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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14829 ***
+
+ =OUR HOLIDAYS=
+
+
+
+ HISTORICAL STORIES
+
+ RETOLD FROM
+
+ ST. NICHOLAS MAGAZINE
+
+ IN FIVE VOLUMES
+
+
+ INDIAN STORIES
+ A mirror of Indian ideas, customs, and adventures.
+
+ COLONIAL STORIES
+ Stirring tales of the rude frontier life of early times.
+
+ REVOLUTIONARY STORIES
+ Heroic deeds, and especially children's part in them.
+
+ CIVIL WAR STORIES
+ Thrilling stories of the great struggle, both on land and sea.
+
+ OUR HOLIDAYS
+ Something of their meaning and spirit.
+
+
+ Each about 200 pages. Full cloth, 12mo.
+
+
+ THE CENTURY CO.
+
+ [Illustration: HO, FOR THE CHRISTMAS TREE!]
+
+
+
+ OUR HOLIDAYS
+
+ THEIR MEANING AND SPIRIT
+
+ RETOLD FROM ST. NICHOLAS
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ PUBLISHED BY THE CENTURY CO.
+ NEW YORK MCMVI
+
+ THE DE VINNE PRESS
+
+
+
+
+ =CONTENTS=
+
+ PAGE
+
+OUR HOLIDAYS 1
+
+ ST. SATURDAY _Henry Johnstone_ 3
+
+
+HALLOWE'EN 7
+
+ ALL-HALLOW-EVE MYTHS _David Brown_ 9
+
+
+ELECTION DAY 13
+
+ RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF CITIZENS _S.E. Forman_ 15
+
+
+THANKSGIVING DAY 21
+
+ A THANKSGIVING DINNER THAT FLEW AWAY _H. Butterworth_ 23
+
+
+WHITTIER'S BIRTHDAY 35
+
+ THE BOYHOOD OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER _William H. Rideing_ 37
+
+
+CHRISTMAS 51
+
+ HOW UNCLE SAM OBSERVES CHRISTMAS _Clifford Howard_ 53
+
+
+NEW YEAR'S DAY 79
+
+ EXTRACT FROM "SOCIAL LIFE IN THE COLONIES" _Edward Eggleston_ 81
+
+ A CHINESE NEW YEAR'S IN CALIFORNIA _H.H._ 82
+
+
+LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY 85
+
+ ABRAHAM LINCOLN _Helen Nicolay_ 87
+
+ THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS 99
+
+ O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN! _Walt Whitman_ 101
+
+
+ST. VALENTINE'S BIRTHDAY 103
+
+ WHO BEGAN IT? _Olive Thorne_ 105
+
+
+WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY 111
+
+ THE BOYHOOD OF WASHINGTON _Horace E. Scudder_ 113
+
+
+LONGFELLOW'S BIRTHDAY 123
+
+ LONGFELLOW AND THE CHILDREN _Lucy Larcom_ 125
+
+
+INAUGURATION DAY 139
+
+ HOW A PRESIDENT IS INAUGURATED _Clifford Howard_ 141
+
+
+EASTER DAY 153
+
+ A SONG OF EASTER _Celia Thaxter_ 155
+
+ THE GENERAL'S EASTER BOX _Temple Bailey_ 159
+
+
+ARBOR DAY 175
+
+ THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE TREE _William Cullen Bryant_ 177
+
+
+APRIL FOOL'S DAY 181
+
+ FOURTH-MONTH DUNCE _H.M.M._ 183
+
+
+MEMORIAL DAY 185
+
+ THE BOY IN GRAY _Mary Bradley_ 187
+
+
+FLAG DAY 193
+
+ THE STARS AND STRIPES _Henry Russell Wray_ 195
+
+
+FOURTH OF JULY 199
+
+ A STORY OF THE FLAG _Victor Mapes_ 201
+
+
+
+
+ =PREFACE=
+
+
+To most young people, holidays mean simply freedom from lessons and a
+good time. All this they should mean--and something more.
+
+It is well to remember, for example, that we owe the pleasure of
+Thanksgiving to those grateful Pilgrims who gave a feast of thanks for
+the long-delayed rain that saved their withering crops--a feast of wild
+turkeys and pumpkin pies, which has been celebrated now for nearly three
+centuries.
+
+It is most fitting that the same honor paid to Washington's Birthday is
+now given to that of Lincoln, who is as closely associated with the
+Civil War as our first President is with the Revolution.
+
+Although the birthdays of the three American poets, Whittier, Lowell,
+and Longfellow, are not holidays, stories relating to these days are
+included in this collection as signalizing days to be remembered.
+
+In this book are contained stories bearing on our holidays and annual
+celebrations, from Hallowe'en to the Fourth of July.
+
+
+
+
+ =Our Holidays=
+
+
+ If all the year were playing holidays,
+ To sport would be as tedious as to work.
+
+ SHAKSPERE. _King Henry IV_, Part I.
+
+
+ =ST. SATURDAY=
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ BY HENRY JOHNSTONE
+
+ Oh, Friday night's the queen of nights, because it ushers in
+ The Feast of good St. Saturday, when studying is a sin,
+ When studying is a sin, boys, and we may go to play
+ Not only in the afternoon, but all the livelong day.
+
+ St. Saturday--so legends say--lived in the ages when
+ The use of leisure still was known and current among men;
+ Full seldom and full slow he toiled, and even as he wrought
+ He'd sit him down and rest awhile, immersed in pious thought.
+
+ He loved to fold his good old arms, to cross his good old knees,
+ And in a famous elbow-chair for hours he'd take his ease;
+ He had a word for old and young, and when the village boys
+ Came out to play, he'd smile on them and never mind the noise.
+
+ So when his time came, honest man, the neighbors all declared
+ That one of keener intellect could better have been spared;
+ By young and old his loss was mourned in cottage and in hall,
+ For if he'd done them little good, he'd done no harm at all.
+
+ In time they made a saint of him, and issued a decree--
+ Since he had loved his ease so well, and been so glad to see
+ The children frolic round him and to smile upon their play--
+ That school boys for his sake should have a weekly holiday.
+
+ They gave his name unto the day, that as the years roll by
+ His memory might still be green; and that's the reason why
+ We speak his name with gratitude, and oftener by far
+ Than that of any other saint in all the calendar.
+
+ Then, lads and lassies, great and small, give ear to what I say--
+ Refrain from work on Saturdays as strictly as you may;
+ So shall the saint your patron be and prosper all you do--
+ And when examinations come he'll see you safely through.
+
+ [Illustration: St. Saturday]
+
+
+
+
+ =Hallowe'en=
+
+ _October 31_
+
+ The Eve of All Saints' Day
+
+
+This night is known in some places as Nutcrack Night, or Snapapple
+Night. Supernatural influences are pretended to prevail and hence all
+kinds of superstitions were formerly connected with it. It is now
+usually celebrated by children's parties, when certain special games are
+played.
+
+
+ =ALL-HALLOW-EVE MYTHS=
+
+ BY DAVID BROWN
+
+As the world grows old and wise, it ceases to believe in many of its
+superstitions. But, although they are no longer believed in, the customs
+connected with them do not always die out; they often linger on through
+centuries, and, from having once been serious religious rites, or
+something real in the life of the people, they become at last mere
+children's plays or empty usages, often most zealously enjoyed by those
+who do not understand their meaning.
+
+All-hallow Eve is now, in our country towns, a time of careless frolic,
+and of great bonfires, which, I hear, are still kindled on the hill-tops
+in some places. We also find these fires in England, Scotland, and
+Ireland, and from their history we learn the meaning of our celebration.
+Some of you may know that the early inhabitants of Great Britain,
+Ireland, and parts of France were known as Celts, and that their
+religion was directed by strange priests called Druids. Three times in
+the year, on the first of May, for the sowing; at the solstice, June
+21st, for the ripening and turn of the year; and on the eve of November
+1st, for the harvesting, those mysterious priests of the Celts, the
+Druids, built fires on the hill-tops in France, Britain, and Ireland, in
+honor of the sun. At this last festival the Druids of all the region
+gathered in their white robes around the stone altar or cairn on the
+hill-top. Here stood an emblem of the sun, and on the cairn was a sacred
+fire, which had been kept burning through the year. The Druids formed
+about the fire, and, at a signal, quenched it, while deep silence rested
+on the mountains and valleys. Then the new fire gleamed on the cairn,
+the people in the valley raised a joyous shout, and from hill-top to
+hill-top other fires answered the sacred flame. On this night, all
+hearth-fires in the region had been put out, and they were kindled with
+brands from the sacred fire, which was believed to guard the households
+through the year.
+
+But the Druids disappeared from their sacred places, the cairns on the
+hill-tops became the monuments of a dead religion, and Christianity
+spread to the barbarous inhabitants of France and the British Islands.
+Yet the people still clung to their old customs, and felt much of the
+old awe for them. Still they built their fires on the first of May,--at
+the solstice in June,--and on the eve of November 1st. The church found
+that it could not all at once separate the people from their old ways,
+so it gradually turned these ways to its own use, and the harvest
+festival of the Druids became in the Catholic Calendar the Eve of All
+Saints, for that is the meaning of the name "All-hallow Eve." In the
+seventh century, the Pantheon, the ancient Roman temple of all the gods,
+was consecrated anew to the worship of the Virgin and of all holy
+martyrs.
+
+By its separation from the solemn character of the Druid festival,
+All-hallow Eve lost much of its ancient dignity, and became the
+carnival-night of the year for wild, grotesque rites. As century after
+century passed by, it came to be spoken of as the time when the magic
+powers, with which the peasantry, all the world over, filled the wastes
+and ruins, were supposed to swarm abroad to help or injure men. It was
+the time when those first dwellers in every land, the fairies, were said
+to come out from their grots and lurking-places; and in the darkness of
+the forests and the shadows of old ruins, witches and goblins gathered.
+In course of time, the hallowing fire came to be considered a protection
+against these malicious powers. It was a custom in the seventeenth
+century for the master of a family to carry a lighted torch of straw
+around his fields, to protect them from evil influence through the year,
+and as he went he chanted an invocation to the fire. The chief thing
+which we seek to impress upon your minds in connection with All-hallow
+Eve is that its curious customs show how no generation of men is
+altogether separated from earlier generations. Far as we think we are
+from our uncivilized ancestors, much of what they did and thought has
+come into our doing and thinking,--with many changes perhaps, under
+different religious forms, and sometimes in jest where they were in
+earnest. Still, these customs and observances (of which All-hallow Eve
+is only one) may be called the piers, upon which rests a bridge that
+spans the wide past between us and the generations that have gone
+before.
+
+
+
+
+ =Election Day=
+
+ The first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.
+
+
+This day is now a holiday so that every man may have an opportunity to
+cast his vote. Unlike most other holidays, it does not commemorate an
+event, but it is a day which has a tremendous meaning if rightly looked
+upon and rightly used. Its true spirit and significance are well set
+forth in the following pages. By act of Congress the date for the
+choosing of Presidential electors is set for the first Tuesday after the
+first Monday in November in the years when Presidents are elected, and
+the different States have now nearly all chosen the same day for the
+election of State officers.
+
+
+ =RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF CITIZENS=
+
+ BY S.E. FORMAN
+
+Read the bill of rights in the constitution of your State and you will
+find there, set down in plain black and white, the rights which you are
+to enjoy as an American citizen. This constitution tells you that you
+have the right to your life, to your liberty, and to the property that
+you may honestly acquire; that your body, your health and your
+reputation shall be protected from injury; that you may move freely from
+place to place unmolested; that you shall not be imprisoned or otherwise
+punished without a fair trial by an impartial jury; that you may worship
+God according to the promptings of your own conscience; that you may
+freely write and speak on any subject providing you do not abuse the
+privilege; that you may peaceably assemble and petition government for
+the redress of grievances. These are civil rights. They, together with
+many others equally dear, are guaranteed by the State and national
+constitutions, and they belong to all American citizens.
+
+These civil rights, like the air and the sunshine, come to us in these
+days as a matter of course, but they did not come to our ancestors as a
+matter of course. To our ancestors rights came as the result of
+hard-fought battles. The reading of the bill of rights would cause your
+heart to throb with gratitude did you but know the suffering and
+sacrifice each right has cost.
+
+Now just as our rights have not been gained without a struggle, so they
+will not be maintained without a struggle. We may not have to fight with
+cannon and sword as did our forefathers in the Revolution, but we may be
+sure that if our liberty is to be preserved there will be fighting of
+some kind to do. Such precious things as human rights cannot be had for
+nothing.
+
+One of the hardest battles will be to fulfil the duties which accompany
+our rights, for every right is accompanied by a duty. If I can hold a
+man to his contract I ought (_I owe it_) to pay my debts; if I may
+worship as I please, I ought to refrain from persecuting another on
+account of his religion; if my property is held sacred, I ought to
+regard the property of another man as sacred; if the government deals
+fairly with me and does not oppress me, I ought to deal fairly With it
+and refuse to cheat it; if I am allowed freedom of speech, I ought not
+to abuse the privilege; if I have a right to a trial by jury, I ought to
+respond when I am summoned to serve as a juror; if I have a right to my
+good name and reputation, I ought not to slander my neighbor; if
+government shields me from injury, I ought to be ready to take up arms
+in its defense.
+
+Foremost among the rights of American citizenship is that of going to
+the polls and casting a ballot. This right of voting is not a civil
+right; it is a political right which grew out of man's long struggle for
+his civil rights. While battling with kings and nobles for liberty the
+people learned to distrust a privileged ruling class. They saw that if
+their civil rights were to be respected, government must pass into their
+own hands or into the hands of their chosen agents. Hence they demanded
+political rights, the right of holding office and of voting at
+elections.
+
+The suffrage, or the right of voting, is sometimes regarded as a natural
+right, one that belongs to a person simply because he is a person.
+
+People will say that a man has as much right to vote as he has to
+acquire property or to defend himself from attack. But this is not a
+correct view. The right to vote is a _franchise_ or privilege which the
+law gives to such citizens as are thought worthy of possessing it. It is
+easy to see that everybody cannot be permitted to vote. There must be
+certain qualifications, certain marks of fitness, required of a citizen
+before he can be entrusted with the right of suffrage. These
+qualifications differ in the different States. In most States every male
+citizen over twenty-one years of age may vote. In four States, women as
+well as men exercise the right of suffrage.
+
+But the right of voting, like every other right, has its corresponding
+duty. No day brings more responsibilities than Election Day. The
+American voter should regard himself as an officer of government. He is
+one of the members of the electorate, that vast governing body which
+consists of all the voters and which possesses supreme political power,
+controlling all the governments, federal and State and local. This
+electorate has in its keeping the welfare and the happiness of the
+American people. When, therefore, the voter takes his place in this
+governing body, that is, when he enters the polling-booth and presumes
+to participate in the business of government, he assumes serious
+responsibilities. In the polling-booth he is a public officer charged
+with certain duties, and if he fails to discharge these duties properly
+he may work great injury. What are the duties of a voter in a
+self-governing country? If an intelligent man will ask himself the
+question and refer it to his conscience as well as deliberate upon it in
+his mind, he will conclude that he ought to do the following things:
+
+ 1. To vote whenever it is his privilege.
+
+ 2. To try to understand the questions upon which he votes.
+
+ 3. To learn something about the character and fitness of the men
+ for whom he votes.
+
+ 4. To vote only for honest men for office.
+
+ 5. To support only honest measures.
+
+ 6. To give no bribe, direct or indirect, and to receive no bribe,
+ direct or indirect.
+
+ 7. To place country above party.
+
+ 8. To recognize the result of the election as the will of the
+ people and therefore as the law.
+
+ 9. To continue to vote for a righteous although defeated cause as
+ long as there is a reasonable hope of victory.
+
+ "The proudest now is but my peer,
+ The highest not more high;
+ To-day of all the weary year,
+ A king of men am I.
+
+ "To-day alike are great and small,
+ The nameless and the known;
+ My palace is the people's hall,
+ The ballot-box my throne!"
+
+ WHITTIER.
+
+
+
+
+ =Thanksgiving Day=
+
+ Appointed by the President--usually the last Thursday in November.
+
+
+Now observed as a holiday in all the States, but not a legal holiday in
+all. The President's proclamation recommends that it be set apart as a
+day of prayer and rejoicing. The day is of New England origin, the first
+one being set by Governor Bradford of the Massachusetts colony on
+December, 1621. Washington issued a thanksgiving proclamation for
+Thursday, December 18, 1777, and again at Valley Forge for May 7, 1778.
+The Thanksgiving of the present incorporates many of the genial features
+of Christmas. The feast with the Thanksgiving turkey and pumpkin-pie
+crowns the day. Even the poorhouse has its turkey. The story of "An
+Old-Time Thanksgiving," in "Indian Stories" of this series, well brings
+out the original spirit of the day.
+
+
+ =A THANKSGIVING DINNER THAT FLEW AWAY=
+
+ BY H. BUTTERWORTH
+
+"Honk!"
+
+I spun around like a top, looking nervously in every direction. I was
+familiar with that sound; I had heard it before, during two summer
+vacations, at the old farm-house on the Cape.
+
+It had been a terror to me. I always put a door, a fence, or a stone
+wall between me and that sound as speedily as possible.
+
+I had just come down from the city to the Cape for my third summer
+vacation. I had left the cars with my arms full of bundles, and hurried
+toward Aunt Targood's.
+
+The cottage stood in from the road. There was a long meadow in front of
+it. In the meadow were two great oaks and some clusters of lilacs. An
+old, mossy stone wall protected the grounds from the road, and a long
+walk ran from the old wooden gate to the door.
+
+It was a sunny day, and my heart was light. The orioles were flaming in
+the old orchards; the bobolinks were tossing themselves about in the
+long meadows of timothy, daisies, and patches of clover. There was a
+scent of new-mown hay in the air.
+
+In the distance lay the bay, calm and resplendent, with white sails and
+specks of boats. Beyond it rose Martha's Vineyard, green and cool and
+bowery, and at its wharf lay a steamer.
+
+I was, as I said, light-hearted. I was thinking of rides over the sandy
+roads at the close of the long, bright days; of excursions on the bay;
+of clam-bakes and picnics.
+
+I was hungry; and before me rose visions of Aunt Targood's fish dinners,
+roast chickens, berry pies. I was thirsty; but ahead was the old
+well-sweep, and, behind the cool lattice of the dairy window, were pans
+of milk in abundance.
+
+I tripped on toward the door with light feet, lugging my bundles and
+beaded with perspiration, but unmindful of all discomforts in the
+thought of the bright days and good things in store for me.
+
+"Honk! honk!"
+
+My heart gave a bound!
+
+_Where_ did that sound come from?
+
+Out of a cool cluster of innocent-looking lilac bushes, I saw a dark
+object cautiously moving. It seemed to have no head. I knew, however,
+that it had a head. I had seen it; it had seized me once on the previous
+summer, and I had been in terror of it during all the rest of the
+season.
+
+I looked down into the irregular grass, and saw the head and a very long
+neck running along on the ground, propelled by the dark body, like a
+snake running away from a ball. It was coming toward me, and faster and
+faster as it approached.
+
+I dropped all my bundles.
+
+In a few flying leaps I returned to the road again, and armed myself
+with a stick from a pile of cord-wood.
+
+"Honk! honk! honk!"
+
+It was a call of triumph. The head was high in the air now. My enemy
+moved grandly forward, as became the monarch of the great meadow
+farm-yard.
+
+I stood with beating heart, after my retreat.
+
+It was Aunt Targood's gander.
+
+How he enjoyed his triumph, and how small and cowardly he made me feel!
+
+"Honk! honk! honk!"
+
+The geese came out of the lilac bushes, bowing their heads to him in
+admiration. Then came the goslings--a long procession of awkward,
+half-feathered things: they appeared equally delighted.
+
+The gander seemed to be telling his admiring audience all about it: how
+a strange girl with many bundles had attempted to cross the yard; how he
+had driven her back, and had captured her bundles, and now was monarch
+of the field. He clapped his wings when he had finished his heroic
+story, and sent forth such a "honk!" as might have startled a
+major-general.
+
+Then he, with an air of great dignity and coolness, began to examine my
+baggage.
+
+Among my effects were several pounds of chocolate caramels, done up in
+brown paper. Aunt Targood liked caramels, and I had brought her a large
+supply.
+
+He tore off the wrappers quickly. Bit one. It was good. He began to
+distribute the bon-bons among the geese, and they, with much liberality
+and good-will, among the goslings.
+
+This was too much. I ventured through the gate swinging my cord-wood
+stick.
+
+"Shoo!"
+
+He dropped his head on the ground, and drove it down the walk in a
+lively waddle toward me.
+
+"_Shoo_!"
+
+It was Aunt Targood's voice at the door.
+
+He stopped immediately.
+
+His head was in the air again.
+
+"_Shoo_!"
+
+Out came Aunt Targood with her broom.
+
+She always corrected the gander with her broom. If I were to be whipped
+I should choose a broom--not the stick.
+
+As soon as he beheld the broom he retired, although with much offended
+pride and dignity, to the lilac bushes; and the geese and goslings
+followed him.
+
+"Hester, you dear child, come here. I was expecting you, and had been
+looking out for you, but missed sight of you. I had forgotten all about
+the gander."
+
+We gathered up the bundles and the caramels. I was light-hearted again.
+
+How cool was the sitting-room, with the woodbine falling about the open
+windows! Aunt brought me a pitcher of milk and some strawberries; some
+bread and honey; and a fan.
+
+While I was resting and taking my lunch, I could hear the gander
+discussing the affairs of the farm-yard with the geese. I did not
+greatly enjoy the discussion. His tone of voice was very proud, and he
+did not seem to be speaking well of me. I was suspicious that he did not
+think me a very brave girl. A young person likes to be spoken well of,
+even by the gander.
+
+Aunt Targood's gander had been the terror of many well-meaning people,
+and of some evildoers, for many years. I have seen tramps and
+pack-peddlers enter the gate, and start on toward the door, when there
+would sound that ringing warning like a war-blast. "Honk, honk!" and in
+a few minutes these unwelcome people would be gone. Farm-house boarders
+from the city would sometimes enter the yard, thinking to draw water by
+the old well-sweep: in a few minutes it was customary to hear shrieks,
+and to see women and children flying over the walls, followed by
+air-rending "honks!" and jubilant cackles from the victorious gander and
+his admiring family.
+
+"Aunt, what makes you keep that gander, year after year?" said I, one
+evening, as we were sitting on the lawn before the door. "Is it because
+he is a kind of a watch-dog, and keeps troublesome people away?"
+
+"No, child, no; I do not wish to keep most people away, not well-behaved
+people, nor to distress nor annoy any one. The fact is, there is a
+story about that gander that I do not like to speak of to every
+one--something that makes me feel tender toward him; so that if he needs
+a whipping, I would rather do it. He knows something that no one else
+knows. I could not have him killed or sent away. You have heard me speak
+of Nathaniel, my oldest boy?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"That is his picture in my room, you know. He was a good boy to me. He
+loved his mother. I loved Nathaniel--you cannot think how much I loved
+Nathaniel. It was on my account that he went away.
+
+"The farm did not produce enough for us all: Nathaniel, John, and I. We
+worked hard and had a hard time. One year--that was ten years ago--we
+were sued for our taxes.
+
+"'Nathaniel,' said I, 'I will go to taking boarders.'
+
+"Then he looked up to me and said (oh, how noble and handsome he
+appeared to me!):
+
+"'Mother, I will go to sea.'
+
+"'Where?' asked I, in surprise.
+
+"'In a coaster.'
+
+"I turned white. How I felt!
+
+"'You and John can manage the place,' he continued. 'One of the vessels
+sails next week--Uncle Aaron's; he offers to take me.'
+
+"It seemed best, and he made preparations to go.
+
+"The spring before, Skipper Ben--you have met Skipper Ben--had given me
+some goose eggs; he had brought them from Canada, and said that they
+were wild-goose eggs.
+
+"I set them under hens. In four weeks I had three goslings. I took them
+into the house at first, but afterward made a pen for them out in the
+yard. I brought them up myself, and one of those goslings is that
+gander.
+
+"Skipper Ben came over to see me, the day before Nathaniel was to sail.
+Aaron came with him.
+
+"I said to Aaron:
+
+"'What can I give to Nathaniel to carry to sea with him to make him
+think of home? Cake, preserves, apples? I haven't got much; I have done
+all I can for him, poor boy.'
+
+"Brother looked at me curiously, and said:
+
+"'Give him one of those wild geese, and we will fatten it on shipboard
+and will have it for our Thanksgiving dinner.'
+
+"What brother Aaron said pleased me. The young gander was a noble bird,
+the handsomest of the lot; and I resolved to keep the geese to kill for
+my own use and to give _him_ to Nathaniel.
+
+"The next morning--it was late in September--I took leave of Nathaniel.
+I tried to be calm and cheerful and hopeful. I watched him as he went
+down the walk with the gander struggling under his arms. A stranger
+would have laughed, but I did not feel like laughing; it was true that
+the boys who went coasting were usually gone but a few months and came
+home hardy and happy. But when poverty compels a mother and son to part,
+after they have been true to each other, and shared their feelings in
+common, it seems hard, it seems hard--though I do not like to murmur or
+complain at anything allotted to me.
+
+"I saw him go over the hill. On the top he stopped and held up the
+gander. He disappeared; yes, my own Nathaniel disappeared. I think of
+him now as one who disappeared.
+
+"November came--it was a terrible month on the coast that year. Storm
+followed storm; the sea-faring people talked constantly of wrecks and
+losses. I could not sleep on the nights of those high winds. I used to
+lie awake thinking over all the happy hours I had lived with Nathaniel.
+
+"Thanksgiving week came.
+
+"It was full of an Indian-summer brightness after the long storms. The
+nights were frosty, bright, and calm.
+
+"I could sleep on those calm nights.
+
+"One morning, I thought I heard a strange sound in the woodland pasture.
+It was like a wild goose. I listened; it was repeated. I was lying in
+bed. I started up--I thought I had been dreaming.
+
+"On the night before Thanksgiving I went to bed early, being very tired.
+The moon was full; the air was calm and still. I was thinking of
+Nathaniel, and I wondered if he would indeed have the gander for his
+Thanksgiving dinner: if it would be cooked as well as I would have
+cooked it, and if he would think of me that day.
+
+"I was just going to sleep, when suddenly I heard a sound that made me
+start up and hold my breath.
+
+"'_Honk_!'
+
+"I thought it was a dream followed by a nervous shock.
+
+"'_Honk! honk_!'
+
+"There it was again, in the yard. I was surely awake and in my senses.
+
+"I heard the geese cackle.
+
+"'_Honk! honk! honk_!'
+
+"I got out of bed and lifted the curtain. It was almost as light as day.
+Instead of two geese there were three. Had one of the neighbors' geese
+stolen away?
+
+"I should have thought so, and should not have felt disturbed, but for
+the reason that none of the neighbors' geese had that peculiar
+call--that hornlike tone that I had noticed in mine.
+
+"I went out of the door.
+
+"The third goose looked like the very gander I had given Nathaniel.
+Could it be?
+
+"I did not sleep. I rose early and went to the crib for some corn.
+
+"It was a gander--a 'wild' gander--that had come in the night. He seemed
+to know me.
+
+"I trembled all over as though I had seen a ghost. I was so faint that I
+sat down on the meal-chest.
+
+"As I was in that place, a bill pecked against the door. The door
+opened. The strange gander came hobbling over the crib-stone and went to
+the corn-bin. He stopped there, looked at me, and gave a sort of glad
+"honk," as though he knew me and was glad to see me.
+
+"I was certain that he was the gander I had raised, and that Nathaniel
+had lifted into the air when he gave me his last recognition from the
+top of the hill.
+
+"It overcame me. It was Thanksgiving. The church bell would soon be
+ringing as on Sunday. And here was Nathaniel's Thanksgiving dinner; and
+brother Aaron's--had it flown away? Where was the vessel?
+
+"Years have passed--ten. You know I waited and waited for my boy to come
+back. December grew dark with its rainy seas; the snows fell; May
+lighted up the hills, but the vessel never came back. Nathaniel--my
+Nathaniel--never returned.
+
+"That gander knows something he could tell me if he could talk. Birds
+have memories. He remembered the corn-crib--he remembered something
+else. I wish he _could_ talk, poor bird! I wish he could talk. I will
+never sell him, nor kill him, nor have him abused. _He knows!_"
+
+
+
+
+ =Whittier's Birthday=
+
+ JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER
+
+ Born December 17, 1807 Died September 7, 1892
+
+
+Whittier is known not only as a poet, but as a reformer and author. He
+was a member of the Society of Friends. He attended a New England
+academy; worked on a farm; taught school in order to afford further
+education, and at the age of twenty-two edited a paper at Boston. He was
+a leading opponent of slavery and was several times attacked by mobs on
+account of his opinions.
+
+
+ =THE BOYHOOD OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER=
+
+ BY WILLIAM H. RIDEING
+
+The life of Whittier may be read in his poems, and, by putting a note
+here and a date there, a full autobiography might be compiled from them.
+His boyhood and youth are depicted in them with such detail that little
+need be added to make the story complete, and that little, reverently
+done as it may be, must seem poor in comparison with the poetic beauty
+of his own revelations.
+
+What more can we do to show his early home than to quote from his own
+beautiful poem, "Snow-bound"? There the house is pictured for us, inside
+and out, with all its furnishings; and those who gather around its
+hearth, inmates and visitors, are set before us so clearly that long
+after the book has been put away they remain as distinct in the memory
+as portraits that are visible day after day on the walls of our own
+homes. He reproduces in his verse the landscapes he saw, the legends of
+witches and Indians he listened to, the schoolfellows he played with,
+the voices of the woods and fields, and the round of toil and pleasure
+in a country boy's life; and in other poems his later life, with its
+impassioned devotion to freedom and lofty faith, is reflected as lucidly
+as his youth is in "Snow-bound" and "The Barefoot Boy."
+
+He himself was "The Barefoot Boy," and what Robert Burns said of himself
+Whittier might repeat: "The poetic genius of my country found me, as the
+prophetic bard Elijah did Elisha, at the plow, and threw her inspiring
+mantle over me." He was a farmer's son, born at a time when farm-life in
+New England was more frugal than it is now, and with no other heritage
+than the good name and example of parents and kinsmen, in whom simple
+virtues--thrift, industry, and piety--abounded.
+
+His birthplace still stands near Haverhill, Mass.,--a house in one of
+the hollows of the surrounding hills, little altered from what it was in
+1807, the year he was born, when it was already at least a century and a
+half old.
+
+[Illustration: WHITTIER'S BIRTHPLACE, NEAR HAVERHILL, MASS.]
+
+He had no such opportunities for culture as Holmes and Lowell had in
+their youth. His parents were intelligent and upright people of
+limited means, who lived in all the simplicity of the Quaker faith, and
+there was nothing in his early surroundings to encourage and develop a
+literary taste. Books were scarce, and the twenty volumes on his
+father's shelves were, with one exception, about Quaker doctrines and
+Quaker heroes. The exception was a novel, and that was hidden away from
+the children, for fiction was forbidden fruit. No library or scholarly
+companionship was within reach; and if his gift had been less than
+genius, it could never have triumphed over the many disadvantages with
+which it had to contend. Instead of a poet he would have been a farmer
+like his forefathers. But literature was a spontaneous impulse with him,
+as natural as the song of a bird; and he was not wholly dependent on
+training and opportunity, as he would have been had he possessed mere
+talent.
+
+Frugal from necessity, the life of the Whittiers was not sordid nor
+cheerless to him, moreover; and he looks back to it as tenderly as if it
+had been full of luxuries. It was sweetened by strong affections, simple
+tastes, and an unflinching sense of duty; and in all the members of the
+household the love of nature was so genuine that meadow, wood, and
+river yielded them all the pleasure they needed, and they scarcely
+missed the refinements of art.
+
+Surely there could not be a pleasanter or more homelike picture than
+that which the poet has given us of the family on the night of the great
+storm when the old house was snowbound:
+
+ "Shut in from all the world without,
+ We sat the clean-winged hearth about,
+ Content to let the north wind roar
+ In baffled rage at pane and door,
+ While the red logs before us beat
+ The frost-line back with tropic heat.
+ And ever when a louder blast
+ Shook beam and rafter as it passed,
+ The merrier up its roaring draught
+ The great throat of the chimney laughed.
+ The house-dog on his paws outspread,
+ Laid to the fire his drowsy head;
+ The cat's dark silhouette on the wall
+ A couchant tiger's seemed to fall,
+ And for the winter fireside meet
+ Between the andiron's straddling feet
+ The mug of cider simmered slow,
+ The apples sputtered in a row,
+ And close at hand the basket stood
+ With nuts from brown October's wood."
+
+For a picture of the poet himself we must turn to the verses in "The
+Barefoot Boy," in which he says:
+
+ "O for boyhood's time of June,
+ Crowding years in one brief moon,
+ When all things I heard or saw,
+ Me, their master, waited for.
+ I was rich in flowers and trees,
+ Humming-birds and honey-bees;
+ For my sport the squirrel played,
+ Plied the snouted mole his spade;
+ For my taste the blackberry cone
+ Purpled over hedge and stone;
+ Laughed the brook for my delight
+ Through the day and through the night,
+ Whispering at the garden-wall,
+ Talked with me from fall to fall;
+ Mine the sand-rimmed pickerel pond,
+ Mine the walnut slopes beyond,
+ Mine on bending orchard trees,
+ Apples of Hesperides!
+ Still as my horizon grew,
+ Larger grew my riches, too;
+ All the world I saw or knew
+ Seemed a complex Chinese toy,
+ Fashioned for a barefoot boy!"[1]
+
+[Illustration: THE OLD SCHOOL-HOUSE, HAVERHILL, MASS.]
+
+I doubt if any boy ever rose to intellectual eminence who had fewer
+opportunities for education than Whittier. He had no such pasturage to
+browse on as is open to every reader who, by simply reaching them out,
+can lay his hands on the treasures of English literature. He had to
+borrow books wherever they could be found among the neighbors who were
+willing to lend, and he thought nothing of walking several miles for one
+volume. The only instruction he received was at the district school,
+which was open a few weeks in midwinter, and at the Haverhill Academy,
+which he attended two terms of six months each, paying tuition by work
+in spare hours, and by keeping a small school himself. A feeble spirit
+would have languished under such disadvantages. But Whittier scarcely
+refers to them, and instead of begging for pity, he takes them as part
+of the common lot, and seems to remember only what was beautiful and
+good in his early life.
+
+Occasionally a stranger knocked at the door of the old homestead in the
+valley; sometimes it was a distinguished Quaker from abroad, but oftener
+it was a peddler or some vagabond begging for food, which was seldom
+refused. Once a foreigner came and asked for lodgings for the night--a
+dark, repulsive man, whose appearance was so much against him that Mrs.
+Whittier was afraid to admit him. No sooner had she sent him away,
+however, than she repented. "What if a son of mine was in a strange
+land?" she thought. The young poet (who was not yet recognized as such)
+offered to go out in search of him, and presently returned with him,
+having found him standing in the roadway just as he had been turned away
+from another house.
+
+[Illustration: JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER]
+
+"He took his seat with us at the supper-table," says Whittier in one of
+his prose sketches, "and when we were all gathered around the hearth
+that cold autumnal evening, he told us, partly by words and partly by
+gestures, the story of his life and misfortunes, amused us with
+descriptions of the grape-gatherings and festivals of his sunny
+clime, edified my mother with a recipe for making bread of chestnuts,
+and in the morning, when, after breakfast, his dark sallow face lighted
+up, and his fierce eyes moistened with grateful emotion as in his own
+silvery Tuscan accent he poured out his thanks, we marveled at the fears
+which had so nearly closed our doors against him, and as he departed we
+all felt that he had left with us the blessing of the poor."
+
+Another guest came to the house one day. It was a vagrant old Scotchman,
+who, when he had been treated to bread and cheese and cider, sang some
+of the songs of Robert Burns, which Whittier then heard for the first
+time, and which he never forgot. Coming to him thus as songs reached the
+people before printing was invented, through gleemen and minstrels,
+their sweetness lingered in his ears, and he soon found himself singing
+in the same strain. Some of his earliest inspirations were drawn from
+Burns, and he tells us of his joy when one day, after the visit of the
+old Scotchman, his schoolmaster loaned him a copy of that poet's works.
+"I began to make rhymes myself, and to imagine stories and adventures,"
+he says in his simple way.
+
+Indeed, he began to rhyme very early and kept his gift a secret from
+all, except his oldest sister, fearing that his father, who was a
+prosaic man, would think that he was wasting time. He wrote under the
+fence, in the attic, in the barn--wherever he could escape observation;
+and as pen and ink were not always available, he sometimes used chalk,
+and even charcoal. Great was the surprise of the family when some of his
+verses were unearthed, literally unearthed, from under a heap of rubbish
+in a garret; but his father frowned upon these evidences of the bent of
+his mind, not out of unkindness, but because he doubted the sufficiency
+of the boy's education for a literary life, and did not wish to inspire
+him with hopes which might never be fulfilled.
+
+His sister had faith in him, nevertheless, and, without his knowledge,
+she sent one of his poems to the editor of _The Free Press_, a newspaper
+published in Newburyport. Whittier was helping his father to repair a
+stone wall by the roadside when the carrier flung a copy of the paper to
+him, and, unconscious that anything of his was in it, he opened it and
+glanced up and down the columns. His eyes fell on some verses called
+"The Exile's Departure."
+
+ "Fond scenes, which delighted my youthful existence,
+ With feelings of sorrow I bid ye adieu--
+ A lasting adieu; for now, dim in the distance,
+ The shores of Hibernia recede from my view.
+ Farewell to the cliffs, tempest-beaten and gray,
+ Which guard the loved shores of my own native land;
+ Farewell to the village and sail-shadowed bay,
+ The forest-crowned hill and the water-washed strand."
+
+His eyes swam; it was his own poem, the first he ever had in print.
+
+[Illustration: WHITTIER'S STUDY AT AMESBURY, MASS.]
+
+"What is the matter with thee?" his father demanded, seeing how dazed he
+was; but, though he resumed his work on the wall, he could not speak,
+and he had to steal a glance at the paper again and again, before he
+could convince himself that he was not dreaming. Sure enough, the poem
+was there with his initial at the foot of it,--"W., Haverhill, June 1st,
+1826,"--and, better still, this editorial notice: "If 'W.,' at
+Haverhill, will continue to favor us with pieces beautiful as the one
+inserted in our poetical department of to-day, we shall esteem it a
+favor."
+
+Fame never passes true genius by, and when it came it brought with it
+the love and reverence of thousands, who recognize in Whittier a nature
+abounding in patience, unselfishness, and all the sweetness of Christian
+charity.
+
+[Footnote 1: The selections from Mr. Whittier's poems contained in this
+article are included by kind permission of Messrs. Houghton,
+Mifflin & Co.]
+
+
+
+
+ =Christmas=
+
+ _December 25_
+
+
+A festival held every year in memory of the birth of Christ. Christmas
+is essentially a day of rejoicing and thanksgiving and of good will
+toward others. Many customs older than Christianity mark the
+festivities. In our country the observance of the day was discouraged in
+colonial times, and in England in 1643 Parliament abolished the day. Now
+its celebration is world-wide and by all classes and creeds.
+
+
+ =HOW UNCLE SAM OBSERVES CHRISTMAS=
+
+ BY CLIFFORD HOWARD
+
+Of course Uncle Sam is best acquainted with the good old-fashioned
+Christmas--the kind we have known all about since we were little bits of
+children. There are the Christmas trees with their pretty decorations
+and candles, and the mistletoe and holly and all sorts of evergreens to
+make the house look bright, while outside the trees are bare, the ground
+is white with snow, and Jack Frost is prowling around, freezing up the
+ponds and pinching people's noses. And then there is dear old Santa
+Claus with his reindeer, galloping about on the night before Christmas,
+and scrambling down chimneys to fill the stockings that hang in a row by
+the fireplace.
+
+It is the time of good cheer and happiness and presents for everybody;
+the time of chiming bells and joyful carols; of turkey and candy and
+plum-pudding and all the other good things that go to make up a truly
+merry Christmas. And here and there throughout the country, some of the
+quaint old customs of our forefathers are still observed at this time,
+as, for instance, the pretty custom of "Christmas waits"--boys and girls
+who go about from house to house on Christmas eve, or early Christmas
+morning, singing carols.
+
+But, aside from the Christmas customs we all know so well, Uncle Sam has
+many strange and special ways of observing Christmas; for in this big
+country of his there are many different kinds of people, and they all do
+not celebrate Christmas in the same way, as you shall see.
+
+
+ =IN THE SOUTH=
+
+Siss! Bang! Boom! Sky-rockets hissing, crackers snapping, cannons
+roaring, horns tooting, bells ringing, and youngsters shouting with wild
+delight. That is the way Christmas begins down South.
+
+[Illustration: CHRISTMAS IN THE SOUTH]
+
+It starts at midnight, or even before; and all day long fire-crackers
+are going off in the streets of every city, town, and village of the
+South, from Virginia to Louisiana. A Northern boy, waking up suddenly in
+New Orleans or Mobile or Atlanta, would think he was in the midst of
+a rousing Fourth-of-July celebration. In some of the towns the brass
+bands come out and add to the jollity of the day by marching around and
+playing "My Maryland" and "Dixie"; while the soldier companies parade up
+and down the streets to the strains of joyous music and fire salutes
+with cannons and rifles.
+
+To the girls and boys of the South, Christmas is the noisiest and
+jolliest day of the year. The Fourth of July doesn't compare with it.
+And as for the darkies, they look upon Christmas as a holiday that was
+invented for their especial happiness. They take it for granted that all
+the "white folks" they know will give them presents; and with grinning
+faces they are up bright and early, asking for "Christmus gif', mistah;
+Christmus gif, missus." No one thinks of refusing them, and at the end
+of the day they are richer and happier than at any other time during the
+whole year.
+
+Except for the jingle of sleigh-bells and the presence of Jack Frost, a
+Christmas in the South is in other ways very much like that in the
+North. The houses are decorated with greens, mistletoe hangs above the
+doorways, Santa Claus comes down the chimneys and fills the waiting
+stockings, while Christmas dinner is not complete without the familiar
+turkey and cranberry sauce, plum puddings and pies.
+
+
+ =IN NEW ENGLAND=
+
+For a great many years there was no Christmas in New England. The
+Pilgrims and the Puritans did not believe in such celebrations. In fact,
+they often made it a special point to do their hardest work on Christmas
+day, just to show their contempt for what they considered a pagan
+festival.
+
+During colonial times there was a law in Massachusetts forbidding any
+one to celebrate Christmas; and if anybody was so rash in those days as
+to go about tooting a horn and shouting a "Merry Christmas!" he was
+promptly brought to his senses by being arrested and punished.
+
+[Illustration: CHRISTMAS SPORTS IN NEW ENGLAND]
+
+Of course things are very different in New England now, but in many
+country towns the people still make more of Thanksgiving than they do of
+Christmas; and there are hundreds of New England men and women still
+living who knew nothing of Christmas as children--who never hung up
+their stockings; who never waited for Santa Claus; who never had a
+tree; who never even had a Christmas present!
+
+Nowadays, however, Christmas in New England is like Christmas anywhere
+else; but here and there, even now, the effects of the early Puritan
+ideas may still be seen. In some of the smaller and out-of-the-way towns
+and villages you will find Christmas trees and evergreens in only a very
+few of the houses, and in some places--particularly in New
+Hampshire--one big Christmas tree does for the whole town. This tree is
+set up in the town hall, and there the children go to get their gifts,
+which have been hung on the branches by the parents. Sometimes the tree
+has no decorations--no candles, no popcorn strings, no shiny balls.
+After the presents are taken off and given to the children, the tree
+remains perfectly bare. There is usually a short entertainment of
+recitations and songs, and a speech or two perhaps, and then the little
+folks, carrying their presents with them, go back to their homes.
+
+
+ =IN NEW MEXICO=
+
+In certain parts of New Mexico, among the old Spanish settlements, the
+celebration of Christmas begins more than a week before the day. In the
+evenings, a party of men and women go together to the house of some
+friend--a different house being visited each evening. When they arrive,
+they knock on the door and begin to sing, and when those in the house
+ask, "Who is there?" they reply, "The Virgin Mary and St. Joseph seek
+lodgings in your house." At first the inmates of the house refuse to let
+them in. This is done to carry out the Bible story of Joseph and Mary
+being unable to find lodgings in Bethlehem. But in a little while the
+door is opened and the visitors are heartily welcomed. As soon as they
+enter, they kneel and repeat a short prayer; and when the devotional
+exercises are concluded, the rest of the evening is spent in
+merrymaking.
+
+On Christmas eve the people of the village gather together in some large
+room or hall and give a solemn little play, commemorating the birthday
+of the Saviour. One end of the room is used as a stage, and this is
+fitted up to represent the stable and the manger; and the characters in
+the sacred story of Bethlehem--Mary and Joseph, the shepherds, the wise
+men, and the angels--are represented in the tableaux, and with a
+genuine, reverential spirit. Even the poorer people of the town take
+part in these Christmas plays.
+
+
+ =AMONG THE SHAKERS=
+
+The Shakers observe Christmas by a dinner at which the men and women
+both sit down at the same table. This custom of theirs is the thing that
+serves to make Christmas different from any other day among the Shakers.
+During all the rest of the year the men and women eat their meals at
+separate tables.
+
+At sunset on Christmas day, after a service in the church, they march to
+the community-house, where the dinner is waiting. The men sit on one
+side of the table and the women on the other. At the head sits an old
+man called the elder, who begins the meal by saying grace, after which
+each one in turn gets up and, lifting the right hand, says in a solemn
+voice, "God is love." The dinner is eaten in perfect silence. Not a
+voice is heard until the meal comes to an end. Then the men and women
+rise and sing, standing in their places at the table. As the singing
+proceeds they mark time with their hands and feet. Then their bodies
+begin to sway from side to side in the peculiar manner that has given
+this sect its name of Shakers.
+
+When the singing comes to an end, the elder chants a prayer, after which
+the men and women silently file out and leave the building.
+
+
+ =AMONG THE PENNSYLVANIA GERMANS=
+
+"You'd better look out, or Pelznickel will catch you!" This is the dire
+threat held over naughty boys and girls at Christmas-time in some of the
+country settlements of the Pennsylvania Germans, or Pennsylvania Dutch,
+as they are often called.
+
+Pelznickel is another name for Santa Claus. But he is not altogether the
+same old Santa that we welcome so gladly. On Christmas eve some one in
+the neighborhood impersonates Pelznickel by dressing up as an old man
+with a long white beard. Arming himself with a switch and carrying a bag
+of toys over his shoulder, he goes from house to house, where the
+children are expecting him.
+
+[Illustration: A VISIT FROM PELZNICKEL]
+
+He asks the parents how the little ones have behaved themselves during
+the year. To each of those who have been good he gives a present from
+his bag. But--woe betide the naughty ones! These are not only supposed
+to get no presents, but Pelznickel catches them by the collar and
+playfully taps them with his switch.
+
+
+ =IN PORTO RICO=
+
+The Porto Rican boys and girls would be frightened out of their wits if
+Santa Claus should come to them in a sleigh drawn by reindeer and should
+try to enter the houses and fill their stockings. Down there, Santa
+Claus does not need reindeer or any other kind of steeds, for the
+children say that he just comes flying through the air like a bird.
+Neither does he bother himself looking for stockings, for such things
+are not so plentiful in Porto Rico as they are in cooler climates.
+Instead of stockings, the children use little boxes, which they make
+themselves. These they place on the roofs and in the courtyards, and old
+Santa Claus drops the gifts into them as he flies around at night with
+his bag on his back.
+
+He is more generous in Porto Rico than he is anywhere else. He does not
+come on Christmas eve only, but is likely to call around every night or
+two during the week. Each morning, therefore, the little folks run out
+eagerly to see whether anything more has been left in their boxes during
+the night.
+
+Christmas in Porto Rico is a church festival of much importance, and the
+celebration of it is made up chiefly of religious ceremonies intended to
+commemorate the principal events in the life of the Saviour. Beginning
+with the celebration of his birth, at Christmas-time, the feast-days
+follow one another in rapid succession. Indeed, it may justly be said
+that they do not really come to an end until Easter.
+
+[Illustration: BETHLEHEM DAY IN PORTO RICO]
+
+One of the most popular of these festival-days is that known as
+Bethlehem day. This is celebrated on the 12th of January, in memory of
+the coming of the Magi. The celebration consists of a procession of
+children through the streets of the town. The foremost three, dressed in
+flowing robes to represent the wise men of the East, come riding along
+on ponies, holding in their hands the gifts for the Infant King;
+following them come angels and shepherds and flute-players, all
+represented by children dressed in pretty costumes and carrying garlands
+of flowers. These processions are among the most picturesque of all
+Christmas celebrations.
+
+
+ =AMONG THE MORAVIANS=
+
+For many days before Christmas the Moravian housewives in Bethlehem,
+Pennsylvania, are busy in their kitchens making good things for the
+holidays--mint-cakes, pepper-nuts, _Kümmelbrod_, sugar-cake, mince-pies,
+and, most important of all, large quantities of "Christmas cakes." These
+Christmas cakes are a kind of ginger cooky, crisp and spicy, and are
+made according to a recipe known only to the Moravians. They are made in
+all sorts of curious shapes--birds, horses, bears, lions, fishes,
+turtles, stars, leaves, and funny little men and women; so that they are
+not only good to eat, but are ornamental as well, and are often used by
+the good fathers and mothers as decorations for the "_Putz_."
+
+Every Moravian family has its _Putz_ at Christmas-time. This consists of
+a Christmas tree surrounded at its base by a miniature landscape made up
+of moss and greens and make-believe rocks, and adorned with toy houses
+and tiny fences and trees and all sorts of little animals and toy
+people.
+
+[Illustration: A CHRISTMAS "PUTZ"]
+
+On Christmas eve a love-feast is held in the church. The greater part of
+the service is devoted to music, for which the Moravians have always
+been noted. While the choir is singing, cake and coffee are brought in
+and served to all the members of the congregation, each one receiving a
+good-sized bun and a large cup of coffee. Shortly before the end of the
+meeting lighted wax candles carried on large trays are brought into the
+church, by men on one side and women on the other, and passed around to
+the little folks--one for each boy and girl. This is meant to represent
+the coming of the Light into the world, and is but one of the many
+beautiful customs observed by the Moravians.
+
+
+ =IN ALASKA=
+
+"Going around with the star" is a popular Christmas custom among some of
+the natives of Alaska who belong to the Greek Church. A large figure of
+a star, covered with brightly colored paper, is carried about at night
+by a procession of men and women and children. They call at the homes of
+the well-to-do families of the village, marching about from house to
+house, headed by the star-bearer and two men or boys carrying lanterns
+on long poles. They are warmly welcomed at each place, and are invited
+to come in and have some refreshments. After enjoying the cakes and
+other good things, and singing one or two carols, they take up the star
+and move on to the next house.
+
+These processions take place each night during Christmas week; but after
+the second night the star-bearers are followed by men and boys dressed
+in fantastic clothes, who try to catch the star-men and destroy their
+stars. This part of the game is supposed to be an imitation of the
+soldiers of Herod trying to destroy the children of Bethlehem; but these
+happy folks of Alaska evidently don't think much about its meaning, for
+they make a great frolic of it. Everybody is full of fun, and the frosty
+air of the dark winter nights is filled with laughter as men and boys
+and romping girls chase one another here and there in merry excitement.
+
+
+ =IN HAWAII=
+
+The natives of Hawaii say that Santa Claus comes over to the islands in
+a boat. Perhaps he does; it would be a tedious journey for his reindeer
+to make without stopping from San Francisco to Honolulu. At all events,
+he gets there by some means or other, for he would not neglect the
+little folks of those islands away out in the Pacific.
+
+They look for him as eagerly as do the boys and girls in the lands of
+snow and ice, and although it must almost melt him to get around in that
+warm climate with his furs on, he never misses a Christmas.
+
+Before the missionaries and the American settlers went to Hawaii, the
+natives knew nothing about Christmas, but now they all celebrate the
+day, and do it, of course, in the same way as the Americans who live
+there. The main difference between Christmas in Honolulu and Christmas
+in New York is that in Honolulu in December the weather is like June in
+New York. Birds are warbling in the leafy trees; gardens are overflowing
+with roses and carnations; fields and mountain slopes are ablaze with
+color; and a sunny sky smiles dreamily upon the glories of a summer day.
+In the morning people go to church, and during the day there are sports
+and games and merry-making of all sorts. The Christmas dinner is eaten
+out of doors in the shade of the veranda, and everybody is happy and
+contented.
+
+
+ =IN THE PHILIPPINES=
+
+"BUENAS PASQUAS!" This is the hearty greeting that comes to the dweller
+in the Philippines on Christmas morning, and with it, perhaps, an
+offering of flowers.
+
+[Illustration: CHRISTMAS IN THE PHILIPPINES]
+
+The Filipino, like the Porto Rican and all others who have lived under
+Spanish rule, look upon Christmas as a great religious festival, and one
+that requires very special attention. On Christmas eve the churches are
+open, and the coming of the great day is celebrated by a mass at
+midnight; and during all of Christmas day mass is held every hour, so
+that every one may have an opportunity to attend. Even the popular
+Christmas customs among the people are nearly all of a religious
+character, for most of them consist of little plays or dramas founded
+upon the life of the Saviour.
+
+These plays are called _pastures_, and are performed by bands of young
+men and women, and sometimes mere boys and girls, who go about from
+village to village and present their simple little plays to expectant
+audiences at every stopping-place. The visit of the wise men, the flight
+into Egypt--these and many other incidents as related in the Scriptures
+are acted in these _pastores_.
+
+
+
+
+ =New Year's Day=
+
+ _January 1_
+
+
+The custom of celebrating the first day of the year is a very ancient
+one. The exchange of gifts, the paying of calls, the making of good
+resolutions for the new year and feasting often characterize the day.
+The custom of ringing the church bells is of the widest extent.
+
+The old-world custom of sitting up on New Year's eve to see the old year
+out is still very common.
+
+
+ =EXTRACT FROM "SOCIAL LIFE IN THE COLONIES"=
+
+ _The Century Magazine, July 1885_
+
+ BY EDWARD EGGLESTON
+
+New Year's Day was celebrated among the New York Dutch by the calls of
+the gentlemen on their lady friends; it is perhaps the only distinctly
+Dutch custom that afterward came into widespread use in the United
+States. New Year's Day, and the church festivals kept alike by the Dutch
+and English, brought an intermission of labor to the New York slaves,
+who gathered in throngs to devote themselves to wild frolics. The
+Brooklyn fields were crowded with them on New Year's Day, at Easter, at
+Whitsuntide, or "Prixter," as the Dutch called it, and on "San Claus
+Day"--the feast of St. Nicholas.
+
+
+ =A CHINESE NEW YEAR'S IN CALIFORNIA=
+
+ BY H.H.
+
+The Chinese in California have a week of holiday at their New Year's in
+February, just as we do between the twenty-fifth of December and the
+first of January.
+
+In the cities they make a fine display of fire-works. They use barrels
+full of fire-crackers, and the Chinese boys do not fire them off, as the
+American boys do, a cracker at a time; they bring out a large box full,
+or a barrel full, and fire them off package after package, as fast as
+they can.
+
+In Santa Barbara, where I was during the Chinese New Year's of 1882, we
+heard the crackers long before we reached Chinatown. After these stopped
+we went into the houses. Every Chinese family keeps open house on New
+Year's day all day long. They set up a picture or an image of their god
+in some prominent place, and on a table in front of this they put a
+little feast of good things to eat. Some are for an offering to the god
+and some are for their friends who call. Everyone is expected to take
+something.
+
+There was no family so poor that it did not have something set out, and
+some sort of a shrine made for its idol; in some houses it was only a
+coarse wooden box turned up on one end like a cupboard, with two or
+three little teacups full of rice or tea, and one poor candle burning
+before a paper picture of the god pasted or tacked at the back of the
+box.
+
+It was amusing to watch the American boys darting about from shop to
+shop and house to house, coming out with their hands full of queer
+Chinese things to eat, showing them to each other and comparing notes.
+
+"Oh, let me taste that!" one boy would exclaim on seeing some new thing;
+and "Where did you get it? Which house gives that?" Then the whole party
+would race off to make a descent on that house and get some more. I
+thought it wonderfully hospitable on the part of the Chinese people to
+let all these American boys run in and out of their houses in that way,
+and help themselves from the New Year's feast.
+
+Some of the boys were very rude and ill-mannered--little better than
+street beggars; but the Chinese were polite and generous to them all.
+The joss-house, where they held their religious services, was a chamber
+opening out upon an upper balcony. This balcony was hung with lanterns
+and decorated. The door at the foot of the stairs which led to this
+chamber stood open all day, and any one who wished could go up and say
+his prayers in the Chinese fashion, which is a curious fashion indeed.
+They have slender reeds with tight rolls of brown paper fastened at one
+end. In front of the image or picture of their god they set a box or
+vase of ashes, on which a little sandalwood is kept burning. When they
+wish to make a prayer they stick one of the reeds down in these ashes
+and set the paper on fire. They think the smoke of the burning paper
+will carry the prayer up to heaven.
+
+I asked a Chinese man who could speak a little English why they put
+teacups of wine and tea and rice before their god; if they believed that
+the god would eat and drink.
+
+"Oh, no," he said, "that not what for. What you like self, you give god.
+He see. He like see."
+
+
+
+
+ =Lincoln's Birthday=
+
+ _February 12_
+
+ ABRAHAM LINCOLN
+
+ Born February 12, 1809 Died April 15, 1865
+
+Lincoln was the sixteenth President of the United States. He was
+descended from a Quaker family of English origin. He followed various
+occupations, including those of a farm laborer, a salesman, a merchant,
+and a surveyor; was admitted to the bar in 1836 and began the practice
+of law in this year. He was twice elected President, the second time
+receiving 212 out of 233 electoral votes. He was shot by John Wilkes
+Booth at Ford's Theater, Washington, April 14, 1865, and died the
+following day.
+
+
+ =ABRAHAM LINCOLN=
+
+ BY HELEN NICOLAY
+
+Abraham Lincoln was not an ordinary man. He was, in truth, in the
+language of the poet Lowell, a "new birth of our new soil." His
+greatness did not consist in growing up on the frontier. An ordinary man
+would have found on the frontier exactly what he would have found
+elsewhere--a commonplace life, varying only with the changing ideas and
+customs of time and place. But for the man with extraordinary powers of
+mind and body, for one gifted by Nature as Abraham Lincoln was gifted,
+the pioneer life, with its severe training in self-denial, patience, and
+industry, developed his character, and fitted him for the great duties
+of his after life as no other training could have done.
+
+[Illustration: LINCOLN'S HOME AFTER HIS MARRIAGE]
+
+His advancement in the astonishing career that carried him from
+obscurity to world-wide fame--from postmaster of New Salem village to
+President of the United States, from captain of a backwoods volunteer
+company to Commander-in-chief of the army and navy--was neither sudden
+nor accidental nor easy. He was both ambitious and successful, but his
+ambition was moderate, and his success was slow. And, because his
+success was slow, it never outgrew either his judgment or his powers.
+Between the day when he left his father's cabin and launched his canoe
+on the head waters of the Sangamon River to begin life on his own
+account, and the day of his first inauguration, lay full thirty years
+of toil, self-denial, patience; often of effort baffled, of hope
+deferred; sometimes of bitter disappointment. Even with the natural gift
+of great genius, it required an average lifetime and faithful,
+unrelaxing effort to transform the raw country stripling into a fit
+ruler for this great nation.
+
+Almost every success was balanced--sometimes overbalanced--by a seeming
+failure. He went into the Black Hawk war a captain, and through no fault
+of his own came out a private. He rode to the hostile frontier on
+horseback, and trudged home on foot. His store "winked out." His
+surveyor's compass and chain, with which he was earning a scanty living,
+were sold for debt. He was defeated in his first attempts to be
+nominated for the legislature and for Congress; defeated in his
+application to be appointed Commissioner of the General Land Office;
+defeated for the Senate, when he had forty-five votes to begin with, by
+a man who had only five votes to begin with; defeated again after his
+joint debates with Douglas; defeated in the nomination for
+Vice-President, when a favorable nod from half a dozen politicians would
+have brought him success.
+
+Failures? Not so. Every seeming defeat was a slow success. His was the
+growth of the oak, and not of Jonah's gourd. He could not become a
+master workman until he had served a tedious apprenticeship. It was the
+quarter of a century of reading, thinking, speech-making, and law-making
+which fitted him to be the chosen champion in the great Lincoln-Douglas
+debates of 1858. It was the great moral victory won in those debates
+(although the senatorship went to Douglas), added to the title "Honest
+Old Abe," won by truth and manhood among his neighbors during a whole
+lifetime, that led the people of the United States to trust him with the
+duties and powers of President.
+
+[Illustration: HOUSE IN WHICH LINCOLN LIVED WHEN HE WAS ELECTED
+PRESIDENT]
+
+And when, at last, after thirty years of endeavor, success had beaten
+down defeat, when Lincoln had been nominated, elected, and inaugurated,
+came the crowning trial of his faith and constancy. When the people, by
+free and lawful choice, had placed honor and power in his hands, when
+his name could convene Congress, approve laws, cause ships to sail and
+armies to move, there suddenly came upon the government and the nation a
+fatal paralysis. Honor seemed to dwindle and power to vanish. Was he
+then, after all, not to be President? Was patriotism dead? Was the
+Constitution only a bit of waste paper? Was the Union gone?
+
+The outlook was indeed grave. There was treason in Congress, treason in
+the Supreme Court, treason in the army and navy. Confusion and discord
+were everywhere. To use Mr. Lincoln's forcible figure of speech, sinners
+were calling the righteous to repentance. Finally the flag, insulted and
+fired upon, trailed in surrender at Sumter; and then came the
+humiliation of the riot at Baltimore, and the President for a few days
+practically a prisoner in the capital of the nation.
+
+[Illustration: PRESIDENT LINCOLN AND TAD]
+
+But his apprenticeship had been served, and there was to be no more
+failure. With faith and justice and generosity he conducted for four
+long years a war whose frontiers stretched from the Potomac to the Rio
+Grande; whose soldiers numbered a million men on each side. The labor,
+the thought, the responsibility, the strain of mind and anguish of soul
+that he gave to his great task, who can measure? "Here was place for no
+holiday magistrate, no fair-weather sailor," as Emerson justly said of
+him. "The new pilot was hurried to the helm in a tornado. In four
+years--four years of battle days--his endurance, his fertility of
+resources, his magnanimity, were sorely tried and never found wanting."
+"By his courage, his justice, his even temper, ... his humanity, he stood
+a heroic figure in a heroic epoch."
+
+[Illustration: THE LINCOLN MONUMENT AT SPRINGFIELD]
+
+What but a lifetime's schooling in disappointment; what but the
+pioneer's self-reliance and freedom from prejudice; what but the clear
+mind quick to see natural right and unswerving in its purpose to follow
+it; what but the steady self-control, the unwarped sympathy, the
+unbounded charity of this man with spirit so humble and soul so great,
+could have carried him through the labors he wrought to the victory he
+attained?
+
+With truth it could be written, "His heart was as great as the world,
+but there was no room in it to hold the memory of a wrong." So, "with
+malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as
+God gave him to see the right," he lived and died. We, who have never
+seen him, yet feel daily the influence of his kindly life, and cherish
+among our most precious possessions the heritage of his example.
+
+[Illustration: STATUE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. BY AUGUSTUS ST. GAUDENS]
+
+
+ =THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS=
+
+Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this
+continent a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the
+proposition that all men are created equal.
+
+Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or
+any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on
+a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of
+that field as a final resting-place for those who here gave their lives
+that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we
+should do this.
+
+But, in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate--we cannot consecrate--we
+cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled
+here, have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract.
+The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it
+can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather,
+to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here
+have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here
+dedicated to the great task remaining before us--that from these honored
+dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the
+last full measure of devotion; that we here highly resolve that these
+dead shall not have died in vain; that this nation, under God, shall
+have a new birth of freedom; and that government of the people, by the
+people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.
+
+ The above address was delivered by Abraham Lincoln, November 19,
+ 1863, at the dedication of the Gettysburg battle-field as a
+ national cemetery for Union soldiers.
+
+
+ =O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!=
+
+ O captain. My captain. Our fearful trip is done;
+ The ship has weathered 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!
+ Leave you not the little spot,
+ 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;
+ O captain. Dear father.
+ This arm I push beneath you;
+ 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;
+ But the ship, the ship is anchor'd safe, 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 silent tread,
+ Walk the spot the captain lies,
+ Fallen cold and dead.
+
+ WALT WHITMAN.
+
+
+
+
+ =St. Valentine's Day=
+
+ _February 14_
+
+
+Custom decrees that on this day the young shall exchange missives in
+which the love of the sender is told in verses, pictures, and
+sentiments. No reason beyond a guess can be given to connect St.
+Valentine with these customs. He was a Christian martyr, about 270 A.D.,
+while the practice of sending valentines had its origin in the heathen
+worship of Juno. It is Cupid's day, and no boy or girl needs any
+encouragement to make the most of it.
+
+
+ =WHO BEGAN IT?=
+
+ BY OLIVE THORNE
+
+There's one thing we know positively, that St. Valentine didn't begin
+this fourteenth of February excitement; but who _did_ is a question not
+so easy to answer. I don't think any one would have begun it if he could
+have known what the simple customs of his day would have grown into, or
+could even have imagined the frightful valentines that disgrace our
+shops to-day.
+
+It began, for us, with our English ancestors, who used to assemble on
+the eve of St. Valentine's day, put the names of all the young maidens
+promiscuously in a box, and let each bachelor draw one out. The damsel
+whose name fell to his lot became his valentine for the year. He wore
+her name in his bosom or on his sleeve, and it was his duty to attend
+her and protect her. As late as the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
+this custom was very popular, even among the upper classes.
+
+But the wiseacres have traced the custom farther back. Some of them
+think it was begun by the ancient Romans, who had on the fourteenth or
+fifteenth of February a festival in honor of Lupercus, "the destroyer of
+wolves"--a wolf-destroyer being quite worthy of honor in those wild
+days, let me tell you. At this festival it was the custom, among other
+curious things, to pair off the young men and maidens in the same chance
+way, and with the same result of a year's attentions.
+
+Even this is not wholly satisfactory. Who began it among the Romans?
+becomes the next interesting question. One old writer says it was
+brought to Rome from Arcadia sixty years before the Trojan war (which
+Homer wrote about, you know). I'm sure that's far enough back to satisfy
+anybody. The same writer also says that the Pope tried to abolish it in
+the fifth century, but he succeeded only in sending it down to us in the
+name of St. Valentine instead of Lupercus.
+
+[Illustration: FOR THIS WAS ON SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY]
+
+Our own ancestry in England and Scotland have observed some very funny
+customs within the last three centuries. At one time valentines were
+fashionable among the nobility, and, while still selected by lot, it
+became the duty of a gentleman to give to the lady who fell to his lot a
+handsome present. Pieces of jewelry costing thousands of dollars were
+not unusual, though smaller things, as gloves, were more common.
+
+There was a tradition among the country people that every bird chose its
+mate on Valentine's day; and at one time it was the custom for young
+folks to go out before daylight on that morning and try to catch an owl
+and two sparrows in a net. If they succeeded, it was a good omen, and
+entitled them to gifts from the villagers. Another fashion among them
+was to write the valentine, tie it to an apple or orange, and steal up
+to the house of the chosen one in the evening, open the door quietly,
+and throw it in.
+
+Those were the days of charms, and of course the rural maidens had a
+sure and infallible charm foretelling the future husband. On the eve of
+St. Valentine's day, the anxious damsel prepared for sleep by pinning to
+her pillow five bay leaves, one at each corner and one in the middle
+(which must have been delightful to sleep on, by the way). If she
+dreamed of her sweetheart, she was sure to marry him before the end of
+the year.
+
+But to make it a sure thing, the candidate for matrimony must boil an
+egg hard, take out the yolk, and fill its place with salt. Just before
+going to bed, she must eat egg, salt, shell and all, and neither speak
+nor drink after it. If that wouldn't insure her a vivid dream, there
+surely could be no virtue in charms.
+
+Modern valentines, aside from the valuable presents often contained in
+them, are very pretty things, and they are growing prettier every year,
+since large business houses spare neither skill nor money in getting
+them up. The most interesting thing about them, to "grown-ups," is the
+way they are made; and perhaps even you youngsters, who watch eagerly
+for the postman, "sinking beneath the load of delicate embarrassments
+not his own," would like to know how satin and lace and flowers and
+other dainty things grew into a valentine.
+
+It was no fairy's handiwork. It went through the hands of grimy-looking
+workmen before it reached your hands.
+
+To be sure, a dreamy artist may have designed it, but a lithographer,
+with inky fingers, printed the picture part of it; a die-cutter, with
+sleeves rolled up, made a pattern in steel of the lace-work on the edge;
+and a dingy-looking pressman, with a paper hat on, stamped the pattern
+around the picture. Another hard-handed workman rubbed the back of the
+stamped lace with sand-paper till it came in holes and looked like lace,
+and not merely like stamped paper; and a row of girls at a common long
+table put on the colors with stencils, gummed on the hearts and darts
+and cupids and flowers, and otherwise finished the thing exactly like
+the pattern before them.
+
+You see, the sentiment about a valentine doesn't begin until Tom, Dick,
+or Harry takes it from the stationer, and writes your name on it.
+
+[Illustration: ST. VALENTINE'S LETTER-CARRIERS]
+
+
+
+
+ =Washington's Birthday=
+
+ _February 22_
+
+ GEORGE WASHINGTON
+
+ Born February 22, 1732 Died December 14, 1799
+
+
+Washington was the first President of the United States, and the son of
+a Virginia planter. He attended school until about sixteen years of age,
+was engaged in surveying, 1748-51, became an officer in the Continental
+army, and President in 1789. He was re-elected in 1793. He was
+preëminent for his sound judgment and perfect self-control. It is said
+that no act of his public life can be traced to personal caprice,
+ambition, or resentment.
+
+
+ =THE BOYHOOD OF WASHINGTON=
+
+ BY HORACE E. SCUDDER
+
+It was near the shore of the Potomac River, between Pope's Creek and
+Bridge's Creek, that Augustine Washington lived when his son George was
+born. The land had been in the family ever since Augustine's
+grandfather, John Washington, had bought it, when he came over from
+England in 1657. John Washington was a soldier and a public-spirited
+man, and so the parish in which he lived--for Virginia was divided into
+parishes as some other colonies into townships--was named Washington. It
+is a quiet neighborhood; not a sign remains of the old house, and the
+only mark of the place is a stone slab, broken and overgrown with weeds
+and brambles, which lies on a bed of bricks taken from the remnants of
+the old chimney of the house. It bears the inscription:
+
+ Here
+The 11th of February, 1732 (old style)
+ George Washington
+ was born
+
+[Illustration: SLAB THAT MARKS THE LOCATION OF THE HOUSE WHERE
+WASHINGTON WAS BORN]
+
+The English had lately agreed to use the calendar of Pope Gregory, which
+added eleven days to the reckoning, but people still used the old style
+as well as the new. By the new style, the birthday was February 22, and
+that is the day which is now observed. The family into which the child
+was born consisted of the father and mother, Augustine and Mary
+Washington, and two boys, Lawrence and Augustine. These were sons of
+Augustine Washington and a former wife who had died four years before.
+George Washington was the eldest of the children of Augustine and Mary
+Washington; he had afterward three brothers and two sisters, but one of
+the sisters died in infancy.
+
+It was not long after George Washington's birth that the house in which
+he was born was burned, and as his father was at the time especially
+interested in some iron-works at a distance, it was determined not to
+rebuild upon the lonely place. Accordingly Augustine Washington removed
+his family to a place which he owned in Stafford County, on the banks of
+the Rappahannock River opposite Fredericksburg. The house is not now
+standing, but a picture was made of it before it was destroyed. It was,
+like many Virginia houses of the day, divided into four rooms on a
+floor, and had great outside chimneys at either end.
+
+Here George Washington spent his childhood. He learned to read, write,
+and cipher at a small school kept by Hobby, the sexton of the parish
+church. Among his playmates was Richard Henry Lee, who was afterward a
+famous Virginian. When the boys grew up, they wrote to each other of
+grave matters of war and state, but here is the beginning of their
+correspondence, written when they were nine years old.
+
+ "RICHARD HENRY LEE TO GEORGE WASHINGTON:
+
+ "Pa brought me two pretty books full of pictures he got them in
+ Alexandria they have pictures of dogs and cats and tigers and
+ elefants and ever so many pretty things cousin bids me send you one
+ of them it has a picture of an elefant and a little Indian boy on
+ his back like uncle jo's sam pa says if I learn my tasks good he
+ will let uncle jo bring me to see you will you ask your ma to let
+ you come to see me.
+
+ "RICHARD HENRY LEE."
+
+
+ "GEORGE WASHINGTON TO RICHARD HENRY LEE:
+
+ "DEAR DICKEY I thank you very much for the pretty picture book you
+ gave me. Sam asked me to show him the pictures and I showed him all
+ the pictures in it; and I read to him how the tame elephant took
+ care of the master's little boy, and put him on his back and would
+ not let anybody touch his master's little son. I can read three or
+ four pages sometimes without missing a word. Ma says I may go to
+ see you, and stay all day with you next week if it be not rainy.
+ She says I may ride my pony Hero if Uncle Ben will go with me and
+ lead Hero. I have a little piece of poetry about the picture book
+ you gave me, but I mustn't tell you who wrote the poetry.
+
+ "'G.W.'s compliments to R.H.L.,
+ And likes his book full well,
+ Henceforth will count him his friend,
+ And hopes many happy days he may spend.'
+
+ "Your good friend,
+ "GEORGE WASHINGTON.
+
+ "I am going to get a whip top soon, and you may see it and whip
+ it."[1]
+
+It looks very much as if Richard Henry sent his letter off just as it
+was written. I suspect that his correspondent's letter was looked over,
+corrected, and copied before it was sent. Very possibly Augustine
+Washington was absent at the time on one of his journeys; but at any
+rate the boy owed most of his training to his mother, for only two years
+after this, his father died, and he was left to his mother's care.
+
+[Illustration: MONUMENT ON THE SITE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON'S BIRTHPLACE]
+
+She was a woman born to command, and since she was left alone with a
+family and an estate to care for, she took the reins into her own hands,
+and never gave them up to any one else. She used to drive about
+in an old-fashioned open chaise, visiting the various parts of her farm,
+just as a planter would do on horseback. The story is told that she had
+given an agent directions how to do a piece of work, and he had seen fit
+to do it differently, because he thought his way a better one. He showed
+her the improvement.
+
+"And pray," said the lady, "who gave you any exercise of judgment in the
+matter? I command you, sir; there is nothing left for you but to obey."
+
+In those days, more than now, a boy used very formal language when
+addressing his mother. He might love her warmly, but he was expected to
+treat her with a great show of respect. When Washington wrote to his
+mother, even after he was of age, he began his letter, "Honored Madam,"
+and signed it, "Your dutiful son." This was a part of the manners of the
+time. It was like the stiff dress which men wore when they paid their
+respects to others; it was put on for the occasion, and one would have
+been thought very unmannerly who did not make a marked difference
+between his every-day dress and that which he wore when he went into the
+presence of his betters. So Washington, when he wrote to his mother,
+would not say, "Dear Mother."
+
+Such habits as this go deeper than mere forms of speech. I do not
+suppose that the sons of this lady feared her, but they stood in awe of
+her, which is quite a different thing.
+
+"We were all as mute as mice, when in her presence," says one of
+Washington's companions; and common report makes her to have been very
+much such a woman as her son afterward was a man.
+
+I think that George Washington owed two strong traits to his mother,--a
+governing spirit, and a spirit of order and method. She taught him many
+lessons and gave him many rules; but, after all, it was her character
+shaping his which was most powerful. She taught him to be truthful, but
+her lessons were not half so forcible as her own truthfulness.
+
+There is a story told of George Washington's boyhood--unfortunately
+there are not many stories--which is to the point. His father had taken
+a great deal of pride in his blooded horses, and his mother afterward
+took great pains to keep the stock pure. She had several young horses
+that had not yet been broken, and one of them in particular, a sorrel,
+was extremely spirited. No one had been able to do anything with it, and
+it was pronounced thoroughly vicious, as people are apt to pronounce
+horses which they have not learned to master. George was determined to
+ride this colt, and told his companions that if they would help him
+catch it, he would ride and tame it.
+
+[Illustration: OLD WHITE CHAPEL, LANCASTER COUNTY, VIRGINIA, WHERE
+WASHINGTON AND HIS MOTHER ATTENDED SERVICE]
+
+Early in the morning they set out for the pasture, where the boys
+managed to surround the sorrel and then to put a bit into its mouth.
+Washington sprang on its back, the boys dropped the bridle, and away
+flew the angry animal. Its rider at once began to command; the horse
+resisted, backing about the field, rearing and plunging. The boys became
+thoroughly alarmed, but Washington kept his seat, never once losing his
+self-control or his mastery of the colt. The struggle was a sharp one;
+when suddenly, as if determined to rid itself of its rider, the creature
+leaped into the air with a tremendous bound. It was its last. The
+violence burst a blood-vessel, and the noble horse fell dead.
+
+Before the boys could sufficiently recover to consider how they should
+extricate themselves from the scrape, they were called to breakfast; and
+the mistress of the house, knowing that they had been in the fields,
+began to ask after her stock.
+
+"Pray, young gentlemen," said she, "have you seen my blooded colts in
+your rambles? I hope they are well taken care of. My favorite, I am
+told, is as large as his sire."
+
+The boys looked at one another, and no one liked to speak. Of course the
+mother repeated her question.
+
+"The sorrel is dead, madam," said her son. "I killed him!"
+
+And then he told the whole story. They say that his mother flushed with
+anger, as her son often used to, and then, like him, controlled herself,
+and presently said, quietly:
+
+"It is well; but while I regret the loss of my favorite, I rejoice in
+my son who always speaks the truth."
+
+The story of Washington's killing the blooded colt is of a piece with
+other stories less particular, which show that he was a very athletic
+fellow. Of course, when a boy becomes famous, every one likes to
+remember the wonderful things he did before he was famous, and
+Washington's playmates, when they grew up, used to show the spot by the
+Rappahannock near Fredericksburg where he stood and threw a stone to the
+opposite bank; and at the celebrated Natural Bridge, the arch of which
+is two hundred feet above the ground, they always tell the visitor that
+George Washington threw a stone in the air the whole height. He
+undoubtedly took part in all the sports which were the favorites of his
+country at that time--he pitched heavy bars, tossed quoits, ran, leaped,
+and wrestled; for he was a powerful, large-limbed young fellow, and he
+had a very large and strong hand.
+
+(From "Life of George Washington" by Horace E. Scudder, published by
+Houghton, Mifflin & Co.)
+
+(The illustrations in this story are copied from the original pictures in
+Mr. B.J. Lossing's "Mt. Vernon and its Associations," by permission of
+Messrs. J.C. Yorston & Co., Cincinnati, Ohio.)
+
+[Footnote 1: From B.J. Lossing's "The Home of Washington."]
+
+
+
+
+ =Longfellow's Birthday=
+
+ _February 27_
+
+ HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW
+
+ Born February 27, 1807 Died March 24, 1882
+
+
+Longfellow graduated at Bowdoin College in 1825; traveled in Europe in
+1826; was professor at Bowdoin in 1829-35; again visited Europe 1835-36;
+and was professor at Harvard College 1836-54. He continued to reside at
+Cambridge. He is best known and loved for his poems, though he wrote
+three novels.
+
+
+ =LONGFELLOW AND THE CHILDREN=
+
+ BY LUCY LARCOM
+
+The poets who love children are the poets whom children love. It is
+natural that they should care much for each other, because both children
+and poets look into things in the same way,--simply, with open eyes and
+hearts, seeing Nature as it is, and finding whatever is lovable and pure
+in the people who surround them, as flowers may receive back from
+flowers sweet odors for those which they have given. The little child is
+born with a poet's heart in him, and the poet has been fitly called "the
+eternal child."
+
+Not that all children or all poets are alike in this. But of Longfellow
+we think as of one who has always been fresh and natural in his sympathy
+for children, one who has loved them as they have loved him.
+
+We wish he had given us more of the memories of his own childhood. One
+vivid picture of it comes to us in "My Lost Youth," a poem which shows
+us how everything he saw when a child must have left within him a
+life-long impression. That boyhood by the sea must have been full of
+dreams as well as of pictures. The beautiful bay with its green islands,
+widening out to the Atlantic on the east, and the dim chain of
+mountains, the highest in New England, lying far away on the
+northwestern horizon, give his native city a roomy feeling not often
+experienced in the streets of a town; and the boy-poet must have felt
+his imagination taking wings there, for many a long flight. So he more
+than hints to us in his song:
+
+ "I can see the shadowy lines of its trees,
+ And catch, in sudden gleams,
+ The sheen of the far-surrounding seas,
+ And islands that were the Hesperides
+ Of all my boyish dreams.
+ And the burden of that old song,
+ It murmurs and whispers still:
+ 'A boy's will is the wind's will,
+ And the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts.'
+
+ "I remember the black wharves and the slips,
+ And the sea-tides tossing free;
+ And Spanish sailors with bearded lips,
+ And the beauty and mystery of the ships,
+ And the magic of the sea.
+ And the voice of that wayward song
+ Is singing and saying still:
+ 'A boy's will is the wind's will,
+ And the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts.'"
+
+Longfellow's earliest volume, "The Voices of the Night," was one of the
+few books of American poetry that some of us who are now growing old
+ourselves can remember reading, just as we were emerging from childhood.
+"The Reaper and the Flowers" and the "Psalm of Life,"--I recall the
+delight with which I used to repeat those poems. The latter, so full of
+suggestions which a very young person could feel, but only half
+understand, was for that very reason the more fascinating. It seemed to
+give glimpses, through opening doors, of that wonderful new world of
+mankind, where children are always longing to wander freely as men and
+women. Looking forward and aspiring are among the first occupations of
+an imaginative child; and the school-boy who declaimed the words:
+
+ "Lives of great men all remind us
+ We can make our lives sublime,"
+
+and the school-girl who read them quietly by herself, felt them,
+perhaps, no less keenly than the man of thought and experience.
+
+Longfellow has said that--
+
+ "Sublimity always is simple
+ Both in sermon and song, a child can seize on its meaning,"
+
+and the simplicity of his poetry is the reason why children and young
+people have always loved it; the reason, also, why it has been enjoyed
+by men and women and children all over the world.
+
+One of his poems which has been the delight of children and grown people
+alike is the "Village Blacksmith," the first half of which is a
+description that many a boy might feel as if he could have written
+himself--if he only had the poet's command of words and rhymes, and the
+poet's genius! Is not this one of the proofs of a good poem, that it
+haunts us until it seems as if it had almost grown out of our own mind?
+How life-like the picture is!--
+
+ "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."
+
+No wonder the Cambridge children, when the old chestnut-tree that
+overhung the smithy was cut down, had a memento shaped into a chair
+from its boughs, to present to him who had made it an immortal tree in
+his verse! It bore flower and fruit for them a second time in his
+acknowledgment of the gift; for he told them how--
+
+ "There, by the blacksmith's forge, beside the street
+ Its blossoms, white and sweet,
+ Enticed the bees, until it seemed alive,
+ And murmured like a hive.
+
+ "And when the wind of autumn, with a shout
+ Tossed its great arms about,
+ The shining chestnuts, bursting from the sheath,
+ Dropped to the ground beneath."
+
+In its own wild, winsome way, the song of "Hiawatha's Childhood" is one
+of the prettiest fancies in poetry. It is a dream of babyhood in the
+"forest primeval," with Nature for nurse and teacher; and it makes us
+feel as if--were the poet's idea only a possibility--it might have been
+very pleasant to be a savage baby, although we consider it so much
+better to be civilized.
+
+How Longfellow loved the very little ones can be seen in such verses as
+the "Hanging of the Crane," and in those earlier lines "To a Child,"
+where the baby on his mother's knee gazes at the painted tiles, shakes
+his "coral rattle with the silver bells," or escapes through the open
+door into the old halls where once
+
+ "The Father of his country dwelt."
+
+Those verses give us a charming glimpse of the home-life in the historic
+mansion which is now so rich with poetic, as well as patriotic
+associations.
+
+How beautiful it was to be let in to that twilight library scene
+described in the "Children's Hour":
+
+ "A sudden rush from the stair-way,
+ A sudden raid from the hall!
+ By three doors left unguarded,
+ They enter my castle wall!
+
+ "They climb up into my turret,
+ O'er the arms and back of my chair;
+ If I try to escape, they surround me;
+ They seem to be everywhere."
+
+Afterward, when sorrow and loss had come to the happy home, in the
+sudden removal of the mother of those merry children, the father who
+loved them so had a sadder song for them, as he looked onward into their
+orphaned lives:
+
+ "O little feet, that such long years
+ Must wander on, through hopes and fears,
+ Must ache and bleed beneath your load,
+ I, nearer to the wayside inn,
+ Where toil shall cease, and rest begin,
+ Am weary, thinking of your road!"
+
+[Illustration: LONGFELLOW'S HOUSE--ONCE WASHINGTON'S HEADQUARTERS AT
+CAMBRIDGE]
+
+Longfellow loved all children, and had a word for them whenever he met
+them.
+
+At a concert, going early with her father, a little girl espied Mr.
+Longfellow sitting alone, and begged that she might go and speak to him.
+Her father, himself a stranger, took the liberty of introducing his
+little daughter Edith to the poet.
+
+"Edith?" said Mr. Longfellow, tenderly. "Ah! I have an Edith, too; but
+_my_ baby Edith is twenty years old." And he seated the child beside
+him, taking her hand in his, and making her promise to come and see him
+at his house in Cambridge.
+
+"What is the name of your sled, my boy?" he said to a small lad, who
+came tugging one up the road toward him, on a winter morning.
+
+"It's 'Evange_line_.' Mr. Longfellow wrote 'Evange_line_.' Did you ever
+see Mr. Longfellow?" answered the little fellow, as he ran by, doubtless
+wondering at the smile on the face of the pleasant gray-haired
+gentleman.
+
+Professor Monti, who witnessed the pretty scene, tells the story of a
+little girl who one Christmas inquired the way to the poet's house, and
+asked if she could just step inside the yard; and he relates how Mr.
+Longfellow, being told she was there, went to the door and called her
+in, and showed her the "old clock on the stairs," and many other
+interesting things about the house, leaving his little guest with
+beautiful memories of that Christmas day to carry all through her life.
+This was characteristic of the poet's hospitality, delicate and
+courteous and thoughtful to all who crossed his threshold. Many a
+trembling young girl, frightened at her own boldness in having ventured
+into his presence, was set at ease by her host in the most genial way;
+he would make her forget herself in the interesting mementos all about
+her, devoting himself to her entertainment as if it were the one
+pleasure of the hour for him to do so.
+
+[Illustration: Henry W. Longfellow]
+
+It is often said, and with reason, that we Americans do not think enough
+of manners--that politeness of behavior which comes from genuine
+sympathy and a delicate perception of others' feelings. Certainly our
+young people might look to Mr. Longfellow as a model in this respect. He
+was a perfect gentleman, in the best sense of that term, always
+considerate, and quick to see where he might do a kindness, or say a
+pleasant word.
+
+The celebration of Longfellow's seventy-fifth birthday by
+school-children all over the country is something that those children
+must be glad to think of now--glad to remember that the poet knew how
+much they cared for him and for what he had written. Even the blind
+children, who have to read with their fingers, were enjoying his songs
+with the rest. How pleasant that must have been to him! Certainly, as it
+seems to me, the best tribute that the young people of the country can
+pay to his memory is to become more familiar with his poems.
+
+We should not wait until a great and good man has left us before giving
+him honor, or trying to understand what he has done for us. A dreary
+world ours would be, if there were no poets' songs echoing through it;
+and we may be proud of our country that it has a poetry of its own,
+which it is for us to know and possess for ourselves.
+
+Longfellow has said:
+
+ "What the leaves are to the forest
+ With light and air and food,
+ Ere their sweet and tender juices
+ Have been hardened into wood,
+ That to the world, are children":
+
+and something like this we may say of his songs. There is in all true
+poetry a freshness of life which makes the writer of it immortal.
+
+The singer so much beloved has passed from sight, but the music of his
+voice is in the air, and, listening to it, we know that he can not die.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ =Inauguration Day=
+
+ _March 4_
+
+
+The date was settled by the old Congress of the Confederation in 1788,
+when the procedure was established for the election of a President. It
+was decreed that the Electoral College should meet on the first
+Wednesday of January, the votes be counted by the House of
+Representatives on the first Wednesday of February, and the President be
+inaugurated on the first Wednesday of March. This March date was the
+4th. March 4 has been Inauguration Day ever since.
+
+
+ =HOW A PRESIDENT IS INAUGURATED=
+
+ BY CLIFFORD HOWARD
+
+As you will remember, Thomas Jefferson was the first President of our
+country to be inaugurated at Washington. This took place in the year
+1801, when our national capital was not much more than a year old; and
+you may imagine that the city was a very different-looking place from
+what it is to-day.
+
+But now instead of a straggling town with a few muddy streets and about
+three thousand inhabitants, Jefferson would find our national capital
+one of the most beautiful cities on the face of the earth, with a
+population of nearly three hundred thousand; and on March 4 he would
+behold a scene such as he never dreamed of. Thousands of flags fly from
+the house-tops and windows, bright-colored bunting in beautiful designs
+adorns the great public buildings, all the stores and business houses
+are gaily decorated with flags and streamers, and everything presents
+the appearance of a great and glorious holiday, while the streets swarm
+with the hundreds of thousands of people who have come to the city from
+all parts of the country to take part in the grand celebration.
+
+Everybody is moving toward Pennsylvania Avenue, where the parade is to
+march. No, not everybody: some fifty or sixty thousand make their way to
+the Capitol, so as to get a glimpse of the inauguration exercises that
+take place on the east portico; and although the ceremonies will not
+begin until nearly one o'clock, the great space in front of the Capitol
+is packed with people three hours before that time, some of them having
+come as early as eight o'clock in the morning to be sure of getting a
+good view.
+
+Early in the morning Pennsylvania Avenue is cleared of all street-cars,
+carriages, and bicycles, and no one is allowed to step off the sidewalk.
+A strong wire rope is stretched along each side of the avenue, so as to
+prevent people from getting into the street.
+
+Soon every window and balcony along the line is crowded with spectators.
+Even the roofs are black with people, and small boys may be seen
+perched among the branches of the trees, or hanging on to the
+electric-light poles. For a distance of nearly three miles, on each side
+of the street, people are packed so closely together that it is almost
+impossible for them to move. In every park and open space along the line
+large wooden stands have been erected; and these, too, are filled with
+those who are willing to pay for seats.
+
+As the time for the morning parade draws near, the crowds become
+restless with eagerness and excitement. Policemen on horseback dash up
+and down the avenue to see that the road is clear, and every now and
+then a trooper or messenger in bright uniform gallops past. Suddenly the
+boom of a cannon is heard. The next moment there comes the distant roll
+of drums, and then, amid the inspiring music of brass bands and
+tremendous cheering, the procession appears moving slowly down the
+avenue on its way to the Capitol. Riding ahead is a squad of mounted
+police--big, brawny fellows, with glittering brass buttons. After them
+come the United States troops and naval forces, armed with their rifles
+and sabers that flash in the sunlight, and marching to the music of the
+famous Marine Band, while rumbling over the hard, smooth pavement of
+the avenue come the big cannons drawn by powerful horses. Then appears
+the chief marshal of the parade on his spirited horse, heading the
+body-guard of soldiers that surround the open carriage containing the
+President and the President-elect, sitting side by side. As the
+carriage, which is drawn by four handsome horses, rolls slowly along
+with its distinguished occupants, men and boys shout and cheer at the
+top of their lungs, and throw their hats into the air when their voices
+give out, while the women and girls wave their handkerchiefs and hurrah
+with the rest of the crowd. With hat in hand, the President-elect smiles
+and bows to the right and the left; and with the bands playing and
+people cheering, handkerchiefs fluttering and flags flying, he arrives
+at the Capitol a few minutes before noon. Here he meets with another
+rousing reception from the great mass of people who have been waiting
+for him for two or three hours; and it requires all the efforts of a
+small army of police to open the way for him and his party to pass into
+the Capitol.
+
+[Illustration: GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON ON THE WAY TO HIS INAUGURATION]
+
+The House of Representatives is about to adjourn, and many of its
+members have already come over to the Senate to witness the closing
+exercises there. Extra chairs and seats have been brought in for them
+and the many other prominent officials who also have gathered there,
+including the officers of the army and the navy, the justices of the
+Supreme Court, the cabinet officers, and the foreign ambassadors and
+ministers, many of whom are dressed in their gorgeous state robes.
+According to law, Congress must come to an end at noon; but if the
+presidential party has not made its appearance when the Senate clock is
+about to point to twelve, the hands are moved back a few minutes so as
+to gain time. And before the hands are allowed to get around to twelve,
+everybody has arrived, everything is in readiness, and the President of
+the Senate has administered the oath of office to his successor, the new
+Vice-President of the United States, who at once calls an extra session
+of the Senate, so that not a moment elapses between the death of one
+session and the birth of another. Then, after a short prayer by the
+chaplain and a brief address by the Vice-President, the distinguished
+people gathered in the Senate form in line, and, headed by a company of
+newspaper reporters, they march in dignified procession to the rotunda,
+and thence to the platform on the east front of the Capitol.
+
+The nine justices of the Supreme Court, clothed in their black robes,
+walk out on the platform first, followed by the President-elect. As soon
+as the crowd catches sight of him, a deafening shout breaks forth from
+fifty thousand throats, and, amid the enthusiastic uproar that lasts
+several minutes, hats and canes, umbrellas and handkerchiefs, are waved
+aloft or thrown wildly into the air by joyous and patriotic Americans.
+Removing his hat, the President-elect comes forward, and, turning to the
+Chief Justice of the United States, takes the oath of office as required
+by the Constitution. Then comes the inaugural address, which, of course,
+only those near the platform are able to hear. But the thirty or forty
+thousand who can't hear the speech are willing to agree with everything
+that is said, and every little while they shout and cheer and applaud.
+
+[Illustration: THE INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT GARFIELD]
+
+All this time the crowd on the avenue has been patiently waiting for the
+return of the President. The morning's procession was nothing more than
+a military escort; now is to come the great feature of the day--the
+grand inauguration parade. The ceremonies at the Capitol are over at
+half-past one, and the new President goes at once to the White House,
+greeted with rousing cheers all along the way, and prepares to review
+the greatest parade ever seen in the city of Washington. All the
+morning, companies of soldiers, political clubs, bands, and drum corps
+have been preparing for the afternoon's march. There are so many
+thousands who are going to take part in the parade that orders have been
+given requiring all companies to march in ranks reaching from curb to
+curb, a distance of one hundred and thirty feet, and to follow one
+another as closely as possible.
+
+The march is begun a little before two o'clock; and, although the people
+have been standing on the sidewalks since early morning, they have
+plenty of enthusiasm left, and they fill the air with their shouts and
+hurrahs as regiment after regiment of magnificently drilled soldiers and
+horses marches by.
+
+Even after the electric lamps are lighted, men and horses are still
+tramping along the avenue, and people are still shouting and the bands
+playing and flags waving. And all this time the President stands in
+front of the White House, reviewing the marching thousands as they pass
+along.
+
+But although the big parade finally comes to an end, the festivities are
+not yet over. Late into the night the city is brilliantly illuminated
+by magnificent and wonderful fireworks and powerful electric
+search-lights that shine from the tops of the tall buildings and light
+up the great dome of the Capitol and the Washington monument. Then comes
+the grand inaugural ball. There are over ten thousand people present,
+and the scene is a glorious and wonderful sight.
+
+It is almost sunrise when the last carriage rolls away, and with the
+closing of the ball the inauguration festivities end.
+
+
+
+
+ =Easter Day=
+
+
+Easter is the Sunday that follows the 14th day of the calendar moon,
+which falls upon or next after the 21st of March. This Sunday, when
+Christian churches celebrate the resurrection of Christ, is one of
+solemn rejoicing. Coming after the self-denials of Lent and at the
+beginning of spring, it seems naturally a time of hope and new life. It
+is the feast of flowers, particularly of lilies, and the name had its
+origin in a festival in honor of the goddess of spring. The esteem in
+which it is held is indicated by its ancient title, "The great day."
+
+
+ =A SONG OF EASTER=
+
+ BY CELIA THAXTER
+
+ Sing, children, sing!
+ And the lily censers swing;
+ Sing that life and joy are waking and that Death no more is king.
+ Sing the happy, happy tumult of the slowly brightening Spring;
+ Sing, little children, sing!
+
+ Sing, children, sing!
+ Winter wild has taken wing.
+ Fill the air with the sweet tidings till the frosty echoes ring!
+ Along the eaves the icicles no longer glittering cling;
+ And the crocus in the garden lifts its bright face to the sun,
+ And in the meadows softly the brooks begin to run;
+ And the golden catkins swing
+ In the warm airs of the Spring;
+ Sing, little children, sing!
+
+ Sing, children, sing!
+ The lilies white you bring
+ In the joyous Easter morning for hope are blossoming;
+ And as the earth her shroud of snow from off her breast doth fling,
+ So may we cast our fetters off in God's eternal Spring.
+ So may we find release at last from sorrow and from pain,
+ So may we find our childhood's calm, delicious dawn again.
+ Sweet are your eyes, O little ones, that look with smiling grace,
+ Without a shade of doubt or fear into the Future's face!
+ Sing, sing in happy chorus, with joyful voices tell
+ That death is life, and God is good, and all things shall be well;
+ That bitter days shall cease
+ In warmth and light and peace,--
+ That Winter yields to Spring,--
+ Sing, little children, sing!
+
+[Illustration: "HE SAT DOWN ON THE STEP, BREATHLESS WITH SURPRISE AND
+JOY"]
+
+
+ =THE GENERAL'S EASTER BOX=
+
+ BY TEMPLE BAILEY
+
+The General did not look at all as one would expect a general to look.
+He was short and thick-set and had a red face and a white mustache, and
+he usually dressed in a gray tweed suit, with a funny Norfolk jacket
+with a belt, and wore a soft cap pulled down almost to his eye-glasses.
+
+And he always did his own marketing.
+
+That is how he came to know Jimmy.
+
+Jimmy stood at a corner of Old Market and sold little bundles of dried
+sage and sweet marjoram, and sassafras and cinnamon, and soup-bunches
+made of bits of vegetables tied together--a bit of parsley and a bit of
+celery and a bit of carrot and a sprig of summer savory, all for one
+cent. Then at Christmas-time he displayed wreaths, which he and his
+little mother made at home, and as the spring came on he brought wild
+flowers that he picked in the woods.
+
+And that was how he came to know the General.
+
+For one morning, just before Easter, the General came puffing down the
+outside aisle of Old Market, with his colored man behind him with an
+enormous basket. The General's carriage was drawn up to the curbstone,
+and the gray horses were dancing little fancy dances over the asphalt
+street, when all at once Jimmy thrust a bunch of arbutus under the
+General's very nose.
+
+"Go away, go away," said the General, and trotted down to the carriage
+door, which a footman held open for him.
+
+But a whiff of fragrance had reached him, and he stopped.
+
+"How much?" he asked.
+
+"Three cents," said Jimmy, in a hoarse voice.
+
+The General looked at the little fellow through his eye-glasses.
+
+"Got a cold?" he inquired gruffly.
+
+"Yes, sir," croaked Jimmy.
+
+"Why don't you stay in the house, then?" growled the General.
+
+"Can't, sir," said Jimmy, cheerfully; "business is business."
+
+The General looked at the little stand where "business" was
+transacted--at the little rows of dried stuffs, at the small basket of
+flowers, and at the soup-bunches.
+
+"Humph," he said.
+
+Then his hand went down into his pocket, and he pulled out a lot of
+change. After that he chose two bunches of sweet, pinky blossoms.
+
+"Two for five, sir," said Jimmy.
+
+"Hum," said the General. "You might give me some parsley and a
+soup-bunch."
+
+Jimmy wrapped up the green stuff carefully and dropped it into the
+basket carried by the colored man.
+
+"Nine cents, sir," he said; and the General handed him a dime and then
+moved to the next stall, holding the flowers close to his nose.
+
+"You forgot your change," cried Jimmy, and rushed after him with the one
+cent.
+
+"Keep--" But one look at the honest little face and he changed his
+sentence.
+
+"Thank you, young man," he said, and away he drove.
+
+After that Jimmy looked for the General, and the General for Jimmy.
+Their transactions were always carried on in a strictly business manner,
+although, to be sure, the General's modest family of two did not
+require the unlimited sage and sweet marjoram that were ordered from
+time to time.
+
+On the Saturday before Easter the little stand was gay with new wares.
+In little nests of dried grasses lay eggs--Easter eggs, bright pink and
+blue and purple and mottled. Jimmy had invested in a dozen at forty
+cents the dozen, and he had hopes of doubling the money, for work surely
+counted for something, and he and the Little Mother had dyed them.
+
+But somehow people passed them by. Inside of the market there were finer
+nests, and eggs gilded and lettered, and Jimmy began to feel that his
+own precious eggs were very dull indeed.
+
+But when the General appeared around the corner, the boy's spirits rose.
+Here, at any rate, was a good customer.
+
+The General, however, was in a temper. There had been an argument with
+the fish-man which had left him red in the face and very touchy. So he
+bought two bunches of arbutus and nothing else.
+
+"Any eggs, sir?" asked Jimmy.
+
+"Eggs?" said the General, looking over the little stand.
+
+"Easter eggs," explained Jimmy.
+
+"I've no use for such things," said the General.
+
+"Oh!" said Jimmy, and in spite of himself his voice trembled. When one
+is the man of the family, and the Little Mother is sewing for dear life,
+and her work and the little stand in the market are all that pay the
+rent and buy food, it is sometimes hard to be brave. But the General did
+not notice the tremble.
+
+Jimmy tried again:
+
+"Any children, sir? Children always like Easter eggs, you know."
+
+"No," said the General; "no one but a son in the Philippines--a son some
+six feet two in his stockings."
+
+"Any grandchildren, sir?" hopefully.
+
+"Bless my soul," said the General, testily, "what a lot of questions!"
+And he hurried off to his carriage.
+
+Jimmy felt very forlorn. The General had been his last hope. The eggs
+were a dead loss.
+
+At last it came time to close up, and he piled all of his wares in a
+basket. Then he took out a little broom and began to sweep in an orderly
+way around his little stall. He had a battered old dustpan, and as he
+carried it out to the street to empty it, he saw a stiff greenish-gray
+paper sticking out of the dirt. Nothing in the world ever looks exactly
+like that but an American greenback, and, sure enough, when Jimmy pulled
+it out it proved to be a ten-dollar bill.
+
+Jimmy sat down on the curb suddenly. His money always came in pennies
+and nickels and dimes and quarters. The Little Mother sometimes earned a
+dollar at a time, but never in his whole life had Jimmy possessed a
+ten-dollar bill.
+
+Think of the possibilities to a little, poor, cold, worried boy. There
+was two months' rent in that ten-dollar bill--two months in which he
+would not have to worry over whether there would be a roof over their
+heads.
+
+Then there was a basket stall in that ten-dollar bill. That had always
+been his ambition. Some one had told him that baskets sold well in other
+cities, and not a single person had opened a basket stall in Old Market,
+and that was Jimmy's chance. Once established, he knew he could earn a
+good living.
+
+As for ten dollars' worth of groceries and provisions, Jimmy's mind
+could not grasp such a thing; fifty cents had always been the top limit
+for a grocery bill.
+
+But--it wasn't Jimmy's ten dollars. Like a flash his dreams tumbled to
+the ground. There had been many people coming and going through Old
+Market, but Jimmy knew that the bill was the General's. For the old
+gentleman had pulled out a roll when he reached for the five cents. Yes,
+it was the General's; but how to find the General?
+
+Inside the market he found the General's butcher. Yes, the butcher knew
+the General's address, for he was one of his best customers, and would
+keep Jimmy's basket while the boy went to the house.
+
+It was a long distance. Jimmy passed rows of great stone mansions, and
+went through parks, where crocuses and hyacinths were just peeping out.
+
+At last he came to the General's.
+
+A colored man answered the ring of the bell.
+
+"Who shall I say?" he inquired loftily. "The General is very busy,
+y'know."
+
+"Say Jimmy, from the market, please"; and Jimmy sat down on the great
+hall seat, feeling very much awed with all the magnificence.
+
+"Well, well," said the General, as he came puffing down the stairs.
+"Well, well, and what do you want?"
+
+"Please, sir, did you drop this?" and Jimmy held out the tightly rolled
+bill.
+
+"Did I? Well, now, I'm sure I don't know. Perhaps I did, perhaps I did."
+
+"I found it in front of my stall," said Jimmy.
+
+What a strange thing it seemed that the General should not know! Jimmy
+would have known if he had lost a penny. He began to feel that the
+General could not have a true idea of _business_.
+
+The General took out a roll of bills. "Let me see," he said. "Here's my
+market list. Yes, I guess that's mine, sure enough."
+
+"I'm glad I noticed it," said Jimmy, simply. "I came near sweeping it
+into the street."
+
+"And what can I pay you for your trouble?" asked the General, looking at
+the boy keenly.
+
+"Well," said Jimmy, stoutly, "you see, business is business, and I had
+to take my time, and I'd like to get back as soon as I can."
+
+The General frowned. He was afraid he was going to be disappointed in
+this boy.
+
+"And so," went on Jimmy, "if you would give me a nickel for car-fare, I
+think we might call it square."
+
+[Illustration: "THEN THE GENERAL, WITH KNIFE UPRAISED, STOPPED IN HIS
+CARVING OF THE COLD ROAST CHICKEN, AND TURNED TO JIMMY"]
+
+The General fumbled around for his eye-glasses, put them on, and looked
+at Jimmy in astonishment.
+
+"A nickel?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, sir"; Jimmy blushed. "You know I ought to get back."
+
+"Well, well," said the General. The boy had certainly the instincts of a
+gentleman. Not a single plea of poverty, and yet one could see that he
+was poor, very poor.
+
+Just then a gong struck softly somewhere. "I'm not going to let you go
+until you have a bit of lunch with us," said the General. "I have told
+my wife of Jimmy of the market, and now I want you to meet her."
+
+So Jimmy went down into a wonderful dining-room, where the silver and
+the cut glass shone, and where at the farther side of the table was the
+sweetest little old lady, who came and shook hands with him.
+
+Jimmy had never before eaten lunch where the soup was served in little
+cups, but the General's wife put him at his ease when she told him that
+his very own soup-bunches were in that soup, and if he didn't eat plenty
+of it he wouldn't be advertising his wares. Then the General, with knife
+upraised, stopped in his carving of the cold roast chicken, and turned
+to Jimmy with a smile of approval in his genial face, and said that it
+was his sage, too, that was in the chicken dressing.
+
+They made Jimmy talk, and finally he told them of his ambition for a
+basket stall.
+
+"And when do you expect to get it?" asked the General, with a smile.
+
+"When I get the goose that lays the golden egg, I am afraid, sir," said
+Jimmy, a little sadly.
+
+Then the General's wife asked questions, and Jimmy told her about the
+Little Mother, and of their life together; but not one word did he tell
+of their urgent need, for Jimmy had not learned to beg.
+
+At last the wonderful lunch was over, somewhat to Jimmy's relief, it
+must be confessed.
+
+"I shall come and see your mother, Jimmy," said the General's wife, as
+Jimmy left her.
+
+Out in the hall the General handed the boy a nickel. "Business is
+business, young man," he said, with a twinkle in his eye.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That night Jimmy and his mother sat up very late, for the boy had so
+much to tell.
+
+"Do you think I was wrong to ask for the nickel, Mother?" he asked
+anxiously, when he had finished.
+
+"No," said his mother; "but I am glad you didn't ask for more."
+
+Then, after Jimmy had gone to bed, the mother sat up for a long time,
+wondering how the rent was to be paid.
+
+On Easter Monday morning Jimmy and the Little Mother started out to pick
+the arbutus and the early violets which Jimmy was to sell Tuesday at his
+little stall.
+
+It was a sunshiny morning. The broad road was hard and white after the
+April showers, the sky was blue, and the air was sweet with the breath
+of bursting buds. And, in spite of cares, Jimmy and his mother had a
+very happy time as they filled their baskets.
+
+At last they sat down to tie up the bunches. Carriage after carriage
+passed them. As the last bunch of flowers was laid in Jimmy's basket, a
+victoria drawn by a pair of grays stopped in front of the
+flower-gatherers.
+
+"Well, well," said a hearty voice, and there were the General and his
+wife! They had called for Jimmy and his mother, they said, and had been
+directed to the wooded hill.
+
+"Get in, get in," commanded the General; and, in spite of the Little
+Mother's hesitancy and timid protests, she was helped up beside the
+General's wife by the footman, while Jimmy hopped in beside the General,
+and away they went over the hard white road.
+
+The General was in a gay mood.
+
+"Well, my boy, have you found your golden egg?" he asked Jimmy.
+
+"No, sir," said Jimmy, gravely; "not yet."
+
+"Too bad, too bad," said the old gentleman, while he shifted a white box
+that was on the seat between himself and Jimmy to the other side.
+
+"You're quite sure, are you, that you could only get it from a goose?"
+he asked later.
+
+"Get what, sir?" said Jimmy, whose eyes were on the gay crowds that
+thronged the sidewalks.
+
+"The egg," said the General.
+
+"Oh--yes, sir," replied Jimmy, with a smile.
+
+The General leaned back and laughed and laughed until he was red in the
+face; but Jimmy could see nothing to laugh at, so he merely smiled
+politely, and wondered what the joke was.
+
+At last they reached Jimmy's home, and the General helped the Little
+Mother out. As he did so he handed her a white box. Jimmy was busy
+watching the gray horses, and saw nothing else.
+
+"For the boy," whispered the General.
+
+The Little Mother shook her head doubtfully.
+
+"Bless you, madam," cried the General, testily, "I have a boy of my
+own--if he _is_ six feet two in his stockings." Then, in a softer tone,
+"I beg of you to take it, madam; it will please an old man and give the
+boy a start."
+
+So when good-by had been said, and Jimmy stood looking after the
+carriage and the prancing grays, the Little Mother put the white box in
+his hand.
+
+Jimmy opened it, and there on a nest of white cotton was an egg. But it
+was different from any of the eggs that Jimmy had sold on Saturday. It
+was large and gilded, and around the middle was a yellow ribbon.
+
+Jimmy lifted it out, and found it very heavy.
+
+"What do you think it is?" he said.
+
+"Untie the ribbon," advised his mother, whose quick eyes saw a faint
+line which showed an opening.
+
+Jimmy pulled the yellow ribbon, the upper half of the egg opened on a
+hinge, and there were glistening gold coins--five-dollar gold pieces.
+
+"Oh!" said Jimmy, and he sat down on the step, breathless with surprise
+and joy.
+
+A slip of white paper lay between two of the coins. Jimmy snatched it
+out, and this is what he read:
+
+ Please accept the contents of the golden egg, with the best wishes
+ of THE GOOSE.
+
+
+
+
+ =Arbor Day=
+
+ No uniform date in the different States
+
+
+Arbor Day is a designated day upon which the people and especially the
+school children plant trees and shrubs along the highways and other
+suitable places. It was first observed in Nebraska. The State board of
+agriculture offered prizes for the counties and persons planting the
+largest number of trees, and it is said that more than a million trees
+were planted the first year, while within sixteen years over 350,000,000
+trees and vines were planted in the State.
+
+This custom, so beautiful and useful, spread rapidly, and now is
+recognized by the statutes of many of the States.
+
+The exact date naturally varies with the climate.
+
+
+ =THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE-TREE=
+
+ BY WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT
+
+ Come, let us plant the apple-tree,
+ Cleave the tough greensward with the spade;
+ Wide let its hollow bed be made;
+ There gently lay the roots, and there
+ Sift the dark mold with kindly care,
+ And press it o'er them tenderly;
+ As 'round the sleeping infant's feet
+ We softly fold the cradle-sheet,
+ So plant we the apple-tree.
+
+ What plant we in this apple-tree?
+ Buds, which the breath of summer days
+ Shall lengthen into leafy sprays;
+ Boughs, where the thrush, with crimson breast,
+ Shall hunt and sing, and hide her nest;
+ We plant upon the sunny lea
+ A shadow for the noontide hour,
+ A shelter from the summer shower,
+ When we plant the apple-tree.
+
+ What plant we in this apple-tree?
+ Sweets for a hundred flowery springs
+ To load the May-wind's restless wings,
+ When, from the orchard-row, he pours
+ Its fragrance through our open doors;
+ A world of blossoms for the bee,
+ Flowers for the sick girl's silent room,
+ For the glad infant sprigs of bloom,
+ We plant with the apple-tree.
+
+ What plant we in this apple-tree?
+ Fruits that shall swell in sunny June,
+ And redden in the August noon,
+ And drop, when gentle airs come by,
+ That fan the blue September sky;
+ While children come, with cries of glee,
+ And seek them where the fragrant grass
+ Betrays their bed to those who pass,
+ At the foot of the apple-tree.
+
+ And when, above this apple-tree,
+ The winter stars are glittering bright,
+ And winds go howling through the night,
+ Girls whose young eyes o'erflow with mirth
+ Shall peel its fruit by cottage-hearth,
+ And guests in prouder homes shall see,
+ Heaped with the grape of Cintra's vine,
+ And golden orange of the line,
+ The fruit of the apple-tree.
+
+ The fruitage of this apple-tree,
+ Winds and our flag of stripe and star
+ Shall bear to coasts that lie afar,
+ Where men shall wonder at the view,
+ And ask in what fair groves they grew;
+ And sojourners beyond the sea
+ Shall think of childhood's careless day,
+ And long, long hours of summer play,
+ In the shade of the apple-tree.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ Each year shall give this apple-tree
+ A broader flush of roseate bloom,
+ A deeper maze of verdurous gloom,
+ And loosen, when the frost-clouds lower,
+ The crisp brown leaves in thicker shower.
+ The years shall come and pass, but we
+ Shall hear no longer, where we lie,
+ The summer's songs, the autumn's sigh,
+ In the boughs of the apple-tree.
+
+ And time shall waste this apple-tree.
+ Oh, when its aged branches throw
+ Thin shadows on the ground below,
+ Shall fraud and force and iron will
+ Oppress the weak and helpless still?
+ What shall the tasks of mercy be,
+ Amid the toils, the strifes, the tears
+ Of those who live when length of years
+ Is wasting this little apple-tree?
+
+ "Who planted this old apple-tree?"
+ The children of that distant day
+ Thus to some aged man shall say;
+ And, gazing on its mossy stem,
+ The gray-haired man shall answer them:
+ "A poet of the land was he,
+ Born in the rude but good old times;
+ 'Tis said he made some quaint old rhymes
+ On planting the apple-tree."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ =April Fools' Day=
+
+ _April 1_
+
+
+So old is the custom of playing amiable and harmless tricks upon the
+first of April that its origin is not definitely known. It is not a
+holiday and not worthy to be one, but it should be good for our sense of
+humor and that is one of the best things we can have. An April fool is
+sometimes called a "Fourth-month Dunce."
+
+
+ =FOURTH-MONTH DUNCE=
+
+ BY H.M.M.
+
+The curious custom of joking on the first of April, sending the ignorant
+or the unwary on fruitless errands, for the sake of making them feel
+foolish and having a laugh at them, prevails very widely in the world.
+And whether you call the victim a "Fourth-month Dunce," an "April fool,"
+an "April fish" (as in France), or an "April gowk" (as in Scotland), the
+object, to deceive him and laugh at him, is everywhere the same.
+
+The custom has been traced back for ages; all through Europe, as far
+back as the records go. The "Feast of Fools" is mentioned as celebrated
+by the ancient Romans. In Asia the Hindoos have a festival, ending on
+the 31st of March, called the "Huli festival," in which they play the
+same sort of first of April pranks--translated into Hindoo,--laughing at
+the victim, and making him a "Huli fool." It goes back to Persia, where
+it is supposed to have had a beginning, in very ancient times, in the
+celebration of spring, when their New Year begins.
+
+How it came to be what we everywhere find it, the wise men cannot agree.
+The many authorities are so divided, that I see no way but for us to
+accept the custom as we find it, wherever we may happen to be, and be
+careful not to abuse it.
+
+Some jokes are peculiar to some places. In England, where it is called
+"All Fools' Day," one favorite joke is to send the greenhorn to a
+bookseller to buy the "Life and Adventures of Eve's Grandmother," or to
+a cobbler to buy a few cents' worth of "strap oil,"--strap oil being, in
+the language of the shoe-making brotherhood, a personal application of
+the leather.
+
+But this custom, with others, common in coarser and rougher times, is
+fast dying out. Even now it is left almost entirely to playful children.
+This sentiment, quoted from an English almanac of a hundred years ago,
+will, I'm sure, meet the approval of "grown-ups" of this century:
+
+ "But 't is a thing to be disputed,
+ Which is the greatest fool reputed,
+ The one that innocently went,
+ Or he that him designedly sent."
+
+
+
+
+ =Memorial Day=
+
+ _May 30_
+
+
+It is said that the observance of this day grew originally out of the
+custom of the widows, mothers, and children of the Confederate dead in
+the South strewing the soldiers' graves with flowers, including the
+unmarked graves of the Union soldiers. There was no settled date for
+this in the North until 1868, when General John A. Logan, as
+commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, designated May 30.
+It is now generally observed, and is a legal holiday in most of the
+States.
+
+
+ =THE BOY IN GRAY=
+
+ _A Ballad for Memorial Day_
+
+ BY MARY BRADLEY
+
+ Fredericksburg had had her fray,
+ And the armies stood at bay;
+ Back of wall, and top of hill,
+ Union men and men in gray
+ Glowered at each other still.
+
+ In the space between the two
+ Many a hapless boy in blue
+ Lay face upward to the skies;
+ Many another, just as true,
+ Filled the air with frantic cries.
+
+ "Love of God!" with pity stirred,
+ Cried a rebel lad who heard.
+ "This is more than I can bear!
+ General, only say the word,
+ They shall have some water there."
+
+ "What's the use?" his general,
+ Frowning, asked. "A Yankee ball
+ Drops you dead, or worse, half way,
+ Once you go beyond the wall."
+ "May be!" said the boy in gray.
+
+ "Still I'll risk it, if you please."
+ And the senior, ill at ease,
+ Nodded, growling under breath,
+ "For his mortal enemies
+ I have sent the lad to death."
+
+ Then a hotter fire began
+ As across the field he ran,--
+ Yankee shooters marked a prey,--
+ But beside each wounded man
+ Heedless knelt the boy in gray.
+
+ Parched lips hailed him as he came;
+ Throats with fever all aflame,
+ While the balls were spinning by,
+ Drained the cup he offered them,
+ Blessed him with their dying cry.
+
+ Suddenly, through rain of those
+ Pattering shots, a shout uprose;
+ Din of voices filled his ears;
+ Firing ceased, and eager foes
+ Made the welkin ring with cheers.
+
+[Illustration: "BUT BESIDE EACH WOUNDED MAN HEEDLESS KNELT THE BOY IN
+GRAY"]
+
+ Foes they were, of bitter need,
+ Still to every noble deed
+ Hearts of men, thank God, must thrill;
+ And we thrill, too, as we read
+ Of those cheers on Marye's Hill.
+
+ Days of battle long since done,
+ Days of peace and blessing won,
+ Better is it to forget
+ Cruel work of sword and gun:
+ But some deeds are treasures yet.
+
+ While a grateful nation showers
+ Graves of heroes with her flowers,
+ Here's a wreath for one to-day:
+ North or South, we claim him ours--
+ Honor to the Boy in Gray!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THE EVOLUTION OF OUR FLAG]
+
+ =Flag Day=
+
+ _June 14_
+
+
+The first recognition of Flag Day by the New York schools was in 1889,
+but it is now generally observed by appropriate exercises. June 14 is
+the anniversary of the adoption of the Stars and Stripes by the
+Continental Congress in the year 1777. This was the flag which, first
+raised over an American vessel by John Paul Jones, became the emblem of
+the new republic. In some places another day is set apart instead.
+
+
+ =THE STARS AND STRIPES=
+
+ BY HENRY RUSSELL WRAY
+
+While every lad and lassie in the land knows and has read all about the
+famous old Liberty Bell, too little is known of the origin and growth of
+America's dearest emblem--her flag. William Penn's city--Philadelphia--is
+gemmed with many historical landmarks, but none should be more dear to us
+than that little old building still standing on Arch street, over whose
+doorway is the number--239. For in a small back room in this primitive
+dwelling, during the uncertain struggle for independence by the American
+colonies, was designed and made the first American flag, known as the
+"Stars and Stripes," now respected and honored in every quarter of the
+world, and loved and patriotically worshiped at home.
+
+The early history of our great flag is very interesting.
+
+It is a matter of record that during the early days of the Revolution
+the colonists made use of flags of various devices.
+
+It is nowadays generally accepted as a fact that the final idea of the
+Stars and Stripes as a national flag was borrowed from or suggested by
+the coat of arms of General George Washington's family.
+
+The first definite action taken by the colonies toward creating a flag,
+was a resolution passed by Congress in 1775, appointing a committee of
+three gentlemen--Benjamin Franklin and Messrs. Harrison and Lynch--to
+consider and devise a national flag. The result of the work of this
+committee was the adoption of the "King's Colors" as a union (or corner
+square), combined with thirteen stripes, alternate red and white,
+showing "that although the colonies united for defense against England's
+tyranny, they still acknowledged her sovereignty."
+
+[Illustration: NUMBER 239 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA--THE HOUSE IN WHICH
+THE FIRST "STARS AND STRIPES" WAS MADE]
+
+The first public acceptance, recognition, and salute of this flag
+occurred January 2, 1776, at Washington's headquarters, Cambridge,
+Massachusetts. The name given to this flag was "The Flag of the Union,"
+and sometimes it was called the "Cambridge Flag." The design of this
+flag was a combination of the crosses of St. George and St. Andrew in
+a blue field in the upper left-hand corner, bordered by thirteen stripes
+for the thirteen colonies.
+
+But in the spring of 1777 Congress appointed another committee
+"authorized to design a suitable flag for the nation."
+
+This committee seems to have consisted of General George Washington and
+Robert Morris. They called upon Mrs. Elizabeth Ross, of Philadelphia,
+and from a pencil-drawing by General Washington engaged her to make a
+flag.
+
+This flag, the first of a number she made, was cut out and completed in
+the back parlor of her little Arch street home.
+
+It was the first legally established emblem, and was adopted by Congress
+June 14, 1777, under the act which provided for stripes alternately red
+and white, with a union of thirteen white stars in a field of blue. This
+act read as follows: "Resolved, That the flag of the United States be
+thirteen stripes, alternate red and white: that the union be thirteen
+stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constellation."
+
+
+
+
+
+ =Fourth of July=
+
+
+This is the greatest secular holiday of our country, its observance
+being sanctioned by the laws of every State. The birthday of our liberty
+would be a hard one to fix, but by common consent the anniversary of the
+signing of the Declaration of Independence is the one observed. The use
+of powder to celebrate the day is gradually going out on account of the
+large number of lives annually lost through accidents. It is known
+officially as Independence Day.
+
+
+ =A STORY OF THE FLAG=
+
+ BY VICTOR MAPES
+
+When the Fourth of July came, we had been abroad nearly two months, and
+during that time I think we had not seen a single American flag. On the
+morning of the Fourth, however, we walked out on the Paris boulevards,
+and a number of flags were hanging out from the different American
+shops, which are quite frequent there. They looked strange to us; and
+the idea occurred to Frank, for the first time, that the United States
+was one of a great many nations living next to one another in this
+world--that it was his own nation, a kind of big family he belonged to.
+The Fourth of July was a sort of big, family birthday, and the flags
+were out so as to tell the Frenchmen and everybody else not to forget
+the fact.
+
+A feeling of this nature came over Frank that morning, and he called
+out, "There's another!" every time a new flag came in view. He stopped
+two or three times to count the number of them in sight, and showed in
+various ways that he, America, and the American flag had come to a new
+understanding with one another.
+
+During the morning, Frank's cousin George, a boy two or three years
+older than Frank, who had been in Paris the preceding winter, came to
+our hotel; and, as I had some matters to attend to in the afternoon,
+they went off together to see sights and to have a good time.
+
+When Frank returned about dinner-time, and came up to the room where I
+was writing letters, I noticed a small American-flag pin stuck in the
+lapel of his coat.
+
+"George had two," he said in answer to my question; "and he gave me this
+one. He's been in Paris a year now, and he says we ought to wear them or
+maybe people won't know we're Americans. But say, Uncle Jack, where do
+you think I got that?" He opened a paper bundle he had under his arm and
+unrolled a weather-beaten American flag.
+
+"Where?" asked I, naturally supposing it came from George's house.
+
+"We took it off of Lafayette's tomb."
+
+I opened my eyes in astonishment; while he went on:
+
+"George says the American Consul, or the American Consul-General, or
+somebody, put it on the tomb last Fourth of July, for our government,
+because Lafayette, don't you know, helped us in the Revolution."
+
+"They ought to put a new flag on every year, George says," explained
+Frank, seeing my amazement, "on Fourth of July morning. But the American
+Consul, or whoever he is that's here now, is a new man, George thinks;
+anyhow, he forgot to do it. So we bought a new flag and we did it.
+
+"There were a lot of people at the tomb when we went there, and we
+guessed they were all waiting to see the new flag put on. We waited,
+too, but no soldiers or anybody came; and after a while the people all
+went away. Then George said:
+
+"'Somebody ought to put on a new flag--let's do it!'
+
+"We went to a store on the Boulevard, and for twenty francs bought a new
+flag just like this old one. George and I each paid half. There were two
+women and a little girl at the tomb when we got back, and we waited
+till they went away. Then we unrolled the new flag and took the old one
+off the tomb.
+
+"We thought we ought to say something when we put the new flag on, but
+we didn't know what to say. George said they always made a regular
+speech thanking Lafayette for helping us in the Revolution, but we
+thought it didn't matter much. So we just took off our hats when we
+spread out the new flag on the grave, and then we rolled up the old flag
+and came away.
+
+"We drew lots for it afterward, and I'm going to take it back home with
+me.
+
+"Somebody ought to have done it, and as we were both American boys, it
+was all right, wasn't it?"
+
+Right or wrong, the flag that travelers see on Lafayette's tomb this
+year, as a mark of the American nation's sentiment toward the great
+Frenchman, is the one put there by two small, self-appointed
+representatives. And the flag put there the year before, with fitting
+ceremony by the authorized official, Frank preserves carefully hung up
+on the wall of his little room in America.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Our Holidays, by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14829 ***
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+ Our Holidays, Their Meaning and Spirit, Retold from St. Nicholas
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14829 ***</div>
+
+<h1>OUR HOLIDAYS</h1>
+
+<h2>HISTORICAL STORIES</h2>
+
+<h3>RETOLD FROM</h3>
+
+<h2>ST. NICHOLAS MAGAZINE</h2>
+
+<h3>IN FIVE VOLUMES</h3>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h4>INDIAN STORIES</h4>
+<h5>A mirror of Indian ideas, customs, and adventures.</h5>
+
+<h4>COLONIAL STORIES</h4>
+<h5>Stirring tales of the rude frontier life of early times.</h5>
+
+<h4>REVOLUTIONARY STORIES</h4>
+<h5>Heroic deeds, and especially children's part in them.</h5>
+
+<h4>CIVIL WAR STORIES</h4>
+<h5>Thrilling stories of the great struggle, both on land and sea.</h5>
+
+<h4>OUR HOLIDAYS</h4>
+<h5>Something of their meaning and spirit.</h5>
+
+
+
+<p class="figcenter">Each about 200 pages. Full cloth, 12mo.</p>
+
+
+<p class="figcenter">THE CENTURY CO.</p>
+
+<div><br /></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+  <a href="./images/stnichoh01.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh01.jpg" width="40%" alt="HO, FOR THE CHRISTMAS TREE!" title="HO, FOR THE CHRISTMAS TREE!" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">HO, FOR THE CHRISTMAS TREE!</span></p>
+ </div>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+<h1>OUR HOLIDAYS</h1>
+
+<h3>THEIR MEANING AND SPIRIT</h3>
+
+<h2>RETOLD FROM ST. NICHOLAS</h2>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh02.png"><img src="./images/stnichoh02.png" width="40%" alt="Christmas 1776" title="Christmas 1776" /></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>PUBLISHED BY THE CENTURY CO.</h3>
+<h3>NEW YORK&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; MCMVI</h3>
+
+<h5>THE DE VINNE PRESS</h5>
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="center">
+
+<table class="cent_tab" summary="Table of Contents">
+ <tr>
+ <th align='left'>&nbsp;</th>
+ <th align='right'>&nbsp;</th>
+ <th align='right'><span class="smcap">Page</span></th>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Our_Holidays"><span class="smcap">Our Holidays</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Our_Holidays">1</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#SATURDAY">
+ <span class="allcap">ST. SATURDAY</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Henry Johnstone</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#SATURDAY">3</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Halloween"><span class="smcap">Hallowe'en</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Halloween">7</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#AllHallowEve">
+ <span class="allcap">ALL-HALLOW-EVE MYTHS</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>David Brown</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#AllHallowEve">9</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Election_Day"><span class="smcap">Election Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Election_Day">13</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#RightsDuties">
+ <span class="allcap">RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF CITIZENS</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>S.E. Forman</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#RightsDuties">15</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Thanksgiving_Day"><span class="smcap">Thanksgiving Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Thanksgiving_Day">21</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#ThanksDinnerFlew">
+ <span class="allcap">A THANKSGIVING DINNER THAT FLEW AWAY</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>H. Butterworth</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#ThanksDinnerFlew">23</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Whittiers_Birthday"><span class="smcap">Whittier's Birthday</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Whittiers_Birthday">35</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#BoyhoodWhittier">
+ <span class="allcap">THE BOYHOOD OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>William H. Rideing</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#BoyhoodWhittier">37</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Christmas"><span class="smcap">Christmas</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Christmas">51</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#UncleSamObserve">
+ <span class="allcap">HOW UNCLE SAM OBSERVES CHRISTMAS</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Clifford Howard</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#UncleSamObserve">53</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#New_Years_Day"><span class="smcap">New Year's Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#New_Years_Day">79</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#SocialLifeColon">
+ <span class="allcap">EXTRACT FROM &quot;SOCIAL LIFE IN THE COLONIES&quot;</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Edward Eggleston</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#SocialLifeColon">81</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#ChineseNewYear">
+ <span class="allcap">A CHINESE NEW YEAR'S IN CALIFORNIA</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>H.H.</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#ChineseNewYear">82</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Lincolns_Birthday"><span class="smcap">Lincoln's Birthday</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Lincolns_Birthday">85</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#AbrahamLincoln">
+ <span class="allcap">ABRAHAM LINCOLN</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Helen Nicolay</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#AbrahamLincoln">81</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#GettysburgAdd">
+ <span class="allcap">THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>&nbsp;</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#GettysburgAdd">99</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#OCaptain">
+ <span class="allcap">O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Walt Whitman</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#OCaptain">101</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#St_Valentines_Day"><span class="smcap">St. Valentine's Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#St_Valentines_Day">103</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#WhoBegan">
+ <span class="allcap">WHO BEGAN IT?</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Olive Thorne</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#WhoBegan">105</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Washingtons_Birthday"><span class="smcap">Washington's Birthday</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Washingtons_Birthday">111</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#BoyhoodWash">
+ <span class="allcap">THE BOYHOOD OF WASHINGTON</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Horace E. Scudder</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#BoyhoodWash">113</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Longfellows_Birthday"><span class="smcap">Longfellow's Birthday</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Longfellows_Birthday">123</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#LongChild">
+ <span class="allcap">LONGFELLOW AND THE CHILDREN</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Lucy Larcom</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#LongChild">125</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Inauguration_Day"><span class="smcap">Inauguration Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Inauguration_Day">139</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#HowPresInaug">
+ <span class="allcap">HOW A PRESIDENT IS INAUGURATED</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Clifford Howard</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#HowPresInaug">141</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Easter_Day"><span class="smcap">Easter Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Easter_Day">153</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#SongEaster">
+ <span class="allcap">A SONG OF EASTER</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Celia Thaxter</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#SongEaster">155</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#GenEaster">
+ <span class="allcap">THE GENERAL'S EASTER BOX</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Temple Bailey</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#GenEaster">159</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Arbor_Day"><span class="smcap">Arbor Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Arbor_Day">175</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#PlantApple">
+ <span class="allcap">THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE TREE</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>William Cullen Bryant</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#PlantApple">177</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#April_Fools_Day"><span class="smcap">April Fools' Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#April_Fools_Day">181</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#FourMonth">
+ <span class="allcap">FOURTH-MONTH DUNCE</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>H.M.M.</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#FourMonth">183</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Memorial_Day"><span class="smcap">Memorial Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Memorial_Day">185</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#BoyGray">
+ <span class="allcap">THE BOY IN GRAY</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Mary Bradley</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#BoyGray">187</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Flag_Day"><span class="smcap">Flag Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Flag_Day">193</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#StarsStripes">
+ <span class="allcap">THE STARS AND STRIPES</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Henry Russell Wray</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#StarsStripes">195</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Fourth_of_July"><span class="smcap">Fourth of July</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Fourth_of_July">199</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#StoryFlag">
+ <span class="allcap">A STORY OF THE FLAG</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Victor Mapes</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#StoryFlag">201</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE" />PREFACE</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p>To most young people, holidays mean simply freedom from lessons and a
+good time. All this they should mean&mdash;and something more.</p>
+
+<p>It is well to remember, for example, that we owe the pleasure of
+Thanksgiving to those grateful Pilgrims who gave a feast of thanks for
+the long-delayed rain that saved their withering crops&mdash;a feast of wild
+turkeys and pumpkin pies, which has been celebrated now for nearly three
+centuries.</p>
+
+<p>It is most fitting that the same honor paid to Washington's Birthday is
+now given to that of Lincoln, who is as closely associated with the
+Civil War as our first President is with the Revolution.</p>
+
+<p>Although the birthdays of the three American poets, Whittier, Lowell,
+and Longfellow, are not holidays, stories relating to these days are
+included in this collection as signalizing days to be remembered.</p>
+
+<p>In this book are contained stories bearing on our holidays and annual
+celebrations, from Hallowe'en to the Fourth of July.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Our_Holidays" id="Our_Holidays" />Our Holidays</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div>
+<span style="margin-left: 30%;"><strong>If all the year were playing holidays,</strong></span>
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30%;"><strong>To sport would be as tedious as to work.</strong></span>
+</div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 40%;">
+
+ <ins title="Transcriber's note: original spelling preserved"><span class="smcap">Shakspere. </span></ins>
+ <i>King Henry IV</i>, Part I.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<h3><a name="SATURDAY" id="SATURDAY" />ST. SATURDAY</h3>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh03.png"><img src="./images/stnichoh03.png" width="50%" alt="St. Saturday I" title="St. Saturday I" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p class="center">BY HENRY JOHNSTONE</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: ST. SATURDAY">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+
+ Oh, Friday night's the queen of nights, because it ushers in<br />
+ The Feast of good St. Saturday, when studying is a sin,<br />
+ When studying is a sin, boys, and we may go to play<br />
+ Not only in the afternoon, but all the livelong day.<br />
+ <br />
+ St. Saturday&mdash;so legends say&mdash;lived in the ages when<br />
+ The use of leisure still was known and current among men;<br />
+ Full seldom and full slow he toiled, and even as he wrought<br />
+ He'd sit him down and rest awhile, immersed in pious thought.<br />
+ <br />
+ He loved to fold his good old arms, to cross his good old knees,<br />
+ And in a famous elbow-chair for hours he'd take his ease;<br />
+ He had a word for old and young, and when the village boys<br />
+ Came out to play, he'd smile on them and never mind the noise.<br />
+ <br />
+ So when his time came, honest man, the neighbors all declared<br />
+ That one of keener intellect could better have been spared;<br />
+ By young and old his loss was mourned in cottage and in hall,<br />
+ For if he'd done them little good, he'd done no harm at all.<br />
+ <br />
+ In time they made a saint of him, and issued a decree&mdash;<br />
+ Since he had loved his ease so well, and been so glad to see<br />
+ The children frolic round him and to smile upon their play&mdash;<br />
+ That school boys for his sake should have a weekly holiday.<br />
+ <br />
+ They gave his name unto the day, that as the years roll by<br />
+ His memory might still be green; and that's the reason why<br />
+ We speak his name with gratitude, and oftener by far<br />
+ Than that of any other saint in all the calendar.<br />
+ <br />
+ Then, lads and lassies, great and small, give ear to what I say&mdash;<br />
+ Refrain from work on Saturdays as strictly as you may;<br />
+ So shall the saint your patron be and prosper all you do&mdash;<br />
+ And when examinations come he'll see you safely through.<br />
+ <br />
+
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh04.png"><img src="./images/stnichoh04.png" width="50%" alt="St. Saturday II" title="St. Saturday II" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Halloween" id="Halloween" />Hallowe'en</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>October 31</i></strong></p>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>The Eve of All Saints' Day</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>This night is known in some places as Nutcrack Night, or Snapapple
+Night. Supernatural influences are pretended to prevail and hence all
+kinds of <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'superstititions'">superstitions</ins>
+were formerly connected
+with it. It is now usually celebrated by children's parties, when certain
+special games are played.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="AllHallowEve" id="AllHallowEve" />ALL-HALLOW-EVE MYTHS</h3>
+
+<p class="center">BY DAVID BROWN</p>
+
+<p>As the world grows old and wise, it ceases to believe in many of its
+superstitions. But, although they are no longer believed in, the customs
+connected with them do not always die out; they often linger on through
+centuries, and, from having once been serious religious rites, or
+something real in the life of the people, they become at last mere
+children's plays or empty usages, often most zealously enjoyed by those
+who do not understand their meaning.</p>
+
+<p>All-hallow Eve is now, in our country towns, a time of careless frolic,
+and of great bonfires, which, I hear, are still kindled on the hill-tops
+in some places. We also find these fires in England, Scotland, and
+Ireland, and from their history we learn the meaning of our celebration.
+Some of you may know that the early inhabitants of Great Britain,
+Ireland, and parts of France were known as Celts, and that their
+religion was directed by strange priests called Druids. Three times in
+the year, on the first of May, for the sowing; at the solstice, June
+21st, for the ripening and turn of the year; and on the eve of November
+1st, for the harvesting, those mysterious priests of the Celts, the
+Druids, built fires on the hill-tops in France, Britain, and Ireland, in
+honor of the sun. At this last festival the Druids of all the region
+gathered in their white robes around the stone altar or cairn on the
+hill-top. Here stood an emblem of the sun, and on the cairn was a sacred
+fire, which had been kept burning through the year. The Druids formed
+about the fire, and, at a signal, quenched it, while deep silence rested
+on the mountains and valleys. Then the new fire gleamed on the cairn,
+the people in the valley raised a joyous shout, and from hill-top to
+hill-top other fires answered the sacred flame. On this night, all
+hearth-fires in the region had been put out, and they were kindled with
+brands from the sacred fire, which was believed to guard the households
+through the year.</p>
+
+<p>But the Druids disappeared from their sacred places, the cairns on the
+hill-tops became the monuments of a dead religion, and Christianity
+spread to the barbarous inhabitants of France and the British Islands.
+Yet the people still clung to their old customs, and felt much of the
+old awe for them. Still they built their fires on the first of May,&mdash;at
+the solstice in June,&mdash;and on the eve of November 1st. The church found
+that it could not all at once separate the people from their old ways,
+so it gradually turned these ways to its own use, and the harvest
+festival of the Druids became in the Catholic Calendar the Eve of All
+Saints, for that is the meaning of the name &quot;All-hallow Eve.&quot; In the
+seventh century, the Pantheon, the ancient Roman temple of all the gods,
+was consecrated anew to the worship of the Virgin and of all holy
+martyrs.</p>
+
+<p>By its separation from the solemn character of the Druid festival,
+All-hallow Eve lost much of its ancient dignity, and became the
+carnival-night of the year for wild, grotesque rites. As century after
+century passed by, it came to be spoken of as the time when the magic
+powers, with which the peasantry, all the world over, filled the wastes
+and ruins, were supposed to swarm abroad to help or injure men. It was
+the time when those first dwellers in every land, the fairies, were said
+to come out from their grots and lurking-places; and in the darkness of
+the forests and the shadows of old ruins, witches and goblins gathered.
+In course of time, the hallowing fire came to be considered a protection
+against these malicious powers. It was a custom in the seventeenth
+century for the master of a family to carry a lighted torch of straw
+around his fields, to protect them from evil influence through the year,
+and as he went he chanted an invocation to the fire. The chief thing
+which we seek to impress upon your minds in connection with All-hallow
+Eve is that its curious customs show how no generation of men is
+altogether separated from earlier generations. Far as we think we are
+from our uncivilized ancestors, much of what they did and thought has
+come into our doing and thinking,&mdash;with many changes perhaps, under
+different religious forms, and sometimes in jest where they were in
+earnest. Still, these customs and observances (of which All-hallow Eve
+is only one) may be called the piers, upon which rests a bridge that
+spans the wide past between us and the generations that have gone
+before.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Election_Day" id="Election_Day" />Election Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>The first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>This day is now a holiday so that every man may have an opportunity to
+cast his vote. Unlike most other holidays, it does not commemorate an
+event, but it is a day which has a tremendous meaning if rightly looked
+upon and rightly used. Its true spirit and significance are well set
+forth in the following pages. By act of Congress the date for the
+choosing of Presidential electors is set for the first Tuesday after the
+first Monday in November in the years when Presidents are elected, and
+the different States have now nearly all chosen the same day for the
+election of State officers.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="RightsDuties" id="RightsDuties" />RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF CITIZENS</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY S.E. FORMAN</p>
+
+<p>Read the bill of rights in the constitution of your State and you will
+find there, set down in plain black and white, the rights which you are
+to enjoy as an American citizen. This constitution tells you that you
+have the right to your life, to your liberty, and to the property that
+you may honestly acquire; that your body, your health and your
+reputation shall be protected from injury; that you may move freely from
+place to place unmolested; that you shall not be imprisoned or otherwise
+punished without a fair trial by an impartial jury; that you may worship
+God according to the promptings of your own conscience; that you may
+freely write and speak on any subject providing you do not abuse the
+privilege; that you may peaceably assemble and petition government for
+the redress of grievances. These are civil rights. They, together with
+many others equally dear, are guaranteed by the State and national
+constitutions, and they belong to all American citizens.</p>
+
+<p>These civil rights, like the air and the sunshine, come to us in these
+days as a matter of course, but they did not come to our ancestors as a
+matter of course. To our ancestors rights came as the result of
+hard-fought battles. The reading of the bill of rights would cause your
+heart to throb with gratitude did you but know the suffering and
+sacrifice each right has cost.</p>
+
+<p>Now just as our rights have not been gained without a struggle, so they
+will not be maintained without a struggle. We may not have to fight with
+cannon and sword as did our forefathers in the Revolution, but we may be
+sure that if our liberty is to be preserved there will be fighting of
+some kind to do. Such precious things as human rights cannot be had for
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p>One of the hardest battles will be to fulfil the duties which accompany
+our rights, for every right is accompanied by a duty. If I can hold a
+man to his contract I ought (<i>I owe it</i>) to pay my debts; if I may
+worship as I please, I ought to refrain from persecuting another on
+account of his religion; if my property is held sacred, I ought to
+regard the property of another man as sacred; if the government deals
+fairly with me and does not oppress me, I ought to deal fairly With it
+and refuse to cheat it; if I am allowed freedom of speech, I ought not
+to abuse the privilege; if I have a right to a trial by jury, I ought to
+respond when I am summoned to serve as a juror; if I have a right to my
+good name and reputation, I ought not to slander my neighbor; if
+government shields me from injury, I ought to be ready to take up arms
+in its defense.</p>
+
+<p>Foremost among the rights of American citizenship is that of going to
+the polls and casting a ballot. This right of voting is not a civil
+right; it is a political right which grew out of man's long struggle for
+his civil rights. While battling with kings and nobles for liberty the
+people learned to distrust a privileged ruling class. They saw that if
+their civil rights were to be respected, government must pass into their
+own hands or into the hands of their chosen agents. Hence they demanded
+political rights, the right of holding office and of voting at
+elections.</p>
+
+<p>The suffrage, or the right of voting, is sometimes regarded as a natural
+right, one that belongs to a person simply because he is a person.</p>
+
+<p>People will say that a man has as much right to vote as he has to
+acquire property or to defend himself from attack. But this is not a
+correct view. The right to vote is a <i>franchise</i> or privilege which the
+law gives to such citizens as are thought worthy of possessing it. It is
+easy to see that everybody cannot be permitted to vote. There must be
+certain qualifications, certain marks of fitness, required of a citizen
+before he can be entrusted with the right of suffrage. These
+qualifications differ in the different States. In most States every male
+citizen over twenty-one years of age may vote. In four States, women as
+well as men exercise the right of suffrage.</p>
+
+<p>But the right of voting, like every other right, has its corresponding
+duty. No day brings more responsibilities than Election Day. The
+American voter should regard himself as an officer of government. He is
+one of the members of the electorate, that vast governing body which
+consists of all the voters and which possesses supreme political power,
+controlling all the governments, federal and State and local. This
+electorate has in its keeping the welfare and the happiness of the
+American people. When, therefore, the voter takes his place in this
+governing body, that is, when he enters the polling-booth and presumes
+to participate in the business of government, he assumes serious
+responsibilities. In the polling-booth he is a public officer charged
+with certain duties, and if he fails to discharge these duties properly
+he may work great injury. What are the duties of a voter in a
+self-governing country? If an intelligent man will ask himself the
+question and refer it to his conscience as well as deliberate upon it in
+his mind, he will conclude that he ought to do the following things:</p>
+
+<table summary="Voter's Duties">
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;1. To vote whenever it is his privilege.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;2. To try to understand the questions upon which he votes.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;3. To learn something about the character and fitness of the
+ men for whom he votes.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;4. To vote only for honest men for office.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;5. To support only honest measures.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;6. To give no bribe, direct or indirect, and to receive no
+ bribe, direct or indirect.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;7. To place country above party.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;8. To recognize the result of the election as the will of the
+ people and therefore as the law.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;9. To continue to vote for a righteous although defeated cause
+ as long as there is a reasonable hope of victory.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Whittier Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &quot;The proudest now is but my peer,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The highest not more high;<br />
+ To-day of all the weary year,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A king of men am I.<br />
+<br />
+ &quot;To-day alike are great and small,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The nameless and the known;<br />
+ My palace is the people's hall,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The ballot-box my throne!&quot;<br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">WHITTIER.</span><br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Thanksgiving_Day" id="Thanksgiving_Day" />Thanksgiving Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>Appointed by the President&mdash;usually the last Thursday in November.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Now observed as a holiday in all the States, but not a legal holiday in
+all. The President's proclamation recommends that it be set apart as a
+day of prayer and rejoicing. The day is of New England origin, the first
+one being set by Governor Bradford of the Massachusetts colony on
+December, 1621. Washington issued a thanksgiving proclamation for
+Thursday, December 18, 1777, and again at Valley Forge for May 7, 1778.
+The Thanksgiving of the present incorporates many of the genial features
+of Christmas. The feast with the Thanksgiving turkey and pumpkin-pie
+crowns the day. Even the poorhouse has its turkey. The story of &quot;An
+Old-Time Thanksgiving,&quot; in &quot;Indian Stories&quot; of this series, well brings
+out the original spirit of the day.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="ThanksDinnerFlew" id="ThanksDinnerFlew" />A THANKSGIVING DINNER THAT FLEW AWAY</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY H. BUTTERWORTH</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Honk!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I spun around like a top, looking nervously in every direction. I was
+familiar with that sound; I had heard it before, during two summer
+vacations, at the old farm-house on the Cape.</p>
+
+<p>It had been a terror to me. I always put a door, a fence, or a stone
+wall between me and that sound as speedily as possible.</p>
+
+<p>I had just come down from the city to the Cape for my third summer
+vacation. I had left the cars with my arms full of bundles, and hurried
+toward Aunt Targood's.</p>
+
+<p>The cottage stood in from the road. There was a long meadow in front of
+it. In the meadow were two great oaks and some clusters of lilacs. An
+old, mossy stone wall protected the grounds from the road, and a long
+walk ran from the old wooden gate to the door.</p>
+
+<p>It was a sunny day, and my heart was light. The orioles were flaming in
+the old orchards; the bobolinks were tossing themselves about in the
+long meadows of timothy, daisies, and patches of clover. There was a
+scent of new-mown hay in the air.</p>
+
+<p>In the distance lay the bay, calm and resplendent, with white sails and
+specks of boats. Beyond it rose Martha's Vineyard, green and cool and
+bowery, and at its wharf lay a steamer.</p>
+
+<p>I was, as I said, light-hearted. I was thinking of rides over the sandy
+roads at the close of the long, bright days; of excursions on the bay;
+of clam-bakes and picnics.</p>
+
+<p>I was hungry; and before me rose visions of Aunt Targood's fish dinners,
+roast chickens, berry pies. I was thirsty; but ahead was the old
+well-sweep, and, behind the cool lattice of the dairy window, were pans
+of milk in abundance.</p>
+
+<p>I tripped on toward the door with light feet, lugging my bundles and
+beaded with perspiration, but unmindful of all discomforts in the
+thought of the bright days and good things in store for me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Honk! honk!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My heart gave a bound!</p>
+
+<p><i>Where</i> did that sound come from?</p>
+
+<p>Out of a cool cluster of innocent-looking lilac bushes, I saw a dark
+object cautiously moving. It seemed to have no head. I knew, however,
+that it had a head. I had seen it; it had seized me once on the previous
+summer, and I had been in terror of it during all the rest of the
+season.</p>
+
+<p>I looked down into the irregular grass, and saw the head and a very long
+neck running along on the ground, propelled by the dark body, like a
+snake running away from a ball. It was coming toward me, and faster and
+faster as it approached.</p>
+
+<p>I dropped all my bundles.</p>
+
+<p>In a few flying leaps I returned to the road again, and armed myself
+with a stick from a pile of cord-wood.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Honk! honk! honk!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was a call of triumph. The head was high in the air now. My enemy
+moved grandly forward, as became the monarch of the great meadow
+farm-yard.</p>
+
+<p>I stood with beating heart, after my retreat.</p>
+
+<p>It was Aunt Targood's gander.</p>
+
+<p>How he enjoyed his triumph, and how small and cowardly he made me feel!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Honk! honk! honk!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The geese came out of the lilac bushes, bowing their heads to him in
+admiration. Then came the goslings&mdash;a long procession of awkward,
+half-feathered things: they appeared equally delighted.</p>
+
+<p>The gander seemed to be telling his admiring audience all about it: how
+a strange girl with many bundles had attempted to cross the yard; how he
+had driven her back, and had captured her bundles, and now was monarch
+of the field. He clapped his wings when he had finished his heroic
+story, and sent forth such a &quot;honk!&quot; as might have startled a
+major-general.</p>
+
+<p>Then he, with an air of great dignity and coolness, began to examine my
+baggage.</p>
+
+<p>Among my effects were several pounds of chocolate caramels, done up in
+brown paper. Aunt Targood liked caramels, and I had brought her a large
+supply.</p>
+
+<p>He tore off the wrappers quickly. Bit one. It was good. He began to
+distribute the bon-bons among the geese, and they, with much liberality
+and good-will, among the goslings.</p>
+
+<p>This was too much. I ventured through the gate swinging my cord-wood
+stick.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Shoo!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He dropped his head on the ground, and drove it down the walk in a
+lively waddle toward me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Shoo</i>!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was Aunt Targood's voice at the door.</p>
+
+<p>He stopped immediately.</p>
+
+<p>His head was in the air again.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Shoo</i>!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Out came Aunt Targood with her broom.</p>
+
+<p>She always corrected the gander with her broom. If I were to be whipped
+I should choose a broom&mdash;not the stick.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as he beheld the broom he retired, although with much offended
+pride and dignity, to the lilac bushes; and the geese and goslings
+followed him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hester, you dear child, come here. I was expecting you, and had been
+looking out for you, but missed sight of you. I had forgotten all about
+the gander.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We gathered up the bundles and the caramels. I was light-hearted again.</p>
+
+<p>How cool was the sitting-room, with the woodbine falling about the open
+windows! Aunt brought me a pitcher of milk and some strawberries; some
+bread and honey; and a fan.</p>
+
+<p>While I was resting and taking my lunch, I could hear the gander
+discussing the affairs of the farm-yard with the geese. I did not
+greatly enjoy the discussion. His tone of voice was very proud, and he
+did not seem to be speaking well of me. I was suspicious that he did not
+think me a very brave girl. A young person likes to be spoken well of,
+even by the gander.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Targood's gander had been the terror of many well-meaning people,
+and of some evildoers, for many years. I have seen tramps and
+pack-peddlers enter the gate, and start on toward the door, when there
+would sound that ringing warning like a war-blast. &quot;Honk, honk!&quot; and in
+a few minutes these unwelcome people would be gone. Farm-house boarders
+from the city would sometimes enter the yard, thinking to draw water by
+the old well-sweep: in a few minutes it was customary to hear shrieks,
+and to see women and children flying over the walls, followed by
+air-rending &quot;honks!&quot; and jubilant cackles from the victorious gander and
+his admiring family.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Aunt, what makes you keep that gander, year after year?&quot; said I, one
+evening, as we were sitting on the lawn before the door. &quot;Is it because
+he is a kind of a watch-dog, and keeps troublesome people away?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, child, no; I do not wish to keep most people away, not well-behaved
+people, nor to distress nor annoy any one. The fact is, there is a
+story about that gander that I do not like to speak of to every
+one&mdash;something that makes me feel tender toward him; so that if he needs
+a whipping, I would rather do it. He knows something that no one else
+knows. I could not have him killed or sent away. You have heard me speak
+of Nathaniel, my oldest boy?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is his picture in my room, you know. He was a good boy to me. He
+loved his mother. I loved Nathaniel&mdash;you cannot think how much I loved
+Nathaniel. It was on my account that he went away.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The farm did not produce enough for us all: Nathaniel, John, and I. We
+worked hard and had a hard time. One year&mdash;that was ten years ago&mdash;we
+were sued for our taxes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Nathaniel,' said I, 'I will go to taking boarders.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then he looked up to me and said (oh, how noble and handsome he
+appeared to me!):</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Mother, I will go to sea.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Where?' asked I, in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'In a coaster.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I turned white. How I felt!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'You and John can manage the place,' he continued. 'One of the vessels
+sails next week&mdash;Uncle Aaron's; he offers to take me.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It seemed best, and he made preparations to go.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The spring before, Skipper Ben&mdash;you have met Skipper Ben&mdash;had given me
+some goose eggs; he had brought them from Canada, and said that they
+were wild-goose eggs.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I set them under hens. In four weeks I had three goslings. I took them
+into the house at first, but afterward made a pen for them out in the
+yard. I brought them up myself, and one of those goslings is that
+gander.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Skipper Ben came over to see me, the day before Nathaniel was to sail.
+Aaron came with him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I said to Aaron:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'What can I give to Nathaniel to carry to sea with him to make him
+think of home? Cake, preserves, apples? I haven't got much; I have done
+all I can for him, poor boy.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Brother looked at me curiously, and said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Give him one of those wild geese, and we will fatten it on shipboard
+and will have it for our Thanksgiving dinner.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What brother Aaron said pleased me. The young gander was a noble bird,
+the handsomest of the lot; and I resolved to keep the geese to kill for
+my own use and to give <i>him</i> to Nathaniel.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The next morning&mdash;it was late in September&mdash;I took leave of Nathaniel.
+I tried to be calm and cheerful and hopeful. I watched him as he went
+down the walk with the gander struggling under his arms. A stranger
+would have laughed, but I did not feel like laughing; it was true that
+the boys who went coasting were usually gone but a few months and came
+home hardy and happy. But when poverty compels a mother and son to part,
+after they have been true to each other, and shared their feelings in
+common, it seems hard, it seems hard&mdash;though I do not like to murmur or
+complain at anything allotted to me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I saw him go over the hill. On the top he stopped and held up the
+gander. He disappeared; yes, my own Nathaniel disappeared. I think of
+him now as one who disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;November came&mdash;it was a terrible month on the coast that year. Storm
+followed storm; the sea-faring people talked constantly of wrecks and
+losses. I could not sleep on the nights of those high winds. I used to
+lie awake thinking over all the happy hours I had lived with Nathaniel.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thanksgiving week came.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was full of an Indian-summer brightness after the long storms. The
+nights were frosty, bright, and calm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I could sleep on those calm nights.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One morning, I thought I heard a strange sound in the woodland pasture.
+It was like a wild goose. I listened; it was repeated. I was lying in
+bed. I started up&mdash;I thought I had been dreaming.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On the night before Thanksgiving I went to bed early, being very tired.
+The moon was full; the air was calm and still. I was thinking of
+Nathaniel, and I wondered if he would indeed have the gander for his
+Thanksgiving dinner: if it would be cooked as well as I would have
+cooked it, and if he would think of me that day.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was just going to sleep, when suddenly I heard a sound that made me
+start up and hold my breath.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'<i>Honk</i>!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought it was a dream followed by a nervous shock.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'<i>Honk! honk</i>!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There it was again, in the yard. I was surely awake and in my senses.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I heard the geese cackle.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'<i>Honk! honk! honk</i>!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I got out of bed and lifted the curtain. It was almost as light as day.
+Instead of two geese there were three. Had one of the neighbors' geese
+stolen away?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I should have thought so, and should not have felt disturbed, but for
+the reason that none of the neighbors' geese had that peculiar
+call&mdash;that hornlike tone that I had noticed in mine.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I went out of the door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The third goose looked like the very gander I had given Nathaniel.
+Could it be?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I did not sleep. I rose early and went to the crib for some corn.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was a gander&mdash;a 'wild' gander&mdash;that had come in the night. He seemed
+to know me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I trembled all over as though I had seen a ghost. I was so faint that I
+sat down on the meal-chest.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As I was in that place, a bill pecked against the door. The door
+opened. The strange gander came hobbling over the crib-stone and went to
+the corn-bin. He stopped there, looked at me, and gave a sort of glad
+&quot;honk,&quot; as though he knew me and was glad to see me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was certain that he was the gander I had raised, and that Nathaniel
+had lifted into the air when he gave me his last recognition from the
+top of the hill.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It overcame me. It was Thanksgiving. The church bell would soon be
+ringing as on Sunday. And here was Nathaniel's Thanksgiving dinner; and
+brother Aaron's&mdash;had it flown away? Where was the vessel?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Years have passed&mdash;ten. You know I waited and waited for my boy to come
+back. December grew dark with its rainy seas; the snows fell; May
+lighted up the hills, but the vessel never came back. Nathaniel&mdash;my
+Nathaniel&mdash;never returned.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That gander knows something he could tell me if he could talk. Birds
+have memories. He remembered the corn-crib&mdash;he remembered something
+else. I wish he <i>could</i> talk, poor bird! I wish he could talk. I will
+never sell him, nor kill him, nor have him abused. <i>He knows!</i>&quot;</p>
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Whittiers_Birthday" id="Whittiers_Birthday" />Whittier's Birthday</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER</strong></p>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>Born December 17, 1807&nbsp;&nbsp; Died September 7, 1892</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Whittier is known not only as a poet, but as a reformer and author. He
+was a member of the Society of Friends. He attended a New England
+academy; worked on a farm; taught school in order to afford further
+education, and at the age of twenty-two edited a paper at Boston. He was
+a leading opponent of slavery and was several times attacked by mobs on
+account of his opinions.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="BoyhoodWhittier" id="BoyhoodWhittier" />THE BOYHOOD OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY WILLIAM H. RIDEING</p>
+
+<p>The life of Whittier may be read in his poems, and, by putting a note
+here and a date there, a full autobiography might be compiled from them.
+His boyhood and youth are depicted in them with such detail that little
+need be added to make the story complete, and that little, reverently
+done as it may be, must seem poor in comparison with the poetic beauty
+of his own revelations.</p>
+
+<p>What more can we do to show his early home than to quote from his own
+beautiful poem, &quot;Snow-bound&quot;? There the house is pictured for us, inside
+and out, with all its furnishings; and those who gather around its
+hearth, inmates and visitors, are set before us so clearly that long
+after the book has been put away they remain as distinct in the memory
+as portraits that are visible day after day on the walls of our own
+homes. He reproduces in his verse the landscapes he saw, the legends of
+witches and Indians he listened to, the schoolfellows he played with,
+the voices of the woods and fields, and the round of toil and pleasure
+in a country boy's life; and in other poems his later life, with its
+impassioned devotion to freedom and lofty faith, is reflected as lucidly
+as his youth is in &quot;Snow-bound&quot; and &quot;The Barefoot Boy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He himself was &quot;The Barefoot Boy,&quot; and what Robert Burns said of himself
+Whittier might repeat: &quot;The poetic genius of my country found me, as the
+prophetic bard Elijah did Elisha, at the plow, and threw her inspiring
+mantle over me.&quot; He was a farmer's son, born at a time when farm-life in
+New England was more frugal than it is now, and with no other heritage
+than the good name and example of parents and kinsmen, in whom simple
+virtues&mdash;thrift, industry, and piety&mdash;abounded.</p>
+
+<p>His birthplace still stands near Haverhill, Mass.,&mdash;a house in one of
+the hollows of the surrounding hills, little altered from what it was in
+1807, the year he was born, when it was already at least a century and a
+half old.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh05.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh05.jpg" width="50%" alt="WHITTIER'S BIRTHPLACE, NEAR HAVERHILL, MASS." title="WHITTIER'S BIRTHPLACE, NEAR HAVERHILL, MASS." /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="smcap">WHITTIER'S BIRTHPLACE, NEAR HAVERHILL, MASS.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>He had no such opportunities for culture as Holmes and Lowell had in
+their youth. His parents were intelligent and upright people of
+limited means, who lived in all the simplicity of the Quaker faith, and
+there was nothing in his early surroundings to encourage and develop a
+literary taste. Books were scarce, and the twenty volumes on his
+father's shelves were, with one exception, about Quaker doctrines and
+Quaker heroes. The exception was a novel, and that was hidden away from
+the children, for fiction was forbidden fruit. No library or scholarly
+companionship was within reach; and if his gift had been less than
+genius, it could never have triumphed over the many disadvantages with
+which it had to contend. Instead of a poet he would have been a farmer
+like his forefathers. But literature was a spontaneous impulse with him,
+as natural as the song of a bird; and he was not wholly dependent on
+training and opportunity, as he would have been had he possessed mere
+talent.</p>
+
+<p>Frugal from necessity, the life of the Whittiers was not sordid nor
+cheerless to him, moreover; and he looks back to it as tenderly as if it
+had been full of luxuries. It was sweetened by strong affections, simple
+tastes, and an unflinching sense of duty; and in all the members of the
+household the love of nature was so genuine that meadow, wood, and
+river yielded them all the pleasure they needed, and they scarcely
+missed the refinements of art.</p>
+
+<p>Surely there could not be a pleasanter or more homelike picture than
+that which the poet has given us of the family on the night of the great
+storm when the old house was snowbound:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Whittier Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &quot;Shut in from all the world without,<br />
+ &nbsp;We sat the clean-winged hearth about,<br />
+ &nbsp;Content to let the north wind roar<br />
+ &nbsp;In baffled rage at pane and door,<br />
+ &nbsp;While the red logs before us beat<br />
+ &nbsp;The frost-line back with tropic heat.<br />
+ &nbsp;And ever when a louder blast<br />
+ &nbsp;Shook beam and rafter as it passed,<br />
+ &nbsp;The merrier up its roaring draught<br />
+ &nbsp;The great throat of the chimney laughed.<br />
+ &nbsp;The house-dog on his paws outspread,<br />
+ &nbsp;Laid to the fire his drowsy head;<br />
+ &nbsp;The cat's dark silhouette on the wall<br />
+ &nbsp;A couchant tiger's seemed to fall,<br />
+ &nbsp;And for the winter fireside meet<br />
+ &nbsp;Between the andiron's straddling feet<br />
+ &nbsp;The mug of cider simmered slow,<br />
+ &nbsp;The apples sputtered in a row,<br />
+ &nbsp;And close at hand the basket stood<br />
+ &nbsp;With nuts from brown October's wood.&quot;<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p>For a picture of the poet himself we must turn to the verses in &quot;The
+Barefoot Boy,&quot; in which he says:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Whittier Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &quot;O for boyhood's time of June,<br />
+ &nbsp;Crowding years in one brief moon,<br />
+ &nbsp;When all things I heard or saw,<br />
+ &nbsp;Me, their master, waited for.<br />
+ &nbsp;I was rich in flowers and trees,<br />
+ &nbsp;Humming-birds and honey-bees;<br />
+ &nbsp;For my sport the squirrel played,<br />
+ &nbsp;Plied the snouted mole his spade;<br />
+ &nbsp;For my taste the blackberry cone<br />
+ &nbsp;Purpled over hedge and stone;<br />
+ &nbsp;Laughed the brook for my delight<br />
+ &nbsp;Through the day and through the night,<br />
+ &nbsp;Whispering at the garden-wall,<br />
+ &nbsp;Talked with me from fall to fall;<br />
+ &nbsp;Mine the sand-rimmed pickerel pond,<br />
+ &nbsp;Mine the walnut slopes beyond,<br />
+ &nbsp;Mine on bending orchard trees,<br />
+ &nbsp;Apples of Hesperides!<br />
+ &nbsp;Still as my horizon grew,<br />
+ &nbsp;Larger grew my riches, too;<br />
+ &nbsp;All the world I saw or knew<br />
+ &nbsp;Seemed a complex Chinese toy,<br />
+ &nbsp;Fashioned for a barefoot boy!&quot;<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1" /><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a><br />
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<br />
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh06.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh06.jpg" width="50%" alt="THE OLD SCHOOL-HOUSE, HAVERHILL, MASS." title="THE OLD SCHOOL-HOUSE, HAVERHILL, MASS." /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">THE OLD SCHOOL-HOUSE, HAVERHILL, MASS.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>I doubt if any boy ever rose to intellectual eminence who had fewer
+opportunities for education than Whittier. He had no such pasturage to
+browse on as is open to every reader who, by simply reaching them out,
+can lay his hands on the treasures of English literature. He had to
+borrow books wherever they could be found among the neighbors who were
+willing to lend, and he thought nothing of walking several miles for one
+volume. The only instruction he received was at the district school,
+which was open a few weeks in midwinter, and at the Haverhill Academy,
+which he attended two terms of six months each, paying tuition by work
+in spare hours, and by keeping a small school himself. A feeble spirit
+would have languished under such disadvantages. But Whittier scarcely
+refers to them, and instead of begging for pity, he takes them as part
+of the common lot, and seems to remember only what was beautiful and
+good in his early life.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally a stranger knocked at the door of the old homestead in the
+valley; sometimes it was a distinguished Quaker from abroad, but oftener
+it was a peddler or some vagabond begging for food, which was seldom
+refused. Once a foreigner came and asked for lodgings for the night&mdash;a
+dark, repulsive man, whose appearance was so much against him that Mrs.
+Whittier was afraid to admit him. No sooner had she sent him away,
+however, than she repented. &quot;What if a son of mine was in a strange
+land?&quot; she thought. The young poet (who was not yet recognized as such)
+offered to go out in search of him, and presently returned with him,
+having found him standing in the roadway just as he had been turned away
+from another house.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh07.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh07.jpg" width="40%" alt="JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER" title="JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>&quot;He took his seat with us at the supper-table,&quot; says Whittier in one of
+his prose sketches, &quot;and when we were all gathered around the hearth
+that cold autumnal evening, he told us, partly by words and partly by
+gestures, the story of his life and misfortunes, amused us with
+descriptions of the grape-gatherings and festivals of his sunny
+clime, edified my mother with a recipe for making bread of chestnuts,
+and in the morning, when, after breakfast, his dark sallow face lighted
+up, and his fierce eyes moistened with grateful emotion as in his own
+silvery Tuscan accent he poured out his thanks, we marveled at the fears
+which had so nearly closed our doors against him, and as he departed we
+all felt that he had left with us the blessing of the poor.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Another guest came to the house one day. It was a vagrant old Scotchman,
+who, when he had been treated to bread and cheese and cider, sang some
+of the songs of Robert Burns, which Whittier then heard for the first
+time, and which he never forgot. Coming to him thus as songs reached the
+people before printing was invented, through gleemen and minstrels,
+their sweetness lingered in his ears, and he soon found himself singing
+in the same strain. Some of his earliest inspirations were drawn from
+Burns, and he tells us of his joy when one day, after the visit of the
+old Scotchman, his schoolmaster loaned him a copy of that poet's works.
+&quot;I began to make rhymes myself, and to imagine stories and adventures,&quot;
+he says in his simple way.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, he began to rhyme very early and kept his gift a secret from
+all, except his oldest sister, fearing that his father, who was a
+prosaic man, would think that he was wasting time. He wrote under the
+fence, in the attic, in the barn&mdash;wherever he could escape observation;
+and as pen and ink were not always available, he sometimes used chalk,
+and even charcoal. Great was the surprise of the family when some of his
+verses were unearthed, literally unearthed, from under a heap of rubbish
+in a garret; but his father frowned upon these evidences of the bent of
+his mind, not out of unkindness, but because he doubted the sufficiency
+of the boy's education for a literary life, and did not wish to inspire
+him with hopes which might never be fulfilled.</p>
+
+<p>His sister had faith in him, nevertheless, and, without his knowledge,
+she sent one of his poems to the editor of <i>The Free Press</i>, a newspaper
+published in Newburyport. Whittier was helping his father to repair a
+stone wall by the roadside when the carrier flung a copy of the paper to
+him, and, unconscious that anything of his was in it, he opened it and
+glanced up and down the columns. His eyes fell on some verses called
+&quot;The Exile's Departure.&quot;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Whittier Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &quot;Fond scenes, which delighted my youthful existence,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With feelings of sorrow I bid ye adieu&mdash;<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;A lasting adieu; for now, dim in the distance,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The shores of Hibernia recede from my view.<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;Farewell to the cliffs, tempest-beaten and gray,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Which guard the loved shores of my own native land;<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;Farewell to the village and sail-shadowed bay,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The forest-crowned hill and the water-washed strand.&quot;<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<br />
+
+</div>
+
+<p>His eyes swam; it was his own poem, the first he ever had in print.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh08.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh08.jpg" width="50%" alt="WHITTIER'S STUDY AT AMESBURY, MASS." title="WHITTIER'S STUDY AT AMESBURY, MASS." /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">WHITTIER'S STUDY AT AMESBURY, MASS.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>&quot;What is the matter with thee?&quot; his father demanded, seeing how dazed he
+was; but, though he resumed his work on the wall, he could not speak,
+and he had to steal a glance at the paper again and again, before he
+could convince himself that he was not dreaming. Sure enough, the poem
+was there with his initial at the foot of it,&mdash;&quot;W., Haverhill, June 1st,
+1826,&quot;&mdash;and, better still, this editorial notice: &quot;If 'W.,' at
+Haverhill, will continue to favor us with pieces beautiful as the one
+inserted in our poetical department of to-day, we shall esteem it a
+favor.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Fame never passes true genius by, and when it came it brought with it
+the love and reverence of thousands, who recognize in Whittier a nature
+abounding in patience, unselfishness, and all the sweetness of Christian
+charity.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1" /><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> The selections from Mr. Whittier's poems contained in this
+article are included by kind permission of Messrs. Houghton,
+Mifflin &amp; Co.</p></div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Christmas" id="Christmas" />Christmas</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>December 25</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>A festival held every year in memory of the birth of Christ. Christmas
+is essentially a day of rejoicing and thanksgiving and of good will
+toward others. Many customs older than Christianity mark the
+festivities. In our country the observance of the day was discouraged in
+colonial times, and in England in 1643 Parliament abolished the day. Now
+its celebration is world-wide and by all classes and creeds.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="UncleSamObserve" id="UncleSamObserve" />HOW UNCLE SAM OBSERVES CHRISTMAS</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY CLIFFORD HOWARD</p>
+
+<p>Of course Uncle Sam is best acquainted with the good old-fashioned
+Christmas&mdash;the kind we have known all about since we were little bits of
+children. There are the Christmas trees with their pretty decorations
+and candles, and the mistletoe and holly and all sorts of evergreens to
+make the house look bright, while outside the trees are bare, the ground
+is white with snow, and Jack Frost is prowling around, freezing up the
+ponds and pinching people's noses. And then there is dear old Santa
+Claus with his reindeer, galloping about on the night before Christmas,
+and scrambling down chimneys to fill the stockings that hang in a row by
+the fireplace.</p>
+
+<p>It is the time of good cheer and happiness and presents for everybody;
+the time of chiming bells and joyful carols; of turkey and candy and
+plum-pudding and all the other good things that go to make up a truly
+merry Christmas. And here and there throughout the country, some of the
+quaint old customs of our forefathers are still observed at this time,
+as, for instance, the pretty custom of &quot;Christmas waits&quot;&mdash;boys and girls
+who go about from house to house on Christmas eve, or early Christmas
+morning, singing carols.</p>
+
+<p>But, aside from the Christmas customs we all know so well, Uncle Sam has
+many strange and special ways of observing Christmas; for in this big
+country of his there are many different kinds of people, and they all do
+not celebrate Christmas in the same way, as you shall see.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN THE SOUTH</h4>
+
+<p>Siss! Bang! Boom! Sky-rockets hissing, crackers snapping, cannons
+roaring, horns tooting, bells ringing, and youngsters shouting with wild
+delight. That is the way Christmas begins down South.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh09.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh09.jpg" width="40%" alt="CHRISTMAS IN THE SOUTH" title="CHRISTMAS IN THE SOUTH" /></a>
+<p class="center"><span class="allcap">CHRISTMAS IN THE SOUTH</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It starts at midnight, or even before; and all day long fire-crackers
+are going off in the streets of every city, town, and village of the
+South, from Virginia to Louisiana. A Northern boy, waking up suddenly in
+New Orleans or Mobile or Atlanta, would think he was in the midst of
+a rousing Fourth-of-July celebration. In some of the towns the brass
+bands come out and add to the jollity of the day by marching around and
+playing &quot;My Maryland&quot; and &quot;Dixie&quot;; while the soldier companies parade up
+and down the streets to the strains of joyous music and fire salutes
+with cannons and rifles.</p>
+
+<p>To the girls and boys of the South, Christmas is the noisiest and
+jolliest day of the year. The Fourth of July doesn't compare with it.
+And as for the darkies, they look upon Christmas as a holiday that was
+invented for their especial happiness. They take it for granted that all
+the &quot;white folks&quot; they know will give them presents; and with grinning
+faces they are up bright and early, asking for &quot;Christmus gif', mistah;
+Christmus gif, missus.&quot; No one thinks of refusing them, and at the end
+of the day they are richer and happier than at any other time during the
+whole year.</p>
+
+<p>Except for the jingle of sleigh-bells and the presence of Jack Frost, a
+Christmas in the South is in other ways very much like that in the
+North. The houses are decorated with greens, mistletoe hangs above the
+doorways, Santa Claus comes down the chimneys and fills the waiting
+stockings, while Christmas dinner is not complete without the familiar
+turkey and cranberry sauce, plum puddings and pies.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN NEW ENGLAND</h4>
+
+<p>For a great many years there was no Christmas in New England. The
+Pilgrims and the Puritans did not believe in such celebrations. In fact,
+they often made it a special point to do their hardest work on Christmas
+day, just to show their contempt for what they considered a pagan
+festival.</p>
+
+<p>During colonial times there was a law in Massachusetts forbidding any
+one to celebrate Christmas; and if anybody was so rash in those days as
+to go about tooting a horn and shouting a &quot;Merry Christmas!&quot; he was
+promptly brought to his senses by being arrested and punished.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh10.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh10.jpg" width="50%" alt="CHRISTMAS SPORTS IN NEW ENGLAND" title="CHRISTMAS SPORTS IN NEW ENGLAND" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">CHRISTMAS SPORTS IN NEW ENGLAND</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>Of course things are very different in New England now, but in many
+country towns the people still make more of Thanksgiving than they do of
+Christmas; and there are hundreds of New England men and women still
+living who knew nothing of Christmas as children&mdash;who never hung up
+their stockings; who never waited for Santa Claus; who never had a
+tree; who never even had a Christmas present!</p>
+
+<p>Nowadays, however, Christmas in New England is like Christmas anywhere
+else; but here and there, even now, the effects of the early Puritan
+ideas may still be seen. In some of the smaller and out-of-the-way towns
+and villages you will find Christmas trees and evergreens in only a very
+few of the houses, and in some places&mdash;particularly in New
+Hampshire&mdash;one big Christmas tree does for the whole town. This tree is
+set up in the town hall, and there the children go to get their gifts,
+which have been hung on the branches by the parents. Sometimes the tree
+has no decorations&mdash;no candles, no popcorn strings, no shiny balls.
+After the presents are taken off and given to the children, the tree
+remains perfectly bare. There is usually a short entertainment of
+recitations and songs, and a speech or two perhaps, and then the little
+folks, carrying their presents with them, go back to their homes.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN NEW MEXICO</h4>
+
+<p>In certain parts of New Mexico, among the old Spanish settlements, the
+celebration of Christmas begins more than a week before the day. In the
+evenings, a party of men and women go together to the house of some
+friend&mdash;a different house being visited each evening. When they arrive,
+they knock on the door and begin to sing, and when those in the house
+ask, &quot;Who is there?&quot; they reply, &quot;The Virgin Mary and St. Joseph seek
+lodgings in your house.&quot; At first the inmates of the house refuse to let
+them in. This is done to carry out the Bible story of Joseph and Mary
+being unable to find lodgings in Bethlehem. But in a little while the
+door is opened and the visitors are heartily welcomed. As soon as they
+enter, they kneel and repeat a short prayer; and when the devotional
+exercises are concluded, the rest of the evening is spent in
+merrymaking.</p>
+
+<p>On Christmas eve the people of the village gather together in some large
+room or hall and give a solemn little play, commemorating the birthday
+of the Saviour. One end of the room is used as a stage, and this is
+fitted up to represent the stable and the manger; and the characters in
+the sacred story of Bethlehem&mdash;Mary and Joseph, the shepherds, the wise
+men, and the angels&mdash;are represented in the tableaux, and with a
+genuine, reverential spirit. Even the poorer people of the town take
+part in these Christmas plays.</p>
+
+
+<h4>AMONG THE SHAKERS</h4>
+
+<p>The Shakers observe Christmas by a dinner at which the men and women
+both sit down at the same table. This custom of theirs is the thing that
+serves to make Christmas different from any other day among the Shakers.
+During all the rest of the year the men and women eat their meals at
+separate tables.</p>
+
+<p>At sunset on Christmas day, after a service in the church, they march to
+the community-house, where the dinner is waiting. The men sit on one
+side of the table and the women on the other. At the head sits an old
+man called the elder, who begins the meal by saying grace, after which
+each one in turn gets up and, lifting the right hand, says in a solemn
+voice, &quot;God is love.&quot; The dinner is eaten in perfect silence. Not a
+voice is heard until the meal comes to an end. Then the men and women
+rise and sing, standing in their places at the table. As the singing
+proceeds they mark time with their hands and feet. Then their bodies
+begin to sway from side to side in the peculiar manner that has given
+this sect its name of Shakers.</p>
+
+<p>When the singing comes to an end, the elder chants a prayer, after which
+the men and women silently file out and leave the building.</p>
+
+
+<h4>AMONG THE PENNSYLVANIA GERMANS</h4>
+
+<p>&quot;You'd better look out, or Pelznickel will catch you!&quot; This is the dire
+threat held over naughty boys and girls at Christmas-time in some of the
+country settlements of the Pennsylvania Germans, or Pennsylvania Dutch,
+as they are often called.</p>
+
+<p>Pelznickel is another name for Santa Claus. But he is not altogether the
+same old Santa that we welcome so gladly. On Christmas eve some one in
+the neighborhood impersonates Pelznickel by dressing up as an old man
+with a long white beard. Arming himself with a switch and carrying a bag
+of toys over his shoulder, he goes from house to house, where the
+children are expecting him.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh11.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh11.jpg" width="40%" alt="A VISIT FROM PELZNICKEL" title="A VISIT FROM PELZNICKEL" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">A VISIT FROM PELZNICKEL</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>He asks the parents how the little ones have behaved themselves during
+the year. To each of those who have been good he gives a present from
+his bag. But&mdash;woe betide the naughty ones! These are not only supposed
+to get no presents, but Pelznickel catches them by the collar and
+playfully taps them with his switch.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN PORTO RICO</h4>
+
+<p>The Porto Rican boys and girls would be frightened out of their wits if
+Santa Claus should come to them in a sleigh drawn by reindeer and should
+try to enter the houses and fill their stockings. Down there, Santa
+Claus does not need reindeer or any other kind of steeds, for the
+children say that he just comes flying through the air like a bird.
+Neither does he bother himself looking for stockings, for such things
+are not so plentiful in Porto Rico as they are in cooler climates.
+Instead of stockings, the children use little boxes, which they make
+themselves. These they place on the roofs and in the courtyards, and old
+Santa Claus drops the gifts into them as he flies around at night with
+his bag on his back.</p>
+
+<p>He is more generous in Porto Rico than he is anywhere else. He does not
+come on Christmas eve only, but is likely to call around every night or
+two during the week. Each morning, therefore, the little folks run out
+eagerly to see whether anything more has been left in their boxes during
+the night.</p>
+
+<p>Christmas in Porto Rico is a church festival of much importance, and the
+celebration of it is made up chiefly of religious ceremonies intended to
+commemorate the principal events in the life of the Saviour. Beginning
+with the celebration of his birth, at Christmas-time, the feast-days
+follow one another in rapid succession. Indeed, it may justly be said
+that they do not really come to an end until Easter.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh12.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh12.jpg" width="50%" alt="BETHLEHEM DAY IN PORTO RICO" title="BETHLEHEM DAY IN PORTO RICO" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">BETHLEHEM DAY IN PORTO RICO</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>One of the most popular of these festival-days is that known as
+Bethlehem day. This is celebrated on the 12th of January, in memory of
+the coming of the Magi. The celebration consists of a procession of
+children through the streets of the town. The foremost three, dressed in
+flowing robes to represent the wise men of the East, come riding along
+on ponies, holding in their hands the gifts for the Infant King;
+following them come angels and shepherds and flute-players, all
+represented by children dressed in pretty costumes and carrying garlands
+of flowers. These processions are among the most picturesque of all
+Christmas celebrations.</p>
+
+
+<h4>AMONG THE MORAVIANS</h4>
+
+<p>For many days before Christmas the Moravian housewives in Bethlehem,
+Pennsylvania, are busy in their kitchens making good things for the
+holidays&mdash;mint-cakes, pepper-nuts, <i>K&uuml;mmelbrod</i>, sugar-cake, mince-pies,
+and, most important of all, large quantities of &quot;Christmas cakes.&quot; These
+Christmas cakes are a kind of ginger cooky, crisp and spicy, and are
+made according to a recipe known only to the Moravians. They are made in
+all sorts of curious shapes&mdash;birds, horses, bears, lions, fishes,
+turtles, stars, leaves, and funny little men and women; so that they are
+not only good to eat, but are ornamental as well, and are often used by
+the good fathers and mothers as decorations for the &quot;<i>Putz</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Every Moravian family has its <i>Putz</i> at Christmas-time. This consists of
+a Christmas tree surrounded at its base by a miniature landscape made up
+of moss and greens and make-believe rocks, and adorned with toy houses
+and tiny fences and trees and all sorts of little animals and toy
+people.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh13.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh13.jpg" width="40%" alt="A CHRISTMAS &quot;PUTZ&quot;" title="A CHRISTMAS &quot;PUTZ&quot;" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">A CHRISTMAS &quot;PUTZ&quot;</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<p>On Christmas eve a love-feast is held in the church. The greater part of
+the service is devoted to music, for which the Moravians have always
+been noted. While the choir is singing, cake and coffee are brought in
+and served to all the members of the congregation, each one receiving a
+good-sized bun and a large cup of coffee. Shortly before the end of the
+meeting lighted wax candles carried on large trays are brought into the
+church, by men on one side and women on the other, and passed around to
+the little folks&mdash;one for each boy and girl. This is meant to represent
+the coming of the Light into the world, and is but one of the many
+beautiful customs observed by the Moravians.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN ALASKA</h4>
+
+<p>&quot;Going around with the star&quot; is a popular Christmas custom among some of
+the natives of Alaska who belong to the Greek Church. A large figure of
+a star, covered with brightly colored paper, is carried about at night
+by a procession of men and women and children. They call at the homes of
+the well-to-do families of the village, marching about from house to
+house, headed by the star-bearer and two men or boys carrying lanterns
+on long poles. They are warmly welcomed at each place, and are invited
+to come in and have some refreshments. After enjoying the cakes and
+other good things, and singing one or two carols, they take up the star
+and move on to the next house.</p>
+
+<p>These processions take place each night during Christmas week; but after
+the second night the star-bearers are followed by men and boys dressed
+in fantastic clothes, who try to catch the star-men and destroy their
+stars. This part of the game is supposed to be an imitation of the
+soldiers of Herod trying to destroy the children of Bethlehem; but these
+happy folks of Alaska evidently don't think much about its meaning, for
+they make a great frolic of it. Everybody is full of fun, and the frosty
+air of the dark winter nights is filled with laughter as men and boys
+and romping girls chase one another here and there in merry excitement.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN HAWAII</h4>
+
+<p>The natives of Hawaii say that Santa Claus comes over to the islands in
+a boat. Perhaps he does; it would be a tedious journey for his reindeer
+to make without stopping from San Francisco to Honolulu. At all events,
+he gets there by some means or other, for he would not neglect the
+little folks of those islands away out in the Pacific.</p>
+
+<p>They look for him as eagerly as do the boys and girls in the lands of
+snow and ice, and although it must almost melt him to get around in that
+warm climate with his furs on, he never misses a Christmas.</p>
+
+<p>Before the missionaries and the American settlers went to Hawaii, the
+natives knew nothing about Christmas, but now they all celebrate the
+day, and do it, of course, in the same way as the Americans who live
+there. The main difference between Christmas in Honolulu and Christmas
+in New York is that in Honolulu in December the weather is like June in
+New York. Birds are warbling in the leafy trees; gardens are overflowing
+with roses and carnations; fields and mountain slopes are ablaze with
+color; and a sunny sky smiles dreamily upon the glories of a summer day.
+In the morning people go to church, and during the day there are sports
+and games and merry-making of all sorts. The Christmas dinner is eaten
+out of doors in the shade of the veranda, and everybody is happy and
+contented.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN THE PHILIPPINES</h4>
+
+<p>&quot;BUENAS PASQUAS!&quot; This is the hearty greeting that comes to the dweller
+in the Philippines on Christmas morning, and with it, perhaps, an
+offering of flowers.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh14.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh14.jpg" width="50%" alt="CHRISTMAS IN THE PHILIPPINES" title="CHRISTMAS IN THE PHILIPPINES" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">CHRISTMAS IN THE PHILIPPINES</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The Filipino, like the Porto Rican and all others who have lived under
+Spanish rule, look upon Christmas as a great religious festival, and one
+that requires very special attention. On Christmas eve the churches are
+open, and the coming of the great day is celebrated by a mass at
+midnight; and during all of Christmas day mass is held every hour, so
+that every one may have an opportunity to attend. Even the popular
+Christmas customs among the people are nearly all of a religious
+character, for most of them consist of little plays or dramas founded
+upon the life of the Saviour.</p>
+
+<p>These plays are called <i>pastures</i>, and are performed by bands of young
+men and women, and sometimes mere boys and girls, who go about from
+village to village and present their simple little plays to expectant
+audiences at every stopping-place. The visit of the wise men, the flight
+into Egypt&mdash;these and many other incidents as related in the Scriptures
+are acted in these <i>pastores</i>.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="New_Years_Day" id="New_Years_Day" />New Year's Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>January 1</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The custom of celebrating the first day of the year is a very ancient
+one. The exchange of gifts, the paying of calls, the making of good
+resolutions for the new year and feasting often characterize the day.
+The custom of ringing the church bells is of the widest extent.</p>
+
+<p>The old-world custom of sitting up on New Year's eve to see the old year
+out is still very common.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="SocialLifeColon" id="SocialLifeColon" />EXTRACT FROM &quot;SOCIAL LIFE IN THE COLONIES&quot;</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>The Century Magazine, July 1885</i></strong></p>
+
+<p class="center">BY EDWARD EGGLESTON</p>
+
+<p>New Year's Day was celebrated among the New York Dutch by the calls of
+the gentlemen on their lady friends; it is perhaps the only distinctly
+Dutch custom that afterward came into widespread use in the United
+States. New Year's Day, and the church festivals kept alike by the Dutch
+and English, brought an intermission of labor to the New York slaves,
+who gathered in throngs to devote themselves to wild frolics. The
+Brooklyn fields were crowded with them on New Year's Day, at Easter, at
+Whitsuntide, or &quot;Prixter,&quot; as the Dutch called it, and on &quot;San Claus
+Day&quot;&mdash;the feast of St. Nicholas.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h3><a name="ChineseNewYear" id="ChineseNewYear" />A CHINESE NEW YEAR'S IN CALIFORNIA</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY H.H.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese in California have a week of holiday at their New Year's in
+February, just as we do between the twenty-fifth of December and the
+first of January.</p>
+
+<p>In the cities they make a fine display of fire-works. They use barrels
+full of fire-crackers, and the Chinese boys do not fire them off, as the
+American boys do, a cracker at a time; they bring out a large box full,
+or a barrel full, and fire them off package after package, as fast as
+they can.</p>
+
+<p>In Santa Barbara, where I was during the Chinese New Year's of 1882, we
+heard the crackers long before we reached Chinatown. After these stopped
+we went into the houses. Every Chinese family keeps open house on New
+Year's day all day long. They set up a picture or an image of their god
+in some prominent place, and on a table in front of this they put a
+little feast of good things to eat. Some are for an offering to the god
+and some are for their friends who call. Everyone is expected to take
+something.</p>
+
+<p>There was no family so poor that it did not have something set out, and
+some sort of a shrine made for its idol; in some houses it was only a
+coarse wooden box turned up on one end like a cupboard, with two or
+three little teacups full of rice or tea, and one poor candle burning
+before a paper picture of the god pasted or tacked at the back of the
+box.</p>
+
+<p>It was amusing to watch the American boys darting about from shop to
+shop and house to house, coming out with their hands full of queer
+Chinese things to eat, showing them to each other and comparing notes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, let me taste that!&quot; one boy would exclaim on seeing some new thing;
+and &quot;Where did you get it? Which house gives that?&quot; Then the whole party
+would race off to make a descent on that house and get some more. I
+thought it wonderfully hospitable on the part of the Chinese people to
+let all these American boys run in and out of their houses in that way,
+and help themselves from the New Year's feast.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the boys were very rude and ill-mannered&mdash;little better than
+street beggars; but the Chinese were polite and generous to them all.
+The joss-house, where they held their religious services, was a chamber
+opening out upon an upper balcony. This balcony was hung with lanterns
+and decorated. The door at the foot of the stairs which led to this
+chamber stood open all day, and any one who wished could go up and say
+his prayers in the Chinese fashion, which is a curious fashion indeed.
+They have slender reeds with tight rolls of brown paper fastened at one
+end. In front of the image or picture of their god they set a box or
+vase of ashes, on which a little sandalwood is kept burning. When they
+wish to make a prayer they stick one of the reeds down in these ashes
+and set the paper on fire. They think the smoke of the burning paper
+will carry the prayer up to heaven.</p>
+
+<p>I asked a Chinese man who could speak a little English why they put
+teacups of wine and tea and rice before their god; if they believed that
+the god would eat and drink.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, no,&quot; he said, &quot;that not what for. What you like self, you give god.
+He see. He like see.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Lincolns_Birthday" id="Lincolns_Birthday" />Lincoln's Birthday</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>February 12</i></strong></p>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>ABRAHAM LINCOLN</strong></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>Born February 12, 1809&nbsp;&nbsp;Died April 15, 1865</strong></p>
+
+
+<p> Lincoln was the sixteenth
+President of the United States. He was descended from a Quaker family of
+English origin. He followed various occupations, including those of a
+farm laborer, a salesman, a merchant, and a surveyor; was admitted to
+the bar in 1836 and began the practice of law in this year. He was twice
+elected President, the second time receiving 212 out of 233 electoral
+votes. He was shot by John Wilkes Booth at Ford's Theater, Washington,
+April 14, 1865, and died the following day.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="AbrahamLincoln" id="AbrahamLincoln" />ABRAHAM LINCOLN</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY HELEN NICOLAY</p>
+
+<p>Abraham Lincoln was not an ordinary man. He was, in truth, in the
+language of the poet Lowell, a &quot;new birth of our new soil.&quot; His
+greatness did not consist in growing up on the frontier. An ordinary man
+would have found on the frontier exactly what he would have found
+elsewhere&mdash;a commonplace life, varying only with the changing ideas and
+customs of time and place. But for the man with extraordinary powers of
+mind and body, for one gifted by Nature as Abraham Lincoln was gifted,
+the pioneer life, with its severe training in self-denial, patience, and
+industry, developed his character, and fitted him for the great duties
+of his after life as no other training could have done.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh15.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh15.jpg" width="50%" alt="LINCOLN'S HOME AFTER HIS MARRIAGE" title="LINCOLN'S HOME AFTER HIS MARRIAGE" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">LINCOLN'S HOME AFTER HIS MARRIAGE</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>His advancement in the astonishing career that carried him from
+obscurity to world-wide fame&mdash;from postmaster of New Salem village to
+President of the United States, from captain of a backwoods volunteer
+company to Commander-in-chief of the army and navy&mdash;was neither sudden
+nor accidental nor easy. He was both ambitious and successful, but his
+ambition was moderate, and his success was slow. And, because his
+success was slow, it never outgrew either his judgment or his powers.
+Between the day when he left his father's cabin and launched his canoe
+on the head waters of the Sangamon River to begin life on his own
+account, and the day of his first inauguration, lay full thirty years
+of toil, self-denial, patience; often of effort baffled, of hope
+deferred; sometimes of bitter disappointment. Even with the natural gift
+of great genius, it required an average lifetime and faithful,
+unrelaxing effort to transform the raw country stripling into a fit
+ruler for this great nation.</p>
+
+<p>Almost every success was balanced&mdash;sometimes overbalanced&mdash;by a seeming
+failure. He went into the Black Hawk war a captain, and through no fault
+of his own came out a private. He rode to the hostile frontier on
+horseback, and trudged home on foot. His store &quot;winked out.&quot; His
+surveyor's compass and chain, with which he was earning a scanty living,
+were sold for debt. He was defeated in his first attempts to be
+nominated for the legislature and for Congress; defeated in his
+application to be appointed Commissioner of the General Land Office;
+defeated for the Senate, when he had forty-five votes to begin with, by
+a man who had only five votes to begin with; defeated again after his
+joint debates with Douglas; defeated in the nomination for
+Vice-President, when a favorable nod from half a dozen politicians would
+have brought him success.</p>
+
+<p>Failures? Not so. Every seeming defeat was a slow success. His was the
+growth of the oak, and not of Jonah's gourd. He could not become a
+master workman until he had served a tedious apprenticeship. It was the
+quarter of a century of reading, thinking, speech-making, and law-making
+which fitted him to be the chosen champion in the great Lincoln-Douglas
+debates of 1858. It was the great moral victory won in those debates
+(although the senatorship went to Douglas), added to the title &quot;Honest
+Old Abe,&quot; won by truth and manhood among his neighbors during a whole
+lifetime, that led the people of the United States to trust him with the
+duties and powers of President.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh16.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh16.jpg" width="50%" alt="HOUSE IN WHICH LINCOLN LIVED WHEN HE WAS ELECTED PRESIDENT" title="HOUSE IN WHICH LINCOLN LIVED WHEN HE WAS ELECTED PRESIDENT" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">HOUSE IN WHICH LINCOLN LIVED WHEN HE WAS ELECTED PRESIDENT</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<p>And when, at last, after thirty years of endeavor, success had beaten
+down defeat, when Lincoln had been nominated, elected, and inaugurated,
+came the crowning trial of his faith and constancy. When the people, by
+free and lawful choice, had placed honor and power in his hands, when
+his name could convene Congress, approve laws, cause ships to sail and
+armies to move, there suddenly came upon the government and the nation a
+fatal paralysis. Honor seemed to dwindle and power to vanish. Was he
+then, after all, not to be President? Was patriotism dead? Was the
+Constitution only a bit of waste paper? Was the Union gone?</p>
+
+<p>The outlook was indeed grave. There was treason in Congress, treason in
+the Supreme Court, treason in the army and navy. Confusion and discord
+were everywhere. To use Mr. Lincoln's forcible figure of speech, sinners
+were calling the righteous to repentance. Finally the flag, insulted and
+fired upon, trailed in surrender at Sumter; and then came the
+humiliation of the riot at Baltimore, and the President for a few days
+practically a prisoner in the capital of the nation.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh17.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh17.jpg" width="40%" alt="PRESIDENT LINCOLN AND TAD" title="PRESIDENT LINCOLN AND TAD" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">PRESIDENT LINCOLN AND TAD</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>But his apprenticeship had been served, and there was to be no more
+failure. With faith and justice and generosity he conducted for four
+long years a war whose frontiers stretched from the Potomac to the Rio
+Grande; whose soldiers numbered a million men on each side. The labor,
+the thought, the responsibility, the strain of mind and anguish of soul
+that he gave to his great task, who can measure? &quot;Here was place for no
+holiday magistrate, no fair-weather sailor,&quot; as Emerson justly said of
+him. &quot;The new pilot was hurried to the helm in a tornado. In four
+years&mdash;four years of battle days&mdash;his endurance, his fertility of
+resources, his magnanimity, were sorely tried and never found wanting.&quot;
+&quot;By his courage, his justice, his even temper, ... his humanity, he stood
+a heroic figure in a heroic epoch.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh18.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh18.jpg" width="50%" alt="THE LINCOLN MONUMENT AT SPRINGFIELD" title="THE LINCOLN MONUMENT AT SPRINGFIELD" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">THE LINCOLN MONUMENT AT SPRINGFIELD</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>What but a lifetime's schooling in disappointment; what but the
+pioneer's self-reliance and freedom from prejudice; what but the clear
+mind quick to see natural right and unswerving in its purpose to follow
+it; what but the steady self-control, the unwarped sympathy, the
+unbounded charity of this man with spirit so humble and soul so great,
+could have carried him through the labors he wrought to the victory he
+attained?</p>
+
+<p>With truth it could be written, &quot;His heart was as great as the world,
+but there was no room in it to hold the memory of a wrong.&quot; So, &quot;with
+malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as
+God gave him to see the right,&quot; he lived and died. We, who have never
+seen him, yet feel daily the influence of his kindly life, and cherish
+among our most precious possessions the heritage of his example.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh19.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh19.jpg" width="40%" alt="STATUE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. BY AUGUSTUS ST. GAUDENS" title="STATUE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. BY AUGUSTUS ST. GAUDENS" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">STATUE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. BY AUGUSTUS ST. GAUDENS</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h3><a name="GettysburgAdd" id="GettysburgAdd" />THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS</h3>
+
+
+<p>Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this
+continent a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the
+proposition that all men are created equal.</p>
+
+<p>Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or
+any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on
+a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of
+that field as a final resting-place for those who here gave their lives
+that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we
+should do this.</p>
+
+<p>But, in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate&mdash;we cannot consecrate&mdash;we
+cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled
+here, have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract.
+The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it
+can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather,
+to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here
+have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here
+dedicated to the great task remaining before us&mdash;that from these honored
+dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the
+last full measure of devotion; that we here highly resolve that these
+dead shall not have died in vain; that this nation, under God, shall
+have a new birth of freedom; and that government of the people, by the
+people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquotjust">The above address was delivered by Abraham Lincoln,
+November 19, 1863, at the dedication of the Gettysburg battle-field as a
+national cemetery for Union soldiers.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="OCaptain" id="OCaptain" />O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!</h3>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+O captain. My captain. Our fearful trip is done;<br />
+The ship has weathered every rack, the prize we sought is won;<br />
+The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,<br />
+While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring:<br />
+But O heart! Heart! Heart!<br />
+Leave you not the little spot,<br />
+Where on the deck my captain lies,<br />
+Fallen cold and dead.<br />
+
+<br />
+
+O captain. My captain. Rise up and hear the bells;<br />
+Rise up&mdash;for you the flag is flung&mdash;for you the bugle trills;<br />
+For you bouquets and ribbon'd wreaths&mdash;for you the shores a-crowding;<br />
+For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;<br />
+O captain. Dear father.<br />
+This arm I push beneath you;<br />
+It is some dream that on the deck,<br />
+You've fallen cold and dead.<br />
+
+<br />
+
+My captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still;<br />
+My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will;<br />
+But the ship, the ship is anchor'd safe, its voyage closed and done;<br />
+From fearful trip, the victor ship, comes in with object won:<br />
+Exult O shores, and ring, O bells.<br />
+But I with silent tread,<br />
+Walk the spot the captain lies,<br />
+Fallen cold and dead.<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;" class="smcap">Walt Whitman.</span>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="St_Valentines_Day" id="St_Valentines_Day" />St. Valentine's Day</h2>
+
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>February 14</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Custom decrees that on this day the young shall exchange missives in
+which the love of the sender is told in verses, pictures, and
+sentiments. No reason beyond a guess can be given to connect St.
+Valentine with these customs. He was a Christian martyr, about 270 A.D.,
+while the practice of sending valentines had its origin in the heathen
+worship of Juno. It is Cupid's day, and no boy or girl needs any
+encouragement to make the most of it.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="WhoBegan" id="WhoBegan" />WHO BEGAN IT?</h3>
+
+<p class="center">BY OLIVE THORNE</p>
+
+<p>There's one thing we know positively, that St. Valentine didn't begin
+this fourteenth of February excitement; but who <i>did</i> is a question not
+so easy to answer. I don't think any one would have begun it if he could
+have known what the simple customs of his day would have grown into, or
+could even have imagined the frightful valentines that disgrace our
+shops to-day.</p>
+
+<p>It began, for us, with our English ancestors, who used to assemble on
+the eve of St. Valentine's day, put the names of all the young maidens
+promiscuously in a box, and let each bachelor draw one out. The damsel
+whose name fell to his lot became his valentine for the year. He wore
+her name in his bosom or on his sleeve, and it was his duty to attend
+her and protect her. As late as the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
+this custom was very popular, even among the upper classes.</p>
+
+<p>But the wiseacres have traced the custom farther back. Some of them
+think it was begun by the ancient Romans, who had on the fourteenth or
+fifteenth of February a festival in honor of Lupercus, &quot;the destroyer of
+wolves&quot;&mdash;a wolf-destroyer being quite worthy of honor in those wild
+days, let me tell you. At this festival it was the custom, among other
+curious things, to pair off the young men and maidens in the same chance
+way, and with the same result of a year's attentions.</p>
+
+<p>Even this is not wholly satisfactory. Who began it among the Romans?
+becomes the next interesting question. One old writer says it was
+brought to Rome from Arcadia sixty years before the Trojan war (which
+Homer wrote about, you know). I'm sure that's far enough back to satisfy
+anybody. The same writer also says that the Pope tried to abolish it in
+the fifth century, but he succeeded only in sending it down to us in the
+name of St. Valentine instead of Lupercus.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh20.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh20.jpg" width="55%" alt="FOR THIS WAS ON SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY" title="FOR THIS WAS ON SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY" /></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Our own ancestry in England and Scotland have observed some very funny
+customs within the last three centuries. At one time valentines were
+fashionable among the nobility, and, while still selected by lot, it
+became the duty of a gentleman to give to the lady who fell to his lot a
+handsome present. Pieces of jewelry costing thousands of dollars were
+not unusual, though smaller things, as gloves, were more common.</p>
+
+<p>There was a tradition among the country people that every bird chose its
+mate on Valentine's day; and at one time it was the custom for young
+folks to go out before daylight on that morning and try to catch an owl
+and two sparrows in a net. If they succeeded, it was a good omen, and
+entitled them to gifts from the villagers. Another fashion among them
+was to write the valentine, tie it to an apple or orange, and steal up
+to the house of the chosen one in the evening, open the door quietly,
+and throw it in.</p>
+
+<p>Those were the days of charms, and of course the rural maidens had a
+sure and infallible charm foretelling the future husband. On the eve of
+St. Valentine's day, the anxious damsel prepared for sleep by pinning to
+her pillow five bay leaves, one at each corner and one in the middle
+(which must have been delightful to sleep on, by the way). If she
+dreamed of her sweetheart, she was sure to marry him before the end of
+the year.</p>
+
+<p>But to make it a sure thing, the candidate for matrimony must boil an
+egg hard, take out the yolk, and fill its place with salt. Just before
+going to bed, she must eat egg, salt, shell and all, and neither speak
+nor drink after it. If that wouldn't insure her a vivid dream, there
+surely could be no virtue in charms.</p>
+
+<p>Modern valentines, aside from the valuable presents often contained in
+them, are very pretty things, and they are growing prettier every year,
+since large business houses spare neither skill nor money in getting
+them up. The most interesting thing about them, to &quot;grown-ups,&quot; is the
+way they are made; and perhaps even you youngsters, who watch eagerly
+for the postman, &quot;sinking beneath the load of delicate embarrassments
+not his own,&quot; would like to know how satin and lace and flowers and
+other dainty things grew into a valentine.</p>
+
+<p>It was no fairy's handiwork. It went through the hands of grimy-looking
+workmen before it reached your hands.</p>
+
+<p>To be sure, a dreamy artist may have designed it, but a lithographer,
+with inky fingers, printed the picture part of it; a die-cutter, with
+sleeves rolled up, made a pattern in steel of the lace-work on the edge;
+and a dingy-looking pressman, with a paper hat on, stamped the pattern
+around the picture. Another hard-handed workman rubbed the back of the
+stamped lace with sand-paper till it came in holes and looked like lace,
+and not merely like stamped paper; and a row of girls at a common long
+table put on the colors with stencils, gummed on the hearts and darts
+and cupids and flowers, and otherwise finished the thing exactly like
+the pattern before them.</p>
+
+<p>You see, the sentiment about a valentine doesn't begin until Tom, Dick,
+or Harry takes it from the stationer, and writes your name on it.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh21.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh21.jpg" width="45%" alt="ST. VALENTINE'S LETTER-CARRIERS" title="ST. VALENTINE'S LETTER-CARRIERS" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Washingtons_Birthday" id="Washingtons_Birthday" />Washington's Birthday</h2>
+
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>February 22</i></strong></p>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>GEORGE WASHINGTON</strong></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>Born February 22, 1732&nbsp;&nbsp;Died December 14, 1799</strong></p>
+
+
+
+<p>Washington was the first President of the United States, and the son of
+a Virginia planter. He attended school until about sixteen years of age,
+was engaged in surveying, 1748-51, became an officer in the Continental
+army, and President in 1789. He was re-elected in 1793. He was
+pre&euml;minent for his sound judgment and perfect self-control. It is said
+that no act of his public life can be traced to personal caprice,
+ambition, or resentment.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="BoyhoodWash" id="BoyhoodWash" />THE BOYHOOD OF WASHINGTON</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY HORACE E. SCUDDER</p>
+
+<p>It was near the shore of the Potomac River, between Pope's Creek and
+Bridge's Creek, that Augustine Washington lived when his son George was
+born. The land had been in the family ever since Augustine's
+grandfather, John Washington, had bought it, when he came over from
+England in 1657. John Washington was a soldier and a public-spirited
+man, and so the parish in which he lived&mdash;for Virginia was divided into
+parishes as some other colonies into townships&mdash;was named Washington. It
+is a quiet neighborhood; not a sign remains of the old house, and the
+only mark of the place is a stone slab, broken and overgrown with weeds
+and brambles, which lies on a bed of bricks taken from the remnants of
+the old chimney of the house. It bears the inscription:</p>
+
+<p class="center">Here<br />
+The 11th of February, 1732 (old style)<br />
+George Washington<br />
+was born</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh22.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh22.jpg" width="55%" alt="SLAB THAT MARKS THE LOCATION OF THE HOUSE WHERE WASHINGTON WAS BORN" title="SLAB THAT MARKS THE LOCATION OF THE HOUSE WHERE WASHINGTON WAS BORN" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">SLAB THAT MARKS THE LOCATION OF THE HOUSE WHERE WASHINGTON WAS BORN</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>The English had lately agreed to use the calendar of Pope Gregory, which
+added eleven days to the reckoning, but people still used the old style
+as well as the new. By the new style, the birthday was February 22, and
+that is the day which is now observed. The family into which the child
+was born consisted of the father and mother, Augustine and Mary
+Washington, and two boys, Lawrence and Augustine. These were sons of
+Augustine Washington and a former wife who had died four years before.
+George Washington was the eldest of the children of Augustine and Mary
+Washington; he had afterward three brothers and two sisters, but one of
+the sisters died in infancy.</p>
+
+<p>It was not long after George Washington's birth that the house in which
+he was born was burned, and as his father was at the time especially
+interested in some iron-works at a distance, it was determined not to
+rebuild upon the lonely place. Accordingly Augustine Washington removed
+his family to a place which he owned in Stafford County, on the banks of
+the Rappahannock River opposite Fredericksburg. The house is not now
+standing, but a picture was made of it before it was destroyed. It was,
+like many Virginia houses of the day, divided into four rooms on a
+floor, and had great outside chimneys at either end.</p>
+
+<p>Here George Washington spent his childhood. He learned to read, write,
+and cipher at a small school kept by Hobby, the sexton of the parish
+church. Among his playmates was Richard Henry Lee, who was afterward a
+famous Virginian. When the boys grew up, they wrote to each other of
+grave matters of war and state, but here is the beginning of their
+correspondence, written when they were nine years old.</p>
+
+<div>
+
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;RICHARD HENRY LEE TO GEORGE WASHINGTON:</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">&quot;Pa brought me two pretty books full of pictures he got them in</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Alexandria they have pictures of dogs and cats and tigers and</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">elefants and ever so many pretty things cousin bids me send you one</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">of them it has a picture of an elefant and a little Indian boy on</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">his back like uncle jo's sam pa says if I learn my tasks good he</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">will let uncle jo bring me to see you will you ask your ma to let</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">you come to see me.</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 15em;">&quot;RICHARD HENRY LEE.&quot;</span><br />
+
+<br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;GEORGE WASHINGTON TO RICHARD HENRY LEE:</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">&quot;DEAR DICKEY I thank you very much for the pretty picture book</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">you gave me. Sam asked me to show him the pictures and I showed him </span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">all the pictures in it; and I read to him how the tame elephant took</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">care of the master's little boy, and put him on his back and would</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">not let anybody touch his master's little son. I can read three or</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">four pages sometimes without missing a word. Ma says I may go to</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">see you, and stay all day with you next week if it be not rainy.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">She says I may ride my pony Hero if Uncle Ben will go with me and</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">lead Hero. I have a little piece of poetry about the picture book</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">you gave me, but I mustn't tell you who wrote the poetry.</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">&quot;'G.W.'s compliments to R.H.L.,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">And likes his book full well,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">Henceforth will count him his friend,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">And hopes many happy days he may spend.'</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 15em;">&quot;Your good friend,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 15.5em;">&quot;GEORGE WASHINGTON.</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;I am going to get a whip top soon, and you may see it and whip</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">it.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_1_2" id="FNanchor_1_2" /><a href="#Footnote_1_2" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></span><br />
+
+</div>
+
+<p>It looks very much as if Richard Henry sent his letter off just as it
+was written. I suspect that his correspondent's letter was looked over,
+corrected, and copied before it was sent. Very possibly Augustine
+Washington was absent at the time on one of his journeys; but at any
+rate the boy owed most of his training to his mother, for only two years
+after this, his father died, and he was left to his mother's care.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figright">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh23.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh23.jpg" width="40%" alt="MONUMENT ON THE SITE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON'S BIRTHPLACE" title="MONUMENT ON THE SITE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON'S BIRTHPLACE" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">MONUMENT ON THE SITE OF GEORGE <br />
+ WASHINGTON'S BIRTHPLACE</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>She was a woman born to command, and since she was left alone with a
+family and an estate to care for, she took the reins into her own hands,
+and never gave them up to any one else. She used to drive about
+in an old-fashioned open chaise, visiting the various parts of her farm,
+just as a planter would do on horseback. The story is told that she had
+given an agent directions how to do a piece of work, and he had seen fit
+to do it differently, because he thought his way a better one. He showed
+her the improvement.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And pray,&quot; said the lady, &quot;who gave you any exercise of judgment in the
+matter? I command you, sir; there is nothing left for you but to obey.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>In those days, more than now, a boy used very formal language when
+addressing his mother. He might love her warmly, but he was expected to
+treat her with a great show of respect. When Washington wrote to his
+mother, even after he was of age, he began his letter, &quot;Honored Madam,&quot;
+and signed it, &quot;Your dutiful son.&quot; This was a part of the manners of the
+time. It was like the stiff dress which men wore when they paid their
+respects to others; it was put on for the occasion, and one would have
+been thought very unmannerly who did not make a marked difference
+between his every-day dress and that which he wore when he went into the
+presence of his betters. So Washington, when he wrote to his mother,
+would not say, &quot;Dear Mother.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Such habits as this go deeper than mere forms of speech. I do not
+suppose that the sons of this lady feared her, but they stood in awe of
+her, which is quite a different thing.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We were all as mute as mice, when in her presence,&quot; says one of
+Washington's companions; and common report makes her to have been very
+much such a woman as her son afterward was a man.</p>
+
+<p>I think that George Washington owed two strong traits to his mother,&mdash;a
+governing spirit, and a spirit of order and method. She taught him many
+lessons and gave him many rules; but, after all, it was her character
+shaping his which was most powerful. She taught him to be truthful, but
+her lessons were not half so forcible as her own truthfulness.</p>
+
+<p>There is a story told of George Washington's boyhood&mdash;unfortunately
+there are not many stories&mdash;which is to the point. His father had taken
+a great deal of pride in his blooded horses, and his mother afterward
+took great pains to keep the stock pure. She had several young horses
+that had not yet been broken, and one of them in particular, a sorrel,
+was extremely spirited. No one had been able to do anything with it, and
+it was pronounced thoroughly vicious, as people are apt to pronounce
+horses which they have not learned to master. George was determined to
+ride this colt, and told his companions that if they would help him
+catch it, he would ride and tame it.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh24.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh24.jpg" width="50%" alt="OLD WHITE CHAPEL, LANCASTER COUNTY, VIRGINIA, WHERE WASHINGTON AND HIS MOTHER ATTENDED SERVICE" title="OLD WHITE CHAPEL, LANCASTER COUNTY, VIRGINIA, WHERE WASHINGTON AND HIS MOTHER ATTENDED SERVICE" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">OLD WHITE CHAPEL, LANCASTER COUNTY, VIRGINIA, WHERE <br />
+ WASHINGTON AND HIS MOTHER ATTENDED SERVICE</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Early in the morning they set out for the pasture, where the boys
+managed to surround the sorrel and then to put a bit into its mouth.
+Washington sprang on its back, the boys dropped the bridle, and away
+flew the angry animal. Its rider at once began to command; the horse
+resisted, backing about the field, rearing and plunging. The boys became
+thoroughly alarmed, but Washington kept his seat, never once losing his
+self-control or his mastery of the colt. The struggle was a sharp one;
+when suddenly, as if determined to rid itself of its rider, the creature
+leaped into the air with a tremendous bound. It was its last. The
+violence burst a blood-vessel, and the noble horse fell dead.</p>
+
+<p>Before the boys could sufficiently recover to consider how they should
+extricate themselves from the scrape, they were called to breakfast; and
+the mistress of the house, knowing that they had been in the fields,
+began to ask after her stock.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pray, young gentlemen,&quot; said she, &quot;have you seen my blooded colts in
+your rambles? I hope they are well taken care of. My favorite, I am
+told, is as large as his sire.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The boys looked at one another, and no one liked to speak. Of course the
+mother repeated her question.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The sorrel is dead, madam,&quot; said her son. &quot;I killed him!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And then he told the whole story. They say that his mother flushed with
+anger, as her son often used to, and then, like him, controlled herself,
+and presently said, quietly:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is well; but while I regret the loss of my favorite, I rejoice in
+my son who always speaks the truth.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The story of Washington's killing the blooded colt is of a piece with
+other stories less particular, which show that he was a very athletic
+fellow. Of course, when a boy becomes famous, every one likes to
+remember the wonderful things he did before he was famous, and
+Washington's playmates, when they grew up, used to show the spot by the
+Rappahannock near Fredericksburg where he stood and threw a stone to the
+opposite bank; and at the celebrated Natural Bridge, the arch of which
+is two hundred feet above the ground, they always tell the visitor that
+George Washington threw a stone in the air the whole height. He
+undoubtedly took part in all the sports which were the favorites of his
+country at that time&mdash;he pitched heavy bars, tossed quoits, ran, leaped,
+and wrestled; for he was a powerful, large-limbed young fellow, and he
+had a very large and strong hand.</p>
+
+<p>(From &quot;Life of George Washington&quot; by Horace E. Scudder, published by
+Houghton, Mifflin &amp; Co.)</p>
+
+<p>(The illustrations in this story are copied from the original pictures in
+Mr. B.J. Lossing's &quot;Mt. Vernon and its Associations,&quot; by permission of
+Messrs. J.C. Yorston &amp; Co., Cincinnati, Ohio.)</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_2" id="Footnote_1_2" /><a href="#FNanchor_1_2"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> From B.J. Lossing's &quot;The Home of Washington.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Longfellows_Birthday" id="Longfellows_Birthday" />Longfellow's Birthday</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>February 27</i></strong></p>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW</strong></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>Born February 27, 1807&nbsp;&nbsp;Died March 24, 1882</strong></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p>Longfellow graduated at Bowdoin College in 1825; traveled in Europe in
+1826; was professor at Bowdoin in 1829-35; again visited Europe 1835-36;
+and was professor at Harvard College 1836-54. He continued to reside at
+Cambridge. He is best known and loved for his poems, though he wrote
+three novels.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="LongChild" id="LongChild" />LONGFELLOW AND THE CHILDREN</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY LUCY LARCOM</p>
+
+<p>The poets who love children are the poets whom children love. It is
+natural that they should care much for each other, because both children
+and poets look into things in the same way,&mdash;simply, with open eyes and
+hearts, seeing Nature as it is, and finding whatever is lovable and pure
+in the people who surround them, as flowers may receive back from
+flowers sweet odors for those which they have given. The little child is
+born with a poet's heart in him, and the poet has been fitly called &quot;the
+eternal child.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Not that all children or all poets are alike in this. But of Longfellow
+we think as of one who has always been fresh and natural in his sympathy
+for children, one who has loved them as they have loved him.</p>
+
+<p>We wish he had given us more of the memories of his own childhood. One
+vivid picture of it comes to us in &quot;My Lost Youth,&quot; a poem which shows
+us how everything he saw when a child must have left within him a
+life-long impression. That boyhood by the sea must have been full of
+dreams as well as of pictures. The beautiful bay with its green islands,
+widening out to the Atlantic on the east, and the dim chain of
+mountains, the highest in New England, lying far away on the
+northwestern horizon, give his native city a roomy feeling not often
+experienced in the streets of a town; and the boy-poet must have felt
+his imagination taking wings there, for many a long flight. So he more
+than hints to us in his song:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&quot;I can see the shadowy lines of its trees,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And catch, in sudden gleams,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The sheen of the far-surrounding seas,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And islands that were the Hesperides<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of all my boyish dreams.<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the burden of that old song,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It murmurs and whispers still:<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'A boy's will is the wind's will,<br />
+ &nbsp;And the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts.'<br />
+ <br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&quot;I remember the black wharves and the slips,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the sea-tides tossing free;<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And Spanish sailors with bearded lips,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the beauty and mystery of the ships,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the magic of the sea.<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the voice of that wayward song<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is singing and saying still:<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'A boy's will is the wind's will,<br />
+ &nbsp;And the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts.'&quot;<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p>Longfellow's earliest volume, &quot;The Voices of the Night,&quot; was one of the
+few books of American poetry that some of us who are now growing old
+ourselves can remember reading, just as we were emerging from childhood.
+&quot;The Reaper and the Flowers&quot; and the &quot;Psalm of Life,&quot;&mdash;I recall the
+delight with which I used to repeat those poems. The latter, so full of
+suggestions which a very young person could feel, but only half
+understand, was for that very reason the more fascinating. It seemed to
+give glimpses, through opening doors, of that wonderful new world of
+mankind, where children are always longing to wander freely as men and
+women. Looking forward and aspiring are among the first occupations of
+an imaginative child; and the school-boy who declaimed the words:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &quot;Lives of great men all remind us<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We can make our lives sublime,&quot;<br />
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<p>and the school-girl who read them quietly by herself, felt them,
+perhaps, no less keenly than the man of thought and experience.</p>
+
+<p>Longfellow has said that&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&quot;Sublimity always is simple<br />
+ Both in sermon and song, a child can seize on its meaning,&quot;<br />
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<p>and the simplicity of his poetry is the reason why children and young
+people have always loved it; the reason, also, why it has been enjoyed
+by men and women and children all over the world.</p>
+
+<p>One of his poems which has been the delight of children and grown people
+alike is the &quot;Village Blacksmith,&quot; the first half of which is a
+description that many a boy might feel as if he could have written
+himself&mdash;if he only had the poet's command of words and rhymes, and the
+poet's genius! Is not this one of the proofs of a good poem, that it
+haunts us until it seems as if it had almost grown out of our own mind?
+How life-like the picture is!&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&quot;And children coming home from school<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Look in at the open door;<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They love to see the flaming forge,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And hear the bellows roar,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And catch the burning sparks that fly<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Like chaff from a threshing-floor.&quot;<br />
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<p>No wonder the Cambridge children, when the old chestnut-tree that
+overhung the smithy was cut down, had a memento shaped into a chair
+from its boughs, to present to him who had made it an immortal tree in
+his verse! It bore flower and fruit for them a second time in his
+acknowledgment of the gift; for he told them how&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&quot;There, by the blacksmith's forge, beside the street<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Its blossoms, white and sweet,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Enticed the bees, until it seemed alive,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And murmured like a hive.<br />
+ <br />
+ &nbsp;&quot;And when the wind of autumn, with a shout<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Tossed its great arms about,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The shining chestnuts, bursting from the sheath,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dropped to the ground beneath.&quot;<br />
+
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<p>In its own wild, winsome way, the song of &quot;Hiawatha's Childhood&quot; is one
+of the prettiest fancies in poetry. It is a dream of babyhood in the
+&quot;forest primeval,&quot; with Nature for nurse and teacher; and it makes us
+feel as if&mdash;were the poet's idea only a possibility&mdash;it might have been
+very pleasant to be a savage baby, although we consider it so much
+better to be civilized.</p>
+
+<p>How Longfellow loved the very little ones can be seen in such verses as
+the &quot;Hanging of the Crane,&quot; and in those earlier lines &quot;To a Child,&quot;
+where the baby on his mother's knee gazes at the painted tiles, shakes
+his &quot;coral rattle with the silver bells,&quot; or escapes through the open
+door into the old halls where once</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &quot;The Father of his country dwelt.&quot;<br />
+
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<p>Those verses give us a charming glimpse of the home-life in the historic
+mansion which is now so rich with poetic, as well as patriotic
+associations.</p>
+
+<p>How beautiful it was to be let in to that twilight library scene
+described in the &quot;Children's Hour&quot;:</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+&nbsp;&quot;A sudden rush from the stair-way,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A sudden raid from the hall!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By three doors left unguarded,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They enter my castle wall!<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&quot;They climb up into my turret,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O'er the arms and back of my chair;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If I try to escape, they surround me;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They seem to be everywhere.&quot;<br />
+
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<p>Afterward, when sorrow and loss had come to the happy home, in the
+sudden removal of the mother of those merry children, the father who
+loved them so had a sadder song for them, as he looked onward into their
+orphaned lives:</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&quot;O little feet, that such long years<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Must wander on, through hopes and fears,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Must ache and bleed beneath your load,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I, nearer to the wayside inn,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where toil shall cease, and rest begin,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Am weary, thinking of your road!&quot;<br />
+
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+
+<br />
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh25.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh25.jpg" width="45%" alt="LONGFELLOW'S HOUSE&mdash;ONCE WASHINGTON'S HEADQUARTERS AT CAMBRIDGE" title="LONGFELLOW'S HOUSE&mdash;ONCE WASHINGTON'S HEADQUARTERS AT CAMBRIDGE" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">LONGFELLOW'S HOUSE&mdash;ONCE WASHINGTON'S HEADQUARTERS AT CAMBRIDGE</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Longfellow loved all children, and had a word for them whenever he met
+them.</p>
+
+<p>At a concert, going early with her father, a little girl espied Mr.
+Longfellow sitting alone, and begged that she might go and speak to him.
+Her father, himself a stranger, took the liberty of introducing his
+little daughter Edith to the poet.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Edith?&quot; said Mr. Longfellow, tenderly. &quot;Ah! I have an Edith, too; but
+<i>my</i> baby Edith is twenty years old.&quot; And he seated the child beside
+him, taking her hand in his, and making her promise to come and see him
+at his house in Cambridge.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is the name of your sled, my boy?&quot; he said to a small lad, who
+came tugging one up the road toward him, on a winter morning.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's 'Evange<i>line</i>.' Mr. Longfellow wrote 'Evange<i>line</i>.' Did you ever
+see Mr. Longfellow?&quot; answered the little fellow, as he ran by, doubtless
+wondering at the smile on the face of the pleasant gray-haired
+gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>Professor Monti, who witnessed the pretty scene, tells the story of a
+little girl who one Christmas inquired the way to the poet's house, and
+asked if she could just step inside the yard; and he relates how Mr.
+Longfellow, being told she was there, went to the door and called her
+in, and showed her the &quot;old clock on the stairs,&quot; and many other
+interesting things about the house, leaving his little guest with
+beautiful memories of that Christmas day to carry all through her life.
+This was characteristic of the poet's hospitality, delicate and
+courteous and thoughtful to all who crossed his threshold. Many a
+trembling young girl, frightened at her own boldness in having ventured
+into his presence, was set at ease by her host in the most genial way;
+he would make her forget herself in the interesting mementos all about
+her, devoting himself to her entertainment as if it were the one
+pleasure of the hour for him to do so.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh26.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh26.jpg" width="40%" alt="HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW" title="HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It is often said, and with reason, that we Americans do not think enough
+of manners&mdash;that politeness of behavior which comes from genuine
+sympathy and a delicate perception of others' feelings. Certainly our
+young people might look to Mr. Longfellow as a model in this respect. He
+was a perfect gentleman, in the best sense of that term, always
+considerate, and quick to see where he might do a kindness, or say a
+pleasant word.</p>
+
+<p>The celebration of Longfellow's seventy-fifth birthday by
+school-children all over the country is something that those children
+must be glad to think of now&mdash;glad to remember that the poet knew how
+much they cared for him and for what he had written. Even the blind
+children, who have to read with their fingers, were enjoying his songs
+with the rest. How pleasant that must have been to him! Certainly, as it
+seems to me, the best tribute that the young people of the country can
+pay to his memory is to become more familiar with his poems.</p>
+
+<p>We should not wait until a great and good man has left us before giving
+him honor, or trying to understand what he has done for us. A dreary
+world ours would be, if there were no poets' songs echoing through it;
+and we may be proud of our country that it has a poetry of its own,
+which it is for us to know and possess for ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>Longfellow has said:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+&nbsp;&quot;What the leaves are to the forest<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With light and air and food,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Ere their sweet and tender juices<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Have been hardened into wood,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;That to the world, are children&quot;:<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p>and something like this we may say of his songs. There is in all true
+poetry a freshness of life which makes the writer of it immortal.</p>
+
+<p>The singer so much beloved has passed from sight, but the music of his
+voice is in the air, and, listening to it, we know that he can not die.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh27.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh27.jpg" width="45%" alt="Somewhat back from the village street" title="Somewhat back from the village street" /></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Inauguration_Day" id="Inauguration_Day" />Inauguration Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>March 4</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The date was settled by the old Congress of the Confederation in 1788,
+when the procedure was established for the election of a President. It
+was decreed that the Electoral College should meet on the first
+Wednesday of January, the votes be counted by the House of
+Representatives on the first Wednesday of February, and the President be
+inaugurated on the first Wednesday of March. This March date was the
+4th. March 4 has been Inauguration Day ever since.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="HowPresInaug" id="HowPresInaug" />HOW A PRESIDENT IS INAUGURATED</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY CLIFFORD HOWARD</p>
+
+<p>As you will remember, Thomas Jefferson was the first President of our
+country to be inaugurated at Washington. This took place in the year
+1801, when our national capital was not much more than a year old; and
+you may imagine that the city was a very different-looking place from
+what it is to-day.</p>
+
+<p>But now instead of a straggling town with a few muddy streets and about
+three thousand inhabitants, Jefferson would find our national capital
+one of the most beautiful cities on the face of the earth, with a
+population of nearly three hundred thousand; and on March 4 he would
+behold a scene such as he never dreamed of. Thousands of flags fly from
+the house-tops and windows, bright-colored bunting in beautiful designs
+adorns the great public buildings, all the stores and business houses
+are gaily decorated with flags and streamers, and everything presents
+the appearance of a great and glorious holiday, while the streets swarm
+with the hundreds of thousands of people who have come to the city from
+all parts of the country to take part in the grand celebration.</p>
+
+<p>Everybody is moving toward Pennsylvania Avenue, where the parade is to
+march. No, not everybody: some fifty or sixty thousand make their way to
+the Capitol, so as to get a glimpse of the inauguration exercises that
+take place on the east portico; and although the ceremonies will not
+begin until nearly one o'clock, the great space in front of the Capitol
+is packed with people three hours before that time, some of them having
+come as early as eight o'clock in the morning to be sure of getting a
+good view.</p>
+
+<p>Early in the morning Pennsylvania Avenue is cleared of all street-cars,
+carriages, and bicycles, and no one is allowed to step off the sidewalk.
+A strong wire rope is stretched along each side of the avenue, so as to
+prevent people from getting into the street.</p>
+
+<p>Soon every window and balcony along the line is crowded with spectators.
+Even the roofs are black with people, and small boys may be seen
+perched among the branches of the trees, or hanging on to the
+electric-light poles. For a distance of nearly three miles, on each side
+of the street, people are packed so closely together that it is almost
+impossible for them to move. In every park and open space along the line
+large wooden stands have been erected; and these, too, are filled with
+those who are willing to pay for seats.</p>
+
+<p>As the time for the morning parade draws near, the crowds become
+restless with eagerness and excitement. Policemen on horseback dash up
+and down the avenue to see that the road is clear, and every now and
+then a trooper or messenger in bright uniform gallops past. Suddenly the
+boom of a cannon is heard. The next moment there comes the distant roll
+of drums, and then, amid the inspiring music of brass bands and
+tremendous cheering, the procession appears moving slowly down the
+avenue on its way to the Capitol. Riding ahead is a squad of mounted
+police&mdash;big, brawny fellows, with glittering brass buttons. After them
+come the United States troops and naval forces, armed with their rifles
+and sabers that flash in the sunlight, and marching to the music of the
+famous Marine Band, while rumbling over the hard, smooth pavement of
+the avenue come the big cannons drawn by powerful horses. Then appears
+the chief marshal of the parade on his spirited horse, heading the
+body-guard of soldiers that surround the open carriage containing the
+President and the President-elect, sitting side by side. As the
+carriage, which is drawn by four handsome horses, rolls slowly along
+with its distinguished occupants, men and boys shout and cheer at the
+top of their lungs, and throw their hats into the air when their voices
+give out, while the women and girls wave their handkerchiefs and hurrah
+with the rest of the crowd. With hat in hand, the President-elect smiles
+and bows to the right and the left; and with the bands playing and
+people cheering, handkerchiefs fluttering and flags flying, he arrives
+at the Capitol a few minutes before noon. Here he meets with another
+rousing reception from the great mass of people who have been waiting
+for him for two or three hours; and it requires all the efforts of a
+small army of police to open the way for him and his party to pass into
+the Capitol.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh28.jpg">
+<img src="./images/stnichoh28.jpg" width="40%"
+ alt="GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON ON THE WAY TO HIS INAUGURATION"
+ title="GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON ON THE WAY TO HIS INAUGURATION" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON ON THE WAY TO HIS INAUGURATION</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The House of Representatives is about to adjourn, and many of its
+members have already come over to the Senate to witness the closing
+exercises there. Extra chairs and seats have been brought in for them
+and the many other prominent officials who also have gathered there,
+including the officers of the army and the navy, the justices of the
+Supreme Court, the cabinet officers, and the foreign ambassadors and
+ministers, many of whom are dressed in their gorgeous state robes.
+According to law, Congress must come to an end at noon; but if the
+presidential party has not made its appearance when the Senate clock is
+about to point to twelve, the hands are moved back a few minutes so as
+to gain time. And before the hands are allowed to get around to twelve,
+everybody has arrived, everything is in readiness, and the President of
+the Senate has administered the oath of office to his successor, the new
+Vice-President of the United States, who at once calls an extra session
+of the Senate, so that not a moment elapses between the death of one
+session and the birth of another. Then, after a short prayer by the
+chaplain and a brief address by the Vice-President, the distinguished
+people gathered in the Senate form in line, and, headed by a company of
+newspaper reporters, they march in dignified procession to the rotunda,
+and thence to the platform on the east front of the Capitol.</p>
+
+<p>The nine justices of the Supreme Court, clothed in their black robes,
+walk out on the platform first, followed by the President-elect. As soon
+as the crowd catches sight of him, a deafening shout breaks forth from
+fifty thousand throats, and, amid the enthusiastic uproar that lasts
+several minutes, hats and canes, umbrellas and handkerchiefs, are waved
+aloft or thrown wildly into the air by joyous and patriotic Americans.
+Removing his hat, the President-elect comes forward, and, turning to the
+Chief Justice of the United States, takes the oath of office as required
+by the Constitution. Then comes the inaugural address, which, of course,
+only those near the platform are able to hear. But the thirty or forty
+thousand who can't hear the speech are willing to agree with everything
+that is said, and every little while they shout and cheer and applaud.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh29.jpg">
+<img src="./images/stnichoh29.jpg" width="40%" alt="THE INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT GARFIELD" title="THE INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT GARFIELD" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">THE INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT GARFIELD</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>All this time the crowd on the avenue has been patiently waiting for the
+return of the President. The morning's procession was nothing more than
+a military escort; now is to come the great feature of the day&mdash;the
+grand inauguration parade. The ceremonies at the Capitol are over at
+half-past one, and the new President goes at once to the White House,
+greeted with rousing cheers all along the way, and prepares to review
+the greatest parade ever seen in the city of Washington. All the
+morning, companies of soldiers, political clubs, bands, and drum corps
+have been preparing for the afternoon's march. There are so many
+thousands who are going to take part in the parade that orders have been
+given requiring all companies to march in ranks reaching from curb to
+curb, a distance of one hundred and thirty feet, and to follow one
+another as closely as possible.</p>
+
+<p>The march is begun a little before two o'clock; and, although the people
+have been standing on the sidewalks since early morning, they have
+plenty of enthusiasm left, and they fill the air with their shouts and
+hurrahs as regiment after regiment of magnificently drilled soldiers and
+horses marches by.</p>
+
+<p>Even after the electric lamps are lighted, men and horses are still
+tramping along the avenue, and people are still shouting and the bands
+playing and flags waving. And all this time the President stands in
+front of the White House, reviewing the marching thousands as they pass
+along.</p>
+
+<p>But although the big parade finally comes to an end, the festivities are
+not yet over. Late into the night the city is brilliantly illuminated
+by magnificent and wonderful fireworks and powerful electric
+search-lights that shine from the tops of the tall buildings and light
+up the great dome of the Capitol and the Washington monument. Then comes
+the grand inaugural ball. There are over ten thousand people present,
+and the scene is a glorious and wonderful sight.</p>
+
+<p>It is almost sunrise when the last carriage rolls away, and with the
+closing of the ball the inauguration festivities end.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Easter_Day" id="Easter_Day" />Easter Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center">Easter is the Sunday that follows the 14th day of the calendar<br />
+moon, which falls upon or next after the 21st of March.</p>
+
+<p>This Sunday, when Christian churches celebrate the resurrection of Christ,
+is one of solemn rejoicing. Coming after the self-denials of Lent and at the
+beginning of spring, it seems naturally a time of hope and new life. It
+is the feast of flowers, particularly of lilies, and the name had its
+origin in a festival in honor of the goddess of spring. The esteem in
+which it is held is indicated by its ancient title, &quot;The great day.&quot;</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="SongEaster" id="SongEaster" />A SONG OF EASTER</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY CELIA THAXTER</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: A SONG OF EASTER">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sing, children, sing!<br />
+And the lily censers swing;<br />
+Sing that life and joy are waking and that Death no more is king.<br />
+Sing the happy, happy tumult of the slowly brightening Spring;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sing, little children, sing!<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sing, children, sing!<br />
+Winter wild has taken wing.<br />
+Fill the air with the sweet tidings till the frosty echoes ring!<br />
+Along the eaves the icicles no longer glittering cling;<br />
+And the crocus in the garden lifts its bright face to the sun,<br />
+And in the meadows softly the brooks begin to run;<br />
+And the golden catkins swing<br />
+In the warm airs of the Spring;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sing, little children, sing!<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sing, children, sing!<br />
+The lilies white you bring<br />
+In the joyous Easter morning for hope are blossoming;<br />
+And as the earth her shroud of snow from off her breast doth fling,<br />
+So may we cast our fetters off in God's eternal Spring.<br />
+So may we find release at last from sorrow and from pain,<br />
+So may we find our childhood's calm, delicious dawn again.<br />
+Sweet are your eyes, O little ones, that look with smiling grace,<br />
+Without a shade of doubt or fear into the Future's face!<br />
+Sing, sing in happy chorus, with joyful voices tell<br />
+That death is life, and God is good, and all things shall be well;<br />
+That bitter days shall cease<br />
+In warmth and light and peace,&mdash;<br />
+That Winter yields to Spring,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sing, little children, sing!<br />
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<br />
+
+</div>
+
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh30.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh30.jpg" width="40%" alt="&quot;HE SAT DOWN ON THE STEP, BREATHLESS WITH SURPRISE AND JOY&quot;" title="&quot;HE SAT DOWN ON THE STEP, BREATHLESS WITH SURPRISE AND JOY&quot;" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">&quot;HE SAT DOWN ON THE STEP, BREATHLESS WITH SURPRISE AND JOY&quot;</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div>
+<br />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<h3><a name="GenEaster" id="GenEaster" />THE GENERAL'S EASTER BOX</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY TEMPLE BAILEY</p>
+
+<p>The General did not look at all as one would expect a general to look.
+He was short and thick-set and had a red face and a white mustache, and
+he usually dressed in a gray tweed suit, with a funny Norfolk jacket
+with a belt, and wore a soft cap pulled down almost to his eye-glasses.</p>
+
+<p>And he always did his own marketing.</p>
+
+<p>That is how he came to know Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy stood at a corner of Old Market and sold little bundles of dried
+sage and sweet marjoram, and sassafras and cinnamon, and soup-bunches
+made of bits of vegetables tied together&mdash;a bit of parsley and a bit of
+celery and a bit of carrot and a sprig of summer savory, all for one
+cent. Then at Christmas-time he displayed wreaths, which he and his
+little mother made at home, and as the spring came on he brought wild
+flowers that he picked in the woods.</p>
+
+<p>And that was how he came to know the General.</p>
+
+<p>For one morning, just before Easter, the General came puffing down the
+outside aisle of Old Market, with his colored man behind him with an
+enormous basket. The General's carriage was drawn up to the curbstone,
+and the gray horses were dancing little fancy dances over the asphalt
+street, when all at once Jimmy thrust a bunch of arbutus under the
+General's very nose.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Go away, go away,&quot; said the General, and trotted down to the carriage
+door, which a footman held open for him.</p>
+
+<p>But a whiff of fragrance had reached him, and he stopped.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How much?&quot; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Three cents,&quot; said Jimmy, in a hoarse voice.</p>
+
+<p>The General looked at the little fellow through his eye-glasses.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Got a cold?&quot; he inquired gruffly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir,&quot; croaked Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why don't you stay in the house, then?&quot; growled the General.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Can't, sir,&quot; said Jimmy, cheerfully; &quot;business is business.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The General looked at the little stand where &quot;business&quot; was
+transacted&mdash;at the little rows of dried stuffs, at the small basket of
+flowers, and at the soup-bunches.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Humph,&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>Then his hand went down into his pocket, and he pulled out a lot of
+change. After that he chose two bunches of sweet, pinky blossoms.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Two for five, sir,&quot; said Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hum,&quot; said the General. &quot;You might give me some parsley and a
+soup-bunch.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy wrapped up the green stuff carefully and dropped it into the
+basket carried by the colored man.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nine cents, sir,&quot; he said; and the General handed him a dime and then
+moved to the next stall, holding the flowers close to his nose.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You forgot your change,&quot; cried Jimmy, and rushed after him with the one
+cent.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Keep&mdash;&quot; But one look at the honest little face and he changed his
+sentence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you, young man,&quot; he said, and away he drove.</p>
+
+<p>After that Jimmy looked for the General, and the General for Jimmy.
+Their transactions were always carried on in a strictly business manner,
+although, to be sure, the General's modest family of two did not
+require the unlimited sage and sweet marjoram that were ordered from
+time to time.</p>
+
+<p>On the Saturday before Easter the little stand was gay with new wares.
+In little nests of dried grasses lay eggs&mdash;Easter eggs, bright pink and
+blue and purple and mottled. Jimmy had invested in a dozen at forty
+cents the dozen, and he had hopes of doubling the money, for work surely
+counted for something, and he and the Little Mother had dyed them.</p>
+
+<p>But somehow people passed them by. Inside of the market there were finer
+nests, and eggs gilded and lettered, and Jimmy began to feel that his
+own precious eggs were very dull indeed.</p>
+
+<p>But when the General appeared around the corner, the boy's spirits rose.
+Here, at any rate, was a good customer.</p>
+
+<p>The General, however, was in a temper. There had been an argument with
+the fish-man which had left him red in the face and very touchy. So he
+bought two bunches of arbutus and nothing else.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Any eggs, sir?&quot; asked Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Eggs?&quot; said the General, looking over the little stand.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Easter eggs,&quot; explained Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I've no use for such things,&quot; said the General.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh!&quot; said Jimmy, and in spite of himself his voice trembled. When one
+is the man of the family, and the Little Mother is sewing for dear life,
+and her work and the little stand in the market are all that pay the
+rent and buy food, it is sometimes hard to be brave. But the General did
+not notice the tremble.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy tried again:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Any children, sir? Children always like Easter eggs, you know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; said the General; &quot;no one but a son in the Philippines&mdash;a son some
+six feet two in his stockings.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Any grandchildren, sir?&quot; hopefully.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bless my soul,&quot; said the General, testily, &quot;what a lot of questions!&quot;
+And he hurried off to his carriage.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy felt very forlorn. The General had been his last hope. The eggs
+were a dead loss.</p>
+
+<p>At last it came time to close up, and he piled all of his wares in a
+basket. Then he took out a little broom and began to sweep in an orderly
+way around his little stall. He had a battered old dustpan, and as he
+carried it out to the street to empty it, he saw a stiff greenish-gray
+paper sticking out of the dirt. Nothing in the world ever looks exactly
+like that but an American greenback, and, sure enough, when Jimmy pulled
+it out it proved to be a ten-dollar bill.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy sat down on the curb suddenly. His money always came in pennies
+and nickels and dimes and quarters. The Little Mother sometimes earned a
+dollar at a time, but never in his whole life had Jimmy possessed a
+ten-dollar bill.</p>
+
+<p>Think of the possibilities to a little, poor, cold, worried boy. There
+was two months' rent in that ten-dollar bill&mdash;two months in which he
+would not have to worry over whether there would be a roof over their
+heads.</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a basket stall in that ten-dollar bill. That had always
+been his ambition. Some one had told him that baskets sold well in other
+cities, and not a single person had opened a basket stall in Old Market,
+and that was Jimmy's chance. Once established, he knew he could earn a
+good living.</p>
+
+<p>As for ten dollars' worth of groceries and provisions, Jimmy's mind
+could not grasp such a thing; fifty cents had always been the top limit
+for a grocery bill.</p>
+
+<p>But&mdash;it wasn't Jimmy's ten dollars. Like a flash his dreams tumbled to
+the ground. There had been many people coming and going through Old
+Market, but Jimmy knew that the bill was the General's. For the old
+gentleman had pulled out a roll when he reached for the five cents. Yes,
+it was the General's; but how to find the General?</p>
+
+<p>Inside the market he found the General's butcher. Yes, the butcher knew
+the General's address, for he was one of his best customers, and would
+keep Jimmy's basket while the boy went to the house.</p>
+
+<p>It was a long distance. Jimmy passed rows of great stone mansions, and
+went through parks, where crocuses and hyacinths were just peeping out.</p>
+
+<p>At last he came to the General's.</p>
+
+<p>A colored man answered the ring of the bell.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who shall I say?&quot; he inquired loftily. &quot;The General is very busy,
+y'know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Say Jimmy, from the market, please&quot;; and Jimmy sat down on the great
+hall seat, feeling very much awed with all the magnificence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, well,&quot; said the General, as he came puffing down the stairs.
+&quot;Well, well, and what do you want?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Please, sir, did you drop this?&quot; and Jimmy held out the tightly rolled
+bill.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did I? Well, now, I'm sure I don't know. Perhaps I did, perhaps I did.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I found it in front of my stall,&quot; said Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>What a strange thing it seemed that the General should not know! Jimmy
+would have known if he had lost a penny. He began to feel that the
+General could not have a true idea of <i>business</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The General took out a roll of bills. &quot;Let me see,&quot; he said. &quot;Here's my
+market list. Yes, I guess that's mine, sure enough.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm glad I noticed it,&quot; said Jimmy, simply. &quot;I came near sweeping it
+into the street.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And what can I pay you for your trouble?&quot; asked the General, looking at
+the boy keenly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; said Jimmy, stoutly, &quot;you see, business is business, and I had
+to take my time, and I'd like to get back as soon as I can.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The General frowned. He was afraid he was going to be disappointed in
+this boy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And so,&quot; went on Jimmy, &quot;if you would give me a nickel for car-fare, I
+think we might call it square.&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh31.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh31.jpg" width="50%" alt="&quot;THEN THE GENERAL, WITH KNIFE UPRAISED, STOPPED IN HIS CARVING OF THE COLD ROAST CHICKEN, AND TURNED TO JIMMY&quot;" title="&quot;THEN THE GENERAL, WITH KNIFE UPRAISED, STOPPED IN HIS CARVING OF THE COLD ROAST CHICKEN, AND TURNED TO JIMMY&quot;" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">&quot;THEN THE GENERAL, WITH KNIFE UPRAISED, STOPPED IN HIS CARVING OF THE COLD ROAST CHICKEN, <br />
+ AND TURNED TO JIMMY&quot;</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The General fumbled around for his eye-glasses, put them on, and looked
+at Jimmy in astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A nickel?&quot; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir&quot;; Jimmy blushed. &quot;You know I ought to get back.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, well,&quot; said the General. The boy had certainly the instincts of a
+gentleman. Not a single plea of poverty, and yet one could see that he
+was poor, very poor.</p>
+
+<p>Just then a gong struck softly somewhere. &quot;I'm not going to let you go
+until you have a bit of lunch with us,&quot; said the General. &quot;I have told
+my wife of Jimmy of the market, and now I want you to meet her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So Jimmy went down into a wonderful dining-room, where the silver and
+the cut glass shone, and where at the farther side of the table was the
+sweetest little old lady, who came and shook hands with him.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy had never before eaten lunch where the soup was served in little
+cups, but the General's wife put him at his ease when she told him that
+his very own soup-bunches were in that soup, and if he didn't eat plenty
+of it he wouldn't be advertising his wares. Then the General, with knife
+upraised, stopped in his carving of the cold roast chicken, and turned
+to Jimmy with a smile of approval in his genial face, and said that it
+was his sage, too, that was in the chicken dressing.</p>
+
+<p>They made Jimmy talk, and finally he told them of his ambition for a
+basket stall.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And when do you expect to get it?&quot; asked the General, with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When I get the goose that lays the golden egg, I am afraid, sir,&quot; said
+Jimmy, a little sadly.</p>
+
+<p>Then the General's wife asked questions, and Jimmy told her about the
+Little Mother, and of their life together; but not one word did he tell
+of their urgent need, for Jimmy had not learned to beg.</p>
+
+<p>At last the wonderful lunch was over, somewhat to Jimmy's relief, it
+must be confessed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall come and see your mother, Jimmy,&quot; said the General's wife, as
+Jimmy left her.</p>
+
+<p>Out in the hall the General handed the boy a nickel. &quot;Business is
+business, young man,&quot; he said, with a twinkle in his eye.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>That night Jimmy and his mother sat up very late, for the boy had so
+much to tell.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you think I was wrong to ask for the nickel, Mother?&quot; he asked
+anxiously, when he had finished.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; said his mother; &quot;but I am glad you didn't ask for more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then, after Jimmy had gone to bed, the mother sat up for a long time,
+wondering how the rent was to be paid.</p>
+
+<p>On Easter Monday morning Jimmy and the Little Mother started out to pick
+the arbutus and the early violets which Jimmy was to sell Tuesday at his
+little stall.</p>
+
+<p>It was a sunshiny morning. The broad road was hard and white after the
+April showers, the sky was blue, and the air was sweet with the breath
+of bursting buds. And, in spite of cares, Jimmy and his mother had a
+very happy time as they filled their baskets.</p>
+
+<p>At last they sat down to tie up the bunches. Carriage after carriage
+passed them. As the last bunch of flowers was laid in Jimmy's basket, a
+victoria drawn by a pair of grays stopped in front of the
+flower-gatherers.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, well,&quot; said a hearty voice, and there were the General and his
+wife! They had called for Jimmy and his mother, they said, and had been
+directed to the wooded hill.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Get in, get in,&quot; commanded the General; and, in spite of the Little
+Mother's hesitancy and timid protests, she was helped up beside the
+General's wife by the footman, while Jimmy hopped in beside the General,
+and away they went over the hard white road.</p>
+
+<p>The General was in a gay mood.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, my boy, have you found your golden egg?&quot; he asked Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, sir,&quot; said Jimmy, gravely; &quot;not yet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Too bad, too bad,&quot; said the old gentleman, while he shifted a white box
+that was on the seat between himself and Jimmy to the other side.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You're quite sure, are you, that you could only get it from a goose?&quot;
+he asked later.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Get what, sir?&quot; said Jimmy, whose eyes were on the gay crowds that
+thronged the sidewalks.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The egg,&quot; said the General.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh&mdash;yes, sir,&quot; replied Jimmy, with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>The General leaned back and laughed and laughed until he was red in the
+face; but Jimmy could see nothing to laugh at, so he merely smiled
+politely, and wondered what the joke was.</p>
+
+<p>At last they reached Jimmy's home, and the General helped the Little
+Mother out. As he did so he handed her a white box. Jimmy was busy
+watching the gray horses, and saw nothing else.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;For the boy,&quot; whispered the General.</p>
+
+<p>The Little Mother shook her head doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bless you, madam,&quot; cried the General, testily, &quot;I have a boy of my
+own&mdash;if he <i>is</i> six feet two in his stockings.&quot; Then, in a softer tone,
+&quot;I beg of you to take it, madam; it will please an old man and give the
+boy a start.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So when good-by had been said, and Jimmy stood looking after the
+carriage and the prancing grays, the Little Mother put the white box in
+his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy opened it, and there on a nest of white cotton was an egg. But it
+was different from any of the eggs that Jimmy had sold on Saturday. It
+was large and gilded, and around the middle was a yellow ribbon.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy lifted it out, and found it very heavy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What do you think it is?&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Untie the ribbon,&quot; advised his mother, whose quick eyes saw a faint
+line which showed an opening.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy pulled the yellow ribbon, the upper half of the egg opened on a
+hinge, and there were glistening gold coins&mdash;five-dollar gold pieces.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh!&quot; said Jimmy, and he sat down on the step, breathless with surprise
+and joy.</p>
+
+<p>A slip of white paper lay between two of the coins. Jimmy snatched it
+out, and this is what he read:</p>
+
+<div>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Please accept the contents of the golden egg, with the best wishes</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">of</span> <span style="margin-left: 15.5em;" class="smcap">The Goose.</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Arbor_Day" id="Arbor_Day" />Arbor Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>No uniform date in the different States</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Arbor Day is a designated day upon which the people and especially the
+school children plant trees and shrubs along the highways and other
+suitable places. It was first observed in Nebraska. The State board of
+agriculture offered prizes for the counties and persons planting the
+largest number of trees, and it is said that more than a million trees
+were planted the first year, while within sixteen years over 350,000,000
+trees and vines were planted in the State.</p>
+
+<p>This custom, so beautiful and useful, spread rapidly, and now is
+recognized by the statutes of many of the States.</p>
+
+<p>The exact date naturally varies with the climate.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="PlantApple" id="PlantApple" />THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE-TREE</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE-TREE">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Come, let us plant the apple-tree,<br />
+Cleave the tough greensward with the spade;<br />
+Wide let its hollow bed be made;<br />
+There gently lay the roots, and there<br />
+Sift the dark mold with kindly care,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And press it o'er them tenderly;<br />
+As 'round the sleeping infant's feet<br />
+We softly fold the cradle-sheet,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;So plant we the apple-tree.<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What plant we in this apple-tree?<br />
+Buds, which the breath of summer days<br />
+Shall lengthen into leafy sprays;<br />
+Boughs, where the thrush, with crimson breast,<br />
+Shall hunt and sing, and hide her nest;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We plant upon the sunny lea<br />
+A shadow for the noontide hour,<br />
+A shelter from the summer shower,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When we plant the apple-tree.<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What plant we in this apple-tree?<br />
+Sweets for a hundred flowery springs<br />
+To load the May-wind's restless wings,<br />
+When, from the orchard-row, he pours<br />
+Its fragrance through our open doors;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A world of blossoms for the bee,<br />
+Flowers for the sick girl's silent room,<br />
+For the glad infant sprigs of bloom,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We plant with the apple-tree.<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What plant we in this apple-tree?<br />
+Fruits that shall swell in sunny June,<br />
+And redden in the August noon,<br />
+And drop, when gentle airs come by,<br />
+That fan the blue September sky;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;While children come, with cries of glee,<br />
+And seek them where the fragrant grass<br />
+Betrays their bed to those who pass,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At the foot of the apple-tree.<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And when, above this apple-tree,<br />
+The winter stars are glittering bright,<br />
+And winds go howling through the night,<br />
+Girls whose young eyes o'erflow with mirth<br />
+Shall peel its fruit by cottage-hearth,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And guests in prouder homes shall see,<br />
+Heaped with the grape of Cintra's vine,<br />
+And golden orange of the line,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The fruit of the apple-tree.<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh32.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh32.jpg" width="40%" alt="Arbour Day" title="Arbour Day" /></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE-TREE">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The fruitage of this apple-tree,<br />
+Winds and our flag of stripe and star<br />
+Shall bear to coasts that lie afar,<br />
+Where men shall wonder at the view,<br />
+And ask in what fair groves they grew;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And sojourners beyond the sea<br />
+Shall think of childhood's careless day,<br />
+And long, long hours of summer play,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In the shade of the apple-tree.<br />
+<br />
+
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Each year shall give this apple-tree<br />
+A broader flush of roseate bloom,<br />
+A deeper maze of verdurous gloom,<br />
+And loosen, when the frost-clouds lower,<br />
+The crisp brown leaves in thicker shower.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The years shall come and pass, but we<br />
+Shall hear no longer, where we lie,<br />
+The summer's songs, the autumn's sigh,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In the boughs of the apple-tree.<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And time shall waste this apple-tree.<br />
+Oh, when its aged branches throw<br />
+Thin shadows on the ground below,<br />
+Shall fraud and force and iron will<br />
+Oppress the weak and helpless still?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What shall the tasks of mercy be,<br />
+Amid the toils, the strifes, the tears<br />
+Of those who live when length of years<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is wasting this little apple-tree?<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&quot;Who planted this old apple-tree?&quot;<br />
+The children of that distant day<br />
+Thus to some aged man shall say;<br />
+And, gazing on its mossy stem,<br />
+The gray-haired man shall answer them:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&quot;A poet of the land was he,<br />
+Born in the rude but good old times;<br />
+'Tis said he made some quaint old rhymes<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On planting the apple-tree.&quot;<br />
+
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh33.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh33.jpg" width="45%" alt="The Planting of the Apple-Tree" title="The Planting of the Apple-Tree" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="April_Fools_Day" id="April_Fools_Day" />April Fools' Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>April 1</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>So old is the custom of playing amiable and harmless tricks upon the
+first of April that its origin is not definitely known. It is not a
+holiday and not worthy to be one, but it should be good for our sense of
+humor and that is one of the best things we can have. An April fool is
+sometimes called a &quot;Fourth-month Dunce.&quot;</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<h3><a name="FourMonth" id="FourMonth" />FOURTH-MONTH DUNCE</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY H.M.M.</p>
+
+<p>The curious custom of joking on the first of April, sending the ignorant
+or the unwary on fruitless errands, for the sake of making them feel
+foolish and having a laugh at them, prevails very widely in the world.
+And whether you call the victim a &quot;Fourth-month Dunce,&quot; an &quot;April fool,&quot;
+an &quot;April fish&quot; (as in France), or an &quot;April gowk&quot; (as in Scotland), the
+object, to deceive him and laugh at him, is everywhere the same.</p>
+
+<p>The custom has been traced back for ages; all through Europe, as far
+back as the records go. The &quot;Feast of Fools&quot; is mentioned as celebrated
+by the ancient Romans. In Asia the Hindoos have a festival, ending on
+the 31st of March, called the &quot;Huli festival,&quot; in which they play the
+same sort of first of April pranks&mdash;translated into Hindoo,&mdash;laughing at
+the victim, and making him a &quot;Huli fool.&quot; It goes back to Persia, where
+it is supposed to have had a beginning, in very ancient times, in the
+celebration of spring, when their New Year begins.</p>
+
+<p>How it came to be what we everywhere find it, the wise men cannot agree.
+The many authorities are so divided, that I see no way but for us to
+accept the custom as we find it, wherever we may happen to be, and be
+careful not to abuse it.</p>
+
+<p>Some jokes are peculiar to some places. In England, where it is called
+&quot;All Fools' Day,&quot; one favorite joke is to send the greenhorn to a
+bookseller to buy the &quot;Life and Adventures of Eve's Grandmother,&quot; or to
+a cobbler to buy a few cents' worth of &quot;strap oil,&quot;&mdash;strap oil being, in
+the language of the shoe-making brotherhood, a personal application of
+the leather.</p>
+
+<p>But this custom, with others, common in coarser and rougher times, is
+fast dying out. Even now it is left almost entirely to playful children.
+This sentiment, quoted from an English almanac of a hundred years ago,
+will, I'm sure, meet the approval of &quot;grown-ups&quot; of this century:</p>
+
+<div>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&quot;But 't is a thing to be disputed,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Which is the greatest fool reputed,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The one that innocently went,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Or he that him designedly sent.&quot;</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Memorial_Day" id="Memorial_Day" />Memorial Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>May 30</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>It is said that the observance of this day grew originally out of the
+custom of the widows, mothers, and children of the Confederate dead in
+the South strewing the soldiers' graves with flowers, including the
+unmarked graves of the Union soldiers. There was no settled date for
+this in the North until 1868, when General John A. Logan, as
+commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, designated May 30.
+It is now generally observed, and is a legal holiday in most of the
+States.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="BoyGray" id="BoyGray" />THE BOY IN GRAY</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>A Ballad for Memorial Day</i></strong></p>
+
+<p class="center">BY MARY BRADLEY</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: THE BOY IN GRAY">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+Fredericksburg had had her fray,<br />
+And the armies stood at bay;<br />
+Back of wall, and top of hill,<br />
+Union men and men in gray<br />
+Glowered at each other still.<br />
+<br />
+In the space between the two<br />
+Many a hapless boy in blue<br />
+Lay face upward to the skies;<br />
+Many another, just as true,<br />
+Filled the air with frantic cries.<br />
+<br />
+&quot;Love of God!&quot; with pity stirred,<br />
+Cried a rebel lad who heard.<br />
+&quot;This is more than I can bear!<br />
+General, only say the word,<br />
+They shall have some water there.&quot;<br />
+<br />
+&quot;What's the use?&quot; his general,<br />
+Frowning, asked. &quot;A Yankee ball<br />
+Drops you dead, or worse, half way,<br />
+Once you go beyond the wall.&quot;<br />
+&quot;May be!&quot; said the boy in gray.<br />
+<br />
+&quot;Still I'll risk it, if you please.&quot;<br />
+And the senior, ill at ease,<br />
+Nodded, growling under breath,<br />
+&quot;For his mortal enemies<br />
+I have sent the lad to death.&quot;<br />
+<br />
+Then a hotter fire began<br />
+As across the field he ran,&mdash;<br />
+Yankee shooters marked a prey,&mdash;<br />
+But beside each wounded man<br />
+Heedless knelt the boy in gray.<br />
+<br />
+Parched lips hailed him as he came;<br />
+Throats with fever all aflame,<br />
+While the balls were spinning by,<br />
+Drained the cup he offered them,<br />
+Blessed him with their dying cry.<br />
+<br />
+Suddenly, through rain of those<br />
+Pattering shots, a shout uprose;<br />
+Din of voices filled his ears;<br />
+Firing ceased, and eager foes<br />
+Made the welkin ring with cheers.<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh34.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh34.jpg" width="50%" alt="&quot;BUT BESIDE EACH WOUNDED MAN HEEDLESS KNELT THE BOY IN GRAY&quot;" title="&quot;BUT BESIDE EACH WOUNDED MAN HEEDLESS KNELT THE BOY IN GRAY&quot;" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">&quot;BUT BESIDE EACH WOUNDED MAN <br />
+ HEEDLESS KNELT THE BOY IN GRAY&quot;</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<br />
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: THE BOY IN GRAY">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+Foes they were, of bitter need,<br />
+Still to every noble deed<br />
+Hearts of men, thank God, must thrill;<br />
+And we thrill, too, as we read<br />
+Of those cheers on Marye's Hill.<br />
+<br />
+Days of battle long since done,<br />
+Days of peace and blessing won,<br />
+Better is it to forget<br />
+Cruel work of sword and gun:<br />
+But some deeds are treasures yet.<br />
+<br />
+While a grateful nation showers<br />
+Graves of heroes with her flowers,<br />
+Here's a wreath for one to-day:<br />
+North or South, we claim him ours&mdash;<br />
+Honor to the Boy in Gray!<br />
+<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh35.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh35.jpg" width="42%" alt="THE EVOLUTION OF OUR FLAG" title="THE EVOLUTION OF OUR FLAG" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">THE EVOLUTION OF OUR FLAG</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Flag_Day" id="Flag_Day" />Flag Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>June 14</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The first recognition of Flag Day by the New York schools was in 1889,
+but it is now generally observed by appropriate exercises. June 14 is
+the anniversary of the adoption of the Stars and Stripes by the
+Continental Congress in the year 1777. This was the flag which, first
+raised over an American vessel by John Paul Jones, became the emblem of
+the new republic. In some places another day is set apart instead.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="StarsStripes" id="StarsStripes" />THE STARS AND STRIPES</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY HENRY RUSSELL WRAY</p>
+
+<p>While every lad and lassie in the land knows and has read all about the
+famous old Liberty Bell, too little is known of the origin and growth of
+America's dearest emblem&mdash;her flag. William Penn's
+city&mdash;Philadelphia&mdash;is gemmed with many historical landmarks, but none
+should be more dear to us than that little old building still standing
+on Arch street, over whose doorway is the number&mdash;239. For in a small
+back room in this primitive dwelling, during the uncertain struggle for
+independence by the American colonies, was designed and made the first
+American flag, known as the &quot;Stars and Stripes,&quot; now respected and
+honored in every quarter of the world, and loved and patriotically
+worshiped at home.</p>
+
+<p>The early history of our great flag is very interesting.</p>
+
+<p>It is a matter of record that during the early days of the Revolution
+the colonists made use of flags of various devices.</p>
+
+<p>It is nowadays generally accepted as a fact that the final idea of the
+Stars and Stripes as a national flag was borrowed from or suggested by
+the coat of arms of General George Washington's family.</p>
+
+<p>The first definite action taken by the colonies toward creating a flag,
+was a resolution passed by Congress in 1775, appointing a committee of
+three gentlemen&mdash;Benjamin Franklin and Messrs. Harrison and Lynch&mdash;to
+consider and devise a national flag. The result of the work of this
+committee was the adoption of the &quot;King's Colors&quot; as a union (or corner
+square), combined with thirteen stripes, alternate red and white,
+showing &quot;that although the colonies united for defense against England's
+tyranny, they still acknowledged her sovereignty.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh36.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh36.jpg" width="40%" alt="NUMBER 239 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA&mdash;THE HOUSE IN WHICH THE FIRST &quot;STARS AND STRIPES&quot; WAS MADE" title="NUMBER 239 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA&mdash;THE HOUSE IN WHICH THE FIRST &quot;STARS AND STRIPES&quot; WAS MADE" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">NUMBER 239 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA&mdash;THE HOUSE IN WHICH THE FIRST <br />
+ &quot;STARS AND STRIPES&quot; WAS MADE</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The first public acceptance, recognition, and salute of this flag
+occurred January 2, 1776, at Washington's headquarters, Cambridge,
+Massachusetts. The name given to this flag was &quot;The Flag of the Union,&quot;
+and sometimes it was called the &quot;Cambridge Flag.&quot; The design of this
+flag was a combination of the crosses of St. George and St. Andrew in
+a blue field in the upper left-hand corner, bordered by thirteen stripes
+for the thirteen colonies.</p>
+
+<p>But in the spring of 1777 Congress appointed another committee
+&quot;authorized to design a suitable flag for the nation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This committee seems to have consisted of General George Washington and
+Robert Morris. They called upon Mrs. Elizabeth Ross, of Philadelphia,
+and from a pencil-drawing by General Washington engaged her to make a
+flag.</p>
+
+<p>This flag, the first of a number she made, was cut out and completed in
+the back parlor of her little Arch street home.</p>
+
+<p>It was the first legally established emblem, and was adopted by Congress
+June 14, 1777, under the act which provided for stripes alternately red
+and white, with a union of thirteen white stars in a field of blue. This
+act read as follows: &quot;Resolved, That the flag of the United States be
+thirteen stripes, alternate red and white: that the union be thirteen
+stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constellation.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Fourth_of_July" id="Fourth_of_July" />Fourth of July</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<p>This is the greatest secular holiday of our country, its observance
+being sanctioned by the laws of every State. The birthday of our liberty
+would be a hard one to fix, but by common consent the anniversary of the
+signing of the Declaration of Independence is the one observed. The use
+of powder to celebrate the day is gradually going out on account of the
+large number of lives annually lost through accidents. It is known
+officially as Independence Day.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="StoryFlag" id="StoryFlag" />A STORY OF THE FLAG</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY VICTOR MAPES</p>
+
+<p>When the Fourth of July came, we had been abroad nearly two months, and
+during that time I think we had not seen a single American flag. On the
+morning of the Fourth, however, we walked out on the Paris boulevards,
+and a number of flags were hanging out from the different American
+shops, which are quite frequent there. They looked strange to us; and
+the idea occurred to Frank, for the first time, that the United States
+was one of a great many nations living next to one another in this
+world&mdash;that it was his own nation, a kind of big family he belonged to.
+The Fourth of July was a sort of big, family birthday, and the flags
+were out so as to tell the Frenchmen and everybody else not to forget
+the fact.</p>
+
+<p>A feeling of this nature came over Frank that morning, and he called
+out, &quot;There's another!&quot; every time a new flag came in view. He stopped
+two or three times to count the number of them in sight, and showed in
+various ways that he, America, and the American flag had come to a new
+understanding with one another.</p>
+
+<p>During the morning, Frank's cousin George, a boy two or three years
+older than Frank, who had been in Paris the preceding winter, came to
+our hotel; and, as I had some matters to attend to in the afternoon,
+they went off together to see sights and to have a good time.</p>
+
+<p>When Frank returned about dinner-time, and came up to the room where I
+was writing letters, I noticed a small American-flag pin stuck in the
+lapel of his coat.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;George had two,&quot; he said in answer to my question; &quot;and he gave me this
+one. He's been in Paris a year now, and he says we ought to wear them or
+maybe people won't know we're Americans. But say, Uncle Jack, where do
+you think I got that?&quot; He opened a paper bundle he had under his arm and
+unrolled a weather-beaten American flag.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where?&quot; asked I, naturally supposing it came from George's house.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We took it off of Lafayette's tomb.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I opened my eyes in astonishment; while he went on:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;George says the American Consul, or the American Consul-General, or
+somebody, put it on the tomb last Fourth of July, for our government,
+because Lafayette, don't you know, helped us in the Revolution.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They ought to put a new flag on every year, George says,&quot; explained
+Frank, seeing my amazement, &quot;on Fourth of July morning. But the American
+Consul, or whoever he is that's here now, is a new man, George thinks;
+anyhow, he forgot to do it. So we bought a new flag and we did it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There were a lot of people at the tomb when we went there, and we
+guessed they were all waiting to see the new flag put on. We waited,
+too, but no soldiers or anybody came; and after a while the people all
+went away. Then George said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Somebody ought to put on a new flag&mdash;let's do it!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We went to a store on the Boulevard, and for twenty francs bought a new
+flag just like this old one. George and I each paid half. There were two
+women and a little girl at the tomb when we got back, and we waited
+till they went away. Then we unrolled the new flag and took the old one
+off the tomb.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We thought we ought to say something when we put the new flag on, but
+we didn't know what to say. George said they always made a regular
+speech thanking Lafayette for helping us in the Revolution, but we
+thought it didn't matter much. So we just took off our hats when we
+spread out the new flag on the grave, and then we rolled up the old flag
+and came away.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We drew lots for it afterward, and I'm going to take it back home with
+me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Somebody ought to have done it, and as we were both American boys, it
+was all right, wasn't it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Right or wrong, the flag that travelers see on Lafayette's tomb this
+year, as a mark of the American nation's sentiment toward the great
+Frenchman, is the one put there by two small, self-appointed
+representatives. And the flag put there the year before, with fitting
+ceremony by the authorized official, Frank preserves carefully hung up
+on the wall of his little room in America.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14829 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #14829 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14829)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Our Holidays, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Our Holidays
+ Their Meaning and Spirit; retold from St. Nicholas
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: January 29, 2005 [EBook #14829]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR HOLIDAYS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Jennifer Zickerman and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net).
+
+
+
+
+
+ =OUR HOLIDAYS=
+
+
+
+ HISTORICAL STORIES
+
+ RETOLD FROM
+
+ ST. NICHOLAS MAGAZINE
+
+ IN FIVE VOLUMES
+
+
+ INDIAN STORIES
+ A mirror of Indian ideas, customs, and adventures.
+
+ COLONIAL STORIES
+ Stirring tales of the rude frontier life of early times.
+
+ REVOLUTIONARY STORIES
+ Heroic deeds, and especially children's part in them.
+
+ CIVIL WAR STORIES
+ Thrilling stories of the great struggle, both on land and sea.
+
+ OUR HOLIDAYS
+ Something of their meaning and spirit.
+
+
+ Each about 200 pages. Full cloth, 12mo.
+
+
+ THE CENTURY CO.
+
+ [Illustration: HO, FOR THE CHRISTMAS TREE!]
+
+
+
+ OUR HOLIDAYS
+
+ THEIR MEANING AND SPIRIT
+
+ RETOLD FROM ST. NICHOLAS
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ PUBLISHED BY THE CENTURY CO.
+ NEW YORK MCMVI
+
+ THE DE VINNE PRESS
+
+
+
+
+ =CONTENTS=
+
+ PAGE
+
+OUR HOLIDAYS 1
+
+ ST. SATURDAY _Henry Johnstone_ 3
+
+
+HALLOWE'EN 7
+
+ ALL-HALLOW-EVE MYTHS _David Brown_ 9
+
+
+ELECTION DAY 13
+
+ RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF CITIZENS _S.E. Forman_ 15
+
+
+THANKSGIVING DAY 21
+
+ A THANKSGIVING DINNER THAT FLEW AWAY _H. Butterworth_ 23
+
+
+WHITTIER'S BIRTHDAY 35
+
+ THE BOYHOOD OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER _William H. Rideing_ 37
+
+
+CHRISTMAS 51
+
+ HOW UNCLE SAM OBSERVES CHRISTMAS _Clifford Howard_ 53
+
+
+NEW YEAR'S DAY 79
+
+ EXTRACT FROM "SOCIAL LIFE IN THE COLONIES" _Edward Eggleston_ 81
+
+ A CHINESE NEW YEAR'S IN CALIFORNIA _H.H._ 82
+
+
+LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY 85
+
+ ABRAHAM LINCOLN _Helen Nicolay_ 87
+
+ THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS 99
+
+ O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN! _Walt Whitman_ 101
+
+
+ST. VALENTINE'S BIRTHDAY 103
+
+ WHO BEGAN IT? _Olive Thorne_ 105
+
+
+WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY 111
+
+ THE BOYHOOD OF WASHINGTON _Horace E. Scudder_ 113
+
+
+LONGFELLOW'S BIRTHDAY 123
+
+ LONGFELLOW AND THE CHILDREN _Lucy Larcom_ 125
+
+
+INAUGURATION DAY 139
+
+ HOW A PRESIDENT IS INAUGURATED _Clifford Howard_ 141
+
+
+EASTER DAY 153
+
+ A SONG OF EASTER _Celia Thaxter_ 155
+
+ THE GENERAL'S EASTER BOX _Temple Bailey_ 159
+
+
+ARBOR DAY 175
+
+ THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE TREE _William Cullen Bryant_ 177
+
+
+APRIL FOOL'S DAY 181
+
+ FOURTH-MONTH DUNCE _H.M.M._ 183
+
+
+MEMORIAL DAY 185
+
+ THE BOY IN GRAY _Mary Bradley_ 187
+
+
+FLAG DAY 193
+
+ THE STARS AND STRIPES _Henry Russell Wray_ 195
+
+
+FOURTH OF JULY 199
+
+ A STORY OF THE FLAG _Victor Mapes_ 201
+
+
+
+
+ =PREFACE=
+
+
+To most young people, holidays mean simply freedom from lessons and a
+good time. All this they should mean--and something more.
+
+It is well to remember, for example, that we owe the pleasure of
+Thanksgiving to those grateful Pilgrims who gave a feast of thanks for
+the long-delayed rain that saved their withering crops--a feast of wild
+turkeys and pumpkin pies, which has been celebrated now for nearly three
+centuries.
+
+It is most fitting that the same honor paid to Washington's Birthday is
+now given to that of Lincoln, who is as closely associated with the
+Civil War as our first President is with the Revolution.
+
+Although the birthdays of the three American poets, Whittier, Lowell,
+and Longfellow, are not holidays, stories relating to these days are
+included in this collection as signalizing days to be remembered.
+
+In this book are contained stories bearing on our holidays and annual
+celebrations, from Hallowe'en to the Fourth of July.
+
+
+
+
+ =Our Holidays=
+
+
+ If all the year were playing holidays,
+ To sport would be as tedious as to work.
+
+ SHAKSPERE. _King Henry IV_, Part I.
+
+
+ =ST. SATURDAY=
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ BY HENRY JOHNSTONE
+
+ Oh, Friday night's the queen of nights, because it ushers in
+ The Feast of good St. Saturday, when studying is a sin,
+ When studying is a sin, boys, and we may go to play
+ Not only in the afternoon, but all the livelong day.
+
+ St. Saturday--so legends say--lived in the ages when
+ The use of leisure still was known and current among men;
+ Full seldom and full slow he toiled, and even as he wrought
+ He'd sit him down and rest awhile, immersed in pious thought.
+
+ He loved to fold his good old arms, to cross his good old knees,
+ And in a famous elbow-chair for hours he'd take his ease;
+ He had a word for old and young, and when the village boys
+ Came out to play, he'd smile on them and never mind the noise.
+
+ So when his time came, honest man, the neighbors all declared
+ That one of keener intellect could better have been spared;
+ By young and old his loss was mourned in cottage and in hall,
+ For if he'd done them little good, he'd done no harm at all.
+
+ In time they made a saint of him, and issued a decree--
+ Since he had loved his ease so well, and been so glad to see
+ The children frolic round him and to smile upon their play--
+ That school boys for his sake should have a weekly holiday.
+
+ They gave his name unto the day, that as the years roll by
+ His memory might still be green; and that's the reason why
+ We speak his name with gratitude, and oftener by far
+ Than that of any other saint in all the calendar.
+
+ Then, lads and lassies, great and small, give ear to what I say--
+ Refrain from work on Saturdays as strictly as you may;
+ So shall the saint your patron be and prosper all you do--
+ And when examinations come he'll see you safely through.
+
+ [Illustration: St. Saturday]
+
+
+
+
+ =Hallowe'en=
+
+ _October 31_
+
+ The Eve of All Saints' Day
+
+
+This night is known in some places as Nutcrack Night, or Snapapple
+Night. Supernatural influences are pretended to prevail and hence all
+kinds of superstitions were formerly connected with it. It is now
+usually celebrated by children's parties, when certain special games are
+played.
+
+
+ =ALL-HALLOW-EVE MYTHS=
+
+ BY DAVID BROWN
+
+As the world grows old and wise, it ceases to believe in many of its
+superstitions. But, although they are no longer believed in, the customs
+connected with them do not always die out; they often linger on through
+centuries, and, from having once been serious religious rites, or
+something real in the life of the people, they become at last mere
+children's plays or empty usages, often most zealously enjoyed by those
+who do not understand their meaning.
+
+All-hallow Eve is now, in our country towns, a time of careless frolic,
+and of great bonfires, which, I hear, are still kindled on the hill-tops
+in some places. We also find these fires in England, Scotland, and
+Ireland, and from their history we learn the meaning of our celebration.
+Some of you may know that the early inhabitants of Great Britain,
+Ireland, and parts of France were known as Celts, and that their
+religion was directed by strange priests called Druids. Three times in
+the year, on the first of May, for the sowing; at the solstice, June
+21st, for the ripening and turn of the year; and on the eve of November
+1st, for the harvesting, those mysterious priests of the Celts, the
+Druids, built fires on the hill-tops in France, Britain, and Ireland, in
+honor of the sun. At this last festival the Druids of all the region
+gathered in their white robes around the stone altar or cairn on the
+hill-top. Here stood an emblem of the sun, and on the cairn was a sacred
+fire, which had been kept burning through the year. The Druids formed
+about the fire, and, at a signal, quenched it, while deep silence rested
+on the mountains and valleys. Then the new fire gleamed on the cairn,
+the people in the valley raised a joyous shout, and from hill-top to
+hill-top other fires answered the sacred flame. On this night, all
+hearth-fires in the region had been put out, and they were kindled with
+brands from the sacred fire, which was believed to guard the households
+through the year.
+
+But the Druids disappeared from their sacred places, the cairns on the
+hill-tops became the monuments of a dead religion, and Christianity
+spread to the barbarous inhabitants of France and the British Islands.
+Yet the people still clung to their old customs, and felt much of the
+old awe for them. Still they built their fires on the first of May,--at
+the solstice in June,--and on the eve of November 1st. The church found
+that it could not all at once separate the people from their old ways,
+so it gradually turned these ways to its own use, and the harvest
+festival of the Druids became in the Catholic Calendar the Eve of All
+Saints, for that is the meaning of the name "All-hallow Eve." In the
+seventh century, the Pantheon, the ancient Roman temple of all the gods,
+was consecrated anew to the worship of the Virgin and of all holy
+martyrs.
+
+By its separation from the solemn character of the Druid festival,
+All-hallow Eve lost much of its ancient dignity, and became the
+carnival-night of the year for wild, grotesque rites. As century after
+century passed by, it came to be spoken of as the time when the magic
+powers, with which the peasantry, all the world over, filled the wastes
+and ruins, were supposed to swarm abroad to help or injure men. It was
+the time when those first dwellers in every land, the fairies, were said
+to come out from their grots and lurking-places; and in the darkness of
+the forests and the shadows of old ruins, witches and goblins gathered.
+In course of time, the hallowing fire came to be considered a protection
+against these malicious powers. It was a custom in the seventeenth
+century for the master of a family to carry a lighted torch of straw
+around his fields, to protect them from evil influence through the year,
+and as he went he chanted an invocation to the fire. The chief thing
+which we seek to impress upon your minds in connection with All-hallow
+Eve is that its curious customs show how no generation of men is
+altogether separated from earlier generations. Far as we think we are
+from our uncivilized ancestors, much of what they did and thought has
+come into our doing and thinking,--with many changes perhaps, under
+different religious forms, and sometimes in jest where they were in
+earnest. Still, these customs and observances (of which All-hallow Eve
+is only one) may be called the piers, upon which rests a bridge that
+spans the wide past between us and the generations that have gone
+before.
+
+
+
+
+ =Election Day=
+
+ The first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.
+
+
+This day is now a holiday so that every man may have an opportunity to
+cast his vote. Unlike most other holidays, it does not commemorate an
+event, but it is a day which has a tremendous meaning if rightly looked
+upon and rightly used. Its true spirit and significance are well set
+forth in the following pages. By act of Congress the date for the
+choosing of Presidential electors is set for the first Tuesday after the
+first Monday in November in the years when Presidents are elected, and
+the different States have now nearly all chosen the same day for the
+election of State officers.
+
+
+ =RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF CITIZENS=
+
+ BY S.E. FORMAN
+
+Read the bill of rights in the constitution of your State and you will
+find there, set down in plain black and white, the rights which you are
+to enjoy as an American citizen. This constitution tells you that you
+have the right to your life, to your liberty, and to the property that
+you may honestly acquire; that your body, your health and your
+reputation shall be protected from injury; that you may move freely from
+place to place unmolested; that you shall not be imprisoned or otherwise
+punished without a fair trial by an impartial jury; that you may worship
+God according to the promptings of your own conscience; that you may
+freely write and speak on any subject providing you do not abuse the
+privilege; that you may peaceably assemble and petition government for
+the redress of grievances. These are civil rights. They, together with
+many others equally dear, are guaranteed by the State and national
+constitutions, and they belong to all American citizens.
+
+These civil rights, like the air and the sunshine, come to us in these
+days as a matter of course, but they did not come to our ancestors as a
+matter of course. To our ancestors rights came as the result of
+hard-fought battles. The reading of the bill of rights would cause your
+heart to throb with gratitude did you but know the suffering and
+sacrifice each right has cost.
+
+Now just as our rights have not been gained without a struggle, so they
+will not be maintained without a struggle. We may not have to fight with
+cannon and sword as did our forefathers in the Revolution, but we may be
+sure that if our liberty is to be preserved there will be fighting of
+some kind to do. Such precious things as human rights cannot be had for
+nothing.
+
+One of the hardest battles will be to fulfil the duties which accompany
+our rights, for every right is accompanied by a duty. If I can hold a
+man to his contract I ought (_I owe it_) to pay my debts; if I may
+worship as I please, I ought to refrain from persecuting another on
+account of his religion; if my property is held sacred, I ought to
+regard the property of another man as sacred; if the government deals
+fairly with me and does not oppress me, I ought to deal fairly With it
+and refuse to cheat it; if I am allowed freedom of speech, I ought not
+to abuse the privilege; if I have a right to a trial by jury, I ought to
+respond when I am summoned to serve as a juror; if I have a right to my
+good name and reputation, I ought not to slander my neighbor; if
+government shields me from injury, I ought to be ready to take up arms
+in its defense.
+
+Foremost among the rights of American citizenship is that of going to
+the polls and casting a ballot. This right of voting is not a civil
+right; it is a political right which grew out of man's long struggle for
+his civil rights. While battling with kings and nobles for liberty the
+people learned to distrust a privileged ruling class. They saw that if
+their civil rights were to be respected, government must pass into their
+own hands or into the hands of their chosen agents. Hence they demanded
+political rights, the right of holding office and of voting at
+elections.
+
+The suffrage, or the right of voting, is sometimes regarded as a natural
+right, one that belongs to a person simply because he is a person.
+
+People will say that a man has as much right to vote as he has to
+acquire property or to defend himself from attack. But this is not a
+correct view. The right to vote is a _franchise_ or privilege which the
+law gives to such citizens as are thought worthy of possessing it. It is
+easy to see that everybody cannot be permitted to vote. There must be
+certain qualifications, certain marks of fitness, required of a citizen
+before he can be entrusted with the right of suffrage. These
+qualifications differ in the different States. In most States every male
+citizen over twenty-one years of age may vote. In four States, women as
+well as men exercise the right of suffrage.
+
+But the right of voting, like every other right, has its corresponding
+duty. No day brings more responsibilities than Election Day. The
+American voter should regard himself as an officer of government. He is
+one of the members of the electorate, that vast governing body which
+consists of all the voters and which possesses supreme political power,
+controlling all the governments, federal and State and local. This
+electorate has in its keeping the welfare and the happiness of the
+American people. When, therefore, the voter takes his place in this
+governing body, that is, when he enters the polling-booth and presumes
+to participate in the business of government, he assumes serious
+responsibilities. In the polling-booth he is a public officer charged
+with certain duties, and if he fails to discharge these duties properly
+he may work great injury. What are the duties of a voter in a
+self-governing country? If an intelligent man will ask himself the
+question and refer it to his conscience as well as deliberate upon it in
+his mind, he will conclude that he ought to do the following things:
+
+ 1. To vote whenever it is his privilege.
+
+ 2. To try to understand the questions upon which he votes.
+
+ 3. To learn something about the character and fitness of the men
+ for whom he votes.
+
+ 4. To vote only for honest men for office.
+
+ 5. To support only honest measures.
+
+ 6. To give no bribe, direct or indirect, and to receive no bribe,
+ direct or indirect.
+
+ 7. To place country above party.
+
+ 8. To recognize the result of the election as the will of the
+ people and therefore as the law.
+
+ 9. To continue to vote for a righteous although defeated cause as
+ long as there is a reasonable hope of victory.
+
+ "The proudest now is but my peer,
+ The highest not more high;
+ To-day of all the weary year,
+ A king of men am I.
+
+ "To-day alike are great and small,
+ The nameless and the known;
+ My palace is the people's hall,
+ The ballot-box my throne!"
+
+ WHITTIER.
+
+
+
+
+ =Thanksgiving Day=
+
+ Appointed by the President--usually the last Thursday in November.
+
+
+Now observed as a holiday in all the States, but not a legal holiday in
+all. The President's proclamation recommends that it be set apart as a
+day of prayer and rejoicing. The day is of New England origin, the first
+one being set by Governor Bradford of the Massachusetts colony on
+December, 1621. Washington issued a thanksgiving proclamation for
+Thursday, December 18, 1777, and again at Valley Forge for May 7, 1778.
+The Thanksgiving of the present incorporates many of the genial features
+of Christmas. The feast with the Thanksgiving turkey and pumpkin-pie
+crowns the day. Even the poorhouse has its turkey. The story of "An
+Old-Time Thanksgiving," in "Indian Stories" of this series, well brings
+out the original spirit of the day.
+
+
+ =A THANKSGIVING DINNER THAT FLEW AWAY=
+
+ BY H. BUTTERWORTH
+
+"Honk!"
+
+I spun around like a top, looking nervously in every direction. I was
+familiar with that sound; I had heard it before, during two summer
+vacations, at the old farm-house on the Cape.
+
+It had been a terror to me. I always put a door, a fence, or a stone
+wall between me and that sound as speedily as possible.
+
+I had just come down from the city to the Cape for my third summer
+vacation. I had left the cars with my arms full of bundles, and hurried
+toward Aunt Targood's.
+
+The cottage stood in from the road. There was a long meadow in front of
+it. In the meadow were two great oaks and some clusters of lilacs. An
+old, mossy stone wall protected the grounds from the road, and a long
+walk ran from the old wooden gate to the door.
+
+It was a sunny day, and my heart was light. The orioles were flaming in
+the old orchards; the bobolinks were tossing themselves about in the
+long meadows of timothy, daisies, and patches of clover. There was a
+scent of new-mown hay in the air.
+
+In the distance lay the bay, calm and resplendent, with white sails and
+specks of boats. Beyond it rose Martha's Vineyard, green and cool and
+bowery, and at its wharf lay a steamer.
+
+I was, as I said, light-hearted. I was thinking of rides over the sandy
+roads at the close of the long, bright days; of excursions on the bay;
+of clam-bakes and picnics.
+
+I was hungry; and before me rose visions of Aunt Targood's fish dinners,
+roast chickens, berry pies. I was thirsty; but ahead was the old
+well-sweep, and, behind the cool lattice of the dairy window, were pans
+of milk in abundance.
+
+I tripped on toward the door with light feet, lugging my bundles and
+beaded with perspiration, but unmindful of all discomforts in the
+thought of the bright days and good things in store for me.
+
+"Honk! honk!"
+
+My heart gave a bound!
+
+_Where_ did that sound come from?
+
+Out of a cool cluster of innocent-looking lilac bushes, I saw a dark
+object cautiously moving. It seemed to have no head. I knew, however,
+that it had a head. I had seen it; it had seized me once on the previous
+summer, and I had been in terror of it during all the rest of the
+season.
+
+I looked down into the irregular grass, and saw the head and a very long
+neck running along on the ground, propelled by the dark body, like a
+snake running away from a ball. It was coming toward me, and faster and
+faster as it approached.
+
+I dropped all my bundles.
+
+In a few flying leaps I returned to the road again, and armed myself
+with a stick from a pile of cord-wood.
+
+"Honk! honk! honk!"
+
+It was a call of triumph. The head was high in the air now. My enemy
+moved grandly forward, as became the monarch of the great meadow
+farm-yard.
+
+I stood with beating heart, after my retreat.
+
+It was Aunt Targood's gander.
+
+How he enjoyed his triumph, and how small and cowardly he made me feel!
+
+"Honk! honk! honk!"
+
+The geese came out of the lilac bushes, bowing their heads to him in
+admiration. Then came the goslings--a long procession of awkward,
+half-feathered things: they appeared equally delighted.
+
+The gander seemed to be telling his admiring audience all about it: how
+a strange girl with many bundles had attempted to cross the yard; how he
+had driven her back, and had captured her bundles, and now was monarch
+of the field. He clapped his wings when he had finished his heroic
+story, and sent forth such a "honk!" as might have startled a
+major-general.
+
+Then he, with an air of great dignity and coolness, began to examine my
+baggage.
+
+Among my effects were several pounds of chocolate caramels, done up in
+brown paper. Aunt Targood liked caramels, and I had brought her a large
+supply.
+
+He tore off the wrappers quickly. Bit one. It was good. He began to
+distribute the bon-bons among the geese, and they, with much liberality
+and good-will, among the goslings.
+
+This was too much. I ventured through the gate swinging my cord-wood
+stick.
+
+"Shoo!"
+
+He dropped his head on the ground, and drove it down the walk in a
+lively waddle toward me.
+
+"_Shoo_!"
+
+It was Aunt Targood's voice at the door.
+
+He stopped immediately.
+
+His head was in the air again.
+
+"_Shoo_!"
+
+Out came Aunt Targood with her broom.
+
+She always corrected the gander with her broom. If I were to be whipped
+I should choose a broom--not the stick.
+
+As soon as he beheld the broom he retired, although with much offended
+pride and dignity, to the lilac bushes; and the geese and goslings
+followed him.
+
+"Hester, you dear child, come here. I was expecting you, and had been
+looking out for you, but missed sight of you. I had forgotten all about
+the gander."
+
+We gathered up the bundles and the caramels. I was light-hearted again.
+
+How cool was the sitting-room, with the woodbine falling about the open
+windows! Aunt brought me a pitcher of milk and some strawberries; some
+bread and honey; and a fan.
+
+While I was resting and taking my lunch, I could hear the gander
+discussing the affairs of the farm-yard with the geese. I did not
+greatly enjoy the discussion. His tone of voice was very proud, and he
+did not seem to be speaking well of me. I was suspicious that he did not
+think me a very brave girl. A young person likes to be spoken well of,
+even by the gander.
+
+Aunt Targood's gander had been the terror of many well-meaning people,
+and of some evildoers, for many years. I have seen tramps and
+pack-peddlers enter the gate, and start on toward the door, when there
+would sound that ringing warning like a war-blast. "Honk, honk!" and in
+a few minutes these unwelcome people would be gone. Farm-house boarders
+from the city would sometimes enter the yard, thinking to draw water by
+the old well-sweep: in a few minutes it was customary to hear shrieks,
+and to see women and children flying over the walls, followed by
+air-rending "honks!" and jubilant cackles from the victorious gander and
+his admiring family.
+
+"Aunt, what makes you keep that gander, year after year?" said I, one
+evening, as we were sitting on the lawn before the door. "Is it because
+he is a kind of a watch-dog, and keeps troublesome people away?"
+
+"No, child, no; I do not wish to keep most people away, not well-behaved
+people, nor to distress nor annoy any one. The fact is, there is a
+story about that gander that I do not like to speak of to every
+one--something that makes me feel tender toward him; so that if he needs
+a whipping, I would rather do it. He knows something that no one else
+knows. I could not have him killed or sent away. You have heard me speak
+of Nathaniel, my oldest boy?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"That is his picture in my room, you know. He was a good boy to me. He
+loved his mother. I loved Nathaniel--you cannot think how much I loved
+Nathaniel. It was on my account that he went away.
+
+"The farm did not produce enough for us all: Nathaniel, John, and I. We
+worked hard and had a hard time. One year--that was ten years ago--we
+were sued for our taxes.
+
+"'Nathaniel,' said I, 'I will go to taking boarders.'
+
+"Then he looked up to me and said (oh, how noble and handsome he
+appeared to me!):
+
+"'Mother, I will go to sea.'
+
+"'Where?' asked I, in surprise.
+
+"'In a coaster.'
+
+"I turned white. How I felt!
+
+"'You and John can manage the place,' he continued. 'One of the vessels
+sails next week--Uncle Aaron's; he offers to take me.'
+
+"It seemed best, and he made preparations to go.
+
+"The spring before, Skipper Ben--you have met Skipper Ben--had given me
+some goose eggs; he had brought them from Canada, and said that they
+were wild-goose eggs.
+
+"I set them under hens. In four weeks I had three goslings. I took them
+into the house at first, but afterward made a pen for them out in the
+yard. I brought them up myself, and one of those goslings is that
+gander.
+
+"Skipper Ben came over to see me, the day before Nathaniel was to sail.
+Aaron came with him.
+
+"I said to Aaron:
+
+"'What can I give to Nathaniel to carry to sea with him to make him
+think of home? Cake, preserves, apples? I haven't got much; I have done
+all I can for him, poor boy.'
+
+"Brother looked at me curiously, and said:
+
+"'Give him one of those wild geese, and we will fatten it on shipboard
+and will have it for our Thanksgiving dinner.'
+
+"What brother Aaron said pleased me. The young gander was a noble bird,
+the handsomest of the lot; and I resolved to keep the geese to kill for
+my own use and to give _him_ to Nathaniel.
+
+"The next morning--it was late in September--I took leave of Nathaniel.
+I tried to be calm and cheerful and hopeful. I watched him as he went
+down the walk with the gander struggling under his arms. A stranger
+would have laughed, but I did not feel like laughing; it was true that
+the boys who went coasting were usually gone but a few months and came
+home hardy and happy. But when poverty compels a mother and son to part,
+after they have been true to each other, and shared their feelings in
+common, it seems hard, it seems hard--though I do not like to murmur or
+complain at anything allotted to me.
+
+"I saw him go over the hill. On the top he stopped and held up the
+gander. He disappeared; yes, my own Nathaniel disappeared. I think of
+him now as one who disappeared.
+
+"November came--it was a terrible month on the coast that year. Storm
+followed storm; the sea-faring people talked constantly of wrecks and
+losses. I could not sleep on the nights of those high winds. I used to
+lie awake thinking over all the happy hours I had lived with Nathaniel.
+
+"Thanksgiving week came.
+
+"It was full of an Indian-summer brightness after the long storms. The
+nights were frosty, bright, and calm.
+
+"I could sleep on those calm nights.
+
+"One morning, I thought I heard a strange sound in the woodland pasture.
+It was like a wild goose. I listened; it was repeated. I was lying in
+bed. I started up--I thought I had been dreaming.
+
+"On the night before Thanksgiving I went to bed early, being very tired.
+The moon was full; the air was calm and still. I was thinking of
+Nathaniel, and I wondered if he would indeed have the gander for his
+Thanksgiving dinner: if it would be cooked as well as I would have
+cooked it, and if he would think of me that day.
+
+"I was just going to sleep, when suddenly I heard a sound that made me
+start up and hold my breath.
+
+"'_Honk_!'
+
+"I thought it was a dream followed by a nervous shock.
+
+"'_Honk! honk_!'
+
+"There it was again, in the yard. I was surely awake and in my senses.
+
+"I heard the geese cackle.
+
+"'_Honk! honk! honk_!'
+
+"I got out of bed and lifted the curtain. It was almost as light as day.
+Instead of two geese there were three. Had one of the neighbors' geese
+stolen away?
+
+"I should have thought so, and should not have felt disturbed, but for
+the reason that none of the neighbors' geese had that peculiar
+call--that hornlike tone that I had noticed in mine.
+
+"I went out of the door.
+
+"The third goose looked like the very gander I had given Nathaniel.
+Could it be?
+
+"I did not sleep. I rose early and went to the crib for some corn.
+
+"It was a gander--a 'wild' gander--that had come in the night. He seemed
+to know me.
+
+"I trembled all over as though I had seen a ghost. I was so faint that I
+sat down on the meal-chest.
+
+"As I was in that place, a bill pecked against the door. The door
+opened. The strange gander came hobbling over the crib-stone and went to
+the corn-bin. He stopped there, looked at me, and gave a sort of glad
+"honk," as though he knew me and was glad to see me.
+
+"I was certain that he was the gander I had raised, and that Nathaniel
+had lifted into the air when he gave me his last recognition from the
+top of the hill.
+
+"It overcame me. It was Thanksgiving. The church bell would soon be
+ringing as on Sunday. And here was Nathaniel's Thanksgiving dinner; and
+brother Aaron's--had it flown away? Where was the vessel?
+
+"Years have passed--ten. You know I waited and waited for my boy to come
+back. December grew dark with its rainy seas; the snows fell; May
+lighted up the hills, but the vessel never came back. Nathaniel--my
+Nathaniel--never returned.
+
+"That gander knows something he could tell me if he could talk. Birds
+have memories. He remembered the corn-crib--he remembered something
+else. I wish he _could_ talk, poor bird! I wish he could talk. I will
+never sell him, nor kill him, nor have him abused. _He knows!_"
+
+
+
+
+ =Whittier's Birthday=
+
+ JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER
+
+ Born December 17, 1807 Died September 7, 1892
+
+
+Whittier is known not only as a poet, but as a reformer and author. He
+was a member of the Society of Friends. He attended a New England
+academy; worked on a farm; taught school in order to afford further
+education, and at the age of twenty-two edited a paper at Boston. He was
+a leading opponent of slavery and was several times attacked by mobs on
+account of his opinions.
+
+
+ =THE BOYHOOD OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER=
+
+ BY WILLIAM H. RIDEING
+
+The life of Whittier may be read in his poems, and, by putting a note
+here and a date there, a full autobiography might be compiled from them.
+His boyhood and youth are depicted in them with such detail that little
+need be added to make the story complete, and that little, reverently
+done as it may be, must seem poor in comparison with the poetic beauty
+of his own revelations.
+
+What more can we do to show his early home than to quote from his own
+beautiful poem, "Snow-bound"? There the house is pictured for us, inside
+and out, with all its furnishings; and those who gather around its
+hearth, inmates and visitors, are set before us so clearly that long
+after the book has been put away they remain as distinct in the memory
+as portraits that are visible day after day on the walls of our own
+homes. He reproduces in his verse the landscapes he saw, the legends of
+witches and Indians he listened to, the schoolfellows he played with,
+the voices of the woods and fields, and the round of toil and pleasure
+in a country boy's life; and in other poems his later life, with its
+impassioned devotion to freedom and lofty faith, is reflected as lucidly
+as his youth is in "Snow-bound" and "The Barefoot Boy."
+
+He himself was "The Barefoot Boy," and what Robert Burns said of himself
+Whittier might repeat: "The poetic genius of my country found me, as the
+prophetic bard Elijah did Elisha, at the plow, and threw her inspiring
+mantle over me." He was a farmer's son, born at a time when farm-life in
+New England was more frugal than it is now, and with no other heritage
+than the good name and example of parents and kinsmen, in whom simple
+virtues--thrift, industry, and piety--abounded.
+
+His birthplace still stands near Haverhill, Mass.,--a house in one of
+the hollows of the surrounding hills, little altered from what it was in
+1807, the year he was born, when it was already at least a century and a
+half old.
+
+[Illustration: WHITTIER'S BIRTHPLACE, NEAR HAVERHILL, MASS.]
+
+He had no such opportunities for culture as Holmes and Lowell had in
+their youth. His parents were intelligent and upright people of
+limited means, who lived in all the simplicity of the Quaker faith, and
+there was nothing in his early surroundings to encourage and develop a
+literary taste. Books were scarce, and the twenty volumes on his
+father's shelves were, with one exception, about Quaker doctrines and
+Quaker heroes. The exception was a novel, and that was hidden away from
+the children, for fiction was forbidden fruit. No library or scholarly
+companionship was within reach; and if his gift had been less than
+genius, it could never have triumphed over the many disadvantages with
+which it had to contend. Instead of a poet he would have been a farmer
+like his forefathers. But literature was a spontaneous impulse with him,
+as natural as the song of a bird; and he was not wholly dependent on
+training and opportunity, as he would have been had he possessed mere
+talent.
+
+Frugal from necessity, the life of the Whittiers was not sordid nor
+cheerless to him, moreover; and he looks back to it as tenderly as if it
+had been full of luxuries. It was sweetened by strong affections, simple
+tastes, and an unflinching sense of duty; and in all the members of the
+household the love of nature was so genuine that meadow, wood, and
+river yielded them all the pleasure they needed, and they scarcely
+missed the refinements of art.
+
+Surely there could not be a pleasanter or more homelike picture than
+that which the poet has given us of the family on the night of the great
+storm when the old house was snowbound:
+
+ "Shut in from all the world without,
+ We sat the clean-winged hearth about,
+ Content to let the north wind roar
+ In baffled rage at pane and door,
+ While the red logs before us beat
+ The frost-line back with tropic heat.
+ And ever when a louder blast
+ Shook beam and rafter as it passed,
+ The merrier up its roaring draught
+ The great throat of the chimney laughed.
+ The house-dog on his paws outspread,
+ Laid to the fire his drowsy head;
+ The cat's dark silhouette on the wall
+ A couchant tiger's seemed to fall,
+ And for the winter fireside meet
+ Between the andiron's straddling feet
+ The mug of cider simmered slow,
+ The apples sputtered in a row,
+ And close at hand the basket stood
+ With nuts from brown October's wood."
+
+For a picture of the poet himself we must turn to the verses in "The
+Barefoot Boy," in which he says:
+
+ "O for boyhood's time of June,
+ Crowding years in one brief moon,
+ When all things I heard or saw,
+ Me, their master, waited for.
+ I was rich in flowers and trees,
+ Humming-birds and honey-bees;
+ For my sport the squirrel played,
+ Plied the snouted mole his spade;
+ For my taste the blackberry cone
+ Purpled over hedge and stone;
+ Laughed the brook for my delight
+ Through the day and through the night,
+ Whispering at the garden-wall,
+ Talked with me from fall to fall;
+ Mine the sand-rimmed pickerel pond,
+ Mine the walnut slopes beyond,
+ Mine on bending orchard trees,
+ Apples of Hesperides!
+ Still as my horizon grew,
+ Larger grew my riches, too;
+ All the world I saw or knew
+ Seemed a complex Chinese toy,
+ Fashioned for a barefoot boy!"[1]
+
+[Illustration: THE OLD SCHOOL-HOUSE, HAVERHILL, MASS.]
+
+I doubt if any boy ever rose to intellectual eminence who had fewer
+opportunities for education than Whittier. He had no such pasturage to
+browse on as is open to every reader who, by simply reaching them out,
+can lay his hands on the treasures of English literature. He had to
+borrow books wherever they could be found among the neighbors who were
+willing to lend, and he thought nothing of walking several miles for one
+volume. The only instruction he received was at the district school,
+which was open a few weeks in midwinter, and at the Haverhill Academy,
+which he attended two terms of six months each, paying tuition by work
+in spare hours, and by keeping a small school himself. A feeble spirit
+would have languished under such disadvantages. But Whittier scarcely
+refers to them, and instead of begging for pity, he takes them as part
+of the common lot, and seems to remember only what was beautiful and
+good in his early life.
+
+Occasionally a stranger knocked at the door of the old homestead in the
+valley; sometimes it was a distinguished Quaker from abroad, but oftener
+it was a peddler or some vagabond begging for food, which was seldom
+refused. Once a foreigner came and asked for lodgings for the night--a
+dark, repulsive man, whose appearance was so much against him that Mrs.
+Whittier was afraid to admit him. No sooner had she sent him away,
+however, than she repented. "What if a son of mine was in a strange
+land?" she thought. The young poet (who was not yet recognized as such)
+offered to go out in search of him, and presently returned with him,
+having found him standing in the roadway just as he had been turned away
+from another house.
+
+[Illustration: JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER]
+
+"He took his seat with us at the supper-table," says Whittier in one of
+his prose sketches, "and when we were all gathered around the hearth
+that cold autumnal evening, he told us, partly by words and partly by
+gestures, the story of his life and misfortunes, amused us with
+descriptions of the grape-gatherings and festivals of his sunny
+clime, edified my mother with a recipe for making bread of chestnuts,
+and in the morning, when, after breakfast, his dark sallow face lighted
+up, and his fierce eyes moistened with grateful emotion as in his own
+silvery Tuscan accent he poured out his thanks, we marveled at the fears
+which had so nearly closed our doors against him, and as he departed we
+all felt that he had left with us the blessing of the poor."
+
+Another guest came to the house one day. It was a vagrant old Scotchman,
+who, when he had been treated to bread and cheese and cider, sang some
+of the songs of Robert Burns, which Whittier then heard for the first
+time, and which he never forgot. Coming to him thus as songs reached the
+people before printing was invented, through gleemen and minstrels,
+their sweetness lingered in his ears, and he soon found himself singing
+in the same strain. Some of his earliest inspirations were drawn from
+Burns, and he tells us of his joy when one day, after the visit of the
+old Scotchman, his schoolmaster loaned him a copy of that poet's works.
+"I began to make rhymes myself, and to imagine stories and adventures,"
+he says in his simple way.
+
+Indeed, he began to rhyme very early and kept his gift a secret from
+all, except his oldest sister, fearing that his father, who was a
+prosaic man, would think that he was wasting time. He wrote under the
+fence, in the attic, in the barn--wherever he could escape observation;
+and as pen and ink were not always available, he sometimes used chalk,
+and even charcoal. Great was the surprise of the family when some of his
+verses were unearthed, literally unearthed, from under a heap of rubbish
+in a garret; but his father frowned upon these evidences of the bent of
+his mind, not out of unkindness, but because he doubted the sufficiency
+of the boy's education for a literary life, and did not wish to inspire
+him with hopes which might never be fulfilled.
+
+His sister had faith in him, nevertheless, and, without his knowledge,
+she sent one of his poems to the editor of _The Free Press_, a newspaper
+published in Newburyport. Whittier was helping his father to repair a
+stone wall by the roadside when the carrier flung a copy of the paper to
+him, and, unconscious that anything of his was in it, he opened it and
+glanced up and down the columns. His eyes fell on some verses called
+"The Exile's Departure."
+
+ "Fond scenes, which delighted my youthful existence,
+ With feelings of sorrow I bid ye adieu--
+ A lasting adieu; for now, dim in the distance,
+ The shores of Hibernia recede from my view.
+ Farewell to the cliffs, tempest-beaten and gray,
+ Which guard the loved shores of my own native land;
+ Farewell to the village and sail-shadowed bay,
+ The forest-crowned hill and the water-washed strand."
+
+His eyes swam; it was his own poem, the first he ever had in print.
+
+[Illustration: WHITTIER'S STUDY AT AMESBURY, MASS.]
+
+"What is the matter with thee?" his father demanded, seeing how dazed he
+was; but, though he resumed his work on the wall, he could not speak,
+and he had to steal a glance at the paper again and again, before he
+could convince himself that he was not dreaming. Sure enough, the poem
+was there with his initial at the foot of it,--"W., Haverhill, June 1st,
+1826,"--and, better still, this editorial notice: "If 'W.,' at
+Haverhill, will continue to favor us with pieces beautiful as the one
+inserted in our poetical department of to-day, we shall esteem it a
+favor."
+
+Fame never passes true genius by, and when it came it brought with it
+the love and reverence of thousands, who recognize in Whittier a nature
+abounding in patience, unselfishness, and all the sweetness of Christian
+charity.
+
+[Footnote 1: The selections from Mr. Whittier's poems contained in this
+article are included by kind permission of Messrs. Houghton,
+Mifflin & Co.]
+
+
+
+
+ =Christmas=
+
+ _December 25_
+
+
+A festival held every year in memory of the birth of Christ. Christmas
+is essentially a day of rejoicing and thanksgiving and of good will
+toward others. Many customs older than Christianity mark the
+festivities. In our country the observance of the day was discouraged in
+colonial times, and in England in 1643 Parliament abolished the day. Now
+its celebration is world-wide and by all classes and creeds.
+
+
+ =HOW UNCLE SAM OBSERVES CHRISTMAS=
+
+ BY CLIFFORD HOWARD
+
+Of course Uncle Sam is best acquainted with the good old-fashioned
+Christmas--the kind we have known all about since we were little bits of
+children. There are the Christmas trees with their pretty decorations
+and candles, and the mistletoe and holly and all sorts of evergreens to
+make the house look bright, while outside the trees are bare, the ground
+is white with snow, and Jack Frost is prowling around, freezing up the
+ponds and pinching people's noses. And then there is dear old Santa
+Claus with his reindeer, galloping about on the night before Christmas,
+and scrambling down chimneys to fill the stockings that hang in a row by
+the fireplace.
+
+It is the time of good cheer and happiness and presents for everybody;
+the time of chiming bells and joyful carols; of turkey and candy and
+plum-pudding and all the other good things that go to make up a truly
+merry Christmas. And here and there throughout the country, some of the
+quaint old customs of our forefathers are still observed at this time,
+as, for instance, the pretty custom of "Christmas waits"--boys and girls
+who go about from house to house on Christmas eve, or early Christmas
+morning, singing carols.
+
+But, aside from the Christmas customs we all know so well, Uncle Sam has
+many strange and special ways of observing Christmas; for in this big
+country of his there are many different kinds of people, and they all do
+not celebrate Christmas in the same way, as you shall see.
+
+
+ =IN THE SOUTH=
+
+Siss! Bang! Boom! Sky-rockets hissing, crackers snapping, cannons
+roaring, horns tooting, bells ringing, and youngsters shouting with wild
+delight. That is the way Christmas begins down South.
+
+[Illustration: CHRISTMAS IN THE SOUTH]
+
+It starts at midnight, or even before; and all day long fire-crackers
+are going off in the streets of every city, town, and village of the
+South, from Virginia to Louisiana. A Northern boy, waking up suddenly in
+New Orleans or Mobile or Atlanta, would think he was in the midst of
+a rousing Fourth-of-July celebration. In some of the towns the brass
+bands come out and add to the jollity of the day by marching around and
+playing "My Maryland" and "Dixie"; while the soldier companies parade up
+and down the streets to the strains of joyous music and fire salutes
+with cannons and rifles.
+
+To the girls and boys of the South, Christmas is the noisiest and
+jolliest day of the year. The Fourth of July doesn't compare with it.
+And as for the darkies, they look upon Christmas as a holiday that was
+invented for their especial happiness. They take it for granted that all
+the "white folks" they know will give them presents; and with grinning
+faces they are up bright and early, asking for "Christmus gif', mistah;
+Christmus gif, missus." No one thinks of refusing them, and at the end
+of the day they are richer and happier than at any other time during the
+whole year.
+
+Except for the jingle of sleigh-bells and the presence of Jack Frost, a
+Christmas in the South is in other ways very much like that in the
+North. The houses are decorated with greens, mistletoe hangs above the
+doorways, Santa Claus comes down the chimneys and fills the waiting
+stockings, while Christmas dinner is not complete without the familiar
+turkey and cranberry sauce, plum puddings and pies.
+
+
+ =IN NEW ENGLAND=
+
+For a great many years there was no Christmas in New England. The
+Pilgrims and the Puritans did not believe in such celebrations. In fact,
+they often made it a special point to do their hardest work on Christmas
+day, just to show their contempt for what they considered a pagan
+festival.
+
+During colonial times there was a law in Massachusetts forbidding any
+one to celebrate Christmas; and if anybody was so rash in those days as
+to go about tooting a horn and shouting a "Merry Christmas!" he was
+promptly brought to his senses by being arrested and punished.
+
+[Illustration: CHRISTMAS SPORTS IN NEW ENGLAND]
+
+Of course things are very different in New England now, but in many
+country towns the people still make more of Thanksgiving than they do of
+Christmas; and there are hundreds of New England men and women still
+living who knew nothing of Christmas as children--who never hung up
+their stockings; who never waited for Santa Claus; who never had a
+tree; who never even had a Christmas present!
+
+Nowadays, however, Christmas in New England is like Christmas anywhere
+else; but here and there, even now, the effects of the early Puritan
+ideas may still be seen. In some of the smaller and out-of-the-way towns
+and villages you will find Christmas trees and evergreens in only a very
+few of the houses, and in some places--particularly in New
+Hampshire--one big Christmas tree does for the whole town. This tree is
+set up in the town hall, and there the children go to get their gifts,
+which have been hung on the branches by the parents. Sometimes the tree
+has no decorations--no candles, no popcorn strings, no shiny balls.
+After the presents are taken off and given to the children, the tree
+remains perfectly bare. There is usually a short entertainment of
+recitations and songs, and a speech or two perhaps, and then the little
+folks, carrying their presents with them, go back to their homes.
+
+
+ =IN NEW MEXICO=
+
+In certain parts of New Mexico, among the old Spanish settlements, the
+celebration of Christmas begins more than a week before the day. In the
+evenings, a party of men and women go together to the house of some
+friend--a different house being visited each evening. When they arrive,
+they knock on the door and begin to sing, and when those in the house
+ask, "Who is there?" they reply, "The Virgin Mary and St. Joseph seek
+lodgings in your house." At first the inmates of the house refuse to let
+them in. This is done to carry out the Bible story of Joseph and Mary
+being unable to find lodgings in Bethlehem. But in a little while the
+door is opened and the visitors are heartily welcomed. As soon as they
+enter, they kneel and repeat a short prayer; and when the devotional
+exercises are concluded, the rest of the evening is spent in
+merrymaking.
+
+On Christmas eve the people of the village gather together in some large
+room or hall and give a solemn little play, commemorating the birthday
+of the Saviour. One end of the room is used as a stage, and this is
+fitted up to represent the stable and the manger; and the characters in
+the sacred story of Bethlehem--Mary and Joseph, the shepherds, the wise
+men, and the angels--are represented in the tableaux, and with a
+genuine, reverential spirit. Even the poorer people of the town take
+part in these Christmas plays.
+
+
+ =AMONG THE SHAKERS=
+
+The Shakers observe Christmas by a dinner at which the men and women
+both sit down at the same table. This custom of theirs is the thing that
+serves to make Christmas different from any other day among the Shakers.
+During all the rest of the year the men and women eat their meals at
+separate tables.
+
+At sunset on Christmas day, after a service in the church, they march to
+the community-house, where the dinner is waiting. The men sit on one
+side of the table and the women on the other. At the head sits an old
+man called the elder, who begins the meal by saying grace, after which
+each one in turn gets up and, lifting the right hand, says in a solemn
+voice, "God is love." The dinner is eaten in perfect silence. Not a
+voice is heard until the meal comes to an end. Then the men and women
+rise and sing, standing in their places at the table. As the singing
+proceeds they mark time with their hands and feet. Then their bodies
+begin to sway from side to side in the peculiar manner that has given
+this sect its name of Shakers.
+
+When the singing comes to an end, the elder chants a prayer, after which
+the men and women silently file out and leave the building.
+
+
+ =AMONG THE PENNSYLVANIA GERMANS=
+
+"You'd better look out, or Pelznickel will catch you!" This is the dire
+threat held over naughty boys and girls at Christmas-time in some of the
+country settlements of the Pennsylvania Germans, or Pennsylvania Dutch,
+as they are often called.
+
+Pelznickel is another name for Santa Claus. But he is not altogether the
+same old Santa that we welcome so gladly. On Christmas eve some one in
+the neighborhood impersonates Pelznickel by dressing up as an old man
+with a long white beard. Arming himself with a switch and carrying a bag
+of toys over his shoulder, he goes from house to house, where the
+children are expecting him.
+
+[Illustration: A VISIT FROM PELZNICKEL]
+
+He asks the parents how the little ones have behaved themselves during
+the year. To each of those who have been good he gives a present from
+his bag. But--woe betide the naughty ones! These are not only supposed
+to get no presents, but Pelznickel catches them by the collar and
+playfully taps them with his switch.
+
+
+ =IN PORTO RICO=
+
+The Porto Rican boys and girls would be frightened out of their wits if
+Santa Claus should come to them in a sleigh drawn by reindeer and should
+try to enter the houses and fill their stockings. Down there, Santa
+Claus does not need reindeer or any other kind of steeds, for the
+children say that he just comes flying through the air like a bird.
+Neither does he bother himself looking for stockings, for such things
+are not so plentiful in Porto Rico as they are in cooler climates.
+Instead of stockings, the children use little boxes, which they make
+themselves. These they place on the roofs and in the courtyards, and old
+Santa Claus drops the gifts into them as he flies around at night with
+his bag on his back.
+
+He is more generous in Porto Rico than he is anywhere else. He does not
+come on Christmas eve only, but is likely to call around every night or
+two during the week. Each morning, therefore, the little folks run out
+eagerly to see whether anything more has been left in their boxes during
+the night.
+
+Christmas in Porto Rico is a church festival of much importance, and the
+celebration of it is made up chiefly of religious ceremonies intended to
+commemorate the principal events in the life of the Saviour. Beginning
+with the celebration of his birth, at Christmas-time, the feast-days
+follow one another in rapid succession. Indeed, it may justly be said
+that they do not really come to an end until Easter.
+
+[Illustration: BETHLEHEM DAY IN PORTO RICO]
+
+One of the most popular of these festival-days is that known as
+Bethlehem day. This is celebrated on the 12th of January, in memory of
+the coming of the Magi. The celebration consists of a procession of
+children through the streets of the town. The foremost three, dressed in
+flowing robes to represent the wise men of the East, come riding along
+on ponies, holding in their hands the gifts for the Infant King;
+following them come angels and shepherds and flute-players, all
+represented by children dressed in pretty costumes and carrying garlands
+of flowers. These processions are among the most picturesque of all
+Christmas celebrations.
+
+
+ =AMONG THE MORAVIANS=
+
+For many days before Christmas the Moravian housewives in Bethlehem,
+Pennsylvania, are busy in their kitchens making good things for the
+holidays--mint-cakes, pepper-nuts, _Kümmelbrod_, sugar-cake, mince-pies,
+and, most important of all, large quantities of "Christmas cakes." These
+Christmas cakes are a kind of ginger cooky, crisp and spicy, and are
+made according to a recipe known only to the Moravians. They are made in
+all sorts of curious shapes--birds, horses, bears, lions, fishes,
+turtles, stars, leaves, and funny little men and women; so that they are
+not only good to eat, but are ornamental as well, and are often used by
+the good fathers and mothers as decorations for the "_Putz_."
+
+Every Moravian family has its _Putz_ at Christmas-time. This consists of
+a Christmas tree surrounded at its base by a miniature landscape made up
+of moss and greens and make-believe rocks, and adorned with toy houses
+and tiny fences and trees and all sorts of little animals and toy
+people.
+
+[Illustration: A CHRISTMAS "PUTZ"]
+
+On Christmas eve a love-feast is held in the church. The greater part of
+the service is devoted to music, for which the Moravians have always
+been noted. While the choir is singing, cake and coffee are brought in
+and served to all the members of the congregation, each one receiving a
+good-sized bun and a large cup of coffee. Shortly before the end of the
+meeting lighted wax candles carried on large trays are brought into the
+church, by men on one side and women on the other, and passed around to
+the little folks--one for each boy and girl. This is meant to represent
+the coming of the Light into the world, and is but one of the many
+beautiful customs observed by the Moravians.
+
+
+ =IN ALASKA=
+
+"Going around with the star" is a popular Christmas custom among some of
+the natives of Alaska who belong to the Greek Church. A large figure of
+a star, covered with brightly colored paper, is carried about at night
+by a procession of men and women and children. They call at the homes of
+the well-to-do families of the village, marching about from house to
+house, headed by the star-bearer and two men or boys carrying lanterns
+on long poles. They are warmly welcomed at each place, and are invited
+to come in and have some refreshments. After enjoying the cakes and
+other good things, and singing one or two carols, they take up the star
+and move on to the next house.
+
+These processions take place each night during Christmas week; but after
+the second night the star-bearers are followed by men and boys dressed
+in fantastic clothes, who try to catch the star-men and destroy their
+stars. This part of the game is supposed to be an imitation of the
+soldiers of Herod trying to destroy the children of Bethlehem; but these
+happy folks of Alaska evidently don't think much about its meaning, for
+they make a great frolic of it. Everybody is full of fun, and the frosty
+air of the dark winter nights is filled with laughter as men and boys
+and romping girls chase one another here and there in merry excitement.
+
+
+ =IN HAWAII=
+
+The natives of Hawaii say that Santa Claus comes over to the islands in
+a boat. Perhaps he does; it would be a tedious journey for his reindeer
+to make without stopping from San Francisco to Honolulu. At all events,
+he gets there by some means or other, for he would not neglect the
+little folks of those islands away out in the Pacific.
+
+They look for him as eagerly as do the boys and girls in the lands of
+snow and ice, and although it must almost melt him to get around in that
+warm climate with his furs on, he never misses a Christmas.
+
+Before the missionaries and the American settlers went to Hawaii, the
+natives knew nothing about Christmas, but now they all celebrate the
+day, and do it, of course, in the same way as the Americans who live
+there. The main difference between Christmas in Honolulu and Christmas
+in New York is that in Honolulu in December the weather is like June in
+New York. Birds are warbling in the leafy trees; gardens are overflowing
+with roses and carnations; fields and mountain slopes are ablaze with
+color; and a sunny sky smiles dreamily upon the glories of a summer day.
+In the morning people go to church, and during the day there are sports
+and games and merry-making of all sorts. The Christmas dinner is eaten
+out of doors in the shade of the veranda, and everybody is happy and
+contented.
+
+
+ =IN THE PHILIPPINES=
+
+"BUENAS PASQUAS!" This is the hearty greeting that comes to the dweller
+in the Philippines on Christmas morning, and with it, perhaps, an
+offering of flowers.
+
+[Illustration: CHRISTMAS IN THE PHILIPPINES]
+
+The Filipino, like the Porto Rican and all others who have lived under
+Spanish rule, look upon Christmas as a great religious festival, and one
+that requires very special attention. On Christmas eve the churches are
+open, and the coming of the great day is celebrated by a mass at
+midnight; and during all of Christmas day mass is held every hour, so
+that every one may have an opportunity to attend. Even the popular
+Christmas customs among the people are nearly all of a religious
+character, for most of them consist of little plays or dramas founded
+upon the life of the Saviour.
+
+These plays are called _pastures_, and are performed by bands of young
+men and women, and sometimes mere boys and girls, who go about from
+village to village and present their simple little plays to expectant
+audiences at every stopping-place. The visit of the wise men, the flight
+into Egypt--these and many other incidents as related in the Scriptures
+are acted in these _pastores_.
+
+
+
+
+ =New Year's Day=
+
+ _January 1_
+
+
+The custom of celebrating the first day of the year is a very ancient
+one. The exchange of gifts, the paying of calls, the making of good
+resolutions for the new year and feasting often characterize the day.
+The custom of ringing the church bells is of the widest extent.
+
+The old-world custom of sitting up on New Year's eve to see the old year
+out is still very common.
+
+
+ =EXTRACT FROM "SOCIAL LIFE IN THE COLONIES"=
+
+ _The Century Magazine, July 1885_
+
+ BY EDWARD EGGLESTON
+
+New Year's Day was celebrated among the New York Dutch by the calls of
+the gentlemen on their lady friends; it is perhaps the only distinctly
+Dutch custom that afterward came into widespread use in the United
+States. New Year's Day, and the church festivals kept alike by the Dutch
+and English, brought an intermission of labor to the New York slaves,
+who gathered in throngs to devote themselves to wild frolics. The
+Brooklyn fields were crowded with them on New Year's Day, at Easter, at
+Whitsuntide, or "Prixter," as the Dutch called it, and on "San Claus
+Day"--the feast of St. Nicholas.
+
+
+ =A CHINESE NEW YEAR'S IN CALIFORNIA=
+
+ BY H.H.
+
+The Chinese in California have a week of holiday at their New Year's in
+February, just as we do between the twenty-fifth of December and the
+first of January.
+
+In the cities they make a fine display of fire-works. They use barrels
+full of fire-crackers, and the Chinese boys do not fire them off, as the
+American boys do, a cracker at a time; they bring out a large box full,
+or a barrel full, and fire them off package after package, as fast as
+they can.
+
+In Santa Barbara, where I was during the Chinese New Year's of 1882, we
+heard the crackers long before we reached Chinatown. After these stopped
+we went into the houses. Every Chinese family keeps open house on New
+Year's day all day long. They set up a picture or an image of their god
+in some prominent place, and on a table in front of this they put a
+little feast of good things to eat. Some are for an offering to the god
+and some are for their friends who call. Everyone is expected to take
+something.
+
+There was no family so poor that it did not have something set out, and
+some sort of a shrine made for its idol; in some houses it was only a
+coarse wooden box turned up on one end like a cupboard, with two or
+three little teacups full of rice or tea, and one poor candle burning
+before a paper picture of the god pasted or tacked at the back of the
+box.
+
+It was amusing to watch the American boys darting about from shop to
+shop and house to house, coming out with their hands full of queer
+Chinese things to eat, showing them to each other and comparing notes.
+
+"Oh, let me taste that!" one boy would exclaim on seeing some new thing;
+and "Where did you get it? Which house gives that?" Then the whole party
+would race off to make a descent on that house and get some more. I
+thought it wonderfully hospitable on the part of the Chinese people to
+let all these American boys run in and out of their houses in that way,
+and help themselves from the New Year's feast.
+
+Some of the boys were very rude and ill-mannered--little better than
+street beggars; but the Chinese were polite and generous to them all.
+The joss-house, where they held their religious services, was a chamber
+opening out upon an upper balcony. This balcony was hung with lanterns
+and decorated. The door at the foot of the stairs which led to this
+chamber stood open all day, and any one who wished could go up and say
+his prayers in the Chinese fashion, which is a curious fashion indeed.
+They have slender reeds with tight rolls of brown paper fastened at one
+end. In front of the image or picture of their god they set a box or
+vase of ashes, on which a little sandalwood is kept burning. When they
+wish to make a prayer they stick one of the reeds down in these ashes
+and set the paper on fire. They think the smoke of the burning paper
+will carry the prayer up to heaven.
+
+I asked a Chinese man who could speak a little English why they put
+teacups of wine and tea and rice before their god; if they believed that
+the god would eat and drink.
+
+"Oh, no," he said, "that not what for. What you like self, you give god.
+He see. He like see."
+
+
+
+
+ =Lincoln's Birthday=
+
+ _February 12_
+
+ ABRAHAM LINCOLN
+
+ Born February 12, 1809 Died April 15, 1865
+
+Lincoln was the sixteenth President of the United States. He was
+descended from a Quaker family of English origin. He followed various
+occupations, including those of a farm laborer, a salesman, a merchant,
+and a surveyor; was admitted to the bar in 1836 and began the practice
+of law in this year. He was twice elected President, the second time
+receiving 212 out of 233 electoral votes. He was shot by John Wilkes
+Booth at Ford's Theater, Washington, April 14, 1865, and died the
+following day.
+
+
+ =ABRAHAM LINCOLN=
+
+ BY HELEN NICOLAY
+
+Abraham Lincoln was not an ordinary man. He was, in truth, in the
+language of the poet Lowell, a "new birth of our new soil." His
+greatness did not consist in growing up on the frontier. An ordinary man
+would have found on the frontier exactly what he would have found
+elsewhere--a commonplace life, varying only with the changing ideas and
+customs of time and place. But for the man with extraordinary powers of
+mind and body, for one gifted by Nature as Abraham Lincoln was gifted,
+the pioneer life, with its severe training in self-denial, patience, and
+industry, developed his character, and fitted him for the great duties
+of his after life as no other training could have done.
+
+[Illustration: LINCOLN'S HOME AFTER HIS MARRIAGE]
+
+His advancement in the astonishing career that carried him from
+obscurity to world-wide fame--from postmaster of New Salem village to
+President of the United States, from captain of a backwoods volunteer
+company to Commander-in-chief of the army and navy--was neither sudden
+nor accidental nor easy. He was both ambitious and successful, but his
+ambition was moderate, and his success was slow. And, because his
+success was slow, it never outgrew either his judgment or his powers.
+Between the day when he left his father's cabin and launched his canoe
+on the head waters of the Sangamon River to begin life on his own
+account, and the day of his first inauguration, lay full thirty years
+of toil, self-denial, patience; often of effort baffled, of hope
+deferred; sometimes of bitter disappointment. Even with the natural gift
+of great genius, it required an average lifetime and faithful,
+unrelaxing effort to transform the raw country stripling into a fit
+ruler for this great nation.
+
+Almost every success was balanced--sometimes overbalanced--by a seeming
+failure. He went into the Black Hawk war a captain, and through no fault
+of his own came out a private. He rode to the hostile frontier on
+horseback, and trudged home on foot. His store "winked out." His
+surveyor's compass and chain, with which he was earning a scanty living,
+were sold for debt. He was defeated in his first attempts to be
+nominated for the legislature and for Congress; defeated in his
+application to be appointed Commissioner of the General Land Office;
+defeated for the Senate, when he had forty-five votes to begin with, by
+a man who had only five votes to begin with; defeated again after his
+joint debates with Douglas; defeated in the nomination for
+Vice-President, when a favorable nod from half a dozen politicians would
+have brought him success.
+
+Failures? Not so. Every seeming defeat was a slow success. His was the
+growth of the oak, and not of Jonah's gourd. He could not become a
+master workman until he had served a tedious apprenticeship. It was the
+quarter of a century of reading, thinking, speech-making, and law-making
+which fitted him to be the chosen champion in the great Lincoln-Douglas
+debates of 1858. It was the great moral victory won in those debates
+(although the senatorship went to Douglas), added to the title "Honest
+Old Abe," won by truth and manhood among his neighbors during a whole
+lifetime, that led the people of the United States to trust him with the
+duties and powers of President.
+
+[Illustration: HOUSE IN WHICH LINCOLN LIVED WHEN HE WAS ELECTED
+PRESIDENT]
+
+And when, at last, after thirty years of endeavor, success had beaten
+down defeat, when Lincoln had been nominated, elected, and inaugurated,
+came the crowning trial of his faith and constancy. When the people, by
+free and lawful choice, had placed honor and power in his hands, when
+his name could convene Congress, approve laws, cause ships to sail and
+armies to move, there suddenly came upon the government and the nation a
+fatal paralysis. Honor seemed to dwindle and power to vanish. Was he
+then, after all, not to be President? Was patriotism dead? Was the
+Constitution only a bit of waste paper? Was the Union gone?
+
+The outlook was indeed grave. There was treason in Congress, treason in
+the Supreme Court, treason in the army and navy. Confusion and discord
+were everywhere. To use Mr. Lincoln's forcible figure of speech, sinners
+were calling the righteous to repentance. Finally the flag, insulted and
+fired upon, trailed in surrender at Sumter; and then came the
+humiliation of the riot at Baltimore, and the President for a few days
+practically a prisoner in the capital of the nation.
+
+[Illustration: PRESIDENT LINCOLN AND TAD]
+
+But his apprenticeship had been served, and there was to be no more
+failure. With faith and justice and generosity he conducted for four
+long years a war whose frontiers stretched from the Potomac to the Rio
+Grande; whose soldiers numbered a million men on each side. The labor,
+the thought, the responsibility, the strain of mind and anguish of soul
+that he gave to his great task, who can measure? "Here was place for no
+holiday magistrate, no fair-weather sailor," as Emerson justly said of
+him. "The new pilot was hurried to the helm in a tornado. In four
+years--four years of battle days--his endurance, his fertility of
+resources, his magnanimity, were sorely tried and never found wanting."
+"By his courage, his justice, his even temper, ... his humanity, he stood
+a heroic figure in a heroic epoch."
+
+[Illustration: THE LINCOLN MONUMENT AT SPRINGFIELD]
+
+What but a lifetime's schooling in disappointment; what but the
+pioneer's self-reliance and freedom from prejudice; what but the clear
+mind quick to see natural right and unswerving in its purpose to follow
+it; what but the steady self-control, the unwarped sympathy, the
+unbounded charity of this man with spirit so humble and soul so great,
+could have carried him through the labors he wrought to the victory he
+attained?
+
+With truth it could be written, "His heart was as great as the world,
+but there was no room in it to hold the memory of a wrong." So, "with
+malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as
+God gave him to see the right," he lived and died. We, who have never
+seen him, yet feel daily the influence of his kindly life, and cherish
+among our most precious possessions the heritage of his example.
+
+[Illustration: STATUE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. BY AUGUSTUS ST. GAUDENS]
+
+
+ =THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS=
+
+Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this
+continent a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the
+proposition that all men are created equal.
+
+Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or
+any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on
+a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of
+that field as a final resting-place for those who here gave their lives
+that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we
+should do this.
+
+But, in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate--we cannot consecrate--we
+cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled
+here, have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract.
+The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it
+can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather,
+to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here
+have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here
+dedicated to the great task remaining before us--that from these honored
+dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the
+last full measure of devotion; that we here highly resolve that these
+dead shall not have died in vain; that this nation, under God, shall
+have a new birth of freedom; and that government of the people, by the
+people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.
+
+ The above address was delivered by Abraham Lincoln, November 19,
+ 1863, at the dedication of the Gettysburg battle-field as a
+ national cemetery for Union soldiers.
+
+
+ =O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!=
+
+ O captain. My captain. Our fearful trip is done;
+ The ship has weathered 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!
+ Leave you not the little spot,
+ 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;
+ O captain. Dear father.
+ This arm I push beneath you;
+ 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;
+ But the ship, the ship is anchor'd safe, 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 silent tread,
+ Walk the spot the captain lies,
+ Fallen cold and dead.
+
+ WALT WHITMAN.
+
+
+
+
+ =St. Valentine's Day=
+
+ _February 14_
+
+
+Custom decrees that on this day the young shall exchange missives in
+which the love of the sender is told in verses, pictures, and
+sentiments. No reason beyond a guess can be given to connect St.
+Valentine with these customs. He was a Christian martyr, about 270 A.D.,
+while the practice of sending valentines had its origin in the heathen
+worship of Juno. It is Cupid's day, and no boy or girl needs any
+encouragement to make the most of it.
+
+
+ =WHO BEGAN IT?=
+
+ BY OLIVE THORNE
+
+There's one thing we know positively, that St. Valentine didn't begin
+this fourteenth of February excitement; but who _did_ is a question not
+so easy to answer. I don't think any one would have begun it if he could
+have known what the simple customs of his day would have grown into, or
+could even have imagined the frightful valentines that disgrace our
+shops to-day.
+
+It began, for us, with our English ancestors, who used to assemble on
+the eve of St. Valentine's day, put the names of all the young maidens
+promiscuously in a box, and let each bachelor draw one out. The damsel
+whose name fell to his lot became his valentine for the year. He wore
+her name in his bosom or on his sleeve, and it was his duty to attend
+her and protect her. As late as the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
+this custom was very popular, even among the upper classes.
+
+But the wiseacres have traced the custom farther back. Some of them
+think it was begun by the ancient Romans, who had on the fourteenth or
+fifteenth of February a festival in honor of Lupercus, "the destroyer of
+wolves"--a wolf-destroyer being quite worthy of honor in those wild
+days, let me tell you. At this festival it was the custom, among other
+curious things, to pair off the young men and maidens in the same chance
+way, and with the same result of a year's attentions.
+
+Even this is not wholly satisfactory. Who began it among the Romans?
+becomes the next interesting question. One old writer says it was
+brought to Rome from Arcadia sixty years before the Trojan war (which
+Homer wrote about, you know). I'm sure that's far enough back to satisfy
+anybody. The same writer also says that the Pope tried to abolish it in
+the fifth century, but he succeeded only in sending it down to us in the
+name of St. Valentine instead of Lupercus.
+
+[Illustration: FOR THIS WAS ON SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY]
+
+Our own ancestry in England and Scotland have observed some very funny
+customs within the last three centuries. At one time valentines were
+fashionable among the nobility, and, while still selected by lot, it
+became the duty of a gentleman to give to the lady who fell to his lot a
+handsome present. Pieces of jewelry costing thousands of dollars were
+not unusual, though smaller things, as gloves, were more common.
+
+There was a tradition among the country people that every bird chose its
+mate on Valentine's day; and at one time it was the custom for young
+folks to go out before daylight on that morning and try to catch an owl
+and two sparrows in a net. If they succeeded, it was a good omen, and
+entitled them to gifts from the villagers. Another fashion among them
+was to write the valentine, tie it to an apple or orange, and steal up
+to the house of the chosen one in the evening, open the door quietly,
+and throw it in.
+
+Those were the days of charms, and of course the rural maidens had a
+sure and infallible charm foretelling the future husband. On the eve of
+St. Valentine's day, the anxious damsel prepared for sleep by pinning to
+her pillow five bay leaves, one at each corner and one in the middle
+(which must have been delightful to sleep on, by the way). If she
+dreamed of her sweetheart, she was sure to marry him before the end of
+the year.
+
+But to make it a sure thing, the candidate for matrimony must boil an
+egg hard, take out the yolk, and fill its place with salt. Just before
+going to bed, she must eat egg, salt, shell and all, and neither speak
+nor drink after it. If that wouldn't insure her a vivid dream, there
+surely could be no virtue in charms.
+
+Modern valentines, aside from the valuable presents often contained in
+them, are very pretty things, and they are growing prettier every year,
+since large business houses spare neither skill nor money in getting
+them up. The most interesting thing about them, to "grown-ups," is the
+way they are made; and perhaps even you youngsters, who watch eagerly
+for the postman, "sinking beneath the load of delicate embarrassments
+not his own," would like to know how satin and lace and flowers and
+other dainty things grew into a valentine.
+
+It was no fairy's handiwork. It went through the hands of grimy-looking
+workmen before it reached your hands.
+
+To be sure, a dreamy artist may have designed it, but a lithographer,
+with inky fingers, printed the picture part of it; a die-cutter, with
+sleeves rolled up, made a pattern in steel of the lace-work on the edge;
+and a dingy-looking pressman, with a paper hat on, stamped the pattern
+around the picture. Another hard-handed workman rubbed the back of the
+stamped lace with sand-paper till it came in holes and looked like lace,
+and not merely like stamped paper; and a row of girls at a common long
+table put on the colors with stencils, gummed on the hearts and darts
+and cupids and flowers, and otherwise finished the thing exactly like
+the pattern before them.
+
+You see, the sentiment about a valentine doesn't begin until Tom, Dick,
+or Harry takes it from the stationer, and writes your name on it.
+
+[Illustration: ST. VALENTINE'S LETTER-CARRIERS]
+
+
+
+
+ =Washington's Birthday=
+
+ _February 22_
+
+ GEORGE WASHINGTON
+
+ Born February 22, 1732 Died December 14, 1799
+
+
+Washington was the first President of the United States, and the son of
+a Virginia planter. He attended school until about sixteen years of age,
+was engaged in surveying, 1748-51, became an officer in the Continental
+army, and President in 1789. He was re-elected in 1793. He was
+preëminent for his sound judgment and perfect self-control. It is said
+that no act of his public life can be traced to personal caprice,
+ambition, or resentment.
+
+
+ =THE BOYHOOD OF WASHINGTON=
+
+ BY HORACE E. SCUDDER
+
+It was near the shore of the Potomac River, between Pope's Creek and
+Bridge's Creek, that Augustine Washington lived when his son George was
+born. The land had been in the family ever since Augustine's
+grandfather, John Washington, had bought it, when he came over from
+England in 1657. John Washington was a soldier and a public-spirited
+man, and so the parish in which he lived--for Virginia was divided into
+parishes as some other colonies into townships--was named Washington. It
+is a quiet neighborhood; not a sign remains of the old house, and the
+only mark of the place is a stone slab, broken and overgrown with weeds
+and brambles, which lies on a bed of bricks taken from the remnants of
+the old chimney of the house. It bears the inscription:
+
+ Here
+The 11th of February, 1732 (old style)
+ George Washington
+ was born
+
+[Illustration: SLAB THAT MARKS THE LOCATION OF THE HOUSE WHERE
+WASHINGTON WAS BORN]
+
+The English had lately agreed to use the calendar of Pope Gregory, which
+added eleven days to the reckoning, but people still used the old style
+as well as the new. By the new style, the birthday was February 22, and
+that is the day which is now observed. The family into which the child
+was born consisted of the father and mother, Augustine and Mary
+Washington, and two boys, Lawrence and Augustine. These were sons of
+Augustine Washington and a former wife who had died four years before.
+George Washington was the eldest of the children of Augustine and Mary
+Washington; he had afterward three brothers and two sisters, but one of
+the sisters died in infancy.
+
+It was not long after George Washington's birth that the house in which
+he was born was burned, and as his father was at the time especially
+interested in some iron-works at a distance, it was determined not to
+rebuild upon the lonely place. Accordingly Augustine Washington removed
+his family to a place which he owned in Stafford County, on the banks of
+the Rappahannock River opposite Fredericksburg. The house is not now
+standing, but a picture was made of it before it was destroyed. It was,
+like many Virginia houses of the day, divided into four rooms on a
+floor, and had great outside chimneys at either end.
+
+Here George Washington spent his childhood. He learned to read, write,
+and cipher at a small school kept by Hobby, the sexton of the parish
+church. Among his playmates was Richard Henry Lee, who was afterward a
+famous Virginian. When the boys grew up, they wrote to each other of
+grave matters of war and state, but here is the beginning of their
+correspondence, written when they were nine years old.
+
+ "RICHARD HENRY LEE TO GEORGE WASHINGTON:
+
+ "Pa brought me two pretty books full of pictures he got them in
+ Alexandria they have pictures of dogs and cats and tigers and
+ elefants and ever so many pretty things cousin bids me send you one
+ of them it has a picture of an elefant and a little Indian boy on
+ his back like uncle jo's sam pa says if I learn my tasks good he
+ will let uncle jo bring me to see you will you ask your ma to let
+ you come to see me.
+
+ "RICHARD HENRY LEE."
+
+
+ "GEORGE WASHINGTON TO RICHARD HENRY LEE:
+
+ "DEAR DICKEY I thank you very much for the pretty picture book you
+ gave me. Sam asked me to show him the pictures and I showed him all
+ the pictures in it; and I read to him how the tame elephant took
+ care of the master's little boy, and put him on his back and would
+ not let anybody touch his master's little son. I can read three or
+ four pages sometimes without missing a word. Ma says I may go to
+ see you, and stay all day with you next week if it be not rainy.
+ She says I may ride my pony Hero if Uncle Ben will go with me and
+ lead Hero. I have a little piece of poetry about the picture book
+ you gave me, but I mustn't tell you who wrote the poetry.
+
+ "'G.W.'s compliments to R.H.L.,
+ And likes his book full well,
+ Henceforth will count him his friend,
+ And hopes many happy days he may spend.'
+
+ "Your good friend,
+ "GEORGE WASHINGTON.
+
+ "I am going to get a whip top soon, and you may see it and whip
+ it."[1]
+
+It looks very much as if Richard Henry sent his letter off just as it
+was written. I suspect that his correspondent's letter was looked over,
+corrected, and copied before it was sent. Very possibly Augustine
+Washington was absent at the time on one of his journeys; but at any
+rate the boy owed most of his training to his mother, for only two years
+after this, his father died, and he was left to his mother's care.
+
+[Illustration: MONUMENT ON THE SITE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON'S BIRTHPLACE]
+
+She was a woman born to command, and since she was left alone with a
+family and an estate to care for, she took the reins into her own hands,
+and never gave them up to any one else. She used to drive about
+in an old-fashioned open chaise, visiting the various parts of her farm,
+just as a planter would do on horseback. The story is told that she had
+given an agent directions how to do a piece of work, and he had seen fit
+to do it differently, because he thought his way a better one. He showed
+her the improvement.
+
+"And pray," said the lady, "who gave you any exercise of judgment in the
+matter? I command you, sir; there is nothing left for you but to obey."
+
+In those days, more than now, a boy used very formal language when
+addressing his mother. He might love her warmly, but he was expected to
+treat her with a great show of respect. When Washington wrote to his
+mother, even after he was of age, he began his letter, "Honored Madam,"
+and signed it, "Your dutiful son." This was a part of the manners of the
+time. It was like the stiff dress which men wore when they paid their
+respects to others; it was put on for the occasion, and one would have
+been thought very unmannerly who did not make a marked difference
+between his every-day dress and that which he wore when he went into the
+presence of his betters. So Washington, when he wrote to his mother,
+would not say, "Dear Mother."
+
+Such habits as this go deeper than mere forms of speech. I do not
+suppose that the sons of this lady feared her, but they stood in awe of
+her, which is quite a different thing.
+
+"We were all as mute as mice, when in her presence," says one of
+Washington's companions; and common report makes her to have been very
+much such a woman as her son afterward was a man.
+
+I think that George Washington owed two strong traits to his mother,--a
+governing spirit, and a spirit of order and method. She taught him many
+lessons and gave him many rules; but, after all, it was her character
+shaping his which was most powerful. She taught him to be truthful, but
+her lessons were not half so forcible as her own truthfulness.
+
+There is a story told of George Washington's boyhood--unfortunately
+there are not many stories--which is to the point. His father had taken
+a great deal of pride in his blooded horses, and his mother afterward
+took great pains to keep the stock pure. She had several young horses
+that had not yet been broken, and one of them in particular, a sorrel,
+was extremely spirited. No one had been able to do anything with it, and
+it was pronounced thoroughly vicious, as people are apt to pronounce
+horses which they have not learned to master. George was determined to
+ride this colt, and told his companions that if they would help him
+catch it, he would ride and tame it.
+
+[Illustration: OLD WHITE CHAPEL, LANCASTER COUNTY, VIRGINIA, WHERE
+WASHINGTON AND HIS MOTHER ATTENDED SERVICE]
+
+Early in the morning they set out for the pasture, where the boys
+managed to surround the sorrel and then to put a bit into its mouth.
+Washington sprang on its back, the boys dropped the bridle, and away
+flew the angry animal. Its rider at once began to command; the horse
+resisted, backing about the field, rearing and plunging. The boys became
+thoroughly alarmed, but Washington kept his seat, never once losing his
+self-control or his mastery of the colt. The struggle was a sharp one;
+when suddenly, as if determined to rid itself of its rider, the creature
+leaped into the air with a tremendous bound. It was its last. The
+violence burst a blood-vessel, and the noble horse fell dead.
+
+Before the boys could sufficiently recover to consider how they should
+extricate themselves from the scrape, they were called to breakfast; and
+the mistress of the house, knowing that they had been in the fields,
+began to ask after her stock.
+
+"Pray, young gentlemen," said she, "have you seen my blooded colts in
+your rambles? I hope they are well taken care of. My favorite, I am
+told, is as large as his sire."
+
+The boys looked at one another, and no one liked to speak. Of course the
+mother repeated her question.
+
+"The sorrel is dead, madam," said her son. "I killed him!"
+
+And then he told the whole story. They say that his mother flushed with
+anger, as her son often used to, and then, like him, controlled herself,
+and presently said, quietly:
+
+"It is well; but while I regret the loss of my favorite, I rejoice in
+my son who always speaks the truth."
+
+The story of Washington's killing the blooded colt is of a piece with
+other stories less particular, which show that he was a very athletic
+fellow. Of course, when a boy becomes famous, every one likes to
+remember the wonderful things he did before he was famous, and
+Washington's playmates, when they grew up, used to show the spot by the
+Rappahannock near Fredericksburg where he stood and threw a stone to the
+opposite bank; and at the celebrated Natural Bridge, the arch of which
+is two hundred feet above the ground, they always tell the visitor that
+George Washington threw a stone in the air the whole height. He
+undoubtedly took part in all the sports which were the favorites of his
+country at that time--he pitched heavy bars, tossed quoits, ran, leaped,
+and wrestled; for he was a powerful, large-limbed young fellow, and he
+had a very large and strong hand.
+
+(From "Life of George Washington" by Horace E. Scudder, published by
+Houghton, Mifflin & Co.)
+
+(The illustrations in this story are copied from the original pictures in
+Mr. B.J. Lossing's "Mt. Vernon and its Associations," by permission of
+Messrs. J.C. Yorston & Co., Cincinnati, Ohio.)
+
+[Footnote 1: From B.J. Lossing's "The Home of Washington."]
+
+
+
+
+ =Longfellow's Birthday=
+
+ _February 27_
+
+ HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW
+
+ Born February 27, 1807 Died March 24, 1882
+
+
+Longfellow graduated at Bowdoin College in 1825; traveled in Europe in
+1826; was professor at Bowdoin in 1829-35; again visited Europe 1835-36;
+and was professor at Harvard College 1836-54. He continued to reside at
+Cambridge. He is best known and loved for his poems, though he wrote
+three novels.
+
+
+ =LONGFELLOW AND THE CHILDREN=
+
+ BY LUCY LARCOM
+
+The poets who love children are the poets whom children love. It is
+natural that they should care much for each other, because both children
+and poets look into things in the same way,--simply, with open eyes and
+hearts, seeing Nature as it is, and finding whatever is lovable and pure
+in the people who surround them, as flowers may receive back from
+flowers sweet odors for those which they have given. The little child is
+born with a poet's heart in him, and the poet has been fitly called "the
+eternal child."
+
+Not that all children or all poets are alike in this. But of Longfellow
+we think as of one who has always been fresh and natural in his sympathy
+for children, one who has loved them as they have loved him.
+
+We wish he had given us more of the memories of his own childhood. One
+vivid picture of it comes to us in "My Lost Youth," a poem which shows
+us how everything he saw when a child must have left within him a
+life-long impression. That boyhood by the sea must have been full of
+dreams as well as of pictures. The beautiful bay with its green islands,
+widening out to the Atlantic on the east, and the dim chain of
+mountains, the highest in New England, lying far away on the
+northwestern horizon, give his native city a roomy feeling not often
+experienced in the streets of a town; and the boy-poet must have felt
+his imagination taking wings there, for many a long flight. So he more
+than hints to us in his song:
+
+ "I can see the shadowy lines of its trees,
+ And catch, in sudden gleams,
+ The sheen of the far-surrounding seas,
+ And islands that were the Hesperides
+ Of all my boyish dreams.
+ And the burden of that old song,
+ It murmurs and whispers still:
+ 'A boy's will is the wind's will,
+ And the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts.'
+
+ "I remember the black wharves and the slips,
+ And the sea-tides tossing free;
+ And Spanish sailors with bearded lips,
+ And the beauty and mystery of the ships,
+ And the magic of the sea.
+ And the voice of that wayward song
+ Is singing and saying still:
+ 'A boy's will is the wind's will,
+ And the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts.'"
+
+Longfellow's earliest volume, "The Voices of the Night," was one of the
+few books of American poetry that some of us who are now growing old
+ourselves can remember reading, just as we were emerging from childhood.
+"The Reaper and the Flowers" and the "Psalm of Life,"--I recall the
+delight with which I used to repeat those poems. The latter, so full of
+suggestions which a very young person could feel, but only half
+understand, was for that very reason the more fascinating. It seemed to
+give glimpses, through opening doors, of that wonderful new world of
+mankind, where children are always longing to wander freely as men and
+women. Looking forward and aspiring are among the first occupations of
+an imaginative child; and the school-boy who declaimed the words:
+
+ "Lives of great men all remind us
+ We can make our lives sublime,"
+
+and the school-girl who read them quietly by herself, felt them,
+perhaps, no less keenly than the man of thought and experience.
+
+Longfellow has said that--
+
+ "Sublimity always is simple
+ Both in sermon and song, a child can seize on its meaning,"
+
+and the simplicity of his poetry is the reason why children and young
+people have always loved it; the reason, also, why it has been enjoyed
+by men and women and children all over the world.
+
+One of his poems which has been the delight of children and grown people
+alike is the "Village Blacksmith," the first half of which is a
+description that many a boy might feel as if he could have written
+himself--if he only had the poet's command of words and rhymes, and the
+poet's genius! Is not this one of the proofs of a good poem, that it
+haunts us until it seems as if it had almost grown out of our own mind?
+How life-like the picture is!--
+
+ "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."
+
+No wonder the Cambridge children, when the old chestnut-tree that
+overhung the smithy was cut down, had a memento shaped into a chair
+from its boughs, to present to him who had made it an immortal tree in
+his verse! It bore flower and fruit for them a second time in his
+acknowledgment of the gift; for he told them how--
+
+ "There, by the blacksmith's forge, beside the street
+ Its blossoms, white and sweet,
+ Enticed the bees, until it seemed alive,
+ And murmured like a hive.
+
+ "And when the wind of autumn, with a shout
+ Tossed its great arms about,
+ The shining chestnuts, bursting from the sheath,
+ Dropped to the ground beneath."
+
+In its own wild, winsome way, the song of "Hiawatha's Childhood" is one
+of the prettiest fancies in poetry. It is a dream of babyhood in the
+"forest primeval," with Nature for nurse and teacher; and it makes us
+feel as if--were the poet's idea only a possibility--it might have been
+very pleasant to be a savage baby, although we consider it so much
+better to be civilized.
+
+How Longfellow loved the very little ones can be seen in such verses as
+the "Hanging of the Crane," and in those earlier lines "To a Child,"
+where the baby on his mother's knee gazes at the painted tiles, shakes
+his "coral rattle with the silver bells," or escapes through the open
+door into the old halls where once
+
+ "The Father of his country dwelt."
+
+Those verses give us a charming glimpse of the home-life in the historic
+mansion which is now so rich with poetic, as well as patriotic
+associations.
+
+How beautiful it was to be let in to that twilight library scene
+described in the "Children's Hour":
+
+ "A sudden rush from the stair-way,
+ A sudden raid from the hall!
+ By three doors left unguarded,
+ They enter my castle wall!
+
+ "They climb up into my turret,
+ O'er the arms and back of my chair;
+ If I try to escape, they surround me;
+ They seem to be everywhere."
+
+Afterward, when sorrow and loss had come to the happy home, in the
+sudden removal of the mother of those merry children, the father who
+loved them so had a sadder song for them, as he looked onward into their
+orphaned lives:
+
+ "O little feet, that such long years
+ Must wander on, through hopes and fears,
+ Must ache and bleed beneath your load,
+ I, nearer to the wayside inn,
+ Where toil shall cease, and rest begin,
+ Am weary, thinking of your road!"
+
+[Illustration: LONGFELLOW'S HOUSE--ONCE WASHINGTON'S HEADQUARTERS AT
+CAMBRIDGE]
+
+Longfellow loved all children, and had a word for them whenever he met
+them.
+
+At a concert, going early with her father, a little girl espied Mr.
+Longfellow sitting alone, and begged that she might go and speak to him.
+Her father, himself a stranger, took the liberty of introducing his
+little daughter Edith to the poet.
+
+"Edith?" said Mr. Longfellow, tenderly. "Ah! I have an Edith, too; but
+_my_ baby Edith is twenty years old." And he seated the child beside
+him, taking her hand in his, and making her promise to come and see him
+at his house in Cambridge.
+
+"What is the name of your sled, my boy?" he said to a small lad, who
+came tugging one up the road toward him, on a winter morning.
+
+"It's 'Evange_line_.' Mr. Longfellow wrote 'Evange_line_.' Did you ever
+see Mr. Longfellow?" answered the little fellow, as he ran by, doubtless
+wondering at the smile on the face of the pleasant gray-haired
+gentleman.
+
+Professor Monti, who witnessed the pretty scene, tells the story of a
+little girl who one Christmas inquired the way to the poet's house, and
+asked if she could just step inside the yard; and he relates how Mr.
+Longfellow, being told she was there, went to the door and called her
+in, and showed her the "old clock on the stairs," and many other
+interesting things about the house, leaving his little guest with
+beautiful memories of that Christmas day to carry all through her life.
+This was characteristic of the poet's hospitality, delicate and
+courteous and thoughtful to all who crossed his threshold. Many a
+trembling young girl, frightened at her own boldness in having ventured
+into his presence, was set at ease by her host in the most genial way;
+he would make her forget herself in the interesting mementos all about
+her, devoting himself to her entertainment as if it were the one
+pleasure of the hour for him to do so.
+
+[Illustration: Henry W. Longfellow]
+
+It is often said, and with reason, that we Americans do not think enough
+of manners--that politeness of behavior which comes from genuine
+sympathy and a delicate perception of others' feelings. Certainly our
+young people might look to Mr. Longfellow as a model in this respect. He
+was a perfect gentleman, in the best sense of that term, always
+considerate, and quick to see where he might do a kindness, or say a
+pleasant word.
+
+The celebration of Longfellow's seventy-fifth birthday by
+school-children all over the country is something that those children
+must be glad to think of now--glad to remember that the poet knew how
+much they cared for him and for what he had written. Even the blind
+children, who have to read with their fingers, were enjoying his songs
+with the rest. How pleasant that must have been to him! Certainly, as it
+seems to me, the best tribute that the young people of the country can
+pay to his memory is to become more familiar with his poems.
+
+We should not wait until a great and good man has left us before giving
+him honor, or trying to understand what he has done for us. A dreary
+world ours would be, if there were no poets' songs echoing through it;
+and we may be proud of our country that it has a poetry of its own,
+which it is for us to know and possess for ourselves.
+
+Longfellow has said:
+
+ "What the leaves are to the forest
+ With light and air and food,
+ Ere their sweet and tender juices
+ Have been hardened into wood,
+ That to the world, are children":
+
+and something like this we may say of his songs. There is in all true
+poetry a freshness of life which makes the writer of it immortal.
+
+The singer so much beloved has passed from sight, but the music of his
+voice is in the air, and, listening to it, we know that he can not die.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ =Inauguration Day=
+
+ _March 4_
+
+
+The date was settled by the old Congress of the Confederation in 1788,
+when the procedure was established for the election of a President. It
+was decreed that the Electoral College should meet on the first
+Wednesday of January, the votes be counted by the House of
+Representatives on the first Wednesday of February, and the President be
+inaugurated on the first Wednesday of March. This March date was the
+4th. March 4 has been Inauguration Day ever since.
+
+
+ =HOW A PRESIDENT IS INAUGURATED=
+
+ BY CLIFFORD HOWARD
+
+As you will remember, Thomas Jefferson was the first President of our
+country to be inaugurated at Washington. This took place in the year
+1801, when our national capital was not much more than a year old; and
+you may imagine that the city was a very different-looking place from
+what it is to-day.
+
+But now instead of a straggling town with a few muddy streets and about
+three thousand inhabitants, Jefferson would find our national capital
+one of the most beautiful cities on the face of the earth, with a
+population of nearly three hundred thousand; and on March 4 he would
+behold a scene such as he never dreamed of. Thousands of flags fly from
+the house-tops and windows, bright-colored bunting in beautiful designs
+adorns the great public buildings, all the stores and business houses
+are gaily decorated with flags and streamers, and everything presents
+the appearance of a great and glorious holiday, while the streets swarm
+with the hundreds of thousands of people who have come to the city from
+all parts of the country to take part in the grand celebration.
+
+Everybody is moving toward Pennsylvania Avenue, where the parade is to
+march. No, not everybody: some fifty or sixty thousand make their way to
+the Capitol, so as to get a glimpse of the inauguration exercises that
+take place on the east portico; and although the ceremonies will not
+begin until nearly one o'clock, the great space in front of the Capitol
+is packed with people three hours before that time, some of them having
+come as early as eight o'clock in the morning to be sure of getting a
+good view.
+
+Early in the morning Pennsylvania Avenue is cleared of all street-cars,
+carriages, and bicycles, and no one is allowed to step off the sidewalk.
+A strong wire rope is stretched along each side of the avenue, so as to
+prevent people from getting into the street.
+
+Soon every window and balcony along the line is crowded with spectators.
+Even the roofs are black with people, and small boys may be seen
+perched among the branches of the trees, or hanging on to the
+electric-light poles. For a distance of nearly three miles, on each side
+of the street, people are packed so closely together that it is almost
+impossible for them to move. In every park and open space along the line
+large wooden stands have been erected; and these, too, are filled with
+those who are willing to pay for seats.
+
+As the time for the morning parade draws near, the crowds become
+restless with eagerness and excitement. Policemen on horseback dash up
+and down the avenue to see that the road is clear, and every now and
+then a trooper or messenger in bright uniform gallops past. Suddenly the
+boom of a cannon is heard. The next moment there comes the distant roll
+of drums, and then, amid the inspiring music of brass bands and
+tremendous cheering, the procession appears moving slowly down the
+avenue on its way to the Capitol. Riding ahead is a squad of mounted
+police--big, brawny fellows, with glittering brass buttons. After them
+come the United States troops and naval forces, armed with their rifles
+and sabers that flash in the sunlight, and marching to the music of the
+famous Marine Band, while rumbling over the hard, smooth pavement of
+the avenue come the big cannons drawn by powerful horses. Then appears
+the chief marshal of the parade on his spirited horse, heading the
+body-guard of soldiers that surround the open carriage containing the
+President and the President-elect, sitting side by side. As the
+carriage, which is drawn by four handsome horses, rolls slowly along
+with its distinguished occupants, men and boys shout and cheer at the
+top of their lungs, and throw their hats into the air when their voices
+give out, while the women and girls wave their handkerchiefs and hurrah
+with the rest of the crowd. With hat in hand, the President-elect smiles
+and bows to the right and the left; and with the bands playing and
+people cheering, handkerchiefs fluttering and flags flying, he arrives
+at the Capitol a few minutes before noon. Here he meets with another
+rousing reception from the great mass of people who have been waiting
+for him for two or three hours; and it requires all the efforts of a
+small army of police to open the way for him and his party to pass into
+the Capitol.
+
+[Illustration: GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON ON THE WAY TO HIS INAUGURATION]
+
+The House of Representatives is about to adjourn, and many of its
+members have already come over to the Senate to witness the closing
+exercises there. Extra chairs and seats have been brought in for them
+and the many other prominent officials who also have gathered there,
+including the officers of the army and the navy, the justices of the
+Supreme Court, the cabinet officers, and the foreign ambassadors and
+ministers, many of whom are dressed in their gorgeous state robes.
+According to law, Congress must come to an end at noon; but if the
+presidential party has not made its appearance when the Senate clock is
+about to point to twelve, the hands are moved back a few minutes so as
+to gain time. And before the hands are allowed to get around to twelve,
+everybody has arrived, everything is in readiness, and the President of
+the Senate has administered the oath of office to his successor, the new
+Vice-President of the United States, who at once calls an extra session
+of the Senate, so that not a moment elapses between the death of one
+session and the birth of another. Then, after a short prayer by the
+chaplain and a brief address by the Vice-President, the distinguished
+people gathered in the Senate form in line, and, headed by a company of
+newspaper reporters, they march in dignified procession to the rotunda,
+and thence to the platform on the east front of the Capitol.
+
+The nine justices of the Supreme Court, clothed in their black robes,
+walk out on the platform first, followed by the President-elect. As soon
+as the crowd catches sight of him, a deafening shout breaks forth from
+fifty thousand throats, and, amid the enthusiastic uproar that lasts
+several minutes, hats and canes, umbrellas and handkerchiefs, are waved
+aloft or thrown wildly into the air by joyous and patriotic Americans.
+Removing his hat, the President-elect comes forward, and, turning to the
+Chief Justice of the United States, takes the oath of office as required
+by the Constitution. Then comes the inaugural address, which, of course,
+only those near the platform are able to hear. But the thirty or forty
+thousand who can't hear the speech are willing to agree with everything
+that is said, and every little while they shout and cheer and applaud.
+
+[Illustration: THE INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT GARFIELD]
+
+All this time the crowd on the avenue has been patiently waiting for the
+return of the President. The morning's procession was nothing more than
+a military escort; now is to come the great feature of the day--the
+grand inauguration parade. The ceremonies at the Capitol are over at
+half-past one, and the new President goes at once to the White House,
+greeted with rousing cheers all along the way, and prepares to review
+the greatest parade ever seen in the city of Washington. All the
+morning, companies of soldiers, political clubs, bands, and drum corps
+have been preparing for the afternoon's march. There are so many
+thousands who are going to take part in the parade that orders have been
+given requiring all companies to march in ranks reaching from curb to
+curb, a distance of one hundred and thirty feet, and to follow one
+another as closely as possible.
+
+The march is begun a little before two o'clock; and, although the people
+have been standing on the sidewalks since early morning, they have
+plenty of enthusiasm left, and they fill the air with their shouts and
+hurrahs as regiment after regiment of magnificently drilled soldiers and
+horses marches by.
+
+Even after the electric lamps are lighted, men and horses are still
+tramping along the avenue, and people are still shouting and the bands
+playing and flags waving. And all this time the President stands in
+front of the White House, reviewing the marching thousands as they pass
+along.
+
+But although the big parade finally comes to an end, the festivities are
+not yet over. Late into the night the city is brilliantly illuminated
+by magnificent and wonderful fireworks and powerful electric
+search-lights that shine from the tops of the tall buildings and light
+up the great dome of the Capitol and the Washington monument. Then comes
+the grand inaugural ball. There are over ten thousand people present,
+and the scene is a glorious and wonderful sight.
+
+It is almost sunrise when the last carriage rolls away, and with the
+closing of the ball the inauguration festivities end.
+
+
+
+
+ =Easter Day=
+
+
+Easter is the Sunday that follows the 14th day of the calendar moon,
+which falls upon or next after the 21st of March. This Sunday, when
+Christian churches celebrate the resurrection of Christ, is one of
+solemn rejoicing. Coming after the self-denials of Lent and at the
+beginning of spring, it seems naturally a time of hope and new life. It
+is the feast of flowers, particularly of lilies, and the name had its
+origin in a festival in honor of the goddess of spring. The esteem in
+which it is held is indicated by its ancient title, "The great day."
+
+
+ =A SONG OF EASTER=
+
+ BY CELIA THAXTER
+
+ Sing, children, sing!
+ And the lily censers swing;
+ Sing that life and joy are waking and that Death no more is king.
+ Sing the happy, happy tumult of the slowly brightening Spring;
+ Sing, little children, sing!
+
+ Sing, children, sing!
+ Winter wild has taken wing.
+ Fill the air with the sweet tidings till the frosty echoes ring!
+ Along the eaves the icicles no longer glittering cling;
+ And the crocus in the garden lifts its bright face to the sun,
+ And in the meadows softly the brooks begin to run;
+ And the golden catkins swing
+ In the warm airs of the Spring;
+ Sing, little children, sing!
+
+ Sing, children, sing!
+ The lilies white you bring
+ In the joyous Easter morning for hope are blossoming;
+ And as the earth her shroud of snow from off her breast doth fling,
+ So may we cast our fetters off in God's eternal Spring.
+ So may we find release at last from sorrow and from pain,
+ So may we find our childhood's calm, delicious dawn again.
+ Sweet are your eyes, O little ones, that look with smiling grace,
+ Without a shade of doubt or fear into the Future's face!
+ Sing, sing in happy chorus, with joyful voices tell
+ That death is life, and God is good, and all things shall be well;
+ That bitter days shall cease
+ In warmth and light and peace,--
+ That Winter yields to Spring,--
+ Sing, little children, sing!
+
+[Illustration: "HE SAT DOWN ON THE STEP, BREATHLESS WITH SURPRISE AND
+JOY"]
+
+
+ =THE GENERAL'S EASTER BOX=
+
+ BY TEMPLE BAILEY
+
+The General did not look at all as one would expect a general to look.
+He was short and thick-set and had a red face and a white mustache, and
+he usually dressed in a gray tweed suit, with a funny Norfolk jacket
+with a belt, and wore a soft cap pulled down almost to his eye-glasses.
+
+And he always did his own marketing.
+
+That is how he came to know Jimmy.
+
+Jimmy stood at a corner of Old Market and sold little bundles of dried
+sage and sweet marjoram, and sassafras and cinnamon, and soup-bunches
+made of bits of vegetables tied together--a bit of parsley and a bit of
+celery and a bit of carrot and a sprig of summer savory, all for one
+cent. Then at Christmas-time he displayed wreaths, which he and his
+little mother made at home, and as the spring came on he brought wild
+flowers that he picked in the woods.
+
+And that was how he came to know the General.
+
+For one morning, just before Easter, the General came puffing down the
+outside aisle of Old Market, with his colored man behind him with an
+enormous basket. The General's carriage was drawn up to the curbstone,
+and the gray horses were dancing little fancy dances over the asphalt
+street, when all at once Jimmy thrust a bunch of arbutus under the
+General's very nose.
+
+"Go away, go away," said the General, and trotted down to the carriage
+door, which a footman held open for him.
+
+But a whiff of fragrance had reached him, and he stopped.
+
+"How much?" he asked.
+
+"Three cents," said Jimmy, in a hoarse voice.
+
+The General looked at the little fellow through his eye-glasses.
+
+"Got a cold?" he inquired gruffly.
+
+"Yes, sir," croaked Jimmy.
+
+"Why don't you stay in the house, then?" growled the General.
+
+"Can't, sir," said Jimmy, cheerfully; "business is business."
+
+The General looked at the little stand where "business" was
+transacted--at the little rows of dried stuffs, at the small basket of
+flowers, and at the soup-bunches.
+
+"Humph," he said.
+
+Then his hand went down into his pocket, and he pulled out a lot of
+change. After that he chose two bunches of sweet, pinky blossoms.
+
+"Two for five, sir," said Jimmy.
+
+"Hum," said the General. "You might give me some parsley and a
+soup-bunch."
+
+Jimmy wrapped up the green stuff carefully and dropped it into the
+basket carried by the colored man.
+
+"Nine cents, sir," he said; and the General handed him a dime and then
+moved to the next stall, holding the flowers close to his nose.
+
+"You forgot your change," cried Jimmy, and rushed after him with the one
+cent.
+
+"Keep--" But one look at the honest little face and he changed his
+sentence.
+
+"Thank you, young man," he said, and away he drove.
+
+After that Jimmy looked for the General, and the General for Jimmy.
+Their transactions were always carried on in a strictly business manner,
+although, to be sure, the General's modest family of two did not
+require the unlimited sage and sweet marjoram that were ordered from
+time to time.
+
+On the Saturday before Easter the little stand was gay with new wares.
+In little nests of dried grasses lay eggs--Easter eggs, bright pink and
+blue and purple and mottled. Jimmy had invested in a dozen at forty
+cents the dozen, and he had hopes of doubling the money, for work surely
+counted for something, and he and the Little Mother had dyed them.
+
+But somehow people passed them by. Inside of the market there were finer
+nests, and eggs gilded and lettered, and Jimmy began to feel that his
+own precious eggs were very dull indeed.
+
+But when the General appeared around the corner, the boy's spirits rose.
+Here, at any rate, was a good customer.
+
+The General, however, was in a temper. There had been an argument with
+the fish-man which had left him red in the face and very touchy. So he
+bought two bunches of arbutus and nothing else.
+
+"Any eggs, sir?" asked Jimmy.
+
+"Eggs?" said the General, looking over the little stand.
+
+"Easter eggs," explained Jimmy.
+
+"I've no use for such things," said the General.
+
+"Oh!" said Jimmy, and in spite of himself his voice trembled. When one
+is the man of the family, and the Little Mother is sewing for dear life,
+and her work and the little stand in the market are all that pay the
+rent and buy food, it is sometimes hard to be brave. But the General did
+not notice the tremble.
+
+Jimmy tried again:
+
+"Any children, sir? Children always like Easter eggs, you know."
+
+"No," said the General; "no one but a son in the Philippines--a son some
+six feet two in his stockings."
+
+"Any grandchildren, sir?" hopefully.
+
+"Bless my soul," said the General, testily, "what a lot of questions!"
+And he hurried off to his carriage.
+
+Jimmy felt very forlorn. The General had been his last hope. The eggs
+were a dead loss.
+
+At last it came time to close up, and he piled all of his wares in a
+basket. Then he took out a little broom and began to sweep in an orderly
+way around his little stall. He had a battered old dustpan, and as he
+carried it out to the street to empty it, he saw a stiff greenish-gray
+paper sticking out of the dirt. Nothing in the world ever looks exactly
+like that but an American greenback, and, sure enough, when Jimmy pulled
+it out it proved to be a ten-dollar bill.
+
+Jimmy sat down on the curb suddenly. His money always came in pennies
+and nickels and dimes and quarters. The Little Mother sometimes earned a
+dollar at a time, but never in his whole life had Jimmy possessed a
+ten-dollar bill.
+
+Think of the possibilities to a little, poor, cold, worried boy. There
+was two months' rent in that ten-dollar bill--two months in which he
+would not have to worry over whether there would be a roof over their
+heads.
+
+Then there was a basket stall in that ten-dollar bill. That had always
+been his ambition. Some one had told him that baskets sold well in other
+cities, and not a single person had opened a basket stall in Old Market,
+and that was Jimmy's chance. Once established, he knew he could earn a
+good living.
+
+As for ten dollars' worth of groceries and provisions, Jimmy's mind
+could not grasp such a thing; fifty cents had always been the top limit
+for a grocery bill.
+
+But--it wasn't Jimmy's ten dollars. Like a flash his dreams tumbled to
+the ground. There had been many people coming and going through Old
+Market, but Jimmy knew that the bill was the General's. For the old
+gentleman had pulled out a roll when he reached for the five cents. Yes,
+it was the General's; but how to find the General?
+
+Inside the market he found the General's butcher. Yes, the butcher knew
+the General's address, for he was one of his best customers, and would
+keep Jimmy's basket while the boy went to the house.
+
+It was a long distance. Jimmy passed rows of great stone mansions, and
+went through parks, where crocuses and hyacinths were just peeping out.
+
+At last he came to the General's.
+
+A colored man answered the ring of the bell.
+
+"Who shall I say?" he inquired loftily. "The General is very busy,
+y'know."
+
+"Say Jimmy, from the market, please"; and Jimmy sat down on the great
+hall seat, feeling very much awed with all the magnificence.
+
+"Well, well," said the General, as he came puffing down the stairs.
+"Well, well, and what do you want?"
+
+"Please, sir, did you drop this?" and Jimmy held out the tightly rolled
+bill.
+
+"Did I? Well, now, I'm sure I don't know. Perhaps I did, perhaps I did."
+
+"I found it in front of my stall," said Jimmy.
+
+What a strange thing it seemed that the General should not know! Jimmy
+would have known if he had lost a penny. He began to feel that the
+General could not have a true idea of _business_.
+
+The General took out a roll of bills. "Let me see," he said. "Here's my
+market list. Yes, I guess that's mine, sure enough."
+
+"I'm glad I noticed it," said Jimmy, simply. "I came near sweeping it
+into the street."
+
+"And what can I pay you for your trouble?" asked the General, looking at
+the boy keenly.
+
+"Well," said Jimmy, stoutly, "you see, business is business, and I had
+to take my time, and I'd like to get back as soon as I can."
+
+The General frowned. He was afraid he was going to be disappointed in
+this boy.
+
+"And so," went on Jimmy, "if you would give me a nickel for car-fare, I
+think we might call it square."
+
+[Illustration: "THEN THE GENERAL, WITH KNIFE UPRAISED, STOPPED IN HIS
+CARVING OF THE COLD ROAST CHICKEN, AND TURNED TO JIMMY"]
+
+The General fumbled around for his eye-glasses, put them on, and looked
+at Jimmy in astonishment.
+
+"A nickel?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, sir"; Jimmy blushed. "You know I ought to get back."
+
+"Well, well," said the General. The boy had certainly the instincts of a
+gentleman. Not a single plea of poverty, and yet one could see that he
+was poor, very poor.
+
+Just then a gong struck softly somewhere. "I'm not going to let you go
+until you have a bit of lunch with us," said the General. "I have told
+my wife of Jimmy of the market, and now I want you to meet her."
+
+So Jimmy went down into a wonderful dining-room, where the silver and
+the cut glass shone, and where at the farther side of the table was the
+sweetest little old lady, who came and shook hands with him.
+
+Jimmy had never before eaten lunch where the soup was served in little
+cups, but the General's wife put him at his ease when she told him that
+his very own soup-bunches were in that soup, and if he didn't eat plenty
+of it he wouldn't be advertising his wares. Then the General, with knife
+upraised, stopped in his carving of the cold roast chicken, and turned
+to Jimmy with a smile of approval in his genial face, and said that it
+was his sage, too, that was in the chicken dressing.
+
+They made Jimmy talk, and finally he told them of his ambition for a
+basket stall.
+
+"And when do you expect to get it?" asked the General, with a smile.
+
+"When I get the goose that lays the golden egg, I am afraid, sir," said
+Jimmy, a little sadly.
+
+Then the General's wife asked questions, and Jimmy told her about the
+Little Mother, and of their life together; but not one word did he tell
+of their urgent need, for Jimmy had not learned to beg.
+
+At last the wonderful lunch was over, somewhat to Jimmy's relief, it
+must be confessed.
+
+"I shall come and see your mother, Jimmy," said the General's wife, as
+Jimmy left her.
+
+Out in the hall the General handed the boy a nickel. "Business is
+business, young man," he said, with a twinkle in his eye.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That night Jimmy and his mother sat up very late, for the boy had so
+much to tell.
+
+"Do you think I was wrong to ask for the nickel, Mother?" he asked
+anxiously, when he had finished.
+
+"No," said his mother; "but I am glad you didn't ask for more."
+
+Then, after Jimmy had gone to bed, the mother sat up for a long time,
+wondering how the rent was to be paid.
+
+On Easter Monday morning Jimmy and the Little Mother started out to pick
+the arbutus and the early violets which Jimmy was to sell Tuesday at his
+little stall.
+
+It was a sunshiny morning. The broad road was hard and white after the
+April showers, the sky was blue, and the air was sweet with the breath
+of bursting buds. And, in spite of cares, Jimmy and his mother had a
+very happy time as they filled their baskets.
+
+At last they sat down to tie up the bunches. Carriage after carriage
+passed them. As the last bunch of flowers was laid in Jimmy's basket, a
+victoria drawn by a pair of grays stopped in front of the
+flower-gatherers.
+
+"Well, well," said a hearty voice, and there were the General and his
+wife! They had called for Jimmy and his mother, they said, and had been
+directed to the wooded hill.
+
+"Get in, get in," commanded the General; and, in spite of the Little
+Mother's hesitancy and timid protests, she was helped up beside the
+General's wife by the footman, while Jimmy hopped in beside the General,
+and away they went over the hard white road.
+
+The General was in a gay mood.
+
+"Well, my boy, have you found your golden egg?" he asked Jimmy.
+
+"No, sir," said Jimmy, gravely; "not yet."
+
+"Too bad, too bad," said the old gentleman, while he shifted a white box
+that was on the seat between himself and Jimmy to the other side.
+
+"You're quite sure, are you, that you could only get it from a goose?"
+he asked later.
+
+"Get what, sir?" said Jimmy, whose eyes were on the gay crowds that
+thronged the sidewalks.
+
+"The egg," said the General.
+
+"Oh--yes, sir," replied Jimmy, with a smile.
+
+The General leaned back and laughed and laughed until he was red in the
+face; but Jimmy could see nothing to laugh at, so he merely smiled
+politely, and wondered what the joke was.
+
+At last they reached Jimmy's home, and the General helped the Little
+Mother out. As he did so he handed her a white box. Jimmy was busy
+watching the gray horses, and saw nothing else.
+
+"For the boy," whispered the General.
+
+The Little Mother shook her head doubtfully.
+
+"Bless you, madam," cried the General, testily, "I have a boy of my
+own--if he _is_ six feet two in his stockings." Then, in a softer tone,
+"I beg of you to take it, madam; it will please an old man and give the
+boy a start."
+
+So when good-by had been said, and Jimmy stood looking after the
+carriage and the prancing grays, the Little Mother put the white box in
+his hand.
+
+Jimmy opened it, and there on a nest of white cotton was an egg. But it
+was different from any of the eggs that Jimmy had sold on Saturday. It
+was large and gilded, and around the middle was a yellow ribbon.
+
+Jimmy lifted it out, and found it very heavy.
+
+"What do you think it is?" he said.
+
+"Untie the ribbon," advised his mother, whose quick eyes saw a faint
+line which showed an opening.
+
+Jimmy pulled the yellow ribbon, the upper half of the egg opened on a
+hinge, and there were glistening gold coins--five-dollar gold pieces.
+
+"Oh!" said Jimmy, and he sat down on the step, breathless with surprise
+and joy.
+
+A slip of white paper lay between two of the coins. Jimmy snatched it
+out, and this is what he read:
+
+ Please accept the contents of the golden egg, with the best wishes
+ of THE GOOSE.
+
+
+
+
+ =Arbor Day=
+
+ No uniform date in the different States
+
+
+Arbor Day is a designated day upon which the people and especially the
+school children plant trees and shrubs along the highways and other
+suitable places. It was first observed in Nebraska. The State board of
+agriculture offered prizes for the counties and persons planting the
+largest number of trees, and it is said that more than a million trees
+were planted the first year, while within sixteen years over 350,000,000
+trees and vines were planted in the State.
+
+This custom, so beautiful and useful, spread rapidly, and now is
+recognized by the statutes of many of the States.
+
+The exact date naturally varies with the climate.
+
+
+ =THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE-TREE=
+
+ BY WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT
+
+ Come, let us plant the apple-tree,
+ Cleave the tough greensward with the spade;
+ Wide let its hollow bed be made;
+ There gently lay the roots, and there
+ Sift the dark mold with kindly care,
+ And press it o'er them tenderly;
+ As 'round the sleeping infant's feet
+ We softly fold the cradle-sheet,
+ So plant we the apple-tree.
+
+ What plant we in this apple-tree?
+ Buds, which the breath of summer days
+ Shall lengthen into leafy sprays;
+ Boughs, where the thrush, with crimson breast,
+ Shall hunt and sing, and hide her nest;
+ We plant upon the sunny lea
+ A shadow for the noontide hour,
+ A shelter from the summer shower,
+ When we plant the apple-tree.
+
+ What plant we in this apple-tree?
+ Sweets for a hundred flowery springs
+ To load the May-wind's restless wings,
+ When, from the orchard-row, he pours
+ Its fragrance through our open doors;
+ A world of blossoms for the bee,
+ Flowers for the sick girl's silent room,
+ For the glad infant sprigs of bloom,
+ We plant with the apple-tree.
+
+ What plant we in this apple-tree?
+ Fruits that shall swell in sunny June,
+ And redden in the August noon,
+ And drop, when gentle airs come by,
+ That fan the blue September sky;
+ While children come, with cries of glee,
+ And seek them where the fragrant grass
+ Betrays their bed to those who pass,
+ At the foot of the apple-tree.
+
+ And when, above this apple-tree,
+ The winter stars are glittering bright,
+ And winds go howling through the night,
+ Girls whose young eyes o'erflow with mirth
+ Shall peel its fruit by cottage-hearth,
+ And guests in prouder homes shall see,
+ Heaped with the grape of Cintra's vine,
+ And golden orange of the line,
+ The fruit of the apple-tree.
+
+ The fruitage of this apple-tree,
+ Winds and our flag of stripe and star
+ Shall bear to coasts that lie afar,
+ Where men shall wonder at the view,
+ And ask in what fair groves they grew;
+ And sojourners beyond the sea
+ Shall think of childhood's careless day,
+ And long, long hours of summer play,
+ In the shade of the apple-tree.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ Each year shall give this apple-tree
+ A broader flush of roseate bloom,
+ A deeper maze of verdurous gloom,
+ And loosen, when the frost-clouds lower,
+ The crisp brown leaves in thicker shower.
+ The years shall come and pass, but we
+ Shall hear no longer, where we lie,
+ The summer's songs, the autumn's sigh,
+ In the boughs of the apple-tree.
+
+ And time shall waste this apple-tree.
+ Oh, when its aged branches throw
+ Thin shadows on the ground below,
+ Shall fraud and force and iron will
+ Oppress the weak and helpless still?
+ What shall the tasks of mercy be,
+ Amid the toils, the strifes, the tears
+ Of those who live when length of years
+ Is wasting this little apple-tree?
+
+ "Who planted this old apple-tree?"
+ The children of that distant day
+ Thus to some aged man shall say;
+ And, gazing on its mossy stem,
+ The gray-haired man shall answer them:
+ "A poet of the land was he,
+ Born in the rude but good old times;
+ 'Tis said he made some quaint old rhymes
+ On planting the apple-tree."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ =April Fools' Day=
+
+ _April 1_
+
+
+So old is the custom of playing amiable and harmless tricks upon the
+first of April that its origin is not definitely known. It is not a
+holiday and not worthy to be one, but it should be good for our sense of
+humor and that is one of the best things we can have. An April fool is
+sometimes called a "Fourth-month Dunce."
+
+
+ =FOURTH-MONTH DUNCE=
+
+ BY H.M.M.
+
+The curious custom of joking on the first of April, sending the ignorant
+or the unwary on fruitless errands, for the sake of making them feel
+foolish and having a laugh at them, prevails very widely in the world.
+And whether you call the victim a "Fourth-month Dunce," an "April fool,"
+an "April fish" (as in France), or an "April gowk" (as in Scotland), the
+object, to deceive him and laugh at him, is everywhere the same.
+
+The custom has been traced back for ages; all through Europe, as far
+back as the records go. The "Feast of Fools" is mentioned as celebrated
+by the ancient Romans. In Asia the Hindoos have a festival, ending on
+the 31st of March, called the "Huli festival," in which they play the
+same sort of first of April pranks--translated into Hindoo,--laughing at
+the victim, and making him a "Huli fool." It goes back to Persia, where
+it is supposed to have had a beginning, in very ancient times, in the
+celebration of spring, when their New Year begins.
+
+How it came to be what we everywhere find it, the wise men cannot agree.
+The many authorities are so divided, that I see no way but for us to
+accept the custom as we find it, wherever we may happen to be, and be
+careful not to abuse it.
+
+Some jokes are peculiar to some places. In England, where it is called
+"All Fools' Day," one favorite joke is to send the greenhorn to a
+bookseller to buy the "Life and Adventures of Eve's Grandmother," or to
+a cobbler to buy a few cents' worth of "strap oil,"--strap oil being, in
+the language of the shoe-making brotherhood, a personal application of
+the leather.
+
+But this custom, with others, common in coarser and rougher times, is
+fast dying out. Even now it is left almost entirely to playful children.
+This sentiment, quoted from an English almanac of a hundred years ago,
+will, I'm sure, meet the approval of "grown-ups" of this century:
+
+ "But 't is a thing to be disputed,
+ Which is the greatest fool reputed,
+ The one that innocently went,
+ Or he that him designedly sent."
+
+
+
+
+ =Memorial Day=
+
+ _May 30_
+
+
+It is said that the observance of this day grew originally out of the
+custom of the widows, mothers, and children of the Confederate dead in
+the South strewing the soldiers' graves with flowers, including the
+unmarked graves of the Union soldiers. There was no settled date for
+this in the North until 1868, when General John A. Logan, as
+commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, designated May 30.
+It is now generally observed, and is a legal holiday in most of the
+States.
+
+
+ =THE BOY IN GRAY=
+
+ _A Ballad for Memorial Day_
+
+ BY MARY BRADLEY
+
+ Fredericksburg had had her fray,
+ And the armies stood at bay;
+ Back of wall, and top of hill,
+ Union men and men in gray
+ Glowered at each other still.
+
+ In the space between the two
+ Many a hapless boy in blue
+ Lay face upward to the skies;
+ Many another, just as true,
+ Filled the air with frantic cries.
+
+ "Love of God!" with pity stirred,
+ Cried a rebel lad who heard.
+ "This is more than I can bear!
+ General, only say the word,
+ They shall have some water there."
+
+ "What's the use?" his general,
+ Frowning, asked. "A Yankee ball
+ Drops you dead, or worse, half way,
+ Once you go beyond the wall."
+ "May be!" said the boy in gray.
+
+ "Still I'll risk it, if you please."
+ And the senior, ill at ease,
+ Nodded, growling under breath,
+ "For his mortal enemies
+ I have sent the lad to death."
+
+ Then a hotter fire began
+ As across the field he ran,--
+ Yankee shooters marked a prey,--
+ But beside each wounded man
+ Heedless knelt the boy in gray.
+
+ Parched lips hailed him as he came;
+ Throats with fever all aflame,
+ While the balls were spinning by,
+ Drained the cup he offered them,
+ Blessed him with their dying cry.
+
+ Suddenly, through rain of those
+ Pattering shots, a shout uprose;
+ Din of voices filled his ears;
+ Firing ceased, and eager foes
+ Made the welkin ring with cheers.
+
+[Illustration: "BUT BESIDE EACH WOUNDED MAN HEEDLESS KNELT THE BOY IN
+GRAY"]
+
+ Foes they were, of bitter need,
+ Still to every noble deed
+ Hearts of men, thank God, must thrill;
+ And we thrill, too, as we read
+ Of those cheers on Marye's Hill.
+
+ Days of battle long since done,
+ Days of peace and blessing won,
+ Better is it to forget
+ Cruel work of sword and gun:
+ But some deeds are treasures yet.
+
+ While a grateful nation showers
+ Graves of heroes with her flowers,
+ Here's a wreath for one to-day:
+ North or South, we claim him ours--
+ Honor to the Boy in Gray!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THE EVOLUTION OF OUR FLAG]
+
+ =Flag Day=
+
+ _June 14_
+
+
+The first recognition of Flag Day by the New York schools was in 1889,
+but it is now generally observed by appropriate exercises. June 14 is
+the anniversary of the adoption of the Stars and Stripes by the
+Continental Congress in the year 1777. This was the flag which, first
+raised over an American vessel by John Paul Jones, became the emblem of
+the new republic. In some places another day is set apart instead.
+
+
+ =THE STARS AND STRIPES=
+
+ BY HENRY RUSSELL WRAY
+
+While every lad and lassie in the land knows and has read all about the
+famous old Liberty Bell, too little is known of the origin and growth of
+America's dearest emblem--her flag. William Penn's city--Philadelphia--is
+gemmed with many historical landmarks, but none should be more dear to us
+than that little old building still standing on Arch street, over whose
+doorway is the number--239. For in a small back room in this primitive
+dwelling, during the uncertain struggle for independence by the American
+colonies, was designed and made the first American flag, known as the
+"Stars and Stripes," now respected and honored in every quarter of the
+world, and loved and patriotically worshiped at home.
+
+The early history of our great flag is very interesting.
+
+It is a matter of record that during the early days of the Revolution
+the colonists made use of flags of various devices.
+
+It is nowadays generally accepted as a fact that the final idea of the
+Stars and Stripes as a national flag was borrowed from or suggested by
+the coat of arms of General George Washington's family.
+
+The first definite action taken by the colonies toward creating a flag,
+was a resolution passed by Congress in 1775, appointing a committee of
+three gentlemen--Benjamin Franklin and Messrs. Harrison and Lynch--to
+consider and devise a national flag. The result of the work of this
+committee was the adoption of the "King's Colors" as a union (or corner
+square), combined with thirteen stripes, alternate red and white,
+showing "that although the colonies united for defense against England's
+tyranny, they still acknowledged her sovereignty."
+
+[Illustration: NUMBER 239 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA--THE HOUSE IN WHICH
+THE FIRST "STARS AND STRIPES" WAS MADE]
+
+The first public acceptance, recognition, and salute of this flag
+occurred January 2, 1776, at Washington's headquarters, Cambridge,
+Massachusetts. The name given to this flag was "The Flag of the Union,"
+and sometimes it was called the "Cambridge Flag." The design of this
+flag was a combination of the crosses of St. George and St. Andrew in
+a blue field in the upper left-hand corner, bordered by thirteen stripes
+for the thirteen colonies.
+
+But in the spring of 1777 Congress appointed another committee
+"authorized to design a suitable flag for the nation."
+
+This committee seems to have consisted of General George Washington and
+Robert Morris. They called upon Mrs. Elizabeth Ross, of Philadelphia,
+and from a pencil-drawing by General Washington engaged her to make a
+flag.
+
+This flag, the first of a number she made, was cut out and completed in
+the back parlor of her little Arch street home.
+
+It was the first legally established emblem, and was adopted by Congress
+June 14, 1777, under the act which provided for stripes alternately red
+and white, with a union of thirteen white stars in a field of blue. This
+act read as follows: "Resolved, That the flag of the United States be
+thirteen stripes, alternate red and white: that the union be thirteen
+stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constellation."
+
+
+
+
+
+ =Fourth of July=
+
+
+This is the greatest secular holiday of our country, its observance
+being sanctioned by the laws of every State. The birthday of our liberty
+would be a hard one to fix, but by common consent the anniversary of the
+signing of the Declaration of Independence is the one observed. The use
+of powder to celebrate the day is gradually going out on account of the
+large number of lives annually lost through accidents. It is known
+officially as Independence Day.
+
+
+ =A STORY OF THE FLAG=
+
+ BY VICTOR MAPES
+
+When the Fourth of July came, we had been abroad nearly two months, and
+during that time I think we had not seen a single American flag. On the
+morning of the Fourth, however, we walked out on the Paris boulevards,
+and a number of flags were hanging out from the different American
+shops, which are quite frequent there. They looked strange to us; and
+the idea occurred to Frank, for the first time, that the United States
+was one of a great many nations living next to one another in this
+world--that it was his own nation, a kind of big family he belonged to.
+The Fourth of July was a sort of big, family birthday, and the flags
+were out so as to tell the Frenchmen and everybody else not to forget
+the fact.
+
+A feeling of this nature came over Frank that morning, and he called
+out, "There's another!" every time a new flag came in view. He stopped
+two or three times to count the number of them in sight, and showed in
+various ways that he, America, and the American flag had come to a new
+understanding with one another.
+
+During the morning, Frank's cousin George, a boy two or three years
+older than Frank, who had been in Paris the preceding winter, came to
+our hotel; and, as I had some matters to attend to in the afternoon,
+they went off together to see sights and to have a good time.
+
+When Frank returned about dinner-time, and came up to the room where I
+was writing letters, I noticed a small American-flag pin stuck in the
+lapel of his coat.
+
+"George had two," he said in answer to my question; "and he gave me this
+one. He's been in Paris a year now, and he says we ought to wear them or
+maybe people won't know we're Americans. But say, Uncle Jack, where do
+you think I got that?" He opened a paper bundle he had under his arm and
+unrolled a weather-beaten American flag.
+
+"Where?" asked I, naturally supposing it came from George's house.
+
+"We took it off of Lafayette's tomb."
+
+I opened my eyes in astonishment; while he went on:
+
+"George says the American Consul, or the American Consul-General, or
+somebody, put it on the tomb last Fourth of July, for our government,
+because Lafayette, don't you know, helped us in the Revolution."
+
+"They ought to put a new flag on every year, George says," explained
+Frank, seeing my amazement, "on Fourth of July morning. But the American
+Consul, or whoever he is that's here now, is a new man, George thinks;
+anyhow, he forgot to do it. So we bought a new flag and we did it.
+
+"There were a lot of people at the tomb when we went there, and we
+guessed they were all waiting to see the new flag put on. We waited,
+too, but no soldiers or anybody came; and after a while the people all
+went away. Then George said:
+
+"'Somebody ought to put on a new flag--let's do it!'
+
+"We went to a store on the Boulevard, and for twenty francs bought a new
+flag just like this old one. George and I each paid half. There were two
+women and a little girl at the tomb when we got back, and we waited
+till they went away. Then we unrolled the new flag and took the old one
+off the tomb.
+
+"We thought we ought to say something when we put the new flag on, but
+we didn't know what to say. George said they always made a regular
+speech thanking Lafayette for helping us in the Revolution, but we
+thought it didn't matter much. So we just took off our hats when we
+spread out the new flag on the grave, and then we rolled up the old flag
+and came away.
+
+"We drew lots for it afterward, and I'm going to take it back home with
+me.
+
+"Somebody ought to have done it, and as we were both American boys, it
+was all right, wasn't it?"
+
+Right or wrong, the flag that travelers see on Lafayette's tomb this
+year, as a mark of the American nation's sentiment toward the great
+Frenchman, is the one put there by two small, self-appointed
+representatives. And the flag put there the year before, with fitting
+ceremony by the authorized official, Frank preserves carefully hung up
+on the wall of his little room in America.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Our Holidays, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR HOLIDAYS ***
+
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+ .poem {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; text-align: left;}
+ .poem br {display: none;}
+ .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;}
+ .poem span {display: block; margin: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i2 {display: block; margin-left: 2em;}
+ .poem span.i4 {display: block; margin-left: 4em;}
+ // -->
+ /* XML end ]]>*/
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Our Holidays, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Our Holidays
+ Their Meaning and Spirit; retold from St. Nicholas
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: January 29, 2005 [EBook #14829]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR HOLIDAYS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Jennifer Zickerman and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net).
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<h1>OUR HOLIDAYS</h1>
+
+<h2>HISTORICAL STORIES</h2>
+
+<h3>RETOLD FROM</h3>
+
+<h2>ST. NICHOLAS MAGAZINE</h2>
+
+<h3>IN FIVE VOLUMES</h3>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h4>INDIAN STORIES</h4>
+<h5>A mirror of Indian ideas, customs, and adventures.</h5>
+
+<h4>COLONIAL STORIES</h4>
+<h5>Stirring tales of the rude frontier life of early times.</h5>
+
+<h4>REVOLUTIONARY STORIES</h4>
+<h5>Heroic deeds, and especially children's part in them.</h5>
+
+<h4>CIVIL WAR STORIES</h4>
+<h5>Thrilling stories of the great struggle, both on land and sea.</h5>
+
+<h4>OUR HOLIDAYS</h4>
+<h5>Something of their meaning and spirit.</h5>
+
+
+
+<p class="figcenter">Each about 200 pages. Full cloth, 12mo.</p>
+
+
+<p class="figcenter">THE CENTURY CO.</p>
+
+<div><br /></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+  <a href="./images/stnichoh01.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh01.jpg" width="40%" alt="HO, FOR THE CHRISTMAS TREE!" title="HO, FOR THE CHRISTMAS TREE!" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">HO, FOR THE CHRISTMAS TREE!</span></p>
+ </div>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+<h1>OUR HOLIDAYS</h1>
+
+<h3>THEIR MEANING AND SPIRIT</h3>
+
+<h2>RETOLD FROM ST. NICHOLAS</h2>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh02.png"><img src="./images/stnichoh02.png" width="40%" alt="Christmas 1776" title="Christmas 1776" /></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>PUBLISHED BY THE CENTURY CO.</h3>
+<h3>NEW YORK&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; MCMVI</h3>
+
+<h5>THE DE VINNE PRESS</h5>
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="center">
+
+<table class="cent_tab" summary="Table of Contents">
+ <tr>
+ <th align='left'>&nbsp;</th>
+ <th align='right'>&nbsp;</th>
+ <th align='right'><span class="smcap">Page</span></th>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Our_Holidays"><span class="smcap">Our Holidays</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Our_Holidays">1</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#SATURDAY">
+ <span class="allcap">ST. SATURDAY</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Henry Johnstone</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#SATURDAY">3</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Halloween"><span class="smcap">Hallowe'en</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Halloween">7</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#AllHallowEve">
+ <span class="allcap">ALL-HALLOW-EVE MYTHS</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>David Brown</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#AllHallowEve">9</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Election_Day"><span class="smcap">Election Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Election_Day">13</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#RightsDuties">
+ <span class="allcap">RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF CITIZENS</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>S.E. Forman</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#RightsDuties">15</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Thanksgiving_Day"><span class="smcap">Thanksgiving Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Thanksgiving_Day">21</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#ThanksDinnerFlew">
+ <span class="allcap">A THANKSGIVING DINNER THAT FLEW AWAY</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>H. Butterworth</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#ThanksDinnerFlew">23</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Whittiers_Birthday"><span class="smcap">Whittier's Birthday</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Whittiers_Birthday">35</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#BoyhoodWhittier">
+ <span class="allcap">THE BOYHOOD OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>William H. Rideing</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#BoyhoodWhittier">37</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Christmas"><span class="smcap">Christmas</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Christmas">51</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#UncleSamObserve">
+ <span class="allcap">HOW UNCLE SAM OBSERVES CHRISTMAS</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Clifford Howard</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#UncleSamObserve">53</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#New_Years_Day"><span class="smcap">New Year's Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#New_Years_Day">79</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#SocialLifeColon">
+ <span class="allcap">EXTRACT FROM &quot;SOCIAL LIFE IN THE COLONIES&quot;</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Edward Eggleston</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#SocialLifeColon">81</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#ChineseNewYear">
+ <span class="allcap">A CHINESE NEW YEAR'S IN CALIFORNIA</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>H.H.</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#ChineseNewYear">82</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Lincolns_Birthday"><span class="smcap">Lincoln's Birthday</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Lincolns_Birthday">85</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#AbrahamLincoln">
+ <span class="allcap">ABRAHAM LINCOLN</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Helen Nicolay</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#AbrahamLincoln">81</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#GettysburgAdd">
+ <span class="allcap">THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>&nbsp;</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#GettysburgAdd">99</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#OCaptain">
+ <span class="allcap">O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Walt Whitman</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#OCaptain">101</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#St_Valentines_Day"><span class="smcap">St. Valentine's Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#St_Valentines_Day">103</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#WhoBegan">
+ <span class="allcap">WHO BEGAN IT?</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Olive Thorne</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#WhoBegan">105</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Washingtons_Birthday"><span class="smcap">Washington's Birthday</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Washingtons_Birthday">111</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#BoyhoodWash">
+ <span class="allcap">THE BOYHOOD OF WASHINGTON</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Horace E. Scudder</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#BoyhoodWash">113</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Longfellows_Birthday"><span class="smcap">Longfellow's Birthday</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Longfellows_Birthday">123</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#LongChild">
+ <span class="allcap">LONGFELLOW AND THE CHILDREN</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Lucy Larcom</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#LongChild">125</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Inauguration_Day"><span class="smcap">Inauguration Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Inauguration_Day">139</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#HowPresInaug">
+ <span class="allcap">HOW A PRESIDENT IS INAUGURATED</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Clifford Howard</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#HowPresInaug">141</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Easter_Day"><span class="smcap">Easter Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Easter_Day">153</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#SongEaster">
+ <span class="allcap">A SONG OF EASTER</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Celia Thaxter</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#SongEaster">155</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#GenEaster">
+ <span class="allcap">THE GENERAL'S EASTER BOX</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Temple Bailey</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#GenEaster">159</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Arbor_Day"><span class="smcap">Arbor Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Arbor_Day">175</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#PlantApple">
+ <span class="allcap">THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE TREE</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>William Cullen Bryant</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#PlantApple">177</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#April_Fools_Day"><span class="smcap">April Fools' Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#April_Fools_Day">181</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#FourMonth">
+ <span class="allcap">FOURTH-MONTH DUNCE</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>H.M.M.</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#FourMonth">183</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Memorial_Day"><span class="smcap">Memorial Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Memorial_Day">185</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#BoyGray">
+ <span class="allcap">THE BOY IN GRAY</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Mary Bradley</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#BoyGray">187</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Flag_Day"><span class="smcap">Flag Day</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Flag_Day">193</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#StarsStripes">
+ <span class="allcap">THE STARS AND STRIPES</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Henry Russell Wray</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#StarsStripes">195</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'><a href="#Fourth_of_July"><span class="smcap">Fourth of July</span></a></td>
+ <td align='right'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Fourth_of_July">199</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <a href="#StoryFlag">
+ <span class="allcap">A STORY OF THE FLAG</span>
+ </a>
+ </td>
+ <td align='right'><i>Victor Mapes</i></td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#StoryFlag">201</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE" />PREFACE</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p>To most young people, holidays mean simply freedom from lessons and a
+good time. All this they should mean&mdash;and something more.</p>
+
+<p>It is well to remember, for example, that we owe the pleasure of
+Thanksgiving to those grateful Pilgrims who gave a feast of thanks for
+the long-delayed rain that saved their withering crops&mdash;a feast of wild
+turkeys and pumpkin pies, which has been celebrated now for nearly three
+centuries.</p>
+
+<p>It is most fitting that the same honor paid to Washington's Birthday is
+now given to that of Lincoln, who is as closely associated with the
+Civil War as our first President is with the Revolution.</p>
+
+<p>Although the birthdays of the three American poets, Whittier, Lowell,
+and Longfellow, are not holidays, stories relating to these days are
+included in this collection as signalizing days to be remembered.</p>
+
+<p>In this book are contained stories bearing on our holidays and annual
+celebrations, from Hallowe'en to the Fourth of July.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Our_Holidays" id="Our_Holidays" />Our Holidays</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div>
+<span style="margin-left: 30%;"><strong>If all the year were playing holidays,</strong></span>
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30%;"><strong>To sport would be as tedious as to work.</strong></span>
+</div>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 40%;">
+
+ <ins title="Transcriber's note: original spelling preserved"><span class="smcap">Shakspere. </span></ins>
+ <i>King Henry IV</i>, Part I.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<h3><a name="SATURDAY" id="SATURDAY" />ST. SATURDAY</h3>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh03.png"><img src="./images/stnichoh03.png" width="50%" alt="St. Saturday I" title="St. Saturday I" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p class="center">BY HENRY JOHNSTONE</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: ST. SATURDAY">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+
+ Oh, Friday night's the queen of nights, because it ushers in<br />
+ The Feast of good St. Saturday, when studying is a sin,<br />
+ When studying is a sin, boys, and we may go to play<br />
+ Not only in the afternoon, but all the livelong day.<br />
+ <br />
+ St. Saturday&mdash;so legends say&mdash;lived in the ages when<br />
+ The use of leisure still was known and current among men;<br />
+ Full seldom and full slow he toiled, and even as he wrought<br />
+ He'd sit him down and rest awhile, immersed in pious thought.<br />
+ <br />
+ He loved to fold his good old arms, to cross his good old knees,<br />
+ And in a famous elbow-chair for hours he'd take his ease;<br />
+ He had a word for old and young, and when the village boys<br />
+ Came out to play, he'd smile on them and never mind the noise.<br />
+ <br />
+ So when his time came, honest man, the neighbors all declared<br />
+ That one of keener intellect could better have been spared;<br />
+ By young and old his loss was mourned in cottage and in hall,<br />
+ For if he'd done them little good, he'd done no harm at all.<br />
+ <br />
+ In time they made a saint of him, and issued a decree&mdash;<br />
+ Since he had loved his ease so well, and been so glad to see<br />
+ The children frolic round him and to smile upon their play&mdash;<br />
+ That school boys for his sake should have a weekly holiday.<br />
+ <br />
+ They gave his name unto the day, that as the years roll by<br />
+ His memory might still be green; and that's the reason why<br />
+ We speak his name with gratitude, and oftener by far<br />
+ Than that of any other saint in all the calendar.<br />
+ <br />
+ Then, lads and lassies, great and small, give ear to what I say&mdash;<br />
+ Refrain from work on Saturdays as strictly as you may;<br />
+ So shall the saint your patron be and prosper all you do&mdash;<br />
+ And when examinations come he'll see you safely through.<br />
+ <br />
+
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh04.png"><img src="./images/stnichoh04.png" width="50%" alt="St. Saturday II" title="St. Saturday II" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Halloween" id="Halloween" />Hallowe'en</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>October 31</i></strong></p>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>The Eve of All Saints' Day</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>This night is known in some places as Nutcrack Night, or Snapapple
+Night. Supernatural influences are pretended to prevail and hence all
+kinds of <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'superstititions'">superstitions</ins>
+were formerly connected
+with it. It is now usually celebrated by children's parties, when certain
+special games are played.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="AllHallowEve" id="AllHallowEve" />ALL-HALLOW-EVE MYTHS</h3>
+
+<p class="center">BY DAVID BROWN</p>
+
+<p>As the world grows old and wise, it ceases to believe in many of its
+superstitions. But, although they are no longer believed in, the customs
+connected with them do not always die out; they often linger on through
+centuries, and, from having once been serious religious rites, or
+something real in the life of the people, they become at last mere
+children's plays or empty usages, often most zealously enjoyed by those
+who do not understand their meaning.</p>
+
+<p>All-hallow Eve is now, in our country towns, a time of careless frolic,
+and of great bonfires, which, I hear, are still kindled on the hill-tops
+in some places. We also find these fires in England, Scotland, and
+Ireland, and from their history we learn the meaning of our celebration.
+Some of you may know that the early inhabitants of Great Britain,
+Ireland, and parts of France were known as Celts, and that their
+religion was directed by strange priests called Druids. Three times in
+the year, on the first of May, for the sowing; at the solstice, June
+21st, for the ripening and turn of the year; and on the eve of November
+1st, for the harvesting, those mysterious priests of the Celts, the
+Druids, built fires on the hill-tops in France, Britain, and Ireland, in
+honor of the sun. At this last festival the Druids of all the region
+gathered in their white robes around the stone altar or cairn on the
+hill-top. Here stood an emblem of the sun, and on the cairn was a sacred
+fire, which had been kept burning through the year. The Druids formed
+about the fire, and, at a signal, quenched it, while deep silence rested
+on the mountains and valleys. Then the new fire gleamed on the cairn,
+the people in the valley raised a joyous shout, and from hill-top to
+hill-top other fires answered the sacred flame. On this night, all
+hearth-fires in the region had been put out, and they were kindled with
+brands from the sacred fire, which was believed to guard the households
+through the year.</p>
+
+<p>But the Druids disappeared from their sacred places, the cairns on the
+hill-tops became the monuments of a dead religion, and Christianity
+spread to the barbarous inhabitants of France and the British Islands.
+Yet the people still clung to their old customs, and felt much of the
+old awe for them. Still they built their fires on the first of May,&mdash;at
+the solstice in June,&mdash;and on the eve of November 1st. The church found
+that it could not all at once separate the people from their old ways,
+so it gradually turned these ways to its own use, and the harvest
+festival of the Druids became in the Catholic Calendar the Eve of All
+Saints, for that is the meaning of the name &quot;All-hallow Eve.&quot; In the
+seventh century, the Pantheon, the ancient Roman temple of all the gods,
+was consecrated anew to the worship of the Virgin and of all holy
+martyrs.</p>
+
+<p>By its separation from the solemn character of the Druid festival,
+All-hallow Eve lost much of its ancient dignity, and became the
+carnival-night of the year for wild, grotesque rites. As century after
+century passed by, it came to be spoken of as the time when the magic
+powers, with which the peasantry, all the world over, filled the wastes
+and ruins, were supposed to swarm abroad to help or injure men. It was
+the time when those first dwellers in every land, the fairies, were said
+to come out from their grots and lurking-places; and in the darkness of
+the forests and the shadows of old ruins, witches and goblins gathered.
+In course of time, the hallowing fire came to be considered a protection
+against these malicious powers. It was a custom in the seventeenth
+century for the master of a family to carry a lighted torch of straw
+around his fields, to protect them from evil influence through the year,
+and as he went he chanted an invocation to the fire. The chief thing
+which we seek to impress upon your minds in connection with All-hallow
+Eve is that its curious customs show how no generation of men is
+altogether separated from earlier generations. Far as we think we are
+from our uncivilized ancestors, much of what they did and thought has
+come into our doing and thinking,&mdash;with many changes perhaps, under
+different religious forms, and sometimes in jest where they were in
+earnest. Still, these customs and observances (of which All-hallow Eve
+is only one) may be called the piers, upon which rests a bridge that
+spans the wide past between us and the generations that have gone
+before.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Election_Day" id="Election_Day" />Election Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>The first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>This day is now a holiday so that every man may have an opportunity to
+cast his vote. Unlike most other holidays, it does not commemorate an
+event, but it is a day which has a tremendous meaning if rightly looked
+upon and rightly used. Its true spirit and significance are well set
+forth in the following pages. By act of Congress the date for the
+choosing of Presidential electors is set for the first Tuesday after the
+first Monday in November in the years when Presidents are elected, and
+the different States have now nearly all chosen the same day for the
+election of State officers.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="RightsDuties" id="RightsDuties" />RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF CITIZENS</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY S.E. FORMAN</p>
+
+<p>Read the bill of rights in the constitution of your State and you will
+find there, set down in plain black and white, the rights which you are
+to enjoy as an American citizen. This constitution tells you that you
+have the right to your life, to your liberty, and to the property that
+you may honestly acquire; that your body, your health and your
+reputation shall be protected from injury; that you may move freely from
+place to place unmolested; that you shall not be imprisoned or otherwise
+punished without a fair trial by an impartial jury; that you may worship
+God according to the promptings of your own conscience; that you may
+freely write and speak on any subject providing you do not abuse the
+privilege; that you may peaceably assemble and petition government for
+the redress of grievances. These are civil rights. They, together with
+many others equally dear, are guaranteed by the State and national
+constitutions, and they belong to all American citizens.</p>
+
+<p>These civil rights, like the air and the sunshine, come to us in these
+days as a matter of course, but they did not come to our ancestors as a
+matter of course. To our ancestors rights came as the result of
+hard-fought battles. The reading of the bill of rights would cause your
+heart to throb with gratitude did you but know the suffering and
+sacrifice each right has cost.</p>
+
+<p>Now just as our rights have not been gained without a struggle, so they
+will not be maintained without a struggle. We may not have to fight with
+cannon and sword as did our forefathers in the Revolution, but we may be
+sure that if our liberty is to be preserved there will be fighting of
+some kind to do. Such precious things as human rights cannot be had for
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p>One of the hardest battles will be to fulfil the duties which accompany
+our rights, for every right is accompanied by a duty. If I can hold a
+man to his contract I ought (<i>I owe it</i>) to pay my debts; if I may
+worship as I please, I ought to refrain from persecuting another on
+account of his religion; if my property is held sacred, I ought to
+regard the property of another man as sacred; if the government deals
+fairly with me and does not oppress me, I ought to deal fairly With it
+and refuse to cheat it; if I am allowed freedom of speech, I ought not
+to abuse the privilege; if I have a right to a trial by jury, I ought to
+respond when I am summoned to serve as a juror; if I have a right to my
+good name and reputation, I ought not to slander my neighbor; if
+government shields me from injury, I ought to be ready to take up arms
+in its defense.</p>
+
+<p>Foremost among the rights of American citizenship is that of going to
+the polls and casting a ballot. This right of voting is not a civil
+right; it is a political right which grew out of man's long struggle for
+his civil rights. While battling with kings and nobles for liberty the
+people learned to distrust a privileged ruling class. They saw that if
+their civil rights were to be respected, government must pass into their
+own hands or into the hands of their chosen agents. Hence they demanded
+political rights, the right of holding office and of voting at
+elections.</p>
+
+<p>The suffrage, or the right of voting, is sometimes regarded as a natural
+right, one that belongs to a person simply because he is a person.</p>
+
+<p>People will say that a man has as much right to vote as he has to
+acquire property or to defend himself from attack. But this is not a
+correct view. The right to vote is a <i>franchise</i> or privilege which the
+law gives to such citizens as are thought worthy of possessing it. It is
+easy to see that everybody cannot be permitted to vote. There must be
+certain qualifications, certain marks of fitness, required of a citizen
+before he can be entrusted with the right of suffrage. These
+qualifications differ in the different States. In most States every male
+citizen over twenty-one years of age may vote. In four States, women as
+well as men exercise the right of suffrage.</p>
+
+<p>But the right of voting, like every other right, has its corresponding
+duty. No day brings more responsibilities than Election Day. The
+American voter should regard himself as an officer of government. He is
+one of the members of the electorate, that vast governing body which
+consists of all the voters and which possesses supreme political power,
+controlling all the governments, federal and State and local. This
+electorate has in its keeping the welfare and the happiness of the
+American people. When, therefore, the voter takes his place in this
+governing body, that is, when he enters the polling-booth and presumes
+to participate in the business of government, he assumes serious
+responsibilities. In the polling-booth he is a public officer charged
+with certain duties, and if he fails to discharge these duties properly
+he may work great injury. What are the duties of a voter in a
+self-governing country? If an intelligent man will ask himself the
+question and refer it to his conscience as well as deliberate upon it in
+his mind, he will conclude that he ought to do the following things:</p>
+
+<table summary="Voter's Duties">
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;1. To vote whenever it is his privilege.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;2. To try to understand the questions upon which he votes.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;3. To learn something about the character and fitness of the
+ men for whom he votes.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;4. To vote only for honest men for office.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;5. To support only honest measures.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;6. To give no bribe, direct or indirect, and to receive no
+ bribe, direct or indirect.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;7. To place country above party.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;8. To recognize the result of the election as the will of the
+ people and therefore as the law.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;&nbsp;9. To continue to vote for a righteous although defeated cause
+ as long as there is a reasonable hope of victory.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Whittier Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &quot;The proudest now is but my peer,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The highest not more high;<br />
+ To-day of all the weary year,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A king of men am I.<br />
+<br />
+ &quot;To-day alike are great and small,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The nameless and the known;<br />
+ My palace is the people's hall,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The ballot-box my throne!&quot;<br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">WHITTIER.</span><br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Thanksgiving_Day" id="Thanksgiving_Day" />Thanksgiving Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>Appointed by the President&mdash;usually the last Thursday in November.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Now observed as a holiday in all the States, but not a legal holiday in
+all. The President's proclamation recommends that it be set apart as a
+day of prayer and rejoicing. The day is of New England origin, the first
+one being set by Governor Bradford of the Massachusetts colony on
+December, 1621. Washington issued a thanksgiving proclamation for
+Thursday, December 18, 1777, and again at Valley Forge for May 7, 1778.
+The Thanksgiving of the present incorporates many of the genial features
+of Christmas. The feast with the Thanksgiving turkey and pumpkin-pie
+crowns the day. Even the poorhouse has its turkey. The story of &quot;An
+Old-Time Thanksgiving,&quot; in &quot;Indian Stories&quot; of this series, well brings
+out the original spirit of the day.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="ThanksDinnerFlew" id="ThanksDinnerFlew" />A THANKSGIVING DINNER THAT FLEW AWAY</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY H. BUTTERWORTH</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Honk!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I spun around like a top, looking nervously in every direction. I was
+familiar with that sound; I had heard it before, during two summer
+vacations, at the old farm-house on the Cape.</p>
+
+<p>It had been a terror to me. I always put a door, a fence, or a stone
+wall between me and that sound as speedily as possible.</p>
+
+<p>I had just come down from the city to the Cape for my third summer
+vacation. I had left the cars with my arms full of bundles, and hurried
+toward Aunt Targood's.</p>
+
+<p>The cottage stood in from the road. There was a long meadow in front of
+it. In the meadow were two great oaks and some clusters of lilacs. An
+old, mossy stone wall protected the grounds from the road, and a long
+walk ran from the old wooden gate to the door.</p>
+
+<p>It was a sunny day, and my heart was light. The orioles were flaming in
+the old orchards; the bobolinks were tossing themselves about in the
+long meadows of timothy, daisies, and patches of clover. There was a
+scent of new-mown hay in the air.</p>
+
+<p>In the distance lay the bay, calm and resplendent, with white sails and
+specks of boats. Beyond it rose Martha's Vineyard, green and cool and
+bowery, and at its wharf lay a steamer.</p>
+
+<p>I was, as I said, light-hearted. I was thinking of rides over the sandy
+roads at the close of the long, bright days; of excursions on the bay;
+of clam-bakes and picnics.</p>
+
+<p>I was hungry; and before me rose visions of Aunt Targood's fish dinners,
+roast chickens, berry pies. I was thirsty; but ahead was the old
+well-sweep, and, behind the cool lattice of the dairy window, were pans
+of milk in abundance.</p>
+
+<p>I tripped on toward the door with light feet, lugging my bundles and
+beaded with perspiration, but unmindful of all discomforts in the
+thought of the bright days and good things in store for me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Honk! honk!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My heart gave a bound!</p>
+
+<p><i>Where</i> did that sound come from?</p>
+
+<p>Out of a cool cluster of innocent-looking lilac bushes, I saw a dark
+object cautiously moving. It seemed to have no head. I knew, however,
+that it had a head. I had seen it; it had seized me once on the previous
+summer, and I had been in terror of it during all the rest of the
+season.</p>
+
+<p>I looked down into the irregular grass, and saw the head and a very long
+neck running along on the ground, propelled by the dark body, like a
+snake running away from a ball. It was coming toward me, and faster and
+faster as it approached.</p>
+
+<p>I dropped all my bundles.</p>
+
+<p>In a few flying leaps I returned to the road again, and armed myself
+with a stick from a pile of cord-wood.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Honk! honk! honk!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was a call of triumph. The head was high in the air now. My enemy
+moved grandly forward, as became the monarch of the great meadow
+farm-yard.</p>
+
+<p>I stood with beating heart, after my retreat.</p>
+
+<p>It was Aunt Targood's gander.</p>
+
+<p>How he enjoyed his triumph, and how small and cowardly he made me feel!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Honk! honk! honk!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The geese came out of the lilac bushes, bowing their heads to him in
+admiration. Then came the goslings&mdash;a long procession of awkward,
+half-feathered things: they appeared equally delighted.</p>
+
+<p>The gander seemed to be telling his admiring audience all about it: how
+a strange girl with many bundles had attempted to cross the yard; how he
+had driven her back, and had captured her bundles, and now was monarch
+of the field. He clapped his wings when he had finished his heroic
+story, and sent forth such a &quot;honk!&quot; as might have startled a
+major-general.</p>
+
+<p>Then he, with an air of great dignity and coolness, began to examine my
+baggage.</p>
+
+<p>Among my effects were several pounds of chocolate caramels, done up in
+brown paper. Aunt Targood liked caramels, and I had brought her a large
+supply.</p>
+
+<p>He tore off the wrappers quickly. Bit one. It was good. He began to
+distribute the bon-bons among the geese, and they, with much liberality
+and good-will, among the goslings.</p>
+
+<p>This was too much. I ventured through the gate swinging my cord-wood
+stick.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Shoo!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He dropped his head on the ground, and drove it down the walk in a
+lively waddle toward me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Shoo</i>!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was Aunt Targood's voice at the door.</p>
+
+<p>He stopped immediately.</p>
+
+<p>His head was in the air again.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Shoo</i>!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Out came Aunt Targood with her broom.</p>
+
+<p>She always corrected the gander with her broom. If I were to be whipped
+I should choose a broom&mdash;not the stick.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as he beheld the broom he retired, although with much offended
+pride and dignity, to the lilac bushes; and the geese and goslings
+followed him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hester, you dear child, come here. I was expecting you, and had been
+looking out for you, but missed sight of you. I had forgotten all about
+the gander.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We gathered up the bundles and the caramels. I was light-hearted again.</p>
+
+<p>How cool was the sitting-room, with the woodbine falling about the open
+windows! Aunt brought me a pitcher of milk and some strawberries; some
+bread and honey; and a fan.</p>
+
+<p>While I was resting and taking my lunch, I could hear the gander
+discussing the affairs of the farm-yard with the geese. I did not
+greatly enjoy the discussion. His tone of voice was very proud, and he
+did not seem to be speaking well of me. I was suspicious that he did not
+think me a very brave girl. A young person likes to be spoken well of,
+even by the gander.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Targood's gander had been the terror of many well-meaning people,
+and of some evildoers, for many years. I have seen tramps and
+pack-peddlers enter the gate, and start on toward the door, when there
+would sound that ringing warning like a war-blast. &quot;Honk, honk!&quot; and in
+a few minutes these unwelcome people would be gone. Farm-house boarders
+from the city would sometimes enter the yard, thinking to draw water by
+the old well-sweep: in a few minutes it was customary to hear shrieks,
+and to see women and children flying over the walls, followed by
+air-rending &quot;honks!&quot; and jubilant cackles from the victorious gander and
+his admiring family.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Aunt, what makes you keep that gander, year after year?&quot; said I, one
+evening, as we were sitting on the lawn before the door. &quot;Is it because
+he is a kind of a watch-dog, and keeps troublesome people away?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, child, no; I do not wish to keep most people away, not well-behaved
+people, nor to distress nor annoy any one. The fact is, there is a
+story about that gander that I do not like to speak of to every
+one&mdash;something that makes me feel tender toward him; so that if he needs
+a whipping, I would rather do it. He knows something that no one else
+knows. I could not have him killed or sent away. You have heard me speak
+of Nathaniel, my oldest boy?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is his picture in my room, you know. He was a good boy to me. He
+loved his mother. I loved Nathaniel&mdash;you cannot think how much I loved
+Nathaniel. It was on my account that he went away.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The farm did not produce enough for us all: Nathaniel, John, and I. We
+worked hard and had a hard time. One year&mdash;that was ten years ago&mdash;we
+were sued for our taxes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Nathaniel,' said I, 'I will go to taking boarders.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then he looked up to me and said (oh, how noble and handsome he
+appeared to me!):</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Mother, I will go to sea.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Where?' asked I, in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'In a coaster.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I turned white. How I felt!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'You and John can manage the place,' he continued. 'One of the vessels
+sails next week&mdash;Uncle Aaron's; he offers to take me.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It seemed best, and he made preparations to go.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The spring before, Skipper Ben&mdash;you have met Skipper Ben&mdash;had given me
+some goose eggs; he had brought them from Canada, and said that they
+were wild-goose eggs.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I set them under hens. In four weeks I had three goslings. I took them
+into the house at first, but afterward made a pen for them out in the
+yard. I brought them up myself, and one of those goslings is that
+gander.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Skipper Ben came over to see me, the day before Nathaniel was to sail.
+Aaron came with him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I said to Aaron:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'What can I give to Nathaniel to carry to sea with him to make him
+think of home? Cake, preserves, apples? I haven't got much; I have done
+all I can for him, poor boy.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Brother looked at me curiously, and said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Give him one of those wild geese, and we will fatten it on shipboard
+and will have it for our Thanksgiving dinner.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What brother Aaron said pleased me. The young gander was a noble bird,
+the handsomest of the lot; and I resolved to keep the geese to kill for
+my own use and to give <i>him</i> to Nathaniel.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The next morning&mdash;it was late in September&mdash;I took leave of Nathaniel.
+I tried to be calm and cheerful and hopeful. I watched him as he went
+down the walk with the gander struggling under his arms. A stranger
+would have laughed, but I did not feel like laughing; it was true that
+the boys who went coasting were usually gone but a few months and came
+home hardy and happy. But when poverty compels a mother and son to part,
+after they have been true to each other, and shared their feelings in
+common, it seems hard, it seems hard&mdash;though I do not like to murmur or
+complain at anything allotted to me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I saw him go over the hill. On the top he stopped and held up the
+gander. He disappeared; yes, my own Nathaniel disappeared. I think of
+him now as one who disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;November came&mdash;it was a terrible month on the coast that year. Storm
+followed storm; the sea-faring people talked constantly of wrecks and
+losses. I could not sleep on the nights of those high winds. I used to
+lie awake thinking over all the happy hours I had lived with Nathaniel.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thanksgiving week came.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was full of an Indian-summer brightness after the long storms. The
+nights were frosty, bright, and calm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I could sleep on those calm nights.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One morning, I thought I heard a strange sound in the woodland pasture.
+It was like a wild goose. I listened; it was repeated. I was lying in
+bed. I started up&mdash;I thought I had been dreaming.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On the night before Thanksgiving I went to bed early, being very tired.
+The moon was full; the air was calm and still. I was thinking of
+Nathaniel, and I wondered if he would indeed have the gander for his
+Thanksgiving dinner: if it would be cooked as well as I would have
+cooked it, and if he would think of me that day.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was just going to sleep, when suddenly I heard a sound that made me
+start up and hold my breath.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'<i>Honk</i>!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought it was a dream followed by a nervous shock.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'<i>Honk! honk</i>!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There it was again, in the yard. I was surely awake and in my senses.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I heard the geese cackle.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'<i>Honk! honk! honk</i>!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I got out of bed and lifted the curtain. It was almost as light as day.
+Instead of two geese there were three. Had one of the neighbors' geese
+stolen away?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I should have thought so, and should not have felt disturbed, but for
+the reason that none of the neighbors' geese had that peculiar
+call&mdash;that hornlike tone that I had noticed in mine.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I went out of the door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The third goose looked like the very gander I had given Nathaniel.
+Could it be?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I did not sleep. I rose early and went to the crib for some corn.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was a gander&mdash;a 'wild' gander&mdash;that had come in the night. He seemed
+to know me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I trembled all over as though I had seen a ghost. I was so faint that I
+sat down on the meal-chest.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As I was in that place, a bill pecked against the door. The door
+opened. The strange gander came hobbling over the crib-stone and went to
+the corn-bin. He stopped there, looked at me, and gave a sort of glad
+&quot;honk,&quot; as though he knew me and was glad to see me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was certain that he was the gander I had raised, and that Nathaniel
+had lifted into the air when he gave me his last recognition from the
+top of the hill.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It overcame me. It was Thanksgiving. The church bell would soon be
+ringing as on Sunday. And here was Nathaniel's Thanksgiving dinner; and
+brother Aaron's&mdash;had it flown away? Where was the vessel?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Years have passed&mdash;ten. You know I waited and waited for my boy to come
+back. December grew dark with its rainy seas; the snows fell; May
+lighted up the hills, but the vessel never came back. Nathaniel&mdash;my
+Nathaniel&mdash;never returned.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That gander knows something he could tell me if he could talk. Birds
+have memories. He remembered the corn-crib&mdash;he remembered something
+else. I wish he <i>could</i> talk, poor bird! I wish he could talk. I will
+never sell him, nor kill him, nor have him abused. <i>He knows!</i>&quot;</p>
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Whittiers_Birthday" id="Whittiers_Birthday" />Whittier's Birthday</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER</strong></p>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>Born December 17, 1807&nbsp;&nbsp; Died September 7, 1892</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Whittier is known not only as a poet, but as a reformer and author. He
+was a member of the Society of Friends. He attended a New England
+academy; worked on a farm; taught school in order to afford further
+education, and at the age of twenty-two edited a paper at Boston. He was
+a leading opponent of slavery and was several times attacked by mobs on
+account of his opinions.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="BoyhoodWhittier" id="BoyhoodWhittier" />THE BOYHOOD OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY WILLIAM H. RIDEING</p>
+
+<p>The life of Whittier may be read in his poems, and, by putting a note
+here and a date there, a full autobiography might be compiled from them.
+His boyhood and youth are depicted in them with such detail that little
+need be added to make the story complete, and that little, reverently
+done as it may be, must seem poor in comparison with the poetic beauty
+of his own revelations.</p>
+
+<p>What more can we do to show his early home than to quote from his own
+beautiful poem, &quot;Snow-bound&quot;? There the house is pictured for us, inside
+and out, with all its furnishings; and those who gather around its
+hearth, inmates and visitors, are set before us so clearly that long
+after the book has been put away they remain as distinct in the memory
+as portraits that are visible day after day on the walls of our own
+homes. He reproduces in his verse the landscapes he saw, the legends of
+witches and Indians he listened to, the schoolfellows he played with,
+the voices of the woods and fields, and the round of toil and pleasure
+in a country boy's life; and in other poems his later life, with its
+impassioned devotion to freedom and lofty faith, is reflected as lucidly
+as his youth is in &quot;Snow-bound&quot; and &quot;The Barefoot Boy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He himself was &quot;The Barefoot Boy,&quot; and what Robert Burns said of himself
+Whittier might repeat: &quot;The poetic genius of my country found me, as the
+prophetic bard Elijah did Elisha, at the plow, and threw her inspiring
+mantle over me.&quot; He was a farmer's son, born at a time when farm-life in
+New England was more frugal than it is now, and with no other heritage
+than the good name and example of parents and kinsmen, in whom simple
+virtues&mdash;thrift, industry, and piety&mdash;abounded.</p>
+
+<p>His birthplace still stands near Haverhill, Mass.,&mdash;a house in one of
+the hollows of the surrounding hills, little altered from what it was in
+1807, the year he was born, when it was already at least a century and a
+half old.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh05.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh05.jpg" width="50%" alt="WHITTIER'S BIRTHPLACE, NEAR HAVERHILL, MASS." title="WHITTIER'S BIRTHPLACE, NEAR HAVERHILL, MASS." /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="smcap">WHITTIER'S BIRTHPLACE, NEAR HAVERHILL, MASS.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>He had no such opportunities for culture as Holmes and Lowell had in
+their youth. His parents were intelligent and upright people of
+limited means, who lived in all the simplicity of the Quaker faith, and
+there was nothing in his early surroundings to encourage and develop a
+literary taste. Books were scarce, and the twenty volumes on his
+father's shelves were, with one exception, about Quaker doctrines and
+Quaker heroes. The exception was a novel, and that was hidden away from
+the children, for fiction was forbidden fruit. No library or scholarly
+companionship was within reach; and if his gift had been less than
+genius, it could never have triumphed over the many disadvantages with
+which it had to contend. Instead of a poet he would have been a farmer
+like his forefathers. But literature was a spontaneous impulse with him,
+as natural as the song of a bird; and he was not wholly dependent on
+training and opportunity, as he would have been had he possessed mere
+talent.</p>
+
+<p>Frugal from necessity, the life of the Whittiers was not sordid nor
+cheerless to him, moreover; and he looks back to it as tenderly as if it
+had been full of luxuries. It was sweetened by strong affections, simple
+tastes, and an unflinching sense of duty; and in all the members of the
+household the love of nature was so genuine that meadow, wood, and
+river yielded them all the pleasure they needed, and they scarcely
+missed the refinements of art.</p>
+
+<p>Surely there could not be a pleasanter or more homelike picture than
+that which the poet has given us of the family on the night of the great
+storm when the old house was snowbound:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Whittier Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &quot;Shut in from all the world without,<br />
+ &nbsp;We sat the clean-winged hearth about,<br />
+ &nbsp;Content to let the north wind roar<br />
+ &nbsp;In baffled rage at pane and door,<br />
+ &nbsp;While the red logs before us beat<br />
+ &nbsp;The frost-line back with tropic heat.<br />
+ &nbsp;And ever when a louder blast<br />
+ &nbsp;Shook beam and rafter as it passed,<br />
+ &nbsp;The merrier up its roaring draught<br />
+ &nbsp;The great throat of the chimney laughed.<br />
+ &nbsp;The house-dog on his paws outspread,<br />
+ &nbsp;Laid to the fire his drowsy head;<br />
+ &nbsp;The cat's dark silhouette on the wall<br />
+ &nbsp;A couchant tiger's seemed to fall,<br />
+ &nbsp;And for the winter fireside meet<br />
+ &nbsp;Between the andiron's straddling feet<br />
+ &nbsp;The mug of cider simmered slow,<br />
+ &nbsp;The apples sputtered in a row,<br />
+ &nbsp;And close at hand the basket stood<br />
+ &nbsp;With nuts from brown October's wood.&quot;<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p>For a picture of the poet himself we must turn to the verses in &quot;The
+Barefoot Boy,&quot; in which he says:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Whittier Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &quot;O for boyhood's time of June,<br />
+ &nbsp;Crowding years in one brief moon,<br />
+ &nbsp;When all things I heard or saw,<br />
+ &nbsp;Me, their master, waited for.<br />
+ &nbsp;I was rich in flowers and trees,<br />
+ &nbsp;Humming-birds and honey-bees;<br />
+ &nbsp;For my sport the squirrel played,<br />
+ &nbsp;Plied the snouted mole his spade;<br />
+ &nbsp;For my taste the blackberry cone<br />
+ &nbsp;Purpled over hedge and stone;<br />
+ &nbsp;Laughed the brook for my delight<br />
+ &nbsp;Through the day and through the night,<br />
+ &nbsp;Whispering at the garden-wall,<br />
+ &nbsp;Talked with me from fall to fall;<br />
+ &nbsp;Mine the sand-rimmed pickerel pond,<br />
+ &nbsp;Mine the walnut slopes beyond,<br />
+ &nbsp;Mine on bending orchard trees,<br />
+ &nbsp;Apples of Hesperides!<br />
+ &nbsp;Still as my horizon grew,<br />
+ &nbsp;Larger grew my riches, too;<br />
+ &nbsp;All the world I saw or knew<br />
+ &nbsp;Seemed a complex Chinese toy,<br />
+ &nbsp;Fashioned for a barefoot boy!&quot;<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1" /><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a><br />
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<br />
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh06.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh06.jpg" width="50%" alt="THE OLD SCHOOL-HOUSE, HAVERHILL, MASS." title="THE OLD SCHOOL-HOUSE, HAVERHILL, MASS." /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">THE OLD SCHOOL-HOUSE, HAVERHILL, MASS.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>I doubt if any boy ever rose to intellectual eminence who had fewer
+opportunities for education than Whittier. He had no such pasturage to
+browse on as is open to every reader who, by simply reaching them out,
+can lay his hands on the treasures of English literature. He had to
+borrow books wherever they could be found among the neighbors who were
+willing to lend, and he thought nothing of walking several miles for one
+volume. The only instruction he received was at the district school,
+which was open a few weeks in midwinter, and at the Haverhill Academy,
+which he attended two terms of six months each, paying tuition by work
+in spare hours, and by keeping a small school himself. A feeble spirit
+would have languished under such disadvantages. But Whittier scarcely
+refers to them, and instead of begging for pity, he takes them as part
+of the common lot, and seems to remember only what was beautiful and
+good in his early life.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally a stranger knocked at the door of the old homestead in the
+valley; sometimes it was a distinguished Quaker from abroad, but oftener
+it was a peddler or some vagabond begging for food, which was seldom
+refused. Once a foreigner came and asked for lodgings for the night&mdash;a
+dark, repulsive man, whose appearance was so much against him that Mrs.
+Whittier was afraid to admit him. No sooner had she sent him away,
+however, than she repented. &quot;What if a son of mine was in a strange
+land?&quot; she thought. The young poet (who was not yet recognized as such)
+offered to go out in search of him, and presently returned with him,
+having found him standing in the roadway just as he had been turned away
+from another house.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh07.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh07.jpg" width="40%" alt="JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER" title="JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>&quot;He took his seat with us at the supper-table,&quot; says Whittier in one of
+his prose sketches, &quot;and when we were all gathered around the hearth
+that cold autumnal evening, he told us, partly by words and partly by
+gestures, the story of his life and misfortunes, amused us with
+descriptions of the grape-gatherings and festivals of his sunny
+clime, edified my mother with a recipe for making bread of chestnuts,
+and in the morning, when, after breakfast, his dark sallow face lighted
+up, and his fierce eyes moistened with grateful emotion as in his own
+silvery Tuscan accent he poured out his thanks, we marveled at the fears
+which had so nearly closed our doors against him, and as he departed we
+all felt that he had left with us the blessing of the poor.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Another guest came to the house one day. It was a vagrant old Scotchman,
+who, when he had been treated to bread and cheese and cider, sang some
+of the songs of Robert Burns, which Whittier then heard for the first
+time, and which he never forgot. Coming to him thus as songs reached the
+people before printing was invented, through gleemen and minstrels,
+their sweetness lingered in his ears, and he soon found himself singing
+in the same strain. Some of his earliest inspirations were drawn from
+Burns, and he tells us of his joy when one day, after the visit of the
+old Scotchman, his schoolmaster loaned him a copy of that poet's works.
+&quot;I began to make rhymes myself, and to imagine stories and adventures,&quot;
+he says in his simple way.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, he began to rhyme very early and kept his gift a secret from
+all, except his oldest sister, fearing that his father, who was a
+prosaic man, would think that he was wasting time. He wrote under the
+fence, in the attic, in the barn&mdash;wherever he could escape observation;
+and as pen and ink were not always available, he sometimes used chalk,
+and even charcoal. Great was the surprise of the family when some of his
+verses were unearthed, literally unearthed, from under a heap of rubbish
+in a garret; but his father frowned upon these evidences of the bent of
+his mind, not out of unkindness, but because he doubted the sufficiency
+of the boy's education for a literary life, and did not wish to inspire
+him with hopes which might never be fulfilled.</p>
+
+<p>His sister had faith in him, nevertheless, and, without his knowledge,
+she sent one of his poems to the editor of <i>The Free Press</i>, a newspaper
+published in Newburyport. Whittier was helping his father to repair a
+stone wall by the roadside when the carrier flung a copy of the paper to
+him, and, unconscious that anything of his was in it, he opened it and
+glanced up and down the columns. His eyes fell on some verses called
+&quot;The Exile's Departure.&quot;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Whittier Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &quot;Fond scenes, which delighted my youthful existence,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With feelings of sorrow I bid ye adieu&mdash;<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;A lasting adieu; for now, dim in the distance,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The shores of Hibernia recede from my view.<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;Farewell to the cliffs, tempest-beaten and gray,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Which guard the loved shores of my own native land;<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;Farewell to the village and sail-shadowed bay,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The forest-crowned hill and the water-washed strand.&quot;<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<br />
+
+</div>
+
+<p>His eyes swam; it was his own poem, the first he ever had in print.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh08.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh08.jpg" width="50%" alt="WHITTIER'S STUDY AT AMESBURY, MASS." title="WHITTIER'S STUDY AT AMESBURY, MASS." /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">WHITTIER'S STUDY AT AMESBURY, MASS.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>&quot;What is the matter with thee?&quot; his father demanded, seeing how dazed he
+was; but, though he resumed his work on the wall, he could not speak,
+and he had to steal a glance at the paper again and again, before he
+could convince himself that he was not dreaming. Sure enough, the poem
+was there with his initial at the foot of it,&mdash;&quot;W., Haverhill, June 1st,
+1826,&quot;&mdash;and, better still, this editorial notice: &quot;If 'W.,' at
+Haverhill, will continue to favor us with pieces beautiful as the one
+inserted in our poetical department of to-day, we shall esteem it a
+favor.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Fame never passes true genius by, and when it came it brought with it
+the love and reverence of thousands, who recognize in Whittier a nature
+abounding in patience, unselfishness, and all the sweetness of Christian
+charity.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1" /><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> The selections from Mr. Whittier's poems contained in this
+article are included by kind permission of Messrs. Houghton,
+Mifflin &amp; Co.</p></div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Christmas" id="Christmas" />Christmas</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>December 25</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>A festival held every year in memory of the birth of Christ. Christmas
+is essentially a day of rejoicing and thanksgiving and of good will
+toward others. Many customs older than Christianity mark the
+festivities. In our country the observance of the day was discouraged in
+colonial times, and in England in 1643 Parliament abolished the day. Now
+its celebration is world-wide and by all classes and creeds.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="UncleSamObserve" id="UncleSamObserve" />HOW UNCLE SAM OBSERVES CHRISTMAS</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY CLIFFORD HOWARD</p>
+
+<p>Of course Uncle Sam is best acquainted with the good old-fashioned
+Christmas&mdash;the kind we have known all about since we were little bits of
+children. There are the Christmas trees with their pretty decorations
+and candles, and the mistletoe and holly and all sorts of evergreens to
+make the house look bright, while outside the trees are bare, the ground
+is white with snow, and Jack Frost is prowling around, freezing up the
+ponds and pinching people's noses. And then there is dear old Santa
+Claus with his reindeer, galloping about on the night before Christmas,
+and scrambling down chimneys to fill the stockings that hang in a row by
+the fireplace.</p>
+
+<p>It is the time of good cheer and happiness and presents for everybody;
+the time of chiming bells and joyful carols; of turkey and candy and
+plum-pudding and all the other good things that go to make up a truly
+merry Christmas. And here and there throughout the country, some of the
+quaint old customs of our forefathers are still observed at this time,
+as, for instance, the pretty custom of &quot;Christmas waits&quot;&mdash;boys and girls
+who go about from house to house on Christmas eve, or early Christmas
+morning, singing carols.</p>
+
+<p>But, aside from the Christmas customs we all know so well, Uncle Sam has
+many strange and special ways of observing Christmas; for in this big
+country of his there are many different kinds of people, and they all do
+not celebrate Christmas in the same way, as you shall see.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN THE SOUTH</h4>
+
+<p>Siss! Bang! Boom! Sky-rockets hissing, crackers snapping, cannons
+roaring, horns tooting, bells ringing, and youngsters shouting with wild
+delight. That is the way Christmas begins down South.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh09.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh09.jpg" width="40%" alt="CHRISTMAS IN THE SOUTH" title="CHRISTMAS IN THE SOUTH" /></a>
+<p class="center"><span class="allcap">CHRISTMAS IN THE SOUTH</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It starts at midnight, or even before; and all day long fire-crackers
+are going off in the streets of every city, town, and village of the
+South, from Virginia to Louisiana. A Northern boy, waking up suddenly in
+New Orleans or Mobile or Atlanta, would think he was in the midst of
+a rousing Fourth-of-July celebration. In some of the towns the brass
+bands come out and add to the jollity of the day by marching around and
+playing &quot;My Maryland&quot; and &quot;Dixie&quot;; while the soldier companies parade up
+and down the streets to the strains of joyous music and fire salutes
+with cannons and rifles.</p>
+
+<p>To the girls and boys of the South, Christmas is the noisiest and
+jolliest day of the year. The Fourth of July doesn't compare with it.
+And as for the darkies, they look upon Christmas as a holiday that was
+invented for their especial happiness. They take it for granted that all
+the &quot;white folks&quot; they know will give them presents; and with grinning
+faces they are up bright and early, asking for &quot;Christmus gif', mistah;
+Christmus gif, missus.&quot; No one thinks of refusing them, and at the end
+of the day they are richer and happier than at any other time during the
+whole year.</p>
+
+<p>Except for the jingle of sleigh-bells and the presence of Jack Frost, a
+Christmas in the South is in other ways very much like that in the
+North. The houses are decorated with greens, mistletoe hangs above the
+doorways, Santa Claus comes down the chimneys and fills the waiting
+stockings, while Christmas dinner is not complete without the familiar
+turkey and cranberry sauce, plum puddings and pies.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN NEW ENGLAND</h4>
+
+<p>For a great many years there was no Christmas in New England. The
+Pilgrims and the Puritans did not believe in such celebrations. In fact,
+they often made it a special point to do their hardest work on Christmas
+day, just to show their contempt for what they considered a pagan
+festival.</p>
+
+<p>During colonial times there was a law in Massachusetts forbidding any
+one to celebrate Christmas; and if anybody was so rash in those days as
+to go about tooting a horn and shouting a &quot;Merry Christmas!&quot; he was
+promptly brought to his senses by being arrested and punished.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh10.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh10.jpg" width="50%" alt="CHRISTMAS SPORTS IN NEW ENGLAND" title="CHRISTMAS SPORTS IN NEW ENGLAND" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">CHRISTMAS SPORTS IN NEW ENGLAND</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>Of course things are very different in New England now, but in many
+country towns the people still make more of Thanksgiving than they do of
+Christmas; and there are hundreds of New England men and women still
+living who knew nothing of Christmas as children&mdash;who never hung up
+their stockings; who never waited for Santa Claus; who never had a
+tree; who never even had a Christmas present!</p>
+
+<p>Nowadays, however, Christmas in New England is like Christmas anywhere
+else; but here and there, even now, the effects of the early Puritan
+ideas may still be seen. In some of the smaller and out-of-the-way towns
+and villages you will find Christmas trees and evergreens in only a very
+few of the houses, and in some places&mdash;particularly in New
+Hampshire&mdash;one big Christmas tree does for the whole town. This tree is
+set up in the town hall, and there the children go to get their gifts,
+which have been hung on the branches by the parents. Sometimes the tree
+has no decorations&mdash;no candles, no popcorn strings, no shiny balls.
+After the presents are taken off and given to the children, the tree
+remains perfectly bare. There is usually a short entertainment of
+recitations and songs, and a speech or two perhaps, and then the little
+folks, carrying their presents with them, go back to their homes.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN NEW MEXICO</h4>
+
+<p>In certain parts of New Mexico, among the old Spanish settlements, the
+celebration of Christmas begins more than a week before the day. In the
+evenings, a party of men and women go together to the house of some
+friend&mdash;a different house being visited each evening. When they arrive,
+they knock on the door and begin to sing, and when those in the house
+ask, &quot;Who is there?&quot; they reply, &quot;The Virgin Mary and St. Joseph seek
+lodgings in your house.&quot; At first the inmates of the house refuse to let
+them in. This is done to carry out the Bible story of Joseph and Mary
+being unable to find lodgings in Bethlehem. But in a little while the
+door is opened and the visitors are heartily welcomed. As soon as they
+enter, they kneel and repeat a short prayer; and when the devotional
+exercises are concluded, the rest of the evening is spent in
+merrymaking.</p>
+
+<p>On Christmas eve the people of the village gather together in some large
+room or hall and give a solemn little play, commemorating the birthday
+of the Saviour. One end of the room is used as a stage, and this is
+fitted up to represent the stable and the manger; and the characters in
+the sacred story of Bethlehem&mdash;Mary and Joseph, the shepherds, the wise
+men, and the angels&mdash;are represented in the tableaux, and with a
+genuine, reverential spirit. Even the poorer people of the town take
+part in these Christmas plays.</p>
+
+
+<h4>AMONG THE SHAKERS</h4>
+
+<p>The Shakers observe Christmas by a dinner at which the men and women
+both sit down at the same table. This custom of theirs is the thing that
+serves to make Christmas different from any other day among the Shakers.
+During all the rest of the year the men and women eat their meals at
+separate tables.</p>
+
+<p>At sunset on Christmas day, after a service in the church, they march to
+the community-house, where the dinner is waiting. The men sit on one
+side of the table and the women on the other. At the head sits an old
+man called the elder, who begins the meal by saying grace, after which
+each one in turn gets up and, lifting the right hand, says in a solemn
+voice, &quot;God is love.&quot; The dinner is eaten in perfect silence. Not a
+voice is heard until the meal comes to an end. Then the men and women
+rise and sing, standing in their places at the table. As the singing
+proceeds they mark time with their hands and feet. Then their bodies
+begin to sway from side to side in the peculiar manner that has given
+this sect its name of Shakers.</p>
+
+<p>When the singing comes to an end, the elder chants a prayer, after which
+the men and women silently file out and leave the building.</p>
+
+
+<h4>AMONG THE PENNSYLVANIA GERMANS</h4>
+
+<p>&quot;You'd better look out, or Pelznickel will catch you!&quot; This is the dire
+threat held over naughty boys and girls at Christmas-time in some of the
+country settlements of the Pennsylvania Germans, or Pennsylvania Dutch,
+as they are often called.</p>
+
+<p>Pelznickel is another name for Santa Claus. But he is not altogether the
+same old Santa that we welcome so gladly. On Christmas eve some one in
+the neighborhood impersonates Pelznickel by dressing up as an old man
+with a long white beard. Arming himself with a switch and carrying a bag
+of toys over his shoulder, he goes from house to house, where the
+children are expecting him.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh11.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh11.jpg" width="40%" alt="A VISIT FROM PELZNICKEL" title="A VISIT FROM PELZNICKEL" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">A VISIT FROM PELZNICKEL</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>He asks the parents how the little ones have behaved themselves during
+the year. To each of those who have been good he gives a present from
+his bag. But&mdash;woe betide the naughty ones! These are not only supposed
+to get no presents, but Pelznickel catches them by the collar and
+playfully taps them with his switch.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN PORTO RICO</h4>
+
+<p>The Porto Rican boys and girls would be frightened out of their wits if
+Santa Claus should come to them in a sleigh drawn by reindeer and should
+try to enter the houses and fill their stockings. Down there, Santa
+Claus does not need reindeer or any other kind of steeds, for the
+children say that he just comes flying through the air like a bird.
+Neither does he bother himself looking for stockings, for such things
+are not so plentiful in Porto Rico as they are in cooler climates.
+Instead of stockings, the children use little boxes, which they make
+themselves. These they place on the roofs and in the courtyards, and old
+Santa Claus drops the gifts into them as he flies around at night with
+his bag on his back.</p>
+
+<p>He is more generous in Porto Rico than he is anywhere else. He does not
+come on Christmas eve only, but is likely to call around every night or
+two during the week. Each morning, therefore, the little folks run out
+eagerly to see whether anything more has been left in their boxes during
+the night.</p>
+
+<p>Christmas in Porto Rico is a church festival of much importance, and the
+celebration of it is made up chiefly of religious ceremonies intended to
+commemorate the principal events in the life of the Saviour. Beginning
+with the celebration of his birth, at Christmas-time, the feast-days
+follow one another in rapid succession. Indeed, it may justly be said
+that they do not really come to an end until Easter.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh12.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh12.jpg" width="50%" alt="BETHLEHEM DAY IN PORTO RICO" title="BETHLEHEM DAY IN PORTO RICO" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">BETHLEHEM DAY IN PORTO RICO</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>One of the most popular of these festival-days is that known as
+Bethlehem day. This is celebrated on the 12th of January, in memory of
+the coming of the Magi. The celebration consists of a procession of
+children through the streets of the town. The foremost three, dressed in
+flowing robes to represent the wise men of the East, come riding along
+on ponies, holding in their hands the gifts for the Infant King;
+following them come angels and shepherds and flute-players, all
+represented by children dressed in pretty costumes and carrying garlands
+of flowers. These processions are among the most picturesque of all
+Christmas celebrations.</p>
+
+
+<h4>AMONG THE MORAVIANS</h4>
+
+<p>For many days before Christmas the Moravian housewives in Bethlehem,
+Pennsylvania, are busy in their kitchens making good things for the
+holidays&mdash;mint-cakes, pepper-nuts, <i>K&uuml;mmelbrod</i>, sugar-cake, mince-pies,
+and, most important of all, large quantities of &quot;Christmas cakes.&quot; These
+Christmas cakes are a kind of ginger cooky, crisp and spicy, and are
+made according to a recipe known only to the Moravians. They are made in
+all sorts of curious shapes&mdash;birds, horses, bears, lions, fishes,
+turtles, stars, leaves, and funny little men and women; so that they are
+not only good to eat, but are ornamental as well, and are often used by
+the good fathers and mothers as decorations for the &quot;<i>Putz</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Every Moravian family has its <i>Putz</i> at Christmas-time. This consists of
+a Christmas tree surrounded at its base by a miniature landscape made up
+of moss and greens and make-believe rocks, and adorned with toy houses
+and tiny fences and trees and all sorts of little animals and toy
+people.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh13.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh13.jpg" width="40%" alt="A CHRISTMAS &quot;PUTZ&quot;" title="A CHRISTMAS &quot;PUTZ&quot;" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">A CHRISTMAS &quot;PUTZ&quot;</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<p>On Christmas eve a love-feast is held in the church. The greater part of
+the service is devoted to music, for which the Moravians have always
+been noted. While the choir is singing, cake and coffee are brought in
+and served to all the members of the congregation, each one receiving a
+good-sized bun and a large cup of coffee. Shortly before the end of the
+meeting lighted wax candles carried on large trays are brought into the
+church, by men on one side and women on the other, and passed around to
+the little folks&mdash;one for each boy and girl. This is meant to represent
+the coming of the Light into the world, and is but one of the many
+beautiful customs observed by the Moravians.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN ALASKA</h4>
+
+<p>&quot;Going around with the star&quot; is a popular Christmas custom among some of
+the natives of Alaska who belong to the Greek Church. A large figure of
+a star, covered with brightly colored paper, is carried about at night
+by a procession of men and women and children. They call at the homes of
+the well-to-do families of the village, marching about from house to
+house, headed by the star-bearer and two men or boys carrying lanterns
+on long poles. They are warmly welcomed at each place, and are invited
+to come in and have some refreshments. After enjoying the cakes and
+other good things, and singing one or two carols, they take up the star
+and move on to the next house.</p>
+
+<p>These processions take place each night during Christmas week; but after
+the second night the star-bearers are followed by men and boys dressed
+in fantastic clothes, who try to catch the star-men and destroy their
+stars. This part of the game is supposed to be an imitation of the
+soldiers of Herod trying to destroy the children of Bethlehem; but these
+happy folks of Alaska evidently don't think much about its meaning, for
+they make a great frolic of it. Everybody is full of fun, and the frosty
+air of the dark winter nights is filled with laughter as men and boys
+and romping girls chase one another here and there in merry excitement.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN HAWAII</h4>
+
+<p>The natives of Hawaii say that Santa Claus comes over to the islands in
+a boat. Perhaps he does; it would be a tedious journey for his reindeer
+to make without stopping from San Francisco to Honolulu. At all events,
+he gets there by some means or other, for he would not neglect the
+little folks of those islands away out in the Pacific.</p>
+
+<p>They look for him as eagerly as do the boys and girls in the lands of
+snow and ice, and although it must almost melt him to get around in that
+warm climate with his furs on, he never misses a Christmas.</p>
+
+<p>Before the missionaries and the American settlers went to Hawaii, the
+natives knew nothing about Christmas, but now they all celebrate the
+day, and do it, of course, in the same way as the Americans who live
+there. The main difference between Christmas in Honolulu and Christmas
+in New York is that in Honolulu in December the weather is like June in
+New York. Birds are warbling in the leafy trees; gardens are overflowing
+with roses and carnations; fields and mountain slopes are ablaze with
+color; and a sunny sky smiles dreamily upon the glories of a summer day.
+In the morning people go to church, and during the day there are sports
+and games and merry-making of all sorts. The Christmas dinner is eaten
+out of doors in the shade of the veranda, and everybody is happy and
+contented.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IN THE PHILIPPINES</h4>
+
+<p>&quot;BUENAS PASQUAS!&quot; This is the hearty greeting that comes to the dweller
+in the Philippines on Christmas morning, and with it, perhaps, an
+offering of flowers.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh14.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh14.jpg" width="50%" alt="CHRISTMAS IN THE PHILIPPINES" title="CHRISTMAS IN THE PHILIPPINES" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">CHRISTMAS IN THE PHILIPPINES</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The Filipino, like the Porto Rican and all others who have lived under
+Spanish rule, look upon Christmas as a great religious festival, and one
+that requires very special attention. On Christmas eve the churches are
+open, and the coming of the great day is celebrated by a mass at
+midnight; and during all of Christmas day mass is held every hour, so
+that every one may have an opportunity to attend. Even the popular
+Christmas customs among the people are nearly all of a religious
+character, for most of them consist of little plays or dramas founded
+upon the life of the Saviour.</p>
+
+<p>These plays are called <i>pastures</i>, and are performed by bands of young
+men and women, and sometimes mere boys and girls, who go about from
+village to village and present their simple little plays to expectant
+audiences at every stopping-place. The visit of the wise men, the flight
+into Egypt&mdash;these and many other incidents as related in the Scriptures
+are acted in these <i>pastores</i>.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="New_Years_Day" id="New_Years_Day" />New Year's Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>January 1</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The custom of celebrating the first day of the year is a very ancient
+one. The exchange of gifts, the paying of calls, the making of good
+resolutions for the new year and feasting often characterize the day.
+The custom of ringing the church bells is of the widest extent.</p>
+
+<p>The old-world custom of sitting up on New Year's eve to see the old year
+out is still very common.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="SocialLifeColon" id="SocialLifeColon" />EXTRACT FROM &quot;SOCIAL LIFE IN THE COLONIES&quot;</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>The Century Magazine, July 1885</i></strong></p>
+
+<p class="center">BY EDWARD EGGLESTON</p>
+
+<p>New Year's Day was celebrated among the New York Dutch by the calls of
+the gentlemen on their lady friends; it is perhaps the only distinctly
+Dutch custom that afterward came into widespread use in the United
+States. New Year's Day, and the church festivals kept alike by the Dutch
+and English, brought an intermission of labor to the New York slaves,
+who gathered in throngs to devote themselves to wild frolics. The
+Brooklyn fields were crowded with them on New Year's Day, at Easter, at
+Whitsuntide, or &quot;Prixter,&quot; as the Dutch called it, and on &quot;San Claus
+Day&quot;&mdash;the feast of St. Nicholas.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h3><a name="ChineseNewYear" id="ChineseNewYear" />A CHINESE NEW YEAR'S IN CALIFORNIA</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY H.H.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese in California have a week of holiday at their New Year's in
+February, just as we do between the twenty-fifth of December and the
+first of January.</p>
+
+<p>In the cities they make a fine display of fire-works. They use barrels
+full of fire-crackers, and the Chinese boys do not fire them off, as the
+American boys do, a cracker at a time; they bring out a large box full,
+or a barrel full, and fire them off package after package, as fast as
+they can.</p>
+
+<p>In Santa Barbara, where I was during the Chinese New Year's of 1882, we
+heard the crackers long before we reached Chinatown. After these stopped
+we went into the houses. Every Chinese family keeps open house on New
+Year's day all day long. They set up a picture or an image of their god
+in some prominent place, and on a table in front of this they put a
+little feast of good things to eat. Some are for an offering to the god
+and some are for their friends who call. Everyone is expected to take
+something.</p>
+
+<p>There was no family so poor that it did not have something set out, and
+some sort of a shrine made for its idol; in some houses it was only a
+coarse wooden box turned up on one end like a cupboard, with two or
+three little teacups full of rice or tea, and one poor candle burning
+before a paper picture of the god pasted or tacked at the back of the
+box.</p>
+
+<p>It was amusing to watch the American boys darting about from shop to
+shop and house to house, coming out with their hands full of queer
+Chinese things to eat, showing them to each other and comparing notes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, let me taste that!&quot; one boy would exclaim on seeing some new thing;
+and &quot;Where did you get it? Which house gives that?&quot; Then the whole party
+would race off to make a descent on that house and get some more. I
+thought it wonderfully hospitable on the part of the Chinese people to
+let all these American boys run in and out of their houses in that way,
+and help themselves from the New Year's feast.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the boys were very rude and ill-mannered&mdash;little better than
+street beggars; but the Chinese were polite and generous to them all.
+The joss-house, where they held their religious services, was a chamber
+opening out upon an upper balcony. This balcony was hung with lanterns
+and decorated. The door at the foot of the stairs which led to this
+chamber stood open all day, and any one who wished could go up and say
+his prayers in the Chinese fashion, which is a curious fashion indeed.
+They have slender reeds with tight rolls of brown paper fastened at one
+end. In front of the image or picture of their god they set a box or
+vase of ashes, on which a little sandalwood is kept burning. When they
+wish to make a prayer they stick one of the reeds down in these ashes
+and set the paper on fire. They think the smoke of the burning paper
+will carry the prayer up to heaven.</p>
+
+<p>I asked a Chinese man who could speak a little English why they put
+teacups of wine and tea and rice before their god; if they believed that
+the god would eat and drink.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, no,&quot; he said, &quot;that not what for. What you like self, you give god.
+He see. He like see.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Lincolns_Birthday" id="Lincolns_Birthday" />Lincoln's Birthday</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>February 12</i></strong></p>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>ABRAHAM LINCOLN</strong></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>Born February 12, 1809&nbsp;&nbsp;Died April 15, 1865</strong></p>
+
+
+<p> Lincoln was the sixteenth
+President of the United States. He was descended from a Quaker family of
+English origin. He followed various occupations, including those of a
+farm laborer, a salesman, a merchant, and a surveyor; was admitted to
+the bar in 1836 and began the practice of law in this year. He was twice
+elected President, the second time receiving 212 out of 233 electoral
+votes. He was shot by John Wilkes Booth at Ford's Theater, Washington,
+April 14, 1865, and died the following day.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="AbrahamLincoln" id="AbrahamLincoln" />ABRAHAM LINCOLN</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY HELEN NICOLAY</p>
+
+<p>Abraham Lincoln was not an ordinary man. He was, in truth, in the
+language of the poet Lowell, a &quot;new birth of our new soil.&quot; His
+greatness did not consist in growing up on the frontier. An ordinary man
+would have found on the frontier exactly what he would have found
+elsewhere&mdash;a commonplace life, varying only with the changing ideas and
+customs of time and place. But for the man with extraordinary powers of
+mind and body, for one gifted by Nature as Abraham Lincoln was gifted,
+the pioneer life, with its severe training in self-denial, patience, and
+industry, developed his character, and fitted him for the great duties
+of his after life as no other training could have done.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh15.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh15.jpg" width="50%" alt="LINCOLN'S HOME AFTER HIS MARRIAGE" title="LINCOLN'S HOME AFTER HIS MARRIAGE" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">LINCOLN'S HOME AFTER HIS MARRIAGE</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>His advancement in the astonishing career that carried him from
+obscurity to world-wide fame&mdash;from postmaster of New Salem village to
+President of the United States, from captain of a backwoods volunteer
+company to Commander-in-chief of the army and navy&mdash;was neither sudden
+nor accidental nor easy. He was both ambitious and successful, but his
+ambition was moderate, and his success was slow. And, because his
+success was slow, it never outgrew either his judgment or his powers.
+Between the day when he left his father's cabin and launched his canoe
+on the head waters of the Sangamon River to begin life on his own
+account, and the day of his first inauguration, lay full thirty years
+of toil, self-denial, patience; often of effort baffled, of hope
+deferred; sometimes of bitter disappointment. Even with the natural gift
+of great genius, it required an average lifetime and faithful,
+unrelaxing effort to transform the raw country stripling into a fit
+ruler for this great nation.</p>
+
+<p>Almost every success was balanced&mdash;sometimes overbalanced&mdash;by a seeming
+failure. He went into the Black Hawk war a captain, and through no fault
+of his own came out a private. He rode to the hostile frontier on
+horseback, and trudged home on foot. His store &quot;winked out.&quot; His
+surveyor's compass and chain, with which he was earning a scanty living,
+were sold for debt. He was defeated in his first attempts to be
+nominated for the legislature and for Congress; defeated in his
+application to be appointed Commissioner of the General Land Office;
+defeated for the Senate, when he had forty-five votes to begin with, by
+a man who had only five votes to begin with; defeated again after his
+joint debates with Douglas; defeated in the nomination for
+Vice-President, when a favorable nod from half a dozen politicians would
+have brought him success.</p>
+
+<p>Failures? Not so. Every seeming defeat was a slow success. His was the
+growth of the oak, and not of Jonah's gourd. He could not become a
+master workman until he had served a tedious apprenticeship. It was the
+quarter of a century of reading, thinking, speech-making, and law-making
+which fitted him to be the chosen champion in the great Lincoln-Douglas
+debates of 1858. It was the great moral victory won in those debates
+(although the senatorship went to Douglas), added to the title &quot;Honest
+Old Abe,&quot; won by truth and manhood among his neighbors during a whole
+lifetime, that led the people of the United States to trust him with the
+duties and powers of President.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh16.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh16.jpg" width="50%" alt="HOUSE IN WHICH LINCOLN LIVED WHEN HE WAS ELECTED PRESIDENT" title="HOUSE IN WHICH LINCOLN LIVED WHEN HE WAS ELECTED PRESIDENT" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">HOUSE IN WHICH LINCOLN LIVED WHEN HE WAS ELECTED PRESIDENT</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<p>And when, at last, after thirty years of endeavor, success had beaten
+down defeat, when Lincoln had been nominated, elected, and inaugurated,
+came the crowning trial of his faith and constancy. When the people, by
+free and lawful choice, had placed honor and power in his hands, when
+his name could convene Congress, approve laws, cause ships to sail and
+armies to move, there suddenly came upon the government and the nation a
+fatal paralysis. Honor seemed to dwindle and power to vanish. Was he
+then, after all, not to be President? Was patriotism dead? Was the
+Constitution only a bit of waste paper? Was the Union gone?</p>
+
+<p>The outlook was indeed grave. There was treason in Congress, treason in
+the Supreme Court, treason in the army and navy. Confusion and discord
+were everywhere. To use Mr. Lincoln's forcible figure of speech, sinners
+were calling the righteous to repentance. Finally the flag, insulted and
+fired upon, trailed in surrender at Sumter; and then came the
+humiliation of the riot at Baltimore, and the President for a few days
+practically a prisoner in the capital of the nation.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh17.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh17.jpg" width="40%" alt="PRESIDENT LINCOLN AND TAD" title="PRESIDENT LINCOLN AND TAD" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">PRESIDENT LINCOLN AND TAD</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>But his apprenticeship had been served, and there was to be no more
+failure. With faith and justice and generosity he conducted for four
+long years a war whose frontiers stretched from the Potomac to the Rio
+Grande; whose soldiers numbered a million men on each side. The labor,
+the thought, the responsibility, the strain of mind and anguish of soul
+that he gave to his great task, who can measure? &quot;Here was place for no
+holiday magistrate, no fair-weather sailor,&quot; as Emerson justly said of
+him. &quot;The new pilot was hurried to the helm in a tornado. In four
+years&mdash;four years of battle days&mdash;his endurance, his fertility of
+resources, his magnanimity, were sorely tried and never found wanting.&quot;
+&quot;By his courage, his justice, his even temper, ... his humanity, he stood
+a heroic figure in a heroic epoch.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh18.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh18.jpg" width="50%" alt="THE LINCOLN MONUMENT AT SPRINGFIELD" title="THE LINCOLN MONUMENT AT SPRINGFIELD" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">THE LINCOLN MONUMENT AT SPRINGFIELD</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>What but a lifetime's schooling in disappointment; what but the
+pioneer's self-reliance and freedom from prejudice; what but the clear
+mind quick to see natural right and unswerving in its purpose to follow
+it; what but the steady self-control, the unwarped sympathy, the
+unbounded charity of this man with spirit so humble and soul so great,
+could have carried him through the labors he wrought to the victory he
+attained?</p>
+
+<p>With truth it could be written, &quot;His heart was as great as the world,
+but there was no room in it to hold the memory of a wrong.&quot; So, &quot;with
+malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as
+God gave him to see the right,&quot; he lived and died. We, who have never
+seen him, yet feel daily the influence of his kindly life, and cherish
+among our most precious possessions the heritage of his example.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh19.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh19.jpg" width="40%" alt="STATUE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. BY AUGUSTUS ST. GAUDENS" title="STATUE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. BY AUGUSTUS ST. GAUDENS" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">STATUE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. BY AUGUSTUS ST. GAUDENS</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h3><a name="GettysburgAdd" id="GettysburgAdd" />THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS</h3>
+
+
+<p>Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this
+continent a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the
+proposition that all men are created equal.</p>
+
+<p>Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or
+any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on
+a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of
+that field as a final resting-place for those who here gave their lives
+that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we
+should do this.</p>
+
+<p>But, in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate&mdash;we cannot consecrate&mdash;we
+cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled
+here, have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract.
+The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it
+can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather,
+to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here
+have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here
+dedicated to the great task remaining before us&mdash;that from these honored
+dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the
+last full measure of devotion; that we here highly resolve that these
+dead shall not have died in vain; that this nation, under God, shall
+have a new birth of freedom; and that government of the people, by the
+people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.</p>
+
+<p class="blockquotjust">The above address was delivered by Abraham Lincoln,
+November 19, 1863, at the dedication of the Gettysburg battle-field as a
+national cemetery for Union soldiers.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="OCaptain" id="OCaptain" />O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!</h3>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+O captain. My captain. Our fearful trip is done;<br />
+The ship has weathered every rack, the prize we sought is won;<br />
+The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,<br />
+While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring:<br />
+But O heart! Heart! Heart!<br />
+Leave you not the little spot,<br />
+Where on the deck my captain lies,<br />
+Fallen cold and dead.<br />
+
+<br />
+
+O captain. My captain. Rise up and hear the bells;<br />
+Rise up&mdash;for you the flag is flung&mdash;for you the bugle trills;<br />
+For you bouquets and ribbon'd wreaths&mdash;for you the shores a-crowding;<br />
+For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;<br />
+O captain. Dear father.<br />
+This arm I push beneath you;<br />
+It is some dream that on the deck,<br />
+You've fallen cold and dead.<br />
+
+<br />
+
+My captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still;<br />
+My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will;<br />
+But the ship, the ship is anchor'd safe, its voyage closed and done;<br />
+From fearful trip, the victor ship, comes in with object won:<br />
+Exult O shores, and ring, O bells.<br />
+But I with silent tread,<br />
+Walk the spot the captain lies,<br />
+Fallen cold and dead.<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;" class="smcap">Walt Whitman.</span>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="St_Valentines_Day" id="St_Valentines_Day" />St. Valentine's Day</h2>
+
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>February 14</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Custom decrees that on this day the young shall exchange missives in
+which the love of the sender is told in verses, pictures, and
+sentiments. No reason beyond a guess can be given to connect St.
+Valentine with these customs. He was a Christian martyr, about 270 A.D.,
+while the practice of sending valentines had its origin in the heathen
+worship of Juno. It is Cupid's day, and no boy or girl needs any
+encouragement to make the most of it.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="WhoBegan" id="WhoBegan" />WHO BEGAN IT?</h3>
+
+<p class="center">BY OLIVE THORNE</p>
+
+<p>There's one thing we know positively, that St. Valentine didn't begin
+this fourteenth of February excitement; but who <i>did</i> is a question not
+so easy to answer. I don't think any one would have begun it if he could
+have known what the simple customs of his day would have grown into, or
+could even have imagined the frightful valentines that disgrace our
+shops to-day.</p>
+
+<p>It began, for us, with our English ancestors, who used to assemble on
+the eve of St. Valentine's day, put the names of all the young maidens
+promiscuously in a box, and let each bachelor draw one out. The damsel
+whose name fell to his lot became his valentine for the year. He wore
+her name in his bosom or on his sleeve, and it was his duty to attend
+her and protect her. As late as the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
+this custom was very popular, even among the upper classes.</p>
+
+<p>But the wiseacres have traced the custom farther back. Some of them
+think it was begun by the ancient Romans, who had on the fourteenth or
+fifteenth of February a festival in honor of Lupercus, &quot;the destroyer of
+wolves&quot;&mdash;a wolf-destroyer being quite worthy of honor in those wild
+days, let me tell you. At this festival it was the custom, among other
+curious things, to pair off the young men and maidens in the same chance
+way, and with the same result of a year's attentions.</p>
+
+<p>Even this is not wholly satisfactory. Who began it among the Romans?
+becomes the next interesting question. One old writer says it was
+brought to Rome from Arcadia sixty years before the Trojan war (which
+Homer wrote about, you know). I'm sure that's far enough back to satisfy
+anybody. The same writer also says that the Pope tried to abolish it in
+the fifth century, but he succeeded only in sending it down to us in the
+name of St. Valentine instead of Lupercus.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh20.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh20.jpg" width="55%" alt="FOR THIS WAS ON SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY" title="FOR THIS WAS ON SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY" /></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Our own ancestry in England and Scotland have observed some very funny
+customs within the last three centuries. At one time valentines were
+fashionable among the nobility, and, while still selected by lot, it
+became the duty of a gentleman to give to the lady who fell to his lot a
+handsome present. Pieces of jewelry costing thousands of dollars were
+not unusual, though smaller things, as gloves, were more common.</p>
+
+<p>There was a tradition among the country people that every bird chose its
+mate on Valentine's day; and at one time it was the custom for young
+folks to go out before daylight on that morning and try to catch an owl
+and two sparrows in a net. If they succeeded, it was a good omen, and
+entitled them to gifts from the villagers. Another fashion among them
+was to write the valentine, tie it to an apple or orange, and steal up
+to the house of the chosen one in the evening, open the door quietly,
+and throw it in.</p>
+
+<p>Those were the days of charms, and of course the rural maidens had a
+sure and infallible charm foretelling the future husband. On the eve of
+St. Valentine's day, the anxious damsel prepared for sleep by pinning to
+her pillow five bay leaves, one at each corner and one in the middle
+(which must have been delightful to sleep on, by the way). If she
+dreamed of her sweetheart, she was sure to marry him before the end of
+the year.</p>
+
+<p>But to make it a sure thing, the candidate for matrimony must boil an
+egg hard, take out the yolk, and fill its place with salt. Just before
+going to bed, she must eat egg, salt, shell and all, and neither speak
+nor drink after it. If that wouldn't insure her a vivid dream, there
+surely could be no virtue in charms.</p>
+
+<p>Modern valentines, aside from the valuable presents often contained in
+them, are very pretty things, and they are growing prettier every year,
+since large business houses spare neither skill nor money in getting
+them up. The most interesting thing about them, to &quot;grown-ups,&quot; is the
+way they are made; and perhaps even you youngsters, who watch eagerly
+for the postman, &quot;sinking beneath the load of delicate embarrassments
+not his own,&quot; would like to know how satin and lace and flowers and
+other dainty things grew into a valentine.</p>
+
+<p>It was no fairy's handiwork. It went through the hands of grimy-looking
+workmen before it reached your hands.</p>
+
+<p>To be sure, a dreamy artist may have designed it, but a lithographer,
+with inky fingers, printed the picture part of it; a die-cutter, with
+sleeves rolled up, made a pattern in steel of the lace-work on the edge;
+and a dingy-looking pressman, with a paper hat on, stamped the pattern
+around the picture. Another hard-handed workman rubbed the back of the
+stamped lace with sand-paper till it came in holes and looked like lace,
+and not merely like stamped paper; and a row of girls at a common long
+table put on the colors with stencils, gummed on the hearts and darts
+and cupids and flowers, and otherwise finished the thing exactly like
+the pattern before them.</p>
+
+<p>You see, the sentiment about a valentine doesn't begin until Tom, Dick,
+or Harry takes it from the stationer, and writes your name on it.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh21.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh21.jpg" width="45%" alt="ST. VALENTINE'S LETTER-CARRIERS" title="ST. VALENTINE'S LETTER-CARRIERS" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Washingtons_Birthday" id="Washingtons_Birthday" />Washington's Birthday</h2>
+
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>February 22</i></strong></p>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>GEORGE WASHINGTON</strong></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>Born February 22, 1732&nbsp;&nbsp;Died December 14, 1799</strong></p>
+
+
+
+<p>Washington was the first President of the United States, and the son of
+a Virginia planter. He attended school until about sixteen years of age,
+was engaged in surveying, 1748-51, became an officer in the Continental
+army, and President in 1789. He was re-elected in 1793. He was
+pre&euml;minent for his sound judgment and perfect self-control. It is said
+that no act of his public life can be traced to personal caprice,
+ambition, or resentment.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="BoyhoodWash" id="BoyhoodWash" />THE BOYHOOD OF WASHINGTON</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY HORACE E. SCUDDER</p>
+
+<p>It was near the shore of the Potomac River, between Pope's Creek and
+Bridge's Creek, that Augustine Washington lived when his son George was
+born. The land had been in the family ever since Augustine's
+grandfather, John Washington, had bought it, when he came over from
+England in 1657. John Washington was a soldier and a public-spirited
+man, and so the parish in which he lived&mdash;for Virginia was divided into
+parishes as some other colonies into townships&mdash;was named Washington. It
+is a quiet neighborhood; not a sign remains of the old house, and the
+only mark of the place is a stone slab, broken and overgrown with weeds
+and brambles, which lies on a bed of bricks taken from the remnants of
+the old chimney of the house. It bears the inscription:</p>
+
+<p class="center">Here<br />
+The 11th of February, 1732 (old style)<br />
+George Washington<br />
+was born</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh22.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh22.jpg" width="55%" alt="SLAB THAT MARKS THE LOCATION OF THE HOUSE WHERE WASHINGTON WAS BORN" title="SLAB THAT MARKS THE LOCATION OF THE HOUSE WHERE WASHINGTON WAS BORN" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">SLAB THAT MARKS THE LOCATION OF THE HOUSE WHERE WASHINGTON WAS BORN</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>The English had lately agreed to use the calendar of Pope Gregory, which
+added eleven days to the reckoning, but people still used the old style
+as well as the new. By the new style, the birthday was February 22, and
+that is the day which is now observed. The family into which the child
+was born consisted of the father and mother, Augustine and Mary
+Washington, and two boys, Lawrence and Augustine. These were sons of
+Augustine Washington and a former wife who had died four years before.
+George Washington was the eldest of the children of Augustine and Mary
+Washington; he had afterward three brothers and two sisters, but one of
+the sisters died in infancy.</p>
+
+<p>It was not long after George Washington's birth that the house in which
+he was born was burned, and as his father was at the time especially
+interested in some iron-works at a distance, it was determined not to
+rebuild upon the lonely place. Accordingly Augustine Washington removed
+his family to a place which he owned in Stafford County, on the banks of
+the Rappahannock River opposite Fredericksburg. The house is not now
+standing, but a picture was made of it before it was destroyed. It was,
+like many Virginia houses of the day, divided into four rooms on a
+floor, and had great outside chimneys at either end.</p>
+
+<p>Here George Washington spent his childhood. He learned to read, write,
+and cipher at a small school kept by Hobby, the sexton of the parish
+church. Among his playmates was Richard Henry Lee, who was afterward a
+famous Virginian. When the boys grew up, they wrote to each other of
+grave matters of war and state, but here is the beginning of their
+correspondence, written when they were nine years old.</p>
+
+<div>
+
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;RICHARD HENRY LEE TO GEORGE WASHINGTON:</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">&quot;Pa brought me two pretty books full of pictures he got them in</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Alexandria they have pictures of dogs and cats and tigers and</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">elefants and ever so many pretty things cousin bids me send you one</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">of them it has a picture of an elefant and a little Indian boy on</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">his back like uncle jo's sam pa says if I learn my tasks good he</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">will let uncle jo bring me to see you will you ask your ma to let</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">you come to see me.</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 15em;">&quot;RICHARD HENRY LEE.&quot;</span><br />
+
+<br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;GEORGE WASHINGTON TO RICHARD HENRY LEE:</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">&quot;DEAR DICKEY I thank you very much for the pretty picture book</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">you gave me. Sam asked me to show him the pictures and I showed him </span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">all the pictures in it; and I read to him how the tame elephant took</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">care of the master's little boy, and put him on his back and would</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">not let anybody touch his master's little son. I can read three or</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">four pages sometimes without missing a word. Ma says I may go to</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">see you, and stay all day with you next week if it be not rainy.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">She says I may ride my pony Hero if Uncle Ben will go with me and</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">lead Hero. I have a little piece of poetry about the picture book</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">you gave me, but I mustn't tell you who wrote the poetry.</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">&quot;'G.W.'s compliments to R.H.L.,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">And likes his book full well,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">Henceforth will count him his friend,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">And hopes many happy days he may spend.'</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 15em;">&quot;Your good friend,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 15.5em;">&quot;GEORGE WASHINGTON.</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;I am going to get a whip top soon, and you may see it and whip</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">it.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_1_2" id="FNanchor_1_2" /><a href="#Footnote_1_2" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></span><br />
+
+</div>
+
+<p>It looks very much as if Richard Henry sent his letter off just as it
+was written. I suspect that his correspondent's letter was looked over,
+corrected, and copied before it was sent. Very possibly Augustine
+Washington was absent at the time on one of his journeys; but at any
+rate the boy owed most of his training to his mother, for only two years
+after this, his father died, and he was left to his mother's care.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figright">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh23.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh23.jpg" width="40%" alt="MONUMENT ON THE SITE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON'S BIRTHPLACE" title="MONUMENT ON THE SITE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON'S BIRTHPLACE" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">MONUMENT ON THE SITE OF GEORGE <br />
+ WASHINGTON'S BIRTHPLACE</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>She was a woman born to command, and since she was left alone with a
+family and an estate to care for, she took the reins into her own hands,
+and never gave them up to any one else. She used to drive about
+in an old-fashioned open chaise, visiting the various parts of her farm,
+just as a planter would do on horseback. The story is told that she had
+given an agent directions how to do a piece of work, and he had seen fit
+to do it differently, because he thought his way a better one. He showed
+her the improvement.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And pray,&quot; said the lady, &quot;who gave you any exercise of judgment in the
+matter? I command you, sir; there is nothing left for you but to obey.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>In those days, more than now, a boy used very formal language when
+addressing his mother. He might love her warmly, but he was expected to
+treat her with a great show of respect. When Washington wrote to his
+mother, even after he was of age, he began his letter, &quot;Honored Madam,&quot;
+and signed it, &quot;Your dutiful son.&quot; This was a part of the manners of the
+time. It was like the stiff dress which men wore when they paid their
+respects to others; it was put on for the occasion, and one would have
+been thought very unmannerly who did not make a marked difference
+between his every-day dress and that which he wore when he went into the
+presence of his betters. So Washington, when he wrote to his mother,
+would not say, &quot;Dear Mother.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Such habits as this go deeper than mere forms of speech. I do not
+suppose that the sons of this lady feared her, but they stood in awe of
+her, which is quite a different thing.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We were all as mute as mice, when in her presence,&quot; says one of
+Washington's companions; and common report makes her to have been very
+much such a woman as her son afterward was a man.</p>
+
+<p>I think that George Washington owed two strong traits to his mother,&mdash;a
+governing spirit, and a spirit of order and method. She taught him many
+lessons and gave him many rules; but, after all, it was her character
+shaping his which was most powerful. She taught him to be truthful, but
+her lessons were not half so forcible as her own truthfulness.</p>
+
+<p>There is a story told of George Washington's boyhood&mdash;unfortunately
+there are not many stories&mdash;which is to the point. His father had taken
+a great deal of pride in his blooded horses, and his mother afterward
+took great pains to keep the stock pure. She had several young horses
+that had not yet been broken, and one of them in particular, a sorrel,
+was extremely spirited. No one had been able to do anything with it, and
+it was pronounced thoroughly vicious, as people are apt to pronounce
+horses which they have not learned to master. George was determined to
+ride this colt, and told his companions that if they would help him
+catch it, he would ride and tame it.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh24.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh24.jpg" width="50%" alt="OLD WHITE CHAPEL, LANCASTER COUNTY, VIRGINIA, WHERE WASHINGTON AND HIS MOTHER ATTENDED SERVICE" title="OLD WHITE CHAPEL, LANCASTER COUNTY, VIRGINIA, WHERE WASHINGTON AND HIS MOTHER ATTENDED SERVICE" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">OLD WHITE CHAPEL, LANCASTER COUNTY, VIRGINIA, WHERE <br />
+ WASHINGTON AND HIS MOTHER ATTENDED SERVICE</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Early in the morning they set out for the pasture, where the boys
+managed to surround the sorrel and then to put a bit into its mouth.
+Washington sprang on its back, the boys dropped the bridle, and away
+flew the angry animal. Its rider at once began to command; the horse
+resisted, backing about the field, rearing and plunging. The boys became
+thoroughly alarmed, but Washington kept his seat, never once losing his
+self-control or his mastery of the colt. The struggle was a sharp one;
+when suddenly, as if determined to rid itself of its rider, the creature
+leaped into the air with a tremendous bound. It was its last. The
+violence burst a blood-vessel, and the noble horse fell dead.</p>
+
+<p>Before the boys could sufficiently recover to consider how they should
+extricate themselves from the scrape, they were called to breakfast; and
+the mistress of the house, knowing that they had been in the fields,
+began to ask after her stock.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pray, young gentlemen,&quot; said she, &quot;have you seen my blooded colts in
+your rambles? I hope they are well taken care of. My favorite, I am
+told, is as large as his sire.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The boys looked at one another, and no one liked to speak. Of course the
+mother repeated her question.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The sorrel is dead, madam,&quot; said her son. &quot;I killed him!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And then he told the whole story. They say that his mother flushed with
+anger, as her son often used to, and then, like him, controlled herself,
+and presently said, quietly:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is well; but while I regret the loss of my favorite, I rejoice in
+my son who always speaks the truth.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The story of Washington's killing the blooded colt is of a piece with
+other stories less particular, which show that he was a very athletic
+fellow. Of course, when a boy becomes famous, every one likes to
+remember the wonderful things he did before he was famous, and
+Washington's playmates, when they grew up, used to show the spot by the
+Rappahannock near Fredericksburg where he stood and threw a stone to the
+opposite bank; and at the celebrated Natural Bridge, the arch of which
+is two hundred feet above the ground, they always tell the visitor that
+George Washington threw a stone in the air the whole height. He
+undoubtedly took part in all the sports which were the favorites of his
+country at that time&mdash;he pitched heavy bars, tossed quoits, ran, leaped,
+and wrestled; for he was a powerful, large-limbed young fellow, and he
+had a very large and strong hand.</p>
+
+<p>(From &quot;Life of George Washington&quot; by Horace E. Scudder, published by
+Houghton, Mifflin &amp; Co.)</p>
+
+<p>(The illustrations in this story are copied from the original pictures in
+Mr. B.J. Lossing's &quot;Mt. Vernon and its Associations,&quot; by permission of
+Messrs. J.C. Yorston &amp; Co., Cincinnati, Ohio.)</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_2" id="Footnote_1_2" /><a href="#FNanchor_1_2"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> From B.J. Lossing's &quot;The Home of Washington.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Longfellows_Birthday" id="Longfellows_Birthday" />Longfellow's Birthday</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>February 27</i></strong></p>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW</strong></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>Born February 27, 1807&nbsp;&nbsp;Died March 24, 1882</strong></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p>Longfellow graduated at Bowdoin College in 1825; traveled in Europe in
+1826; was professor at Bowdoin in 1829-35; again visited Europe 1835-36;
+and was professor at Harvard College 1836-54. He continued to reside at
+Cambridge. He is best known and loved for his poems, though he wrote
+three novels.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="LongChild" id="LongChild" />LONGFELLOW AND THE CHILDREN</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY LUCY LARCOM</p>
+
+<p>The poets who love children are the poets whom children love. It is
+natural that they should care much for each other, because both children
+and poets look into things in the same way,&mdash;simply, with open eyes and
+hearts, seeing Nature as it is, and finding whatever is lovable and pure
+in the people who surround them, as flowers may receive back from
+flowers sweet odors for those which they have given. The little child is
+born with a poet's heart in him, and the poet has been fitly called &quot;the
+eternal child.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Not that all children or all poets are alike in this. But of Longfellow
+we think as of one who has always been fresh and natural in his sympathy
+for children, one who has loved them as they have loved him.</p>
+
+<p>We wish he had given us more of the memories of his own childhood. One
+vivid picture of it comes to us in &quot;My Lost Youth,&quot; a poem which shows
+us how everything he saw when a child must have left within him a
+life-long impression. That boyhood by the sea must have been full of
+dreams as well as of pictures. The beautiful bay with its green islands,
+widening out to the Atlantic on the east, and the dim chain of
+mountains, the highest in New England, lying far away on the
+northwestern horizon, give his native city a roomy feeling not often
+experienced in the streets of a town; and the boy-poet must have felt
+his imagination taking wings there, for many a long flight. So he more
+than hints to us in his song:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&quot;I can see the shadowy lines of its trees,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And catch, in sudden gleams,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The sheen of the far-surrounding seas,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And islands that were the Hesperides<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of all my boyish dreams.<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the burden of that old song,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It murmurs and whispers still:<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'A boy's will is the wind's will,<br />
+ &nbsp;And the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts.'<br />
+ <br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&quot;I remember the black wharves and the slips,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the sea-tides tossing free;<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And Spanish sailors with bearded lips,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the beauty and mystery of the ships,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the magic of the sea.<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the voice of that wayward song<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is singing and saying still:<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'A boy's will is the wind's will,<br />
+ &nbsp;And the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts.'&quot;<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p>Longfellow's earliest volume, &quot;The Voices of the Night,&quot; was one of the
+few books of American poetry that some of us who are now growing old
+ourselves can remember reading, just as we were emerging from childhood.
+&quot;The Reaper and the Flowers&quot; and the &quot;Psalm of Life,&quot;&mdash;I recall the
+delight with which I used to repeat those poems. The latter, so full of
+suggestions which a very young person could feel, but only half
+understand, was for that very reason the more fascinating. It seemed to
+give glimpses, through opening doors, of that wonderful new world of
+mankind, where children are always longing to wander freely as men and
+women. Looking forward and aspiring are among the first occupations of
+an imaginative child; and the school-boy who declaimed the words:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &quot;Lives of great men all remind us<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We can make our lives sublime,&quot;<br />
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<p>and the school-girl who read them quietly by herself, felt them,
+perhaps, no less keenly than the man of thought and experience.</p>
+
+<p>Longfellow has said that&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&quot;Sublimity always is simple<br />
+ Both in sermon and song, a child can seize on its meaning,&quot;<br />
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<p>and the simplicity of his poetry is the reason why children and young
+people have always loved it; the reason, also, why it has been enjoyed
+by men and women and children all over the world.</p>
+
+<p>One of his poems which has been the delight of children and grown people
+alike is the &quot;Village Blacksmith,&quot; the first half of which is a
+description that many a boy might feel as if he could have written
+himself&mdash;if he only had the poet's command of words and rhymes, and the
+poet's genius! Is not this one of the proofs of a good poem, that it
+haunts us until it seems as if it had almost grown out of our own mind?
+How life-like the picture is!&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&quot;And children coming home from school<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Look in at the open door;<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They love to see the flaming forge,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And hear the bellows roar,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And catch the burning sparks that fly<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Like chaff from a threshing-floor.&quot;<br />
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<p>No wonder the Cambridge children, when the old chestnut-tree that
+overhung the smithy was cut down, had a memento shaped into a chair
+from its boughs, to present to him who had made it an immortal tree in
+his verse! It bore flower and fruit for them a second time in his
+acknowledgment of the gift; for he told them how&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&quot;There, by the blacksmith's forge, beside the street<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Its blossoms, white and sweet,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Enticed the bees, until it seemed alive,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And murmured like a hive.<br />
+ <br />
+ &nbsp;&quot;And when the wind of autumn, with a shout<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Tossed its great arms about,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The shining chestnuts, bursting from the sheath,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dropped to the ground beneath.&quot;<br />
+
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<p>In its own wild, winsome way, the song of &quot;Hiawatha's Childhood&quot; is one
+of the prettiest fancies in poetry. It is a dream of babyhood in the
+&quot;forest primeval,&quot; with Nature for nurse and teacher; and it makes us
+feel as if&mdash;were the poet's idea only a possibility&mdash;it might have been
+very pleasant to be a savage baby, although we consider it so much
+better to be civilized.</p>
+
+<p>How Longfellow loved the very little ones can be seen in such verses as
+the &quot;Hanging of the Crane,&quot; and in those earlier lines &quot;To a Child,&quot;
+where the baby on his mother's knee gazes at the painted tiles, shakes
+his &quot;coral rattle with the silver bells,&quot; or escapes through the open
+door into the old halls where once</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &quot;The Father of his country dwelt.&quot;<br />
+
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<p>Those verses give us a charming glimpse of the home-life in the historic
+mansion which is now so rich with poetic, as well as patriotic
+associations.</p>
+
+<p>How beautiful it was to be let in to that twilight library scene
+described in the &quot;Children's Hour&quot;:</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+&nbsp;&quot;A sudden rush from the stair-way,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A sudden raid from the hall!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By three doors left unguarded,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They enter my castle wall!<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&quot;They climb up into my turret,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O'er the arms and back of my chair;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If I try to escape, they surround me;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They seem to be everywhere.&quot;<br />
+
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+</div>
+
+<p>Afterward, when sorrow and loss had come to the happy home, in the
+sudden removal of the mother of those merry children, the father who
+loved them so had a sadder song for them, as he looked onward into their
+orphaned lives:</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&quot;O little feet, that such long years<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Must wander on, through hopes and fears,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Must ache and bleed beneath your load,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I, nearer to the wayside inn,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where toil shall cease, and rest begin,<br />
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Am weary, thinking of your road!&quot;<br />
+
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+
+<br />
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh25.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh25.jpg" width="45%" alt="LONGFELLOW'S HOUSE&mdash;ONCE WASHINGTON'S HEADQUARTERS AT CAMBRIDGE" title="LONGFELLOW'S HOUSE&mdash;ONCE WASHINGTON'S HEADQUARTERS AT CAMBRIDGE" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">LONGFELLOW'S HOUSE&mdash;ONCE WASHINGTON'S HEADQUARTERS AT CAMBRIDGE</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Longfellow loved all children, and had a word for them whenever he met
+them.</p>
+
+<p>At a concert, going early with her father, a little girl espied Mr.
+Longfellow sitting alone, and begged that she might go and speak to him.
+Her father, himself a stranger, took the liberty of introducing his
+little daughter Edith to the poet.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Edith?&quot; said Mr. Longfellow, tenderly. &quot;Ah! I have an Edith, too; but
+<i>my</i> baby Edith is twenty years old.&quot; And he seated the child beside
+him, taking her hand in his, and making her promise to come and see him
+at his house in Cambridge.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is the name of your sled, my boy?&quot; he said to a small lad, who
+came tugging one up the road toward him, on a winter morning.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's 'Evange<i>line</i>.' Mr. Longfellow wrote 'Evange<i>line</i>.' Did you ever
+see Mr. Longfellow?&quot; answered the little fellow, as he ran by, doubtless
+wondering at the smile on the face of the pleasant gray-haired
+gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>Professor Monti, who witnessed the pretty scene, tells the story of a
+little girl who one Christmas inquired the way to the poet's house, and
+asked if she could just step inside the yard; and he relates how Mr.
+Longfellow, being told she was there, went to the door and called her
+in, and showed her the &quot;old clock on the stairs,&quot; and many other
+interesting things about the house, leaving his little guest with
+beautiful memories of that Christmas day to carry all through her life.
+This was characteristic of the poet's hospitality, delicate and
+courteous and thoughtful to all who crossed his threshold. Many a
+trembling young girl, frightened at her own boldness in having ventured
+into his presence, was set at ease by her host in the most genial way;
+he would make her forget herself in the interesting mementos all about
+her, devoting himself to her entertainment as if it were the one
+pleasure of the hour for him to do so.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh26.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh26.jpg" width="40%" alt="HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW" title="HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>It is often said, and with reason, that we Americans do not think enough
+of manners&mdash;that politeness of behavior which comes from genuine
+sympathy and a delicate perception of others' feelings. Certainly our
+young people might look to Mr. Longfellow as a model in this respect. He
+was a perfect gentleman, in the best sense of that term, always
+considerate, and quick to see where he might do a kindness, or say a
+pleasant word.</p>
+
+<p>The celebration of Longfellow's seventy-fifth birthday by
+school-children all over the country is something that those children
+must be glad to think of now&mdash;glad to remember that the poet knew how
+much they cared for him and for what he had written. Even the blind
+children, who have to read with their fingers, were enjoying his songs
+with the rest. How pleasant that must have been to him! Certainly, as it
+seems to me, the best tribute that the young people of the country can
+pay to his memory is to become more familiar with his poems.</p>
+
+<p>We should not wait until a great and good man has left us before giving
+him honor, or trying to understand what he has done for us. A dreary
+world ours would be, if there were no poets' songs echoing through it;
+and we may be proud of our country that it has a poetry of its own,
+which it is for us to know and possess for ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>Longfellow has said:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Longfellow Poem Snippet">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+&nbsp;&quot;What the leaves are to the forest<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With light and air and food,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Ere their sweet and tender juices<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Have been hardened into wood,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;That to the world, are children&quot;:<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p>and something like this we may say of his songs. There is in all true
+poetry a freshness of life which makes the writer of it immortal.</p>
+
+<p>The singer so much beloved has passed from sight, but the music of his
+voice is in the air, and, listening to it, we know that he can not die.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh27.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh27.jpg" width="45%" alt="Somewhat back from the village street" title="Somewhat back from the village street" /></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Inauguration_Day" id="Inauguration_Day" />Inauguration Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>March 4</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The date was settled by the old Congress of the Confederation in 1788,
+when the procedure was established for the election of a President. It
+was decreed that the Electoral College should meet on the first
+Wednesday of January, the votes be counted by the House of
+Representatives on the first Wednesday of February, and the President be
+inaugurated on the first Wednesday of March. This March date was the
+4th. March 4 has been Inauguration Day ever since.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="HowPresInaug" id="HowPresInaug" />HOW A PRESIDENT IS INAUGURATED</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY CLIFFORD HOWARD</p>
+
+<p>As you will remember, Thomas Jefferson was the first President of our
+country to be inaugurated at Washington. This took place in the year
+1801, when our national capital was not much more than a year old; and
+you may imagine that the city was a very different-looking place from
+what it is to-day.</p>
+
+<p>But now instead of a straggling town with a few muddy streets and about
+three thousand inhabitants, Jefferson would find our national capital
+one of the most beautiful cities on the face of the earth, with a
+population of nearly three hundred thousand; and on March 4 he would
+behold a scene such as he never dreamed of. Thousands of flags fly from
+the house-tops and windows, bright-colored bunting in beautiful designs
+adorns the great public buildings, all the stores and business houses
+are gaily decorated with flags and streamers, and everything presents
+the appearance of a great and glorious holiday, while the streets swarm
+with the hundreds of thousands of people who have come to the city from
+all parts of the country to take part in the grand celebration.</p>
+
+<p>Everybody is moving toward Pennsylvania Avenue, where the parade is to
+march. No, not everybody: some fifty or sixty thousand make their way to
+the Capitol, so as to get a glimpse of the inauguration exercises that
+take place on the east portico; and although the ceremonies will not
+begin until nearly one o'clock, the great space in front of the Capitol
+is packed with people three hours before that time, some of them having
+come as early as eight o'clock in the morning to be sure of getting a
+good view.</p>
+
+<p>Early in the morning Pennsylvania Avenue is cleared of all street-cars,
+carriages, and bicycles, and no one is allowed to step off the sidewalk.
+A strong wire rope is stretched along each side of the avenue, so as to
+prevent people from getting into the street.</p>
+
+<p>Soon every window and balcony along the line is crowded with spectators.
+Even the roofs are black with people, and small boys may be seen
+perched among the branches of the trees, or hanging on to the
+electric-light poles. For a distance of nearly three miles, on each side
+of the street, people are packed so closely together that it is almost
+impossible for them to move. In every park and open space along the line
+large wooden stands have been erected; and these, too, are filled with
+those who are willing to pay for seats.</p>
+
+<p>As the time for the morning parade draws near, the crowds become
+restless with eagerness and excitement. Policemen on horseback dash up
+and down the avenue to see that the road is clear, and every now and
+then a trooper or messenger in bright uniform gallops past. Suddenly the
+boom of a cannon is heard. The next moment there comes the distant roll
+of drums, and then, amid the inspiring music of brass bands and
+tremendous cheering, the procession appears moving slowly down the
+avenue on its way to the Capitol. Riding ahead is a squad of mounted
+police&mdash;big, brawny fellows, with glittering brass buttons. After them
+come the United States troops and naval forces, armed with their rifles
+and sabers that flash in the sunlight, and marching to the music of the
+famous Marine Band, while rumbling over the hard, smooth pavement of
+the avenue come the big cannons drawn by powerful horses. Then appears
+the chief marshal of the parade on his spirited horse, heading the
+body-guard of soldiers that surround the open carriage containing the
+President and the President-elect, sitting side by side. As the
+carriage, which is drawn by four handsome horses, rolls slowly along
+with its distinguished occupants, men and boys shout and cheer at the
+top of their lungs, and throw their hats into the air when their voices
+give out, while the women and girls wave their handkerchiefs and hurrah
+with the rest of the crowd. With hat in hand, the President-elect smiles
+and bows to the right and the left; and with the bands playing and
+people cheering, handkerchiefs fluttering and flags flying, he arrives
+at the Capitol a few minutes before noon. Here he meets with another
+rousing reception from the great mass of people who have been waiting
+for him for two or three hours; and it requires all the efforts of a
+small army of police to open the way for him and his party to pass into
+the Capitol.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh28.jpg">
+<img src="./images/stnichoh28.jpg" width="40%"
+ alt="GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON ON THE WAY TO HIS INAUGURATION"
+ title="GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON ON THE WAY TO HIS INAUGURATION" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON ON THE WAY TO HIS INAUGURATION</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The House of Representatives is about to adjourn, and many of its
+members have already come over to the Senate to witness the closing
+exercises there. Extra chairs and seats have been brought in for them
+and the many other prominent officials who also have gathered there,
+including the officers of the army and the navy, the justices of the
+Supreme Court, the cabinet officers, and the foreign ambassadors and
+ministers, many of whom are dressed in their gorgeous state robes.
+According to law, Congress must come to an end at noon; but if the
+presidential party has not made its appearance when the Senate clock is
+about to point to twelve, the hands are moved back a few minutes so as
+to gain time. And before the hands are allowed to get around to twelve,
+everybody has arrived, everything is in readiness, and the President of
+the Senate has administered the oath of office to his successor, the new
+Vice-President of the United States, who at once calls an extra session
+of the Senate, so that not a moment elapses between the death of one
+session and the birth of another. Then, after a short prayer by the
+chaplain and a brief address by the Vice-President, the distinguished
+people gathered in the Senate form in line, and, headed by a company of
+newspaper reporters, they march in dignified procession to the rotunda,
+and thence to the platform on the east front of the Capitol.</p>
+
+<p>The nine justices of the Supreme Court, clothed in their black robes,
+walk out on the platform first, followed by the President-elect. As soon
+as the crowd catches sight of him, a deafening shout breaks forth from
+fifty thousand throats, and, amid the enthusiastic uproar that lasts
+several minutes, hats and canes, umbrellas and handkerchiefs, are waved
+aloft or thrown wildly into the air by joyous and patriotic Americans.
+Removing his hat, the President-elect comes forward, and, turning to the
+Chief Justice of the United States, takes the oath of office as required
+by the Constitution. Then comes the inaugural address, which, of course,
+only those near the platform are able to hear. But the thirty or forty
+thousand who can't hear the speech are willing to agree with everything
+that is said, and every little while they shout and cheer and applaud.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh29.jpg">
+<img src="./images/stnichoh29.jpg" width="40%" alt="THE INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT GARFIELD" title="THE INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT GARFIELD" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">THE INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT GARFIELD</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>All this time the crowd on the avenue has been patiently waiting for the
+return of the President. The morning's procession was nothing more than
+a military escort; now is to come the great feature of the day&mdash;the
+grand inauguration parade. The ceremonies at the Capitol are over at
+half-past one, and the new President goes at once to the White House,
+greeted with rousing cheers all along the way, and prepares to review
+the greatest parade ever seen in the city of Washington. All the
+morning, companies of soldiers, political clubs, bands, and drum corps
+have been preparing for the afternoon's march. There are so many
+thousands who are going to take part in the parade that orders have been
+given requiring all companies to march in ranks reaching from curb to
+curb, a distance of one hundred and thirty feet, and to follow one
+another as closely as possible.</p>
+
+<p>The march is begun a little before two o'clock; and, although the people
+have been standing on the sidewalks since early morning, they have
+plenty of enthusiasm left, and they fill the air with their shouts and
+hurrahs as regiment after regiment of magnificently drilled soldiers and
+horses marches by.</p>
+
+<p>Even after the electric lamps are lighted, men and horses are still
+tramping along the avenue, and people are still shouting and the bands
+playing and flags waving. And all this time the President stands in
+front of the White House, reviewing the marching thousands as they pass
+along.</p>
+
+<p>But although the big parade finally comes to an end, the festivities are
+not yet over. Late into the night the city is brilliantly illuminated
+by magnificent and wonderful fireworks and powerful electric
+search-lights that shine from the tops of the tall buildings and light
+up the great dome of the Capitol and the Washington monument. Then comes
+the grand inaugural ball. There are over ten thousand people present,
+and the scene is a glorious and wonderful sight.</p>
+
+<p>It is almost sunrise when the last carriage rolls away, and with the
+closing of the ball the inauguration festivities end.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Easter_Day" id="Easter_Day" />Easter Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center">Easter is the Sunday that follows the 14th day of the calendar<br />
+moon, which falls upon or next after the 21st of March.</p>
+
+<p>This Sunday, when Christian churches celebrate the resurrection of Christ,
+is one of solemn rejoicing. Coming after the self-denials of Lent and at the
+beginning of spring, it seems naturally a time of hope and new life. It
+is the feast of flowers, particularly of lilies, and the name had its
+origin in a festival in honor of the goddess of spring. The esteem in
+which it is held is indicated by its ancient title, &quot;The great day.&quot;</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="SongEaster" id="SongEaster" />A SONG OF EASTER</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY CELIA THAXTER</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: A SONG OF EASTER">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sing, children, sing!<br />
+And the lily censers swing;<br />
+Sing that life and joy are waking and that Death no more is king.<br />
+Sing the happy, happy tumult of the slowly brightening Spring;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sing, little children, sing!<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sing, children, sing!<br />
+Winter wild has taken wing.<br />
+Fill the air with the sweet tidings till the frosty echoes ring!<br />
+Along the eaves the icicles no longer glittering cling;<br />
+And the crocus in the garden lifts its bright face to the sun,<br />
+And in the meadows softly the brooks begin to run;<br />
+And the golden catkins swing<br />
+In the warm airs of the Spring;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sing, little children, sing!<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sing, children, sing!<br />
+The lilies white you bring<br />
+In the joyous Easter morning for hope are blossoming;<br />
+And as the earth her shroud of snow from off her breast doth fling,<br />
+So may we cast our fetters off in God's eternal Spring.<br />
+So may we find release at last from sorrow and from pain,<br />
+So may we find our childhood's calm, delicious dawn again.<br />
+Sweet are your eyes, O little ones, that look with smiling grace,<br />
+Without a shade of doubt or fear into the Future's face!<br />
+Sing, sing in happy chorus, with joyful voices tell<br />
+That death is life, and God is good, and all things shall be well;<br />
+That bitter days shall cease<br />
+In warmth and light and peace,&mdash;<br />
+That Winter yields to Spring,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sing, little children, sing!<br />
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<br />
+
+</div>
+
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh30.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh30.jpg" width="40%" alt="&quot;HE SAT DOWN ON THE STEP, BREATHLESS WITH SURPRISE AND JOY&quot;" title="&quot;HE SAT DOWN ON THE STEP, BREATHLESS WITH SURPRISE AND JOY&quot;" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">&quot;HE SAT DOWN ON THE STEP, BREATHLESS WITH SURPRISE AND JOY&quot;</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div>
+<br />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<h3><a name="GenEaster" id="GenEaster" />THE GENERAL'S EASTER BOX</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY TEMPLE BAILEY</p>
+
+<p>The General did not look at all as one would expect a general to look.
+He was short and thick-set and had a red face and a white mustache, and
+he usually dressed in a gray tweed suit, with a funny Norfolk jacket
+with a belt, and wore a soft cap pulled down almost to his eye-glasses.</p>
+
+<p>And he always did his own marketing.</p>
+
+<p>That is how he came to know Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy stood at a corner of Old Market and sold little bundles of dried
+sage and sweet marjoram, and sassafras and cinnamon, and soup-bunches
+made of bits of vegetables tied together&mdash;a bit of parsley and a bit of
+celery and a bit of carrot and a sprig of summer savory, all for one
+cent. Then at Christmas-time he displayed wreaths, which he and his
+little mother made at home, and as the spring came on he brought wild
+flowers that he picked in the woods.</p>
+
+<p>And that was how he came to know the General.</p>
+
+<p>For one morning, just before Easter, the General came puffing down the
+outside aisle of Old Market, with his colored man behind him with an
+enormous basket. The General's carriage was drawn up to the curbstone,
+and the gray horses were dancing little fancy dances over the asphalt
+street, when all at once Jimmy thrust a bunch of arbutus under the
+General's very nose.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Go away, go away,&quot; said the General, and trotted down to the carriage
+door, which a footman held open for him.</p>
+
+<p>But a whiff of fragrance had reached him, and he stopped.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How much?&quot; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Three cents,&quot; said Jimmy, in a hoarse voice.</p>
+
+<p>The General looked at the little fellow through his eye-glasses.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Got a cold?&quot; he inquired gruffly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir,&quot; croaked Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why don't you stay in the house, then?&quot; growled the General.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Can't, sir,&quot; said Jimmy, cheerfully; &quot;business is business.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The General looked at the little stand where &quot;business&quot; was
+transacted&mdash;at the little rows of dried stuffs, at the small basket of
+flowers, and at the soup-bunches.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Humph,&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>Then his hand went down into his pocket, and he pulled out a lot of
+change. After that he chose two bunches of sweet, pinky blossoms.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Two for five, sir,&quot; said Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hum,&quot; said the General. &quot;You might give me some parsley and a
+soup-bunch.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy wrapped up the green stuff carefully and dropped it into the
+basket carried by the colored man.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nine cents, sir,&quot; he said; and the General handed him a dime and then
+moved to the next stall, holding the flowers close to his nose.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You forgot your change,&quot; cried Jimmy, and rushed after him with the one
+cent.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Keep&mdash;&quot; But one look at the honest little face and he changed his
+sentence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you, young man,&quot; he said, and away he drove.</p>
+
+<p>After that Jimmy looked for the General, and the General for Jimmy.
+Their transactions were always carried on in a strictly business manner,
+although, to be sure, the General's modest family of two did not
+require the unlimited sage and sweet marjoram that were ordered from
+time to time.</p>
+
+<p>On the Saturday before Easter the little stand was gay with new wares.
+In little nests of dried grasses lay eggs&mdash;Easter eggs, bright pink and
+blue and purple and mottled. Jimmy had invested in a dozen at forty
+cents the dozen, and he had hopes of doubling the money, for work surely
+counted for something, and he and the Little Mother had dyed them.</p>
+
+<p>But somehow people passed them by. Inside of the market there were finer
+nests, and eggs gilded and lettered, and Jimmy began to feel that his
+own precious eggs were very dull indeed.</p>
+
+<p>But when the General appeared around the corner, the boy's spirits rose.
+Here, at any rate, was a good customer.</p>
+
+<p>The General, however, was in a temper. There had been an argument with
+the fish-man which had left him red in the face and very touchy. So he
+bought two bunches of arbutus and nothing else.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Any eggs, sir?&quot; asked Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Eggs?&quot; said the General, looking over the little stand.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Easter eggs,&quot; explained Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I've no use for such things,&quot; said the General.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh!&quot; said Jimmy, and in spite of himself his voice trembled. When one
+is the man of the family, and the Little Mother is sewing for dear life,
+and her work and the little stand in the market are all that pay the
+rent and buy food, it is sometimes hard to be brave. But the General did
+not notice the tremble.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy tried again:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Any children, sir? Children always like Easter eggs, you know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; said the General; &quot;no one but a son in the Philippines&mdash;a son some
+six feet two in his stockings.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Any grandchildren, sir?&quot; hopefully.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bless my soul,&quot; said the General, testily, &quot;what a lot of questions!&quot;
+And he hurried off to his carriage.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy felt very forlorn. The General had been his last hope. The eggs
+were a dead loss.</p>
+
+<p>At last it came time to close up, and he piled all of his wares in a
+basket. Then he took out a little broom and began to sweep in an orderly
+way around his little stall. He had a battered old dustpan, and as he
+carried it out to the street to empty it, he saw a stiff greenish-gray
+paper sticking out of the dirt. Nothing in the world ever looks exactly
+like that but an American greenback, and, sure enough, when Jimmy pulled
+it out it proved to be a ten-dollar bill.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy sat down on the curb suddenly. His money always came in pennies
+and nickels and dimes and quarters. The Little Mother sometimes earned a
+dollar at a time, but never in his whole life had Jimmy possessed a
+ten-dollar bill.</p>
+
+<p>Think of the possibilities to a little, poor, cold, worried boy. There
+was two months' rent in that ten-dollar bill&mdash;two months in which he
+would not have to worry over whether there would be a roof over their
+heads.</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a basket stall in that ten-dollar bill. That had always
+been his ambition. Some one had told him that baskets sold well in other
+cities, and not a single person had opened a basket stall in Old Market,
+and that was Jimmy's chance. Once established, he knew he could earn a
+good living.</p>
+
+<p>As for ten dollars' worth of groceries and provisions, Jimmy's mind
+could not grasp such a thing; fifty cents had always been the top limit
+for a grocery bill.</p>
+
+<p>But&mdash;it wasn't Jimmy's ten dollars. Like a flash his dreams tumbled to
+the ground. There had been many people coming and going through Old
+Market, but Jimmy knew that the bill was the General's. For the old
+gentleman had pulled out a roll when he reached for the five cents. Yes,
+it was the General's; but how to find the General?</p>
+
+<p>Inside the market he found the General's butcher. Yes, the butcher knew
+the General's address, for he was one of his best customers, and would
+keep Jimmy's basket while the boy went to the house.</p>
+
+<p>It was a long distance. Jimmy passed rows of great stone mansions, and
+went through parks, where crocuses and hyacinths were just peeping out.</p>
+
+<p>At last he came to the General's.</p>
+
+<p>A colored man answered the ring of the bell.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who shall I say?&quot; he inquired loftily. &quot;The General is very busy,
+y'know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Say Jimmy, from the market, please&quot;; and Jimmy sat down on the great
+hall seat, feeling very much awed with all the magnificence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, well,&quot; said the General, as he came puffing down the stairs.
+&quot;Well, well, and what do you want?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Please, sir, did you drop this?&quot; and Jimmy held out the tightly rolled
+bill.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did I? Well, now, I'm sure I don't know. Perhaps I did, perhaps I did.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I found it in front of my stall,&quot; said Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>What a strange thing it seemed that the General should not know! Jimmy
+would have known if he had lost a penny. He began to feel that the
+General could not have a true idea of <i>business</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The General took out a roll of bills. &quot;Let me see,&quot; he said. &quot;Here's my
+market list. Yes, I guess that's mine, sure enough.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm glad I noticed it,&quot; said Jimmy, simply. &quot;I came near sweeping it
+into the street.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And what can I pay you for your trouble?&quot; asked the General, looking at
+the boy keenly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; said Jimmy, stoutly, &quot;you see, business is business, and I had
+to take my time, and I'd like to get back as soon as I can.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The General frowned. He was afraid he was going to be disappointed in
+this boy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And so,&quot; went on Jimmy, &quot;if you would give me a nickel for car-fare, I
+think we might call it square.&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh31.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh31.jpg" width="50%" alt="&quot;THEN THE GENERAL, WITH KNIFE UPRAISED, STOPPED IN HIS CARVING OF THE COLD ROAST CHICKEN, AND TURNED TO JIMMY&quot;" title="&quot;THEN THE GENERAL, WITH KNIFE UPRAISED, STOPPED IN HIS CARVING OF THE COLD ROAST CHICKEN, AND TURNED TO JIMMY&quot;" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">&quot;THEN THE GENERAL, WITH KNIFE UPRAISED, STOPPED IN HIS CARVING OF THE COLD ROAST CHICKEN, <br />
+ AND TURNED TO JIMMY&quot;</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The General fumbled around for his eye-glasses, put them on, and looked
+at Jimmy in astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A nickel?&quot; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir&quot;; Jimmy blushed. &quot;You know I ought to get back.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, well,&quot; said the General. The boy had certainly the instincts of a
+gentleman. Not a single plea of poverty, and yet one could see that he
+was poor, very poor.</p>
+
+<p>Just then a gong struck softly somewhere. &quot;I'm not going to let you go
+until you have a bit of lunch with us,&quot; said the General. &quot;I have told
+my wife of Jimmy of the market, and now I want you to meet her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So Jimmy went down into a wonderful dining-room, where the silver and
+the cut glass shone, and where at the farther side of the table was the
+sweetest little old lady, who came and shook hands with him.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy had never before eaten lunch where the soup was served in little
+cups, but the General's wife put him at his ease when she told him that
+his very own soup-bunches were in that soup, and if he didn't eat plenty
+of it he wouldn't be advertising his wares. Then the General, with knife
+upraised, stopped in his carving of the cold roast chicken, and turned
+to Jimmy with a smile of approval in his genial face, and said that it
+was his sage, too, that was in the chicken dressing.</p>
+
+<p>They made Jimmy talk, and finally he told them of his ambition for a
+basket stall.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And when do you expect to get it?&quot; asked the General, with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When I get the goose that lays the golden egg, I am afraid, sir,&quot; said
+Jimmy, a little sadly.</p>
+
+<p>Then the General's wife asked questions, and Jimmy told her about the
+Little Mother, and of their life together; but not one word did he tell
+of their urgent need, for Jimmy had not learned to beg.</p>
+
+<p>At last the wonderful lunch was over, somewhat to Jimmy's relief, it
+must be confessed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall come and see your mother, Jimmy,&quot; said the General's wife, as
+Jimmy left her.</p>
+
+<p>Out in the hall the General handed the boy a nickel. &quot;Business is
+business, young man,&quot; he said, with a twinkle in his eye.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>That night Jimmy and his mother sat up very late, for the boy had so
+much to tell.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you think I was wrong to ask for the nickel, Mother?&quot; he asked
+anxiously, when he had finished.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; said his mother; &quot;but I am glad you didn't ask for more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then, after Jimmy had gone to bed, the mother sat up for a long time,
+wondering how the rent was to be paid.</p>
+
+<p>On Easter Monday morning Jimmy and the Little Mother started out to pick
+the arbutus and the early violets which Jimmy was to sell Tuesday at his
+little stall.</p>
+
+<p>It was a sunshiny morning. The broad road was hard and white after the
+April showers, the sky was blue, and the air was sweet with the breath
+of bursting buds. And, in spite of cares, Jimmy and his mother had a
+very happy time as they filled their baskets.</p>
+
+<p>At last they sat down to tie up the bunches. Carriage after carriage
+passed them. As the last bunch of flowers was laid in Jimmy's basket, a
+victoria drawn by a pair of grays stopped in front of the
+flower-gatherers.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, well,&quot; said a hearty voice, and there were the General and his
+wife! They had called for Jimmy and his mother, they said, and had been
+directed to the wooded hill.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Get in, get in,&quot; commanded the General; and, in spite of the Little
+Mother's hesitancy and timid protests, she was helped up beside the
+General's wife by the footman, while Jimmy hopped in beside the General,
+and away they went over the hard white road.</p>
+
+<p>The General was in a gay mood.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, my boy, have you found your golden egg?&quot; he asked Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, sir,&quot; said Jimmy, gravely; &quot;not yet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Too bad, too bad,&quot; said the old gentleman, while he shifted a white box
+that was on the seat between himself and Jimmy to the other side.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You're quite sure, are you, that you could only get it from a goose?&quot;
+he asked later.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Get what, sir?&quot; said Jimmy, whose eyes were on the gay crowds that
+thronged the sidewalks.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The egg,&quot; said the General.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh&mdash;yes, sir,&quot; replied Jimmy, with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>The General leaned back and laughed and laughed until he was red in the
+face; but Jimmy could see nothing to laugh at, so he merely smiled
+politely, and wondered what the joke was.</p>
+
+<p>At last they reached Jimmy's home, and the General helped the Little
+Mother out. As he did so he handed her a white box. Jimmy was busy
+watching the gray horses, and saw nothing else.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;For the boy,&quot; whispered the General.</p>
+
+<p>The Little Mother shook her head doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bless you, madam,&quot; cried the General, testily, &quot;I have a boy of my
+own&mdash;if he <i>is</i> six feet two in his stockings.&quot; Then, in a softer tone,
+&quot;I beg of you to take it, madam; it will please an old man and give the
+boy a start.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So when good-by had been said, and Jimmy stood looking after the
+carriage and the prancing grays, the Little Mother put the white box in
+his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy opened it, and there on a nest of white cotton was an egg. But it
+was different from any of the eggs that Jimmy had sold on Saturday. It
+was large and gilded, and around the middle was a yellow ribbon.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy lifted it out, and found it very heavy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What do you think it is?&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Untie the ribbon,&quot; advised his mother, whose quick eyes saw a faint
+line which showed an opening.</p>
+
+<p>Jimmy pulled the yellow ribbon, the upper half of the egg opened on a
+hinge, and there were glistening gold coins&mdash;five-dollar gold pieces.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh!&quot; said Jimmy, and he sat down on the step, breathless with surprise
+and joy.</p>
+
+<p>A slip of white paper lay between two of the coins. Jimmy snatched it
+out, and this is what he read:</p>
+
+<div>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Please accept the contents of the golden egg, with the best wishes</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">of</span> <span style="margin-left: 15.5em;" class="smcap">The Goose.</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Arbor_Day" id="Arbor_Day" />Arbor Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong>No uniform date in the different States</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Arbor Day is a designated day upon which the people and especially the
+school children plant trees and shrubs along the highways and other
+suitable places. It was first observed in Nebraska. The State board of
+agriculture offered prizes for the counties and persons planting the
+largest number of trees, and it is said that more than a million trees
+were planted the first year, while within sixteen years over 350,000,000
+trees and vines were planted in the State.</p>
+
+<p>This custom, so beautiful and useful, spread rapidly, and now is
+recognized by the statutes of many of the States.</p>
+
+<p>The exact date naturally varies with the climate.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="PlantApple" id="PlantApple" />THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE-TREE</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE-TREE">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Come, let us plant the apple-tree,<br />
+Cleave the tough greensward with the spade;<br />
+Wide let its hollow bed be made;<br />
+There gently lay the roots, and there<br />
+Sift the dark mold with kindly care,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And press it o'er them tenderly;<br />
+As 'round the sleeping infant's feet<br />
+We softly fold the cradle-sheet,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;So plant we the apple-tree.<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What plant we in this apple-tree?<br />
+Buds, which the breath of summer days<br />
+Shall lengthen into leafy sprays;<br />
+Boughs, where the thrush, with crimson breast,<br />
+Shall hunt and sing, and hide her nest;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We plant upon the sunny lea<br />
+A shadow for the noontide hour,<br />
+A shelter from the summer shower,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When we plant the apple-tree.<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What plant we in this apple-tree?<br />
+Sweets for a hundred flowery springs<br />
+To load the May-wind's restless wings,<br />
+When, from the orchard-row, he pours<br />
+Its fragrance through our open doors;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A world of blossoms for the bee,<br />
+Flowers for the sick girl's silent room,<br />
+For the glad infant sprigs of bloom,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We plant with the apple-tree.<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What plant we in this apple-tree?<br />
+Fruits that shall swell in sunny June,<br />
+And redden in the August noon,<br />
+And drop, when gentle airs come by,<br />
+That fan the blue September sky;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;While children come, with cries of glee,<br />
+And seek them where the fragrant grass<br />
+Betrays their bed to those who pass,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At the foot of the apple-tree.<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And when, above this apple-tree,<br />
+The winter stars are glittering bright,<br />
+And winds go howling through the night,<br />
+Girls whose young eyes o'erflow with mirth<br />
+Shall peel its fruit by cottage-hearth,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And guests in prouder homes shall see,<br />
+Heaped with the grape of Cintra's vine,<br />
+And golden orange of the line,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The fruit of the apple-tree.<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh32.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh32.jpg" width="40%" alt="Arbour Day" title="Arbour Day" /></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE-TREE">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The fruitage of this apple-tree,<br />
+Winds and our flag of stripe and star<br />
+Shall bear to coasts that lie afar,<br />
+Where men shall wonder at the view,<br />
+And ask in what fair groves they grew;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And sojourners beyond the sea<br />
+Shall think of childhood's careless day,<br />
+And long, long hours of summer play,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In the shade of the apple-tree.<br />
+<br />
+
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Each year shall give this apple-tree<br />
+A broader flush of roseate bloom,<br />
+A deeper maze of verdurous gloom,<br />
+And loosen, when the frost-clouds lower,<br />
+The crisp brown leaves in thicker shower.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The years shall come and pass, but we<br />
+Shall hear no longer, where we lie,<br />
+The summer's songs, the autumn's sigh,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In the boughs of the apple-tree.<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And time shall waste this apple-tree.<br />
+Oh, when its aged branches throw<br />
+Thin shadows on the ground below,<br />
+Shall fraud and force and iron will<br />
+Oppress the weak and helpless still?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What shall the tasks of mercy be,<br />
+Amid the toils, the strifes, the tears<br />
+Of those who live when length of years<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is wasting this little apple-tree?<br />
+<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&quot;Who planted this old apple-tree?&quot;<br />
+The children of that distant day<br />
+Thus to some aged man shall say;<br />
+And, gazing on its mossy stem,<br />
+The gray-haired man shall answer them:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&quot;A poet of the land was he,<br />
+Born in the rude but good old times;<br />
+'Tis said he made some quaint old rhymes<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On planting the apple-tree.&quot;<br />
+
+
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh33.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh33.jpg" width="45%" alt="The Planting of the Apple-Tree" title="The Planting of the Apple-Tree" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="April_Fools_Day" id="April_Fools_Day" />April Fools' Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>April 1</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>So old is the custom of playing amiable and harmless tricks upon the
+first of April that its origin is not definitely known. It is not a
+holiday and not worthy to be one, but it should be good for our sense of
+humor and that is one of the best things we can have. An April fool is
+sometimes called a &quot;Fourth-month Dunce.&quot;</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<h3><a name="FourMonth" id="FourMonth" />FOURTH-MONTH DUNCE</h3>
+
+
+
+<p class="center">BY H.M.M.</p>
+
+<p>The curious custom of joking on the first of April, sending the ignorant
+or the unwary on fruitless errands, for the sake of making them feel
+foolish and having a laugh at them, prevails very widely in the world.
+And whether you call the victim a &quot;Fourth-month Dunce,&quot; an &quot;April fool,&quot;
+an &quot;April fish&quot; (as in France), or an &quot;April gowk&quot; (as in Scotland), the
+object, to deceive him and laugh at him, is everywhere the same.</p>
+
+<p>The custom has been traced back for ages; all through Europe, as far
+back as the records go. The &quot;Feast of Fools&quot; is mentioned as celebrated
+by the ancient Romans. In Asia the Hindoos have a festival, ending on
+the 31st of March, called the &quot;Huli festival,&quot; in which they play the
+same sort of first of April pranks&mdash;translated into Hindoo,&mdash;laughing at
+the victim, and making him a &quot;Huli fool.&quot; It goes back to Persia, where
+it is supposed to have had a beginning, in very ancient times, in the
+celebration of spring, when their New Year begins.</p>
+
+<p>How it came to be what we everywhere find it, the wise men cannot agree.
+The many authorities are so divided, that I see no way but for us to
+accept the custom as we find it, wherever we may happen to be, and be
+careful not to abuse it.</p>
+
+<p>Some jokes are peculiar to some places. In England, where it is called
+&quot;All Fools' Day,&quot; one favorite joke is to send the greenhorn to a
+bookseller to buy the &quot;Life and Adventures of Eve's Grandmother,&quot; or to
+a cobbler to buy a few cents' worth of &quot;strap oil,&quot;&mdash;strap oil being, in
+the language of the shoe-making brotherhood, a personal application of
+the leather.</p>
+
+<p>But this custom, with others, common in coarser and rougher times, is
+fast dying out. Even now it is left almost entirely to playful children.
+This sentiment, quoted from an English almanac of a hundred years ago,
+will, I'm sure, meet the approval of &quot;grown-ups&quot; of this century:</p>
+
+<div>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&quot;But 't is a thing to be disputed,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Which is the greatest fool reputed,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The one that innocently went,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Or he that him designedly sent.&quot;</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Memorial_Day" id="Memorial_Day" />Memorial Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>May 30</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>It is said that the observance of this day grew originally out of the
+custom of the widows, mothers, and children of the Confederate dead in
+the South strewing the soldiers' graves with flowers, including the
+unmarked graves of the Union soldiers. There was no settled date for
+this in the North until 1868, when General John A. Logan, as
+commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, designated May 30.
+It is now generally observed, and is a legal holiday in most of the
+States.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="BoyGray" id="BoyGray" />THE BOY IN GRAY</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>A Ballad for Memorial Day</i></strong></p>
+
+<p class="center">BY MARY BRADLEY</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: THE BOY IN GRAY">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+Fredericksburg had had her fray,<br />
+And the armies stood at bay;<br />
+Back of wall, and top of hill,<br />
+Union men and men in gray<br />
+Glowered at each other still.<br />
+<br />
+In the space between the two<br />
+Many a hapless boy in blue<br />
+Lay face upward to the skies;<br />
+Many another, just as true,<br />
+Filled the air with frantic cries.<br />
+<br />
+&quot;Love of God!&quot; with pity stirred,<br />
+Cried a rebel lad who heard.<br />
+&quot;This is more than I can bear!<br />
+General, only say the word,<br />
+They shall have some water there.&quot;<br />
+<br />
+&quot;What's the use?&quot; his general,<br />
+Frowning, asked. &quot;A Yankee ball<br />
+Drops you dead, or worse, half way,<br />
+Once you go beyond the wall.&quot;<br />
+&quot;May be!&quot; said the boy in gray.<br />
+<br />
+&quot;Still I'll risk it, if you please.&quot;<br />
+And the senior, ill at ease,<br />
+Nodded, growling under breath,<br />
+&quot;For his mortal enemies<br />
+I have sent the lad to death.&quot;<br />
+<br />
+Then a hotter fire began<br />
+As across the field he ran,&mdash;<br />
+Yankee shooters marked a prey,&mdash;<br />
+But beside each wounded man<br />
+Heedless knelt the boy in gray.<br />
+<br />
+Parched lips hailed him as he came;<br />
+Throats with fever all aflame,<br />
+While the balls were spinning by,<br />
+Drained the cup he offered them,<br />
+Blessed him with their dying cry.<br />
+<br />
+Suddenly, through rain of those<br />
+Pattering shots, a shout uprose;<br />
+Din of voices filled his ears;<br />
+Firing ceased, and eager foes<br />
+Made the welkin ring with cheers.<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh34.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh34.jpg" width="50%" alt="&quot;BUT BESIDE EACH WOUNDED MAN HEEDLESS KNELT THE BOY IN GRAY&quot;" title="&quot;BUT BESIDE EACH WOUNDED MAN HEEDLESS KNELT THE BOY IN GRAY&quot;" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">&quot;BUT BESIDE EACH WOUNDED MAN <br />
+ HEEDLESS KNELT THE BOY IN GRAY&quot;</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<br />
+ <table class="nestcenter" summary="Poem: THE BOY IN GRAY">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+Foes they were, of bitter need,<br />
+Still to every noble deed<br />
+Hearts of men, thank God, must thrill;<br />
+And we thrill, too, as we read<br />
+Of those cheers on Marye's Hill.<br />
+<br />
+Days of battle long since done,<br />
+Days of peace and blessing won,<br />
+Better is it to forget<br />
+Cruel work of sword and gun:<br />
+But some deeds are treasures yet.<br />
+<br />
+While a grateful nation showers<br />
+Graves of heroes with her flowers,<br />
+Here's a wreath for one to-day:<br />
+North or South, we claim him ours&mdash;<br />
+Honor to the Boy in Gray!<br />
+<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh35.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh35.jpg" width="42%" alt="THE EVOLUTION OF OUR FLAG" title="THE EVOLUTION OF OUR FLAG" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">THE EVOLUTION OF OUR FLAG</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Flag_Day" id="Flag_Day" />Flag Day</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p class="center"><strong><i>June 14</i></strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The first recognition of Flag Day by the New York schools was in 1889,
+but it is now generally observed by appropriate exercises. June 14 is
+the anniversary of the adoption of the Stars and Stripes by the
+Continental Congress in the year 1777. This was the flag which, first
+raised over an American vessel by John Paul Jones, became the emblem of
+the new republic. In some places another day is set apart instead.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="StarsStripes" id="StarsStripes" />THE STARS AND STRIPES</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY HENRY RUSSELL WRAY</p>
+
+<p>While every lad and lassie in the land knows and has read all about the
+famous old Liberty Bell, too little is known of the origin and growth of
+America's dearest emblem&mdash;her flag. William Penn's
+city&mdash;Philadelphia&mdash;is gemmed with many historical landmarks, but none
+should be more dear to us than that little old building still standing
+on Arch street, over whose doorway is the number&mdash;239. For in a small
+back room in this primitive dwelling, during the uncertain struggle for
+independence by the American colonies, was designed and made the first
+American flag, known as the &quot;Stars and Stripes,&quot; now respected and
+honored in every quarter of the world, and loved and patriotically
+worshiped at home.</p>
+
+<p>The early history of our great flag is very interesting.</p>
+
+<p>It is a matter of record that during the early days of the Revolution
+the colonists made use of flags of various devices.</p>
+
+<p>It is nowadays generally accepted as a fact that the final idea of the
+Stars and Stripes as a national flag was borrowed from or suggested by
+the coat of arms of General George Washington's family.</p>
+
+<p>The first definite action taken by the colonies toward creating a flag,
+was a resolution passed by Congress in 1775, appointing a committee of
+three gentlemen&mdash;Benjamin Franklin and Messrs. Harrison and Lynch&mdash;to
+consider and devise a national flag. The result of the work of this
+committee was the adoption of the &quot;King's Colors&quot; as a union (or corner
+square), combined with thirteen stripes, alternate red and white,
+showing &quot;that although the colonies united for defense against England's
+tyranny, they still acknowledged her sovereignty.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+ <a href="./images/stnichoh36.jpg"><img src="./images/stnichoh36.jpg" width="40%" alt="NUMBER 239 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA&mdash;THE HOUSE IN WHICH THE FIRST &quot;STARS AND STRIPES&quot; WAS MADE" title="NUMBER 239 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA&mdash;THE HOUSE IN WHICH THE FIRST &quot;STARS AND STRIPES&quot; WAS MADE" /></a>
+ <p class="center"><span class="allcap">NUMBER 239 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA&mdash;THE HOUSE IN WHICH THE FIRST <br />
+ &quot;STARS AND STRIPES&quot; WAS MADE</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The first public acceptance, recognition, and salute of this flag
+occurred January 2, 1776, at Washington's headquarters, Cambridge,
+Massachusetts. The name given to this flag was &quot;The Flag of the Union,&quot;
+and sometimes it was called the &quot;Cambridge Flag.&quot; The design of this
+flag was a combination of the crosses of St. George and St. Andrew in
+a blue field in the upper left-hand corner, bordered by thirteen stripes
+for the thirteen colonies.</p>
+
+<p>But in the spring of 1777 Congress appointed another committee
+&quot;authorized to design a suitable flag for the nation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This committee seems to have consisted of General George Washington and
+Robert Morris. They called upon Mrs. Elizabeth Ross, of Philadelphia,
+and from a pencil-drawing by General Washington engaged her to make a
+flag.</p>
+
+<p>This flag, the first of a number she made, was cut out and completed in
+the back parlor of her little Arch street home.</p>
+
+<p>It was the first legally established emblem, and was adopted by Congress
+June 14, 1777, under the act which provided for stripes alternately red
+and white, with a union of thirteen white stars in a field of blue. This
+act read as follows: &quot;Resolved, That the flag of the United States be
+thirteen stripes, alternate red and white: that the union be thirteen
+stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constellation.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+<h2><a name="Fourth_of_July" id="Fourth_of_July" />Fourth of July</h2>
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<p>This is the greatest secular holiday of our country, its observance
+being sanctioned by the laws of every State. The birthday of our liberty
+would be a hard one to fix, but by common consent the anniversary of the
+signing of the Declaration of Independence is the one observed. The use
+of powder to celebrate the day is gradually going out on account of the
+large number of lives annually lost through accidents. It is known
+officially as Independence Day.</p>
+
+<div>
+<hr />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3><a name="StoryFlag" id="StoryFlag" />A STORY OF THE FLAG</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">BY VICTOR MAPES</p>
+
+<p>When the Fourth of July came, we had been abroad nearly two months, and
+during that time I think we had not seen a single American flag. On the
+morning of the Fourth, however, we walked out on the Paris boulevards,
+and a number of flags were hanging out from the different American
+shops, which are quite frequent there. They looked strange to us; and
+the idea occurred to Frank, for the first time, that the United States
+was one of a great many nations living next to one another in this
+world&mdash;that it was his own nation, a kind of big family he belonged to.
+The Fourth of July was a sort of big, family birthday, and the flags
+were out so as to tell the Frenchmen and everybody else not to forget
+the fact.</p>
+
+<p>A feeling of this nature came over Frank that morning, and he called
+out, &quot;There's another!&quot; every time a new flag came in view. He stopped
+two or three times to count the number of them in sight, and showed in
+various ways that he, America, and the American flag had come to a new
+understanding with one another.</p>
+
+<p>During the morning, Frank's cousin George, a boy two or three years
+older than Frank, who had been in Paris the preceding winter, came to
+our hotel; and, as I had some matters to attend to in the afternoon,
+they went off together to see sights and to have a good time.</p>
+
+<p>When Frank returned about dinner-time, and came up to the room where I
+was writing letters, I noticed a small American-flag pin stuck in the
+lapel of his coat.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;George had two,&quot; he said in answer to my question; &quot;and he gave me this
+one. He's been in Paris a year now, and he says we ought to wear them or
+maybe people won't know we're Americans. But say, Uncle Jack, where do
+you think I got that?&quot; He opened a paper bundle he had under his arm and
+unrolled a weather-beaten American flag.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where?&quot; asked I, naturally supposing it came from George's house.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We took it off of Lafayette's tomb.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I opened my eyes in astonishment; while he went on:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;George says the American Consul, or the American Consul-General, or
+somebody, put it on the tomb last Fourth of July, for our government,
+because Lafayette, don't you know, helped us in the Revolution.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They ought to put a new flag on every year, George says,&quot; explained
+Frank, seeing my amazement, &quot;on Fourth of July morning. But the American
+Consul, or whoever he is that's here now, is a new man, George thinks;
+anyhow, he forgot to do it. So we bought a new flag and we did it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There were a lot of people at the tomb when we went there, and we
+guessed they were all waiting to see the new flag put on. We waited,
+too, but no soldiers or anybody came; and after a while the people all
+went away. Then George said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Somebody ought to put on a new flag&mdash;let's do it!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We went to a store on the Boulevard, and for twenty francs bought a new
+flag just like this old one. George and I each paid half. There were two
+women and a little girl at the tomb when we got back, and we waited
+till they went away. Then we unrolled the new flag and took the old one
+off the tomb.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We thought we ought to say something when we put the new flag on, but
+we didn't know what to say. George said they always made a regular
+speech thanking Lafayette for helping us in the Revolution, but we
+thought it didn't matter much. So we just took off our hats when we
+spread out the new flag on the grave, and then we rolled up the old flag
+and came away.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We drew lots for it afterward, and I'm going to take it back home with
+me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Somebody ought to have done it, and as we were both American boys, it
+was all right, wasn't it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Right or wrong, the flag that travelers see on Lafayette's tomb this
+year, as a mark of the American nation's sentiment toward the great
+Frenchman, is the one put there by two small, self-appointed
+representatives. And the flag put there the year before, with fitting
+ceremony by the authorized official, Frank preserves carefully hung up
+on the wall of his little room in America.</p>
+
+
+<div>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ <hr style="width: 65%;"/>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Our Holidays, by Various
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+
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@@ -0,0 +1,3706 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Our Holidays, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Our Holidays
+ Their Meaning and Spirit; retold from St. Nicholas
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: January 29, 2005 [EBook #14829]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR HOLIDAYS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Jennifer Zickerman and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net).
+
+
+
+
+
+ =OUR HOLIDAYS=
+
+
+
+ HISTORICAL STORIES
+
+ RETOLD FROM
+
+ ST. NICHOLAS MAGAZINE
+
+ IN FIVE VOLUMES
+
+
+ INDIAN STORIES
+ A mirror of Indian ideas, customs, and adventures.
+
+ COLONIAL STORIES
+ Stirring tales of the rude frontier life of early times.
+
+ REVOLUTIONARY STORIES
+ Heroic deeds, and especially children's part in them.
+
+ CIVIL WAR STORIES
+ Thrilling stories of the great struggle, both on land and sea.
+
+ OUR HOLIDAYS
+ Something of their meaning and spirit.
+
+
+ Each about 200 pages. Full cloth, 12mo.
+
+
+ THE CENTURY CO.
+
+ [Illustration: HO, FOR THE CHRISTMAS TREE!]
+
+
+
+ OUR HOLIDAYS
+
+ THEIR MEANING AND SPIRIT
+
+ RETOLD FROM ST. NICHOLAS
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ PUBLISHED BY THE CENTURY CO.
+ NEW YORK MCMVI
+
+ THE DE VINNE PRESS
+
+
+
+
+ =CONTENTS=
+
+ PAGE
+
+OUR HOLIDAYS 1
+
+ ST. SATURDAY _Henry Johnstone_ 3
+
+
+HALLOWE'EN 7
+
+ ALL-HALLOW-EVE MYTHS _David Brown_ 9
+
+
+ELECTION DAY 13
+
+ RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF CITIZENS _S.E. Forman_ 15
+
+
+THANKSGIVING DAY 21
+
+ A THANKSGIVING DINNER THAT FLEW AWAY _H. Butterworth_ 23
+
+
+WHITTIER'S BIRTHDAY 35
+
+ THE BOYHOOD OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER _William H. Rideing_ 37
+
+
+CHRISTMAS 51
+
+ HOW UNCLE SAM OBSERVES CHRISTMAS _Clifford Howard_ 53
+
+
+NEW YEAR'S DAY 79
+
+ EXTRACT FROM "SOCIAL LIFE IN THE COLONIES" _Edward Eggleston_ 81
+
+ A CHINESE NEW YEAR'S IN CALIFORNIA _H.H._ 82
+
+
+LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY 85
+
+ ABRAHAM LINCOLN _Helen Nicolay_ 87
+
+ THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS 99
+
+ O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN! _Walt Whitman_ 101
+
+
+ST. VALENTINE'S BIRTHDAY 103
+
+ WHO BEGAN IT? _Olive Thorne_ 105
+
+
+WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY 111
+
+ THE BOYHOOD OF WASHINGTON _Horace E. Scudder_ 113
+
+
+LONGFELLOW'S BIRTHDAY 123
+
+ LONGFELLOW AND THE CHILDREN _Lucy Larcom_ 125
+
+
+INAUGURATION DAY 139
+
+ HOW A PRESIDENT IS INAUGURATED _Clifford Howard_ 141
+
+
+EASTER DAY 153
+
+ A SONG OF EASTER _Celia Thaxter_ 155
+
+ THE GENERAL'S EASTER BOX _Temple Bailey_ 159
+
+
+ARBOR DAY 175
+
+ THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE TREE _William Cullen Bryant_ 177
+
+
+APRIL FOOL'S DAY 181
+
+ FOURTH-MONTH DUNCE _H.M.M._ 183
+
+
+MEMORIAL DAY 185
+
+ THE BOY IN GRAY _Mary Bradley_ 187
+
+
+FLAG DAY 193
+
+ THE STARS AND STRIPES _Henry Russell Wray_ 195
+
+
+FOURTH OF JULY 199
+
+ A STORY OF THE FLAG _Victor Mapes_ 201
+
+
+
+
+ =PREFACE=
+
+
+To most young people, holidays mean simply freedom from lessons and a
+good time. All this they should mean--and something more.
+
+It is well to remember, for example, that we owe the pleasure of
+Thanksgiving to those grateful Pilgrims who gave a feast of thanks for
+the long-delayed rain that saved their withering crops--a feast of wild
+turkeys and pumpkin pies, which has been celebrated now for nearly three
+centuries.
+
+It is most fitting that the same honor paid to Washington's Birthday is
+now given to that of Lincoln, who is as closely associated with the
+Civil War as our first President is with the Revolution.
+
+Although the birthdays of the three American poets, Whittier, Lowell,
+and Longfellow, are not holidays, stories relating to these days are
+included in this collection as signalizing days to be remembered.
+
+In this book are contained stories bearing on our holidays and annual
+celebrations, from Hallowe'en to the Fourth of July.
+
+
+
+
+ =Our Holidays=
+
+
+ If all the year were playing holidays,
+ To sport would be as tedious as to work.
+
+ SHAKSPERE. _King Henry IV_, Part I.
+
+
+ =ST. SATURDAY=
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ BY HENRY JOHNSTONE
+
+ Oh, Friday night's the queen of nights, because it ushers in
+ The Feast of good St. Saturday, when studying is a sin,
+ When studying is a sin, boys, and we may go to play
+ Not only in the afternoon, but all the livelong day.
+
+ St. Saturday--so legends say--lived in the ages when
+ The use of leisure still was known and current among men;
+ Full seldom and full slow he toiled, and even as he wrought
+ He'd sit him down and rest awhile, immersed in pious thought.
+
+ He loved to fold his good old arms, to cross his good old knees,
+ And in a famous elbow-chair for hours he'd take his ease;
+ He had a word for old and young, and when the village boys
+ Came out to play, he'd smile on them and never mind the noise.
+
+ So when his time came, honest man, the neighbors all declared
+ That one of keener intellect could better have been spared;
+ By young and old his loss was mourned in cottage and in hall,
+ For if he'd done them little good, he'd done no harm at all.
+
+ In time they made a saint of him, and issued a decree--
+ Since he had loved his ease so well, and been so glad to see
+ The children frolic round him and to smile upon their play--
+ That school boys for his sake should have a weekly holiday.
+
+ They gave his name unto the day, that as the years roll by
+ His memory might still be green; and that's the reason why
+ We speak his name with gratitude, and oftener by far
+ Than that of any other saint in all the calendar.
+
+ Then, lads and lassies, great and small, give ear to what I say--
+ Refrain from work on Saturdays as strictly as you may;
+ So shall the saint your patron be and prosper all you do--
+ And when examinations come he'll see you safely through.
+
+ [Illustration: St. Saturday]
+
+
+
+
+ =Hallowe'en=
+
+ _October 31_
+
+ The Eve of All Saints' Day
+
+
+This night is known in some places as Nutcrack Night, or Snapapple
+Night. Supernatural influences are pretended to prevail and hence all
+kinds of superstitions were formerly connected with it. It is now
+usually celebrated by children's parties, when certain special games are
+played.
+
+
+ =ALL-HALLOW-EVE MYTHS=
+
+ BY DAVID BROWN
+
+As the world grows old and wise, it ceases to believe in many of its
+superstitions. But, although they are no longer believed in, the customs
+connected with them do not always die out; they often linger on through
+centuries, and, from having once been serious religious rites, or
+something real in the life of the people, they become at last mere
+children's plays or empty usages, often most zealously enjoyed by those
+who do not understand their meaning.
+
+All-hallow Eve is now, in our country towns, a time of careless frolic,
+and of great bonfires, which, I hear, are still kindled on the hill-tops
+in some places. We also find these fires in England, Scotland, and
+Ireland, and from their history we learn the meaning of our celebration.
+Some of you may know that the early inhabitants of Great Britain,
+Ireland, and parts of France were known as Celts, and that their
+religion was directed by strange priests called Druids. Three times in
+the year, on the first of May, for the sowing; at the solstice, June
+21st, for the ripening and turn of the year; and on the eve of November
+1st, for the harvesting, those mysterious priests of the Celts, the
+Druids, built fires on the hill-tops in France, Britain, and Ireland, in
+honor of the sun. At this last festival the Druids of all the region
+gathered in their white robes around the stone altar or cairn on the
+hill-top. Here stood an emblem of the sun, and on the cairn was a sacred
+fire, which had been kept burning through the year. The Druids formed
+about the fire, and, at a signal, quenched it, while deep silence rested
+on the mountains and valleys. Then the new fire gleamed on the cairn,
+the people in the valley raised a joyous shout, and from hill-top to
+hill-top other fires answered the sacred flame. On this night, all
+hearth-fires in the region had been put out, and they were kindled with
+brands from the sacred fire, which was believed to guard the households
+through the year.
+
+But the Druids disappeared from their sacred places, the cairns on the
+hill-tops became the monuments of a dead religion, and Christianity
+spread to the barbarous inhabitants of France and the British Islands.
+Yet the people still clung to their old customs, and felt much of the
+old awe for them. Still they built their fires on the first of May,--at
+the solstice in June,--and on the eve of November 1st. The church found
+that it could not all at once separate the people from their old ways,
+so it gradually turned these ways to its own use, and the harvest
+festival of the Druids became in the Catholic Calendar the Eve of All
+Saints, for that is the meaning of the name "All-hallow Eve." In the
+seventh century, the Pantheon, the ancient Roman temple of all the gods,
+was consecrated anew to the worship of the Virgin and of all holy
+martyrs.
+
+By its separation from the solemn character of the Druid festival,
+All-hallow Eve lost much of its ancient dignity, and became the
+carnival-night of the year for wild, grotesque rites. As century after
+century passed by, it came to be spoken of as the time when the magic
+powers, with which the peasantry, all the world over, filled the wastes
+and ruins, were supposed to swarm abroad to help or injure men. It was
+the time when those first dwellers in every land, the fairies, were said
+to come out from their grots and lurking-places; and in the darkness of
+the forests and the shadows of old ruins, witches and goblins gathered.
+In course of time, the hallowing fire came to be considered a protection
+against these malicious powers. It was a custom in the seventeenth
+century for the master of a family to carry a lighted torch of straw
+around his fields, to protect them from evil influence through the year,
+and as he went he chanted an invocation to the fire. The chief thing
+which we seek to impress upon your minds in connection with All-hallow
+Eve is that its curious customs show how no generation of men is
+altogether separated from earlier generations. Far as we think we are
+from our uncivilized ancestors, much of what they did and thought has
+come into our doing and thinking,--with many changes perhaps, under
+different religious forms, and sometimes in jest where they were in
+earnest. Still, these customs and observances (of which All-hallow Eve
+is only one) may be called the piers, upon which rests a bridge that
+spans the wide past between us and the generations that have gone
+before.
+
+
+
+
+ =Election Day=
+
+ The first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.
+
+
+This day is now a holiday so that every man may have an opportunity to
+cast his vote. Unlike most other holidays, it does not commemorate an
+event, but it is a day which has a tremendous meaning if rightly looked
+upon and rightly used. Its true spirit and significance are well set
+forth in the following pages. By act of Congress the date for the
+choosing of Presidential electors is set for the first Tuesday after the
+first Monday in November in the years when Presidents are elected, and
+the different States have now nearly all chosen the same day for the
+election of State officers.
+
+
+ =RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF CITIZENS=
+
+ BY S.E. FORMAN
+
+Read the bill of rights in the constitution of your State and you will
+find there, set down in plain black and white, the rights which you are
+to enjoy as an American citizen. This constitution tells you that you
+have the right to your life, to your liberty, and to the property that
+you may honestly acquire; that your body, your health and your
+reputation shall be protected from injury; that you may move freely from
+place to place unmolested; that you shall not be imprisoned or otherwise
+punished without a fair trial by an impartial jury; that you may worship
+God according to the promptings of your own conscience; that you may
+freely write and speak on any subject providing you do not abuse the
+privilege; that you may peaceably assemble and petition government for
+the redress of grievances. These are civil rights. They, together with
+many others equally dear, are guaranteed by the State and national
+constitutions, and they belong to all American citizens.
+
+These civil rights, like the air and the sunshine, come to us in these
+days as a matter of course, but they did not come to our ancestors as a
+matter of course. To our ancestors rights came as the result of
+hard-fought battles. The reading of the bill of rights would cause your
+heart to throb with gratitude did you but know the suffering and
+sacrifice each right has cost.
+
+Now just as our rights have not been gained without a struggle, so they
+will not be maintained without a struggle. We may not have to fight with
+cannon and sword as did our forefathers in the Revolution, but we may be
+sure that if our liberty is to be preserved there will be fighting of
+some kind to do. Such precious things as human rights cannot be had for
+nothing.
+
+One of the hardest battles will be to fulfil the duties which accompany
+our rights, for every right is accompanied by a duty. If I can hold a
+man to his contract I ought (_I owe it_) to pay my debts; if I may
+worship as I please, I ought to refrain from persecuting another on
+account of his religion; if my property is held sacred, I ought to
+regard the property of another man as sacred; if the government deals
+fairly with me and does not oppress me, I ought to deal fairly With it
+and refuse to cheat it; if I am allowed freedom of speech, I ought not
+to abuse the privilege; if I have a right to a trial by jury, I ought to
+respond when I am summoned to serve as a juror; if I have a right to my
+good name and reputation, I ought not to slander my neighbor; if
+government shields me from injury, I ought to be ready to take up arms
+in its defense.
+
+Foremost among the rights of American citizenship is that of going to
+the polls and casting a ballot. This right of voting is not a civil
+right; it is a political right which grew out of man's long struggle for
+his civil rights. While battling with kings and nobles for liberty the
+people learned to distrust a privileged ruling class. They saw that if
+their civil rights were to be respected, government must pass into their
+own hands or into the hands of their chosen agents. Hence they demanded
+political rights, the right of holding office and of voting at
+elections.
+
+The suffrage, or the right of voting, is sometimes regarded as a natural
+right, one that belongs to a person simply because he is a person.
+
+People will say that a man has as much right to vote as he has to
+acquire property or to defend himself from attack. But this is not a
+correct view. The right to vote is a _franchise_ or privilege which the
+law gives to such citizens as are thought worthy of possessing it. It is
+easy to see that everybody cannot be permitted to vote. There must be
+certain qualifications, certain marks of fitness, required of a citizen
+before he can be entrusted with the right of suffrage. These
+qualifications differ in the different States. In most States every male
+citizen over twenty-one years of age may vote. In four States, women as
+well as men exercise the right of suffrage.
+
+But the right of voting, like every other right, has its corresponding
+duty. No day brings more responsibilities than Election Day. The
+American voter should regard himself as an officer of government. He is
+one of the members of the electorate, that vast governing body which
+consists of all the voters and which possesses supreme political power,
+controlling all the governments, federal and State and local. This
+electorate has in its keeping the welfare and the happiness of the
+American people. When, therefore, the voter takes his place in this
+governing body, that is, when he enters the polling-booth and presumes
+to participate in the business of government, he assumes serious
+responsibilities. In the polling-booth he is a public officer charged
+with certain duties, and if he fails to discharge these duties properly
+he may work great injury. What are the duties of a voter in a
+self-governing country? If an intelligent man will ask himself the
+question and refer it to his conscience as well as deliberate upon it in
+his mind, he will conclude that he ought to do the following things:
+
+ 1. To vote whenever it is his privilege.
+
+ 2. To try to understand the questions upon which he votes.
+
+ 3. To learn something about the character and fitness of the men
+ for whom he votes.
+
+ 4. To vote only for honest men for office.
+
+ 5. To support only honest measures.
+
+ 6. To give no bribe, direct or indirect, and to receive no bribe,
+ direct or indirect.
+
+ 7. To place country above party.
+
+ 8. To recognize the result of the election as the will of the
+ people and therefore as the law.
+
+ 9. To continue to vote for a righteous although defeated cause as
+ long as there is a reasonable hope of victory.
+
+ "The proudest now is but my peer,
+ The highest not more high;
+ To-day of all the weary year,
+ A king of men am I.
+
+ "To-day alike are great and small,
+ The nameless and the known;
+ My palace is the people's hall,
+ The ballot-box my throne!"
+
+ WHITTIER.
+
+
+
+
+ =Thanksgiving Day=
+
+ Appointed by the President--usually the last Thursday in November.
+
+
+Now observed as a holiday in all the States, but not a legal holiday in
+all. The President's proclamation recommends that it be set apart as a
+day of prayer and rejoicing. The day is of New England origin, the first
+one being set by Governor Bradford of the Massachusetts colony on
+December, 1621. Washington issued a thanksgiving proclamation for
+Thursday, December 18, 1777, and again at Valley Forge for May 7, 1778.
+The Thanksgiving of the present incorporates many of the genial features
+of Christmas. The feast with the Thanksgiving turkey and pumpkin-pie
+crowns the day. Even the poorhouse has its turkey. The story of "An
+Old-Time Thanksgiving," in "Indian Stories" of this series, well brings
+out the original spirit of the day.
+
+
+ =A THANKSGIVING DINNER THAT FLEW AWAY=
+
+ BY H. BUTTERWORTH
+
+"Honk!"
+
+I spun around like a top, looking nervously in every direction. I was
+familiar with that sound; I had heard it before, during two summer
+vacations, at the old farm-house on the Cape.
+
+It had been a terror to me. I always put a door, a fence, or a stone
+wall between me and that sound as speedily as possible.
+
+I had just come down from the city to the Cape for my third summer
+vacation. I had left the cars with my arms full of bundles, and hurried
+toward Aunt Targood's.
+
+The cottage stood in from the road. There was a long meadow in front of
+it. In the meadow were two great oaks and some clusters of lilacs. An
+old, mossy stone wall protected the grounds from the road, and a long
+walk ran from the old wooden gate to the door.
+
+It was a sunny day, and my heart was light. The orioles were flaming in
+the old orchards; the bobolinks were tossing themselves about in the
+long meadows of timothy, daisies, and patches of clover. There was a
+scent of new-mown hay in the air.
+
+In the distance lay the bay, calm and resplendent, with white sails and
+specks of boats. Beyond it rose Martha's Vineyard, green and cool and
+bowery, and at its wharf lay a steamer.
+
+I was, as I said, light-hearted. I was thinking of rides over the sandy
+roads at the close of the long, bright days; of excursions on the bay;
+of clam-bakes and picnics.
+
+I was hungry; and before me rose visions of Aunt Targood's fish dinners,
+roast chickens, berry pies. I was thirsty; but ahead was the old
+well-sweep, and, behind the cool lattice of the dairy window, were pans
+of milk in abundance.
+
+I tripped on toward the door with light feet, lugging my bundles and
+beaded with perspiration, but unmindful of all discomforts in the
+thought of the bright days and good things in store for me.
+
+"Honk! honk!"
+
+My heart gave a bound!
+
+_Where_ did that sound come from?
+
+Out of a cool cluster of innocent-looking lilac bushes, I saw a dark
+object cautiously moving. It seemed to have no head. I knew, however,
+that it had a head. I had seen it; it had seized me once on the previous
+summer, and I had been in terror of it during all the rest of the
+season.
+
+I looked down into the irregular grass, and saw the head and a very long
+neck running along on the ground, propelled by the dark body, like a
+snake running away from a ball. It was coming toward me, and faster and
+faster as it approached.
+
+I dropped all my bundles.
+
+In a few flying leaps I returned to the road again, and armed myself
+with a stick from a pile of cord-wood.
+
+"Honk! honk! honk!"
+
+It was a call of triumph. The head was high in the air now. My enemy
+moved grandly forward, as became the monarch of the great meadow
+farm-yard.
+
+I stood with beating heart, after my retreat.
+
+It was Aunt Targood's gander.
+
+How he enjoyed his triumph, and how small and cowardly he made me feel!
+
+"Honk! honk! honk!"
+
+The geese came out of the lilac bushes, bowing their heads to him in
+admiration. Then came the goslings--a long procession of awkward,
+half-feathered things: they appeared equally delighted.
+
+The gander seemed to be telling his admiring audience all about it: how
+a strange girl with many bundles had attempted to cross the yard; how he
+had driven her back, and had captured her bundles, and now was monarch
+of the field. He clapped his wings when he had finished his heroic
+story, and sent forth such a "honk!" as might have startled a
+major-general.
+
+Then he, with an air of great dignity and coolness, began to examine my
+baggage.
+
+Among my effects were several pounds of chocolate caramels, done up in
+brown paper. Aunt Targood liked caramels, and I had brought her a large
+supply.
+
+He tore off the wrappers quickly. Bit one. It was good. He began to
+distribute the bon-bons among the geese, and they, with much liberality
+and good-will, among the goslings.
+
+This was too much. I ventured through the gate swinging my cord-wood
+stick.
+
+"Shoo!"
+
+He dropped his head on the ground, and drove it down the walk in a
+lively waddle toward me.
+
+"_Shoo_!"
+
+It was Aunt Targood's voice at the door.
+
+He stopped immediately.
+
+His head was in the air again.
+
+"_Shoo_!"
+
+Out came Aunt Targood with her broom.
+
+She always corrected the gander with her broom. If I were to be whipped
+I should choose a broom--not the stick.
+
+As soon as he beheld the broom he retired, although with much offended
+pride and dignity, to the lilac bushes; and the geese and goslings
+followed him.
+
+"Hester, you dear child, come here. I was expecting you, and had been
+looking out for you, but missed sight of you. I had forgotten all about
+the gander."
+
+We gathered up the bundles and the caramels. I was light-hearted again.
+
+How cool was the sitting-room, with the woodbine falling about the open
+windows! Aunt brought me a pitcher of milk and some strawberries; some
+bread and honey; and a fan.
+
+While I was resting and taking my lunch, I could hear the gander
+discussing the affairs of the farm-yard with the geese. I did not
+greatly enjoy the discussion. His tone of voice was very proud, and he
+did not seem to be speaking well of me. I was suspicious that he did not
+think me a very brave girl. A young person likes to be spoken well of,
+even by the gander.
+
+Aunt Targood's gander had been the terror of many well-meaning people,
+and of some evildoers, for many years. I have seen tramps and
+pack-peddlers enter the gate, and start on toward the door, when there
+would sound that ringing warning like a war-blast. "Honk, honk!" and in
+a few minutes these unwelcome people would be gone. Farm-house boarders
+from the city would sometimes enter the yard, thinking to draw water by
+the old well-sweep: in a few minutes it was customary to hear shrieks,
+and to see women and children flying over the walls, followed by
+air-rending "honks!" and jubilant cackles from the victorious gander and
+his admiring family.
+
+"Aunt, what makes you keep that gander, year after year?" said I, one
+evening, as we were sitting on the lawn before the door. "Is it because
+he is a kind of a watch-dog, and keeps troublesome people away?"
+
+"No, child, no; I do not wish to keep most people away, not well-behaved
+people, nor to distress nor annoy any one. The fact is, there is a
+story about that gander that I do not like to speak of to every
+one--something that makes me feel tender toward him; so that if he needs
+a whipping, I would rather do it. He knows something that no one else
+knows. I could not have him killed or sent away. You have heard me speak
+of Nathaniel, my oldest boy?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"That is his picture in my room, you know. He was a good boy to me. He
+loved his mother. I loved Nathaniel--you cannot think how much I loved
+Nathaniel. It was on my account that he went away.
+
+"The farm did not produce enough for us all: Nathaniel, John, and I. We
+worked hard and had a hard time. One year--that was ten years ago--we
+were sued for our taxes.
+
+"'Nathaniel,' said I, 'I will go to taking boarders.'
+
+"Then he looked up to me and said (oh, how noble and handsome he
+appeared to me!):
+
+"'Mother, I will go to sea.'
+
+"'Where?' asked I, in surprise.
+
+"'In a coaster.'
+
+"I turned white. How I felt!
+
+"'You and John can manage the place,' he continued. 'One of the vessels
+sails next week--Uncle Aaron's; he offers to take me.'
+
+"It seemed best, and he made preparations to go.
+
+"The spring before, Skipper Ben--you have met Skipper Ben--had given me
+some goose eggs; he had brought them from Canada, and said that they
+were wild-goose eggs.
+
+"I set them under hens. In four weeks I had three goslings. I took them
+into the house at first, but afterward made a pen for them out in the
+yard. I brought them up myself, and one of those goslings is that
+gander.
+
+"Skipper Ben came over to see me, the day before Nathaniel was to sail.
+Aaron came with him.
+
+"I said to Aaron:
+
+"'What can I give to Nathaniel to carry to sea with him to make him
+think of home? Cake, preserves, apples? I haven't got much; I have done
+all I can for him, poor boy.'
+
+"Brother looked at me curiously, and said:
+
+"'Give him one of those wild geese, and we will fatten it on shipboard
+and will have it for our Thanksgiving dinner.'
+
+"What brother Aaron said pleased me. The young gander was a noble bird,
+the handsomest of the lot; and I resolved to keep the geese to kill for
+my own use and to give _him_ to Nathaniel.
+
+"The next morning--it was late in September--I took leave of Nathaniel.
+I tried to be calm and cheerful and hopeful. I watched him as he went
+down the walk with the gander struggling under his arms. A stranger
+would have laughed, but I did not feel like laughing; it was true that
+the boys who went coasting were usually gone but a few months and came
+home hardy and happy. But when poverty compels a mother and son to part,
+after they have been true to each other, and shared their feelings in
+common, it seems hard, it seems hard--though I do not like to murmur or
+complain at anything allotted to me.
+
+"I saw him go over the hill. On the top he stopped and held up the
+gander. He disappeared; yes, my own Nathaniel disappeared. I think of
+him now as one who disappeared.
+
+"November came--it was a terrible month on the coast that year. Storm
+followed storm; the sea-faring people talked constantly of wrecks and
+losses. I could not sleep on the nights of those high winds. I used to
+lie awake thinking over all the happy hours I had lived with Nathaniel.
+
+"Thanksgiving week came.
+
+"It was full of an Indian-summer brightness after the long storms. The
+nights were frosty, bright, and calm.
+
+"I could sleep on those calm nights.
+
+"One morning, I thought I heard a strange sound in the woodland pasture.
+It was like a wild goose. I listened; it was repeated. I was lying in
+bed. I started up--I thought I had been dreaming.
+
+"On the night before Thanksgiving I went to bed early, being very tired.
+The moon was full; the air was calm and still. I was thinking of
+Nathaniel, and I wondered if he would indeed have the gander for his
+Thanksgiving dinner: if it would be cooked as well as I would have
+cooked it, and if he would think of me that day.
+
+"I was just going to sleep, when suddenly I heard a sound that made me
+start up and hold my breath.
+
+"'_Honk_!'
+
+"I thought it was a dream followed by a nervous shock.
+
+"'_Honk! honk_!'
+
+"There it was again, in the yard. I was surely awake and in my senses.
+
+"I heard the geese cackle.
+
+"'_Honk! honk! honk_!'
+
+"I got out of bed and lifted the curtain. It was almost as light as day.
+Instead of two geese there were three. Had one of the neighbors' geese
+stolen away?
+
+"I should have thought so, and should not have felt disturbed, but for
+the reason that none of the neighbors' geese had that peculiar
+call--that hornlike tone that I had noticed in mine.
+
+"I went out of the door.
+
+"The third goose looked like the very gander I had given Nathaniel.
+Could it be?
+
+"I did not sleep. I rose early and went to the crib for some corn.
+
+"It was a gander--a 'wild' gander--that had come in the night. He seemed
+to know me.
+
+"I trembled all over as though I had seen a ghost. I was so faint that I
+sat down on the meal-chest.
+
+"As I was in that place, a bill pecked against the door. The door
+opened. The strange gander came hobbling over the crib-stone and went to
+the corn-bin. He stopped there, looked at me, and gave a sort of glad
+"honk," as though he knew me and was glad to see me.
+
+"I was certain that he was the gander I had raised, and that Nathaniel
+had lifted into the air when he gave me his last recognition from the
+top of the hill.
+
+"It overcame me. It was Thanksgiving. The church bell would soon be
+ringing as on Sunday. And here was Nathaniel's Thanksgiving dinner; and
+brother Aaron's--had it flown away? Where was the vessel?
+
+"Years have passed--ten. You know I waited and waited for my boy to come
+back. December grew dark with its rainy seas; the snows fell; May
+lighted up the hills, but the vessel never came back. Nathaniel--my
+Nathaniel--never returned.
+
+"That gander knows something he could tell me if he could talk. Birds
+have memories. He remembered the corn-crib--he remembered something
+else. I wish he _could_ talk, poor bird! I wish he could talk. I will
+never sell him, nor kill him, nor have him abused. _He knows!_"
+
+
+
+
+ =Whittier's Birthday=
+
+ JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER
+
+ Born December 17, 1807 Died September 7, 1892
+
+
+Whittier is known not only as a poet, but as a reformer and author. He
+was a member of the Society of Friends. He attended a New England
+academy; worked on a farm; taught school in order to afford further
+education, and at the age of twenty-two edited a paper at Boston. He was
+a leading opponent of slavery and was several times attacked by mobs on
+account of his opinions.
+
+
+ =THE BOYHOOD OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER=
+
+ BY WILLIAM H. RIDEING
+
+The life of Whittier may be read in his poems, and, by putting a note
+here and a date there, a full autobiography might be compiled from them.
+His boyhood and youth are depicted in them with such detail that little
+need be added to make the story complete, and that little, reverently
+done as it may be, must seem poor in comparison with the poetic beauty
+of his own revelations.
+
+What more can we do to show his early home than to quote from his own
+beautiful poem, "Snow-bound"? There the house is pictured for us, inside
+and out, with all its furnishings; and those who gather around its
+hearth, inmates and visitors, are set before us so clearly that long
+after the book has been put away they remain as distinct in the memory
+as portraits that are visible day after day on the walls of our own
+homes. He reproduces in his verse the landscapes he saw, the legends of
+witches and Indians he listened to, the schoolfellows he played with,
+the voices of the woods and fields, and the round of toil and pleasure
+in a country boy's life; and in other poems his later life, with its
+impassioned devotion to freedom and lofty faith, is reflected as lucidly
+as his youth is in "Snow-bound" and "The Barefoot Boy."
+
+He himself was "The Barefoot Boy," and what Robert Burns said of himself
+Whittier might repeat: "The poetic genius of my country found me, as the
+prophetic bard Elijah did Elisha, at the plow, and threw her inspiring
+mantle over me." He was a farmer's son, born at a time when farm-life in
+New England was more frugal than it is now, and with no other heritage
+than the good name and example of parents and kinsmen, in whom simple
+virtues--thrift, industry, and piety--abounded.
+
+His birthplace still stands near Haverhill, Mass.,--a house in one of
+the hollows of the surrounding hills, little altered from what it was in
+1807, the year he was born, when it was already at least a century and a
+half old.
+
+[Illustration: WHITTIER'S BIRTHPLACE, NEAR HAVERHILL, MASS.]
+
+He had no such opportunities for culture as Holmes and Lowell had in
+their youth. His parents were intelligent and upright people of
+limited means, who lived in all the simplicity of the Quaker faith, and
+there was nothing in his early surroundings to encourage and develop a
+literary taste. Books were scarce, and the twenty volumes on his
+father's shelves were, with one exception, about Quaker doctrines and
+Quaker heroes. The exception was a novel, and that was hidden away from
+the children, for fiction was forbidden fruit. No library or scholarly
+companionship was within reach; and if his gift had been less than
+genius, it could never have triumphed over the many disadvantages with
+which it had to contend. Instead of a poet he would have been a farmer
+like his forefathers. But literature was a spontaneous impulse with him,
+as natural as the song of a bird; and he was not wholly dependent on
+training and opportunity, as he would have been had he possessed mere
+talent.
+
+Frugal from necessity, the life of the Whittiers was not sordid nor
+cheerless to him, moreover; and he looks back to it as tenderly as if it
+had been full of luxuries. It was sweetened by strong affections, simple
+tastes, and an unflinching sense of duty; and in all the members of the
+household the love of nature was so genuine that meadow, wood, and
+river yielded them all the pleasure they needed, and they scarcely
+missed the refinements of art.
+
+Surely there could not be a pleasanter or more homelike picture than
+that which the poet has given us of the family on the night of the great
+storm when the old house was snowbound:
+
+ "Shut in from all the world without,
+ We sat the clean-winged hearth about,
+ Content to let the north wind roar
+ In baffled rage at pane and door,
+ While the red logs before us beat
+ The frost-line back with tropic heat.
+ And ever when a louder blast
+ Shook beam and rafter as it passed,
+ The merrier up its roaring draught
+ The great throat of the chimney laughed.
+ The house-dog on his paws outspread,
+ Laid to the fire his drowsy head;
+ The cat's dark silhouette on the wall
+ A couchant tiger's seemed to fall,
+ And for the winter fireside meet
+ Between the andiron's straddling feet
+ The mug of cider simmered slow,
+ The apples sputtered in a row,
+ And close at hand the basket stood
+ With nuts from brown October's wood."
+
+For a picture of the poet himself we must turn to the verses in "The
+Barefoot Boy," in which he says:
+
+ "O for boyhood's time of June,
+ Crowding years in one brief moon,
+ When all things I heard or saw,
+ Me, their master, waited for.
+ I was rich in flowers and trees,
+ Humming-birds and honey-bees;
+ For my sport the squirrel played,
+ Plied the snouted mole his spade;
+ For my taste the blackberry cone
+ Purpled over hedge and stone;
+ Laughed the brook for my delight
+ Through the day and through the night,
+ Whispering at the garden-wall,
+ Talked with me from fall to fall;
+ Mine the sand-rimmed pickerel pond,
+ Mine the walnut slopes beyond,
+ Mine on bending orchard trees,
+ Apples of Hesperides!
+ Still as my horizon grew,
+ Larger grew my riches, too;
+ All the world I saw or knew
+ Seemed a complex Chinese toy,
+ Fashioned for a barefoot boy!"[1]
+
+[Illustration: THE OLD SCHOOL-HOUSE, HAVERHILL, MASS.]
+
+I doubt if any boy ever rose to intellectual eminence who had fewer
+opportunities for education than Whittier. He had no such pasturage to
+browse on as is open to every reader who, by simply reaching them out,
+can lay his hands on the treasures of English literature. He had to
+borrow books wherever they could be found among the neighbors who were
+willing to lend, and he thought nothing of walking several miles for one
+volume. The only instruction he received was at the district school,
+which was open a few weeks in midwinter, and at the Haverhill Academy,
+which he attended two terms of six months each, paying tuition by work
+in spare hours, and by keeping a small school himself. A feeble spirit
+would have languished under such disadvantages. But Whittier scarcely
+refers to them, and instead of begging for pity, he takes them as part
+of the common lot, and seems to remember only what was beautiful and
+good in his early life.
+
+Occasionally a stranger knocked at the door of the old homestead in the
+valley; sometimes it was a distinguished Quaker from abroad, but oftener
+it was a peddler or some vagabond begging for food, which was seldom
+refused. Once a foreigner came and asked for lodgings for the night--a
+dark, repulsive man, whose appearance was so much against him that Mrs.
+Whittier was afraid to admit him. No sooner had she sent him away,
+however, than she repented. "What if a son of mine was in a strange
+land?" she thought. The young poet (who was not yet recognized as such)
+offered to go out in search of him, and presently returned with him,
+having found him standing in the roadway just as he had been turned away
+from another house.
+
+[Illustration: JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER]
+
+"He took his seat with us at the supper-table," says Whittier in one of
+his prose sketches, "and when we were all gathered around the hearth
+that cold autumnal evening, he told us, partly by words and partly by
+gestures, the story of his life and misfortunes, amused us with
+descriptions of the grape-gatherings and festivals of his sunny
+clime, edified my mother with a recipe for making bread of chestnuts,
+and in the morning, when, after breakfast, his dark sallow face lighted
+up, and his fierce eyes moistened with grateful emotion as in his own
+silvery Tuscan accent he poured out his thanks, we marveled at the fears
+which had so nearly closed our doors against him, and as he departed we
+all felt that he had left with us the blessing of the poor."
+
+Another guest came to the house one day. It was a vagrant old Scotchman,
+who, when he had been treated to bread and cheese and cider, sang some
+of the songs of Robert Burns, which Whittier then heard for the first
+time, and which he never forgot. Coming to him thus as songs reached the
+people before printing was invented, through gleemen and minstrels,
+their sweetness lingered in his ears, and he soon found himself singing
+in the same strain. Some of his earliest inspirations were drawn from
+Burns, and he tells us of his joy when one day, after the visit of the
+old Scotchman, his schoolmaster loaned him a copy of that poet's works.
+"I began to make rhymes myself, and to imagine stories and adventures,"
+he says in his simple way.
+
+Indeed, he began to rhyme very early and kept his gift a secret from
+all, except his oldest sister, fearing that his father, who was a
+prosaic man, would think that he was wasting time. He wrote under the
+fence, in the attic, in the barn--wherever he could escape observation;
+and as pen and ink were not always available, he sometimes used chalk,
+and even charcoal. Great was the surprise of the family when some of his
+verses were unearthed, literally unearthed, from under a heap of rubbish
+in a garret; but his father frowned upon these evidences of the bent of
+his mind, not out of unkindness, but because he doubted the sufficiency
+of the boy's education for a literary life, and did not wish to inspire
+him with hopes which might never be fulfilled.
+
+His sister had faith in him, nevertheless, and, without his knowledge,
+she sent one of his poems to the editor of _The Free Press_, a newspaper
+published in Newburyport. Whittier was helping his father to repair a
+stone wall by the roadside when the carrier flung a copy of the paper to
+him, and, unconscious that anything of his was in it, he opened it and
+glanced up and down the columns. His eyes fell on some verses called
+"The Exile's Departure."
+
+ "Fond scenes, which delighted my youthful existence,
+ With feelings of sorrow I bid ye adieu--
+ A lasting adieu; for now, dim in the distance,
+ The shores of Hibernia recede from my view.
+ Farewell to the cliffs, tempest-beaten and gray,
+ Which guard the loved shores of my own native land;
+ Farewell to the village and sail-shadowed bay,
+ The forest-crowned hill and the water-washed strand."
+
+His eyes swam; it was his own poem, the first he ever had in print.
+
+[Illustration: WHITTIER'S STUDY AT AMESBURY, MASS.]
+
+"What is the matter with thee?" his father demanded, seeing how dazed he
+was; but, though he resumed his work on the wall, he could not speak,
+and he had to steal a glance at the paper again and again, before he
+could convince himself that he was not dreaming. Sure enough, the poem
+was there with his initial at the foot of it,--"W., Haverhill, June 1st,
+1826,"--and, better still, this editorial notice: "If 'W.,' at
+Haverhill, will continue to favor us with pieces beautiful as the one
+inserted in our poetical department of to-day, we shall esteem it a
+favor."
+
+Fame never passes true genius by, and when it came it brought with it
+the love and reverence of thousands, who recognize in Whittier a nature
+abounding in patience, unselfishness, and all the sweetness of Christian
+charity.
+
+[Footnote 1: The selections from Mr. Whittier's poems contained in this
+article are included by kind permission of Messrs. Houghton,
+Mifflin & Co.]
+
+
+
+
+ =Christmas=
+
+ _December 25_
+
+
+A festival held every year in memory of the birth of Christ. Christmas
+is essentially a day of rejoicing and thanksgiving and of good will
+toward others. Many customs older than Christianity mark the
+festivities. In our country the observance of the day was discouraged in
+colonial times, and in England in 1643 Parliament abolished the day. Now
+its celebration is world-wide and by all classes and creeds.
+
+
+ =HOW UNCLE SAM OBSERVES CHRISTMAS=
+
+ BY CLIFFORD HOWARD
+
+Of course Uncle Sam is best acquainted with the good old-fashioned
+Christmas--the kind we have known all about since we were little bits of
+children. There are the Christmas trees with their pretty decorations
+and candles, and the mistletoe and holly and all sorts of evergreens to
+make the house look bright, while outside the trees are bare, the ground
+is white with snow, and Jack Frost is prowling around, freezing up the
+ponds and pinching people's noses. And then there is dear old Santa
+Claus with his reindeer, galloping about on the night before Christmas,
+and scrambling down chimneys to fill the stockings that hang in a row by
+the fireplace.
+
+It is the time of good cheer and happiness and presents for everybody;
+the time of chiming bells and joyful carols; of turkey and candy and
+plum-pudding and all the other good things that go to make up a truly
+merry Christmas. And here and there throughout the country, some of the
+quaint old customs of our forefathers are still observed at this time,
+as, for instance, the pretty custom of "Christmas waits"--boys and girls
+who go about from house to house on Christmas eve, or early Christmas
+morning, singing carols.
+
+But, aside from the Christmas customs we all know so well, Uncle Sam has
+many strange and special ways of observing Christmas; for in this big
+country of his there are many different kinds of people, and they all do
+not celebrate Christmas in the same way, as you shall see.
+
+
+ =IN THE SOUTH=
+
+Siss! Bang! Boom! Sky-rockets hissing, crackers snapping, cannons
+roaring, horns tooting, bells ringing, and youngsters shouting with wild
+delight. That is the way Christmas begins down South.
+
+[Illustration: CHRISTMAS IN THE SOUTH]
+
+It starts at midnight, or even before; and all day long fire-crackers
+are going off in the streets of every city, town, and village of the
+South, from Virginia to Louisiana. A Northern boy, waking up suddenly in
+New Orleans or Mobile or Atlanta, would think he was in the midst of
+a rousing Fourth-of-July celebration. In some of the towns the brass
+bands come out and add to the jollity of the day by marching around and
+playing "My Maryland" and "Dixie"; while the soldier companies parade up
+and down the streets to the strains of joyous music and fire salutes
+with cannons and rifles.
+
+To the girls and boys of the South, Christmas is the noisiest and
+jolliest day of the year. The Fourth of July doesn't compare with it.
+And as for the darkies, they look upon Christmas as a holiday that was
+invented for their especial happiness. They take it for granted that all
+the "white folks" they know will give them presents; and with grinning
+faces they are up bright and early, asking for "Christmus gif', mistah;
+Christmus gif, missus." No one thinks of refusing them, and at the end
+of the day they are richer and happier than at any other time during the
+whole year.
+
+Except for the jingle of sleigh-bells and the presence of Jack Frost, a
+Christmas in the South is in other ways very much like that in the
+North. The houses are decorated with greens, mistletoe hangs above the
+doorways, Santa Claus comes down the chimneys and fills the waiting
+stockings, while Christmas dinner is not complete without the familiar
+turkey and cranberry sauce, plum puddings and pies.
+
+
+ =IN NEW ENGLAND=
+
+For a great many years there was no Christmas in New England. The
+Pilgrims and the Puritans did not believe in such celebrations. In fact,
+they often made it a special point to do their hardest work on Christmas
+day, just to show their contempt for what they considered a pagan
+festival.
+
+During colonial times there was a law in Massachusetts forbidding any
+one to celebrate Christmas; and if anybody was so rash in those days as
+to go about tooting a horn and shouting a "Merry Christmas!" he was
+promptly brought to his senses by being arrested and punished.
+
+[Illustration: CHRISTMAS SPORTS IN NEW ENGLAND]
+
+Of course things are very different in New England now, but in many
+country towns the people still make more of Thanksgiving than they do of
+Christmas; and there are hundreds of New England men and women still
+living who knew nothing of Christmas as children--who never hung up
+their stockings; who never waited for Santa Claus; who never had a
+tree; who never even had a Christmas present!
+
+Nowadays, however, Christmas in New England is like Christmas anywhere
+else; but here and there, even now, the effects of the early Puritan
+ideas may still be seen. In some of the smaller and out-of-the-way towns
+and villages you will find Christmas trees and evergreens in only a very
+few of the houses, and in some places--particularly in New
+Hampshire--one big Christmas tree does for the whole town. This tree is
+set up in the town hall, and there the children go to get their gifts,
+which have been hung on the branches by the parents. Sometimes the tree
+has no decorations--no candles, no popcorn strings, no shiny balls.
+After the presents are taken off and given to the children, the tree
+remains perfectly bare. There is usually a short entertainment of
+recitations and songs, and a speech or two perhaps, and then the little
+folks, carrying their presents with them, go back to their homes.
+
+
+ =IN NEW MEXICO=
+
+In certain parts of New Mexico, among the old Spanish settlements, the
+celebration of Christmas begins more than a week before the day. In the
+evenings, a party of men and women go together to the house of some
+friend--a different house being visited each evening. When they arrive,
+they knock on the door and begin to sing, and when those in the house
+ask, "Who is there?" they reply, "The Virgin Mary and St. Joseph seek
+lodgings in your house." At first the inmates of the house refuse to let
+them in. This is done to carry out the Bible story of Joseph and Mary
+being unable to find lodgings in Bethlehem. But in a little while the
+door is opened and the visitors are heartily welcomed. As soon as they
+enter, they kneel and repeat a short prayer; and when the devotional
+exercises are concluded, the rest of the evening is spent in
+merrymaking.
+
+On Christmas eve the people of the village gather together in some large
+room or hall and give a solemn little play, commemorating the birthday
+of the Saviour. One end of the room is used as a stage, and this is
+fitted up to represent the stable and the manger; and the characters in
+the sacred story of Bethlehem--Mary and Joseph, the shepherds, the wise
+men, and the angels--are represented in the tableaux, and with a
+genuine, reverential spirit. Even the poorer people of the town take
+part in these Christmas plays.
+
+
+ =AMONG THE SHAKERS=
+
+The Shakers observe Christmas by a dinner at which the men and women
+both sit down at the same table. This custom of theirs is the thing that
+serves to make Christmas different from any other day among the Shakers.
+During all the rest of the year the men and women eat their meals at
+separate tables.
+
+At sunset on Christmas day, after a service in the church, they march to
+the community-house, where the dinner is waiting. The men sit on one
+side of the table and the women on the other. At the head sits an old
+man called the elder, who begins the meal by saying grace, after which
+each one in turn gets up and, lifting the right hand, says in a solemn
+voice, "God is love." The dinner is eaten in perfect silence. Not a
+voice is heard until the meal comes to an end. Then the men and women
+rise and sing, standing in their places at the table. As the singing
+proceeds they mark time with their hands and feet. Then their bodies
+begin to sway from side to side in the peculiar manner that has given
+this sect its name of Shakers.
+
+When the singing comes to an end, the elder chants a prayer, after which
+the men and women silently file out and leave the building.
+
+
+ =AMONG THE PENNSYLVANIA GERMANS=
+
+"You'd better look out, or Pelznickel will catch you!" This is the dire
+threat held over naughty boys and girls at Christmas-time in some of the
+country settlements of the Pennsylvania Germans, or Pennsylvania Dutch,
+as they are often called.
+
+Pelznickel is another name for Santa Claus. But he is not altogether the
+same old Santa that we welcome so gladly. On Christmas eve some one in
+the neighborhood impersonates Pelznickel by dressing up as an old man
+with a long white beard. Arming himself with a switch and carrying a bag
+of toys over his shoulder, he goes from house to house, where the
+children are expecting him.
+
+[Illustration: A VISIT FROM PELZNICKEL]
+
+He asks the parents how the little ones have behaved themselves during
+the year. To each of those who have been good he gives a present from
+his bag. But--woe betide the naughty ones! These are not only supposed
+to get no presents, but Pelznickel catches them by the collar and
+playfully taps them with his switch.
+
+
+ =IN PORTO RICO=
+
+The Porto Rican boys and girls would be frightened out of their wits if
+Santa Claus should come to them in a sleigh drawn by reindeer and should
+try to enter the houses and fill their stockings. Down there, Santa
+Claus does not need reindeer or any other kind of steeds, for the
+children say that he just comes flying through the air like a bird.
+Neither does he bother himself looking for stockings, for such things
+are not so plentiful in Porto Rico as they are in cooler climates.
+Instead of stockings, the children use little boxes, which they make
+themselves. These they place on the roofs and in the courtyards, and old
+Santa Claus drops the gifts into them as he flies around at night with
+his bag on his back.
+
+He is more generous in Porto Rico than he is anywhere else. He does not
+come on Christmas eve only, but is likely to call around every night or
+two during the week. Each morning, therefore, the little folks run out
+eagerly to see whether anything more has been left in their boxes during
+the night.
+
+Christmas in Porto Rico is a church festival of much importance, and the
+celebration of it is made up chiefly of religious ceremonies intended to
+commemorate the principal events in the life of the Saviour. Beginning
+with the celebration of his birth, at Christmas-time, the feast-days
+follow one another in rapid succession. Indeed, it may justly be said
+that they do not really come to an end until Easter.
+
+[Illustration: BETHLEHEM DAY IN PORTO RICO]
+
+One of the most popular of these festival-days is that known as
+Bethlehem day. This is celebrated on the 12th of January, in memory of
+the coming of the Magi. The celebration consists of a procession of
+children through the streets of the town. The foremost three, dressed in
+flowing robes to represent the wise men of the East, come riding along
+on ponies, holding in their hands the gifts for the Infant King;
+following them come angels and shepherds and flute-players, all
+represented by children dressed in pretty costumes and carrying garlands
+of flowers. These processions are among the most picturesque of all
+Christmas celebrations.
+
+
+ =AMONG THE MORAVIANS=
+
+For many days before Christmas the Moravian housewives in Bethlehem,
+Pennsylvania, are busy in their kitchens making good things for the
+holidays--mint-cakes, pepper-nuts, _Kuemmelbrod_, sugar-cake, mince-pies,
+and, most important of all, large quantities of "Christmas cakes." These
+Christmas cakes are a kind of ginger cooky, crisp and spicy, and are
+made according to a recipe known only to the Moravians. They are made in
+all sorts of curious shapes--birds, horses, bears, lions, fishes,
+turtles, stars, leaves, and funny little men and women; so that they are
+not only good to eat, but are ornamental as well, and are often used by
+the good fathers and mothers as decorations for the "_Putz_."
+
+Every Moravian family has its _Putz_ at Christmas-time. This consists of
+a Christmas tree surrounded at its base by a miniature landscape made up
+of moss and greens and make-believe rocks, and adorned with toy houses
+and tiny fences and trees and all sorts of little animals and toy
+people.
+
+[Illustration: A CHRISTMAS "PUTZ"]
+
+On Christmas eve a love-feast is held in the church. The greater part of
+the service is devoted to music, for which the Moravians have always
+been noted. While the choir is singing, cake and coffee are brought in
+and served to all the members of the congregation, each one receiving a
+good-sized bun and a large cup of coffee. Shortly before the end of the
+meeting lighted wax candles carried on large trays are brought into the
+church, by men on one side and women on the other, and passed around to
+the little folks--one for each boy and girl. This is meant to represent
+the coming of the Light into the world, and is but one of the many
+beautiful customs observed by the Moravians.
+
+
+ =IN ALASKA=
+
+"Going around with the star" is a popular Christmas custom among some of
+the natives of Alaska who belong to the Greek Church. A large figure of
+a star, covered with brightly colored paper, is carried about at night
+by a procession of men and women and children. They call at the homes of
+the well-to-do families of the village, marching about from house to
+house, headed by the star-bearer and two men or boys carrying lanterns
+on long poles. They are warmly welcomed at each place, and are invited
+to come in and have some refreshments. After enjoying the cakes and
+other good things, and singing one or two carols, they take up the star
+and move on to the next house.
+
+These processions take place each night during Christmas week; but after
+the second night the star-bearers are followed by men and boys dressed
+in fantastic clothes, who try to catch the star-men and destroy their
+stars. This part of the game is supposed to be an imitation of the
+soldiers of Herod trying to destroy the children of Bethlehem; but these
+happy folks of Alaska evidently don't think much about its meaning, for
+they make a great frolic of it. Everybody is full of fun, and the frosty
+air of the dark winter nights is filled with laughter as men and boys
+and romping girls chase one another here and there in merry excitement.
+
+
+ =IN HAWAII=
+
+The natives of Hawaii say that Santa Claus comes over to the islands in
+a boat. Perhaps he does; it would be a tedious journey for his reindeer
+to make without stopping from San Francisco to Honolulu. At all events,
+he gets there by some means or other, for he would not neglect the
+little folks of those islands away out in the Pacific.
+
+They look for him as eagerly as do the boys and girls in the lands of
+snow and ice, and although it must almost melt him to get around in that
+warm climate with his furs on, he never misses a Christmas.
+
+Before the missionaries and the American settlers went to Hawaii, the
+natives knew nothing about Christmas, but now they all celebrate the
+day, and do it, of course, in the same way as the Americans who live
+there. The main difference between Christmas in Honolulu and Christmas
+in New York is that in Honolulu in December the weather is like June in
+New York. Birds are warbling in the leafy trees; gardens are overflowing
+with roses and carnations; fields and mountain slopes are ablaze with
+color; and a sunny sky smiles dreamily upon the glories of a summer day.
+In the morning people go to church, and during the day there are sports
+and games and merry-making of all sorts. The Christmas dinner is eaten
+out of doors in the shade of the veranda, and everybody is happy and
+contented.
+
+
+ =IN THE PHILIPPINES=
+
+"BUENAS PASQUAS!" This is the hearty greeting that comes to the dweller
+in the Philippines on Christmas morning, and with it, perhaps, an
+offering of flowers.
+
+[Illustration: CHRISTMAS IN THE PHILIPPINES]
+
+The Filipino, like the Porto Rican and all others who have lived under
+Spanish rule, look upon Christmas as a great religious festival, and one
+that requires very special attention. On Christmas eve the churches are
+open, and the coming of the great day is celebrated by a mass at
+midnight; and during all of Christmas day mass is held every hour, so
+that every one may have an opportunity to attend. Even the popular
+Christmas customs among the people are nearly all of a religious
+character, for most of them consist of little plays or dramas founded
+upon the life of the Saviour.
+
+These plays are called _pastures_, and are performed by bands of young
+men and women, and sometimes mere boys and girls, who go about from
+village to village and present their simple little plays to expectant
+audiences at every stopping-place. The visit of the wise men, the flight
+into Egypt--these and many other incidents as related in the Scriptures
+are acted in these _pastores_.
+
+
+
+
+ =New Year's Day=
+
+ _January 1_
+
+
+The custom of celebrating the first day of the year is a very ancient
+one. The exchange of gifts, the paying of calls, the making of good
+resolutions for the new year and feasting often characterize the day.
+The custom of ringing the church bells is of the widest extent.
+
+The old-world custom of sitting up on New Year's eve to see the old year
+out is still very common.
+
+
+ =EXTRACT FROM "SOCIAL LIFE IN THE COLONIES"=
+
+ _The Century Magazine, July 1885_
+
+ BY EDWARD EGGLESTON
+
+New Year's Day was celebrated among the New York Dutch by the calls of
+the gentlemen on their lady friends; it is perhaps the only distinctly
+Dutch custom that afterward came into widespread use in the United
+States. New Year's Day, and the church festivals kept alike by the Dutch
+and English, brought an intermission of labor to the New York slaves,
+who gathered in throngs to devote themselves to wild frolics. The
+Brooklyn fields were crowded with them on New Year's Day, at Easter, at
+Whitsuntide, or "Prixter," as the Dutch called it, and on "San Claus
+Day"--the feast of St. Nicholas.
+
+
+ =A CHINESE NEW YEAR'S IN CALIFORNIA=
+
+ BY H.H.
+
+The Chinese in California have a week of holiday at their New Year's in
+February, just as we do between the twenty-fifth of December and the
+first of January.
+
+In the cities they make a fine display of fire-works. They use barrels
+full of fire-crackers, and the Chinese boys do not fire them off, as the
+American boys do, a cracker at a time; they bring out a large box full,
+or a barrel full, and fire them off package after package, as fast as
+they can.
+
+In Santa Barbara, where I was during the Chinese New Year's of 1882, we
+heard the crackers long before we reached Chinatown. After these stopped
+we went into the houses. Every Chinese family keeps open house on New
+Year's day all day long. They set up a picture or an image of their god
+in some prominent place, and on a table in front of this they put a
+little feast of good things to eat. Some are for an offering to the god
+and some are for their friends who call. Everyone is expected to take
+something.
+
+There was no family so poor that it did not have something set out, and
+some sort of a shrine made for its idol; in some houses it was only a
+coarse wooden box turned up on one end like a cupboard, with two or
+three little teacups full of rice or tea, and one poor candle burning
+before a paper picture of the god pasted or tacked at the back of the
+box.
+
+It was amusing to watch the American boys darting about from shop to
+shop and house to house, coming out with their hands full of queer
+Chinese things to eat, showing them to each other and comparing notes.
+
+"Oh, let me taste that!" one boy would exclaim on seeing some new thing;
+and "Where did you get it? Which house gives that?" Then the whole party
+would race off to make a descent on that house and get some more. I
+thought it wonderfully hospitable on the part of the Chinese people to
+let all these American boys run in and out of their houses in that way,
+and help themselves from the New Year's feast.
+
+Some of the boys were very rude and ill-mannered--little better than
+street beggars; but the Chinese were polite and generous to them all.
+The joss-house, where they held their religious services, was a chamber
+opening out upon an upper balcony. This balcony was hung with lanterns
+and decorated. The door at the foot of the stairs which led to this
+chamber stood open all day, and any one who wished could go up and say
+his prayers in the Chinese fashion, which is a curious fashion indeed.
+They have slender reeds with tight rolls of brown paper fastened at one
+end. In front of the image or picture of their god they set a box or
+vase of ashes, on which a little sandalwood is kept burning. When they
+wish to make a prayer they stick one of the reeds down in these ashes
+and set the paper on fire. They think the smoke of the burning paper
+will carry the prayer up to heaven.
+
+I asked a Chinese man who could speak a little English why they put
+teacups of wine and tea and rice before their god; if they believed that
+the god would eat and drink.
+
+"Oh, no," he said, "that not what for. What you like self, you give god.
+He see. He like see."
+
+
+
+
+ =Lincoln's Birthday=
+
+ _February 12_
+
+ ABRAHAM LINCOLN
+
+ Born February 12, 1809 Died April 15, 1865
+
+Lincoln was the sixteenth President of the United States. He was
+descended from a Quaker family of English origin. He followed various
+occupations, including those of a farm laborer, a salesman, a merchant,
+and a surveyor; was admitted to the bar in 1836 and began the practice
+of law in this year. He was twice elected President, the second time
+receiving 212 out of 233 electoral votes. He was shot by John Wilkes
+Booth at Ford's Theater, Washington, April 14, 1865, and died the
+following day.
+
+
+ =ABRAHAM LINCOLN=
+
+ BY HELEN NICOLAY
+
+Abraham Lincoln was not an ordinary man. He was, in truth, in the
+language of the poet Lowell, a "new birth of our new soil." His
+greatness did not consist in growing up on the frontier. An ordinary man
+would have found on the frontier exactly what he would have found
+elsewhere--a commonplace life, varying only with the changing ideas and
+customs of time and place. But for the man with extraordinary powers of
+mind and body, for one gifted by Nature as Abraham Lincoln was gifted,
+the pioneer life, with its severe training in self-denial, patience, and
+industry, developed his character, and fitted him for the great duties
+of his after life as no other training could have done.
+
+[Illustration: LINCOLN'S HOME AFTER HIS MARRIAGE]
+
+His advancement in the astonishing career that carried him from
+obscurity to world-wide fame--from postmaster of New Salem village to
+President of the United States, from captain of a backwoods volunteer
+company to Commander-in-chief of the army and navy--was neither sudden
+nor accidental nor easy. He was both ambitious and successful, but his
+ambition was moderate, and his success was slow. And, because his
+success was slow, it never outgrew either his judgment or his powers.
+Between the day when he left his father's cabin and launched his canoe
+on the head waters of the Sangamon River to begin life on his own
+account, and the day of his first inauguration, lay full thirty years
+of toil, self-denial, patience; often of effort baffled, of hope
+deferred; sometimes of bitter disappointment. Even with the natural gift
+of great genius, it required an average lifetime and faithful,
+unrelaxing effort to transform the raw country stripling into a fit
+ruler for this great nation.
+
+Almost every success was balanced--sometimes overbalanced--by a seeming
+failure. He went into the Black Hawk war a captain, and through no fault
+of his own came out a private. He rode to the hostile frontier on
+horseback, and trudged home on foot. His store "winked out." His
+surveyor's compass and chain, with which he was earning a scanty living,
+were sold for debt. He was defeated in his first attempts to be
+nominated for the legislature and for Congress; defeated in his
+application to be appointed Commissioner of the General Land Office;
+defeated for the Senate, when he had forty-five votes to begin with, by
+a man who had only five votes to begin with; defeated again after his
+joint debates with Douglas; defeated in the nomination for
+Vice-President, when a favorable nod from half a dozen politicians would
+have brought him success.
+
+Failures? Not so. Every seeming defeat was a slow success. His was the
+growth of the oak, and not of Jonah's gourd. He could not become a
+master workman until he had served a tedious apprenticeship. It was the
+quarter of a century of reading, thinking, speech-making, and law-making
+which fitted him to be the chosen champion in the great Lincoln-Douglas
+debates of 1858. It was the great moral victory won in those debates
+(although the senatorship went to Douglas), added to the title "Honest
+Old Abe," won by truth and manhood among his neighbors during a whole
+lifetime, that led the people of the United States to trust him with the
+duties and powers of President.
+
+[Illustration: HOUSE IN WHICH LINCOLN LIVED WHEN HE WAS ELECTED
+PRESIDENT]
+
+And when, at last, after thirty years of endeavor, success had beaten
+down defeat, when Lincoln had been nominated, elected, and inaugurated,
+came the crowning trial of his faith and constancy. When the people, by
+free and lawful choice, had placed honor and power in his hands, when
+his name could convene Congress, approve laws, cause ships to sail and
+armies to move, there suddenly came upon the government and the nation a
+fatal paralysis. Honor seemed to dwindle and power to vanish. Was he
+then, after all, not to be President? Was patriotism dead? Was the
+Constitution only a bit of waste paper? Was the Union gone?
+
+The outlook was indeed grave. There was treason in Congress, treason in
+the Supreme Court, treason in the army and navy. Confusion and discord
+were everywhere. To use Mr. Lincoln's forcible figure of speech, sinners
+were calling the righteous to repentance. Finally the flag, insulted and
+fired upon, trailed in surrender at Sumter; and then came the
+humiliation of the riot at Baltimore, and the President for a few days
+practically a prisoner in the capital of the nation.
+
+[Illustration: PRESIDENT LINCOLN AND TAD]
+
+But his apprenticeship had been served, and there was to be no more
+failure. With faith and justice and generosity he conducted for four
+long years a war whose frontiers stretched from the Potomac to the Rio
+Grande; whose soldiers numbered a million men on each side. The labor,
+the thought, the responsibility, the strain of mind and anguish of soul
+that he gave to his great task, who can measure? "Here was place for no
+holiday magistrate, no fair-weather sailor," as Emerson justly said of
+him. "The new pilot was hurried to the helm in a tornado. In four
+years--four years of battle days--his endurance, his fertility of
+resources, his magnanimity, were sorely tried and never found wanting."
+"By his courage, his justice, his even temper, ... his humanity, he stood
+a heroic figure in a heroic epoch."
+
+[Illustration: THE LINCOLN MONUMENT AT SPRINGFIELD]
+
+What but a lifetime's schooling in disappointment; what but the
+pioneer's self-reliance and freedom from prejudice; what but the clear
+mind quick to see natural right and unswerving in its purpose to follow
+it; what but the steady self-control, the unwarped sympathy, the
+unbounded charity of this man with spirit so humble and soul so great,
+could have carried him through the labors he wrought to the victory he
+attained?
+
+With truth it could be written, "His heart was as great as the world,
+but there was no room in it to hold the memory of a wrong." So, "with
+malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as
+God gave him to see the right," he lived and died. We, who have never
+seen him, yet feel daily the influence of his kindly life, and cherish
+among our most precious possessions the heritage of his example.
+
+[Illustration: STATUE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. BY AUGUSTUS ST. GAUDENS]
+
+
+ =THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS=
+
+Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this
+continent a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the
+proposition that all men are created equal.
+
+Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or
+any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on
+a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of
+that field as a final resting-place for those who here gave their lives
+that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we
+should do this.
+
+But, in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate--we cannot consecrate--we
+cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled
+here, have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract.
+The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it
+can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather,
+to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here
+have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here
+dedicated to the great task remaining before us--that from these honored
+dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the
+last full measure of devotion; that we here highly resolve that these
+dead shall not have died in vain; that this nation, under God, shall
+have a new birth of freedom; and that government of the people, by the
+people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.
+
+ The above address was delivered by Abraham Lincoln, November 19,
+ 1863, at the dedication of the Gettysburg battle-field as a
+ national cemetery for Union soldiers.
+
+
+ =O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!=
+
+ O captain. My captain. Our fearful trip is done;
+ The ship has weathered 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!
+ Leave you not the little spot,
+ 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;
+ O captain. Dear father.
+ This arm I push beneath you;
+ 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;
+ But the ship, the ship is anchor'd safe, 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 silent tread,
+ Walk the spot the captain lies,
+ Fallen cold and dead.
+
+ WALT WHITMAN.
+
+
+
+
+ =St. Valentine's Day=
+
+ _February 14_
+
+
+Custom decrees that on this day the young shall exchange missives in
+which the love of the sender is told in verses, pictures, and
+sentiments. No reason beyond a guess can be given to connect St.
+Valentine with these customs. He was a Christian martyr, about 270 A.D.,
+while the practice of sending valentines had its origin in the heathen
+worship of Juno. It is Cupid's day, and no boy or girl needs any
+encouragement to make the most of it.
+
+
+ =WHO BEGAN IT?=
+
+ BY OLIVE THORNE
+
+There's one thing we know positively, that St. Valentine didn't begin
+this fourteenth of February excitement; but who _did_ is a question not
+so easy to answer. I don't think any one would have begun it if he could
+have known what the simple customs of his day would have grown into, or
+could even have imagined the frightful valentines that disgrace our
+shops to-day.
+
+It began, for us, with our English ancestors, who used to assemble on
+the eve of St. Valentine's day, put the names of all the young maidens
+promiscuously in a box, and let each bachelor draw one out. The damsel
+whose name fell to his lot became his valentine for the year. He wore
+her name in his bosom or on his sleeve, and it was his duty to attend
+her and protect her. As late as the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
+this custom was very popular, even among the upper classes.
+
+But the wiseacres have traced the custom farther back. Some of them
+think it was begun by the ancient Romans, who had on the fourteenth or
+fifteenth of February a festival in honor of Lupercus, "the destroyer of
+wolves"--a wolf-destroyer being quite worthy of honor in those wild
+days, let me tell you. At this festival it was the custom, among other
+curious things, to pair off the young men and maidens in the same chance
+way, and with the same result of a year's attentions.
+
+Even this is not wholly satisfactory. Who began it among the Romans?
+becomes the next interesting question. One old writer says it was
+brought to Rome from Arcadia sixty years before the Trojan war (which
+Homer wrote about, you know). I'm sure that's far enough back to satisfy
+anybody. The same writer also says that the Pope tried to abolish it in
+the fifth century, but he succeeded only in sending it down to us in the
+name of St. Valentine instead of Lupercus.
+
+[Illustration: FOR THIS WAS ON SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY]
+
+Our own ancestry in England and Scotland have observed some very funny
+customs within the last three centuries. At one time valentines were
+fashionable among the nobility, and, while still selected by lot, it
+became the duty of a gentleman to give to the lady who fell to his lot a
+handsome present. Pieces of jewelry costing thousands of dollars were
+not unusual, though smaller things, as gloves, were more common.
+
+There was a tradition among the country people that every bird chose its
+mate on Valentine's day; and at one time it was the custom for young
+folks to go out before daylight on that morning and try to catch an owl
+and two sparrows in a net. If they succeeded, it was a good omen, and
+entitled them to gifts from the villagers. Another fashion among them
+was to write the valentine, tie it to an apple or orange, and steal up
+to the house of the chosen one in the evening, open the door quietly,
+and throw it in.
+
+Those were the days of charms, and of course the rural maidens had a
+sure and infallible charm foretelling the future husband. On the eve of
+St. Valentine's day, the anxious damsel prepared for sleep by pinning to
+her pillow five bay leaves, one at each corner and one in the middle
+(which must have been delightful to sleep on, by the way). If she
+dreamed of her sweetheart, she was sure to marry him before the end of
+the year.
+
+But to make it a sure thing, the candidate for matrimony must boil an
+egg hard, take out the yolk, and fill its place with salt. Just before
+going to bed, she must eat egg, salt, shell and all, and neither speak
+nor drink after it. If that wouldn't insure her a vivid dream, there
+surely could be no virtue in charms.
+
+Modern valentines, aside from the valuable presents often contained in
+them, are very pretty things, and they are growing prettier every year,
+since large business houses spare neither skill nor money in getting
+them up. The most interesting thing about them, to "grown-ups," is the
+way they are made; and perhaps even you youngsters, who watch eagerly
+for the postman, "sinking beneath the load of delicate embarrassments
+not his own," would like to know how satin and lace and flowers and
+other dainty things grew into a valentine.
+
+It was no fairy's handiwork. It went through the hands of grimy-looking
+workmen before it reached your hands.
+
+To be sure, a dreamy artist may have designed it, but a lithographer,
+with inky fingers, printed the picture part of it; a die-cutter, with
+sleeves rolled up, made a pattern in steel of the lace-work on the edge;
+and a dingy-looking pressman, with a paper hat on, stamped the pattern
+around the picture. Another hard-handed workman rubbed the back of the
+stamped lace with sand-paper till it came in holes and looked like lace,
+and not merely like stamped paper; and a row of girls at a common long
+table put on the colors with stencils, gummed on the hearts and darts
+and cupids and flowers, and otherwise finished the thing exactly like
+the pattern before them.
+
+You see, the sentiment about a valentine doesn't begin until Tom, Dick,
+or Harry takes it from the stationer, and writes your name on it.
+
+[Illustration: ST. VALENTINE'S LETTER-CARRIERS]
+
+
+
+
+ =Washington's Birthday=
+
+ _February 22_
+
+ GEORGE WASHINGTON
+
+ Born February 22, 1732 Died December 14, 1799
+
+
+Washington was the first President of the United States, and the son of
+a Virginia planter. He attended school until about sixteen years of age,
+was engaged in surveying, 1748-51, became an officer in the Continental
+army, and President in 1789. He was re-elected in 1793. He was
+preeminent for his sound judgment and perfect self-control. It is said
+that no act of his public life can be traced to personal caprice,
+ambition, or resentment.
+
+
+ =THE BOYHOOD OF WASHINGTON=
+
+ BY HORACE E. SCUDDER
+
+It was near the shore of the Potomac River, between Pope's Creek and
+Bridge's Creek, that Augustine Washington lived when his son George was
+born. The land had been in the family ever since Augustine's
+grandfather, John Washington, had bought it, when he came over from
+England in 1657. John Washington was a soldier and a public-spirited
+man, and so the parish in which he lived--for Virginia was divided into
+parishes as some other colonies into townships--was named Washington. It
+is a quiet neighborhood; not a sign remains of the old house, and the
+only mark of the place is a stone slab, broken and overgrown with weeds
+and brambles, which lies on a bed of bricks taken from the remnants of
+the old chimney of the house. It bears the inscription:
+
+ Here
+The 11th of February, 1732 (old style)
+ George Washington
+ was born
+
+[Illustration: SLAB THAT MARKS THE LOCATION OF THE HOUSE WHERE
+WASHINGTON WAS BORN]
+
+The English had lately agreed to use the calendar of Pope Gregory, which
+added eleven days to the reckoning, but people still used the old style
+as well as the new. By the new style, the birthday was February 22, and
+that is the day which is now observed. The family into which the child
+was born consisted of the father and mother, Augustine and Mary
+Washington, and two boys, Lawrence and Augustine. These were sons of
+Augustine Washington and a former wife who had died four years before.
+George Washington was the eldest of the children of Augustine and Mary
+Washington; he had afterward three brothers and two sisters, but one of
+the sisters died in infancy.
+
+It was not long after George Washington's birth that the house in which
+he was born was burned, and as his father was at the time especially
+interested in some iron-works at a distance, it was determined not to
+rebuild upon the lonely place. Accordingly Augustine Washington removed
+his family to a place which he owned in Stafford County, on the banks of
+the Rappahannock River opposite Fredericksburg. The house is not now
+standing, but a picture was made of it before it was destroyed. It was,
+like many Virginia houses of the day, divided into four rooms on a
+floor, and had great outside chimneys at either end.
+
+Here George Washington spent his childhood. He learned to read, write,
+and cipher at a small school kept by Hobby, the sexton of the parish
+church. Among his playmates was Richard Henry Lee, who was afterward a
+famous Virginian. When the boys grew up, they wrote to each other of
+grave matters of war and state, but here is the beginning of their
+correspondence, written when they were nine years old.
+
+ "RICHARD HENRY LEE TO GEORGE WASHINGTON:
+
+ "Pa brought me two pretty books full of pictures he got them in
+ Alexandria they have pictures of dogs and cats and tigers and
+ elefants and ever so many pretty things cousin bids me send you one
+ of them it has a picture of an elefant and a little Indian boy on
+ his back like uncle jo's sam pa says if I learn my tasks good he
+ will let uncle jo bring me to see you will you ask your ma to let
+ you come to see me.
+
+ "RICHARD HENRY LEE."
+
+
+ "GEORGE WASHINGTON TO RICHARD HENRY LEE:
+
+ "DEAR DICKEY I thank you very much for the pretty picture book you
+ gave me. Sam asked me to show him the pictures and I showed him all
+ the pictures in it; and I read to him how the tame elephant took
+ care of the master's little boy, and put him on his back and would
+ not let anybody touch his master's little son. I can read three or
+ four pages sometimes without missing a word. Ma says I may go to
+ see you, and stay all day with you next week if it be not rainy.
+ She says I may ride my pony Hero if Uncle Ben will go with me and
+ lead Hero. I have a little piece of poetry about the picture book
+ you gave me, but I mustn't tell you who wrote the poetry.
+
+ "'G.W.'s compliments to R.H.L.,
+ And likes his book full well,
+ Henceforth will count him his friend,
+ And hopes many happy days he may spend.'
+
+ "Your good friend,
+ "GEORGE WASHINGTON.
+
+ "I am going to get a whip top soon, and you may see it and whip
+ it."[1]
+
+It looks very much as if Richard Henry sent his letter off just as it
+was written. I suspect that his correspondent's letter was looked over,
+corrected, and copied before it was sent. Very possibly Augustine
+Washington was absent at the time on one of his journeys; but at any
+rate the boy owed most of his training to his mother, for only two years
+after this, his father died, and he was left to his mother's care.
+
+[Illustration: MONUMENT ON THE SITE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON'S BIRTHPLACE]
+
+She was a woman born to command, and since she was left alone with a
+family and an estate to care for, she took the reins into her own hands,
+and never gave them up to any one else. She used to drive about
+in an old-fashioned open chaise, visiting the various parts of her farm,
+just as a planter would do on horseback. The story is told that she had
+given an agent directions how to do a piece of work, and he had seen fit
+to do it differently, because he thought his way a better one. He showed
+her the improvement.
+
+"And pray," said the lady, "who gave you any exercise of judgment in the
+matter? I command you, sir; there is nothing left for you but to obey."
+
+In those days, more than now, a boy used very formal language when
+addressing his mother. He might love her warmly, but he was expected to
+treat her with a great show of respect. When Washington wrote to his
+mother, even after he was of age, he began his letter, "Honored Madam,"
+and signed it, "Your dutiful son." This was a part of the manners of the
+time. It was like the stiff dress which men wore when they paid their
+respects to others; it was put on for the occasion, and one would have
+been thought very unmannerly who did not make a marked difference
+between his every-day dress and that which he wore when he went into the
+presence of his betters. So Washington, when he wrote to his mother,
+would not say, "Dear Mother."
+
+Such habits as this go deeper than mere forms of speech. I do not
+suppose that the sons of this lady feared her, but they stood in awe of
+her, which is quite a different thing.
+
+"We were all as mute as mice, when in her presence," says one of
+Washington's companions; and common report makes her to have been very
+much such a woman as her son afterward was a man.
+
+I think that George Washington owed two strong traits to his mother,--a
+governing spirit, and a spirit of order and method. She taught him many
+lessons and gave him many rules; but, after all, it was her character
+shaping his which was most powerful. She taught him to be truthful, but
+her lessons were not half so forcible as her own truthfulness.
+
+There is a story told of George Washington's boyhood--unfortunately
+there are not many stories--which is to the point. His father had taken
+a great deal of pride in his blooded horses, and his mother afterward
+took great pains to keep the stock pure. She had several young horses
+that had not yet been broken, and one of them in particular, a sorrel,
+was extremely spirited. No one had been able to do anything with it, and
+it was pronounced thoroughly vicious, as people are apt to pronounce
+horses which they have not learned to master. George was determined to
+ride this colt, and told his companions that if they would help him
+catch it, he would ride and tame it.
+
+[Illustration: OLD WHITE CHAPEL, LANCASTER COUNTY, VIRGINIA, WHERE
+WASHINGTON AND HIS MOTHER ATTENDED SERVICE]
+
+Early in the morning they set out for the pasture, where the boys
+managed to surround the sorrel and then to put a bit into its mouth.
+Washington sprang on its back, the boys dropped the bridle, and away
+flew the angry animal. Its rider at once began to command; the horse
+resisted, backing about the field, rearing and plunging. The boys became
+thoroughly alarmed, but Washington kept his seat, never once losing his
+self-control or his mastery of the colt. The struggle was a sharp one;
+when suddenly, as if determined to rid itself of its rider, the creature
+leaped into the air with a tremendous bound. It was its last. The
+violence burst a blood-vessel, and the noble horse fell dead.
+
+Before the boys could sufficiently recover to consider how they should
+extricate themselves from the scrape, they were called to breakfast; and
+the mistress of the house, knowing that they had been in the fields,
+began to ask after her stock.
+
+"Pray, young gentlemen," said she, "have you seen my blooded colts in
+your rambles? I hope they are well taken care of. My favorite, I am
+told, is as large as his sire."
+
+The boys looked at one another, and no one liked to speak. Of course the
+mother repeated her question.
+
+"The sorrel is dead, madam," said her son. "I killed him!"
+
+And then he told the whole story. They say that his mother flushed with
+anger, as her son often used to, and then, like him, controlled herself,
+and presently said, quietly:
+
+"It is well; but while I regret the loss of my favorite, I rejoice in
+my son who always speaks the truth."
+
+The story of Washington's killing the blooded colt is of a piece with
+other stories less particular, which show that he was a very athletic
+fellow. Of course, when a boy becomes famous, every one likes to
+remember the wonderful things he did before he was famous, and
+Washington's playmates, when they grew up, used to show the spot by the
+Rappahannock near Fredericksburg where he stood and threw a stone to the
+opposite bank; and at the celebrated Natural Bridge, the arch of which
+is two hundred feet above the ground, they always tell the visitor that
+George Washington threw a stone in the air the whole height. He
+undoubtedly took part in all the sports which were the favorites of his
+country at that time--he pitched heavy bars, tossed quoits, ran, leaped,
+and wrestled; for he was a powerful, large-limbed young fellow, and he
+had a very large and strong hand.
+
+(From "Life of George Washington" by Horace E. Scudder, published by
+Houghton, Mifflin & Co.)
+
+(The illustrations in this story are copied from the original pictures in
+Mr. B.J. Lossing's "Mt. Vernon and its Associations," by permission of
+Messrs. J.C. Yorston & Co., Cincinnati, Ohio.)
+
+[Footnote 1: From B.J. Lossing's "The Home of Washington."]
+
+
+
+
+ =Longfellow's Birthday=
+
+ _February 27_
+
+ HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW
+
+ Born February 27, 1807 Died March 24, 1882
+
+
+Longfellow graduated at Bowdoin College in 1825; traveled in Europe in
+1826; was professor at Bowdoin in 1829-35; again visited Europe 1835-36;
+and was professor at Harvard College 1836-54. He continued to reside at
+Cambridge. He is best known and loved for his poems, though he wrote
+three novels.
+
+
+ =LONGFELLOW AND THE CHILDREN=
+
+ BY LUCY LARCOM
+
+The poets who love children are the poets whom children love. It is
+natural that they should care much for each other, because both children
+and poets look into things in the same way,--simply, with open eyes and
+hearts, seeing Nature as it is, and finding whatever is lovable and pure
+in the people who surround them, as flowers may receive back from
+flowers sweet odors for those which they have given. The little child is
+born with a poet's heart in him, and the poet has been fitly called "the
+eternal child."
+
+Not that all children or all poets are alike in this. But of Longfellow
+we think as of one who has always been fresh and natural in his sympathy
+for children, one who has loved them as they have loved him.
+
+We wish he had given us more of the memories of his own childhood. One
+vivid picture of it comes to us in "My Lost Youth," a poem which shows
+us how everything he saw when a child must have left within him a
+life-long impression. That boyhood by the sea must have been full of
+dreams as well as of pictures. The beautiful bay with its green islands,
+widening out to the Atlantic on the east, and the dim chain of
+mountains, the highest in New England, lying far away on the
+northwestern horizon, give his native city a roomy feeling not often
+experienced in the streets of a town; and the boy-poet must have felt
+his imagination taking wings there, for many a long flight. So he more
+than hints to us in his song:
+
+ "I can see the shadowy lines of its trees,
+ And catch, in sudden gleams,
+ The sheen of the far-surrounding seas,
+ And islands that were the Hesperides
+ Of all my boyish dreams.
+ And the burden of that old song,
+ It murmurs and whispers still:
+ 'A boy's will is the wind's will,
+ And the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts.'
+
+ "I remember the black wharves and the slips,
+ And the sea-tides tossing free;
+ And Spanish sailors with bearded lips,
+ And the beauty and mystery of the ships,
+ And the magic of the sea.
+ And the voice of that wayward song
+ Is singing and saying still:
+ 'A boy's will is the wind's will,
+ And the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts.'"
+
+Longfellow's earliest volume, "The Voices of the Night," was one of the
+few books of American poetry that some of us who are now growing old
+ourselves can remember reading, just as we were emerging from childhood.
+"The Reaper and the Flowers" and the "Psalm of Life,"--I recall the
+delight with which I used to repeat those poems. The latter, so full of
+suggestions which a very young person could feel, but only half
+understand, was for that very reason the more fascinating. It seemed to
+give glimpses, through opening doors, of that wonderful new world of
+mankind, where children are always longing to wander freely as men and
+women. Looking forward and aspiring are among the first occupations of
+an imaginative child; and the school-boy who declaimed the words:
+
+ "Lives of great men all remind us
+ We can make our lives sublime,"
+
+and the school-girl who read them quietly by herself, felt them,
+perhaps, no less keenly than the man of thought and experience.
+
+Longfellow has said that--
+
+ "Sublimity always is simple
+ Both in sermon and song, a child can seize on its meaning,"
+
+and the simplicity of his poetry is the reason why children and young
+people have always loved it; the reason, also, why it has been enjoyed
+by men and women and children all over the world.
+
+One of his poems which has been the delight of children and grown people
+alike is the "Village Blacksmith," the first half of which is a
+description that many a boy might feel as if he could have written
+himself--if he only had the poet's command of words and rhymes, and the
+poet's genius! Is not this one of the proofs of a good poem, that it
+haunts us until it seems as if it had almost grown out of our own mind?
+How life-like the picture is!--
+
+ "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."
+
+No wonder the Cambridge children, when the old chestnut-tree that
+overhung the smithy was cut down, had a memento shaped into a chair
+from its boughs, to present to him who had made it an immortal tree in
+his verse! It bore flower and fruit for them a second time in his
+acknowledgment of the gift; for he told them how--
+
+ "There, by the blacksmith's forge, beside the street
+ Its blossoms, white and sweet,
+ Enticed the bees, until it seemed alive,
+ And murmured like a hive.
+
+ "And when the wind of autumn, with a shout
+ Tossed its great arms about,
+ The shining chestnuts, bursting from the sheath,
+ Dropped to the ground beneath."
+
+In its own wild, winsome way, the song of "Hiawatha's Childhood" is one
+of the prettiest fancies in poetry. It is a dream of babyhood in the
+"forest primeval," with Nature for nurse and teacher; and it makes us
+feel as if--were the poet's idea only a possibility--it might have been
+very pleasant to be a savage baby, although we consider it so much
+better to be civilized.
+
+How Longfellow loved the very little ones can be seen in such verses as
+the "Hanging of the Crane," and in those earlier lines "To a Child,"
+where the baby on his mother's knee gazes at the painted tiles, shakes
+his "coral rattle with the silver bells," or escapes through the open
+door into the old halls where once
+
+ "The Father of his country dwelt."
+
+Those verses give us a charming glimpse of the home-life in the historic
+mansion which is now so rich with poetic, as well as patriotic
+associations.
+
+How beautiful it was to be let in to that twilight library scene
+described in the "Children's Hour":
+
+ "A sudden rush from the stair-way,
+ A sudden raid from the hall!
+ By three doors left unguarded,
+ They enter my castle wall!
+
+ "They climb up into my turret,
+ O'er the arms and back of my chair;
+ If I try to escape, they surround me;
+ They seem to be everywhere."
+
+Afterward, when sorrow and loss had come to the happy home, in the
+sudden removal of the mother of those merry children, the father who
+loved them so had a sadder song for them, as he looked onward into their
+orphaned lives:
+
+ "O little feet, that such long years
+ Must wander on, through hopes and fears,
+ Must ache and bleed beneath your load,
+ I, nearer to the wayside inn,
+ Where toil shall cease, and rest begin,
+ Am weary, thinking of your road!"
+
+[Illustration: LONGFELLOW'S HOUSE--ONCE WASHINGTON'S HEADQUARTERS AT
+CAMBRIDGE]
+
+Longfellow loved all children, and had a word for them whenever he met
+them.
+
+At a concert, going early with her father, a little girl espied Mr.
+Longfellow sitting alone, and begged that she might go and speak to him.
+Her father, himself a stranger, took the liberty of introducing his
+little daughter Edith to the poet.
+
+"Edith?" said Mr. Longfellow, tenderly. "Ah! I have an Edith, too; but
+_my_ baby Edith is twenty years old." And he seated the child beside
+him, taking her hand in his, and making her promise to come and see him
+at his house in Cambridge.
+
+"What is the name of your sled, my boy?" he said to a small lad, who
+came tugging one up the road toward him, on a winter morning.
+
+"It's 'Evange_line_.' Mr. Longfellow wrote 'Evange_line_.' Did you ever
+see Mr. Longfellow?" answered the little fellow, as he ran by, doubtless
+wondering at the smile on the face of the pleasant gray-haired
+gentleman.
+
+Professor Monti, who witnessed the pretty scene, tells the story of a
+little girl who one Christmas inquired the way to the poet's house, and
+asked if she could just step inside the yard; and he relates how Mr.
+Longfellow, being told she was there, went to the door and called her
+in, and showed her the "old clock on the stairs," and many other
+interesting things about the house, leaving his little guest with
+beautiful memories of that Christmas day to carry all through her life.
+This was characteristic of the poet's hospitality, delicate and
+courteous and thoughtful to all who crossed his threshold. Many a
+trembling young girl, frightened at her own boldness in having ventured
+into his presence, was set at ease by her host in the most genial way;
+he would make her forget herself in the interesting mementos all about
+her, devoting himself to her entertainment as if it were the one
+pleasure of the hour for him to do so.
+
+[Illustration: Henry W. Longfellow]
+
+It is often said, and with reason, that we Americans do not think enough
+of manners--that politeness of behavior which comes from genuine
+sympathy and a delicate perception of others' feelings. Certainly our
+young people might look to Mr. Longfellow as a model in this respect. He
+was a perfect gentleman, in the best sense of that term, always
+considerate, and quick to see where he might do a kindness, or say a
+pleasant word.
+
+The celebration of Longfellow's seventy-fifth birthday by
+school-children all over the country is something that those children
+must be glad to think of now--glad to remember that the poet knew how
+much they cared for him and for what he had written. Even the blind
+children, who have to read with their fingers, were enjoying his songs
+with the rest. How pleasant that must have been to him! Certainly, as it
+seems to me, the best tribute that the young people of the country can
+pay to his memory is to become more familiar with his poems.
+
+We should not wait until a great and good man has left us before giving
+him honor, or trying to understand what he has done for us. A dreary
+world ours would be, if there were no poets' songs echoing through it;
+and we may be proud of our country that it has a poetry of its own,
+which it is for us to know and possess for ourselves.
+
+Longfellow has said:
+
+ "What the leaves are to the forest
+ With light and air and food,
+ Ere their sweet and tender juices
+ Have been hardened into wood,
+ That to the world, are children":
+
+and something like this we may say of his songs. There is in all true
+poetry a freshness of life which makes the writer of it immortal.
+
+The singer so much beloved has passed from sight, but the music of his
+voice is in the air, and, listening to it, we know that he can not die.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ =Inauguration Day=
+
+ _March 4_
+
+
+The date was settled by the old Congress of the Confederation in 1788,
+when the procedure was established for the election of a President. It
+was decreed that the Electoral College should meet on the first
+Wednesday of January, the votes be counted by the House of
+Representatives on the first Wednesday of February, and the President be
+inaugurated on the first Wednesday of March. This March date was the
+4th. March 4 has been Inauguration Day ever since.
+
+
+ =HOW A PRESIDENT IS INAUGURATED=
+
+ BY CLIFFORD HOWARD
+
+As you will remember, Thomas Jefferson was the first President of our
+country to be inaugurated at Washington. This took place in the year
+1801, when our national capital was not much more than a year old; and
+you may imagine that the city was a very different-looking place from
+what it is to-day.
+
+But now instead of a straggling town with a few muddy streets and about
+three thousand inhabitants, Jefferson would find our national capital
+one of the most beautiful cities on the face of the earth, with a
+population of nearly three hundred thousand; and on March 4 he would
+behold a scene such as he never dreamed of. Thousands of flags fly from
+the house-tops and windows, bright-colored bunting in beautiful designs
+adorns the great public buildings, all the stores and business houses
+are gaily decorated with flags and streamers, and everything presents
+the appearance of a great and glorious holiday, while the streets swarm
+with the hundreds of thousands of people who have come to the city from
+all parts of the country to take part in the grand celebration.
+
+Everybody is moving toward Pennsylvania Avenue, where the parade is to
+march. No, not everybody: some fifty or sixty thousand make their way to
+the Capitol, so as to get a glimpse of the inauguration exercises that
+take place on the east portico; and although the ceremonies will not
+begin until nearly one o'clock, the great space in front of the Capitol
+is packed with people three hours before that time, some of them having
+come as early as eight o'clock in the morning to be sure of getting a
+good view.
+
+Early in the morning Pennsylvania Avenue is cleared of all street-cars,
+carriages, and bicycles, and no one is allowed to step off the sidewalk.
+A strong wire rope is stretched along each side of the avenue, so as to
+prevent people from getting into the street.
+
+Soon every window and balcony along the line is crowded with spectators.
+Even the roofs are black with people, and small boys may be seen
+perched among the branches of the trees, or hanging on to the
+electric-light poles. For a distance of nearly three miles, on each side
+of the street, people are packed so closely together that it is almost
+impossible for them to move. In every park and open space along the line
+large wooden stands have been erected; and these, too, are filled with
+those who are willing to pay for seats.
+
+As the time for the morning parade draws near, the crowds become
+restless with eagerness and excitement. Policemen on horseback dash up
+and down the avenue to see that the road is clear, and every now and
+then a trooper or messenger in bright uniform gallops past. Suddenly the
+boom of a cannon is heard. The next moment there comes the distant roll
+of drums, and then, amid the inspiring music of brass bands and
+tremendous cheering, the procession appears moving slowly down the
+avenue on its way to the Capitol. Riding ahead is a squad of mounted
+police--big, brawny fellows, with glittering brass buttons. After them
+come the United States troops and naval forces, armed with their rifles
+and sabers that flash in the sunlight, and marching to the music of the
+famous Marine Band, while rumbling over the hard, smooth pavement of
+the avenue come the big cannons drawn by powerful horses. Then appears
+the chief marshal of the parade on his spirited horse, heading the
+body-guard of soldiers that surround the open carriage containing the
+President and the President-elect, sitting side by side. As the
+carriage, which is drawn by four handsome horses, rolls slowly along
+with its distinguished occupants, men and boys shout and cheer at the
+top of their lungs, and throw their hats into the air when their voices
+give out, while the women and girls wave their handkerchiefs and hurrah
+with the rest of the crowd. With hat in hand, the President-elect smiles
+and bows to the right and the left; and with the bands playing and
+people cheering, handkerchiefs fluttering and flags flying, he arrives
+at the Capitol a few minutes before noon. Here he meets with another
+rousing reception from the great mass of people who have been waiting
+for him for two or three hours; and it requires all the efforts of a
+small army of police to open the way for him and his party to pass into
+the Capitol.
+
+[Illustration: GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON ON THE WAY TO HIS INAUGURATION]
+
+The House of Representatives is about to adjourn, and many of its
+members have already come over to the Senate to witness the closing
+exercises there. Extra chairs and seats have been brought in for them
+and the many other prominent officials who also have gathered there,
+including the officers of the army and the navy, the justices of the
+Supreme Court, the cabinet officers, and the foreign ambassadors and
+ministers, many of whom are dressed in their gorgeous state robes.
+According to law, Congress must come to an end at noon; but if the
+presidential party has not made its appearance when the Senate clock is
+about to point to twelve, the hands are moved back a few minutes so as
+to gain time. And before the hands are allowed to get around to twelve,
+everybody has arrived, everything is in readiness, and the President of
+the Senate has administered the oath of office to his successor, the new
+Vice-President of the United States, who at once calls an extra session
+of the Senate, so that not a moment elapses between the death of one
+session and the birth of another. Then, after a short prayer by the
+chaplain and a brief address by the Vice-President, the distinguished
+people gathered in the Senate form in line, and, headed by a company of
+newspaper reporters, they march in dignified procession to the rotunda,
+and thence to the platform on the east front of the Capitol.
+
+The nine justices of the Supreme Court, clothed in their black robes,
+walk out on the platform first, followed by the President-elect. As soon
+as the crowd catches sight of him, a deafening shout breaks forth from
+fifty thousand throats, and, amid the enthusiastic uproar that lasts
+several minutes, hats and canes, umbrellas and handkerchiefs, are waved
+aloft or thrown wildly into the air by joyous and patriotic Americans.
+Removing his hat, the President-elect comes forward, and, turning to the
+Chief Justice of the United States, takes the oath of office as required
+by the Constitution. Then comes the inaugural address, which, of course,
+only those near the platform are able to hear. But the thirty or forty
+thousand who can't hear the speech are willing to agree with everything
+that is said, and every little while they shout and cheer and applaud.
+
+[Illustration: THE INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT GARFIELD]
+
+All this time the crowd on the avenue has been patiently waiting for the
+return of the President. The morning's procession was nothing more than
+a military escort; now is to come the great feature of the day--the
+grand inauguration parade. The ceremonies at the Capitol are over at
+half-past one, and the new President goes at once to the White House,
+greeted with rousing cheers all along the way, and prepares to review
+the greatest parade ever seen in the city of Washington. All the
+morning, companies of soldiers, political clubs, bands, and drum corps
+have been preparing for the afternoon's march. There are so many
+thousands who are going to take part in the parade that orders have been
+given requiring all companies to march in ranks reaching from curb to
+curb, a distance of one hundred and thirty feet, and to follow one
+another as closely as possible.
+
+The march is begun a little before two o'clock; and, although the people
+have been standing on the sidewalks since early morning, they have
+plenty of enthusiasm left, and they fill the air with their shouts and
+hurrahs as regiment after regiment of magnificently drilled soldiers and
+horses marches by.
+
+Even after the electric lamps are lighted, men and horses are still
+tramping along the avenue, and people are still shouting and the bands
+playing and flags waving. And all this time the President stands in
+front of the White House, reviewing the marching thousands as they pass
+along.
+
+But although the big parade finally comes to an end, the festivities are
+not yet over. Late into the night the city is brilliantly illuminated
+by magnificent and wonderful fireworks and powerful electric
+search-lights that shine from the tops of the tall buildings and light
+up the great dome of the Capitol and the Washington monument. Then comes
+the grand inaugural ball. There are over ten thousand people present,
+and the scene is a glorious and wonderful sight.
+
+It is almost sunrise when the last carriage rolls away, and with the
+closing of the ball the inauguration festivities end.
+
+
+
+
+ =Easter Day=
+
+
+Easter is the Sunday that follows the 14th day of the calendar moon,
+which falls upon or next after the 21st of March. This Sunday, when
+Christian churches celebrate the resurrection of Christ, is one of
+solemn rejoicing. Coming after the self-denials of Lent and at the
+beginning of spring, it seems naturally a time of hope and new life. It
+is the feast of flowers, particularly of lilies, and the name had its
+origin in a festival in honor of the goddess of spring. The esteem in
+which it is held is indicated by its ancient title, "The great day."
+
+
+ =A SONG OF EASTER=
+
+ BY CELIA THAXTER
+
+ Sing, children, sing!
+ And the lily censers swing;
+ Sing that life and joy are waking and that Death no more is king.
+ Sing the happy, happy tumult of the slowly brightening Spring;
+ Sing, little children, sing!
+
+ Sing, children, sing!
+ Winter wild has taken wing.
+ Fill the air with the sweet tidings till the frosty echoes ring!
+ Along the eaves the icicles no longer glittering cling;
+ And the crocus in the garden lifts its bright face to the sun,
+ And in the meadows softly the brooks begin to run;
+ And the golden catkins swing
+ In the warm airs of the Spring;
+ Sing, little children, sing!
+
+ Sing, children, sing!
+ The lilies white you bring
+ In the joyous Easter morning for hope are blossoming;
+ And as the earth her shroud of snow from off her breast doth fling,
+ So may we cast our fetters off in God's eternal Spring.
+ So may we find release at last from sorrow and from pain,
+ So may we find our childhood's calm, delicious dawn again.
+ Sweet are your eyes, O little ones, that look with smiling grace,
+ Without a shade of doubt or fear into the Future's face!
+ Sing, sing in happy chorus, with joyful voices tell
+ That death is life, and God is good, and all things shall be well;
+ That bitter days shall cease
+ In warmth and light and peace,--
+ That Winter yields to Spring,--
+ Sing, little children, sing!
+
+[Illustration: "HE SAT DOWN ON THE STEP, BREATHLESS WITH SURPRISE AND
+JOY"]
+
+
+ =THE GENERAL'S EASTER BOX=
+
+ BY TEMPLE BAILEY
+
+The General did not look at all as one would expect a general to look.
+He was short and thick-set and had a red face and a white mustache, and
+he usually dressed in a gray tweed suit, with a funny Norfolk jacket
+with a belt, and wore a soft cap pulled down almost to his eye-glasses.
+
+And he always did his own marketing.
+
+That is how he came to know Jimmy.
+
+Jimmy stood at a corner of Old Market and sold little bundles of dried
+sage and sweet marjoram, and sassafras and cinnamon, and soup-bunches
+made of bits of vegetables tied together--a bit of parsley and a bit of
+celery and a bit of carrot and a sprig of summer savory, all for one
+cent. Then at Christmas-time he displayed wreaths, which he and his
+little mother made at home, and as the spring came on he brought wild
+flowers that he picked in the woods.
+
+And that was how he came to know the General.
+
+For one morning, just before Easter, the General came puffing down the
+outside aisle of Old Market, with his colored man behind him with an
+enormous basket. The General's carriage was drawn up to the curbstone,
+and the gray horses were dancing little fancy dances over the asphalt
+street, when all at once Jimmy thrust a bunch of arbutus under the
+General's very nose.
+
+"Go away, go away," said the General, and trotted down to the carriage
+door, which a footman held open for him.
+
+But a whiff of fragrance had reached him, and he stopped.
+
+"How much?" he asked.
+
+"Three cents," said Jimmy, in a hoarse voice.
+
+The General looked at the little fellow through his eye-glasses.
+
+"Got a cold?" he inquired gruffly.
+
+"Yes, sir," croaked Jimmy.
+
+"Why don't you stay in the house, then?" growled the General.
+
+"Can't, sir," said Jimmy, cheerfully; "business is business."
+
+The General looked at the little stand where "business" was
+transacted--at the little rows of dried stuffs, at the small basket of
+flowers, and at the soup-bunches.
+
+"Humph," he said.
+
+Then his hand went down into his pocket, and he pulled out a lot of
+change. After that he chose two bunches of sweet, pinky blossoms.
+
+"Two for five, sir," said Jimmy.
+
+"Hum," said the General. "You might give me some parsley and a
+soup-bunch."
+
+Jimmy wrapped up the green stuff carefully and dropped it into the
+basket carried by the colored man.
+
+"Nine cents, sir," he said; and the General handed him a dime and then
+moved to the next stall, holding the flowers close to his nose.
+
+"You forgot your change," cried Jimmy, and rushed after him with the one
+cent.
+
+"Keep--" But one look at the honest little face and he changed his
+sentence.
+
+"Thank you, young man," he said, and away he drove.
+
+After that Jimmy looked for the General, and the General for Jimmy.
+Their transactions were always carried on in a strictly business manner,
+although, to be sure, the General's modest family of two did not
+require the unlimited sage and sweet marjoram that were ordered from
+time to time.
+
+On the Saturday before Easter the little stand was gay with new wares.
+In little nests of dried grasses lay eggs--Easter eggs, bright pink and
+blue and purple and mottled. Jimmy had invested in a dozen at forty
+cents the dozen, and he had hopes of doubling the money, for work surely
+counted for something, and he and the Little Mother had dyed them.
+
+But somehow people passed them by. Inside of the market there were finer
+nests, and eggs gilded and lettered, and Jimmy began to feel that his
+own precious eggs were very dull indeed.
+
+But when the General appeared around the corner, the boy's spirits rose.
+Here, at any rate, was a good customer.
+
+The General, however, was in a temper. There had been an argument with
+the fish-man which had left him red in the face and very touchy. So he
+bought two bunches of arbutus and nothing else.
+
+"Any eggs, sir?" asked Jimmy.
+
+"Eggs?" said the General, looking over the little stand.
+
+"Easter eggs," explained Jimmy.
+
+"I've no use for such things," said the General.
+
+"Oh!" said Jimmy, and in spite of himself his voice trembled. When one
+is the man of the family, and the Little Mother is sewing for dear life,
+and her work and the little stand in the market are all that pay the
+rent and buy food, it is sometimes hard to be brave. But the General did
+not notice the tremble.
+
+Jimmy tried again:
+
+"Any children, sir? Children always like Easter eggs, you know."
+
+"No," said the General; "no one but a son in the Philippines--a son some
+six feet two in his stockings."
+
+"Any grandchildren, sir?" hopefully.
+
+"Bless my soul," said the General, testily, "what a lot of questions!"
+And he hurried off to his carriage.
+
+Jimmy felt very forlorn. The General had been his last hope. The eggs
+were a dead loss.
+
+At last it came time to close up, and he piled all of his wares in a
+basket. Then he took out a little broom and began to sweep in an orderly
+way around his little stall. He had a battered old dustpan, and as he
+carried it out to the street to empty it, he saw a stiff greenish-gray
+paper sticking out of the dirt. Nothing in the world ever looks exactly
+like that but an American greenback, and, sure enough, when Jimmy pulled
+it out it proved to be a ten-dollar bill.
+
+Jimmy sat down on the curb suddenly. His money always came in pennies
+and nickels and dimes and quarters. The Little Mother sometimes earned a
+dollar at a time, but never in his whole life had Jimmy possessed a
+ten-dollar bill.
+
+Think of the possibilities to a little, poor, cold, worried boy. There
+was two months' rent in that ten-dollar bill--two months in which he
+would not have to worry over whether there would be a roof over their
+heads.
+
+Then there was a basket stall in that ten-dollar bill. That had always
+been his ambition. Some one had told him that baskets sold well in other
+cities, and not a single person had opened a basket stall in Old Market,
+and that was Jimmy's chance. Once established, he knew he could earn a
+good living.
+
+As for ten dollars' worth of groceries and provisions, Jimmy's mind
+could not grasp such a thing; fifty cents had always been the top limit
+for a grocery bill.
+
+But--it wasn't Jimmy's ten dollars. Like a flash his dreams tumbled to
+the ground. There had been many people coming and going through Old
+Market, but Jimmy knew that the bill was the General's. For the old
+gentleman had pulled out a roll when he reached for the five cents. Yes,
+it was the General's; but how to find the General?
+
+Inside the market he found the General's butcher. Yes, the butcher knew
+the General's address, for he was one of his best customers, and would
+keep Jimmy's basket while the boy went to the house.
+
+It was a long distance. Jimmy passed rows of great stone mansions, and
+went through parks, where crocuses and hyacinths were just peeping out.
+
+At last he came to the General's.
+
+A colored man answered the ring of the bell.
+
+"Who shall I say?" he inquired loftily. "The General is very busy,
+y'know."
+
+"Say Jimmy, from the market, please"; and Jimmy sat down on the great
+hall seat, feeling very much awed with all the magnificence.
+
+"Well, well," said the General, as he came puffing down the stairs.
+"Well, well, and what do you want?"
+
+"Please, sir, did you drop this?" and Jimmy held out the tightly rolled
+bill.
+
+"Did I? Well, now, I'm sure I don't know. Perhaps I did, perhaps I did."
+
+"I found it in front of my stall," said Jimmy.
+
+What a strange thing it seemed that the General should not know! Jimmy
+would have known if he had lost a penny. He began to feel that the
+General could not have a true idea of _business_.
+
+The General took out a roll of bills. "Let me see," he said. "Here's my
+market list. Yes, I guess that's mine, sure enough."
+
+"I'm glad I noticed it," said Jimmy, simply. "I came near sweeping it
+into the street."
+
+"And what can I pay you for your trouble?" asked the General, looking at
+the boy keenly.
+
+"Well," said Jimmy, stoutly, "you see, business is business, and I had
+to take my time, and I'd like to get back as soon as I can."
+
+The General frowned. He was afraid he was going to be disappointed in
+this boy.
+
+"And so," went on Jimmy, "if you would give me a nickel for car-fare, I
+think we might call it square."
+
+[Illustration: "THEN THE GENERAL, WITH KNIFE UPRAISED, STOPPED IN HIS
+CARVING OF THE COLD ROAST CHICKEN, AND TURNED TO JIMMY"]
+
+The General fumbled around for his eye-glasses, put them on, and looked
+at Jimmy in astonishment.
+
+"A nickel?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, sir"; Jimmy blushed. "You know I ought to get back."
+
+"Well, well," said the General. The boy had certainly the instincts of a
+gentleman. Not a single plea of poverty, and yet one could see that he
+was poor, very poor.
+
+Just then a gong struck softly somewhere. "I'm not going to let you go
+until you have a bit of lunch with us," said the General. "I have told
+my wife of Jimmy of the market, and now I want you to meet her."
+
+So Jimmy went down into a wonderful dining-room, where the silver and
+the cut glass shone, and where at the farther side of the table was the
+sweetest little old lady, who came and shook hands with him.
+
+Jimmy had never before eaten lunch where the soup was served in little
+cups, but the General's wife put him at his ease when she told him that
+his very own soup-bunches were in that soup, and if he didn't eat plenty
+of it he wouldn't be advertising his wares. Then the General, with knife
+upraised, stopped in his carving of the cold roast chicken, and turned
+to Jimmy with a smile of approval in his genial face, and said that it
+was his sage, too, that was in the chicken dressing.
+
+They made Jimmy talk, and finally he told them of his ambition for a
+basket stall.
+
+"And when do you expect to get it?" asked the General, with a smile.
+
+"When I get the goose that lays the golden egg, I am afraid, sir," said
+Jimmy, a little sadly.
+
+Then the General's wife asked questions, and Jimmy told her about the
+Little Mother, and of their life together; but not one word did he tell
+of their urgent need, for Jimmy had not learned to beg.
+
+At last the wonderful lunch was over, somewhat to Jimmy's relief, it
+must be confessed.
+
+"I shall come and see your mother, Jimmy," said the General's wife, as
+Jimmy left her.
+
+Out in the hall the General handed the boy a nickel. "Business is
+business, young man," he said, with a twinkle in his eye.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That night Jimmy and his mother sat up very late, for the boy had so
+much to tell.
+
+"Do you think I was wrong to ask for the nickel, Mother?" he asked
+anxiously, when he had finished.
+
+"No," said his mother; "but I am glad you didn't ask for more."
+
+Then, after Jimmy had gone to bed, the mother sat up for a long time,
+wondering how the rent was to be paid.
+
+On Easter Monday morning Jimmy and the Little Mother started out to pick
+the arbutus and the early violets which Jimmy was to sell Tuesday at his
+little stall.
+
+It was a sunshiny morning. The broad road was hard and white after the
+April showers, the sky was blue, and the air was sweet with the breath
+of bursting buds. And, in spite of cares, Jimmy and his mother had a
+very happy time as they filled their baskets.
+
+At last they sat down to tie up the bunches. Carriage after carriage
+passed them. As the last bunch of flowers was laid in Jimmy's basket, a
+victoria drawn by a pair of grays stopped in front of the
+flower-gatherers.
+
+"Well, well," said a hearty voice, and there were the General and his
+wife! They had called for Jimmy and his mother, they said, and had been
+directed to the wooded hill.
+
+"Get in, get in," commanded the General; and, in spite of the Little
+Mother's hesitancy and timid protests, she was helped up beside the
+General's wife by the footman, while Jimmy hopped in beside the General,
+and away they went over the hard white road.
+
+The General was in a gay mood.
+
+"Well, my boy, have you found your golden egg?" he asked Jimmy.
+
+"No, sir," said Jimmy, gravely; "not yet."
+
+"Too bad, too bad," said the old gentleman, while he shifted a white box
+that was on the seat between himself and Jimmy to the other side.
+
+"You're quite sure, are you, that you could only get it from a goose?"
+he asked later.
+
+"Get what, sir?" said Jimmy, whose eyes were on the gay crowds that
+thronged the sidewalks.
+
+"The egg," said the General.
+
+"Oh--yes, sir," replied Jimmy, with a smile.
+
+The General leaned back and laughed and laughed until he was red in the
+face; but Jimmy could see nothing to laugh at, so he merely smiled
+politely, and wondered what the joke was.
+
+At last they reached Jimmy's home, and the General helped the Little
+Mother out. As he did so he handed her a white box. Jimmy was busy
+watching the gray horses, and saw nothing else.
+
+"For the boy," whispered the General.
+
+The Little Mother shook her head doubtfully.
+
+"Bless you, madam," cried the General, testily, "I have a boy of my
+own--if he _is_ six feet two in his stockings." Then, in a softer tone,
+"I beg of you to take it, madam; it will please an old man and give the
+boy a start."
+
+So when good-by had been said, and Jimmy stood looking after the
+carriage and the prancing grays, the Little Mother put the white box in
+his hand.
+
+Jimmy opened it, and there on a nest of white cotton was an egg. But it
+was different from any of the eggs that Jimmy had sold on Saturday. It
+was large and gilded, and around the middle was a yellow ribbon.
+
+Jimmy lifted it out, and found it very heavy.
+
+"What do you think it is?" he said.
+
+"Untie the ribbon," advised his mother, whose quick eyes saw a faint
+line which showed an opening.
+
+Jimmy pulled the yellow ribbon, the upper half of the egg opened on a
+hinge, and there were glistening gold coins--five-dollar gold pieces.
+
+"Oh!" said Jimmy, and he sat down on the step, breathless with surprise
+and joy.
+
+A slip of white paper lay between two of the coins. Jimmy snatched it
+out, and this is what he read:
+
+ Please accept the contents of the golden egg, with the best wishes
+ of THE GOOSE.
+
+
+
+
+ =Arbor Day=
+
+ No uniform date in the different States
+
+
+Arbor Day is a designated day upon which the people and especially the
+school children plant trees and shrubs along the highways and other
+suitable places. It was first observed in Nebraska. The State board of
+agriculture offered prizes for the counties and persons planting the
+largest number of trees, and it is said that more than a million trees
+were planted the first year, while within sixteen years over 350,000,000
+trees and vines were planted in the State.
+
+This custom, so beautiful and useful, spread rapidly, and now is
+recognized by the statutes of many of the States.
+
+The exact date naturally varies with the climate.
+
+
+ =THE PLANTING OF THE APPLE-TREE=
+
+ BY WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT
+
+ Come, let us plant the apple-tree,
+ Cleave the tough greensward with the spade;
+ Wide let its hollow bed be made;
+ There gently lay the roots, and there
+ Sift the dark mold with kindly care,
+ And press it o'er them tenderly;
+ As 'round the sleeping infant's feet
+ We softly fold the cradle-sheet,
+ So plant we the apple-tree.
+
+ What plant we in this apple-tree?
+ Buds, which the breath of summer days
+ Shall lengthen into leafy sprays;
+ Boughs, where the thrush, with crimson breast,
+ Shall hunt and sing, and hide her nest;
+ We plant upon the sunny lea
+ A shadow for the noontide hour,
+ A shelter from the summer shower,
+ When we plant the apple-tree.
+
+ What plant we in this apple-tree?
+ Sweets for a hundred flowery springs
+ To load the May-wind's restless wings,
+ When, from the orchard-row, he pours
+ Its fragrance through our open doors;
+ A world of blossoms for the bee,
+ Flowers for the sick girl's silent room,
+ For the glad infant sprigs of bloom,
+ We plant with the apple-tree.
+
+ What plant we in this apple-tree?
+ Fruits that shall swell in sunny June,
+ And redden in the August noon,
+ And drop, when gentle airs come by,
+ That fan the blue September sky;
+ While children come, with cries of glee,
+ And seek them where the fragrant grass
+ Betrays their bed to those who pass,
+ At the foot of the apple-tree.
+
+ And when, above this apple-tree,
+ The winter stars are glittering bright,
+ And winds go howling through the night,
+ Girls whose young eyes o'erflow with mirth
+ Shall peel its fruit by cottage-hearth,
+ And guests in prouder homes shall see,
+ Heaped with the grape of Cintra's vine,
+ And golden orange of the line,
+ The fruit of the apple-tree.
+
+ The fruitage of this apple-tree,
+ Winds and our flag of stripe and star
+ Shall bear to coasts that lie afar,
+ Where men shall wonder at the view,
+ And ask in what fair groves they grew;
+ And sojourners beyond the sea
+ Shall think of childhood's careless day,
+ And long, long hours of summer play,
+ In the shade of the apple-tree.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ Each year shall give this apple-tree
+ A broader flush of roseate bloom,
+ A deeper maze of verdurous gloom,
+ And loosen, when the frost-clouds lower,
+ The crisp brown leaves in thicker shower.
+ The years shall come and pass, but we
+ Shall hear no longer, where we lie,
+ The summer's songs, the autumn's sigh,
+ In the boughs of the apple-tree.
+
+ And time shall waste this apple-tree.
+ Oh, when its aged branches throw
+ Thin shadows on the ground below,
+ Shall fraud and force and iron will
+ Oppress the weak and helpless still?
+ What shall the tasks of mercy be,
+ Amid the toils, the strifes, the tears
+ Of those who live when length of years
+ Is wasting this little apple-tree?
+
+ "Who planted this old apple-tree?"
+ The children of that distant day
+ Thus to some aged man shall say;
+ And, gazing on its mossy stem,
+ The gray-haired man shall answer them:
+ "A poet of the land was he,
+ Born in the rude but good old times;
+ 'Tis said he made some quaint old rhymes
+ On planting the apple-tree."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ =April Fools' Day=
+
+ _April 1_
+
+
+So old is the custom of playing amiable and harmless tricks upon the
+first of April that its origin is not definitely known. It is not a
+holiday and not worthy to be one, but it should be good for our sense of
+humor and that is one of the best things we can have. An April fool is
+sometimes called a "Fourth-month Dunce."
+
+
+ =FOURTH-MONTH DUNCE=
+
+ BY H.M.M.
+
+The curious custom of joking on the first of April, sending the ignorant
+or the unwary on fruitless errands, for the sake of making them feel
+foolish and having a laugh at them, prevails very widely in the world.
+And whether you call the victim a "Fourth-month Dunce," an "April fool,"
+an "April fish" (as in France), or an "April gowk" (as in Scotland), the
+object, to deceive him and laugh at him, is everywhere the same.
+
+The custom has been traced back for ages; all through Europe, as far
+back as the records go. The "Feast of Fools" is mentioned as celebrated
+by the ancient Romans. In Asia the Hindoos have a festival, ending on
+the 31st of March, called the "Huli festival," in which they play the
+same sort of first of April pranks--translated into Hindoo,--laughing at
+the victim, and making him a "Huli fool." It goes back to Persia, where
+it is supposed to have had a beginning, in very ancient times, in the
+celebration of spring, when their New Year begins.
+
+How it came to be what we everywhere find it, the wise men cannot agree.
+The many authorities are so divided, that I see no way but for us to
+accept the custom as we find it, wherever we may happen to be, and be
+careful not to abuse it.
+
+Some jokes are peculiar to some places. In England, where it is called
+"All Fools' Day," one favorite joke is to send the greenhorn to a
+bookseller to buy the "Life and Adventures of Eve's Grandmother," or to
+a cobbler to buy a few cents' worth of "strap oil,"--strap oil being, in
+the language of the shoe-making brotherhood, a personal application of
+the leather.
+
+But this custom, with others, common in coarser and rougher times, is
+fast dying out. Even now it is left almost entirely to playful children.
+This sentiment, quoted from an English almanac of a hundred years ago,
+will, I'm sure, meet the approval of "grown-ups" of this century:
+
+ "But 't is a thing to be disputed,
+ Which is the greatest fool reputed,
+ The one that innocently went,
+ Or he that him designedly sent."
+
+
+
+
+ =Memorial Day=
+
+ _May 30_
+
+
+It is said that the observance of this day grew originally out of the
+custom of the widows, mothers, and children of the Confederate dead in
+the South strewing the soldiers' graves with flowers, including the
+unmarked graves of the Union soldiers. There was no settled date for
+this in the North until 1868, when General John A. Logan, as
+commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, designated May 30.
+It is now generally observed, and is a legal holiday in most of the
+States.
+
+
+ =THE BOY IN GRAY=
+
+ _A Ballad for Memorial Day_
+
+ BY MARY BRADLEY
+
+ Fredericksburg had had her fray,
+ And the armies stood at bay;
+ Back of wall, and top of hill,
+ Union men and men in gray
+ Glowered at each other still.
+
+ In the space between the two
+ Many a hapless boy in blue
+ Lay face upward to the skies;
+ Many another, just as true,
+ Filled the air with frantic cries.
+
+ "Love of God!" with pity stirred,
+ Cried a rebel lad who heard.
+ "This is more than I can bear!
+ General, only say the word,
+ They shall have some water there."
+
+ "What's the use?" his general,
+ Frowning, asked. "A Yankee ball
+ Drops you dead, or worse, half way,
+ Once you go beyond the wall."
+ "May be!" said the boy in gray.
+
+ "Still I'll risk it, if you please."
+ And the senior, ill at ease,
+ Nodded, growling under breath,
+ "For his mortal enemies
+ I have sent the lad to death."
+
+ Then a hotter fire began
+ As across the field he ran,--
+ Yankee shooters marked a prey,--
+ But beside each wounded man
+ Heedless knelt the boy in gray.
+
+ Parched lips hailed him as he came;
+ Throats with fever all aflame,
+ While the balls were spinning by,
+ Drained the cup he offered them,
+ Blessed him with their dying cry.
+
+ Suddenly, through rain of those
+ Pattering shots, a shout uprose;
+ Din of voices filled his ears;
+ Firing ceased, and eager foes
+ Made the welkin ring with cheers.
+
+[Illustration: "BUT BESIDE EACH WOUNDED MAN HEEDLESS KNELT THE BOY IN
+GRAY"]
+
+ Foes they were, of bitter need,
+ Still to every noble deed
+ Hearts of men, thank God, must thrill;
+ And we thrill, too, as we read
+ Of those cheers on Marye's Hill.
+
+ Days of battle long since done,
+ Days of peace and blessing won,
+ Better is it to forget
+ Cruel work of sword and gun:
+ But some deeds are treasures yet.
+
+ While a grateful nation showers
+ Graves of heroes with her flowers,
+ Here's a wreath for one to-day:
+ North or South, we claim him ours--
+ Honor to the Boy in Gray!
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THE EVOLUTION OF OUR FLAG]
+
+ =Flag Day=
+
+ _June 14_
+
+
+The first recognition of Flag Day by the New York schools was in 1889,
+but it is now generally observed by appropriate exercises. June 14 is
+the anniversary of the adoption of the Stars and Stripes by the
+Continental Congress in the year 1777. This was the flag which, first
+raised over an American vessel by John Paul Jones, became the emblem of
+the new republic. In some places another day is set apart instead.
+
+
+ =THE STARS AND STRIPES=
+
+ BY HENRY RUSSELL WRAY
+
+While every lad and lassie in the land knows and has read all about the
+famous old Liberty Bell, too little is known of the origin and growth of
+America's dearest emblem--her flag. William Penn's city--Philadelphia--is
+gemmed with many historical landmarks, but none should be more dear to us
+than that little old building still standing on Arch street, over whose
+doorway is the number--239. For in a small back room in this primitive
+dwelling, during the uncertain struggle for independence by the American
+colonies, was designed and made the first American flag, known as the
+"Stars and Stripes," now respected and honored in every quarter of the
+world, and loved and patriotically worshiped at home.
+
+The early history of our great flag is very interesting.
+
+It is a matter of record that during the early days of the Revolution
+the colonists made use of flags of various devices.
+
+It is nowadays generally accepted as a fact that the final idea of the
+Stars and Stripes as a national flag was borrowed from or suggested by
+the coat of arms of General George Washington's family.
+
+The first definite action taken by the colonies toward creating a flag,
+was a resolution passed by Congress in 1775, appointing a committee of
+three gentlemen--Benjamin Franklin and Messrs. Harrison and Lynch--to
+consider and devise a national flag. The result of the work of this
+committee was the adoption of the "King's Colors" as a union (or corner
+square), combined with thirteen stripes, alternate red and white,
+showing "that although the colonies united for defense against England's
+tyranny, they still acknowledged her sovereignty."
+
+[Illustration: NUMBER 239 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA--THE HOUSE IN WHICH
+THE FIRST "STARS AND STRIPES" WAS MADE]
+
+The first public acceptance, recognition, and salute of this flag
+occurred January 2, 1776, at Washington's headquarters, Cambridge,
+Massachusetts. The name given to this flag was "The Flag of the Union,"
+and sometimes it was called the "Cambridge Flag." The design of this
+flag was a combination of the crosses of St. George and St. Andrew in
+a blue field in the upper left-hand corner, bordered by thirteen stripes
+for the thirteen colonies.
+
+But in the spring of 1777 Congress appointed another committee
+"authorized to design a suitable flag for the nation."
+
+This committee seems to have consisted of General George Washington and
+Robert Morris. They called upon Mrs. Elizabeth Ross, of Philadelphia,
+and from a pencil-drawing by General Washington engaged her to make a
+flag.
+
+This flag, the first of a number she made, was cut out and completed in
+the back parlor of her little Arch street home.
+
+It was the first legally established emblem, and was adopted by Congress
+June 14, 1777, under the act which provided for stripes alternately red
+and white, with a union of thirteen white stars in a field of blue. This
+act read as follows: "Resolved, That the flag of the United States be
+thirteen stripes, alternate red and white: that the union be thirteen
+stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constellation."
+
+
+
+
+
+ =Fourth of July=
+
+
+This is the greatest secular holiday of our country, its observance
+being sanctioned by the laws of every State. The birthday of our liberty
+would be a hard one to fix, but by common consent the anniversary of the
+signing of the Declaration of Independence is the one observed. The use
+of powder to celebrate the day is gradually going out on account of the
+large number of lives annually lost through accidents. It is known
+officially as Independence Day.
+
+
+ =A STORY OF THE FLAG=
+
+ BY VICTOR MAPES
+
+When the Fourth of July came, we had been abroad nearly two months, and
+during that time I think we had not seen a single American flag. On the
+morning of the Fourth, however, we walked out on the Paris boulevards,
+and a number of flags were hanging out from the different American
+shops, which are quite frequent there. They looked strange to us; and
+the idea occurred to Frank, for the first time, that the United States
+was one of a great many nations living next to one another in this
+world--that it was his own nation, a kind of big family he belonged to.
+The Fourth of July was a sort of big, family birthday, and the flags
+were out so as to tell the Frenchmen and everybody else not to forget
+the fact.
+
+A feeling of this nature came over Frank that morning, and he called
+out, "There's another!" every time a new flag came in view. He stopped
+two or three times to count the number of them in sight, and showed in
+various ways that he, America, and the American flag had come to a new
+understanding with one another.
+
+During the morning, Frank's cousin George, a boy two or three years
+older than Frank, who had been in Paris the preceding winter, came to
+our hotel; and, as I had some matters to attend to in the afternoon,
+they went off together to see sights and to have a good time.
+
+When Frank returned about dinner-time, and came up to the room where I
+was writing letters, I noticed a small American-flag pin stuck in the
+lapel of his coat.
+
+"George had two," he said in answer to my question; "and he gave me this
+one. He's been in Paris a year now, and he says we ought to wear them or
+maybe people won't know we're Americans. But say, Uncle Jack, where do
+you think I got that?" He opened a paper bundle he had under his arm and
+unrolled a weather-beaten American flag.
+
+"Where?" asked I, naturally supposing it came from George's house.
+
+"We took it off of Lafayette's tomb."
+
+I opened my eyes in astonishment; while he went on:
+
+"George says the American Consul, or the American Consul-General, or
+somebody, put it on the tomb last Fourth of July, for our government,
+because Lafayette, don't you know, helped us in the Revolution."
+
+"They ought to put a new flag on every year, George says," explained
+Frank, seeing my amazement, "on Fourth of July morning. But the American
+Consul, or whoever he is that's here now, is a new man, George thinks;
+anyhow, he forgot to do it. So we bought a new flag and we did it.
+
+"There were a lot of people at the tomb when we went there, and we
+guessed they were all waiting to see the new flag put on. We waited,
+too, but no soldiers or anybody came; and after a while the people all
+went away. Then George said:
+
+"'Somebody ought to put on a new flag--let's do it!'
+
+"We went to a store on the Boulevard, and for twenty francs bought a new
+flag just like this old one. George and I each paid half. There were two
+women and a little girl at the tomb when we got back, and we waited
+till they went away. Then we unrolled the new flag and took the old one
+off the tomb.
+
+"We thought we ought to say something when we put the new flag on, but
+we didn't know what to say. George said they always made a regular
+speech thanking Lafayette for helping us in the Revolution, but we
+thought it didn't matter much. So we just took off our hats when we
+spread out the new flag on the grave, and then we rolled up the old flag
+and came away.
+
+"We drew lots for it afterward, and I'm going to take it back home with
+me.
+
+"Somebody ought to have done it, and as we were both American boys, it
+was all right, wasn't it?"
+
+Right or wrong, the flag that travelers see on Lafayette's tomb this
+year, as a mark of the American nation's sentiment toward the great
+Frenchman, is the one put there by two small, self-appointed
+representatives. And the flag put there the year before, with fitting
+ceremony by the authorized official, Frank preserves carefully hung up
+on the wall of his little room in America.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Our Holidays, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR HOLIDAYS ***
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