress was white and motionless for- ever. Where were the traces of her early cares, her sufferings, and fatigues? All gone. Sorrow was dead, indeed, in her; but peace and perfect happiness was born — imaged — in her tranquil beauty and pro- found repose. And still her former self lay there, unaltered in this change. Yes, the old fireside had smiled upon that same sweet face, which had passed, like a dream, through haunts of misery and care. At the door of the poor schoolmaster on the summer evening, before the furnace fire RELIGIOUS READINGS. 281 upon the cold wet night, at the same still bedside of the dying boy, there had been the same mild, lovely look. The old man took one languid arm in his, and held the small hand to his breast for warmth. It was the hand she had stretched out to him with her last smile — the hand that had led him on through all their wan- derings. Ever and anon he pressed it to his lips ; then hugged it to his breast again, murmuring that it was warmer now; and, as he said it, he looked in agony to those who stood around, as if imploring them to help her. She was dead, and past all help or need of it. The ancient rooms she had seemed to fill with life, even while her own was w«aning fast, the garden she had tended, the eyes she had gladdened, the noiseless haunts of many a thoughtful hour, the paths she had trodden, as it were, but yes- terday, could know her no more. She had been dead two days. They were all about her at the time, knowing that the end was drawing on. She died soon after daybreak. They had read and talked to her in the earlier portion of the night, but as the hours crept on, she sunk to sleep. They could tell, by what she faintly uttered in her dreams, that they were of her journeyings with the old man ; they were of no painful scenes, but of those who had helped and used them kindly ; for she often said "God bless you !" with great fervor. Walking, she never wandered in her mind but once ; and that was at beautiful music which she said was in the air. God knows. It may have been. Opening her eyes at last from a very quiet sleep, she begged that they would kiss her once again. That done, she turned again to the old man, with a lovely smile on her face, — such, they said, as they had nev- er seen, and never could forget, — and clung with both arms about his neck. They did not know that she was dead at first. ^** £& (2& SOMETIME, SOMEWHERE. UNANSWERED yet ! The prayer your lips have pleaded In agony of heart, these many years? Does faith begin to fail, is hope departing, And think you all in vain those falling tears ? Say not the Father hath not heard your prayer ; You shall have your desire, sometime, somewhere. Unanswered yet? Though when you first presented This one petition to the Father's throne, It seemed you could not wait the time of asking, So urgent was your heart to make it known. Though years have passed since then, do net despair ; The Lord will answer you sometime, somewhere. Unanswered yet? Nay, do not say, un- granted ! Perhaps your part is not yet wholly done. The work began when first your prayer was uttered, And God will finish what He has begun. If you will keep the incense burning there, His glory you shall see, sometime, some- where. 282 RELIGIOUS READINGS. Unanswered yet? Faith cannot be un- answered, Her feet are firmly planted on the Rock ; Amid the wildest storms she stands un- daunted, Nor quails before the loudest thunder shock. She knows Omnipotence has heard her prayer And cries, "It shall be done, sometime, somewhere." i^* t?* t5* NEARER HOME. ONE sweetly solemn thought Comes to me o'er and o'er : I'm nearer my home to-day Than I ever have been before. Nearer my Father's house, Where the many mansions be ; Nearer the great white throne, Nearer the crystal sea; Nearer the bound of life, Where we lay our burdens down ; Nearer leaving the cross, Nearer gaining the crown. But the waves of that silent sea Roll dark before my sight, That brightly the other side Break on a shore of light. O, if my mortal feet Have almost gained the brink, If it be I am nearer home Even to-day than I think, Father, perfect my trust, Let my spirit feel in death That her feet are firmly set On the Rock of a living faith. t5* ^?* ^* THERE IS NO DEATH. THERE is no death ! The stars go down To rise upon some fairer shore ; And bright in heaven's jeweled crown They shine for evermore. There is no death ! The dust we tread Shall change beneath the summer showers To golden grain or mellowed fruit Or rainbow-tinted flowers, The granite rocks disorganize, And feed the hungry moss they bear ; The forest leaves drink daily life From out the viewless air. There is no death ! The leaves may fall, And flowers may fade and pass away ; They only wait through wintry hours The coming of the May. There is no death ! An angel form Walks o'er the earth with silent tread ; He bears our best-loved things away, And then we call them "dead." He leaves our hearts all desolate; He plucks our fairest, sweetest flowers; Transplanted into bliss, they now Adorn immortal bowers. The birdlike voice, whose joyous tones Made glad these scenes of sin and strife, Sings now an everlasting song Around the tree of life. Where'er He sees a smile too bright, Or heart too pure for taint and vice, He bears it to that world of light, To dwell in paradise. RELIGIOUS READINGS. 283 Born unto that undying life, They leave us but to come again ; With joy we welcome them the same, — Except their sin and pain. And ever near us, though unseen, The dear immortal spirits tread; For all the boundless universe Is life — ther^e are no dead. (5* *5* t*5* A HOME WHERE GOD IS. ) ry* WAS early day, and sunlight streamed 1 Soft through a quiet room, That hushed, but not forsaken, seemed Still, but with naught of gloom. For there, serene in happy age, Whose hope is from above, A father communed with the page Of heaven's recorded love. Pure fell the beam, and meekly bright, On his gray holy hair, And touched the page with tenderest light, As if its shrine were there ! But oh ! that patriarch's aspect shone With something lovelier far — A radiance all the spirit's own, Caught not from sun or star. Some word of life e'en then had met His calm benignant eye ; Some ancient promise breathing yet Of immortality ! Some martyr's prayer, wherein the glow Of quenchless faith survives : While every feature said — "I know That my Redeemer lives !" And silent stood his children by Hushing their very breath, Before the solemn sanctity Of thoughts o'ersweeping death. Silent — yet did not each young breast With love and reverence melt ? Oh ! blest be those fair girls, and blest That home where God is felt ! $5* t5* ^* RECESSIONAL. GOD of our fathers, known of old — Lord of our far-flung battle-line — Beneath Whose awful Hand we hold Dominion over palm and pine — Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet, Lest we forget — lest we forget ! The tumult and the shouting dies — The captains and the kings depart — Still stands Thine ancient Sacrifice, An humble and a contrite heart. Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet, Lest we forget — lest we forget ! Far-called our navies melt away — On dune and headland sinks the fire — Lo, all our pomp of yesterday Is one with Nineveh and Tyre! Judge of the Nations, spare us yet, Lest we forget — lest we forget ! If, drunk with sight of power, we loose Wild tongues that have not Thee in awe- Such boasting as the Gentiles use Or lesser breeds without the law — Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet, Lest we forget — lest we forget! For heathen heart that puts her trust In reeking tube and iron shard — 284 RELIGIOUS READINGS. All valiant dust that builds on dust, And guarding calls not Thee to guard- For frantic boast and foolish word, Thy mercy on Thy people, Lord! Amen. — Rudyard Kipling. t5* t5* *5* THERE IS NO UNBELIEF. THERE is no Unbelief ! Whoever plants a seed beneath the sod And waits to see it push away the clod, Trusts he in God. There is no Unbelief ! Whoever says, when clouds are in the sky, Be patient, heart, light breaketh by and by, Trusts the most High. There is no Unbelief ! Whoever sees 'neath Winter's fields of snow The silent harvests of the future grow, God's power must know. There is no Unbelief ! Whoever lies down on his couch to sleep, Content to lock each sense in slumber deep, Knows God will keep. There is no Unbelief ! Whoever says to-morrow, the unknown, The future, trusts that power alone He dare disown. There is no Unbelief ! The heart that looks on when dear eyelids close And dares to live when life has only woes, God's comfort knows. There is no Unbelief ! For thus by day and night unconsciously The heart lives by that faith the lips deny, God knoweth why. IMMORTALITY. O listen, man! A voice within us speaks that startling word, "Man, thou shalt never die!" Celestial voices Hymn it into our souls; according harps, By angel fingers touched, when the mild stars Of morning sang together, sound forth still The song of our great immortality. Thick-clustering orbs, and this our fair do- main, The tall, dark mountains and the deep-toned seas, Join in this solemn, universal song. O listen ye, our spirits ; drink it in From all the air. Tis in the gentle moon- light; 'Tis floating midst Day's setting glories; Night, Wrapped in her sable robe, with silent step Comes to our bed, and breathes it in our ears: Night, and the dawn, bright day, and thoughtful eve, All time, all bounds, the limitless expanse, As one vast mystic instrument, are touched By an unseen, living Hand; and conscious chords Quiver with joy in this great jubilee. The dying hear it ; and, as sounds of earth Grow dull and distant, wake their passing souls To mingle in this heavenly harmony. (A splendid drill for a half-dozen pupils or the entire school.) t5* e5* (5* STANDING in rank near the front side of the stage, the teacher gives the command to "present arms," "carry arms," "trail arms," etc. Each command consists of two words: the first is to indicate what the pupil is to do, and on the second word the movement is made, all acting in con- cert. The following exercises are suitable for this drill, and always prove very entertain- ing to the audience. Carry — Arms! — The broom is held in the right hand, handle upward, with the hand clasping the .handle where it joins the brush. The left hand hangs at the side. Present — Arms! — Place the broom with the right hand in front of the center of the body, clasping the handle with the left hand above the right. Hold the broom perfectly perpendicular. Order — Arms! — Let go the handle with the left hand, and carry the broom to the side with the right hand; then drop the broom to the floor. In place — Rest I — Grasp the handle with both hands, the left above the r'ght, and place both hands in front of the lower part of the breast. Trail — Arms ! — Grasp the handle with the right hand and incline it forward, the broom behind, resting on the floor. Attention — Charge! — Half face to the right, carrying the heel six inches to the rear and three inches to the right of the left, turning the toes of both feet slightly inward; at the same time drop the stick into the left hand, elbow against the body, point of stick at the height of the chin, right hand grasping the stick just above the brush and supporting it firmly against the right hip. Port — Arms ! — Raise and throw the broom diagonally across the body; grasp it smartly with both hands, the right, palm down at the base of the stick ; the left, palm up, thumb clasping stick; handle sloping to the left and crossing opposite the middle of left shoulder; right forearm horizontal; forearms and handle near the body. Secure — Arms ! — Advance the broom slightly with the right hand, turn the han- dle to the front with the left hand. At the same time change the position of the right hand, placing it further up the han- dle, drop the handle to the front, placing the broom where joined with the handle, under the right arm. Reverse — Arms! — Lift the broom ver- tically with the right hand, clasp the stick with the left hand; then, with the right hand, grasp the handle near the brush. Re- verse the broom, the handle dropping to the front, the broom passing between the breast and right forearm. Press the han- dle under the arm with the left hand until the right elbow can hold it in place against the body; pass left hand behind the back and clasp the stick. Inspection — Arms ! — This is executed from the "carry arms" position. Lift the broom quickly with the right hand, bring- ing it in front of the center of the body; then grasp the handle with the left hand, placed near the chin, and hold it. 285 286 TEE BROOMSTICK ARMY. MOVEMENTS OF ATTACK AND DEFENSE. These can be executed only with open ranks, the pupils being placed seven or eight feet apart. To so place them, the teacher will give the order — Right {or Left) open Ranks — March! — The pupils face to the right or left, ac- cording to the order given, except the one at the extreme end of the line. The others march, the last of the file halting at every four or five steps from the one in the rear, until all are the same distance apart. They then face front. To close the rank, turn to the right or left and march toward the pupil standing at the end until halted by the one ahead. Then face front. Attention — Guard ! — At the command guard, half face to the right, carry back and place the right foot about twice its length to the rear and nearly the same dis- tance to the right, the feet at little less than a right angle, the right toe pointing square- ly to the right, both knees bent slightly, weight of the body held equally on both legs ; at the same time throw the end of the stick to the front, at the height of the chin, grasping it lightly with both hands, the right just above the brush, the left a few inches higher; the right hand in line with the left hip and both arms held free from the body and without constraint. Being at the Guard — Advance! — Move the left foot quickly forward, twice its length ; follow with the right foot the same distance. Retire ! — Move the right foot quickly to the rear, twice its length ; follow with the left foot the same distance. Front — Pass! — Advance the right foot quickly, fifteen inches in front of the left, keeping right toe squarely to the right ; ad- vance the left foot to its relative position in front. Rear — Pass ! — Carry the left foot quickly fifteen inches to the rear of the right ; place the right foot in its relative position in rear, keeping the right toe squarely to the right. Right — Volt ! — Face to the right, turn- ing on the ball of the left foot, at the same time carry the right foot quickly to its po- sition in the rear. Left — Volt! — Face to the left, turning on the ball of the left foot, at the same time carry the right foot quickly to its po- sition in rear. Right rear and left rear volts are simi- larly executed, facing about on the ball of the left foot. Qnarte — Parry! — Hold the broom in front of the left shoulder with the right hand, handle upward, the fingers of the left hand on the handle, the left elbow touch- ing the right wrist. Seconde — Parry! — Move the point of the broom-handle quickly to the left, de- scribing a semi-circle from left to right, the left elbow in front of the body, the flat of the broom under the right forearm, the right elbow two or three inches higher than the right shoulder. Prime — Parry ! — Carry the broom to the left, covering the left shoulder, the handle downward, the left forearm behind the handle, the right arm in front of and above the eyes. To Guard when Kneeling. — Bring the toe of the left foot square in front, plant the right foot to the rear, kneel on the right knee, bending the left, hold the broom at an angle of 45 degrees, pointing directly to the front, the right hand pressed firmly against the side, the left hand holding the point of handle upward. This drill may be terminated by a march. While enacting these tableaux the children should stand as motionless as possible. The cur- tain should be drawn back and kept in that position for a full minute, and then be slowly closed. ^* ^* t&R A CHRISTMAS PANTOMIME. TIME: CHRISTMAS EVE. Characters and Costumes. — Santa Clans, a large boy, with long, white hair and beard, round fur or paper cap, an enormous pack strapped upon his shoulders, from which protrude various toys. A light carriage-cloth may be wrapped about him. George and Fred — Two little boys, one quite small, dressed in short blouse and pantaloons in Scene I. In Scenes II, III and IV in long colored dressing-gowns. Nellie — Small girl with short dress and apron in Scene I. In Scenes II, III and IV in long white night-robe. Father and Mother— Large boy and girl in ordinary house dress, except the father, as Santa Claus in Scene III. Scene I. THE children come bounding in, they bow to the audience, glance at the clock, go to a small bureau, and opening a drawer, extract three pairs of colored hose. They pin the tops together, and mounting chairs proceed to hang them carefully upon hooks prepared to receive them. Georgie points to the clock, expressing that it is nearly bed-time. Nellie claps her hands, and Fred jumps about and smiles his joy. Taking hold of hands they bow and go out. Scene II. The mother enters with the children, who are robed for sleep. She leads the two youngest, one by each hand. They pause, pointing to the stockings. The mother smiles, and toys with Fred's curls. She leads them to the couch, over which blan- kets are spread, and kneels in front of the couch, the children follow her example, with clasped hands and bowed heads. They remain in this attitude a short time, then rising, the mother proceeds to assist the two boys into bed, kisses them good-night, looks out of the window, then tucks the covering closer about them. She then leads Nellie to the crib, lifts her in, kisses her, arranges the chairs, closes the drawer that the children left open, takes one more look at the boys and goes out. Scene III. Santa Claus comes creeping cautiously in, makes a profound bow to the audience, then peering at the occupants of couch and crib to be sure they are asleep, he proceeds to fill the stockings. While he is thus en- gaged, the youngest boy (who should have piercing eyes) slowly raises his curly head from the pillow, and recognizing his father in the person of Santa Claus, places a finger significantly upon his nose, as much as to say, "You can't fool me." Of course, his movements are unnoticed by Santa Claus, who fills the stockings to repletion, places sundry other large toys, such as a sled, wax doll, hobby, etc., under each re- spective stocking, and laying a finger upon his lips, bows and goes out. Scene IV. The father and mother enter, and going up to the children, pantomime that they are asleep, and must not be disturbed. They sit. Children begin to show signs of wak- ing. Fred leaps to the floor with a bound, 287 288 EFFECTIVE TABLEAUX. rubbing his eyes, the others follow in rapid succession, and mounting chairs, wrench the stockings from the hooks, and scatter their contents over the floor. — (They should contain nothing that would injure by fall- ing.) — Fred shakes his finger mischievous- ly at his father, then rushes up and kisses him heartily. The children gather up the toys, which they drop again, and finally, with arms full, they all face the audience, bow and go out. t5* *5* «5* HOW TO ACT SHADOW PICTURES. HOME entertainments can be given all the year round, although it is the custom to reserve them almost exclusively for the holidays, or, at least, the season when cold weather prevails. Young people are always searching for something new, but they have never discovered anything more pleasurable than the old-time shadow pantomime, which affords prac- tical, endless amusement. Of all the various methods which have been devised for furnishing an amusing en- tertainment there is probably none which so strongly recommends itself for its sim- plicity, its scope for originality and for genuine fun as the shadow pantomime. To the uninitiated the effects produced are startling, and to all, if properly managed, ludicrous in the extreme. In the arrangement of tableaux the effect is mainly dependent on the judicious and artistic blending of colors, the expression of countenances and the graceful positions of the posers. In the pantomime, color is of no consequence, and facial expression is confined entirely to the profile. The first thing requisite is a white cur- tain or sheet to receive the shadows. Where there is already a stage and drop curtain the white sheet is arranged as an extra drop, care being taken to have it hang so as to be as tight and as free from inequali- ties as possible, and the larger the better. In adapting the exhibition to a parlor en- tertainment the white sheet may be stretched to fit exactly between sliding or folding doors. Before stretching the sheet it should be thoroughly and uniformly wet- ted, and then wrung out. This insures sharpness of outline to the shadows. At the front or on that side of the sheet appropriated to. the spectators, the room must, during the performance, be entirely dark. On the stage or behind the sheet, where the performers are, should be only one bright, steady light. This must be ar- ranged so as to be as near to the floor as possible, and exactly opposite the center of the sheet. For parlor purposes, where there is gas in the room, the best con- trivance is a drop light, the burner of which (a large-sized one) is not more than two or three inches from the ground and placed so as to present the thin edge (not the flat) of the flame to the curtain. This renders the outlines all the more distinct and clearly defined. If gas is not to be had, the next best lamp is a tin cup filled with tallow, in the center of which is a cotton wick secured by a wire coil soldered into the middle of the inside of the cup, to prevent the wick from falling down when the tallow has melted. This tin lamp should be placed in the cen- ter of a flat dish full of sand, as a precau- tion against accident. If the curtain is large, the light should be placed at a distance of about five or six EFFECTIVE TABLEAUX. 289 feet, but a small curtain requires the light to be two or three feet farther away. The distance can be best ascertained by experi- ment. If there should be no means of clos- ing the sheet after or in the intervals of a performance, there should be a light placed on each side, behind the curtain, in such a position that no shadow will be thrown by it, and the center light extinguished, or ef- fectually shaded by the placing of some solid object close in front of it. During the performance care must be taken that those persons whose shadows are not for the moment needed, should stand behind the light, as entrance or exit is effected by jumping lightly or stepping sideways over the light. This produces an effect on the curtain just as if the shadow had dropped from or gone up into the ceil- ing. As profile is essential, the side and not the front or back should as far as prac- ticable be presented to the light, and in using tables or chairs let them be placed close to, but not touching, the curtain. The nearer the curtain, the clearer the shadow. In order to bring any object on a table clearly into shadow, it must be placed at the edge of the table nearest the light, otherwise the shadow of the top of the table will obscure the shadow of the lower part of the object. The table, therefore, for general purposes, should not be too wide, and may be just as well a strip of board from two or three feet long, and eight inches wide, nailed to four strips of wood for legs. An amusing deception may be practiced with small objects, such as cups and saucers, by first placing them at the edge farthest from the light, where they will be out of shadow, and by fastening a string to them, which can be done with a piece of wax, and carrying the end over the edge and down the leg nearest the light, through a small eyelet at the bottom of the leg and so along the ground to the back of the light. By this means the objects can be drawn across to the edge nearest the light and will appear to rise out of the table. By reversing the arrangement they appear to sink into the table. For this purpose the table should be a little wider than that ordinarily used. Many curious effects are possible. For instance, to make a false nose, cut a piece of pasteboard to the required shape, and split open the back edge sufficiently to al- low the real nose to be inserted. It can be fixed securely either by strings attached to each side and tied behind the head, or by gumming on with mucilage. The latter plan is the better, as it admits of the nose being apparently pulled off. When this is done the performer who loses his nose should have one hand full of sawdust, and, at the moment that the false nose is re- moved, bring that hand up in time to pre- vent the shadow of his natural nose ap- pearing on the curtain, then leaning his head forward and letting the sawdust drop gently in little gushes as it were. The blood will seem to drop and call forth manifesta- tions of deep emotion or high delight from the sympathizing spectators. Sawdust is the best thing to represent liquid in the act of pouring, but if the orifice be small, as in the case of a coffeepot or tea kettle, it will be liable to choke up the spout, and sand, thoroughly dried, will be found preferable. Any one with a moderate degree of in- genuity and fertility of invention, will be able to multiply the effects from the hints given, and may produce an almost endless variety of illusions. As an illustration of this, some of the most effective conjuring tricks may be produced with great suc- cess. For instance, a number of objects 290 EFFECTIVE TABLEAUX. may be cut out of cardboard, such as birds, animals, kettles, teapots, hats, flowers and plants in pots, at least twenty or more of which can be piled flat on the floor without coming above the level of the lower part of the shadow curtain. If these are lifted one by one just behind the profile of a stiff hat, all the amusing effects can be produced of an inexhaustible "tile." A full-sized hoop- skirt can be presented to the gaze of the astonished spectators. All of these objects can be thrown over the light, picked up by an assistant behind, and pushed, one by one, back to the hat, by means of a thin strip of wood kept flat on the floor, and re- produced as often as may be required. It would be well to remark, incidentally, that for grown-up performers the curtain should not be less than ten feet high. When the curtain is much less, smaller per- formers are requisite. Too much stress cannot be laid on thor- ough rehearsal. Everything should be tried over and over again, until perfectly accom- plished. Care should be taken that the acts or separate pieces performed during an ex- hibition be as distinct in details as possible, so as not to allow the effects produced in any one of them to be repeated in any other. Let nothing be undertaken in which there is the possibility of failure in any of the arrangements. Rather attempt little and do it well, than too much and bungle in it. Then always remember, also, that the individual in corpore is nothing, the shadow everything. Do not be too sure that this little action or that bit of by-play will be all right when the time comes; try it be- forehand, and in all possibility the trial will show how imperfect the attempt would have been. It should be remembered: That in re- hearsal only can the performer be permitted to look at his own shadow; as during the performance the profile must be constantly presented to the curtain, a position which will prevent the performer from witnessing the effect of his actions. Let everything be done as close to the curtain as possible, but never so near as to touch it. If these general directions are carefully followed the performers will not fail to elicit their meed of applause at the close of the shadow pantomime. tJw ^W <£w THE MAY-POLE. (This selection is one of the most effective opening acts for an evening's entertainment that can be imagined or devised, and fully repays the comparatively trifling amount of trouble and preparation necessary for its representation.) IT requires a pole ten feet high with a revolving head-piece, to which the rib- bons are attached; the lower end of the pole should be inserted and tightly wedged into the middle of a piece of wood to serve for a stand, into which a suitable hole has been mortised to receive the pole; the stand concealed by green branches and flowers, or in any other way that may suit. The pole is placed in the center of the stage, the stand being strongly secured to the floor. For outdoor purposes the pole may be sunk in the ground. Next provide eight strips of paper-mus- lin or ribbon about six feet longer than the height of the pole, and about three inches wide. Four of the strips should be white, two of them red and two blue. One end of each strip should be fastened firmly on the top of the pole, and so arranged that they will hang down around the pole in regular order, a white strip and a colored EFFECTIVE TABLEAUX. 291 strip alternately. The width of the strips, which we will call "banners," should be regulated to suit the thickness of the pole; their width ought not to exceed its di- ameter. A wreath or garland will make a pretty finish for the top of the pole. For a small pole eight performers are sufficient; with a larger pole twelve or more may join, but always an equal number of boys and girls to form couples, and the total number divisible by four, with sufficient ribbons for one for each. It may save possible confusion to loop up the ends of the banners clear of the floor and secure them to the pole with a pin, each in its proper order. The pole and banners are now ready for use. The dance is here arranged for four couples, costumed in old holiday style. The girls may be dressed in short dresses resembling a gypsy, milk-maid, etc. The boys may wear knee breeches and blouse with a scarf around the waist, tied at one side. Round hats with gar- lands for the girls, and sailor hats for the boys. The dresses should be of very bright colors — with white or black rows of braid ; or a blue or red cambric skirt, with bands of plain white cotton cloth sewed in rows around the bottom, will look almost as well on the stage at night as silk; while danc- ing no one can distinguish the difference. When the curtain rises, the music should strike up a lively tune in well-marked polka time, and the four couples enter, dancing, in their order. The movements of all should be regulated by the first couple, on whom, therefore, a great deal of responsibility rests. The preliminary dancing may be arranged to suit the manager; but it must be so contrived that it leaves the four couples standing around and facing the pole (each boy having his partner on his right), holding hands so as to form a ring as large as pos- sible. A circle marked on the floor, hav- ing the pole for its center, and its circum- ference about six feet from the pole, will form a very good line for the dancers to stand upon. At a signal, the boys advance to the pole, keeping strict time to the music, and each takes a pair of banners, the left one white, and the right one colored; they dance backwards to their places, each boy hand- ing the colored banner to his partner, and retaining the white one himself. Another signal is given, when all, hold- ing their banners in their right hands, dance backwards, each in a line directly away from the pole, as far as the banners will conveniently allow. All now face to the right, and dance in perfect order round and round the pole. This movement — if executed in exact pre- cision, the dancers preserving the same dis- tance from each other, and the banners kept just tight enough to prevent them from hanging loosely — will wind the ban- ners around the pole, giving it the appear- ance of a barber's pole. As soon as the dancers, by the continu- ous winding of the banners, have got conveniently near to the pole and to one another, a signal is given, at which they stop; all face half round, and then dance in reverse direction until the banners are entirely unwound, and the dancers have resumed their starting-points, where they stop. At another signal all take the ban- ners in their left hands, the boys only face half round, taking their partners by the right hand, and then right and left all round, in the same manner as at the begin- ning of the last figure of "The Lancers," continuing until the banners are evenly braided upon the pole, and the space for ^92 EFFECTIVE TABLEAUX. dancing becomes too confined for comfort. The leader should then give the signal to stop, as soon as the dance brings him face to face with his own partner. Another signal is then given, at which all face half round, bringing each boy opposite a new partner, whose right hand he takes, and the movement, thus reversed, is repeated in the same manner as before, until the banners are entirely unwound again. To succeed in this dance, it is absolutely necessary for all the dancers to keep exact time to the music, and to keep regular in- tervals, or distances, between each other; the banners will then lie evenly and sym- metrically on the pole, and present a very pretty appearance; a fearful forfeit being exacted from the unlucky individual who, by carelessness or inattention, gets his ban- ner out of its proper place, as this, of course, stops the dance entirely. The only way to avoid such an accident is to re- hearse the whole dance frequently and thoroughly, until each is perfect in all the details. Previous to the figure just described, other figures may be introduced. The re- volving head-piece will allow of all joining hands, holding the ribbons, and dancing around the pole to the right; stopping at a signal, and each couple balance to part- ner; then all hands around to the left. Various pleasing combinations would sug- gest themselves to the arrangers of the dance. THE MINUET. (This should be recited with a musical accompaniment of a "minuet." Between each stanza dance a few measures, and on the final line the reciter should bow him- self gracefully off the stage, keeping time to the music.) GRANDMA told me all about it, Told me so I couldn't doubt it, How she danced — my grandma danced — Long ago. How she held her pretty head, How her dainty skirt she spread, How she turned her little toes — Smiling little human rose ! — Long ago. Grandma's hair was bright and sunny; Dimpled cheeks, too — ah, how funny! Really quite a pretty girl, Long ago. Bless her! why, she wears a cap, Grandma does, and takes a nap Every single day; and yet Grandma danced the minuet Long ago. Now she sits there, rocking, rocking, Always knitting grandpa's stocking — (Every girl was taught to knit Long ago.) Yet her figure is so neat, And her way so staid and sweet, I can almost see her now Bending to her partner's bow, Long ago. Grandma says our modern jumping, Hopping, rushing, whirling, bumping, Would have shocked the gentle folk Long ago. No — they moved with stately grace. Everything in proper place, Gliding slowly forward, then Slowly courtesying back again, Long ago. EFFECTIVE TABLEAUX. 293 Modern ways are quite alarming, Grandma says; but boys were charming — Girls and boys, I mean, of course — " Long ago. Bravely modest, grandly shy — What if all of us should try Just to feel like those who met In the graceful minuet Long ago. With the minuet in fashion, Who could fly into a passion ? All would wear the calm they wore Lon Sf ago. In time to come, if I, perchance, Should tell my grandchild of our dance, I should really like to say, "We did it, dear, in some such way, Long ago." — Mrs. Mary M. Dodge. <5* t5* <5* HIAWATHA. (The Story of Hiawatha told in verse and tableaux.) Directions. — Let one person recite the entire parts, standing on the stage in front of the curtain — stepping to the right each time a tableau is presented. In setting the tableau follow the poem carefully for expression and delineation. (( A 1 Part I. S unto the bow the cord is, So unto the man is woman; Though she bends him, she obeys him, Though she draws him, yet she follows, Useless one without the other !" Thus the youthful Hiawatha Said within himself and pondered, Much perplexed by various feelings, Listless, longing, hoping, fearing, Dreaming still of Minnehaha, Of the lovely Laughing Water, In the land of the Dacotahs. "Wed a maiden of your people," Warning said the old Nokomis ; "Go not eastward, go not westward, For a stranger, whom we know not ! "Bring not here an idle maiden, Bring not here a useless woman, Hands unskilful, feet unwilling; Bring a wife with nimble fingers, Heart and hand that move together, Feet that run on willing errands !" Smiling answered Hiawatha : "In the land of the Dacotahs Lives the arrow-maker's daughter, Minnehaha, Laughing Water, Handsomest of all the women. I will bring her to your wigwam, She shall run upon your errands, Be your starlight, moonlight, firelight, Be the sunlight of my people !" Still dissuading said Nokomis: "Bring not to my lodge a stranger From the land of the Dacotahs! Very fierce are the Dacotahs, Often is there war between us, There are feuds yet unforgotten, Wounds that ache and still may open !" Laughing answered Hiawatha: "For that reason, if no other, Would I wed the fair Dacotah, That our tribes might be united, That old feuds might be forgotten, And old wounds be healed forever!" Thus departed Hiawatha To the land of the Dacotahs. (Tableau No. i. Scene — A wigwam. Nokomis seated in doorway and Hiawatha standing near — both in Indian costume. Skins and guns and the usual paraphernalia strewn about.) 294 EFFECTIVE TABLEAUX. Part II. HIAWATHA'S JOURNEY. At the doorway of his wigwam Sat the ancient Arrow-maker, In the land of the Dacotahs, Making arrow-heads of jasper, Arrow-heads of chalcedony. At his side in all her beauty, Sat the lovely Minnehaha, Sat his daughter, Laughing Water, Plaiting mats of flags and rushes ; Of the past the old man's thoughts were, And the maiden's of the future. He was thinking as he sat there, Thinking of the great war-parties, How they came to buy his arrows, Could not fight without his arrows. She was thinking of a hunter, From another tribe and country, Young and tall and very handsome, Who one morning in the springtime, Came to buy her father's arrows, Sat and rested in the wigwam, Lingered long about the doorway, Looking back as he departed. She had heard her father praise him, Praise his courage and his wisdom ; Would he come again for a.Tows To the Falls of Minnehaha? (Tableau 2. Scene — A wigwam, in the doorway of which sits the arrow-maker making arrow-heads. Near him sits Laugh- ing Water plaiting mats. Both in Indian costume.) Part III. HIAWATHA'S WOOING. At the feet of Laughing Water Hiawatha laid his burden, Threw the red deer from his shoulders ; And the maiden looked up at him, Looked up from her mat of rushes, Said with gentle look and accent, "You are welcome, Hiawatha !" Very spacious was the wigwam, Made of deer-skin dressed and whitened, With the gods of the Dacotahs Drawn and painted on its curtains, And so tall the doorway, hardly Hiawatha stooped to enter, Hardly touched his eagle-feathers As he entered at the doorway. Then uprose the Laughing Water, From the ground fair Minnehaha, Laid aside her mat unfinished, Brought forth food and set before them. Water brought them from the brooklet, Gave them food in earthen vessels, Gave them drink in bowls of bass-wood, Listened while the guest was speaking, Listened while her father answered, But not once her lips she opened, Not a single word she uttered. Yes, as in a dream she listened To the words of Hiawatha : "After many years of warfare, Many years of strife and bloodshed, There is peace between the Ojibways And the tribe of the Dacotahs." Thus continued Hiawatha, And then added, speaking slowly: "That this peace may last forever, And our hands be clasped more closely, And our hearts be more united, Give me as my wife this maiden, Minnehaha, Laughing Water, Loveliest of Dacotah women." And the ancient Arrow-maker Paused a moment ere he answered, Smoked a little while in silence, Looked at Hiawatha proudly, Fondly looked at Laughing Water, And made answer very gravely : o A 4 w H i-l Ph s 3 oS W M * g «J H i-l H H M hi o be a '3 «! EFFECTIVE TABLEAUX. 297 "Yes, if Minnehaha wishes; Let your heart speak, Minnehaha!" And the lovely Laughing Water Seemed more lovely as she stood there, Neither willing nor reluctant, As she went to Hiawatha, Softly took the seat beside him, While she said, and blushed to say it, "I will follow you, my husband !" This was Hiawatha's wooing ! Thus it was he won the daughter Of the ancient Arrow-maker, In the land of the Dacotahs. (Tableau 3. For scene follow poem as given in Part III.) Part IV. HIAWATHA'S DEPARTURE. From the wigwam he departed, Leading with him Laughing Water ; Hand in hand they went together, Through the woodland and the meadow, Left the old man standing lonely At the doorway of his wigwam, Heard the Falls of Minnehaha Calling to them from the distance, Crying to them from afar off, "Fare thee well, O Minnehaha !" And the ancient Arrow-maker Turned again unto his labor, Sat down by his sunny doorway, Murmuring to himself, and saying : "Thus it is our daughters leave us, Those we love, and those who love us! Just when they have learned to help us, When we are old and lean upon them, Comes a youth with flaming feathers, With his flute of reeds, a stranger Wanders piping through the village, Beckons to the fairest maiden, And she follows where he leads her, Leaving all things for the stranger!" (Tableau 4. The arrow-maker alone, watching the departure of Laughing Water.) Part V. HIAWATHA'S RETURN. Pleasant was the journey homeward Through interminable forests, Over meadow, over mountain, Over river, hill, and hollow, Short it seemed to Hiawatha, Though they journeyed very slowly, Though his pace he checked and slackened To the steps of Laughing Water. Over wide and rushing rivers In his arms he bore the maiden ; Light he thought her as a feather, As the plume upon his head-gear; Cleared the tangled pathway for her, Bent aside the swaying branches, Made at night a lodge of branches, And a bed with boughs of hemlock, And a fire before the doorway With the dry cones of the pine-tree. All the traveling winds went with them O'er the meadow, through the forest ; All the stars of night looked at them, Watched with sleepless eyes their slumber. Pleasant was the journey homeward ! All the birds sang loud and sweetly Songs of happiness and heart's ease; Sang the blue-bird, the Owaissa, "Happy are you, Hiawatha, Having such a wife to love you !" Sang the robin, the Opechee, "Happy are you, Laughing Water, Having such a noble husband !" From the sky the sun benignant Looked upon them through the branches Saying to them, "O my children, Love is sunshine, hate is shadow, Life is checkered shade and sunshine, Rule by love, O Hiawatha!" 298 EFFECTIVE TABLEAUX. From the sky the moon looked at them, Filled the lodge with mystic splendors, Whispered to them, "O my children, Day is restless, night is quiet, Man imperious, woman feeble; Half is mine, although I follow ; Rule by patience, Laughing Water!" Thus it was they journeyed homeward. Thus it was that Hiawatha PRETTY To the lodge of old Nokomis Brought the moonlight, starlight, firelight, Brought the sunshine of his people, Minnehaha, Laughing Water. Handsomest of all the women In the land of the Dacotahs, In the land of handsome women. (Final Tableau. The welcome home — Old Nokomis receiving the lovers.) t£* c5* c5* GROUPS FOR CHILDREN. DRESSED FOR THE PARTY. Little girl in party dress, with fan partly open in her hand, is looking backward over her shoulder. Little boy, also in party dress, is holding a bouquet toward the girl. you can't find me. A chair with a large shawl carelessly arranged over it. A child's smiling face peeping out from behind the drapery, while its body is hidden. One hand holds the drapery aside from the face. PUTTING THE CHILDREN TO BED. A toy bedstead in which are placed two or three dolls. A little girl bending over the bed, with her hand in position for tucking in the bed-clothes. RAISE THE GATES. Two small girls with hands joined and raised as in the game. A still smaller child is about passing under the "gates." His hands are clasped behind him, and one foot is raised on tip-toe. His back is toward the audience, and his head stretched a little forward. DOLLY'S DOCTOR. A little girl seated with a doll on her lap. A doll's baby-coach or cradle stands beside her. A boy with high silk hat and long coat touching the floor, with watch in one hand, is holding the wrist of the doll as if feeling its pulse. THE YOUNG ARTIST. A small boy holding a large slate, on which is partly drawn with chalk a ludi- crous outline of a little girl. Standing near the boy is a little girl with the solemn look of importance on her face befitting the occasion of having her portrait made. The boy holds his crayon on the unfinished pic- ture, and he is looking intently at the girl as if studying his subject. TIRED OUT. A child asleep in a large chair. One arm thrown over the arm of the chair; the other in his lap, having just loosened his hold of a picture-book, which lies open on his knee. His mouth is a little open, and his head drooped carelessly forward. SUNSHINE OR SHOWER. Three little girls with laughing faces are huddled closely together under a large dilapidated umbrella. The umbrella, held open behind them, forms the back-ground of the picture. THE MATCH-BOY. A small boy in ragged jacket, and old hat pushed back from his forehead, hold' ing a large package under his arm, and some boxes of matches in his extended hand. A little girl handsomely dressed, with open pocket-book in hand and a pitying look on her face is holding a coin ready to give to the boy. _§._ *_ m © 9 © © Miscellaneous Selections I © s © © ®»©©«©«€>®S«®««i The selections in this department are intended to supplement the regular departments and arc of such great variety that a selection can be made on any subject. ^* t£* «£?* THE ROUGH RIDER. WHERE the longhorns feed on the sun- cured grass, 'neath the blaze of a cloudless sky, Where the cactus crawls and the sage brush spreads on a plain of alkali, Where the lone wolf prowls and makes his feast on the range calf gone astray, Where the coward coyote yelps by night and slinks near the herds by day, Where the mountains frame the pictured plain with a border line of snow, Where the chill of death in the blizzard's breath falls with a sting and blow : There rides a man of the wild wide west, blest of the sun and air, A simple man with a face of tan, and a heart to do and dare. From rope, and quirt, and ripping gaff, and the strangling hackamore, The untamed broncho learned his will and a master burden bore. Over the hills and the gophered ground; still serving his direst need, When he rides in the peril of hoof and horn at the head of the night stampede. He is slow of speech but quick of hand, and keen and true of eye, He is wise in the learning of nature's school, the open earth and sky ; He is strong with the strength of an honest heart, he is free as the mountain's breath, He takes no fear of a living thing, and dy- ing, jests with death. — Richard Linthicum. LOVE'S RAILWAY. THE starting point on love's railway is "Timid-glances." From thence the train moves slowly, at irregular rates of speed, till it reaches the station of "Squeeze- the-hand." From "Squeeze-the-hand" to "Call-in-the-evening" is but a short dis- tance, and is made in good time. Next, on a down-grade, and after a quick passage, we reach "Moonlight- Walk;" a long pause is made here, and a fresh supply of fuel taken aboard. Steam is then raised and the train hurried on to the little station of "Drop-letters." Then comes an up-grade and bad track to "Green-eye." At "Green- eye" some repairs are necessary before we make the trip, still up-grade, to "Faith-re- stored." Here we have a level track, and make the station of "Pop-the-question" inside of schedule time. At "Pop-the-ques- tion" we must put on all the steam, for it is a terribly stiff grade from thence up to "Pa's-consent." Between these two points more than half the accidents occur which happen on this much-traveled road. Hav- 299 300 MISCELLANEOUS. ing reached "Pa's-consent," we must screw down the brakes and reverse the engine, for the decline is almost precipitous, and the speed is terrific from thence to "Tie- the-knot." There are occasional accidents between these two points, but not many. Sometimes a train is complete. From "Tie-the-knot," the train hurries on as fast as possible, in order not to be behind time in reaching the important sta- tion of "Buy-the-cradle." Here the route becomes monotonous, and little interest is felt in the movement of the train — unless it should switch off the main track and run out to a side-station called "Family-jar." From this station return trips are occa- sionally made as far as "Pop-the-question," but no farther. There are no back trains to "Timid-glances," or "Squeeze-the- hand." Accidents quite frequently happen to trains which run direct from "Timid- glances" to "Pa's-consent," without stop- ping at intermediate points ; for in running back from "Pa's-consent" to "Pop-the-ques- tion" the train is frequently thrown from the track, and there occurs a great smash. I have traveled the road from "Timid- glances" to "Moonlight-walk," stopping for some time at the stations of "Squeeze- the-hand" and "Call-in-the-evening." I once ran a considerable distance toward "Pop-the-question," but a screw got loose and I couldn't proceed, ■i I have now the machinery in good working order, and am getting steam up for a grand rush upon "Pop-the-question" and "Pa's-consent." If I reach those points in safety, no more will be heard of my train until it arrives "At Home." If I am unable to reach that point, it will be safe to conclude that the effort has "busted" the train. %3"i t&& (0& MONEY MUSK. AH, the buxom girls that helped the boys — The nobler Helens of humbler Troys — As they stripped the husks with rustling fold From eight-rowed corn as yellow as gold, By the candlelight in pumpkin bowls, And the gleams that showed fantastic holes In the quaint old lantern's tattooed tin, From the hermit glim set up within; By the rarer light in the girlish eyes As dark as wells, or as blue as skies. .1 hear the laugh when the ear is red I see the blush with the forfeit paid, The cedar cakes with the ancient twist, The cider cup that the girls have kissed, And I see the fiddler through the dusk As he twangs the ghost of "Money Musk!" The boys and girls in a double row Wait face to face till the magic bow Shall whip the tune from the violin, And the merry pulse of the feet begin. In shirt of check, and tallowed hair, The fiddler sits in the bulrush chair Like Moses' basket stranded there On the brink of Father Nile. He feels the fiddle's slender neck, Picks out the notes with thrum and check, And times the tune with nod and beck, And thinks it a weary while. MISCELLANEOUS. 301 All ready! Now he gives the call, Cries, "Honor to the ladies!" All The jolly tides of laughter fall And ebb in a happy smile. D-o-w-n comes the bow on every string, "First couple join right hands and swing!' As light as any bluebird's wing, "Swing once-and-a-half times round." Whirls Mary Martin all in blue — Calico gown and stockings new, And tinted eyes that tell you true, Dance all to the dancing sound. She flits about big Moses Brown, Who holds her hands to keep her down And thinks her hair a golden crown, And his heart turns over once! His cheek with Mary's breath is wet, It gives a second somerset! He means to win the maiden yet, Alas, for the awkward dunce! "Your stoga boot has crushed my toe;" "I'd rather dance with one-legged Joe!" "You clumsy fellow!" "Pass belozv!" And the first pair dance apart. Then "Forward six!" advance, retreat, Like midges gay in sunbeam street, Tis Money Musk by merry feet And the Money Musk by heart! "Three-quarters round your partner swing !" "Across the set!" The rafters ring, The girls and boys have taken wing And have brought their roses out! 'Tis "Forzvard six!" with rustic grace, Ah, rarer far than — "Swing to place!" Than golden clouds of old point-lace They bring the dance about. Then clasping hands all — "Right and left!" All swiftly weave the measure deft Across the woof in living weft And the Money Musk is done! Oh, dancers of the rustling husk, Good-night, sweethearts, 'tis growing dusk, Good-night for aye to Money Musk, For the heavy march begun! — Benjamin F. Taylor. £& c5* ^* THE LITTLE OLD LOG HOUSE WHERE WE WERE BORN W HEN the labors and the cares of day are over, And the shades of night are falling o'er the town, And the sleepy sparrows seek their hiding places, And the silvery moonbeams softly shim- mer down, Oft we sit and dream about the days of childhood, When the life now waning fast was in its morn, Of the faces hid forever in the church- yard, And the little old log house where we were born. We can hear the bluebirds singing in the morning, When the golden sunrays touch the for- est trees; We can hear the catbird calling in the bushes, And can hear the humming of the busy bees. There the saucy squirrels chattered to the chipmunks, 302 MISCELLANEOUS. And the Bob White whistled in the wav- ing corn, And the pheasant drummed a tattoo in the wildwood, Near the little old log house where we were born. When the King of Winter swung his icy sceptre, And the trees were draped in bridal robes of white, In the snow we tracked the rabbits through the clearing, EVery boyish heart a-quiver with de- light, We'd return with hands all scratched by bristling briars, And our homespun clothes by thorns and bushes torn, To be patched and mended by the patient mother In the little old log house where we were born. There the country boys and girls would often gather For the jolly party of the wintry night, And the fiddler, with his hair all greased and shining, Jerked the bow across the strings with muscled might. And the old folks, too, would shake their feet in rapture O'er the solid puncheon floors so smoothly worn, While the god of love lurked near in wait for victims In the little old log house where we were born. Mid the grandeur of a mansion in the city, With the choicest modern comforts at command, Oft there comes into the soul an earnest longing As the silent wings of memory expand — Comes a wish to once more hear the wood- land voices, And to hear the song-birds greet the early morn, And to lie and dream beneath the oaks and maples, Near the little old log house where we were born. ^^* t£& t6& TO A MOUSE IN A TRAP. POOR, trembling wretch, what sad mis- hap Has brought you tight within my tra Had man's vile greed so clean bereft Your bairnies that you'd stoop to theft ? Ah, who'd not lay his scruples by That heard his babies' hungered cry? Still, though to mercy I incline, Must I the ends of law resign? The crust you sought full well you knew Belonged to me and not to you. But — peace ! I'll grant your frenzied plea, Move back the bars and set you free. If man one God-like spark can claim, Then surely mercy is its name. So, though you meant to steal my bread, I'll spend no anger on your head, But, warned by gentle mercy's flame, I'll let you go as poor's you came. As poor's you came, yet richer far By freedom's gift than now you are. Your life's to me of little worth — To you the grandest fact of earth ; So now, whilst I throw wide my door, Begone, wee neighbor — sin no more! — Frank Putnam. MISCELLANEOUS. 303 TOO LATE FOR THE TRAIN. WHEN they reached the depot, Mr. Mann and his wife gazed in un- speakable disappointment at the receding train, which was just pulling away from the bridge switch at the rate of a mile a minute. Their first impulse was to run after it, but as the train was out of sight and whistling for Sagetown before they could act upon the impulse, they remained in the carriage and disconsolately turned their horses' heads homeward. Mr. Mann broke the silence, very grimly : "It all comes of having to wait for a woman to get ready." "I was ready before you were," replied his wife. "Great heavens," cried Mr. Mann, with great impatience, nearly jerking the horses' jaws out of place, "just listen to that! And I sat in the buggy ten minutes yelling at you to come along until the whole neigh- borhood heard me." "Yes," affquiesced Mrs. Mann, with the provoking placidity which no one can as- sume but a woman, "and every time I started down stairs you sent me back for something you had forgotten." Mr. Mann groaned. "This is too much to bear," he said, "when everybody knows that if I were going to Europe I would just rush into the house, put on a clean shirt, grab up my gripsack, and fly, while you would want at least six months for pre- liminary preparations, and then dawdle around the whole day of starting until every train had left town." Well, the upshot of the matter was that the Manns put off their visit to Aurora until the next week, and it was agreed that each one should get himself or herself ready and go down to the train and go, and the one who failed to get ready should be left. The day of the match came around in due time. The train was going at 10:30, and Mr. Mann, after attending to his busi- ness, went home at 9:45. "Now, then," he shouted, "only three- quarters of an hour's time. Fly around; a fair field and no favors, you know." And away they flew. Mr. Mann bulged into this room and flew through that one, and dived into one closet after another with inconceivable rapidity, chuckling under his breath all the time to think how cheap Mrs. Mann would feel when he started off alone. He stopped on his way up stairs to pull off his heavy boots to save time. For the same reason he pulled off his coat as he ran through the dining room and hung it on the corner of the silver closet. Then he jerked off his vest as he rushed through the hall and tossed it on the hat-rack hook, and by the time he had reached his own room he was ready to plunge into his clean clothes. He pulled out a bureau drawer and began to paw at the things like a Scotch terrier after a rat. "Eleanor," he shrieked, "where are mv shirts?" "In your bureau drawer," calmly replied Mrs. Mann, who was standing before a glass calmly and deliberately coaxing a re- fractory crimp into place. "Well, but they ain't!" shouted Mr. Mann, a little annoyed. "I've emptied everything out of the drawer, and there isn't a thing in it I ever saw before." Mrs. Mann stepped back a few paces, held her head on one side, and after satis- fying herself that the crimp would do, re- plied: "These things scattered around on the floor are all mine. Probably you haven't been looking into your own drawer." 304 MISCELLANEOUS'. "I don't see," testily observed Mr. Mann, "why you couldn't have put my things out for me when you had nothing else to do all the morning." "Because," said Mrs. Mann, setting her- self into an additional article of raiment with awful deliberation, "nobody put mine out for me. A fair field and no favors, my dear." Mr. Mann plunged into his shirt like a bull at a red flag. "Foul!" he shouted in malicious triumph. "No buttons on the neck!" "Because," said Mrs. Mann sweetly, after a deliberate stare at the fidgeting, im- patient man, during which she buttoned her dress and put eleven pins where they would do the most good, "because you have got the shirt on wrong side out." When Mr. Mann slid out of the shirt he began to sweat. He dropped the shirt three times before he got it on, and while it was over his head he heard the clock strike ten. When his head came through he saw Mrs. Mann coaxing the ends and bows of her necktie. "Where are my shirt studs?" he cried. Mrs. Mann went out into another room and presently came back with gloves and hat, and saw Mr. Mann emptying all the boxes he could find in and around the bu- reau. Then she said, "In the shirt you just pulled off." Mrs. Mann put on her gloves while Mr. Mann hunted up and down the room for his cuff-buttons. "Eleanor," he snarled, at last, "I believe you must know where those cuff-buttons are. "I haven't seen them," said the lady, set- tling her hat; "didn't you lay them down on the window-sill in the sitting-room last night?" Mr. Mann remembered, and he went down stairs on the run. He stepped on one of his boots and was immediately landed in the hall at the foot of the stairs with neatness and despatch, attended in the transmission with more bumps than he could count with Webb's Adder, and landed with a bang like the Hell Gate ex- plosion. "Are you nearly ready, Algernon?" sweetly asked the wife of his bosom, lean- ing over the banisters. The unhappy man groaned. "Can't you throw me down the other boot?" he asked. Mrs. Mann, pityingly, kicked it down to him. "My valise?" he inquired, as he tugged at the boot. "Up in your dressing-room," she an- swered. "Packed?" "I do not know; unless you packed it yourself, probably not," she replied, with her hand on the door knob; "I had barely time to pack my own." She was passing out of the gate when the door opened, and he shouted, "Where in the name of goodness did you put my vest? It has all my money in it!" "You threw it on the hat-rack," she called. "Good-bye, dear." Before she got to the corner of the street she was hailed again. "Eleanor! Eleanor! Eleanor Mann! Did you wear off my coat?" She paused and turned, after signaling the street car to stop, and cried, "You threw it in the silver closet." The street car engulfed her graceful form and she was seen no more. But the neighbors say that they heard Mr. Mann charging up and down the house, rushing out of the front door every now and then, shrieking after the unconscious Mrs. Mann, to know where his hat was, and MISCELLANEOUS. 305 where she put the valise key, and if she had his clean socks and undershirts, and that there wasn't a linen collar in the house. And when he went away at last, he left the kitchen door, the side door, and the front door, all the down-stairs windows and the front gate, wide open. The loungers around the depot were somewhat amused, just as the train was pulling out of sight down in the yards, to see a flushed, enterprising man, with his hat on sideways, his vest unbuttoned and necktie flying, and his gripsack flapping open and shut like a demented shutter on a March night, and a door key in his hand, dash wildly across the platform and halt in the middle of the track, glaring in de- jected, impotent, wrathful mortification at the departing train, and shaking his fist at a pretty woman who was throwing kisses at him from the rear platform of the last car. (5* c5* t5* MOTHER'S PUNKIN PIES. T HESE days of cool September, An' hazy night an' morn, Set me thinkin' o' the punkins Among the rustlin' corn; An' I'm back again with mother, A lookin' in her eyes, An' thinkin' they are sweet'nin', Her famous punkin pies. Fer when from out the oven, A crispy golden brown, The crust in flaky scollops, Like lace upon a gown, She used tu take an' set 'em In rows tu feast my eyes, I jest thanked God fer mother, An' mother's punkin pies.' Why all I've larned of natur, An' human natur's wiles, An' the rugged path tu glory, I owe tu mother's smiles, As she helped us plant the punkin An' corn, 'neath April skies, An' told me how the seasons Ripened her punkin pies. I tell you there ain't nuthin' Upon this livin' earth, A man kin larn tu treasure Of everlastin' worth, Like things his mother taught him, When his big an' honest eyes Was watchin' her contrivin' Them golden punkin pies. %5* ^* ^5* BREVITIES. THE man who insists upon conversa- tion whether you will or no was on the train with me between Detroit and Chi- cago. This time, as is often the case, he was one of those dear fellows, the com- mercial travelers. I was reading when he took a seat opposite and began to talk. "Traveling?" "Yes." "What line?" "Paper." "Wall?" I gave up. As an example of the laconic in conversation it reminded me of a story told me once by Max O'Rell. It was of a Scotsman stopping before a shop door in a Scotch village. He took a bit of cloth in his hand. " 'Oo' ?" he asked. 306 MISCELLANEOUS. "Ave, 'oo'," said the shopkeeper. "A' 'oo'?" "Aye, a' 'oo'." "A' ae 'oo'?" "Aye, a' ae 'oo'." Which, being interpreted, would be re- corded in ordinary English. "Wool?" "Yes, wool." "All wool?" "Yes, all wool." "All the same quality of wool?" "Yes, all the same wool." — Moses P. Handy. j* CASEY AT THE BAT. IT looked extremely rocky for the Mud- ville nine that day; The score stood two to four, with but an inning left to play. So, when Cooney died at second, and Bur- rows did the same, A pallor wreathed the features of the pa- trons of the game. A straggling few got up to go, leaving there the rest, With that hope which springs eternal within the human breast, For they thought: "If only Casey could get a whack at that," They'd put up even money now, with Casey at the bat. But Flynn preceded Casey, and likewise so did Blake, And the former was a puddin', and the latter was a fake. So on that stricken multitude a deathlike silence sat, For there seemed but little chance of Casey's getting to the bat. But Flynn let drive a "single," to the won- derment of all, And the much-despised Blakey "tore the cover off the ball." And when the dust had lifted, and they saw what had occurred, There was Blakey safe at second, and Flynn a-huggin' third. Then, from the gladdened multitude went up a joyous yell, It rumbled in the mountain tops, it rattled in the dell! It struck upon the hillside and rebounded on the flat; For Casey, mighty Casey, was advancing to the bat. There was ease in Casey's manner as he stepped into his place, There was pride in Casey's bearing and a smile on Casey's face ; And, when responding to the cheers, he lightly doffed his hat, No stranger in the crowd could doubt 'twas Casey at the bat. Ten thousand eyes were on him as he rubbed his hands with dirt, Five thousand tongues applauded when he wiped them on his shirt; Then, when the writhing pitcher ground the ball into his hip, Defiance glanced in Casey's eye, a sneer curled Casey's lip. And now the leather-covered sphere came hurtling through the air, And Casey stood a-watchin' it in mighty grandeur there. Close by the sturdy batsman the ball un- heeded sped; "That ain't my style," said Casey. "Strike one," the umpire said. MISCELLANEOUS. 30? From the benches, black with people, there went up a muffled roar, Like the beating of storm waves on the stern and distant shore; "Kill him ! kill the umpire !" shouted some- one on the stand; And it's likely they'd have killed him had not Casey raised his hand. With a smile of Christian charity great Casey's visage shone ; He stilled the rising tumult, he made the game go on ; He signaled to the pitcher, and once more the spheroid flew ; But Casey still ignored it, and the umpire said, "Strike two." "Fraud !" cried the maddened thousands, and the echo answered "Fraud !" But one scornful look from Casey and the audience was awed ; They saw his face grow stern and cold, they saw his muscles strain, And they knew that Casey wouldn't let the ball go by again. The sneer is gone from Casey's lips, his teeth are clenched in hate. He pounds with cruel vengeance his bat upon the plate ; And now the pitcher holds the ball, and now he lets it go, And now the air is shattered by the force of Casey's blow. Oh, somewhere in this favored land the sun is shining bright, The band is playing somewhere, and some- where hearts are light ; And somewhere men are laughing, and somewhere children shout, But there is no joy in Mudville; mighty Casey has struck out ! — Ernest L. Thayer. t2& <5* ^* OLD MART AND ME. HIT'S been so monstrous long ago it seems jes like a dream, Sence we was only chunks er boys — a rough-an'-tumble team — That useter dam the spring-house branch an' set up flutter wheels, An' work so dead in arnest that we often missed our meals, An' sometimes fit en quarreled till we war a sight to see,' An' frequent we got licked for that, Old Mart an' me. Time come we had to go to school — some furder en a mile — But what we larnt, ontil this day, jis sorter makes me smile; 'Twas little mo' than nuthin', en we got it, inch by inch, While the teacher lammed it to us, till we hed the mortal cinch On everything the old man knowed, plum to the rule of three, But frequent we got licked for that, Old Mart an' me. We was raised on farms adjinin', with plenty all aroun', But still we'd skip off, after dark, an' pole away to town, Three mile, up hill, ef 'twar a foot, an' jine the boys up there, To eat sardines, and smoke seegyars, an' have a sort of "tare," 308 MISCELLANEOUS, Or rob a neighbor's million patch — for dev- iltry, you see — But frequent we got licked for at, Old Mart an' me. At spellin' bees and singin' school, thar's whar we useter shine; We couldn't spell a little bit, ner sing so mighty fine, But when it come to courtin' gals an' seein' of 'em home, Why we was thar, an' you hear me, 'twas honey in the comb, Then Widder Kane got married, an' we raised a shivaree — But didn't we get licked for that, Old Mart an' me. . When finally the war broke loose, an' Mart an' me went in, One time we struck a scrimmage that was livelier en sin; We had it, back an' forrards, twict, acrost a cotton patch — You never see'd, in all yo' life, a hotter shootin' match — I got a plug clean through my leg, an' him one in the knee, So, we got sorter licked at that, Old Mart an' me. We've had some ups and downs in life, and growin' kinder old, With hearts as warm as ever, an' they will never git cold, So fur as him and me's consarned ; not even over thar, When all are called to answer, at the final jedgement bar, For friendship's close to holiness, and blamed ef I can see, How we'll git licked a bit for that, Old Mart an' me. — William Lightfoot Visscher. THE FLYING DUTCHMAN. WHERE the tide crept up in a stealthy way By the reefs and hollows of Table Bay The dwellings rude of the Dutchmen lay. And the night approached with a sign of storm, For the winds blew cold and the winds blew warm, And cloud-rack high in the skies would form. And off to the right, in the lone cape's lee, A vessel surged in the wallowing sea, And the whitecaps gleamed and the winds rose free. 'Twas the brig that carried the Holland mails Through the summer's calm or the winter gales, And her pennant streamed o'er her tawny sails. A giant she was in a giant's grip, For the dark seas clung to the struggling ship, And the salt brine down from the shrouds did drip. And her sails were wet with the glancing spray As she loomed through the gathering dark- ness gray, And her bow was headed for Table Bay. But the sea beat back with a sodden force MISCELLANEOUS. 309 The Dutchman's ship in its wandering course, And the thunder's mockery bellowed hoarse. And a woman waited beside a tree, In the moan of the winds and the branches' dree, For a letter to come that night by sea. Then shouted the mate to the skipper there, "Turn back," so sounded his trumpet's blare, "Or our seams will split and our masts stand bare." But Vanderdecken drew his blade, And the steely sheen that its flashing made Struck light from the all-surrounding shade. And his anger stood in his bristling hair While his furious sword-stroke smote the air As he stood alone in defiance there. And he swore to weather the stubborn gaie With its rattling volleys of icy hail, If it stripped from the masts each tattered sail; And to beat around for that very bay, And where was the one who could say him nay — "By God! if he sailed till the judgment day." Then the mist grew dense and the light- ning flashed, And a red bolt down on the tree-top crashed, Where a woman stood by the shore sea- lashed. And the thunder tolled in the blackening clouds, And the waves swept by in hurrying crowds, And a wan light paled in the creaking shrouds ; While a scream came by from the far-off shore That was hushed and drowned by the mad waves' roar, And the vessel passed and was seen no more. And now on that selfsame fateful night, If the seas be calm and the skies are bright, The ocean giveth a mystic sight. For a shadow-ship and a shadow-frame Goes by at twelve through the moonlight flame, Passing as suddenly as it came. And a whisper thrills through the salt- sweet breeze, While a heart-throb stirs in the moving seas And the tide fast out to the ocean flees. And a fine wind stirs in the tree-top high That ghostly stands in the starlit sky, And a sound wells up like a woman's sigh. But when on that night the clouds turn black And the huge waves follow the storm king's track, And the skies are heavy with tempest- wrack, Why, then is seen, as a spectre gray, 'Mid the shimmering mist and lightning- play, A vessel headed for Table Bay. And the ship, like a lover, keeps her troth To her skipper's pledge — 'twas a pledge for both — 310 MISCELLANEOUS. And the wild winds echo the Dutchman's oath, And a wraith waits there by the haunted tree, While the storm wails on and the wind blows free, For a letter which comes not in from the sea. — Ernest McGaffey. tS* to* K0* THE MEN WHO LOSE. HERE'S to the men who lose! What though their work be e'er so . nobly planned And watched with zealous care, No glorious halo crowns their efforts grand ; Contempt is failure's share. Here's to the men who lose ! If triumph's easy smiles our struggles greet, Courage is easy then ; The king is he who, after fierce defeat, Can up and fight again. Here's to the men who lose ! The ready plaudits of a fawning world Ring sweet in victor's ears ; The vanquished's banners never are un- furled — For them there sound no cheers. Here's to the men who lose ! The touchstone of true wcrth is not suc- cess: There is a higher test — Though fate may darkly frown, onward to press, And bravely do one's best. Here's to the men who lose ! It is the vanquished's praises that I sing, And this the toast I choose : "A hard-fought failure is a noble thing. Here's a luck to those who lose!" — G. H, Broadhurst. t£& t2& t5* THE STREAMS OF LIFE. THESE Streams of Life that ever flow Through earth's unnumbered living things — Whence come they, whither do they go, And where are their exhaustless springs ? Our little lives are here to-day, Where, when these throbbing hearts are still, To me there comes no certain ray Of light, the dark abyss to fill. And do these fountains outward flow, Wherever sweeps the Almighty's wand, Farther than human thought can go, Through the Measureless Beyond? Oh, tell me why, if there are not, On far more glorious worlds than ours, Beings of broader, deeper thought, Of nobler form, and mightier powers ? Or, is it only on the earth, This little speck of love and strife, That thought and being have their birth, And matter quickens into life? Oh, Mysteries of Mysteries, Who shall the vast unknown explore? Who sail the illimitable seas That stretch beyond this earthly shore? And having scanned the realms of space, The countless worlds that circle there, MISCELLANEOUS. 311 Shall come again, and face to face, To us the wondrous truth declare. Go forth ye workers of the brain, Pierce the dark veil that hides the un- known; There's much of truth and good to gain, There's much of fallow ground unsown. A life of idle luxury For earnest, restless, thinking mind I cannot think would even be A happy life in heaven to find. Search then and toil, even though ye fail, Bold delvers in the mine of thought, To look beyond the parting veil ; Your labor shall not be for naught. But give me still where'er I be, All Nature's beauty bathed in light, The glory of earth, sky and sea, The solemn majesty of night. For there's no breath of common air, No ray of light from star or sun, No shade of beauty anywhere But whispers of the Almighty One. His law supreme rules every place — The invisible dust that floats around, The mighty orbs that roll through space, All life, all motion, light and sound. ^* ^* ^* ALWAYS CONSULT YOUR WIFE. A BLUEBIRD sat on a farmhouse shed And wagged his tail as he scratched his head, While he puzzled his brain to find the best And safest spot to build his nest. A "cruel monster," this bluebird, he No counsel would take from Mrs. B b, He did not allow her in aught to have choice, Nor in family matters to raise up her voice. The consequence was that his wife's small head Was very firm set against all that he said; But he was the master, and "willy or nilly," His orders she followed — no matter how silly. "Chick-a-dee ! I have it! The very thing! We will go where the swallows built last spring "You have it, indeed!" sneered Mrs. .B bj "You'd do no such thing if you listened to me ! "Why not build in the shed?" "Hush! hush, my dear! You've nothing to do but sit quiet and hear." So sloth prevailed, and they quietly took A swallow's nest in the chimney nook. "Three eggs?" Mr. Bluebird hopped out in the sun To laugh at the trick he'd played. "What fun !" But as he was smoothing his little brown vest, Came a sound which soon made him fly back to the nest. The swallows had come, and their fierce, flashing eyes Showed the anger they felt, as well as sur- prise. After some consultation they urged the re- quest 312 MISCELLANEOUS. That Blue and his wife would vacate their nest. But gentleman Blue knew the old-time saw, Possession is fully nine-tenths of the law ; And he laughed in their faces, and winked his left eye, As much as to say, "You are green, not I." But Mrs. B b, with an angry burst, Said, "I told you so from the very first; And I won't stay here another day." So out she flew and hurried away. "Good riddance !" cried Bluebird. "To go you are free, But they won't find it easy to get rid of me!" Alas ! for the folly that revels in sin ; The swallows with mud came and coffined him in. Moral : Oh, man who wouldst flourish and prosper in life, In matters of moment consult with thy wife. t5* «5* <5* SAND. 1 OBSERVED a locomotive in the rail- road yards one day — It was waiting in the round-house where the locomotives stay; It was panting for the journey, it was coaled and fully manned, And it had a box the fireman was filling full of sand. It appears that locomotives cannot always get a grip On their slender iron pavement, 'cause the wheels are apt to slip; And when they reach a slippery spot, their tactics they command, And to get a grip upon the rail, they sprin- kle it with sand. It's about this way with travel along life's slippery track, If your load is rather heavy and you're al- ways sliding back; So, if a common locomotive you completely understand, You'll supply yourself, in starting, with a good supply of sand. If your track is steep and hilly and you have a heavy grade, And if those who've gone before you have the rails quite slippery made, If you ever reach the summit of the upper tableland, You'll find you'll have to do it with a lib- eral use of sand. If you strike some frigid weather and dis- cover to your cost That you're liable to slip on a heavy coat of frost Then some prompt, decided action will be called into demand, You'll slip way to the bottom if you haven't any sand. You can get to any station that is on life's schedule seen, If there's fire beneath the boiler of ambi- tion's strong machine; And you'll reach a place called Flushtown at a rate of speed that's grand, If for all the slippery places you've a good supply of sand. MISCELLANEOUS. 313 LORRAINE, LORREE. ARE you ready for your steeplechase, Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorree? You're booked to ride your capping race to-day at Coulterlee, You're booked to ride Vindictive, for all the world to see, To keep him straight, and keep him first, and win the run for me." She clasped her new-born baby, poor Lor- raine, Lorraine, Lorree, "I can not ride Vindictive, as any man might see, And I will not ride Vindictive with this baby on my knee ; He's killed a boy, he's killed a man, and why must he kill me ?" "Unless you ride Vindictive, Lorraine, Lorraine, Lorree, - Unless you ride Vindictive to-day at Coul- terlee And land him safe across the brook and win the blank for me, It's you who may keep your baby, for you'll get no keep from me." "That husbands could be cruel," said Lor- raine, Lorraine, Lorree, "That husbands could be cruel I have known for seasons three; But oh! to ride Vindictive while a baby cries for me And be killed across the fence at last for all the world to see?" She mastered young Vindictive — oh! the gallant lass was she ! — And she kept him straight and won the race, as near as near could be ; But he killed her at the brook against a pollard willow tree. Oh ! he killed her at the brook — the brute ! — for all the world to see, And no one but the baby cried for poor Lorraine, Lorree. — Charles Kingsley. t2rf t3* t&& LIKE OTHER MEN. OH, varied are the changes, half unno- ticed, all unsung, That have passed across this world of ours since you and I were young, When all the sea, and sky, and earth, and stars that gemmed the night, Were ours by eminent domain of youth's unchallenged right — Old comrade of my boyhood, do you e'er recall the joys Of that glorious, care-free time of life when you and I were boys ? We knew, perchance, that other ships o'er favoring seas had sailed, And of the harbor of success had fallen short, and failed To reach the golden shores they sought, but no such luckless fate Along the future's glittering waves for us could lie in wait — For all the good things of this world but waited our command And all there was for us to do was occupy the land. We dreamed of great and noble deeds we'd do as life sped on, When honor, fame and glory, and un- bounded wealth were won ; 314 MISCELLANEOUS. For other men, perhaps, might be a life of toil and grind, The grip of poverty might seize upon the grovelling mind — But as for us, our shining path lay upward and across The everlasting hills of Hope, where no man suffers loss ! Ah, well, we've drifted on until the even- ing shades lie long Across the afternoon of life, and all the happy throng Of boys that used to play with us upon the schoolhouse green, Have laid their tired heads to rest, and passed to the unseen, And you and I, old comrade, have suc- ceeded much the same As the hundred thousand other men un- known to wealth or fame. — Clara A. Trask. f£pl t*fr e5* CANADIAN CAMPING SONG. A WHITE tent pitched by a glassy lake, Well under a shady tree, Or by rippling rills from the grand old hills, Is the summer home for me. I fear no blaze of the noontide rays, For woodland glades are mine, The fragrant air, and that perfume rare, — The odor of forest pine. A cooling plunge at the break of day, A paddle, a row or sail; With always a fish for a midday dish, And plenty of Adam's ale; With rod or gun, or in hammock swung, We glide through the pleasant days ; When darkness falls on our canvas walls, We kindle the camp-fire's blaze. From out the gloom sails the silv'ry moon, O'er forests dark and still; Now far, now near, ever sad and clear, Comes the plaint of whip-poor-will; With song and laugh, and with kindly chaff, We startle the birds above; Then rest tired heads on our cedar beds, And dream of the ones we love. — James D. Edgar. *5* <5* &5* ON THE SKAGUAY TRAIL. GOD pity the babe on the icy trail, In the arms of those who loved it best, Yet failed to shield from the withering gale That claimed its prey at the mother's breast. On the summit they mourned a lifeless child, Sobbing their grief to the mocking storm, Then left to the snows and the trackless wild The cache that cradled the frozen form. The argonaut pauses with moistened cheek And tear-dimmed eyes, who would never quail In the battle's front, for the strong grow weak, Where baby sleeps on the Skaguay trail. MISCELLANEOUS. 315 A youth with his face toward the great divide, With steady purpose that would not fail Of the hidden gold on the other side, For which he climbed up the mountain trail, — But the river, his fondest dreams to mock, Hollowed a bed 'neath the yielding wave, Then shattered his form on the tide and rock, — And instead of treasure he found a grave. In the home where is dearth of song and laugh, Where echoes a stricken mother's wail, And the father yearns for his broken staff — An ended life on the Skaguay trail. He was three score years, with the heart of youth, A hero's courage, an athlete's strength, Who had compassed the fearful pass, for- sooth, Would traverse the mighty Yukon's length. But a messenger came, unvoiced, unsought, Whose presence darkened the golden star, He called, but the stalwart answered not, For speech was hushed and the soul afar ; And she, who had periled her life with him, Who climbed the summit without avail, Turned wearily back through the shadows dim, Back from the grave on the Skaguay trail. — Mary Byron Reese. DOMINION DAY. 'FidelisJ WITH feu-de-joie and merry bells, and cannon's thundering peal, And pennons fluttering on the breeze, and serried rows of steel, We greet, again, the birthday morn of our young giant's land, From the Atlantic stretching wide to far Pacific strand; With flashing rivers, ocean lakes, and prairies wide and free, And waterfalls, and forests dim, and moun- tains by the sea ; A country on whose birth-hour smiles the genius of romance, Above whose cradle brave hands waved the lily-cross of France; Whose infancy was grimly nursed in peril, pain and woe ; Whose gallant hearts found early graves beneath Canadian snow ; When savage raid and ambuscade and fam- ine's sore distress, Combined their strength, in vain, to crush the dauntless French noblesse ; When her dim, trackless forest lured again and yet again, From silken courts of sunny France, her flower, the brave Champlain. And now, her proud traditions boast four blazoned rolls of fame, — Crecy's and Flodden's deadly foes our an- cestors we claim ; Past feud and battle buried far behind the peaceful years, While Gaul and Celt and Briton turn to pruning-hooks their spears ; Four nations welded into one, — with long historic past, Have found, in these our western wilds, one common life, at last; 316 MISCELLANEOUS. Through the young giant's mighty limbs, that stretch from sea to sea, There runs a throb of conscious life — of waking energy. From Nova Scotia's misty coast to far Co- lumbia's shore, She wakes, — a band of scattered homes and colonies no more, But a young nation, with her life full beat- ing in her breast, A noble future in her eyes — the Britain of the West. Hers be the noble task to fill the yet un- trodden plains With fruitful, many-sided life that courses through her veins ; The English honor, nerve, and pluck, — the Scotsman's love of right, — The grace of courtesy of France, — the Irish fancy bright, — The Saxon's faithful love of home, and home's affections blest; And, chief of all, our holy faith, — of all our treasures best. A people poor in pomp and state, but rich in noble deeds, Holding that righteousness exalts the peo- ple that it leads; As yet the waxen mould is soft, the open- ing page is fair; It rests with those who rule us now, to leave their impress there, — The stamp of true nobility, high honor, stainless truth ; The earnest quest of noble ends; the gen- erous heart of youth; The love of country, soaring far above dull party strife; The love of learning, art, and song — the crowning grace of life ; The love of science, soaring far through Nature's hidden ways; The love and fear of Nature's God — a na- tion's highest praise. So, in the long hereafter, this Canada shall be The worthy heir of British power and Brit- ish liberty; Spreading the blessings of her sway to her remotest bounds, While, with the fame of her fair name, a continent resounds. True to her high traditions, to Britain's ancient glory Of patient saint and martyr, alive in death- less story; Strong, in their liberty and truth, to shed from shore to shore A light among the nations, till nations are no more. t5* t5* t5* A GENTLEMAN. HE could not be so poor that he would hate the rich, Nor yet so rich that he despised the poor. He is so brave and just, that not a turn nor hitch, In all of fortune's winding way, could lure Him to an act or thought of vile in- gratitude. He's true unto himself, and thus to every man And has that courage, high, and grand, and strong, That comes with kindness, and with honor leads the van To help the right, and sternly punish wrong ; To strip injustice till it shivers, shamed and nude. MISCELLANEOUS. 317 He seeks the culture that, refining, gives a grace And comfort to himself and those around. He has no ostentation, nor would he abase Himself to thus become a monarch crowned. Clean comes his thought and from his hand a brother's grip. He comes from anywhere — aye, e'en from Nazareth — From north and south, and from the east and west ; He comes as comes the cool and grateful breeze's breath. He need not be an angel from the blest, He might be, thus, too good for man's companionship. A FATHER'S ADVICE TO HIS SON. REMEMBER, my son, you have to work. Whether you handle a pick or a pen, a wheelbarrow or a set of books, digging ditches or editing a paper, ringing an auction bell or writing funny things, you must work. If you look around, you will see the men who are the most able to live the rest of their days without work are the men who work the hardest. Don't be afraid of killing yourself with overwork. It is beyond your power to do that on the sunny side of thirty. They die sometimes,, but it is because they quit work at six p. m., and don't get home until two a. m. It's the interval that kills, my son. The work gives you an appetite for your meals ; it lends solidity to your slumbers ; it gives you a perfect and grateful appreciation of a holi- day. There are young men who do not work, but the world is not proud of them. It does not know their names, even; it simply speaks of them as "old So-and-so's boys." Nobody likes them ; the great, busy world doesn't know that they are there. So find out what you want to be and do, and take off your coat and make a dust in the world. The busier you are, the less harm you will be apt to get into, the sweeter will be your sleep, the brighter and happier your holi- days, and the better satisfied will the world be with you. — R. J. Burdette. t^w t^* ^* THE MAN THAT MARRIED. THE sun's heat will give out in ten million years more," And he worried about it ; "It will sure give out then, if it doesn't before," And he worried about it ; It would surely give out, so the scientists said In all scientific books that he read, And the whole mighty universe then would be dead, And he worried about it. "And some day the earth will fall into the sun," And he worried about it ; "Just as sure, and as straight as if shot from a gun," And he worried about it ; "When strong gravitation unbuckles her straps Just picture," he said, "what a fearful col- lapse ! It will come in a few million ages, perhaps," And he worried about it." 318 MISCELLANEOUS. "The earth will become much too small for the race," And he worried about it ; "When we'll pay thirty dollars an inch for pure space," And he worried about it ; "The earth will be crowded so much, with- out doubt, That there'll be no room for one's tongue to stick out, And no room for one's thoughts to wander about," And he worried about it. "The Gulf Stream will curve, and New England grow torrider," And he worried about it ; "Than was ever the climate of southern- most Florida," And he worried about it. "The ice crop will be knocked into small smithereens, And crocodiles block up our mowing ma- chines, And we'll lose our fine crops of potatoes and beans," And he worried about it. "And in less than ten thousand years, there's no doubt," And he worried about it ; "Our supply of lumber and coal will give out," And he worried about it ; "Just when the Ice Age will return cold and raw, Frozen men will stand stiff with arms out- stretched in awe, As if vainly beseeching a general thaw," And he worried about it. His wife took in washing (a dollar a day), He didn't worry about it ; His daughter sewed shirts, the rude grocer to pay, He didn't worry about it, While his wife beat her tireless rub-a-dub- dub On the washboard drum in her old wooden tub He sat by the stove and he just let her rub, He didn't worry about it. — Sam Walter Foss. to* to* t&* THE EGGS THAT NEVER HATCH. THERE'S a young man on the cor- ner, Filled with life and strength and hope, Looking far beyond the present, With the whole world in his scope. He is grasping at to-morrow, That phantom none can catch; To-day is lost. He's waiting For the eggs that never hatch. There's an old man over yonder, With a worn and weary face, With searching anxious features, And weak, uncertain pace. He is living in the future, With no desire to catch The golden Now. He's waiting For the eggs that never hatch. There's a world of men and women, With their life's work yet undone, Who are sitting, standing, moving Beneath the same great sun; Ever eager for the future, But not content to snatch The Present. They are waiting For the eggs that never hatch. MISCELLANEOUS. 319 CONTENTED JIM. EVERYTHING pleased our neighbor Jim, When it rained He never complained, But said wet weather suited him. "There never is too much rain for me. And this is something like," said he. When earth was dry as a powder mill, He did not sigh Because it was dry, But said if he could have his will It would be his chief supreme delight To live where the sun shone day and night. When winter came with its snow and ice, He did not scold Because it was cold, But said : "Now this is real nice ; If ever from home I'm forced to go, I'll move up North with the Esquimau." A cyclone whirled along its track, And did him harm — It broke his arm, And stripped the coat from off his back ; "And I would give another limb To see such a blow again," said Jim. And when at length his years were told, And his body bent, And his strength all spent, And Jim was very weak and old: "I long have wanted to know," he said, "How it feels to die" — and Jim was dead. The Angel of Death had summoned To heaven, or — well, I cannot tell ; But I knew that the climate suited Jim; And cold or hot, it mattered not — It was to him the long-sought spot. 10& %2fr to* THE TRUE GENTLEMAN WHAT is a gentleman? Is it a thing Decked with a scarf-pin, a chain, and a ring, Dressed in a suit of immaculate style, Sporting an eye-glass, a lisp, and a smile? Talking of operas, concerts, and balls, Evening assemblies and afternoon calls, Sunning himself at "At Homes" and ba- zars, Whistling mazurkas, and smoking cigars? What is a gentleman ? Say, is it one Boasting of conquests and deeds he has done? One who unblushingly glories to speak Things which should call up a blush to his cheek ? One, who, whilst railing at actions unjust, Robs some young heart of its pureness and trust ; Scorns to steal money, or jewels, or wealth, Thinks it no crime to take honor by stealth ? What is a gentleman ? Is it not one Knowing instinctively what he should shun, Speaking no word that can injure or pain, Spreading no scandal and deep'ning no stain ? One who knows how to put each at his ease, Striving instinctively always to please ; One who can tell, by a glance at your cheek, When to be silent, and when he should speak ? What is a gentleman? Is it not one Honestly eating the bread he has won, 320 MISCELLANEOUS. Living in uprightness, fearing his God, Leaving no stain on the path he has trod, Caring not whether his coat may be old, Prizing sincerity far above gold, Recking not whether his hand may be hard, Stretching it boldly to grasp its reward? What is a gentleman ? Say, is it birth Makes a man noble, or adds to his worth? Is there a family tree to be had Spreading enough to conceal what is bad? Seek out the man who has God for his Guide Nothing to blush for, and nothing to hide ; Be he a noble, or be he in trade, This is the gentleman Nature has made. *5* <5* *5* WHY SHE DIDN'T STAY IN THE POOR-HOUSE. NO, I didn't stay in the poor-house, and this is how, you see, It happened at the very last, there came a way for me. The Lord, he makes our sunniest times out of our darkest days, And yet we fail most always to render His name the praise. But, as I am goin' to tell you, I have a home of my own, And keep my house, an' — no, I'm not a- livin' here alone. Of course you wonder how it is, an' I'm a-goin' to tell How, though I couldn't change a jot, the Lord done all things well. I've spoke of Charlie and Thomas, and Re- becca, "that lives out west;" An' Isaac, not far from her, some twenty miles at best; An' Susan; — but not a single word I said about another one, — Yet we had six; but Georgie! Ah! he was our wayward son, An' while his father was livin' he ran away to sea, An' never sent a word or line to neither him nor me. Each heart has some secret sorrow it hides in silence there, An' what we can freely speak of is never so hard to bear. But I couldn't talk of Georgie — he was too dear to blame, — It seemed as if I couldn't bear even to hear his name. But when I took my pauper's place in that old work -house grim, My weary heart was every day a-cryin' out for him. For I'd tried the love of the others, and found it weak and cold, An' I kind o' felt if Georgie knew that I was poor and old, He'd help to make it better, and try to do his part, For love and trust are last of all to die in a woman's heart. An' he used to be always tellin' when he was a man and strong, How he'd work for father and mother; and he never done no wrong, Exceptin' his boyish mischief, an' his run- nin' off to sea; So somehow now, out of them all, he seemed the best to me. And so the slow days wore along, just as the days all go, When we cling to some wild fancy that all the time we know Is nothing but a fancy, yet we nurse it till 'twould seem That the dream alone is real, and the real but a dream. MISCELLANEOUS, 321 And so I clung to Georgie, or clung to my faith in him, And thought of him the long days through, until my eyes were dim. And my old heart ached full sorely to think that never again I should see my boy until we stood before the Judge of men. When one day a big brown-bearded man came rushin' up to me, Sayin', "Mother! my God! have they put you here?" An' then I see 'Twas Georgie, my boy, come back to me, and I knowed nothin' more, 'Cause I got faint, and but for him, I'd fallen on the floor. , They say he swore some awful words — I don't know — it may be; But swear or not, I know my boy's been very, very good to me. An' he's bought the old home back again, an' I've come here to stay, Never to move till the last move — the final goin' away. An' I take a heap of comfort, for Georgie's good an' kind, An' the thought of bein' a pauper ain't wearin' on my mind; But still I never can forget until my dyin' day, That they put me in the poor-house 'cause I was in the way. ^* x2fr t2& SAVING MOTHER. THE farmer sat in his easy chair Between the fire and the lamplight's glare; His face was ruddy, and full and fair. His three small boys in the chimney nook Scanned the lines of a picture book; His wife, the pride of his home and heart, Baked the biscuit and made the tart, Laid the table and steeped the tea, Deftly, swiftly, silently; Tired and weary, and weak and faint, She bore her trials without complaint, Like many another household saint — Content, all selfish bliss above, In the patient ministry of love. At last, between the clouds of smoke That wreathed his lips, the husband spoke: "There's taxes to raise, and int'rest to pay, And if there should come a rainy day, 'T would be mighty handy, I'm boun' to say, T have sumpthin' put by. For folks must die, An' there's funeral bills an' gravestuns to buy — Enough to swamp a man, purty nigh. Besides, there's Edward and Dick and Joe To be provided for when we go. "So'f I was you, I'll tell you what I'd du; I'd be savin' of wood as ever I could — Extry fire don't du any good — I'd be savin' of soap, an' savin' of ile, And run up some candles once in a while; I'd be rather sparin' of coffee an' tea, For sugar is high, And all to buy, And cider is good enough for me. I'd be kind o' careful about my clo'es And look out sharp how the money goes — ■ Gewgaws is useless, nater knows; Extry trimmin' 'S the bane of women. "I'd sell off the best of the cheese and honey, And eggs is as good, nigh about, 's the money; 322 MISCELLANEOUS. And as to the carpet you wanted new — I guess we can make the old one du. And as for the washer, an' sewin' machine, Them smooth-tongued agents so pesky- mean, You'd better get rid of 'em, slick an' clean. What do they know about women's work? Du they kalkilate women was born to shirk?" Dick and Edward and Little Joe Sat in the corner in a row. They saw the patient mother go, On ceaseless errands to and fro; They saw that her form was bent and thin, Her temples gray, her cheeks sunk in, They saw the quiver of her lip and chin — And then, with a warmth he could not smother, Outspoke the youngest, frailest brother — "You talk of savin' wood and ile An' tea an' sugar, all the while, But you never talk of savin' mother!" t^* %&*/ tS" KIT CARSON'S RIDE. R UN? Now you bet you; I rather guess But he's blind as a badger. Whoa, Pache, boy, whoa, No, you wouldn't think so to look at his eyes, But he is badger blind, and it happened this wise: We lay low in the grass on the broad plain levels Old Revels and I, and my stolen brown bride. "Forty full miles if a foot to ride, Forty full miles if a foot, and the devils Of red Comanches are hot on the track When once they strike it. Let the sun go down Soon, very soon," muttered bearded old Revels, As he peered at the sun lying low on his back, Holding fast to his lasso; then he jerked at his steed, And sprang to his feet, and glanced swift- ly around, And then dropped, as if shot, with his ear to the ground — Then again to his feet and to me, to my bride, While his eyes were like fire, his face like a shroud, His form like a king, and his beard like a cloud, And his voice loud and shrill, as if blown from a reed — "Pull, pull in your lassos, and bridle .to steed, And 'Speed, .if ever jfor life you would speed ; And ride for your lives, for your lives you must ride, For the plain is aflame, the prairie on fire; And feet of wild horses hard flying before, I hear like a sea breaking high on the shore ; While the buffalo come like the surge of the sea, Driven far by the flame, driving fast on us three As a hurricane comes, crushing palms in his ire." We drew in the lassos, seized saddle and rein, Threw them on, sinched them on, sinched them over again, And again drew the girth, cast aside the macheer, MISCELLANEOUS. 323 Cut away tapidaros, loosed the sash from its fold, Cast aside the catenas red and spangled with gold, And gold-mounted Colt's, true compan- ions for years; Cast the silken serapes to the wind in a breath, And so bared to the skin sprang all haste to the horse, As bare as when born, as when new from the hand Of God, without word, or one word of command, Turned head to the Brazos in a red race with death, Turned head to the Brazos with a breath in the hair Blowing hot from a king leaving death in his course; Turned head to the Brazos with a sound in the air Like the rush of an army, and a flash in the eye Of a red wall of fire reaching up to the sky, Stretching fierce in pursuit of a black roll- ing sea Rushing fast upon us as the wind sweep- ing free And afar from the desert, blew hollow and hoarse. Not a word, not a wail from a lip was let fall, Not a kiss from my bride, not a look or low call Of love-note or courage, but on o'er the plain So steady and still, leaning low to the mane, With the heel to the flank and the hand to the rein. Rode we on, rode we three, rode we nose and gray nose, Reaching long, breathing loud, like a crev- iced wind blows, Yet we broke not a whisper, we breathed not a prayer, There was work to be done, there was death in the air, And the chance was as one to a thousand for all. Gray nose to gray nose and each steady mustang Stretched neck and stretched nerve till the arid earth rang, And the foam from the flank and the croup and the neck Flew around like the spray on £ storm- driven deck. Twenty miles! thirty miles! — a dim distant speck — Then a long reaching line, and the Brazos in sight, And I rose in my seat with a shout of de- light. I stood in my stirrup and looked to my right, But Revels was gone; I glanced by my shoulder And saw his horse stagger; I saw his head drooping Hard on his breast, and his naked breast stooping Low down to the mane as so swifter and bolder Ran reaching out for us the red-footed fire. To right and to left the black buffalo came, A terrible surf on a red sea of flame Rushing on in the rear, reaching high, reaching higher; And he rode neck to neck to a buffalo bull, The monarch of millions, with shaggy mane full 324 MISCELLANEOUS. Of smoke and of dust, and it shook with desire Of battle, with rage and with bellowing loud And unearthly, and up through its lower- ing cloud Came the flash of his eyes like a half-hid- den fire, While his keen crooked horns through the storm of his mane Like black lances lifted and lifted again; And I looked but this once, for the fire licked through, And he fell and was lost, as we rode two and two. I looked to my left, then, and nose, neck, and shoulder Sank slowly, sank surely, till back to my thighs ; And up through the black blowing veil of her hair Did beam full in mine her two marvelous eyes With a longing and love, yet a look of despair, And a pity for me, as she felt the smoke fold her, And flames reaching far for her glorious hair. Her sinking steed faltered, his eager ears fell To and fro and unsteady, and all the neck's swell Did subside and recede and the nerves fall as dead. Then she saw sturdy Pache still lorded his head, With a look of delight, for this Pache, you see, Was her father's, and once at the South Santa Fe Had won a whole herd, sweeping every- thing down In a race where the world came to run for the crown; And so when I won the true heart of my bride — My neighbor's and deadliest enemy's child, And child of the kingly war-chief of his tribe — She brought me this steed to the border the night She met Revels and me in her perilous flight From the lodge of the chief to the north Brazos side; And said, so half-guessing of ill as she smiled, As if jesting, that I, and I only, should ride The fleet-footed Pache, so if kin should pursue I should surely escape without other ado Than to ride, without blood, to the north Brazos side, And await her, and wait till the next hol- low moon Hung her horn in the palms, when surely and soon And swift she would join me, and all would be well Without bloodshed or word. And now, as she fell From the front, and went down in the ocean of fire, The last that I saw was a look of delight That I should escape — a love — a desire — Yet never a word, not a look of appeal, iLest I shlould reach hand, should stay hand or stay heel One instant for her in my terrible flight. Then the rushing of fire around me and under, And the howling of beasts and a sound as of thunder — Beasts burning and blind and forced on- ward and over, MISCELLANEOUS. 325 As the passionate flame reached around them and wove her Hands in their hair, and kissed hot till they died — Till they died with a wild and a desolate moan, As a sea heart-broken on the hard brown stone. And into the Brazos — I rode all alone — All alone, save only a horse long-limbed, And blind and bare and burnt to the skin, Then, just as the terrible sea came in, And tumbled its thousands hot into the tide, Till the tide blocked up and the swift stream brimmed In eddies, we struck on the opposite side. Sell Pache, — blind Pache? Now, mister, look here, You have slept in my tent and partook of my cheer Many days, many days, on this rugged frontier, For the ways they were rough and Co- manches were near; But you'd better pack up, sir! that tent is too small For us two after this! Has an old moun- taineer, Do you bookmen believe, got no tum-tum at all? Sell Pache? You buy him! A bag full of gold! You show him! Tell of him the tale I have told! Why, he bore me through fire, and is blind, and is old! Now pack up your papers and get up and spin, And never look back. Blast you and your tin! — Joaquin Miller. t&& £& 1&rt THEY ALL SANG ANNIE LAURIE. An incident of the Crimean war. GIVE us a song !" the soldiers cried, The outer trenches guarding, When the heated guns of the camps allied Grew weary of bombarding. The dark Redan, in silent scoff, Lay, grim and threatening, under ; And the tawny mound of the Malakoff No longer belched its thunder. There was a pause. A guardsman said, "We storm the forts to-morrow; Sing while we may, another day Will bring enough of sorrow." They lay along the battery's side, Below the smoking cannon : Brave hearts, from Severn and from Clyde, And from the banks of Shannon. They sang of love, and not of fame; Forgot was Britain's glory: Each heart recalled a different name, But all sang "Annie Laurie." Voice after voice caught up the song, Until its tender passion Rose like an anthem, rich and strong, — Their battle-eve confession. Dear girl, her name he dared not speak But, as the song grew louder, Something upon the soldier's cheek Washed off the stains of powder. Beyond the darkening ocean burned The bloody sunset's embers, While the Crimean valleys learned How English love remembers. 326 MISCELLANEOUS. And once again a fire of hell Rained on the Russian quarters, With scream of shot, and burst of shell, And bellowing of the mortars ! And Irish Nora's eyes are dim For a singer, dumb and gory; And English Mary mourns for him Who sang of "Annie Laurie." Sleep, soldiers! still in honored rest Your truth and valor wearing ; The bravest are the tenderest, — The loving are the daring. JS & "GOT STRIPES DOWN HIS LEGS." I USED to boss him in the store And oversee his work, For I had charge of one whole floor And he was just a clerk. To-day it's different, if you please; We've changed respective pegs, I'm private in the ranks — and he's Got stripes Down His Legs. The girls, whose smiles were once for me, Now scarce vouchsafe a glance, Such great attraction can they see In decorated pants. The erstwhile clerk no longer my Indulgence humble begs. He's up on high, I'm down below. With stripes Down His Legs. It's "Private Jones, do this and that." In haste I must bestir — To Jenkins, on whom oft I've sat, I'm told to answer "Sir!" One born to rule, it's come to pass Of woe I drink the dregs — I'm in the army with, alas ! No stripes Down My Legs. — Edwin L. Sabin. t5* «5* ^* SOMEBODY. SOMEBODY'S courting somebody Somewhere or other to-night ; Somebody's whispering to somebody, Somebody's listening to somebody, Under this clear moonlight. Near the bright river's flow, Running so still and slow, Talking so soft an d low, She sits with somebody. Pacing the ocean's shore, Edged by the foaming roar, Words never used before Sound sweet to somebody. Under the maple tree Deep though the shadow be, Plain enough they can see, Bright eyes has somebody. No one sits up to wait, Though she is out so late, All know she's at the gate, Talking with somebody. MISCELLANEOUS. 327 Tiptoe to parlor door, Two shadows on the floor, Moonlight, reveal no more, Susy and somebody. Two sitting side by side, Float with the ebbing tide, "Thus, dearest, may we glide Through life," says somebody. Somewhere, somebody Makes love to somebody To-night. —Anonymous. HIS hoss went dead an' his mule went lame; He lost six cows in a poker game ; A hurricane came on a summer's day, An' carried the house whar he lived away ; Then a earthquake come when that was gone, An' swallowed the land that the house stood on! An' the tax collector, he come roun' An' charged him up for the hole in the groun An' the city marshal — he came in view, An' said he wanted his street tax, too ! AN UNCOMPLAINING MAN. Did he moan an' sigh ? Did he set an' cry An' cuss the hurricane sweepin' by? Did he grieve that his ole friends failed to call When the earthquake come an' swallowed all? Never a word of blame he said, With all them troubles on top his head ! Not him! — He climbed to the top of the hill— Whar standin' room wuz left him still, An', barin' his head, here's what he said : "I reckon it's time to git up an' git ; But, Lord, I hain't had the measles yit !" — Philander Johnson. t5* <5* «5* TWO WOMEN'S LIVES. TWO babes were born in the selfsame town On the very same bright day; They laughed and cried in their mother's arms In the very selfsame way, And both were pure and innocent As falling flakes of snow, But one of them lived in the terraced house And one in the street below. Two children played in the selfsame town, And the children both were fair, But one had curls brushed smooth and round, The other had tangled hair j The children both grew up apace, As other children grow, But one of them lived in the terraced house And one in the street below. Two maidens wrought in the selfsame town, And one was wedded and loved, The other saw through the curtain's part The world where her sister moved; And one was smiling, a happy bride, The other knew care and woe, For one of them lived in the terraced house And one in the street below. 328 MISCELLANEOUS. Two women lay dead in the selfsame town, And one had had tender care, The other was left to die alone On her pallet all thin and bare, And one had many to mourn her loss, For the other few tears would flow, For one had lived in the terraced house And one in the street below. If Jesus, who died for the rich and the poor In wondrous holy love, Took both the sisters in his arms And carried them above, Then all the differences vanished quite, For in heaven none would know Which of them lived in the terraced house And which in the street below. ^* t£& t0& BEDTIME. WHEN my good-nights and prayers are said, And I am warm tucked up in bed, I know my guardian angel stands And holds my head between his hands. I cannot see his gown of light, Because I keep my eyes shut tight, For if I open them I know My pretty angel has to go. But while my eyes are shut I hear His white wings rustling very near; I know it is his darling wings, Not mother folding up my things. ^* ^* ^* THE BOY TO THE SCHOOLMASTER. YOU have quizzed me often and puzzled me long; You have asked me to cipher and spell; You have called me a dolt if I answered wrong, Or a dunce if I failed to tell Just when to say lie and when to say lay, Or what nine-sevenths may make, Or the longitude of Kamtschatka bay, Or the I-forget-what-it's-name lake, So I think it's about my turn, I do, To ask a question or so of you." The schoolmaster grim he opened his eyes, But he said not a word for sheer surprise. "Can you tell what 'phen-dubs' means? I can. Can you say all off by heart The onery, twoery, hicgory ann? Or tell 'commons' and 'alleys' apart? Can you fling a top, I would like to know, Till it hums like a bumble-bee? Can you make a kite yourself that will go Most as high as the eye can see, Till it sails and soars, like a hawk on the wing, And the birds come and light on the string?" The schoolmaster grim he looked demure, But his mouth was twitching, I'm almost sure. "Can you tell where the nest of the oriole swings, Or the color its eggs may be? Do you know the time when the squirrel brings Its young from their nest in the tree? Can you tell when the chestnuts are ready to drop, 'What shall I write?' "I've got it." THE LETTER TO PAPA.— PLATE I. 'I send a thousand kisses. "Now, I'll mail it." THE LETTER TO PAPA.— PLATE LT. MISCELLANEOUS. 331 Or where the best hazelnuts grow? Can you climb a tree to the very tip-top, And gaze, without trembling, below? Can you swim and dive, can you jump and run, Or do anything else we boys call fun?" The master's voice trembled as he replied: "You are right, my lad, I'm the dunce," and sighed. (5* c5* c5* HIS BEST PRAYER. THE proper way for a man to pray," Said Deacon Lemuel Keys, "And the only proper attitude, Is down upon his knees." "No; I should say the way to pray," Said Rev. Dr. Wise, "Is standing straight, with outstretched arms, And rapt and upturned eyes." "Oh, no, no, no!" said Elder Slow, "Such posture is too proud. A man should pray with eyes fast closed And head contritely bowed." "It seems to me his hands should be Austerely clasped in front, With both thumbs pointed toward the ground," Said Rev. Dr. Hunt. "Las' year I fell in Hodgkins' well Head first," said Cyrus Brown, "With both my heels a-stickin up, My head a-pintin' down, An' I made a prayer right then an' there — Best prayer I ever said, The prayin'est prayer I ever prayed — A-standin' on my head." t5* *5* t5* "ARIZONY RAY." THE wildest cowboy on the range was that same Arizony Ray, Neck deep in every crookedness that come a-driftin' 'round his way, As quick as lightnin' with the gun an' mighty handy with the rope, An' ridin' bronks he never had no equal on the Western slope. An' independent sort o' chap, but true as steel to all his pals, 'Bout halfway liked and halfway feared by all the purty rancher gals, An' when he'd flood his inner works with cactus-brier booze we found 'Twas safest to keep out o' reach o' that ol' gun he packed around. His daily work o' punchin' cows the kid was never knowed to shirk, He follered Injuns with a vim that showed he sort o' liked the work, And when we'd overtake the reds and bump again a nasty fight, That same young Arizony Ray'd seem a- bilin' with delight. His cup o' joy was alius full when he was shootin' up a town, An' somethin' alius overtook the man that tried to call him down; Was dumped in jail a hundred times, but managed to git out agin With jest the same affection fur the trail o' devilment an' sin. One day a letter come to him, an' with it came a photygraph, An' as he read the letter through us chaps that knowed him had to laugh 332 MISCELLANEOUS. To see him cry, but changed our tune when with his head at humble poise, He handed us the pictur card and said, "That's my ol' mother, boys!" Then came a most surprisin' change — per- haps a dozen times a day He'd read that letter through an' through in eager, lovin' sort o' way, An' when we'd go to bunk at night it seemed to us surprisin' odd To see him down upon- his knees a-tryin' to make up with God. (,?■ t5* t5* LESSONS FROM SCRIPTURE FLOWERS. The assignment of parts here given can be changed to suit different cases and such other classifications adopted as may seem best. Singing could also be introduced very effectively, especially in connection with "The Rose of Sharon," by the use of H. R. Palmer's hymn by that name. The Lily of the Field. First Boy — This flower that Jesus bids us consider was the Chalcedonian Lily, very common in Palestine, with scarlet flowers, like those that grow wild in our pastures. First Girl — In upland meadows bright flowers I see, Like lilies that blossomed in Galilee; When I see them shining in gold and red, I think of the words that Jesus said: TWO IN CONCERT — Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin; and yet I say unto you that even Solomon, in all his glory, was not arrayed like one of these. — Matt, vi; 28, 29. The Rose of Sharon. Second B. — This flower was not a rose, but the nar- cissus, like our white flowers of that name. This is the flower of which Solomon speaks when he says: "I am the Rose of Sharon." Second G. — In garden-borders, in rows of white, The dear narcissus is spring's delight: This lovely blossom in odors sweet, The promise of old still seems to repeat: Two in con. — The desert shall rejoice and blossom as the rose. — Isa. xxxv: 2. The True Rose. Third B.— This grows in Palestine. The hills of Jerusalem are covered with beautiful pink, white, and yellow roses. Third G. — When lovely roses, in colors fair, Are budding and blossoming everywhere. By the brook of the fields in the bright June day, Their voices to the children shall sweetly say: Two in con. — Hearken unto me, ye children, and bud forth as a rose, growing by the brool the fields. — Ecclesiasticus xxxix: 13. The Almond Tree. Fourth B. — This is the wakeful tree, because it is the first to awake from winter's sleep and put on its beautiful garment of rose-colored blossoms. Fourth G. — The flowering almond, we call it now; Spring's brightest, earliest blooming bough. MISCELLANEOUS. 333 The prophet found it a symbol true. That God would hasten his work to do. Two in con. — And I said, I see a rod of an almond tree. Then said the Lord unto me, Thou hast well seen, for I will hasten my word to perform it. — Jer. i: 1 1, 12. Mint, Anise, Cummin. Fifth B. — These plants had small, fragrant seeds, and were those that we now call by the same name. Fifth G. — In fragrant gardens I love to go, Where mint and anise and cummin grow; But, oh! how sad it would be to hear Such words as these from the Master, dear. Two in con. — Ye pay tithe of mint, and anise, and cummin, and have omitted the weightier matters of the law, — judgment, mercy and faith. — Matt, xxiii: 23. The Mustard Tree. Sixth B. — This was not our common mustard plant. It is a shrub, still found by the sea of Galilee. The seed is small but the shrub grows so large that birds can, and do, lodge in the branches. Sixth G. — Sometimes I stop by the way to heed The simple bloom of the mustard seed; And think how, from humblest things that grew, Such lessons as this our Teacher drew. Two in con. — The kingdom oi heaven is like to a grain of mustard seed, which a man took, and sov/ed in his field; which, indeed, is the least of all seeds; but when it is grown, it is the greatest among herbs, and becom- eth a tree, so that the birds of the air come and lodge in the branches thereof. — Matt, xiii: 31, 32. Seventh G. — When winter goes by and spring is here, And over the earth the flowers appear, While birds are singing and- breezes play, These beautiful words again we say: Two in con. — For lo! the winter is past; the rain is over and gone. The flowers appear on the earth. The time of the singing of birds is come. — Cant. ii. 11, 12. Eighth G. — When spring and summer have hastened on, And beautiful buds and blooms are gone, With fragrant breath, as they pass away, The autumn blossoms to us shall say: All in con. — The grass withereth, the flower fadeth, but the Word of the Lord endureth for- ever! — Isa. xl: 8. —M. B. C. Slade. «5* &5* *£• WHAT ABOUT THE HIRED MAN ? THEY talk about the servant girl, sug- gesting this and that, To make her life more happy in the man- sion or the flat. They say to teach her music and to , .lti- vate her mind, And never, never speak to her in voice that is unkind; But — what about the hired man, Hired man, tired man — Frequently the fired man — What about his life? 334 MISCELLANEOUS. No one ever sighs for him; Books nobody buys for him, Or intimates that pies, for him, Should ever know a knife. The ladies sip Young Hyson at the Eso- teric clubs, And weep about the hardships of the maid who bakes or scrubs; They advocate a fashion-plate upon the kitchen wall, And "higher aspirations" they propose for one and all; But — what about the hired man, Hired man, tired man — Soon or late the fired man — What about his lot? No one ever thinks of him, Or sends out fancy drinks for him, Or talks of fashion's kinks for him, Or gives to him a thought. They write to all the papers on the "ser- vant question" now, And Mrs. Talkso Tellum-What gets up and makes a bow, And shows the ladies how to act, the ser- vant girls to suit, And all her hearers vow that her remarks are "awful cute." But — what about the hired man, Hired man, tired man — And after while the fired man — Who's concerned for him? He must keep his hustle on, And toil, and tug, and rustle on, With work to test his muscle on, Or else his chance is slim. t5» ^» *5* THROUGH GRANDFATHER'S SPECTACLES. YOUR boy's come home from school, Mariar, a college graduate, An' what he knows and means to do I 'low is somethin' great; But I have been observin' him ; and I ain't much impressed That when he's pressed the button the world'll do the rest. Fer thinkin' which I don't blame him, I blame his pa and ma, They've stuffed him with sech notions an' made his word a law. Course rockin' in affection's cradle's mighty pleasant to us all, [I only hope he won't rock out, — he'd be so apt to feel the fall. I only hope he won't rock out, yet I am free to say He's apt to git a jolt as '11 wake him up some day! Your boy's not bad, Mariar, I hope you'll not git mad At a few plain truths about the peart, high- steppin' lad : He's jammed his head so full o' isms, ologies, an' stuff 'At when he come to cram in sense there wasn't room enuff. You know as well, Mariar, as you know this chair I've alius sat in, That he'll ne'er keep books in Hebrew nor buy nor sell in Latin; That the German name o' jimpson weed ain't worth as much to him As a knowledge of good English which is in his case slim ; That all he knows about the stars in heavenly orbits fixed Don't count for nothin' longside o' how his spellin's mixed, MISCELLANEOUS. 335 It is a common thing, Mariar, this fault that parents get in, This educatin' young folks up till head ex- pansion sets in; This givin' them an outside polish, which strivin' to attain, Has led in no few instances to softenin' of the brain. The world ne'er stopped on their account and ne'er would it, I ween, If half its pampered youth was taken down a notch or two while green ; And mayhap such a course pursued with them a spell, 'Ud work a revolution, tho' it's pretty hard to tell. I wouldn't have you think, Mariar, that I'm set agin a college ; There's nothin' that we need and lack so much as knowledge. But we cannot have it all nor even have the heft, And what most we want to learn is to keep from gittin' left ! Then lend your ears my student friends to what I have to say, And heed it, too, perhaps it may come handy in its way : Remember my life's e'en most lived while yours is jest begun, And you ain't s'posed to be so sure not ever'thing's fqr fun. If you will take advices which I have alius given, The first thing you will learn is how to make a hones' livin' ; And havin' got the infermation you need for ever' day Then you can hustle to and git whatever else'll pay. — Emily F. Smith. t2& «5* «5* CHORUS OF THE FLOWERS. Chorus. WE are the little flowers, coming with the spring; If you listen closely, sometimes you'll hear us sing. The Honeysuckle — Red: I am the honeysuckle, with my drooping head; And early in the springtime I don my dress of red. I grow in quiet woodlands, beneath some budding tree; So when you take a ramble, — just look for me. The Dandelion — Yellow: I am the dandelion, yellow, as you see, And when the children see me they shout for glee. I grow by every wayside, and when I've had my day, I spread my wings so silvery, — and fly away. The Forget-me-not — Blue: When God made all the flowers, He gave each one a name, And, when the others all had gone, a little blue one came And said in trembling whisper: "My name has been forgot." Then the good Father called her, "Forget- me-not." 33€ MISCELLANEOUS. The Fern — Green: A fern, the people call me, I'm always clothed in green, I live in every forest; you've seen me oft, I ween. Sometimes I leave the shadow, to grow beside the way You'll see me as you pass, — some nice, fine day. Chorus. We are the little flowers, coming with the spring; If you listen closely, sometimes you'll hear us sing. SAY there ! P'r'aps Some on you chaps Might know Jim Wild ? Well, no offense: Thar ain't no sense In gittin' riled! Jim was my chum Up on the Bar; That's why I come Down from up thar, Lookin' for Jim. Thank ye, oir! you Ain't of that crew — Blest if you are! Money? — not much; That ain't my kind; I ain't no such. Rum? — I don't mind, Seein' it's you. Well, this yer Jim, Did you know him? — Jess 'bout your size; Same kind of eyes? — Well, that is strange ; Why, it's two year Since he came here, Sick, for a change. Well, here's to us; Eh? c5* «5* ^* JIM. The deuce you say ! Dead?— That little cuss? What makes you star' — You over thar? Can't a man drop 'S glass in yer shop But you must rar'? It wouldn't take Denied much to break You and your bar. Dead! Poor — little — Jim ! — Why, there was me, Jones, and Bob Lee, Harry and Ben — No-account men ; Then to take him! Well; thar — Good-bye — No more, sir — I— Eh? What's that you say ? — Why dem it! — sho! No? Yes! By Jo! Sold! Sold! Why, you limb, You ornery, Derned old Long-legged Jim ! — Bret Harte. MISCELLANEOUS. 337 JOE. WE don't take vagrants in, sir, And I am alone to-day, Leastwise, I could call the good man — He's not so far away. You are welcome to a breakfast — I'll bring you some bread and tea; You might sit on the old stone yonder, Under the chestnut tree. You're traveling, stranger? Mebbe You've got some notions to sell? We hev a sight of peddlers, But we allers treat them well, For they, poor souls, are trying, Like the rest of us to live; And its not like tramping the country And calling on folks to give. Not that I meant a word, sir — No offence in the world to you ; I think, now I look at it closer, Your coat is an army blue. Don't say ? Under Sherman, were you ? That was — how many years ago? I had a boy at Shiloh, Kearney — a sergeant — Joe ! Joe Kearney, you might a' met him? But in course you were miles apart, He was a tall, straight boy, sir, The pride of his mother's heart. We were off to Kittery, then, sir, Small farmers in dear old Maine ; It's a long stretch from there to Kansas, But I couldn't go back again. He was all we had, was Joseph ; He and my old man and me Had sort o' growed together, And were happy as we could be. I wasn't a-looking for trouble When the terrible war begun, And I wrestled for grace to be able To give up our only son. Well, well, 'taint no use o' talking, My old man said, said he: "The Lord loves a willing giver ;" And that's what I tried to be. Well, the heart and the flesh are rebels, And hev to be fought with grace But I'd give my life — yes, willin' — To look on my dead boy's face. Take care ! you are spillin' your tea, sir, Poor soul! don't cry; I'm sure You've had a good mother some time — Your wounds, were they hard to cure? Andersonville ! God help you ! Hunted by dogs, did you say? Hospital ! crazy, seven years, sir i I wonder you're living to-day. I'm thankful my Joe was shot, sir, "How do you know that he died?" 'Twas certified, sir, by the surgeon, Here's the letter, and — "mebbe he lied/' Well, I never ! you shake like the ager, My Joe ! there's his name and the date ; "Joe Kearney, 7th Maine, sir, a sergeant — ■ Lies here in a critical state — "Just died — will be buried to-morrow — Can't wait for his pafents to come." Well, I thought God had left us that hour, As for John, my poor man, he was dumb. Didn't speak for a month to his neighbors, Scarce spoke in a week, sir, to me; Never been the same man since that Mon- day They brought us this letter you see. 338 MISCELLANEOUS. And you were from Maine! from old Kit- tery? What time in the year did you go ? I just disremember the fellows That marched out of town with our Joe. Lord love ye ! come into the house, sir ! It's getting too warm out o' door. If I'd known you'd been gone for a soger, I'd taken you here afore. Now make yourself easy. We're humbler, We Kansas folks don't go for show — Set here — it's Joe's chair — take your hat off. "Call father !" My God ! you are Joe ! — Alice Robbins. t2& t5* t£& THE COMING MILLIONS. JIM CROKER lived far in the woods, a solitary place. Where the bushes grew, like whiskers, on his unrazored face; And the black bear was his brother and the catamount his chum, And Jim he lived and waited for the mil- lions yet to come. Jim Croker made a clearing, and he sowed it down to wheat, And he filled his lawn with cabbage and he planted it with beet, And it blossomed with potatoes, and with peach and pear and plum, And Jim he lived and waited for the mil- lions yet to come. Then Jim he took his ancient axe and cleared a forest street, While he lived on bear and succotash and young opossum meat. And his rhythmic axe strokes sounded and the woods no more were dumb, While he cleared a crooked highway for the millions yet to come. Then they came like aimless stragglers, they came from far and near, A little log house settlement grew round the pioneer ; And the sound of saw and broadaxe made a glad industrial hum. Jim said: "The coming millions, they have just begun to come." And a little crooked railway wound round mountain, hill and lake, Crawling toward the forest village like an undulating snake; And one morn the locomotive puffed into the wilderness, And Jim said: "The coming millions, they are coming by express." And the village grew and prospered, but Jim Croker's hair was grayer; When they got a city charter, and old Jim was chosen Mayor; But Jim declined the honor, and moved his household goods Far away into the forest, to the old prime- val woods. Far and far into the forest moved the griz- zled pioneer, There he reared his hut and murmured, "I will build a city here." And he hears the woodfox barking, and he hears the partridge drum, And the old man sits and listens for the millions yet to come. —S. W.Foss. MISCELLANEOUS. 339 KEEP A STIFF UPPER LIP. THE summer wind is sniffin' round the bloomin' locus' trees, And the clover in the pastur' is a big day for the bees, And they been a-swiggin' honey, above- board and on the sly, Till they stutter in their buzzin' and stag- ger as they fly. They's been a heap o' rain, but the sun's out to-day, And the clouds of the wet spell is all cleared away, And the woods is all the greener, and the grass is greener still; It may rain again to-morrow, but I don't think it will. Some say the crops is ruined, and the corn's drownded out, And propha-sy the wheat will be a failure, without doubt; But the kind Providence that has never failed as yet, Will be on hand onc't more at the 'leventh hour, I bet! Does the medder-lark complain, as he swims high and dry, Through the waves of the wind and the blue of the sky? Does the quail set up and whistle in a dis- appointed way, Er hang his head in silence and sorrow all the day? Is the chipmunk's health a failure? Does he walk or does he run? Don't the buzzards> ooze around up there, just like they've alius done? Is there anything the matter with the roos- ter's lungs or voice? Ort a mortal be complainin' when dumb an-' imals rejoice? Then let us, one and all, be contented with our lot; The June is here this morning and the sun is shining hot. Oh, let us fill our hearts with the glory of the day, And banish ev'ry doubt and care and sor- row far away! i Whatever be our station, with Providence for guide, Such fine circumstances ort to make us sat- isfied ; For the world is full of roses, and the roses full of dew, And the dew is full of heavenly, love that drips for me and you. — James Whit comb Riley. (5* e5* (J* THE BEST SEWING-MACHLNE. GOT one? Don't say so! Which did you get? One of the kind to open and shut ? Own or hire it? How much did you pay? Does it go with a crank or a treadle? S-a-y. I'm a single man, and somewhat green ; Tell me about your sewing-machine." "Listen, my boy, and hear all about it : I don't know what I could do without it ; I've owned one now for more than a year, And like it so well that I call it 'my dear ;' 'Tis the cleverest thing that ever was seen, This wonderful family sewing-machine. "It's none of your angular Wheeler things, 340 MISCELLANEOUS. With steel-shod back and cast-iron wings ; Its work would bother a hundred of his, And worth a thousand ! Indeed it is ; And has a way — you need not stare — Of combing and braiding its own back hair ! "Mine is not one of those stupid affairs That stands in a corner with what-nots and chairs And makes that dismal, heachy noise Which all the comfort of sewing destroys ; No rigid contrivance of lumber and steel, But one with a natural spring in the heel. "Mine is one of the kind to love, And wears a shawl and a soft kid glove ; Has the merriest eyes and the daintiest foot, And sports the charmingest gaiter-boot, And a bonnet with feathers, and ribbons, and loops, With any indefinite number of hoops. "None of your patent machines for me, Unless Dame Nature's the patentee ; I like the sort that can laugh and talk, And take my arm for an evening walk ; That will do whatever the owner may choose, With the slightest perceptible turn of the screws ; "One that can dance, and — possibly — flirt ; And make a pudding as well as a shirt ; One that can sing without dropping a stitch, And play the housewife, lady, or witch ; Ready to give the sagest advice, Or to do up your collars and things so nice. "What do you think of my machine? A'n't it the best that ever was seen? 'Tisn't a clumsy, mechanical toy, But flesh and blood ! Hear that, my boy ? With a turn for gossip and household affairs, Which include, you know, the sewing of tears. "Tut, tut, don't talk. I see it all — You needn't keep winking so hard at the wall; I know what your fidgety fumblings mean ; You would like, yourself a sewing-machine ! Well, get one, then, — of the same design, — There were plenty left where I got mine !" ^* ^* fc CABIN PHILOSOPHY. JES' turn de back-log, ober, dar— an' pull your stoo'es up nigher, An* watch dat 'possum cookin' in de skillet by de fire: Lemme spread my legs out on de bricks to make my feelin's flow, An' I'll grin' you out a fac' or two, to take befo' you go. Now, in dese busy wukin' days, dey's changed de Scripter fashions, An' you needn't look to mirakuls to furnish you wid rations ; Now, when you's wantin' loaves o' bread, you got to go and fetch 'em, An' ef you's wantin' fishes, you mus' dig your wums an' ketch 'em ; For you kin put it down as sartin dat the time is long gone by, When sassages an' 'taters use to rain fum out de sky ! Ef yo think about it keerfully, an' put it to the tes', You'll diskiver dat de safes' plan is gin'ully de bes' : MISCELLANEOUS. 31-1 Ef you stumble on a hornet's nes' an' make de critters scatter, You needn't stan' dar like a fool an' argefy de matter ; An' when de yaller fever comes an' settles all aroun', Tis better dan de karanteen to shuffle out o' town ! Dar's heap o' dreadful music in de very fines' fiddle; A ripe an' meller apple may be rotten in de middle ; De wises' lcokin' trabeler may be de bigges' fool; Dar's a lot o' solid kickin' in the humbles' kind o' mule ; De preacher ain't de holies' dat war's de meekes' look, An' does de loudes' bangin' on the kive'r ob de book ! De people pays deir bigges' bills in buyin' lots an' lan's ; Dey scatter all deir picayunes aroun' de peanut stan's ; De twenties an' de fifties goes in payin' orf deir rents, But Heben an' de organ grinder gits de cop- per cents. I neber likes de cullud man dat thinks too much o' eatin' ; But frolics froo de wukin' days, and snoozes at de meetin' ; Dat jines de Temp'ance 'Ciety, an' keeps a gittin' tight, An' pulls his water-millions in de middle ob de night ! Dese milerterry nigger chaps, with muskets in deir han's, Perradin' froo de city to de music ob de ban's, Had better drop deir guns, an' go to marchin' v/id deir hoes An' git a honest libbin' as dey chop de cot- ton-rows, Or de State may put 'em arter while to drillin' in de ditches, Wid more'n a single stripe a-runnin' 'cross deir breeches. Well, you think dat doin' nuffin' 'tall is mighty so' an' nice, But it busted up de renters in de lubly Paradise ! You see, dey bofe was human bein's jes' like me and' you, An' dey couldn't reggerlate deirselves wid not a thing to do; Wid plenty wuk befo' 'em, an' a cotton crop to make, Dey'd nebber thought o' loafin' roun' an' chattin' wid de snake. ^* t?* ^* MR. MEEK'S DINNER. i (■ J WONDER, James," said Airs. Meek, 1 doubtfully, to her husband one morn- ing, "if you could get your own dinner to- night ? You see, I've had to let the servant go on her holidays for a day or two, and they want me desperately at the Woman's Aid and Relief Bazaar, to help them with their high tea from 4:30 to 8:30. If you thought you could manage by yourself — " "I'll try to survive it," observed Mr. Meek, good-naturedly. "I don't fancy it will prove fatal." "I'll get a roast and cook it this morn- ing," went on Mrs. Meek, cheerfully, "and you can have it cold for dinner." "Thank you," replied Mr. Meek, "you'll- do nothing of the kind. I fancy I haven't gone camping pretty much every year of 342 MISCELLANEOUS. my life for nothing. I suspect I can man- age a hot dinner about as well as most women." Mrs. Meek had her doubts, and, unlike most wives, expressed them. Mr. Meek viewed his wife's doubts with supreme contempt, and, unlike most hus- bands, expressed it. Thus it finally resulted that Mrs. Meek abandoned all idea of preparing Mr. Meek's dinner for him and betook herself to the Bazaar. So it resulted furthermore, that Mr. Meek left his office about four o'clock that afternoon, and proceeded to collect on his way home the necessary supplies for a dainty little dinner. An alluring display of chickens was the first thing to catch his eye, and he was just on the point of securing one of them when, by good luck, or more probably through the natural sagacity of the man, he recol- lected that — well, that you don't, as a rule, cook chickens as they are. In the mo- mentary reaction that followed this feat of memory he bought a couple of mutton chops and three tomatoes. "I'll have a good, plain, old-fashioned English dinner," thought he, as he hurried past the deceitful chickens with something almost akin to reproach. "None of your finiky poultry dinners for me!" "By Jove !" he exclaimed a moment later, "I'll have an apple pudding and some oyster soup to begin on." He was so tickled with this idea that he promptly rushed into a grocery shop and purchased half a peck of their best eating apples and then hurried home without a thought of the cab he was to order for his wife at 8 130 sharp. By five o'clock he had the fire going beautifully, and everything ready for a start. By six o'clock he was just beginning to enjoy the thing ; the tomatoes were stew- ing divinely, the potatoes were boiling to their heart's content, and the milk for the oyster soup was simmering contentedly on the back of the stove. The oysters, by- the-by, had not yet arrived. "Dear me," thought the ambitious gen- tleman, "I wish I had thought of it in time, and I'd have had some oyster patties for a sort of final dessert. Hello, what's this? If that everlasting pig-headed woman hasn't left me some cold ham and a custard pie ! By the Lord Harry, for two cents I'd throw the whole thing into the back yard !" The natural docility of his nature, how- ever, prevailed, and he left the obnoxious viands unmolested, and proceeded with his dinner. At 6:30 he put the chops on to broil, "as in the good old days of yore" — this -poetic allusion to the style of cooking being occasioned by one of them accident- ally dropping into the fire, whence he res- cued it with great presence of mind by the joint assistance of the stove lifter and one of the best table napkins. By the time the chop was thus rescued both it and the table napkin were fairly well done — to say noth- ing stronger. This trifling difficulty he got over by putting the erring chop on the win- dow-sill to cool, and the napkin into the fire — to do the other thing. This accomplished, and with one chop gently cooking on the gridiron and the other one cooling on the window-sill, he started to construct the paste for his apple pudding. This proved most fascinating. He placed a large quantity of flour in a small bowl, emptied a jug of water on top of it, added butter to taste, and proceeded to mould it deftly into shape, as he had often seen his wife do. The flour and water promptly forsook the bowl and be- took themselves to his hands. Then the milk for the soup began to burn, just as the potatoes boiled dry. He rushed to the MISCELLANEOUS. 343 rescue and left the major portion of the paste fairly evenly divided between the handles of the two saucepans and the stove lifter. At this juncture the tomatoes start- ed to see if they couldn't surpass the milk in burning. They succeeded. The cat, which was accustomed to a 6:30 dinner, walked off with the chop on the window sill, while the chop on the fire grew beauti- fully black on the "down side." So many things were now burning all at the same time that Mr. Meek gave up all hope of trying to discover just which one was burn- ing most. "Let the plaguy things burn till they're sick of it !" was the extremely broad- minded way in which he summed up the situation. With the astuteness that char- acterized him as distinguished from his fel- low men, he at once gave up all efforts to track the truant paste, and simply popped his apples into the oven to bake. It was now about 7 :30, and the fire was getting hotter than pretty much anything on earth unless, perhaps, it was Mr. Meek. He turned all the dampers, opened all the doors, and took off all the lids. This re- sulted most satisfactorily, and the fire be- gan to cool. It didn't stop. It got, if anything, a little low. After that it got very low. Then it went out. He rushed for a kindling, ai\d nearly took his head off on a clothes-line. Just as he had got nicely through expressing his views on clothes-lines in general, and that clothes- line in particular, he went about twice as far towards taking his head off on the same clothes-line on his way back. The gentlest of natures when roused is often the most terrible. Mr. Meek became very terrible. He used up enough kindling, profanity and coal oil to have ignited the pyramids of Egypt. He stamped and shoved, and poked and banged, and howled and shook till even the cat — and it had had its dinner — was displeased with him, and departed to the outer kitchen to try the oysters, which the dilatory grocer had just deposited on the table without waiting to parley with Mr. Meek. He was a wise grocer and had heard enough. When about five minutes later Mr. Meek discovered that the cat had found the oysters to its taste, he became even less calm. Had the cat been around (but, like the grocer, it had heard enough, and taken an unobtrusive departure) it is highly prob- able that a majority of its nine lives would have come to an abrupt termination. At this stage, to console the unfortunate man, the fire began to go again. Once started it didn't stop. In about five minutes it had burnt up what remained of pretty much everything except a large pot of green tea and a small portion of Mr. Meek. The chop that the cat hadn't eaten was especially well done. It could be quite safely left on the window sill with a whole legion of cats around it. Mr. Meek, however, simply left it in the coal bin. In point of either color or hardness it would have been difficult to have found a more fitting resting place for it. Then there came over Mr. Meek's face a terrible expression. He brought in a pail (it was the scrubbing pail which he had mistaken for the scrap pail, but no matter) and poured the soup carefully into it, throw- ing the pan about five feet, into the sink; next he scraped the potatoes into the same pail, and again another pan followed the course of the first in getting to the sink ; then he poured the tomatoes on top of the potatoes, and still a third pan got to the sink with unusual rapidity. It cannot be definitely stated whether or not Mr. Meek, in doing this, was actuated by the desire to prepare some famous hunter's dish relished in the dear old camping days gone by, but 344 MISCELLANEOUS. certain it is, no sooner did he get the toma- toes nicely on top of the potatoes than he took the whole thing and tossed it, pail and all, into the outer lane. This accomplished, he proceeded to make a meal off the cold ham and some bread and butter — the cooking butter, of course. Just as he was finishing, Mrs. Meek re- turned. "Why, James," she cried, cheer- fully, "you never sent the cab for me and I waited nearly an hour." "No," said her husband, calmly. "I've been terribly busy. Men from New York ■ — just got home a little while ago. This is a very good ham — a shade overdone, though, isn't it?" "Perhaps a shade less wouldn't have hurt it. Let me get you a piece of pie?" "No, thank you! No cold pie for me when there're hot apples in the oven. I'll tell you what you might do; you might bring 'em in if you're not too tired." Mrs. Meek departed on her mission. In a few moments she reappeared, and, with- out moving a muscle, placed the plate of baked apples before her lord and master. They were about the size of walnuts and the color of ebony. Judging by the way they rattled on the plate they were rather harder than flint. Mr. Meek rose with an awful look in his eye. "I'm afraid," observed his wife, "they're like the ham — just a shade overdone." "If ever I catch that cat," remarked Mr. Meek as that sleek feline purred past him with a playful frisk of his tail, "I'll break every bone in its body" — only he described its body with sundry adjectives that were very strange to the ears of Mrs. Meek. At least, so she said when she described the occurrence to her bosom friend, Mrs. Mug- gins, next day. S S OVER THE TELEPHONE. CONSIDER that a conversation by tele- phone — when you are simply sitting by and not taking any part in that conversation is one of the solemnest curiosities of this modern life. Yesterday I was writing a deep article on a sublime philosophical subject while such a conversation was going on in the next room. I notice that one can always write best when somebody is talking through a telephone close by. Well, the thing began in this way. A member of our household came in and asked me to have our house put into communication with Mr. Bagley's down town. I have observed, in many cities, that the gentle sex always shrink from calling up the Cen- tral Office themselves. I don't know why, but they do. So I rang the bell, and this talk ensued : Central office — "What-number-do-you- want ?" I.— "Main ,24-68." C. O.— "Main 2-4-6-3 ?" I.— "No, 2-4-6-8." Then I heard a k-look, k-look, k'look — klook-klook-klook-look-look ! Then a hor- rible "gritting" of teeth, and finally a pip- ing voice : "Hello?" (rising inflection). I.— "Hello, is this Mr. Bagley's?" "Yes, did you wish to speak to me?" Without answering, I handed the receiver to the applicant, and sat down. Then fol- lowed the queerest of all things in the world — a conversation with only one end to it. MISCELLANEOUS. Ol-J You hear questions asked; you don't hear the answer. You hear invitations given ; you hear no thanks in return. You have listening pauses of dead silence, followed by apparently irrelevant and unjustifiable exclamations of glad surprise, or sorrow or dismay. You can't make head or tail out of the talk, because you never hear anything that the person at the other end of the wire says. Well, I heard the following series of remarkable observations, all from the one tongue, and all shouted, — for you can't ever persuade the gentle sex to speak gently into a telephone : "Hello, is that you, Daisy?" Pause. "Yes. Why, how did that happen?" Pause. "What did you say?" Pause. "Oh, no, I don't think it was." Pause. "No! Oh, no, I didn't mean that. I did think of getting it, but I don't believe it will stay in style, and — what? — and Charlie just hates that shade of blue, any- way." Pause. "What's that?" "You wouldn't let him dictate to you, at least before you were married?" Pause. "Why, my dear, how childish ! You don't suppose I'd let him afterwards, do you?" Pause. "I turned it over with a back stitch on the selvage edge." Pause. "Yes, I like that way, too; but I think it better to baste it on with valenciennes, or something of that kind. It gives such an air." Pause. "Yes, you know he did pay some attention to Delia." Pause. "Why, she threw herself right at his head." Pause. "And he told me he always admired me." Pause. "Well, he said it seemed as if he never could get anybody to introduce him." Pause. "Perhaps so; I generally use a hairpin." "What did you say?" (Aside) "Chil- dren, do be quiet !" Pause. "Oh! B flat! Dear me, I thought you said it was the cat !" Pause. "Since when?" Pause. "Why, I never heard of it." Pause. "You astound me! It seems utterly im- possible !" Pause. "Who did?" Pause. "Goodness gracious !" Pause. "Well, what is the world coming to? Was it right in church?" Pause. "And was her mother there?" Pause. "Why, Daisy, I should have died of hu- miliation ! What did they do?" Long pause. "I can't be perfectly sure, because I haven't the notes by me; but I think it goes something like this : To-tolly-loll-loll- lee-ly-li-i-do ! And then repeat, you know." Pause. "Yes, I think it is very sweet — and very 346 MISCELLANEOUS. solemn and impressive, if you get the andantino and the pianissimo right." Pause. "Did he really say that?" Pause. "Yes, I do care for him— what? — but mind you don't tell him I don't want him to know it." Pause. "What?" Pause. "Oh, not in the least — go right on. Papa's here, writing, — it doesn't bother him." Pause. "Very well, I'll come if I can." (Aside) "Dear me, papa, how it does tire a person's arm to hold this thing up so long ! I wish she'd " Pause. "Oh, no, not at all; I like to talk — but I'm afraid I'm keeping you from your af- fairs." Pause. "Visitors?" Pause. "No, we never use butter on them." Pause. "Yes, that is a very good way; but all the cook-books say they are very unhealthy when they are out of season. And papa doesn't like them, anyway, — especially canned." Pause. "Yes, I'm going to the concert with him to-night." "Engaged ? why, certainly not." Pause. "You know, dear, you'd be the very first one I'd tell." Pause. "No, we really are not engaged." Pause. "Must you go? Well, good-bye." Pause. "Yes, I think so. Good-bye." Pause. "Four o'clock, then — I'll be ready. Can Charlie meet us then ?" Pause. "Oh, that's good. • Good-bye." Pause. "Thank you ever so much. Good-bye." Pause. "Oh, not at all ! Just as fresh— which ?" "Oh, I'm glad to hear that. Good-bye." (Hangs up the receiver and says: "Oh, it does tire a person's arm so.") A man delivers a single brutal "Good- bye," and that is the end of it. Not so with the gentle sex — I say it in their praise, they cannot abide abruptness. fcv* ^* ^* THE VOLUNTEER'S UNIFORM. MY papa's all dressed up to-day, He never looked so fine, I thought when I first looked at him, My papa wasn't mine. He's got a beautiful new suit — The old one was so old — It's blue, with buttons, O, so bright, I guess they must be gold. And papa's sort o' glad and sort O' sad — I wonder why? And every time she looks at him It makes my mamma cry. Who's Uncle Sam? My papa says That he belongs to him ; But papa's joking, 'cause he knows My uncle's name is Jim, ■ ,-V i 2 w r * ^ ^k ^1 Mr*****. •» ^•^ i^^^^B ^^^L,* "^ k 1 ii . H i If Xl* ► ri ^w ■# - fe - TL : ^ T^ B9 ¥< **, ' ^s i k r J- ; *S2m& &K|J! ;d Jar* -is. ^J*V^/ */ a' V \ WiTI ! 'WHEN GRANDMA DANCED THE MINUET.' Iff* i ■ *■ lfl V ^b ft. '?•% V ~ . c5 MISCELLANEOUS. 3-19 My papa just belongs to me And mamma. And I guess The folks are blind who cannot see His buttons, marked U. S. U. S. spells us. He's ours — and yet My mamma can't help cry, And papa tries to smile at me And can't. I wonder why? (£• t&& <3* THE CLOSING YEAR. ? T^ IS midnight's holy hour, — and silence 1 now Is brooding like a gentle spirit o'er The still and pulseless world. Hark! on the winds The bell's deep tones are swelling, — 'tis the knell Of the departed year. No funeral train Is sweeping past; yet, on the stream and wood, With melancholy light, the moon-beams rest Like a pale, spotless shroud; the air is stirred As by a mourner's sigh ; and on yon cloud That floats so still and placidly through heaven, The spirits of the seasons seem to stand, — Young Spring, bright Summer, Autumn's solemn form, And Winter with its aged locks, — and breathe, In mournful cadences that come abroad Like the far wind-harp's wild and touch- ing wail, A melancholy dirge o'er the dead year, Gone from the Earth forever. 'Tis a time For memory and for tears. Within the deep, Still chambers of the heart, a spectre dim, Whose tones are like the wizard voice of Time Heard from the tomb of ages, points its cold And solemn finger to the beautiful And holy visions that have passed away, And left no shadow of their loveliness On the dead waste of life. That spectre lifts The coffin-lid of Hope, and Joy, and Love, And, bending mournfully above the pale, Sweet forms, that slumber there, scatters dead flowers O'er what has passed to nothingness. The year Has gone, and, with it, many a glorious throng Of happy dreams. Its mark is on each brow, Its shadow in each heart. In its swift course, It waved its scepter o'er the beautiful, — And they are not. It laid its pallid hand Upon the strong man, — and the haughty form Is fallen, and the flashing eye is dim. It trod the hall of revelry, where thronged The bright and joyous, — and the tearful wail Of stricken ones, is heard where erst the song And reckless shout resounded It passed o'er The battle-plain, where sword, and spear, and shield Flashed in the light of mid-day, — and the strength Of serried hosts is shivered, and the grass, 350 MISCELLANEOUS. Green from the soil of carnage, waves above The crushed and moldering skeleton. It came, And faded like a wreath of mist at eve; Yet, ere it melted in the viewless air, It heralded its millions to their home In the dim land of dreams. Remorseless Time! Fierce spirit of the glass and scythe ! — what power Can stay him in his silent course, or melt His iron heart to pity? On, still on, He presses, and forever. The proud bird, The condor of the Andes, that can soar Through heaven's unfathomable depths, or brave The fury of the northern Hurricane, And bathe his plumage in the thunder's home, Furls his broad wings at nightfall, and sinks down To rest upon his mountain crag, — but Time Knows not the weight of sleep or weari- ness, And night's deep darkness has no chain to bind His rushing pinions. Revolutions sweep O'er earth, like troubled visions o'er the breast Of dreaming sorrow, — cities rise and sink Like bubbles on the water, — fiery isles Spring blazing from the Ocean, and go back To their mysterious caverns, — Mountains rear To heaven their bald and blackened cliffs, and bow Their tall heads to the plain, — new Em- pires rise, Gathering the strength of hoary centuries, And rush down like the Alpine avalanche, Startling the nations, — and the very stars, Yon bright and burning blazonry of God, Glitter a while in their eternal depths, And, like the Pleiad, loveliest of their train, Shoot from their glorious spheres, and pass away To darkle in the trackless void, — Yet, Time, Time, the tomb-builder, holds his fierce career, Dark, stern, all-pitiless, and pauses not Amid the mighty wrecks that strew his path, To sit and muse like other conquerors Upon the fearful ruin he has wrought. — George D. Prentice. A love of nature is inherent in all, and the selections in this department will be found particu- larly adapted to the wishes of children, young and old, who are always interested in the affairs of Mother Nature. t5* ^* <£* EASTER FLOWERS. M ESSAGES of God's dear love Do these flowers bear ; He who with gracious hand Gives these colors rare, Will remember you and me With as true a care. So I bring love's offering On this Easter Day, Flowers fair that to each heart Softly seem to say: "Death no more can over you Hold eternal sway." As the tender plants escaped From the pris'ning mold, So has Christ death's bondage burst, Death so grim and cold. This I think the message true That these blossoms hold. — Clara J. Denton. tS& t3* (5* A LITTLE BOY'S "ESSAY ON KATS." (Regardless of method, and original in spelling.) AKAT is an animile. Ov coarse it iz. Any student of Grammur nose that. Sum kats don't yuze good Grammur. Thare ar tu kinds ov kats, maskuline, and the uther kind. Yu no what that iz. Thare ar black kats, white kats, malteze kats, awlso mixed culurs ov boath jenders. Moast awl kan fite. Sumtimes thay get beet. Usuly thay doant. Thay ar yuzed for doughmestick purr-pussies, except the Kat of Nign Tales. When sircumstances are bad, kats hav two liv on Ratts and Katnipp. Sum fokes yews katnipp as a bevurij. Eye doant. Kats have fasillytiz for mewzik. Eye saw nign kats under mie windur wun nite. Eye thawt thay wur the nign mewses. Eye gess thay war. It sounded sow. Once in a while thay wood taik a rest. A rest denoats a mewzical silents. Thay wur quarter-rests, I guess. Eye tried to taik a rest, but Eye coodn't. Finully, eye through the water-pitchur out the win- dur. That had sum effekt. It broak the pitchur. Eye must hav lade awaik thurtie or fortie owrz, when the klok struk wun. Eye hoaped it wuld skair them aweigh, but it didn't. Eye through a chare at them. Eye gess it hit 'em all, and kind ov en- kurijed them. Thay went and browt a lot ov moar kats, eye gess. Sow eye laiy in bed, waiting for mornin to kum. It wuz 35i 352 LITTLE NATURE STUDIES. geting coled, and a happy thawt struck me. Eye put down the windur. Eye awlso re- tired tu a room on the opozit sighed ov the hows, up stares. Finally eye saw a goast. It wuz a white kat, with a black i, siting in the windur. Then eye went two slepe. In the morning eye got up, and what dew yew sopohs eye saw ? Why, eye saw a chare and a lot uv water-pitchur outsighed the win- dur. What puzuls owr hole family iz how it cairn thare. Doant yew evur tell. Lizzy Taylor found a kitun undur her desk the uthur day. I wundur if sum teecher put it thare to skair her. She didn't faint, thoh, and neethur did the kitun. t5* (5* <5* IF I WERE A FLOWER." IF I were a flower, fair, I would try to bloom At Easter-tide, and scatter Sweetest of perfume. For on the Easter morning, Night was turned to Day, When the angels from the tomb Rolled the stone away. And now, we fear no longer Death and all its tears, We shall with the Savior live Through the countless years. So, if I were a flower, I would for Easter grow, And that life must conquer death, Would my beauty show. — Clara- J. Denton. X0& t£pl t&* A BIRD STORY. (For Christian Endeavor entertainment.) FOUR little birds in a nest too small, Only one mamma to care for all ; 'Twas twitter and chirp the livelong day, No wonder the mammas soon grew gray. Papa-bird was a dashing fellow, Coat of black with a flash of yellow ; Never a bird in the early spring Could rival him when he chose to sing. He helped the mamma-bird hang the nest Where the winds would rock it the very best, And while she sat on her eggs all day, He'd cheer her up with a roundelay. But when from each egg in the swinging bed, A little birdie popped its head, He said to his wife, "I've done my share Of household duties; they're now your care." Then off he'd go to a concert fine In the apple trees and bright sunshine, Without a thought of the stupid way His poor little wife must pass her day. At last the mamma-bird fell ill, And the papa was forced, against his will, To take her place with the birdies small, Ready to answer their chirp and call. Sorry day for the wretched fellow, Dressed so gay with a scarf of yellow ! Shut in the house from morning till night, Was ever a bird in such a plight ? LITTLE NATURE STUDIES. 353 Tie on a hood, or fasten a shoe, Or mend a dolly as good as new, Or tell a story over again, Or kiss the finger that had a pain. , Or settle dispute of which and who, Or sew on a button to baby's shoe — These were a part of the calls he had In that single day to drive him mad. At even he said, "Another day Would turn my goldenest plume to gray; & Or else, in a fit of grim despair, I'd fling these children into the air I" Have I mixed up birds with human folks? And homes with nests in the lofty oaks? The story is true, and I overheard Those very words of the papa-bird ; But who he was, and where he did dwell, I'll never, no never, no never tell ! The truth for once is truth for aye, And this is the reason mammas grow gray. — Mrs. Maggie B. Peeke. BOB-O'-LINK. MERRILY swinging on brier and weed, Near to the nest of his little dame, Over the mountain-side or mead, Robert of Lincoln is telling his name ; Bob-o'-link, bob-o'-link, Spink, spank, spink; Snug and safe is that nest of ours, Hidden among the summer flowers, Chee, chee, chee. Robert of Lincoln is gayly dressed, Wearing a bright black wedding coat ; White are his shoulders and white his crest, Hear him call in his merry note ; Bob-o'-link, bob-o'-link, Spink, spank, spink, Look what a nice new coat is mine, Sure there was never a bird so fine, Chee, chee, chee. Robert of Lincoln's Quaker wife, Pretty and quiet, with plain brown wings, Passing at home a patient life, Broods in the grass while her husband sings, Bob-o'-link, bob-o'-link, Spink, spank, spink; Brood, kind creature ; you need not fear Thieves and robbers, while I am here. Chee, chee, chee. Modest and shy as a nun is she, One weak chirp is her only note, Braggart and prince of braggarts is he, Pouring boasts from his little throat ; Bob-o'-link, bob-o'-link, Spink, spank, spink; Never was I afraid of man ; Catch me, cowardly knaves, if you can. Chee, chee, chee. Six white eggs on a bed of hay, Flecked with purple, a pretty sight ! There as the mother sits all day, Robert is singing with all his might ; Bob-o'-link, bob-o'-link, Spink, spank, spink; Nice good wife, that never goes out, Keeping house while I frolic about. Chee, chee, chee. Soon as the little ones chip the shell Six wide mouths are open for food ; Robert of Lincoln bestirs him well, Gathering seed for the hungry brood Bob-o'-link, bob-o'-link, Spink, spank, spink; This new life is likely to be Hard for a gay young fellow like me. Chee, chee, chee. 354 LITTLE NATURE STUDIES. Robert of Lincoln at last is made Sober with work and silent with care Off is his holiday garment laid, Half forgotten, that merry air, Bob-o'-link, bob-o'-link, Spink, spank, spink; Nobody knows but my mate and I Where our nest and our nestlings lie. Chee, chee, chee. Summer wanes ; the children are grown ; Fun and frolic no more he knows ; Robert of Lincoln's a humdrum crone ; Off he flies, and we sing as he goes ; Bob-o'-link, bob-o'-link, Spink, spank, spink; When you can pipe that merry old strain, Robert of Lincoln, come back again. Chee, chee, chee. — William Cullen Bryant. iE& tS* tS* FORGET-ME-NOT. A LOVELY little flow'ret Blooms on our meadow green; Its eye, just like the heaven, So blue and clear, is seen. Although you hear no voices In that far lonely spot, The flower is something saying: It says, "Forget me not !" So, when I see two dear eyes So shining and so blue, I think of our green meadow And of my flow'ret too. My heart then something sayeth- Oh, can you tell me what ? All timidly and softly It says, "Forget me not !" t£& (5* ^* A SERMON IN FLOWERS. JUST beyond this field of clover, in a pasture rough and rocky, Where the golden-rod and thistles and the trailing woodbine grow, There, one day, I heard this sermon, most pathetically simple, Yet so fraught with truth and wisdom that it set my heart aglow : "I am just a little flower, — just the plainest, wildest flower, Growing here upon a rock, with very lit- tle soil or shade; I am stunted, pale and crooked, — quite un- like my brothers yonder, With their tall, green stalks and yellow plumes that never droop nor fade. "But I care not; He who planted knew just how much soil and sunshine, How much rain and wind were needful to unfold the flower He planted, So He gave them, and I grew, to tell my story with its lesson ; What am I, that I should murmur at His wise and just command ? "Quite enough for me to know that I am just as He designed me; So I never lose my joy in sighs for what I might have been; God looks down in love and mercy — I look up in perfect trusting, And I love the earth and air, the pain as well as joy therein." LITTLE NATURE STUDIES. 355 Man may sing a song most sweetly, which his inmost soul despises ; He may preach a sermon boldly, which his heart has never known ; All have sinned — and this sad knowledge makes us loth to look for guidance To ourselves or to our brothers — and we cannot walk alone. But a bird can thrill a message, or a thunder-burst proclaim it, Far beyond the faintest shade of doubt, with meaning, full and broad; And the modest little wild flowers, though we crush them with our footsteps, Bruised and dying, preach their sermon, and we know it comes from God. — Ad die F. Davis. %2& c?* *5* AN APRIL WELCOME. COME up, April, through the valley, In your robes of beauty drest, Come and wake your flowery children From their wintry beds of rest ; Come and overthrow them softly With the sweet breath of the south ; Drop upon them, warm and loving, Tenderest kisses of your mouth. Call the crowfoot and the crocus, Call the pale anemone, Call the violet and the daisy, Clothed with careful modesty; Seek the low and humble blossoms, Of their beauties unaware, Let the dandelion and fennel Show their shining, yellow hair. Bid the little homely sparrows Chirping in the cold and rain, Their important sweet complaining Sing out from their hearts again ; Bid them set themselves to nesting, Cooing love in softest words, Crowd their nest, all cold and empty, Full of little callow birds. — Phebe Cary. t^w ^* w* MORN ON THE MOUNTAINS. THERE is beauty in this world of ours for him with eyes to see, There are beauty smiles at harvest on the prairies broad and free, There is beauty in the forest, there is beauty on»the hills, There is beauty in the mottled light that gleams along the rills, And a beauty out of heaven over all the landscape spills When the sun shines on the mountains in the morning. There is beauty where the ocean rolls ma- jestic on the shore, There is beauty in the moonlight as it gleams the waters o'er, There is beauty in the sunrise where the clouds blush rosy red, There is beauty in the sunset with its ban- ners flung o'erhead, And a beauty past expression o'er the snowy peaks is shed When the sun shines on the mountains in the morning. There is beauty when the green returns and glistens in the showers, There is beauty in the summer, as she gar- lands earth with flowers, 356 LITTLE NATURE STUDIES. There is beauty in the autumn, with the mellow afterglow, There is beauty in the winter, with this dia- dem of snow, But a beauty more enchanting than the sea- sons ever know Gilds the sunshine on the mountains in the morning. There is beauty in the rainbow as it gleams above the storm, There is beauty in the sculptor's vision frozen into form, There is beauty in the prophet's dream and in the poet's thought, There is beauty in the artist's rapture on the canvas wrought, ^* t5* <3* But a beauty more divine than art can ever tell is caught From the sunshine oh the mountains in the morning. Oh, the sunshine on the mountains ! How a golden web is spun O'er the topmost peaks that glisten from the yet unrisen sun. With their bases yet in shadow, but their faces glowing bright, With their foreheads turned to heaven and their locks so snowy white, They are high priests of the sunrise, they are prophets of the light, With the sunshine smiling o'er them in the morning. A STRING OF BIRDS' EGGS. WHO knows Hebrew? Greek? Who the tongue the birdies speak? Here's a set of meanings hid As records on a pryamid. What is meant by all these freckles, Bluish blotches, brownish speckles? (A short sermon on ornithology.) Who knows "Chattering braggart, crested thief, Jester to the woods in chief, Dandy gay in brilliant blue, Cruel glutton, coward, too, Screaming, gleaming rogue shall be The little bird that sleeps in me !" These are words, in cipher printed, On each egg-shell faintly tinted; Changeless laws the birds must heed, What if I should try to read ? On the Oriole's, scratched and scarred, This to trace I find not hard : "Breasted bright as trumpet flower; Builder of a swinging bower, Airest dwelling ever seen In the elm-trees' branches green; Careless caroler shall be The little bird that sleeps in me." On the Blue Jay's greenish gray, Dottings fine would seem to say: On Bob Lincoln's browny-white This is writ, if I read right: "Gallant lover in the clover, With his gladness bubbling over; Waltzes warbling liquid notes, — Yes, and one that hath two coats ! Nimble, neat, and blithe shall be The little bird that sleeps in me !" On the King-bird's creamy-hued Runs this legend : "Sulky, nude, Tiny tyrant, winged with black, Big of head and gray of back, Teaser of the hawk and crow, And of flies the deadly foe, — Short and sharp of note shall be The little bird that sleeps in me." LITTLE NATURE STUDIES. 357 On the Mockbird's bluish green, In spot and blot these words are seen : "Prince of singers, sober clad, Wildly merry, wildly sad, Mocking all the feathered throng, Bittering still each bird's own song,- Madcap mocker he shall be, The little bird that sleeps in me !" ^* (5* t3& HOPPER AND BEE. A GRASSHOPPER met a bumblebee In a field of sweet red clover. "Oh, why this flurry and haste?" cried he; "I've brought my fiddle along with me. Let's dance till the summer's over!" "I'm gathering stores for the winter time," The bee cried over his shoulder. "I like your fiddling, it is sublime ; But, living here in this changeable clime, I must think of days that are colder." The grasshopper laughed in a mocking way, As gayly he flourished his fiddle ; A troop of butterflies, merry and gay, Danced in a ring through the livelong day, While the grasshopper stood in the mid- dle. The bumblebee, too, was fond of a dance, And the day was hot for working, But he never gave them a second glance And hastened away (if near them by chance), For he knew the danger of shirking ! He gathered his stores through the sunny hours And felt that his pleasures were coming ; He felt that soon there would be no flowers, He knew that in winter the cold sky lowers, And he kept up a cheerful humming. The cold winds came, and the days grew dark, And frozen were flower and berry ; The fiddler and dancers lay stiff and stark In lonely graves, with never a mark, But the wise little bee made merry. 35S LITTLE NATURE STUDIES. DAISIES. OVER the shoulders and slopes of the dune I saw the white daisies go down to the sea, A host in the sunshine, an army in June, The people God sends us to set our hearts free. The bobolinks rallied them up from the dell, The orioles whistled them out of the wood: And all of their singing was, "Earth, it is well!" And all of their dancing was, "Life, thou art good !" ONE DAY. OCOME, sweet wind of the South, In the arms of awakening spring; You have kissed the violet's mouth, Ere she hid it, the sly little thing ; You have kissed the blossoming violet's mouth. And her perfume kisses bring. Oh, gay little dancing stream, Whose waves with the sunbeams play ; From the land of a beautiful fairy's dream, Did your silvery music stray — From the land of a fairy's dream To float to the earth and stay? O, white clouds floating on high, Far up in the heavenly blue — The joyous blue of the sky, The blossoming spring's own hue, Bend tenderly out of the sweet blue sky, For the flowers are calling you. SEE the meadows white with daisies, Hear the Bob o'Lincoln's song, While he passes through the grasses, While he sings the whole day long. Daisies, daisies, daisies white, Meadows white with daisies ; Bob o', Bob o,' Bob o' bright, Singing sweet June's praises. A DAY IN JUNE. See the meadows white with clover, Hear our robin redbreast's song. While he flashes through the ashes, While he sings the boughs among. Clover, clover, clover white, Meadows white with clover; Robin, robin, now it's night, Day of June is over. t&& i3& *5* SONG OF THE GRASS BLADES. PEEPING, peeping, here and there, In lawns and meadows everywhere, Coming up to find the spring And hear the robin redbreast sing ; Creeping under children's feet, Glancing at the violets sweet ; Growing into tiny bowers, For the dainty meadow flowers : We are small, but think a minute Of a world with no grass in it. < Clever Monologues > The selections in this department give the speaker unusual opportunities for a display of elocutionary, vocal and dramatic powers. SYLVY HOOK ON CLUBS AND SOCIETIES. Scene. — An ordinary room; Sylvy discov- ered sewing; knock at door; she opens it, and addresses her supposed visitor; this continues throughout the recitation, which can be acted in full, or the move- ments only assumed, as best suits the speaker. WHY, how do you do, Mis' Wise? Come right in and set down. It's a miser'ble day to be out, aint it? The wind is real searchin' an' it aint let up rainin' sense mornin'. Here, let me take your umbrella and put it in the sink to drain. You aint very well? Well, I thought you looked kinder pindlin'. What's the mat- ter? Haint been workin' too hard, have you ? Oh, want to know ! been tryin' to im- prove your mind by follerin' up lit'rary pur- suits, eh ? Land knows I pity you, for that does take hold of a body. No, no, thank you, Mis' Wise, but nothin' would indooce me to jine any society, new or old, I aint tuff enough. What say? You b'long to 'leven diffrunt ones? Well, I don't wonder you've lost flesh ! No, I prob'ly shall never b'long to another so- ciety, as long as I live ! I've jest resigned from the only one I ever did b'long to. Unpin your shawl and take your bunnit off. You might as well spend the after- noon, now that you're here. It's real kind of you to want me to jine your new society, but, as I said before, I couldn't, nohow. What makes me so bitter agin 'em? Why, don't you know the ex- perience I've been through, this winter? No? Well, I thought the hull town knew it; for I expect I acted kinder hasty. It runs in our family not to stand too much naggin', 'specially on mother's side. I shouldn't wonder if I took my disposition from Aunt Silvy. She was kinder touchy, when she thought she was bein' put on, and I — but, land sake, what's the use of resur- rectin' the dead, an' pickin' 'em to pieces. I started in to tell you what made me appear so sorter crabbed like 'bout clubs an' socie- ties. Well, one day, early in the fall, Mis' Meachem came over and told me what a good time they was a-havin' at a new, secret society that had jest been started, and how she was President of it, and she said they was improvin' their minds awful fast, be- sides bein' pledged to stan' by each other through thick an' thin. They had grand good suppers and, once in two weeks, they had entertainments, where they sung, spoke pieces and had a real sociable, helpful time. She run on so that I got real carried away about it and asked her to take in my name. I didn't know but what I should be black-balled, for Loizy Lang never could abide me sence I took the prize on riz bread, at the fair, two years ago. Howsumever, there wasn't a vote agin me, an' a few weeks later, I was 'nitiated. I aint the one as would tell secrets, if I did get mad, so I aint goin' to say anythin' about the ins an' outs of that society, only this much I am free to say: They promise as solemn as anythin' can be, to be like sisters to one 359 360 CLEVER MONOLOGUES. 'nother, an' not say or do nothin' that would wilfully hurt one 'nother's feelin's. I'd been to several suppers, an' each time they all said I carried the best cake, an' I stayed an' washed the dishes every time I went. Well, one Monday, Charity Dean came over an' said as how I was to be on the program for next lit'rary meetin'. "Land sake !" said I, "I can't sing, nor play the pianner, or do nothin'. You must count me out." "We won't do nothin' of the sort. You kin speak a piece," says she. "Speak a piece !" says I, "why I aint done sech a thing as that sence I was knee high to a toad." Then she said somethin' 'bout shirkin', an' how that we was all sisters an' well-disposed to one 'nother, an' finally I consented to do my best. I found an old scrap-book up in the attic an' I picked out a piece of po'try that sounded ruther elevatin', an' I tell you, Mis' Wise, I worked like a nailer, for the next fortnit. I'd ruther a-weeded the onion bed (an' that's back-achin' work) a dozen times than larnt that piece ; but I got it, word for word. Then I took my old gray alapaca and colored it blue. It looked real stylish, 'specially the bask. Well ! when the evenin' came, I was on hand as early as any of 'em. Malviny Sweet sang a touchin' little song, and Mis' Salter's oldest girl played a piece on the fiddle. Funny thing for a girl to learn, aint it? I suppose it was good, for they cheered her back twice. I couldn't make out no tune to • it, and three or four times I thought she was goin' to break down, for her hand shook so. Then they called on me, an' I picked up my book an' started down the hall, deter- mined to try an' please 'em; but I hadn't got half way to the platform before I heard some one say: "Ain't she a show!" I dropped my handkerchief, an' when I stooped to pick it up, Sally Rines said I "waddled like a duck," an' Mis' Meachem, who asked me to jine, said to Mis' Kindly, loud enough for me to hear, that she didn't think I would be willin' to make such a fool of myself ! Well, my face was as red as fire by the time I took the stand, an' I never was madder in my life, but I was bound to speak that piece or perish in the attempt ! I started in an' spoke every verse. It was a solemn kind of piece, about a boy who was burned up on a ship ruther than leave the spot where his father had told him to stay. Nothin' very funny about that ; but that crowd giggled an' laffed as if I was a hull minstrel show, makin' jokes for 'em. After I got through, they cheered an' stamped like mad. I didn't leave the plat- form, so they thought I was goin' to speak agin, so they quieted down, an' I says: "Mis' President an' members of this society, I'd like to say a few words that aint printed in no book, so I didn't learn 'em. I bleeve there is somethin' in your by-laws that charges every sister to be true to one 'nother, an' if any one fails in her duty an' wilfully injures the feelin's of a feller sis- ter, a forfeit can be imposed on to her by the said injured party. I've lived up to them rules sence I jined this society, an' I aint got very rich out of it neither. To be sure I've had some good suppers, but I could have cooked jest as good an' et 'em to home. When I promised to speak a piece to-night it wasn't for glory or money, but because I wouldn't shirk my dooty. I heard Sister B talk about my dress, an' Sister R doesn't like the way I walk, while Sister M hates to see me make a fool of my- self. Now, accordin' to your statoots, I de- mand that them sisters get up on this plat- form an' entertain me. Let me see if they CLEVER MONOLOGUES. 361 can do any better than I've done. I s'pose Sister B has forgot the time when we was gals, an' she borrowed my red cash- mere dress to wear to a dance at Gill's Cor- ner. People are apt to forgit, as they git on in years; an' I presume I didn't waddle when Sister R asked me to run for a doctor, the night her Johnnie had the croup ; but we'll let these things pass ; only, to be fair an' square an' to live up to them by- laws, Mis' President, I demand that those sisters speak me a piece." You don't bleeve I said it? Well, I did, as true as my name is Sylvy Hook ! an' the president had to ask 'em to do as I said, but, of course, they wouldn't do it ; jest got mad an' resigned. I did, too, so you see the society aint as big as 'twas, but perhaps it'll set 'em to thinkin' that by-laws is by-laws, an' we're all human critters an' don't enjoy bein' tromped on. But, land sake ! it's five o'clock an' I want to make some cream biscuits for supper. I know you like 'em, so, if you'll jest excuse me, I'll step out into the kitchen an' get 'em into the oven. Make yourself to home now an' I'll be back in a few minutes. — Belle Marshall Locke. t£fr (£• t5* THE HYPOCHONDRIAC. GOOD-MORNING, Doctor; how do you do? I hain't quite so well as I have been ; but I think I'm some better than I was. I don't think that last medicine you gin me did me much good. I had a terrible time with the earache last night; my wife got up and drapt a few draps of walnut sap into it, and that relieved it some; but I didn't get a wink of sleep till nearly day- light. For nearly a week, Doctor, I've had the worst kind of a narvous headache; it has been so bad sometimes that I thought my head would bust open. Oh, dear! I sometimes think that I'm the most afflicted- est human that ever lived. Since this cold weather . sot in that troublesome cough, that I have had every winter for the last fifteen year, has began to pester me agin. {Coughs.) Doctor, do you think you can give me anything that will relieve this desprit pain I have in my side ? Then I have a crick at times in the back of my neck, so that I can't turn my head without turning the hull of my body. {Coughs.) Oh, dear! What shall I do? I have consulted almost every doctor in the coun- try, but they don't any of them seem to un- derstand my case. I have tried everything that I could think of; but I can't find any- thing that does me the leastest good. ( Coughs. ) Oh, this cough — it will be the death of me yet! You know I had my right hip put out last fall at the rising of Deacon Jones' saw-mill; it's getting to be very troublesome just before we have a change of weather. Then I've got the sciatica in my right knee, and sometimes I'm so crip- pled up that I can hardly crawl around in any fashion. What do you think that old white mare of ours did while I was out plowing last week? Why, the weacked old critter, she kept a backing and backing, ontil she backed me right up agin the colter, and knock'd a piece of skin off my shin nearly so big. {Coughs.) But I had a worse misfortune than that the other day, Doctor. You see it was washing-day — and my wife wanted me to 362 CLEVER MONOLOGUES. go out and bring in a little stove-wood — you know we lost our help lately, and my wife has to wash and tend to everything about the house herself. I knew it wouldn't be safe for me to go out — as it was a-raining at the time — but I thought I'd risk it, anyhow. So I went out, picked up a few chunks of stove-wood, and was a-coming up the steps into the house when my feet slipped from under me and I fell down as sudden as if I'd been shot. Some of the wood lit upon my face, broke down the bridge of my nose, cut my upper lip and knocked out three of my front teeth. I suffered dreadfully on account of it, as you may suppose, and my face ain't well enough yet to make me fit to be seen, 'specially by the women folks. (Coughs.) Oh, dear ! but that ain't all, Doctor ; I've got fifteen corns on my toes — and I'm afeard I'm a-going to have the "yeller janders." ( Coughs. ) Dr. Valentine. UGH! ugh— oh! If I only could Make this old leg go ! What 't tiz — Rhoomatiz, Er suthin' else, — Doctors now, they dun know ; There, / do b'lieve This ol' leg can go! • • •• Now, ef Sally Ann Sh'd stay 'way Long nuf, B'lieve I'd try, an' try, All day. There, That aint so bad ! ( Scat ! Sca-at ! Con-found that cat Hangin' roun' ! Guess I'm narvus.) H*uh — what's that soun'? P'r'aps I'd best be settlin' down, For — what if Sally Ann should Come back Suddin-like, an' see me Gallavantin' roun', An' sh'u'd say: t5* «5* t5* RHOOMATIZ OR SUTHIN' ELSE. (A monologue.) "Tim'thy Smith, Ef you can walk I guess you could Chop wood!" That way — Tho' 'taint her way; But — then — this here stitch I' my side, An' this pain — un hitch In my back! Kin straighten up more'n I thought, tho' ! So-o-o ! Why e-e ? Why, wouldn't it be a joke on me Ef Sally Ann's right when She laughs an' sez That "a man's twict as like to set, An' set, an' set, Ez a hen " She jes' said 't fur fun, tho'; Talkin' o' some one else — not me! She aint that kind — no-o ! Huh, ho, oh — There 'tis ag'in, That pain ! What? Come in! Thought I heerd suthin', — CLEVER MONOLOGUES. 3G3 Nothin' but the win', — Guess it's blowin' up a rain! Hope now Sally Ann won't git wet, Er fret Fur fear her ol', Good-fur-nothin' man 'LI ketch col'— Jes' like Sally Ann ! Ye-es, jes' — like — Sally Ann! 'N mebby I haint bin Won'er she don't git turb'l tired out Workin' Year out an' year in ! Yes, an' gittin' thin, An' peaked like. This time 'tis some 'n drivin up, — Brown ! Comin' here — Hitchin' his horse? Kinder queer ; he '11 think this queer, Me standin' here, — But I swan I don' keer What he thinks or knows ! Jes' — su'pose (I'm puttin' it to m'self) / had gi'n up too easy like! Mebby the idee Wouldn't strike er shock Some folks as 'twould me! Hum — well, — Come in! Don' wait t' knock! Ye-es, I'm up — tryin' my stren'th ; Hope I'm feelin' pretty strong — cause- Cause what ? You say "I'd be a poor lot Without Sally Ann?" Brown ! Man Don't tell me! Where's m' hat? Don' tell me — that — that — Or I'll knock y' down. Laughin'? You "hed to"— the idee Uv me Knockin' uv you er enny one down ? I wuz — never min' — what o' that — I mean what o' her, Brown ? Jes' "hurt — some?" An' y'r wife thought seein' I wuz lame Y'd better? So you come T' carry me to Sally Ann ? Thank — you— We can go quicker that way. But — SAY Brown, ef Sally Ann once gits back here She'll set, not me, in that there cheer From then till nex' year ! Y'r laughin' agin? Aint hurt as bad's that? That's good — good! But / be Brown ! To think I've sot there An' let her split kin'lin wood, An' do the chores, When mabby I could — I don' know's I could ; But mebby 'f I'd thought I could, / could — better'n she could! Yes, yes! Kind o' you to say "Never min' that t' day" — But / do, Brown! Sho — oh — oh/ (bracing himself) Never min' my leg — Le's go ! le's go ! A FORTNIGHT LATER. Don' this seem good To be back hum ? I vum, It seems some like livin' ag'in To see you, Sally Ann, here, In that ol' cheer ! O' course, Brown's folks can't be beat Fer hospitality ! Thet wife o' hisen's jist ez neat 'S you be ! An' as pleasant-like tew ! Don't al'ys go together, — Mos' al'ys squally weather, 364 CLEVER MONOLOGUES. Ha, ha, where y' can almost eat Off'n the floor I" There, I mustn't talk any more Jes' now ; You go on tellin' me how To make bread ; When all's said I orto know how ; . Watchin' of you do an' do, I've sed to m'se'f A hundred an' fifty times, I guess : "Look there ! Who'd think that sticky lot O' water an' the rest, She'd turn into the best Bread ever any one see!" Law me, You'r laughin' at me Jest as you did, — D' you remember zvhen, Sally Ann? Wan't them apple trees pink that spring? An' how them birds did sing ! An' how I watched from under that tree Fur t' see How that rich feller looked when he Rode away From your house that day. Looked ? Well, I guess ! He didn't see me, — Nor nothin' ! But I see him From back o' a limb Full o' flowers; An' how them birds did sing — Like — like anything! He didn't notice 'em, — They sung for me! Them wuz happy hours, Wa'n't they, Sally Ann ! {Aside.) There, she's laughin' agi'n, — She's goin' to git well, I know. Where's the water an' the flour — •_ An', an' — the dish an' th' spoon — B'lieve / could jump over the moon, [Slaps his leg and attempts to jump. Fur, rhoomatiz or whatever 'tiz, This ol' leg can go I — E. S. Stillwell. t5* ^* t*7* AUNTY DOLEFUL CHEERS THE SICK. HOW do you do, Cornelia? I heard you were sick, and I stopped in to cheer you up a little. My friends often say : "It's such a comfort to see you, Aunty Doleful. You have such a flow of conver- sation and are so lively." Besides, I said to myself as I came up the stairs : "Perhaps this is the last time I'll ever see Cornelia Jane alive." You don't mean to die yet, eh? Well, now, how do you know? You can't tell. You think you're gettin' better, but there was poor Mrs. Jones sitting up, and every one saying how smart she was, and all of a sudden she was taken with spasms in the heart and went off like a flash. But you must be careful and not get excited. Keep quite calm, and don't fret about anything. Of course, things can't go just as if you was down-stairs ; and I wondered whether you knew your little Billy was sailing about in a tub on the mill-pond, and that your little Sammy was letting your little Jimmy adown from the veranda roof in a clothes basket. Goodness ! What's the matter ? I guess Providence '11 take care of 'em; don't look so. You thought Bridget was watchin' CLEVER MONOLOGUES. 365 them ? No ; I saw her talking to a man at the gate. He looks to me like a burglar. There was a family at Knob Hill last week all killed for fifty dollars. Yes, indeed. Now, don't fidget so ; it will be bad for the baby. Poor little dear! How sing'lar it is, to be sure, that you can't tell whether a child is blind, or deaf and dumb, or a cripple, at that age. It might be all and you'd never know it. Most of them that have their senses make bad use of* them, though ; that ought to be your comfort, if it does turn out to have anything dreadful the matter with it. How is Mr. Knobble? Well, but finds it warm in town, eh? Well, I should think he would. They are dropping down by hundreds there from sunstroke. You must prepare your mind for anything. Then, a trip on these railroad trains is just a-riskin' your life every time you take one. Back and forth as he is, it's just a-triflin' with danger. Don't forget now, Cornelia, that the doctor said you must keep calm. Dear! dear! now to think what dreadful things hang over us all the time! Oh, dear! Scarlet fever has broken out in the village, Cornelia. Little Isaac Porter has it, and I saw your Jimmy playing with him last Saturday. Well, I must be going now. I've got an- other sick friend, and I shan't think my duty done unless I cheer her up a little be- fore I sleep. Good-bye. How pale you look, Cornelia. I don't believe you have a good doctor. Do send him away and get somebody else. You don't look as well as you did when I came in. If anything happens send for me at once. If I can't do anything else I can cheer you up a little. — Mary Kyle Dallas. (5* t5* «5* THE MASQUERADE. (A dramatic monologue; to be given either as conditions, or in full court costume, with I FEEL like quite a gay young sport again In this costume of which I was so vain ! It fits to-night very snug in places ; Ah, well, time changes both our forms and faces. This is my first masquerade ball since — Why will that one face come before me, Flitting out and in among the throng Like a will-o'-the-wisp ? I was a gay young coxcomb then ; how Years leave their gray shadow on one's brow! Then I filled life's gleaming crystal glass With pleasure, letting some golden chances pass. Butterflies and moths — disregarding sex — an impersonation by suggesting the various stage-setting and suitable properties.) Will seek the flowers where radiance re- flects. When first I stood before my mirror and this Coat was new, with what fastidious ac- curacy I set my wig aright. Each wave and puff must stand in certain place, To lend seductive charm to youthful face. The lace that clung in snowy whiteness then around my hands Has yellowed with Time's passing sands. Ha, Ha, I'll never forget Bronson that night ; he was my guest ; 3GG CLEVER MONOLOGUES. The costume that he wore, — that of a cow- boy from the West. He looked the part, and he used to blush and start At" sound of certain steps outside the door ; Blushed, but I could judge from nothing more. When ready, I in courtly guise, He with a daring flash within his eyes, Proposed I should teach him the new step We were to dance that night in the minuet. With what a lordly, overweening grace I set for him the proper pace (imitating). Just in the midst of outward glide, My chamber door flung open wide, Where, laughing fit to kill, Stood my old black servant, Dill. "Well done, Massa Don, Youse'll win de prize if yo' keep on ! Pomp said, 'tell young massa de carriage wait, And it am growin' berry late.' " "How do you like me, Dill ?" I cried, (From boyhood I had been her pride.) "Oh, Massa Don, you look — Ho, ho ! jes' like a picture from a book. Sho, honey, 'twould not poor old Dill sur- prise, If some young missy link likewise." Then Bronson threw his cloak around his form, And I my mantle rich and warm — Where has Tom put those roses (search- ing) ? She, too, was fond of crimson posies. To-night I'll carry them in memory Of when she was more than all the world to me. Bah ! Why do all these misty velvets and laces Remind me so of long gone faces ? My hat (looking about), — ah, here it. is, — A trifle worn and wrinkled like my phiz. Gad ! I don't walk with quite the stride I used to in those my days of pride. The thoughts of music and the flowers Turn back the pages of the hours. There, a buckle's missing from my shoe ; > Tom doesn't watch things like he used to do. Nay; that reminds me. 'Twas midnight, — - Almost the hour to lift the masks, not quite. We had flirted, chatted, danced, Until she held me quite entranced. Bronson had tried his best to cut me out, Until I thought him quite a beastly lout. 'Twas she, I knew. No other feet Could fit a number one complete ; No other form so rounded quite, As this, the sparkling queen of night. I knew her, but would not betray, For I, too, had a part to play. I'd loved her years ; had promised long That from this night she would to me be- long. 'Twas by the fountain where flowers sweet, Made dream of love the more complete. I held her hand, then sinking on my knee, Spoke, while my heart thrilled tenderly : "Hortense, I love you madly, will you " Then pierced the silence through and through, The call, "Masks off, the hour has come !" Then — well, I was stricken dumb ! For there before me, wreathed in smiles, Sat the old, frisky, widow Miles. Fifty if ever she had seen a day, Married when I was a child at play. And Hortense? — well, she is Bronson's wife, A social queen in gay, high life. Just a glance at the evening news (taking tip paper) , CLEVER MONOLOGUES. 367 Politics will crush, perchance, love's muse. Heavens ! Why, what's this I see ? "To-night, at a masquerade, Mrs. Keene Will introduce an old-time social queen, Mrs. Bronson, wife of the late well-known man Who made his millions in the mine Vofan." Free ! Hortense, do you think my face Looks too old to enter the race ? I'll not count years by cycle of time, But, by my heart's wild, maddening chime. My roses ! For her? Yes. Au-revoir ! — Mrs. Franklin Hall. t5* c5* (5* A PRIVATE REHEARSAL. (A monologue.) Scene. — A room, with door center and side exit; furnished with table, desk, screen, easy chair, couch, chairs, bric-a-brac, etc. Mrs. Lovely discovered at left of table, sewing on gentleman's coat. THERE, the buttons are all on, the collar sponged and the coat looks as good as new. Dear old Hal ! how happy I am when I can do anything for his comfort. Poor boy, I'm afraid he works very hard. I noticed this morning that he was looking pale and tired. No wonder, for he has been writing every evening for a week — extra copying, he says. Mr. Grindem is a regular old miser anyway — I've often heard papa say that — and he makes a drudge of Hal, just because he is so good-natured. But it's no use talking, he says he shall never be thoroughly happy until he can give me as good a home as he took me from. What nonsense! (Rises, arranges pillows on couch, folds afghan, etc.) when I like this cosy little flat twice as well as papa's grand, old house. Dearie me ! he has never forgiven me for marrying a poor man and he says the time will surely come when I shall beg to return to him. (Takes photo from desk and looks at it.) Leave Harry! that makes me smile. If papa only knew him; but men can't get acquainted— es- pecially a young man and an elderly one. It takes a woman to find the best side of a man's nature, and I know that I have mar- ried a saint. I feel rather guilty to think I have a secret. (Seats herself at right of table.) I little thought, when I was at Madam Lamont's, and took an extra course in painting, that I'd ever really earn money with my brush ; but I did — twenty-five dol- lars, at Christmas. It was great fun — just like a bit of masquerading — when I put on the plainest little hat I had, and a veil, so thick no one could know me, and walked into Dayton's Art Store and showed them a sample of my work. How my heart did beat, when the man adjusted his glasses, so, and looking at my little placque, in this way, said: "Ahem! it is very fair, miss." And when he gave me an order, I could have screamed with delight! But the very fun- niest thing of it all was when Harry brought me one of my own frames (taking frame from table) for a Christmas gift. How my cheeks burned when he said : "It was such a dainty little thing, I knew you would like it." I could hardly resist throwing my arms around his neck and crying: "I did it !" but that would never do, for I wanted to earn money enough to buy him an easy- chair for his birth-day gift. (Goes to easy- 568 CLEVER MONOLOGUES. chair left, arranges tidy on it.) I do hope he will like it. When the man brought it this morning he said : "The springs are good, ma'am, and the arms are wide." I tried to look dignified, but it was a failure and I burst out laughing. I can't appear like an old married woman, if I try, besides what's the fun in being a three-months' bride, if you can't act a bit foolish ? Well, I might as well hang the coat away and find something to busy myself about until Hal comes home. I told him I was going to spend the day with Dollie Wells, but I be- lieve I won't, for she does nothing but talk about her lover, and won't give me a chance to speak of Harry. ( Takes coat from chair and starts to go; as she throws it over her arm, discovers something protruding from pocket.) Oh, he's always stuffing his pockets full ! Never got over the school- boy fashion, I suppose. (Takes out pack- age.) What is this, I wonder. A box of candy, that he forgot to give me, I suppose. (Unties package.) The dear, thoughtful fellow! Why no, it's a box of grease- paints ! What in the world does he want with these ? Probably he got them for some of the boys at the office. Arn't they funny little things, these sticks. But they do make a plain woman look just lovely under the glare of the foot-lights. I remember at school when we played "Cricket on the Hearth," Dorothy Freeman played Dot. She isn't a bit pretty; but after she was "made up," as they call it, she was too sweet for anything. (Takes hand-mirror from table and looks at herself.) Wonder how I should look. Let' s see — this is for the lips. (Touches lips with grease-paint.) There! that's a rose-bud mouth! Why couldn't people have naturally such a sweet little pucker (makes up cyebrozvs), and there's a pair of arched brows (rouges cheeks), and those cheeks are glowing with blushes. (Rises.) Now I could float into a room and meet my lover, with all the grace of a stage- heroine. Something like this : "Charence ! • so you have returned!" and then he says something too awfully sweet and I should say: "Spare my blushes!" but with that stuff on my cheeks there would be a never- fading glow. (Goes to table.) What a dear little puff! (Powders face.) It's a positive luxury to feel that on your face. (Looks in mirror.) And now my roses have gone, "buried under the snow," so to speak, and I am as pale as the actress I saw the other night. Oh, she was positively ghastly, when she found her husband was false. What a dreadful thing that would be in real life ! I am sure it would kill me. (Starts up.) What's that noise? (Tip- toes to door, center, and listens.) Why, it's Harry returned! What in the world brought him home so soon! (Listens.) Some one is with him, too! (Starts to enter.) Stop! I can't show myself with my face like this. I wonder who it can be. Never mind, it won't matter if I don't go in. Hal thinks I'm away and (Listens.) What's he saying? (Repeats.) "Now she's gone, I'll have a chance?" Have a chance for what? (Listens again, and repeats.) "Be seated, Nell, and listen?" Nell! who's Nell? (Listens again, repeating his words.) "You shall not leave me until I have told you of my love?" Good heavens ! my — my husband speaking like that to a woman ! (Listens again.) Now he is talking so low I cannot hear a word. Oh, my heart is throbbing so! (Listens again.) Not a word ! Probably he has her in his arms, her head on his shoulder — oh, I shall die ! Ah ! he is speaking again! (Listens and again repeats.) "I will burst these bonds and you shall yet be mine?" Oh ! Oh ! (Staggers down stage. ) I cannot listen — I have heard enough ! The traitor ! He will burst these CLEVER MONOLOGUES. 369 bonds! Does he mean to murder me? ( Throws herself into chair left of table and hides her face in her hands, sobbing.) And to think I — I — trusted him so ! thought him so perfect (rising) ! But I will not remain another hour in his house ! Papa was right ! The time has come when I am glad to re- turn to him. The cruel, perfidious wretch ! I will write a note and leave it on his desk, saying I heard his little interview with Nell, and preferred to "burst the bonds" myself ! Oh, the misery an hour ran bring! This morning I was so light-hearted and happy, and now — now my heart is breaking! (Seats herself at desk, picks up leuer lying on desk.) I wonder who his correspondents are. Possibly this is from that — that wo- man ! We will see ! ( Opens letter and reads. ) "Dear Mr. Henshaw : Your little Com- edy is just what our Club needs and has been accepted. Enclosed find check for same. We remember your talent as an amateur actor and if you will consent to fill the role of Ralph, we will make it an object for you to do so. My daughter, Sue, will essay the part of Nell. I shall be most hap- py to recommend your dramatic writings to Catchem & Buyem and predict a brilliant future for you as a play-wright. Yours Truly, James H. Underwood. President of Wonolancet Club." (Breathlessly.) Harry a writer of plays ! Sue Underwood to play the part of Nell ! Why, that's the name of (Points to door, rising. ) What an impulsive little fool I've been ! That explains the grease-paints ! So he has been having a private rehearsal ! Has been thinking to surprise me with his success and the money it will bring. I re- member he told me last night, I was to have that lovely blue silk at Stylem's soon, and I laughed at the extravagant idea. To think he has been working like this for me and I — I — was about to leave him! (Comes down.) But he shall never know what a little fool I have been, never ! Oh, I'm so happy, I can scarcely restrain myself; but I must be cautious, or he will hear me ! I'll just run softly up to my room, wash this mask off, slip on my things and come in at the front door, so he will think I have just returned ; and then I'll put my arms around his neck and tell him he's the dearest fellow in the world ! (Listens at door again.) He is still at it, the dear boy! (Shakes finger at door.) Talk away! Make love to your imaginary Nell ! ( Tip toes up left, turns at door.) But when the real part of it is acted I'll be there ! [EoUi. CURTAIN. t2& *3fr ^w BARCAROLLE. (A rhythmical monologue to be given to the accompaniment of the well-known Barcarolle.) THE gondolier, in music clear, His lady-love is serenading From his gondola, while his softiguitar In tinkling sweetness is persuading The sleeping maiden, with visions laden, To quickly rise and hear his sighs, While night and fall of ripples, all Make music more than musical. Awake, my love ! though stars above In witchery are peeping, Far more I prize the starry eyes That now are veiled in sleeping. 370 CLEVER MONOLOGUES. And while he sings, how sweetly rings The melody ; now rises firmer The barcarolle ; and now a lull As soft as an Aeolian murmur; Now madly sighing with love, now dying, And soft and low and sweet and slow, And low again ; 'tis almost pain To hear the gondolier's refrain, Awake, my love ! though stars above In witchery are peeping, Far more I prize the starry eyes That now are veiled in sleeping. She wakes, she hears ; her ravished ears Are drinking all her lover's praises ; They send a start to her vain heart ; With noiseless steps she steals, and raises The curtain slyly, and peeping shyly, The teasing sprite hides with delight, Smiles at the strain with mock disdain, And pouts her lips and smiles again. Awake, my love ! though stars above In witchery are peeping, Far more I prize the starry eyes That now are veiled in sleeping. — Ben Wood Davis. t2& <£" t&* MARK TWAIN'S JOHN JAMES GODFREY was hired by the Hayblossom Mining Company in California to do some blasting for them — the "Incorporated Company of Mean Men," the boys used to call it. Well, one day he drilled a hole about four feet deep and put in an awful blast of powder, and was stand- ing over it ramming it down with an iron crowbar about nine feet long, when the blamed thing struck a spark and fired the powder, and scat ! away John Godfrey whizzed like a sky-rocket, him and his crowbar! Well, sir, he kept on going up in the air higher and higher, till he didn't look any bigger than a boy — and he kept going on up higher and higher till he didn't look any bigger than a doll — and he kept on going up higher and higher till he didn't look any bigger than a small bee — and then MINING STORY. he went out of sight. Presently he came in sight again, looking like a little small bee — and he came along down further and further, till he looked as big as a doll again — and down further and further till he was as big as a boy again — and further and further, till he was a full-sized man once more, and then him and his crowbar came a-whizzing down and lit right exactly in the same old tracks and went to r-ramming down, and r-ramming down, and r-ram- ming down again, just the same as if noth- ing had happened! Now, do you know, that poor fellow was gone but fifteen min- utes, and yet that Incorporated Company of Mean Men docked him for the fif- teen minutes lost time while he was gone up in the air! The selections in this department have been made to meet the needs of very little children who want recitations that are short and pleasing. CHILDREN'S ALPHABET. This is very pretty when each little one holds or raises above her head as she speaks, a capital letter covered with evergreens or flowers. A is the alphabet that little folks learn ; B is for books, coming next in their turn ; C is for clock, making time in its flight ; D is for desk, where we study and write ; E is for early ones, who are prompt at the call ; F is for friendship, which we cherish for all; G is for goodness, may each have a share ; H is for honesty — we hope it's not rare ; I is for idleness, we fight every day ; J is for judgment, which governs our way; K is for kindness towards schoolmates and friends ; L is for love, which our pathway attends ; M is for music — which brightens our way; N is for noon, the time we can play ; O is for order, it's rules we'll not break ; P is the progress, we hope we shall make ; Q is the question, to which answer we find; R is the rule which we ever will mind ; S is the school, which we love every day; T is for truth, which shall guide all we say; U is for union, in all that is right ; V is for virtue, may it ever be bright; ' W is for welcome, which all our friends claim ; X is this cross with our fingers we frame ; Y is our youth, the time to improve ; Z is for zealous, in work that we love. j* a« j* THE CHRISTMAS BALL. THE fiddlers were scraping so cheerily, O, With a one, two, three, and a one, two, three, And the children were dancing so merrily, O, All under the shade of the Christmas-tree. O, bonny the fruit on its branches which grows And the mistletoe bough from the ceiling hung^ ! The fiddlers they rosined their squeaking bows, And the brave little lads their partners swung. Oh, the fiddlers they played such a merry tune, With a one, two, three, and a one, two, three, And the children they blossomed like roses in June, 371 372 TINY TOTS. All under the boughs of the Christmas- tree. And the fiddlers were scraping so merrily, O, With a one, two, three, and a one, two, three, And the children were dancing so cheerily, O, All under the shade of the Christmas-tree. When, all of a sudden, a fairy-land crew Came whirling airily into the room, As light as the fluffy balls, they flew, Which fly from the purple thistle-bloom. There were little girl-fairies in cobweb frocks All spun by spiders from golden threads, With butterfly-wings and glistening locks, And strings of dewdrops encircling their heads ! There were little boy- fairies in jeweled coats Of pansy-velvet, of cost untold, With chains of daisies around their throats, And their heads all powdered with lily gold ! The fiddlers they laughed till they scarce could see, And then they fiddled so cheerily, O, And the fairies and children around the tree, They all went tripping so merrily, O. The fiddlers they boxed up their fiddles all ; The fairies they silently flew away; But every child at the Christmas ball, Had danced with a fairy first, they say. So they told their mothers — and did not you Ever have such a lovely time at your play, My boy and my girl, that it seemed quite true That you'd played with a fairy all the day? t5* *3& ta^ THE BABIES' BEDTIME. SWEET are children in the morning, in the afternoon or night, In their dainty frocks of red and blue or gowns of simple white, In their play up in the playroom, in the yard or on the lawn, But they're sweetest when it's bedtime and they get their "nighties" on. Little ghosts of white a-romping o'er the bed and through the room ; In the season of a lifetime they're the rosy month of June. Little ghosts of white a-marching to the music of their laugh, And the one whoe'er would miss it sees in life its minor half. Little curls a-dangling, frowsy, to the heads a fitting wreath, Little gowns a-hanging loosely and the peeping feet beneath. Merry monarchs of the household and their love as is the fawn, And they're sweetest when it's bedtime and they've got their "nighties" on. Oh, the clear notes of their laughter, and the patter of their feet, As they romp and chase each other in the game of hide and seek, Gives a hint of faint suspicion of the world that is to be, For the Master taught us, saying, "Suffer these to come to me !" TINT TOTS. 373 Soon fatigue o'ercomes the players, and the white brigade is still, And the "Now I lay me" whispered with a pleading and a will ! Oh, the wee tots are in slumber, and their dreams are in repose, For the clearness of a conscience rivals beauties of the rose. And the white, up turned, sweet visage adds to innocence the charm Of the soul reposing trust upon the guar- dian angel's arm ; Oh, the sweetest scented nectar flowing from this life is gone If you cannot see the babies when they get their "nighties" on ! ^w ^w ta*l PARTNERSHIP. (The speaker should hold a kitten in her arms, and appear to address the mother cat.) YOU needn't be looking around at me so, She's my kitten as much as your kit- ten, you know, And I'll take her wherever I wish her to go ! You know very well that, the day she was found, If I hadn't cried, she'd surely been drowned ; And you ought to be thankful she's here safe and sound ! She is only crying 'cause she's a goose. I'm not squeezing her, look now, my arms are quite loose, And she may as well hush, for it's not any use. And you may as well get right down and go 'way ; You're not in the thing we're going to play ; And remember, it isn't your half of the day. You're forgetting the bargain we made, and so soon! In the morning she's mine, and yours all afternoon ; And you couldn't teach her to eat with a spoon. So don't let me hear one single mew ! Do you know what will happen right off if you do? She'll be my kitten mornings and afternoons too. — Margaret Vandegrift. (5* t<5* t5* MY DEAR TRUE-LOVE. (For a little boy, THE stars are very beautiful Up in the far-off skies ; But, oh ! more beautiful to me Are my own true-love's eyes. The songs the little birdies sing, When morning things rejoice, Are very sweet, but far more sweet Is my dear true-love's voice. on Saint Valentine's Day.) I like to feel upon my cheek The gentle summer air, But better far I like to feel My true-love's kisses there. I love my true-love more, — yes, more Than wind, or song, or star ; My true-love? Who is my true-love? My own sweet, good mamma! 374 TINY TOTS. POOR ADAM! ADAM never knew what 'twas to be a boy, To wheedle pennies from a doting sire, With which to barter for some pleasing toy, Or calm the rising of a strong desire To suck an orange. Nor did he E'er cast the shuttlecock to battledoor ; Nor were his trousers ever out at knee, From playing marbles on the kitchen floor. He never skated o'er the frozen rill, When winter's covering o'er the earth was spread; Nor ever glided down the slippery hill, With pretty girls upon his trusty sled. He never swung upon his father's gate, Or slept in sunshine on the cellar door, Nor roasted chestnuts at the kitchen grate, Nor spun his humming top upon the floor. He ne'er amused himself with rows of bricks, So set, if one fall, all come down ; Nor gazed delighted at the funny tricks Of harlequin or traveling circus clown. By gradual growth he never reached the age When cruel Cupid first invokes his art, And stamps love's glowing lesson, page by page, Upon the tablets of a youngling's heart. He never wandered forth on moonlight nights, With her he loved above all earthly things ; Nor tried to mount old Pindar's rocky heights, Because he fancied love had lent him wings. He never tripped it o'er the ball-room floor, Where love and music intertwine their charms, Nor wandered listless by the sandy shore, Debarred the pleasure of his lady's arms. For Adam — so at least it has been said By many an ancient and a modern sage — Before a moment of his life had fled, Was fully thirty years of age! t5* t^* t?* RUNNING A RACE. A LITTLE tear and a little smile set out to run a race ; We watched them closely all the while ; their course was baby's face. The little tear he got the start; we really feared he'd win: He ran so fast and made a dart straight for the dimpled chin. But somehow, — it was very queer; we watched them all the while, — The little shining, fretful tear, got beaten by the smile. t5* c5* &3* D EAR little Wora, dimpled and fair, Under the mistletoe standing there. WHERE HE DID IT. In a moment he grasped the opportunity. No one was near, no one could see ; Under the mistletoe, under the rose; Under the mistletoe, under the nose. TINT TOTS. 375 MOTION SONG WITH THE HANDS. HPHISistheleft 1 This is the right, I put them together And clap with my might. With my right toward the east, And my left toward the west, You'll know where sun rises, And where it goes to rest. North to the front of me, South in the back must be, Now I do know, In which way I go, North or East, South or West, And to the place I like the best. tS* c5* t5* IN LIQUOR. ONCE a poor little mouse had a fall, And it fell in a gallon of wine ; "Here," it cried to a cat: "Help me out! You may eat me the first time you dine." So the pussy complied ; but the fumes Brought a sneeze that she couldn't con- trol, While the gay little mouse, with a laugh, Cut a very straight line to a hole. When the Tabby was done with her sneeze, She exclaimed to the mouse unafraid: "Now come out, for I want a good meal ; Don't go back on the bargain we made." Then the mouse laid her thumb on her nose, And she said with a comical glow: "I'm aware of the promise I gave; But I then was in liquor, you know." ^¥ ^% t0* THE BITTERNESS OF CHILDHOOD. WHEN I get settled after tea With some big, bully book, Ma, she'll commence t' watch the clock ; You'd oughter see her look ! An' jes' when I get down t' where The hero begs for bread, Ma's jes' as sure as fate to say, "It's time t' go t' bed." Or, ef pa knows a funny yarn What ain't fer me t' hear An' gets so wrapped up tellin' ma He clean fergets I'm near, You'd better guess she shuts him up; She kinder shakes her head, Looks solemnlike at me an' says, "It's time t' go t' bed." An' when they's company at night, Don't I wish I could stay Down stairs t' watch the big folks an' T' hear the things they say ! But 'tain't no use a-wishin' things, Fer ma comes out ahead An' says t' me afore them all, "It's time t' go t' bed." I'd like t' be an angel in A thing what's long an' white An' fly around when other folks Was sound asleep at night. But like as not ma, she'd wake Not knowin' I was dead, An' pull me in the house an' say, "It's time t' go t' bed." up, 376 TINY TOTS. THREE FOR "THE TOTS." I NEVER made a speech before, And cannot say I shall make more; But if you'll let me look at you, And say to all, "How do you do?" I'm sure I'll let you look at me — It won't take long, I am so "wee." But then I won't be always small ; And now I'll throw a kiss to all ! And if I live I'll speak next year With stronger voice, and have no fear. They thought I couldn't make a speech, I'm such a little tot. I'll show them whether I can do A thing or two, or not. Don't be afraid to fight the wrong, Or stand up for the right ; And when you've nothing else to say, Be sure you say — "Good-night." je I've got three kisses sweet to give ; There's one for mother, kind and true, And one for father, while I live, And all the rest I give to you ! [Kisses hand to audience and retires. MINNIE HAD A LITTLE LAMB. M INNIE had a little lamb, A tender little elf; She roasted it and basted it And laid it on the shelf. She set it on the table And heartily did eat And thought that pretty little lamb A glorious kind of meat. But morning, noon and evening She wearied of the roast, So minced and buttered some of it And spread it on some toast. And then she broiled a little piece, And then a stew made she, And next that frisky lamb appeared As "Monsieur Fricassee." But to assume a giddy guise In that old lamb was rash; He humbly ended his career As plain plebeian hash. t£& i0& t£& IN MANY LANDS. THE bonny babe, tossed blithely to and fro, Rests on Amanda's apron white as snow In Lapland. Full well he fares, no epicure is he, Upon a diet that would frighten me In Papland. Anon he is an urchin, and must learn "Globes" with "geography," and take his turn In Mapland. If he is idle, and his books will flout, There is a ruler, and he'll have a bout In Rapland. Or, it may be, his fate is harder yet, And he will spend a time he won't forget In Strapland. But like the longest lane, the laggard day Will end at last, and Tom will sn e away In Napland. TINY TOTS. 377 EASTER MORNING. One Voice. SNOWDROPS ! lift your timid heads,- All the earth is waking ; Field and forest, brown and dead, Into life are breaking. Several Voices. Snowdrops, rise and tell the story, How He rose, the Lord of glory. One Voice. Lilies ! lilies ! Easter calls : Rise to meet the dawning Of the blessed light that falls Through the Easter morning. Several Voices. Ring your bells and tell the story, How He rose, the Lord of glory. One Voice. Waken, sleeping butterflies ! Burst your narrow prison; Spread your golden wings and rise, For the Lord is risen. Several Voices. Spread your wings and tell the story- How He rose, the Lord of glory ! — Mary A. Lathbury. t^rl (5* e5* A SMALL BOY'S ADVICE. MAYBE you'll smile because I try About reform to speak; Because I'm only three feet high, And have a voice so weak. But boys like me, make men like you And now you have a chance To teach us to be brave and true, And vote for Temperance. Don't drink that "for your stomach's sake," That poisons all your breath, But hate that cup, and never take, That's filled with sin and death. Then, by-and-by, when you have done The work God called you to, We'll take it, where you lay it down, And help to carry it through. Kj* t&*t t£T* THE BOY AND THE BOOT. BOTHER!" was all that John Clatter- by said; His breath came quick and his cheeks were red; He flourished his elbows and looked ab- surd While, over and over, his "Bother!" I heard. Harder and harder he tugged and worked ; Vainly and savagely still he jerked ; The boot, half on, would dwaddle and flap, "Bother!" and then he burst the strap. Redder than ever his hot cheek flamed ; Louder than ever he fumed and blamed; He wiggled his heel and he tugged at the leather Till his knees and his chin came bumping together. "My boy," said I, in a voice like a flute, "Why not first try your troublesome boot On the other foot?" "I'm a goose!" laughed John, As he stood, in a flash, with his two boots on. 378 TINY TOTS. In half the affairs of this every-day life (As that same day I said to my wife), MY I Our troubles come from trying to put I The left-hand boot on the right-hand foot. LITTLE SISTER. & WHO comes to meet me, running out To smile away all care and doubt, And takes me by the hand, and talks Her childish prattle as she walks, And makes me feel as if life's yoke Were really nothing but a joke? My little sister. Whose deepest griefs can pass away As quick as darkness yields to day, And leaves the little face as bright As sunbeams in the morning light? She leaves me - nothing else to do But just to be light-hearted too, — My little sister. And when I'm tired, and feeling blue, And ugly, and disgusted, too, And when I even doubt if I Can claim a friend by any tie, I know, though others distant be, There's one small girl sticks up for me, — My little sister. And sometimes, when I may have slipped Some wrong have done, some good have skipped, When I some bitter pill must take In payment for my own mistake, When others slight, and others blame, Who comes to kiss me just the same? My little sister. I see her oft when I'm not there, And offer up a silent prayer; May grief and sorrow never chase The sunshine from that little face. May she ne'er grow to love me less — May Heaven keep, and guard, and bless My little sister. A BOY'S WISH. WHEN winter comes, the people say, "Oh, shut the door!" And when, As sometimes happens, I forget, They call me back again. It takes till summer-time to learn; And then things change about, And "Leave it open!" is the cry When I go in or out. I try to be a pleasant boy, And do just as I ought, But when things are so hard to learn, I wish they might stay taught ! t5* «5* <5* THEIR PREFERENCES. THREE maidens talked, as maidens will, Of what gives life its zest. Said one, a buxom country girl, "The mountain air is best." The second, clad in yachting suit All white beyond compare, Did thereupon exulting cry: "Give me the ocean air!" Then one, in swinging hammock posea, Half opened her eyes divine And languorously said : "I'll take The millionaire for mine." The selections in this department include a variety of subjects, all of which afford an op- portunity for a fine display of descriptive power on the part of the speaker. tj* {&& (£* GOING HOME TO-DAY. MY business on the jury's done — the quibblin' all is through — I've watched the lawyers, right and left, and give my verdict true ; I stuck so long unto my chair I thought I would grow in; And if I do not know myself, they'll get me there again. But now the court's adjourned for good, and I have got my pay ; I'm loose at last, and thank the Lord, I'm goin' home to-day I've somehow felt uneasy like since first day I come down; It's an awkward game to play the gentle- man in town; And this 'ere Sunday suit of mine, on Sun- day rightly sets, But when I wear the stuff a week, it some- how galls and frets, I'd rather wear my homespun rig of pepper- salt and gray — I'll have it on in half a jiff when I get home to-day. I have no doubt my wife looked out, as well as any one, As well as any woman could — to see that things were done ; For though Melinda, when I'm there, won't set her foot outdoors, She's very careful when I'm gone to 'tend to all the chores. But nothing prospers half so well when I go off to stay, And I will put things into shape when I get home to-day. The mornin' that I come away we had a little bout ; I coolly took my hat and left before the show was out, For what I said was naught whereat she ought to take offense ; And she was always quick at words and ready to commence ; But then, she's first one to give up when she has had her say; And she will meet me with a kiss when I go home to-day. My little boy — I'll give 'em leave to match him, if they can — It's fun to see him strut about and try to be a man ! The gamest, cheeriest little chap you'd ever want to see ! And then they laugh because I think the child resembles me. The little rogue! he gees for me like rob- bers for their prey. He'll turn my pockets inside out when I get home to-day. My little girl — I can't contrive how it should happen thus — That God should pick that sweet bouquet and fling it down to us ! My wife, she says that han'some face will some day make a stir; And then I laugh because she thinks the child resembles her. 379 380 DESCRIPTIVE RECITATIONS. She'll meet me half way down the hill and kiss me any way; And light my heart up with her smiles when I get home to-day ! If there's a heaven upon the earth a fellow knows it when He's been away from home a week, and then gets back again. <<5* s5* «5* If there's a heaven above the earth there often, I'll be bound, Some homesick fellow meets his folks and hugs 'em all around. But let my creed be right or wrong, or be it as it may. My heaven is just ahead of me — I'm goin' home to-day. — Will Carleton. MAKING SUCCESS.. POETS may be born, but success is made ; therefore let me beg of you, in the outset of your career, to dismiss from your minds all ideas of succeeding by luck. There is no more common thought among young people than that foolish one that by and by something will turn up by which they will suddenly achieve fame or fortune. Luck is an ignis fatuics. You may follow it to ruin, but not to success. The great Na- poleon, who believed • in his destiny, fol- lowed it until he saw his star go down in blackest night, when the Old Guard per- ished around him, and Waterloo was lost. A pound of pluck is worth a ton of luck. Young men talk of trusting to the spur of the occasion. That trust is vain. Oc- casion cannot make spurs. If you expect to wear spurs, you must win them. If you wish to use them, you must buckle them to your own heels before you go into the fight. Any success you may achieve is not worth having unless you fight for it. Whatever you win in life you must conquer by your own efforts, and then it is yours — a part of yourself. Again : in order to have any success in life, Or any worthy success, you must re- solve to carry into your work a fulness of knowledge — not merely a sufficiency, but more than a sufficiency. Be fit for more than the thing you are now doing. Let every one know that you have a reserve in yourself; that you have more power than you are now using. If you are not too large for the place you occupy, you are too small for it. How full our country is of bright examples, not only of those who occupy some proud eminence in public life, but in every place you may find men going on with steady nerve, attracting the attention of their fellow-citizens, and carving out for themselves names and fortunes from small and humble beginnings and in the face of formidable obstacles. Let not poverty stand as an obstacle in your way. Poverty is uncomfortable, as I can testify; but nine times out of ten the best thing that can happen to a young man is to be tossed overboard, and compelled to sink or swim for himself. In all my ac- quaintance, I have never known one to be drowned who was worth the saving. This would not be wholly true in any country but one of political equality like ours. The reason is this : In the aristocracies of the Old World, wealth and society are built up like the strata of rock which compose the crust of the earth. If a boy be born in the lowest stratum of life, it is almost im- possible for him to rise through this hard crust into the higher ranks ; but in this coun- try it is not so. The strata of our society resemble rather the ocean, where every 1 f! jjfej^^ "^ 1 Si W M o 01 M 1-5 « bDitifiAn iirVion o Crvoi Lr^i** V»n o hoon This department is supplementary to all the other departments in this wor pieces suitable for recitation when a speaker has been recalled by the audience. t&nl t&nf t&rl MARK TWAIN AS A FARMER. I HAVE been introduced to you as an experienced agriculturist. I love the farm. Adam loved the farm. Noah loved his vineyards. Horace loved the farm, as is shown by that great book, "What I Know About Farming." Washington, Webster and Beecher were allured by the attractions of agriculture. Some one said to Beecher : "Keep your cows out of my shrubbery." "Keep your shrubbery out of my cows," re- plied Beecher. "It spoils the milk." Hogs are hard animals to drive over a bridge. I once saw a man carried several miles on the back of a hog that turned back in op- position to the solicitations of the driver on approaching a bridge. I will tell you of a safe way to get hogs over a bridge. Kill them and draw them over in a wagon. Hogs are fond of spring lambs and spring chick- ens. Hogs will eat their own offspring if no lambs or chickens are offered in the market. When a boy I was solicited to escort a pig to a neighbor's farm. A strong rope tied to the pig's leg was placed in my hand ; I did not know before the speed and strength of a pig. But they do not run the way you want them to run. A pig can draw a canal-boat with the tow-line tied to his hind leg, but I would not insure the canal- boat. Hogs are cleanly, orderly, silent and not bent on mischief — when cut up and salted and in a tight barrel, with a heavy weight on the lid. This is all I know about hogs. I love cows. What is so meek and low-ly as a mooley cow? City people are foolish to be frightened at cows. I was never hurt by a cow but once. He shook his head at me from behind a strong gate. I felt the security of my position and shied a^ pump- kin at him. He came through the gate as though it were a spider's web, and then I was sorry I did it. This kind of a cow should not be fooled with unless you are tired of monotony. The poet loves to dwell upon milkmaids, milking-time and lovers sparking over the farmyard gate, but no such poet could ever have milked a cow in fly time. I cannot imagine a successful love suit at such a season. I milked the cows one night when the boys were off on a Fourth of July. That is, I milked one and one-half cows. The last one was so busy knocking off flies with her hind foot I thought I had better not disturb her longer. A pail of fresh milk kicked over a boy does not im- prove his clothes or temper. Some say I milked from the wrong side. I thought I would be sure and be right, so I milked half on one side and half on the other. I was on the other side when she knocked off most flies. Can any one tell me why a cow should be permitted to dictate which side a man shall milk from? I claim the right of my choice at least half of the time. Sheep are my special delight. How grace- fully the lambs gambol over the green. I trust you never gamble over the green. 413 414 ENCORES. Nothing so patient and modest as a sheep. Some say a scamp is the black sheep of the flock, but a black sheep is just as respectable as any, and the color line should not thus be drawn. I once fished on a bluff and cas- ually discovered a sheep with large crooked horns coming at me with head down and fire in his eyes. The fish were not biting well, so I left my sport and dodged behind a stump. The sheep fell on the rocks below and broke her neck. For this act I have since been accused of non-protection in the wool traffic. This reminds me of a com- missioner of agriculture in old times who purchased six hydraulic rams for the im- provement of American flocks. Feather beds are made from geese, but all woolen goods and drums are made from sheepskins. I take great pride in the horse. "He is the noblest Roman of them all." I once led Stephens' horse to water. How proudly he arched his neck and tail. He was so fond of me that he tried to embrace me with his front feet. But I was so shy he turned about and playfully knocked my hat off with his heels. I told Stephens I thought horses looked much better walking on four feet than on two feet. A horse presses hard when your toe is caught under the hoof. I speak not from theory, but from actual ex- perience. I went riding with Stephens' horse and he shied and danced provoking- ly. "Treat him kindly," said Stephens ; "never beat a horse." By and by Stephens thought he would get out and walk for ex- ercise. "You may let him feel the lash a little now," said Stephens. "A little dis- cipline now will do him good." Here is a composition I wrote on farming when a boy : Farming is healthy work ; but no man can run a farm and wear his best clothes at the same time. Either the farm- ing must cease while the new clothes con- tinue or the new clothes must cease while the farming continues. This shows that farming is not so clean work as being a congressman or schoolmaster, for these men can wear good clothes if they can find money to pay for them. Farmers get up early in the morning. They say the early bird catches the worm. If I was a bird, I had rather get up late and eat cherries in place of worms. Farmers don't paint their wagons when they can help it, for they show mud too quick. The color of their boots is red, and don't look like other people's boots, because they are twice as big. Farmers' wives have a hard time cooking for hired men, and the hired men find fault with the farmers' wives' cooking. Why don't farm- ers' wives let the hired men do the cooking while they do the finding fault? Farmers don't get as rich as bank pres- idents, but they get more exercise. Some ask, "Why don't farmers run for Con- gress?" They run so much keeping boys out of their peach orchards and melon patches they don't have any time to run after anything else. If Congress should run after farmers, one might be caught now and then. Lawyers can beat farmers at running for most anything. I know a farm- er who tried to run a line fence according to his notion. The other man objected and hurt the farmer. The farmer hired a law- yer to run his line fence, and now the lawyer runs the farmer's farm and the farmer has stopped running anything. Speaking of running reminds me of our calf that ran away to the woods. There were not enough men in the county to catch that calf. We turned the old cow loose in the woods, and she caught the calf, proving the old saying that it takes a cow to catch a thief. — Samuel L. Clemens. ENCORES. 415 THE QUEER LITTLE HOUSE. THERE'S a queer little house And it stands in the sun. When the good mother calls The children all run. While under her roof They are cozy and warm, Though the cold wind may whistle And bluster and storm. In the daytime, this queer Little house moves away, And the children run after it, Happy and gay; But it comes back at night, And the children are fed, And tucked up to sleep In a soft feather-bed. This queer little house Has no windows nor doors — The roof has no shingles, The rooms have no floors — No fireplace, chimney, Nor stove can you see, , Yet the children are cozy And warm as can be. The story of this Funny house is all true, I have seen it myself, And I think you have, too; You can see it to-day, If you watch the old hen, When her downy wings cover Her chickens again. (,5* ^* <5* THE FOOLISH LITTLE MAIDEN. A FOOLISH little maiden bought a fool- ish little bonnet, With a ribbon, and a feather, and a bit of lace upon it ; And, that the other maidens of the little town might know it, She thought she'd go to meeting the next Sunday just to show it. But though the little bonnet was scarce larger than a dime, The getting of it settled proved to be a work of time ; So when 'twas fairly tied, and the bells had stopped their ringing, And when she came to meeting, sure enough, the folks were singing. So this foolish little maiden stood and wait- ed at the door; And she shook her ruffles out behind and smoothed them down before. "Hallelujah! Hallelujah!" sang the choir above her head. "Hardly knew you ! Hardly knew you !" were the words she thought they said. This made the little maiden feel so very, very cross, That she gave her little mouth a twist, her little head a toss ; For she thought the very hymn they sang was all about her bonnet, With the ribbon, and the feather, and the bit of lace upon it. And she would not wait to listen to the sermon or the prayer, But pattered down the silent street, and hurried down the stair, Till she reached her little bureau, and in a band-box on it, Had hidden, safe from critic's eye, her fool- ish little bonnet. 416 ENCORES. Which proves, my little maidens, that each of you will find In every Sabbath service but an echo of your mind; ARRAYED in snow-white pants and vest And other raiment fair to view, I stood before my sweetheart Sue — The charming creature I love best. "Tell me, and does my costume suit?" I asked that apple of my eye, And then the charmer made reply — "Oh, yes, you do look awful cute!" Although I frequently had heard My sweetheart vent her pleasure so, And the silly little head, that's filled with silly little airs, Will never get a blessing from sermon or from prayers. c5* J* v* AIN'T HE CUTE. I must confess I did not know The meaning of that favorite word. But presently at window side We stood and watched the passing throng. And soon a donkey passed along With ears like sails extending wide. And gazing at the doleful brute My sweetheart gave a merry cry — I quote her language with a sigh — "Oh, Charlie, ain't he awful cute?" (5* «5* ^5* LARRIE O'DEE. NOW the Widow McGee, And Larrie O'Dee, Had two little cottages out on the green, With just room enough for two pigpens be- tween. The widow was young and the widow was fair, With the brightest of eyes and the brownest of hair; And it frequently chanced when she came in the morn With the swill for her pig, Larrie came with the corn. And some of the ears that he tossed from his hand, In the pen of the widow were certain to land. ; One morning said he : "Och! Misthress McGee, It's a waste of good lumber, this runnin' two rigs, Wid a fancy purtition betwane our two pigs "Indade sur, it is!" answered Widow Mc- Gee, With the sweetest of smiles upon Larrie O'Dee. "And thin, it looks kind o' hard-hearted and mane, Kapin' two friendly pigs so exsaidenly near That whinever one grunts the other can hear. And yit kape a cruel partition betwane." "Shwate Widow McGee," Answered Larrie O'Dee, "If ye fale in your heart we are mane to the pigs, Ain't we mane to ourselves to be runnin' two rigs? Och ! it made me heart ache whin I paped through the cracks ENCORES. 417 Of me shanty, lasht March, at yez swingin' yer axe; An' a bobbin' yer head an' a sthompin' yer fate, Wid yer purty white hands jisht as red as a bate, A-sphlittin' yer kindlin'-wood out in the shtorm, When one little shtove would kape us both warm !" "Now, piggy," said she, "Larrie's courtin' 6' me, Wid his dilicate tinder allusions to you ; So now yez must tell me jisht what I must do: For, if I'm to say yes, shtir the swill wid yer snout ; But if I'm to say no, ye must kape your nose out. Now, Larrie, for shame! to be bribin' a pig By a-tossin' a handful of corn in its shwig !" "Me darlint, the piggy says yes," answered he. And that was the courtship of Larrie O'Dee. W. W. Fink. t&& *£& t&& ONLY NATION WITH A BIRTHDAY. THE United States is the only country with a known birthday. All the rest began, they know not when, and grew into power, they know not how. If there had been no Independence Day, England and America combined would not be so great as each actually is. There is no "Republican," no "Democrat," on the Fourth of July — all are Americans. All feel that their country is greater than party. — James G. Blaine. 1G& t6& t5* THE RAIL FENCE. IN the merry days of boyhood when we never knew a care Greater than the mumps or measles or a mother's cut of hair, When a sore toe was a treasure and a stone bruise on the heel Filled the other boys with envy which they tried not to conceal, There were many treasured objects on the farm we held most dear, Orchard, fields, the creek we swam in and the old spring cold and clear, Over there the woods of hick'ry and of oak so deep and dense, Looming up behind the outlines of the old rail fence. On its rails the quail would whistle in the early summer morn, Calling to their hiding fellows in the field of waving corn, And the meadow larks and robins on the stakes would sit and sing Till the forest shades behind them with their melody would ring. There the catbird and the jaybird sat and called each other names, And the squirrels and the chipmunks played the chase and catch me games, And the garter snake was often in unpleas- ant evidence In the grasses in the corners of the old rail fence. 418 ENCORES. As we grew to early manhood when we thought the country girls In the diadem of beauty were the very fair- est pearls Oft from spelling school or meeting or the jolly shucking bee Down the old lane we would wander with a merry little "she." On the plea of being tired (just the country lover lie), On a grassy seat we'd linger in the moon- light, she and I, And we'd paint a future picture touched with colors most intense As we sat there in the corner of the old rail fence. There one night in happy dreaming we were sitting hand in hand, Us so near the gates of heaven we could almost hear the band, When she heard a declaration whispered in her lis'ning ear — One she often since has told me she was mighty glad to hear. On my head there's now a desert fringed with foliage of gray, And there's many a thread of silver in her dear old head to-day, Yet the flame of love is burning in our bosoms as intense As it burned in the corner of that old rail fence. &5* t5* ^* WHICH LOVED BEST? 1LOVE you, mother," said little Ben, Then forgetting his work, his cap went on. And he was off to the garden swing, And left her the water and wood to bring. "I love you, mother," said rosy Nell — "I love you better than tongue can tell ;" Then she teased and pouted full half the day, Till her mother rejoiced when she went to play. "I love you, mother," said little Fan, "To-day I'll help you all I can ; How glad I am school doesn't keep;" So she rocked the babe till it fell asleep. Then, stepping softly, she fetched the broom, And swept the floor and tidied the room ; Busy and happy all day was she, Helpful and happy as child could be. "I love you, mother," again they said Three little children going to bed ; How do you think that mother guessed Which of them really loved her best ? c5* t5* ft5* HER FIRST PARTY. MISS Annabel McCarty Was invited to a party, "Your company from four to ten," the invi- tation said; And the maiden was delighted To think she was invited To sit up till the hour when the big folks went to bed. The crazy little midget Ran and told her news to Bridget, Who clapped her hands, and danced a jig, to Annabel's delight, And said, with accents hearty, " 'Twill be the swatest party If ye're there yerself, me darlint! I wish it was to-night !" ENCORES. 419 The great display of frilling Was positively killing; And, oh, the little booties! and the lovely sash so wide! And the gloves so very cunning! She was altogether "stunning," And the whole McCarty family regarded her with pride. They gave minute directions, With copious interjections Of "sit up straight !" and "don't do this or that — 'twould be absurd!" But, with their caressing, And the agony of dressing, Miss Annabel McCarty didn't hear a sin- gle word. There was music, there was dancing, And the sight was most entrancing, As if fairyland and floral band were hold- ing jubilee ; There was laughing, there was pouting; There was singing, there was shouting ; And young and old together made a carni- val of glee. Miss Annabel McCarty Was the youngest at the party, And every one remarked that she was beau- tifully dressed ; Like a doll she sat demurely On a sofa, thinking surely It would never do for her to run and frolic with the rest. The noise kept growing louder; The naughty boys would crowd her; "I think you're very rude, indeed !" the little lady said ; And then, without a warning, Her home instructions scorning^ She screamed : "I want my supper — and I want to go to bed !" c5* c5* *5* THE YOUNG SEAMSTRESS. (For a girl I AM learning how to sew, though I'm such a little maid; I push the needle in and out, and make the stitches strong; I'm sewing blocks of patchwork for my dolly's pretty bed, And mamma says the way I work it will not take me long. It's over and over — do you know How over-and-over stitches go? "I have begun a handkerchief. Mamma turned in the edge, And basted it with a pink thread to show me where to sew ; It has Greenaway children on it stepping staidly by a hedge ; of seven.) I look at them when I get tired, or the needle pricks, you know ; And that is the way I learn to hem With hemming stitches — do you know them? "Next I shall learn to run, and darn, and back-stitch, too, I guess. It wouldn't take me long, I know, if 'twasn't for the thread ; But the knots keep coming, and besides — I shall have to confess — Sometimes I slip my thimble off, and use my thumb instead ! When your thread knots, what do you do? And does it turn all brownish, too? 420' ENCORES. "My papa, he's a great big man, as much as six feet high; He's more than forty, and his hair has gray mixed with the black; Well, he can't sew — he can't begin to sew as well as I. If he loses off a button, mamma has to set it back ! You mustn't think me proud, you know, But I'm seven, and I can sew !" %g& t(5* t5* BORROWING TROUBLE. THERE'S many a trouble Would break like a bubble, And into the waters of Lethe depart, Did we not rehearse it, And tenderly nurse it, And give it a permanent place in the heart. There's many a sorrow Would vanish to-morrow, Were we but willing to furnish the wings ; So sadly intruding, And quietly brooding, It hatches out all sorts of horrible things. t3& t2& t2& WHY BETTY WHEN I was at the party," Said Betty (aged just four), "A little girl fell off her chair, Right down upon the floor; And all the other little girls Began to laugh, but me — / didn't laugh a single bit," Said Betty, seriously. DIDN'T LAUGH. 'Why not?" her mother asked her, Full of delight to find That Betty — bless her little heart ! — Had been so sweetly kind. "Why didn't you laugh, darling? Or don't you like to tell ?" "I didn't laugh," said Betty, "Cause it was me that fell!" ^* ^w ^* IT'S MY NATURE. AN aged colored man rose to a standing position and a point of order the other night with a tremulous voice and a feeble mien, and combated a sentiment adverse to the crushing out of old King Alcohol. Said he: "You 'mind me, my bredern and sistern, of a nannecot I wonse heerd when I was nigh a pickaninny. Dar was a sh't ho'n kalf a ramblin' ob hisself down a shady lane, when wot should he see but a snaik a lying on the ground with a big rock on his hed. "Says Mr. Kalf : 'Wot de matter ob you ?' "Says Mr. Snaik: 'Please, Mr. Kalf, to take dis stone off my hed.' " 'Dunno,' says Mr, Kalf, ' 'spec you'll bite me.' " 'Deed, no,' says Mr. Snaik ; 'you take de stone off on' sure I'll neber bite you.' "So Mr. Kalf he knocked de stone off Mr. Snaik's hed. " 'Which way you gwine, Mr. Kalf, says Mr. Snaik. " 'Down dis way,' said Mr. Kalf. "So dey started off togedder. ENCORES. 421 "Bine by, Mr. Snaik says: 'Mr. Kalf, guess I'll bite you.' "'Why,' said Mr. Kalf, 'y° u said you wouldn't bite if I turned you loose.' " 'I know dat,' says Mr. Snaik, 'but I kan't help it; it's my nature.' " 'Well,' says Mr. Kalf, 'we'll leave that queschun to de fust niggah we meet.' "Well, de fust niggah they met was a fox. '"Mr. Fox,' says Mr. Kalf, 'I took a stone offen Mr. Snaik's hed awhile back, an' he promised he wouldn't bite me; an' now he wants to bite anyhow.' " 'Well,' says Mr. Fox, 'de only way I can arborate de matter is to see de 'rig'nal per- sishuns ob de parties.' "So dey went back, an' Mr. Snaik laid hisself down and Mr. Kalf put de stone on his hed. " 'Now,' says Mr. Fox, 'dat am de 'rig'- nal persishuns ob de 'sputants, am it?' "Dey boff said it was. " 'Well,' said Mr. Fox, 'Mr. Kalf, you just go 'bout yo' bis'ness and Mr. Snaik won't bite you.' "Dass it, my bredern, dass it. You mus' put de stone on de hed an' gwine about yo' bis'ness, an' de Snaik won't bite you." tcfr t&* «5* GRIND YOUR AXE IN THE MORNING. GRIND your axe in the morning, my boy!" 'Twas a gray old woodcutter spoke, Beneath whose arm, on his backwoods farm, Had fallen the elm and oak. The hickory rough and the hornbeam tough Had yielded to wheat and corn, Till his children played 'neath the apple- tree's shade, By the cabin where they were born. "Grind your axe in the morning, my boy," He said to his lusty son ; "Or the hearts of oak will weary your stroke Long ere the day is done. The shag-bark's shell and the hemlock knot Defy the dull, blunt tool; And maul as you may, you may waste your day If your strength is the strength of a fool. "Grind your axe in the morning, my boy; Bring the hard, bright steel to an edge ; The bit, like a barber's razor, keen; The head like a blacksmith's sledge ; And then, through maple, and ironwood, and ash, Your stroke resistless shall drive, Till the forest monarchs around you crash, And their rugged fibers rive. "Grind your axe ere the sunrise shines, With long and patient care, And whet with the oil-stone, sharp and fine, Till the edge will clip a hair. And what though you reel o'er the stub- born steel, Till the toil your right arm racks, Pray, how could you cut the white-oak butt, If you had but a pewter axe ? "Grind your axe and be ready, my lad ; Then afar in the forest glen, With a steady swing your stroke shall ring, Keeping time with the stalwart men ; And if you miss your grinding at dawn, You'll never know manhood's joys ; No triumphs for you the long days through ; You must hack the bush withjthe boys." "Grind your axe in the morning," I heard Life's watchword, rude but clear; 422 ENCORES. And my soul was stirred at the homely word Of the backwoods sage and seer ; O, youth, whose long day lies before, Heed, heed, the woodman's warning ! Would you fell life's oaks with manly strokes, You must grind your axe in the morning. And he who dawdles and plays the fool, Nor longs for virtue and knowledge ; Who shirks at work, plays truant from school, Or "cuts" and "ponies" at college ; Whose soul no noble ambition fires — No hero-purpose employs— He must hoe life's fence-row among the briers, Or hack the brush with the boys. — George Lansing Taylor. t0& t&* *2& LYING IN CHINA. PEE CHEE and Hung Li and Wun Fang and Chin Lo Are lying around in China; They lie on the banks of the winding Pei- ho And in other dark spots in China; Gum Shoo and Dun Kee and Wun Lung and Yip Ye And Hung Lo and Hip La and Sam Yu and Ong We Are all kept as busy as they can be Just lying around in China. When the guns cease to roar and the smoke drifts away They will still lie around in China ; Hung Hi and Li Lo and Wun Chin and Kin Say Will be lying around in China ! They have caused us to hope and then left us to grieve, And the lies that they tell and the fibs that they weave Are things that the world must decline to believe ; Now let them lie down in China! t5* *5* <5* EASTER. ANIGHT, a day, another night had passed Since that strange day of sorrow and amaze When,, on the cruel cross of Calvary, The pure and holy Son of Man had died. Scattered were they who once had followed Him: Silent the tongues that once had hailed Him king; Heavy the hearts that loved Him as their Lord. A few sad women who had followed close When Joseph bore Him from the cross away, And saw the sepulcher made fast and sure, Came early when the Sabbath day was past, Bringing sweet spices to the sacred tomb ; And lo ! the heavy stone was rolled away. They looked within and saw the empty place, And mournfully unto each other said, "Where have they laid the body of our Lord?" But as they drew with lingering steps away, An angel, clad in shining garments, said, ENCORES. 423 "Why seek among the dead, the risen Lord? Did He not say that He would rise again ! He is arisen ; quickly go and tell The great glad tidings to His followers." With joyful haste they bore the wondrous news, And on from lip to lip the story passed : "The Lord is risen, risen from the dead." So broke the morning of the gospel day; So came the heavenly springtime to the world. As in the trembling light of early dawn, And in the first faint pulsings of the spring, We read the promise of the day's high sun, And the glad gathering of- the harvest sheaves, So in the dawning of that Easter morn, There shone the brightness that was yet to be. The day has risen to its noontide hour, And still the joyful message is as sweet As when, on Easter morning long ago, The women told it in Jerusalem, — "The Lord is risen, risen from the dead." Repeat the message, O ye happy ones, Upon whose hearts no darkness ever fell ! Repeat it, ye upon whose rayless night, The brightness of His shining has come in ! And ye who are afar, take the refrain, "The Lord is risen, risen from the dead," And with the joyful news the light will come. O lily white, yield all your rich perfume! O bird, sing ever sweet your vernal song ! O brook, glance brightly in the morning sun! Lend all your charms to grace the hallowed day Wherein we sing the ever-new, glad song, "The Lord is risen, risen from the dead." Christ is risen ! Let the swell Of the holy Easter bell All the wond'rous story tell. Sound, O bell, your dulcet ring! Lift, O child, your voice, and sing, For again has come the King. And, fair lily, lift your head; All your sweetest incense shed ; Christ is risen from the dead ! — Marion Riche. icr* K0* t&rl THE BUILDERS. O NCE there was a sort of a sailor man- Kind that loves to study an' plan ; Had no reverence under the sun For a thing that's only half-way done. Made no difference to him, it 'pears, If it'd been that way ten thousand years. So he sailed, one day, out into the sea, Past the bound of all seas that used to be ; Past the rim of the world; past the edge of things, Down the slant of the sky where chaos springs ; Past the hem of the twilight's dusky robe ; Down the s'lope of the globe — 'fore there was a globe ! And what do you reckon he goes and does ? Spoiled every map of the world there was ! But he made a better one. Once was a man who had an idee That everything was 'cause it had to be. An' every "must," he used to say, Had a law behind it, plain as day ; An' he used to argy, if you could find The law that gave the "thing" its mind, 424 ENCORES. By using your brains, and hands, and eyes, You could break the "must" to be bridle wise ; To "haw" an' "gee," "geddap" an' "whoa!" To stand an' back ; to come an' go ; Jest learn to use, this man, says he, Your "think" instead of your memory. So he got to thinkin' one day 'bout steam ; An' he'd think, an' study, an' whittle, an' dream — An' 'fore he got through, what you reckon he'd done? Wrecked every stage-coach under the sun ! But he made a better one. t5* ^* ^* SISTER SALLIE JONES. IN big revival-meetin' time, when sinners crowded round The mourner's bench to git their feet sot onto solid ground, To git 'em pulled by Christian faith from out the mire an' clay An' have their strayin' footsteps sot toward eternal day, One voice 'd rise above the rest in clear and searchin' tones, — The wonderful arousin' voice of Sister Sal- lie Jones ; 'T'd cheer the mourners, prayin' there, to hear her glad refrain: There is a land o' pure delight where saints immortal reign! 01' Jonas Treat 'd start the tune, pitched in the proper key, An' then Aunt Sallie she'd break in, an' goodness ! mercy me ! But how that meetin'-house 'd ring till every head 'd swim To hear her jerk the music from some ol' revival hymn ! She'd look 'way back towards the door, where unsaved sinners sot, An' sing right at 'em till they seemed all rooted to the spot: There is a fountain filled with blood drawn from Immanuel's veins, An' sinners plunged beneath that Hood lose all their guilty stains. She'd long to stand where Moses stood, an' view the lan'scape o'er, Would some day set her ransomed feet on Canaan's happy shore, An' sometimes sing ontil I thought the angels all could hear: Amazin' grace, how sweet the sound in a believer's earl An' every heart 'd feel a thrill o' sympa- thetic pain When she would raise her tender eyes an' sing the sad refrain : Alas, an' did my Savior bleed an' did my sovereign die? Would He devote that sacred head fur sich a worm as I? I've of'n heerd the preacher say that voice to her was given To rescue sinners from their sins an' start 'em up to heaven, An' cheer the droopin' hearts o' them whose burdens bent them down An' fill them full o' new resolves to fight an' win the crown. Sometimes I sit in wakin' dreams an' memory takes wing Back to the long ago an' I kin hear Aunt Sallie sing: When I can read my title clear to mansions in the skies, I'll bid farwell to every fear an' wipe my weepin' eyes. ENCORES. 425 She's been at rest fur many years beside the church that she Once filled with sweet an' soul-felt strains o' sacred melody ; An' I've an idee 'fore she died the mourn- ers heerd her sing: 0, grave, where is thy victory? 0, death, where is thy sting? An' when she entered heaven's gate, with glad, triumphant tongue, I bet she clapped her saintly hands an' rapturously sung: Here will I bathe my wearied soul in seas o' heavenly rest, An' not a wave o' trouble roll across my peaceful breast. 10* (5* «5* THAT OLD RED SUNBONNET. HOW dear to my heart are the scenes of my childhood When fond recollection presents them to view ! The orchard, the meadow, the deep tangled wildwood And every fond spot which my infancy knew." So sang the old poet in rhythmical measure, And millions have dreamed of his picture so fair, But never a word of that one crowning treasure, The old red sunbonnet our girls used to wear. The bells of to-day in their scorn would deride it And wonder how maidens could wear such a fright! But when 'twas protecting a dear head in- side it To old-fashioned boys 'twas a heavenly sight. No ornaments decked it, it bore no fine laces * No ribbons of bright colored hues did it bear, But hid in its depths was the sweetest of faces — That old red sunbonnet our girl used to wear. When school was dismissed, on her head we would set it And tie the long strings in a knot 'neath her chin, Then claim from her red lips a kiss and would get it, For kissing in old days was never a sin. Then homeward we'd speed where the brooklet was plashing Down through the old wood and the meadow so fair, The skies not more blue than the eyes that were flashing Inside that sunbonnet our girl used to wear. In front of her mirror a proud dame is standing Arranging a prize on her head, now so white ! She turns, while her bosom with pride is expanding, And asks if it is not a dream of delight ! I speak of the past as I make the inspec- tion, Of days when to me she was never more fair, And tears gem her eyes at the fond recol- lection Of that old sunbonnet she once used to wear. — James Barton Adams. 426 ENCORES. O CAPTAIN, MY CAPTAIN! (This exquisite poem refers to our martyred Lincoln.) O CAPTAIN, my Captain ! our fearful trip is done, The ship has weather'd every rack, the prize we sought is won, The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting, While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring; But O heart, heart, heart! O the bleeding drops of red, Where on the deck my Captain lies Fallen, cold and dead. O Captain, my Captain! rise up and hear the bells; Rise up — for you the flag is flung — for you the bugle trills, For you bouquets and ribbon'd wreaths, for you the shores a-crowding, For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning: Here," Captain ! dear father ! This arm beneath your head ! It is some dream that on the deck You've fallen cold and dead. My Captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still, My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will, The ship is anchor'd safe and sound, its voyage closed and done, From fearful trip the victor ship comes in with object won ; Exult, O shores, and ring, O bells ! But I, with mournful tread, Walk the deck — my Captain lies Fallen, cold and dead. £m tpm £& THE GOOD OLD TIME RELIGION. THE good old time religion that we have in Bowerville; This is the kind that suits me, an' - the kind that always will. There ain't no pew that isn't free — the same as heav'nly grace — But then I sort of claim a seat up in the "Amen" place. An' it is good to hear the way the old-time stanzas ring When Parson Brown lines out the hymn an' says, "Arise an' sing." The good, old-time religion, an' the old- time music, too, It sets your soul a-singin' 'fore the verse is half way through. There ain't no high priced singer, who seems too good fer earth, A-warblin just enough to give the folks their money's worth. The congregation sings the song; it may get off the key, But still the old-time praise an' song is good enough for me.. The good, old-time religion — the new kinds are too strange, But, thank the Lord that heaven hasn't suf- fered any change ! We still believe that heaven is our home up in the skies, An' it is still old fashioned when we call it "paradise." We've got new streets an' 'lectric lights an' waterworks, but still We've got old-time religion in the church at Bowerville. ENCORES. 427 BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU SAY. JN speaking of a person's faults, Pray don't forget your own; Remember those with homes of glass, Should seldom throw a stone. If we have nothing else to do But talk of those who sin, Tis better we commenced at home, And from that point begin. We have no right to judge a man Until he's fairly tried ; Should we not like his company, We know the world is wide. Some may have faults — and who not?— The old as well as young; Perhaps we may, for aught we know, Have fifty to their one. has I'll tell you of a better plan, And find it works full well: To try my own defects to cure Before of others' tell; And though I sometimes hope to be No worse than some I know, My own shortcomings bid me let The faults of others go. Then let us all, when we commence To slander friend or foe, Think of the harm one word may do To those we little know. Remember, curses sometimes, like Our chickens, "roost at home ;" Don't speak of others' faults until We have none of our own. t0& t&* t&* MEMORY. (The following poem was written by President Garfield during his senior year in William's College, Mass.) T IS beauteous night; the stars look brightly down Upon the earth decked in her robe of snow. No lights gleam at the windows save my own Which gives its cheer to midnight and to me. And now with noiseless step sweet memory comes And leads me gently through her twilight ; What poet's tuneful lyre has ever sung realms Or delicatest pencil e'er portrayed The enchanted shadow land where memory dwells ? It has its valleys, cheerless, lone and drear, Dark, shaded, mournful, cypress tree; And yet its sunlit mountain tops are bathed Upon its craggy In heaven's own blue. cliffs Robed in the dreamy light of distant years, Are clustered joys serene of other days. Upon its gently sloping hillsides bend The weeping willows o'er the sacred dust Of dear departed ones ; yet in that land, Where'er our footsteps fall upon the shore. They that were sleeping rise from out the dust Of death's long, silent years, and round us stand As erst they did before the prison tomb Received their • clay within its voiceless halls. The heavens that bend above that land are hung With clouds of various hues. Some dark and chill, 428 ENCORES. Surcharged with sorrow, cast their sombre shade Upon the sunny, joyous land below. Others are floating through the dreamy air, White as the falling snow, their margins tinged With gold and crimson hues ; their shadows fall Upon the flowery meads and sunny slopes, Soft as the shadow of an angel's wing. When the rough battle of the day is done, And evening's peace falls gently on the heart, I bound away, across the noisy years, Unto the utmost verge of memory's land, Where earth and sky in dreamy distance meet, And memory dim with dark oblivion joins ; Where woke the first remembered sound that fell Upon the ear in childhood's early morn ; And, wandering thence along the rolling years, I see the shadow of my former self, Gliding from childhood up to man's estate ; The path of youth winds down through many a vale, And on the brink of many a dread abyss, From out whose darkness comes no ray of light, Save that a phantom dances o'er the gulf And beckons toward the verge. Again the path Leads o'er the summit where the sunbeams fall: And thus in light and shade, sunshine and gloom, Sorrow and joy this life-path leads along. — James Abram Garfield. xcfr c5* ^* A TALE OF "WHOA." MORNING. GOODBY, old horse, we'll turn you out To roam o'er hill and plain ; We've bought a horseless carriage, and We'll never need you again. With naphtha, oil or gasoline We'll ride from morn till dark And on a Sunday afternoon Go puffing through the park. You're hardly worth a piece of pie ! Goodby, old horse, goodby ! EVENING. Come here, old horse, we need your pull To get us home to-night; This nasty, stinking, puffing thing Is not perfected — quite. Ten miles from home it fussed and fumed And then refused to go, And, minus both a push and pull, It was a case of whoa ! If you'll return, so will our joy, Good boy, old horse, good boy. %G& *£& (5* THE MAxN WHO KNOWS IT ALL. His egotism never yet was known to slip a cog. His self assurance has its stamp forever in his eyes ; No gray and patriarchal owl could ever look so wise; YOU bump against him everywhere, in country and in town ; Upon his sadly swollen head he wears the knowledge crown. His bump of self-esteem stands out like knots upon a log; ENCORES. 429 He is a constant sufferer from enlargement of the gall And petrifaction of the cheek, the man who knows it all. He has an unimpeded flow of language at command ; His active, tireless tongue is of the auto- matic brand. His nasal organ he inserts in every one's affairs ; He sows the grain of knowledge, while his neighbors sow the tares. No matter what the theme may be, he's posted up to date ; The information that he bears would wreck a common pate. He thinks without his guidance this ter- restrial whirling ball Would cease to take its daily spin, the man who knows it all. — James Barton Adams. t2& t5* ^* THE COURTIN'. GOD makes sech nights, all white an' still Fur'z you can look or listen, Moonshine an' snow on field an' hill, All silence an' all glisten. Zekle crep' up quite unbeknown An' peeked in thru the winder, An' there sot Huldy all alone, Tth no one nigh to hender. A fireplace filled the room's one side With half a cord o' wood in — There warn't no stoves (tell comfort died) To bake ye to a puddin'. The wa'nut logs shot sparkles out Towards the pootiest, bless her, An' leetle flames danced all about The chiny on the dresser. Agin the chimbley crook-necks hung, An' in amongst 'em rusted The ole queen's-arm thet gran'ther Young Fetched back from Concord busted. The very room, coz she was in, Seemed warm from floor to ceilin', An' she looked full ez rosy agin Ez the apples she was peelin'. 'Twas kin' o' kingdom-come to look On sech a blessed cretur; A dogrose blushin' to a brook Ain't modester nor sweeter. He was six foot o' man, Ai, Clear grit an' human natur' ; None couldn't quicker pitch a ton Nor dror a furrer straighten He'd sparked it with full twenty gals, He'd squired 'em, danced 'em, druv 'em, Fust this one, an' then thet, by spells — All is, he couldn't love 'em. But long o' her his veins 'ould run All crinkly like curled maple, — The side she breshed felt full o' sun Ez a south slope in April. She thought no voice hed such a swing Ez hisn in the choir ; My ! when he made Ole Hundred ring, She knowed the Lord was nigher. An' she'd blush scarlit, right in prayer, When her new meetin' bunnet Felt somehow thru its crown a pair O' blue eyes sot upon it. 430 ENCORES. Thet night, I tell ye, she looked some ! She seemed to 've gut a new soul, For she felt sartin-sure he'd come, Down to her very shoe-sole. She heered a foot, an' knowed it tu, A-raspin' on the scraper, — All ways to once her feel in 's flew, Like sparks in burnt-up paper. He kin' o' l'itered on the mat, Some doubtfle o' the sekle; His heart kep' goin' pity-pat, But hern went pity Zekle. An' yit she gin her cheer a juerk Ez though she wished him furder, An' on her apples kep' to work, Parin' away like murder. "You want to see my Pa, I s'pose ?" "Wal — no — I come dasignin' — " "To see my Ma? She's sprinklin' clo'es Agin to-morrer's i'nin." To say why gals acts so or so, Or don't 'ould be presumin'; Mebby to mean yes an' say no Comes nateral to women. He stood a spell on one foot fust, Then stood a spell on t'other, An' on which one he felt the wust • He couldn't ha' told ye nuther. Says he, "I'd better call agin," Says she, "Think likely, Mister;" Thet last word pricked him like a pin, An' — wal, he up an' kist her. When Ma bimeby upon 'em slips, Huldy sot pale ez ashes, All kin' o' smily roun' the lips An' teary roun' the lashes. For she was jest the quiet kind Whose naturs never vary, Like streams that keep a summer mind Snowhid in Jenooary. The blood clost 'roun' her heart felt glued Too tight for all expressin' Tell mother see how metters stood, An' gin 'em both her blessin'. Then her red come back like the tide Down to the Bay of Fundy, An' all I know is they was cried In' meetin' come nex' Sunday. ^w (^* ^» MY BOB-SLED. MADE it all myself, you see ; it wasn't much fer fine; Fellers all began to laugh at that ol' sled uv mine, When they see me climbin' up ther hill we used to slide, A-draggin' it along behin', all ready for a ride — - Then they shouted, scornful like : "Say, Jimmie, what it is?" Didn't feel like sayin' much, so 'tended to my biz; Jes' let 'em keep on laughin' an' a-tauntin' me, until I squared my ol' bob-sled around fer my first slide down ther hill. The runners were of hickory, and the top was made uv oak. When I got her finished, wa'n't no part could be broke ; But the other fellers' sleds were all so bang-up slick and fine, Kinder knocked the spots all off that home- made one uv mine; The bottoms were so slippery, an' polished up so bright, ENCORES. 431 I was ready to bet she'd go ahead uv every thing in sight; But I never answered back a word, an' was mighty quiet till I laid right down an' hugged her tight, fer my first run down ther hill. Didn't have a mite uv paint on bottom, sides, or top; Knew if she once got started though, 'twould be mighty hard to stop. 'Twas seasoned stuff she was made uv, an' jes' ther shape fer speed, Might keep a-pokin' lots uv fun, I knew she'd take ther lead. There was Clipper, Comet, Reindeer, an' Dexter there, an' Dart — All lined up on ther hillside, an' ready fer the start. My ol' bob-sled didn't hev no name.. I'se bound she wouldn't till I found out which would suit her best, by my first slide down ther hill. An' then we shouted : "One, two, three, an' altogether. Go!" Gee whiz! the way that bob-sled flew was anything but slow : She shot ahead like a rocket that's got lots uv powder behin'; None uv the rest was in it, when you looked back up ther line. She beat 'em like a thoroughbred, if she did look like a scrub, 'Twas my turn now ter laugh an' shout: "Gimme yer heads to rub !" "Say, Jimmie, won't yer let us ride?" an' I said: "Course I will;" For they owned my bob-sled beat 'em all a-slidin' down ther hill. <£ <£ & THE MITES IN THE cheese mites asked how the cheese got there, And warmly debated the matter. The orthodox said it came from the air, And the heretics said from the platter. They argued it long, and they argued it strong, - THE CHEESE. And I hear they are arguing it now, But of all the choice spirits who lived iv. the cheese Not one of them thought of a cow. — A. Conan Doyle. PITCHER THEY toiled together side by side, In the field where the corn was grow- ing; They paused awhile to quench their thirst, Grown weary with the hoeing. "I fear, my friend," I said to one, "That you will ne'er be richer ; You drink, I see, from the little brown jug, Whilst your friend drinks from the pitcher. OR JUG. "One is filled with alcohol, The fiery drink from the still; * The other with water clear and cool From the spring at the foot of the hill. "In all of life's best gifts, my friend, I fear you will ne'er be richer, Unless you leave the little brown jug, And drink, like your friend, from the pitcher." 432 ENCORES. My words have proved a prophecy, For years have passed away ; How do you think have fared our friends That toiled in the fields that day? One is a reeling, drunken sot, Grown poorer instead of richer; The other has won both wealth and fame, And he always drank from the pitcher. ^* i2rl ^w VAT I CALL HIM. DER leddle boy vot yust arrived Aboud some veeks ago, His voice was learning for to make Dot noise vich is a crow. Und also somedimes ven I vent Und sboke mit him a vile, He tvists his leddle face arount Und makes vot is a smile ! — I vonder vot to call him? Some say Thomas, Some say Tim; Some say Stephen, Some say Jim ; Some say Diederich, Some say Matt; Some say Daniel, Some say Pat; Some say Goethe, Some say Choe; Vot to call him I doan'd know. I ask dot leddle boy himself Vot name he dinks vill do, Und den he makes a funny vink Und says py me, "Ah, Goo!" Ah Goo ! dot is a Chinese name ! I guess vot he doan'd like To be called dot ven he grows up, Much bedder id vas Mike ! I wonder vot I call him? Some say Heinrich, Some say Net; Some say Villum, Some say Fret; Some say Dewey, Some say Schley, Some say Sampson, Some say Si; Some say Chasper, Some say Snitz; So I dink I Call him Fritz. t5* ^* *5* WATER. WINE, wine, thy power and praise Have ever been echoed in minstrel lays; But water, I deem, hath a mightier claim To fill up a niche in the temple of Fame. Ye who are bred in Anacreon's school May sneer at my strain, as the song of a fool; Ye are wise, no doubt, but have yet to learn How the tongue can cleave, and the veins can burn. Should you ever be one of a fainting band, With your brow to the sun and your feet to the sand I would wager the thing I'm most loth to spare, That your Bacchanal chorus would never ring there. Traverse the desert, and then ye can tell What treasures exist in the cold, deep well ; Sink in despair on the red, parched earth, And then you may reckon what water is worth. ENCORES. 433 Famine is laying her hand of bone On the ship becalmed in a torrid zone ; The gnawing of Hunger's worm is past, But fiery Thirst lives on to the last. The stoutest one of the gallant crew Hath a cheek and lips of ghastly hue ; The hot blood stands in each glassy eye ; And, "Water, O T-od !" is the only cry. There's drought in the land, and the herbage is dead, No ripple is heard in the streamlet's bed : The herd's low bleat, and the sick man's pant, Are mournfully telling the boon we want. Let Heaven this one rich gift withhold, How soon we find it is better than gold ; And water, I say, hath a right to claim The minstrel's song, and a tithe of Fame. «5* d9* &$* CONTENTMENT BETTER THAN RICHES. Arthur Rich: YOUR hat is too big for your head, Martin Lee, Your jacket is threadbare and old, There's a hole in your shoe and a patch on your knee, Yet you seem very cheerful and bold. Martin Lee: Why not, Arthur Rich ? for my lesson I say, And my duty I try hard to do ; . I have plenty of work, I have time, too, to play, I have health, and my joys are not few. Arthur Rich: See my vest, Martin Lee, and my boots how they shine! My jacket, my trousers, all new ! Now, would you not like such a nice ring as mine? Come, give me the answer that's true. Martin Lee: Such clothes, Arthur Rich, would become me, and please, But I'm content in the thought, Since my mother is poor, that I'd rather wear these Than make her work more than she ought. Arthur Rich: You are right, Martin Lee, and your way is the best; Your hat is now handsome to me ; I look at the heart beating under your vest, And the patches no longer I see. ^* t3& t5* THE TABLES TURNED. (Can be used as a dialogue.) I KNOW what you're going to say," she said, And she stood up, looking uncommonly tall; "You are going to speak of the hectic fall, And say you are sorry the summer's dead, And no other summer was like it, you know, And can I imagine what made it so ? Now, ain't you, honestly ?." "Yes," I said. "I know what you're going to say," she said; "You're going to ask if I forget That day in June when the woods were wet, 434 ENCORES. And you carried me" — here she dropped her head — "Over the creek; you are going to say, Do I remember that horrid day? Now, ain't you, honestly?" "Yes," I said. "I know what you're going to say," she said; "You are going to say that since that time You have rather tended to run to rhyme ; And," — her clear glance fell, and her cheek grew red, — "And have I noticed your tone was queer ; Why, everybody has seen it here ! Now, ain't you, honestly?" "Yes," I said. "I know what you're going to say," I said, "You are going to say you've been much annoyed, And I'm short of tact — you will say, de- void — And I'm clumsy and awkward, and call me Ted, And I'll bear abuse like a dear old lamb, And you'll have me, anyway, just as I am? Now, ain't you, honestly?" "Ye — es," she said. <5* * *„ C •5? f -^ A* o. w A 0' ^*°, "c- \> * c- •V s Y % - s 'V ,. V ■ vO 1 ' '- r ' it °* V R ESTS' _ ^ -* \ ,v ^^ X 0$ < l ' » « "£> .A V s s „ : ^ a. 0' LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 029 561 719 6