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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/17513-8.txt b/17513-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4292c22 --- /dev/null +++ b/17513-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6558 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and Girls, +Vol. 5, Nov 1877-Nov 1878, 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: St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and Girls, Vol. 5, Nov 1877-Nov 1878 + No 1, Nov 1877 + +Author: Various + +Editor: Mary Mapes Dodge + +Release Date: January 14, 2006 [EBook #17513] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ST. NICHOLAS MAGAZINE *** + + + + +Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Lesley Halamek and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + +ST. NICHOLAS: + +SCRIBNER'S ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE + +FOR GIRLS AND BOYS, + +CONDUCTED BY + +MARY MAPES DODGE. + +VOLUME V. + +NOVEMBER, 1877, TO NOVEMBER, 1878. + +SCRIBNER & CO., NEW YORK. + + + + +Copyright by SCRIBNER & CO., 1878. + +PRESS OF FRANCIS HART & CO. + +NEW YORK + + + + + +CONTENTS. + + +Child-Queen, A. (Illustrated by Alfred Fredericks) Cecilia Cleveland 1 + +Chased by Wolves. (Illustrated) George Dudley Lawson 3 + +Jingle: There was an Old Person of Crewd. (Illustrated by K. W. P.) 6 + +Mollie's Boyhood. (Illustrated by George White) Sarah E. Chester 7 + +*The Largest Volcano in the World. (Illustrated) Sarah Coan 13 + +Making it Skip. Verse. (Illustrated by Thomas Moran) M. M. D. 15 + +*Willow Wand, The. Poem. (Illustrated) A. E. W. 16 + +*Story that Wouldn't be Told, The. (Illustrated) Louise Stockton 18 + +Polly: A Before-Christmas Story. (Illustrated) Hope Ledyard 19 + +Boggs's Photograph. Picture. 21 + +Lord Mayor of London's Show, The. (Illustrated) Jennie A. Owen 22 + +My Girl. Poem. John S. Adams 25 + +Mars, the Planet of War. (Illustrated by the Author) + Richard A. Proctor 26 + +*Domestic Tragedy, A. In Two Parts (Illustration) 31 + +Bell-Ringers, The Stickleback. (Illustrated by James C. Beard) + C. F. Holder 31 + +Cricket on the Hearth, The. Poem. (Illustrated )Clara Doty Bates 33 + +How I Weighed the Thanksgiving Turkey. G. M. Shaw 34 + +Nimble Jim and the Magic Melon. (Illustrated by E. B. Bensell) + J. A. Judson 34 + +"Oh, I'm My Mamma's Lady-Girl." Verse. (Illustrated by + Addie Ledyard) M. M. D. 41 + +Christmas-Gifts, A Budget of Home-Made. (Illustrated) 42 + +*Little Tweet. (Illustrated) 64 + +*Jack-in-the-Pulpit. (Illustrated) 66 + +Can a Little Child Like Me? (Thanksgiving Hymn) Mary Mapes Dodge 68 + +"Baby's Opera" and Walter Crane, The. 69 + +*The Letter Box. 69 + +*The Moons of Mars. 69 + +*The Riddle Box. (Illustrated) 71 + + + +[Transcriber's Notes: +For ease of navigation, this Table of Contents has been taken from the +full contents listing for the volume. +Some entries were missing from the index. For completeness they have +been added and marked with an asterisk. + +The full list of contents for Volume V is to be found at the end of this +text. + +p. 27: changed 'rains' to 'trains': +...--; just like the +lines by which trains are made to run easily off one +track on to another. + +p. 30: Missing opening quote replaced: +"The snows that glittered on the disc of Mars..." + +p. 31:' replaced with ": +"Don't you think, papa, that that's enough about +the sun? Come and play with us on the lawn." + +p. 59: Missing ) replaced, +...(widening the strip, +however, in proportion as the fabric is thinner). + +Music Notation (Our Music Page) has been added.] + + * * * * * + + + +[Illustration: KING RICHARD II. AND HIS CHILD-QUEEN.] + + * * * * * + + +ST. NICHOLAS. + + + VOL. V. NOVEMBER, 1877. No. 1. + +[Copyright, 1877, by Scribner & Co.] + + * * * * * + + + +A CHILD QUEEN. + +BY CECILIA CLEVELAND. + + +I wonder how many of the little girl readers of ST. NICHOLAS are fond +of history? If they answer candidly, I do not doubt that a very large +proportion will declare that they prefer the charming stories they +find in ST. NICHOLAS to the dull pages of history, with its countless +battles and murdered sovereigns. But history is not every bit dull, +by any means, as you will find if your elder sisters and friends will +select portions for you to read that are suitable to your age and +interests. Perhaps you are very imaginative, and prefer fairy tales to +all others. I am sure, then, that you will like the story I am about +to tell you, of a little French princess, who was married and crowned +Queen of England when only eight years old, and who became a widow at +twelve. + +This child-sovereign was born many hundred years ago--in 1387--at the +palace of the Louvre in Paris, of whose noble picture-gallery I am +sure you all have heard,--if, indeed, many of you have not seen it +yourselves. She was the daughter of the poor King Charles VI., whose +misfortunes made him insane, and for whose amusement playing-cards +were invented, and of his queen, Isabeau of Bavaria, a beautiful but +very wicked woman. Little Princess Isabella was the eldest of twelve +children. She inherited her mother's beauty, and was petted by her +parents and the entire court of France. + +King Richard II. of England, who was a widower about thirty years old, +was urged to marry again; and, instead of selecting a wife near his +own age, his choice fell upon little Princess Isabella. + +"She is much too young," he was told. "Even in five or six years she +will not be old enough to be married." The king, however, thought +this objection too trifling to stand in the way of his marriage, and +saying, "The lady's age is a fault that every day will remedy," he +sent a magnificent embassy to the court of France, headed by the +Archbishop of Dublin, and consisting of earls, marshals, knights, and +squires of honor uncounted, with attendants to the number of five +hundred. + +When the embassy reached Paris, and the offer of marriage had been +formally accepted, the archbishop and the earls asked to see the +little princess who was soon to become their queen. At first the +French Council refused, saying so young a child was not prepared to +appear on public occasions, and they could not tell how she might +behave. The English noblemen were so solicitous, however, that at last +she was brought before them. The earl marshal immediately knelt before +her, and said, in the old-fashioned language of the time: "Madam, if +it please God, you shall be our lady and queen." + +Queen Isabeau stood at a little distance, curious and anxious, no +doubt, to know how her little daughter would answer this formal +address. To her great pleasure, and the great surprise of all present, +Princess Isabella replied: + +"Sir, if it please God and my father that I be Queen of England, I +shall be well pleased, for I am told I shall then be a great lady." + +Then, giving the marshal her tiny hand to kiss, she bade him rise from +his knees, and leading him to her mother, she presented him to her +with the grace and ease of a mature woman. + +According to the fashion of the time, Princess Isabella was +immediately married by proxy, and received the title of Queen of +England. Froissart, a celebrated historian living at that epoch, says: +"It was very pretty to see her, young as she was, practicing how to +act the queen." + +In a few days, King Richard arrived from England with a gay and +numerous retinue of titled ladies to attend his little bride. After +many grand festivities they were married and were taken in state to +England, where the Baby Queen was crowned in the famous Westminster +Abbey. + +I must not forget to describe the magnificent _trousseau_ that the +King of France gave his little daughter. Her dowry was 800,000 francs +($160,000); her coronets, rings, necklaces, and jewelry of all +sorts, were worth 500,000 crowns; and her dresses were of surpassing +splendor. One was a robe and mantle of crimson velvet, trimmed with +gold birds perched on branches of pearls and emeralds, and another was +trimmed with pearl roses. Do you think any fairy princess could have +had a finer bridal outfit? + +When the ceremonies of the coronation were over, little Isabella's +life became a quiet routine of study; for, although a reigning +sovereign, she was in the position of that young Duchess of Burgundy +of later years, who at the time of her marriage could neither read nor +write. This duchess, who married a grandson of Louis XIV. of France, +was older than Queen Isabella--thirteen years old; and as soon as the +wedding festivities were over, she was sent to school in a convent, +to learn at least to read, as she knew absolutely nothing save how to +dance. Queen Isabella, however, was not sent away to school, but was +placed under the care of a very accomplished lady, a cousin of the +king, who acted as her governess. In her leisure hours, the king, who +was a fine musician, would play and sing for her, and, history gravely +informs us, he would even play dolls with her by the hour! + +But King Richard's days of quiet pleasure with his child-wife were at +last disturbed, and he was obliged to leave her and go to the war in +Ireland. The parting was very sad and affecting, and they never met +again. + +While King Richard was in Ireland, his cousin, Henry of Lancaster, +afterward Henry IV., took possession of the royal treasury, and upon +the return of Richard from his unfortunate campaign, marched at the +head of an army and made a prisoner of him, lodging him in that grim +Tower of London from which so few prisoners ever issued alive. + +Meantime, the poor little queen was hurried from one town to another, +her French attendants were taken from her, and the members of her new +household were forbidden ever to speak to her of the husband she +loved so dearly. Finally, it was rumored that Richard had escaped. +Instantly, this extraordinary little girl of eleven issued a +proclamation saying that she did not recognize Henry IV. (for he was +now crowned King of England) as sovereign; and she set out with an +army to meet her husband. The poor child was bitterly disappointed +upon learning that the rumor was false, and her husband was still a +prisoner, and before long she also was again a prisoner of Henry IV., +this time closely guarded. + +In a few months Richard was murdered in prison by order of King Henry, +and his queen's childish figure was shrouded in the heavy crape of her +widow's dress. Her superb jewelry was taken from her and divided +among the children of Henry IV., and she was placed in still closer +captivity. Her father, the King of France, sent to demand that she +should return to him, but for a long time King Henry refused +his consent. Meantime, she received a second offer of marriage +from--strange to say--the son of the man who had killed her husband +and made her a prisoner, but a handsome, dashing young prince, Harry +of Monmouth, often called "Madcap Hal." Perhaps you have read, or your +parents have read to you, extracts from Shakspeare's "Henry IV.," so +that you know of the wild exploits of the Prince of Wales with his +friends, in turning highwayman and stealing purses from travelers, +often saying, + + "Where shall we take a purse to-morrow, Jack?" + +and finding himself in prison sometimes as a result of such +amusements? Isabella was a child of decided character, and truly +devoted to the memory of her husband, and much as she had enjoyed +her rank she refused to continue it by marrying handsome Madcap Hal, +although he offered himself to her several times, and even as she was +embarking for France. + +Poor little Isabella, who had left France so brilliantly, returned a +sad child-widow, and all that remained to her of her former splendor +was a silver drink-cup and a few saucers. As Shakspeare says: + + "My queen to France, from whence set forth in pomp, + She came adorned hither like sweet May, + Sent back like Hallowmas or shortest day." + +She was received throughout France with joy, and tears of sympathy. + +When Isabella was eighteen. Madcap Hal again offered his hand to her, +supposing she had forgotten her former prejudice, but although she +married again she was so far faithful to the memory of her English +husband that she would not accept the son of his murderer. Some years +later, when Prince Hal was king, he married her beautiful sister +Katherine. + +Isabella's second husband was her cousin, the Duke of Orleans, whose +beautiful poems are considered classic in France. Again she was the +joy of her family and the pride of France, but all her happiness was +destined to be fleeting, for she survived her marriage only one year. +Her husband, who loved her fondly, wrote after her death: + + "Alas! + Death, who made thee so bold, + To take from me my lovely princess, + Who was my comfort, my life, + My good, my pleasure, my riches? + Alas! I am lonely, bereft of my mate-- + Adieu! my lady, my lily! + Our loves are forever severed." + +And in another poem, full of expressions that show how very devoted +was his affection for her, he says: + + "Above her lieth spread a tomb + Of gold and sapphires blue, + The gold doth show her blessedness, + The sapphires mark her true. + + "And round about, in quaintest guise, + Was carved--'Within this tomb there lies + The fairest thing to mortal eyes.'" + +Farewell, sweet Isabella!--a wife at eight, a widow at twelve, and +dead at twenty-two,--your life was indeed short, and, though not +without happy days, sorrow blended largely with its joy! + + + + +CHASED BY WOLVES + +BY GEORGE DUDLEY LAWSON. + + +Some forty years ago the northern part of the State of New York was +very sparsely settled. In one of the remote counties, which for a +name's sake we will call Macy County, a stout-hearted settler, named +Devins, posted himself beyond the borders of civilization, and hewed +for his little family a home in the heart of a forest that extended +all the way from Lake Champlain to Lake Ontario. His nearest neighbor +was six miles away, and the nearest town nearly twenty; but the +Devinses were so happy and contented that the absence of company gave +them no concern. + +It was a splendid place to live in. In summer the eye ranged from the +slope where the sturdy pioneer had built his house over miles and +miles of waving beech and maple woods, away to the dark line of pines +on the high ground that formed the horizon. In the valley below, +Otter Creek, a tributary of the St. Lawrence, wound its sparkling way +northward. When Autumn painted the scene in brilliant hues, and it +lay glowing under the crimson light of October sunsets, the dullest +observer could not restrain bursts of admiration. + +Mr. Devins's first attack on the stubborn forest had been over the +brow of the hill, some four miles nearer Owenton, but his house was +burned down before he had taken his family there from Albany. He had +regretted that he had not "pitched his tent" on the slope of Otter +Creek; so now he began with renewed energy his second home, in which +the closing in of the winter of 1839 found him. He had sixty acres of +rich soil under cultivation at the time of which we are to speak, his +right-hand man being his son Allan,--a rugged, handsome, intelligent +boy of sixteen. + +The winter of '39 was a terrible one; snow set in before the end of +November, and, even in the open country, lay upon the ground until the +beginning of April, while in the recesses of the forest it was found +as late as the middle of June. There was great distress among the +settlers outside of the bounds of civilization, to whom the deep snow +was an impassable barrier. The Devinses neither saw nor heard from +their nearest neighbors from the first of December till near the +beginning of February, when a crust was formed upon the snow +sufficiently firm to bear the weight of a man, and a friendly Cayuga +Indian brought them news of how badly their neighbors fared. + +Mr. Devins was especially touched by the bad case of his friend Will +Inman, who lived on the nearest farm. The poor man lay ill of a fever; +Mrs. Inman was dead and temporarily buried, until her body could be +removed to the cemetery in Owenton, and all the care of the family +devolved upon Esther, his daughter, fourteen years old. After a short +consultation, the next morning breaking bright and clear though very +cold, it was determined to allow Allan to go over the hill to Inman's, +bearing medicine, tea, and other little necessaries for the family. He +was impressively warned to begin his return at so early an hour that +he might reach home before the short day's end, especially because of +the danger from wild animals. The severity of the winter had made the +wolves more venturesome and dangerous than they had been for many +years. Mr. Devins had lost several sheep and hogs, and deemed it +unsafe for any of his family to be caught far from the house at night. + +Allan armed himself with his light rifle, put some biscuits and cold +meat in a pouch strapped to his waist, mounted one of the strong +farm-horses, and set out on his journey. The road through the forest +was better than he expected to find it, as the snow had been drifted +off, but at the turns, and in the thickest part of the wood, his horse +floundered through drifts more than breast high; and more than once +Allan had to dismount and beat a path ahead. Therefore, he did not +reach Inman's till two o'clock, and, by the time he had helped Esther +about her work, assisted her young brother to get in a good supply of +wood, and made things more comfortable for the invalid, it was almost +sundown. He stoutly refused to wait for supper, declaring that the +luncheon still in his pouch would serve, and started just as the short +twilight came on. He was a brave lad, and, with no thought of peril, +went off, kissing his hand gayly to Esther. + +It took him an hour to traverse the first three miles, and then he +came to a stretch of comparatively bare ground leading through his +father's old clearing, and almost to the top of the hill back of Mr. +Devins's house. He was just urging old Bob into a trot, when a long, +clear howl broke upon his ear; then another and another answered +from east and south. He knew what that meant. It was the cry of the +advance-guard of a pack of wolves. + +The howling sounded near, and came swiftly nearer, as though the +wolves had found his tracks and scented their prey. Old Bob trembled +in every limb, and seemed powerless to move. Allan realized that he +could not, before dark, reach home through the drifts ahead, and the +increasing cold of the advancing night would render a refuge in a +tree-top probably as deadly as an encounter with the pack. + +Presently there came a cry, shriller and sharper than before, and +Allan, looking back, saw a great, lean, hungry gray wolf burst from +the underbrush into the road, followed by dozens more; and in a moment +the road behind him was full of wolves, open-mouthed and in keen +chase. Their yells now seemed notes of exultation, for the leader +of the pack--the strongest, fleetest, hungriest one among them--was +within a dozen yards of Allan, who was now riding faster than ever old +Bob had gone before or ever would go again. Excitement made the lad's +blood boil in his veins, and he determined to show fight. The moon had +risen, and the scene was almost as light as day. Now he could count +the crowding host of his enemies, and just as he broke from the forest +road into the old clearing, he turned in his saddle and fired. The +foremost of the pack rolled over and over; the rest gathered around +and tore their leader in pieces. + +By the time they resumed the chase, Allan was a hundred yards ahead +with his rifle loaded. He determined to make a running fight of it to +the hill, where he was sure of meeting his father, or could take to a +tree and shoot until help came. This had hardly flashed through his +brain when, right ahead of him, a detachment of the pack sprang into +the road and answered with double yells the cries of the rest coming +up behind. The horse wheeled suddenly, almost unseating Allan, and +dashed across the clearing toward the wood; but he had not taken a +dozen bounds when a wolf sprang upon him. Old Bob reared and fell, +pitching Allan nearly twenty feet ahead, and was covered with wolves +before he could regain his footing. That was the last of poor old Bob. + +[Illustration: "OLD BOB FELL, PITCHING ALLAN AHEAD."] + +But Allan! What of him? When he recovered from the effects of the +shock, he found himself over head and ears in snow. He had no idea +where he was, but struggled and plunged in vain endeavors to extricate +himself, until at last he broke into a space that was clear of snow, +but dark as Erebus, damp and close. Feeling about him he discovered +over his head logs resting slantingly against the upper edge of a pit, +and then he knew that he was in the cellar of the old house his father +had built, and which had been burned down nine years before! The +cellar was full of snow, except at the corner roofed over by the +fallen logs, and Allan, bursting through the snow into the empty +corner, was as secure from the wolves as though seated by his father's +fireside. It was not nearly as cold in there as outside, and he found +a dry spot upon which he lay down to think. + +He was in no danger of freezing to death, his food would keep him from +starvation a week at least, and Allan concluded that, with the first +glimpse of dawn, his father would be in search of him, and, following +the tracks, find old Bob's bones, and quickly rescue him from his +predicament. He reasoned wisely enough, but the elements were against +him. Before sunrise a furious storm of wind and snow had completely +obliterated every trace of horse, rider and wolves. + +At home, as the night wore on, the anxiety of the family had +increased. While they were watching the gathering storm, they heard +the long, dismal howl of the wolves coming over the hill. The chill of +fear that they should never see the boy again settled down upon all +their hearts, until the house was as dreary within as the winter waste +and gloomy forest were without. + +Meanwhile the brave youth was sound asleep, dreaming as peacefully as +though snugly resting with his brother in his warm bed at home. He +slumbered on unconscious of the raging storm without, and did not +awake until late the next forenoon. It took him several seconds +to realize where he was and how he came there, but gradually he +remembered his ride for life, the falling of his horse, his struggle +in the snow, and his breaking into the protected space where he lay. + +The storm lasted all day and far into the succeeding night. Allan ate +slightly, quenched his thirst with a few drops of water obtained by +melting snow in the palm of his hand, and began casting about for +means to get out. He soon found that to dig his way up through the +mass of snow that filled the cellar was beyond his powers. If he could +have made a succession of footholds, the task would have been easy; +but all his efforts only tended to fill his retreat, without bringing +him nearer the air. As soon as he saw this, he gave himself up to +calmly waiting for help from without. + +The second morning of his imprisonment broke clear and cheerful, and +Mr. Devins set out to search for traces of his boy. He visited the +Inmans' and learned the particulars of Allan's stay and departure, +then mournfully turned his face homeward, his heart filled with +despair. When he emerged from the forest into the clearing, he met the +Indian who had visited him a few days before, and he told the red man +of Allan's loss. The Indian stood a moment in deep thought, and then +asked: + +"No horse, no boy back there?" pointing to the road just traversed by +Mr. Devins. + +"No. I have looked carefully, and if there had been a trace left by +the recent storm I should have detected it." + +"Ugh! well, me come over the hill; nothing that way either; then they +here." + +"Why do you think so?" + +"Ah! me know wolves. When Allan come to this place they ahead; +horse turn; wolves caught 'em this side woods; we look there," and +Tayenathonto pointed to the very course taken by the horse and rider. + +It so happened when Allan was thrown from the horse's back that his +rifle flew from his hand and struck, muzzle down, in a hollow stump, +where, imbedded in the snow, it stood like a sign to mark the scene +of the last struggle of the lost boy. The snow had whitened all its +hither side. When the Indian came abreast of it, he cried: + +"Told you so! See! Allan's gun! And here rest of 'em," pointing to the +little heap over the ruins of the old cabin. + +Kicking the snow hastily aside, the Indian examined the ground +carefully a moment and then said: "No, only horse; Allan further on." + +The Indian, with head bent down, walked quickly forward, threw up +his arms, and disappeared. He had stepped over the clean edge of the +cellar and sunk exactly as Allan had. A few desperate plunges sufficed +to take the strong Indian through the intervening snow and into the +protected corner where Allan, just rousing from his second sleep, sat +bolt upright. The Indian's coming disturbed the snow so that a glimmer +of light penetrated into the dark space. Allan supposed a wolf had +found its way down there, and hastily drew his large knife, bracing +himself for an encounter. + +The Indian sputtered, thrashed about to clear himself from the snow, +and in so doing rapped his head smartly against the low ceiling of +logs. + +"Waugh! waugh!" exclaimed he. "Too much low; Indian break 'em head; +look out." + +Allan instantly recognized the voice of the Indian, his comrade on +many a fishing and hunting tour. + +"Tayenathonto!" he cried, "dear old fellow, who would have thought of +you finding me!" + +The Indian quietly replied: + +"Tayenathonto no find; come like water-fall; couldn't help his self." + +A very few minutes sufficed to put both on the surface again, where +Allan was received "like one come from the dead," and closely folded +in his father's arms. Oh, the joy of that embrace! The past grief and +suffering were forgotten in the bliss of that moment. + +The Indian had to return with the happy father and son to their home, +where he was hailed as Allan's rescuer, and enjoyed to the full a +share of the festivities. + +In after years Allan married Esther Inman, and now, by the fireside in +winter, he tells his grandchildren of his escape from the wolves, and +the little ones never tire of petting their faithful old Tayenathonto. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration] + + There was an old person of Crewd, + Who said, "We use saw-dust for food; + It's cheap by the ton, + And it nourishes one, + And that's the main object of food." + + + + +MOLLIE'S BOYHOOD. + +BY SARAH E. CHESTER. + + +A little girl sat squeezed in between an old fat man and his old bony +wife in a crowded hall on a sultry evening in October. On one side it +was as if feather pillows loomed above her with intent to smother; on +the other, sharp elbows came into distressing contact with her ribs. +The windows were open; but the hall had not been built with reference +to transmitting draughts on suffocating nights for the benefit of +packed audiences; and everybody gasped for breath, though everybody +fanned--that is, everybody who had a fan, a newspaper, a hat, or a +starched handkerchief. Mollie had neither fan, newspaper, hat, nor +handkerchief, and yet she of all the audience gasped unawares. She was +stifled, but happy. Elbows and bad air might do their worst; her body +suffered, but her spirit soared. She was lifted above her neighbors, +into an atmosphere where she was conscious of nothing but the +eloquence that fell in such soft tones from the lips of the beautiful +woman on the stage. + +Mollie was fatherless and brotherless. She had no male cousins within +a thousand miles. Her only uncle, two blocks off, was a man whose +dinners rebelled against digestion, and who might have been beyond +the seas for all the good he did her. They were a feminine +family,--Mollie, her mother, the old cat and her kittens +three,--bereft of masculine rule and care, and in need of money earned +by masculine hands. + +The mother bore losses and lacks with the philosophy of her age; but +Mollie's age was only twelve, and knew not philosophy. She realized +that she was a mistake. She was miserably aware that she was a mistake +which could never be corrected. Friends repeatedly assured her that it +was a great pity she had not been born a boy, and tantalized her with +boyhood's possibilities. Frequent mention was made of ways in which +she might minister to her mother's comfort if she were a son; and all +Mollie's day-dreams were visions of that gallant son's achievements. +She used to close her eyes and see wings and bay-windows growing +around their little cottage and making it a mansion; their old clothes +gliding away, and fine new robes stepping into their places; strong +servants working in the kitchen; pictures stealing up the walls, and +luxuries scattering themselves hither and thither, till she felt the +spirit of the boy within her, and seemed equal to the deeds he would +have done. Then she used to open her eyes wide to the fact of her +girlhood and have little seasons of despair. + +This had been going on a long time, the visions, their destruction +by facts, and the consequent despair; for, of course, she had always +believed there was nothing to be done. And now here was one telling +her that something could be done--that she, even she, the little girl +Mollie, had equal rights with boys, and that it was not only her +privilege but her duty to claim them. Here was one exhorting her to +throw off the yoke of her girlhood, talking of a glorious career that +might be hers, of emancipation and liberty, of a womanhood grand as +manhood itself. And how the tremendous sentiments, so beautifully +uttered, thrilled through Mollie from the crown of her hat to the toes +of her boots! She would have given worlds for one glance from that +bravest of her sex who had thrown off the yoke, and for a chance to +ask her just how she did it. For while Mollie had fully made up her +mind to wear her yoke no longer, she did not know exactly by what +means to become an emancipated creature. As she walked home with her +hand in that of the fat gentleman who had treated her to the lecture, +she reached the conclusion that no special instructions had been given +because it was taken for granted that each woman's nobler instincts +would guide her. She entered the gate a champion of freedom, a +believer in the equality of the sexes--a girl bound to be a boy, and +trusting to her nobler instincts to teach her how. + +No trembling and glancing back over her shoulder for goblins and +burglars to-night as she put the key into the door! No scared +chattering of teeth in the dark hall! No skipping three steps at a +time up the stairs pursued by imaginary hands that would grip at her +ankles! She faced the darkness with wide-open eyes, instead of feeling +her way with lids squeezed down as had been her custom; and when eyes +seemed to look back at her from the darkness, her boyhood laughed at +her girlhood, and she did not quicken her pace. But--Mollie was glad +to step into the room where the light burned. Her mother had gone to +bed early with one of her tired-out headaches, and she only half woke +to see that her little girl was safely in. Mollie kissed her softly +(for boys may kiss their mothers softly) and took the lamp into the +little room beyond, where she always slept. + +The first thing that she did was to look in the glass. What a girlish +little face it was! How foolishly its dimples came and went with its +smiles! In what an effeminate manner the hair crinkled above it, and +then went rambling off into half a yard of stylish disorder! Mollie +lifted the hair in her hand and surveyed it thoughtfully. Then she +took a thoughtful survey of the scissors in her work-basket. Then +she reached them. She allowed herself a moment of conscientious +reflection; then the boy's naughty spirit crept down through her +fingers and set the scissors flying, and the deed was done. + +It was not easy to satisfy her mother's amazement and vexation in the +morning; but Mollie stumbled through it and went to school. There +opportunities were few. She coaxed her teacher to let her study +book-keeping, and took one disagreeable lesson in its first +principles; but she accomplished nothing else that day except the +putting of a general check upon weak-minded inclinations to be +frolicsome. + +But that evening there was a fair sky, one of the soft, deep skies +that make imaginative little girls' brains dizzy; and Mollie tramped +down the gravel path to the gate and leaned over; then she soon +nestled her head in her arms and looked up and lost herself. Boyhood +was far from her dreamy fancies, when they were scattered by a tweak +at one of her cropped locks. + +"What does this mean?" asked the voice of the neighbor over the fence. +"How came it to be done without my leave?" + +"Don't I look manly, Mr. John?" said Mollie. + +"What does it mean?" said he, severely. + +"That would be telling," said Mollie. + +"I intend that you shall tell me," said he. + +"Oh, it's a secret!" said Mollie. + +"All the better; we'll keep it together. Tell it." + +He was a grown-up man, nearer thirty than twenty years old, who +stooped to take an interest in his neighbor's little girl, and +flattered himself that he was bringing her up in the way she should +go. It amused him in his leisure moments to try the experiment of +rearing a girl to be as unlike as possible the girl of the period. + +From mere force of habit, Mollie opened her mouth and poured out her +heart to him. He seemed quite impressed by the solemn confession. +Mollie studied his face closely while she was speaking, and saw +nothing but a grave and earnest interest in her project. She could not +see deep enough to discover the indignation that was fuming over the +loss of her pretty locks, and the purpose that was brewing to cure her +of her folly. + +"Don't have any half-way work about it, Mollie," said Mr. John. "Do +the thing thoroughly, if you undertake it." "Oh yes, indeed!" said +Mollie. + +"If you should need an occasional reminder, I will try and help you," +said he; "for of course it wont do to be off guard at all. But now get +your hat, and we'll go for some ice-cream. I know you need cooling off +this warm evening." + +Mollie skipped about to run toward the house. + +"Be careful of your steps," he called; and she tramped as boyishly as +she could. + +"No, don't take hold of my hand," as she came back and slipped her +fingers in his. "Put your hands in your pockets." + +"I've only one pocket," she answered meekly, putting her right hand in +it. + +"Difficulties at once, aren't there?" said Mr. John. "Your clothes +want reforming, you see. You'll have to put on Bloomers." + +"Oh!" said Mollie. + +"I'm afraid you're not very much in earnest," he said. "You surely are +not frightened by a trifle like that?" Mollie looked up imploringly. + +"Must I?" she asked. + +"Well," he answered, her earnestness making him fear that she would +actually appear publicly in masculine array, "I don't know that it is +necessary at present. A few days wont matter; and, after a while, it +will seem to you the natural way to dress." + +He was so faithful that evening in reminding her of her short-comings +that their _tête-à-tête_ over the little table in the ice-cream +saloon, which usually was so cosey and delightful, was quite spoiled. +She went to sleep regretting that she had taken Mr. John into her +confidence and made it necessary for him to treat her as a boy. + +She did not see him again for several days: and meanwhile she had +taken her lessons in book-keeping, practiced the writing hours on +heavy masculine strokes, learned to walk without dancing little +whirligigs on her tiptoes every other minute, and made some progress +in the art of whistling. She felt that she had done much to earn his +commendation, and was anxious for a meeting. + +On the way home from school, one afternoon, she saw his sister's baby +at the window--the roundest, fattest, whitest and sweetest of all the +babies that had taken up an abode in Mollie's heart, where babies +innumerable were enshrined. There it was, being danced in somebody's +hands before the window, and reaching out its ten dear little fingers +to beckon her in. + +She was quickly in, regardless of her gait. In a moment from the time +the tempting vision appeared she was cuddling it in her arms, glibly +talking the nonsense that it loved to hear, and kissing and petting it +to her heart's content. She was so absorbed that she did not hear Mr. +John come in; and he was close by her when she looked up and saw his +face--not the genial, welcoming look she had been in the habit of +meeting since he became her friend, but one of grave disapproval. + +"I am ashamed of you, Mollie," he said. "Boys of your age don't pet +babies in that way." + +Mollie dropped it--she hardly knew whether on the floor or the +stove--and flew. When she got home, she ran into the little back room +that used to be her play-room. She was all ready for a good cry, and +she closed the door. Then she thought, what if Mr. John were to see +her crying like a girl-baby!--and she marched to the window, and +through the dimness in her eyes tried to see something cheering. Her +nature was very social, and her need of companionship great at that +moment; so she turned to the friend who had been brother, sister and +child to her through most of her little girlhood--her big doll Helena, +who sat in a chair in the corner beholding her agitation with fixed, +compassionless gaze. + +"Come here, you dear," said Mollie, folding her tenderly in her arms +and finding comfort in the contact of her cold china cheek. She had +loved her so long that she had given her a soul; and to Mollie's heart +the doll was as fit for loving as if she had had breath and speech. +She did not play with her any longer, but Helena was still her dear +old friend--an almost human confidant and crony. + +As she held her closely, suddenly she thought of Mr. John. If he had +objected to the petting of babies, what would he say to dolls? She +gave her a frantic kiss, put her away, and turned her back on her +to reflect; for she did not mean to shirk the most disagreeable +reflections in the new line of duty she had chosen to follow. + +If it had really been a human friend whose destinies Mollie +considered, she could not have been more serious; and if it had been +a human friend whom she at last decided must be put far from her, she +could hardly have suffered severer heart-pangs. But she would have no +compromising with inclination in this matter. She would be brave and +strong, as it became her mother's son to be. So to the lowest depths +of the deepest trunk in the garret she mentally consigned Helena. +There, beyond the reach of her loving eyes and arms, she should lie in +banishment until her heart became callous. + +But there was something so repulsive in the idea of smothering human +Helena under layers of old garments, that Mollie finally thought of a +better way. Helena should no longer be Helena, dear to her heart in +all her little feminine adornings and her sympathetic, tender traits +of character. She should undergo a change; a radical reform. She, too, +should become a boy, and her name should be Thomas. Thenceforth Mollie +spent her leisure moments in manufacturing garments suitable for the +change; and at last she saw a boy-doll, in roundabout and pantaloons, +occupying the chair where Helena had so long sat in dainty dresses. +The sight was a perpetual offense to her eyes; but she bore it +bravely, keeping in store for herself a reward of merit in Mr. John's +approval. She did not fail to mention to him Helena's reform the +next time they met, which was one morning before breakfast. She was +sweeping the front steps when he came and leaned over the fence and +called her. + +She shouldered the broom, as she had seen men shoulder implements of +labor,--hoes, rakes, etc.,--and tramped toward him. Mr. John watched +her, with an expression of disgust under his mustache. + +"Well, Bob," he said, "I'm glad to see you out so early. Form good +habits before you're grown, and when you come to manhood you'll make +money by it. Where are your Bloomers to-day? It isn't possible your +mind's not made up to them yet?" + +There was something in Mr. John's tone and manner which did not seem +quite courteous to Mollie; but she had hardly hung her head when he +began to talk in his old half-fatherly, half-brotherly fashion; and +then, in the lively conversation, she found a chance to introduce +Thomas. Mr. John gave her a long, solemn, searching look. + +"Mollie," he said, "I am very much afraid you will never succeed as a +boy. It seems to me that even an ordinarily masculine girl of your +age would have been clear-headed enough to see the absurdity of your +little farce. It is nothing but a farce, mere babyishness. You have +been playing with yourself and with your doll. No boy could have done +it." + +There was a short pause; then Mollie's voice piped out into a humble +question as to what course a boy would have pursued in the matter. + +"Why, that is clear enough," said Mr. John. "If you want to do what a +boy would do, dispose of the doll on the shortest notice. Get it out +of your sight and mind as soon as possible, and then never give it any +more thought than you'd give the rattle you used to shake when you +were a baby, or the rubber ring you cut your teeth on." + +Could he be made to understand the immense difference between Helena +and other toys? Could any words explain to him about the soul that had +grown out of Mollie's love into the cloth and sawdust body? Mollie +looked up to catch a sympathetic expression that should help her to +tell him; but she did not find it. + +"You don't understand," she said desperately. + +"No?" said he. + +"Mr. John," said Mollie, not looking him in the eye, "when you have a +doll as long as I have had Helena, it is only natural that she should +seem to you like a live person. If I didn't play with her at all, +she'd seem real to me, and I shouldn't like to have her go away any +more than I would mother." + +"Which tells the secret that you have some sort of human fondness +for the lifeless bundle of rags," said Mr. John, "and proves what I +feared, that you are a very weak-minded little girl, Mollie." + +"You wont believe in me at all," said Mollie. + +"You wont think I am doing my best, and that I ever succeed. You are +not like you used to be." + +"That naturally follows _your_ being different," said Mr. John. "Of +course, we can't have the same feelings toward each other now as when +you were contented to be a little girl and to let me treat you as one. +I'm sorry you don't find me as agreeable as before, Mollie; but you +must acknowledge that I am acting as a friend in doing all that I can +to help you in your dear project." + +"It isn't dear!" burst forth Mollie, indignantly. "I hate it!--but +I'll never give it up!" + +"Of course not," Mr. John said. "Then I presume you are all ready to +part with Helena." + +"I'll go and get her," said Mollie. + +No one saw the parting in the play-room. It was quickly over, and she +was back by the fence. + +"Give her to Bessie," said Mollie, putting Helena and her wardrobe +into Mr. John's arms. Bessie was one of his many nieces. + +"To Bessie!" said he. "Where you can feel that she is away on a visit; +where you know that she will be petted and cared for; where you can +see her occasionally. If you are sincere in this matter, Mollie, send +her off where you can no longer care to think of her. Our ash-man +would be very glad to carry her home to his little girls." + +Mollie's hands made a wild dive toward Helena as a vision of the +little grimy man who crept into their areas for ashes rose before her. + +"Decide now," said Mr. John. "Take your doll and be Mollie Kelly +again, or be a boy and give her to the ash-man's children without a +pang." + +Mollie hung her head. There was color coming and going in her cheeks, +her fingers trembled,--how they longed to snatch Helena!--and her mind +was full of indecision. Mr. John watched her closely, and he thought +he saw the tide turning in favor of her girlhood. He held the doll +nearer that it might tempt her fingers; but, on the instant, she +turned and ran away. He tucked Helena under his coat and carried her +upstairs and locked her in a drawer, there to abide until Mollie +should want her again. + +That was a gloomy day to Mollie. She was out of humor with her +boyhood. She was ashamed of herself one moment for bewailing Helena, +and furious the next with Mr. John and the ash-man. She felt cross and +discouraged, and was glad when the darkness came, and she could go to +bed and sleep. But the next morning she was in no cheerier, braver +frame of mind; and she walked home at noon, considering plain sewing +_versus_ book-keeping as a means of subsistence. Mr. John would have +rejoiced if he could have seen his "little leaven" working. + +"The gutters on the roof are full of leaves, Mollie," said her mother +as she came in. "Stop on your way back to school and send Michael to +clean them out. I think we are going to have rain, and we don't want +them washed into the pipes." + +"How much will he charge, mother?" + +"About fifty cents." + +"That fifty cents shall buy something for you," said Mollie to +herself. "The boy of the family shall clean the roof." + +There was just enough recklessness in her mood to make her rather +enjoy than fear the prospect. She left her mother getting dinner, and +took a broom and escaped up the garret stairs and through the scuttle. +The roof did not slope steeply, and she let herself down with an easy +slide to the rear eaves. She rested her feet on the edge of the house +and swept as far as her arms would reach east and west. Then she +shifted her position and swept again until the whole length was clean. + +She heard her mother calling her to dinner, but she had the front +gutter yet to sweep, and, climbing up, went down on the other side. +There was a thought which gave zest to her work on that side,--Mr. +John would be coming home that way to dinner and would see her. +Besides, other people would see her, and no passer-by should say that +she did not do her work as thoroughly and fearlessly as any boy. She +had taken for granted that Mr. John's eyes would be drawn upward; but +when he had walked almost by, looking straight ahead, she sent him a +shrill call. He looked at the windows, around the yard, and even as +far up as the trees. + +"On the roof," screamed Mollie, and in her excitement she forgot her +situation and lost her balance and slipped,--not far, but one foot +went out beyond the eaves into the air. The other one rallied to the +rescue, supported her whole weight, and helped her to regain her +position. Danger was over in a moment, but it had been danger of +death, and Mollie's heart beat wildly, and a faintness came over her. +Still through it all she was able to see Mr. John's approving smile as +he lifted his hat and waved it gayly in applause. + +"He wouldn't care if I had fallen and been killed," thought Mollie, as +she recovered herself. "All he wants is to have me succeed in being a +horrid boy. I've a mind to give it up just to spite him." + +She could not know--so successfully had he concealed his agitation +under that bland smile--how faint he, too, had been in the moment of +her danger, nor how fast his heart was still beating as he walked on, +nor what resolves he was forming to put a speedy end to her boyhood. + +He stopped on his way back from dinner to tell her that he had engaged +to take a party of his nephews and nieces nutting that afternoon, and +that he wanted her to come. + +"It will be so nice to have a big boy on hand, Mollie," said Mr. John, +"especially one that isn't afraid of heights. We may have some to +climb." + +Not a word about her danger and his gladness for her safety, and she +knew he had seen her narrow escape. But she felt so gay over memories +of Mr. John's nutting parties, and the prospect of another, that she +forgave him all, and prepared to be thoroughly happy that afternoon. + +School closed at three o'clock, and Mollie flew to Mr. John's yard, +where they were all waiting. She came dancing by the gate, her cheeks +rosy, her eyes shining,--just her old self, as she had been in the +days when no boyhood loomed like an ugly shadow between her and Mr. +John. He saw it all, and charged himself to be stony. So he gave no +better response to her impulsive greeting than he would have given an +ordinary boy. Her spirits fell a degree; but with those happy children +bobbing around her, expecting her to be the happiest of all, they +could do nothing but rise again. + +Mr. John did not offer to lift her over fences as he lifted the other +girls; he even called on her to help the little ones over. He held +back branches that came across other girls' paths; he let her clear +her own way. He carried Kittie and Bessie, and Esther and Dora, over +the brook; he let her splash across on the stones with the boys. He +gallantly made cups and gave the other girls to drink; he suggested to +Mollie that she should scoop the water up in her hand, as he was doing +for his own use. + +She wished many a time before they came to the walnut-trees that she +had staid at home. She wished her boyhood's days were over, or had +never been. She couldn't bear Mr. John, and all the children noticed +that she moped, and asked her why. + +Well, there were no nuts when they got there, Mr. John had known there +wouldn't be. They should have come much earlier in the day to find +these trees full, and the next trees were too far away. So they +concluded to turn their nutting party into a picnic. They had a basket +of provisions, and Mr. John sent the big boys into the next lot to get +wood for a fire. Then came his grand opportunity for crushing Mollie. +He called her, and she ran to him gladly, ready to take him back to +her favor on his own terms. + +"Please, go and help the boys bring wood for our fire," he said. "They +have all gone but you." + +She went, but not without giving him a look that actually made him +blush for his rudeness. She went with the aspect of a tragedy queen, +and by the time she overtook the boys she had calmly made up her mind +to two things: never, never again to be friends with Mr. John, and to +give up her boyhood just to spite him. But one more temptation still +held her. There was a little cliff over in that next lot, stony and +steep, and high enough to make a leap which it was some credit to a +boy to achieve. The boys stood on the edge, measuring the distance +with experienced eyes and preparing to go over. + +Now Mollie as a girl had always been a very good jumper, so she +resolved at once to try the leap, and have the report of her valiant +deed carried back to Mr. John. She joined the boys, and seeing that +one after another went down safely, she soon asked for a turn. She was +gravely remonstrated with. She was overwhelmed with sage masculine +advice, but she swept her way clear and jumped--with all the +recklessness of her reckless mood. She knew well enough the backward +inclination proper for her head, what the relative positions of her +knees and chin should be, and if she had taken the least forethought +might have redeemed the declining reputation of her boyhood. The +knowledge flashed across her in her swift descent that her spine had +not preserved the proper perpendicular, and that she was coming down +wrong. Chin and knees knocked together as she fell in a heap on the +grass below. + +[Illustration: MOLLIE IS CARED FOR BY THE BOYS.] + +It was a caving in of skull, she thought, that made that horrible +crashing pain and that sent lightning dancing on a black background +before her eyes, then blinded her quite. Nothing but a general chaos +of skull and brain could make such terrible pain. She wondered if her +friends would be able to recognize one dear lineament in the jumble +of her features. She thought what a sad fate it was to die young. She +wondered how Mr. John would feel now! and then she found that light +dawned upon her and that she had an eye open. In a moment she +discovered that the sense of hearing, too, had not abandoned her; +for the boys had reached her by this time, and she heard Mr. John's +nephew, John, saying: + +"She's knocked her teeth through her lip, that's all. I did it once +when I jumped wrong and hit my chin on my knee. She'll soon be all +right." + +Two eyes open now, and she saw a bloody frock, and what seemed an army +of boys; for there was something still the matter with her vision +which caused it to multiply. + +"Boys, boys, nothing but boys!" thought Mollie, dropping her lids. +"Where did they all come from, I wonder? There must be a thousand. I +never want to see another. I wouldn't be one for the world. I wish +they'd go away." + +Then she felt some one bathing her face gently, and when the water had +refreshed her, she ventured another peep at the world. Boys around her +still; but she could see now that their number was only four, and the +faces those of friends. + +"Cheer up, Mollie," said John, jr. "You got a hard knock, but you're +coming on. Bob's gone for the phaeton, and we'll have you home in no +time." + +They propped her up against a tree, and continued to bathe her head +with water from Jerry's felt hat, filled at the little brook close by. + +All this while Mr. John had been accounting for their absence by +supposing that Mollie was taking some sort of revenge on him, and he +would permit none of the girls to go in search of the wanderers. Not +until Bob and the phaeton appeared did news of Mollie's valiant deed +reach him. Then he went to her at once, and saw her pale and bloody. + +But to display weakness now might be to lose all, reflected Mr. John; +so he kept back the words of sympathy that were on his lips as he +leaned down and offered to carry her to the phaeton. + +"I prefer to walk, thank you," said Mollie, her pride giving her +strength to rise and take the arm which John, jr., stood ready to +offer. However, Mr. John forcibly made an exchange, and, in spite of +Mollie, half led and half carried her to the road. + +"Don't be discouraged, Mollie," he said as he put her in, while Bob +was busy at the halter. "The next time you'll jump like a man." + +"That nonsense is all over, thank you," said Mollie, very loftily, +though not very clearly, because of her swollen lips. "Think what you +please of me," she mumbled. "It is all ended; and it might have ended +sooner, too, if I'd taken better advice." + +"With better advice it never would have ended, you contrary little +minx," said Mr. John to himself as she drove away. + +The doctor came and Mollie was ordered to bed; but even his opiate +did not make her sleep. It was soothing, indeed, to lie there in the +twilight with her hand in her mother's, and feel that she was her +little girl entirely, no more to be her boy while life should last. +And pleasant visions of a Gothic school-house, where she should some +day be mistress of sweet, rosy-cheeked children, rose gracefully on +the ruins of her manly aspirations. + +By and by the bell rang, and her mother brought a lamp, and a package +which Mollie sat up and opened. There, with a note pinned on the left +leg of her trousers and a box of Mollie's best-beloved candies clasped +on her jacket, lay Helena. + +"I have never been to the ash-man's house, Mother Mollie," said the +note. "I have been visiting Mr. John's cuffs and collars in the +bureau-drawer. I want my girls' clothes on to-morrow. I claim it as my +right. We all have our rights. Put me in dresses and take me home to +the play-room. You have your rights too, and I wouldn't let any one +tell me that I hadn't a right to be a girl. It is my opinion that +if you had been meant for a boy you would have been made one. Come, +mother, cuddle me up, and let's go to sleep and have sweet dreams, and +a blithe waking to girlhood in the morning, when we will make up with +Mr. John; for he sends these chocolate-creams to let you know that he +is sorry." + +"So we will, dear," said Mollie, tucking Helena's head under her chin. +"You were always wiser than your mother, child." + + + + +THE LARGEST VOLCANO IN THE WORLD + +BY SARAH COAN. + + +[Illustration: THE LAKE OF FIRE.] + + "Why, it isn't on the top of a mountain at all! What a humbug my + geography must have been!" + +So wrote a little fellow to a young friend in America. + +He was right. It isn't on the top of a mountain, though the +geographies do say, "A volcano is a mountain sending forth fire, smoke +and lava," and give the picture of a mountain smoking at the top. + +This volcano is nothing of the kind; but is a hideous, yawning black +pit at the bottom of a mountain, and big enough to stow away a large +city. + +Of course you want to know, first, where this wonder is. Get out the +map of the Western Hemisphere, put your finger on any of the lines +running north and south, through North America, and called meridians; +follow it south until you come to the Tropic of Cancer, running east +and west; then "left-about-face!" and, following the tropic, sail out +into the calm Pacific. After a voyage of about two thousand miles, +you'll run ashore on one of a group of islands marked Sandwich. We +will call them Hawaiian, for that is their true name. Not one of the +brown, native inhabitants would call them "Sandwich." An English +sailor gave them that name, out of compliment to a certain Lord +Sandwich. + +On the largest of these islands, Hawaii--pronounced "Ha-y-e"--is the +volcano, Kilauea, the largest volcano in the world. + +We have seen it a great many times, and that you may see it as clearly +as possible, you shall have a letter from the very spot. The letter +reads: + + "Here we are, a large party of us, looking into Kilauea, which is + nine miles in circumference, and a thousand feet below us--a pit + about seven times as deep as Niagara Falls are high. We came + to-day, on horseback, from Hilo, a ride of thirty miles. Hilo is a + beautiful sea-shore village, the largest on the island of Hawaii, + and from it all visitors to Kilauea make their start. + + + "The road over which we came is nothing but a bridle-path, and a + very rough one at that, traversing miles and miles of old lava + flows. We had almost ridden to the crater's brink before we + discovered, in the dim twilight, the awful abyss. + + "Before us is the immense pit which, in the day-time, shows only a + floor of black lava, looking as smooth as satin; and, miles away, + rising out of this floor, are a few slender columns of smoke. + + "At night, everything is changed; and you can't conceive of the + lurid, demoniacal effect. Each slender column of smoke becomes + a pillar of fire that rolls upward, throbbing as it moves, and + spreads itself out above the crater like an immense canopy, all + ablaze. + + "Ships a hundred miles from land see the glow, and we here, on the + precipice above, can read ordinary print by its lurid light. + + "No wonder the natives worshiped the volcano. They thought it the + home of a goddess, whom they named Pélé, and in times of unusual + activity believed her to be very angry with them. Then they came + in long processions, from the seashore villages, bringing pigs, + dogs, fowls, and sometimes human beings, for sacrifice. These they + threw into the crater, to appease her wrath. + + "A small berry, called the ohélo, grows on the banks of the pit, + and of these the natives never dared to eat until Pélé had first + had her share. Very polite, were they not? And if ever they + forgot their manners, I dare say she gave them a shaking up by an + earthquake, as a reminder. + + "Sandal-wood and strawberries grow all about here--and fleas, too! + wicked fleas, that bite voraciously, to keep themselves warm, I + think, for here, so far from Pélé's hearth, it is cold, and we sit + by a log fire of our own. + + "The day after our arrival we went into the crater, starting + immediately after an early breakfast. There is but one entrance, + a narrow ledge, formed by the gradual crumbling and falling in of + the precipice. Along this ledge we slipped and scrambled, making + the descent on foot--for no ridden animal has ever been able to + descend the trail. Holding on to bushes and snags when the path + was dangerously steep, we finally landed below on the black satin + floor of lava. + + "Satin! What had looked so smooth and tempting from a thousand + feet above, turned out to be a surface more troubled and uneven + than the ocean in the most violent storm. And that tiny thread + of smoke, toward which our faces were set, lay three miles + distant--three miles that were worse than nine on an ordinary + road. + + "How we worked that passage! up hill and down hill, over hard + pointed lava that cut through our shoes like knife blades; over + light, crumbled lava into which we sank up to our knees; over + hills of lava that were, themselves, covered with smaller hills; + into ravines and over steam-cracks, some of which we could jump + with the aid of our long poles, and some of which we had to find + our way around; steam-cracks whose depths we could not see, and + into which we thrust our walking-sticks, drawing them out charred + black or aflame; over lava so hot that we ran as rapidly and + lightly as possible, to prevent our shoes being scorched. + Three hours of this kind of work for the three miles, and + _Hale-mau-mau_, or 'House of Everlasting Fire,' lay spitting and + moaning at our feet! + + "A lake of boiling lava is what the column of smoke marked out to + us,--a pit within a pit,--a lake of raging lava fifty feet below + us, of which you have here the picture taken 'from life.' + + "It was so hot and suffocating on the brink of this lake that we + cut eye-holes in our pocket-handkerchiefs and wore them as masks. + Even then we had to run back every few moments for a breath of + fresher air, though we were on the windward side of the lake. The + gases on the leeward side would suffocate one instantly. Oh, the + glory! This Hale-mau-mau, whose fire never goes out, is a huge + lake of liquid lava, heaving with groans and thunderings that + cannot be described. Around its edge, as you see in the picture, + the red lava was spouting furiously. Now and then the center of + the lake cooled over, forming a thin crust of black lava, which, + suddenly cracking in a hundred directions, let the blood-red fluid + ooze up through the seams, looking like fiery snakes. + + "Look at the picture, and imagine these enormous slabs of cooled + lava slowly rising themselves on end, as if alive, and with + a stately motion plunging beneath the sea of fire, with an + indescribable roar. + + "For three hours we gazed, spell-bound, though it seemed but a few + moments: we were chained to the spot, as is every one else who + visits Kilauea. + + "The wind, as the jets rose in air, spun the molten drops of lava + into fine threads, which the natives call Pélé's hair, and very + like hair it is. + + "All this time, under our feet were rumblings and explosions that + made us start and run now and then, for fear of being blown up; + coming back again after each fright, unwilling to leave the spot. + + "Occasionally, the embankment of the lake cracked off and fell + in, being immediately devoured by the hungry flood. These ledges + around Hale-mau-mau are very dangerous to stand upon. A whole + family came near losing their lives on one. A loud report beneath + their feet and a sudden trembling of the crust made them run for + life; and hardly had they jumped the fissure that separated + the ledge on which they were standing from more solid + footing--separated life from death--than crash went the ledge into + the boiling lake! + + "Sometimes the lake boils over, like a pot of molasses, and then + you can dip up the liquid lava with a long pole. You get quite + a lump of it, and by quickly rolling it on the ground mold a + cylinder the size of the end of the pole, and about six inches + long. Or you can drop a coin into the lava to be imprisoned as it + cools. + + "A foreigner once imbedded a silver dollar in the hot lava, and + gave the specimen to a native; but he immediately threw it on the + ground, breaking the lava, of course, and liberating the dollar, + which he pocketed, exclaiming: 'Volcano plenty enough, but me not + get dollar every day.' + + "One of our party collected lava specimens from around + Hale-mau-mau, and tied them up in her pocket-handkerchief. Imagine + her astonishment on finding, later, they had burned through the + linen, and one by one dropped out. + + "Terrible as old Pélé is, she makes herself useful, and is an + excellent cook. She keeps a great many ovens heated for the use of + her guests, and no two at the same temperature, so that you may + select one of any heat you wish. In these ovens (steam-cracks) she + boils tea, coffee and eggs; or cooks omelets and meats. You wrap + the beef or chicken, or whatever meat you may wish to cook, in + leaves, and lay it in the steam-crack. Soon it is thoroughly + cooked, and deliciously, too. + + "She also keeps a tub of warm water always ready for bathers. + + "She doesn't mean to be laughed at, though, for doing this kind of + work, and doing it in an original kind of way. After she has given + you one or two sound shakings, which she generally does, you'll + have great respect for the old lady, and feel quite like taking + off your hat to her. With the shakings and the thunderings + under-foot, and now and then the opening of a long steam-crack, + she keeps her visitors quite in awe of her powers, though she is + probably several hundred years old. + + "Not far from the little hut where we sleep, close to the + precipice, is Pélé's great laboratory, where she makes sulphur. We + wear our straw hats to the sulphur banks, and she bleaches them + for us. + + "Well, this is a strange, strange land, old Pélé being only one of + its many curiosities. + + "I only hope you may all see the active old goddess before she + dies. She hasn't finished her work yet. Once in a while she runs + down to the shore, to bathe and look at the Pacific Ocean, and + when there she generally gives a new cape to Hawaii by running out + into the sea." + +Majestic old Pélé! Long may she live! + + + + +MAKING IT SKIP + +[Illustration] + + + "I'll make it skip!" + Cried Charley, seizing a bit of stone. + And, in a trice, from our Charley's hand, + With scarce a dip, + Over the water it danced alone, + While we were watching it from the land-- + Skip! skip! skip! + + "I'll make it skip!" + Now, somehow, that is our Charley's way: + He takes little troubles that vex one so, + Not worth a flip, + And makes them seem to frolic and play + Just by his way of making them go + Skip! skip! skip! + + + + + +THE WILLOW WAND. BY A.E.W. + + + I have a little brother, + And his name is Little Lewy; + His starry eyes are bright as flowers + And they are twice as dewy. + Sometimes the dew o'erflows them, + And trickles down his cheeks; + And then he cries so hard, you'd think + He wouldn't stop for weeks. + Then my other little brother, + A bough of willow bringing, + Drives all the dew-drops far away, + By waving it and singing: + +[Illustration] + + "One, two, free, fo', five, six, _seven_ tears! + You'll be as old as farver in forty sousand years. + Drate big men don't have tears, so let me wipe 'em dry; + In forty sousand years from now you'll never, never cry." + + This other little brother, + Whose name is Little Bert, + Frowns in a dreadful manner + Whenever he is hurt; + The wrinkles right above his nose + Look like the letter M, + He keeps them there so long, he must + Be very fond of them. + Then my little brother Lewy, + The branch of willow bringing, + Sends all the naughty frowns away, + By waving it and singing: + +[Illustration] + + "A, B, C, D, E, F, G; + How many wrinkles are there? One, two, three! + We'll send them all off quickly, or they'll climb up to your hair, + And then to-morrow morning you'll have lots of tangles there." + +[Illustration] + + Sometimes our little Lewy + Loses all his pretty smiles; + He says they're very far away; + At least a hundred miles. + He looks as sober as a judge, + As stately as a king, + As solemn as a parson and + As still as anything. + And then our little Bertie, + The witching willow bringing, + Sends all the smiles safe home again, + By waving it and singing: + + "I want to buy a smile, sir, if you have some about; + I'll draw this leaf across your lips, and that will bring them out. + And if you cannot spare me one, just let me take a half. + Oh, here they come and there they come, and now we'll have a laugh." + +[Illustration] + + On every "morrow morning," + This funny little Bertie + Doesn't want to have his face washed + Because it don't feel dirty; + He runs half-dressed 'way out-of-doors, + Safe hidden from our view; + We search and call, hunt up and down, + And don't know what to do, + Until we see our little Lu + The wand of willow bringing, + And leading Bertie back to us, + While all the time he's singing: + + "Do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, si. + You look like a very small heathen Chinee. + Get the sleep all washed off and hang it up to dry, + And then you'll look as fresh as if you'd just come from the sky." + + When all the stars are shining, + Each little sleepy-head + Is lying in a funny bunch + Within the little bed. + Their eyes are so wide open, + They stay awake so long, + They're calling me to tell to them + A story or a song. + So up the stairs again I come, + The magic willow bringing, + And wave it here and wave it there, + While o'er and o'er I'm singing: + + "Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep; + Sailing away on the dreamy deep; + Sister to watch you and angels to keep; + Sailing away and away and away, + Away on the d-r-e-a-m-y deep; + Sleep, sleep, s-l-e-e-p, sleep." + +[Illustration] + + + + + +THE STORY THAT WOULDN'T BE TOLD. + +BY LOUISE STOCKTON. + + +"Do tell me one more story; just _one_ more!" said the little boy. + +It certainly was getting late. The fire lighted the room, the shadows +danced in the corners. Down in the kitchen they were hurrying with the +dinner, and in a moment nurse would come in to take the boy to bed. +But all this made him want to stay. He was very comfortable in his +mamma's lap, and he was in no haste to go upstairs to Maggie and the +nursery. + +Then his mamma kissed him right on the tip of his little nose, and she +said: + +"But you must go to bed sometime." + +"Please, mamma dear," he said, pushing his curly head almost under her +arm, "just one little story." + +[Illustration: A SCENE IN THE STORY THAT WOULDN'T BE TOLD.] + +"Just one! You can choose it, but mind, a little one!" + +"You know what one I want. Of course about the giant Tancankeroareous, +and how he stole the slipper of the princess for a snuff-box, and how +the Prince Limberlocks climbed up a cherry-tree into the giant's room. +That is the story _I_ like!" + +"And it must be the 'amen story' to-night. Well: Once upon a time the +Princess Thistleblossom stood on one foot, while--" + +"No, no," interrupted The Story, "you need not tell _me_! Tell some +other story. I am tired of being said over and over. Every night, as +soon as your bed-time comes, and you are so sleepy that you don't want +to go to bed, you ask for me, and I have to be told. I am sick of it, +and I want to rest." + +"But I want you," said the boy. "I like you best of all my stories. +I like that part where the giant comes in and calls out 'PORTER!' in +such a loud voice that the gate shakes all the bolts loose." + +"I suppose you do like it," said The Story; "anybody would. I am a +very good story, and very fit to be told last, although I cannot +see why that is any reason for calling me the 'amen story.' That is +foolish, _I_ think! But at any rate, that is no reason for telling +me _every_ night. Let your mamma tell you Cock Robin, or Jack the +Giant-Killer. They are plenty good enough." + +"I don't want them," said the little boy, beginning to cry; "I want +_you!_ I wont go to sleep all night if mamma don't tell you." + +"_I_ don't care!" replied The Story; "you needn't cry for me. I've +made up my mind. You wont hear me to-night. That as as sure as your +name is Paul." + +And it was just as The Story said. There was no use in the boy's +crying, for off went The Story, and it was _not_ told that night; but +it is my private opinion that the boy did go to sleep after all. + + + + +POLLY: A BEFORE-CHRISTMAS STORY. + +BY HOPE LEDYARD. + +[Illustration] + +"Santa Claus!" exclaimed Ned, half mockingly. + +"Yes," insisted Mamie, "what's he going to bring you, Ned?" + +"I don't know, and I don't care much," he answered, "for there isn't +any Santa Claus." + +"Why, Ned!" cried Mamie, in astonishment. "Even my big brother Harry +believes in Santa Claus. He's coming home from school to-night, and +we're going to hang up our stockings." + +"Pshaw!" said Ned, "I must go home. Good-bye." + +Merry little Mamie stood in amazement, and then ran in-doors to her +mother with her perplexity. + +"Why, mother!" she cried, "Ned Huntley said there wasn't any Santa +Claus--and he was real cross about it, too." + +"Well, Mamie," said her mother, "I wouldn't take any notice of Ned's +being cross about Christmas-time. The Huntleys don't keep Christmas." + +"Don't keep Christmas!" exclaimed Mamie, astonished beyond measure. + +Seeing that her mother was busy, she took her doll, Helena Margaret +Constance Victorine, in her arms, and talked the matter over with her. + +"What do you think, my dear," said she, "they don't keep Christmas +at Ned Huntley's house! I don't know just what mother means by not +keeping it, for you know Santa Claus comes down the chimney, and so he +can get in during the night and leave Christmas there. Oh, yes, but +they don't keep it. They turn it out, I suppose, just like mother told +me they acted about the dear little baby Savior; they hadn't any room +for him, and I guess Mrs. Huntley hasn't any room to keep Christmas +in. I wonder what she does with the Christmas things Santa Claus +brings? I wonder if she throws 'em away? I mean to go and ask her;" +and putting her child carefully in its cradle, Mamie started. + +There was some truth in what Mrs. Gaston had told her little daughter; +the Huntleys did not keep Christmas in a loving, hearty way. They kept +it in so far that on this very afternoon Mrs. Huntley was busy making +the mince pies, dressing the turkey, and doing all she could to be +beforehand with the extra Christmas dinner. Mr. Huntley had just +stepped into the kitchen for a moment to say to his wife, "What have +you settled on for Ned's Christmas?" + +"I've bought him a pair of arctics--he needed 'em; and if you want to +spend more than common, you might get him half a dozen handkerchiefs." + +"Well, wife, I was thinking that perhaps"--the farmer tried to be +particular about his words, for Mrs. Huntley did not seem in a very +good humor--"I was remembering how you used to enjoy giving the young +ones candies and toys; so, perhaps--" + +"Now, Noah Huntley, I'm surprised at you! Buy candies and toys for a +great lumbering boy like Ned? Why, you must be crazy, man! The next +thing will be that you'll want a Christmas-tree yourself!" + +"Well, and it wouldn't be a bad idea," thought the father. "There's +my man, Fritz, he has been to the woods and cut a little tree for his +children, and he seems to get a heap of pleasure out of it. Ah! if +only little Polly had lived!" Strangely enough, the wife was thinking +the same thing, as she sliced and sifted and weighed. "If little Polly +had lived it would have been different, but we can't throw away money +on nonsense for Ned." + +A little red cloak flashed by the window, a little bright face, just +about the age of "our little Polly's," peeped in at the door, and +Mamie asked, "May I come in, Mrs. Huntley?" + +"Certainly, child. Here's a fresh cookie. I suppose you're full of +Christmas over at your house?" + +"Oh, yes, ma'am! And I'm so sorry you don't keep it. What's the +reason?" + +"Don't keep it! Why, we have a regular Christmas dinner as sure as +the 25th of December comes round, and Pa gives me a new dress, or +something that I need, and we give Ned a suit of clothes, or shoes, or +something that he needs." + +"Well," said Mamie, "but I like our way best. May I tell you how we +keep Christmas?" + +"Talk away. I can listen." + +"Well, you see, a good while before Christmas my mother begins to get +ready, and I often see her hide up something quick when I come in, and +then she laughs, and I think, 'Oh, yes, something's coming,' and then +mother takes me in her lap and tells me how Jesus is coming, and how +He did come. Do you know, Mrs. Huntley?" + +"You can tell me, child?" + +"You see, He came a long, long time ago as a little baby. Mamma says +that he began at the beginning, so that no little child could say, 'I +can't be like Jesus, for Jesus never was so little as me.' That first +birthday of His, there wasn't any room for Him at the tavern, and when +the dear little baby Jesus was sleepy, they laid Him right in a stable +manger, and the shepherds found Him lying there. Christmas is His +Birthday, and I suppose they give all the children presents because +Jesus loved little children, and then Santa Claus--Oh, Mrs. Huntley, +that's what I came about, and I 'most forgot! If you don't keep +Christmas--I mean as we do," she added, as Mrs. Huntley frowned, "and +if you don't use the things that Santa Claus leaves here, can't I come +over and get 'em? Only I'd rather Ned should have 'em." + +"Child alive! How your tongue runs! Here, now, take these cookies home +with you, I guess Ned's too busy to play with you." + +"Thank you, ma'am. And you'll remember about Santa Claus?" said little +Mamie, as she walked away with her cookies. + +Mrs. Huntley worked on for a few minutes longer, and then, leaving her +dishes, she went to her own room and opened a bureau drawer. There +lay a bright little dress and pretty white apron,--Polly's best +things,--the little clothes in which she used to look so lovely. There +were the last Christmas toys the mother had ever bought,--only a +little tin bank, a paper cornucopia, and a doll; but she remembered +that Christmas so well! Could it be that it was only three years ago? +How Polly had laughed and chattered over her stocking! And Ned,--now +that she thought about it,--she remembered that they bought him a pair +of skates that year. He had made a great time over those skates, and +had taken his little sister out to see him try to use them. Ned was +so loving and gentle in those days. And then the mother's heart +reproached her. Could she blame her boy because he seemed to care so +little for his parents and his home, when she had nursed her grief for +the loss of her baby-girl, and taken no pains to be bright or cheerful +with him? She thought how clearly Mamie had told the story of the +Savior's birthday. Could her boy, who was six years older, do as well? +He went to Sunday-school sometimes, but she had never talked with him +about Jesus--never since God took her Polly. And her eyes filled as +she shut the drawer. + +Mrs. Huntley went back to the kitchen, but the room seemed different +to her. Ned brought in the milk, and looked at his mother curiously +at hearing her say, "Thank you, Ned." Wonders would never end, Ned +thought, when, after tea, she said, "Father, it's a moonlight night; +couldn't you and I drive to the village? Ned will excuse our leaving +him alone." + +"Excuse!" When had his mother ever asked him to excuse her? And then, +as mother waited for the wagon to be got ready, she asked him to read +about the Savior's birth, and surely there were tears in her eyes as +father came in, just as Ned read, "And they came with haste and found +Mary and Joseph, and the babe lying in a manger." + +Mr. Huntley was bewildered, too. To start off for the village at seven +o'clock in the evening! When had such a thing happened? + +On the road Mrs. Huntley told her husband what Mamie had said to her, +and she added, "Perhaps, as I tell it, it don't seem much, but it made +me think of our Polly, and"--the woman's voice broke, and the father, +saddened too, said, comfortingly, "She's safe, my dear, in heaven." + +"Yes, father, but I'm thinking of the one that's left, for all I cried +a little. I guess you were near right about getting him something +nice. He's but a boy yet, and he'd think more of Christmas, and +perhaps of the child that was born on Christmas, if we show him that +Jesus has made our hearts a little more tender." + +What it cost that hard, reserved woman to say that, none knew, but I +think her husband felt dimly how she must have fought with herself, +and he was silent for some time. At last he said, with a tone of +gladness in his voice, "My dear, I'm glad to get him something. He's a +good boy, Ned is." + +What a pleasant time they had, and how they caught the spirit of +Christmas! They bought a sled and skates, a book or two, and candies, +and Mrs. Huntley found a jack-knife that was just the thing Ned +wanted. Then she said to her husband: + +"I'd like to buy something for Mamie. It will be nice to buy a girl's +present." + +Their hearts ached a little, as they chose a wonderful little wash-tub +and board, with a clothes-horse to match. How Polly's eyes would have +shone at these! + +Meantime, Ned mused over his mother's tears and her strangely kind +tones, and thought: "I wonder if she's going to be as good to me as +she was to Polly! I hated to hear Mamie talk about Santa Claus. Polly +used to talk just that way, and we did have such good times. I used to +get skates and things at Christmas, but now I get some handkerchiefs +or a lot of shirts! It makes me mad." Then Ned fell asleep, and so +the mother found him. She woke him gently and he went off to bed, +bewildered by more kind words. + +Morning dawned and Ned hurried down to light the fire in the kitchen, +but he went no further than the sitting-room. There was a sled,--a +splendid one,--a pair of skates, and books! He put his hands in his +pockets to take a long stare, and felt something strange in one of +them. Why! There was a beautiful knife! + +Mother came in and watched his face, but at sight of her the boy +fairly broke down. Laying his head on her shoulder, "It's like Polly +coming back," he said. + +And so it was, and so it continued to be. + + +[Illustration: BOGGS SHOULD NOT HAVE HAD HIS PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN ON +THANKSGIVING DAY, AND EATEN A HEARTY DINNER AFTERWARD.] + + + + +THE LORD MAYOR OF LONDON'S SHOW. + +BY JENNIE A. OWEN. + + +"Aunt Jennie," said my little godson Willie, a few days ago, "wont +you go with us to see the Lord Mayor's show? There'll be thirteen +elephants and eight clowns, and an elephant picks a man up with his +trunk and holds him there. And then mamma's going to take me to +Sampson's. Do you know Sampson, Aunt Jennie?" + +"I know about Samson in the Bible, Willie." + +"Oh, not that one; our Sampson is a man in a shop in Oxford street, +and he makes such nice boys' clothes, and he's the master." + +I have just come home from the Sandwich Islands, where I have been +living; I spent a few years, too, in New Zealand and Tahiti, and so +have seen many wonderful things on the land and sea; but a Lord Mayor +going to be sworn in to his duties, attended by thirteen elephants and +a London crowd, would be a novelty to me. I thought, too, that certain +little boys and girls in the Sandwich Islands and the United States, +who also call me Aunt Jennie, would like to hear all about it. + +This has been an exciting week for the London children. The fifth of +November fell on Sunday, and Guy Fawkes had to wait till Monday to +make his appearance. All that day he was carried about the streets in +various shapes and forms, and the naughty, ignorant little boys, in +spite of enlightened school-board teaching, sang at our doors: + + "A ha'penny loaf to feed the Pope, + A penn'orth of cheese to choke him, + A pint of beer to wash it all down, + And a jolly good fire to burn him." + +"Oh, papa," said Willie, as he ran into the breakfast-room for +pennies, "aren't you glad you're a real man and not a pope?" + +At last the ninth, the Lord Mayor's day, came. It is also the Prince +of Wales' birthday, so the city would be very gay-looking with all the +flags flying. + +Alas! it was a dark, dull morning, and a heavy fog hung all over the +city. Alas for the gilt coaches, the steel armor and other braveries! +and then the elephants, how could they possibly feel their way all +round the city in a thick, yellow fog? But, happily, by eleven the +weather cleared, and the sun shone out brightly. Such a crowd as there +was at our railway dépôt! So many bonny, happy little children never +went on the same morning to the busy old town before. It was something +new for great elephants to be seen walking through the prosy business +streets. Once before, twenty-seven years ago, when Sir John Musgrave +was Lord Mayor, not only elephants, but camels, deer, negroes, +beehives, a ship in full sail, and Britannia seated on a car drawn by +six horses, had made part of the show; since then, however, no Lord +Mayor had been thoughtful enough of little and big children's pleasure +to order out such delightful things, and so this year everybody must +go. To quote from the _Daily News:_ + + "Since the reign of Henry III., when, by that monarch's gracious + act the Lord Mayor of London was permitted to present himself + before the Barons of Exchequer at Westminster instead of submitting + the citizens' choice for the king's personal approval, there has + been no Lord Mayor's show at which so great a concourse of + spectators assembled." + +We crowd into the cars and are soon in Cannon street. At the gates a +boy meets us with little books for sale, shouting, "Thirteen elephants +for a penny! the other boys'll only give you twelve, but I'll give you +thirteen. Sold again! Thirteen elephants for a penny!" This wonderful +book consists of a series of common gaudily colored pictures, supposed +to represent the procession, which has done service at the show +from time immemorial, but it is each year as welcome as ever to the +children who each have a penny to buy one. Through the streets we have +passing visions of pink silk stockings, canary-colored breeches, and +dark green coats and gold lace, also tri-colored rosettes as large as +saucers; and pass by shop-windows full of sweet, eager little faces, +in the place of hose, shirts, sewing-machines, etc. + +At last we arrive at our destination in Cheapside, where, through the +kindness of a friend, a window on the first floor of a large building +is waiting for us. How impatient we are until we hear the band of the +Grenadier Guards, which heads the procession. After this band and that +of the Royal London Militia, come the Worshipful Company of Loriners, +preceded by jolly watermen in blue and white striped jerseys and white +trousers, bearing banners; more watermen follow to relieve them; the +beadle of the company with his staff of office; the clerk in his +chariot; the wardens, wearing silk cloaks trimmed with sables, +in their carriages, and amongst them Sir John Bennett, the great +watch-maker in Cheapside, a charming-looking old gentleman with rosy +cheeks and profuse gray curls; his face lights up with smiles as the +shouts of "Bravo, Bennett," show how popular he is. + +Then comes a grand yellow coach, in which rides the Master of the +Company, attended by his chaplain. After the Loriners come the +Farriers, the band of the First Life Guards, banners, beadle and mace +clerk, wardens and master. After them the Broderers. As these pass +slowly along, an excitement is caused by the behavior of the horse of +a hussar, who is mounting guard. It does not like the proceedings at +all, and still less the greasy asphalt on which it stands, dances +round, backs into the Worshipful Master of Broderers' carriage, and +finally rears and falls, unseating its rider. The hussar is quite cool +and quiet, soon reseats himself, and rejects the offer of a fussy +little man in red to hold his horse. + +And now comes the Worshipful Company of Bakers, preceded by their +banner, with its good old motto, "Praise God for all." These are +really very jolly and well-favored looking companions, most of the +members bearing large bouquets of flowers. After them the Vintners' +Company, with the band of the Royal Artillery; ten Commissioners, +each bearing a shield; eight master porters in vintner's dress; the +Bargemaster in full uniform, and the Swan Uppers. These are men who +look after the swans belonging to the corporation of London, which +build their nests along the banks of the Thames, and they mark the +young swans each spring. + +The "Uppers" look very well in their dress, consisting of dark cloth +jackets slashed with white, blue and white striped jerseys and white +trousers. + +After this company had passed, a grand shout announced the coming of +the elephants. These, as some small boy has observed, are "curious +animals, with two tails--one before and one behind." First came a +number of large ones, with Mr. Sanger, their owner, who was mounted on +a curiously spotted horse. They were gorgeous with oriental trappings +and howdahs. On the foremost one rode a man representing a grand +Indian prince. He had a reddish mustache, wore spectacles, a +magnificent purple and white turban, and showy oriental costume. He +produced a great impression on the crowd. In other howdahs sat one, +two or three splendid Hindoos, whose dress was past description. Then +came several young elephants ridden by boys; one of these was seized +with a desire to lie down, and had to be vigorously roused; but, +on the whole, they behaved in a wonderfully correct and dignified +manner--now and then gracefully swinging round their trunks amongst +the sympathizing crowd, in search of refreshment. + +The elephants were escorted by equestrians in state costumes, and +followed by six knights in steel armor, with lances and pennons, +mounted on chargers. One of these "wouldn't go," and had to be dragged +on ignominiously by a policeman. Then the Epping Forest rangers came. +They were picturesquely dressed in green velvet coats, broad-brimmed +hats and long feathers. After these, trumpeters, under-sheriffs in +their state carriages, aldermen, the Recorder, more trumpeters, and +then a most gorgeous coach--with hammer-cloth of red and gold, men in +liveries too splendid to describe, and four fine horses--brings the +late lord mayor. The mounted band of household cavalry follows. These +really look splendid in crimson coats covered with gold embroidery and +velvet caps, riding handsome white horses. + +There is a stoppage just as they come up. They are rapturously greeted +by the crowd, and requested to "play up." The mayor's servants, in +state liveries, follow on foot. After them rides a very important +person, the city marshal, on horseback. The city trumpeters come now, +preceding the right honorable the lord mayor's most gorgeous gilt +coach, drawn by six horses. In it sits Sir Thomas White, supported by +his chaplain, and attended by his sword-bearer and the common crier. +An escort of the 21st Hussars brings up the rear. Policemen follow, +and after them a stray mail-cart, a butcher's boy with his tray; after +that, not just the deluge, but the crowd. + +"Oh, mamma!" says Willie, "the beefeaters didn't come! Nine of them +there are in my book, and a grand one going in front, blowing a +trumpet. And the man holding his thumb to his nose at the sheriffs; +and the policeman knocking a thief down with a staff! And the lord +mayor had no spectacles on. That's not fair! Do beefeaters eat lots of +beef, mamma?" + +"Oh, no," says Charlie, with a superior air, "they are only sideboard +chaps." + +Willie is still more puzzled, until he is told that in the olden time +servants so costumed used to stand by the sideboard, or buffet, as +it was called, at feasts, and so got the name of buffetiers, and by +degrees the name became changed into beefeaters, which was more easily +remembered by the people. + +[Illustration: THE LORD MAYOR OF LONDON'S SHOW.] + +From our window we could not, of course, follow the procession on its +winding way, nor had we seen it start. On looking at the paper next +morning, we read that at first it was feared that the elephants had +failed to keep their appointment. It was almost time to set out, and +no elephants were to be seen. What must be done? The people ought not +to be cheated out of the best part of the show; and yet, on the other +hand, how undignified for a lord mayor to be kept waiting for thirteen +elephants! I am sorry to say the police were rather glad. They had +been very much afraid that the animals might prove troublesome during +so long and unusual a walk; or else, coming from a circus, might, at +any sudden pause, imagine themselves in the arena, and take it into +their grave heads to perform on two legs and terrify the horses, or +possibly annoy the lord mayor and his chaplain by putting their +long trunks into his coach. But, happily for us, the police were +disappointed. Such dignified creatures could not be expected to come +early and be kept waiting. + +Just at the right time they came leisurely up, and gravely taking +their proper place, marched on with their proverbial sagacity--waiting +outside Westminster Hall, whilst the lord mayor swore to do his +duty, as quietly as though they were at home--and afterward left the +procession at Blackfriars Bridge, to go to their own quarters and +eat their well-earned dinner. It is to be hoped that the lord mayor +ordered something specially good for them. + +The elephants having left, the **embassadors, her majesty's ministers of +state, the nobility, judges, and other persons of distinction, joined +the procession, and proceeded to feast with his lordship and the lady +mayoress at Guildhall. + +[*sic] + + * * * * * + + + + +MY GIRL + +BY JOHN S. ADAMS. + + + I. + + A little corner with its crib, + A little mug, a spoon, a bib, + A little tooth so pearly white, + A little rubber ring to bite. + + + II. + + A little plate all lettered round, + A little rattle to resound, + A little creeping--see! she stands! + A little step 'twixt outstretched hands. + + + III. + + A little doll with flaxen hair, + A little willow rocking-chair, + A little dress of richest hue, + A little pair of gaiters blue. + + + IV. + + A little school day after day, + A "little schoolma'am" to obey, + A little study--soon 'tis past, + A little graduate at last. + + + V. + + A little muff for winter weather, + A little jockey-hat and feather, + A little sack with funny pockets, + A little chain, a ring, and lockets. + + + VI. + + A little while to dance and bow, + A little escort homeward now, + A little party, somewhat late, + A little lingering at the gate. + + + VII. + + A little walk in leafy June, + A little talk while shines the moon, + A little reference to papa, + A little planning with mamma. + + + VIII. + + A little ceremony grave, + A little struggle to be brave, + A little cottage on a lawn, + A little kiss--my girl was gone! + + * * * * * + + + + +MARS, THE PLANET OF WAR. + +BY RICHARD A. PROCTOR. + + +Not long ago, the planet Jupiter came among the stars of our southern +evening skies. Those who noted down his track found that he first +advanced from west to east, then receded along a track near his +advancing one, then advanced again, still running on a track side by +side with his former advancing track, and so passed away from the +scene, toward the part of the sky where the sun's light prevents our +tracking him. + +That was a useful and rather easy first lesson about the motions of +the bodies called planets. + +We have now to consider a rather less simple case, but one a great +deal more interesting. Two planets intrude among our evening stars, +each following a looped track, but the tracks are unlike; the two +planets are unlike in appearance, and they are also very unlike in +reality. + +I hope many of my young readers have already found out for themselves +that these intrusive bodies have been wandering among our fixed stars. +I purposely said nothing about the visitors last August, so that those +who try to learn the star-groups from my maps may have had a chance of +discovering the two planets for themselves. If they have done so, they +have in fact repeated a discovery which was made many, many years ago. +Ages before astronomy began to be a science, men found out that some +of the stars move about among the rest, and they also noticed the kind +of path traveled in the sky by each of those moving bodies. It was +long, indeed, before they found out the kind of path traveled _really_ +by the planets. In fact, they supposed our earth to be fixed; and if +our earth were fixed, the paths of the planets about her as a center +would be twisted and tangled in the most perplexing way. So that folks +in those old times, seeing the planets making all manner of loops and +twistings round the sky, and supposing they made corresponding loops +and twistings in traveling round the earth, thought the planets were +living creatures, going round the earth to watch it and rule over it, +each according to his own fashion. So they worshiped the planets as +gods, counting seven of them, including the sun and moon. Some they +thought good to men, others evil. The two planets now twisting their +way along the southern skies were two of the evil sort, viz.: Mars, +called the Lesser Infortune, and Saturn, called the Greater Infortune. +In the old system of star-worship, Mars ruled over Tuesday, and Saturn +over Saturday,--the Sabbath of olden times,--a day which the Chaldean +and Egyptian astrologers regarded as the most unlucky in the whole +week. + +[Illustration: FIG. 1. THE PATHS OF MARS AND SATURN.] + +The actual paths traveled among the stars by these two planets, this +fall, are shown in Fig. 1. You will see how wildly the fiery Mars, the +planet of war, careers round his great loop, while old Saturn, "heavy, +dull, and slow" (as Armado says that lead is--the metal dedicated to +Saturn), plods slowly and wearily along. Between August 6 and October +1, Mars traversed his entire backward track,--Saturn, you notice, only +a small portion of his much smaller loop. On the sky, too, you will +see that while Mars shines with a fierce ruddy glow, well suited +to his warlike character, Saturn shines with a dull yellow light, +suggestive of the evil qualities which the astrologers of old assigned +to him. "My loking," says Saturn, in Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales," "is +the fader of pestilence: + + "Min ben also the maladies colde, + The derke treasons, and the costes olde; + Min is the drenching in the see so wan, + Min is the prison in the derke cote,[1] + Min is the strangel and hanging by the throte, + The murmure, and the cherles[2] rebelling, + The groyning and the prine empoysoning." + + [Footnote 1: _Dark or gloomy coast_. This line was amusingly + rendered, by the printer of my "Saturn and its System," in which I + quoted Chaucer's lines, "Mine is the prison, and the dirty coat."] + + [Footnote 2: _Churl's._ Notice this word. It is the same as the + word rendered _Charles's_ in the common English name for the + Dipper. One should always say Charles's Wain, not Charles' (as is + the way Tennyson does in the "May Queen ").] + +For the present, however, let us consider the planet Mars, leaving +slow Saturn to wait for us another month. + +It has always seemed to me one of the most useful lessons in astronomy +to follow the line by which, long ago, great discoveries were made. +Thus, if the young reader went out on every fine night and noted the +changing position of Mars, he traced out the track shown in Fig. 1. +He noted, also, that the planet, which shone at its brightest about +September 5, gradually grew less and less bright as it traveled off, +after rounding the station near October 5 (really on Oct. 7), toward +the east. He observed, then, that the seeming loop followed by the +planet was a real looped track (so far, at least, as our observer on +the earth was concerned). Fig. 2 shows the apparent shape of Mars's +loop, the dates corresponding to those shown in Fig. 1. Only it does +not lie flat, as shown on the paper, but must be supposed to lie +somewhat under the surface of the paper, as shown by the little +upright _a, b,_ which, indeed, gives the distance under the paper at +which the part of the loop is supposed to lie where lowest at _m_. The +other similar uprights at M_1, M_2, and M_3 show the depression at +these places. You perceive that the part M_1, M_2, lies higher than +the part M_2, M_3. If the loop were flat, and, like E, the earth, +were in the level of the paper, it would be seen edgewise, and the +advancing, receding, and advancing parts of the planet's course would +all lie on the same line upon the sky. But being thus out of the +level, we see through the loop, so to speak, and it has the seeming +shape shown in Fig. 1.[3] + + [Footnote 3: I must re-mention that though this explanation is + made as simple as I possibly can make it, so far as words are + concerned, the figures present the result of an exact geometrical + investigation. Every dot, for instance, in Fig. 2, has had its + place separately determined by me.] + +[Illustration: FIG. 2. ONE OF MARS'S LOOPS.] + +This is one loop, you will understand, out of an immense number which +Mars makes in journeying round the earth, regarded as fixed. He +retreats to a great distance, swoops inward again toward the earth, +making a loop as in Fig. 2, and retreating again. Then he comes +again, makes another swoop, and a loop on another side, and so on. +He behaves, in fact, like that "little quiver fellow," a right +martialist, no doubt, who, as Justice Shallow tells us, "would about +and about, and come you in, and come you in,--and away again would a +go, and again would a come." The loops are not all of the same size. +The one shown in Fig. 2 is one of the smallest. I have before me a +picture which I have made of all this planet's loops from 1875 to +1892, and it forms the most curiously intertwined set of curves you +can imagine,--rather pretty, though not regular, the loops on one side +being much larger than those on the other. I would show the picture +here, but it is too large. One of these days, it will be given in a +book I am going to write about Mars, who is quite important enough to +have a book all to himself. I want you, now, to understand me that +Mars really does travel in a most complicated path, when you consider +the earth as at rest. If a perfect picture of all his loopings and +twistings since astronomy began could be drawn,--even on a sheet of +paper as large as the floor of a room,--the curves would so interlace +that you would not be able to track them out, but be always leaving +the true track and getting upon one crossing it slightly aslant,--just +like the lines by which trains are made to run easily off one +track on to another. + +The unfortunate astronomers of old times, who had to explain, _if they +could_, this complicated behavior of Mars (and of other planets, too), +were quite beaten. The more carefully they made their observations, +the more peculiar the motions seemed. One astronomer gave up the work +in despair, just like that unfortunate Greek philosopher who, because +he could not understand the tides of the Euboean Sea, drowned +himself in it. So this astronomer, who was a king,--Alphonsus of +Portugal,--unable to unravel the loops of the planets, said, in his +wrath, that if he had been called on by the Creator to assign the +planets their paths, he would have managed the matter a great deal +better. The plates of the old astronomical books became more and more +confusing, and cost more and more labor, as astronomers continued to + + ... "Build, unbuild, contrive + To save appearances, to gird the sphere + With centric and eccentric scribbled o'er, + Cycle and epicycle, orb in orb." + +It was to the study of Mars, the wildest wanderer of all, that we owe +the removal of all these perplexities. The idea had occurred to the +great astronomer, Copernicus, that the complexities of the planets' +paths are not real, but are caused by the constant moving about of the +place from whence we watch the planets. If a fly at rest at the middle +of a clock face watched the ends of the two hands, they would seem to +go round him in circles; but if, instead, he was on the end of one of +the hands (and was not knocked off as the other passed), the end of +this other hand would not move round the fly in the same simple way. +When the two hands were together it would be near, when they were +opposite it would be far away, and, without entering into any +particular description of the way in which it would seem to move, you +can easily see that the motion would seem much more complicated +than if the fly watched it from the middle of the clock face. Now, +Copernicus _did_ enter into particulars, and showed by mathematical +reasoning that nearly all the peculiarities of the planets' motions +could be explained by supposing that the sun, not the earth, was the +body round which the planets move, and that they go round him nearly +in circles. + +[Illustration: FIG. 3. THE PATHS OF MARS, THE EARTH, VENUS, AND +MERCURY.] + +But Copernicus could not explain _all_ the motions. And Tycho Brahe, +another great astronomer, who did not believe at all in the new ideas +of Copernicus, made a number of observations on our near neighbor +Mars, to show that Copernicus was wrong. He gave these to Kepler, +another great astronomer, enjoining him to explain them in such a way +as to overthrow the Copernican ideas. But Kepler behaved like Balaam +the son of Beor; for, called on to curse (or at least to denounce) the +views of Copernicus, he altogether blessed them three times. First, +he found from the motions of Mars that the planets do not travel in +circles, but in ovals, very nearly circular in shape, but not having +the sun exactly at the center. Secondly, he discovered the law +according to which they move, now faster now slower, in their oval +paths; and thirdly, he found a law according to which the nearer +planets travel more quickly and the farther planets more slowly, +every distance having its own proper rate. These three laws of Kepler +constitute the Magna Charta of the solar system. + +Afterward, Newton showed _how_ it happens that the planets obey these +laws, but as his part of the work had no particular reference to Mars, +I say no more about it in this place. + +Here, in Fig. 3, are the real paths of Mars and the Earth, and also of +Venus and Mercury. No loops, you see, in any of them, simply because +we have set the sun in the middle. Set the earth in the middle, and +each planet would have its own set of loops, each set enormously +complicated, and all three sets mixed together in the most confusing +way. It is well to remember this when you see, as in many books of +astronomy, the old theory illustrated with a set of circles looking +almost as neat and compact as the set truly representing the modern +theory. For the idea is suggested by this simple picture of the old +theory that the theory itself was simple, whereas it had become so +confusing that not merely young learners, but the most profound +mathematicians, were baffled when they tried to unravel the motions of +the planets. + +I think the figure pretty well explains itself. All I need mention is, +that while the shape and position of each path is correctly shown, the +size of the sun at center is immensely exaggerated. A mere pin point, +but shining with star-like splendor, would properly represent him. +As for the figures of the earth and Mars, they are still more +tremendously out of proportion. The cross-breadth of the lines +representing these planets' tracks is _many times_ greater than the +breadth of either planet on the scale of the chart. + +On September 5 the earth and Mars came to the position shown at E and +M. You observe that they could not be much nearer. It is indeed very +seldom that Mars is so well placed for observation. His illuminated +face was turned toward the dark or night half of the earth, so that he +shone brightly in the sky at midnight, and can be well studied with +the telescope. + +When Galileo turned toward Mars the telescope with which he had +discovered the moons of Jupiter, the crescent form of Venus, and many +other wonders in the heavens, he was altogether disappointed. His +telescope was indeed too small to show any features of interest in +Mars, though the planet of war is much nearer to us than Jupiter. Mars +is but a small world. The diameter of the planet is about 4,400 miles, +that of our earth being nearly 8,000. Jupiter, though much farther +away, has an immense diameter of more than 80,000 miles to make +up, and much more than make up, for the effect of distance. With his +noble system of moons he appears a remarkable object even with a +small telescope, while Mars shows no feature of interest even with +telescopes of considerable size. + +It was not, then, till very powerful telescopes had been constructed +that astronomers learned what we now know about Mars.[4] + + [Footnote 4: See the "Moons of Mars" in "Letter Box" Department] + +It is found that his surface is divided into land and water, like the +surface of our own earth. But his seas and oceans are not nearly so +large compared with his continents and lands. You know that on our own +earth the water covers so much larger a surface than the land that +the great continents are in reality islands. Europe, Asia and Africa +together form one great island; North and South America another, not +quite so large; then come Australia, Greenland, Madagascar, and so +forth; all the lands being islands, larger or smaller. On the other +hand, except the Caspian Sea and the Sea of Aral, there are no large +seas entirely land-bound. In the case of Mars a very different state +of things prevails, as you will see from the three accompanying +pictures (hitherto unpublished), drawn by the famous English observer, +Dawes (called the Eagle-eyed). The third and best was drawn with +a telescope constructed by your famous optician, Alvan Clark, of +Cambridge, Massachusetts. The dark parts are the seas, the light parts +being land, or in some cases cloud or snow. But in these pictures most +of the lighter portions represent land; for they have been seen often +so shaped, whereas clouds, of course, would change in shape. + +The planet Mars, like our earth, turns on its axis, so that it has day +and night as we have. The length of its day is not very different from +that of our own day. Our earth turns once on its axis in ---- but +before reading on, try to complete this sentence for yourself. Every +one knows that the earth's turning on its axis produces day and night, +and nine persons out of ten, if asked how long the earth takes in +turning round her axis, will answer, 24 hours; and if asked how many +times she turns on her axis in a year, will say 365 times, or if +disposed to be very exact, "about 365-1/4 times." But neither answer +is correct. The earth turns on her axis about 366-1/4 times in each +year, and each turning occupies 23 hours 56 minutes and 4 seconds and +1 tenth of a second. We, taking the ordinary day as the time of a +turning or rotation, lose count of one rotation each year. It is +necessary to mention this, in order that when I tell you how long the +day of Mars is, you may be able correctly to compare it with our own +day. Mars, then, turns on his axis in 24 hours 37 minutes 22 seconds +and 7 tenth-parts of a second. So that Mars requires 41 minutes 18 +seconds and 6-tenths of a second longer to turn his small body once +round than our earth requires to turn round her much larger body. The +common day of Mars is, however, only about 39 minutes longer than our +common day. + +Mars has a long year, taking no less than 687 of our days to complete +his circuit round the sun, so that his year lasts only about one month +and a half less than two of ours. + +[Illustration: APPEARANCE OF MARS, 1852, MARCH 23, 5 H. 45 M., +Greenwich Mean Time. Power of Telescope, 358; 6-1/3 inch object-glass] + +[Illustration: APPEARANCE OF MARS, 1852, FEBRUARY 3, 6 H. 50 M., +Greenwich Mean Time. Power of Telescope, 242 and 358 on 6-1/3 inch +object-glass.] + +[Illustration: APPEARANCE OF MARS, 1860, JULY 6, 11 H. 33 M., +Greenwich Mean Time. Power of Telescope, 201; 8-1/4 inch object-glass. +Planet very low, yet pretty distinct.] + +Like the earth, Mars has seasons, for his polar axis, like that of +the earth, is aslant, and at one part of his year brings his northern +regions more fully into sunlight, at which time summer prevails there +and winter in his southern regions; while at the opposite part of his +year his southern regions are turned more fully sunward and have their +summer, while winter prevails over his northern regions. + +Around his poles, as around the earth's, there are great masses of +ice, insomuch that it is very doubtful whether any inhabitants of Mars +have been able to penetrate to his poles, any more than Kane or Hayes +or Nares or Parry, despite their courage and endurance, have been +able to reach our northern pole, or Cook or Wilkes or James Ross our +antarctic pole. + +In the summer of either hemisphere of Mars, the north polar snows +become greatly reduced in extent, as is natural, while in winter +they reach to low latitudes, showing that in parts of the planet +corresponding to the United States, or mid-Europe, as to latitude, +bitter cold must prevail for several weeks in succession. + +The land regions of Mars can be distinguished from the seas by their +ruddy color, the seas being greenish. But here, perhaps, you will be +disposed to ask how astronomers can be sure that the greenish regions +are seas, the ruddy regions land, the white spots either snow or +cloud. Might not materials altogether unlike any we are acquainted +with exist upon that remote planet? + +The spectroscope answers this question in the clearest way. You +may remember what I told you in October, 1876, about Venus, how +astronomers have learned that the vapor of water exists in +her atmosphere. The same method has been applied, even more +satisfactorily, to the planet of war, and it has been found that he +also has his atmosphere at times laden with moisture. This being so, +it is clear we have not to do with a planet made of materials utterly +unlike those forming our earth. To suppose so, when we find that the +air of Mars, formed like our own (for if it contained other gases the +spectroscope would tell us), contains often large quantities of the +vapor of water, would be as absurd as to believe in the green cheese +theory of the moon, or in another equally preposterous, advanced +lately by an English artist--Mr. J.T. Brett--to the effect that the +atmosphere of Venus is formed of glass. + +There is another theory about Mars, certainly not so absurd as +either of those just named, but scarcely supported by evidence at +present--the idea, namely, advanced by a French astronomer, that the +ruddy color of the lands and seas of Mars is due to red trees and a +generally scarlet vegetation. Your poet Holmes refers to this in those +lines of his, "Star-clouds and Wind-clouds" (to my mind among the most +charming of his many charming poems): + + "The snows that glittered on the disc of Mars + Have melted, and the planet's fiery orb + Rolls in the crimson summer of its year." + +It is quite possible, of course, that such colors as are often seen +in American woods in the autumn-time may prevail in the forests and +vegetation of Mars during the fullness of the Martian summer. The fact +that during this season the planet looks ruddier than usual, in some +degree corresponds with this theory. But it is much better explained, +to my mind, by the greater clearness of the Martian air in the +summer-time. That would enable us to see the color of the soil better. +If our earth were looked at from Venus during the winter-time, the +snows covering large parts of her surface, and the clouds and mists +common in the winter months, would hide the tints of the surface, +whereas these would be very distinct in clear summer weather. + +I fear my own conclusion about Mars is that his present condition +is very desolate. I look on the ruddiness of tint to which I have +referred as one of the signs that the planet of war has long since +passed its prime. There are lands and seas in Mars, the vapor of water +is present in his air, clouds form, rains and snows fall upon his +surface, and doubtless brooks and rivers irrigate his soil, and carry +down the moisture collected on his wide continents to the seas whence +the clouds had originally been formed. But I do not think there is +much vegetation on Mars, or that many living creatures of the higher +types of Martian life as it once existed still remain. All that is +known about the planet tends to show that the time when it attained +that stage of planetary existence through which our earth is now +passing must be set millions of years, perhaps hundreds of millions of +years, ago. He has not yet, indeed, reached that airless and waterless +condition, that extremity of internal cold, or in fact that utter +unfitness to support any kind of life, which would seem to prevail +in the moon. The planet of war in some respects resembles a desolate +battle-field, and I fancy that there is not a single region of the +earth now inhabited by man which is not infinitely more comfortable as +an abode of life than the most favored regions of Mars at the present +time would be for creatures like ourselves. + +But there are other subjects besides astronomy that the readers of the +ST. NICHOLAS want to learn about. I do not wish you to have to say to +me what a little daughter of mine said the other day. She had asked me +several questions about the sun, and after I had answered them I went +on to tell her several things which she had not asked. She listened +patiently for quite a long time,--fully five minutes, I really +believe,--and then she said: "Don't you think, papa, that that's +enough about the sun? Come and play with us on the lawn." So, as it +was holiday time, we went and played in the sun, instead of talking +about him. + + * * * * * + + + + +A DOMESTIC TRAGEDY--IN TWO PARTS. + +[Illustration: PART I.] + + "MOTHER! from this moment, behold me, my own master! + Yes, madam, I am old enough. I mean just what I say." + +[Illustration: PART II.] + + AND, but for a sudden and unforeseen disaster, + The puppy might have kept his resolution to this day. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE STICKLEBACK BELL-RINGERS + +BY C. F. HOLDER. + + +A certain pond in the country was once peopled with a number of +turtles, frogs, and fishes which I came to consider my pets, and +which at last grew so tame that I fed them from my hands. Among them, +however, were four or five little sticklebacks that lived under the +shade of a big willow, and these were so quarrelsome that I generally +fed them apart from the rest. But sometimes all met, and then the +feast usually was ended by the death of a minnow. For, shocking to +say, whenever there was a dispute for the food, some one of the little +fishes was almost sure to be devoured by the hungry sticklebacks. + +These stickleback-and-minnow combats, after a while, came to be of +daily occurrence, and the reason for this was a singular one, which I +must explain. + +Under the willow shade, and from one of the branches, I had hung a +miniature "belfry," containing a tiny brass bell, and had led the +string into the water, letting it go down to a considerable depth. At +first, I tied bait at intervals upon the line, and the sticklebacks, +of course, seized upon it, and thus rang the bell. Generally the +ringing was done in a very grave and proper way, although sometimes, +when the bait was too tightly tied, the quick peals sounded like a +call to a fire. + +[Illustration] + +I kept up this system of baiting the string for about a week, until +I thought they understood it, and then replaced the worms by bits of +stone. As I expected, the next morning, as I looked through the grass +and down into the water, tinkle! tinkle! rang the bell, and I knew my +little friends were saying, "Good-morning!" and expected a breakfast. +You may be sure they got it. I put my hand down, and up they came, and +got one worm apiece; and as I raised my hand, down they rushed, and +away went the bell, in an uproarious peal, that must have startled the +whole neighborhood. I was quick to respond, and they soon learned to +ring the bell before coming to the surface; in fact, if they saw me +pass, I always heard their welcome greeting. But to return to the +minnows. + +I generally fed them first, about twenty feet up the bank; but one +morning I found one or two had followed me down to the residence of +the stickleback family. They met with a rude reception, however, and, +to avoid making trouble, the next day I went to the willow first. But +no sooner had the bell begun to ring, than I saw a lot of ripples +coming down, and in a second the two factions were in mortal combat. +The sticklebacks were fighting not only for breakfast, but for their +nests, which were near by; and they made sad work of the poor minnows, +who, though smart in some things, did not know when they were whipped, +and so kept up the fight, though losing one of their number nearly +every morning. The bell now and then rang violently, but I fear it was +only sounding an appeal from a voracious stickleback whose appetite +had got the better of his rage. + +So it went on every morning. The minnows had learned what the bell +meant, and though usually defeated in the fight, they in reality had +their betters as servants to ring the bell and call them to meals. +Finally, they succeeded, by force of great numbers, in driving away +their pugnacious little rivals, and the bell hung silent; for, strange +to say, they knew what the sound meant, but I could never teach them +to ring it, when they could rise and steal the worm from my hand +without. But I am inclined to think it was more laziness than +inability to learn, as they afterward picked up readily some much more +difficult tricks. I taught them to leap from the water into my hand, +and lie as if dead; and having arranged a slide of polished wood upon +the bank, by placing worms upon it I soon had them leaping out and +sliding down like so many boys coasting in the winter. That they +afterward did it for amusement I know, as I often watched them +unobserved when there was nothing to attract but the fun of sliding. +This kind of amusement is not uncommon with many other animals, +particularly seals, which delight in making "slides" on the icy +shores. + + + + + +[ILLUSTATION] + +THE CRICKET ON THE HEARTH + +BY MRS. CLARA DOTY BATES. + + + Old Granny Cricket's rocking-chair, + Creakety-creak, creakety-creak!-- + Back and forth, and here and there, + Squeakety-squeak, squeakety-squeak!-- + On the hearth-stone, every night, + Rocks and rocks in the cheery light. + Little old woman, dressed in black, + With spindling arms and a crooked back, + She sits with a cap on her wise old head, + And her eyes are fixed on the embers red; + She does not sing, she does not speak, + But the rocking-chair goes creakety-creak! + + Cheerily sounds the rocking-chair, + Creakety-creak, creakety-creak!-- + While it swings in the firelight there, + Squeakety-squeak, squeakety-squeak! + Old Granny Cricket, rocking, rocking, + Knits and knits on a long black stocking. + No matter how swiftly her fingers fly, + She never can keep her family, + With their legs so long from foot to knee, + Stockinged as well as they ought to be; + That's why, at night, week after week, + Her rocking-chair goes squeakety-squeak! + + * * * * * + + + + +HOW I WEIGHED THE THANKSGIVING TURKEY. + +BY G. M. SHAW. + + +"Here, sir! Please take this bird around to Albro's, and see how much +it weighs." + +The idea! What would the folks over the way say, to see the +"professor" walking out with a big turkey under his arm? That was the +way the thing presented itself to the good-natured college-student +acting as private tutor in the family. But Mrs. Simpson, the portly +and practical housewife, had no such idea of the fitness of things. + +It was the day before Thanksgiving, and the farmer who had agreed to +supply her with a turkey had brought it, but had not weighed it, and, +of course, they could not agree on its weight, all of which ended in +the startling proposition with which we began. + +"Well, if you aint the laziest man--! Just as though it was going to +hurt you any to take this bird to the corner and back!" she went on, +as she saw me looking, apparently, for a hole to crawl into, but, in +reality, for the broom, which, when I found, I made use of in putting +into execution a plan I had formed for weighing the turkey at home. + +I hung the broom-handle to the gas-jet by a wire loop, and slid it +along in the loop until it balanced. By this time all were curious to +see what I was about. + +I then fixed a wire to the turkey's feet and hooked it so that it +would slide on the broom-handle. Next I got a flat-iron and fixed it +in the same way. When the broom was nicely balanced, I hung the turkey +on the broom end of the stick, two inches from the balancing loop. +Then I hung the flat-iron on the other side, and shoved it along until +it balanced the turkey. Next I measured the distances of the turkey +and flat-iron from the balancing loop, and found that the turkey hung +two inches and the flat-iron eight inches from the balancing loop. +That was all. I had found the weight of the turkey, and told them: +Twenty-four pounds. + +"Do you s'pose I'm going to believe all that tomfoolery? It doesn't +weigh more'n twenty, I know. Here, Maggie! Take this out and ask Albro +to weigh it for you." + +"I'm blamed if he hasn't hit it about right," said the farmer who had +brought the turkey. "How did you find out?" + +"Well, you see," said I, "the flat-iron has a figure 6 on it; that +shows that it weighs six pounds. Now, if the turkey had not weighed +more than the flat-iron they would have balanced each other at the +same distance from the balancing loop; but the turkey was the heavier, +so I had to move the flat-iron out further. At the same distance from +the loop as the turkey (two inches), the flat-iron pulled six pounds' +weight, and at every addition of that distance it would pull six +pounds more. Thus: at four inches it pulled twelve pounds; at six +inches, eighteen pounds; and at eight inches, twenty-four pounds. +At that distance it just balanced the turkey, thus proving that it +weighed----" + +"Well, Maggie, what does Albro say?" + +"Twenty-four poun', mum," replied Maggie, coming in. + +"Well, I give up," said Mrs. Simpson; and she did, and so do I--till +next time. + + + + + +NIMBLE JIM AND THE MAGIC MELON + +BY J. A. JUDSON. + + +Once upon a time, in a snug little cottage by a brook under a hill, +lived an old widow and her only child. She was a tidy, pleasant-faced +dame, was "Old Mother Growser;" and as to her boy, there wasn't a +brighter lad of his age in all the village. His real name was James, +but he had always been so spry and handy that when he was a little +bit of a chap the neighbors called him "Nimble Jim." At work in the +cottage garden, or at play on the village green, even at his books +and slate, he was ever the same industrious, active "Nimble Jim," and +always a comfort to his mother. + +His father had been the village cobbler, and when he died the folks +said: "Who'll mend our shoes now, and auld Jamie gone?" + +Then up sprang the boy, saying: "I'll mend them, now father's dead." + +The simple folks laughed at him. "Hoot! toot! lad," said they; "ye +canna mend shoes!" + +But he answered bravely: "Am I not fifteen years old, and e'en a'most +a mon? Haven't I all father's tools? Haven't I seen him do it day +after day ever since I was a wee boy? It's time I was doing something +besides jobbin' and runnin' and pretendin' to work! I may take to th' +auld bench, and e'en get my father's place among ye in time, so I be +good enough. Mother canna allus be a-spinnin', spinnin', spinnin'. The +poor old eyes are growing dim a'ready,"--and Jim gently stroked her +thin gray hair. + +"Ye're a brave darlin', and my own handy Nimble Jim," said the fond +mother, smilingly. + +"Ah, well, boy," the neighbors said, "be about it if ye will, for +there's no cobbler hereabout now, and the shoes must be mended. But +ye'll do the work fairly, mind, or we'll no' pay ye a penny!" + +"I'll try my best, and bide your good favor, neighbors," was Jim's +cheery answer. + +And so he succeeded to his father's old bench by the window, the +lap-stone and hammer and awl; and as he waxed his thread and stitched +away, singing the old songs, the country folks passing by would +listen, look at each other, smile and nod approvingly, or say: + +"Hark to that, friend! One might think auld Jamie back again, with the +whack o' the hammer and the blithe song, though the voice ben't so +crackit like as th' auld one." + +"Aye, it's a bit clearer, but no happier. Auld cobbler Jamie was a +merry soul," says one. + +"And the lad'll prove worthy his father, I warrant. Listen to the +turn of that song, now; I've heard Jamie singin' it many a day," says +another. + + "Whack! whack! thump-pet-ty crack! + In go the shoe-nails with many a smack. + Zu! zu! pull the thread through; + Soon will the shoe be, done, master, for you! + + "Nay! nay! there's nothin' to pay, + If it is not mended as good as I say. + I do my work honestly--that is the thing; + Then Jamie the cobbler's as good as the king!" + +And the folks passed on, or stopped to leave shoes to mend. + +Jim prospered in the old stall, and they called him "Nimble Jim, the +Cobbler," for soon he was fairly installed as cobbler to the whole +country-side. He was happy, and his old mother was happy, and proud, +too, of the success of her boy, who was the light of her home and the +joy of her heart. + +All day Jim worked away at his bench. Winter evenings he read his few +books by the firelight; in the cool of the summer days, or in the +early mornings, he busied himself in the little garden. His +vegetables were his pride, and for miles around no one had so trim a +garden-patch, or so many good things in it, as Nimble Jim. + +Only one kind of all his plants failed to come to anything,--his +melon-vines,--and these always failed. This began to grieve him +sorely, for he was fond of melons; and, besides, he thought if he +could only raise fine ones, he might sell them for a deal of money, +like gruff, rich old Farmer Hummidge. + +"Oh dear! my melons don't grow like other folkses. They don't come up +at all, or if they do they wither or spindle away," he said, losing +his temper, and tearing up some of the vines by the roots. Then he +went into the cottage, angrily, and began to pound away, driving in +big hob-nails. With the twilight, his mother called him to the simple +meal, but he was sullen and silent. + +"What be the matter with ye, my Nimble Jim?" asked the good dame, +cheerily. + +"Matter enough, mother! My melons wont grow; there's somethin' the +matter with them. Faith, I believe some imp has cast a spell over 'em. +I do, mother," quoth he, thumping the table with his fist until the +dishes rattled. + +"Softly, softly, boy! Where's thy good nature gone?" said Mother +Growser, staring at him in wonder. + +"It be well enough to say 'Softly, softly,'" said he, "and I don't +want to grieve ye, mother; but it's naught with me but hammer, stitch, +dig,--hammer, stitch, dig,--the day in, the day out, when I might be +raisin' fine melons and sellin' 'em for mints of gold in the great +city. Yea, mother, sellin' 'em e'en to the king and queen and all the +grand lords and ladies at the court, like old Farmer Hummidge." + +For almost the first time in his life Jim was unhappy. + +"I would you had your wish, Nimble Jim; but then we've a neat bit +garden besides the melons; and the home is snug, and you're a good boy +and the best o' cobblers. Can't you be happy with that, my lad?" + +But Nimble Jim shook his head, for the spirit of discontent had taken +possession of him. + +Now, for many days, Nimble Jim neglected his cobbling and let the +weeds grow in his garden, while he moodily watched his melons as they +withered away. Soon he came to idle about them in the evening, too, +until, one bright moonlight night, as he was grieving over the +wretched, scraggy vines, he heard a tiny, silvery voice quite near him +cry, tauntingly: + +"Hello, Nimble Jim! How are your melons?" + +Jim would have been very angry at such a question could he have seen +anybody to be angry with; but, though he looked and looked with all +his eyes, not a soul could he see. + +"Hello, Nimble Jim! How are your melons? Ha, ha, ha! Melons! melons! +Ha, ha, ha!" And the sweet little voice sang, in a merry, mocking +strain: + + "Nice sweet melons! + Round ripe melons! + Nimble Jim likes them, I know. + Mean sour melons, + Crooked green melons, + Nimble Jim only can grow! + +Ha, ha, ha! How are your melons, Nimble Jim?" + +[Illustration: The Elfin Queen] + +"Who are you? What are you? Where are you?" cried Jim, hardly knowing +whether to be angry, amused, or frightened. + +"You ask a good many questions at once, don't you?" said the silvery +voice. "_Who_ am I? _What_ am I? _Where_ am I? Eh! I'm the Queen of +the Elfs," said her tiny majesty, "and if you look sharply you'll see +where I am." + +Just then a moonbeam streaming through the trees overhead fell across +his path, and, dancing up and down on it, he saw the tiny elfin +queen,--a lovely little creature with long, bright, wavy hair, and +glittering garments fluttering in the breeze, wings like a butterfly, +a mischievous smile on her face, and in her hand a wee wand tipped +with a star. But the brightest thing about her was the twinkle that +played hide-and-seek in her eye. + +Nimble Jim took off his hat and made a low bow. + +"Now, what is all this about?--and why are you neglecting your work, +sir?" demanded she, sternly. + +Jim trembled beneath her royal gaze, little as she was, and replied +humbly: + +"May it please your majesty, I wish I'd some melon-seeds that'd grow +like magic. I am dead tired of being nothin' but a cobbler. I want +to be a melon-merchant, and raise the finest, largest melons ever +seen,--supply the whole kingdom with them, and grow to be as rich as +the king himself." + +"Oh, you do, do you?" she answered, laughing her merry little laugh, +and capering up and down the moonbeam. "Oh! quite a modest youth! +Well, I'll make a bargain with you; and if you will do something for +me, you shall have your wish," said the queen. + +Nimble Jim was about to pour out his gratitude, when she interrupted +him, saying: "Now, Nimble Jim, listen to me. Your wish is a foolish +one, and I warn you that if you gain it you will be sorry. Why will +you not be content as you are?" + +"Your majesty," replied the obstinate youth. "I _cannot_ be content as +I am." + +"Well, since you insist on having your own way, we'll make our +bargain. Here,"--and, sitting down on the moonbeam, she pulled off a +shoe,--"here, sir, I want you to mend my shoe. I tripped just now on +a rough place in this moonbeam. Mend the rip; show me you are a good +cobbler, and I promise that you shall have your wish." + +"But, your majesty," began Nimble Jim, taking the shoe, which was no +bigger than a bean, "I can't sew such a little shoe; my fingers are +----" + +"There, there! Stop! I'm a queen, and people don't say 'can't' or +'wont' to me, sir," interrupted her majesty, with much dignity. "Take +the shoe, and find a way to mend it. I will come for it to-morrow +night at this same place and hour," and off she went up the moonbeam, +half skipping, half flying, while Jim stood stupidly staring until +she had entirely disappeared. Then he began, slowly: "Well,--I--never +--in--all--my--life--saw--such--a----" + +He said no more, but went in, and sat up all night, thinking how and +where he could find needle and thread fine enough to do such a piece +of cobbling as this. About dawn a thought struck him. His mother +thought he had gone crazy when she saw him chasing bees and pulling +down spider-webs. Hours and hours he worked, and though his fingers +were big, they were nimble, like his name; so, by and by, with a +needle made of a bee's sting and thread drawn from a spider-web, he +sewed up the rip in her fairy majesty's dainty shoe. + +He hardly could wait for the hour of meeting, but went into the +garden, with the shoe in his hand, long before the time. At length, +the queen came sliding down the moonbeam, laughing and singing: + +"Hello, Nimble Jim! How are your melons?" + +But he was not angry now; he only laughed respectfully, made a +profound bow, and said: + +"May it please your majesty, I have mended your majesty's shoe." + +The merry little queen took it from him, looked at it closely, saying +to herself: "Humph! I didn't think he could, but he did,"--and, +turning to Jim, said, much more graciously than before: "I suppose you +think yourself quite a cobbler; and so you are--for a mortal. Since +you have done your work so well, I will do as I said. Now," she +continued, handing him a little package about as big as a baby's +thumb, "plant these melon-seeds, and----" + +"Are these little things melon seeds? They look too small," +interrupted Jim,--for he had made no ceremony, even in the queen's +presence, about peeping into the package,--and it must be confessed +that they were very small indeed. + +"Certainly they are, or I would not tell you so. They are the +magic melons of fairy-land. As I was about to say when you rudely +interrupted, plant----" + +"I beg your pardon, your majes----" + +[Illustration: "BEFORE NIMBLE JIM COULD GET BACK TO THE HOUSE, THE +YARD WAS FULL OF MELON-VINE."] + +"_Will_ you keep still? Was there _ever_ such a chatterbox!" said +she. "I say, plant these melon-seeds to-morrow at sunrise, and you +will have your wish, foolish boy." And, while Jim was thinking of +melons and wealth, she skipped away up the moonbeam, singing: + + "Nimble Jim is quite demented,-- + Wants to be a melon-king! + Silly mortal! not contented + With the riches home-joys bring! + Oh! ho! + Oh! ho! + He will be sorry to-morrow; + To-morrow will bring only sorrow." + +But Nimble Jim heeded her not. This night also he could not close his +eyes, and in the early morning he hastened to tell his mother their +good fortune. She looked grave, and said: + +"Ah, my lad! I'd rather you minded the cobbler's bench, nor trafficked +with fairies. I fear me they're uncanny folks to deal with." + +"Never fear, mother; we'll be rich yet, and I'll make you a queen +yourself, and then you need spin no more," said Jim, wild with hope +and excitement. + +"I don't mind the spinnin', my boy. I'd rather be----". + +Jim heard no more, for he dashed off at once to the garden to plant +his precious seeds just at sunrise. With furious energy, he tore up +all his old vines, flung them over the fence, and, after that, spaded +up the melon-bed with the greatest care. Then he opened the paper and +poured the magical seeds into his hand. + +There were only _four_--four wee seeds, each no bigger than a pin's +head! His first impulse was to fling them away in wrath, for he +thought such little things couldn't possibly make as big a fortune as +he wanted. But then he reflected, "Fairies are little, so I suppose +their seeds are little, too. I'll try them, anyhow." And with that he +put them in the ground and carefully covered them. + +In an instant, the ground burst open in four places, and up shot four +sturdy melon-vines, that grew east, west, north, south! + +Grew? No! they raced, they tore, they dashed through the country far +and wide! In no time, before Nimble Jim could get back to the house +door, the whole yard was full of melon-vine, and one great big melon, +bigger than the cottage itself, blocked the door-way. + +[Illustration: THE MAGIC MELON OVERRUNS THE COUNTRY.] + +"Oh! oh! oh!" roared Jim. "What _have_ I done? What _shall_ I do?" And +with his spade he cut a hole through the melon. It took him a whole +hour, and when he got into the house he found that his poor mother had +fainted from fright. + +And all the time the vine and melons kept growing--east, west, north, +south. + +Nimble Jim was frantic! + +But the vines didn't mind Jim. On they went, growing like mad, a mile +a minute, faster than any railroad train. The big arms filled up the +main roads; the smaller ones crammed themselves into the lanes and +by-paths, while the tendrils embraced the tall trees, the houses, and +the church steeples, and snarled up everything. The leaves grew +so large, thick and green that they covered the whole face of the +country, shutting out the sun from the fields so the crops couldn't +grow; and the whole kingdom became so dark from the awful shade of +Nimble Jim's magic melon-vine, that the people had to burn candles day +and night. + +It grew like mad. On! on! Stem, branch, leaf, tendril, fruit--on, on +it went! The melons grew--great, round, smooth, rich, ripe, juicy +melons, as big as houses--at the cross-roads, on the roads, in the +fields, filling barn-yards and door-yards so people and cattle +couldn't pass, or go in or out, till they had eaten their way through +the melons, or got ladders and climbed over, or dug trenches and +crawled under! On, on it went, surrounding the king's palaces and +choking up his forts! Down, down it grew into the brooks and rivers, +and out into the king's harbors, where the tendrils seized and wound +about his ships of war riding at anchor, and climbed up the masts, +while melons grew on the decks till the vessels sank to the bottom! +It choked up and drank up all the rivers and lakes in the kingdom, or +dammed them up so the waters overflowed the land, drowning people and +cattle, and sweeping away houses and barns! + +On, on it grew--melons, melons everywhere! Ruin and starvation stared +the nation in the face; while poor, poor Nimble Jim, hid within the +rind of the melon he had dug out, shivered, cried and bewailed his +folly. + +"I'll be killed! I'll be killed! The people will murder me!" he +shrieked. But no one of them all save his mother knew he had had +anything to do with bringing on the dire calamity that had befallen +the kingdom. + +Then some of the people proposed: "Let us go immediately to our king, +and ask him to make a law that the vine shall stop growing ere it ruin +us forever." + +But when they had eaten and hewed their way to the palace, they found +the king had gone to count his soldiers; and while he was gone the +vine came galloping along, and an enormous melon grew and blocked up +the palace gate. So they had to help the king and his guards force +their way through to the hall of audience. + +When they all were in, and the king had wiped the melon-juice off his +robes and crown, and was fairly seated on his throne, surrounded by +his guards and courtiers, the trumpets sounded, drums beat, banners +waved, and the people fell on their knees and said: + +"O mighty king! We, thy liege subjects, have come to tell thee of the +ruin and desolation this fearful vine maketh in all thy great kingdom, +and to entreat thy majesty to enact a law forbidding it to grow any +more, and commanding it to wither away." + +"Alas!" answered the troubled king, "what can I do? No law of mine can +stop this awful thing. It is an enchanted vine sent to torment us. +Hear me, my people! Proclaim it, ye my heralds! I pledge my kingly +word to give up my crown and kingdom, and change places with any one +of my subjects who will wither and instantly sweep away this direful +vine. I, your king, am as helpless as a child to stop it." + +And the king, who was a good old man, shed tears for the misery of his +people, and commanded the queen and all the court to dress themselves +in mourning and fast night and day. + +The people got home as best they could, and each fell to thinking how +he could stop the vine and so be king. Even Nimble Jim heard of this. +So, every night, he watched, hoping to see the elfin queen. At last +she came, as before, on her moonbeam footpath, saying: "Hello, Nimble +Jim! How are your melons by this time?" + +But he was in no mood to be facetious now. He only said, humbly: + +"May it please your majesty, what can I do to stop the growth of this +horrible vine, and instantly sweep it from the face of the earth? Help +me, I beg your gracious majesty!"--and Jim knelt before her. + +"Ha, ha! Nimble Jim don't seem to like melons! I told you you'd be +sorry," laughed the little elfin queen. "I suppose you still want +to be as rich as the king? Or perhaps you would like to be the king +himself?" said she, tauntingly. + +"Of course I would, your majesty," said Jim, "if the vine can only be +stopped." + +"You are a very good cobbler, Nimble Jim," she answered, "and since +you mended my shoe so nicely, and as the king has promised to exchange +with any one who will wither and destroy the vine, and as you might as +well be king as another (and as you need a good lesson," said she to +herself), "I give you the means to do it all!" + +And the tiny queen pulled off the mended shoe, and cried: "Here, you +silly boy! Take this and run to the palace. Once there, you need touch +but a tendril with this magic shoe, and the vine will wither and +disappear, and the crown and kingdom will be yours. I wish you joy of +both. Good-bye! You will learn contentment yet, poor Jim, I hope," she +added, as he ran out of hearing, with the precious little shoe in his +hand. + +Leaving his poor mother behind, for he had forgotten all about her +during these days, Jim set off for the palace. It was a long, hard +journey, on account of the melon-vines, that not only blocked the +road, but even chased him. Many a narrow escape had he from being +crushed to death in the embrace of some young tendril that would shoot +out, wriggling and writhing toward him like a great green serpent. + +At length, he arrived at the palace gate, which in old times was +marble, but now was only a hole that had been cut through a melon. + +"Halt! Who goes there!" shouted a sentinel, thrusting his spear in +front of Jim's panting breast. + +"It's only Nimble Jim, the Cobbler. I want to see the king," said the +boy. + +"Be off, you fellow!" shouted the sentry. "Our noble king don't +hob-nob with cobblers! Be off, I say, or----" And he shook his spear +at our hero ominously. + +"Hold, there!" shouted the king himself, straining out of a window to +look between the melon-leaves. "Hold, I say! What do you want, young +cobbler?" + +"I want your crown and kingdom, sire," boldly answered Jim. "I've +heard of the new law, and I'll stop the melon-vine." + +"Let him pass, guards," shouted the king; "and send him hither." + +A little page dressed in black led Jim to the throne-room. The king +and his court no longer blazed in gold and jewels. Black covered +everybody and everything, even the golden throne itself, and grief and +dismay were on all faces. + +Then said the king, in a hollow tone: "What know you of this vine? +Speak!" + +And Jim, tremblingly, told the whole story. + +"Wicked boy!" groaned the king. "You well deserve punishment for the +ruin you have brought on the land. But I have passed my royal word, +and you shall try to destroy the vine. If you succeed, bad as you are, +you then will be the king and I the cobbler. But if you fail, you +shall be put where you shall have nothing but melons to eat for the +rest of your days. Guards, take him away!" + +That night, before the king and queen and all the assembled court, +when the moon was fairly risen, Nimble Jim touched with the toe of the +magic shoe the end of a tendril that was running rapidly up a tower. + +In an instant, every vestige of the vine vanished throughout all the +palace grounds; and in the morning the people all over the country +shouted for joy and cried with one voice: "Let us all go up to the +coronation, for to-day we have a new king who has delivered us from +the horrible vine." + +And on they came, in hordes, till the capital was full and the country +about the palace was one vast camp, while throughout the kingdom not a +trace of the vine was to be seen. + +Then the nobles and prelates prepared for the coronation. It was +magnificent. They girt Jim with the sword of state, clothed him in the +imperial robes, placed the scepter in his hand, and, as the golden +crown descended upon his head, all the people shouted: + +"Hail, King Nimblejimble, our deliverer! Long live the king!" + +[Illustration: MAKING AN ENTRANCE FOR THE KING THROUGH THE MELON IN +FRONT OF THE PALACE GATE.] + +And the silly boy was happy. + +Meanwhile, the poor, faithful old king, who cheerfully had given up +all for his people, was hammering and stitching and digging away on +Jim's cobbler-bench off in the village; and Jim's mother, whom the +naughty boy, in his strange elevation, had forgotten all about, +tenderly cared for the humbled old monarch. + +Before long, the elfin queen saw how patient the old king and Jim's +mother were, and how badly Nimble Jim was behaving now he was king, +for he was given up to all sorts of wickedness and tyranny, was fast +becoming hated by every one, and himself was beginning to see that he +was not nearly so happy as he had been while he was a cobbler. + +Jim was really good at heart, only his unreasonable discontent with +his lot had got him into all this misery. At last, he began to repent, +and, one moonlight night when he was walking alone on the palace +terrace, he said: + +"I wish I could see that little elfin queen, and I would ask her to +let me go back home again." + +"Well, here I am!" said the silvery voice; and, sitting on a moonbeam +beside him, there she was. "Tired of being king, Jim?" she asked. + +"Yes, your majesty, indeed I am," he replied. + +"Want any more melons, Jim?" said she, laughing. + +"No, no, no!" groaned Jim. "No more!" + +"How is your mother, Jim?" asked her majesty. + +"Alas! I don't know,"--and he hung his head in shame. + +"Are you ready to go and see her, Jim?" she asked, gently. "And will +you be contented now?" + +"Yes, yes!" was his eager reply. + +Now, the old king had been mending shoes all day, and was at this +moment resting in the cottage porch, when, suddenly, he was whisked +away on a cloud and landed in his palace again. His crown was popped +on his head, and the scepter thrust in his hand, while his old +chamberlain tenderly tucked him up in bed. + +At the same instant, another cloud brought back Nimble Jim to his +bench and his faithful mother, who at once made him some oat-meal +porridge without a murmur or word of reproach. + +"There!" said the elfin queen to herself. "That boy is cured of his +silly notions." + +"Mother, I think I don't care much for melons. I wont plant any more," +said Jim next morning. + +"I don't like 'em myself, lad," said the mother. "I'd a deal rather +you'd stick to the bench, like your auld father." + +"I will, mother dear," answered Nimble Jim. And he is mending shoes +there to this day, as happy as happy can be. + + * * * * * + + + + +[Illustration] + + "Oh! I'm my mamma's lady-girl + And I must sit quite still; + It would not do to jump and whirl, + And get my hair all out of curl, + And rumple up my frill. + No, I'm my mamma's lady-girl, + So I must sit quite still." + + * * * * * + + + + +A BUDGET OF HOME-MADE CHRISTMAS GIFTS. + + + +HINTS FOR GIRLS AND BOYS, LITTLE AND BIG.[1] + + [Footnote 1: The present paper will enable our young friends to + make over seventy different articles for Christmas gifts. While a + few familiar things may be found among them, a great majority of + the objects are entirely novel, and are here described for the + first time. All who may wish for still further hints in regard + to home-made Christmas presents will find very many useful + suggestions in the paper "One Hundred Christmas Presents, and How + to Make Them," published in ST. NICHOLAS for December, 1875--Vol. + III.] + + +[Illustration: W] + +Who is it that every year invents the thousand-and-one new and pretty +things which hang on Christmas-trees, and stuff the toes of Christmas +stockings? Who is it that has so wise and watchful an eye for the +capacities of little people, and the tastes of bigger ones, providing +for each, planning for tiny purses with almost nothing in them, as +well as for fat wallets stuffed with bank-bills, and suggesting +something which can be made, accepted and enjoyed by everybody, large +and small, all the wide world over? Who can it be that possesses +this inexhaustible fertility of invention and kindness of heart? No +ordinary human being, you may be sure. Not Father Santa Claus! He +has enough to do with distributing the presents after they are made; +besides, fancy-work is not in a man's line,--not even a saint's! But +what so likely as that he should have a mate, and that it is to her we +are indebted for all this? What an immense work-basket Mother Santa +Claus's must be! What a glancing thimble and swift needle and thread! +Can't you imagine her throwing aside her scissors and spool-bag to +help the dear saint "tackle up" and load the sledge? And who knows but +she sits behind as he drives over the roofs of the universe on the +blessed eve, and holds the reins while Santa Claus dispenses to +favored chimneys the innumerable pretty things which he and she have +chuckled over together months and months before the rest of us knew +anything about them? + +This is not a fact. It can't be proved in any way, for none of us +knows anything about the Santa Clauses or their abode. There is no +telegraphing, or writing to the selectmen of their town to inquire +about them; they haven't even a post-office address. But admitting it +to be a fiction, it is surely a pleasant one; so, as the children say, +"Let's play that it is true," and proceed to see what Mother Santa +Claus has in her basket for us this year. We will first pull out some +easy things for the benefit of little beginners who are not yet up to +all the tricks of the needle; then some a little harder for the more +advanced class; and, at bottom of all, big girls not afraid to dive +will find plenty of elaborate designs suited to their taste and +powers. + +Here, to begin with, is something nice for papa's pocket: + + +A POSTAGE-STAMP HOLDER. + +Cut two pieces of perforated board, or of stiff morocco, two inches +long by one and a half wide, and stitch them together, leaving one +end open. If you choose the board, a little border in cat-stitch or +feather-stitch should be worked before putting the pieces together, +and, if you like, an initial in the middle of one side. If the morocco +is chosen, an initial in colored silk will be pretty, and the edges +should be bound with narrow ribbon, and over-handed together. + +Cut two other pieces of the material a quarter of an inch smaller than +the first. Bind the morocco with ribbon. Make a fastening at one end +with a ribbon loop; place the stamps between the two, and slip the +little envelope thus filled into the outer case, the open end down. It +fits so snugly that it will not fall out in the pocket, and is easily +drawn forth by means of the loop when papa wants to get at his stamps. + +[Illustration: A POSTAGE-STAMP HOLDER.] + +A letter-case for papa's other pocket: This can be made either of +morocco, oiled silk, or rubber cloth. Cut an envelope-shaped piece, +about an inch larger all round than an ordinary letter envelope. Bind +the edges, work an initial on one side, and for a fastening use a loop +of elastic braid. + + +SAND-BAGS FOR WINDOWS. + +These are capital presents for grandmammas whose windows rattle in +winter weather and let cold air in between the sashes. You must +measure the window, and cut in stout cotton cloth a bag just as long +as the sash is wide, and about four inches across. Stitch this all +round, leaving one end open, and stuff it firmly with fine, dry sand. +Sew up the open end, and slip the bag into an outer case of bright +scarlet flannel, made just a trifle larger than the inner one, so that +it may go in easily. Lay the sand-bag over the crack between the two +sashes, and on cold nights, when you are asleep, grandmamma will +rejoice in the little giver of such a comfortable bulwark against the +wind. + + +RACK FOR TOOTH-BRUSHES, IN RUSTIC-WORK. + +This is very simple, but it is pretty as well. Cut two straight spruce +twigs, each having two or three little branches projecting upward at +an angle of forty-five degrees. These twigs must be as much alike in +shape as possible. Place them six inches apart; lay two cross-twigs +across, as you see them in the picture, and tie the corners with fine +wire, or fasten them with tiny pins. Two diagonal braces will add to +the strength of the rack. Hang it to the wall above the wash-stand by +a wire or ribbon. The tooth-brushes rest on the parallel branches. + +[Illustration: A RACK FOR TOOTH-BRUSHES.] + +For further particulars concerning spruce-wood work, see ST. NICHOLAS, +Vol. III., pp. 114 and 115. + + +MINIATURE HANGING-SHELVES. + +[Illustration: MINIATURE HANGING-SHELVES.] + +Boys who have learned to use their pocket-knives skillfully may make a +very pretty set of hanging-shelves by taking three bits of thin wood +(the sides of a cigar-box, for instance), well smoothed and oiled, +boring a hole in each corner, and suspending them with cords, run in, +and knotted underneath each shelf as in the picture. The wood should +be about eight inches long by three wide, and the shelves, small as +they are, will be found convenient for holding many little articles. + + +PAPER-CUTTERS. + +Another idea for these graduates of the knife is this falchion-shaped +paper-cutter. It can be made of any sort of hard-wood, neatly cut out, +rubbed smooth with sand-paper, and oiled or varnished. It has the +advantage that the materials cost almost nothing. Suggestions for more +elaborate articles in wood will be given further on. + +[Illustration: A FALCHION-SHAPED PAPER-CUTTER.] + + +A WALL LETTER-HOLDER. + +This is something which quite a little boy could make. Cut out three +pieces of thin wood, a foot long by six inches wide; smooth and +sand-paper two of them, bore a hole in each corner and in the middle +of one side, and fasten them together with fine wire, cord, ribbon, +or the small brass pins which are used for holding manuscripts. The +pieces should be held a little apart. Cut one end of the third piece +into some ornamental shape, glue it firmly to the back of one of the +others, and suspend it from the wall by a hole bored in the top. It +will be found a useful thing to hold letters or pamphlets. A clever +boy could make this much handsomer by cutting a pattern over the +front, or an initial, or monogram, or name in the middle. The wood +should be oiled or shellacked. + +[Illustration: A WALL LETTER-HOLDER FOR PAPA.] + + +SHOE-CASES. + +These cases are meant to take the place of paper when shoes are to be +wrapped up to go in a trunk. They are made of brown crash, bound with +red worsted braid. One end is pointed so as to turn over and button +down, or the top has strings over the braid to tie the mouth up. There +should be three or four made at a time, as each holds but one pair of +shoes; and you will find that mamma or your unmarried aunts will like +them very much. + +[Illustration: A SHOE-CASE FOR TRAVELING.] + + +SKATE-BAGS. + +A nice present for a skating boy--and what boy does not skate?--is a +bag made much after the pattern of the shoe-case just described, +only larger and wider, and of stouter material. Water-proof cloth or +cassimere is best. Sew it very strongly, and attach a string of wide +braid, or a strong elastic strap, that the bag may be swung over +the shoulders. A big initial letter cut out in red flannel and +button-holed on will make a pretty effect. + + +A SCALLOP-SHELL ALBUM. + +Young folks who are fortunate enough to have a pair of good-sized +scallop-shells (picked up, perhaps, at the sea-side during the last +summer vacation), can make a very pretty little autograph album in +this way: + +[Illustration: A SCALLOP-SHELL ALBUM.] + +Take a pair of well-mated scallop-shells. Clean them with brush and +soap. When dry, paint them with the white of egg to bring out the +colors, and let them dry again. Now insert between the shells a dozen +or more pages of writing-paper, cut of the same shape and size as the +shells, and very neatly scalloped around the edges. Then secure the +whole loosely, as shown in the picture, by means of a narrow ribbon +passed through two holes previously bored in the shells. Of course, +holes also must be pierced in the sheets of paper to correspond with +those in the shells. + + +A LITTLE NUN. + +This droll figure is cut out in black and white paper. Fastened at the +end of a wide ribbon, it would make an odd and pretty book-mark. The +black paper should be dull black, though the glossy will answer if +no other can be procured. Fig. 1 of the diagrams is cut in white, a +rosary and cross being put in with pen and ink, and is folded in the +middle by the dotted lines, the head and arms being afterward folded +over, as indicated. Figs. 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 are cut in black and pasted +into place, leaving a narrow white border to the bonnet, a mite +of white band at the end of the sleeve, and a suggestion of snowy +stocking above the shoe. Fig. 6, cut double, forms a book, which can +be pasted to look as if held in the hand. + +[Illustration: A LITTLE NUN.] + + +BEAN-BAG CASES. + +Are there any of you who do not know the game of bean-bags? It is +capital exercise for rainy days, besides being very good fun, and we +would advise all of you who are not familiar with it to make a set at +once. Usually, there are four bags to a set, but any number of persons +from two to eight can play at bean-bags. Each player holds two, +flinging to his opponent the one in his right hand, and rapidly +shifting the one in his left to the right, so as to leave the left +hand free to catch the bag which is thrown at him. A set of these bags +would be a nice present for some of you little girls to make for your +small brothers; and there are various ways of ornamenting the bags +gayly and prettily. The real bags must first be made of stout ticking, +over-handed strongly all round, and filled (not too full) with white +baking-beans. Over these are drawn covers of flannel, blue or scarlet, +and you can work an initial in white letters or braid on each, or make +each of the four bags of a different color--yellow, blue, red, green; +anything but black, which is hard to follow with the eye, or white, +which soils too soon to be desirable. + +[Illustration: DIAGRAMS FOR MAKING THE LITTLE NUN.] + + +BABY'S SHOES IN CASHMERE. + +Babies who can't walk are particularly hard on their shoes! We once +heard of one who "wore out" nine pairs in two months! In these +circumstances, it seems very desirable to have a home shoe-maker, and +not have to frequent the shops too often; so we will tell you of an +easy kind, which almost any little sister can make. You must take an +old morocco shoe which fits, and cut out the shape in paper, first +the sole, and then the upper. Then cut the same shape in merino or +cashmere, line the little sole with Canton flannel or silk, and bind +it with very narrow ribbon. Line and bind the upper in the same way, +and feather-stitch round the top and down both sides of the opening in +front; sew on two ends of ribbon to tie round the ankle, and the shoe +is done. It will look very pretty on baby's pink foot, and he will +thank you for your gift in his own way, by kicking his toes joyfully, +and getting the shoes into his mouth as soon as possible. + + +A HEMLOCK PILLOW. + +It is rather late in the year to make these pillows, but you can try +them for next Christmas. They must be prepared for beforehand by +gathering and drying a quantity of the needles of the hemlock, the +fine ones from the ends of the young shrubs being the best. Make a +large square bag of cotton, stuff it full of the needles, and inclose +it in an outer case of soft thick silk or woolen stuff. The one from +which we take our description had "Rêve du forêt" embroidered on it in +dull yellow floss, and we don't believe any one could help dreaming +of the forest who laid a cheek on the pillow and smelled the mingled +spice and sweetness of its aromatic contents. + + +SACHETS FOR LINEN-CLOSETS. + +If you have any old-fashioned lavender growing in your garden, you can +easily make a delightful sachet for mamma to lay among her sheets and +pillow-cases in the linen-closet, by cutting a square bag of tarletane +or Swiss muslin, made as tastefully as you please, and stuffing it +full of the flowers. Another delightful scent is the _mellilotte_, or +sweet clover, which grows wild in many parts of the country, and has, +when dried, a fragrance like that of the tonquin-bean, only more +delicate. + + +TISSUE-PAPER MATS. + +[Illustration: A TISSUE-PAPER MAT.] + +We like to be able to tell you about these mats, for they cost almost +nothing at all, and are so simple that any little boy or girl can +make them. All the material needed for them is three sheets of +tissue-paper,--a light shade, a medium shade, and a dark shade, or, if +you like, they can also be made of one solid color, but are not quite +so pretty then. Cut a piece of each color nine inches square, fold it +across, and then across again, so as to form a small square, and then +fold from point to point. Lay on it a pattern, like the first diagram +on next page, and cut the tissue paper according to the lines of the +pattern. Opening the paper, you will find it a circle, with the edge +pointed in scallops. Now take a common hair-pin, bend its points over +that they may not tear the paper, slip it in turn over each point, as +shown in the diagram, and draw it down, _crinkling_ the paper into a +sort of double scallop. (The second diagram on next page will explain +this process.) Treat your three rounds in this way, lay them over each +other like a pile of plates, stick a small pin in the middle to hold +them, set a goblet upon them, and gently arrange the crinkled edges +about its base, so as to give a full ruffled effect, like the +petals of a dahlia, although less stiff and regular. These mats are +exceedingly pretty. + +[Illustration: DIAGRAM FOR PAPER MAT, SHOWING MODE OF FOLDING AND +SHAPING.] + +[Illustration: DIAGRAM SHOWING THE MANNER OF CRIMPING EACH SCALLOP OF +THE PAPER MAT OVER A HAIR-PIN.] + + +A WORK BASKET IN VANILLA GRASS. + +If any of you live where the sweet-scented vanilla grass grows +plentifully, you can make a delicious little basket by drying the long +wiry blades, braiding them in strands of three, tying the ends firmly +together to make a long braid, and coiling and sewing as in straw +plaiting. Two circles the size of a dessert plate should be prepared, +one for the bottom of the basket, and the other for the top of the lid +(the latter a trifle the larger). Then draw the braid tighter, and +form a rim to each about two inches deep. The lid, which is separate, +fits over the bottom, and the scent of the grass will impart itself to +everything kept in the basket. + +So much for the dear little people. Our next dip into Mother Santa +Claus's basket brings out a big handful for girls (and boys) who are a +trifle older,--say from twelve to fifteen. + + +HAIR-PIN HOLDERS. + +On the next page is a picture of the hair-pin holder when finished; +and above it you will find a diagram of it when cut out and not yet +put in shape. It is cut, as you will observe, in one piece. The +material is perforated card-board, either white or "silver." The +dotted lines show where to fold it. + +A, A and B, B are lapped outside the end pieces, D, D, and held in +place by stitches of worsted, long below and very short above, where +the sides join. A little border is worked in worsted at top and bottom +before the sides are joined. The inside is stuffed with curled hair, +and topped with a little cover crocheted or knit in worsted--plain +ribbing or the tufted crochet, just as you prefer. A cord and a small +worsted tassel at either end complete it, and it is a convenient +little thing to hang or stand on mamma's or sister's toilet-table. It +will be an easy matter to enlarge the pattern, if this hair-pin holder +would be too small. + +[Illustration: PATTERN OF HAIR-PIN HOLDER.] + +[Illustration: A HAIR-PIN HOLDER.] + +[Illustration: END OF HAIR-PIN HOLDER WHEN FOLDED.] + + +A CRIB-BLANKET FOR BABY. + +The prettiest and simplest crib-blanket which we have seen of late, +was made of thick white flannel, a yard wide, and a yard and a quarter +long. Across each end were basted two rows of scarlet worsted braid, +four inches apart, and between the two a row of bright yellow braid. +These were cat-stitched down on both edges with black worsted, and +between them were rows of feather-stitching in blue. Above, in each +corner, was a small wheel made of rows of feather-stitch--black, red, +yellow and blue. Nothing could be easier to make, but the effect was +extremely gay and bright, and we advise some of you who are lucky +enough to "belong to a baby" to try it. + + +ANOTHER BABY'S BLANKET. + +For this you must buy a real blanket--one of the small ones which come +for use in a baby's crib. Those with blue stripes and a narrow binding +of blue silk are prettiest for the purpose. Baste a narrow strip of +canvas between the stripes and the binding, and with blue saddler's +silk doubled, work in cross-stitch a motto, so arranged that it can be +read when the top of the blanket is folded back. If the stripe is red +instead of blue, the motto must be in red silk, and it should, of +course, have reference to the baby. Here are some pretty ones in +various languages: "_Nun guten ruh, die augen zu_" (Now go to sleep, +and shut your eyes). "_Cap-à-pie_" (From head to foot). "_Ad ogni +ucello, suo nido è bello_" (To every bird its own nest is beautiful). +And here is one in English: + + "Shut little eyes, and shut in the blue; + Sleep, little baby, God loves you." + +The same idea can be beautifully applied to a pair of large blankets, +but this is rather a considerable gift for young people to undertake. + + +SUMMER BLANKETS. + +A pair of thin summer blankets, of the kind which are scarcely heavier +than flannel, can be made very pretty by button-holing them all round +loosely with double zephyr wool in large scallops, and working three +large initials in the middle of the top end. + + +A WORK-BASKET FOR "SISTER." + +For this, you must buy a straw basket, flat in shape, and without a +handle. It can be round, square, oval, or eight-sided, just as you +prefer. You must also buy a yard of silk or cashmere in some pretty +color. Line the whole basket, first of all cutting the shape of the +bottom exactly, and fastening the lining down with deft stitches, +which shall show neither inside nor out. Make four little pockets +of the stuff (six if the basket is large), draw their tops up with +elastic cord, and fasten them round the sides at equal distances. +These are to hold spools of silk, tapes, hooks-and-eyes, and such +small wares, which are always getting into disorder in a pocketless +basket. Between two of the pockets on one side, suspend a small square +pincushion, and on the other a flat needle-book hung by a loop of +ribbon. At the opposite ends, between the pockets, fasten an emery bag +and a sheath of morocco bound with ribbon to hold a pair of scissors. +Finish the top last of all with a quilling of ribbon, and you have as +dainty and complete a gift as any younger sister can wish to make, or +any older one receive. It will cost time and pains, but is pretty and +useful enough to repay both. + + +A FANCY WHEELBARROW. + +This cannot be made easily by any boy or girl who is not already +acquainted with fancy wood-sawing, and to such the illustration gives +all the hint that will be needed. We would simply suggest that the +body of this barrow is about six inches long, that it is lined with +crimson silk, and that standing upon a dressing-bureau, writing-table, +or mantel-shelf, it makes a very pretty receiver of cards or +knick-knacks. Many beautiful Christmas gifts can be made by boys or +girls owning one of the little bracket-saws, which, with books of +directions, can now be bought in almost any hardware shop. + +[Illustration: A FANCY WHEELBARROW.] + +For further particulars on wood-carving, see illustrated articles in +ST. NICHOLAS, Vol. I., pp. 84, 215, 346, 592. + + +A SET OF TEA-NAPKINS. + +There hardly could be a nicer gift for a girl to make for her mother +or married sister than a set of tea-napkins, with a large initial +letter in white, or white and red, embroidered on each. The doily +should be folded in four, and the letter out-lined in lead pencil in +the corner of one of the quarters. If inked very black on paper, and +held dry to the window behind the linen, the initial is easily traced. +The pattern is then run and "stuffed" with heavy working-cotton, and +the letter embroidered in finer cotton. Another nice gift is a long +fringed towel, with three very large letters in white, or blue, or +crimson, worked half-way between the middle and the side edge. Folded +over lengthwise, it is a convenient thing to lay on a bureau-top +or the front of a sideboard, and the large colored letters make it +ornamental as well. Patterns of initials can be bought in any fancy +shop. If desired, they can be bought already worked, requiring only to +be transferred to the napkin. + + +NAPKIN-BANDS. + +Any of you who have mastered cross-stitch, and learned to follow a +pattern, will find these bands easy enough to make. Their use is to +fasten a napkin round a child's neck at dinner, and take the place of +that disobliging "pin," which is never at hand when wanted. You must +cut a strip of Java canvas, two inches wide by a foot long; overcast +the edges, and work on it some easy little vine in worsted, or a +Grecian pattern, or, if you like, a short motto, such as "More haste, +worse speed." Line the strip with silk, turn in the edges, overhand +them, and finish the ends with two of those gilt clasps which are used +to loop up ladies' dresses. + + +A RUSTIC VASE. + +[Illustration] + +It is very easy to get the material out of which this vase is made. +You need only go to your wood-pile, or, if you have none, to the +wood-pile of a neighbor. Choose a round stick four inches in diameter +and eight or ten inches long, with a smooth bark. If you find the +stick, and it is too long, you can easily saw off an end. Now comes +the difficult part of the work: The inside of the stick must be +scooped out to within four inches of the bottom. The easiest way of +accomplishing this will be to send it to a turning-mill if there +is one at hand; if not, patience and a jack-knife will in the end +prevail. Next, with a little oil-color, paint a pretty design on +the bark, if you can,--trailing-arbutus, partridge berry, sprays of +linnea,--any wood thing which can be supposed to cluster naturally +round a stump. Set the stump in a flower-pot saucer, filled with +earth, and planted with mosses and tiny ferns; fit a footless wine +or champagne glass, or a plain cup, into the hollow end, and, with a +bunch of grasses and wild flowers, or autumn leaves, you have a really +exquisite vase, prettier than any formal article bought in a shop, and +costing little more than time and patience, with a touch of that rare +thing--taste! which, after all, is not so very rare as some people +imagine. Any friend will prize such a vase of your own making. + + +A TABLE-COVER. + +A really charming cover for a small table can be made in this way: Cut +a square--or oblong, as the case may be--of that loosely woven linen +which is used for glass-towels, making it about four inches larger all +round than the table it is meant to fit. Pale yellow or brown is the +best color to select. Ravel the edges into a fringe two inches deep; +then, beginning two inches within the edge, draw the linen threads all +round in a band an inch and three-quarters wide. Lace the plain space +thus left with dark-red ribbon of the same width, woven in and out in +regular spaces, and at each corner tie the ribbon in a graceful knot +with drooping ends. + + +ANOTHER TABLE-COVER. + +This cover is made of pale-brown Turkish toweling. Cut a piece of +the size to suit your table, and baste all round it, first a row of +scarlet worsted braid, then of olive, then of yellow, leaving spaces +each an inch and a half wide between the rows. Cat-stitch the braids +down on both edges with saddlers' silk, and feather-stitch between +them in silks, choosing colors which harmonize, and turning the whole +into a wide stripe brilliant and soft at the same time. The choice and +placing of the colors will be excellent practice for your eye, and +after a little while you will be able to tell, as soon as a couple +of inches are done, if you are putting the right tint into the right +place. It is infinitely more interesting to feel your way thus through +a piece of work than to follow any set pattern, however pretty, and it +is far more cultivating to the taste. + + +A PAPER TRANSPARENCY. + +Take a piece of white, or tinted, or silver paper, exactly ten and a +half inches square. Fold it double diagonally. Fold it double again. +Fold it double once more. + +You will now have a triangular-shaped form of eight thicknesses. Now +lay this folded piece on a pine table, or on a smooth piece of pine +board. Next, lay evenly over it, so that it will fit exactly, the +"pattern of transparency," or an exact tracing from it. When so +placed, secure them firmly to the board by pins driven in at each +corner. Now, with a very sharp pen-knife follow and cut _through to +the board_ the lines of the pattern, so as to cut out all the portions +that show black in the design. When this is all done, pull out +the pins, open your folded paper, and you will have a square form +beautifully figured in open-work. It should be laid between two sheets +of white paper and carefully pressed with a hot iron, and then it can +be lined with black or fancy tissue paper, and hung against a pane in +the window as a "transparency;" or you may use it as a picture-frame, +inserting an engraving or photograph in the center. + +The original, from which our pattern is taken, was cut during the late +war by a young Union soldier while in Libby prison. + +[Illustration: PATTERN OF PAPER TRANSPARENCY.] + + +SHAWL-BAGS. + +These bags are capital things to save a shawl from the dust of a +journey, and, if of good size, can be made to serve a useful purpose +by packing into them dressing materials, etc., for which there is +not room in your hand-bag. The best material for them is stout brown +Holland. Cut two round end-pieces eight inches in diameter and a piece +half a yard wide by twenty-four inches long. Stitch these together, +leaving the straight seam open nearly all the way across, and bind its +edges and the edges of the end-pieces with worsted braid (maroon +or dark brown), put on with a machine. Close the opening with five +buttons and button-holes. Bind with braid a band of the Holland two +inches wide, and fasten it over the button-holed side, leaving a large +loop in the middle to carry the bag by. + +By way of ornament you may embroider three large letters in +single-stitch on the side, using worsted of the color of the braid, or +may put a pattern down either side of the opening and round the ends +in braiding, or a braided medallion with initials in the center. + + +A JAPANESE BASKET FOR GRANDMOTHER. + +You will never guess what the top of this droll little basket is made +of, unless we tell you. It is one of those Japanese cuffs of brown +straw which can be bought nowadays for a small price at any of +the Japanese shops. You may embroider a little pattern over +it--diagonally, if you wish to make it look very Japanese-y; line it +with silk or satin, and fasten a small bag of the same material to the +bottom, drawn up with a ribbon bow or a tassel. A band of wide ribbon +is sewed to the top. Grandmamma will find this just the thing to hang +on her arm for holding her knitting-ball, or the knitting itself if +she wishes to lay it aside. This sort of basket also is useful as a +"catch-all" when hung at the side of a dressing-bureau. + +[Illustration: JAPANESE HANGING-BASKET OF STRAW AND SILK] + + +A CATCH-ALL, MADE FROM A SINGLE SQUARE. + +This is very pretty, and very easily made. Take a piece of silver (or +gold) perforated paper, eight inches square, and ornament it with +worsted or silk, as in the diagram, all in one direction. To make the +cornucopia, it is only necessary to join any two edges (as A and B) +by first binding each with ribbon and then sewing them together. Line +with silk, and put box-plaiting at the top. A worsted tassel might be +put at the top (in front) as well as at the bottom, and a loop at C. + +[Illustration: DIAGRAM OF PATTERN TO BE WORKED ON PERFORATED PAPER FOR +A CATCH-ALL.] + +If silver paper is used, the trimmings would better be all red. All +blue would look well with gold paper. But the colors may be varied +according to taste. If your friend is a brunette, you will find that +he or she will be most pleased with the red, while a blonde will +prefer blue. + +[Illustration: A CATCH-ALL MADE OF PERFORATED PAPER.] + + +A WALL-POCKET OF SPLITS. + +Splits, or cigar-lighters as they are sometimes called, are to be +had at any of the fancy shops. They are an inch wide and about seven +inches long, and come in various shades of brown and straw color, +and their flexibility makes it easy to weave them in and out like +basket-work. For the wall-pocket you must weave two squares, each +containing six splits each way, but one made larger than the other, as +seen in the picture. A few stitches in cotton of the same color will +hold the strips in place. Line the smaller of the squares with silk, +and lay it across the face of the other in such a way that the four +points shall make a diamond, touching the middle of each side of the +square. Fasten it to the wall by two of the splits crossed and united +by a bow of ribbons, and fill the pocket with dried autumn leaves and +ferns gracefully arranged. + +[Illustration: WALL-POCKET OF SPLITS.] + + +SILHOUETTE LIKENESSES. + +This is rather a Christmas game than a present, but will answer well +for either; and young folks can get much fun out of an evening spent +in "taking" each other. Each in turn must stand so as to cast a sharp +profile shadow on the wall, to which is previously pinned, white side +out, a large sheet of paper, known as silhouette paper, black on one +side and white on the other. Somebody draws the outline of this shadow +_exactly_ with a pencil; it is then cut out and pasted neatly, black +side up, on a sheet of white paper. Good and expressive likenesses are +often secured, and droll ones _very_ often. Try it, some of you, in +the long evenings which are coming. + +[Illustration: DIAGRAM OF WALL-POCKET.] + + +A LEAF PEN-WIPER. + +Your pattern for this must be a beech-leaf again,--a _long_ one this +time,--or you may trace the shape from the illustration. Outline the +shape as before, and from the model thus secured cut six leaves in +flannel--two green, two brown, and two red, or red, white and blue, or +any combination you like. Snip the edge of each leaf into very tiny +points, and chain-stitch veins upon it with gold-colored floss. Attach +these leaves together by the upper ends, arranging under them three +triply pointed leaves of black broadcloth or silk to receive the ink, +and finish the top with a small bow of ribbon. + +[Illustration: A LEAF PEN-WIPER.] + + +A BIRDS'-NEST PEN-WIPER. + +Girls are always trying to find something which they can make to +delight their papas, and a gay little pen-wiper with fresh uninked +leaves rarely comes amiss to a man who likes an orderly writing-table. +Here is a pretty one which is easily made. For the pattern you may +borrow a moderately large beech-leaf from the nearest tree (or +botanical work); lay it down on paper, pencil the outline and cut it +out neatly. Repeat this six or eight times in black cloth or velvet, +and sew the leaves round a small oval or circle of black cloth. Knit +and ravel out a quantity of yellow worsted or floss silk, and with it +construct a nest in the center of the oval, putting a hen into the +nest. This hen may be made of canton flannel, stuffed with cotton-wool +and painted in water color, with a comb of red flannel, two black +beads for eyes, and a tuft of feathers by way of tail. But better +still and much easier, buy one of the droll little Japanese chicks +which can be had at the shops now for twenty or twenty-five cents, and +fasten it in the middle of the nest. Three plain circles of cloth are +fastened underneath for wiping the pens. + + +JAPANESE PEN-WIPER. + +[Illustration: A JAPANESE PEN-WIPER.] + +A nice little pen-wiper can be made by cutting three circles of black +cloth, snipping the edges or button-holing them with colored silk, and +standing in the middle one of the droll little Japanese birds just +mentioned. Of course it should be secured firmly at the feet. There +are long-legged birds and short-legged ones. A tiny stork is very +pretty. + + +BLEACHED GRASSES. + +Some of you who have been pressing autumn leaves for winter use may +like to hear of a new way of bleaching grasses to mix with them. The +process is exceedingly simple. Take a few of the grasses in your hand +at a time, dip them into a pan of water, shake gently, dip into a pan +of sifted flour, and again shake gently. All the superfluous flour +will fall off, but enough will remain to make the grasses snowy-white. +When dry it is perfectly firm, and you would never guess what process +produced the effect. A bunch of these white grasses in a coral-red +basket is a vivid object. + +Colored grasses, to our thinking, are not half so pretty as the same +grasses when left in their own soft natural browns and yellows. Still, +as some people like them, we will just mention that the same process +can be used for them as for the white grass, by mixing with small +portions of flour, a little dry paint powder, vermilion, green, etc. +A bunch of the deep red mixed with the bleached grass has a gay and +uncommon effect. + + +A NUBÉ IN TWO COLORS. + +A novelty in knitting is a nubé in Shetland wool of two colors--pink +or crimson or blue with white. The skeins are opened, and the two +strands, laid side by side, are wound double in a large ball. The +nubé is then knit in the usual way with large needles and common +garter-stitch, and is very fine. + + +LAMP SHADES. + +Plain white porcelain lamp-shades, such as are used on the German +student-lamps, look well when decorated with wreaths of autumn leaves +put on with mucilage. We read lately in the _Tribune_ that leaves +treated with extract of chlorophyl became transparent. This would be +a fine experiment for some of you to try, and a garland of the +transparent leaves would be much more beautiful around a shade than +the ordinary dried ones. + +There are other styles of lamp-shades that can be made with little +difficulty, for instance: A very pretty shade is easily formed by +cutting in thin drawing-board fine scalloped sections, which, tied +together with narrow ribbon, take the form of a shade. Leaves are +glued to the under side of these, and a lining of thin tissue-paper +is pasted on to hold them in place. Still another is made in the same +way, with doubled sections of card-board, between each pair of which +is laid a steel engraving or wood-cut, or an unmounted photograph. The +pictures are invisible till the lamp is lighted: then they gleam forth +with something of the soft glow of a porcelain transparency. + + +A GLOVE-BOX. + +In any of the fancy shops you can now buy the slender frames of +silvered tin on which these boxes are made. Cut out double pieces of +pale-tinted silk to fit the top, bottom, sides and ends, and quilt +each separately with an interlining of cotton batting, on which +sachet-powder has been lightly sprinkled. Slip the pieces between the +double rods of the frame, sew over and over, and finish with a plaited +satin ribbon all round, adding a neat little loop and bow to lift the +lid. + +The small tin boxes in which fancy biscuits are sold can be utilized +for glove-boxes, covered as you choose on the outside, and lined with +wadded silk. + + +ANOTHER GLOVE-BOX. + +This box can be made in very stiff card-board, but tin is better +if you have the pieces which form its shape cut by the tinman, and +punched with holes in rows an inch and a half apart. If you use +card-board, you must punch your own holes, measuring the places for +them with rule and pencil. In either case, you will need the same +number of pieces and of the same size, namely: two strips one foot +long and five inches wide, two strips one foot long and three inches +wide, and two strips five inches long and three inches wide. Cover +each piece with a layer of cotton wadding, sprinkled with sachet +powder, and a layer of silk or satin of any color you prefer. Then +catch the silk firmly down through the holes in the tin, making long +stitches on the wrong side, and small cross-stitches on the right, +so as to form neat regular tufts. A very tiny button sewed in each +depression has a neat effect. When the inside of the box is thus +tufted, baste the pieces together, cover the outside with black or +dark silk or satin, embroidered or ornamented in any way your fancy +may dictate, overhand the edges daintily, and neatly finish with +a small cord. Square boxes made in the same way are pretty for +pocket-handkerchiefs. + +[Illustration: SILK GLOVE-BOX.] + +[Illustration: DIAGRAM SHOWING THE MANNER OF TUFTING THE LINING OF +SILK GLOVE-BOX.] + + +A COAL-SCUTTLE PIN-CUSHION. + +This droll little scuttle is made of black enamel cloth, cut according +to the diagrams on next page. Fig. 1 is cut double and folded over +at G. The two sides marked B and E in Fig. 1 are bound with black +galloon; also the two sides marked with the same letters in Fig. 2. + +[Illustration: COAL-SCUTTLE PINCUSHION AND NEEDLE BOOK.] + +Before binding over, cast a bit of wire around the top and one around +the bottom of the scuttle, and bend each into its proper shape. Figs. +3 and 4 are bound all round, and sewed over and over to the places +indicated. Wrap two bits of wire, one four inches long and the other +an inch and a quarter, with black worsted, and insert them through +little holes made for the purpose to serve as the handles of the +scuttle; stuff the inside firmly with hair or cotton-wool, cover the +top with flannel, cut after Fig. 4, and button-hole the edges down all +round with worsted of the color of the flannel. If you like to add +a needle-book you can do so by cutting three leaves of differently +colored flannels, after the shape of Fig. 4, snipping the edges into +points, or button-holing them, and fastening the leaves to the back of +the scuttle above the pincushion. + +[Illustration: DIAGRAMS OF COAL-SCUTTLE PINCUSHION AND NEEDLE-BOOK. +Fig. 1.--Pattern of Coal-Scuttle Pinchusion. Fig. 2.--Part of Pattern +of Coal-Scuttle Pinchusion. Fig. 3.--Bottom of Coal-Scuttle. Fig. +4.--Top of Coal-Scuttle.] + + +A BIT OF PLAIN WORK. + +There are notable little sempstresses even in these days of machines +("and I am thankful to know that there are," says Mother Santa Claus) +who set their stitches as swiftly and as precisely as ever their +grandmothers did before them, and have the same liking for what used +to be called "white seam." To such we would suggest, what a nice and +useful Christmas present would be a beautifully made under-garment. +It need not of necessity be a shirt, though in old days no girl was +considered educated who could not finish one all by herself, from +cutting out to the last button-hole; but an apron or petticoat or +dressing-jacket or night-gown, over which little fingers had labored +deftly and lovingly, would, it seems to us, be a most wonderful +and delightful novelty for mamma or grandmamma to find on the +Christmas-tree this year. A set of handkerchiefs nicely hemmed and +marked (girls used to cross-stitch the marks in their own hair!), or +a soft flannel petticoat, cat-stitched at the seams, scalloped with +coarse working cotton,--which grows whiter with washing, instead of +yellowing like silk,--with three pretty initials on the waistband, +would be other capital ideas. Try them. + + +WORK APRONS. + +The great convenience of these aprons is that the work can be rolled +up in them and laid aside for use. They are made of brown Holland +trimmed with black or blue or crimson worsted braid. Little loops of +doubled braid ornament the edge, and are held in place by a plain row +of the braid stitched on above them. The lower and largest pocket +should be made full and drawn up with a cord at top, so as to hold +rolls of pieces, worsteds and patterns. The little pockets are for +spools of silk and thread, tapes, buttons, and so on. + +[Illustration: DIAGRAM OF WORK APRON.] + + +A LEAF NEEDLE-BOOK. + +For this needle-book you will need the following materials: One-eighth +of a yard of crimson or green velvet, one-eighth of a yard of lining +silk to match, one-eighth of a yard of fine white flannel, two skeins +of white silk floss, a bit of Bristol-board, and a half yard of narrow +ribbon. + +Cut in the Bristol-board a couple of leaf-shaped pieces like the +illustration. Cover each with the velvet, turning in the edges neatly, +line with the silk, and button-hole both together all round with white +floss. Stitch the veins in the leaves with the floss, held tightly, so +as to depress the lines a little. Cut three leaves of flannel in the +same shape, button-hole the edges, lay them between the leaves, and +fasten all together at top with a bow of ribbon. A tiny loop and +button should be attached to the point to hold the needle-book +together. + +[Illustration: PATTERN OF LEAF NEEDLE-BOOK.] + +[Illustration: PAD OF LEAF NEEDLE-BOOK.] + + +BOOK-MARK. + +A large lace-like cross hanging from the end of a wide ribbon makes +a handsome and appropriate mark for a big bible or prayer-book. The +materials cost almost nothing, all that is required being a bit of +perforated card-board, a sharp penknife, and--patience. Trace the form +of the cross on the card-board, and outline the pattern on one side in +pencil. You will observe that the one given as illustration is made +up of small forms many times repeated, and this is the case with +all patterns used for this purpose. The easiest way to outline it +regularly is to do a square of eight holes at a time, marking the +places to be cut, and leaving the uncut places white. When all is +marked, place on a smooth board and cut, following the markings +exactly with your knife. The work cannot be hurried: it must be done +slowly and very carefully if you hope to succeed. + + * * * * * + +And now we will turn out the more difficult things from the bottom of +the basket, and you big, clever boys and girls who can do what you +like with your fingers and knives and needles and paint-brushes, can +take your pick from them. + + +AUTUMN-LEAF WORK. + +If you have an old work-box, or desk, or table-top, or screen, which +has grown shabby, and which you would like to renew, we can tell you +how to do so. First, you must take those generous friends, the woods, +into your counsel. Gather and press every bright, perfect leaf and +spray which comes in your way this autumn, and every graceful bit of +vine, and a quantity of small brown and gold-colored ferns, and those +white feathery ones which have blanched in the deep shadows. These +ready, paint your box, or whatever it is, with solid black, let it +dry, rub it smooth with fine sand-paper, and repeat the process three +times. Then glue the leaves and ferns on, irregularly scattered, or +in regular bouquets and wreaths, as suits your fancy. Apply a coat of +isinglass, dissolved in water, to the whole surface, and when that is +dry, three coats of copal varnish, allowing each to dry before the +next is put on. The effect is very handsome. And, even without +painting the objects black, this same style of leaf and fern-work can +be applied to earthen vases, wooden boxes, trays and saucers, for +card-receivers. For these, you may get some good hints from the +illustrations on subsequent pages. The same illustrations will apply +to the "novelties in fern-work" given further on. + + +A WINDOW TRANSPARENCY. + +Another pretty use for autumn leaves is a transparency for a window. +Arrange a group of the leaves upon a pane of glass, lay another pane +of same size over these, and glue the edges together, first with a +strip of stout muslin, and then with narrow red ribbon, leaving a +loop at each upper corner to hang it up by. The deep leaf colors seen +against the light are delightful. + + +SIDE-LIGHT TRANSPARENCIES. + +Any of you who happen to live in a house which has, like many old +houses, a narrow side-light on either side of its front-door, and a +row of panes across the top, can make a pretty effect by preparing a +series of these transparencies to fit the door-glasses, and fastening +them on by driving a stout tack into the sashes so as to support +the four corners of each pane. The transparencies could be prepared +secretly and put into place overnight, or on Christmas morning, before +any one is up, so as to give mother a pleasant surprise as she comes +downstairs. + + +A FRAME OF AUTUMN LEAVES. + +Procure an oblong bit of tin, eight inches by ten, or ten inches by +twelve, and have a large oval cut out in the middle. Paint the tin +with two coats of black, glue a small group of leaves in each corner, +with a wire spray or tendril to connect them, varnish with two coats +of copal, and put a small picture behind the oval. + + +A FRAME OF MAIDEN-HAIR. + +Cut a pasteboard frame three inches wide of the size you need, and sew +thickly all over it little sprays of maiden-hair ferns, pressed and +dried. It is fastened to the wall with a pin at each corner, and of +course does not support a glass. The effect of the light fern shapes +against the wall is very delicate and graceful, and unsubstantial as +it may seem, the frame lasts a long time, especially if, when the +maiden-hair first begins to curl, the whole is taken down and +re-pressed for two or three days under a heavy book. + +[Illustration: VASE (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK).] + + +NOVELTIES IN FERN-WORK. + +We hope some of you have collected a good supply of ferns of the +different colors,--deep brown, yellow, green and white,--for by means +of a new process you can make something really beautiful with them. It +requires deft fingers and good eyes, but with practice and patience +any of you could manage it. Supposing it to be a table-top which you +wish to ornament, you proceed as follows: Paint the wood all over with +black or very dark brown; let it dry, and rub it smooth with pumice. +Next varnish. And here comes the point of the process. _While the +varnish is wet_, lay your ferns down upon it, following a design which +you have arranged clearly in your head, or marked beforehand on a +sheet of paper. A pin's point will aid you to move and place the +fragile stems, which must not be much handled, and must lie perfectly +flat, with no little projecting points to mar the effect, which when +done should be like mosaic-work. As soon as the pattern is in place, +varnish again immediately. The ferns, thus inclosed in a double wall +of varnish, will keep their places perfectly. Next day, when all is +dry, varnish once more. Small articles of white holly-wood decorated +in this way are very pretty, and a thin china plate with an overlaying +of these varnished ferns becomes a beautiful and ornamental +card-receiver. + +[Illustration: CARD-RECEIVER (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK).] + + +A SHOE-CHAIR. + +An old cane-seated chair will answer perfectly to make this, provided +the frame-work is strong and good. Cut away the cane and insert in its +place a stout bag of twilled linen, the size of the seat and about ten +inches deep. Around this bag sew eight pockets, each large enough for +a pair of shoes. The round pocket left in the middle will serve to +hold stockings. Have a bit of thin wood cut to fit the seat of the +chair; fasten on this a cushion covered with cretonne, with a deep +frill all around (or a narrow frill, provided you prefer to fasten the +deep ruffle around the chair itself, as shown in the picture), and a +little loop in front by which the seat can be raised like the lid of a +box, when the shoes are wanted. This chair is really a most convenient +piece of furniture for a bedroom. + +[Illustration: A SHOE-CHAIR, WITH COVER (OR SEAT) REMOVED.] + + +SCRAP-BAGS IN TURKISH TOWELING. + +These are convenient little affairs. Hung on the gas-fixture beside a +looking-glass, or on a hook above the work-table, they will be found +just the things to catch odds and ends, such as hair, burnt matches, +ravelings and shreds of cloth, which are always accumulating, and for +which many city bedrooms afford no receptacle. The materials needed +are three-quarters of a yard of pale-brown Turkish toweling, six +yards of red worsted braid, four steel rings (to hold the strings), +one-eighth of a yard each of blue, white, and scarlet cashmere, a +skein each of blue, red, green, yellow, and black worsted, and a small +red tassel in chenille or silk. + +Cut four pieces of the toweling, twelve inches long and six and a half +wide, and shape them according to diagram. + +Bind each around with braid. Cut out a shape in cashmere of the three +colors laid one over the other, and button-hole it on with worsted, +contrasting the shades in as gay and marked a manner as possible. +In the design given, A is white cashmere, B red, and C blue. A is +button-holed with green, B with black, and C with yellow. B is +chain-stitched in blue and white lines, C feather-stitched in white +and yellow. The daisy-like flower above is white, with a yellow center +and a green stem, and the long lines of stitching on either side are +in red and black. Some of these bags are very pretty. + +This bag could be simplified by using no cashmere, and +feather-stitching each quarter diagonally across with alternate black, +red, and yellow lines. + +[Illustration: PATTERN OF EACH OF THE FOUR SIDES OF SCRAP-BAG.] + +[Illustration: SCRAP-BAG IN TURKISH TOWELING.] + + +ANOTHER SCRAP-BAG. + +The upper part of this bag is made of silver perforated paper. Buy a +strip a foot long and six inches wide, and embroider it all over in +alternate lines of cross and single stitching, using single zephyr +worsted, blue or rose-colored. Cut a piece of stiff card-board of +exactly the same size, and line it with pink or blue silk to match the +worsted. Sew the two ends together to form a circle, lay the silver +paper smoothly over it, stitch down, and trim both edges with plaited +satin ribbon three-quarters of an inch wide. + +This is the top of your bag. The bottom is crocheted in worsted by the +ordinary long stitch, and sewed to the silver-paper top piece under +the satin ribbon. A worsted tassel finishes the lower end. + + +ARTISTIC EMBROIDERY. + +Just here a word to the girls about embroidery. In old days, when +embroidery was the chief occupation of noble dames and demoiselles, +the needle was used as a paint-brush might be, to make a picture of +some real thing or some ideal occurrence. For instance: the Bayeux +tapestry, worked in the eleventh century by Matilda, wife of William +the Conqueror, and her ladies, is a continuous series of pictures, two +hundred and fourteen feet long by about two feet wide, which represent +scenes in the invasion and conquest of England. Old as it is, the +colors are still undimmed and brilliant. Even so lately as the last +century, ladies designed their own patterns, and embroidered court +dresses and trimmings with flowers and birds copied from nature. But +for many years back fancy-work has degenerated into the following of +set models, without exercising any "fancy" of one's own at all. Now +the old method is come into fashion again, and it means so much more, +and is so vastly more interesting than copying a cut-and-dried pattern +from a shop, that we long to set you all to trying your hands at it. +For example, if you want a cushion with a group of daisies, gather a +handful of fresh ones,--take a bit of linen or china crape, or fine +crash or pongee, and, with green and white and gray and gold-colored +silks, make a picture of the daisies as they look to you, not using +any particular kind of stitch, but employing long ones or short ones, +or loose or tight ones, just as comes most easily in giving the effect +you want to get. This is much nicer than counting the stitches on a +paper pattern and a bit of canvas, and when done, produces a much +better effect. Even in winter, a real flower or a fern-spray, by way +of model, can always be found in the flower-shops or greenhouses. +Practice will stimulate invention and suggest all sorts of devices and +ideas. Bits of pretty stuffs will catch your eye as adaptable for use, +and oddly tinted silks (the old, faded colors often work in better +than fresh ones), patterns on fans, on rice paper, on Japanese +pictures--all sorts of things--will serve as material for your fancy. +And when your work is done it will be _original_, and, as such, more +valuable and interesting than any shop model, however beautiful in +itself, can possibly be. + +[Illustration: ANOTHER SCRAP-BAG (SILVER PERFORATED PAPER AND +CROCHET-WORK).] + +[Illustration: PAPER-CUTTER (NOVELTIES IN FERN-WORK).] + + +ORIENTAL WORK. + +Very gay and quaint effects are produced with this work, which is an +adaptation of the well-known Eastern embroideries. Its ground-work +is plain cashmere or flannel, red, black or blue, on which small +fantastically shaped figures in variously colored velvets or cashmeres +are laid and button-holed down with floss silks. All sorts of forms +are employed for these figures--stars, crescents, circles, trefoils, +shields, palm-leaves, griffins, imps; and little wheels and comets +in feather-stitch and cat-stitch are inserted between, to add to the +oddity of the whole. These forms can be bought at a low price in +almost any fancy shop. A good deal of ingenuity and taste can be shown +in arranging and blending the figures richly and brilliantly, without +making them too bright and glaring. Table-covers in this work should +have falls of deep points, pinked on the edges. Smaller points of +white cashmere are sometimes inserted between the deep ones, and +similarly decorated. Bright little tassels are swung between the +points by twisted silk cords. The tassels are made of strips of +scarlet and white flannel, cut _almost_ across, in narrow fringes, +rolled into shape, and confined by a tiny heading of flannel +embroidered with silk. Sofa-pillows in this Oriental work are bright +and effective, also wall-pockets and brackets--in fact, it can be +applied in many ways. The bracket shapes must be cut in wood, and +topped with flannel, the embroidered piece hanging across the front +like a miniature drapery. + + +BEDSIDE RUGS. + +The prettiest bedside rug which we ever saw was made in part of a +snow-white lamb's-wool mat. This was laid in the center of a stout +burlap, which projected six inches beyond the fleece all around, and +was bordered with a band of embroidery on canvas six inches wide, the +whole being lined with flannel and finished with a cord and a heavy +tassel at each corner. A simpler rug is made of brown burlap, with +a pattern in cross-stitch, worked in double zephyr worsteds of gay +colors. Initials, or a motto, can be embroidered in the middle. The +burlap can be fringed out around the edges for a finish. + +[Illustration: VASE, PAINTED BLACK AND ORNAMENTED WITH FERNS +(AUTUMN-LEAF WORK).] + + +A RAG RUG. + +An effective rug can be made in this way: Cut long inch-wide strips of +cloths, flannels, and various kinds of material (widening the strip, +however, in proportion as the fabric is thinner). Sew the ends together +so as to make one very long strip, which, for convenience' sake, +can be loosely wound up in a ball. Then, with a very large wooden +crochet-needle, you crochet a circle, a square, or oblong mat of this +rag-strip, just as with cotton or worsted. It makes a strong, durable, +and, with bright and tasteful colors, a very pretty rug. + + +A SCREEN. + +A folding clothes-horse with two leaves, such as is used in laundries, +makes the foundation for this screen. The wood is painted solid +black, and covered inside and out with very yellow unbleached cotton, +stretched tightly over the frame, and held down by black upholstery +braid fastened on with gilt nails. A design in flowers, leaves, birds, +double circles, crescents, and parallel bars, to imitate the Japanese +style of decoration, is painted in oil colors on the cotton, and a +motto on the wood along the top. If the motto is arranged to read +backward, the foreign effect of the whole will be enhanced. We have +seen a striking screen of this sort made by a little girl who, as she +could not paint in oil colors, decorated the surface with figures of +various kinds cut from Japanese picture-papers, such as are now sold +for from ten to twenty cents in the Japanese goods shops. Her figures +were so well pasted and arranged, that the screen was one of the +prettiest things in the bedroom. + +Screens covered with pictures cut from magazines and illustrated +newspapers are very much liked by boys and girls, and by some of their +elders. + + +A COUVRE-PIED. + +This is a large oblong in loosely knitted double zephyr wools, and is +made double, dark brown on one side, for instance, and pale blue on +the other. The two are united with a border in open crochet of the +brown, laced through with light blue ribbon, which is finished at each +corner with a loosely tied bow and ends. The _couvre-pied_, as the +name indicates, is meant to cover the feet of a person who lies on a +sofa, and is an excellent present to make to an elderly or invalid +friend. + + +TILE OR CHINA PAINTING. + +Don't be frightened at the word, dears. China-painting is high art +sometimes, and intricate and difficult work often, but it is quite +possible to produce pretty effects without knowing a great deal about +either china or painting. Neither are the materials of necessity +expensive. All that you need, to begin with, are a few half tubes of +china or mineral paints, which cost about as much as oil colors, +four or five camel's-hair brushes, a palette-knife, a small phial of +oil-of-lavender, and another of oil-of-turpentine, a plain glazed +china cup or plate or tile to work on, and either a china palette or +another plate on which to rub the paints. For colors, black, capuchine +red, rose-pink, yellow, blue, green and brown are an ample assortment +for a novice and for purposes of practice. We would advise only two +tubes, one of black and one of rose pink, which are colors that do +not betray your confidence when it comes to baking. For the chief +difficulty in china-painting is that to be permanent the work must +be "fired,"--that is, fused by a great heat in a furnace,--and it +requires a great deal of experience to learn what the different +tints are likely to do under this test. Some colors--yellow, for +instance--eat up, so to speak, the colors laid over them. Others +change tint. Pinks and some of the greens grow more intense; white +cannot be trusted, and mixing one paint with another, as in oils, can +only be done safely by experts. It is well, therefore, to begin with +two simple colors, and you will be surprised to see how much may be +done with them. (See "Hollenberry Cup," in ST. NICHOLAS for May, 1877, +page 458.) A cup of transparent white china, the handle painted black, +a Japanese-looking bough with black foliage and pink blossoms thrown +over it, and a little motto, has a really charming effect. But be sure +to put on the pink very pale, and the black, not in a hard, solid +streak, but delicately, to suggest shading from dark to light, or the +result of the baking will be disappointment. + +[Illustration: WOODEN BOX, ORNAMENTED WITH FERNS (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK).] + +The method of preparing the colors is to squeeze a very little paint +from each tube upon your palette or plate; take a tiny drop of +oil-of-lavender on the palette-knife, and with it rub the paint +smooth. It should be thinned just enough to work smoothly; every drop +of oil added after that is a disadvantage. Use a separate brush for +each color, and wash them thoroughly with soap and hot water before +putting them aside. The painting should be set away where no dust can +come to it, and it will dry rapidly in forty-eight hours or less. +Elaborate work often requires repainting after baking, the process +being repeated several times; but for simpler designs one baking is +usually enough. There are bakeries in Boston, New York, and others +of our large cities, to which china can be sent, the price of baking +being about ten cents for each article. + +[Illustration: TABLE-TOP (NOVELTIES IN FERN-WORK)] + + +OTHER MODES OF DECORATING CHINA. + +The picture-books which are to be found at the Japanese stores +nowadays suggest numberless excellent designs for china decorating. So +do the "Walter Crane Fairy-tales." A plain olive or cream-colored tile +with a pattern in bamboo-boughs and little birds, a milk-jug in gray +with leaves and a motto in black, a set of tiny butter-plates with +initials and a flower-spray on each, are easy things to attempt and +very effective when done. Pie-dishes can be ornamented with a long, +sketchy branch of blossoms or a flight of swallows across the bottom, +and we have seen those small dishes of Nancy ware, in which eggs are +first poached and then served on table, made very pretty by a painting +on each of a chicken, done in soft browns and reds, with a little line +to frame it in and run down along the handle. What we have mentioned +here are only suggestions; a little patience and practice will soon +help you to other patterns of your own, and we can't help hoping that +some of you will be tempted to try your hands at this delightful art. + + +DRAWING AND PAINTING ON WOOD. + +Articles in plain white wood can be bought almost anywhere nowadays. +Pen-trays, letter-racks, easels, paper-knives, photograph-frames, +watch-cases, needle-books, portfolios, glove-boxes, fans, +silk-winders--there is no end to the variety which can be had, and +had at a very moderate price. Now, any girl or boy among you with a +paint-box and a little taste for drawing, can make a really pretty +gift by decorating some one of these wooden things, either in color or +with pen drawings in brown or black. The pattern need by no means be +elaborate. A wreath of ivy simply out-lined in sepia or india-ink, or +a group of figures sketched with the same, produces a very pleasing +and harmonious effect. "Prout's Brown," a sort of fluent ink of a +burnt-umber tint, will be found excellent for drawing purposes. +For designs, our own ST. NICHOLAS will furnish excellent examples. +Scarcely a number but holds something which a clever artist can +adapt to his purpose. The "Miss Muffett" series, for example, or the +silhouettes, or the sea-side sketches, or the ornamental borders and +leaf-and-flower headings. Look over your back numbers, and you will +see how rich they are in subjects for copies. + +Here is a suggestion for such of you as live by the sea, and who know +something about drawing. Search for clam-shells on the beach, and +select the whitest and most perfectly formed. Separate the two shells, +cleanse them thoroughly, and make on the smooth pearly lining of each +a little drawing in sepia. It will serve as a receiver to stand on a +lady's toilet and hold rings and trinkets, or it can be used as +an ash-holder by a smoking gentleman, or to contain pens on a +writing-table. + + +A SHOE-CHAIR MADE OF A BARREL. + +Another shoe-chair as nice as that pictured on page 56 can be made out +of a barrel by any girl who has a father or big brother to help her a +little with the carpentering. The barrel is cut as in Fig. 1 below, so +as to form a back and a low front. The back is stuffed a little, and +covered with chintz nearly down to the floor. The front has a deep +frill tacked on all around the chair. Four blocks are nailed inside +the barrel to support a round of wood, stuffed and cushioned with the +same chintz, to serve as a seat. + +A straight shoe-bag, with eight pockets, is made in the same chintz, +and tacked firmly all around the inside. A loop of the chintz serves +to raise the seat. Four castors screwed to the bottom of the barrel +will be an improvement, as the chair without them cannot easily be +moved about. About five yards of chintz will be required for the +covering; or you might use the merino of an old dress. + +[Illustration: 1. SHOWS MANNER OF CUTTING BARREL. 2. BARREL SHOE-CHAIR +COMPLETED. 3. INTERIOR OF BARREL SHOE-CHAIR. 4. DIAGRAM SHOWING MODE +OF MAKING POCKETS FOR BARREL SHOE-CHAIR.] + + + +A MUSLIN TIDY. + +Three-quarters of a yard of clear French muslin will be needed for +this. Lay a large dinner-plate down on the muslin, draw the circle +made by its edge with a pencil, cut out, and lightly whip it round, +pulling the thread a little to keep the circle perfect. Measure the +circle, and cut a straight muslin ruffle, five inches wide and a +little less than twice as long as the measure. Roll one edge finely, +and overhand on a plain lace footing an inch and a half wide. Whip +the other edge, and sew it round the circle, graduating the fullness +equally. + +[Illustration: A MUSLIN TIDY TRIMMED WITH LACE FOOTING.] + +Baste a bit of lace footing three-quarters of an inch wide in the +middle of the circle, giving it the form of a bow-knot with two ends. +The lace must be bent and folded into the form, but not cut. Run the +edges with embroidery cotton, and button-hole all round. Then, with +sharp scissors, cut away the muslin underneath, leaving the bow-knot +transparent on a thicker ground. Dry-flute the ruffle. This little +affair is very dainty and odd, one of the prettiest things which we +have seen lately. + + +AN ILLUMINATED BORDER FOR A PHOTOGRAPH. + +St. Nicholas has given us of late such precise directions for the +process of illuminating in color,[2] that it is not needful to repeat +them; but we should like to suggest an idea to those of you who have +begun to practice the art. This is to illuminate a border or "mount" +around a favorite photograph. The picture must first be pasted on a +large sheet of tinted card-board, pale cream or gray being the best +tints to select. You then measure the spaces for your frame, which +should be square if the picture is oval or round, and outline +them lightly in lead-pencil. Next you sketch and paint your +pattern,--flowers, leaves, birds, butterflies, or a set pattern, as +you prefer,--putting the designs thickly together; and, lastly, you +fill all the blank spaces in with gold paint, leaving the pattern +in colors on a gilded ground. The outer edge of the frame should be +broken into little scallops or trefoils in gold, and the card-board +should be large enough to leave a space of at least three inches +between the illuminated border and the frame, which should be a wide +band of dull gilding or pale-colored wood, with a tiny line of black +to relieve it. The ornament should, if possible, chord in some way +with the picture. Thus a photograph of a Madonna might have the +annunciation-lilies and passion-flowers on the gold ground. + + [Footnote 2: SEE ST. NICHOLAS, Vol. IV., page 379.] + + +A BOOK OF TEXTS. + +Another choice thing which can be done by a skillful illuminator is a +small book, containing a few favorite texts, chosen by some friend. +Half-a-dozen will be enough. Each text occupies a separate page, and +is carefully lettered in red or black, with decorated initials, and +a border in colors. A great deal of taste can be shown in the +arrangement of these borders, which should be appropriate to the text +they surround. A title-page is added, and the book is bound in some +quaint way. A cover of parchment or white vellum, illuminated also, +can be made very beautiful. + + +A CARTE-DE-VISITE RECEIVER. + +For this you must procure from the tin-man a strip of tin three times +as long as it is wide--say six inches by eighteen--with each end +shaped to a point, as indicated in the picture. Measure off two bits +of card-board of exactly the same size and shape; cover one with +silk or muslin for a back, and the other with Java canvas, cloth, or +velvet, embroidered with a monogram in the upper point, and a little +pattern or motto in the lower. Lay the double coverings one on each +side of the tin, and cross the outside one with narrow ribbons, +arranged as in the picture. Overhand firmly all around; finish the top +with a plaited ribbon and a little bow and loop to hang it by, and the +bottom with a bullion fringe of the color of the ribbon. + +[Illustration: CARTE-DE-VISITE RECEIVER.] + + +A PAIR OF BELLOWS. + +There seems no end to the pretty devices which proficients in painting +can accomplish. We saw not long since a pair of wooden bellows which +had been decorated with a painting of a tiny owl sitting on a bough, +and the motto "Blow, blow, thou bitter wind." Why should not some of +you try your hands at something similar? Wood fires, thank heaven, are +much more common than they used to be, and most of you must know a +cozy chimney corner where a pretty pair of bellows would be valued. + + +A DOOR-PANEL. + +A great bunch of field-flowers, or fruit-boughs, or Virginia-creeper, +painted in water-paints on the panel of an ordinary door, is another +nice thing for you young artists to attempt. Perhaps you will object +that a picture on a door can hardly be called a Christmas present; but +we don't know. + +Anything which loving fingers can make, and loving hearts enjoy, is a +gift worthy of Christmas or any other time. + + +A SACHET IN WATER-COLORS. + +Another dainty idea for you who can paint is a small perfume-case of +white or pale-colored silk or satin, on which is painted a bunch of +flowers or a little motto. The flowers must be small ones, such as +forget-me-nots or purple and white violets. A great deal of white +paint--body color, as it is called--should be mixed with the color, to +make it thick enough not to soak and stain the silk along the edges of +the pattern. Some people paint the whole design in solid white, let +it dry, and then put on the color over the white. Others mix a little +ox-gall with the paint. + + +DECORATED CANDLES. + +The large wax or composition candles, of a firm texture, are best +for purposes of decoration. Water-color paints can be used, or those +powders which come for coloring wax flowers. In either case it will +be necessary to use a little ox-gall to give the paint consistency. +A band of solid tint--crimson, black, blue or gold--is usually put +around the middle of the candle, with a pattern in flowers or small +bright points above and below. Spirals of blue forget-me-nots all +over the candle are pretty, or sprays of leaves and berries set in a +regular pattern. These gay candles are considered ornamental for a +writing-table, and look well in the brass candlesticks which are +so much used just now, though _we_ confess to a preference for +unornamented candles of one solid tint. + + +A RUSTIC JARDINIÈRE. + +Boys and girls who live in the country hardly know how lucky they are, +or what mines of materials for clever handiwork lie close by them in +the fruitful, generous woods. What with cones and leaves and moss and +lichens and bark and fungi and twigs and ferns, these great green +store-houses beat all the fancy shops for variety and beauty, and +their "stock" is given away without money or price to all who choose +to take. Most of you know something of the infinite variety of things +which can be made out of these wood treasures, though nobody knows, or +can know, _all_. Now, we want to tell you of a new thing, not at all +difficult to make, and which would be a lovely surprise for some one +this coming Christmas. + +It is a rustic jardinière, or flower-pot. The first step toward making +it is to find a small stump about ten inches high, and as odd and +twisted in shape as possible. It should have a base broader than its +top, and three or four little branches projecting from its sides. +Carry this treasure home, brush off any dirt which may cling to it, +and ornament it with mosses and lichens, glued on to look as natural +as possible. Make three small cornucopias of pasteboard; cover them +also with mosses and lichens, and fasten them to the stump between the +forks of the branches, using small brads or tacks to keep them firm. +Stuff the cornucopias with dry moss, and arrange in each a bouquet of +grasses, autumn leaves, and dried ferns, dipping the end of each +stem in flour paste, to make it secure in its place. Sprays of +blackberry-vine or michella, and the satin-white pods of the +old-fashioned "honesty," make an effective addition. When done, we +have a delightful winter-garden, which will keep its beauty through +the months of snow and sleet, and brighten any room it stands in. Nor +is its use over when winter ends, for, inserting small glass phials in +the cornucopias, fresh flowers can be kept in them as in a vase, and +the grays and browns of the lichened wood set off their hues far +better than any gay vase could. + + +ANOTHER JARDINIÈRE. + +Another rustic flower-holder can be made by selecting three knotty +twigs, two and a half feet long and about an inch in diameter, and +nailing them together in the form of a tripod, one half serving as a +base, the other to hold a small flower-pot or a goblet whose foot has +been broken off. The lower half should be strengthened with cross +pieces nailed on, and both halves with twists of wild grape-vine or +green briar, wired at their crossings to hold them firmly in place. +When the frame is ready, melt together half a pound of bees'-wax, a +quarter of a pound of rosin, and enough powdered burnt-umber to give +a dark brown color; and pour the mixture on boiling hot. It will give +the wood a rich tint. Fill the pot with sand, place over the sand a +layer of green moss well pulled apart, and in that arrange a bouquet +of dried leaves, ferns and grasses, or, if it is summer-time, wild +flowers and vines. + + * * * * * + +Now, dear fancy-workers, little and big, surely Mother Santa Claus has +furnished you with ideas enough to keep you busy for more Christmases +than one. Just one thing more, and that is the manner in which the +presents shall be given. Nothing can be droller than to hang up +one's stockings, and nothing prettier or more full of meaning than a +Christmas-tree. But for some of you who may like to make a novelty in +these time-honored ways, we will just mention that it is good fun +to make a "Christmas-pie" in an enormous tin dish-pan, with a +make-believe crust of yellow cartridge paper, ornamented with twirls +and flourishes of the same, held down with pins, and have it served on +Christmas Eve, full of pretty things and sugar-plums, jokes and jolly +little rhymes fastened to the parcels. The cutting should be done +beforehand, and hidden by the twirls of paper; but the carver can +pretend to use his knife and fork, and spooning out the packages will +insure a merry time for all at table. And one more suggestion. Little +articles, wrapped in white paper, can be put inside cakes, baked and +iced, and thus furnish another amusing surprise for the "pie" or the +Christmas-tree. + + * * * * * + +We are indebted to Mrs. L. B. Goodall, Mrs. M. E. Stockton, Mrs. +Tolles, Miss Annie M. Phoebus, Miss M. Meeker, and Miss M. H. D., +for designs and suggestions in aid of this article; and to the +"Ladies' Floral Cabinet" for some valuable hints on "Leaf-work." + + * * * * * + + + + +LITTLE TWEET. + + +There were once some nice little birds who lived together in a great +big cage. This cage was not at all like the bird-cages we generally +see. It was called an aviary, and it was as large as a room. It had +small trees and bushes growing in it, so that the birds could fly +about among the green leaves and settle on the branches. There were +little houses where the birds might make their nests and bring up +their young ones, and there was everything else that the people who +owned this big cage thought their little birds would want. It had +wires all around it to keep the birds from flying away. + +One of the tamest and prettiest of the birds who lived in this place +was called little Tweet, because, whenever she saw any of the family +coming near the cage she would fly up close to the wires and say, +"Tweet! Tweet!" which meant "Good-morning! how do you do?" But they +thought it was only her pretty way of asking for something to eat; and +as she said "Tweet" so much, they gave her that for a name. + +One day there was a boy who came to visit the family who owned the +birds, and very soon he went to see the big cage. He had never seen +anything like it before. He had never been so close to birds that were +sitting on trees or hopping about among the branches. If the birds +at home were as tame as these, he could knock over lots of them, he +thought. + +There was one that seemed tamer than any of the rest. It came up close +to him and said: "Tweet! Tweet!" + +The boy got a little stick and pushed it through the wires at little +Tweet, and struck her. Poor little Tweet was frightened and hurt. She +flew up to a branch of the tree and sat there, feeling very badly. +When the boy found he could not reach her any more with his stick, he +went away. + +Tweet sat on the branch a long time. The other birds saw she was sick, +and came and asked how she felt. Some of them carried nice seeds to +her in their bills. But little Tweet could not eat anything. She ached +all over, and sat very quietly with her head down on her breast. + +[Illustration: "THE OTHER BIRDS BRING SEEDS TO POOR TWEET."] + +She sat on that branch nearly all day. She had a little baby-bird, who +was in a nest in one of the small houses, but the other birds said she +need not go and feed it if she did not wish to move about. They would +take it something to eat. + +But, toward night, she heard her baby cry, and then she thought she +must go to it. So she slowly flew over to her house; and her baby, who +was in a little nest against the wall, was very glad to see her. + +In the morning, two of the birds came to the house to see how little +Tweet was, and found her lying on the floor, dead. The little +baby-bird was looking out of its nest, wondering what it all meant. +How sorry those two birds were when they found that their good little +friend Tweet was really dead! + +"Poor Tweet!" said one of them, "She was the gentlest and best of us +all. And that poor little dear in the nest there, what will become of +it?" + +"Become of it!" replied the other bird, who was sitting by poor Tweet, +"Become of it! Why, it shall never want for anything. I shall take it +for my own, and I will be a kind mother to it, for the sake of poor +little Tweet." + +Now, do you not think that there were good, kind birds in that big +cage? But what do you think of the boy? + +[Illustration: "I WILL BE A KIND MOTHER TO IT, FOR THE SAKE OF POOR +LITTLE TWEET."] + + + +[Illustration] + +JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT. + + +Hurrah for the new volume!--Volume V., I believe it is to be called. +That reminds me of the names of Japanese children, hundreds of years +ago. Instead of being known by the Japanese for Tom, Henry, or John, +it was No. 1, No. 2, No. 3, and so on, through a whole family of +little folks. + +Once you had an article[1] on Japanese Games by a native of Japan, +Ichy Zo Hattori. Well, this name, as you will all admit, is a +fine-sounding appellative enough, but in English it means simply No. 1 +Hattori. + + [Footnote 1: See ST. NICHOLAS for January, 1874.] + +So, welcome to the lovely new child, No. 5 St. Nicholas!--and that he +may grow to be a brave, bright volume, beautiful to look at and useful +to this and many a generation of little folks, is your Jack's earnest +wish. + +Of one thing the little fellow may be sure,--Jack and the Deacon, and +the dear, blessed Little School-ma'am, will stand by him to the end. +And so will you, my chicks, Jack verily believes. He'll be a good +friend to you, bringing you any amount of fun, and telling you more +good things every month than you'll remember in a thousand years. + +Now we'll take up our next subject. + + +AN ARTIFICIAL HORSE THAT CAN GO. + +Well, well! The birds must be joking, for who ever heard of a bird +telling a deliberate lie? And yet it _may_ be true. There have been +artificial men,--manikins, automata, or whatever they are called,--so +why shouldn't there be artificial horses? + +Come to think of it, it was not the birds who told me about them. It +was a letter; and "artificial horses" the letter said, as plainly as +could be. It told how a fine specimen had just been exhibited in the +capital of Prussia. The thing must look like a horse, too, for it is a +hobby between two high wheels (the rider sits on the saddle), and it +travels about as rapidly as a trotting horse. As I understand it, +the rider moves his legs to make the machine go, and yet it isn't a +bicycle. It goes over stony roads, turns corners, and, for aught Jack +knows, rears and kicks like any ordinary charger--that is, when it's +out of order. + +I should like to see one among the boys of the red school-house. How +they would make it go! + + + A LETTER FROM DEACON GREEN. + + DEAR JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT: I wish some of the boys and girls who + think they never have any chance to read could know a little + fellow of my acquaintance, named George. He is fourteen years old + and employed as errand boy in a business house in New York. All + day long he runs, runs,--up-town, down-town, across town,--until + you would suppose that his little legs would be worn out. But, + always on the alert as he is, and ready to do his duty whether + tired or not, he still keeps constantly before his mind the idea + of self-improvement, in business and out. Through a friend he has + of late been able to procure books from the Mercantile Library. + Although his time during the day, as I have said, is wholly taken + up with his duties, yet he managed, during the evenings of last + fall and winter (in five months), to read twelve books, some of + them quite long ones and some of them in two volumes, all selected + with his friend's assistance. From the list, I fancy the little + fellow had an eye to enjoyment as well as profit, for they are not + all what are called instructive books, although every one of them + is a good book for a boy to read, and George tells me he enjoyed + them all heartily. + + As many of your youngsters, friend Jack, may like to know just + what books the little fellow has read, I will give you the list + that he wrote out at my request. It does not seem a very long + list, perhaps, but I think very few hard-working boys in New York + have read more than George in the same space of time. Here is the + list: + + "Robinson Crusoe;" "Benjamin Franklin," 2 vols.; "Life of + Napoleon," 2 vols.; "Schoolmaster Stories;" "Hans Brinker;" + "Swiss Family Robinson;" "Dickens's Child's History of England;" + "Kenilworth;" "The Scottish Chiefs;" "The Boy Emigrants;" "Sparks' + Life of Washington;" "Glaisher's Aerial Navigation." + + This letter, dear Jack, is sent, not by way of puffing George, but + as a sort of spur to studious boys and girls who may follow his + example, if somebody puts them up to it.--Yours truly, + + SILAS GREEN. + + * * * * * + + +"SEE HOW I HELP!" + +One of Jack's good friends, L.W.J. sends you this new fable: + + "See how I help!" said a little mouse + To the reapers that reaped the grain, + As he nibbled away, by the door of his house, + With all of his might and main. + + "See how I help!" he went on with his talk; + But they laid all the wide field low + Before he had finished a single stalk + Of the golden, glittering row. + + As the mouse ran into his hole, he said: + "Indeed, I cannot deny, + Although an idea I had in my head, + Those fellows work better than I." + + * * * * * + + +AMONG THE CRANBERRY BOGS. + + New Jersey, 1877. + + DEAR JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT: You would not think, from their names, + that cranberry bogs are pleasant places, but I enjoyed very much a + visit to one last year in the fall. Seen merely from the road, + a bog doesn't show very well, for the leaves are small, and the + vines are crowded in heavy masses; but, when you get near, the + white and red berries look pretty among the dark-green leaves. + + The meadow is checquered with little canals by means of which the + whole surface is flooded in winter-time, so as to protect the + vines from the ill effects of frosts and thaws. In the spring, the + water is drawn off at low tide through the flood-gates. + + When the cranberry-pickers are at work, they make a curious sight, + for there are people of all ages, odd dresses, and both sexes + among them, and often a tottering old man may be seen working + beside a small child. The little ones can be trusted to gather + cranberries, for the fruit is not easily crushed in handling. + Where cranberries grow thickly, one can almost fill one's hand at + a grasp. + + The overseer's one-roomed shanty, where he cooks, eats and sleeps, + is on a knoll, and near it are the barrels in which the berries + are packed, after they have been sorted according to size and + quality. + + Picking cranberries may be pleasant enough in fine weather, but it + must be miserable work on a cold, drizzly day. + + I hope this short account will be news to some of your chicks, of + whom I am one, dear Jack; and I remain yours truly, + + H. S. + + * * * * * + + + MORE CRYSTALLIZED HORSES. + + Piermont, N. H. + + DEAR JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT: You ask in the March number of the St. + Nicholas if any of us have seen crystallized horses "with our + own eyes." We (Willie and I) have seen them many times; so has + everybody else who lives here; that is, we have seen something + very much like it, though we do not call it the same. When the + thermometer is from thirty to thirty-six degrees below zero, + horses and oxen are all covered with a white frost, so you cannot + tell a black horse or ox from a white one; nor can you tell young + men from old ones. Their whiskers, eyebrows and eyelashes, are all + perfectly white. I've often had my ears frost-bitten in going to + the school-house, which is only about as far as two blocks in a + city. + + When we see these sights, Jack Frost cannot paint his delicate + pictures on the windows, for a thick white frost covers them all + over, or rubs them out. + + We like the St. Nicholas very much, and even our little sister, + Mary, likes to look at the pictures, and she said that she wished + she could see Jack-in-the-Pulpit. We intend to introduce her next + summer to some of your relations that live by the big brook. + We live about one hundred miles north-west of Concord, in the + Connecticut valley, about half a mile from the Connecticut River. + I am thirteen years old.--Good-bye, + + E. A. M. + + * * * * * + + +A TURTLE CART. + + DEAR JACK: Looking over the fence into my neighbor's yard last + summer, I saw what seemed to be a Liliputian load of hay in a tiny + cart, going along the path. Whatever power drew it, was hidden + from my sight; but the motion of the cart made me half expect to + see a yoke of tiny oxen turn the corner. In a few moments, a small + turtle appeared in sight, plodding leisurely along and drawing + behind him the cart I had seen, which was very small and light. + + I was assured by my little neighbor that the turtle liked the + business very much; but, belonging to the S. P. C. A., I felt + obliged to know the facts. I found that the turtle had his liberty + nearly all the time, and a pond of water specially for his use; + and that, when the haying season should end, he would be turned + out to pasture in his native bog for the rest of the year. + + It was a very comical sight, and, knowing my little friend's + tenderness of heart, I was sure the turtle would receive nothing + but kindness at his hands. The shell was not pierced, but the + queer trotter was attached to the cart by means of a harness made + of tape, allowing him free movement of the head, legs, and tail. + If any of your boys should decide to follow my little friend's + example, I trust that they will be as gentle as he in the + treatment of their turtles.--Yours truly, + + E. F. L. + + * * * * * + + +ANOTHER TURTLE STORY. + + DEAR JACK: One day, Rob and I (he's my brother) heard sister + Welthy screaming awfully. We were playing in the barn, but of + course we rushed out as hard as we could to save her life, if + possible. We did not know where she was, but the screams grew + louder as we neared the house. + + At last we found her near the side-door--and what do you think was + the matter? + + Why, she was screaming at a turtle! + + [Illustration:] A CORNER IN TURTLES. + + You don't know how funny it did seem. But we captured the dreadful + monster (?) and comforted her as well as we could. + + Now, Jack, as you and the Little Schoolma'am can do everything, + wont you please get ST. NICHOLAS to show us a picture of this + scene? I do believe Sis would laugh as hard as any of us if she + could see it.--Yours affectionately, + + NED G. P. + + * * * * * + + +HALF SWEET, HALF SOUR. + + +The birds tell me that in a certain country grows an apple one half of +which is sweet and the other half sour. I don't think I should like +that sort of apple. The sweet side might do very well, as far as it +went; but if you happened to bite on the other side,--ugh! + +I like things that are good all through, so that I can be sure how to +take them. Don't you? + + * * * * * + + + + +OUR MUSIC PAGE + + +CAN A LITTLE CHILD, LIKE ME? + + A THANKSGIVING HYMN. + + Words by MARY MAPES DODGE. + Music by WM. K. BASSFORD. + +[Music: + +Key: Bb Major (Bb, Eb); Time: 2/4; Range: F - D (F, G, A, Bb, C, D) + + ['F', 'Bb', etc. indicate notes having a quarter-note value; + '.' extends a note; '__' includes the notes in a quarter-note + value; '0' indicates a rest.] + + __ +{F Bb Bb Bb |Bb A A . |A G A G |G .FF . | + __ +{F Bb Bb Bb |Bb A A . |C A F CBb|A G F . | + __ __ +{G G C Bb |Bb .AA . |Bb Bb D C |Bb .AA . | + __ +{Bb . F .F|A . G . | + __ +{C . G .G|Bb . A . | + +{Bb . D D |D . G C |Bb . A . |Bb . 0 . || ] + + + +1. Can a little child like me, + Thank the Father fittingly? + Yes, oh yes! be good and true. + Patient, kind in all you do; + Love the Lord and do your part, + Learn to say with all your heart: + Father, we thank Thee! + Father, we thank Thee! + Father in Heaven, we thank Thee! + + +2. For the fruit upon the tree, + For the birds that sing of Thee, + For the earth in beauty drest, + Father, mother and the rest, + For thy precious, loving care, + For Thy bounty ev'rywhere, + Father, we thank Thee! + Father, we thank Thee! + Father in Heaven, we thank Thee! + + + + +Music and words copyrighted, 1877, by Wm. K. Bassford + + * * * * * + + + + +"THE BABY'S OPERA" AND WALTER CRANE. + + +Of the many great artists of England, Walter Crane is accounted among +the ablest and most gifted. As a painter on the canvas he stands high +with critics; and in this country he is most widely known by his +designs of colored picture-books for children. This is what one critic +says of him in this regard: "Walter Crane has every charm. His design +is rich, original, and full of discovery. His drawing is at once manly +and sweet, and his color is as delightful as a garden of roses in +June. And with these accomplishments he comes full-handed to the +children,--and to their parents and lovers too!--and makes us all rich +with a pleasure none of us ever knew as children, and never could have +looked to know." + +After this, it is very discouraging to learn, from a letter of Mr. +Crane's to the Editor of SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY, that one may be deceived +in buying Mr. Crane's books. This is particularly the case with "The +Baby's Opera." So now we tell the readers of ST. NICHOLAS that every +true copy of "The Baby's Opera" bears on its title-page the name +of Messrs. George Routledge & Sons, the publishers, as well as Mr. +Crane's, and that of the engraver and printer, Mr. Edmund Evans. To a +purchaser, it would matter little that there were two editions of a +work as long as the unauthorized one was exactly like the original; +but Mr. Crane says that "the pirated edition grossly misrepresents +his drawings, both in style and coloring; that the arrangement of the +pages is different; and that the full-page colored plates are complete +travesties, and very coarse ones, of the originals." And it does not +at all improve the false copy that it is to be bought for less than +the true one costs. It would be bad enough merely to deprive Mr. Crane +of the profits of selling an exact imitation of his book, but it is +far worse to put a _bad_ sham before the people as the work of a true +artist. This not only lessens his gains, but also takes away from his +good name, besides spoiling the taste of the youngsters. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE LETTER-BOX. + + GIRLS AND BOYS: You will all be very sorry, we know, to learn that + the beginning of Miss Alcott's serial story, "Under the Lilacs," + has been postponed to the December number; but in place of it, we + print this month the capital short story of "Mollie's Boyhood," + which, we feel sure, will go far toward repaying you for the + disappointment. We must ask you to wait a month longer for the + opening chapters of the serial, and we mean to give you then a + much longer installment of it than could have been printed in the + present issue. + + Meanwhile, you will find that the splendid article on Christmas + Gifts, which occupies twenty-two pages of this number, contains + novelties, hints, plates, and directions enough to keep your minds + so busy planning, and your hands so busily at work, during the + next few weeks, that the December ST. NICHOLAS will come before + you think of expecting it, and perhaps before you have half + finished your pretty gifts. + + * * * * * + + DEAR LITTLE SCHOOLMA'AM: Please will you tell me if it is warm + or cold, and if it is dark or light, in the places between the + stars?--Yours affectionately, + + CONSTANCE DURIVAGE. + +The Little Schoolma'am respectfully hands over this question to other +little schoolma'ams. + + * * * * * + + DEAR ST. NICHOLAS: I make so many of the "Thistle-Puffs" spoken of + in the September number that I thought I would let you know how + I fix mine. After I get the thistles I cut off all the green + excepting a little at the bottom; then I pull out all the purple, + and leave them out in the sun till they are perfectly round white + balls. They are very pretty in hats. Please put me down as a + Bird-defender.--Your constant reader, + + ALICE GERTRUDE BENEDICT. + + * * * * * + + + Exmouth, England, August 27th. + + DEAR ST. NICHOLAS: I have read the story of the "Blue-Coat Boy," + and like it. I am in England, and almost every day see a Blue-Coat + boy pass our house. I think he looks like the picture in the ST. + NICHOLAS. I should not like to wear the long coat, because I + couldn't run in it; and I should think he would get a sunstroke, + without a hat, if he ever goes to the beach. Aunt Fanny is like my + mamma; she never asks for the right thing at the shops. I like the + ST. NICHOLAS, and wish another one would come. My aunty gave it to + me for a Christmas present for a whole year.--Your friend, + + BENEDICT CROWELL. + + * * * * * + +We are very glad to see the interest which our readers have taken in +the subject of "School-luncheons." Many boys and girls have sent in +letters, thanking us for the article in our September number, and +filled with sage bits of experience. We should like to acknowledge +these separately, and print some of them, but can do no more here than +express our thanks to our young correspondents, one and all, for their +kind and hearty words. + +It will interest them all to know, however, that the article has +attracted attention, and aroused enthusiasm among the older people +too,--their fathers and mothers, and teachers, and even their favorite +writers. For here, among the many letters it has brought us, is one +that is peculiarly welcome. Our readers will have little difficulty in +guessing who the writer is: + + August 26th. + + DEAR LITTLE SCHOOLMA'AM: Being much interested, as well as amused, + by the luncheon article in ST. NICHOLAS for September, I should + like to add one more to the list of odd luncheons. + + A pretty little dish of boiled rice, with a cake of molasses, or + preserve of some sort, in the middle. This, fitted into a basket, + and covered with a plate, goes safely, and, with the addition of a + napkin and two spoons, makes a simple meal for hungry children. + + It may find favor in the eyes, or rather mouths, of the young + readers of ST. NICHOLAS, not only because it is good, but because + it was the favorite lunch once upon a time of two little girls who + are now pretty well known as "Meg and Jo March." It may be well + to add that these young persons never had dyspepsia in their + lives,--pie and pickles, cake and candy being unknown "goodies" to + them. + + With best wishes for the success of this much-needed reform in + school-children's diet, I am, yours truly, + + L.M.A. + + * * * * * + +THE MOONS OF MARS. + +Since Professor Proctor wrote the paper entitled "Mars, the Planet of +War," published in this number, there has been made, in relation to +its subject, a discovery that the scientists say will rank among the +most brilliant achievements of astronomy. + +A great difference once thought to exist between Mars and the other +planets was that he had no moons; but during the night of the 16th of +August, Professor Hall, of the U.S. Naval Observatory at Washington, +D.C., actually saw through his telescope that Mars has a moon. On the +18th of August another was seen, smaller than the first and nearer to +the planet. The larger satellite is believed to be not more than ten +miles in diameter: it is less than 12,000 miles distant from its +primary, and its period of revolution about it is 30 hours 14 minutes. +The distance of the smaller moon is 3,300 miles, and its period 7 +hours 38 minutes. There is no doubt that these newly found celestial +bodies are the smallest known. + +From measurements made by Professor Hall, it is found, with a near +approach to certainty, that the mass of Mars is equal to 1-3,090,000th +part of the mass of the sun. This result was arrived at after only ten +minutes of calculation, and is believed to be more nearly accurate +than that obtained by M. Le Verrier, the great French astronomer, from +observations continued through a century and after several years +of laborious calculation by a corps of computers. This wonderful +difference in the expenditure of time and labor is due to the +vigilance of Professor Hall and to the admirable qualities of his +instrument, the great twenty-six inch refracting telescope made by +Alvan Clark & Sons. + + * * * * * + + Oakland, Cal. + + DEAR ST. NICHOLAS: I do not wish to make you any trouble, but I + would like it very much if you could find room in some number + to give a good explanation of the great war in Europe. I can't + understand it in the newspaper, but I am pretty sure you can make + it plain and simple enough for all of your young readers.--Yours + truly, + + NEB. + +The Turco-Russian war is partly a conflict of religions and partly one +of politics. The Turks came into Europe as the religious emissaries +of the Mohammedan religion. In all the provinces of Turkey in Europe +which they conquered, the Christians of the Greek, Armenian and +Catholic churches were the victims of a bitter persecution. The Czar +of Russia is the head of the Greek church. He has made repeated wars +in defense of the children of his faith. There have been many wars and +long sieges which, like the present, were said to be only in defense +of the faith of the Greek church--a crusade and a holy war, + +But if "Neb" will only look at the map of Russia, he will see, if he +will study climate a little, that the vast empire of Russia has one +thing lacking. It has no good outlet to the Atlantic Ocean, no power +upon the seas. The Baltic Sea is closed half the year by ice. The +great wheat trade of Russia concentrates at Odessa, on the Black Sea, +and to get her grain to market she must pass through the Turkish lanes +of the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles. Russia is a prisoner as to +access to the Mediterranean, and so to the Atlantic, and so to the +world at large. If she is at war, she cannot float her fleets. If +she is at peace, she cannot sell her grain without going roundabout +through her neighbors' lots. Turkey stands the tollman at the +turnpike-gate, controlling and usurping the highway of all nations. + +Maps are fascinating reading. "Neb" must not think that religious +faith ever occasioned a war. Russia sincerely desires the protection +of Greek Christians in Roumania and Bulgaria in Europe, and Armenia in +Asia, but she wants also to send her ships free to the winds through +from the Black Sea to the Mediterranean. Look at the map once more, +"Neb," and see how much of a great country, fertile, strong, and +industrious, is closed and shut against the outer world by the +absolute Turkish control of the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles. + + + * * * * * + + Indianapolis, 1877. + + DEAR ST. NICHOLAS: I have taken every number of your splendid + magazine, and I will now try to do my share to entertain the + others. + + My papa was a soldier in the great civil war, and I was born in + camp just after the close of the war, and am now nearly twelve + years old. + + General Sherman, who made the great "march to the sea," wrote me a + letter, which is very much too good for one boy alone, so I send + it to you to publish, so that other children may have the benefit + of it too.--Your reader, + + BERNIE M. + + "Head-quarters Army of the United States, + "Washington, D.C., April 21, 1877. + + "MASTER BERNIE M. + "Indianapolis: + + "I have received the handsome photograph sent me, and recognize + the features of a fine young lad, who has before him every + opportunity to grow up a man of fine physique, with a mind + cultivated to meet whatever vicissitudes and opportunities the + future may present. Many boys in reading history have a feeling + of regret that their lives had not fallen in some former period, + replete with events of stirring interest, such as our + Revolutionary War, or that in Mexico, or even the Civil War, + wherein they feel that they might have played a conspicuous part. + + "Don't you make this mistake. The next hundred years will present + more opportunities for distinction than the past, for our country + now contains only forty millions of people, which will probably + double every thirty-three years, so that if you live to three + score years and ten you will be a citizen of a republic of two + hundred millions of people. Now, all changes are attended by + conflict of mind or of arms, and you may rest easy that there will + be plenty for you to do, and plenty of honor and fame if you want + them. The true rule of life is to prepare in advance, so as to be + ready for the opportunity when it presents itself. + + "I surely hope you will grow in strength and knowledge, and do a + full man's share in building up the future of this country, which + your fathers have prepared for you. + + "Truly your friend, + "W.T. SHERMAN, General." + + * * * * * + +No doubt many of our readers have read some of the poems of Charles +and Mary Lamb, and all who have will be interested in the following +news concerning one of their books. In 1809 they published a little +volume of "Poetry for Children," but only a few copies were printed, +and these were soon out of print, so that the book has long been +considered lost to the world. It was recently discovered, however, +that the little book had been reprinted in Boston in 1812, and the +only two copies of this edition known to exist in this country have +lately come into possession of Messrs. Scribner, Armstrong & Co., +who intend to republish the volume this fall. The book contains many +delightful little poems for boys and girls, prettily rhymed, and full +of the quaint humor and conceits which mark the other writings of the +authors. We should like to print several of them, but have only room +for these: + + +THE YOUNG LETTER-WRITER. + +_Dear Sir_, _Dear Madam_, or _Dear Friend_, + With ease are written at the top; + When these two happy words are penn'd, + A youthful writer oft will stop, + + And bite his pen, and lift his eyes, + As if he thinks to find in air + The wish'd-for following words, or tries + To fix his thoughts by fixed stare. + + But haply all in vain--the next + Two words may be so long before + They'll come, the writer, sore perplext, + Gives in despair the matter o'er; + + And when maturer age he sees + With ready pen so swift inditing, + With envy he beholds the ease + Of long-accustom'd letter-writing. + + Courage, young friend, the time may be, + When you attain maturer age, + Some young as you are now may see + You with like ease glide down a page. + + Ev'n then, when you, to years a debtor, + In varied phrase your meanings wrap, + The welcom'st words in all your letter + May be those two kind words at top. + + +CRUMBS TO THE BIRDS. + + A bird appears a thoughtless thing, + He's ever living on the wing, + And keeps up such a carolling, + That little else to do but sing + A man would guess had he. + + No doubt he has his little cares, + And very hard he often fares; + The which so patiently he bears, + That, listening to those cheerful airs, + Who knows but he may be + + In want of his next meal of seeds? + I think for _that_ his sweet song pleads; + If so, his pretty art succeeds. + I'll scatter there among the weeds + All the small crumbs I see. + + * * * * * + +We very seldom take up a book only to break the tenth commandment; +but Bayard Taylor's recent volume, "The Boys of Other Countries," +published by the Putnams, always has that effect upon us, for we wish +that every one of the stories in it had been written for ST. NICHOLAS. +The best thing we can say to our boys and girls, of a book so well +described by its title, is that it contains "Jon of Iceland," which +originally appeared in this magazine, and that each of the stories is +as good in its way as "Jon" itself. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE RIDDLE-BOX. + + +DOUBLE ACROSTIC. + +The initials name a noted philosopher, and the finals an eminent +astronomer. + +1. A narrow arm of the sea. 2. A beautiful flower. 3. A tree, usually +growing in moist land. 4. A small marine animal. 5. A river in the +United States. 6. A cone-bearing tree. 7. A tract of land, surrounded +by water. 8. A metal. + +ISOLA. + + +BROKEN WORDS. + +Find a word to fill the single blank, and divide it into smaller words +(without transposing any letters) to fill the other blanks. Thus: Such +_forages_ have gone on in that forest _for ages_. + +1. You must not think the whole were ---- because he ---- ----. +2. One of this boy's minor ---- is his constant climbing ---- ----. +3. When I gave him a pledge, the toper said with a ---- look, "You +---- ---- ---- ----." 6. The alder was pictured against the ----, +every branch, leaf, and ---- ---- standing out clearly. + +B. + + +PICTORIAL NUMERICAL, REBUS. + +Find the sum expressed in each horizontal row, and add together the +four numbers thus found, to form the complete sum expressed by the +rebus. + +[Illustration] + + +HOUR-GLASS PUZZLE. + +1. Unceasing. 2. Of little worth. 3. Habitation. 4. Ancient. 5. A +vowel. 6. Devoured. 7. To muse. 8. A maker of arms. 9. Small flat +fish. The centrals read downward name the act of unfolding. + +GEORGE CHINN. + + +BEHEADINGS AND CURTAILINGS. + +1. Curtail a disgrace, and leave an imposture. Behead, and leave one +of Noah's sons. Curtail, and leave an exclamation denoting surprise, +joy, or grief. Behead again, and leave a vowel. + +2. Curtail a color, and leave a very small part. Behead, and leave +a verb signifying "to strike." Behead again, and leave a pronoun. +Curtail, and leave a simple, personal pronoun. + +3. Curtail a beautiful marine production, and leave a girl's name. +Behead, and leave an ancient coin. Curtail, and leave a conjunction. +Behead, and leave a consonant. + +4. Behead a part of the body, and leave a kind of tree. Curtail, and +leave an article used in toilets. Behead, and leave a preposition. +Curtail, and leave a pronoun. + +5. Curtail a sweet juice collected by bees, and leave a stone for +sharpening razors. Behead, and leave a number. Curtail, and leave a +preposition. Curtail, and leave an invocation. + +N.T.M. + + +NUMERICAL ENIGMA. + +After handing a mug of 9, 2, 3 to the man who was at the 7, 4, 5 of +the 1, 6, 8, Frank resumed reading the life of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, +9. + +ISOLA. + + +EASY DIAMOND PUZZLE. + +1. In dwelling but not in house. 2. A Spanish poem. 3. A girl's name. +4. A precious stone. 5. A term in English law. 6. An insect. 7. In +bird but not in beast. + +O'B. + + +CHARADE. + + I. + + Out on the hill-side, bleak and bare, + In winter's chill and summer's glare, + Down by the ocean's rugged shore, + Where the restless billows toss and roar, + Deep in gloomy caves and mines, + Where mists are foul and the sun ne'er shines, + Man studies my first and second well, + To learn what story they have to tell. + + II. + + Go to the depths of the fathomless sea, + Go where the dew-drop shines on the lea, + Go where are gathered in lands afar, + The treasures of earth for the rich bazaar, + Go to the crowded ball-room, where + All that is lovely, and young, and fair, + Charms the soul with beauty and grace, + And my third shall meet you face to face. + + III. + + When war's red hand was raised to slay, + And front to front great armies lay, + Then, oft in the silent midnight camp, + When naught was heard but the sentry's tramp, + As he patiently paced his lonely round, + My whole was sought, and yet when found, + It sent full many a warrior brave + To his last long rest, in a soldier's grave. + +E.J.A. + + +PUZZLE BOUQUET. + +1. A cunning animal and a covering for the hand. 2. A voracious bird +of prey and a useless plant. 3. A pipe and a flower. 4. A sweetmeat +and a bunch of hair. 5. A noun meaning a quick breaking and a winged +serpent. 6. A stone fence and the blossom of a plant. 7. Fragrant and +a vegetable. 8. An entertainment of dancing and a boy's nickname. +9. Vapor frozen in flakes, and to let fall. 10. To enter into the +conjugal state, and a precious metal. + +GEORGE CHINN. + + +TRANSPOSITIONS. + +Fill the first blank with a certain word, and then, by transposing +the final letter to the place of the initial, form a word to fill the +second blank. Example: In the _halls_ of her ancestors she _shall_ +tread without fear. + +1. There is not on ---- a person of larger ----. 2. On the banks of +the ---- the traveler ---- alone. 3. As the thought of her kindness +---- up in my heart, it causes it to ---- with gratitude. 4. It was +with no ---- intent that ---- destroyed his first will. 5. I noticed +on the ---- of the pond quantities of ----. + +B. + + +LETTER ANAGRAMS. + +Write a line in each case describing the position of the letters +toward each other, and transpose the letters used in this description +to make a word which will answer the definition given. Thus: + + R. } A part of the day. _Ans_. R. on M. (transposed) Morn. + M. } + + 1. { L. } A kind of bird. + { P. } + 2. S. R. Parts of a house. + 3. S. T. A piece of furniture. + 4. { L. } To pillage. + { P. } + 5. { Et. } Not rhythmical. + { Ic. } + +H.H.D. + + +HIDDEN DRESS GOODS. + +1. Seizing the rascal I compelled him to give up the money. 2. Aunt +Nell is fond of singing Hamburg. 3. Belle Prescott only failed once +last year. 4. Eveline never learned to control herself. 5. Where is +Towser, Gertie? 6. I met Homer in Oregon. 7. Where did you find such a +queer fossil, Kenneth? 8. Tom Thumb is a tiny specimen of humanity. 9. +Did Erasmus Lincoln lose all his property by the fire? + + + + +PICTORIAL, PROVERB-ACROSTIC. + +Arrange the words represented by the numbered pictures in their order. +The initials and finals (reading down the former and continuing +down the latter) form a familiar proverb, the sentiment of which is +suggested by the central picture. + +[Illustration] + + * * * * * + + + + +ANSWERS TO PUZZLES IN OCTOBER NUMBER. + + DOUBLE DIAMOND PUZZLE.--M + G A S + M A P L E + S L Y + E + S + N U T + S U G A R + T A R + R + +SQUARE-WORD.--Midas, Ivory, Donor, Arose, Syten. +CHARADE.--Dilapidated. NUMERICAL ENIGMA.--Handsome. +DOUBLE ACROSTIC--Centennial Exposition.--ClovE, EsseX, +NaP, TallyhO, EpiglottiS, NerolI, NahanT, IttaI, ArnO, +LemoN. + +RIDDLE.--Linest, Inlets, Enlist, Tinsel, Silent, Listen. + +DIAGONAL PUZZLE.--Grand, Prate. + + G L A R E + C R A T E + P L A T E + C R A N E + P L A I D + +COMBINATION PUZZLE.--P--rive--T + E--pod--E + A--lid--A + C--ape--S + E--lop--E + +EASY DIAMOND PUZZLE.--I, Asa, Isola, Ale, A. + +PUZZLE.--Gondola. + +ANSWERS TO PUZZLES IN SEPTEMBER NUMBER were received previous to +September 18, from--Emma Elliott, Brainerd P. Emery, Allie Bertram, +Sarah D. Oakley, "Camille and Leonie," "Tip," "Yankee," J.W. Myers, +George G. Champlin, Alice M. Mason, Maria Peckham, Florence E. Hyde, +Minnie Warner, B. O'Hara, "Green Mountain Boy," John Hinkley, Florence +Wilcox, "Bessie and Sue," Julia Kirene Ladd, Grace Austin Smith, +Arthur C. Smith, George Herbert White, William A. Crocker, Jr, +Georgiana Mead, A.G.D., James Iredell, Lizzie and Anna, Agnes E. +Kennedy, Anna E. Mathewson, C.S. Riche, Edith McKeever, Nessie E. +Stevens, Carrie Lawson, Charles G. Todd, Ella and Kittie Blanke, W. +Creighton Spencer, W. Irving Spencer, Edith Heard, M.W.C., Mary +C. Warren, Lena and Annie, Annie Streckewald, Hattie Peck, Jennie +Passmore, George J. Fiske. + + * * * * * + + + + + + + +CONTENTS VOLUME V. + +[Transcriber's note: +Some entries were missing from this index. For completeness they have +been added and marked with an asterisk. +Some parts of the Table of Contents were illegible, and a few missing +page numbers have been replaced with '?'s.] + + ALCOTT, Miss. (Illustrated from photograph) _F. B. S._ 129 + ALPHABET FRANÇAIS, Un. (Illustrated) _Laura Caxton_ 816 + ALWAYS BEHINDHAND. Talk with Girls _M. D. K._ 434 + ANNIE AND THE BALLS. (Illustrated by the Author) _H. E. H._ 205 + APRIL'S SUNBEAM. Verses _Joy Allison_ 398 + ARMS OF GREAT BRITAIN, The. (Illustrated by Alfred Kappes) + _Susan Archer Weiss_ 190 + ATLANTIC CABLE, Secrets of the. (Illustrated by A.C. Warren) + _William H. Rideing_ 327 + AX OF RANIER, The. (Illustrated by E.B. Bensell) + _Thomas Dunn English_ 709 + "BABY'S OPERA" AND WALTER CRANE, The. 69 + BARBECUE, The. (Illustrated by Walter Shirlaw) + _Sarah Winter Kellogg_ 602 + BELINDA BLONDE. Verses. _Laura E. Richards_ 272 + BELL-RINGERS, The Stickleback. (Illustrated by James C. Beard) + _C.F. Holder_ 31 + BIRDS AND THEIR FAMILIES. (Illustrated) _Professor W. K. Brooks_ + 606 + BIRDS FLY, How. (Illustrated) _Professor W. K. Brooks_ 734 + BOGGS'S PHOTOGRAPH. Picture. 21 + BORN IN PRISON. (Illustrated by Edwin L. Sheppard) + _Julia P. Ballard_ 730 + BOY IN THE Box, The. (Illustrated by C. S. Reinhart) + _Helen C. Barnard_ 356 + BOY'S EXPERIENCE WITH TAR MARBLES, A. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis) + _C.S.N._ 617 + BOY WHO JUMPED ON TRAINS, The. Poem. (Illustrated by L. Hopkins) + _Mary Hartwell_ 132 + BRUNO'S REVENGE (Illustrated) _{Author of "Alice in Wonderland"_ + 18? + BUTTERFLY-CHASE, The. Poem. _Ellis Gray_ 548 + BUTTS, A Chapter of Five Pictures. 77 + BY THE SAD SEA WAVES. Picture drawn by "_Sphinx_" 716 + CAN A LITTLE CHILD LIKE ME? (Thanksgiving Hymn) _Mary Mapes Dodge_ + 68 + CANARY THAT TALKED TOO MUCH, The. _Margaret Eytinge_ 331 + CARLYLE, Thomas. (Crumbs from Older Reading, III.) _Julia E. Sargent_ + 565 + CAROL, The Minstrel's. A Christmas Colloquy. _I. V. Blake_ 153 + CHARADES, Four. Verses. _C.P. Cranch_ 406 + CHARCOAL-BURNERS' FIRE, The. (Illustrated by J. L. Dickinson) + _David Ker_ 490 + CHASED BY WOLVES. _George Dudley Lawson_ 3 + CHILD-QUEEN, A. (Illustrated by Alfred Fredericks) + _Cecilia Cleveland_ 1 + CHRISTMAS CARD. 91 + CHRISTMAS-GIFTS, A Budget of Home-Made. (Illustrated) 42 + CHURNING. Poem. (Illustrated by J. E. Kelly) _Sara Keables Hunt_ + 676 + COCK AND THE SUN, The. Jingle. (Illustrated by F. S. Church) + _J. P. B_ 359 + COMMON-SENSE IN THE HOUSEHOLD. Verses. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis) + _Margaret Vandegrift_ 326 + COOLEST MAN IN RUSSIA, The. (Illustrated by J. E. Kelly) _David Ker_ + 229 + CRICKET ON THE HEARTH, The. Poem. (Illustrated) _Clara Doty Bates_ + 33 + CRIP'S GARRET-DAY. _Sarah J. Prichard_ 339 + CROW THAT THE CROW CROWED, The. _S. Conant Foster_ 694 + CRUMBS FROM OLDER READING _Julia E. Sargent_ + I. EMERSON 262 + II. IRVING 354 + III. CARLYLE 565 + DAB KINZER: A Story of a Growing Boy. (Illustrated by H. F. Farney, + Geo. Inness, Jr., Sol. Eytinge and H. P. Smith) + _William O. Stoddard_ 553, 620, 679, 744, 798 + DEBBY'S CHRISTMAS. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis) _Ella A. Drinkwater_ + 223 + DICK HARDIN AWAY AT SCHOOL. _Lucy J. Rider_ 386 + DIGGER-WASPS AT HOME, The. (Illustrated by R. Riordan) _E. A. E._ + 667 + DOG-SHOW, A Visit to a London. (Illustrated by J. F. Runge) + _Laura Sked Pomeroy_ 420 + *DOMESTIC TRAGEDY, A. In Two Parts. Illustration. 31 + DRIFTED INTO PORT. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge and Thomas Moran). + _Edwin Hodder_ 342, 425, 494 + EASTER EGGS. Poem. _Clara W. Raymond_ 419 + EASTER IN GERMANY. (Illustrated) _F.E. Corne_ 381 + EASTER LILIES. Picture 399 + EMERGENCY MISTRESS, The. (Illustrated) _Frank R. Stockton_ 669 + EMERSON, RALPH WALDO. (Crumbs from Older Reading, I.) + _Julia E. Sargent_ 262 + EXCITING RIDE An. Picture drawn by _Miss S. A. Rankin_ 652 + FAIR EXCHANGE, A. Poem. _M. F. Butts_ 820 + FATHER CHIRP. Verses. (Illustrated by L. Hopkins) _S. C. Stone_ 476 + FERN-SEED. Poem. _Celia Thaxter_ 705 + FISHING-BIRDS OF FLORIDA, Some. (Illustrated) _Mrs. Mary Treat_ 282 + FORTY, Less One. Poem. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _James Richardson_ 579 + "FOUR LITTLE HOUSES BLUE AND ROUND." Jingle _M. F. B._ 465 + FOX, THE MONKEY, AND THE PIG, The. (Illustrated by the Author) + _Howard Pyle_ 743 + FOX AND THE TURKEYS, The. (Illustrated from Gustave Doré) + _Susan Coolidge_ 756 + FULL STOP, A. Silhouette picture drawn by _L. Hopkins_ 387 + GERTY. (Illustrated by Frederick Dielman) _Margaret W. Hamilton_ + 690 + GET UP! GOT DOWN! Silhouettes drawn by _L. Hopkins_ 461 + GIFTS FOR ST. NICHOLAS. Poem. _Emma E. Brewster_ 294 + GIRL WHO SAVED THE GENERAL, The. (Illustrated by H. F. Farney) + _Charles H. Woodman_ 577 + GUEST, An Agreeable _Susan A. Brown_ 180 + HANSA, The Little Lapp Maiden. (Illustrated) _Kate B. Horton_ 305 + HAPPY FIELDS OF SUMMER. Poem. (Illustrated) _Lucy Larcom_ 666 + "HAPPY LITTLE FROGGY." Poem. (Illustrated by F. S. Church) + _E. Müller_ 789 + HORSE AT SEA, A. (Illustrated by J.E. Kelly) _C. B._ 367 + HORSES OF VENICE, The Famous. (Illustrated) _Mary Lloyd_ 89 + HOW BIRDS FLY. (Illustrated) _Professor W.K. Brooks_ 734 + HOW HE CAUGHT HIM. Six Pictures. 740 + HOW I WEIGHED THE THANKSGIVING TURKEY. _G. M. Shaw_ 34 + HOW KITTY GOT HER NEW HAT. (Illustrated by J. E. Kelly) _E. P. W._ 182 + HOW KITTY WAS LOST IN A TURKISH BAZAAR. (Illustrated by Howard Pyle) + _Sara Keables Hunt_ 377 + HOW LILY-TOES WAS CAUGHT IN A SHOWER. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis) + _Emily H. Leland_ 731 + HOW MANDY WENT ROWING WITH THE CAP'N. (Illustrated by the Author) + _Mary Hallock Foote_ 449 + HOW MATCHES ARE MADE. (Illustrated by A.C. Warren) _F. H. C_ 315 + HOW SIR WILLIAM PHIPS FOUND THE TREASURE IN THE SEA. (Illustrated + by J. O. Davidson) _S. G. W. Benjamin_ 278 + HOW TEDDY CUT THE PIE. Verses. (Illustrated) _Rossiter Johnson_ 821 + HOW THE PONY WAS TAKEN. (Illustrated) _C. W._ 174 + HOW THE STONE-AGE CHILDREN PLAYED. (Illustrated) + _Charles C. Abbott_ 413 + HOW THE WEATHER IS FORETOLD. (Illustrated by W.H. Gibson) + _James H. Flint_ 581 + HOW TO KEEP A JOURNAL _W. S. Jerome_ 789 + HOW TO MAKE A TELEPHONE. (Illustrated) _M. F._ 549 + HOW TO TRAVEL _Susan Anna Brown_ 650 + HOW WILLY WOLLY WENT A-FISHING. Verses. (Illustrated by Howard Pyle) + _S.C. Stone_ 562 + HUCKLEBERRY. (Illustrated) _Frank R. Stockton_ 274 + ICE-BOAT, How to make an. (Diagrams by the Author) + _J. H. Hubbard_ 220 + "I'M A LITTLE STORY." Poem. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _Margaret Eytinge_ 380 + IRVING, WASHINGTON. (Crumbs from Older Reading, III.) + _Julia E. Sargent_ 354 + ITALIAN FLOWER-MERCHANT, The Little. Picture drawn by + _Miss E. M. S. Scannell_ 475 + JACK'S CHRISTMAS. (Illustrated by Jennie Brownscombe) + _Emma K. Parrish_ 124 + JAPANESE "HOUSE THAT JACK BUILT," The. Picture drawn by + _William McDougal_ 219 + JINGLES. 6, 41, 359, 404, 412, 465 + JOHN AND HIS VELOCIPEDE. Sketches drawn by _B. D._ 650 + JOHNNY. (Illustrated by R. Sayre) _Sargent Flint_ 361 + JOHNNY'S LOST BALL _Lloyd Wyman_ 500 + JUNO'S WONDERFUL TROUBLES. (Illustrated by F. S. Church) _E. Müller_ + 312 + KEPT IN. Picture drawn by _M. Woolf_ 424 + KING AND THE HARD BREAD, The. (Illustrated) _J. L._ 503 + KING AND THE THREE TRAVELERS, The. (Illustrated by John Lafarge) + _Arlo Bates_ 207 + KING CHEESE. Poem. Versified from story by Maud Christiani. + (Illustrated by L. Hopkins) _J. T. Trowbridge_ 641 + LADY-BIRD, Fly away Home. Picture drawn by _M. Woolf_ 455 + *LARGEST VOLCANO IN THE WORLD, The. (Illustrated.) _Sarah Coan_ 13 + LEFT OUT. Verse. _A. G. W._ 128 + LETTER TO AMERICAN BOYS, A. _George MacDonald_ 202 + LINNET'S FEE, The. Poem. _Mrs. Annie A. Preston_ 798 + LION-KILLER, The. (Illustrated by Alfred Kappes). From the French. + _Mary Wager Fisher_ 78 + LITTLE BEAR. Poem. (Illustrated by Addie Ledyard) + _Samuel W. Duffield_ 726 + "LITTLE BO-PEEP, SHE WENT TO SLEEP." Picture drawn by + _Miss Jessie McDermot_ 268 + LITTLE RED CANAL-BOAT, The. (Illustrated) _M. A. Edwards_ 541 + *LITTLE TWEET. Illustrated. 64 + LIVING SILVER _Mary H. Seymour_ 350 + LONDON CHAIR-MENDER. (Illustrated) _Alexander Wainwright_ 821 + LONDON CHICK-WEED MAN, The. (Illustrated) _Alexander Wainwright_ 361 + LONDON DUST-MAN, The. (Illustrated) _Alexander Wainwright_ 272 + LONDON MILK-WOMAN, The. (Illustrated) _Alexander Wainwright_ 694 + LONG JOURNEY, A. Verses. _Josephine Pollard_ 540 + LORD MAYOR OF LONDON'S SHOW, The. (Illustrated) _Jennie A. Owen_ 22 + MACKEREL-FISHING. (Illustrated by H. P. Smith) _Robert Arnold_ 706 + MAGICIAN AND HIS BEE, The. (Illustrated) _P. F._ 143 + MAKING IT SKIP. Verse. (Illustrated by Thomas Moran) _M. M. D._ 15 + MAKING READY FOR A CRUISE. Picture. 561 + MAN WHO DIDN'T KNOW WHEN TO STOP, The. Verse. _M. M. D._ 415 + MARBLES, Some In-door Games of. (Illustrated) _L. D. Snook_ 295 + MARS, THE PLANET OF WAR. (Illustrated by the Author) + _Richard A. Proctor_ 26 + MARSHAL DE SAXE AND THE DUTCH BLACKSMITH. _David Ker_ 436 + MASTER MONTEZUMA. (Illustrated) _C. C. Haskins_ 535 + MATCHES ARE MADE, How. (Illustrated by A. C. Warren) _F. H. C._ 315 + MAY-DAY, The Story of. (Illustrated by Howard Pyle) _Olive Thorne_ + 486 + MEADOW TALK. Verse. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis) + _Caroline Leslie_ 617 + MERRY MIKE. Poem. (Illustrated by Albert Shults) _Fleta Forrester_ + 176 + MERRY RAIN. Poem. _Fleta Forrester_ 425 + MOCKING-BIRD AND THE DONKEY, The. Poem. _William Cullen Bryant_ 88 + MODERN WILLIAM TELL, A. Picture drawn by _L. Hopkins_ 207 + MOLLIE'S BOYHOOD. (Illustrated by George White) _Sarah E. Chester_ 7 + MONEY is MADE, Where. (Illustrated by Fred. B. Schell) _M. W._ 477 + MONUMENT WITH A STORY, A. _Fannie Roper Feudge_ 364 + MOON, FROM A FROG'S POINT OF VIEW, The. (Illustrated by H.L. Stephens) + _Fleta Forrester_ 677 + *MOONS OF MARS, The. 69 + MOUSIE'S ADVENTURES FROM GARRET TO CELLAR. Picture drawn by + "_Sphinx_" 405 + MUSIC ON ALL FOURS. Poem. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _Josephine Pollard_ 200 + MUSTANG, The Wild. (Illustrated) _Charles Barnard_ 396 + MY GIRL. Poem. _John S. Adams_ 25 + MY ST. GEORGE. (Illustrated by Alfred Kappes) _Alice Maude Eddy_ 726 + NANCY CHIME. Poem. (Illustrated) _S. Smith_ 739 + NAN'S PEACE-OFFERING. (Illustrated by C. S. Reinhart) + _Kate W. Hamilton_ 284 + NEWS-CARRIER, The. Poem. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis) + _Catharine S. Boyd_ 349 + NEW-YEAR CARD. 182 + NIGHT WITH A BEAR, A. (Illustrated by W. L. Sheppard) + _Jane G. Austin_ 332 + NIMBLE JIM AND THE MAGIC MELON. (Illustrated by E. B. Bensell) + _J.A. Judson_ 34 + NO SCHOOL TO-DAY. Picture. Drawn by F. Opper 146 + NOW, OR THEN? Talk with Girls. _Gail Hamilton_ 123 + "OH, I'M MY MAMMA'S LADY-GIRL." Verse. (Illustrated by Addie Ledyard) + _M. M. D._ 41 + OLD MAN AND THE NERVOUS COW, The. (Illustrated by E.B. Bensell) + _R. E._ 264 + OLD NICOLAI. (Illustrated) _Paul Fort_ 399 + OLD SOUP. (Illustrated by J. E. Kelly) _Mrs. E. W. Latimer_ 463 + "ONE DAY AN ANT WENT TO VISIT HIS NEIGHBOR." Jingle. _M. F. B._ 404 + ONE SATURDAY. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) _Sarah Winter Kellogg_ + 514 + ONLY A DOLL. Poem. _Sarah O. Jewell_ 552 + ON THE ICE. Picture drawn by _L. Hopkins_ 300 + "OPEN THE SNOWY LITTLE BED." Jingle. _M. F. B._ 412 + OUT FISHING. Picture drawn by _J. Hopkins_ 759 + PAINTER'S SCARE-CROW, The. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _C.P. Cranch_ 714 + PARISIAN CHILDREN. (Illustrated by K. Brown) _Henry Bacon_ 456 + PARLOR BALL. (Illustrated by the author) _L. Hopkins_ 492 + PARLOR MAGIC. (Illustrated) _Professor Leo H. Grindon_ 811 + PERSEUS, The Story of. _Mary A. Robinson_ 630 + PETERKINS ARE OBLIGED TO MOVE, The. _Lucretia P. Hale_ 458 + PETERKINS' CHARADES, The. _Lucretia P. Hale_ 91 + PETER PIPER'S PICKLES, Mrs. (Illustrated by F. S. Church) + _E. Müller_ 519 + POEMS BY TWO LITTLE AMERICAN GIRLS. _Elaine and Dora Goodale_ 109 + POLLY: A Before-Christmas Story. (Illustrated) _Hope Ledyard_ 19 + PORPOISES, About the. (Illustrated by J. O. Davidson) _J. D._ 142 + POTTERY, A Chat about. (Illustrated from photographs) + _Edwin C. Taylor_ 104 + PRIMKINS' SURPRISE, Mrs. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _Olive Thorne_ 794 + PRINCE CUCURBITA. (Illustrated by E. M. Richards) + _Edith A. Edwards_ 792 + PROFESSOR, The. _Clarence Cook_ 402 + PUCK PARKER. (Illustrated by J. Wells Champney) + _Lizzie W. Champney_ 416 + QUICKSILVER. _Mary H. Seymour_ 359 + RAID OF THE CAMANCHES, The. _The Author of "We Boys"_ 267 + RAIN. Poem. _Edgar Fawcett_ 613 + RAVENS AND THE ANGELS, The. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _Author of "The Schonberg-Cotta Family"_ 169, 242 + RIDDLE, A Double. Verses. _J.G. Holland_ 94 + RODS FOR FIVE. (Illustrated) _Sarah Winter Kellogg_ 645 + ROWING AGAINST TIDE. _Theodore Winthrop_ 75 + SAM'S BIRTHDAY. (Ilustrated by Sol. Eytinge) _Irwin Russell_ 482 + SATURDAY AFTERNOON. Picture drawn by _Miss S. W. Smith_ 725 + SCRUBBY'S BEAUTIFUL TREE. (Illustrated by F. A. Chapman and Sol. + Eytinge) _J. C. Purdy_ 147 + SEEING HIMSELF AS OTHERS SEE HIM. Picture drawn by + _J. Wells Champney_ 431 + SHEPHERD-BOY, The. Poem. _Emily S. Oakey_ 241 + SILLY GOOSE, The. Poem. (Illustrated by F. S. Church) + _E.A. Smuller_ 453 + SIMPLE SIMON. Picture, drawn by _E.B. Bensell_ 791 + SING-A-SING. Poem. (Illustrated by Alfred Kappes) _S. C. Stone_ 122 + SING-AWAY BIRD, The. Poem. _Lucy Larcom_ 462 + SINGING PINS. (Illustrated by A. C. Warren) _Harlan H. Ballard_ 14? + SKATING. Poem. _Theodore Winthrop_ 23? + SNEEZE DODSON'S FIRST INDEPENDENCE DAY. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _Mrs. M. H. W. Jaquith_ 61? + SOLIMIN: A Ship of the Desert. (Illustrated) _Susan Coolidge_ 26? + SONG OF SPRING, A. _Caroline A. Mason_ 48? + SOMETHING IN THE OLD CLOTHES LINE. (Illustrated) _Paul Fort_ 21? + *STORY THAT WOULDN'T BE TOLD, The. (Illustrated.) _Louise Stockton_ 18 + *WILLOW WAND, The. Poem. Illustrated. _A. E. W._ 16 + + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and +Girls, Vol. 5, Nov 1877-Nov 1878, by Various + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ST. 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+ background: #ffffff; + text-decoration:underline; + } + + a.note:link { + color:#000000; + background: #ffffff; + text-decoration:underline; + } + + a.note:visited { + color:#000000; + background: #ffffff; + text-decoration:underline; + } + + a.note:hover { + color:blue; + background:#ffffff; + text-decoration:underline; + } + + a.note:active { + color: #cc0099; + background: #ffffff; + text-decoration:underline; + } + + </style> + </head> + + <body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and Girls, +Vol. 5, Nov 1877-Nov 1878, 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: St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and Girls, Vol. 5, Nov 1877-Nov 1878 + No 1, Nov 1877 + +Author: Various + +Editor: Mary Mapes Dodge + +Release Date: January 14, 2006 [EBook #17513] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ST. NICHOLAS MAGAZINE *** + + + + +Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Lesley Halamek and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + + +<br /> + +<h1>ST. NICHOLAS:</h1><br /> + +<h4>SCRIBNER'S ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE</h4><br /><br /> + +<h2>FOR GIRLS AND BOYS,</h2><br /><br /> + +<h5>CONDUCTED BY</h5><br /><br /> + +<h3>MARY MAPES DODGE.</h3><br /><br /> + +<h4>VOLUME V.</h4> +<h5>NOVEMBER, 1877, TO NOVEMBER, 1878.</h5> +<br /><br /> + +<h5>SCRIBNER & CO., NEW YORK.</h5> + +<h6>Copyright by SCRIBNER & CO., 1878.<br /> + +PRESS OF FRANCIS HART & CO.<br /> + +NEW YORK</h6> + +<br /><br /><hr /><br /><br /> + + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/0136-1.jpg"><img src="images/0136-1-340.jpg" width="340" height="466" alt="KING RICHARD II. AND HIS CHILD-QUEEN." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">KING RICHARD II. AND HIS CHILD-QUEEN.</p> + +</div><br /><br /> + +<h1>ST. NICHOLAS.</h1> + + +<h4>VOL. V. NOVEMBER, 1877. No. 1.</h4> + +<h6>[Copyright, 1877, by Scribner & Co.]</h6> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h3>CONTENTS.</h3> + +<table width="100%" align="center" border="0" summary="contents"> +<tr> + <td colspan="2" valign="top"> </td> + <td class="right">PAGE</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page1"><span class="sc">Child-Queen</span>, A.</a> (Illustrated by Alfred Fredericks) </td> +<td><i>Cecilia Cleveland</i> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page1">1</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#wolves"><span class="sc">Chased by Wolves</span>.</a> (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>George Dudley Lawson</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page3">3</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#crewd"><span class="sc">Jingle: There was an Old Person of Crewd</span>.</a> (Illustrated by K. W. P.)</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page6">6</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page7"><span class="sc">Mollie's Boyhood</span>.</a> (Illustrated by George White)</td> +<td><i>Sarah E. Chester</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page7">7</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page13"><span class="sc">The Largest Volcano in the World</span>.</a> (Illustrated) +</td> +<td><i>Sarah Coan</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page13">13</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#skip"><span class="sc">Making it Skip</span>.</a> Verse. (Illustrated by Thomas Moran)</td> +<td><i>M. M. D.</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page15">15</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page16"><span class="sc">Willow Wand</span>, The.</a> Poem. (Illustrated) +</td> +<td><i>A. E. W.</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page16">16</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page18"><span class="sc">Story that Wouldn't be Told</span>, The.</a> (Illustrated) +</td> +<td><i>Louise Stockton</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page18">18</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#polly"><span class="sc">Polly</span>: A Before-Christmas Story.</a> (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Hope Ledyard</i> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page19">19</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#boggs"><span class="sc">Boggs's Photograph</span>.</a> Picture.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page21">21</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page22"><span class="sc">Lord Mayor of London's Show</span>, The.</a> (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Jennie A. Owen</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page22">22</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#girl"><span class="sc">My Girl</span>.</a> Poem.</td> +<td><i>John S. Adams</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page25">25</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page26"><span class="sc">Mars, the Planet of War</span>.</a> (Illustrated by the Author)</td> +<td><i>Richard A. Proctor</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page26">26</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#tragedy"><span class="sc">Domestic Tragedy</span>, A.</a> In Two Parts (Illustration)</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page31">31</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#bell"><span class="sc">Bell-Ringers</span>, The Stickleback.</a> (Illustrated by James C. Beard)</td> +<td><i>C. F. Holder</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page31">31</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#cricket"><span class="sc">Cricket on the Hearth</span>, The.</a> Poem. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Clara Doty Bates</i> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page33">33</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page34"><span class="sc">How I Weighed the Thanksgiving Turkey</span>.</a></td> +<td><i>G. M. Shaw</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page34">34</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#melon"><span class="sc">Nimble Jim and the Magic Melon</span>.</a> (Illustrated by E. B. Bensell)</td> +<td><i>J. A. Judson</i> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page34">34</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#lady-girl"><span class="sc">"Oh, I'm My Mamma's Lady-Girl</span>."</a> Verse. (Illustrated by Addie Ledyard)</td> +<td><i>M. M. D.</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page41">41</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page42"><span class="sc">Christmas-Gifts</span>, A Budget of Home-Made.</a> (Illustrated)</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page42">42</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page64"><span class="sc">Little Tweet</span>.</a> (Illustrated)</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page64">64</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page66"><span class="sc">Jack-in-the-Pulpit</span>.</a> (Illustrated)</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page66">66</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page68"><span class="sc">Can a Little Child Like Me</span>?</a> (Thanksgiving Hymn)</td> +<td><i>Mary Mapes Dodge</i> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page68">68</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page69"><span class="sc">"Baby's Opera" and Walter Crane</span>, The.</a></td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page69">69</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#letters"><span class="sc">The Letter Box</span>.</a> </td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page69">69</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#moons"><span class="sc">The Moons of Mars</span>.</a> </td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page69">69</a></td> +</tr><tr><td> +<a class="contents" href="#page71"><span class="sc">The Riddle Box</span>.</a> (Illustrated)</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page71">71</a></td> +</tr> + +</table> +<p class="center">The Full Alphabetic Index for Volume V. is <a href="#index">HERE</a>.<br /> +(<span style="font-size: 0.8em;">The <span class="sc">Titles</span> above link directly to the Articles.)</span></p> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="page1" id="page1"></a><span class="left">[page 1]</span> + +<h2>A CHILD QUEEN.</h2> + +<h4><span class="sc">By Cecilia Cleveland</span>.</h4> + +<p> +I wonder how many of the little girl readers of +<span class="sc">St. Nicholas</span> are fond of history? If they answer +candidly, I do not doubt that a very large proportion +will declare that they prefer the charming +stories they find in <span class="sc">St. Nicholas</span> to the dull +pages of history, with its countless battles and murdered +sovereigns. But history is not every bit dull, +by any means, as you will find if your elder sisters +and friends will select portions for you to read +that are suitable to your age and interests. Perhaps +you are very imaginative, and prefer fairy +tales to all others. I am sure, then, that you will +like the story I am about to tell you, of a little +French princess, who was married and crowned +Queen of England when only eight years old, and +who became a widow at twelve.</p> +<p> +This child-sovereign was born many hundred +years ago—in 1387—at the palace of the Louvre in +Paris, of whose noble picture-gallery I am sure you +all have heard,—if, indeed, many of you have not +seen it yourselves. She was the daughter of the +poor King Charles VI., whose misfortunes made +him insane, and for whose amusement playing-cards +were invented, and of his queen, Isabeau of Bavaria, +a beautiful but very wicked woman. Little +Princess Isabella was the eldest of twelve children. +She inherited her mother's beauty, and was petted +by her parents and the entire court of France.</p> +<p> +King Richard II. of England, who was a widower +about thirty years old, was urged to marry again; +and, instead of selecting a wife near his own age, +his choice fell upon little Princess Isabella.</p> +<p> +"She is much too young," he was told. "Even +in five or six years she will not be old enough to be +married." The king, however, thought this objection +too trifling to stand in the way of his marriage, +and saying, "The lady's age is a fault that every +day will remedy," he sent a magnificent embassy +to the court of France, headed by the Archbishop +of Dublin, and consisting of earls, marshals, knights, +and squires of honor uncounted, with attendants to +the number of five hundred.</p> +<p> +When the embassy reached Paris, and the offer +of marriage had been formally accepted, the archbishop +and the earls asked to see the little princess +who was soon to become their queen. At first the +French Council refused, saying so young a child +was not prepared to appear on public occasions, +and they could not tell how she might behave. +The English noblemen were so solicitous, however, +that at last she was brought before them. The earl +marshal immediately knelt before her, and said, in +the old-fashioned language of the time: "Madam, +if it please God, you shall be our lady and queen."</p> +<p> +Queen Isabeau stood at a little distance, curious +and anxious, no doubt, to know how her little +daughter would answer this formal address. To +her great pleasure, and the great surprise of all +present, Princess Isabella replied:</p> +<p> +"Sir, if it please God and my father that I be +Queen of England, I shall be well pleased, for I am +told I shall then be a great lady."</p> +<p> +Then, giving the marshal her tiny hand to kiss, +she bade him rise from his knees, and leading him +to her mother, she presented him to her with the +grace and ease of a mature woman.</p> +<p> +According to the fashion of the time, Princess +Isabella was immediately married by proxy, and<a name="page2" id="page2"></a><span class="left">[page 2]</span> +received the title of Queen of England. Froissart, +a celebrated historian living at that epoch, says: +"It was very pretty to see her, young as she was, +practicing how to act the queen."</p> +<p> +In a few days, King Richard arrived from England +with a gay and numerous retinue of titled ladies to +attend his little bride. After many grand festivities +they were married and were taken in state to +England, where the Baby Queen was crowned in +the famous Westminster Abbey.</p> +<p> +I must not forget to describe the magnificent +<i>trousseau</i> that the King of France gave his little +daughter. Her dowry was 800,000 francs ($160,000); +her coronets, rings, necklaces, and jewelry +of all sorts, were worth 500,000 crowns; and her +dresses were of surpassing splendor. One was a +robe and mantle of crimson velvet, trimmed with +gold birds perched on branches of pearls and +emeralds, and another was trimmed with pearl +roses. Do you think any fairy princess could have +had a finer bridal outfit?</p> +<p> +When the ceremonies of the coronation were +over, little Isabella's life became a quiet routine of +study; for, although a reigning sovereign, she was +in the position of that young Duchess of Burgundy +of later years, who at the time of her marriage +could neither read nor write. This duchess, who +married a grandson of Louis XIV. of France, was +older than Queen Isabella—thirteen years old; and +as soon as the wedding festivities were over, she +was sent to school in a convent, to learn at least to +read, as she knew absolutely nothing save how to +dance. Queen Isabella, however, was not sent +away to school, but was placed under the care of a +very accomplished lady, a cousin of the king, who +acted as her governess. In her leisure hours, the +king, who was a fine musician, would play and sing +for her, and, history gravely informs us, he would +even play dolls with her by the hour!</p> +<p> +But King Richard's days of quiet pleasure with +his child-wife were at last disturbed, and he was +obliged to leave her and go to the war in Ireland. +The parting was very sad and affecting, and they +never met again.</p> +<p> +While King Richard was in Ireland, his cousin, +Henry of Lancaster, afterward Henry IV., took +possession of the royal treasury, and upon the +return of Richard from his unfortunate campaign, +marched at the head of an army and made a prisoner +of him, lodging him in that grim Tower of London +from which so few prisoners ever issued alive.</p> +<p> +Meantime, the poor little queen was hurried +from one town to another, her French attendants +were taken from her, and the members of her new +household were forbidden ever to speak to her of +the husband she loved so dearly. Finally, it was +rumored that Richard had escaped. Instantly, this +extraordinary little girl of eleven issued a proclamation +saying that she did not recognize Henry IV. +(for he was now crowned King of England) as sovereign; +and she set out with an army to meet her +husband. The poor child was bitterly disappointed +upon learning that the rumor was false, and her +husband was still a prisoner, and before long she +also was again a prisoner of Henry IV., this time +closely guarded.</p> +<p> +In a few months Richard was murdered in +prison by order of King Henry, and his queen's +childish figure was shrouded in the heavy crape +of her widow's dress. Her superb jewelry was +taken from her and divided among the children of +Henry IV., and she was placed in still closer +captivity. Her father, the King of France, sent to +demand that she should return to him, but for a +long time King Henry refused his consent. Meantime, +she received a second offer of marriage from—strange +to say—the son of the man who had +killed her husband and made her a prisoner, but a +handsome, dashing young prince, Harry of Monmouth, +often called "Madcap Hal." Perhaps you +have read, or your parents have read to you, extracts +from Shakspeare's "Henry IV.," so that you +know of the wild exploits of the Prince of Wales +with his friends, in turning highwayman and stealing +purses from travelers, often saying,</p> + +<p class="note"> +"Where shall we take a purse to-morrow, Jack?"</p> + +<p> +and finding himself in prison sometimes as a result +of such amusements? Isabella was a child of +decided character, and truly devoted to the memory +of her husband, and much as she had enjoyed her +rank she refused to continue it by marrying handsome +Madcap Hal, although he offered himself to +her several times, and even as she was embarking +for France.</p> +<p> +Poor little Isabella, who had left France so brilliantly, +returned a sad child-widow, and all that +remained to her of her former splendor was a +silver drink-cup and a few saucers. As Shakspeare +says:</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"My queen to France, from whence set forth in pomp,</p> +<p>She came adorned hither like sweet May,</p> +<p>Sent back like Hallowmas or shortest day."</p> +</div> +</div> +<p> +She was received throughout France with joy, +and tears of sympathy.</p> +<p> +When Isabella was eighteen. Madcap Hal again +offered his hand to her, supposing she had forgotten +her former prejudice, but although she married +again she was so far faithful to the memory of her +English husband that she would not accept the son +of his murderer. Some years later, when Prince Hal +was king, he married her beautiful sister Katherine.</p> +<p> +Isabella's second husband was her cousin, the +Duke of Orleans, whose beautiful poems are considered<a name="page3" id="page3"></a><span class="left">[page 3]</span> +classic in France. Again she was the joy +of her family and the pride of France, but all her +happiness was destined to be fleeting, for she survived +her marriage only one year. Her husband, +who loved her fondly, wrote after her death:</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> + <p class="i2">"Alas!</p> +<p>Death, who made thee so bold,</p> +<p>To take from me my lovely princess,</p> +<p>Who was my comfort, my life,</p> +<p>My good, my pleasure, my riches?</p> +<p>Alas! I am lonely, bereft of my mate—</p> +<p>Adieu! my lady, my lily!</p> +<p>Our loves are forever severed."</p> +</div> +</div> +<p> +And in another poem, full of expressions that +show how very devoted was his affection for her, +he says:</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"Above her lieth spread a tomb</p> + <p class="i2">Of gold and sapphires blue,</p> +<p>The gold doth show her blessedness,</p> + <p class="i2">The sapphires mark her true.</p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"And round about, in quaintest guise,</p> + <p class="i2">Was carved—'Within this tomb there lies</p> +<p>The fairest thing to mortal eyes.'"</p> +</div> +</div> +<p> +Farewell, sweet Isabella!—a wife at eight, a +widow at twelve, and dead at twenty-two,—your +life was indeed short, and, though not without +happy days, sorrow blended largely with its joy!</p> +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<a name="wolves" id="wolves"></a> +<h2>CHASED BY WOLVES</h2> + +<h4><span class="sc">By George Dudley Lawson.</span></h4> + +<p> +Some forty years ago the northern part of the +State of New York was very sparsely settled. In +one of the remote counties, which for a name's sake +we will call Macy County, a stout-hearted settler, +named Devins, posted himself beyond the borders +of civilization, and hewed for his little family a +home in the heart of a forest that extended all the +way from Lake Champlain to Lake Ontario. His +nearest neighbor was six miles away, and the +nearest town nearly twenty; but the Devinses were +so happy and contented that the absence of company +gave them no concern.</p> +<p> +It was a splendid place to live in. In summer +the eye ranged from the slope where the sturdy +pioneer had built his house over miles and miles of +waving beech and maple woods, away to the dark +line of pines on the high ground that formed the +horizon. In the valley below, Otter Creek, a tributary +of the St. Lawrence, wound its sparkling way +northward. When Autumn painted the scene in +brilliant hues, and it lay glowing under the crimson +light of October sunsets, the dullest observer could +not restrain bursts of admiration.</p> +<p> +Mr. Devins's first attack on the stubborn forest +had been over the brow of the hill, some four miles +nearer Owenton, but his house was burned down +before he had taken his family there from Albany. +He had regretted that he had not "pitched his +tent" on the slope of Otter Creek; so now he +began with renewed energy his second home, in +which the closing in of the winter of 1839 found +him. He had sixty acres of rich soil under cultivation +at the time of which we are to speak, his right-hand +man being his son Allan,—a rugged, handsome, +intelligent boy of sixteen.</p> +<p> +The winter of '39 was a terrible one; snow set in +before the end of November, and, even in the open +country, lay upon the ground until the beginning +of April, while in the recesses of the forest it was +found as late as the middle of June. There was +great distress among the settlers outside of the +bounds of civilization, to whom the deep snow was +an impassable barrier. The Devinses neither saw +nor heard from their nearest neighbors from the +first of December till near the beginning of February, +when a crust was formed upon the snow sufficiently +firm to bear the weight of a man, and a +friendly Cayuga Indian brought them news of how +badly their neighbors fared.</p> +<p> +Mr. Devins was especially touched by the bad +case of his friend Will Inman, who lived on the +nearest farm. The poor man lay ill of a fever; +Mrs. Inman was dead and temporarily buried, until +her body could be removed to the cemetery in +Owenton, and all the care of the family devolved +upon Esther, his daughter, fourteen years old. +After a short consultation, the next morning breaking +bright and clear though very cold, it was determined +to allow Allan to go over the hill to Inman's, +bearing medicine, tea, and other little necessaries +for the family. He was impressively warned to +begin his return at so early an hour that he might +reach home before the short day's end, especially +because of the danger from wild animals. The +severity of the winter had made the wolves more +venturesome and dangerous than they had been for<a name="page4" id="page4"></a><span class="left">[page 4]</span> +many years. Mr. Devins had lost several sheep +and hogs, and deemed it unsafe for any of his +family to be caught far from the house at night.</p> +<p> +Allan armed himself with his light rifle, put some +biscuits and cold meat in a pouch strapped to his +waist, mounted one of the strong farm-horses, and +set out on his journey. The road through the +forest was better than he expected to find it, as the +snow had been drifted off, but at the turns, and in +the thickest part of the wood, his horse floundered +through drifts more than breast high; and more +than once Allan had to dismount and beat a path +ahead. Therefore, he did not reach Inman's till +two o'clock, and, by the time he had helped Esther +about her work, assisted her young brother to get +in a good supply of wood, and made things more +comfortable for the invalid, it was almost sundown. +He stoutly refused to wait for supper, declaring +that the luncheon still in his pouch would serve, +and started just as the short twilight came on. +He was a brave lad, and, with no thought of peril, +went off, kissing his hand gayly to Esther.</p> +<p> +It took him an hour to traverse the first three +miles, and then he came to a stretch of comparatively +bare ground leading through his father's old +clearing, and almost to the top of the hill back of +Mr. Devins's house. He was just urging old Bob +into a trot, when a long, clear howl broke upon his +ear; then another and another answered from east +and south. He knew what that meant. It was +the cry of the advance-guard of a pack of wolves.</p> +<p> +The howling sounded near, and came swiftly +nearer, as though the wolves had found his tracks +and scented their prey. Old Bob trembled in +every limb, and seemed powerless to move. Allan +realized that he could not, before dark, reach home +through the drifts ahead, and the increasing cold +of the advancing night would render a refuge in a +tree-top probably as deadly as an encounter with +the pack.</p> +<p> +Presently there came a cry, shriller and sharper +than before, and Allan, looking back, saw a great, +lean, hungry gray wolf burst from the underbrush +into the road, followed by dozens more; and in a +moment the road behind him was full of wolves, +open-mouthed and in keen chase. Their yells now +seemed notes of exultation, for the leader of the +pack—the strongest, fleetest, hungriest one among +them—was within a dozen yards of Allan, who was +now riding faster than ever old Bob had gone before +or ever would go again. Excitement made the +lad's blood boil in his veins, and he determined to +show fight. The moon had risen, and the scene +was almost as light as day. Now he could count +the crowding host of his enemies, and just as he +broke from the forest road into the old clearing, he +turned in his saddle and fired. The foremost of +the pack rolled over and over; the rest gathered +around and tore their leader in pieces.</p> +<p> +By the time they resumed the chase, Allan was +a hundred yards ahead with his rifle loaded. He +determined to make a running fight of it to the +hill, where he was sure of meeting his father, or +could take to a tree and shoot until help came. +This had hardly flashed through his brain when, +right ahead of him, a detachment of the pack +sprang into the road and answered with double +yells the cries of the rest coming up behind. The +horse wheeled suddenly, almost unseating Allan, +and dashed across the clearing toward the wood; +but he had not taken a dozen bounds when a wolf +sprang upon him. Old Bob reared and fell, pitching +Allan nearly twenty feet ahead, and was covered +with wolves before he could regain his footing. +That was the last of poor old Bob.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/0138-1.jpg"><img src="images/0138-1-600.jpg" width="600" height="441" alt="OLD BOB FELL, PITCHING ALLAN AHEAD." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">"OLD BOB FELL, PITCHING ALLAN AHEAD."</p> +</div> + + +<p> +But Allan! What of him? When he recovered +from the effects of the shock, he found himself over +head and ears in snow. He had no idea where he +was, but struggled and plunged in vain endeavors +to extricate himself, until at last he broke into a +space that was clear of snow, but dark as Erebus, +damp and close. Feeling about him he discovered +over his head logs resting slantingly against the +upper edge of a pit, and then he knew that he was +in the cellar of the old house his father had built, +and which had been burned down nine years before! +The cellar was full of snow, except at the corner +roofed over by the fallen logs, and Allan, bursting +through the snow into the empty corner, was as +secure from the wolves as though seated by his +father's fireside. It was not nearly as cold in there +as outside, and he found a dry spot upon which +he lay down to think.</p> +<p> +He was in no danger of freezing to death, his +food would keep him from starvation a week at least, +and Allan concluded that, with the first glimpse +of dawn, his father would be in search of him, and, +following the tracks, find old Bob's bones, and +quickly rescue him from his predicament. He +reasoned wisely enough, but the elements were +against him. Before sunrise a furious storm of +wind and snow had completely obliterated every +trace of horse, rider and wolves.</p> +<p> +At home, as the night wore on, the anxiety of +the family had increased. While they were watching +the gathering storm, they heard the long, dismal +howl of the wolves coming over the hill. The +chill of fear that they should never see the boy +again settled down upon all their hearts, until the +house was as dreary within as the winter waste and +gloomy forest were without.</p> +<p> +Meanwhile the brave youth was sound asleep, +dreaming as peacefully as though snugly resting +with his brother in his warm bed at home. He<a name="page5" id="page5"></a><span class="left">[page 5]</span> +slumbered on unconscious of the raging storm without, +and did not awake until late the next forenoon. +It took him several seconds to realize where he was +and how he came there, but gradually he remembered +his ride for life, the falling of his horse, his +struggle in the snow, and his breaking into the +protected space where he lay.</p> +<p> +The storm lasted all day and far into the succeeding +night. Allan ate slightly, quenched his +thirst with a few drops of water obtained by melting +snow in the palm of his hand, and began casting +about for means to get out. He soon found that +to dig his way up through the mass of snow that filled +the cellar was beyond his powers. If he could have +made a succession of footholds, the task would have +been easy; but all his efforts only tended to fill +his retreat, without bringing him nearer the air. +As soon as he saw this, he gave himself up to +calmly waiting for help from without.</p> +<p> +The second morning of his imprisonment broke +clear and cheerful, and Mr. Devins set out to search +for traces of his boy. He visited the Inmans' and +learned the particulars of Allan's stay and departure, +then mournfully turned his face homeward, his +heart filled with despair. When he emerged from +the forest into the clearing, he met the Indian who +had visited him a few days before, and he told +the red man of Allan's loss. The Indian stood a +moment in deep thought, and then asked:</p> +<p> +"No horse, no boy back there?" pointing to the +road just traversed by Mr. Devins.</p> +<p> +"No. I have looked carefully, and if there had +been a trace left by the recent storm I should have +detected it."</p> +<p> +"Ugh! well, me come over the hill; nothing +that way either; then they here."</p> +<p> +"Why do you think so?"</p> +<p> +"Ah! me know wolves. When Allan come to +this place they ahead; horse turn; wolves caught +'em this side woods; we look there," and Tayenathonto +pointed to the very course taken by the +horse and rider.</p> +<p> +It so happened when Allan was thrown from the +horse's back that his rifle flew from his hand and +struck, muzzle down, in a hollow stump, where, imbedded +in the snow, it stood like a sign to mark the +scene of the last struggle of the lost boy. The snow +had whitened all its hither side. When the Indian +came abreast of it, he cried:</p> +<p> +"Told you so! See! Allan's gun! And here<a name="page6" id="page6"></a><span class="left">[page 6]</span> +rest of 'em," pointing to the little heap over the +ruins of the old cabin.</p> +<p> +Kicking the snow hastily aside, the Indian examined +the ground carefully a moment and then +said: "No, only horse; Allan further on."</p> +<p> +The Indian, with head bent down, walked quickly +forward, threw up his arms, and disappeared. He +had stepped over the clean edge of the cellar +and sunk exactly as Allan had. A few desperate +plunges sufficed to take the strong Indian through +the intervening snow and into the protected corner +where Allan, just rousing from his second sleep, +sat bolt upright. The Indian's coming disturbed +the snow so that a glimmer of light penetrated into +the dark space. Allan supposed a wolf had found +its way down there, and hastily drew his large +knife, bracing himself for an encounter.</p> +<p> +The Indian sputtered, thrashed about to clear +himself from the snow, and in so doing rapped his +head smartly against the low ceiling of logs.</p> +<p> +"Waugh! waugh!" exclaimed he. "Too +much low; Indian break 'em head; look out."</p> +<p> +Allan instantly recognized the voice of the Indian, +his comrade on many a fishing and hunting tour.</p> +<p> +"Tayenathonto!" he cried, "dear old fellow, +who would have thought of you finding me!"</p> +<p> +The Indian quietly replied:</p> +<p> +"Tayenathonto no find; come like water-fall; +couldn't help his self."</p> +<p> +A very few minutes sufficed to put both on the +surface again, where Allan was received "like one +come from the dead," and closely folded in his +father's arms. Oh, the joy of that embrace! The +past grief and suffering were forgotten in the bliss +of that moment.</p> +<p> +The Indian had to return with the happy father +and son to their home, where he was hailed as +Allan's rescuer, and enjoyed to the full a share of +the festivities.</p> +<p> +In after years Allan married Esther Inman, and +now, by the fireside in winter, he tells his grandchildren +of his escape from the wolves, and the +little ones never tire of petting their faithful old +Tayenathonto.</p> +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="crewd"></a> +<div class="figcenter1" style="width:40%"> +<img src="images/006-350.jpg" width="350" height="467" alt="THERE WAS AN OLD PERSON OF CREWD,..." border="0" /> + + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>There was an old person of Crewd,</p> +<p>Who said, "We use saw-dust for food;</p> + <p class="i2">It's cheap by the ton,</p> + <p class="i2">And it nourishes one,</p> +<p>And that's the main object of food."</p> +</div> +</div></div> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<a name="page7" id="page7"></a><span class="left">[page 7]</span> + +<h2>MOLLIE'S BOYHOOD.</h2> +<h4>By Sarah E. Chester.</h4> +<p> +A little girl sat squeezed in between an old fat +man and his old bony wife in a crowded hall on a +sultry evening in October. On one side it was as +if feather pillows loomed above her with intent to +smother; on the other, sharp elbows came into +distressing contact with her ribs. The windows +were open; but the hall had not been built with +reference to transmitting draughts on suffocating +nights for the benefit of packed audiences; and +everybody gasped for breath, though everybody +fanned—that is, everybody who had a fan, a newspaper, +a hat, or a starched handkerchief. Mollie +had neither fan, newspaper, hat, nor handkerchief, +and yet she of all the audience gasped unawares. +She was stifled, but happy. Elbows and bad air +might do their worst; her body suffered, but her +spirit soared. She was lifted above her neighbors, +into an atmosphere where she was conscious of +nothing but the eloquence that fell in such soft tones +from the lips of the beautiful woman on the stage.</p> +<p> +Mollie was fatherless and brotherless. She had +no male cousins within a thousand miles. Her +only uncle, two blocks off, was a man whose dinners +rebelled against digestion, and who might +have been beyond the seas for all the good he did +her. They were a feminine family,—Mollie, her +mother, the old cat and her kittens three,—bereft +of masculine rule and care, and in need of money +earned by masculine hands.</p> +<p> +The mother bore losses and lacks with the philosophy +of her age; but Mollie's age was only twelve, +and knew not philosophy. She realized that she +was a mistake. She was miserably aware that she +was a mistake which could never be corrected. +Friends repeatedly assured her that it was a great +pity she had not been born a boy, and tantalized +her with boyhood's possibilities. Frequent mention +was made of ways in which she might minister +to her mother's comfort if she were a son; and all +Mollie's day-dreams were visions of that gallant +son's achievements. She used to close her eyes +and see wings and bay-windows growing around +their little cottage and making it a mansion; their +old clothes gliding away, and fine new robes stepping +into their places; strong servants working in +the kitchen; pictures stealing up the walls, and +luxuries scattering themselves hither and thither, +till she felt the spirit of the boy within her, and +seemed equal to the deeds he would have done. +Then she used to open her eyes wide to the fact +of her girlhood and have little seasons of despair.</p> +<p> +This had been going on a long time, the visions, +their destruction by facts, and the consequent +despair; for, of course, she had always believed +there was nothing to be done. And now here was +one telling her that something could be done—that +she, even she, the little girl Mollie, had equal rights +with boys, and that it was not only her privilege +but her duty to claim them. Here was one exhorting +her to throw off the yoke of her girlhood, talking +of a glorious career that might be hers, of +emancipation and liberty, of a womanhood grand +as manhood itself. And how the tremendous +sentiments, so beautifully uttered, thrilled through +Mollie from the crown of her hat to the toes of +her boots! She would have given worlds for one +glance from that bravest of her sex who had thrown +off the yoke, and for a chance to ask her just how +she did it. For while Mollie had fully made up +her mind to wear her yoke no longer, she did not +know exactly by what means to become an emancipated +creature. As she walked home with her +hand in that of the fat gentleman who had treated +her to the lecture, she reached the conclusion that +no special instructions had been given because it +was taken for granted that each woman's nobler +instincts would guide her. She entered the gate a +champion of freedom, a believer in the equality of +the sexes—a girl bound to be a boy, and trusting +to her nobler instincts to teach her how.</p> +<p> +No trembling and glancing back over her shoulder +for goblins and burglars to-night as she put +the key into the door! No scared chattering of +teeth in the dark hall! No skipping three steps at +a time up the stairs pursued by imaginary hands +that would grip at her ankles! She faced the +darkness with wide-open eyes, instead of feeling +her way with lids squeezed down as had been her +custom; and when eyes seemed to look back at +her from the darkness, her boyhood laughed at +her girlhood, and she did not quicken her pace. +But—Mollie was glad to step into the room where +the light burned. Her mother had gone to bed +early with one of her tired-out headaches, and she +only half woke to see that her little girl was safely +in. Mollie kissed her softly (for boys may kiss +their mothers softly) and took the lamp into the +little room beyond, where she always slept.</p> +<p> +The first thing that she did was to look in the +glass. What a girlish little face it was! How +foolishly its dimples came and went with its smiles! +In what an effeminate manner the hair crinkled +above it, and then went rambling off into half a +yard of stylish disorder! Mollie lifted the hair in<a name="page8" id="page8"></a><span class="left">[page 8]</span> +her hand and surveyed it thoughtfully. Then she +took a thoughtful survey of the scissors in her +work-basket. Then she reached them. She allowed +herself a moment of conscientious reflection; +then the boy's naughty spirit crept down through +her fingers and set the scissors flying, and the deed +was done.</p> +<p> +It was not easy to satisfy her mother's amazement +and vexation in the morning; but Mollie +stumbled through it and went to school. There +opportunities were few. She coaxed her teacher +to let her study book-keeping, and took one disagreeable +lesson in its first principles; but she +accomplished nothing else that day except the putting +of a general check upon weak-minded inclinations +to be frolicsome.</p> +<p> +But that evening there was a fair sky, one of the +soft, deep skies that make imaginative little girls' +brains dizzy; and Mollie tramped down the gravel +path to the gate and leaned over; then she soon +nestled her head in her arms and looked up and +lost herself. Boyhood was far from her dreamy +fancies, when they were scattered by a tweak at +one of her cropped locks.</p> +<p> +"What does this mean?" asked the voice of the +neighbor over the fence. "How came it to be +done without my leave?"</p> +<p> +"Don't I look manly, Mr. John?" said Mollie.</p> +<p> +"What does it mean?" said he, severely.</p> +<p> +"That would be telling," said Mollie.</p> +<p> +"I intend that you shall tell me," said he.</p> +<p> +"Oh, it's a secret!" said Mollie.</p> +<p> +"All the better; we'll keep it together. Tell it."</p> +<p> +He was a grown-up man, nearer thirty than +twenty years old, who stooped to take an interest +in his neighbor's little girl, and flattered himself +that he was bringing her up in the way she should +go. It amused him in his leisure moments to try +the experiment of rearing a girl to be as unlike as +possible the girl of the period.</p> +<p> +From mere force of habit, Mollie opened her +mouth and poured out her heart to him. He +seemed quite impressed by the solemn confession. +Mollie studied his face closely while she was speaking, +and saw nothing but a grave and earnest interest +in her project. She could not see deep +enough to discover the indignation that was fuming +over the loss of her pretty locks, and the purpose +that was brewing to cure her of her folly.</p> +<p> +"Don't have any half-way work about it, Mollie," +said Mr. John. "Do the thing thoroughly, if you +undertake it." "Oh yes, indeed!" said Mollie.</p> +<p> +"If you should need an occasional reminder, I +will try and help you," said he; "for of course +it wont do to be off guard at all. But now get +your hat, and we'll go for some ice-cream. I +know you need cooling off this warm evening."</p> +<p> +Mollie skipped about to run toward the house.</p> +<p> +"Be careful of your steps," he called; and she +tramped as boyishly as she could.</p> +<p> +"No, don't take hold of my hand," as she came +back and slipped her fingers in his. "Put your +hands in your pockets."</p> +<p> +"I've only one pocket," she answered meekly, +putting her right hand in it.</p> +<p> +"Difficulties at once, aren't there?" said Mr. +John. "Your clothes want reforming, you see. +You'll have to put on Bloomers."</p> +<p> +"Oh!" said Mollie.</p> +<p> +"I'm afraid you're not very much in earnest," +he said. "You surely are not frightened by a +trifle like that?" Mollie looked up imploringly.</p> +<p> +"Must I?" she asked.</p> +<p> +"Well," he answered, her earnestness making +him fear that she would actually appear publicly in +masculine array, "I don't know that it is necessary +at present. A few days wont matter; and, after a +while, it will seem to you the natural way to dress."</p> +<p> +He was so faithful that evening in reminding her +of her short-comings that their <i>tête-à-tête</i> over the +little table in the ice-cream saloon, which usually +was so cosey and delightful, was quite spoiled. She +went to sleep regretting that she had taken Mr. +John into her confidence and made it necessary for +him to treat her as a boy.</p> +<p> +She did not see him again for several days: and +meanwhile she had taken her lessons in book-keeping, +practiced the writing hours on heavy masculine +strokes, learned to walk without dancing +little whirligigs on her tiptoes every other minute, +and made some progress in the art of whistling. +She felt that she had done much to earn his commendation, +and was anxious for a meeting.</p> +<p> +On the way home from school, one afternoon, +she saw his sister's baby at the window—the roundest, +fattest, whitest and sweetest of all the babies +that had taken up an abode in Mollie's heart, where +babies innumerable were enshrined. There it was, +being danced in somebody's hands before the window, +and reaching out its ten dear little fingers to +beckon her in.</p> +<p> +She was quickly in, regardless of her gait. In a +moment from the time the tempting vision appeared +she was cuddling it in her arms, glibly talking +the nonsense that it loved to hear, and kissing +and petting it to her heart's content. She was so +absorbed that she did not hear Mr. John come in; +and he was close by her when she looked up and +saw his face—not the genial, welcoming look she +had been in the habit of meeting since he became +her friend, but one of grave disapproval.</p> +<p> +"I am ashamed of you, Mollie," he said. "Boys +of your age don't pet babies in that way."</p> +<p> +Mollie dropped it—she hardly knew whether on<a name="page9" id="page9"></a><span class="left">[page 9]</span> +the floor or the stove—and flew. When she got +home, she ran into the little back room that used +to be her play-room. She was all ready for a good +cry, and she closed the door. Then she thought, +what if Mr. John were to see her crying like a girl-baby!—and +she marched to the window, and +through the dimness in her eyes tried to see something +cheering. Her nature was very social, and +her need of companionship great at that moment; +so she turned to the friend who had been brother, +sister and child to her through most of her little +girlhood—her big doll Helena, who sat in a chair +in the corner beholding her agitation with fixed, +compassionless gaze.</p> +<p> +"Come here, you dear," said Mollie, folding her +tenderly in her arms and finding comfort in the +contact of her cold china cheek. She had loved +her so long that she had given her a soul; and to +Mollie's heart the doll was as fit for loving as if she +had had breath and speech. She did not play with +her any longer, but Helena was still her dear old +friend—an almost human confidant and crony.</p> +<p> +As she held her closely, suddenly she thought of +Mr. John. If he had objected to the petting of +babies, what would he say to dolls? She gave her +a frantic kiss, put her away, and turned her back +on her to reflect; for she did not mean to shirk the +most disagreeable reflections in the new line of duty +she had chosen to follow.</p> +<p> +If it had really been a human friend whose destinies +Mollie considered, she could not have been +more serious; and if it had been a human friend +whom she at last decided must be put far from her, +she could hardly have suffered severer heart-pangs. +But she would have no compromising with inclination +in this matter. She would be brave and strong, +as it became her mother's son to be. So to the +lowest depths of the deepest trunk in the garret +she mentally consigned Helena. There, beyond +the reach of her loving eyes and arms, she should +lie in banishment until her heart became callous.</p> +<p> +But there was something so repulsive in the idea +of smothering human Helena under layers of old +garments, that Mollie finally thought of a better +way. Helena should no longer be Helena, dear to +her heart in all her little feminine adornings and +her sympathetic, tender traits of character. She +should undergo a change; a radical reform. She, +too, should become a boy, and her name should +be Thomas. Thenceforth Mollie spent her leisure +moments in manufacturing garments suitable for +the change; and at last she saw a boy-doll, in +roundabout and pantaloons, occupying the chair +where Helena had so long sat in dainty dresses. +The sight was a perpetual offense to her eyes; but +she bore it bravely, keeping in store for herself a +reward of merit in Mr. John's approval. She did +not fail to mention to him Helena's reform the +next time they met, which was one morning before +breakfast. She was sweeping the front steps when +he came and leaned over the fence and called her.</p> +<p> +She shouldered the broom, as she had seen men +shoulder implements of labor,—hoes, rakes, etc.,—and +tramped toward him. Mr. John watched her, +with an expression of disgust under his mustache.</p> +<p> +"Well, Bob," he said, "I'm glad to see you out +so early. Form good habits before you're grown, +and when you come to manhood you'll make money +by it. Where are your Bloomers to-day? It isn't +possible your mind's not made up to them yet?"</p> +<p> +There was something in Mr. John's tone and +manner which did not seem quite courteous to +Mollie; but she had hardly hung her head when +he began to talk in his old half-fatherly, half-brotherly +fashion; and then, in the lively conversation, +she found a chance to introduce Thomas. +Mr. John gave her a long, solemn, searching look.</p> +<p> +"Mollie," he said, "I am very much afraid you +will never succeed as a boy. It seems to me that +even an ordinarily masculine girl of your age would +have been clear-headed enough to see the absurdity +of your little farce. It is nothing but a farce, mere +babyishness. You have been playing with yourself +and with your doll. No boy could have done it."</p> +<p> +There was a short pause; then Mollie's voice +piped out into a humble question as to what course +a boy would have pursued in the matter.</p> +<p> +"Why, that is clear enough," said Mr. John. +"If you want to do what a boy would do, dispose +of the doll on the shortest notice. Get it out of +your sight and mind as soon as possible, and then +never give it any more thought than you'd give +the rattle you used to shake when you were a baby, +or the rubber ring you cut your teeth on."</p> +<p> +Could he be made to understand the immense +difference between Helena and other toys? Could +any words explain to him about the soul that had +grown out of Mollie's love into the cloth and sawdust +body? Mollie looked up to catch a sympathetic +expression that should help her to tell him; +but she did not find it.</p> +<p> +"You don't understand," she said desperately.</p> +<p> +"No?" said he.</p> +<p> +"Mr. John," said Mollie, not looking him in the +eye, "when you have a doll as long as I have had +Helena, it is only natural that she should seem to +you like a live person. If I didn't play with her at +all, she'd seem real to me, and I shouldn't like to +have her go away any more than I would mother."</p> +<p> +"Which tells the secret that you have some sort +of human fondness for the lifeless bundle of rags," +said Mr. John, "and proves what I feared, that you +are a very weak-minded little girl, Mollie."</p> +<p> +"You wont believe in me at all," said Mollie. +<a name="page10" id="page10"></a><span class="left">[page 10]</span> +"You wont think I am doing my best, and that I +ever succeed. You are not like you used to be."</p> +<p> +"That naturally follows <i>your</i> being different," +said Mr. John. "Of course, we can't have the +same feelings toward each other now as when +you were contented to be a little girl and to let me +treat you as one. I'm sorry you don't find me as +agreeable as before, Mollie; but you must acknowledge +that I am acting as a friend in doing all that I +can to help you in your dear project."</p> +<p> +"It isn't dear!" burst forth Mollie, indignantly. +"I hate it!—but I'll never give it up!"</p> +<p> +"Of course not," Mr. John said. "Then I presume +you are all ready to part with Helena."</p> +<p> +"I'll go and get her," said Mollie.</p> +<p> +No one saw the parting in the play-room. It +was quickly over, and she was back by the fence.</p> +<p> +"Give her to Bessie," said Mollie, putting Helena +and her wardrobe into Mr. John's arms. Bessie +was one of his many nieces.</p> +<p> +"To Bessie!" said he. "Where you can feel +that she is away on a visit; where you know that +she will be petted and cared for; where you can +see her occasionally. If you are sincere in this +matter, Mollie, send her off where you can no longer +care to think of her. Our ash-man would be very +glad to carry her home to his little girls."</p> +<p> +Mollie's hands made a wild dive toward Helena +as a vision of the little grimy man who crept into +their areas for ashes rose before her.</p> +<p> +"Decide now," said Mr. John. "Take your +doll and be Mollie Kelly again, or be a boy and +give her to the ash-man's children without a pang."</p> +<p> +Mollie hung her head. There was color coming +and going in her cheeks, her fingers trembled,—how +they longed to snatch Helena!—and her mind +was full of indecision. Mr. John watched her +closely, and he thought he saw the tide turning in +favor of her girlhood. He held the doll nearer that +it might tempt her fingers; but, on the instant, she +turned and ran away. He tucked Helena under +his coat and carried her upstairs and locked her in +a drawer, there to abide until Mollie should want +her again.</p> +<p> +That was a gloomy day to Mollie. She was out +of humor with her boyhood. She was ashamed of +herself one moment for bewailing Helena, and +furious the next with Mr. John and the ash-man. +She felt cross and discouraged, and was glad when +the darkness came, and she could go to bed and +sleep. But the next morning she was in no +cheerier, braver frame of mind; and she walked +home at noon, considering plain sewing <i>versus</i> +book-keeping as a means of subsistence. Mr. John +would have rejoiced if he could have seen his "little +leaven" working.</p> +<p> +"The gutters on the roof are full of leaves, +Mollie," said her mother as she came in. "Stop +on your way back to school and send Michael to +clean them out. I think we are going to have rain, +and we don't want them washed into the pipes."</p> +<p> +"How much will he charge, mother?"</p> +<p> +"About fifty cents."</p> +<p> +"That fifty cents shall buy something for you," +said Mollie to herself. "The boy of the family +shall clean the roof."</p> +<p> +There was just enough recklessness in her mood +to make her rather enjoy than fear the prospect. +She left her mother getting dinner, and took a +broom and escaped up the garret stairs and through +the scuttle. The roof did not slope steeply, and +she let herself down with an easy slide to the rear +eaves. She rested her feet on the edge of the +house and swept as far as her arms would reach +east and west. Then she shifted her position and +swept again until the whole length was clean.</p> +<p> +She heard her mother calling her to dinner, but +she had the front gutter yet to sweep, and, climbing +up, went down on the other side. There was +a thought which gave zest to her work on that +side,—Mr. John would be coming home that way +to dinner and would see her. Besides, other people +would see her, and no passer-by should say that +she did not do her work as thoroughly and fearlessly +as any boy. She had taken for granted that Mr. +John's eyes would be drawn upward; but when he +had walked almost by, looking straight ahead, she +sent him a shrill call. He looked at the windows, +around the yard, and even as far up as the trees.</p> +<p> +"On the roof," screamed Mollie, and in her +excitement she forgot her situation and lost her +balance and slipped,—not far, but one foot went +out beyond the eaves into the air. The other one +rallied to the rescue, supported her whole weight, +and helped her to regain her position. Danger was +over in a moment, but it had been danger of death, +and Mollie's heart beat wildly, and a faintness came +over her. Still through it all she was able to see +Mr. John's approving smile as he lifted his hat and +waved it gayly in applause.</p> +<p> +"He wouldn't care if I had fallen and been killed," +thought Mollie, as she recovered herself. "All he +wants is to have me succeed in being a horrid boy. +I've a mind to give it up just to spite him."</p> +<p> +She could not know—so successfully had he concealed +his agitation under that bland smile—how +faint he, too, had been in the moment of her +danger, nor how fast his heart was still beating as +he walked on, nor what resolves he was forming to +put a speedy end to her boyhood.</p> +<p> +He stopped on his way back from dinner to tell +her that he had engaged to take a party of his +nephews and nieces nutting that afternoon, and +that he wanted her to come.</p> +<p> +<a name="page11" id="page11"></a><span class="left">[page 11]</span> +"It will be so nice to have a big boy on hand, +Mollie," said Mr. John, "especially one that isn't +afraid of heights. We may have some to climb."</p> +<p> +Not a word about her danger and his gladness +for her safety, and she knew he had seen her narrow +escape. But she felt so gay over memories of Mr. +John's nutting parties, and the prospect of another, +that she forgave him all, and prepared to be thoroughly +happy that afternoon.</p> +<p> +School closed at three o'clock, and Mollie flew +to Mr. John's yard, where they were all waiting. +She came dancing by the gate, her cheeks rosy, +her eyes shining,—just her old self, as she had +been in the days when no boyhood loomed like an +ugly shadow between her and Mr. John. He saw +it all, and charged himself to be stony. So he +gave no better response to her impulsive greeting +than he would have given an ordinary boy. Her +spirits fell a degree; but with those happy children +bobbing around her, expecting her to be the happiest +of all, they could do nothing but rise again.</p> +<p> +Mr. John did not offer to lift her over fences as +he lifted the other girls; he even called on her to +help the little ones over. He held back branches +that came across other girls' paths; he let her clear +her own way. He carried Kittie and Bessie, and +Esther and Dora, over the brook; he let her splash +across on the stones with the boys. He gallantly +made cups and gave the other girls to drink; he +suggested to Mollie that she should scoop the water +up in her hand, as he was doing for his own use.</p> +<p> +She wished many a time before they came to the +walnut-trees that she had staid at home. She +wished her boyhood's days were over, or had never +been. She couldn't bear Mr. John, and all the children +noticed that she moped, and asked her why.</p> +<p> +Well, there were no nuts when they got there, +Mr. John had known there wouldn't be. They +should have come much earlier in the day to find +these trees full, and the next trees were too far +away. So they concluded to turn their nutting party +into a picnic. They had a basket of provisions, +and Mr. John sent the big boys into the +next lot to get wood for a fire. Then came his +grand opportunity for crushing Mollie. He +called her, and she ran to him gladly, ready to +take him back to her favor on his own terms.</p> +<p> +"Please, go and help the boys bring wood for +our fire," he said. "They have all gone but you."</p> +<p> +She went, but not without giving him a look +that actually made him blush for his rudeness. +She went with the aspect of a tragedy queen, and +by the time she overtook the boys she had calmly +made up her mind to two +things: never, never again to be friends with Mr. +John, and to give up her boyhood just to spite him. +But one more temptation still held her. There +was a little cliff over in that next lot, stony and +steep, and high enough to make a leap which it +was some credit to a boy to achieve. The boys +stood on the edge, measuring the distance with +experienced eyes and preparing to go over.</p> +<p> +Now Mollie as a girl had always been a very +good jumper, so she resolved at once to try the +leap, and have the report of her valiant deed carried +back to Mr. John. She joined the boys, and +seeing that one after another went down safely, +she soon asked for a turn. She was gravely remonstrated<a name="page12" id="page12"></a><span class="left">[page 12]</span> +with. She was overwhelmed with sage +masculine advice, but she swept her way clear and +jumped—with all the recklessness of her reckless +mood. She knew well enough the backward inclination +proper for her head, what the relative +positions of her knees and chin should be, and if +she had taken the least forethought might have +redeemed the declining reputation of her boyhood. +The knowledge flashed across her in her swift +descent that her spine had not preserved the +proper perpendicular, and that she was coming +down wrong. Chin and knees knocked together +as she fell in a heap on the grass below.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/0140-1-475.jpg" width="475" height="469" alt="MOLLIE IS CARED FOR BY THE BOYS." border="0" /> +<p class="center">MOLLIE IS CARED FOR BY THE BOYS.</p> +</div> + +<p> +It was a caving in of skull, she thought, that +made that horrible crashing pain and that sent +lightning dancing on a black background before +her eyes, then blinded her quite. Nothing but a +general chaos of skull and brain could make such +terrible pain. She wondered if her friends would +be able to recognize one dear lineament in the +jumble of her features. She thought what a sad +fate it was to die young. She wondered how Mr. +John would feel now! and then she found that +light dawned upon her and that she had an eye +open. In a moment she discovered that the sense +of hearing, too, had not abandoned her; for the +boys had reached her by this time, and she heard +Mr. John's nephew, John, saying:</p> +<p> +"She's knocked her teeth through her lip, that's +all. I did it once when I jumped wrong and hit +my chin on my knee. She'll soon be all right."</p> +<p> +Two eyes open now, and she saw a bloody frock, +and what seemed an army of boys; for there was +something still the matter with her vision which +caused it to multiply.</p> +<p> +"Boys, boys, nothing but boys!" thought Mollie, +dropping her lids. "Where did they all come +from, I wonder? There must be a thousand. I +never want to see another. I wouldn't be one for +the world. I wish they'd go away."</p> +<p> +Then she felt some one bathing her face gently, +and when the water had refreshed her, she ventured +another peep at the world. Boys around +her still; but she could see now that their number +was only four, and the faces those of friends.</p> +<p> +"Cheer up, Mollie," said John, jr. "You got a +hard knock, but you're coming on. Bob's gone for +the phaeton, and we'll have you home in no time."</p> +<p> +They propped her up against a tree, and continued +to bathe her head with water from Jerry's +felt hat, filled at the little brook close by.</p> +<p> +All this while Mr. John had been accounting for +their absence by supposing that Mollie was taking +some sort of revenge on him, and he would permit +none of the girls to go in search of the wanderers. +Not until Bob and the phaeton appeared did news +of Mollie's valiant deed reach him. Then he went +to her at once, and saw her pale and bloody.</p> +<p> +But to display weakness now might be to lose all, +reflected Mr. John; so he kept back the words of +sympathy that were on his lips as he leaned down +and offered to carry her to the phaeton.</p> +<p> +"I prefer to walk, thank you," said Mollie, her +pride giving her strength to rise and take the arm +which John, jr., stood ready to offer. However, +Mr. John forcibly made an exchange, and, in spite +of Mollie, half led and half carried her to the road.</p> +<p> +"Don't be discouraged, Mollie," he said as he +put her in, while Bob was busy at the halter. +"The next time you'll jump like a man."</p> +<p> +"That nonsense is all over, thank you," said +Mollie, very loftily, though not very clearly, because +of her swollen lips. "Think what you please of +me," she mumbled. "It is all ended; and it might +have ended sooner, too, if I'd taken better advice."</p> +<p> +"With better advice it never would have ended, +you contrary little minx," said Mr. John to himself +as she drove away.</p> +<p> +The doctor came and Mollie was ordered to bed; +but even his opiate did not make her sleep. It was +soothing, indeed, to lie there in the twilight with +her hand in her mother's, and feel that she was her +little girl entirely, no more to be her boy while life +should last. And pleasant visions of a Gothic +school-house, where she should some day be mistress +of sweet, rosy-cheeked children, rose gracefully +on the ruins of her manly aspirations.</p> +<p> +By and by the bell rang, and her mother brought +a lamp, and a package which Mollie sat up and +opened. There, with a note pinned on the left leg +of her trousers and a box of Mollie's best-beloved +candies clasped on her jacket, lay Helena.</p> +<p> +"I have never been to the ash-man's house, +Mother Mollie," said the note. "I have been +visiting Mr. John's cuffs and collars in the bureau-drawer. +I want my girls' clothes on to-morrow. I +claim it as my right. We all have our rights. +Put me in dresses and take me home to the play-room. +You have your rights too, and I wouldn't +let any one tell me that I hadn't a right to be a +girl. It is my opinion that if you had been meant +for a boy you would have been made one. Come, +mother, cuddle me up, and let's go to sleep and +have sweet dreams, and a blithe waking to girlhood +in the morning, when we will make up with Mr. +John; for he sends these chocolate-creams to let +you know that he is sorry."</p> +<p> +"So we will, dear," said Mollie, tucking Helena's +head under her chin. "You were always wiser +than your mother, child."</p> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="page13" id="page13"></a><span class="left">[page 13]</span> + +<h2>THE LARGEST VOLCANO IN THE WORLD</h2> +<h4><span class="sc">By Sarah Coan</span>.</h4> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/0142-1.jpg"><img src="images/0142-1-520.jpg" width="520" height="470" alt="THE LAKE OF FIRE." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">THE LAKE OF FIRE.</p> +</div> + + +<blockquote class="comment"><p> +"Why, it isn't on the top of a mountain at all! +What a humbug my geography must have been!"</p></blockquote> +<p> +So wrote a little fellow to a young friend in +America.</p> +<p> +He was right. It isn't on the top of a mountain, +though the geographies do say, "A volcano is a +mountain sending forth fire, smoke and lava," and +give the picture of a mountain smoking at the top.</p> +<p> +This volcano is nothing of the kind; but is a +hideous, yawning black pit at the bottom of a +mountain, and big enough to stow away a large city.</p> +<p> +Of course you want to know, first, where this +wonder is. Get out the map of the Western +Hemisphere, put your finger on any of the lines +running north and south, through North America, +and called meridians; follow it south until you +come to the Tropic of Cancer, running east and +west; then "left-about-face!" and, following the +tropic, sail out into the calm Pacific. After a +voyage of about two thousand miles, you'll run +ashore on one of a group of islands marked Sandwich. +We will call them Hawaiian, for that is +their true name. Not one of the brown, native +inhabitants would call them "Sandwich." An +English sailor gave them that name, out of compliment +to a certain Lord Sandwich.</p> +<p> +On the largest of these islands, Hawaii—pronounced +"Ha-y-e"—is the volcano, Kilauea, the +largest volcano in the world.</p> +<p> +We have seen it a great many times, and that +you may see it as clearly as possible, you shall +have a letter from the very spot. The letter reads:</p> +<a name="page14" id="page14"></a><span class="left">[page 14]</span> +<blockquote class="comment"><p> +"Here we are, a large party of us, looking into +Kilauea, which is nine miles in circumference, and +a thousand feet below us—a pit about seven times +as deep as Niagara Falls are high. We came to-day, +on horseback, from Hilo, a ride of thirty miles. +Hilo is a beautiful sea-shore village, the largest +on the island of Hawaii, and from it all visitors to +Kilauea make their start.</p> +<p> +"The road over which we came is nothing but a +bridle-path, and a very rough one at that, traversing +miles and miles of old lava flows. We had +almost ridden to the crater's brink before we discovered, +in the dim twilight, the awful abyss.</p> +<p> +"Before us is the immense pit which, in the +day-time, shows only a floor of black lava, looking +as smooth as satin; and, miles away, rising out of +this floor, are a few slender columns of smoke.</p> +<p> +"At night, everything is changed; and you +can't conceive of the lurid, demoniacal effect. +Each slender column of smoke becomes a pillar of +fire that rolls upward, throbbing as it moves, and +spreads itself out above the crater like an immense +canopy, all ablaze.</p> +<p> +"Ships a hundred miles from land see the +glow, and we here, on the precipice above, can +read ordinary print by its lurid light.</p> +<p> +"No wonder the natives worshiped the volcano. +They thought it the home of a goddess, +whom they named Pélé, and in times of unusual +activity believed her to be very angry with them. +Then they came in long processions, from the seashore +villages, bringing pigs, dogs, fowls, and sometimes +human beings, for sacrifice. These they threw +into the crater, to appease her wrath.</p> +<p> +"A small berry, called the ohélo, grows on the +banks of the pit, and of these the natives never +dared to eat until Pélé had first had her share. +Very polite, were they not? And if ever they forgot +their manners, I dare say she gave them a +shaking up by an earthquake, as a reminder.</p> +<p> +"Sandal-wood and strawberries grow all about +here—and fleas, too! wicked fleas, that bite voraciously, +to keep themselves warm, I think, for here, +so far from Pélé's hearth, it is cold, and we sit by +a log fire of our own.</p> +<p> +"The day after our arrival we went into the +crater, starting immediately after an early breakfast. +There is but one entrance, a narrow ledge, +formed by the gradual crumbling and falling in of +the precipice. Along this ledge we slipped and +scrambled, making the descent on foot—for no ridden +animal has ever been able to descend the trail. +Holding on to bushes and snags when the path +was dangerously steep, we finally landed below on +the black satin floor of lava.</p> +<p> +"Satin! What had looked so smooth and tempting +from a thousand feet above, turned out to be a +surface more troubled and uneven than the ocean +in the most violent storm. And that tiny thread +of smoke, toward which our faces were set, lay +three miles distant—three miles that were worse +than nine on an ordinary road.</p> +<p> +"How we worked that passage! up hill and down +hill, over hard pointed lava that cut through our +shoes like knife blades; over light, crumbled lava +into which we sank up to our knees; over hills of +lava that were, themselves, covered with smaller +hills; into ravines and over steam-cracks, some of +which we could jump with the aid of our long +poles, and some of which we had to find our way +around; steam-cracks whose depths we could not +see, and into which we thrust our walking-sticks, +drawing them out charred black or aflame; over +lava so hot that we ran as rapidly and lightly as +possible, to prevent our shoes being scorched. +Three hours of this kind of work for the three +miles, and <i>Hale-mau-mau</i>, or 'House of Everlasting +Fire,' lay spitting and moaning at our feet!</p> +<p> +"A lake of boiling lava is what the column of +smoke marked out to us,—a pit within a pit,—a +lake of raging lava fifty feet below us, of which you +have here the picture taken 'from life.'</p> +<p> +"It was so hot and suffocating on the brink of this +lake that we cut eye-holes in our pocket-handkerchiefs +and wore them as masks. Even then we had +to run back every few moments for a breath of +fresher air, though we were on the windward side +of the lake. The gases on the leeward side would +suffocate one instantly. Oh, the glory! This +Hale-mau-mau, whose fire never goes out, is a +huge lake of liquid lava, heaving with groans and +thunderings that cannot be described. Around its +edge, as you see in the picture, the red lava was +spouting furiously. Now and then the center of +the lake cooled over, forming a thin crust of black +lava, which, suddenly cracking in a hundred directions, +let the blood-red fluid ooze up through the +seams, looking like fiery snakes.</p> +<p> +"Look at the picture, and imagine these enormous +slabs of cooled lava slowly rising themselves on +end, as if alive, and with a stately motion plunging +beneath the sea of fire, with an indescribable roar.</p> +<p> +"For three hours we gazed, spell-bound, though +it seemed but a few moments: we were chained to +the spot, as is every one else who visits Kilauea.</p> +<p> +"The wind, as the jets rose in air, spun the +molten drops of lava into fine threads, which the +natives call Pélé's hair, and very like hair it is.</p> +<p> +"All this time, under our feet were rumblings +and explosions that made us start and run now +and then, for fear of being blown up; coming back +again after each fright, unwilling to leave the spot.</p> +<p> +"Occasionally, the embankment of the lake +cracked off and fell in, being immediately devoured<a name="page15" id="page15"></a><span class="left">[page 15]</span> +by the hungry flood. These ledges around Hale-mau-mau +are very dangerous to stand upon. A +whole family came near losing their lives on one. +A loud report beneath their feet and a sudden +trembling of the crust made them run for life; and +hardly had they jumped the fissure that separated +the ledge on which they were standing from more +solid footing—separated life from death—than crash +went the ledge into the boiling lake!</p> +<p> +"Sometimes the lake boils over, like a pot of +molasses, and then you can dip up the liquid lava +with a long pole. You get quite a lump of it, and +by quickly rolling it on the ground mold a cylinder +the size of the end of the pole, and about six +inches long. Or you can drop a coin into the lava +to be imprisoned as it cools.</p> +<p> +"A foreigner once imbedded a silver dollar in +the hot lava, and gave the specimen to a native; +but he immediately threw it on the ground, breaking +the lava, of course, and liberating the dollar, +which he pocketed, exclaiming: 'Volcano plenty +enough, but me not get dollar every day.'</p> +<p> +"One of our party collected lava specimens from +around Hale-mau-mau, and tied them up in her +pocket-handkerchief. Imagine her astonishment +on finding, later, they had burned through the +linen, and one by one dropped out.</p> +<p> +"Terrible as old Pélé is, she makes herself useful, +and is an excellent cook. She keeps a great +many ovens heated for the use of her guests, and +no two at the same temperature, so that you may +select one of any heat you wish. In these ovens +(steam-cracks) she boils tea, coffee and eggs; or +cooks omelets and meats. You wrap the beef or +chicken, or whatever meat you may wish to cook, +in leaves, and lay it in the steam-crack. Soon it is +thoroughly cooked, and deliciously, too.</p> +<p> +"She also keeps a tub of warm water always +ready for bathers.</p> +<p> +"She doesn't mean to be laughed at, though, +for doing this kind of work, and doing it in an +original kind of way. After she has given you one +or two sound shakings, which she generally does, +you'll have great respect for the old lady, and feel +quite like taking off your hat to her. With the +shakings and the thunderings under-foot, and +now and then the opening of a long steam-crack, +she keeps her visitors quite in awe of her powers, +though she is probably several hundred years old.</p> +<p> +"Not far from the little hut where we sleep, close +to the precipice, is Pélé's great laboratory, where +she makes sulphur. We wear our straw hats to the +sulphur banks, and she bleaches them for us.</p> +<p> +"Well, this is a strange, strange land, old Pélé +being only one of its many curiosities.</p> +<p> +"I only hope you may all see the active old goddess +before she dies. She hasn't finished her +work yet. Once in a while she runs down to the +shore, to bathe and look at the Pacific Ocean, and +when there she generally gives a new cape to +Hawaii by running out into the sea."</p></blockquote> +<p> +Majestic old Pélé! Long may she live!</p> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="skip" id="skip"></a> +<h2>MAKING IT SKIP.</h2> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/0144-1-600.jpg" width="600" height="177" alt="MAKING IT SKIP." border="0" /> +</div> + +<div class="poem1"> +<div class="stanza"> + <p class="i6">"I'll make it skip!"</p> +<p>Cried Charley, seizing a bit of stone.</p> + <p class="i2">And, in a trice, from our Charley's hand,</p> + <p class="i8">With scarce a dip,</p> +<p>Over the water it danced alone,</p> + <p class="i2">While we were watching it from the land—</p> + <p class="i8">Skip! skip! skip!</p></div> +<div class="stanza"> + <p class="i6">"I'll make it skip!"</p> +<p>Now, somehow, that is our Charley's way:</p> + <p class="i2">He takes little troubles that vex one so,</p> + <p class="i8">Not worth a flip,</p> +<p>And makes them seem to frolic and play</p> + <p class="i2">Just by his way of making them go</p> + <p class="i8">Skip! skip! skip!</p> +</div> +</div> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="page16" id="page16"></a><span class="left">[page 16]</span> + +<h2>THE WILLOW WAND.</h2> +<h4>BY A. E. W.</h4> + +<table width="100%" align="center" border="0" summary="poem"> +<tr> + <td class="poem"> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>I have a little brother,</p> + <p class="i2">And his name is Little Lewy;</p> +<p>His starry eyes are bright as flowers</p> + <p class="i2">And they are twice as dewy.</p> +<p>Sometimes the dew o'erflows them,</p> + <p class="i2">And trickles down his cheeks;</p> +<p>And then he cries so hard, you'd think</p> + <p class="i2">He wouldn't stop for weeks.</p> +<p>Then my other little brother,</p> + <p class="i2">A bough of willow bringing,</p> +<p>Drives all the dew-drops far away,</p> + <p class="i2">By waving it and singing:</p></div></div> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"One, two, free, fo', five, six, <i>seven</i> tears!</p> +<p>You'll be as old as farver in forty sousand years.</p> +<p>Drate big men don't have tears, so let me wipe 'em dry;</p> +<p>In forty sousand years from now you'll never, never cry."</p></div></div> +</td> +<td> +<a href="images/024a.jpg"><img src="images/024a-200.jpg" width="200" height="303" alt="LITTLE LEWY" border="0" style="float: right;" /></a><br /> +</td> +<td width="10%"> </td> +</tr> +</table> + +<table width="100%" align="center" border="0" summary="poem"> +<tr> +<td width="10%"> </td> + <td> +<a href="images/024b.jpg"><img src="images/024b-200.jpg" width="200" height="347" alt="LITTLE BERT" border="0" style="float: left;" /></a> +</td> + <td class="poem"> +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>This other little brother,</p> + <p class="i2">Whose name is Little Bert,</p> +<p>Frowns in a dreadful manner</p> + <p class="i2">Whenever he is hurt;</p> +<p>The wrinkles right above his nose</p> + <p class="i2">Look like the letter M,</p> +<p>He keeps them there so long, he must</p> + <p class="i2">Be very fond of them.</p> +<p>Then my little brother Lewy,</p> + <p class="i2">The branch of willow bringing,</p> +<p>Sends all the naughty frowns away,</p> + <p class="i2">By waving it and singing:</p> + </div> + </div> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"A, B, C, D, E, F, G;</p> +<p>How many wrinkles are there? One, two, three!</p> +<p>We'll send them all off quickly, or they'll climb up to your hair,</p> +<p>And then to-morrow morning you'll have lots of tangles there."</p></div></div> + + </td> +</tr> +</table> +<a name="page17" id="page17"></a><span class="left">[page 17]</span> +<table width="100%" align="center" border="0" summary="poem"> +<tr> + <td class="poem"> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>Sometimes our little Lewy</p> + <p class="i2">Loses all his pretty smiles;</p> +<p>He says they're very far away;</p> + <p class="i2">At least a hundred miles.</p> +<p>He looks as sober as a judge,</p> + <p class="i2">As stately as a king,</p> +<p>As solemn as a parson and</p> + <p class="i2">As still as anything.</p> +<p>And then our little Bertie,</p> + <p class="i2">The witching willow bringing,</p> +<p>Sends all the smiles safe home again,</p> + <p class="i2">By waving it and singing:</p> + </div> + </div> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"I want to buy a smile, sir, if you have some about;</p> +<p>I'll draw this leaf across your lips, and that will bring them out.</p> +<p>And if you cannot spare me one, just let me take a half.</p> +<p>Oh, here they come and there they come, and now we'll have a laugh."</p></div></div> +</td> +<td> + +<a href="images/024c.jpg"><img src="images/024c-200.jpg" width="200" height="317" alt="LEWY" border="0" /></a><br /><br /> + +</td> +<td width="10%"> </td> +</tr> +</table> + +<table width="100%" align="center" border="0" summary="poem"> +<tr> +<td width="10%"> </td> + <td> + +<a href="images/025a.jpg"><img src="images/025a-200.jpg" width="200" height="307" alt="BERTIE" border="0" /></a><br /><br /> + +</td> + <td class="poem"> +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>On every "morrow morning,"</p> + <p class="i2">This funny little Bertie</p> +<p>Doesn't want to have his face washed</p> + <p class="i2">Because it don't feel dirty;</p> +<p>He runs half-dressed 'way out-of-doors,</p> + <p class="i2">Safe hidden from our view;</p> +<p>We search and call, hunt up and down,</p> + <p class="i2">And don't know what to do,</p> +<p>Until we see our little Lu</p> + <p class="i2">The wand of willow bringing,</p> +<p>And leading Bertie back to us,</p> + <p class="i2">While all the time he's singing:</p></div></div> +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"Do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, si.</p> +<p>You look like a very small heathen Chinee.</p> +<p>Get the sleep all washed off and hang it up to dry,</p> +<p>And then you'll look as fresh as if you'd just come from the sky."</p></div></div> + + +</td> +</tr> +</table> + +<table width="100%" align="center" border="0" summary="poem"> +<tr> + <td class="poem"> +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>When all the stars are shining,</p> + <p class="i2">Each little sleepy-head</p> +<p>Is lying in a funny bunch</p> + <p class="i2">Within the little bed.</p> +<p>Their eyes are so wide open,</p> + <p class="i2">They stay awake so long,</p> +<p>They're calling me to tell to them</p> + <p class="i2">A story or a song.</p> +<p>So up the stairs again I come,</p> + <p class="i2">The magic willow bringing,</p> +<p>And wave it here and wave it there,</p> + <p class="i2">While o'er and o'er I'm singing:</p></div> +<div class="stanza"> + <p class="i4">"Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep;</p> +<p>Sailing away on the dreamy deep;</p> +<p>Sister to watch you and angels to keep;</p> +<p>Sailing away and away and away,</p> + <p class="i4">Away on the d-r-e-a-m-y deep;</p> + <p class="i4">Sleep, sleep, s-l-e-e-p, sleep."</p> +</div> +</div> + </td> + <td> + +<a href="images/025b.jpg"><img src="images/025b-250.jpg" width="250" height="314" alt="SISTER TO WATCH YOU AND ANGELS TO KEEP" border="0" /></a><br /><br /> + + </td> + <td width="10%"> </td> +</tr> +</table> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="page18" id="page18"></a><span class="left">[page 18]</span> + +<h2>THE STORY THAT WOULDN'T BE TOLD.</h2> +<h4><span class="sc">By Louise Stockton</span>.</h4> +<p> +"Do tell me one more story; just <i>one</i> more!" +said the little boy.</p> +<p> +It certainly was getting late. The fire lighted +the room, the shadows danced in the corners. +Down in the kitchen they were hurrying with the +dinner, and in a moment nurse would come in to +take the boy to bed. But all this made him want +to stay. He was very comfortable in his mamma's +lap, and he was in no haste to go upstairs to Maggie +and the nursery.</p> +<p> +Then his mamma kissed him right on the tip of +his little nose, and she said:</p> +<p> +"But you must go to bed sometime."</p> +<p> +"Please, mamma dear," he said, pushing his +curly head almost under her arm, "just one little +story."</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/026-500.jpg" width="500" height="430" alt="A SCENE IN THE STORY THAT WOULDN'T BE TOLD." border="0" /> +<p class="center">A SCENE IN THE STORY THAT WOULDN'T BE TOLD.</p> +</div> + +<p> +"Just one! You can choose it, but mind, a little +one!"</p> +<p> +"You know what one I want. Of course about +the giant Tancankeroareous, and how he stole the +slipper of the princess for a snuff-box, and how the +Prince Limberlocks climbed up a cherry-tree into +the giant's room. That is the story <i>I</i> like!"</p> +<p> +"And it must be the 'amen story' to-night. +Well: Once upon a time the Princess Thistleblossom +stood on one foot, while—"</p> +<p> +"No, no," interrupted The Story, "you need +not tell <i>me</i>! Tell some other story. I am tired +of being said over and over. Every night, as soon +as your bed-time comes, and you are so sleepy that +you don't want to go to bed, you ask for me, and I +have to be told. I am sick of it, and I want to +rest."</p> +<p> +"But I want you," said the boy. "I like you +best of all my stories. I like that part where the +giant comes in and calls out 'PORTER!' in such a +loud voice that the gate shakes all the bolts loose."</p> +<p> +"I suppose you do like it," said The Story; +"anybody would. I am a very good story, and very +fit to be told last, although I cannot see why that +is any reason for calling me the 'amen story.' That +is foolish, <i>I</i> think! But at any rate, that is no<a name="page19" id="page19"></a><span class="left">[page 19]</span> +reason for telling me <i>every</i> night. Let your +mamma tell you Cock Robin, or Jack the Giant-Killer. +They are plenty good enough."</p> +<p> +"I don't want them," said the little boy, beginning +to cry; "I want <i>you!</i> I wont go to sleep all +night if mamma don't tell you."</p> +<p> +"<i>I</i> don't care!" replied The Story; "you +needn't cry for me. I've made up my mind. You +wont hear me to-night. That as as sure as your +name is Paul."</p> +<p> +And it was just as The Story said. There was +no use in the boy's crying, for off went The Story, +and it was <i>not</i> told that night; but it is my private +opinion that the boy did go to sleep after all.</p> + + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<a name="polly" id="polly"></a> + +<h2>POLLY: A BEFORE-CHRISTMAS STORY.</h2> +<h4><span class="sc">By Hope Ledyard</span>.</h4> +<div class="figleft2"> +<a href="images/027.jpg"> +<img src="images/027-195-01.jpg" class="bell" border="0" alt="SANTA CLAUS" /> +<img src="images/027-195-02.jpg" class="bell" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/027-195-03.jpg" class="bell" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/027-195-04.jpg" class="bell" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/027-195-05.jpg" class="bell" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/027-195-06.jpg" class="bell" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/027-195-07.jpg" class="bell" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/027-195-08.jpg" class="bell" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/027-195-09.jpg" class="bell" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/027-195-10.jpg" class="bell" border="0" alt="" /> +</a> +<br /> +<p> +ANTA CLAUS!" exclaimed Ned, half mockingly.</p> +<p> +"Yes," insisted Mamie, "what's he going to bring you, Ned?"</p> +<p> +"I don't know, and I don't care much," he answered, +"for there isn't any Santa Claus."</p> +<p> +"Why, Ned!" cried Mamie, in astonishment. +"Even my big brother Harry believes in +Santa Claus. He's coming home from +school to-night, and we're going to hang +up our stockings."</p> +<p> +"Pshaw!" said Ned, "I must go home. Good-bye."</p> +<p> +Merry little Mamie stood in amazement, +and then ran in-doors to her mother with her perplexity.</p> +<p> +"Why, mother!" she cried, "Ned Huntley said +there wasn't any Santa Claus—and he was real +cross about it, too."</p> +<p> +"Well, Mamie," said her mother, "I wouldn't +take any notice of Ned's being cross about Christmas-time. +The Huntleys don't keep Christmas."</p> +<p> +"Don't keep Christmas!" exclaimed Mamie, +astonished beyond measure.</p> +<p> +Seeing that her mother was busy, she took her +doll, Helena Margaret Constance Victorine, in her +arms, and talked the matter over with her.</p> +<p> +"What do you think, my dear," said she, +"they don't keep Christmas at Ned Huntley's +house! I don't know just what mother means by +not keeping it, for you know Santa Claus comes +down the chimney, and so he can get in during the +night and leave Christmas there. Oh, yes, but +they don't keep it. They turn it out, I suppose, +just like mother told me they acted about the dear +little baby Savior; they hadn't any room for him, +and I guess Mrs. Huntley hasn't any room to keep +Christmas in. I wonder what she does with the +Christmas things Santa Claus brings? I wonder if +she throws 'em away? I mean to go and ask +her;" and putting her child carefully in its cradle, +Mamie started.</p> +<p> +There was some truth in what Mrs. Gaston had +told her little daughter; the Huntleys did not +keep Christmas in a loving, hearty way. They +kept it in so far that on this very afternoon +Mrs. Huntley was busy making the mince pies, +dressing the turkey, and doing all she could to be +beforehand with the extra Christmas dinner. Mr. +Huntley had just stepped into the kitchen for a +moment to say to his wife, "What have you settled +on for Ned's Christmas?"</p> +<p> +"I've bought him a pair of arctics—he needed +'em; and if you want to spend more than common, +you might get him half a dozen handkerchiefs."</p> +<p> +"Well, wife, I was thinking that perhaps" —the +farmer tried to be particular about his words, for +Mrs. Huntley did not seem in a very good humor—"I +was remembering how you used to enjoy giving +the young ones candies and toys; so, perhaps—"</p> +<p> +"Now, Noah Huntley, I'm surprised at you! +Buy candies and toys for a great lumbering boy +like Ned? Why, you must be crazy, man! The +next thing will be that you'll want a Christmas-tree +yourself!"</p> + +<a name="page20" id="page20"></a><span class="left">[page 20]</span> +<p> +"Well, and it wouldn't be a bad idea," thought +the father. "There's my man, Fritz, he has been +to the woods and cut a little tree for his children, +and he seems to get a heap of pleasure out of it. Ah! +if only little Polly had lived!" Strangely enough, +the wife was thinking the same thing, as she sliced +and sifted and weighed. "If little Polly had lived +it would have been different, but we can't throw away +money on nonsense for Ned."</p> +<p> +A little red cloak flashed by the window, a little +bright face, just about the age of "our little Polly's," +peeped in at the door, and Mamie asked, "May I +come in, Mrs. Huntley?"</p> +<p> +"Certainly, child. Here's a fresh cookie. I suppose +you're full of Christmas over at your house?"</p> +<p> +"Oh, yes, ma'am! And I'm so sorry you don't +keep it. What's the reason?"</p> +<p> +"Don't keep it! Why, we have a regular +Christmas dinner as sure as the 25th of December +comes round, and Pa gives me a new dress, or +something that I need, and we give Ned a suit of +clothes, or shoes, or something that he needs."</p> +<p> +"Well," said Mamie, "but I like our way best. +May I tell you how we keep Christmas?"</p> +<p> +"Talk away. I can listen."</p> +<p> +"Well, you see, a good while before Christmas +my mother begins to get ready, and I often see her +hide up something quick when I come in, and then +she laughs, and I think, 'Oh, yes, something's +coming,' and then mother takes me in her lap and +tells me how Jesus is coming, and how He did +come. Do you know, Mrs. Huntley?"</p> +<p> +"You can tell me, child?"</p> +<p> +"You see, He came a long, long time ago as a +little baby. Mamma says that he began at the +beginning, so that no little child could say, 'I can't +be like Jesus, for Jesus never was so little as me.' +That first birthday of His, there wasn't any room +for Him at the tavern, and when the dear little +baby Jesus was sleepy, they laid Him right in a +stable manger, and the shepherds found Him lying +there. Christmas is His Birthday, and I suppose +they give all the children presents because +Jesus loved little children, and then Santa Claus—Oh, +Mrs. Huntley, that's what I came about, and +I 'most forgot! If you don't keep Christmas—I +mean as we do," she added, as Mrs. Huntley +frowned, "and if you don't use the things that Santa +Claus leaves here, can't I come over and get 'em? +Only I'd rather Ned should have 'em."</p> +<p> +"Child alive! How your tongue runs! Here, +now, take these cookies home with you, I guess +Ned's too busy to play with you."</p> +<p> +"Thank you, ma'am. And you'll remember +about Santa Claus?" said little Mamie, as she +walked away with her cookies.</p> +<p> +Mrs. Huntley worked on for a few minutes longer, +and then, leaving her dishes, she went to her own +room and opened a bureau drawer. There lay a +bright little dress and pretty white apron,—Polly's +best things,—the little clothes in which she used to +look so lovely. There were the last Christmas toys +the mother had ever bought,—only a little tin bank, +a paper cornucopia, and a doll; but she remembered +that Christmas so well! Could it be that it +was only three years ago? How Polly had laughed +and chattered over her stocking! And Ned,—now +that she thought about it,—she remembered that +they bought him a pair of skates that year. He +had made a great time over those skates, and had +taken his little sister out to see him try to use them. +Ned was so loving and gentle in those days. And +then the mother's heart reproached her. Could +she blame her boy because he seemed to care so +little for his parents and his home, when she had +nursed her grief for the loss of her baby-girl, and +taken no pains to be bright or cheerful with him? +She thought how clearly Mamie had told the story +of the Savior's birthday. Could her boy, who was +six years older, do as well? He went to Sunday-school +sometimes, but she had never talked with +him about Jesus—never since God took her Polly. +And her eyes filled as she shut the drawer.</p> +<p> +Mrs. Huntley went back to the kitchen, but the +room seemed different to her. Ned brought in +the milk, and looked at his mother curiously at +hearing her say, "Thank you, Ned." Wonders +would never end, Ned thought, when, after tea, she +said, "Father, it's a moonlight night; couldn't +you and I drive to the village? Ned will excuse +our leaving him alone."</p> +<p> +"Excuse!" When had his mother ever asked +him to excuse her? And then, as mother waited +for the wagon to be got ready, she asked him to +read about the Savior's birth, and surely there were +tears in her eyes as father came in, just as Ned +read, "And they came with haste and found Mary +and Joseph, and the babe lying in a manger."</p> +<p> +Mr. Huntley was bewildered, too. To start off +for the village at seven o'clock in the evening! +When had such a thing happened?</p> +<p> +On the road Mrs. Huntley told her husband +what Mamie had said to her, and she added, +"Perhaps, as I tell it, it don't seem much, but it +made me think of our Polly, and"—the woman's +voice broke, and the father, saddened too, said, +comfortingly, "She's safe, my dear, in heaven."</p> +<p> +"Yes, father, but I'm thinking of the one that's +left, for all I cried a little. I guess you were near +right about getting him something nice. He's +but a boy yet, and he'd think more of Christmas, +and perhaps of the child that was born on +Christmas, if we show him that Jesus has made our +hearts a little more tender."</p> + +<a name="page21" id="page21"></a><span class="left">[page 21]</span> +<p> +What it cost that hard, reserved woman to say +that, none knew, but I think her husband felt dimly +how she must have fought with herself, and he was +silent for some time. At last he said, with a tone +of gladness in his voice, "My dear, I'm glad to +get him something. He's a good boy, Ned is."</p> +<p> +What a pleasant time they had, and how they +caught the spirit of Christmas! They bought a +sled and skates, a book or two, and candies, and +Mrs. Huntley found a jack-knife that was just the +thing Ned wanted. Then she said to her husband:</p> +<p> +"I'd like to buy something for Mamie. It will +be nice to buy a girl's present."</p> +<p> +Their hearts ached a little, as they chose a wonderful +little wash-tub and board, with a clothes-horse +to match. How Polly's eyes would have +shone at these!</p> +<p> +Meantime, Ned mused over his mother's tears +and her strangely kind tones, and thought: +"I wonder if she's going to be as good to me as +she was to Polly! I hated to hear Mamie talk +about Santa Claus. Polly used to talk just that +way, and we did have such good times. I used to +get skates and things at Christmas, but now I get +some handkerchiefs or a lot of shirts! It makes +me mad." Then Ned fell asleep, and so the mother +found him. She woke him gently and he went +off to bed, bewildered by more kind words.</p> +<p> +Morning dawned and Ned hurried down to light +the fire in the kitchen, but he went no further than +the sitting-room. There was a sled,—a splendid +one,—a pair of skates, and books! He put his +hands in his pockets to take a long stare, and felt +something strange in one of them. Why! There +was a beautiful knife!</p> +<p> +Mother came in and watched his face, but at +sight of her the boy fairly broke down. Laying +his head on her shoulder, "It's like Polly coming +back," he said.</p> +<p> +And so it was, and so it continued to be.</p></div> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<a name="boggs" id="boggs"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/029-470.jpg" width="470" height="465" alt="BOGGS" border="0" /> +<p class="center">BOGGS SHOULD NOT HAVE HAD HIS PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN ON THANKSGIVING DAY, +AND EATEN A HEARTY DINNER AFTERWARD.</p> +</div> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="page22" id="page22"></a><span class="left">[page 22]</span> + +<h2>THE LORD MAYOR OF LONDON'S SHOW.</h2> +<h4><span class="sc">By Jennie A. Owen</span>.</h4> +<p> +"Aunt Jennie," said my little godson Willie, +a few days ago, "wont you go with us to see the +Lord Mayor's show? There'll be thirteen elephants +and eight clowns, and an elephant picks a +man up with his trunk and holds him there. And +then mamma's going to take me to Sampson's. +Do you know Sampson, Aunt Jennie?"</p> +<p> +"I know about Samson in the Bible, Willie."</p> +<p> +"Oh, not that one; our Sampson is a man in a +shop in Oxford street, and he makes such nice +boys' clothes, and he's the master."</p> +<p> +I have just come home from the Sandwich +Islands, where I have been living; I spent a few +years, too, in New Zealand and Tahiti, and so have +seen many wonderful things on the land and sea; +but a Lord Mayor going to be sworn in to his +duties, attended by thirteen elephants and a London +crowd, would be a novelty to me. I thought, too, +that certain little boys and girls in the Sandwich +Islands and the United States, who also call me +Aunt Jennie, would like to hear all about it.</p> +<p> +This has been an exciting week for the London +children. The fifth of November fell on Sunday, +and Guy Fawkes had to wait till Monday to make +his appearance. All that day he was carried about +the streets in various shapes and forms, and the +naughty, ignorant little boys, in spite of enlightened +school-board teaching, sang at our doors:</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"A ha'penny loaf to feed the Pope,</p> +<p>A penn'orth of cheese to choke him,</p> +<p>A pint of beer to wash it all down,</p> +<p>And a jolly good fire to burn him."</p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +"Oh, papa," said Willie, as he ran into the +breakfast-room for pennies, "aren't you glad +you're a real man and not a pope?"</p> +<p> +At last the ninth, the Lord Mayor's day, came. +It is also the Prince of Wales' birthday, so the city +would be very gay-looking with all the flags flying.</p> +<p> +Alas! it was a dark, dull morning, and a heavy +fog hung all over the city. Alas for the gilt +coaches, the steel armor and other braveries! and +then the elephants, how could they possibly feel +their way all round the city in a thick, yellow fog? +But, happily, by eleven the weather cleared, and +the sun shone out brightly. Such a crowd as +there was at our railway dépôt! So many bonny, +happy little children never went on the same +morning to the busy old town before. It was +something new for great elephants to be seen +walking through the prosy business streets. Once +before, twenty-seven years ago, when Sir John +Musgrave was Lord Mayor, not only elephants, +but camels, deer, negroes, beehives, a ship in full +sail, and Britannia seated on a car drawn by six +horses, had made part of the show; since then, +however, no Lord Mayor had been thoughtful +enough of little and big children's pleasure to order +out such delightful things, and so this year everybody +must go. To quote from the <i>Daily News:</i></p> +<blockquote class="comment"><p> +"Since the reign of Henry III., when, by that +monarch's gracious act the Lord Mayor of London +was permitted to present himself before the Barons +of Exchequer at Westminster instead of submitting +the citizens' choice for the king's personal approval, +there has been no Lord Mayor's show at which +so great a concourse of spectators assembled."</p></blockquote> +<p> +We crowd into the cars and are soon in Cannon +street. At the gates a boy meets us with little +books for sale, shouting, "Thirteen elephants for a +penny! the other boys'll only give you twelve, but +I'll give you thirteen. Sold again! Thirteen +elephants for a penny!" This wonderful book +consists of a series of common gaudily colored pictures, +supposed to represent the procession, which +has done service at the show from time immemorial, +but it is each year as welcome as ever to +the children who each have a penny to buy one. +Through the streets we have passing visions of pink +silk stockings, canary-colored breeches, and dark +green coats and gold lace, also tri-colored rosettes +as large as saucers; and pass by shop-windows full +of sweet, eager little faces, in the place of hose, +shirts, sewing-machines, etc.</p> +<p> +At last we arrive at our destination in Cheapside, +where, through the kindness of a friend, a window +on the first floor of a large building is waiting for +us. How impatient we are until we hear the band +of the Grenadier Guards, which heads the procession. +After this band and that of the Royal London +Militia, come the Worshipful Company of +Loriners, preceded by jolly watermen in blue and +white striped jerseys and white trousers, bearing +banners; more watermen follow to relieve them; +the beadle of the company with his staff of office; +the clerk in his chariot; the wardens, wearing silk +cloaks trimmed with sables, in their carriages, and +amongst them Sir John Bennett, the great watch-maker +in Cheapside, a charming-looking old gentleman +with rosy cheeks and profuse gray curls; his<a name="page23" id="page23"></a><span class="left">[page 23]</span> +face lights up with smiles as the shouts of "Bravo, +Bennett," show how popular he is.</p> +<p> +Then comes a grand yellow coach, in which +rides the Master of the Company, attended by his +chaplain. After the Loriners come the Farriers, +the band of the First Life Guards, banners, beadle +and mace clerk, wardens and master. After them +the Broderers. As these pass slowly along, an +excitement is caused by the behavior of the horse +of a hussar, who is mounting guard. It does not +like the proceedings at all, and still less the greasy +asphalt on which it stands, dances round, backs +into the Worshipful Master of Broderers' carriage, +and finally rears and falls, unseating its rider. The +hussar is quite cool and quiet, soon reseats himself, +and rejects the offer of a fussy little man in red to +hold his horse.</p> +<p> +And now comes the Worshipful Company of +Bakers, preceded by their banner, with its good +old motto, "Praise God for all." These are really +very jolly and well-favored looking companions, +most of the members bearing large bouquets of +flowers. After them the Vintners' Company, with +the band of the Royal Artillery; ten Commissioners, +each bearing a shield; eight master porters in +vintner's dress; the Bargemaster in full uniform, +and the Swan Uppers. These are men who look +after the swans belonging to the corporation of +London, which build their nests along the banks +of the Thames, and they mark the young swans +each spring.</p> +<p> +The "Uppers" look very well in their dress, consisting +of dark cloth jackets slashed with white, +blue and white striped jerseys and white trousers.</p> +<p> +After this company had passed, a grand shout +announced the coming of the elephants. These, +as some small boy has observed, are "curious +animals, with two tails—one before and one behind." +First came a number of large ones, with +Mr. Sanger, their owner, who was mounted on a +curiously spotted horse. They were gorgeous with +oriental trappings and howdahs. On the foremost +one rode a man representing a grand Indian +prince. He had a reddish mustache, wore spectacles, +a magnificent purple and white turban, and +showy oriental costume. He produced a great +impression on the crowd. In other howdahs sat +one, two or three splendid Hindoos, whose dress +was past description. Then came several young +elephants ridden by boys; one of these was seized +with a desire to lie down, and had to be vigorously +roused; but, on the whole, they behaved in a +wonderfully correct and dignified manner—now +and then gracefully swinging round their trunks +amongst the sympathizing crowd, in search of +refreshment.</p> +<p> +The elephants were escorted by equestrians in +state costumes, and followed by six knights in +steel armor, with lances and pennons, mounted on +chargers. One of these "wouldn't go," and had +to be dragged on ignominiously by a policeman. +Then the Epping Forest rangers came. They +were picturesquely dressed in green velvet coats, +broad-brimmed hats and long feathers. After +these, trumpeters, under-sheriffs in their state carriages, +aldermen, the Recorder, more trumpeters, +and then a most gorgeous coach—with hammer-cloth +of red and gold, men in liveries too splendid +to describe, and four fine horses—brings the late +lord mayor. The mounted band of household +cavalry follows. These really look splendid in +crimson coats covered with gold embroidery and +velvet caps, riding handsome white horses.</p> +<p> +There is a stoppage just as they come up. +They are rapturously greeted by the crowd, and +requested to "play up." The mayor's servants, +in state liveries, follow on foot. After them rides +a very important person, the city marshal, on +horseback. The city trumpeters come now, preceding +the right honorable the lord mayor's most +gorgeous gilt coach, drawn by six horses. In it +sits Sir Thomas White, supported by his chaplain, +and attended by his sword-bearer and the common +crier. An escort of the 21st Hussars brings up +the rear. Policemen follow, and after them a stray +mail-cart, a butcher's boy with his tray; after that, +not just the deluge, but the crowd.</p> +<p> +"Oh, mamma!" says Willie, "the beefeaters +didn't come! Nine of them there are in my +book, and a grand one going in front, blowing a +trumpet. And the man holding his thumb to his +nose at the sheriffs; and the policeman knocking +a thief down with a staff! And the lord mayor +had no spectacles on. That's not fair! Do beefeaters +eat lots of beef, mamma?"</p> +<p> +"Oh, no," says Charlie, with a superior air, +"they are only sideboard chaps."</p> +<p> +Willie is still more puzzled, until he is told that +in the olden time servants so costumed used to +stand by the sideboard, or buffet, as it was called, +at feasts, and so got the name of buffetiers, and +by degrees the name became changed into beefeaters, +which was more easily remembered by the +people.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/032-1000.jpg"><img src="images/032-400.jpg" width="400" height="552" alt="THE LORD MAYOR OF LONDON'S SHOW." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">THE LORD MAYOR OF LONDON'S SHOW.</p> +</div> + +<p> +From our window we could not, of course, follow +the procession on its winding way, nor had we +seen it start. On looking at the paper next morning, +we read that at first it was feared that the +elephants had failed to keep their appointment. +It was almost time to set out, and no elephants +were to be seen. What must be done? The +people ought not to be cheated out of the best part +of the show; and yet, on the other hand, how +undignified for a lord mayor to be kept waiting for<a name="page25" id="page25"></a><span class="left">[page 25]</span> +thirteen elephants! I am sorry to say the police +were rather glad. They had been very much +afraid that the animals might prove troublesome +during so long and unusual a walk; or else, +coming from a circus, might, at any sudden pause, +imagine themselves in the arena, and take it into +their grave heads to perform on two legs and +terrify the horses, or possibly annoy the lord +mayor and his chaplain by putting their long +trunks into his coach. But, happily for us, the +police were disappointed. Such dignified creatures +could not be expected to come early and be kept +waiting.</p> +<p> +Just at the right time they came leisurely up, +and gravely taking their proper place, marched +on with their proverbial sagacity—waiting outside +Westminster Hall, whilst the lord mayor swore to +do his duty, as quietly as though they were at +home—and afterward left the procession at Blackfriars +Bridge, to go to their own quarters and eat +their well-earned dinner. It is to be hoped that +the lord mayor ordered something specially good +for them.</p> +<p> +<span class="rightnote">[*sic]</span>The elephants having left, the *embassadors, her +majesty's ministers of state, the nobility, judges, +and other persons of distinction, joined the procession, +and proceeded to feast with his lordship and +the lady mayoress at Guildhall.</p> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + <a name="girl" id="girl"></a> +<h2>MY GIRL</h2> +<h4><span class="sc">By John S. Adams</span>.</h4> + +<table width="100%" align="center" border="0" summary="poem"> +<tr> + <td class="poem"> + <div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i8"><span style="font-size: 1.1em; font-weight: bold;">I.</span></p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>A little corner with its crib,</p> +<p>A little mug, a spoon, a bib,</p> +<p>A little tooth so pearly white,</p> +<p>A little rubber ring to bite.</p> +</div> +</div> + </td> + <td class="poem"> + <div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i8"><span style="font-size: 1.1em; font-weight: bold;">V.</span></p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>A little muff for winter weather,</p> +<p>A little jockey-hat and feather,</p> +<p>A little sack with funny pockets,</p> +<p>A little chain, a ring, and lockets.</p> +</div> +</div> + </td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td class="poem"> + <div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i8"><span style="font-size: 1.1em; font-weight: bold;">II.</span></p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>A little plate all lettered round,</p> +<p>A little rattle to resound,</p> +<p>A little creeping—see! she stands!</p> +<p>A little step 'twixt outstretched hands.</p> +</div> +</div> + </td> + <td class="poem"> + <div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i8"><span style="font-size: 1.1em; font-weight: bold;">VI.</span></p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>A little while to dance and bow,</p> +<p>A little escort homeward now,</p> +<p>A little party, somewhat late,</p> +<p>A little lingering at the gate.</p> +</div> +</div> + </td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td class="poem"> + <div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i8"><span style="font-size: 1.1em; font-weight: bold;">III.</span></p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>A little doll with flaxen hair,</p> +<p>A little willow rocking-chair,</p> +<p>A little dress of richest hue,</p> +<p>A little pair of gaiters blue.</p> +</div> +</div> + + </td> + <td class="poem"> + <div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i8"><span style="font-size: 1.1em; font-weight: bold;">VII.</span></p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>A little walk in leafy June,</p> +<p>A little talk while shines the moon,</p> +<p>A little reference to papa,</p> +<p>A little planning with mamma.</p> +</div> +</div> + </td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td class="poem"> + <div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i8"><span style="font-size: 1.1em; font-weight: bold;">IV.</span></p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>A little school day after day,</p> +<p>A "little schoolma'am" to obey,</p> +<p>A little study—soon 'tis past,</p> +<p>A little graduate at last.</p> +</div> +</div> + </td> + <td class="poem"> + <div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i8"><span style="font-size: 1.1em; font-weight: bold;">VIII.</span></p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>A little ceremony grave,</p> +<p>A little struggle to be brave,</p> +<p>A little cottage on a lawn,</p> +<p>A little kiss—my girl was gone!</p> +</div> +</div> + </td> +</tr> +</table> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="page26" id="page26"></a><span class="left">[page 26]</span> + +<h2>MARS, THE PLANET OF WAR.</h2> +<h4><span class="sc">By Richard A. Proctor</span>.</h4> +<p> +Not long ago, the planet Jupiter came among +the stars of our southern evening skies. Those +who noted down his track found that he first advanced +from west to east, then receded along a +track near his advancing one, then advanced again, +still running on a track side by side with his former +advancing track, and so passed away from the +scene, toward the part of the sky where the sun's +light prevents our tracking him.</p> +<p> +That was a useful and rather easy first lesson +about the motions of the bodies called planets.</p> +<p> +We have now to consider a rather less simple +case, but one a great deal more interesting. Two +planets intrude among our evening stars, each +following a looped track, but the tracks are unlike; +the two planets are unlike in appearance, and they +are also very unlike in reality.</p> +<p> +I hope many of my young readers have already +found out for themselves that these intrusive bodies +have been wandering among our fixed stars. I +purposely said nothing about the visitors last +August, so that those who try to learn the star-groups +from my maps may have had a chance of +discovering the two planets for themselves. If they +have done so, they have in fact repeated a discovery +which was made many, many years ago. Ages +before astronomy began to be a science, men found +out that some of the stars move about among the +rest, and they also noticed the kind of path traveled +in the sky by each of those moving bodies. +It was long, indeed, before they found out the kind +of path traveled <i>really</i> by the planets. In fact, +they supposed our earth to be fixed; and if our +earth were fixed, the paths of the planets about +her as a center would be twisted and tangled in +the most perplexing way. So that folks in those +old times, seeing the planets making all manner +of loops and twistings round the sky, and supposing +they made corresponding loops and twistings +in traveling round the earth, thought the planets +were living creatures, going round the earth to +watch it and rule over it, each according to his own +fashion. So they worshiped the planets as gods, +counting seven of them, including the sun and +moon. Some they thought good to men, others +evil. The two planets now twisting their way +along the southern skies were two of the evil sort, +viz.: Mars, called the Lesser Infortune, and Saturn, +called the Greater Infortune. In the old +system of star-worship, Mars ruled over Tuesday, +and Saturn over Saturday,—the Sabbath of olden +times,—a day which the Chaldean and Egyptian +astrologers regarded as the most unlucky in the +whole week.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/0146-1.jpg"><img src="images/0146-1-500.jpg" width="500" height="470" alt="FIG. 1. THE PATHS OF MARS AND SATURN." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">FIG. 1. THE PATHS OF MARS AND SATURN.</p> +</div> + +<p> +The actual paths traveled among the stars by +these two planets, this fall, are shown in Fig. 1. +You will see how wildly the fiery Mars, the planet +of war, careers round his great loop, while old +Saturn, "heavy, dull, and slow" (as Armado says +that lead is—the metal dedicated to Saturn), +plods slowly and wearily along. Between August +6 and October 1, Mars traversed his entire backward +track,—Saturn, you notice, only a small portion +of his much smaller loop. On the sky, too, +you will see that while Mars shines with a fierce +ruddy glow, well suited to his warlike character, +Saturn shines with a dull yellow light, suggestive of +the evil qualities which the astrologers of old assigned +to him. "My loking," says Saturn, in Chaucer's +"Canterbury Tales," "is the fader of pestilence:</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"Min ben also the maladies colde,</p> +<p>The derke treasons, and the costes olde;</p> +<p>Min is the drenching in the see so wan,</p> +<p>Min is the prison in the derke cote,<a href="#I1"><sup>1</sup></a><a name="I1r" id="I1r"></a></p> +<p>Min is the strangel and hanging by the throte,</p> +<p>The murmure, and the cherles<a href="#I2"><sup>2</sup></a><a name="I2r" id="I2r"></a> rebelling,</p> +<p>The groyning and the prine empoysoning."</p> +</div> +</div> +<a name="page27" id="page27"></a><span class="left">[page 27]</span> +<p> +For the present, however, let us consider the +planet Mars, leaving slow Saturn to wait for us +another month.</p> +<p> +It has always seemed to me one of the most useful +lessons in astronomy to follow the line by which, +long ago, great discoveries were made. Thus, if +the young reader went out on +every fine night and noted the +changing position of Mars, he +traced out the track shown in +Fig. 1. He noted, also, that the +planet, which shone at its brightest +about September 5, gradually +grew less and less bright as it traveled +off, after rounding the station +near October 5 (really on Oct. 7), +toward the east. He observed, then, +that the seeming loop followed by +the planet was a real looped track (so far, at least, +as our observer on the earth was concerned). Fig. +2 shows the apparent shape of Mars's loop, the +dates corresponding to those shown in Fig. 1. Only +it does not lie flat, as shown on the paper, but +must be supposed to lie somewhat under the surface +of the paper, as shown by the little upright <i>a, b,</i> +which, indeed, gives the distance under the paper +at which the part of the loop is supposed to lie +where lowest at <i>m</i>. The other similar uprights at +M_1, M_2, and M_3 show the depression at these places. +You perceive that the part M_1, M_2, lies higher than +the part M_2, M_3. If the loop were flat, and, like +E, the earth, were in the level of the paper, it +would be seen edgewise, and the advancing, receding, +and advancing parts of the planet's +course would all lie on the same line upon the sky. +But being thus out of the level, we see through +the loop, so to speak, and it has the seeming shape +shown in Fig. 1.<a href="#I3"><sup>3</sup></a><a name="I3r" id="I3r"></a></p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/0147-1.jpg"><img src="images/0147-1-600.jpg" width="600" height="220" alt="FIG. 2. ONE OF MARS'S LOOPS." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">FIG. 2. ONE OF MARS'S LOOPS.</p> +</div> + +<p> +This is one loop, you will understand, out of an +immense number which Mars makes in journeying +round the earth, regarded as fixed. He retreats +to a great distance, swoops inward again toward +the earth, making a loop as in Fig. 2, and retreating +again. Then he comes again, makes another +swoop, and a loop on another side, and so on. He +behaves, in fact, like that "little quiver fellow," a +right martialist, no doubt, who, as Justice Shallow +tells us, "would about and about, and come you in, +and come you in,—and away again would a go, +and again would a come." The loops are not +all of the same size. The one shown in Fig. 2 is +one of the smallest. I have before me a picture +which I have made of all this planet's loops from +1875 to 1892, and it forms the most curiously intertwined +set of curves you can imagine,—rather +pretty, though not regular, the loops on one side +being much larger than those on the other. I +would show the picture here, but it is too large. +One of these days, it will be given in a book I am +going to write about Mars, who is quite important +enough to have a book all to himself. I want you, +now, to understand me that Mars really does travel +in a most complicated path, when you consider +the earth as at rest. If a perfect picture of all +his loopings and twistings since astronomy began +could be drawn,—even on a sheet of paper as large +as the floor of a room,—the curves would so interlace +that you would not be able to track them out, +but be always leaving the true track and getting +upon one crossing it slightly aslant,—just like the +lines by which trains are made to run easily off one +track on to another.</p> +<p> +The unfortunate astronomers of old times, who +had to explain, <i>if they could</i>, this complicated +behavior of Mars (and of other planets, too), were +quite beaten. The more carefully they made their +observations, the more peculiar the motions seemed. +One astronomer gave up the work in despair, just +like that unfortunate Greek philosopher who, because +he could not understand the tides of the +Eubœan Sea, drowned himself in it. So this astronomer, +who was a king,—Alphonsus of Portugal,—unable +to unravel the loops of the planets, said, in +his wrath, that if he had been called on by the +Creator to assign the planets their paths, he would +have managed the matter a great deal better. The +plates of the old astronomical books became more +and more confusing, and cost more and more +labor, as astronomers continued to</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> + <p> ... "Build, unbuild, contrive</p> +<p>To save appearances, to gird the sphere</p> +<p>With centric and eccentric scribbled o'er,</p> +<p>Cycle and epicycle, orb in orb."</p> +</div> +</div> +<p> +It was to the study of Mars, the wildest wanderer +of all, that we owe the removal of all these perplexities. +The idea had occurred to the great astronomer, +Copernicus, that the complexities of the<a name="page28" id="page28"></a><span class="left">[page 28]</span> +planets' paths are not real, but are caused by the +constant moving about of the place from whence +we watch the planets. If a fly at rest at the middle +of a clock face watched the ends of the two hands, +they would seem to go round him in circles; but +if, instead, he was on the end of one of the hands +(and was not knocked off as the other passed), the +end of this other hand would not move round the fly +in the same simple way. When the two hands were +together it would be near, when they were opposite +it would be far away, and, without entering into any +particular description of the way in which it would +seem to move, you can easily see that the motion +would seem much more complicated than if the fly +watched it from the middle of the clock face. +Now, Copernicus <i>did</i> enter into particulars, and +showed by mathematical reasoning that nearly all +the peculiarities of the planets' motions could be +explained by supposing that the sun, not the earth, +was the body round which the planets move, and +that they go round him nearly in circles.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/0148-1.jpg"><img src="images/0148-1-460.jpg" width="460" height="471" alt="FIG. 3. THE PATHS OF MARS, THE EARTH, VENUS, AND MERCURY." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">FIG. 3. THE PATHS OF MARS, THE EARTH, VENUS, AND MERCURY.</p> +</div> + +<p> +But Copernicus could not explain <i>all</i> the motions. +And Tycho Brahe, another great astronomer, +who did not believe at all in the new ideas of +Copernicus, made a number of observations on our +near neighbor Mars, to show that Copernicus was +wrong. He gave these to Kepler, another great +astronomer, enjoining him to explain them in such +a way as to overthrow the Copernican ideas. But +Kepler behaved like Balaam the son of Beor; for, +called on to curse (or at least to denounce) the views +of Copernicus, he altogether blessed them three +times. First, he found from the motions of Mars +that the planets do not travel in circles, but in ovals, +very nearly circular in shape, but not having the +sun exactly at the center. Secondly, he discovered +the law according to which they move, now faster +now slower, in their oval paths; and thirdly, he +found a law according to which the nearer planets +travel more quickly and the farther planets more +slowly, every distance having its own proper rate. +These three laws of Kepler constitute +the Magna Charta of the solar system.</p> +<p> +Afterward, Newton showed <i>how</i> it +happens that the planets obey these +laws, but as his part of the work had +no particular reference to Mars, I say +no more about it in this place.</p> +<p> +Here, in Fig. 3, are the real paths of +Mars and the Earth, and also of Venus +and Mercury. No loops, you see, in +any of them, simply because we have +set the sun in the middle. Set the +earth in the middle, and each planet +would have its own set of loops, each +set enormously complicated, and all +three sets mixed together in the most +confusing way. It is well to remember +this when you see, as in many books +of astronomy, the old theory illustrated +with a set of circles looking almost as +neat and compact as the set truly representing +the modern theory. For the +idea is suggested by this simple picture +of the old theory that the theory itself +was simple, whereas it had become so +confusing that not merely young learners, +but the most profound mathematicians, +were baffled when they tried to unravel the +motions of the planets.</p> +<p> +I think the figure pretty well explains itself. All +I need mention is, that while the shape and position +of each path is correctly shown, the size of the +sun at center is immensely exaggerated. A mere +pin point, but shining with star-like splendor, +would properly represent him. As for the figures +of the earth and Mars, they are still more tremendously +out of proportion. The cross-breadth of +the lines representing these planets' tracks is <i>many +times</i> greater than the breadth of either planet on +the scale of the chart.</p> +<p> +On September 5 the earth and Mars came to the +position shown at E and M. You observe that +they could not be much nearer. It is indeed very +seldom that Mars is so well placed for observation. +His illuminated face was turned toward the dark or +night half of the earth, so that he shone brightly<a name="page29" id="page29"></a><span class="left">[page 29]</span> +in the sky at midnight, and can be well studied +with the telescope.</p> +<p> +When Galileo turned toward Mars the telescope +with which he had discovered the moons of Jupiter, +the crescent form of Venus, and many other wonders +in the heavens, he was altogether disappointed. +His telescope was indeed too small to show any +features of interest in Mars, though the planet of +war is much nearer to us than Jupiter. Mars is +but a small world. The diameter of the planet is +about 4,400 miles, that of our earth being nearly +8,000. Jupiter, though much farther away, has +an immense diameter of more than 80,000 miles to +make up, and much more than make up, for the +effect of distance. With his noble system of moons +he appears a remarkable object even with a small +telescope, while Mars shows no feature of interest +even with telescopes of considerable size.</p> +<p> +It was not, then, till very powerful telescopes had +been constructed that astronomers learned what we +now know about Mars.<a href="#I4"><sup>4</sup></a><a name="I4r" id="I4r"></a></p> + +<p> +It is found that his surface is divided into land +and water, like the surface of our own earth. But +his seas and oceans are not nearly so large compared +with his continents and lands. You know +that on our own earth the water covers so much +larger a surface than the land that the great continents +are in reality islands. Europe, Asia and Africa +together form one great island; North and South +America another, not quite so large; then come +Australia, Greenland, Madagascar, and so forth; +all the lands being islands, larger or smaller. On +the other hand, except the Caspian Sea and the +Sea of Aral, there are no large seas entirely land-bound. +In the case of Mars a very different state +of things prevails, as you will see from the three +accompanying pictures (hitherto unpublished), +drawn by the famous English observer, Dawes +(called the Eagle-eyed). The third and best was +drawn with a telescope constructed by your famous +optician, Alvan Clark, of Cambridge, Massachusetts. +The dark parts are the seas, the light parts being +land, or in some cases cloud or snow. But in these +pictures most of the lighter portions represent land; +for they have been seen often so shaped, whereas +clouds, of course, would change in shape.</p> +<p> +The planet Mars, like our earth, turns on its +axis, so that it has day and night as we have. The +length of its day is not very different from that of +our own day. Our earth turns once on its axis in —— but +before reading on, try to complete this +sentence for yourself. Every one knows that the +earth's turning on its axis produces day and night, +and nine persons out of ten, if asked how long the +earth takes in turning round her axis, will answer, +24 hours; and if asked how many times she turns +on her axis in a year, will say 365 times, or if disposed +to be very exact, "about 365-1/4 times." But +neither answer is correct. The earth turns on her +axis about 366-1/4 times in each year, and each turning +occupies 23 hours 56 minutes and 4 seconds +and 1 tenth of a second. We, taking the ordinary +day as the time of a turning or rotation, lose count +of one rotation each year. It is necessary to mention +this, in order that when I tell you how long<a name="page30" id="page30"></a><span class="left">[page 30]</span> +the day of Mars is, you may be able correctly to +compare it with our own day. Mars, then, turns +on his axis in 24 hours 37 minutes 22 seconds and +7 tenth-parts of a second. So that Mars requires +41 minutes 18 seconds and 6-tenths of a second +longer to turn his small body once round than our +earth requires to turn round her much larger body. +The common day of Mars is, however, only about +39 minutes longer than our common day.</p> +<p> +Mars has a long year, taking no less than 687 +of our days to complete his circuit round the sun, +so that his year lasts only about one month and a +half less than two of ours.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/0150-1.jpg"><img src="images/0150-1-600.jpg" width="600" height="403" alt="APPEARANCE OF MARS, 1852, MARCH 23" border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">APPEARANCE OF MARS, 1852, MARCH 23, 5 H. 45 M., +Greenwich Mean Time. Power of Telescope, 358; 6⅓ inch object-glass.</p> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/0150-2.jpg"><img src="images/0150-2-600.jpg" width="600" height="398" alt="APPEARANCE OF MARS, 1852, FEBRUARY 3" border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">APPEARANCE OF MARS, 1852, FEBRUARY 3, 6 H. 50 M., +Greenwich Mean Time. Power of Telescope, 242 and 358 on 6⅓ inch +object-glass.</p> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/0150-3.jpg"><img src="images/0150-3-600.jpg" width="600" height="400" alt="APPEARANCE OF MARS, 1860, JULY 6" border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">APPEARANCE OF MARS, 1860, JULY 6, 11 H. 33 M., +Greenwich Mean Time. Power of Telescope, 201; 8¼ inch object-glass. +Planet very low, yet pretty distinct.</p> +</div> + +<p> +Like the earth, Mars has seasons, for his polar +axis, like that of the earth, is aslant, and at one +part of his year brings his northern regions more +fully into sunlight, at which time summer prevails +there and winter in his southern regions; while at +the opposite part of his year his southern regions +are turned more fully sunward and have their +summer, while winter prevails over his northern +regions.</p> +<p> +Around his poles, as around the earth's, there +are great masses of ice, insomuch that it is very +doubtful whether any inhabitants of Mars have +been able to penetrate to his poles, any more than +Kane or Hayes or Nares or Parry, despite their +courage and endurance, have been able to reach +our northern pole, or Cook or Wilkes or James +Ross our antarctic pole.</p> +<p> +In the summer of either hemisphere of Mars, +the north polar snows become greatly reduced in +extent, as is natural, while in winter they reach to +low latitudes, showing that in parts of the planet +corresponding to the United States, or mid-Europe, +as to latitude, bitter cold must prevail for several +weeks in succession.</p> +<p> +The land regions of Mars can be distinguished +from the seas by their ruddy color, the seas being +greenish. But here, perhaps, you will be disposed +to ask how astronomers can be sure that the greenish +regions are seas, the ruddy regions land, the +white spots either snow or cloud. Might not +materials altogether unlike any we are acquainted +with exist upon that remote planet?</p> +<p> +The spectroscope answers this question in the +clearest way. You may remember what I told you +in October, 1876, about Venus, how astronomers +have learned that the vapor of water exists in her +atmosphere. The same method has been applied, +even more satisfactorily, to the planet of war, and it +has been found that he also has his atmosphere at +times laden with moisture. This being so, it is +clear we have not to do with a planet made of +materials utterly unlike those forming our earth. +To suppose so, when we find that the air of Mars, +formed like our own (for if it contained other gases +the spectroscope would tell us), contains often large +quantities of the vapor of water, would be as +absurd as to believe in the green cheese theory of +the moon, or in another equally preposterous, +advanced lately by an English artist—Mr. J.T. Brett—to +the effect that the atmosphere of Venus is +formed of glass.</p> +<p> +There is another theory about Mars, certainly +not so absurd as either of those just named, but +scarcely supported by evidence at present—the +idea, namely, advanced by a French astronomer, +that the ruddy color of the lands and seas of Mars is +due to red trees and a generally scarlet vegetation. +Your poet Holmes refers to this in those lines of +his, "Star-clouds and Wind-clouds" (to my mind +among the most charming of his many charming +poems):</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> + <p>"The snows that glittered on the disc of Mars</p> + <p>Have melted, and the planet's fiery orb</p> + <p>Rolls in the crimson summer of its year."</p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +It is quite possible, of course, that such colors as +are often seen in American woods in the autumn-time +may prevail in the forests and vegetation of +Mars during the fullness of the Martian summer. +The fact that during this season the planet looks +ruddier than usual, in some degree corresponds +with this theory. But it is much better explained, +to my mind, by the greater clearness of the Martian +air in the summer-time. That would enable us to +see the color of the soil better. If our earth were +looked at from Venus during the winter-time, the +snows covering large parts of her surface, and the +clouds and mists common in the winter months, +would hide the tints of the surface, whereas these +would be very distinct in clear summer weather.</p> +<p> +I fear my own conclusion about Mars is that his +present condition is very desolate. I look on the +ruddiness of tint to which I have referred as one +of the signs that the planet of war has long since +passed its prime. There are lands and seas in +Mars, the vapor of water is present in his air, +clouds form, rains and snows fall upon his surface, +and doubtless brooks and rivers irrigate his soil, +and carry down the moisture collected on his wide +continents to the seas whence the clouds had originally +been formed. But I do not think there is +much vegetation on Mars, or that many living +creatures of the higher types of Martian life as it +once existed still remain. All that is known about +the planet tends to show that the time when it +attained that stage of planetary existence through +which our earth is now passing must be set millions +of years, perhaps hundreds of millions of years, ago. +He has not yet, indeed, reached that airless and +waterless condition, that extremity of internal cold, +or in fact that utter unfitness to support any kind<a name="page31" id="page31"></a><span class="left">[page 31]</span> +of life, which would seem to prevail in the moon. +The planet of war in some respects resembles a +desolate battle-field, and I fancy that there is not a +single region of the earth now inhabited by man +which is not infinitely more comfortable as an abode +of life than the most favored regions of Mars at the +present time would be for creatures like ourselves.</p> +<p> +But there are other subjects besides astronomy +that the readers of the <span class="sc">St. Nicholas</span> want to learn +about. I do not wish you to have to say to me +what a little daughter of mine said the other day. +She had asked me several questions about the sun, +and after I had answered them I went on to tell +her several things which she had not asked. She +listened patiently for quite a long time,—fully five +minutes, I really believe,—and then she said: +"Don't you think, papa, that that's enough about +the sun? Come and play with us on the lawn." +So, as it was holiday time, we went and played in +the sun, instead of talking about him.</p> + + <br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /> + + <h4>Footnotes</h4> + + <p class="note"><a name="I1" id="I1"></a> +<a class="note" href="#I1r">[Footnote 1:</a> <i>Dark or gloomy coast</i>. This line was amusingly rendered, +by the printer of my "Saturn and its System," in which I quoted Chaucer's lines, "Mine is the prison, and the dirty coat."]</p> + +<p class="note"><a name="I2" id="I2"></a> +<a class="note" href="#I2r">[Footnote 2:</a> <i>Churl's.</i> Notice this word. It is the same as the word rendered +<i>Charles's</i> in the common English name for the Dipper. One should always say Charles's Wain, not Charles' +(as is the way Tennyson does in the "May Queen ").]</p> + +<p class="note"><a name="I3" id="I3"></a> +<a class="note" href="#I3r">[Footnote 3:</a> I must re-mention that though this explanation is made as simple as I +possibly can make it, so far as words are concerned, the figures present the result of an exact geometrical investigation. +Every dot, for instance, in Fig. 2, has had its place separately determined by me.]</p> + +<p class="note"><a name="I4" id="I4"></a> +<a class="note" href="#I4r">[Footnote 4:</a> See "The Moons of Mars" in the "<a class="note" href="#moons">Letter Box</a>" Department.</p> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="tragedy" id="tragedy"></a> + +<h2>A DOMESTIC TRAGEDY—IN TWO PARTS.</h2> + + +<div class="figright1"> +<img src="images/0151-2-304.jpg" width="304" height="261" alt="PART II." border="0" /><br /><br /> +<p class="center"><span class="sc">Part</span> II.</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>AND, but for a sudden</p> +<p class="i4">and unforeseen disaster,</p> +<p class="i2">The puppy might have kept</p> +<p class="i8">his resolution to this day.</p> +</div> +</div> +</div> + +<div class="figleft1"> +<img src="images/0151-1-300.jpg" width="300" height="261" alt="PART I." border="0" /> +<p class="center"><span class="sc">Part</span> I.</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"MOTHER! from this moment,</p> +<p class="i4">behold me, my own master!</p> +<p class="i2">Yes, madam, I am old enough.</p> +<p class="i8">I mean just what I say."</p> +</div> +</div> +</div> + + + <br clear="all" /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + <a name="bell" id="bell"></a> +<h2>THE STICKLEBACK BELL-RINGERS.</h2> +<h4><span class="sc">By C. F. Holder</span>.</h4> + +<p> +A certain pond in the country was once peopled +with a number of turtles, frogs, and fishes which I +came to consider my pets, and which at last grew so +tame that I fed them from my hands. Among +them, however, were four or five little sticklebacks +that lived under the shade of a big willow, and +these were so quarrelsome that I generally fed +them apart from the rest. But sometimes all met, +and then the feast usually was ended by the death +of a minnow. For, shocking to say, whenever there +was a dispute for the food, some one of the little +fishes was almost sure to be devoured by the hungry +sticklebacks.</p> +<p> +These stickleback-and-minnow combats, after a<a name="page32" id="page32"></a><span class="left">[page 32]</span> +while, came to be of daily occurrence, and the reason +for this was a singular one, which I must explain.</p> + +<div class="figleft"> +<img src="images/0152-343.jpg" width="343" height="600" alt="THE STICLEBACK BELL-RINGERS." border="0" /> +</div> +<p> +Under the willow shade, and from one of the +branches, I had hung a miniature "belfry," containing +a tiny brass bell, and had led the string into +the water, letting it go down to a considerable depth. +At first, I tied bait at intervals upon the line, and +the sticklebacks, of course, seized upon it, and thus +rang the bell. Generally the ringing was done in a +very grave and proper way, although sometimes, when +the bait was too tightly tied, the quick peals sounded like +a call to a fire.</p><br style="line-height: 12%" /> +<p> +I generally fed them first, about twenty feet up +the bank; but one morning I found one or two +had followed me down to the residence of the +stickleback family. They met with a rude reception, +however, and, to avoid making trouble, the +next day I went to the willow first. But no sooner +had the bell begun to ring, than I saw a lot of ripples +coming down, and in a second the two factions +were in mortal combat. The sticklebacks were fighting +not only for breakfast, but for their nests, which +were near by; and they made sad work of the poor +minnows, who, though smart in some things, did +not know when they were whipped, and so kept up +the fight, though losing one of their number nearly +every morning. The bell now and then rang violently, +but I fear it was only sounding an appeal +from a voracious stickleback +whose appetite had +got the better of his rage.</p> +<p> +So it went on every +morning. The minnows +had learned what the bell +meant, and though usually +defeated in the fight, they +in reality had their betters +as servants to ring the bell +and call them to meals. +Finally, they succeeded, +by force of great numbers, +in driving away their pugnacious +little rivals, and +the bell hung silent; for, +strange to say, they knew +what the sound meant, but +I could never teach them +to ring it, when they could +rise and steal the worm +from my hand without. +But I am inclined to think +it was more laziness than +inability to learn, as they +afterward picked up readily +some much more difficult +tricks. I taught them to leap from the water into +my hand, and lie as if dead; and having arranged +a slide of polished wood upon the bank, by placing<a name="page33" id="page33"></a><span class="left">[page 33]</span> +worms upon it I soon had them leaping out and +sliding down like so many boys coasting in the +winter. That they afterward did it for amusement +I know, as I often watched them unobserved when +there was nothing to attract but the fun of sliding. +This kind of amusement is not uncommon with +many other animals, particularly seals, which delight +in making "slides" on the icy shores.</p> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="cricket" id="cricket"></a> +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/0154-1-600.jpg" width="600" height="463" alt="THE CRICKET ON THE HEARTH." border="0" /> +</div> + + +<h2>THE CRICKET ON THE HEARTH.</h2> +<h4><span class="sc">By Mrs. Clara Doty Bates</span>.</h4> + +<table width="100%" align="center" border="0" summary="poem"> +<tr> + <td class="poem"> +<div class="poem2"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>Old Granny Cricket's rocking-chair,</p> + <p class="i2">Creakety-creak, creakety-creak!—</p> +<p>Back and forth, and here and there,</p> + <p class="i2">Squeakety-squeak, squeakety-squeak!—</p> +<p>On the hearth-stone, every night,</p> + <p class="i2">Rocks and rocks in the cheery light.</p> +<p>Little old woman, dressed in black,</p> + <p class="i2">With spindling arms and a crooked back,</p> +<p>She sits with a cap on her wise old head,</p> + <p class="i2">And her eyes are fixed on the embers red;</p> +<p>She does not sing, she does not speak,</p> + <p class="i2">But the rocking-chair goes creakety-creak!</p> + </div> + </div> + </td> + <td class="poem"> + <div class="poem2"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>Cheerily sounds the rocking-chair,</p> + <p class="i2">Creakety-creak, creakety-creak!—</p> +<p>While it swings in the firelight there,</p> + <p class="i2">Squeakety-squeak, squeakety-squeak!</p> +<p>Old Granny Cricket, rocking, rocking,</p> + <p class="i2">Knits and knits on a long black stocking.</p> +<p>No matter how swiftly her fingers fly,</p> + <p class="i2">She never can keep her family,</p> +<p>With their legs so long from foot to knee,</p> + <p class="i2">Stockinged as well as they ought to be;</p> +<p>That's why, at night, week after week,</p> + <p class="i2">Her rocking-chair goes squeakety-squeak!</p> +</div> +</div> +</td></tr></table> + + + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="page34" id="page34"></a><span class="left">[page 34]</span> + +<h2>HOW I WEIGHED THE THANKSGIVING TURKEY.</h2> +<h4><span class="sc">By G. M. Shaw</span>.</h4> + +<p> +"Here, sir! Please take this bird around to +Albro's, and see how much it weighs."</p> +<p> +The idea! What would the folks over the way +say, to see the "professor" walking out with a big +turkey under his arm? That was the way the +thing presented itself to the good-natured college-student +acting as private tutor in the family. But +Mrs. Simpson, the portly and practical housewife, +had no such idea of the fitness of things.</p> +<p> +It was the day before Thanksgiving, and the +farmer who had agreed to supply her with a turkey +had brought it, but had not weighed it, and, of +course, they could not agree on its weight, all of +which ended in the startling proposition with which +we began.</p> +<p> +"Well, if you aint the laziest man——! Just as +though it was going to hurt you any to take this +bird to the corner and back!" she went on, as she +saw me looking, apparently, for a hole to crawl +into, but, in reality, for the broom, which, when I +found, I made use of in putting into execution a plan +I had formed for weighing the turkey at home.</p> +<p> +I hung the broom-handle to the gas-jet by a wire +loop, and slid it along in the loop until it balanced. +By this time all were curious to see what I was about.</p> +<p> +I then fixed a wire to the turkey's feet and hooked +it so that it would slide on the broom-handle. Next +I got a flat-iron and fixed it in the same way. +When the broom was nicely balanced, I hung the +turkey on the broom end of the stick, two inches +from the balancing loop. Then I hung the flat-iron +on the other side, and shoved it along until it +balanced the turkey. Next I measured the distances +of the turkey and flat-iron from the balancing +loop, and found that the turkey hung two inches +and the flat-iron eight inches from the balancing +loop. That was all. I had found the weight of +the turkey, and told them: Twenty-four pounds.</p> +<p> +"Do you s'pose I'm going to believe all that +tomfoolery? It doesn't weigh more'n twenty, I +know. Here, Maggie! Take this out and ask +Albro to weigh it for you."</p> +<p> +"I'm blamed if he hasn't hit it about right," +said the farmer who had brought the turkey. +"How did you find out?"</p> +<p> +"Well, you see," said I, "the flat-iron has a +figure 6 on it; that shows that it weighs six pounds. +Now, if the turkey had not weighed more than the +flat-iron they would have balanced each other at +the same distance from the balancing loop; but +the turkey was the heavier, so I had to move the +flat-iron out further. At the same distance from +the loop as the turkey (two inches), the flat-iron +pulled six pounds' weight, and at every addition of +that distance it would pull six pounds more. Thus: +at four inches it pulled twelve pounds; at six inches, +eighteen pounds; and at eight inches, twenty-four +pounds. At that distance it just balanced the +turkey, thus proving that it weighed——"</p> +<p> +"Well, Maggie, what does Albro say?"</p> +<p> +"Twenty-four poun', mum," replied Maggie, +coming in.</p> +<p> +"Well, I give up," said Mrs. Simpson; and she +did, and so do I—till next time.</p> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="melon" id="melon"></a> +<h2>NIMBLE JIM AND THE MAGIC MELON</h2> +<h4><span class="sc">By J. A. Judson</span>.</h4> + +<p> +Once upon a time, in a snug little cottage by a +brook under a hill, lived an old widow and her only +child. She was a tidy, pleasant-faced dame, was +"Old Mother Growser;" and as to her boy, there +wasn't a brighter lad of his age in all the village. +His real name was James, but he had always been +so spry and handy that when he was a little bit of +a chap the neighbors called him "Nimble Jim." +At work in the cottage garden, or at play on the +village green, even at his books and slate, he was +ever the same industrious, active "Nimble Jim," +and always a comfort to his mother.</p> +<p> +His father had been the village cobbler, and when +he died the folks said: "Who'll mend our shoes +now, and auld Jamie gone?"</p> +<p> +Then up sprang the boy, saying: "I'll mend +them, now father's dead."</p> +<p> +The simple folks laughed at him. "Hoot! toot! +lad," said they; "ye canna mend shoes!"</p> +<p> +But he answered bravely: "Am I not fifteen<a name="page35" id="page35"></a><span class="left">[page 35]</span> +years old, and e'en a'most a mon? Haven't I all +father's tools? Haven't I seen him do it day after +day ever since I was a wee boy? It's time I was +doing something besides jobbin' and runnin' and +pretendin' to work! I may take to th' auld bench, +and e'en get my father's place among ye in time, +so I be good enough. Mother canna allus be +a-spinnin', spinnin', spinnin'. The poor old eyes +are growing dim a'ready,"—and Jim gently stroked +her thin gray hair.</p> +<p> +"Ye're a brave darlin', and my own handy +Nimble Jim," said the fond mother, smilingly.</p> +<p> +"Ah, well, boy," the neighbors said, "be about +it if ye will, for there's no cobbler hereabout now, +and the shoes must be mended. But ye'll do the +work fairly, mind, or we'll no' pay ye a penny!"</p> +<p> +"I'll try my best, and bide your good favor, +neighbors," was Jim's cheery answer.</p> +<p> +And so he succeeded to his father's old bench by +the window, the lap-stone and hammer and awl; +and as he waxed his thread and stitched away, +singing the old songs, the country folks passing by +would listen, look at each other, smile and nod +approvingly, or say:</p> +<p> +"Hark to that, friend! One might think auld +Jamie back again, with the whack o' the hammer +and the blithe song, though the voice ben't so +crackit like as th' auld one."</p> +<p> +"Aye, it's a bit clearer, but no happier. Auld +cobbler Jamie was a merry soul," says one.</p> +<p> +"And the lad'll prove worthy his father, I warrant. +Listen to the turn of that song, now; I've +heard Jamie singin' it many a day," says another.</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"Whack! whack! thump-pet-ty crack!</p> +<p>In go the shoe-nails with many a smack.</p> +<p>Zu! zu! pull the thread through;</p> +<p>Soon will the shoe be, done, master, for you!</p> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"Nay! nay! there's nothin' to pay,</p> +<p>If it is not mended as good as I say.</p> +<p>I do my work honestly—that is the thing;</p> +<p>Then Jamie the cobbler's as good as the king!"</p></div> +</div> +</div> +<p> +And the folks passed on, or stopped to leave +shoes to mend.</p> +<p> +Jim prospered in the old stall, and they called +him "Nimble Jim, the Cobbler," for soon he was +fairly installed as cobbler to the whole country-side. +He was happy, and his old mother was happy, and +proud, too, of the success of her boy, who was the +light of her home and the joy of her heart.</p> +<p> +All day Jim worked away at his bench. Winter +evenings he read his few books by the firelight; in +the cool of the summer days, or in the early mornings, +he busied himself in the little garden. His +vegetables were his pride, and for miles around no +one had so trim a garden-patch, or so many good +things in it, as Nimble Jim.</p> +<p> +Only one kind of all his plants failed to come +to anything,—his melon-vines,—and these always +failed. This began to grieve him sorely, for he +was fond of melons; and, besides, he thought if he +could only raise fine ones, he might sell them for a +deal of money, like gruff, rich old Farmer Hummidge.</p> +<p> +"Oh dear! my melons don't grow like other +folkses. They don't come up at all, or if they do +they wither or spindle away," he said, losing his +temper, and tearing up some of the vines by the +roots. Then he went into the cottage, angrily, +and began to pound away, driving in big hob-nails. +With the twilight, his mother called him to the +simple meal, but he was sullen and silent.</p> +<p> +"What be the matter with ye, my Nimble Jim?" +asked the good dame, cheerily.</p> +<p> +"Matter enough, mother! My melons wont +grow; there's somethin' the matter with them. +Faith, I believe some imp has cast a spell over 'em. +I do, mother," quoth he, thumping the table with +his fist until the dishes rattled.</p> +<p> +"Softly, softly, boy! Where's thy good nature +gone?" said Mother Growser, staring at him in +wonder.</p> +<p> +"It be well enough to say 'Softly, softly,'" said +he, "and I don't want to grieve ye, mother; but +it's naught with me but hammer, stitch, dig,—hammer, +stitch, dig,—the day in, the day out, +when I might be raisin' fine melons and sellin' 'em +for mints of gold in the great city. Yea, mother, +sellin' 'em e'en to the king and queen and all the +grand lords and ladies at the court, like old Farmer +Hummidge."</p> +<p> +For almost the first time in his life Jim was unhappy.</p> +<p> +"I would you had your wish, Nimble Jim; but +then we've a neat bit garden besides the melons; +and the home is snug, and you're a good boy and +the best o' cobblers. Can't you be happy with +that, my lad?"</p> +<p> +But Nimble Jim shook his head, for the spirit of +discontent had taken possession of him.</p> +<p> +Now, for many days, Nimble Jim neglected his +cobbling and let the weeds grow in his garden, +while he moodily watched his melons as they +withered away. Soon he came to idle about them +in the evening, too, until, one bright moonlight +night, as he was grieving over the wretched, scraggy +vines, he heard a tiny, silvery voice quite near him +cry, tauntingly:</p> +<p> +"Hello, Nimble Jim! How are your melons?"</p> +<p> +Jim would have been very angry at such a question +could he have seen anybody to be angry with; +but, though he looked and looked with all his eyes, +not a soul could he see.</p> + +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/0156-1.jpg"> +<img src="images/0156-1-250.jpg" width="250" height="352" alt="THE ELFIN QUEEN" border="0" /></a> +<p class="center"> +THE ELFIN QUEEN +</p></div> +<p> +"Hello, Nimble Jim! How are your melons? +Ha, ha, ha! Melons! melons! Ha, ha, ha!" +<a name="page36" id="page36"></a><span class="left">[page 36]</span> +And the sweet little voice sang, in a merry, mocking +strain:</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> + <p class="i4">"Nice sweet melons!</p> + <p class="i4">Round ripe melons!</p> +<p>Nimble Jim likes them, I know.</p> + <p class="i4">Mean sour melons,</p> + <p class="i4">Crooked green melons,</p> +<p>Nimble Jim only can grow!</p> +</div> +</div> +<p> +Ha, ha, ha! How are your melons, Nimble Jim?"</p> + +<p> +"Who are you? What +are you? Where are you?" +cried Jim, hardly knowing +whether to be angry, +amused, or frightened.</p> +<p> +"You ask a good many +questions at once, don't +you?" said the silvery +voice. "<i>Who</i> am I? <i>What</i> +am I? <i>Where</i> am I? Eh! +I'm the Queen of the Elfs," +said her tiny majesty, "and +if you look sharply you'll +see where I am."</p> +<p> +Just then a moonbeam +streaming through the +trees overhead fell across +his path, and, dancing up +and down on it, he saw +the tiny elfin queen,—a +lovely little creature with +long, bright, wavy hair, +and glittering garments +fluttering in the breeze, +wings like a butterfly, a +mischievous smile on her +face, and in her hand a +wee wand tipped with a star. But the brightest +thing about her was the twinkle that played hide-and-seek +in her eye.</p> +<p> +Nimble Jim took off his hat and made a low bow.</p> +<p> +"Now, what is all this about?—and why are you +neglecting your work, sir?" demanded she, sternly.</p> +<p> +Jim trembled beneath her royal gaze, little as +she was, and replied humbly:</p> +<p> +"May it please your majesty, I wish I'd some +melon-seeds that'd grow like magic. I am dead +tired of being nothin' but a cobbler. I want to +be a melon-merchant, and raise the finest, largest +melons ever seen,—supply the whole kingdom with +them, and grow to be as rich as the king himself."</p> +<p> +"Oh, you do, do you?" she answered, laughing +her merry little laugh, and capering up and down +the moonbeam. "Oh! quite a modest youth! +Well, I'll make a bargain with you; and if you +will do something for me, you shall have your +wish," said the queen.</p> +<p> +Nimble Jim was about to pour out his gratitude, +when she interrupted him, saying: "Now, Nimble +Jim, listen to me. Your wish is a foolish one, and +I warn you that if you gain it you will be sorry. +Why will you not be content as you are?"</p> +<p> +"Your majesty," replied the obstinate youth. "I +<i>cannot</i> be content as I am."</p> +<p> +"Well, since you insist on having your own +way, we'll make our bargain. Here,"—and, sitting +down on the moonbeam, she pulled off a shoe,—"here, +sir, I want you to +mend my shoe. I tripped +just now on a rough +place in this moonbeam. +Mend the rip; show me +you are a good cobbler, +and I promise that you +shall have your wish."</p> +<p> +"But, your majesty," +began Nimble Jim, taking +the shoe, which was no +bigger than a bean, "I +can't sew such a little shoe; +my fingers are ——"</p> +<p> +"There, there! Stop! +I'm a queen, and people +don't say 'can't' or 'wont' +to me, sir," interrupted +her majesty, with much +dignity. "Take the shoe, +and find a way to mend +it. I will come for it to-morrow +night at this same +place and hour," and off +she went up the moonbeam, +half skipping, half +flying, while Jim stood +stupidly staring until she had entirely disappeared. +Then he began, slowly: "Well,—I—never—in—all—my—life—saw—such—a——"</p> +<p> +He said no more, but went in, and sat up all +night, thinking how and where he could find needle +and thread fine enough to do such a piece of cobbling +as this. About dawn a thought struck him. +His mother thought he had gone crazy when she +saw him chasing bees and pulling down spider-webs. +Hours and hours he worked, and though +his fingers were big, they were nimble, like his +name; so, by and by, with a needle made of a +bee's sting and thread drawn from a spider-web, he +sewed up the rip in her fairy majesty's dainty shoe.</p> +<p> +He hardly could wait for the hour of meeting, +but went into the garden, with the shoe in his +hand, long before the time. At length, the queen +came sliding down the moonbeam, laughing and +singing:</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +"Hello, Nimble Jim! How are your melons?" +</div> +</div> +<p> +But he was not angry now; he only laughed +respectfully, made a profound bow, and said:</p> +<a name="page37" id="page37"></a><span class="left">[page 37]</span> +<p> +"May it please your majesty, I have mended +your majesty's shoe."</p> +<p> +The merry little queen took it from him, looked +at it closely, saying to herself: "Humph! I didn't +think he could, but he did,"—and, turning to Jim, +said, much more graciously than before: "I suppose +you think yourself quite a cobbler; and so you +are—for a mortal. Since you have done your work +so well, I will do as I said. Now," she continued, +handing him a little package about as big as a baby's +thumb, "plant these melon-seeds, and——"</p> +<p> +"Are these little things melon seeds? They +look too small," interrupted Jim,—for he had made +no ceremony, even in the queen's presence, about +peeping into the package,—and it must be confessed +that they were very small indeed.</p> +<p> +"Certainly they are, or I would not tell you so. +They are the magic melons of fairy-land. As I +was about to say when you rudely interrupted, +plant——"</p> +<p> +"I beg your pardon, your majes——"</p> + +<p> +"<i>Will</i> you keep still? Was there <i>ever</i> such a +chatterbox!" said she. "I say, plant these melon-seeds +to-morrow at sunrise, and you will have your +wish, foolish boy." And, while Jim was thinking +of melons and wealth, she skipped away up the +moonbeam, singing:</p> +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"Nimble Jim is quite demented,—</p> + <p class="i2">Wants to be a melon-king!</p> +<p>Silly mortal! not contented</p> + <p class="i2">With the riches home-joys bring!</p> + <p class="i6">Oh! ho!</p> + <p class="i6">Oh! ho!</p> +<p>He will be sorry to-morrow;</p> +<p>To-morrow will bring only sorrow."</p> +</div> +</div> +<p> +But Nimble Jim heeded her not. This night +also he could not close his eyes, and in the early +morning he hastened to tell his mother their good +fortune. She looked grave, and said:</p> +<p> +"Ah, my lad! I'd rather you minded the cobbler's +bench, nor trafficked with fairies. I fear me +they're uncanny folks to deal with."</p> +<p> +"Never fear, mother; we'll be rich yet, and I'll +make you a queen yourself, and then you need +spin no more," said Jim, wild with hope and excitement.</p> +<p> +"I don't mind the spinnin', my boy. I'd rather +be——".</p> +<p> +Jim heard no more, for he dashed off at once to +the garden to plant his precious seeds just at sunrise. +With furious energy, he tore up all his old<a name="page38" id="page38"></a><span class="left">[page 38]</span> +vines, flung them over the fence, and, after that, +spaded up the melon-bed with the greatest care. +Then he opened the paper and poured the magical +seeds into his hand.</p> +<p> +There were only <i>four</i>—four wee seeds, each no +bigger than a pin's head! His first impulse was +to fling them away in wrath, for he thought such +little things couldn't possibly make as big a fortune +as he wanted. But then he reflected, "Fairies are +little, so I suppose their seeds are little, too. I'll +try them, anyhow." And with that he put them in +the ground and carefully covered them.</p> +<p> +In an instant, the ground burst open in four +places, and up shot four sturdy melon-vines, that +grew east, west, north, south!</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/045-600.jpg" width="600" height="441" alt="THE YARD WAS FULL OF MELON-VINE" border="0" /> +<p class="center">"BEFORE NIMBLE JIM COULD GET BACK TO THE HOUSE, THE YARD WAS FULL OF MELON-VINE."</p> +</div> + +<p> +Grew? No! they raced, they tore, they dashed +through the country far and wide! In no time, +before Nimble Jim could get back to the house +door, the whole yard was full of melon-vine, and +one great big melon, bigger than the cottage itself, +blocked the door-way.</p> + +<p> +"Oh! oh! oh!" roared Jim. "What <i>have</i> I +done? What <i>shall</i> I do?" And with his spade +he cut a hole through the melon. It took him a +whole hour, and when he got into the house he +found that his poor mother had fainted from fright.</p> +<p> +And all the time the vine and melons kept growing—east, +west, north, south.</p> +<p> +Nimble Jim was frantic!</p> +<p> +But the vines didn't mind Jim. On they went, +growing like mad, a mile a minute, faster than any +railroad train. The big arms filled up the main +roads; the smaller ones crammed themselves into +the lanes and by-paths, while the tendrils embraced +the tall trees, the houses, and the church steeples, +and snarled up everything. The leaves grew so +large, thick and green that they covered the whole +face of the country, shutting out the sun from the +fields so the crops couldn't grow; and the whole +kingdom became so dark from the awful shade of +Nimble Jim's magic melon-vine, that the people +had to burn candles day and night.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/046-600.jpg" width="600" height="177" alt="THE MAGIC MELON OVERRUNS THE COUNTRY." border="0" /> +<p class="center">THE MAGIC MELON OVERRUNS THE COUNTRY.</p> +</div> + +<p> +It grew like mad. On! on! Stem, branch, +leaf, tendril, fruit—on, on it went! The melons +grew—great, round, smooth, rich, ripe, juicy melons, +as big as houses—at the cross-roads, on the +roads, in the fields, filling barn-yards and door-yards +so people and cattle couldn't pass, or go in +or out, till they had eaten their way through the +melons, or got ladders and climbed over, or dug +trenches and crawled under! On, on it went, surrounding +the king's palaces and choking up his +forts! Down, down it grew into the brooks and +rivers, and out into the king's harbors, where the +tendrils seized and wound about his ships of war +riding at anchor, and climbed up the masts, while +melons grew on the decks till the vessels sank to +the bottom! It choked up and drank up all the +rivers and lakes in the kingdom, or dammed them +up so the waters overflowed the land, drowning +people and cattle, and sweeping away houses and +barns!</p> +<p> +On, on it grew—melons, melons everywhere! +Ruin and starvation stared the nation in the face; +while poor, poor Nimble Jim, hid within the rind +of the melon he had dug out, shivered, cried and +bewailed his folly.</p> +<p> +"I'll be killed! I'll be killed! The people +will murder me!" he shrieked. But no one of +them all save his mother knew he had had anything +to do with bringing on the dire calamity +that had befallen the kingdom.</p> +<p> +Then some of the people proposed: "Let us go +immediately to our king, and ask him to make a +law that the vine shall stop growing ere it ruin us +forever."</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/048-450.jpg" width="450" height="467" alt="MAKING AN ENTRANCE FOR THE KING THROUGH THE MELON IN FRONT OF THE PALACE GATE." border="0" /> +<p class="center">MAKING AN ENTRANCE FOR THE KING THROUGH THE MELON IN FRONT OF THE PALACE GATE.</p> +</div> + +<p> +But when they had eaten and hewed their way to +the palace, they found the king had gone to count +his soldiers; and while he was gone the vine came +galloping along, and an enormous melon grew and +blocked up the palace gate. So they had to help +the king and his guards force their way through to +the hall of audience.</p> +<p> +When they all were in, and the king had wiped<a name="page39" id="page39"></a><span class="left">[page 39]</span> +the melon-juice off his robes and crown, and was +fairly seated on his throne, surrounded by his +guards and courtiers, the trumpets sounded, drums +beat, banners waved, and the people fell on their +knees and said:</p> +<p> +"O mighty king! We, thy liege subjects, have +come to tell thee of the ruin and desolation this +fearful vine maketh in all thy great kingdom, and +to entreat thy majesty to enact a law forbidding +it to grow any more, and commanding it to wither +away."</p> +<p> +"Alas!" answered the troubled king, "what +can I do? No law of mine can stop this awful +thing. It is an enchanted vine sent to torment us. +Hear me, my people! Proclaim it, ye my heralds! +I pledge my kingly word to give up my crown and +kingdom, and change places with any one of my +subjects who will wither and instantly sweep away +this direful vine. I, your king, am as helpless as a +child to stop it."</p> +<p> +And the king, who was a good old man, shed +tears for the misery of his people, and commanded +the queen and all the court to dress themselves in +mourning and fast night and day.</p> +<p> +The people got home as best they could, and +each fell to thinking how he could stop the vine +and so be king. Even Nimble Jim heard of this. +So, every night, he watched, hoping to see the +elfin queen. At last she came, as before, on her +moonbeam footpath, saying: "Hello, Nimble Jim! +How are your melons by this time?"</p> +<p> +But he was in no mood to be facetious now. He +only said, humbly:</p> +<p> +"May it please your majesty, what can I do to +stop the growth of this horrible vine, and instantly +sweep it from the face of the earth? Help me, I +beg your gracious majesty!"—and Jim knelt before +her.</p> +<p> +"Ha, ha! Nimble Jim don't seem to like melons! +I told you you'd be sorry," laughed the +little elfin queen. "I suppose you still want to +be as rich as the king? Or perhaps you would +like to be the king himself?" said she, tauntingly.</p> +<p> +"Of course I would, your majesty," said Jim, +"if the vine can only be stopped."</p> +<p> +"You are a very good cobbler, Nimble Jim," +she answered, "and since you mended my shoe so +nicely, and as the king has promised to exchange +with any one who will wither and destroy the vine, +and as you might as well be king as another (and +as you need a good lesson," said she to herself), +"I give you the means to do it all!"</p> +<p> +And the tiny queen pulled off the mended shoe, +and cried: "Here, you silly boy! Take this and +run to the palace. Once there, you need touch but +a tendril with this magic shoe, and the vine will +wither and disappear, and the crown and kingdom +will be yours. I wish you joy of both. Good-bye! +You will learn contentment yet, poor Jim, I hope," +she added, as he ran out of hearing, with the +precious little shoe in his hand.</p> +<p> +Leaving his poor mother behind, for he had forgotten +all about her during these days, Jim set off +for the palace. It was a long, hard journey, on +account of the melon-vines, that not only blocked +the road, but even chased him. Many a narrow +escape had he from being crushed to death in the +embrace of some young tendril that would shoot +out, wriggling and writhing toward him like a great +green serpent.</p> +<p> +At length, he arrived at the palace gate, which +in old times was marble, but now was only a hole +that had been cut through a melon.</p> +<p> +"Halt! Who goes there!" shouted a sentinel, +thrusting his spear in front of Jim's panting breast.</p> +<p> +"It's only Nimble Jim, the Cobbler. I want to +see the king," said the boy.</p> +<p> +"Be off, you fellow!" shouted the sentry. "Our +noble king don't hob-nob with cobblers! Be off, I +say, or——" And he shook his spear at our hero +ominously.</p> +<p> +"Hold, there!" shouted the king himself, straining +out of a window to look between the melon-leaves. +"Hold, I say! What do you want, young +cobbler?"</p> +<p> +"I want your crown and kingdom, sire," boldly +answered Jim. "I've heard of the new law, and +I'll stop the melon-vine."</p> +<p> +"Let him pass, guards," shouted the king; +"and send him hither."</p> +<p> +A little page dressed in black led Jim to the +throne-room. The king and his court no longer +blazed in gold and jewels. Black covered everybody +and everything, even the golden throne itself, +and grief and dismay were on all faces.</p> +<p> +Then said the king, in a hollow tone: "What +know you of this vine? Speak!"</p> +<p> +And Jim, tremblingly, told the whole story.</p> +<p> +"Wicked boy!" groaned the king. "You well +deserve punishment for the ruin you have brought +on the land. But I have passed my royal word, +and you shall try to destroy the vine. If you succeed, +bad as you are, you then will be the king and +I the cobbler. But if you fail, you shall be put +where you shall have nothing but melons to eat for +the rest of your days. Guards, take him away!"</p> +<p> +That night, before the king and queen and all +the assembled court, when the moon was fairly +risen, Nimble Jim touched with the toe of the +magic shoe the end of a tendril that was running +rapidly up a tower.</p> +<p> +In an instant, every vestige of the vine vanished +throughout all the palace grounds; and in the +morning the people all over the country shouted<a name="page40" id="page40"></a><span class="left">[page 40]</span> +for joy and cried with one voice: "Let us all go up +to the coronation, for to-day we have a new king +who has delivered us from the horrible vine."</p> +<p> +And on they came, in hordes, till the capital was +full and the country about the palace was one vast +camp, while throughout the kingdom not a trace +of the vine was to be seen.</p> +<p> +Then the nobles and prelates prepared for the +coronation. It was magnificent. They girt Jim +with the sword of state, clothed him in the imperial +robes, placed the scepter in his hand, and, as the +golden crown descended upon his head, all the +people shouted:</p> +<p> +"Hail, King Nimblejimble, our deliverer! Long +live the king!"</p> + +<p> +And the silly boy was happy.</p> +<p> +Meanwhile, the poor, faithful old king, who +cheerfully had given up all for his people, was +hammering and stitching and digging away on +Jim's cobbler-bench off in the village; and Jim's +mother, whom the naughty boy, in his strange +elevation, had forgotten all about, tenderly cared +for the humbled old monarch.</p> +<p> +Before long, the elfin queen saw how patient the +old king and Jim's mother were, and how badly +Nimble Jim was behaving now he was king, for he +was given up to all sorts of wickedness and tyranny, +was fast becoming hated by every one, and himself +was beginning to see that he was not nearly so +happy as he had been while he was a cobbler.</p> +<p> +Jim was really good at heart, only his unreasonable +discontent with his lot had got him into all<a name="page41" id="page41"></a><span class="left">[page 41]</span> +this misery. At last, he began to repent, and, one +moonlight night when he was walking alone on the +palace terrace, he said:</p> +<p> +"I wish I could see that little elfin queen, and I +would ask her to let me go back home again."</p> +<p> +"Well, here I am!" said the silvery voice; and, +sitting on a moonbeam beside him, there she was. +"Tired of being king, Jim?" she asked.</p> +<p> +"Yes, your majesty, indeed I am," he replied.</p> +<p> +"Want any more melons, Jim?" said she, +laughing.</p> +<p> +"No, no, no!" groaned Jim. "No more!"</p> +<p> +"How is your mother, Jim?" asked her majesty.</p> +<p> +"Alas! I don't know,"—and he hung his head +in shame.</p> +<p> +"Are you ready to go and see her, Jim?" she +asked, gently. "And will you be contented now?"</p> +<p> +"Yes, yes!" was his eager reply.</p> +<p> +Now, the old king had been mending shoes all +day, and was at this moment resting in the cottage +porch, when, suddenly, he was whisked away on a +cloud and landed in his palace again. His crown +was popped on his head, and the scepter thrust in +his hand, while his old chamberlain tenderly tucked +him up in bed.</p> +<p> +At the same instant, another cloud brought back +Nimble Jim to his bench and his faithful mother, +who at once made him some oat-meal porridge +without a murmur or word of reproach.</p> +<p> +"There!" said the elfin queen to herself. "That +boy is cured of his silly notions."</p> +<p> +"Mother, I think I don't care much for melons. +I wont plant any more," said Jim next morning.</p> +<p> +"I don't like 'em myself, lad," said the mother. +"I'd a deal rather you'd stick to the bench, like +your auld father."</p> +<p> +"I will, mother dear," answered Nimble Jim. +And he is mending shoes there to this day, as +happy as happy can be.</p> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + + +<a name="lady-girl" id="lady-girl"></a> + +<div class="figcenter1" style="width: 40%;"> +<img src="images/049-400.jpg" width="400" height="362" alt="MAMMA'S LADY-GIRL" border="0" /> + + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i4">"Oh! I'm my mamma's lady-girl</p> +<p class="i4">And I must sit quite still;</p> +<p class="i4">It would not do to jump and whirl,</p> +<p class="i4">And get my hair all out of curl,</p> +<p class="i4">And rumple up my frill.</p> +<p class="i4">No, I'm my mamma's lady-girl,</p> +<p class="i4">So I must sit quite still."</p> +</div> +</div> +</div> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="page42" id="page42"></a><span class="left">[page 42]</span> +<h2>A BUDGET OF HOME-MADE CHRISTMAS GIFTS.</h2><br /><br /> +<a name="II1r" id="II1r"></a> +<h4><span class="sc">Hints for Girls and Boys, Little and Big</span>.<a href="#II1"><sup>1</sup></a></h4> + +<div class="figleft"> +<a href="images/050a.jpg"><img src="images/050a-100.jpg" width="100" height="104" alt="W" border="0" /></a> + +</div> +<br /><br /> + + +<p> +HO is it that every year invents the thousand-and-one +new and pretty things which hang on Christmas-trees, +and stuff the toes of Christmas stockings? +Who is it that has so wise and watchful an eye +for the capacities of little people, and the tastes of +bigger ones, providing for each, planning for tiny +purses with almost nothing in them, as well as +for fat wallets stuffed with bank-bills, and suggesting +something which can be made, accepted +and enjoyed by everybody, large and small, all the +wide world over? Who can it be that possesses +this inexhaustible fertility of invention and kindness +of heart? No ordinary human being, you may be +sure. Not Father Santa Claus! He has enough +to do with distributing the presents after they are +made; besides, fancy-work is not in a man's line,—not +even a saint's! But what so likely as that he +should have a mate, and that it is to her we are +indebted for all this? What an immense work-basket +Mother Santa Claus's must be! What a +glancing thimble and swift needle and thread! +Can't you imagine her throwing aside her scissors +and spool-bag to help the dear saint "tackle up" +and load the sledge? And who knows but she sits +behind as he drives over the roofs of the universe +on the blessed eve, and holds the reins while Santa +Claus dispenses to favored chimneys the innumerable +pretty things which he and she have chuckled +over together months and months before the rest +of us knew anything about them?</p> +<p> +This is not a fact. It can't be proved in any way, +for none of us knows anything about the Santa +Clauses or their abode. There is no telegraphing, +or writing to the selectmen of their town to inquire +about them; they haven't even a post-office address. +But admitting it to be a fiction, it is surely +a pleasant one; so, as the children say, "Let's +play that it is true," and proceed to see what +Mother Santa Claus has in her basket for us this +year. We will first pull out some easy things for the +benefit of little beginners who are not yet up to all +the tricks of the needle; then some a little harder +for the more advanced class; and, at bottom of all, +big girls not afraid to dive will find plenty of elaborate +designs suited to their taste and powers.</p> +<p> +Here, to begin with, is something nice for papa's +pocket:</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Postage-Stamp Holder</span>.</h4> + +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/050b.jpg"><img src="images/050b-200.jpg" width="200" height="270" alt="STAMP HOLDER" border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A POSTAGE-STAMP HOLDER.</p> +</div> + +<p> +Cut two pieces of perforated board, or of stiff +morocco, two inches long by one and a half wide, +and stitch them together, leaving one end open. +If you choose the board, a little border in cat-stitch +or feather-stitch should be worked before putting +the pieces together, and, if you like, an initial in the +middle of one side. If the morocco is chosen, an +initial in colored silk will be pretty, and the edges +should be bound with narrow ribbon, and over-handed +together.</p> +<p> +Cut two other pieces of the material a quarter of +an inch smaller than the first. Bind the morocco +with ribbon. Make a fastening at one end with a ribbon +loop; place the stamps between the two, and slip the +little envelope thus filled into the outer case, the open end +down. It fits so snugly that it will not fall out in the +pocket, and is easily drawn forth by means of the loop +when papa wants to get at his stamps.</p> + + <p> +A letter-case for papa's other pocket: This can +be made either of morocco, oiled silk, or rubber +cloth. Cut an envelope-shaped piece, about an +inch larger all round than an ordinary letter envelope. +Bind the edges, work an initial on one side, +and for a fastening use a loop of elastic braid.</p> +<br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Sand-Bags for Windows</span>.</h4> +<p> +These are capital presents for grandmammas +whose windows rattle in winter weather and let cold +air in between the sashes. You must measure the +window, and cut in stout cotton cloth a bag just as +long as the sash is wide, and about four inches +across. Stitch this all round, leaving one end<a name="page43" id="page43"></a><span class="left">[page 43]</span> +open, and stuff it firmly with fine, dry sand. Sew +up the open end, and slip the bag into an outer +case of bright scarlet flannel, made just a trifle +larger than the inner one, so that it may go in +easily. Lay the sand-bag over the crack between +the two sashes, and on cold nights, when you are +asleep, grandmamma will rejoice in the little giver +of such a comfortable bulwark against the wind.</p><br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">Rack for Tooth-Brushes, in Rustic-Work</span>.</h4> +<p> +This is very simple, but it is pretty as well. Cut +two straight spruce twigs, each having two or three +little branches projecting upward at an angle of +forty-five degrees. These twigs must be as much +alike in shape as possible. Place them six inches +apart; lay two cross-twigs across, as you see them +in the picture, and tie the corners with fine wire, +or fasten them with tiny pins. Two diagonal braces +will add to the strength of the rack. Hang it to +the wall above the wash-stand by a wire or ribbon. +The tooth-brushes rest on the parallel branches.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/051a.jpg"><img src="images/051a-400.jpg" width="400" height="341" alt="A RACK FOR TOOTH-BRUSHES." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A RACK FOR TOOTH-BRUSHES.</p> +</div> + +<p> +For further particulars concerning spruce-wood +work, see <span class="sc">St. Nicholas</span>, Vol. III., pp. 114 and 115.</p><br /><br /> + + + +<div class="figleft" style="width: 33%;"> +<a href="images/051b.jpg"><img src="images/051b-150.jpg" width="150" height="178" alt="MINIATURE HANGING-SHELVES." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">MINIATURE HANGING-SHELVES. +</p> +</div> + +<h4><span class="sc">Miniature Hanging-Shelves</span>.</h4> +<p> +Boys who have learned to use their pocket-knives +skillfully may make a very pretty set of +hanging-shelves by taking +three bits of thin wood (the +sides of a cigar-box, for instance), +well smoothed and +oiled, boring a hole in each +corner, and suspending them +with cords, run in, and knotted +underneath each shelf +as in the picture. The wood +should be about eight inches +long by three wide, and the +shelves, small as they are, will be found convenient +for holding many little articles.</p><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Paper-Cutters</span>.</h4> +<p> +Another idea for these graduates of the knife is +this falchion-shaped paper-cutter. It can be made +of any sort of hard-wood, neatly cut out, rubbed +smooth with sand-paper, and oiled or varnished. +It has the advantage that the materials cost almost +nothing. Suggestions for more elaborate articles +in wood will be given further on.</p> +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/051c.jpg"><img src="images/051c-400.jpg" width="400" height="76" alt="A FALCHION-SHAPED PAPER-CUTTER." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A FALCHION-SHAPED PAPER-CUTTER.</p> +</div> + +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/051d.jpg"><img src="images/051d-250.jpg" width="250" height="272" alt="A WALL LETTER-HOLDER FOR PAPA." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center"><span class="sc">A WALL LETTER-HOLDER FOR PAPA</span>. +</p> +</div> +<br /><br /><br /><br /> +<h4><span class="sc">A Wall Letter-Holder</span>.</h4> +<p> +This is something which quite a little boy could +make. Cut out three pieces of thin wood, a foot +long by six inches wide; smooth and sand-paper +two of them, bore a hole in each corner and in the +middle of one side, and fasten them together with +fine wire, cord, ribbon, or the small brass pins +which are used for holding manuscripts. The +pieces should be held a little apart. Cut one end +of the third piece into some ornamental shape, glue +it firmly to the back of one of the others, and suspend +it from the wall by a hole bored in the top. +It will be found a useful thing to hold letters or +pamphlets. A clever boy could make this much +handsomer by cutting a pattern over the front, or +an initial, or monogram, or name in the middle. +The wood should be oiled or shellacked.</p> +<br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Shoe-Cases</span>.</h4> +<div class="figleft"> +<a href="images/052-1.jpg"><img src="images/052-1-300.jpg" width="300" height="126" alt=" A SHOE-CASE FOR TRAVELING." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A SHOE-CASE FOR TRAVELING.</p> +</div><br /> +<p> +These cases are meant to take the place of paper +when shoes are to be wrapped up to go in a trunk. +They are made of brown crash, bound with red +worsted braid. One end is pointed so as to turn<a name="page44" id="page44"></a><span class="left">[page 44]</span> +over and button down, or the top has strings over +the braid to tie the mouth up. There should be +three or four made at a time, as each holds but one +pair of shoes; and you will find that mamma or +your unmarried aunts will like them very much.</p> +<br /><br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">Skate-Bags</span>.</h4> +<p> +A nice present for a skating boy—and what boy +does not skate?—is a bag made much after the +pattern of the shoe-case just described, only larger +and wider, and of stouter material. Water-proof +cloth or cassimere is best. Sew it very strongly, +and attach a string of wide braid, or a strong elastic +strap, that the bag may be swung over the shoulders. +A big initial letter cut out in red flannel and button-holed +on will make a pretty effect.</p><br /><br /> + +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/052-3.jpg"><img src="images/052-3-300.jpg" width="300" height="351" alt="A SCALLOP-SHELL ALBUM." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A SCALLOP-SHELL ALBUM.</p> +</div><br /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">A Scallop-Shell Album</span>.</h4> +<p> +Young folks who are fortunate enough to have a +pair of good-sized scallop-shells (picked up, perhaps, +at the sea-side during the last summer vacation), +can make a very pretty little autograph +album in this way:</p> + +<p> +Take a pair of well-mated scallop-shells. Clean +them with brush and soap. When dry, paint them +with the white of egg to bring out the colors, and +let them dry again. Now insert between the shells +a dozen or more pages of writing-paper, cut of the +same shape and size as the shells, and very neatly +scalloped around the edges. Then secure the whole +loosely, as shown in the picture, by means of a +narrow ribbon passed through two holes previously +bored in the shells. Of course, holes also must be +pierced in the sheets of paper to correspond with +those in the shells.</p><br /><br /><br /><br /> + + + + +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/052-2.jpg"><img src="images/052-2-150.jpg" width="150" height="314" alt="A LITTLE NUN." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A LITTLE NUN.</p> +</div> + +<h4><span class="sc">A Little Nun</span>.</h4> + +<div class="figleft"> +<a href="images/053-1.jpg"><img src="images/053-1-300.jpg" width="300" height="297" alt="DIAGRAMS FOR MAKING THE LITTLE NUN." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">DIAGRAMS FOR MAKING THE LITTLE NUN.</p> +</div> +<p> +This droll figure is cut out in black and white +paper. Fastened at the end of a wide ribbon, it +would make an odd and pretty book-mark. The +black paper should be dull black, though the glossy will +answer if no other can be procured. Fig. 1 of the diagrams +is cut in white, a rosary and cross being put in with pen +and ink, and is folded in the middle by the dotted lines, +the head and arms being afterward folded over, as indicated. +Figs. 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 are cut in black and pasted +into place, leaving a narrow white border to the bonnet, +a mite of white band at the end of the sleeve, and a suggestion +of snowy stocking above the shoe. Fig. 6, cut +double, forms a book, which can be pasted to look +as if held in the hand.</p> +<br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">Bean-Bag Cases</span>.</h4> +<p> +Are there any of you who do not know the game +of bean-bags? It is capital exercise for rainy days, +besides being very good fun, and we would advise +all of you who are not familiar with it to make a set +at once. Usually, there are four bags to a set, but +any number of persons from two to eight can play +at bean-bags. Each player holds two, flinging to +his opponent the one in his right hand, and rapidly +shifting the one in his left to the right, so as to +leave the left hand free to catch the bag which is +thrown at him. A set of these bags would be a +nice present for some of you little girls to make for +your small brothers; and there are various ways +of ornamenting the bags gayly and prettily. The +real bags must first be made of stout ticking, over-handed +strongly all round, and filled (not too full) +with white baking-beans. Over these are drawn +covers of flannel, blue or scarlet, and you can work +an initial in white letters or braid on each, or make<a name="page45" id="page45"></a><span class="left">[page 45]</span> +each of the four bags of a different color—yellow, +blue, red, green; anything but black, which is +hard to follow with the eye, or white, which soils +too soon to be desirable.</p> +<br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">Baby's Shoes in Cashmere</span>.</h4> +<p> +Babies who can't walk are particularly hard on +their shoes! We once heard of one who "wore +out" nine pairs in two months! In these circumstances, +it seems very desirable to have a home +shoe-maker, and not have to frequent the shops too +often; so we will tell you of an easy kind, which +almost any little sister can make. You must take +an old morocco shoe which fits, and cut out the +shape in paper, first the sole, and then the upper. +Then cut the same shape in merino or cashmere, +line the little sole with Canton flannel or +silk, and bind it with very narrow ribbon. +Line and bind the upper in the same +way, and feather-stitch round the top and +down both sides of the opening in front; +sew on two ends of ribbon to tie round +the ankle, and the shoe is done. It will +look very pretty on baby's pink foot, and +he will thank you for your gift in his +own way, by kicking his toes joyfully, +and getting the shoes into his mouth as +soon as possible.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Hemlock Pillow</span>.</h4> +<p> +It is rather late in the year to make +these pillows, but you can try them for +next Christmas. They must be prepared for +beforehand by gathering and drying a quantity of +the needles of the hemlock, the fine ones from the +ends of the young shrubs being the best. Make +a large square bag of cotton, stuff it full of the +needles, and inclose it in an outer case of soft thick +silk or woolen stuff. The one from which we take +our description had "Rêve du forêt" embroidered +on it in dull yellow floss, and we don't believe any +one could help dreaming of the forest who laid a +cheek on the pillow and smelled the mingled spice +and sweetness of its aromatic contents.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Sachets for Linen-Closets</span>.</h4> +<p> +If you have any old-fashioned lavender growing +in your garden, you can easily make a delightful +sachet for mamma to lay among her sheets and +pillow-cases in the linen-closet, by cutting a square +bag of tarletane or Swiss muslin, made as tastefully +as you please, and stuffing it full of the flowers. +Another delightful scent is the <i>mellilotte</i>, or sweet +clover, which grows wild in many parts of the +country, and has, when dried, a fragrance like that +of the tonquin-bean, only more delicate.</p><br /><br /> + + +<div class="figleft"> +<a href="images/053-2.jpg"><img src="images/053-2-300.jpg" width="300" height="182" alt="A TISSUE-PAPER MAT." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A TISSUE-PAPER MAT.</p> +</div> +<h4><span class="sc">Tissue-Paper Mats</span>.</h4> + +<p> +We like to be able to tell you about these mats, +for they cost almost nothing at all, and are so +simple that any little boy or girl can make them. +All the material needed for them is three sheets of +tissue-paper,—a light shade, a medium shade, and +a dark shade, or, if you like, they can also be made +of one solid color, but are not quite so pretty then. +Cut a piece of each color nine inches square, fold +it across, and then across again, so as to form a +small square, and then fold from point to point. +Lay on it a pattern, like the first diagram on next +page, and cut the tissue paper according to the lines +of the pattern. Opening the paper, you will find +it a circle, with the edge pointed in scallops. Now +take a common hair-pin, bend its points over that +they may not tear the paper, slip it in turn over each +point, as shown in the diagram, and draw it down, +<i>crinkling</i> the paper into a sort of double scallop. +(The second diagram on next page will explain this<a name="page46" id="page46"></a><span class="left">[page 46]</span> +process.) Treat your three rounds in this way, lay +them over each other like a pile of plates, stick a +small pin in the middle to hold them, set a goblet +upon them, and gently arrange the crinkled edges +about its base, so as to give a full ruffled effect, like +the petals of a dahlia, although less stiff and regular. +These mats are exceedingly pretty.</p> + +<div class="figright" style="width:40%"> +<a href="images/054b.jpg"><img src="images/054b-252.jpg" width="252" height="450" alt="DIAGRAM SHOWING THE MANNER OF CRIMPING EACH SCALLOP OF THE PAPER MAT OVER A HAIR-PIN." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">DIAGRAM SHOWING THE MANNER OF CRIMPING EACH SCALLOP OF THE +PAPER MAT OVER A HAIR-PIN.</p> +</div> + + +<div class="figleft" style="width:40%"> +<a href="images/054a.jpg"><img src="images/054a-265.jpg" width="265" height="450" alt="DIAGRAM FOR PAPER MAT, SHOWING MODE OF FOLDING AND SHAPING." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">DIAGRAM FOR PAPER MAT, SHOWING MODE OF FOLDING AND SHAPING.</p> +</div> +<br clear="all" /><br /><br /> +<h4><span class="sc">A Work Basket in Vanilla Grass</span>.</h4> +<p> +If any of you live where the sweet-scented vanilla +grass grows plentifully, you can make a delicious +little basket by drying the long wiry blades, braiding +them in strands of three, tying the ends firmly +together to make a long braid, and coiling and sewing +as in straw plaiting. Two circles the size of a +dessert plate should be prepared, one for the bottom +of the basket, and the other for the top of the lid +(the latter a trifle the larger). Then draw the braid +tighter, and form a rim to each about two inches +deep. The lid, which is separate, fits over the +bottom, and the scent of the grass will impart +itself to everything kept in the basket.</p> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<p> +So much for the dear little people. Our next +dip into Mother Santa Claus's basket brings out a +big handful for girls (and boys) who are a trifle +older,—say from twelve to fifteen.</p><br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">Hair-Pin Holders</span>.</h4> +<p> +On the next page is a picture of the hair-pin holder +when finished; and above it you will find a diagram +of it when cut out and not yet put in shape. It is +cut, as you will observe, in one piece. The material +is perforated card-board, either white or "silver." +The dotted lines show where to fold it.</p> +<p> +A, A and B, B are lapped outside the end pieces, +D, D, and held in place by stitches of worsted, long +below and very short above, where the sides join. +A little border is worked in worsted at top and +bottom before the sides are joined. The inside is +stuffed with curled hair, and topped with a little +cover crocheted or knit in worsted—plain ribbing +or the tufted crochet, just as you prefer. +A cord and a small worsted tassel at either +end complete it, and it is a convenient little thing<a name="page47" id="page47"></a><span class="left">[page 47]</span> +to hang or stand on mamma's or sister's toilet-table. +It will be an easy matter to enlarge the +pattern, if this hair-pin holder would be too small.</p> + +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/055b.jpg"><img src="images/055b-300.jpg" width="300" height="255" alt="END OF HAIR-PIN HOLDER WHEN FOLDED." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">END OF HAIR-PIN HOLDER WHEN FOLDED.</p> + +</div> + +<div class="figleft"> +<a href="images/055a.jpg"><img src="images/055a-343.jpg" width="343" height="255" alt="PATTERN OF HAIR-PIN HOLDER." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">PATTERN OF HAIR-PIN HOLDER.</p> +</div> +<br clear="all" /> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/055c.jpg"><img src="images/055c-500.jpg" width="500" height="230" alt="A HAIR-PIN HOLDER." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A HAIR-PIN HOLDER.</p> +</div> +<br /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">A Crib-Blanket for Baby</span>.</h4> +<p> +The prettiest and simplest crib-blanket +which we have seen of late, was made of thick +white flannel, a yard wide, and a yard and +a quarter long. Across each end were basted +two rows of scarlet worsted braid, four +inches apart, and between the two a row +of bright yellow braid. These were cat-stitched +down on both edges with black worsted, and +between them were rows of feather-stitching +in blue. Above, in each corner, was a small +wheel made of rows of feather-stitch—black, red, +yellow and blue. Nothing could be easier to make, +but the effect was extremely gay and bright, and +we advise some of you who are lucky enough to +"belong to a baby" to try it.</p><br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">Another Baby's Blanket</span>.</h4> +<p> +For this you must buy a real blanket—one of the +small ones which come for use in a baby's crib. +Those with blue stripes and a narrow binding of +blue silk are prettiest for the purpose. Baste a +narrow strip of canvas between the stripes and the +binding, and with blue saddler's silk doubled, work +in cross-stitch a motto, so arranged that it can be +read when the top of the blanket is folded back. If +the stripe is red instead of blue, the motto must +be in red silk, and it should, of course, have +reference to the baby. Here are some pretty +ones in various languages: "<i>Nun guten ruh, die +augen zu</i>" (Now go to sleep, and shut your eyes). +"<i>Cap-à-pie</i>" (From head to foot). "<i>Ad ogni +ucello, suo nido è bello</i>" (To every bird its own +nest is beautiful). And here is one in English:</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"Shut little eyes, and shut in the blue;</p> +<p>Sleep, little baby, God loves you."</p> +</div> +</div> +<p> +The same idea can be beautifully applied to a pair +of large blankets, but this is rather a considerable +gift for young people to undertake.</p><br /><br /> + + + +<h4><span class="sc">Summer Blankets</span>.</h4> +<p> +A pair of thin summer blankets, of the kind which +are scarcely heavier than flannel, can be made very +pretty by button-holing them all round loosely with +double zephyr wool in large scallops, and working +three large initials in the middle of the top end.</p><br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">A Work-Basket for "Sister</span>."</h4> +<p> +For this, you must buy a straw basket, flat in +shape, and without a handle. It can be round, +square, oval, or eight-sided, just as you prefer. +You must also buy a yard of silk or cashmere +in some pretty color. Line the +whole basket, first of all cutting +the shape of the bottom exactly, and fastening +the lining down with deft stitches, which shall<a name="page48" id="page48"></a><span class="left">[page 48]</span> +show neither inside nor out. Make four little +pockets of the stuff (six if the basket is large), draw +their tops up with elastic cord, and fasten them +round the sides at equal distances. These are to +hold spools of silk, tapes, hooks-and-eyes, and such +small wares, which are always getting into disorder +in a pocketless basket. Between two of the pockets +on one side, suspend a small square pincushion, and +on the other a flat needle-book hung by a loop of +ribbon. At the opposite ends, between the pockets, +fasten an emery bag and a sheath of morocco bound +with ribbon to hold a pair of scissors. Finish the +top last of all with a quilling of ribbon, and you +have as dainty and complete a gift as any younger +sister can wish to make, or any older one receive. +It will cost time and pains, but is pretty and useful +enough to repay both.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Fancy Wheelbarrow</span>.</h4> +<p> +This cannot be made easily by any boy or girl +who is not already acquainted with fancy wood-sawing, +and to such the illustration gives all the +hint that will be needed. We would simply suggest +that the body of this barrow is about six inches +long, that it is lined with crimson silk, and that +standing upon a dressing-bureau, writing-table, or +mantel-shelf, it makes a very pretty receiver of +cards or knick-knacks. Many beautiful Christmas +gifts can be made by boys or girls owning one of the +little bracket-saws, which, with books of directions, +can now be bought in almost any hardware shop.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/056.jpg"><img src="images/056-500.jpg" width="500" height="221" alt="A FANCY WHEELBARROW." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A FANCY WHEELBARROW.</p> +</div> +<br /><br /> +<p> +For further particulars on wood-carving, see illustrated +articles in ST. NICHOLAS, Vol. I., pp. 84, +215, 346, 592.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Set of Tea-Napkins</span>.</h4> +<p> +There hardly could be a nicer gift for a girl to +make for her mother or married sister than a set +of tea-napkins, with a large initial letter in white, +or white and red, embroidered on each. The +doily should be folded in four, and the letter out-lined +in lead pencil in the corner of one of the +quarters. If inked very black on paper, and held +dry to the window behind the linen, the initial +is easily traced. The pattern is then run and +"stuffed" with heavy working-cotton, and the letter +embroidered in finer cotton. Another nice gift +is a long fringed towel, with three very large letters +in white, or blue, or crimson, worked half-way +between the middle and the side edge. Folded +over lengthwise, it is a convenient thing to lay on +a bureau-top or the front of a sideboard, and the +large colored letters make it ornamental as well. +Patterns of initials can be bought in any fancy shop. +If desired, they can be bought already worked, requiring +only to be transferred to the napkin.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Napkin-Bands</span>.</h4> +<p> +Any of you who have mastered cross-stitch, and +learned to follow a pattern, will find these bands +easy enough to make. Their use is to fasten a +napkin round a child's neck at dinner, and take the +place of that disobliging "pin," which is never at +hand when wanted. You must cut a strip of Java +canvas, two inches wide by a foot long; overcast +the edges, and work on it some easy little vine in +worsted, or a Grecian pattern, or, if you like, a +short motto, such as "More haste, worse speed." +Line the strip with silk, turn in the edges, overhand +them, and finish the ends with two of those +gilt clasps which are used to loop +up ladies' dresses.</p> +<br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Rustic Vase</span>.</h4> +<p> +It is very easy to get the material +out of which this vase is made. +You need only go to your wood-pile, +or, if you have none, to the +wood-pile of a neighbor. Choose +a round stick four inches in diameter +and eight or ten inches long, +with a smooth bark. If you find +the stick, and it is too long, you can +easily saw off an end. Now comes +the difficult part of the work: The inside of the +stick must be scooped out to within four inches of +the bottom. The easiest way of accomplishing this +will be to send it to a turning-mill if there is one at +hand; if not, patience and a jack-knife will in the +end prevail. Next, with a little oil-color, paint a +pretty design on the bark, if you can,—trailing-arbutus, +partridge berry, sprays of linnea,—any +wood thing which can be supposed to cluster naturally +round a stump. Set the stump in a flower-pot +saucer, filled with earth, and planted with +mosses and tiny ferns; fit a footless wine or champagne +glass, or a plain cup, into the hollow end, +and, with a bunch of grasses and wild flowers, or +autumn leaves, you have a really exquisite vase, +prettier than any formal article bought in a shop,<a name="page49" id="page49"></a><span class="left">[page 49]</span> +and costing little more than time and patience, with a touch of that rare thing—taste! which, after all, +is not so very rare as some people imagine. Any friend will prize such a vase of your own making.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Table-Cover</span>.</h4> +<p> +A really charming cover for a small table can be made in this way: Cut a square—or oblong, +as the case may be—of that loosely woven linen which is used for glass-towels, making it +about four inches larger all round than the table it is meant to fit. Pale yellow or brown +is the best color to select. Ravel the edges into a fringe two inches deep; then, beginning +two inches within the edge, draw the linen threads all round in a band an inch +and three-quarters wide. Lace the plain space thus left with dark-red ribbon +of the same width, woven in and out in regular spaces, and at each corner +tie the ribbon in a graceful knot with drooping ends.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Another Table-Cover</span>.</h4> +<p> +This cover is made of pale-brown Turkish toweling. Cut a piece +of the size to suit your table, and baste all round it, first a row of +scarlet worsted braid, then of olive, then of yellow, leaving spaces +each an inch and a half wide between the rows. Cat-stitch the +braids down on both edges with saddlers' silk, and feather-stitch +between them in silks, choosing colors which harmonize, +and turning the whole into a wide stripe brilliant +and soft at the same time. The choice and +placing of the colors will be excellent practice for +your eye, and after a little while you will be +able to tell, as soon as a couple of inches +are done, if you are putting the right tint +into the right place. It is infinitely +more interesting to feel your way thus through a piece of work +than to follow any set pattern, however pretty, and it is +far more cultivating to the taste.</p><br /><br /> + +<div class="figright1"> +<a href="images/057.jpg"> +<img src="images/057-357-01.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="A PAPER TRANSPARENCY." /> +<img src="images/057-357-02.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-03.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-04.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-05.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-06.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-07.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-08.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-09.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-10.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-11.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-12.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-13.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-14.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-15.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-16.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-17.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-18.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-19.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-20.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-21.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-22.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-23.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-24.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-25.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-26.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-27.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/057-357-28.jpg" class="bellright" border="0" alt="" /> +</a> +<br /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">A Paper Transparency</span>.</h4> +<p> +Take a piece of white, or tinted, or +silver paper, exactly ten and a half inches +square. Fold it double diagonally. Fold it +double again. Fold it double once more.</p> +<p> +You will now have a triangular-shaped form of +eight thicknesses. Now lay this folded piece on a +pine table, or on a smooth piece of pine board. Next, +lay evenly over it, so that it will fit exactly, the "pattern +of transparency," or an exact tracing from it. When so placed, +secure them firmly to the board by pins driven in at each corner. +Now, with a very sharp pen-knife follow and cut <i>through to the +board</i> the lines of the pattern, so as to cut out all the portions that +show black in the design. When this is all done, pull out the pins, +open your folded paper, and you will have a square form beautifully +figured in open-work. It should be laid between two sheets of white paper +and carefully pressed with a hot iron, and then it can be lined with black or +fancy tissue paper, and hung against a pane in the window as a "transparency;" +or you may use it as a picture-frame, inserting an engraving or photograph in the center.</p> +<p> +The original, from which our pattern is taken, was cut during the late war by a young +Union soldier while in Libby prison.</p> +</div> + +<h4><span class="sc">Shawl-Bags</span>.</h4> +<p> +These bags are capital things to save a shawl from the dust of a journey, and, if of good size, +can be made to serve a useful purpose by packing into them dressing materials, etc., for which +there is not room in your hand-bag. The best material for them is stout brown Holland. Cut two +round end-pieces eight inches in diameter and a piece half a yard wide by twenty-four inches long.<a name="page50" id="page50"></a><span class="left">[page 50]</span> +Stitch these together, leaving the straight seam +open nearly all the way across, and bind its edges +and the edges of the end-pieces with worsted braid +(maroon or dark brown), put on with a machine. +Close the opening with five buttons and button-holes. +Bind with braid a band of the Holland two +inches wide, and fasten it over the button-holed +side, leaving a large loop in the middle to carry +the bag by.</p> +<p> +By way of ornament you may embroider three +large letters in single-stitch on the side, using +worsted of the color of the braid, or may put a +pattern down either side of the opening and round +the ends in braiding, or a braided medallion with +initials in the center.</p> + +<div class="figleft" style="width:50%"> +<a href="images/058a.jpg"><img src="images/058a-150.jpg" width="150" height="447" alt="JAPANESE HANGING-BASKET OF STRAW AND SILK." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">JAPANESE HANGING-BASKET OF STRAW AND SILK.</p> +</div><br /><br /><br /><br /> +<h4><span class="sc">A Japanese Basket for Grandmother</span>.</h4> +<p> +You will never guess what the top of this droll +little basket is made of, unless we tell you. It is +one of those Japanese cuffs of brown straw +which can be bought nowadays for a small price at +any of the Japanese shops. You may embroider a little +pattern over it—diagonally, if you wish to make +it look very Japanese-y; line it with silk or satin, +and fasten a small bag of the same material to the +bottom, drawn up with a ribbon bow or a tassel. +A band of wide ribbon is sewed to the top. Grandmamma +will find this just the thing to hang on her +arm for holding her knitting-ball, +or the knitting itself if she wishes to lay +it aside. This sort of basket also is useful as a +"catch-all" when hung at the side of a dressing-bureau.</p> + + + +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/058b.jpg"><img src="images/058b-150.jpg" width="150" height="421" alt="A CATCH-ALL MADE OF PERFORATED PAPER." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A CATCH-ALL MADE OF PERFORATED PAPER.</p> +</div> +<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">A Catch-All, Made from a Single Square</span>.</h4> +<p> +This is very pretty, and very easily made. Take +a piece of silver (or gold) perforated paper, eight +inches square, and ornament it with worsted or +silk, as in the diagram, all in one direction. To +make the cornucopia, it is only necessary to join +any two edges (as A and B) by first binding each +with ribbon and then sewing them together. Line +with silk, and put box-plaiting at the top. A +worsted tassel might be put at the top (in front) as +well as at the bottom, and a loop at C.</p> + + +<p> +If silver paper is used, the trimmings would better +be all red. All blue would look well with gold +paper. But the colors may be varied according to +taste. If your friend is a brunette, you will find that +he or she will be most pleased with the red, while +a blonde will prefer blue.</p> +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/058c.jpg"><img src="images/058c-150.jpg" width="150" height="158" alt="DIAGRAM OF PATTERN TO BE WORKED ON PERFORATED PAPER FOR A CATCH-ALL." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">DIAGRAM OF PATTERN TO BE WORKED ON PERFORATED PAPER FOR A CATCH-ALL.</p> +</div> + +<br clear="all" /><br /><br /> + +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/059a.jpg"><img src="images/059a-150.jpg" width="150" height="259" alt="DIAGRAM OF WALL-POCKET." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">DIAGRAM OF WALL-POCKET.</p> +</div> + + +<div class="figleft" style="width:40%"> +<a href="images/058d.jpg"><img src="images/058d-300.jpg" width="300" height="316" alt="WALL-POCKET OF SPLITS." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">WALL-POCKET OF SPLITS.</p> +</div> + +<h4><span class="sc">A Wall-Pocket of Splits</span>.</h4> +<p> +Splits, or cigar-lighters as they are sometimes +called, are to be had at any of the fancy shops. +They are an inch wide and about seven inches +long, and come in various shades of brown and + +<a name="page51" id="page51"></a><span class="left">[page 51]</span> +straw color, and their flexibility makes it easy to +weave them in and out like basket-work. For the +wall-pocket you must weave two squares, each containing +six splits each way, but one made larger +than the other, as seen in the picture. A few +stitches in cotton of the same color will hold the +strips in place. Line the smaller of the squares with +silk, and lay it across the face of the other in such +a way that the four points shall make a diamond, +touching the middle of each side of the square. +Fasten it to the wall by two of the splits crossed +and united by a bow of ribbons, and fill the pocket +with dried autumn leaves and ferns gracefully arranged.</p> + + + +<br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">Silhouette Likenesses</span>.</h4> +<p> +This is rather a Christmas game than a present, +but will answer well for either; and young folks +can get much fun out of an evening spent in "taking" +each other. Each in turn must stand so as to cast +a sharp profile shadow on the wall, to which is previously +pinned, white side out, a large sheet of paper, known as silhouette +paper, black on one side and white on the other. +Somebody draws the outline of this shadow <i>exactly</i> with a +pencil; it is then cut out and pasted neatly, black side up, +on a sheet of white paper. Good and expressive likenesses +are often secured, and droll ones <i>very</i> often. +Try it, some of you, in the long evenings which are coming.</p><br /><br /> + + +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/059b.jpg"><img src="images/059b-300.jpg" width="300" height="306" alt="A LEAF PEN-WIPER." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A LEAF PEN-WIPER.</p> +</div><br /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">A Leaf Pen-Wiper</span>.</h4> +<p> +Your pattern for this must be a beech-leaf again,—a +<i>long</i> one this time,—or you may trace the shape +from the illustration. Outline the shape as before, +and from the model thus secured cut six leaves in +flannel—two green, two brown, and two red, or +red, white and blue, or any combination you like. +Snip the edge of each leaf into very tiny points, +and chain-stitch veins upon it with gold-colored +floss. Attach these leaves together by the upper +ends, arranging under them three triply pointed +leaves of black broadcloth or silk to receive the ink, +and finish the top with a small bow of ribbon.</p> +<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Birds'-Nest Pen-Wiper</span>.</h4> +<p> +Girls are always trying to find something which +they can make to delight their papas, and a gay little +pen-wiper with fresh uninked leaves rarely comes +amiss to a man who likes an orderly writing-table. +Here is a pretty one which is easily made. For the +pattern you may borrow a moderately large beech-leaf +from the nearest tree (or botanical work); lay +it down on paper, pencil the outline and cut it out +neatly. Repeat this six or eight times in black cloth +or velvet, and sew the leaves round a small oval +or circle of black cloth. Knit and ravel out a quantity +of yellow worsted or floss silk, and with it construct +a nest in the center of the oval, putting a hen into the nest. +This hen may be made of canton flannel, stuffed with +cotton-wool and painted in water color, with a comb of +red flannel, two black beads for eyes, and a tuft of +feathers by way of tail. But better still and much +easier, buy one of the droll little Japanese chicks +which can be had at the shops now for twenty or +twenty-five cents, and fasten it in the middle of the +nest. Three plain circles of cloth are fastened +underneath for wiping the pens.</p> + + +<div class="figleft" style="width:40%"> +<a href="images/059c.jpg"><img src="images/059c-300.jpg" width="300" height="220" alt="A JAPANESE PEN-WIPER." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A JAPANESE PEN-WIPER.</p> +</div><br /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">Japanese Pen-Wiper</span>.</h4> +<p> +A nice little pen-wiper can be made by cutting +three circles of black cloth, snipping the edges or<a name="page52" id="page52"></a><span class="left">[page 52]</span> +button-holing them with colored silk, and standing +in the middle one of the droll little Japanese birds +just mentioned. Of course it should be secured +firmly at the feet. There are long-legged birds +and short-legged ones. A tiny stork is very pretty.</p> +<br /><br /><br /> + +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/060.jpg"><img src="images/060-250.jpg" width="250" height="456" alt="A JAPANESE PEN-WIPER." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A JAPANESE PEN-WIPER.</p> +</div><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">Bleached Grasses</span>.</h4> +<p> +Some of you who have been pressing autumn +leaves for winter use may like to hear of a new way +of bleaching grasses to mix with them. The process +is exceedingly simple. Take a few of the grasses +in your hand at a time, dip them into a pan of water, +shake gently, dip into a pan of sifted flour, and again +shake gently. All the superfluous flour will fall off, but +enough will remain to make the grasses snowy-white. +When dry it is perfectly firm, and you would never +guess what process produced the effect. A bunch of these +white grasses in a coral-red basket is a vivid object.</p> +<p> +Colored grasses, to our thinking, are not half so +pretty as the same grasses when left in their own soft +natural browns and yellows. Still, as some people like +them, we will just mention that the same process +can be used for them as for the white grass, by mixing +with small portions of flour, a little dry paint powder, +vermilion, green, etc. A bunch of the deep red mixed +with the bleached grass has a gay and uncommon effect.</p> + +<br /><br /> +<h4><span class="sc">A Nubé in Two Colors</span>.</h4> +<p> +A novelty in knitting is a nubé in Shetland wool of +two colors—pink or crimson or blue with white. +The skeins are opened, and the two strands, laid +side by side, are wound double in a large ball. The +nubé is then knit in the usual way with large +needles and common garter-stitch, and is very fine.</p> + +<br /><br /> +<h4><span class="sc">Lamp Shades</span>.</h4> +<p> +Plain white porcelain lamp-shades, such as are +used on the German student-lamps, look well when +decorated with wreaths of autumn leaves put on +with mucilage. We read lately in the <i>Tribune</i> +that leaves treated with extract of chlorophyl became +transparent. This would be a fine experiment +for some of you to try, and a garland of the +transparent leaves would be much more beautiful +around a shade than the ordinary dried ones.</p> +<p> +There are other styles of lamp-shades that can +be made with little difficulty, for instance: A +very pretty shade is easily formed by cutting in +thin drawing-board fine scalloped sections, which, +tied together with narrow ribbon, take the form +of a shade. Leaves are glued to the under side of +these, and a lining of thin tissue-paper is pasted on to +hold them in place. Still another is made in the same +way, with doubled sections of card-board, between each +pair of which is laid a steel engraving or wood-cut, or +an unmounted photograph. The pictures are invisible +till the lamp is lighted: then they gleam forth with +something of the soft glow of a porcelain transparency.</p> +<br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">A Glove-Box</span>.</h4> +<p> +In any of the fancy shops you can now buy the slender +frames of silvered tin on which these boxes are made. +Cut out double pieces of pale-tinted silk to fit the +top, bottom, sides and ends, and quilt each separately +with an interlining of cotton batting, on which sachet-powder +has been lightly sprinkled. Slip the pieces +between the double rods of the frame, sew over and +over, and finish with a plaited satin ribbon all +round, adding a neat little loop and bow to lift the lid.</p> +<p> +The small tin boxes in which fancy biscuits are +sold can be utilized for glove-boxes, covered as you +choose on the outside, and lined with wadded silk.</p> +<br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Another Glove-Box</span>.</h4> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/061a.jpg"><img src="images/061a-500.jpg" width="500" height="239" alt="SILK GLOVE-BOX." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">SILK GLOVE-BOX.</p> +</div> +<div class="figright" style="width:40%"> +<a href="images/061b.jpg"><img src="images/061b-200.jpg" width="200" height="85" alt="DIAGRAM" border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">DIAGRAM SHOWING THE MANNER OF TUFTING +THE LINING OF SILK GLOVE-BOX.</p> +</div> +<p> +This box can be made in very stiff card-board, +but tin is better if you have the pieces which form its +shape cut by the tinman, and punched with holes +in rows an inch and a half apart. If you use card-board, +you must punch your own holes, measuring +the places for them with rule and pencil. In either<a name="page53" id="page53"></a><span class="left">[page 53]</span> +case, you will need the same number of pieces and +of the same size, namely: two strips one foot long +and five inches wide, two strips one foot long and +three inches wide, and two strips five inches long +and three inches wide. Cover each piece with a +layer of cotton wadding, sprinkled with sachet +powder, and a layer of silk or satin of any color you +prefer. Then catch the silk firmly down through +the holes in the tin, making long stitches on the +wrong side, and small cross-stitches on the right, +so as to form neat regular tufts. A very tiny button +sewed in each depression has a neat effect. +When the inside of the box is thus tufted, baste the +pieces together, cover the outside with black or +dark silk or satin, embroidered or ornamented in +any way your fancy may dictate, overhand the +edges daintily, and neatly finish with a small cord. +Square boxes made in the same way are pretty +for pocket-handkerchiefs.</p> + + + +<div class="figleft" style="width:50%"> +<a href="images/061c.jpg"><img src="images/061c-300.jpg" width="300" height="308" alt="COAL-SCUTTLE PINCUSHION AND NEEDLE BOOK." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">COAL-SCUTTLE PINCUSHION AND NEEDLE BOOK.</p><br /> +</div><br /><br /><br /> +<h4><span class="sc">A Coal-Scuttle Pin-Cushion</span>.</h4> +<p> +This droll little scuttle is made of black enamel +cloth, cut according to the diagrams on next page. +Fig. 1 is cut double and folded over at G. The +two sides marked B and E in Fig. 1 are bound with +black galloon; also the two sides marked with the +same letters in Fig. 2.</p> +<p> +Before binding over, cast a bit of wire around the +top and one around the bottom of the scuttle, and +bend each into its proper shape. Figs. 3 and 4 are +bound all round, and sewed over and over to the +places indicated. Wrap two bits of wire, one four +inches long and the other an inch and a quarter, with +black worsted, and insert them through little holes +made for the purpose to serve as the handles of the +scuttle; stuff the inside firmly with hair or cotton-wool, +cover the top with flannel, cut after Fig. 4, +and button-hole the edges down all round +with worsted of the color of the flannel. If +you like to add a needle-book you can do so +by cutting three leaves of differently colored +flannels, after the shape of Fig. 4, snipping +the edges into points, or button-holing +them, and fastening the leaves to the back +of the scuttle above the pincushion.</p><br /> + +<p class="center">DIAGRAMS OF COAL-SCUTTLE PINCUSHION AND NEEDLE-BOOK.</p> + +<div class="figleft1"> +<a href="images/062ab.jpg"> +<img src="images/062ab-562-01.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="DIAGRAMS OF COAL-SCUTTLE PINCUSHION AND NEEDLE-BOOK." /> +<img src="images/062ab-562-02.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/062ab-562-03.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/062ab-562-04.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/062ab-562-05.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/062ab-562-06.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/062ab-562-07.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/062ab-562-08.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/062ab-562-09.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/062ab-562-10.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> + +</a> +<p> +Fig. 1.—Pattern of Coal-Scuttle Pinchusion.<br /> +Fig. 2.—Part of Pattern of Coal-Scuttle Pinchusion.<br /> +Fig. 3.—Bottom of Coal-Scuttle.<br /> +Fig. 4.—Top of Coal-Scuttle.</p> +</div> + +<br clear="all" /> + + +<br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">A Bit of Plain Work</span>.</h4> +<p> +There are notable little sempstresses even +in these days of machines ("and I am +thankful to know that there are," says +Mother Santa Claus) who set their stitches as +swiftly and as precisely as ever their grandmothers +did before them, and have the same liking for what +used to be called "white seam." To such we would +suggest, what a nice and useful +Christmas present would be a beautifully +made under-garment. It need not of necessity be a +shirt, though in old days no girl was considered +educated who could not finish one all by herself, +from cutting out to the last button-hole; but an +apron or petticoat or dressing-jacket or night-gown, +over which little fingers had labored deftly and +lovingly, would, it seems to us, be a most wonderful +and delightful novelty for mamma or grandmamma +to find on the Christmas-tree this year. A set +of handkerchiefs nicely hemmed and marked (girls +used to cross-stitch the marks in their own hair!), +or a soft flannel petticoat, cat-stitched at the seams, +scalloped with coarse working cotton,—which grows +whiter with washing, instead of yellowing like +silk,—with three pretty initials on the waistband, +would be other capital ideas. Try them.</p> + +<br /><br /> +<h4><span class="sc">Work Aprons</span>.</h4> +<p> +The great convenience of these aprons is that the +work can be rolled up in them and laid aside for<a name="page54" id="page54"></a><span class="left">[page 54]</span> +use. They are made of brown Holland trimmed +with black or blue or crimson worsted braid. Little +loops of doubled braid ornament the edge, and are +held in place by a plain row of the braid stitched +on above them. The lower and largest pocket +should be made full and drawn up with a cord at +top, so as to hold rolls of pieces, worsteds and patterns. +The little pockets are for spools of silk and +thread, tapes, buttons, and so on.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/062b.jpg"><img src="images/062b-500.jpg" width="500" height="332" alt="DIAGRAM OF WORK APRON." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">DIAGRAM OF WORK APRON.</p> +</div> + + + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Leaf Needle-Book</span>.</h4> +<p> +For this needle-book you will need the following +materials: One-eighth of a yard of crimson or +green velvet, one-eighth of a yard of lining silk to +match, one-eighth of a yard of fine white flannel, +two skeins of white silk floss, a bit of Bristol-board, +and a half yard of narrow ribbon.</p> +<p> +Cut in the Bristol-board a couple of leaf-shaped +pieces like the illustration. Cover each with the +velvet, turning in the edges neatly, line with the +silk, and button-hole both together all round with +white floss. Stitch the veins in the leaves with the +floss, held tightly, so as to depress the lines a little. +Cut three leaves of flannel in the same shape, button-hole +the edges, lay them between the leaves, +and fasten all together at top with a bow of ribbon. +A tiny loop and button should be attached to the +point to hold the needle-book together.</p> + +<div class="figright"><br /><br /> +<a href="images/063a.jpg"><img src="images/063a-300.jpg" width="300" height="313" alt="PAD OF LEAF NEEDLE-BOOK." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">PAD OF LEAF NEEDLE-BOOK.</p> +</div> + +<div class="figleft"> +<a href="images/062d.jpg"><img src="images/062d-300.jpg" width="300" height="345" alt="PATTERN OF LEAF NEEDLE-BOOK." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">PATTERN OF LEAF NEEDLE-BOOK.</p> + +</div><br clear="all" /> + +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/063b.jpg"><img src="images/063b-250.jpg" width="250" height="377" alt="PATTERN OF CROSS FOR BOOK MARK." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">PATTERN OF CROSS FOR BOOK MARK.</p> +</div> +<br /><br /><br /> +<h4><span class="sc">Book-Mark</span>.</h4> +<p> +A large lace-like cross hanging from the end of a +wide ribbon makes a handsome and appropriate +mark for a big bible or prayer-book. The +materials cost almost nothing, all that is required +being a bit of perforated card-board, +a sharp penknife, and—patience. Trace the +form of the cross on the card-board, and outline +the pattern on one side in pencil. You +will observe that the one given as illustration +is made up of small forms many times repeated, +and this is the case with all patterns +used for this purpose. The easiest way to outline it +regularly is to do a square of eight holes at a time,<a name="page55" id="page55"></a><span class="left">[page 55]</span> +marking the places to be cut, and leaving the uncut +places white. When all is marked, place on a +smooth board and cut, following the markings +exactly with your knife. The work cannot be hurried: +it must be done slowly and very carefully if +you hope to succeed.</p><br clear="all" /> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<p> +And now we will turn out the more difficult +things from the bottom of the basket, and you big, +clever boys and girls who can do what you like +with your fingers and knives and needles and +paint-brushes, can take your pick from them.</p> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<div class="figleft" style="width:33%"> +<a href="images/064a.jpg"><img src="images/064a-200.jpg" width="200" height="338" alt="VASE (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK)." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">VASE (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK).</p> +</div> + +<div class="figright" style="width:33%"> +<a href="images/066b.jpg"><img src="images/066b-200.jpg" width="200" height="342" alt="VASE, PAINTED BLACK AND ORNAMENTED WITH FERNS (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK)." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">VASE, PAINTED BLACK AND ORNAMENTED +WITH FERNS (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK).</p> +</div> + +<h4><span class="sc">Autumn-Leaf Work</span>.</h4> +<p> +If you have an old work-box, or desk, or table-top, +or screen, which has grown shabby, and which +you would like to renew, we can tell you how to do +so. First, you must take those generous friends, +the woods, into your counsel. Gather and press +every bright, perfect leaf and spray which comes +in your way this autumn, and every graceful bit of +vine, and a quantity of small brown and gold-colored +ferns, and those white feathery ones which have +blanched in the deep shadows. These ready, paint +your box, or whatever it is, with solid black, let it +dry, rub it smooth with fine sand-paper, and repeat +the process three times. Then glue the leaves +and ferns on, irregularly scattered, or in regular +bouquets and wreaths, as suits your fancy. Apply +a coat of isinglass, dissolved in water, to the whole +surface, and when that is dry, three coats of copal +varnish, allowing each to dry before the next is put +on. The effect is very handsome. And, even +without painting the objects black, this same style +of leaf and fern-work can be applied to earthen +vases, wooden boxes, trays and saucers, for card-receivers. +For these, you may get some good +hints from the illustrations on subsequent pages. +The same illustrations will apply to the "novelties +in fern-work" given further on.</p><br /><br /> + + +<div class="figleft"> +<a href="images/065a.jpg"><img src="images/065a-300.jpg" width="300" height="300" alt="CARD-RECEIVER (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK)." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">CARD-RECEIVER (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK).</p> +</div> + + + +<div class="figright"><br /><br /><br /><br /> +<a href="images/067.jpg"><img src="images/067-300.jpg" width="300" height="193" alt=" WOODEN BOX, ORNAMENTED WITH FERNS (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK)." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center"> WOODEN BOX, ORNAMENTED WITH FERNS (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK).</p> +</div><br clear="all" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">A Window Transparency</span>.</h4> + +<p> +Another pretty use for autumn leaves is a transparency +for a window. Arrange a group of the +leaves upon a pane of glass, lay another pane of +same size over these, and glue the edges together, +first with a strip of stout muslin, and then with +narrow red ribbon, leaving a loop at each upper +corner to hang it up by. The deep leaf colors +seen against the light are delightful.</p><br /><br /> + +<h4><span class="sc">Side-Light Transparencies</span>.</h4> + +<p> +Any of you who happen to live in a house which +has, like many old houses, a narrow side-light on +either side of its front-door, and a row of panes +across the top, can make a pretty effect by preparing +a series of these transparencies to fit the door-glasses, +and fastening them on by driving a stout +tack into the sashes so as to support the four corners +of each pane. The transparencies could be prepared +secretly and put into place overnight, or on +Christmas morning, before any one is up, so as to +give mother a pleasant surprise as she comes downstairs.</p><br /><br /> + + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Frame of Autumn Leaves</span>.</h4> + +<p> +Procure an oblong bit of tin, eight inches by ten, +or ten inches by twelve, and have a large oval cut<a name="page56" id="page56"></a><span class="left">[page 56]</span> +out in the middle. Paint the tin with two coats of +black, glue a small group of leaves in each corner, +with a wire spray or tendril to connect them, varnish +with two coats of copal, and put a small picture behind +the oval.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Frame of Maiden-Hair</span>.</h4> +<p> +Cut a pasteboard frame three inches wide of the size +you need, and sew thickly all over it little sprays of +maiden-hair ferns, pressed and dried. It is fastened to +the wall with a pin at each corner, and of course +does not support a glass. The effect of the light fern +shapes against the wall is very delicate and graceful, +and unsubstantial as it may seem, the frame lasts a long +time, especially if, when the maiden-hair first begins to +curl, the whole is taken down and re-pressed for two or +three days under a heavy book.</p><br /><br /> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/065b.jpg"><img src="images/065b-600.jpg" width="600" height="102" alt="PAPER-CUTTER (NOVELTIES IN FERN-WORK)." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">PAPER-CUTTER (NOVELTIES IN FERN-WORK).</p> +</div> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Novelties in Fern-Work</span>.</h4> +<p> +We hope some of you have collected a good supply of +ferns of the different colors,—deep +brown, yellow, green and white,—for by +means of a new process you can make something +really beautiful with them. It requires deft fingers +and good eyes, but with practice and patience any +of you could manage it. Supposing it to be a +table-top which you wish to ornament, you proceed +as follows: Paint the wood all over with black or +very dark brown; let it dry, and rub it smooth +with pumice. Next varnish. And here comes the +point of the process. <i>While the varnish is wet</i>, +lay your ferns down upon it, following a design +which you have arranged clearly in your head, or +marked beforehand on a sheet of paper. A pin's +point will aid you to move and place the fragile +stems, which must not be much handled, and must +lie perfectly flat, with no little projecting points to +mar the effect, which when done should be like +mosaic-work. As soon as the pattern is in place, +varnish again immediately. The ferns, thus +inclosed in a double wall of varnish, will keep their +places perfectly. Next day, when all is dry, varnish +once more. Small articles of white holly-wood +decorated in this way are very pretty, and +a thin china plate with an overlaying of these varnished +ferns becomes a beautiful and ornamental card-receiver.</p> + + + +<div class="figcenter"> +<a href="images/068.jpg"><img src="images/068-400.jpg" width="400" height="399" alt="TABLE-TOP (NOVELTIES IN FERN-WORK)" border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">TABLE-TOP (NOVELTIES IN FERN-WORK)</p> +</div> + + + +<div class="figleft1"> +<a href="images/064b.jpg"> +<img src="images/064b-362-01.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="A SHOE-CHAIR." /> +<img src="images/064b-362-02.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-03.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-04.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-05.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-06.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-07.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-08.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-09.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-10.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-11.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-12.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-13.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-14.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-15.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-16.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-17.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-18.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-19.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +<img src="images/064b-362-20.jpg" class="chair" border="0" alt="" /> +</a> +<br /> +<h4><span class="sc">A Shoe-Chair</span>.</h4> +<p> +An old cane-seated chair will answer perfectly +to make this, provided the frame-work is +strong and good. Cut away the cane and insert in +its place a stout bag of twilled linen, the size of the +seat and about ten inches deep. Around this bag +sew eight pockets, each large enough for a pair of +shoes. The round pocket left in the middle will +serve to hold stockings. Have a bit of thin wood<a name="page57" id="page57"></a><span class="left">[page 57]</span> +cut to fit the seat of the chair; fasten on this a +cushion covered with cretonne, with a deep frill all +around (or a narrow frill, provided you prefer to +fasten the deep ruffle around the chair itself, as +shown in the picture), and a little loop in front by +which the seat can be raised like the lid of a box, +when the shoes are wanted. This chair is really a most +convenient piece of furniture for a bedroom.</p> + +</div> +<p class="tag" style="text-indent: 3em;">A SHOE-CHAIR, WITH COVER (OR SEAT) REMOVED.</p><br /><br /> + + + +<div class="figleft" style="width:26%"> +<a href="images/064c.jpg"><img src="images/064c-150.jpg" width="150" height="268" alt="PATTERN OF EACH OF THE FOUR SIDES OF SCRAP-BAG." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">PATTERN OF EACH OF THE FOUR SIDES OF SCRAP-BAG.</p><br /><br /> +</div> + + + +<div class="figright" style="width:30%"> +<a href="images/064d.jpg"><img src="images/064d-200.jpg" width="200" height="568" alt="SCRAP-BAG IN TURKISH TOWELING." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">SCRAP-BAG IN TURKISH TOWELING.</p> +</div> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Scrap-Bags in Turkish Toweling</span>.</h4> +<p> +These are convenient little affairs. +Hung on the gas-fixture beside a looking-glass, +or on a hook above the work-table, they will be +found just the things to catch odds and ends, such as hair, +burnt matches, ravelings and shreds of cloth, which are always +accumulating, and for which many city bedrooms afford +no receptacle. The materials needed are three-quarters +of a yard of pale-brown Turkish toweling, +six yards of red worsted braid, four steel rings (to +hold the strings), one-eighth of a yard each of blue, +white, and scarlet cashmere, a skein each of blue, +red, green, yellow, and black worsted, and a small +red tassel in chenille or silk.</p> +<p> +Cut four pieces of the toweling, twelve inches +long and six and a half wide, and shape them +according to diagram.</p> +<p> +Bind each around with braid. Cut out a shape +in cashmere of the three colors laid one over the +other, and button-hole it on with worsted, contrasting +the shades in as gay and marked a manner as +possible. In the design given, A is white cashmere, +B red, and C blue. A is button-holed with green, +B with black, and C with yellow. B is chain-stitched +in blue and white lines, C feather-stitched +in white and yellow. The daisy-like flower above +is white, with a yellow center and a green stem, +and the long lines of stitching on either side are in +red and black. Some of these bags are very pretty.</p> +<p> +This bag could be simplified by using no cashmere, +and feather-stitching each quarter diagonally across +with alternate black, red, and yellow lines.</p><br /><br /> + + +<div class="figleft" style="width:26%"> +<a href="images/066a.jpg"><img src="images/066a-150.jpg" width="150" height="489" alt="ANOTHER SCRAP-BAG (SILVER PERFORATED PAPER AND CROCHET-WORK)." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">ANOTHER SCRAP-BAG (SILVER PERFORATED PAPER AND CROCHET-WORK).</p> +</div> + + + +<h4><span class="sc">Another Scrap-Bag</span>.</h4> +<p> +The upper part of this bag is made of silver perforated paper. +Buy a strip a foot long and six inches wide, and embroider +it all over in alternate lines of cross and single stitching, +using single zephyr worsted, blue or rose-colored. +Cut a piece of stiff card-board of exactly the same size, +and line it with pink or blue silk to match the worsted. Sew the +two ends together to form a circle, lay the silver +paper smoothly over it, stitch down, and trim both +edges with plaited satin ribbon three-quarters of +an inch wide.</p> +<p> +This is the top of your bag. The bottom is +crocheted in worsted by the ordinary long stitch, +and sewed to the silver-paper top piece under the +satin ribbon. A worsted tassel finishes the lower end.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Artistic Embroidery</span>.</h4> +<p> +Just here a word to the girls about embroidery. +In old days, when embroidery was the chief +occupation of noble dames and demoiselles, the +needle was used as a paint-brush might be, to +make a picture of some real thing or some ideal +occurrence. For instance: the Bayeux tapestry, +worked in the eleventh century by Matilda, wife<a name="page58" id="page58"></a><span class="left">[page 58]</span> +of William the Conqueror, and her ladies, is a +continuous series of pictures, two hundred and +fourteen feet long by about two feet wide, which +represent scenes in the invasion and conquest of +England. Old as it is, the colors are still undimmed +and brilliant. Even so lately as the last century, +ladies designed their own patterns, and embroidered +court dresses and trimmings with flowers +and birds copied from nature. But for many +years back fancy-work has degenerated into the +following of set models, without exercising any +"fancy" of one's own at all. Now the old method +is come into fashion again, and it means so +much more, and is so vastly more interesting +than copying a cut-and-dried pattern from a +shop, that we long to set you all to trying your +hands at it. For example, if you want a +cushion with a group of daisies, gather a handful +of fresh ones,—take a bit of linen or china crape, or +fine crash or pongee, and, with green and white and gray and +gold-colored silks, make a picture of the daisies +as they look to you, not using any particular kind +of stitch, but employing long ones or short ones, +or loose or tight ones, just as comes most easily in +giving the effect you want to get. This is much +nicer than counting the stitches on a paper pattern +and a bit of canvas, and when done, produces a +much better effect. Even in winter, a real flower +or a fern-spray, by way of model, can always be +found in the flower-shops or greenhouses. Practice +will stimulate invention and suggest all sorts +of devices and ideas. Bits of pretty stuffs will catch +your eye as adaptable for use, and oddly tinted +silks (the old, faded colors often work in better +than fresh ones), patterns on fans, on rice paper, +on Japanese pictures—all sorts of things—will serve +as material for your fancy. And when your work +is done it will be <i>original</i>, and, as such, more +valuable and interesting than any shop model, however +beautiful in itself, can possibly be.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Oriental Work</span>.</h4> +<p> +Very gay and quaint effects are produced with +this work, which is an adaptation of the well-known +Eastern embroideries. Its ground-work is plain +cashmere or flannel, red, black or blue, on which +small fantastically shaped figures in variously colored +velvets or cashmeres are laid and button-holed +down with floss silks. All sorts of forms are +employed for these figures—stars, crescents, circles, +trefoils, shields, palm-leaves, griffins, imps; and +little wheels and comets in feather-stitch and cat-stitch +are inserted between, to add to the oddity of +the whole. These forms can be bought at a low +price in almost any fancy shop. A good deal +of ingenuity and taste can be shown in arranging +and blending the figures richly and brilliantly, +without making them too bright and glaring. +Table-covers in this work should have falls of +deep points, pinked on the edges. Smaller points +of white cashmere are sometimes inserted between +the deep ones, and similarly decorated. Bright +little tassels are swung between the points by +twisted silk cords. The tassels are made of strips +of scarlet and white flannel, cut <i>almost</i> across, in +narrow fringes, rolled into shape, and confined by +a tiny heading of flannel embroidered with silk. +Sofa-pillows in this Oriental work are bright and +effective, also wall-pockets and brackets—in fact, it +can be applied in many ways. The bracket shapes +must be cut in wood, and topped with flannel, the +embroidered piece hanging across the +front like a miniature drapery.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Bedside Rugs</span>.</h4> +<p> +The prettiest bedside rug which we ever saw was made +in part of a snow-white lamb's-wool mat. This was laid +in the center of a stout burlap, which projected +six inches beyond the fleece all around, and was +bordered with a band of embroidery on canvas six +inches wide, the whole being lined with flannel and +finished with a cord and a heavy tassel at each corner. +A simpler rug is made of brown burlap, with +a pattern in cross-stitch, worked in double zephyr<a name="page59" id="page59"></a><span class="left">[page 59]</span> +worsteds of gay colors. Initials, or a motto, can +be embroidered in the middle. The burlap can +be fringed out around the edges for a finish.</p><br /><br /> + + + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Rag Rug</span>.</h4> +<p> +An effective rug can be made in this way: Cut +long inch-wide strips of cloths, flannels, and various +kinds of material (widening the strip, however, +in proportion as the fabric is thinner). Sew the +ends together so as to make one very long strip, +which, for convenience' sake, can be loosely wound +up in a ball. Then, with a very large wooden +crochet-needle, you crochet a circle, a square, or +oblong mat of this rag-strip, just as with cotton or +worsted. It makes a strong, durable, and, with +bright and tasteful colors, a very pretty rug.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Screen</span>.</h4> +<p> +A folding clothes-horse with two leaves, such as +is used in laundries, makes the foundation for this +screen. The wood is painted solid black, and +covered inside and out with very yellow unbleached +cotton, stretched tightly over the frame, and held +down by black upholstery braid fastened on with +gilt nails. A design in flowers, leaves, birds, +double circles, crescents, and parallel bars, to imitate +the Japanese style of decoration, is painted in +oil colors on the cotton, and a motto on the wood +along the top. If the motto is arranged to read +backward, the foreign effect of the whole will be +enhanced. We have seen a striking screen of this +sort made by a little girl who, as she could not +paint in oil colors, decorated the surface with +figures of various kinds cut from Japanese picture-papers, +such as are now sold for from ten to twenty +cents in the Japanese goods shops. Her figures +were so well pasted and arranged, that the screen +was one of the prettiest things in the bedroom.</p> +<p> +Screens covered with pictures cut from magazines +and illustrated newspapers are very much +liked by boys and girls, and by some of their elders.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Couvre-Pied</span>.</h4> +<p> +This is a large oblong in loosely knitted double +zephyr wools, and is made double, dark brown on +one side, for instance, and pale blue on the other. +The two are united with a border in open crochet +of the brown, laced through with light blue ribbon, +which is finished at each corner with a loosely tied +bow and ends. The <i>couvre-pied</i>, as the name +indicates, is meant to cover the feet of a person +who lies on a sofa, and is an excellent present to +make to an elderly or invalid friend.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Tile or China Painting</span>.</h4> +<p> +Don't be frightened at the word, dears. China-painting +is high art sometimes, and intricate and +difficult work often, but it is quite possible to produce +pretty effects without knowing a great deal +about either china or painting. Neither are the +materials of necessity expensive. All that you need, +to begin with, are a few half tubes of china or mineral +paints, which cost about as much as oil colors, +four or five camel's-hair brushes, a palette-knife, a +small phial of oil-of-lavender, and another of oil-of-turpentine, +a plain glazed china cup or plate or tile +to work on, and either a china palette or another +plate on which to rub the paints. For colors, +black, capuchine red, rose-pink, yellow, blue, green +and brown are an ample assortment for a novice +and for purposes of practice. We would advise +only two tubes, one of black and one of rose pink, +which are colors that do not betray your confidence +when it comes to baking. For the chief +difficulty in china-painting is that to be permanent +the work must be "fired,"—that is, fused by a +great heat in a furnace,—and it requires a great +deal of experience to learn what the different tints +are likely to do under this test. Some colors—yellow, +for instance—eat up, so to speak, the colors +laid over them. Others change tint. Pinks and +some of the greens grow more intense; white cannot +be trusted, and mixing one paint with another, +as in oils, can only be done safely by experts. It +is well, therefore, to begin with two simple colors, +and you will be surprised to see how much may +be done with them. (See "Hollenberry Cup," in +ST. NICHOLAS for May, 1877, page 458.) A cup +of transparent white china, the handle painted +black, a Japanese-looking bough with black foliage +and pink blossoms thrown over it, and a little motto, +has a really charming effect. But be sure to put +on the pink very pale, and the black, not in a hard, +solid streak, but delicately, to suggest shading from +dark to light, or the result of the baking will be +disappointment.</p> + +<p> +The method of preparing the colors is to squeeze +a very little paint from each tube upon your palette +or plate; take a tiny drop of oil-of-lavender on the +palette-knife, and with it rub the paint smooth. It<a name="page60" id="page60"></a><span class="left">[page 60]</span> +should be thinned just enough to work smoothly; +every drop of oil added after that is a disadvantage. +Use a separate brush for each color, and wash them +thoroughly with soap and hot water before putting +them aside. The painting should be set away +where no dust can come to it, and it will dry rapidly +in forty-eight hours or less. Elaborate work often +requires repainting after baking, the process being +repeated several times; but for simpler designs +one baking is usually enough. There are bakeries +in Boston, New York, and others of our large cities, +to which china can be sent, the price of baking +being about ten cents for each article.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Other Modes of Decorating China</span>.</h4> +<p> +The picture-books which are to be found at the +Japanese stores nowadays suggest numberless excellent +designs for china decorating. So do the +"Walter Crane Fairy-tales." A plain olive or +cream-colored tile with a pattern in bamboo-boughs +and little birds, a milk-jug in gray with leaves and +a motto in black, a set of tiny butter-plates with +initials and a flower-spray on each, are easy things +to attempt and very effective when done. Pie-dishes +can be ornamented with a long, sketchy +branch of blossoms or a flight of swallows across +the bottom, and we have seen those small dishes +of Nancy ware, in which eggs are first poached and +then served on table, made very pretty by a painting +on each of a chicken, done in soft browns and +reds, with a little line to frame it in and run down +along the handle. What we have mentioned +here are only suggestions; a little patience and +practice will soon help you to other patterns of +your own, and we can't help hoping that some of you will +be tempted to try your hands at this delightful art.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Drawing and Painting on Wood</span>.</h4> +<p> +Articles in plain white wood can be bought almost anywhere +nowadays. Pen-trays, letter-racks, easels, paper-knives, +photograph-frames, watch-cases, needle-books, +portfolios, glove-boxes, fans, silk-winders—there is no end +to the variety which can be had, and had at a very moderate +price. Now, any girl or boy among you with a +paint-box and a little taste for drawing, can make a really +pretty gift by decorating some one of these wooden things, +either in color or with pen drawings in brown or black. +The pattern need by no means be elaborate. A +wreath of ivy simply out-lined in sepia or india-ink, or +a group of figures sketched with the same, produces a very pleasing and harmonious +effect. "Prout's Brown," a sort of fluent +ink of a burnt-umber tint, will be found excellent +for drawing purposes. For designs, our own +ST. NICHOLAS will furnish excellent examples. +Scarcely a number but holds something which a +clever artist can adapt to his purpose. The "Miss +Muffett" series, for example, or the silhouettes, or +the sea-side sketches, or the ornamental borders +and leaf-and-flower headings. Look over your +back numbers, and you will see how rich they are +in subjects for copies.</p> +<p> +Here is a suggestion for such of you as live by +the sea, and who know something about drawing. +Search for clam-shells on the beach, and select the +whitest and most perfectly formed. Separate the +two shells, cleanse them thoroughly, and make on +the smooth pearly lining of each a little drawing in +sepia. It will serve as a receiver to stand on a +lady's toilet and hold rings and trinkets, or it can<a name="page61" id="page61"></a><span class="left">[page 61]</span> +be used as an ash-holder by a smoking gentleman, +or to contain pens on a writing-table.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Shoe-Chair Made of a Barrel</span>.</h4> +<p> +Another shoe-chair as nice as that pictured on +page 56 can be made out of a barrel by any girl +who has a father or big brother to help her a little +with the carpentering. The barrel is cut as in +Fig. 1 below, so as to form a back and a low front. +The back is stuffed a little, and covered with chintz +nearly down to the floor. The front has a deep +frill tacked on all around the chair. Four blocks +are nailed inside the barrel to support a round of +wood, stuffed and cushioned with the same chintz, +to serve as a seat.</p> +<p> +A straight shoe-bag, with eight pockets, is made +in the same chintz, and tacked firmly all around +the inside. A loop of the chintz serves to raise the +seat. Four castors screwed to the bottom of the +barrel will be an improvement, as the chair without +them cannot easily be moved about. About five +yards of chintz will be required for the covering; or +you might use the merino of an old dress.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"><a href="images/069a.jpg"> +<img src="images/069a-500.jpg" width="500" height="453" alt=" BARREL SHOE-CHAIR... " border="0" /> +</a> +<p class="tag">1. SHOWS MANNER OF CUTTING BARREL.<br /> +2. BARREL SHOE-CHAIR COMPLETED.<br /> +3. INTERIOR OF BARREL SHOE-CHAIR.<br /> +4. DIAGRAM SHOWING MODE OF MAKING POCKETS FOR BARREL SHOE-CHAIR.</p> +</div><br /><br /> + + + + + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Muslin Tidy</span>.</h4> +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/069b.jpg"><img src="images/069b-300.jpg" width="300" height="292" alt="A MUSLIN TIDY TRIMMED WITH LACE FOOTING." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">A MUSLIN TIDY TRIMMED WITH LACE FOOTING.</p> +</div> +<p> +Three-quarters of a yard of clear French muslin +will be needed for this. Lay a large dinner-plate +down on the muslin, draw the circle made by its +edge with a pencil, cut out, and lightly whip it +round, pulling the thread a little to keep the circle +perfect. Measure the circle, and cut a straight +muslin ruffle, five inches wide and a little less than +twice as long as the measure. Roll one edge finely, +and overhand on a plain lace footing an inch and a +half wide. Whip the other edge, and sew it round +the circle, graduating the fullness equally.</p> +<br /><br /> + +<p> +Baste a bit of lace footing three-quarters of an +inch wide in the middle of the circle, giving it the +form of a bow-knot with two ends. The lace must be bent and folded +into the form, but not cut. Run the edges with embroidery cotton, +and button-hole all round. Then, with sharp scissors, cut away the +muslin underneath, leaving the bow-knot transparent on a thicker +ground. Dry-flute the ruffle. This little affair is very dainty and odd, +one of the prettiest things which we have seen lately.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">An Illuminated Border for a Photograph</span>.</h4> +<p> +St. Nicholas has given us of late such precise directions for the +process of illuminating in color,<a href="#II2"><sup>2</sup></a><a name="II2r" id="II2r"></a> +that it is not needful to repeat them; but we should like to suggest an idea +to those of you who have begun to practice the art. This is to illuminate +a border or "mount" around a favorite photograph. The picture +must first be pasted on a large sheet of tinted card-board, pale +cream or gray being the best tints to select. You then measure the spaces +for your frame, which should be square if the picture is oval or round,<a name="page62" id="page62"></a><span class="left">[page 62]</span> +and outline them lightly in lead-pencil. Next you +sketch and paint your pattern,—flowers, leaves, +birds, butterflies, or a set pattern, as you prefer,—putting +the designs thickly together; and, lastly, +you fill all the blank spaces in with gold paint, +leaving the pattern in colors on a gilded ground. +The outer edge of the frame should be broken into +little scallops or trefoils in gold, and the card-board +should be large enough to leave a space of at least +three inches between the illuminated border and +the frame, which should be a wide band of dull +gilding or pale-colored wood, with a tiny line of +black to relieve it. The ornament should, if possible, +chord in some way with the picture, Thus a +photograph of a Madonna might have the annunciation-lilies +and passion-flowers on the gold ground.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Book of Texts</span>.</h4> +<p> +Another choice thing which can be done by a +skillful illuminator is a small book, containing a +few favorite texts, chosen by some friend. Half-a-dozen +will be enough. Each text occupies a separate +page, and is carefully lettered in red or black, +with decorated initials, and a border in colors. A +great deal of taste can be shown in the arrangement +of these borders, which should be appropriate +to the text they surround. A title-page is added, +and the book is bound in some quaint way. A +cover of parchment or white vellum, illuminated +also, can be made very beautiful.</p><br /><br /> + +<div class="figleft" style="width:25%"> +<a href="images/070.jpg"><img src="images/070-150.jpg" width="150" height="400" alt="CARTE-DE-VISITE RECEIVER." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">CARTE-DE-VISITE RECEIVER.</p> +</div><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Carte-de-Visite Receiver</span>.</h4> +<p> +For this you must procure from the tin-man a +strip of tin three times as long as it is wide—say +six inches by eighteen—with each end shaped to a +point, as indicated in the picture. Measure off +two bits of card-board of exactly the same size and +shape; cover one with silk or muslin for a back, +and the other with Java canvas, cloth, or velvet, +embroidered with a monogram in the upper point, +and a little pattern or motto in the lower. Lay +the double coverings one on each side of the tin, +and cross the outside one with narrow ribbons, +arranged as in the picture. Overhand firmly all +around; finish the top with a plaited ribbon and a +little bow and loop to hang it by, and the bottom +with a bullion fringe of the color of the ribbon.<br /><br /></p><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Pair of Bellows</span>.</h4> +<p> +There seems no end to the pretty devices which +proficients in painting can accomplish. We saw not +long since a pair of wooden bellows which had +been decorated with a painting of a tiny owl sitting +on a bough, and the motto "Blow, blow, thou +bitter wind." Why should not some of you try +your hands at something similar? Wood fires, +thank heaven, are much more common than they +used to be, and most of you must know a cozy +chimney corner where a pretty pair of bellows +would be valued.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Door-Panel</span>.</h4> +<p> +A great bunch of field-flowers, or fruit-boughs, +or Virginia-creeper, painted in water-paints on the +panel of an ordinary door, is another nice thing for +you young artists to attempt. Perhaps you will object +that a picture on a door can hardly be called +a Christmas present; but we don't know.</p> +<p> +Anything which loving fingers can make, +and loving hearts enjoy, is a gift worthy +of Christmas or any other time.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Sachet in Water-Colors</span>.</h4> +<p> +Another dainty idea for you who can paint is a small +perfume-case of white or pale-colored silk or satin, +on which is painted a bunch of flowers or a little motto. +The flowers must be small ones, such as forget-me-nots +or purple and white violets. A great deal of white +paint—body color, as it is called—should +be mixed with the color, to make it thick enough not +to soak and stain the silk along the +edges of the pattern. Some people paint the whole +design in solid white, let it dry, and then put on +the color over the white. Others mix a little ox-gall +with the paint.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Decorated Candles</span>.</h4> +<p> +The large wax or composition candles, of a firm +texture, are best for purposes of decoration. Water-color +paints can be used, or those powders which<a name="page63" id="page63"></a><span class="left">[page 63]</span> +come for coloring wax flowers. In either case it +will be necessary to use a little ox-gall to give the +paint consistency. A band of solid tint—crimson, +black, blue or gold—is usually put around the +middle of the candle, with a pattern in flowers or +small bright points above and below. Spirals of +blue forget-me-nots all over the candle are pretty, +or sprays of leaves and berries set in a regular +pattern. These gay candles are considered ornamental +for a writing-table, and look well in the +brass candlesticks which are so much used just +now, though <i>we</i> confess to a preference for unornamented +candles of one solid tint.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">A Rustic Jardinière</span>.</h4> +<p> +Boys and girls who live in the country hardly +know how lucky they are, or what mines of materials +for clever handiwork lie close by them in the +fruitful, generous woods. What with cones and +leaves and moss and lichens and bark and fungi +and twigs and ferns, these great green store-houses +beat all the fancy shops for variety and beauty, and +their "stock" is given away without money or +price to all who choose to take. Most of you know +something of the infinite variety of things which +can be made out of these wood treasures, though +nobody knows, or can know, <i>all</i>. Now, we want to +tell you of a new thing, not at all difficult to make, +and which would be a lovely surprise for some one +this coming Christmas.</p> +<p> +It is a rustic jardinière, or flower-pot. The first +step toward making it is to find a small stump +about ten inches high, and as odd and twisted in +shape as possible. It should have a base broader +than its top, and three or four little branches projecting +from its sides. Carry this treasure home, +brush off any dirt which may cling to it, and ornament +it with mosses and lichens, glued on to look +as natural as possible. Make three small cornucopias +of pasteboard; cover them also with mosses +and lichens, and fasten them to the stump between +the forks of the branches, using small brads or +tacks to keep them firm. Stuff the cornucopias +with dry moss, and arrange in each a bouquet of +grasses, autumn leaves, and dried ferns, dipping +the end of each stem in flour paste, to make it +secure in its place. Sprays of blackberry-vine or +michella, and the satin-white pods of the old-fashioned +"honesty," make an effective addition. +When done, we have a delightful winter-garden, +which will keep its beauty through the months of +snow and sleet, and brighten any room it stands in. +Nor is its use over when winter ends, for, inserting +small glass phials in the cornucopias, fresh flowers +can be kept in them as in a vase, and the grays +and browns of the lichened wood set off their hues +far better than any gay vase could.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4><span class="sc">Another Jardinière</span>.</h4> +<p> +Another rustic flower-holder can be made by +selecting three knotty twigs, two and a half feet +long and about an inch in diameter, and nailing +them together in the form of a tripod, one half +serving as a base, the other to hold a small flower-pot +or a goblet whose foot has been broken off. +The lower half should be strengthened with cross +pieces nailed on, and both halves with twists of +wild grape-vine or green briar, wired at their crossings +to hold them firmly in place. When the frame +is ready, melt together half a pound of bees'-wax, +a quarter of a pound of rosin, and enough powdered +burnt-umber to give a dark brown color; +and pour the mixture on boiling hot. It will give +the wood a rich tint. Fill the pot with sand, place +over the sand a layer of green moss well pulled +apart, and in that arrange a bouquet of dried +leaves, ferns and grasses, or, if it is summer-time, +wild flowers and vines.</p> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<p> +Now, dear fancy-workers, little and big, surely +Mother Santa Claus has furnished you with ideas +enough to keep you busy for more Christmases +than one. Just one thing more, and that is the +manner in which the presents shall be given. +Nothing can be droller than to hang up one's stockings, +and nothing prettier or more full of meaning +than a Christmas-tree. But for some of you who +may like to make a novelty in these time-honored +ways, we will just mention that it is good fun to +make a "Christmas-pie" in an enormous tin dish-pan, +with a make-believe crust of yellow cartridge +paper, ornamented with twirls and flourishes of the +same, held down with pins, and have it served on +Christmas Eve, full of pretty things and sugar-plums, +jokes and jolly little rhymes fastened to the +parcels. The cutting should be done beforehand, +and hidden by the twirls of paper; but the carver +can pretend to use his knife and fork, and spooning +out the packages will insure a merry time for all at +table. And one more suggestion. Little articles, +wrapped in white paper, can be put inside cakes, +baked and iced, and thus furnish another amusing +surprise for the "pie" or the Christmas-tree.</p> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<p> +We are indebted to Mrs. L. B. Goodall, Mrs. M. E. Stockton, +Mrs. Tolles, Miss Annie M. Phœbus, +Miss M. Meeker, and Miss M. H. D., for designs +and suggestions in aid of this article; and to the +"Ladies' Floral Cabinet" for some valuable hints +on "Leaf-work."</p> + + +<br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /> + + <h4>Footnotes</h4> + +<p class="note"><a name="II1" id="II1"></a> +<a class="note" href="#II1r">[Footnote 1:</a> The present paper will enable our young friends +to make over seventy different articles for Christmas gifts. While a few familiar things +may be found among them, a great majority of the objects are entirely novel, and are here +described for the first time. All who may wish +for still further hints in regard to home-made Christmas presents will find very many useful +suggestions in the paper "One Hundred Christmas Presents, and How to Make Them," published in +<span class="sc">St. Nicholas</span> for December, 1875—Vol. III.]</p> + +<p class="note"><a name="II2" id="II2"></a> +<a class="note" href="#II2r">[Footnote 2:</a> <span class="sc">See St. Nicholas</span>, Vol. IV., page 379.]</p> + + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="page64" id="page64"></a><span class="left">[page 64]</span> +<h2>LITTLE TWEET.</h2> + +<p> +There were once some nice little birds who lived together in a great +big cage. This cage was not at all like the bird-cages we generally see. +It was called an aviary, and it was as large as a room. It had small +trees and bushes growing in it, so that the birds could fly about +among the green leaves and settle on the branches. There were +little houses where the birds might make their nests and bring up their +young ones, and there was everything else that the people who owned +this big cage thought their little birds would want. It had wires all +around it to keep the birds from flying away.</p> + +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/072.jpg"><img src="images/072-300.jpg" width="300" height="352" alt="THE OTHER BIRDS BRING SEEDS TO POOR TWEET." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">"THE OTHER BIRDS BRING SEEDS TO POOR TWEET."</p> +</div> +<p> +One of the tamest and prettiest of the +birds who lived in this place was called little Tweet, because, whenever +she saw any of the family coming near the cage she would fly up close to +the wires and say, "Tweet! Tweet!" which meant "Good-morning! how +do you do?" But they thought it was only her pretty way of asking for +something to eat; and as she said "Tweet" so much, they gave her that +for a name.</p> +<p> +One day there was a boy who came to visit the family who owned +the birds, and very soon he went to see the big cage. He had never +seen anything like it before. He had never been so close to birds that +were sitting on trees or hopping about among the branches. If the birds +at home were as tame as these, he could knock over lots of them, he thought.</p> +<p> +There was one that seemed tamer than any of the rest. It came up +close to him and said: "Tweet! Tweet!"</p> +<a name="page65" id="page65"></a><span class="left">[page 65]</span> +<p> +The boy got a little stick and pushed it through the wires at little Tweet, +and struck her. Poor little Tweet was frightened and hurt. She flew up +to a branch of the tree and sat there, feeling very badly. When the boy +found he could not reach her any more with his stick, he went away.</p> +<p> +Tweet sat on the branch a long time. The other birds saw she was +sick, and came and asked how she felt. Some of them carried nice seeds +to her in their bills. But little Tweet could not eat anything. She ached +all over, and sat very quietly with her head down on her breast.</p> +<p> +She sat on that branch nearly all day. She had a little baby-bird, +who was in a nest in one of the small houses, but the other birds said +she need not go and feed it if she did not wish to move about. They +would take it something to eat.</p> +<p> +But, toward night, she heard her baby cry, and then she thought she +must go to it. So she slowly flew over to her house; and her baby, who +was in a little nest against the wall, was very glad to see her.</p> + +<div class="figright"> +<a href="images/073.jpg"><img src="images/073-400.jpg" width="400" height="291" alt="I WILL BE A KIND MOTHER TO IT, FOR THE SAKE OF POOR LITTLE TWEET." border="0" /></a> +<p class="center">"I WILL BE A KIND MOTHER TO IT, FOR THE SAKE OF POOR LITTLE TWEET.</p> +</div> +<p> +In the morning, two of the birds came to the house to see how little +Tweet was, and found her lying on the floor, dead. The little baby-bird was +looking out of its nest, wondering what it all meant. How sorry those two +birds were when they found that their good little +friend Tweet was really dead!</p> +<p> +"Poor Tweet!" said one of them, "She was the +gentlest and best of us all. And that poor little +dear in the nest there, what will become of it?"</p> +<p> +"Become of it!" replied the other bird, who +was sitting by poor Tweet, "Become of it! Why, it shall never want for +anything. I shall take it for my own, and I will be a kind mother to it, +for the sake of poor little Tweet."</p> +<p> +Now, do you not think that there were good, kind birds in that big +cage? But what do you think of the boy?</p> + +<a name="page66" id="page66"></a><span class="left">[page 66]</span> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%;"> +<a href="images/074.jpg"><img src="images/074-400.jpg" width="400" height="469" alt="JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT." border="0" /></a> +</div> + +<p> +<span class="sc">Hurrah</span> for the new volume!—Volume V., +I believe it is to be called. That reminds me of +the names of Japanese children, hundreds of years +ago. Instead of being known by the Japanese for +Tom, Henry, or John, it was No. 1, No. 2, No. 3, +and so on, through a whole family of little folks.</p> +<p><a name="III1r" id="III1r"></a> +Once you had an article<a href="#III1"><sup>1</sup></a> on Japanese Games +by a native of Japan, Ichy Zo Hattori. Well, this +name, as you will all admit, is a fine-sounding appellative +enough, but in English it means simply +No. 1 Hattori.</p> +<p> +So, welcome to the lovely new child, No. 5 St. +Nicholas!—and that he may grow to be a brave, +bright volume, beautiful to look at and useful to +this and many a generation of little folks, is your +Jack's earnest wish.</p> +<p> +Of one thing the little fellow may be sure,—Jack +and the Deacon, and the dear, blessed Little School-ma'am, +will stand by him to the end. And so will +you, my chicks, Jack verily believes. He'll be a +good friend to you, bringing you any amount of +fun, and telling you more good things every month +than you'll remember in a thousand years.</p> +<p> +Now we'll take up our next subject.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4>AN ARTIFICIAL HORSE THAT CAN GO.</h4> +<p> +Well, well! The birds must be joking, for +who ever heard of a bird telling a deliberate lie? +And yet it <i>may</i> be true. There have been artificial +men,—manikins, automata, or whatever they are +called,—so why shouldn't there be artificial horses?</p> +<p> +Come to think of it, it was not the birds who +told me about them. It was a letter; and "artificial +horses" the letter said, as plainly as could be. +It told how a fine specimen had just been exhibited +in the capital of Prussia. The thing must look +like a horse, too, for it is a hobby between two high +wheels (the rider sits on the saddle), and it travels +about as rapidly as a trotting horse. As I understand +it, the rider moves his legs to make the +machine go, and yet it isn't a bicycle. It goes +over stony roads, turns corners, and, for aught +Jack knows, rears and kicks like any ordinary +charger—that is, when it's out of order.</p> +<p> +I should like to see one among the boys of the +red school-house. How they would make it go!</p><br /><br /> + + +<blockquote> +<h4>A LETTER FROM DEACON GREEN.</h4> +<p class="indent"> +<span class="sc">Dear Jack-in-the-Pulpit</span>: I wish some of the boys and girls +who think they never have any chance to read could know a little +fellow of my acquaintance, named George. He is fourteen years old +and employed as errand boy in a business house in New York. All +day long he runs, runs,—up-town, down-town, across town,—until +you would suppose that his little legs would be worn out. But, +always on the alert as he is, and ready to do his duty whether tired +or not, he still keeps constantly before his mind the idea of self-improvement, +in business and out. Through a friend he has of late +been able to procure books from the Mercantile Library. Although +his time during the day, as I have said, is wholly taken up with his +duties, yet he managed, during the evenings of last fall and winter +(in five months), to read twelve books, some of them quite long ones +and some of them in two volumes, all selected with his friend's assistance. +From the list, I fancy the little fellow had an eye to enjoyment +as well as profit, for they are not all what are called instructive +books, although every one of them is a good book for a boy to read, +and George tells me he enjoyed them all heartily.</p> +<p> +As many of your youngsters, friend Jack, may like to know just +what books the little fellow has read, I will give you the list that he +wrote out at my request. It does not seem a very long list, perhaps, +but I think very few hard-working boys in New York have read +more than George in the same space of time. Here is the list:</p> +<p> +"Robinson Crusoe;" "Benjamin Franklin," 2 vols.; "Life of +Napoleon," 2 vols.; "Schoolmaster Stories;" "Hans Brinker;" +"Swiss Family Robinson;" "Dickens's Child's History of England:" +"Kenilworth;" "The Scottish Chiefs;" "The Boy Emigrants;" +"Sparks' Life of Washington;" "Glaisher's Aerial Navigation."</p> +<p> +This letter, dear Jack, is sent, not by way of puffing George, but +as a sort of spur to studious boys and girls who may follow his example, +if somebody puts them up to it.—Yours truly,</p> +<p class="author"> +<span class="sc">Silas Green</span>.</p> +</blockquote> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h4>"SEE HOW I HELP!"</h4> +<p> +One of Jack's good friends, L.W.J. sends you +this new fable:</p> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"See how I help!" said a little mouse</p> + <p class="i2">To the reapers that reaped the grain,</p> +<p>As he nibbled away, by the door of his house,</p> + <p class="i2">With all of his might and main.</p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"See how I help!" he went on with his talk;</p> + <p class="i2">But they laid all the wide field low</p> +<p>Before he had finished a single stalk</p> + <p class="i2">Of the golden, glittering row.</p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>As the mouse ran into his hole, he said:</p> + <p class="i2">"Indeed, I cannot deny,</p> +<p>Although an idea I had in my head,</p> + <p class="i2">Those fellows work better than I."</p> +</div> +</div> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h4>AMONG THE CRANBERRY BOGS.</h4> + +<blockquote><p class="author"> +New Jersey, 1877.</p> +<p class="indent"> +<span class="sc">Dear Jack-in-the-Pulpit</span>: You would not think, from their +names, that cranberry bogs are pleasant places, but I enjoyed very +much a visit to one last year in the fall. Seen merely from the road, +a bog doesn't show very well, for the leaves are small, and the vines +are crowded in heavy masses; but, when you get near, the white +and red berries look pretty among the dark-green leaves.</p> +<p> +The meadow is checquered with little canals by means of which +the whole surface is flooded in winter-time, so as to protect the vines +from the ill effects of frosts and thaws. In the spring, the water is +drawn off at low tide through the flood-gates.</p> +<p> +When the cranberry-pickers are at work, they make a curious +sight, for there are people of all ages, odd dresses, and both sexes +among them, and often a tottering old man may be seen working +beside a small child. The little ones can be trusted to gather cranberries,<a name="page67" id="page67"></a><span class="left">[page 67]</span> +for the fruit is not easily crushed in handling. Where cranberries +grow thickly, one can almost fill one's hand at a grasp.</p> +<p> +The overseer's one-roomed shanty, where he cooks, eats and +sleeps, is on a knoll, and near it are the barrels in which the berries +are packed, after they have been sorted according to size and quality.</p> +<p> +Picking cranberries may be pleasant enough in fine weather, but it +must be miserable work on a cold, drizzly day.</p> +<p> +I hope this short account will be news to some of your chicks, of +whom I am one, dear Jack; and I remain yours truly,</p> +<p class="author"> +H. S.</p> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h4>MORE CRYSTALLIZED HORSES.</h4> + +<p class="author"> +Piermont, N. H.</p> +<p class="indent"> +<span class="sc">Dear Jack-in-the-Pulpit</span>: You ask in the March number of the +St. Nicholas if any of us have seen crystallized horses "with our own +eyes." We (Willie and I) have seen them many times; so has +everybody else who lives here; that is, we have seen something very +much like it, though we do not call it the same. When the thermometer +is from thirty to thirty-six degrees below zero, horses and +oxen are all covered with a white frost, so you cannot tell a black +horse or ox from a white one; nor can you tell young men from old +ones. Their whiskers, eyebrows and eyelashes, are all perfectly +white. I've often had my ears frost-bitten in going to the school-house, +which is only about as far as two blocks in a city.</p> +<p> +When we see these sights, Jack Frost cannot paint his delicate pictures +on the windows, for a thick white frost covers them all over, or +rubs them out.</p> +<p> +We like the St. Nicholas very much, and even our little sister, +Mary, likes to look at the pictures, and she said that she wished she +could see Jack-in-the-Pulpit. We intend to introduce her next summer +to some of your relations that live by the big brook. We live +about one hundred miles north-west of Concord, in the Connecticut +valley, about half a mile from the Connecticut River. I am thirteen +years old.—Good-bye, </p> +<p class="author"> + E. A. M.</p> +</blockquote> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h4>A TURTLE CART.</h4> + +<blockquote><p class="indent"> +<span class="sc">Dear Jack</span>: Looking over the fence into my neighbor's yard last +summer, I saw what seemed to be a Liliputian load of hay in a tiny +cart, going along the path. Whatever power drew it, was hidden +from my sight; but the motion of the cart made me half expect to +see a yoke of tiny oxen turn the corner. In a few moments, a small +turtle appeared in sight, plodding leisurely along and drawing behind +him the cart I had seen, which was very small and light.</p> +<p> +I was assured by my little neighbor that the turtle liked the business +very much; but, belonging to the S. P. C. A., I felt obliged to +know the facts. I found that the turtle had his liberty nearly all the +time, and a pond of water specially for his use; and that, when the +haying season should end, he would be turned out to pasture in his +native bog for the rest of the year.</p> +<p> +It was a very comical sight, and, knowing my little friend's tenderness +of heart, I was sure the turtle would receive nothing but kindness +at his hands. The shell was not pierced, but the queer trotter +was attached to the cart by means of a harness made of tape, allowing +him free movement of the head, legs, and tail. If any of your +boys should decide to follow my little friend's example, I trust that +they will be as gentle as he in the treatment of their turtles.—Yours +truly, </p> +<p class="author"> + E. F. L.</p> +</blockquote> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h4>ANOTHER TURTLE STORY.</h4> + +<blockquote><p class="indent"> +<span class="sc">Dear Jack</span>: One day, Rob and I (he's my brother) heard sister +Welthy screaming awfully. We were playing in the barn, but of +course we rushed out as hard as we could to save her life, if possible. +We did not know where she was, but the screams grew louder as we +neared the house.</p> +<p> +At last we found her near the side-door—and what do you think +was the matter?</p> +<p> +Why, she was screaming at a turtle!</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%;"> +<img src="images/075-500.jpg" width="500" height="460" alt="A CORNER IN TURTLES." border="0" /> +<p class="center">A CORNER IN TURTLES.</p> +</div> + + +<p> +You don't know how funny it did seem. But we captured the +dreadful monster (?) and comforted her as well as we could.</p> +<p> +Now, Jack, as you and the Little Schoolma'am can do everything, +wont you please get ST. NICHOLAS to show us a picture of this +scene? I do believe Sis would laugh as hard as any of us if she +could see it.—Yours affectionately, </p> +<p class="author"> +<span class="sc">Ned</span> G. P.</p> +</blockquote> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<h4>HALF SWEET, HALF SOUR.</h4> + +<p> +The birds tell me that in a certain country +grows an apple one half of which is sweet and the +other half sour. I don't think I should like that +sort of apple. The sweet side might do very well, +as far as it went; but if you happened to bite on +the other side,—ugh!</p> +<p> +I like things that are good all through, so that I +can be sure how to take them. Don't you?</p><br /><br /> + +<h4>Footnotes</h4> + +<p class="note"><a name="III1" id="III1"></a> +<a class="note" href="#III1r">[Footnote 1:</a> See <span class="sc">St. Nicholas</span> for January, 1874.]</p> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + +<a name="page68" id="page68"></a><span class="left">[page 68]</span> + +<h2>OUR MUSIC PAGE</h2> +<h3>CAN A LITTLE CHILD, LIKE ME?</h3> +<h4><span class="sc">A Thanksgiving Hymn</span>.</h4> + +<p> +<span style="float: right;"> +Music by <span class="sc">Wm. K. Bassford</span>. </span> +Words by <span class="sc">Mary Mapes Dodge</span>.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%;"> +<a href="images/076.jpg"><img src="images/076-320.jpg" width="320" height="465" alt="A THANKSGIVING HYMN." border="0" /></a> +</div> +<table summary="poem"> +<tr> + <td class="poem"> + +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>1. Can a little child like me,</p> + <p class="i2">Thank the Father fittingly?</p> + <p class="i2">Yes, oh yes! be good and true.</p> + <p class="i2">Patient, kind in all you do;</p> + <p class="i2">Love the Lord and do your part,</p> + <p class="i2">Learn to say with all your heart:</p> + <p class="i4">Father, we thank Thee!</p> + <p class="i4">Father, we thank Thee! </p> + <p class="i2">Father in Heaven, we thank Thee!</p> + </div> + </div> + </td> + <td class="poem"> +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>2. For the fruit upon the tree,</p> + <p class="i2">For the birds that sing of Thee,</p> + <p class="i2">For the earth in beauty drest,</p> + <p class="i2">Father, mother and the rest,</p> + <p class="i2">For thy precious, loving care,</p> + <p class="i2">For Thy bounty ev'rywhere,</p> + <p class="i4">Father, we thank Thee!</p> + <p class="i4">Father, we thank Thee! </p> + <p class="i2">Father in Heaven, we thank Thee!</p> +</div> +</div> +</td> +</tr> +</table> + + +<p class="center"> +Music and words copyrighted, 1877, by Wm. K. Bassford</p> +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /> + +<a name="page69" id="page69"></a><span class="left">[page 69]</span> + + +<h3>"THE BABY'S OPERA" AND WALTER CRANE.</h3> + +<p> +Of the many great artists of England, Walter Crane +is accounted among the ablest and most gifted. As +a painter on the canvas he stands high with critics; +and in this country he is most widely known by his +designs of colored picture-books for children. This is +what one critic says of him in this regard: "Walter +Crane has every charm. His design is rich, original, +and full of discovery. His drawing is at once manly +and sweet, and his color is as delightful as a garden of +roses in June. And with these accomplishments he +comes full-handed to the children,—and to their parents +and lovers too!—and makes us all rich with a pleasure +none of us ever knew as children, and never could have +looked to know."</p> +<p> +After this, it is very discouraging to learn, from a +letter of Mr. Crane's to the Editor of <span class="sc">Scribner's +Monthly</span>, that one may be deceived in buying Mr. +Crane's books. This is particularly the case with "The +Baby's Opera." So now we tell the readers of <span class="sc">St. +Nicholas</span> that every true copy of "The Baby's Opera" +bears on its title-page the name of Messrs. George +Routledge & Sons, the publishers, as well as Mr. +Crane's, and that of the engraver and printer, Mr. +Edmund Evans. To a purchaser, it would matter little +that there were two editions of a work as long as the +unauthorized one was exactly like the original; but Mr. +Crane says that "the pirated edition grossly misrepresents +his drawings, both in style and coloring; that the +arrangement of the pages is different; and that the full-page +colored plates are complete travesties, and very +coarse ones, of the originals." And it does not at all +improve the false copy that it is to be bought for less +than the true one costs. It would be bad enough merely +to deprive Mr. Crane of the profits of selling an exact +imitation of his book, but it is far worse to put a <i>bad</i> +sham before the people as the work of a true artist. This +not only lessens his gains, but also takes away from his +good name, besides spoiling the taste of the youngsters.</p> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + + + +<a name="letters" id="letters"></a> +<h2>THE LETTER-BOX.</h2> + +<blockquote><p> +<span class="sc">Girls and Boys</span>: You will all be very sorry, we know, to learn +that the beginning of Miss Alcott's serial story, "Under the Lilacs," +has been postponed to the December number; but in place of it, we +print this month the capital short story of "Mollie's Boyhood," +which, we feel sure, will go far toward repaying you for the disappointment. +We must ask you to wait a month longer for the opening +chapters of the serial, and we mean to give you then a much longer +installment of it than could have been printed in the present issue.</p> +<p> +Meanwhile, you will find that the splendid article on Christmas +Gifts, which occupies twenty-two pages of this number, contains +novelties, hints, plates, and directions enough to keep your minds so +busy planning, and your hands so busily at work, during the next +few weeks, that the December <span class="sc">St. Nicholas</span> will come before you +think of expecting it, and perhaps before you have half finished your +pretty gifts.</p> +</blockquote> + +<hr class="short" /><br /> + +<blockquote><p> +<span class="sc">Dear Little Schoolma'am</span>: Please will you tell me if it is warm +or cold, and if it is dark or light, in the places between the stars?—Yours +affectionately,</p> +<p class="author"> +<span class="sc">Constance Durivage</span>.</p> +</blockquote> + +<blockquote class="comment"><p> +The Little Schoolma'am respectfully hands over this question to +other little schoolma'ams.</p></blockquote> + + <hr class="short" /><br /> + +<blockquote><p> +<span class="sc">Dear St. Nicholas</span>: I make so many of the "Thistle-Puffs" +spoken of in the September number that I thought I would let you +know how I fix mine. After I get the thistles I cut off all the green +excepting a little at the bottom; then I pull out all the purple, and +leave them out in the sun till they are perfectly round white balls. +They are very pretty in hats. Please put me down as a Bird-defender.—Your +constant reader,</p> +<p class="author"> +<span class="sc">Alice Gertrude Benedict</span>.</p> +</blockquote> + +<hr class="short" /><br /> + +<blockquote><p class="author"> +Exmouth, England, August 27th.</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">Dear St. Nicholas</span>: I have read the story of the "Blue-Coat +Boy," and like it. I am in England, and almost every day see a +Blue-Coat boy pass our house. I think he looks like the picture in +the <span class="sc">St. Nicholas</span>. I should not like to wear the long coat, because +I couldn't run in it; and I should think he would get a sunstroke, +without a hat, if he ever goes to the beach. Aunt Fanny is like my +mamma; she never asks for the right thing at the shops. I like the +<span class="sc">St. Nicholas</span>, and wish another one would come. My aunty gave +it to me for a Christmas present for a whole year.—Your friend,</p> +<p class="author"> +<span class="sc">benedict Crowell</span>.</p> +</blockquote> + + <hr class="short" /><br /> +<blockquote class="comment"><p> +We are very glad to see the interest which our readers have taken +in the subject of "School-luncheons." Many boys and girls have +sent in letters, thanking us for the article in our September number, +and filled with sage bits of experience. We should like to acknowledge +these separately, and print some of them, but can do no more +here than express our thanks to our young correspondents, one and +all, for their kind and hearty words.</p> +<p> +It will interest them all to know, however, that the article has +attracted attention, and aroused enthusiasm among the older people +too,—their fathers and mothers, and teachers, and even their favorite +writers. For here, among the many letters it has brought us, is one +that is peculiarly welcome. Our readers will have little difficulty in +guessing who the writer is:</p></blockquote> <br /><br /> + +<blockquote><p class="author"> +August 26th.</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">Dear Little Schoolma'am</span>: Being much interested, as well as +amused, by the luncheon article in ST. NICHOLAS for September, I +should like to add one more to the list of odd luncheons.</p> +<p> +A pretty little dish of boiled rice, with a cake of molasses, or preserve +of some sort, in the middle. This, fitted into a basket, and +covered with a plate, goes safely, and, with the addition of a napkin +and two spoons, makes a simple meal for hungry children.</p> +<p> +It may find favor in the eyes, or rather mouths, of the young +readers of <span class="sc">St. Nicholas</span>, not only because it is good, but because it +was the favorite lunch once upon a time of two little girls who are +now pretty well known as "Meg and Jo March." It may be well +to add that these young persons never had dyspepsia in their lives,—pie +and pickles, cake and candy being unknown "goodies" to them.</p> +<p> +With best wishes for the success of this much-needed reform in +school-children's diet, I am, yours truly,</p> +<p class="author"> +L. M. A.</p> +</blockquote> + + <br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /> +<a name="moons"></a> +<h3><span class="sc">The Moons of Mars</span>.</h3> +<blockquote class="comment"><p> +Since Professor Proctor wrote the paper entitled "Mars, the +Planet of War," published in this number, there has been made, in +relation to its subject, a discovery that the scientists say will rank +among the most brilliant achievements of astronomy.</p> +<p> +A great difference once thought to exist between Mars and the +other planets was that he had no moons; but during the night of the +16th of August, Professor Hall, of the U.S. Naval Observatory at +Washington, D.C., actually saw through his telescope that Mars +has a moon. On the 18th of August another was seen, smaller than +the first and nearer to the planet. The larger satellite is believed to +be not more than ten miles in diameter: it is less than 12,000 miles +distant from its primary, and its period of revolution about it is<a name="page70" id="page70"></a><span class="left">[page 70]</span> +30 hours 14 minutes. The distance of the smaller moon is 3,300 miles, +and its period 7 hours 38 minutes. There is no doubt that these +newly found celestial bodies are the smallest known.</p> +<p> +From measurements made by Professor Hall, it is found, with a +near approach to certainty, that the mass of Mars is equal to +1-3,090,000th part of the mass of the sun. This result was arrived at +after only ten minutes of calculation, and is believed to be more nearly +accurate than that obtained by M. Le Verrier, the great French +astronomer, from observations continued through a century and after +several years of laborious calculation by a corps of computers. This +wonderful difference in the expenditure of time and labor is due to +the vigilance of Professor Hall and to the admirable qualities of his +instrument, the great twenty-six inch refracting telescope made by +Alvan Clark & Sons.</p></blockquote> + + <br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /> + +<blockquote><p class="author"> +Oakland, Cal.</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">Dear St. Nicholas</span>: I do not wish to make you any trouble, +but I would like it very much if you could find room in some +number to give a good explanation of the great war in Europe. I +can't understand it in the newspaper, but I am pretty sure you can +make it plain and simple enough for all of your young readers.—Yours +truly,</p> +<p class="author"> +<span class="sc">Neb</span>.</p> +</blockquote> <br /><br /> + +<blockquote class="comment"><p> +The Turco-Russian war is partly a conflict of religions and +partly one of politics. The Turks came into Europe as the religious +emissaries of the Mohammedan religion. In all the provinces of +Turkey in Europe which they conquered, the Christians of the Greek, +Armenian and Catholic churches were the victims of a bitter persecution. +The Czar of Russia is the head of the Greek church. He +has made repeated wars in defense of the children of his faith. There +have been many wars and long sieges which, like the present, were +said to be only in defense of the faith of the Greek church—a crusade +and a holy war,</p> +<p> +But if "Neb" will only look at the map of Russia, he will see, if +he will study climate a little, that the vast empire of Russia has one +thing lacking. It has no good outlet to the Atlantic Ocean, no power +upon the seas. The Baltic Sea is closed half the year by ice. The +great wheat trade of Russia concentrates at Odessa, on the Black +Sea, and to get her grain to market she must pass through the Turkish +lanes of the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles. Russia is a prisoner +as to access to the Mediterranean, and so to the Atlantic, and so to +the world at large. If she is at war, she cannot float her fleets. If +she is at peace, she cannot sell her grain without going roundabout +through her neighbors' lots. Turkey stands the tollman at the turnpike-gate, +controlling and usurping the highway of all nations.</p> +<p> +Maps are fascinating reading. "Neb" must not think that +religious faith ever occasioned a war. Russia sincerely desires the +protection of Greek Christians in Roumania and Bulgaria in Europe, +and Armenia in Asia, but she wants also to send her ships free to the +winds through from the Black Sea to the Mediterranean. Look at the +map once more, "Neb," and see how much of a great country, fertile, +strong, and industrious, is closed and shut against the outer +world by the absolute Turkish control of the Bosphorus and the +Dardanelles.</p></blockquote> + + +<br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /> + +<blockquote><p class="author"> +Indianapolis, 1877.</p> +<p> +<span class="sc">Dear St. Nicholas</span>: I have taken every number of your splendid +magazine, and I will now try to do my share to entertain the +others.</p> +<p> +My papa was a soldier in the great civil war, and I was born in +camp just after the close of the war, and am now nearly twelve years +old.</p> +<p> +General Sherman, who made the great "march to the sea," wrote +me a letter, which is very much too good for one boy alone, so I send +it to you to publish, so that other children may have the benefit of it +too.—Your reader,</p> +<p class="author"> +<span class="sc">Bernie M</span>.</p> +</blockquote><br /><br /><br /> + +<blockquote class="note"> +<p class="author"> +"Head-quarters Army of the United States,<br /> +"Washington, D. C., April 21, 1877.</p> + +<div class="poem2"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>"<span class="sc">Master Bernie M</span>.</p> +<p class="i6">"Indianapolis:</p> +</div> +</div> + +<p> +"I have received the handsome photograph sent me, and recognize +the features of a fine young lad, who has before him every opportunity +to grow up a man of fine physique, with a mind cultivated to +meet whatever vicissitudes and opportunities the future may present. +Many boys in reading history have a feeling of regret that their lives +had not fallen in some former period, replete with events of stirring +interest, such as our Revolutionary War, or that in Mexico, or even +the Civil War, wherein they feel that they might have played a conspicuous +part.</p> +<p> +"Don't you make this mistake. The next hundred years will present +more opportunities for distinction than the past, for our country +now contains only forty millions of people, which will probably double +every thirty-three years, so that if you live to three score years and +ten you will be a citizen of a republic of two hundred millions of +people. Now, all changes are attended by conflict of mind or of arms, +and you may rest easy that there will be plenty for you to do, and +plenty of honor and fame if you want them. The true rule of life is +to prepare in advance, so as to be ready for the opportunity when it +presents itself.</p> +<p> +"I surely hope you will grow in strength and knowledge, and do +a full man's share in building up the future of this country, which +your fathers have prepared for you.</p> + + <p class="author">"Truly your friend,<br /> +<span class="sc">"W.T. Sherman</span>, General."</p></blockquote> + + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<blockquote class="comment"><p> +No doubt many of our readers have read some of the poems of +Charles and Mary Lamb, and all who have will be interested in the +following news concerning one of their books. In 1809 they published +a little volume of "Poetry for Children," but only a few copies +were printed, and these were soon out of print, so that the book +has long been considered lost to the world. It was recently discovered, +however, that the little book had been reprinted in Boston +in 1812, and the only two copies of this edition known to exist in +this country have lately come into possession of Messrs. Scribner, +Armstrong & Co., who intend to republish the volume this fall. The +book contains many delightful little poems for boys and girls, prettily +rhymed, and full of the quaint humor and conceits which mark the +other writings of the authors. We should like to print several of +them, but have only room for these:</p></blockquote> + <br /><br /> + +<h3><span class="sc">The Young Letter-Writer</span>.</h3> + +<div class="poem1"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p><i>Dear Sir</i>, <i>Dear Madam</i>, or <i>Dear Friend</i>,</p> + <p class="i2">With ease are written at the top;</p> + <p>When these two happy words are penn'd,</p> + <p class="i2">A youthful writer oft will stop,</p></div> +<div class="stanza"> + <p>And bite his pen, and lift his eyes,</p> + <p class="i2">As if he thinks to find in air</p> + <p>The wish'd-for following words, or tries</p> + <p class="i2">To fix his thoughts by fixed stare.</p></div> +<div class="stanza"> + <p>But haply all in vain—the next</p> + <p class="i2">Two words may be so long before</p> + <p>They'll come, the writer, sore perplext,</p> + <p class="i2">Gives in despair the matter o'er;</p></div> +<div class="stanza"> + <p>And when maturer age he sees</p> + <p class="i2">With ready pen so swift inditing,</p> + <p>With envy he beholds the ease</p> + <p class="i2">Of long-accustom'd letter-writing.</p></div> +<div class="stanza"> + <p>Courage, young friend, the time may be,</p> + <p class="i2">When you attain maturer age,</p> + <p>Some young as you are now may see</p> + <p class="i2">You with like ease glide down a page.</p></div> +<div class="stanza"> + <p>Ev'n then, when you, to years a debtor,</p> + <p class="i2">In varied phrase your meanings wrap,</p> + <p>The welcom'st words in all your letter</p> + <p class="i2">May be those two kind words at top.</p> +</div> +</div> + <br /><br /> + +<h3><span class="sc">Crumbs to the Birds</span>.</h3> + +<div class="poem1"> +<div class="stanza"> + <p>A bird appears a thoughtless thing,</p> + <p>He's ever living on the wing,</p> + <p>And keeps up such a carolling,</p> + <p>That little else to do but sing</p> + <p class="i6">A man would guess had he.</p></div> +<div class="stanza"> + <p>No doubt he has his little cares,</p> + <p>And very hard he often fares;</p> + <p>The which so patiently he bears,</p> + <p>That, listening to those cheerful airs,</p> + <p class="i6">Who knows but he may be</p></div> +<div class="stanza"> + <p>In want of his next meal of seeds?</p> + <p>I think for <i>that</i> his sweet song pleads;</p> + <p>If so, his pretty art succeeds.</p> + <p>I'll scatter there among the weeds</p> + <p class="i6">All the small crumbs I see.</p> +</div> +</div> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<blockquote class="comment"><p> +We very seldom take up a book only to break the tenth commandment; +but Bayard Taylor's recent volume, "The Boys of Other +Countries," published by the Putnams, always has that effect upon us, +for we wish that every one of the stories in it had been written for +ST. NICHOLAS. The best thing we can say to our boys and girls, of +a book so well described by its title, is that it contains "Jon of Iceland," +which originally appeared in this magazine, and that each of +the stories is as good in its way as "Jon" itself.</p></blockquote> + +<br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> +<a name="page71" id="page71"></a><span class="left">[page 71]</span> + +<h2>THE RIDDLE-BOX.</h2> + + + +<div class="riddle"> +<h4>DOUBLE ACROSTIC.</h4> +<p> +The initials name a noted philosopher, and the finals an eminent +astronomer.</p> +<p> +1. A narrow arm of the sea. 2. A beautiful flower. 3. A tree, +usually growing in moist land. 4. A small marine animal. 5. A +river in the United States. 6. A cone-bearing tree. 7. A tract of land, +surrounded by water. 8. A metal.</p> +<p class="author"> +ISOLA.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4>BROKEN WORDS.</h4> +<p> +Find a word to fill the single blank, and divide it into smaller +words (without transposing any letters) to fill the other blanks. Thus: +Such <i>forages</i> have gone on in that forest <i>for ages</i>.</p> +<p> +1. You must not think the whole were —— because he —— ——. +2. One of this boy's minor —— is his constant climbing —— ——. +3. When I gave him a pledge, the toper said with a —— look, "You + —— —— —— ——." 6. The alder was pictured against the ——, +every branch, leaf, and —— —— standing out clearly.</p> +<p class="author"> +B.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4>PICTORIAL NUMERICAL, REBUS.</h4> +<p> +Find the sum expressed in each horizontal row, and add together the +four numbers thus found, to form the complete sum +expressed by the rebus.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/079-400.jpg" width="400" height="402" alt="PICTORIAL NUMERICAL, REBUS." border="0" /> +</div><br /><br /> + + +<h4>HOUR-GLASS PUZZLE.</h4> +<p> +1. Unceasing. 2. Of little worth. 3. Habitation. 4. Ancient. +5. A vowel. 6. Devoured. 7. To muse. 8. A maker of arms. +9. Small flat fish. The centrals read downward name the act of unfolding.</p> +<p class="author"> +GEORGE CHINN.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4>BEHEADINGS AND CURTAILINGS.</h4> +<p> +1. Curtail a disgrace, and leave an imposture. Behead, and +leave one of Noah's sons. Curtail, and leave an exclamation denoting +surprise, joy, or grief. Behead again, and leave a vowel.</p> +<p> +2. Curtail a color, and leave a very small part. Behead, and leave +a verb signifying "to strike." Behead again, and leave a pronoun. +Curtail, and leave a simple, personal pronoun.</p> +<p> +3. Curtail a beautiful marine production, and leave a girl's name. +Behead, and leave an ancient coin. Curtail, and leave a conjunction. +Behead, and leave a consonant.</p> +<p> +4. Behead a part of the body, and leave a kind of tree. Curtail, +and leave an article used in toilets. Behead, and leave a preposition. +Curtail, and leave a pronoun.</p> +<p> +5. Curtail a sweet juice collected by bees, and leave a stone for +sharpening razors. Behead, and leave a number. Curtail, and leave +a preposition. Curtail, and leave an invocation.</p> +<p class="author"> +N. T. M.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4>NUMERICAL ENIGMA.</h4> +<p> +After handing a mug of 9, 2, 3 to the man who was at the 7, 4, +5 of the 1, 6, 8, Frank resumed reading the life of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, +8, 9.</p> +<p class="author"> +ISOLA.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4>EASY DIAMOND PUZZLE.</h4> +<p> +1. In dwelling but not in house. 2. A Spanish poem. 3. A girl's +name. 4. A precious stone. 5. A term in English law. 6. An insect. +7. In bird but not in beast.</p> +<p class="author"> +O'B.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4>CHARADE.</h4> + + +<div class="poem1"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i16"><b>I.</b></p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>Out on the hill-side, bleak and bare,</p> +<p>In winter's chill and summer's glare,</p> +<p>Down by the ocean's rugged shore,</p> +<p>Where the restless billows toss and roar,</p> +<p>Deep in gloomy caves and mines,</p> +<p>Where mists are foul and the sun ne'er shines,</p> +<p>Man studies my first and second well,</p> +<p>To learn what story they have to tell.</p> +</div> +</div> +<br /> +<div class="poem1"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i16"><b>II.</b></p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>Go to the depths of the fathomless sea,</p> +<p>Go where the dew-drop shines on the lea,</p> +<p>Go where are gathered in lands afar,</p> +<p>The treasures of earth for the rich bazaar,</p> +<p>Go to the crowded ball-room, where</p> +<p>All that is lovely, and young, and fair,</p> +<p>Charms the soul with beauty and grace,</p> +<p>And my third shall meet you face to face.</p> +</div> +</div> +<br /> +<div class="poem1"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i16"><b>III.</b></p></div> +<div class="stanza"> +<p>When war's red hand was raised to slay,</p> +<p>And front to front great armies lay,</p> +<p>Then, oft in the silent midnight camp,</p> +<p>When naught was heard but the sentry's tramp,</p> +<p>As he patiently paced his lonely round,</p> +<p>My whole was sought, and yet when found,</p> +<p>It sent full many a warrior brave</p> +<p>To his last long rest, in a soldier's grave.</p> +</div> +</div> +<p class="author"> +E. J. A.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4>PUZZLE BOUQUET.</h4> +<p> +1. A cunning animal and a covering for the hand. 2. A voracious +bird of prey and a useless plant. 3. A pipe and a flower. 4. A +sweetmeat and a bunch of hair. 5. A noun meaning a quick breaking +and a winged serpent. 6. A stone fence and the blossom of a plant. +7. Fragrant and a vegetable. 8. An entertainment of dancing and +a boy's nickname. 9. Vapor frozen in flakes, and to let fall. 10. To +enter into the conjugal state, and a precious metal.</p> +<p class="author"> +GEORGE CHINN.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4>TRANSPOSITIONS.</h4> +<p> +Fill the first blank with a certain word, and then, by transposing +the final letter to the place of the initial, form a word to fill the second +blank. Example: In the <i>halls</i> of her ancestors she <i>shall</i> tread without +fear.</p> +<p> +1. There is not on —— a person of larger ——. 2. On the banks +of the —— the traveler —— alone. 3. As the thought of her kindness +—— up in my heart, it causes it to —— with gratitude. 4. It +was with no —— intent that —— destroyed his first will. 5. I noticed +on the —— of the pond quantities of ——.</p> +<p class="author"> +B.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4>LETTER ANAGRAMS.</h4> +<p> +Write a line in each case describing the position of the letters +toward each other, and transpose the letters used in this description +to make a word which will answer the definition given. Thus:</p> + +<p> + <tt>R. }</tt> A part of the day. <i>Ans</i>. R. on M. (transposed) Morn.<br /> + <tt>M. }</tt></p> + + + +<p> +<tt>1. { L. }</tt> A kind of bird.<br /> + <tt> { P. }</tt><br /><br /> +<tt>2. S. R.</tt> Parts of a house.<br /><br /> +<tt>3. S. T.</tt> A piece of furniture.<br /><br /> +<tt>4. { L. }</tt> To pillage.<br /> + <tt> { P. }</tt><br /><br /> +<tt>5. { Et. }</tt> Not rhythmical.<br /> + <tt> { Ic. }</tt></p> + +<p class="author"> +H. H. D.</p><br /><br /> + + +<h4>HIDDEN DRESS GOODS.</h4> +<p> +1. Seizing the rascal I compelled him to give up the money. 2. +Aunt Nell is fond of singing Hamburg. 3. Belle Prescott only failed +once last year. 4. Eveline never learned to control herself. 5. Where +is Towser, Gertie? 6. I met Homer in Oregon. 7. Where did you +find such a queer fossil, Kenneth? 8. Tom Thumb is a tiny specimen +of humanity. 9. Did Erasmus Lincoln lose all his property by +the fire?</p><br /><br /> + +<a name="page72" id="page72"></a><span class="left">[page 72]</span> + +<h4>PICTORIAL, PROVERB-ACROSTIC.</h4> +<p> +Arrange the words represented by the numbered pictures in their order. The initials +and finals (reading down the former and continuing +down the latter) form a familiar proverb, the sentiment of which is suggested by +the central picture.</p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/080-500.jpg" width="500" height="464" alt="PICTORIAL, PROVERB-ACROSTIC." border="0" /> +</div> + + <br /><br /><hr class="short" /><br /><br /><br /> + + +<h3>ANSWERS TO PUZZLES IN OCTOBER NUMBER.</h3> + + +<p class="note"><span class="sc">Double Diamond Puzzle</span>.—</p> + +<div class="poem1"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i8"><tt>M</tt></p> +<p class="i6"><tt>G A S</tt></p> +<p class="i4"><tt>M A P L E</tt></p> +<p class="i6"><tt>S L Y</tt></p> +<p class="i8"><tt>E</tt></p> +<p class="i8"><tt>S</tt></p> +<p class="i6"><tt>N U T</tt></p> +<p class="i4"><tt>S U G A R</tt></p> +<p class="i6"><tt>T A R</tt></p> +<p class="i8"><tt>R</tt></p> +</div> +</div> +<br /><br /> + +<p class="note"> +<span class="sc">Square-Word</span>.—Midas, Ivory, Donor, Arose, Syten.<br /> +<span class="sc">Charade</span>.—Dilapidated.<br /> +<span class="sc">Numerical Enigma</span>.—Handsome.<br /> +<span class="sc">Double Acrostic</span>—Centennial Exposition.—<b>C</b>lov<b>E</b>, <b>E</b>sse<b>X</b>,<br /> +<b>N</b>a<b>P</b>, <b>T</b>allyh<b>O</b>, <b>E</b>piglotti<b>S</b>, <b>N</b>erol<b>I</b>, <b>N</b>ahan<b>T</b>, +<b>I</b>tta<b>I</b>, <b>A</b>rn<b>O</b>, <b>L</b>emo<b>N</b>.</p> + +<p class="note"> +<span class="sc">Riddle</span>.—Linest, Inlets, Enlist, Tinsel, Silent, Listen.</p> +<p class="note"> +<span class="sc">Diagonal Puzzle</span>.—Grand, Prate.</p> + +<div class="poem1"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i4"><tt>G L A R E</tt></p> +<p class="i4"><tt>C R A T E</tt></p> +<p class="i4"><tt>P L A T E</tt></p> +<p class="i4"><tt>C R A N E</tt></p> +<p class="i4"><tt>P L A I D</tt></p> +</div> +</div> +<p class="note"> +<span class="sc">Combination Puzzle</span>.—</p> +<div class="poem1"> +<div class="stanza"> +<p class="i4"><tt>P—rive—T</tt></p> +<p class="i4"><tt>E—pod—–E</tt></p> +<p class="i4"><tt>A—lid—–A</tt></p> +<p class="i4"><tt>C—ape—–S</tt></p> +<p class="i4"><tt>E—lop—–E</tt></p> +</div> +</div> +<p class="note"> +<span class="sc">Easy Diamond Puzzle</span>.—I, Asa, Isola, Ale, A.</p> +<p class="note"> +<span class="sc">Puzzle</span>.—Gondola.</p><br /><br /> +<p class="note"> +<span class="sc">Answers to Puzzles in September Number</span> were received previous to September 18, from—Emma Elliott, Brainerd P. Emery, +Allie Bertram, Sarah D. Oakley, "Camille and Leonie," "Tip," "Yankee," J.W. Myers, George G. Champlin, Alice M. Mason, Maria +Peckham, Florence E. Hyde, Minnie Warner, B. O'Hara, "Green Mountain Boy," John Hinkley, Florence Wilcox, "Bessie and Sue," +Julia Kirene Ladd, Grace Austin Smith, Arthur C. Smith, George Herbert White, William A. Crocker, Jr, Georgiana Mead, A.G.D., +James Iredell, Lizzie and Anna, Agnes E. Kennedy, Anna E. Mathewson, C.S. Riche, Edith McKeever, Nessie E. Stevens, Carrie +Lawson, Charles G. Todd, Ella and Kittie Blanke, W. Creighton Spencer, W. Irving Spencer, Edith Heard, M.W.C., Mary C. Warren, +Lena and Annie, Annie Streckewald, Hattie Peck, Jennie Passmore, George J. Fiske.</p> +</div> + + +<br /><br /><br/> + +<hr class="full" /><br/><br/> +<table width="50%" align="center" summary="note" border="0"> +<tr> + <td class="note"> +<p class="tag"> +Transcriber's Note:<br /> +Some parts of the TOC were illegible, and a few missing page numbers have +been replaced with '?'s.</p> +<p class="tag"> +p. 27: changed 'rains' to 'trains':<br /> +...--; just like the +lines by which trains are made to run easily off one +track on to another.</p> +<p class="tag"> +p. 30: Missing opening quote replaced:<br /> +"The snows that glittered on the disc of Mars..." +</p> +<p class="tag"> +p. 31: ' replaced with ": +"Don't you think, papa, that that's enough about +the sun? Come and play with us on the lawn."</p> +<p class="tag"> +p. 59: Missing ) replaced:<br /> +...(widening the strip, +however, in proportion as the fabric is thinner). </p> + +</td> +</tr> +</table> + + + +<br/><br/><br /><hr class="full" /><br /><br /> +<a name="index" id="index"></a> +<h3>CONTENTS VOLUME V.</h3> + +<table width="110%" align="center" border="0" summary="contents"> +<tr> + <td colspan="2" valign="top"> </td> + <td class="right">PAGE</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Alcott</span>, Miss. (Illustrated from photograph)</td> +<td><i>F. B. S.</i> </td> +<td class="right">129</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Alphabet Français</span>, Un. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Laura Caxton</i> </td> +<td class="right">816</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Always Behindhand</span>. Talk with Girls</td> +<td><i>M. D. K.</i> </td> +<td class="right">434</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Annie and the Balls</span>. (Illustrated by the Author)</td> +<td><i>H. E. H.</i> </td> +<td class="right">205</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">April's Sunbeam</span>. Verses</td> +<td><i>Joy Allison</i> </td> +<td class="right">398</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Arms of Great Britain</span>, The. (Illustrated by Alfred Kappes)</td> +<td><i>Susan Archer Weiss</i> </td> +<td class="right">190</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Atlantic Cable</span>, Secrets of the. (Illustrated by A. C. Warren)</td> +<td><i>William H. Rideing</i> </td> +<td class="right">327</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Ax of Ranier</span>, The. (Illustrated by E.B. Bensell)</td> +<td><i>Thomas Dunn English</i> </td> +<td class="right">709</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#page69"><span class="sc">"Baby's Opera" and Walter Crane</span>, The.</a></td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page69">69</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Barbecue</span>, The. (Illustrated by Walter Shirlaw)</td> +<td><i>Sarah Winter Kellogg</i> </td> +<td class="right">602</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Belinda Blonde</span>. Verses. </td> +<td><i>Laura E. Richards</i></td> +<td class="right">272</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#bell"><span class="sc">Bell-Ringers</span>, The Stickleback.</a> (Illustrated by James C. Beard)</td> +<td><i>C. F. Holder</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page31">31</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Birds and their Families</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Professor W. K. Brooks</i> </td> +<td class="right">606</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Birds Fly</span>, How. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Professor W. K. Brooks</i></td> +<td class="right">734</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#boggs"><span class="sc">Boggs's Photograph</span>.</a> Picture.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page21">21</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Born in Prison</span>. (Illustrated by Edwin L. Sheppard)</td> +<td><i>Julia P. Ballard</i> </td> +<td class="right">730</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Boy in the Box</span>, The. (Illustrated by C.S. Reinhart)</td> +<td><i>Helen C. Barnard</i> </td> +<td class="right">356</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Boy's Experience with Tar Marbles</span>, A. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis)</td> +<td><i>C. S. N.</i></td> +<td class="right">617</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Boy who Jumped on Trains</span>, The. Poem. (Illustrated by L. Hopkins)</td> +<td><i>Mary Hartwell</i> </td> +<td class="right">132</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Bruno's Revenge</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Author of "Alice in Wonderland</i> </td> +<td class="right">18?</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Butterfly-Chase</span>, The. Poem. </td> +<td><i>Ellis Gray</i></td> +<td class="right">548</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Butts, A Chapter of Five Pictures</span>.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right">77</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">By the Sad Sea Waves</span>. Picture drawn by </td> +<td><i>"Sphinx"</i> </td> +<td class="right">716</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#page68"><span class="sc">Can a Little Child Like Me</span>?</a> (Thanksgiving Hymn)</td> +<td><i>Mary Mapes Dodge</i> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page68">68</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Canary that Talked too Much</span>, The. </td> +<td><i>Margaret Eytinge</i> </td> +<td class="right">331</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Carlyle</span>, Thomas. (Crumbs from Older Reading, III.)</td> +<td><i>Julia E. Sargent</i></td> +<td class="right">565</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Carol</span>, The Minstrel's. A Christmas Colloquy.</td> +<td><i>I. V. Blake</i></td> +<td class="right">153</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Charades</span>, Four. Verses.</td> +<td><i>C. P. Cranch</i></td> +<td class="right">406</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Charcoal-Burners' Fire</span>, The. (Illustrated by J.L. Dickinson)</td> +<td><i>David Ker</i></td> +<td class="right">490</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#wolves"><span class="sc">Chased by Wolves</span>.</a> (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>George Dudley Lawson</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page3">3</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#page1"><span class="sc">Child-Queen</span>, A.</a> (Illustrated by Alfred Fredericks) </td> +<td><i>Cecilia Cleveland</i> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page1">1</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Christmas Card</span>.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right">91</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#page42"><span class="sc">Christmas-Gifts</span>, A Budget of Home-Made.</a> (Illustrated)</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page42">42</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Churning</span>. Poem. (Illustrated by J. E. Kelly)</td> +<td><i>Sara Keables Hunt</i></td> +<td class="right">676</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Cock and the Sun</span>, The. Jingle. (Illustrated by F. S. Church)</td> +<td><i>J. P. B</i> </td> +<td class="right">359</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Common-sense in the Household</span>. Verses. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis)</td> +<td><i>Margaret Vandegrift</i> </td> +<td class="right">326</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Coolest Man in Russia</span>, The. (Illustrated by J. E. Kelly)</td> +<td><i>David Ker</i></td> +<td class="right">229</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#cricket"><span class="sc">Cricket on the Hearth</span>, The.</a> Poem. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Clara Doty Bates</i> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page33">33</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Crip's Garret-Day</span>.</td> +<td><i>Sarah J. Prichard</i></td> +<td class="right">339</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Crow that the Crow Crowed</span>, The.</td> +<td><i>S. Conant Foster</i></td> +<td class="right">694</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Crumbs from Older Reading</span></td> +<td><i>Julia E. Sargent</i></td> +<td> </td> +</tr> +<tr><td> + I. <span class="sc">Emerson</span></td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right">262</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> + II. <span class="sc">Irving</span></td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right">354</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> + III. <span class="sc">Carlyle</span></td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right">565</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Dab Kinzer</span>: A Story of a Growing Boy. (Illustrated by H. F. Farney, Geo. Inness, Jr., Sol. Eytinge and H. P. Smith)</td> +<td><i>William O. Stoddard</i> </td> +<td class="right">553, 620, 679, 744, 798</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Debby's Christmas</span>. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis)</td> +<td><i>Ella A. Drinkwater</i></td> +<td class="right">223</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Dick Hardin away at School</span>.</td> +<td><i>Lucy J. Rider</i> </td> +<td class="right">386</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Digger-Wasps at Home</span>, The. (Illustrated by R. Riordan)</td> +<td><i>E. A. E.</i></td> +<td class="right">667</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Dog-Show</span>, A Visit to a London. (Illustrated by J. F. Runge)</td> +<td><i>Laura Sked Pomeroy</i></td> +<td class="right">420</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#tragedy"><span class="sc">Domestic Tragedy</span>, A.</a> In Two Parts (Illustration)</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page31">31</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Drifted into Port</span>. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge and Thomas Moran)</td> +<td><i>Edwin Hodder</i> </td> +<td class="right">342, 425, 494</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Easter Eggs</span>. Poem.</td> +<td><i>Clara W. Raymond</i></td> +<td class="right">419</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Easter in Germany</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>F. E. Corne</i></td> +<td class="right">381</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Easter Lilies</span>. Picture </td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right">399</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Emergency Mistress</span>, The. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Frank R. Stockton</i></td> +<td class="right">669</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Emerson, Ralph Waldo</span>. (Crumbs from Older Reading, I.)</td> +<td><i>Julia E. Sargent</i> </td> +<td class="right">262</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Exciting Ride</span> An. Picture drawn by</td> +<td><i>Miss S. A. Rankin</i> </td> +<td class="right">652</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Fair Exchange</span>, A. Poem.</td> +<td><i>M. F. Butts</i> </td> +<td class="right">820</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Father Chirp</span>. Verses. (Illustrated by L. Hopkins)</td> +<td><i>S. C. Stone</i></td> +<td class="right">476</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Fern-Seed</span>. Poem.</td> +<td><i>Celia Thaxter</i></td> +<td class="right">705</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Fishing-Birds of Florida</span>, Some. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Mrs. Mary Treat</i></td> +<td class="right">282</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Forty</span>, Less One. Poem. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge)</td> +<td><i>James Richardson</i></td> +<td class="right">579</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">"Four little Houses Blue and Round</span>." Jingle</td> +<td><i>M. F. B.</i></td> +<td class="right">465</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Fox, The Monkey, and the Pig</span>, The. (Illustrated by the Author)</td> +<td><i>Howard Pyle</i></td> +<td class="right">743</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Fox and the Turkeys</span>, The. (Illustrated from Gustave Doré)</td> +<td><i>Susan Coolidge</i></td> +<td class="right">756</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Full Stop</span>, A. Silhouette picture drawn by</td> +<td><i>L. Hopkins</i></td> +<td class="right">387</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Gerty</span>. (Illustrated by Frederick Dielman)</td> +<td><i>Margaret W. Hamilton</i></td> +<td class="right">690</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Get Up! Got Down</span>! Silhouettes drawn by</td> +<td><i>L. Hopkins</i></td> +<td class="right">461</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Gifts for St. Nicholas</span>. Poem.</td> +<td><i>Emma E. Brewster</i></td> +<td class="right">294</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Girl who Saved the General</span>, The. (Illustrated by H. F. Farney) </td> +<td><i>Charles H. Woodman</i></td> +<td class="right">577</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Guest</span>, An Agreeable </td> +<td><i>Susan A. Brown</i></td> +<td class="right">180</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Hansa</span>, The Little Lapp Maiden. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Kate B. Horton</i></td> +<td class="right">305</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Happy Fields of Summer</span>. Poem. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Lucy Larcom</i></td> +<td class="right">666</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">"Happy Little Froggy</span>." Poem. (Illustrated by F. S. Church)</td> +<td><i>E. Müller</i></td> +<td class="right">789</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Horse at Sea</span>, A. (Illustrated by J. E. Kelly)</td> +<td><i>C. B.</i></td> +<td class="right">367</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Horses of Venice</span>, The Famous. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Mary Lloyd</i></td> +<td class="right">89</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How Birds Fly</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Professor W. K. Brooks</i></td> +<td class="right">734</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How He Caught Him</span>. Six Pictures.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right">740</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#page34"><span class="sc">How I Weighed the Thanksgiving Turkey</span>.</a></td> +<td><i>G. M. Shaw</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page34">34</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How Kitty got Her New Hat</span>. (Illustrated by J. E. Kelly) </td> +<td><i>E. P. W.</i></td> +<td class="right">182</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How Kitty was Lost in a Turkish Bazaar</span>. (Illustrated by Howard Pyle) </td> +<td><i>Sara Keables Hunt</i></td> +<td class="right">377</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How Lily-Toes was Caught in a Shower</span>. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis) </td> +<td><i>Emily H. Leland</i></td> +<td class="right">731</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How Mandy went Rowing with the Cap'n</span>. (Illustrated by the Author) </td> +<td><i>Mary Hallock Foote</i></td> +<td class="right">449</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How Matches are Made</span>. (Illustrated by A. C. Warren)</td> +<td><i>F. H. C</i></td> +<td class="right">315</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How Sir William Phips Found the Treasure in the Sea</span>. (Illustrated by J. O. Davidson)</td> +<td><i>S. G. W. Benjamin</i></td> +<td class="right">278</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How Teddy Cut the Pie</span>. Verses. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Rossiter Johnson</i></td> +<td class="right">821</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How the Pony was Taken</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>C. W.</i></td> +<td class="right">174</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How the Stone-Age Children Played</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Charles C. Abbott</i></td> +<td class="right">413</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How the Weather is Foretold</span>. (Illustrated by W. H. Gibson)</td> +<td><i>James H. Flint</i></td> +<td class="right">581</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How to Keep a Journal</span>.</td> +<td><i>W. S. Jerome</i></td> +<td class="right">789</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How to Make a Telephone</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>M. F.</i></td> +<td class="right">549</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How to Travel</span>.</td> +<td><i>Susan Anna Brown</i></td> +<td class="right">650</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">How Willy Wolly Went a-Fishing</span>. Verses. (Illustrated by Howard Pyle)</td> +<td><i>S. C. Stone</i></td> +<td class="right">562</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Huckleberry</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Frank R. Stockton</i></td> +<td class="right">274</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Ice-Boat</span>, How to make an. (Diagrams by the Author) </td> +<td><i>J. H. Hubbard</i></td> +<td class="right">220</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">"I'm a Little Story</span>." Poem. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) </td> +<td><i>Margaret Eytinge</i></td> +<td class="right">380</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Irving, Washington</span>. (Crumbs from Older Reading, III.)</td> +<td><i>Julia E. Sargent</i></td> +<td class="right">354</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Italian Flower-Merchant</span>, The Little. Picture drawn by</td> +<td><i>Miss E. M. S. Scannell</i></td> +<td class="right">475</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Jack's Christmas</span>. (Illustrated by Jennie Brownscombe)</td> +<td><i>Emma K. Parrish</i></td> +<td class="right">124</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Japanese "House that Jack Built</span>," The. Picture drawn by</td> +<td><i>William McDougal</i></td> +<td class="right">219</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Jingles</span>.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page6">6</a>, <a href="#page41">41</a>, 359, 404, 412, 465</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">John and His Velocipede</span>. Sketches drawn by</td> +<td><i>B. D.</i></td> +<td class="right">650</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Johnny</span>. (Illustrated by R. Sayre)</td> +<td><i>Sargent Flint</i></td> +<td class="right">361</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Johnny's Lost Ball</span>.</td> +<td><i>Lloyd Wyman</i> </td> +<td class="right">500</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Juno's Wonderful Troubles</span>. (Illustrated by F.S. Church)</td> +<td><i>E. Müller</i></td> +<td class="right">312</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Kept In</span>. Picture drawn by</td> +<td><i>M. Woolf</i></td> +<td class="right">424</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">King and the Hard Bread</span>, The. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>J. L.</i></td> +<td class="right">503</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">King and the Three Travelers</span>, The. (Illustrated by John Lafarge)</td> +<td><i>Arlo Bates</i></td> +<td class="right">207</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">King Cheese</span>. Poem. Versified from story by Maud Christiani. (Illustrated by L. Hopkins)</td> +<td><i>J. T. Trowbridge</i> </td> +<td class="right">641</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Lady-Bird</span>, Fly away Home. Picture drawn by</td> +<td><i>M. Woolf</i></td> +<td class="right">455</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#page13"><span class="sc">The Largest Volcano in the World</span>.</a> (Illustrated) +</td> +<td><i>Sarah Coan</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page13">13</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Left Out</span>. Verse.</td> +<td><i>A. G. W.</i> </td> +<td class="right">128</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Letter to American Boys</span>, A.</td> +<td><i>George MacDonald</i></td> +<td class="right">202</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Linnet's Fee</span>, The. Poem.</td> +<td><i>Mrs. Annie A. Preston</i></td> +<td class="right">798</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Lion-Killer</span>, The. (Illustrated by Alfred Kappes). From the French.</td> +<td><i>Mary Wager Fisher</i></td> +<td class="right">78</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Little Bear</span>. Poem. (Illustrated by Addie Ledyard)</td> +<td><i>Samuel W. Duffield</i></td> +<td class="right">726</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">"Little Bo-Peep, She went to Sleep</span>." Picture drawn by </td> +<td><i>Miss Jessie McDermot</i></td> +<td class="right">268</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Little Red Canal-Boat</span>, The. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>M. A. Edwards</i></td> +<td class="right">541</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Living Silver</span></td> +<td><i>Mary H. Seymour</i></td> +<td class="right">350</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">London Chair-Mender</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Alexander Wainwright</i></td> +<td class="right">821</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">London Chick-Weed Man</span>, The. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Alexander Wainwright</i></td> +<td class="right">361</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">London Dust-Man</span>, The. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Alexander Wainwright</i></td> +<td class="right">272</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">London Milk-Woman</span>, The. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Alexander Wainwright</i></td> +<td class="right">694</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Long Journey</span>, A. Verses.</td> +<td><i>Josephine Pollard</i></td> +<td class="right">540</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#page22"><span class="sc">Lord Mayor of London's Show</span>, The.</a> (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Jennie A. Owen</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page22">22</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Mackerel-Fishing</span>. (Illustrated by H. P. Smith)</td> +<td><i>Robert Arnold</i></td> +<td class="right">706</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Magician and his Bee</span>, The. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>P.F.</i></td> +<td class="right">143</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#skip"><span class="sc">Making it Skip</span>.</a> Verse. (Illustrated by Thomas Moran)</td> +<td><i>M. M. D.</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page15">15</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Making Ready for a Cruise</span>. Picture.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right">561</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Man Who Didn't Know When to Stop</span>, The. Verse.</td> +<td><i>M. M. D.</i></td> +<td class="right">415</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Marbles</span>, Some In-door Games of. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>L. D. Snook</i></td> +<td class="right">295</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#page26"><span class="sc">Mars, the Planet of War</span>.</a> (Illustrated by the Author)</td> +<td><i>Richard A. Proctor</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page26">26</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Marshal de Saxe and the Dutch Blacksmith</span>.</td> +<td><i>David Ker</i></td> +<td class="right">436</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Master Montezuma</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>C. C. Haskins</i></td> +<td class="right">535</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Matches are Made</span>, How. (Illustrated by A. C. Warren)</td> +<td><i>F. H. C.</i></td> +<td class="right">315</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">May-Day</span>, The Story of. (Illustrated by Howard Pyle)</td> +<td><i>Olive Thorne</i></td> +<td class="right">486</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Meadow Talk</span>. Verse. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis)</td> +<td><i>Caroline Leslie</i> </td> +<td class="right">617</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Merry Mike</span>. Poem. (Illustrated by Albert Shults)</td> +<td><i>Fleta Forrester</i></td> +<td class="right">176</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Merry Rain</span>. Poem.</td> +<td><i>Fleta Forrester</i></td> +<td class="right">425</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Mocking-Bird and the Donkey</span>, The. Poem.</td> +<td><i>William Cullen Bryant</i></td> +<td class="right">88</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Modern William Tell</span>, A. Picture drawn by</td> +<td><i>L. Hopkins</i></td> +<td class="right">207</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#page7"><span class="sc">Mollie's Boyhood</span>.</a> (Illustrated by George White)</td> +<td><i>Sarah E. Chester</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page7">7</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Money is Made</span>, Where. (Illustrated by Fred. B. Schell)</td> +<td><i>M.W.</i></td> +<td class="right">477</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Monument with a Story</span>, A.</td> +<td><i>Fannie Roper Feudge</i></td> +<td class="right">364</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Moon, from a Frog's Point of View</span>, The. (Illustrated by H. L. Stephens)</td> +<td><i>Fleta Forrester</i></td> +<td class="right">677</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Mousie's Adventures from Garret to Cellar</span>. Picture drawn by </td> +<td>"<i>Sphinx</i>"</td> +<td class="right">405</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Music on All Fours</span>. Poem. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge)</td> +<td><i>Josephine Pollard</i></td> +<td class="right">200</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Mustang</span>, The Wild. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Charles Barnard</i> </td> +<td class="right">396</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#girl"><span class="sc">My Girl</span>.</a> Poem.</td> +<td><i>John S. Adams</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page25">25</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">My St. George</span>. (Illustrated by Alfred Kappes)</td> +<td><i>Alice Maude Eddy</i></td> +<td class="right">726</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Nancy Chime</span>. Poem. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>S. Smith</i></td> +<td class="right">739</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Nan's Peace-Offering</span>. (Illustrated by C. S. Reinhart)</td> +<td><i>Kate W. Hamilton</i></td> +<td class="right">284</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">News-Carrier</span>, The. Poem. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis)</td> +<td><i>Catharine S. Boyd</i> </td> +<td class="right">349</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">New-Year Card</span>.</td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right">182</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Night with a Bear</span>, A. (Illustrated by W. L. Sheppard)</td> +<td><i>Jane G. Austin</i></td> +<td class="right">332</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#melon"><span class="sc">Nimble Jim and the Magic Melon</span>.</a> (Illustrated by E. B. Bensell)</td> +<td><i>J. A. Judson</i> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page34">34</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">No School To-Day</span>. Picture. Drawn by F. Opper </td> +<td> </td> +<td class="right">146</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Now, or Then</span>? Talk with Girls. </td> +<td><i>Gail Hamilton</i></td> +<td class="right">123</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#lady-girl"><span class="sc">"Oh, I'm My Mamma's Lady-Girl</span>."</a> Verse. (Illustrated by Addie Ledyard)</td> +<td><i>M. M. D.</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page41">41</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Old Man and the Nervous Cow</span>, The. (Illustrated by E. B. Bensell) </td> +<td><i>R. E.</i> </td> +<td class="right">264</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Old Nicolai</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Paul Fort</i></td> +<td class="right">399</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Old Soup</span>. (Illustrated by J.E. Kelly)</td> +<td><i>Mrs. E. W. Latimer</i> </td> +<td class="right">463</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">"One Day an Ant Went to Visit His Neighbor</span>." Jingle.</td> +<td><i>M. F. B.</i> </td> +<td class="right">404</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">One Saturday</span>. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge)</td> +<td><i>Sarah Winter Kellogg</i> </td> +<td class="right">514</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Only a Doll</span>. Poem.</td> +<td><i>Sarah O. Jewell</i></td> +<td class="right">552</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">On the Ice</span>. Picture drawn by </td> +<td><i>L. Hopkins</i> </td> +<td class="right">300</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">"Open the Snowy Little Bed</span>." Jingle.</td> +<td><i>M. F. B.</i> </td> +<td class="right">412</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Out Fishing</span>. Picture drawn by </td> +<td><i>J. Hopkins</i></td> +<td class="right">759</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Painter's Scare-Crow</span>, The. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge)</td> +<td><i>C. P. Cranch</i></td> +<td class="right">714</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Parisian Children</span>. (Illustrated by K. Brown)</td> +<td><i>Henry Bacon</i></td> +<td class="right">456</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Parlor Ball</span>. (Illustrated by the author)</td> +<td><i>L. Hopkins</i> </td> +<td class="right">492</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Parlor Magic</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Professor Leo H. Grindon</i></td> +<td class="right">811</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Perseus</span>, The Story of.</td> +<td><i>Mary A. Robinson</i> </td> +<td class="right">630</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Peterkins are Obliged to Move</span>, The.</td> +<td><i>Lucretia P. Hale</i> </td> +<td class="right">458</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Peterkins' Charades</span>, The. </td> +<td><i>Lucretia P. Hale</i> </td> +<td class="right">91</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Peter Piper's Pickles</span>, Mrs. (Illustrated by F. S. Church)</td> +<td><i>E. Müller</i> </td> +<td class="right">519</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Poems by Two Little American Girls</span>.</td> +<td><i>Elaine and Dora Goodale</i> </td> +<td class="right">109</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#polly"><span class="sc">Polly</span>: A Before-Christmas Story.</a> (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Hope Ledyard</i> </td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page19">19</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Porpoises</span>, About the. (Illustrated by J. O. Davidson)</td> +<td><i>J. D.</i></td> +<td class="right">142</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Pottery</span>, A Chat about. (Illustrated from photographs)</td> +<td><i>Edwin C. Taylor</i> </td> +<td class="right">104</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Primkins' Surprise</span>, Mrs. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge)</td> +<td><i>Olive Thorne</i></td> +<td class="right">794</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Prince Cucurbita</span>. (Illustrated by E. M. Richards)</td> +<td><i>Edith A. Edwards</i></td> +<td class="right">792</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Professor</span>, The.</td> +<td><i>Clarence Cook</i></td> +<td class="right">402</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Puck Parker</span>. (Illustrated by J. Wells Champney)</td> +<td><i>Lizzie W. Champney</i></td> +<td class="right">416</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Quicksilver</span>.</td> +<td><i>Mary H. Seymour</i></td> +<td class="right">359</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Raid of the Camanches</span>, The.</td> +<td><i>The Author of "We Boys"</i></td> +<td class="right">267</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Rain</span>. Poem.</td> +<td><i>Edgar Fawcett</i></td> +<td class="right">613</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Ravens and the Angels</span>, The. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge)</td> +<td><i>Author of "The Schonberg-Cotta Family"</i> </td> +<td class="right">169, 242</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Riddle</span>, A Double. Verses.</td> +<td><i>J. G. Holland</i></td> +<td class="right">94</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Rods for Five</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Sarah Winter Kellogg</i> </td> +<td class="right">645</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Rowing Against Tide</span>.</td> +<td><i>Theodore Winthrop</i> </td> +<td class="right">75</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Sam's Birthday</span>. (Ilustrated by Sol. Eytinge)</td> +<td><i>Irwin Russell</i> </td> +<td class="right">482</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Saturday Afternoon</span>. Picture drawn by</td> +<td><i>Miss S. W. Smith</i> </td> +<td class="right">725</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Scrubby's Beautiful Tree</span>. (Illustrated by F. A. Chapman and Sol. Eytinge)</td> +<td><i>J. C. Purdy</i></td> +<td class="right">147</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Seeing Himself as Others See Him</span>. Picture drawn by</td> +<td><i>J. Wells Champney</i></td> +<td class="right">431</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Shepherd-Boy</span>, The. Poem.</td> +<td><i>Emily S. Oakey</i> </td> +<td class="right">241</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Silly Goose</span>, The. Poem. (Illustrated by F. S. Church)</td> +<td><i>E. A. Smuller</i></td> +<td class="right">453</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Simple Simon</span>. Picture, drawn by </td> +<td><i>E. B. Bensell</i> </td> +<td class="right">791</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Sing-a-Sing</span>. Poem. (Illustrated by Alfred Kappes)</td> +<td><i>S. C. Stone</i></td> +<td class="right">122</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Sing-Away Bird</span>, The. Poem. </td> +<td><i>Lucy Larcom</i></td> +<td class="right">462</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Singing Pins</span>. (Illustrated by A. C. Warren)</td> +<td><i>Harlan H. Ballard</i></td> +<td class="right">14?</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Skating</span>. Poem. </td> +<td><i>Theodore Winthrop</i></td> +<td class="right">23?</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Sneeze Dodson's First Independence Day</span>. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge)</td> +<td><i>Mrs. M. H. W. Jaquith</i></td> +<td class="right">61?</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Solimin</span>: A Ship of the Desert. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Susan Coolidge</i></td> +<td class="right">26?</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Song of Spring</span>, A.</td> +<td><i>Caroline A. Mason</i></td> +<td class="right">48?</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<span class="sc">Something in the Old Clothes Line</span>. (Illustrated)</td> +<td><i>Paul Fort</i></td> +<td class="right">21?</td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#page18"><span class="sc">Story that Wouldn't be Told</span>, The.</a> (Illustrated) +</td> +<td><i>Louise Stockton</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page18">18</a></td> +</tr> +<tr><td> +<a href="#page16"><span class="sc">Willow Wand</span>, The.</a> Poem. (Illustrated) +</td> +<td><i>A. E. W.</i></td> +<td class="right"><a href="#page16">16</a></td> +</tr> +</table> + + + + + +<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /> + + + + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and +Girls, Vol. 5, Nov 1877-Nov 1878, by Various + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ST. NICHOLAS MAGAZINE *** + +***** This file should be named 17513-h.htm or 17513-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/1/7/5/1/17513/ + +Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Lesley Halamek and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. 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100644 index 0000000..86e600d --- /dev/null +++ b/17513.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6558 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and Girls, +Vol. 5, Nov 1877-Nov 1878, 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: St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and Girls, Vol. 5, Nov 1877-Nov 1878 + No 1, Nov 1877 + +Author: Various + +Editor: Mary Mapes Dodge + +Release Date: January 14, 2006 [EBook #17513] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ST. NICHOLAS MAGAZINE *** + + + + +Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Lesley Halamek and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + +ST. NICHOLAS: + +SCRIBNER'S ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE + +FOR GIRLS AND BOYS, + +CONDUCTED BY + +MARY MAPES DODGE. + +VOLUME V. + +NOVEMBER, 1877, TO NOVEMBER, 1878. + +SCRIBNER & CO., NEW YORK. + + + + +Copyright by SCRIBNER & CO., 1878. + +PRESS OF FRANCIS HART & CO. + +NEW YORK + + + + + +CONTENTS. + + +Child-Queen, A. (Illustrated by Alfred Fredericks) Cecilia Cleveland 1 + +Chased by Wolves. (Illustrated) George Dudley Lawson 3 + +Jingle: There was an Old Person of Crewd. (Illustrated by K. W. P.) 6 + +Mollie's Boyhood. (Illustrated by George White) Sarah E. Chester 7 + +*The Largest Volcano in the World. (Illustrated) Sarah Coan 13 + +Making it Skip. Verse. (Illustrated by Thomas Moran) M. M. D. 15 + +*Willow Wand, The. Poem. (Illustrated) A. E. W. 16 + +*Story that Wouldn't be Told, The. (Illustrated) Louise Stockton 18 + +Polly: A Before-Christmas Story. (Illustrated) Hope Ledyard 19 + +Boggs's Photograph. Picture. 21 + +Lord Mayor of London's Show, The. (Illustrated) Jennie A. Owen 22 + +My Girl. Poem. John S. Adams 25 + +Mars, the Planet of War. (Illustrated by the Author) + Richard A. Proctor 26 + +*Domestic Tragedy, A. In Two Parts (Illustration) 31 + +Bell-Ringers, The Stickleback. (Illustrated by James C. Beard) + C. F. Holder 31 + +Cricket on the Hearth, The. Poem. (Illustrated )Clara Doty Bates 33 + +How I Weighed the Thanksgiving Turkey. G. M. Shaw 34 + +Nimble Jim and the Magic Melon. (Illustrated by E. B. Bensell) + J. A. Judson 34 + +"Oh, I'm My Mamma's Lady-Girl." Verse. (Illustrated by + Addie Ledyard) M. M. D. 41 + +Christmas-Gifts, A Budget of Home-Made. (Illustrated) 42 + +*Little Tweet. (Illustrated) 64 + +*Jack-in-the-Pulpit. (Illustrated) 66 + +Can a Little Child Like Me? (Thanksgiving Hymn) Mary Mapes Dodge 68 + +"Baby's Opera" and Walter Crane, The. 69 + +*The Letter Box. 69 + +*The Moons of Mars. 69 + +*The Riddle Box. (Illustrated) 71 + + + +[Transcriber's Notes: +For ease of navigation, this Table of Contents has been taken from the +full contents listing for the volume. +Some entries were missing from the index. For completeness they have +been added and marked with an asterisk. + +The full list of contents for Volume V is to be found at the end of this +text. + +p. 27: changed 'rains' to 'trains': +...--; just like the +lines by which trains are made to run easily off one +track on to another. + +p. 30: Missing opening quote replaced: +"The snows that glittered on the disc of Mars..." + +p. 31:' replaced with ": +"Don't you think, papa, that that's enough about +the sun? Come and play with us on the lawn." + +p. 59: Missing ) replaced, +...(widening the strip, +however, in proportion as the fabric is thinner). + +Music Notation (Our Music Page) has been added.] + + * * * * * + + + +[Illustration: KING RICHARD II. AND HIS CHILD-QUEEN.] + + * * * * * + + +ST. NICHOLAS. + + + VOL. V. NOVEMBER, 1877. No. 1. + +[Copyright, 1877, by Scribner & Co.] + + * * * * * + + + +A CHILD QUEEN. + +BY CECILIA CLEVELAND. + + +I wonder how many of the little girl readers of ST. NICHOLAS are fond +of history? If they answer candidly, I do not doubt that a very large +proportion will declare that they prefer the charming stories they +find in ST. NICHOLAS to the dull pages of history, with its countless +battles and murdered sovereigns. But history is not every bit dull, +by any means, as you will find if your elder sisters and friends will +select portions for you to read that are suitable to your age and +interests. Perhaps you are very imaginative, and prefer fairy tales to +all others. I am sure, then, that you will like the story I am about +to tell you, of a little French princess, who was married and crowned +Queen of England when only eight years old, and who became a widow at +twelve. + +This child-sovereign was born many hundred years ago--in 1387--at the +palace of the Louvre in Paris, of whose noble picture-gallery I am +sure you all have heard,--if, indeed, many of you have not seen it +yourselves. She was the daughter of the poor King Charles VI., whose +misfortunes made him insane, and for whose amusement playing-cards +were invented, and of his queen, Isabeau of Bavaria, a beautiful but +very wicked woman. Little Princess Isabella was the eldest of twelve +children. She inherited her mother's beauty, and was petted by her +parents and the entire court of France. + +King Richard II. of England, who was a widower about thirty years old, +was urged to marry again; and, instead of selecting a wife near his +own age, his choice fell upon little Princess Isabella. + +"She is much too young," he was told. "Even in five or six years she +will not be old enough to be married." The king, however, thought +this objection too trifling to stand in the way of his marriage, and +saying, "The lady's age is a fault that every day will remedy," he +sent a magnificent embassy to the court of France, headed by the +Archbishop of Dublin, and consisting of earls, marshals, knights, and +squires of honor uncounted, with attendants to the number of five +hundred. + +When the embassy reached Paris, and the offer of marriage had been +formally accepted, the archbishop and the earls asked to see the +little princess who was soon to become their queen. At first the +French Council refused, saying so young a child was not prepared to +appear on public occasions, and they could not tell how she might +behave. The English noblemen were so solicitous, however, that at last +she was brought before them. The earl marshal immediately knelt before +her, and said, in the old-fashioned language of the time: "Madam, if +it please God, you shall be our lady and queen." + +Queen Isabeau stood at a little distance, curious and anxious, no +doubt, to know how her little daughter would answer this formal +address. To her great pleasure, and the great surprise of all present, +Princess Isabella replied: + +"Sir, if it please God and my father that I be Queen of England, I +shall be well pleased, for I am told I shall then be a great lady." + +Then, giving the marshal her tiny hand to kiss, she bade him rise from +his knees, and leading him to her mother, she presented him to her +with the grace and ease of a mature woman. + +According to the fashion of the time, Princess Isabella was +immediately married by proxy, and received the title of Queen of +England. Froissart, a celebrated historian living at that epoch, says: +"It was very pretty to see her, young as she was, practicing how to +act the queen." + +In a few days, King Richard arrived from England with a gay and +numerous retinue of titled ladies to attend his little bride. After +many grand festivities they were married and were taken in state to +England, where the Baby Queen was crowned in the famous Westminster +Abbey. + +I must not forget to describe the magnificent _trousseau_ that the +King of France gave his little daughter. Her dowry was 800,000 francs +($160,000); her coronets, rings, necklaces, and jewelry of all +sorts, were worth 500,000 crowns; and her dresses were of surpassing +splendor. One was a robe and mantle of crimson velvet, trimmed with +gold birds perched on branches of pearls and emeralds, and another was +trimmed with pearl roses. Do you think any fairy princess could have +had a finer bridal outfit? + +When the ceremonies of the coronation were over, little Isabella's +life became a quiet routine of study; for, although a reigning +sovereign, she was in the position of that young Duchess of Burgundy +of later years, who at the time of her marriage could neither read nor +write. This duchess, who married a grandson of Louis XIV. of France, +was older than Queen Isabella--thirteen years old; and as soon as the +wedding festivities were over, she was sent to school in a convent, +to learn at least to read, as she knew absolutely nothing save how to +dance. Queen Isabella, however, was not sent away to school, but was +placed under the care of a very accomplished lady, a cousin of the +king, who acted as her governess. In her leisure hours, the king, who +was a fine musician, would play and sing for her, and, history gravely +informs us, he would even play dolls with her by the hour! + +But King Richard's days of quiet pleasure with his child-wife were at +last disturbed, and he was obliged to leave her and go to the war in +Ireland. The parting was very sad and affecting, and they never met +again. + +While King Richard was in Ireland, his cousin, Henry of Lancaster, +afterward Henry IV., took possession of the royal treasury, and upon +the return of Richard from his unfortunate campaign, marched at the +head of an army and made a prisoner of him, lodging him in that grim +Tower of London from which so few prisoners ever issued alive. + +Meantime, the poor little queen was hurried from one town to another, +her French attendants were taken from her, and the members of her new +household were forbidden ever to speak to her of the husband she +loved so dearly. Finally, it was rumored that Richard had escaped. +Instantly, this extraordinary little girl of eleven issued a +proclamation saying that she did not recognize Henry IV. (for he was +now crowned King of England) as sovereign; and she set out with an +army to meet her husband. The poor child was bitterly disappointed +upon learning that the rumor was false, and her husband was still a +prisoner, and before long she also was again a prisoner of Henry IV., +this time closely guarded. + +In a few months Richard was murdered in prison by order of King Henry, +and his queen's childish figure was shrouded in the heavy crape of her +widow's dress. Her superb jewelry was taken from her and divided +among the children of Henry IV., and she was placed in still closer +captivity. Her father, the King of France, sent to demand that she +should return to him, but for a long time King Henry refused +his consent. Meantime, she received a second offer of marriage +from--strange to say--the son of the man who had killed her husband +and made her a prisoner, but a handsome, dashing young prince, Harry +of Monmouth, often called "Madcap Hal." Perhaps you have read, or your +parents have read to you, extracts from Shakspeare's "Henry IV.," so +that you know of the wild exploits of the Prince of Wales with his +friends, in turning highwayman and stealing purses from travelers, +often saying, + + "Where shall we take a purse to-morrow, Jack?" + +and finding himself in prison sometimes as a result of such +amusements? Isabella was a child of decided character, and truly +devoted to the memory of her husband, and much as she had enjoyed +her rank she refused to continue it by marrying handsome Madcap Hal, +although he offered himself to her several times, and even as she was +embarking for France. + +Poor little Isabella, who had left France so brilliantly, returned a +sad child-widow, and all that remained to her of her former splendor +was a silver drink-cup and a few saucers. As Shakspeare says: + + "My queen to France, from whence set forth in pomp, + She came adorned hither like sweet May, + Sent back like Hallowmas or shortest day." + +She was received throughout France with joy, and tears of sympathy. + +When Isabella was eighteen. Madcap Hal again offered his hand to her, +supposing she had forgotten her former prejudice, but although she +married again she was so far faithful to the memory of her English +husband that she would not accept the son of his murderer. Some years +later, when Prince Hal was king, he married her beautiful sister +Katherine. + +Isabella's second husband was her cousin, the Duke of Orleans, whose +beautiful poems are considered classic in France. Again she was the +joy of her family and the pride of France, but all her happiness was +destined to be fleeting, for she survived her marriage only one year. +Her husband, who loved her fondly, wrote after her death: + + "Alas! + Death, who made thee so bold, + To take from me my lovely princess, + Who was my comfort, my life, + My good, my pleasure, my riches? + Alas! I am lonely, bereft of my mate-- + Adieu! my lady, my lily! + Our loves are forever severed." + +And in another poem, full of expressions that show how very devoted +was his affection for her, he says: + + "Above her lieth spread a tomb + Of gold and sapphires blue, + The gold doth show her blessedness, + The sapphires mark her true. + + "And round about, in quaintest guise, + Was carved--'Within this tomb there lies + The fairest thing to mortal eyes.'" + +Farewell, sweet Isabella!--a wife at eight, a widow at twelve, and +dead at twenty-two,--your life was indeed short, and, though not +without happy days, sorrow blended largely with its joy! + + + + +CHASED BY WOLVES + +BY GEORGE DUDLEY LAWSON. + + +Some forty years ago the northern part of the State of New York was +very sparsely settled. In one of the remote counties, which for a +name's sake we will call Macy County, a stout-hearted settler, named +Devins, posted himself beyond the borders of civilization, and hewed +for his little family a home in the heart of a forest that extended +all the way from Lake Champlain to Lake Ontario. His nearest neighbor +was six miles away, and the nearest town nearly twenty; but the +Devinses were so happy and contented that the absence of company gave +them no concern. + +It was a splendid place to live in. In summer the eye ranged from the +slope where the sturdy pioneer had built his house over miles and +miles of waving beech and maple woods, away to the dark line of pines +on the high ground that formed the horizon. In the valley below, +Otter Creek, a tributary of the St. Lawrence, wound its sparkling way +northward. When Autumn painted the scene in brilliant hues, and it +lay glowing under the crimson light of October sunsets, the dullest +observer could not restrain bursts of admiration. + +Mr. Devins's first attack on the stubborn forest had been over the +brow of the hill, some four miles nearer Owenton, but his house was +burned down before he had taken his family there from Albany. He had +regretted that he had not "pitched his tent" on the slope of Otter +Creek; so now he began with renewed energy his second home, in which +the closing in of the winter of 1839 found him. He had sixty acres of +rich soil under cultivation at the time of which we are to speak, his +right-hand man being his son Allan,--a rugged, handsome, intelligent +boy of sixteen. + +The winter of '39 was a terrible one; snow set in before the end of +November, and, even in the open country, lay upon the ground until the +beginning of April, while in the recesses of the forest it was found +as late as the middle of June. There was great distress among the +settlers outside of the bounds of civilization, to whom the deep snow +was an impassable barrier. The Devinses neither saw nor heard from +their nearest neighbors from the first of December till near the +beginning of February, when a crust was formed upon the snow +sufficiently firm to bear the weight of a man, and a friendly Cayuga +Indian brought them news of how badly their neighbors fared. + +Mr. Devins was especially touched by the bad case of his friend Will +Inman, who lived on the nearest farm. The poor man lay ill of a fever; +Mrs. Inman was dead and temporarily buried, until her body could be +removed to the cemetery in Owenton, and all the care of the family +devolved upon Esther, his daughter, fourteen years old. After a short +consultation, the next morning breaking bright and clear though very +cold, it was determined to allow Allan to go over the hill to Inman's, +bearing medicine, tea, and other little necessaries for the family. He +was impressively warned to begin his return at so early an hour that +he might reach home before the short day's end, especially because of +the danger from wild animals. The severity of the winter had made the +wolves more venturesome and dangerous than they had been for many +years. Mr. Devins had lost several sheep and hogs, and deemed it +unsafe for any of his family to be caught far from the house at night. + +Allan armed himself with his light rifle, put some biscuits and cold +meat in a pouch strapped to his waist, mounted one of the strong +farm-horses, and set out on his journey. The road through the forest +was better than he expected to find it, as the snow had been drifted +off, but at the turns, and in the thickest part of the wood, his horse +floundered through drifts more than breast high; and more than once +Allan had to dismount and beat a path ahead. Therefore, he did not +reach Inman's till two o'clock, and, by the time he had helped Esther +about her work, assisted her young brother to get in a good supply of +wood, and made things more comfortable for the invalid, it was almost +sundown. He stoutly refused to wait for supper, declaring that the +luncheon still in his pouch would serve, and started just as the short +twilight came on. He was a brave lad, and, with no thought of peril, +went off, kissing his hand gayly to Esther. + +It took him an hour to traverse the first three miles, and then he +came to a stretch of comparatively bare ground leading through his +father's old clearing, and almost to the top of the hill back of Mr. +Devins's house. He was just urging old Bob into a trot, when a long, +clear howl broke upon his ear; then another and another answered +from east and south. He knew what that meant. It was the cry of the +advance-guard of a pack of wolves. + +The howling sounded near, and came swiftly nearer, as though the +wolves had found his tracks and scented their prey. Old Bob trembled +in every limb, and seemed powerless to move. Allan realized that he +could not, before dark, reach home through the drifts ahead, and the +increasing cold of the advancing night would render a refuge in a +tree-top probably as deadly as an encounter with the pack. + +Presently there came a cry, shriller and sharper than before, and +Allan, looking back, saw a great, lean, hungry gray wolf burst from +the underbrush into the road, followed by dozens more; and in a moment +the road behind him was full of wolves, open-mouthed and in keen +chase. Their yells now seemed notes of exultation, for the leader +of the pack--the strongest, fleetest, hungriest one among them--was +within a dozen yards of Allan, who was now riding faster than ever old +Bob had gone before or ever would go again. Excitement made the lad's +blood boil in his veins, and he determined to show fight. The moon had +risen, and the scene was almost as light as day. Now he could count +the crowding host of his enemies, and just as he broke from the forest +road into the old clearing, he turned in his saddle and fired. The +foremost of the pack rolled over and over; the rest gathered around +and tore their leader in pieces. + +By the time they resumed the chase, Allan was a hundred yards ahead +with his rifle loaded. He determined to make a running fight of it to +the hill, where he was sure of meeting his father, or could take to a +tree and shoot until help came. This had hardly flashed through his +brain when, right ahead of him, a detachment of the pack sprang into +the road and answered with double yells the cries of the rest coming +up behind. The horse wheeled suddenly, almost unseating Allan, and +dashed across the clearing toward the wood; but he had not taken a +dozen bounds when a wolf sprang upon him. Old Bob reared and fell, +pitching Allan nearly twenty feet ahead, and was covered with wolves +before he could regain his footing. That was the last of poor old Bob. + +[Illustration: "OLD BOB FELL, PITCHING ALLAN AHEAD."] + +But Allan! What of him? When he recovered from the effects of the +shock, he found himself over head and ears in snow. He had no idea +where he was, but struggled and plunged in vain endeavors to extricate +himself, until at last he broke into a space that was clear of snow, +but dark as Erebus, damp and close. Feeling about him he discovered +over his head logs resting slantingly against the upper edge of a pit, +and then he knew that he was in the cellar of the old house his father +had built, and which had been burned down nine years before! The +cellar was full of snow, except at the corner roofed over by the +fallen logs, and Allan, bursting through the snow into the empty +corner, was as secure from the wolves as though seated by his father's +fireside. It was not nearly as cold in there as outside, and he found +a dry spot upon which he lay down to think. + +He was in no danger of freezing to death, his food would keep him from +starvation a week at least, and Allan concluded that, with the first +glimpse of dawn, his father would be in search of him, and, following +the tracks, find old Bob's bones, and quickly rescue him from his +predicament. He reasoned wisely enough, but the elements were against +him. Before sunrise a furious storm of wind and snow had completely +obliterated every trace of horse, rider and wolves. + +At home, as the night wore on, the anxiety of the family had +increased. While they were watching the gathering storm, they heard +the long, dismal howl of the wolves coming over the hill. The chill of +fear that they should never see the boy again settled down upon all +their hearts, until the house was as dreary within as the winter waste +and gloomy forest were without. + +Meanwhile the brave youth was sound asleep, dreaming as peacefully as +though snugly resting with his brother in his warm bed at home. He +slumbered on unconscious of the raging storm without, and did not +awake until late the next forenoon. It took him several seconds +to realize where he was and how he came there, but gradually he +remembered his ride for life, the falling of his horse, his struggle +in the snow, and his breaking into the protected space where he lay. + +The storm lasted all day and far into the succeeding night. Allan ate +slightly, quenched his thirst with a few drops of water obtained by +melting snow in the palm of his hand, and began casting about for +means to get out. He soon found that to dig his way up through the +mass of snow that filled the cellar was beyond his powers. If he could +have made a succession of footholds, the task would have been easy; +but all his efforts only tended to fill his retreat, without bringing +him nearer the air. As soon as he saw this, he gave himself up to +calmly waiting for help from without. + +The second morning of his imprisonment broke clear and cheerful, and +Mr. Devins set out to search for traces of his boy. He visited the +Inmans' and learned the particulars of Allan's stay and departure, +then mournfully turned his face homeward, his heart filled with +despair. When he emerged from the forest into the clearing, he met the +Indian who had visited him a few days before, and he told the red man +of Allan's loss. The Indian stood a moment in deep thought, and then +asked: + +"No horse, no boy back there?" pointing to the road just traversed by +Mr. Devins. + +"No. I have looked carefully, and if there had been a trace left by +the recent storm I should have detected it." + +"Ugh! well, me come over the hill; nothing that way either; then they +here." + +"Why do you think so?" + +"Ah! me know wolves. When Allan come to this place they ahead; +horse turn; wolves caught 'em this side woods; we look there," and +Tayenathonto pointed to the very course taken by the horse and rider. + +It so happened when Allan was thrown from the horse's back that his +rifle flew from his hand and struck, muzzle down, in a hollow stump, +where, imbedded in the snow, it stood like a sign to mark the scene +of the last struggle of the lost boy. The snow had whitened all its +hither side. When the Indian came abreast of it, he cried: + +"Told you so! See! Allan's gun! And here rest of 'em," pointing to the +little heap over the ruins of the old cabin. + +Kicking the snow hastily aside, the Indian examined the ground +carefully a moment and then said: "No, only horse; Allan further on." + +The Indian, with head bent down, walked quickly forward, threw up +his arms, and disappeared. He had stepped over the clean edge of the +cellar and sunk exactly as Allan had. A few desperate plunges sufficed +to take the strong Indian through the intervening snow and into the +protected corner where Allan, just rousing from his second sleep, sat +bolt upright. The Indian's coming disturbed the snow so that a glimmer +of light penetrated into the dark space. Allan supposed a wolf had +found its way down there, and hastily drew his large knife, bracing +himself for an encounter. + +The Indian sputtered, thrashed about to clear himself from the snow, +and in so doing rapped his head smartly against the low ceiling of +logs. + +"Waugh! waugh!" exclaimed he. "Too much low; Indian break 'em head; +look out." + +Allan instantly recognized the voice of the Indian, his comrade on +many a fishing and hunting tour. + +"Tayenathonto!" he cried, "dear old fellow, who would have thought of +you finding me!" + +The Indian quietly replied: + +"Tayenathonto no find; come like water-fall; couldn't help his self." + +A very few minutes sufficed to put both on the surface again, where +Allan was received "like one come from the dead," and closely folded +in his father's arms. Oh, the joy of that embrace! The past grief and +suffering were forgotten in the bliss of that moment. + +The Indian had to return with the happy father and son to their home, +where he was hailed as Allan's rescuer, and enjoyed to the full a +share of the festivities. + +In after years Allan married Esther Inman, and now, by the fireside in +winter, he tells his grandchildren of his escape from the wolves, and +the little ones never tire of petting their faithful old Tayenathonto. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration] + + There was an old person of Crewd, + Who said, "We use saw-dust for food; + It's cheap by the ton, + And it nourishes one, + And that's the main object of food." + + + + +MOLLIE'S BOYHOOD. + +BY SARAH E. CHESTER. + + +A little girl sat squeezed in between an old fat man and his old bony +wife in a crowded hall on a sultry evening in October. On one side it +was as if feather pillows loomed above her with intent to smother; on +the other, sharp elbows came into distressing contact with her ribs. +The windows were open; but the hall had not been built with reference +to transmitting draughts on suffocating nights for the benefit of +packed audiences; and everybody gasped for breath, though everybody +fanned--that is, everybody who had a fan, a newspaper, a hat, or a +starched handkerchief. Mollie had neither fan, newspaper, hat, nor +handkerchief, and yet she of all the audience gasped unawares. She was +stifled, but happy. Elbows and bad air might do their worst; her body +suffered, but her spirit soared. She was lifted above her neighbors, +into an atmosphere where she was conscious of nothing but the +eloquence that fell in such soft tones from the lips of the beautiful +woman on the stage. + +Mollie was fatherless and brotherless. She had no male cousins within +a thousand miles. Her only uncle, two blocks off, was a man whose +dinners rebelled against digestion, and who might have been beyond +the seas for all the good he did her. They were a feminine +family,--Mollie, her mother, the old cat and her kittens +three,--bereft of masculine rule and care, and in need of money earned +by masculine hands. + +The mother bore losses and lacks with the philosophy of her age; but +Mollie's age was only twelve, and knew not philosophy. She realized +that she was a mistake. She was miserably aware that she was a mistake +which could never be corrected. Friends repeatedly assured her that it +was a great pity she had not been born a boy, and tantalized her with +boyhood's possibilities. Frequent mention was made of ways in which +she might minister to her mother's comfort if she were a son; and all +Mollie's day-dreams were visions of that gallant son's achievements. +She used to close her eyes and see wings and bay-windows growing +around their little cottage and making it a mansion; their old clothes +gliding away, and fine new robes stepping into their places; strong +servants working in the kitchen; pictures stealing up the walls, and +luxuries scattering themselves hither and thither, till she felt the +spirit of the boy within her, and seemed equal to the deeds he would +have done. Then she used to open her eyes wide to the fact of her +girlhood and have little seasons of despair. + +This had been going on a long time, the visions, their destruction +by facts, and the consequent despair; for, of course, she had always +believed there was nothing to be done. And now here was one telling +her that something could be done--that she, even she, the little girl +Mollie, had equal rights with boys, and that it was not only her +privilege but her duty to claim them. Here was one exhorting her to +throw off the yoke of her girlhood, talking of a glorious career that +might be hers, of emancipation and liberty, of a womanhood grand as +manhood itself. And how the tremendous sentiments, so beautifully +uttered, thrilled through Mollie from the crown of her hat to the toes +of her boots! She would have given worlds for one glance from that +bravest of her sex who had thrown off the yoke, and for a chance to +ask her just how she did it. For while Mollie had fully made up her +mind to wear her yoke no longer, she did not know exactly by what +means to become an emancipated creature. As she walked home with her +hand in that of the fat gentleman who had treated her to the lecture, +she reached the conclusion that no special instructions had been given +because it was taken for granted that each woman's nobler instincts +would guide her. She entered the gate a champion of freedom, a +believer in the equality of the sexes--a girl bound to be a boy, and +trusting to her nobler instincts to teach her how. + +No trembling and glancing back over her shoulder for goblins and +burglars to-night as she put the key into the door! No scared +chattering of teeth in the dark hall! No skipping three steps at a +time up the stairs pursued by imaginary hands that would grip at her +ankles! She faced the darkness with wide-open eyes, instead of feeling +her way with lids squeezed down as had been her custom; and when eyes +seemed to look back at her from the darkness, her boyhood laughed at +her girlhood, and she did not quicken her pace. But--Mollie was glad +to step into the room where the light burned. Her mother had gone to +bed early with one of her tired-out headaches, and she only half woke +to see that her little girl was safely in. Mollie kissed her softly +(for boys may kiss their mothers softly) and took the lamp into the +little room beyond, where she always slept. + +The first thing that she did was to look in the glass. What a girlish +little face it was! How foolishly its dimples came and went with its +smiles! In what an effeminate manner the hair crinkled above it, and +then went rambling off into half a yard of stylish disorder! Mollie +lifted the hair in her hand and surveyed it thoughtfully. Then she +took a thoughtful survey of the scissors in her work-basket. Then +she reached them. She allowed herself a moment of conscientious +reflection; then the boy's naughty spirit crept down through her +fingers and set the scissors flying, and the deed was done. + +It was not easy to satisfy her mother's amazement and vexation in the +morning; but Mollie stumbled through it and went to school. There +opportunities were few. She coaxed her teacher to let her study +book-keeping, and took one disagreeable lesson in its first +principles; but she accomplished nothing else that day except the +putting of a general check upon weak-minded inclinations to be +frolicsome. + +But that evening there was a fair sky, one of the soft, deep skies +that make imaginative little girls' brains dizzy; and Mollie tramped +down the gravel path to the gate and leaned over; then she soon +nestled her head in her arms and looked up and lost herself. Boyhood +was far from her dreamy fancies, when they were scattered by a tweak +at one of her cropped locks. + +"What does this mean?" asked the voice of the neighbor over the fence. +"How came it to be done without my leave?" + +"Don't I look manly, Mr. John?" said Mollie. + +"What does it mean?" said he, severely. + +"That would be telling," said Mollie. + +"I intend that you shall tell me," said he. + +"Oh, it's a secret!" said Mollie. + +"All the better; we'll keep it together. Tell it." + +He was a grown-up man, nearer thirty than twenty years old, who +stooped to take an interest in his neighbor's little girl, and +flattered himself that he was bringing her up in the way she should +go. It amused him in his leisure moments to try the experiment of +rearing a girl to be as unlike as possible the girl of the period. + +From mere force of habit, Mollie opened her mouth and poured out her +heart to him. He seemed quite impressed by the solemn confession. +Mollie studied his face closely while she was speaking, and saw +nothing but a grave and earnest interest in her project. She could not +see deep enough to discover the indignation that was fuming over the +loss of her pretty locks, and the purpose that was brewing to cure her +of her folly. + +"Don't have any half-way work about it, Mollie," said Mr. John. "Do +the thing thoroughly, if you undertake it." "Oh yes, indeed!" said +Mollie. + +"If you should need an occasional reminder, I will try and help you," +said he; "for of course it wont do to be off guard at all. But now get +your hat, and we'll go for some ice-cream. I know you need cooling off +this warm evening." + +Mollie skipped about to run toward the house. + +"Be careful of your steps," he called; and she tramped as boyishly as +she could. + +"No, don't take hold of my hand," as she came back and slipped her +fingers in his. "Put your hands in your pockets." + +"I've only one pocket," she answered meekly, putting her right hand in +it. + +"Difficulties at once, aren't there?" said Mr. John. "Your clothes +want reforming, you see. You'll have to put on Bloomers." + +"Oh!" said Mollie. + +"I'm afraid you're not very much in earnest," he said. "You surely are +not frightened by a trifle like that?" Mollie looked up imploringly. + +"Must I?" she asked. + +"Well," he answered, her earnestness making him fear that she would +actually appear publicly in masculine array, "I don't know that it is +necessary at present. A few days wont matter; and, after a while, it +will seem to you the natural way to dress." + +He was so faithful that evening in reminding her of her short-comings +that their _tete-a-tete_ over the little table in the ice-cream +saloon, which usually was so cosey and delightful, was quite spoiled. +She went to sleep regretting that she had taken Mr. John into her +confidence and made it necessary for him to treat her as a boy. + +She did not see him again for several days: and meanwhile she had +taken her lessons in book-keeping, practiced the writing hours on +heavy masculine strokes, learned to walk without dancing little +whirligigs on her tiptoes every other minute, and made some progress +in the art of whistling. She felt that she had done much to earn his +commendation, and was anxious for a meeting. + +On the way home from school, one afternoon, she saw his sister's baby +at the window--the roundest, fattest, whitest and sweetest of all the +babies that had taken up an abode in Mollie's heart, where babies +innumerable were enshrined. There it was, being danced in somebody's +hands before the window, and reaching out its ten dear little fingers +to beckon her in. + +She was quickly in, regardless of her gait. In a moment from the time +the tempting vision appeared she was cuddling it in her arms, glibly +talking the nonsense that it loved to hear, and kissing and petting it +to her heart's content. She was so absorbed that she did not hear Mr. +John come in; and he was close by her when she looked up and saw his +face--not the genial, welcoming look she had been in the habit of +meeting since he became her friend, but one of grave disapproval. + +"I am ashamed of you, Mollie," he said. "Boys of your age don't pet +babies in that way." + +Mollie dropped it--she hardly knew whether on the floor or the +stove--and flew. When she got home, she ran into the little back room +that used to be her play-room. She was all ready for a good cry, and +she closed the door. Then she thought, what if Mr. John were to see +her crying like a girl-baby!--and she marched to the window, and +through the dimness in her eyes tried to see something cheering. Her +nature was very social, and her need of companionship great at that +moment; so she turned to the friend who had been brother, sister and +child to her through most of her little girlhood--her big doll Helena, +who sat in a chair in the corner beholding her agitation with fixed, +compassionless gaze. + +"Come here, you dear," said Mollie, folding her tenderly in her arms +and finding comfort in the contact of her cold china cheek. She had +loved her so long that she had given her a soul; and to Mollie's heart +the doll was as fit for loving as if she had had breath and speech. +She did not play with her any longer, but Helena was still her dear +old friend--an almost human confidant and crony. + +As she held her closely, suddenly she thought of Mr. John. If he had +objected to the petting of babies, what would he say to dolls? She +gave her a frantic kiss, put her away, and turned her back on her +to reflect; for she did not mean to shirk the most disagreeable +reflections in the new line of duty she had chosen to follow. + +If it had really been a human friend whose destinies Mollie +considered, she could not have been more serious; and if it had been +a human friend whom she at last decided must be put far from her, she +could hardly have suffered severer heart-pangs. But she would have no +compromising with inclination in this matter. She would be brave and +strong, as it became her mother's son to be. So to the lowest depths +of the deepest trunk in the garret she mentally consigned Helena. +There, beyond the reach of her loving eyes and arms, she should lie in +banishment until her heart became callous. + +But there was something so repulsive in the idea of smothering human +Helena under layers of old garments, that Mollie finally thought of a +better way. Helena should no longer be Helena, dear to her heart in +all her little feminine adornings and her sympathetic, tender traits +of character. She should undergo a change; a radical reform. She, too, +should become a boy, and her name should be Thomas. Thenceforth Mollie +spent her leisure moments in manufacturing garments suitable for the +change; and at last she saw a boy-doll, in roundabout and pantaloons, +occupying the chair where Helena had so long sat in dainty dresses. +The sight was a perpetual offense to her eyes; but she bore it +bravely, keeping in store for herself a reward of merit in Mr. John's +approval. She did not fail to mention to him Helena's reform the +next time they met, which was one morning before breakfast. She was +sweeping the front steps when he came and leaned over the fence and +called her. + +She shouldered the broom, as she had seen men shoulder implements of +labor,--hoes, rakes, etc.,--and tramped toward him. Mr. John watched +her, with an expression of disgust under his mustache. + +"Well, Bob," he said, "I'm glad to see you out so early. Form good +habits before you're grown, and when you come to manhood you'll make +money by it. Where are your Bloomers to-day? It isn't possible your +mind's not made up to them yet?" + +There was something in Mr. John's tone and manner which did not seem +quite courteous to Mollie; but she had hardly hung her head when he +began to talk in his old half-fatherly, half-brotherly fashion; and +then, in the lively conversation, she found a chance to introduce +Thomas. Mr. John gave her a long, solemn, searching look. + +"Mollie," he said, "I am very much afraid you will never succeed as a +boy. It seems to me that even an ordinarily masculine girl of your +age would have been clear-headed enough to see the absurdity of your +little farce. It is nothing but a farce, mere babyishness. You have +been playing with yourself and with your doll. No boy could have done +it." + +There was a short pause; then Mollie's voice piped out into a humble +question as to what course a boy would have pursued in the matter. + +"Why, that is clear enough," said Mr. John. "If you want to do what a +boy would do, dispose of the doll on the shortest notice. Get it out +of your sight and mind as soon as possible, and then never give it any +more thought than you'd give the rattle you used to shake when you +were a baby, or the rubber ring you cut your teeth on." + +Could he be made to understand the immense difference between Helena +and other toys? Could any words explain to him about the soul that had +grown out of Mollie's love into the cloth and sawdust body? Mollie +looked up to catch a sympathetic expression that should help her to +tell him; but she did not find it. + +"You don't understand," she said desperately. + +"No?" said he. + +"Mr. John," said Mollie, not looking him in the eye, "when you have a +doll as long as I have had Helena, it is only natural that she should +seem to you like a live person. If I didn't play with her at all, +she'd seem real to me, and I shouldn't like to have her go away any +more than I would mother." + +"Which tells the secret that you have some sort of human fondness +for the lifeless bundle of rags," said Mr. John, "and proves what I +feared, that you are a very weak-minded little girl, Mollie." + +"You wont believe in me at all," said Mollie. + +"You wont think I am doing my best, and that I ever succeed. You are +not like you used to be." + +"That naturally follows _your_ being different," said Mr. John. "Of +course, we can't have the same feelings toward each other now as when +you were contented to be a little girl and to let me treat you as one. +I'm sorry you don't find me as agreeable as before, Mollie; but you +must acknowledge that I am acting as a friend in doing all that I can +to help you in your dear project." + +"It isn't dear!" burst forth Mollie, indignantly. "I hate it!--but +I'll never give it up!" + +"Of course not," Mr. John said. "Then I presume you are all ready to +part with Helena." + +"I'll go and get her," said Mollie. + +No one saw the parting in the play-room. It was quickly over, and she +was back by the fence. + +"Give her to Bessie," said Mollie, putting Helena and her wardrobe +into Mr. John's arms. Bessie was one of his many nieces. + +"To Bessie!" said he. "Where you can feel that she is away on a visit; +where you know that she will be petted and cared for; where you can +see her occasionally. If you are sincere in this matter, Mollie, send +her off where you can no longer care to think of her. Our ash-man +would be very glad to carry her home to his little girls." + +Mollie's hands made a wild dive toward Helena as a vision of the +little grimy man who crept into their areas for ashes rose before her. + +"Decide now," said Mr. John. "Take your doll and be Mollie Kelly +again, or be a boy and give her to the ash-man's children without a +pang." + +Mollie hung her head. There was color coming and going in her cheeks, +her fingers trembled,--how they longed to snatch Helena!--and her mind +was full of indecision. Mr. John watched her closely, and he thought +he saw the tide turning in favor of her girlhood. He held the doll +nearer that it might tempt her fingers; but, on the instant, she +turned and ran away. He tucked Helena under his coat and carried her +upstairs and locked her in a drawer, there to abide until Mollie +should want her again. + +That was a gloomy day to Mollie. She was out of humor with her +boyhood. She was ashamed of herself one moment for bewailing Helena, +and furious the next with Mr. John and the ash-man. She felt cross and +discouraged, and was glad when the darkness came, and she could go to +bed and sleep. But the next morning she was in no cheerier, braver +frame of mind; and she walked home at noon, considering plain sewing +_versus_ book-keeping as a means of subsistence. Mr. John would have +rejoiced if he could have seen his "little leaven" working. + +"The gutters on the roof are full of leaves, Mollie," said her mother +as she came in. "Stop on your way back to school and send Michael to +clean them out. I think we are going to have rain, and we don't want +them washed into the pipes." + +"How much will he charge, mother?" + +"About fifty cents." + +"That fifty cents shall buy something for you," said Mollie to +herself. "The boy of the family shall clean the roof." + +There was just enough recklessness in her mood to make her rather +enjoy than fear the prospect. She left her mother getting dinner, and +took a broom and escaped up the garret stairs and through the scuttle. +The roof did not slope steeply, and she let herself down with an easy +slide to the rear eaves. She rested her feet on the edge of the house +and swept as far as her arms would reach east and west. Then she +shifted her position and swept again until the whole length was clean. + +She heard her mother calling her to dinner, but she had the front +gutter yet to sweep, and, climbing up, went down on the other side. +There was a thought which gave zest to her work on that side,--Mr. +John would be coming home that way to dinner and would see her. +Besides, other people would see her, and no passer-by should say that +she did not do her work as thoroughly and fearlessly as any boy. She +had taken for granted that Mr. John's eyes would be drawn upward; but +when he had walked almost by, looking straight ahead, she sent him a +shrill call. He looked at the windows, around the yard, and even as +far up as the trees. + +"On the roof," screamed Mollie, and in her excitement she forgot her +situation and lost her balance and slipped,--not far, but one foot +went out beyond the eaves into the air. The other one rallied to the +rescue, supported her whole weight, and helped her to regain her +position. Danger was over in a moment, but it had been danger of +death, and Mollie's heart beat wildly, and a faintness came over her. +Still through it all she was able to see Mr. John's approving smile as +he lifted his hat and waved it gayly in applause. + +"He wouldn't care if I had fallen and been killed," thought Mollie, as +she recovered herself. "All he wants is to have me succeed in being a +horrid boy. I've a mind to give it up just to spite him." + +She could not know--so successfully had he concealed his agitation +under that bland smile--how faint he, too, had been in the moment of +her danger, nor how fast his heart was still beating as he walked on, +nor what resolves he was forming to put a speedy end to her boyhood. + +He stopped on his way back from dinner to tell her that he had engaged +to take a party of his nephews and nieces nutting that afternoon, and +that he wanted her to come. + +"It will be so nice to have a big boy on hand, Mollie," said Mr. John, +"especially one that isn't afraid of heights. We may have some to +climb." + +Not a word about her danger and his gladness for her safety, and she +knew he had seen her narrow escape. But she felt so gay over memories +of Mr. John's nutting parties, and the prospect of another, that she +forgave him all, and prepared to be thoroughly happy that afternoon. + +School closed at three o'clock, and Mollie flew to Mr. John's yard, +where they were all waiting. She came dancing by the gate, her cheeks +rosy, her eyes shining,--just her old self, as she had been in the +days when no boyhood loomed like an ugly shadow between her and Mr. +John. He saw it all, and charged himself to be stony. So he gave no +better response to her impulsive greeting than he would have given an +ordinary boy. Her spirits fell a degree; but with those happy children +bobbing around her, expecting her to be the happiest of all, they +could do nothing but rise again. + +Mr. John did not offer to lift her over fences as he lifted the other +girls; he even called on her to help the little ones over. He held +back branches that came across other girls' paths; he let her clear +her own way. He carried Kittie and Bessie, and Esther and Dora, over +the brook; he let her splash across on the stones with the boys. He +gallantly made cups and gave the other girls to drink; he suggested to +Mollie that she should scoop the water up in her hand, as he was doing +for his own use. + +She wished many a time before they came to the walnut-trees that she +had staid at home. She wished her boyhood's days were over, or had +never been. She couldn't bear Mr. John, and all the children noticed +that she moped, and asked her why. + +Well, there were no nuts when they got there, Mr. John had known there +wouldn't be. They should have come much earlier in the day to find +these trees full, and the next trees were too far away. So they +concluded to turn their nutting party into a picnic. They had a basket +of provisions, and Mr. John sent the big boys into the next lot to get +wood for a fire. Then came his grand opportunity for crushing Mollie. +He called her, and she ran to him gladly, ready to take him back to +her favor on his own terms. + +"Please, go and help the boys bring wood for our fire," he said. "They +have all gone but you." + +She went, but not without giving him a look that actually made him +blush for his rudeness. She went with the aspect of a tragedy queen, +and by the time she overtook the boys she had calmly made up her mind +to two things: never, never again to be friends with Mr. John, and to +give up her boyhood just to spite him. But one more temptation still +held her. There was a little cliff over in that next lot, stony and +steep, and high enough to make a leap which it was some credit to a +boy to achieve. The boys stood on the edge, measuring the distance +with experienced eyes and preparing to go over. + +Now Mollie as a girl had always been a very good jumper, so she +resolved at once to try the leap, and have the report of her valiant +deed carried back to Mr. John. She joined the boys, and seeing that +one after another went down safely, she soon asked for a turn. She was +gravely remonstrated with. She was overwhelmed with sage masculine +advice, but she swept her way clear and jumped--with all the +recklessness of her reckless mood. She knew well enough the backward +inclination proper for her head, what the relative positions of her +knees and chin should be, and if she had taken the least forethought +might have redeemed the declining reputation of her boyhood. The +knowledge flashed across her in her swift descent that her spine had +not preserved the proper perpendicular, and that she was coming down +wrong. Chin and knees knocked together as she fell in a heap on the +grass below. + +[Illustration: MOLLIE IS CARED FOR BY THE BOYS.] + +It was a caving in of skull, she thought, that made that horrible +crashing pain and that sent lightning dancing on a black background +before her eyes, then blinded her quite. Nothing but a general chaos +of skull and brain could make such terrible pain. She wondered if her +friends would be able to recognize one dear lineament in the jumble +of her features. She thought what a sad fate it was to die young. She +wondered how Mr. John would feel now! and then she found that light +dawned upon her and that she had an eye open. In a moment she +discovered that the sense of hearing, too, had not abandoned her; +for the boys had reached her by this time, and she heard Mr. John's +nephew, John, saying: + +"She's knocked her teeth through her lip, that's all. I did it once +when I jumped wrong and hit my chin on my knee. She'll soon be all +right." + +Two eyes open now, and she saw a bloody frock, and what seemed an army +of boys; for there was something still the matter with her vision +which caused it to multiply. + +"Boys, boys, nothing but boys!" thought Mollie, dropping her lids. +"Where did they all come from, I wonder? There must be a thousand. I +never want to see another. I wouldn't be one for the world. I wish +they'd go away." + +Then she felt some one bathing her face gently, and when the water had +refreshed her, she ventured another peep at the world. Boys around her +still; but she could see now that their number was only four, and the +faces those of friends. + +"Cheer up, Mollie," said John, jr. "You got a hard knock, but you're +coming on. Bob's gone for the phaeton, and we'll have you home in no +time." + +They propped her up against a tree, and continued to bathe her head +with water from Jerry's felt hat, filled at the little brook close by. + +All this while Mr. John had been accounting for their absence by +supposing that Mollie was taking some sort of revenge on him, and he +would permit none of the girls to go in search of the wanderers. Not +until Bob and the phaeton appeared did news of Mollie's valiant deed +reach him. Then he went to her at once, and saw her pale and bloody. + +But to display weakness now might be to lose all, reflected Mr. John; +so he kept back the words of sympathy that were on his lips as he +leaned down and offered to carry her to the phaeton. + +"I prefer to walk, thank you," said Mollie, her pride giving her +strength to rise and take the arm which John, jr., stood ready to +offer. However, Mr. John forcibly made an exchange, and, in spite of +Mollie, half led and half carried her to the road. + +"Don't be discouraged, Mollie," he said as he put her in, while Bob +was busy at the halter. "The next time you'll jump like a man." + +"That nonsense is all over, thank you," said Mollie, very loftily, +though not very clearly, because of her swollen lips. "Think what you +please of me," she mumbled. "It is all ended; and it might have ended +sooner, too, if I'd taken better advice." + +"With better advice it never would have ended, you contrary little +minx," said Mr. John to himself as she drove away. + +The doctor came and Mollie was ordered to bed; but even his opiate +did not make her sleep. It was soothing, indeed, to lie there in the +twilight with her hand in her mother's, and feel that she was her +little girl entirely, no more to be her boy while life should last. +And pleasant visions of a Gothic school-house, where she should some +day be mistress of sweet, rosy-cheeked children, rose gracefully on +the ruins of her manly aspirations. + +By and by the bell rang, and her mother brought a lamp, and a package +which Mollie sat up and opened. There, with a note pinned on the left +leg of her trousers and a box of Mollie's best-beloved candies clasped +on her jacket, lay Helena. + +"I have never been to the ash-man's house, Mother Mollie," said the +note. "I have been visiting Mr. John's cuffs and collars in the +bureau-drawer. I want my girls' clothes on to-morrow. I claim it as my +right. We all have our rights. Put me in dresses and take me home to +the play-room. You have your rights too, and I wouldn't let any one +tell me that I hadn't a right to be a girl. It is my opinion that +if you had been meant for a boy you would have been made one. Come, +mother, cuddle me up, and let's go to sleep and have sweet dreams, and +a blithe waking to girlhood in the morning, when we will make up with +Mr. John; for he sends these chocolate-creams to let you know that he +is sorry." + +"So we will, dear," said Mollie, tucking Helena's head under her chin. +"You were always wiser than your mother, child." + + + + +THE LARGEST VOLCANO IN THE WORLD + +BY SARAH COAN. + + +[Illustration: THE LAKE OF FIRE.] + + "Why, it isn't on the top of a mountain at all! What a humbug my + geography must have been!" + +So wrote a little fellow to a young friend in America. + +He was right. It isn't on the top of a mountain, though the +geographies do say, "A volcano is a mountain sending forth fire, smoke +and lava," and give the picture of a mountain smoking at the top. + +This volcano is nothing of the kind; but is a hideous, yawning black +pit at the bottom of a mountain, and big enough to stow away a large +city. + +Of course you want to know, first, where this wonder is. Get out the +map of the Western Hemisphere, put your finger on any of the lines +running north and south, through North America, and called meridians; +follow it south until you come to the Tropic of Cancer, running east +and west; then "left-about-face!" and, following the tropic, sail out +into the calm Pacific. After a voyage of about two thousand miles, +you'll run ashore on one of a group of islands marked Sandwich. We +will call them Hawaiian, for that is their true name. Not one of the +brown, native inhabitants would call them "Sandwich." An English +sailor gave them that name, out of compliment to a certain Lord +Sandwich. + +On the largest of these islands, Hawaii--pronounced "Ha-y-e"--is the +volcano, Kilauea, the largest volcano in the world. + +We have seen it a great many times, and that you may see it as clearly +as possible, you shall have a letter from the very spot. The letter +reads: + + "Here we are, a large party of us, looking into Kilauea, which is + nine miles in circumference, and a thousand feet below us--a pit + about seven times as deep as Niagara Falls are high. We came + to-day, on horseback, from Hilo, a ride of thirty miles. Hilo is a + beautiful sea-shore village, the largest on the island of Hawaii, + and from it all visitors to Kilauea make their start. + + + "The road over which we came is nothing but a bridle-path, and a + very rough one at that, traversing miles and miles of old lava + flows. We had almost ridden to the crater's brink before we + discovered, in the dim twilight, the awful abyss. + + "Before us is the immense pit which, in the day-time, shows only a + floor of black lava, looking as smooth as satin; and, miles away, + rising out of this floor, are a few slender columns of smoke. + + "At night, everything is changed; and you can't conceive of the + lurid, demoniacal effect. Each slender column of smoke becomes + a pillar of fire that rolls upward, throbbing as it moves, and + spreads itself out above the crater like an immense canopy, all + ablaze. + + "Ships a hundred miles from land see the glow, and we here, on the + precipice above, can read ordinary print by its lurid light. + + "No wonder the natives worshiped the volcano. They thought it the + home of a goddess, whom they named Pele, and in times of unusual + activity believed her to be very angry with them. Then they came + in long processions, from the seashore villages, bringing pigs, + dogs, fowls, and sometimes human beings, for sacrifice. These they + threw into the crater, to appease her wrath. + + "A small berry, called the ohelo, grows on the banks of the pit, + and of these the natives never dared to eat until Pele had first + had her share. Very polite, were they not? And if ever they + forgot their manners, I dare say she gave them a shaking up by an + earthquake, as a reminder. + + "Sandal-wood and strawberries grow all about here--and fleas, too! + wicked fleas, that bite voraciously, to keep themselves warm, I + think, for here, so far from Pele's hearth, it is cold, and we sit + by a log fire of our own. + + "The day after our arrival we went into the crater, starting + immediately after an early breakfast. There is but one entrance, + a narrow ledge, formed by the gradual crumbling and falling in of + the precipice. Along this ledge we slipped and scrambled, making + the descent on foot--for no ridden animal has ever been able to + descend the trail. Holding on to bushes and snags when the path + was dangerously steep, we finally landed below on the black satin + floor of lava. + + "Satin! What had looked so smooth and tempting from a thousand + feet above, turned out to be a surface more troubled and uneven + than the ocean in the most violent storm. And that tiny thread + of smoke, toward which our faces were set, lay three miles + distant--three miles that were worse than nine on an ordinary + road. + + "How we worked that passage! up hill and down hill, over hard + pointed lava that cut through our shoes like knife blades; over + light, crumbled lava into which we sank up to our knees; over + hills of lava that were, themselves, covered with smaller hills; + into ravines and over steam-cracks, some of which we could jump + with the aid of our long poles, and some of which we had to find + our way around; steam-cracks whose depths we could not see, and + into which we thrust our walking-sticks, drawing them out charred + black or aflame; over lava so hot that we ran as rapidly and + lightly as possible, to prevent our shoes being scorched. + Three hours of this kind of work for the three miles, and + _Hale-mau-mau_, or 'House of Everlasting Fire,' lay spitting and + moaning at our feet! + + "A lake of boiling lava is what the column of smoke marked out to + us,--a pit within a pit,--a lake of raging lava fifty feet below + us, of which you have here the picture taken 'from life.' + + "It was so hot and suffocating on the brink of this lake that we + cut eye-holes in our pocket-handkerchiefs and wore them as masks. + Even then we had to run back every few moments for a breath of + fresher air, though we were on the windward side of the lake. The + gases on the leeward side would suffocate one instantly. Oh, the + glory! This Hale-mau-mau, whose fire never goes out, is a huge + lake of liquid lava, heaving with groans and thunderings that + cannot be described. Around its edge, as you see in the picture, + the red lava was spouting furiously. Now and then the center of + the lake cooled over, forming a thin crust of black lava, which, + suddenly cracking in a hundred directions, let the blood-red fluid + ooze up through the seams, looking like fiery snakes. + + "Look at the picture, and imagine these enormous slabs of cooled + lava slowly rising themselves on end, as if alive, and with + a stately motion plunging beneath the sea of fire, with an + indescribable roar. + + "For three hours we gazed, spell-bound, though it seemed but a few + moments: we were chained to the spot, as is every one else who + visits Kilauea. + + "The wind, as the jets rose in air, spun the molten drops of lava + into fine threads, which the natives call Pele's hair, and very + like hair it is. + + "All this time, under our feet were rumblings and explosions that + made us start and run now and then, for fear of being blown up; + coming back again after each fright, unwilling to leave the spot. + + "Occasionally, the embankment of the lake cracked off and fell + in, being immediately devoured by the hungry flood. These ledges + around Hale-mau-mau are very dangerous to stand upon. A whole + family came near losing their lives on one. A loud report beneath + their feet and a sudden trembling of the crust made them run for + life; and hardly had they jumped the fissure that separated + the ledge on which they were standing from more solid + footing--separated life from death--than crash went the ledge into + the boiling lake! + + "Sometimes the lake boils over, like a pot of molasses, and then + you can dip up the liquid lava with a long pole. You get quite + a lump of it, and by quickly rolling it on the ground mold a + cylinder the size of the end of the pole, and about six inches + long. Or you can drop a coin into the lava to be imprisoned as it + cools. + + "A foreigner once imbedded a silver dollar in the hot lava, and + gave the specimen to a native; but he immediately threw it on the + ground, breaking the lava, of course, and liberating the dollar, + which he pocketed, exclaiming: 'Volcano plenty enough, but me not + get dollar every day.' + + "One of our party collected lava specimens from around + Hale-mau-mau, and tied them up in her pocket-handkerchief. Imagine + her astonishment on finding, later, they had burned through the + linen, and one by one dropped out. + + "Terrible as old Pele is, she makes herself useful, and is an + excellent cook. She keeps a great many ovens heated for the use of + her guests, and no two at the same temperature, so that you may + select one of any heat you wish. In these ovens (steam-cracks) she + boils tea, coffee and eggs; or cooks omelets and meats. You wrap + the beef or chicken, or whatever meat you may wish to cook, in + leaves, and lay it in the steam-crack. Soon it is thoroughly + cooked, and deliciously, too. + + "She also keeps a tub of warm water always ready for bathers. + + "She doesn't mean to be laughed at, though, for doing this kind of + work, and doing it in an original kind of way. After she has given + you one or two sound shakings, which she generally does, you'll + have great respect for the old lady, and feel quite like taking + off your hat to her. With the shakings and the thunderings + under-foot, and now and then the opening of a long steam-crack, + she keeps her visitors quite in awe of her powers, though she is + probably several hundred years old. + + "Not far from the little hut where we sleep, close to the + precipice, is Pele's great laboratory, where she makes sulphur. We + wear our straw hats to the sulphur banks, and she bleaches them + for us. + + "Well, this is a strange, strange land, old Pele being only one of + its many curiosities. + + "I only hope you may all see the active old goddess before she + dies. She hasn't finished her work yet. Once in a while she runs + down to the shore, to bathe and look at the Pacific Ocean, and + when there she generally gives a new cape to Hawaii by running out + into the sea." + +Majestic old Pele! Long may she live! + + + + +MAKING IT SKIP + +[Illustration] + + + "I'll make it skip!" + Cried Charley, seizing a bit of stone. + And, in a trice, from our Charley's hand, + With scarce a dip, + Over the water it danced alone, + While we were watching it from the land-- + Skip! skip! skip! + + "I'll make it skip!" + Now, somehow, that is our Charley's way: + He takes little troubles that vex one so, + Not worth a flip, + And makes them seem to frolic and play + Just by his way of making them go + Skip! skip! skip! + + + + + +THE WILLOW WAND. BY A.E.W. + + + I have a little brother, + And his name is Little Lewy; + His starry eyes are bright as flowers + And they are twice as dewy. + Sometimes the dew o'erflows them, + And trickles down his cheeks; + And then he cries so hard, you'd think + He wouldn't stop for weeks. + Then my other little brother, + A bough of willow bringing, + Drives all the dew-drops far away, + By waving it and singing: + +[Illustration] + + "One, two, free, fo', five, six, _seven_ tears! + You'll be as old as farver in forty sousand years. + Drate big men don't have tears, so let me wipe 'em dry; + In forty sousand years from now you'll never, never cry." + + This other little brother, + Whose name is Little Bert, + Frowns in a dreadful manner + Whenever he is hurt; + The wrinkles right above his nose + Look like the letter M, + He keeps them there so long, he must + Be very fond of them. + Then my little brother Lewy, + The branch of willow bringing, + Sends all the naughty frowns away, + By waving it and singing: + +[Illustration] + + "A, B, C, D, E, F, G; + How many wrinkles are there? One, two, three! + We'll send them all off quickly, or they'll climb up to your hair, + And then to-morrow morning you'll have lots of tangles there." + +[Illustration] + + Sometimes our little Lewy + Loses all his pretty smiles; + He says they're very far away; + At least a hundred miles. + He looks as sober as a judge, + As stately as a king, + As solemn as a parson and + As still as anything. + And then our little Bertie, + The witching willow bringing, + Sends all the smiles safe home again, + By waving it and singing: + + "I want to buy a smile, sir, if you have some about; + I'll draw this leaf across your lips, and that will bring them out. + And if you cannot spare me one, just let me take a half. + Oh, here they come and there they come, and now we'll have a laugh." + +[Illustration] + + On every "morrow morning," + This funny little Bertie + Doesn't want to have his face washed + Because it don't feel dirty; + He runs half-dressed 'way out-of-doors, + Safe hidden from our view; + We search and call, hunt up and down, + And don't know what to do, + Until we see our little Lu + The wand of willow bringing, + And leading Bertie back to us, + While all the time he's singing: + + "Do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, si. + You look like a very small heathen Chinee. + Get the sleep all washed off and hang it up to dry, + And then you'll look as fresh as if you'd just come from the sky." + + When all the stars are shining, + Each little sleepy-head + Is lying in a funny bunch + Within the little bed. + Their eyes are so wide open, + They stay awake so long, + They're calling me to tell to them + A story or a song. + So up the stairs again I come, + The magic willow bringing, + And wave it here and wave it there, + While o'er and o'er I'm singing: + + "Sleep, sleep, sleep, sleep; + Sailing away on the dreamy deep; + Sister to watch you and angels to keep; + Sailing away and away and away, + Away on the d-r-e-a-m-y deep; + Sleep, sleep, s-l-e-e-p, sleep." + +[Illustration] + + + + + +THE STORY THAT WOULDN'T BE TOLD. + +BY LOUISE STOCKTON. + + +"Do tell me one more story; just _one_ more!" said the little boy. + +It certainly was getting late. The fire lighted the room, the shadows +danced in the corners. Down in the kitchen they were hurrying with the +dinner, and in a moment nurse would come in to take the boy to bed. +But all this made him want to stay. He was very comfortable in his +mamma's lap, and he was in no haste to go upstairs to Maggie and the +nursery. + +Then his mamma kissed him right on the tip of his little nose, and she +said: + +"But you must go to bed sometime." + +"Please, mamma dear," he said, pushing his curly head almost under her +arm, "just one little story." + +[Illustration: A SCENE IN THE STORY THAT WOULDN'T BE TOLD.] + +"Just one! You can choose it, but mind, a little one!" + +"You know what one I want. Of course about the giant Tancankeroareous, +and how he stole the slipper of the princess for a snuff-box, and how +the Prince Limberlocks climbed up a cherry-tree into the giant's room. +That is the story _I_ like!" + +"And it must be the 'amen story' to-night. Well: Once upon a time the +Princess Thistleblossom stood on one foot, while--" + +"No, no," interrupted The Story, "you need not tell _me_! Tell some +other story. I am tired of being said over and over. Every night, as +soon as your bed-time comes, and you are so sleepy that you don't want +to go to bed, you ask for me, and I have to be told. I am sick of it, +and I want to rest." + +"But I want you," said the boy. "I like you best of all my stories. +I like that part where the giant comes in and calls out 'PORTER!' in +such a loud voice that the gate shakes all the bolts loose." + +"I suppose you do like it," said The Story; "anybody would. I am a +very good story, and very fit to be told last, although I cannot +see why that is any reason for calling me the 'amen story.' That is +foolish, _I_ think! But at any rate, that is no reason for telling +me _every_ night. Let your mamma tell you Cock Robin, or Jack the +Giant-Killer. They are plenty good enough." + +"I don't want them," said the little boy, beginning to cry; "I want +_you!_ I wont go to sleep all night if mamma don't tell you." + +"_I_ don't care!" replied The Story; "you needn't cry for me. I've +made up my mind. You wont hear me to-night. That as as sure as your +name is Paul." + +And it was just as The Story said. There was no use in the boy's +crying, for off went The Story, and it was _not_ told that night; but +it is my private opinion that the boy did go to sleep after all. + + + + +POLLY: A BEFORE-CHRISTMAS STORY. + +BY HOPE LEDYARD. + +[Illustration] + +"Santa Claus!" exclaimed Ned, half mockingly. + +"Yes," insisted Mamie, "what's he going to bring you, Ned?" + +"I don't know, and I don't care much," he answered, "for there isn't +any Santa Claus." + +"Why, Ned!" cried Mamie, in astonishment. "Even my big brother Harry +believes in Santa Claus. He's coming home from school to-night, and +we're going to hang up our stockings." + +"Pshaw!" said Ned, "I must go home. Good-bye." + +Merry little Mamie stood in amazement, and then ran in-doors to her +mother with her perplexity. + +"Why, mother!" she cried, "Ned Huntley said there wasn't any Santa +Claus--and he was real cross about it, too." + +"Well, Mamie," said her mother, "I wouldn't take any notice of Ned's +being cross about Christmas-time. The Huntleys don't keep Christmas." + +"Don't keep Christmas!" exclaimed Mamie, astonished beyond measure. + +Seeing that her mother was busy, she took her doll, Helena Margaret +Constance Victorine, in her arms, and talked the matter over with her. + +"What do you think, my dear," said she, "they don't keep Christmas +at Ned Huntley's house! I don't know just what mother means by not +keeping it, for you know Santa Claus comes down the chimney, and so he +can get in during the night and leave Christmas there. Oh, yes, but +they don't keep it. They turn it out, I suppose, just like mother told +me they acted about the dear little baby Savior; they hadn't any room +for him, and I guess Mrs. Huntley hasn't any room to keep Christmas +in. I wonder what she does with the Christmas things Santa Claus +brings? I wonder if she throws 'em away? I mean to go and ask her;" +and putting her child carefully in its cradle, Mamie started. + +There was some truth in what Mrs. Gaston had told her little daughter; +the Huntleys did not keep Christmas in a loving, hearty way. They kept +it in so far that on this very afternoon Mrs. Huntley was busy making +the mince pies, dressing the turkey, and doing all she could to be +beforehand with the extra Christmas dinner. Mr. Huntley had just +stepped into the kitchen for a moment to say to his wife, "What have +you settled on for Ned's Christmas?" + +"I've bought him a pair of arctics--he needed 'em; and if you want to +spend more than common, you might get him half a dozen handkerchiefs." + +"Well, wife, I was thinking that perhaps"--the farmer tried to be +particular about his words, for Mrs. Huntley did not seem in a very +good humor--"I was remembering how you used to enjoy giving the young +ones candies and toys; so, perhaps--" + +"Now, Noah Huntley, I'm surprised at you! Buy candies and toys for a +great lumbering boy like Ned? Why, you must be crazy, man! The next +thing will be that you'll want a Christmas-tree yourself!" + +"Well, and it wouldn't be a bad idea," thought the father. "There's +my man, Fritz, he has been to the woods and cut a little tree for his +children, and he seems to get a heap of pleasure out of it. Ah! if +only little Polly had lived!" Strangely enough, the wife was thinking +the same thing, as she sliced and sifted and weighed. "If little Polly +had lived it would have been different, but we can't throw away money +on nonsense for Ned." + +A little red cloak flashed by the window, a little bright face, just +about the age of "our little Polly's," peeped in at the door, and +Mamie asked, "May I come in, Mrs. Huntley?" + +"Certainly, child. Here's a fresh cookie. I suppose you're full of +Christmas over at your house?" + +"Oh, yes, ma'am! And I'm so sorry you don't keep it. What's the +reason?" + +"Don't keep it! Why, we have a regular Christmas dinner as sure as +the 25th of December comes round, and Pa gives me a new dress, or +something that I need, and we give Ned a suit of clothes, or shoes, or +something that he needs." + +"Well," said Mamie, "but I like our way best. May I tell you how we +keep Christmas?" + +"Talk away. I can listen." + +"Well, you see, a good while before Christmas my mother begins to get +ready, and I often see her hide up something quick when I come in, and +then she laughs, and I think, 'Oh, yes, something's coming,' and then +mother takes me in her lap and tells me how Jesus is coming, and how +He did come. Do you know, Mrs. Huntley?" + +"You can tell me, child?" + +"You see, He came a long, long time ago as a little baby. Mamma says +that he began at the beginning, so that no little child could say, 'I +can't be like Jesus, for Jesus never was so little as me.' That first +birthday of His, there wasn't any room for Him at the tavern, and when +the dear little baby Jesus was sleepy, they laid Him right in a stable +manger, and the shepherds found Him lying there. Christmas is His +Birthday, and I suppose they give all the children presents because +Jesus loved little children, and then Santa Claus--Oh, Mrs. Huntley, +that's what I came about, and I 'most forgot! If you don't keep +Christmas--I mean as we do," she added, as Mrs. Huntley frowned, "and +if you don't use the things that Santa Claus leaves here, can't I come +over and get 'em? Only I'd rather Ned should have 'em." + +"Child alive! How your tongue runs! Here, now, take these cookies home +with you, I guess Ned's too busy to play with you." + +"Thank you, ma'am. And you'll remember about Santa Claus?" said little +Mamie, as she walked away with her cookies. + +Mrs. Huntley worked on for a few minutes longer, and then, leaving her +dishes, she went to her own room and opened a bureau drawer. There +lay a bright little dress and pretty white apron,--Polly's best +things,--the little clothes in which she used to look so lovely. There +were the last Christmas toys the mother had ever bought,--only a +little tin bank, a paper cornucopia, and a doll; but she remembered +that Christmas so well! Could it be that it was only three years ago? +How Polly had laughed and chattered over her stocking! And Ned,--now +that she thought about it,--she remembered that they bought him a pair +of skates that year. He had made a great time over those skates, and +had taken his little sister out to see him try to use them. Ned was +so loving and gentle in those days. And then the mother's heart +reproached her. Could she blame her boy because he seemed to care so +little for his parents and his home, when she had nursed her grief for +the loss of her baby-girl, and taken no pains to be bright or cheerful +with him? She thought how clearly Mamie had told the story of the +Savior's birthday. Could her boy, who was six years older, do as well? +He went to Sunday-school sometimes, but she had never talked with him +about Jesus--never since God took her Polly. And her eyes filled as +she shut the drawer. + +Mrs. Huntley went back to the kitchen, but the room seemed different +to her. Ned brought in the milk, and looked at his mother curiously +at hearing her say, "Thank you, Ned." Wonders would never end, Ned +thought, when, after tea, she said, "Father, it's a moonlight night; +couldn't you and I drive to the village? Ned will excuse our leaving +him alone." + +"Excuse!" When had his mother ever asked him to excuse her? And then, +as mother waited for the wagon to be got ready, she asked him to read +about the Savior's birth, and surely there were tears in her eyes as +father came in, just as Ned read, "And they came with haste and found +Mary and Joseph, and the babe lying in a manger." + +Mr. Huntley was bewildered, too. To start off for the village at seven +o'clock in the evening! When had such a thing happened? + +On the road Mrs. Huntley told her husband what Mamie had said to her, +and she added, "Perhaps, as I tell it, it don't seem much, but it made +me think of our Polly, and"--the woman's voice broke, and the father, +saddened too, said, comfortingly, "She's safe, my dear, in heaven." + +"Yes, father, but I'm thinking of the one that's left, for all I cried +a little. I guess you were near right about getting him something +nice. He's but a boy yet, and he'd think more of Christmas, and +perhaps of the child that was born on Christmas, if we show him that +Jesus has made our hearts a little more tender." + +What it cost that hard, reserved woman to say that, none knew, but I +think her husband felt dimly how she must have fought with herself, +and he was silent for some time. At last he said, with a tone of +gladness in his voice, "My dear, I'm glad to get him something. He's a +good boy, Ned is." + +What a pleasant time they had, and how they caught the spirit of +Christmas! They bought a sled and skates, a book or two, and candies, +and Mrs. Huntley found a jack-knife that was just the thing Ned +wanted. Then she said to her husband: + +"I'd like to buy something for Mamie. It will be nice to buy a girl's +present." + +Their hearts ached a little, as they chose a wonderful little wash-tub +and board, with a clothes-horse to match. How Polly's eyes would have +shone at these! + +Meantime, Ned mused over his mother's tears and her strangely kind +tones, and thought: "I wonder if she's going to be as good to me as +she was to Polly! I hated to hear Mamie talk about Santa Claus. Polly +used to talk just that way, and we did have such good times. I used to +get skates and things at Christmas, but now I get some handkerchiefs +or a lot of shirts! It makes me mad." Then Ned fell asleep, and so +the mother found him. She woke him gently and he went off to bed, +bewildered by more kind words. + +Morning dawned and Ned hurried down to light the fire in the kitchen, +but he went no further than the sitting-room. There was a sled,--a +splendid one,--a pair of skates, and books! He put his hands in his +pockets to take a long stare, and felt something strange in one of +them. Why! There was a beautiful knife! + +Mother came in and watched his face, but at sight of her the boy +fairly broke down. Laying his head on her shoulder, "It's like Polly +coming back," he said. + +And so it was, and so it continued to be. + + +[Illustration: BOGGS SHOULD NOT HAVE HAD HIS PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN ON +THANKSGIVING DAY, AND EATEN A HEARTY DINNER AFTERWARD.] + + + + +THE LORD MAYOR OF LONDON'S SHOW. + +BY JENNIE A. OWEN. + + +"Aunt Jennie," said my little godson Willie, a few days ago, "wont +you go with us to see the Lord Mayor's show? There'll be thirteen +elephants and eight clowns, and an elephant picks a man up with his +trunk and holds him there. And then mamma's going to take me to +Sampson's. Do you know Sampson, Aunt Jennie?" + +"I know about Samson in the Bible, Willie." + +"Oh, not that one; our Sampson is a man in a shop in Oxford street, +and he makes such nice boys' clothes, and he's the master." + +I have just come home from the Sandwich Islands, where I have been +living; I spent a few years, too, in New Zealand and Tahiti, and so +have seen many wonderful things on the land and sea; but a Lord Mayor +going to be sworn in to his duties, attended by thirteen elephants and +a London crowd, would be a novelty to me. I thought, too, that certain +little boys and girls in the Sandwich Islands and the United States, +who also call me Aunt Jennie, would like to hear all about it. + +This has been an exciting week for the London children. The fifth of +November fell on Sunday, and Guy Fawkes had to wait till Monday to +make his appearance. All that day he was carried about the streets in +various shapes and forms, and the naughty, ignorant little boys, in +spite of enlightened school-board teaching, sang at our doors: + + "A ha'penny loaf to feed the Pope, + A penn'orth of cheese to choke him, + A pint of beer to wash it all down, + And a jolly good fire to burn him." + +"Oh, papa," said Willie, as he ran into the breakfast-room for +pennies, "aren't you glad you're a real man and not a pope?" + +At last the ninth, the Lord Mayor's day, came. It is also the Prince +of Wales' birthday, so the city would be very gay-looking with all the +flags flying. + +Alas! it was a dark, dull morning, and a heavy fog hung all over the +city. Alas for the gilt coaches, the steel armor and other braveries! +and then the elephants, how could they possibly feel their way all +round the city in a thick, yellow fog? But, happily, by eleven the +weather cleared, and the sun shone out brightly. Such a crowd as there +was at our railway depot! So many bonny, happy little children never +went on the same morning to the busy old town before. It was something +new for great elephants to be seen walking through the prosy business +streets. Once before, twenty-seven years ago, when Sir John Musgrave +was Lord Mayor, not only elephants, but camels, deer, negroes, +beehives, a ship in full sail, and Britannia seated on a car drawn by +six horses, had made part of the show; since then, however, no Lord +Mayor had been thoughtful enough of little and big children's pleasure +to order out such delightful things, and so this year everybody must +go. To quote from the _Daily News:_ + + "Since the reign of Henry III., when, by that monarch's gracious + act the Lord Mayor of London was permitted to present himself + before the Barons of Exchequer at Westminster instead of submitting + the citizens' choice for the king's personal approval, there has + been no Lord Mayor's show at which so great a concourse of + spectators assembled." + +We crowd into the cars and are soon in Cannon street. At the gates a +boy meets us with little books for sale, shouting, "Thirteen elephants +for a penny! the other boys'll only give you twelve, but I'll give you +thirteen. Sold again! Thirteen elephants for a penny!" This wonderful +book consists of a series of common gaudily colored pictures, supposed +to represent the procession, which has done service at the show +from time immemorial, but it is each year as welcome as ever to the +children who each have a penny to buy one. Through the streets we have +passing visions of pink silk stockings, canary-colored breeches, and +dark green coats and gold lace, also tri-colored rosettes as large as +saucers; and pass by shop-windows full of sweet, eager little faces, +in the place of hose, shirts, sewing-machines, etc. + +At last we arrive at our destination in Cheapside, where, through the +kindness of a friend, a window on the first floor of a large building +is waiting for us. How impatient we are until we hear the band of the +Grenadier Guards, which heads the procession. After this band and that +of the Royal London Militia, come the Worshipful Company of Loriners, +preceded by jolly watermen in blue and white striped jerseys and white +trousers, bearing banners; more watermen follow to relieve them; the +beadle of the company with his staff of office; the clerk in his +chariot; the wardens, wearing silk cloaks trimmed with sables, +in their carriages, and amongst them Sir John Bennett, the great +watch-maker in Cheapside, a charming-looking old gentleman with rosy +cheeks and profuse gray curls; his face lights up with smiles as the +shouts of "Bravo, Bennett," show how popular he is. + +Then comes a grand yellow coach, in which rides the Master of the +Company, attended by his chaplain. After the Loriners come the +Farriers, the band of the First Life Guards, banners, beadle and mace +clerk, wardens and master. After them the Broderers. As these pass +slowly along, an excitement is caused by the behavior of the horse of +a hussar, who is mounting guard. It does not like the proceedings at +all, and still less the greasy asphalt on which it stands, dances +round, backs into the Worshipful Master of Broderers' carriage, and +finally rears and falls, unseating its rider. The hussar is quite cool +and quiet, soon reseats himself, and rejects the offer of a fussy +little man in red to hold his horse. + +And now comes the Worshipful Company of Bakers, preceded by their +banner, with its good old motto, "Praise God for all." These are +really very jolly and well-favored looking companions, most of the +members bearing large bouquets of flowers. After them the Vintners' +Company, with the band of the Royal Artillery; ten Commissioners, +each bearing a shield; eight master porters in vintner's dress; the +Bargemaster in full uniform, and the Swan Uppers. These are men who +look after the swans belonging to the corporation of London, which +build their nests along the banks of the Thames, and they mark the +young swans each spring. + +The "Uppers" look very well in their dress, consisting of dark cloth +jackets slashed with white, blue and white striped jerseys and white +trousers. + +After this company had passed, a grand shout announced the coming of +the elephants. These, as some small boy has observed, are "curious +animals, with two tails--one before and one behind." First came a +number of large ones, with Mr. Sanger, their owner, who was mounted on +a curiously spotted horse. They were gorgeous with oriental trappings +and howdahs. On the foremost one rode a man representing a grand +Indian prince. He had a reddish mustache, wore spectacles, a +magnificent purple and white turban, and showy oriental costume. He +produced a great impression on the crowd. In other howdahs sat one, +two or three splendid Hindoos, whose dress was past description. Then +came several young elephants ridden by boys; one of these was seized +with a desire to lie down, and had to be vigorously roused; but, +on the whole, they behaved in a wonderfully correct and dignified +manner--now and then gracefully swinging round their trunks amongst +the sympathizing crowd, in search of refreshment. + +The elephants were escorted by equestrians in state costumes, and +followed by six knights in steel armor, with lances and pennons, +mounted on chargers. One of these "wouldn't go," and had to be dragged +on ignominiously by a policeman. Then the Epping Forest rangers came. +They were picturesquely dressed in green velvet coats, broad-brimmed +hats and long feathers. After these, trumpeters, under-sheriffs in +their state carriages, aldermen, the Recorder, more trumpeters, and +then a most gorgeous coach--with hammer-cloth of red and gold, men in +liveries too splendid to describe, and four fine horses--brings the +late lord mayor. The mounted band of household cavalry follows. These +really look splendid in crimson coats covered with gold embroidery and +velvet caps, riding handsome white horses. + +There is a stoppage just as they come up. They are rapturously greeted +by the crowd, and requested to "play up." The mayor's servants, in +state liveries, follow on foot. After them rides a very important +person, the city marshal, on horseback. The city trumpeters come now, +preceding the right honorable the lord mayor's most gorgeous gilt +coach, drawn by six horses. In it sits Sir Thomas White, supported by +his chaplain, and attended by his sword-bearer and the common crier. +An escort of the 21st Hussars brings up the rear. Policemen follow, +and after them a stray mail-cart, a butcher's boy with his tray; after +that, not just the deluge, but the crowd. + +"Oh, mamma!" says Willie, "the beefeaters didn't come! Nine of them +there are in my book, and a grand one going in front, blowing a +trumpet. And the man holding his thumb to his nose at the sheriffs; +and the policeman knocking a thief down with a staff! And the lord +mayor had no spectacles on. That's not fair! Do beefeaters eat lots of +beef, mamma?" + +"Oh, no," says Charlie, with a superior air, "they are only sideboard +chaps." + +Willie is still more puzzled, until he is told that in the olden time +servants so costumed used to stand by the sideboard, or buffet, as +it was called, at feasts, and so got the name of buffetiers, and by +degrees the name became changed into beefeaters, which was more easily +remembered by the people. + +[Illustration: THE LORD MAYOR OF LONDON'S SHOW.] + +From our window we could not, of course, follow the procession on its +winding way, nor had we seen it start. On looking at the paper next +morning, we read that at first it was feared that the elephants had +failed to keep their appointment. It was almost time to set out, and +no elephants were to be seen. What must be done? The people ought not +to be cheated out of the best part of the show; and yet, on the other +hand, how undignified for a lord mayor to be kept waiting for thirteen +elephants! I am sorry to say the police were rather glad. They had +been very much afraid that the animals might prove troublesome during +so long and unusual a walk; or else, coming from a circus, might, at +any sudden pause, imagine themselves in the arena, and take it into +their grave heads to perform on two legs and terrify the horses, or +possibly annoy the lord mayor and his chaplain by putting their +long trunks into his coach. But, happily for us, the police were +disappointed. Such dignified creatures could not be expected to come +early and be kept waiting. + +Just at the right time they came leisurely up, and gravely taking +their proper place, marched on with their proverbial sagacity--waiting +outside Westminster Hall, whilst the lord mayor swore to do his +duty, as quietly as though they were at home--and afterward left the +procession at Blackfriars Bridge, to go to their own quarters and +eat their well-earned dinner. It is to be hoped that the lord mayor +ordered something specially good for them. + +The elephants having left, the **embassadors, her majesty's ministers of +state, the nobility, judges, and other persons of distinction, joined +the procession, and proceeded to feast with his lordship and the lady +mayoress at Guildhall. + +[*sic] + + * * * * * + + + + +MY GIRL + +BY JOHN S. ADAMS. + + + I. + + A little corner with its crib, + A little mug, a spoon, a bib, + A little tooth so pearly white, + A little rubber ring to bite. + + + II. + + A little plate all lettered round, + A little rattle to resound, + A little creeping--see! she stands! + A little step 'twixt outstretched hands. + + + III. + + A little doll with flaxen hair, + A little willow rocking-chair, + A little dress of richest hue, + A little pair of gaiters blue. + + + IV. + + A little school day after day, + A "little schoolma'am" to obey, + A little study--soon 'tis past, + A little graduate at last. + + + V. + + A little muff for winter weather, + A little jockey-hat and feather, + A little sack with funny pockets, + A little chain, a ring, and lockets. + + + VI. + + A little while to dance and bow, + A little escort homeward now, + A little party, somewhat late, + A little lingering at the gate. + + + VII. + + A little walk in leafy June, + A little talk while shines the moon, + A little reference to papa, + A little planning with mamma. + + + VIII. + + A little ceremony grave, + A little struggle to be brave, + A little cottage on a lawn, + A little kiss--my girl was gone! + + * * * * * + + + + +MARS, THE PLANET OF WAR. + +BY RICHARD A. PROCTOR. + + +Not long ago, the planet Jupiter came among the stars of our southern +evening skies. Those who noted down his track found that he first +advanced from west to east, then receded along a track near his +advancing one, then advanced again, still running on a track side by +side with his former advancing track, and so passed away from the +scene, toward the part of the sky where the sun's light prevents our +tracking him. + +That was a useful and rather easy first lesson about the motions of +the bodies called planets. + +We have now to consider a rather less simple case, but one a great +deal more interesting. Two planets intrude among our evening stars, +each following a looped track, but the tracks are unlike; the two +planets are unlike in appearance, and they are also very unlike in +reality. + +I hope many of my young readers have already found out for themselves +that these intrusive bodies have been wandering among our fixed stars. +I purposely said nothing about the visitors last August, so that those +who try to learn the star-groups from my maps may have had a chance of +discovering the two planets for themselves. If they have done so, they +have in fact repeated a discovery which was made many, many years ago. +Ages before astronomy began to be a science, men found out that some +of the stars move about among the rest, and they also noticed the kind +of path traveled in the sky by each of those moving bodies. It was +long, indeed, before they found out the kind of path traveled _really_ +by the planets. In fact, they supposed our earth to be fixed; and if +our earth were fixed, the paths of the planets about her as a center +would be twisted and tangled in the most perplexing way. So that folks +in those old times, seeing the planets making all manner of loops and +twistings round the sky, and supposing they made corresponding loops +and twistings in traveling round the earth, thought the planets were +living creatures, going round the earth to watch it and rule over it, +each according to his own fashion. So they worshiped the planets as +gods, counting seven of them, including the sun and moon. Some they +thought good to men, others evil. The two planets now twisting their +way along the southern skies were two of the evil sort, viz.: Mars, +called the Lesser Infortune, and Saturn, called the Greater Infortune. +In the old system of star-worship, Mars ruled over Tuesday, and Saturn +over Saturday,--the Sabbath of olden times,--a day which the Chaldean +and Egyptian astrologers regarded as the most unlucky in the whole +week. + +[Illustration: FIG. 1. THE PATHS OF MARS AND SATURN.] + +The actual paths traveled among the stars by these two planets, this +fall, are shown in Fig. 1. You will see how wildly the fiery Mars, the +planet of war, careers round his great loop, while old Saturn, "heavy, +dull, and slow" (as Armado says that lead is--the metal dedicated to +Saturn), plods slowly and wearily along. Between August 6 and October +1, Mars traversed his entire backward track,--Saturn, you notice, only +a small portion of his much smaller loop. On the sky, too, you will +see that while Mars shines with a fierce ruddy glow, well suited +to his warlike character, Saturn shines with a dull yellow light, +suggestive of the evil qualities which the astrologers of old assigned +to him. "My loking," says Saturn, in Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales," "is +the fader of pestilence: + + "Min ben also the maladies colde, + The derke treasons, and the costes olde; + Min is the drenching in the see so wan, + Min is the prison in the derke cote,[1] + Min is the strangel and hanging by the throte, + The murmure, and the cherles[2] rebelling, + The groyning and the prine empoysoning." + + [Footnote 1: _Dark or gloomy coast_. This line was amusingly + rendered, by the printer of my "Saturn and its System," in which I + quoted Chaucer's lines, "Mine is the prison, and the dirty coat."] + + [Footnote 2: _Churl's._ Notice this word. It is the same as the + word rendered _Charles's_ in the common English name for the + Dipper. One should always say Charles's Wain, not Charles' (as is + the way Tennyson does in the "May Queen ").] + +For the present, however, let us consider the planet Mars, leaving +slow Saturn to wait for us another month. + +It has always seemed to me one of the most useful lessons in astronomy +to follow the line by which, long ago, great discoveries were made. +Thus, if the young reader went out on every fine night and noted the +changing position of Mars, he traced out the track shown in Fig. 1. +He noted, also, that the planet, which shone at its brightest about +September 5, gradually grew less and less bright as it traveled off, +after rounding the station near October 5 (really on Oct. 7), toward +the east. He observed, then, that the seeming loop followed by the +planet was a real looped track (so far, at least, as our observer on +the earth was concerned). Fig. 2 shows the apparent shape of Mars's +loop, the dates corresponding to those shown in Fig. 1. Only it does +not lie flat, as shown on the paper, but must be supposed to lie +somewhat under the surface of the paper, as shown by the little +upright _a, b,_ which, indeed, gives the distance under the paper at +which the part of the loop is supposed to lie where lowest at _m_. The +other similar uprights at M_1, M_2, and M_3 show the depression at +these places. You perceive that the part M_1, M_2, lies higher than +the part M_2, M_3. If the loop were flat, and, like E, the earth, +were in the level of the paper, it would be seen edgewise, and the +advancing, receding, and advancing parts of the planet's course would +all lie on the same line upon the sky. But being thus out of the +level, we see through the loop, so to speak, and it has the seeming +shape shown in Fig. 1.[3] + + [Footnote 3: I must re-mention that though this explanation is + made as simple as I possibly can make it, so far as words are + concerned, the figures present the result of an exact geometrical + investigation. Every dot, for instance, in Fig. 2, has had its + place separately determined by me.] + +[Illustration: FIG. 2. ONE OF MARS'S LOOPS.] + +This is one loop, you will understand, out of an immense number which +Mars makes in journeying round the earth, regarded as fixed. He +retreats to a great distance, swoops inward again toward the earth, +making a loop as in Fig. 2, and retreating again. Then he comes +again, makes another swoop, and a loop on another side, and so on. +He behaves, in fact, like that "little quiver fellow," a right +martialist, no doubt, who, as Justice Shallow tells us, "would about +and about, and come you in, and come you in,--and away again would a +go, and again would a come." The loops are not all of the same size. +The one shown in Fig. 2 is one of the smallest. I have before me a +picture which I have made of all this planet's loops from 1875 to +1892, and it forms the most curiously intertwined set of curves you +can imagine,--rather pretty, though not regular, the loops on one side +being much larger than those on the other. I would show the picture +here, but it is too large. One of these days, it will be given in a +book I am going to write about Mars, who is quite important enough to +have a book all to himself. I want you, now, to understand me that +Mars really does travel in a most complicated path, when you consider +the earth as at rest. If a perfect picture of all his loopings and +twistings since astronomy began could be drawn,--even on a sheet of +paper as large as the floor of a room,--the curves would so interlace +that you would not be able to track them out, but be always leaving +the true track and getting upon one crossing it slightly aslant,--just +like the lines by which trains are made to run easily off one +track on to another. + +The unfortunate astronomers of old times, who had to explain, _if they +could_, this complicated behavior of Mars (and of other planets, too), +were quite beaten. The more carefully they made their observations, +the more peculiar the motions seemed. One astronomer gave up the work +in despair, just like that unfortunate Greek philosopher who, because +he could not understand the tides of the Euboean Sea, drowned +himself in it. So this astronomer, who was a king,--Alphonsus of +Portugal,--unable to unravel the loops of the planets, said, in his +wrath, that if he had been called on by the Creator to assign the +planets their paths, he would have managed the matter a great deal +better. The plates of the old astronomical books became more and more +confusing, and cost more and more labor, as astronomers continued to + + ... "Build, unbuild, contrive + To save appearances, to gird the sphere + With centric and eccentric scribbled o'er, + Cycle and epicycle, orb in orb." + +It was to the study of Mars, the wildest wanderer of all, that we owe +the removal of all these perplexities. The idea had occurred to the +great astronomer, Copernicus, that the complexities of the planets' +paths are not real, but are caused by the constant moving about of the +place from whence we watch the planets. If a fly at rest at the middle +of a clock face watched the ends of the two hands, they would seem to +go round him in circles; but if, instead, he was on the end of one of +the hands (and was not knocked off as the other passed), the end of +this other hand would not move round the fly in the same simple way. +When the two hands were together it would be near, when they were +opposite it would be far away, and, without entering into any +particular description of the way in which it would seem to move, you +can easily see that the motion would seem much more complicated +than if the fly watched it from the middle of the clock face. Now, +Copernicus _did_ enter into particulars, and showed by mathematical +reasoning that nearly all the peculiarities of the planets' motions +could be explained by supposing that the sun, not the earth, was the +body round which the planets move, and that they go round him nearly +in circles. + +[Illustration: FIG. 3. THE PATHS OF MARS, THE EARTH, VENUS, AND +MERCURY.] + +But Copernicus could not explain _all_ the motions. And Tycho Brahe, +another great astronomer, who did not believe at all in the new ideas +of Copernicus, made a number of observations on our near neighbor +Mars, to show that Copernicus was wrong. He gave these to Kepler, +another great astronomer, enjoining him to explain them in such a way +as to overthrow the Copernican ideas. But Kepler behaved like Balaam +the son of Beor; for, called on to curse (or at least to denounce) the +views of Copernicus, he altogether blessed them three times. First, +he found from the motions of Mars that the planets do not travel in +circles, but in ovals, very nearly circular in shape, but not having +the sun exactly at the center. Secondly, he discovered the law +according to which they move, now faster now slower, in their oval +paths; and thirdly, he found a law according to which the nearer +planets travel more quickly and the farther planets more slowly, +every distance having its own proper rate. These three laws of Kepler +constitute the Magna Charta of the solar system. + +Afterward, Newton showed _how_ it happens that the planets obey these +laws, but as his part of the work had no particular reference to Mars, +I say no more about it in this place. + +Here, in Fig. 3, are the real paths of Mars and the Earth, and also of +Venus and Mercury. No loops, you see, in any of them, simply because +we have set the sun in the middle. Set the earth in the middle, and +each planet would have its own set of loops, each set enormously +complicated, and all three sets mixed together in the most confusing +way. It is well to remember this when you see, as in many books of +astronomy, the old theory illustrated with a set of circles looking +almost as neat and compact as the set truly representing the modern +theory. For the idea is suggested by this simple picture of the old +theory that the theory itself was simple, whereas it had become so +confusing that not merely young learners, but the most profound +mathematicians, were baffled when they tried to unravel the motions of +the planets. + +I think the figure pretty well explains itself. All I need mention is, +that while the shape and position of each path is correctly shown, the +size of the sun at center is immensely exaggerated. A mere pin point, +but shining with star-like splendor, would properly represent him. +As for the figures of the earth and Mars, they are still more +tremendously out of proportion. The cross-breadth of the lines +representing these planets' tracks is _many times_ greater than the +breadth of either planet on the scale of the chart. + +On September 5 the earth and Mars came to the position shown at E and +M. You observe that they could not be much nearer. It is indeed very +seldom that Mars is so well placed for observation. His illuminated +face was turned toward the dark or night half of the earth, so that he +shone brightly in the sky at midnight, and can be well studied with +the telescope. + +When Galileo turned toward Mars the telescope with which he had +discovered the moons of Jupiter, the crescent form of Venus, and many +other wonders in the heavens, he was altogether disappointed. His +telescope was indeed too small to show any features of interest in +Mars, though the planet of war is much nearer to us than Jupiter. Mars +is but a small world. The diameter of the planet is about 4,400 miles, +that of our earth being nearly 8,000. Jupiter, though much farther +away, has an immense diameter of more than 80,000 miles to make +up, and much more than make up, for the effect of distance. With his +noble system of moons he appears a remarkable object even with a +small telescope, while Mars shows no feature of interest even with +telescopes of considerable size. + +It was not, then, till very powerful telescopes had been constructed +that astronomers learned what we now know about Mars.[4] + + [Footnote 4: See the "Moons of Mars" in "Letter Box" Department] + +It is found that his surface is divided into land and water, like the +surface of our own earth. But his seas and oceans are not nearly so +large compared with his continents and lands. You know that on our own +earth the water covers so much larger a surface than the land that +the great continents are in reality islands. Europe, Asia and Africa +together form one great island; North and South America another, not +quite so large; then come Australia, Greenland, Madagascar, and so +forth; all the lands being islands, larger or smaller. On the other +hand, except the Caspian Sea and the Sea of Aral, there are no large +seas entirely land-bound. In the case of Mars a very different state +of things prevails, as you will see from the three accompanying +pictures (hitherto unpublished), drawn by the famous English observer, +Dawes (called the Eagle-eyed). The third and best was drawn with +a telescope constructed by your famous optician, Alvan Clark, of +Cambridge, Massachusetts. The dark parts are the seas, the light parts +being land, or in some cases cloud or snow. But in these pictures most +of the lighter portions represent land; for they have been seen often +so shaped, whereas clouds, of course, would change in shape. + +The planet Mars, like our earth, turns on its axis, so that it has day +and night as we have. The length of its day is not very different from +that of our own day. Our earth turns once on its axis in ---- but +before reading on, try to complete this sentence for yourself. Every +one knows that the earth's turning on its axis produces day and night, +and nine persons out of ten, if asked how long the earth takes in +turning round her axis, will answer, 24 hours; and if asked how many +times she turns on her axis in a year, will say 365 times, or if +disposed to be very exact, "about 365-1/4 times." But neither answer +is correct. The earth turns on her axis about 366-1/4 times in each +year, and each turning occupies 23 hours 56 minutes and 4 seconds and +1 tenth of a second. We, taking the ordinary day as the time of a +turning or rotation, lose count of one rotation each year. It is +necessary to mention this, in order that when I tell you how long the +day of Mars is, you may be able correctly to compare it with our own +day. Mars, then, turns on his axis in 24 hours 37 minutes 22 seconds +and 7 tenth-parts of a second. So that Mars requires 41 minutes 18 +seconds and 6-tenths of a second longer to turn his small body once +round than our earth requires to turn round her much larger body. The +common day of Mars is, however, only about 39 minutes longer than our +common day. + +Mars has a long year, taking no less than 687 of our days to complete +his circuit round the sun, so that his year lasts only about one month +and a half less than two of ours. + +[Illustration: APPEARANCE OF MARS, 1852, MARCH 23, 5 H. 45 M., +Greenwich Mean Time. Power of Telescope, 358; 6-1/3 inch object-glass] + +[Illustration: APPEARANCE OF MARS, 1852, FEBRUARY 3, 6 H. 50 M., +Greenwich Mean Time. Power of Telescope, 242 and 358 on 6-1/3 inch +object-glass.] + +[Illustration: APPEARANCE OF MARS, 1860, JULY 6, 11 H. 33 M., +Greenwich Mean Time. Power of Telescope, 201; 8-1/4 inch object-glass. +Planet very low, yet pretty distinct.] + +Like the earth, Mars has seasons, for his polar axis, like that of +the earth, is aslant, and at one part of his year brings his northern +regions more fully into sunlight, at which time summer prevails there +and winter in his southern regions; while at the opposite part of his +year his southern regions are turned more fully sunward and have their +summer, while winter prevails over his northern regions. + +Around his poles, as around the earth's, there are great masses of +ice, insomuch that it is very doubtful whether any inhabitants of Mars +have been able to penetrate to his poles, any more than Kane or Hayes +or Nares or Parry, despite their courage and endurance, have been +able to reach our northern pole, or Cook or Wilkes or James Ross our +antarctic pole. + +In the summer of either hemisphere of Mars, the north polar snows +become greatly reduced in extent, as is natural, while in winter +they reach to low latitudes, showing that in parts of the planet +corresponding to the United States, or mid-Europe, as to latitude, +bitter cold must prevail for several weeks in succession. + +The land regions of Mars can be distinguished from the seas by their +ruddy color, the seas being greenish. But here, perhaps, you will be +disposed to ask how astronomers can be sure that the greenish regions +are seas, the ruddy regions land, the white spots either snow or +cloud. Might not materials altogether unlike any we are acquainted +with exist upon that remote planet? + +The spectroscope answers this question in the clearest way. You +may remember what I told you in October, 1876, about Venus, how +astronomers have learned that the vapor of water exists in +her atmosphere. The same method has been applied, even more +satisfactorily, to the planet of war, and it has been found that he +also has his atmosphere at times laden with moisture. This being so, +it is clear we have not to do with a planet made of materials utterly +unlike those forming our earth. To suppose so, when we find that the +air of Mars, formed like our own (for if it contained other gases the +spectroscope would tell us), contains often large quantities of the +vapor of water, would be as absurd as to believe in the green cheese +theory of the moon, or in another equally preposterous, advanced +lately by an English artist--Mr. J.T. Brett--to the effect that the +atmosphere of Venus is formed of glass. + +There is another theory about Mars, certainly not so absurd as +either of those just named, but scarcely supported by evidence at +present--the idea, namely, advanced by a French astronomer, that the +ruddy color of the lands and seas of Mars is due to red trees and a +generally scarlet vegetation. Your poet Holmes refers to this in those +lines of his, "Star-clouds and Wind-clouds" (to my mind among the most +charming of his many charming poems): + + "The snows that glittered on the disc of Mars + Have melted, and the planet's fiery orb + Rolls in the crimson summer of its year." + +It is quite possible, of course, that such colors as are often seen +in American woods in the autumn-time may prevail in the forests and +vegetation of Mars during the fullness of the Martian summer. The fact +that during this season the planet looks ruddier than usual, in some +degree corresponds with this theory. But it is much better explained, +to my mind, by the greater clearness of the Martian air in the +summer-time. That would enable us to see the color of the soil better. +If our earth were looked at from Venus during the winter-time, the +snows covering large parts of her surface, and the clouds and mists +common in the winter months, would hide the tints of the surface, +whereas these would be very distinct in clear summer weather. + +I fear my own conclusion about Mars is that his present condition +is very desolate. I look on the ruddiness of tint to which I have +referred as one of the signs that the planet of war has long since +passed its prime. There are lands and seas in Mars, the vapor of water +is present in his air, clouds form, rains and snows fall upon his +surface, and doubtless brooks and rivers irrigate his soil, and carry +down the moisture collected on his wide continents to the seas whence +the clouds had originally been formed. But I do not think there is +much vegetation on Mars, or that many living creatures of the higher +types of Martian life as it once existed still remain. All that is +known about the planet tends to show that the time when it attained +that stage of planetary existence through which our earth is now +passing must be set millions of years, perhaps hundreds of millions of +years, ago. He has not yet, indeed, reached that airless and waterless +condition, that extremity of internal cold, or in fact that utter +unfitness to support any kind of life, which would seem to prevail +in the moon. The planet of war in some respects resembles a desolate +battle-field, and I fancy that there is not a single region of the +earth now inhabited by man which is not infinitely more comfortable as +an abode of life than the most favored regions of Mars at the present +time would be for creatures like ourselves. + +But there are other subjects besides astronomy that the readers of the +ST. NICHOLAS want to learn about. I do not wish you to have to say to +me what a little daughter of mine said the other day. She had asked me +several questions about the sun, and after I had answered them I went +on to tell her several things which she had not asked. She listened +patiently for quite a long time,--fully five minutes, I really +believe,--and then she said: "Don't you think, papa, that that's +enough about the sun? Come and play with us on the lawn." So, as it +was holiday time, we went and played in the sun, instead of talking +about him. + + * * * * * + + + + +A DOMESTIC TRAGEDY--IN TWO PARTS. + +[Illustration: PART I.] + + "MOTHER! from this moment, behold me, my own master! + Yes, madam, I am old enough. I mean just what I say." + +[Illustration: PART II.] + + AND, but for a sudden and unforeseen disaster, + The puppy might have kept his resolution to this day. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE STICKLEBACK BELL-RINGERS + +BY C. F. HOLDER. + + +A certain pond in the country was once peopled with a number of +turtles, frogs, and fishes which I came to consider my pets, and +which at last grew so tame that I fed them from my hands. Among them, +however, were four or five little sticklebacks that lived under the +shade of a big willow, and these were so quarrelsome that I generally +fed them apart from the rest. But sometimes all met, and then the +feast usually was ended by the death of a minnow. For, shocking to +say, whenever there was a dispute for the food, some one of the little +fishes was almost sure to be devoured by the hungry sticklebacks. + +These stickleback-and-minnow combats, after a while, came to be of +daily occurrence, and the reason for this was a singular one, which I +must explain. + +Under the willow shade, and from one of the branches, I had hung a +miniature "belfry," containing a tiny brass bell, and had led the +string into the water, letting it go down to a considerable depth. At +first, I tied bait at intervals upon the line, and the sticklebacks, +of course, seized upon it, and thus rang the bell. Generally the +ringing was done in a very grave and proper way, although sometimes, +when the bait was too tightly tied, the quick peals sounded like a +call to a fire. + +[Illustration] + +I kept up this system of baiting the string for about a week, until +I thought they understood it, and then replaced the worms by bits of +stone. As I expected, the next morning, as I looked through the grass +and down into the water, tinkle! tinkle! rang the bell, and I knew my +little friends were saying, "Good-morning!" and expected a breakfast. +You may be sure they got it. I put my hand down, and up they came, and +got one worm apiece; and as I raised my hand, down they rushed, and +away went the bell, in an uproarious peal, that must have startled the +whole neighborhood. I was quick to respond, and they soon learned to +ring the bell before coming to the surface; in fact, if they saw me +pass, I always heard their welcome greeting. But to return to the +minnows. + +I generally fed them first, about twenty feet up the bank; but one +morning I found one or two had followed me down to the residence of +the stickleback family. They met with a rude reception, however, and, +to avoid making trouble, the next day I went to the willow first. But +no sooner had the bell begun to ring, than I saw a lot of ripples +coming down, and in a second the two factions were in mortal combat. +The sticklebacks were fighting not only for breakfast, but for their +nests, which were near by; and they made sad work of the poor minnows, +who, though smart in some things, did not know when they were whipped, +and so kept up the fight, though losing one of their number nearly +every morning. The bell now and then rang violently, but I fear it was +only sounding an appeal from a voracious stickleback whose appetite +had got the better of his rage. + +So it went on every morning. The minnows had learned what the bell +meant, and though usually defeated in the fight, they in reality had +their betters as servants to ring the bell and call them to meals. +Finally, they succeeded, by force of great numbers, in driving away +their pugnacious little rivals, and the bell hung silent; for, strange +to say, they knew what the sound meant, but I could never teach them +to ring it, when they could rise and steal the worm from my hand +without. But I am inclined to think it was more laziness than +inability to learn, as they afterward picked up readily some much more +difficult tricks. I taught them to leap from the water into my hand, +and lie as if dead; and having arranged a slide of polished wood upon +the bank, by placing worms upon it I soon had them leaping out and +sliding down like so many boys coasting in the winter. That they +afterward did it for amusement I know, as I often watched them +unobserved when there was nothing to attract but the fun of sliding. +This kind of amusement is not uncommon with many other animals, +particularly seals, which delight in making "slides" on the icy +shores. + + + + + +[ILLUSTATION] + +THE CRICKET ON THE HEARTH + +BY MRS. CLARA DOTY BATES. + + + Old Granny Cricket's rocking-chair, + Creakety-creak, creakety-creak!-- + Back and forth, and here and there, + Squeakety-squeak, squeakety-squeak!-- + On the hearth-stone, every night, + Rocks and rocks in the cheery light. + Little old woman, dressed in black, + With spindling arms and a crooked back, + She sits with a cap on her wise old head, + And her eyes are fixed on the embers red; + She does not sing, she does not speak, + But the rocking-chair goes creakety-creak! + + Cheerily sounds the rocking-chair, + Creakety-creak, creakety-creak!-- + While it swings in the firelight there, + Squeakety-squeak, squeakety-squeak! + Old Granny Cricket, rocking, rocking, + Knits and knits on a long black stocking. + No matter how swiftly her fingers fly, + She never can keep her family, + With their legs so long from foot to knee, + Stockinged as well as they ought to be; + That's why, at night, week after week, + Her rocking-chair goes squeakety-squeak! + + * * * * * + + + + +HOW I WEIGHED THE THANKSGIVING TURKEY. + +BY G. M. SHAW. + + +"Here, sir! Please take this bird around to Albro's, and see how much +it weighs." + +The idea! What would the folks over the way say, to see the +"professor" walking out with a big turkey under his arm? That was the +way the thing presented itself to the good-natured college-student +acting as private tutor in the family. But Mrs. Simpson, the portly +and practical housewife, had no such idea of the fitness of things. + +It was the day before Thanksgiving, and the farmer who had agreed to +supply her with a turkey had brought it, but had not weighed it, and, +of course, they could not agree on its weight, all of which ended in +the startling proposition with which we began. + +"Well, if you aint the laziest man--! Just as though it was going to +hurt you any to take this bird to the corner and back!" she went on, +as she saw me looking, apparently, for a hole to crawl into, but, in +reality, for the broom, which, when I found, I made use of in putting +into execution a plan I had formed for weighing the turkey at home. + +I hung the broom-handle to the gas-jet by a wire loop, and slid it +along in the loop until it balanced. By this time all were curious to +see what I was about. + +I then fixed a wire to the turkey's feet and hooked it so that it +would slide on the broom-handle. Next I got a flat-iron and fixed it +in the same way. When the broom was nicely balanced, I hung the turkey +on the broom end of the stick, two inches from the balancing loop. +Then I hung the flat-iron on the other side, and shoved it along until +it balanced the turkey. Next I measured the distances of the turkey +and flat-iron from the balancing loop, and found that the turkey hung +two inches and the flat-iron eight inches from the balancing loop. +That was all. I had found the weight of the turkey, and told them: +Twenty-four pounds. + +"Do you s'pose I'm going to believe all that tomfoolery? It doesn't +weigh more'n twenty, I know. Here, Maggie! Take this out and ask Albro +to weigh it for you." + +"I'm blamed if he hasn't hit it about right," said the farmer who had +brought the turkey. "How did you find out?" + +"Well, you see," said I, "the flat-iron has a figure 6 on it; that +shows that it weighs six pounds. Now, if the turkey had not weighed +more than the flat-iron they would have balanced each other at the +same distance from the balancing loop; but the turkey was the heavier, +so I had to move the flat-iron out further. At the same distance from +the loop as the turkey (two inches), the flat-iron pulled six pounds' +weight, and at every addition of that distance it would pull six +pounds more. Thus: at four inches it pulled twelve pounds; at six +inches, eighteen pounds; and at eight inches, twenty-four pounds. +At that distance it just balanced the turkey, thus proving that it +weighed----" + +"Well, Maggie, what does Albro say?" + +"Twenty-four poun', mum," replied Maggie, coming in. + +"Well, I give up," said Mrs. Simpson; and she did, and so do I--till +next time. + + + + + +NIMBLE JIM AND THE MAGIC MELON + +BY J. A. JUDSON. + + +Once upon a time, in a snug little cottage by a brook under a hill, +lived an old widow and her only child. She was a tidy, pleasant-faced +dame, was "Old Mother Growser;" and as to her boy, there wasn't a +brighter lad of his age in all the village. His real name was James, +but he had always been so spry and handy that when he was a little +bit of a chap the neighbors called him "Nimble Jim." At work in the +cottage garden, or at play on the village green, even at his books +and slate, he was ever the same industrious, active "Nimble Jim," and +always a comfort to his mother. + +His father had been the village cobbler, and when he died the folks +said: "Who'll mend our shoes now, and auld Jamie gone?" + +Then up sprang the boy, saying: "I'll mend them, now father's dead." + +The simple folks laughed at him. "Hoot! toot! lad," said they; "ye +canna mend shoes!" + +But he answered bravely: "Am I not fifteen years old, and e'en a'most +a mon? Haven't I all father's tools? Haven't I seen him do it day +after day ever since I was a wee boy? It's time I was doing something +besides jobbin' and runnin' and pretendin' to work! I may take to th' +auld bench, and e'en get my father's place among ye in time, so I be +good enough. Mother canna allus be a-spinnin', spinnin', spinnin'. The +poor old eyes are growing dim a'ready,"--and Jim gently stroked her +thin gray hair. + +"Ye're a brave darlin', and my own handy Nimble Jim," said the fond +mother, smilingly. + +"Ah, well, boy," the neighbors said, "be about it if ye will, for +there's no cobbler hereabout now, and the shoes must be mended. But +ye'll do the work fairly, mind, or we'll no' pay ye a penny!" + +"I'll try my best, and bide your good favor, neighbors," was Jim's +cheery answer. + +And so he succeeded to his father's old bench by the window, the +lap-stone and hammer and awl; and as he waxed his thread and stitched +away, singing the old songs, the country folks passing by would +listen, look at each other, smile and nod approvingly, or say: + +"Hark to that, friend! One might think auld Jamie back again, with the +whack o' the hammer and the blithe song, though the voice ben't so +crackit like as th' auld one." + +"Aye, it's a bit clearer, but no happier. Auld cobbler Jamie was a +merry soul," says one. + +"And the lad'll prove worthy his father, I warrant. Listen to the +turn of that song, now; I've heard Jamie singin' it many a day," says +another. + + "Whack! whack! thump-pet-ty crack! + In go the shoe-nails with many a smack. + Zu! zu! pull the thread through; + Soon will the shoe be, done, master, for you! + + "Nay! nay! there's nothin' to pay, + If it is not mended as good as I say. + I do my work honestly--that is the thing; + Then Jamie the cobbler's as good as the king!" + +And the folks passed on, or stopped to leave shoes to mend. + +Jim prospered in the old stall, and they called him "Nimble Jim, the +Cobbler," for soon he was fairly installed as cobbler to the whole +country-side. He was happy, and his old mother was happy, and proud, +too, of the success of her boy, who was the light of her home and the +joy of her heart. + +All day Jim worked away at his bench. Winter evenings he read his few +books by the firelight; in the cool of the summer days, or in the +early mornings, he busied himself in the little garden. His +vegetables were his pride, and for miles around no one had so trim a +garden-patch, or so many good things in it, as Nimble Jim. + +Only one kind of all his plants failed to come to anything,--his +melon-vines,--and these always failed. This began to grieve him +sorely, for he was fond of melons; and, besides, he thought if he +could only raise fine ones, he might sell them for a deal of money, +like gruff, rich old Farmer Hummidge. + +"Oh dear! my melons don't grow like other folkses. They don't come up +at all, or if they do they wither or spindle away," he said, losing +his temper, and tearing up some of the vines by the roots. Then he +went into the cottage, angrily, and began to pound away, driving in +big hob-nails. With the twilight, his mother called him to the simple +meal, but he was sullen and silent. + +"What be the matter with ye, my Nimble Jim?" asked the good dame, +cheerily. + +"Matter enough, mother! My melons wont grow; there's somethin' the +matter with them. Faith, I believe some imp has cast a spell over 'em. +I do, mother," quoth he, thumping the table with his fist until the +dishes rattled. + +"Softly, softly, boy! Where's thy good nature gone?" said Mother +Growser, staring at him in wonder. + +"It be well enough to say 'Softly, softly,'" said he, "and I don't +want to grieve ye, mother; but it's naught with me but hammer, stitch, +dig,--hammer, stitch, dig,--the day in, the day out, when I might be +raisin' fine melons and sellin' 'em for mints of gold in the great +city. Yea, mother, sellin' 'em e'en to the king and queen and all the +grand lords and ladies at the court, like old Farmer Hummidge." + +For almost the first time in his life Jim was unhappy. + +"I would you had your wish, Nimble Jim; but then we've a neat bit +garden besides the melons; and the home is snug, and you're a good boy +and the best o' cobblers. Can't you be happy with that, my lad?" + +But Nimble Jim shook his head, for the spirit of discontent had taken +possession of him. + +Now, for many days, Nimble Jim neglected his cobbling and let the +weeds grow in his garden, while he moodily watched his melons as they +withered away. Soon he came to idle about them in the evening, too, +until, one bright moonlight night, as he was grieving over the +wretched, scraggy vines, he heard a tiny, silvery voice quite near him +cry, tauntingly: + +"Hello, Nimble Jim! How are your melons?" + +Jim would have been very angry at such a question could he have seen +anybody to be angry with; but, though he looked and looked with all +his eyes, not a soul could he see. + +"Hello, Nimble Jim! How are your melons? Ha, ha, ha! Melons! melons! +Ha, ha, ha!" And the sweet little voice sang, in a merry, mocking +strain: + + "Nice sweet melons! + Round ripe melons! + Nimble Jim likes them, I know. + Mean sour melons, + Crooked green melons, + Nimble Jim only can grow! + +Ha, ha, ha! How are your melons, Nimble Jim?" + +[Illustration: The Elfin Queen] + +"Who are you? What are you? Where are you?" cried Jim, hardly knowing +whether to be angry, amused, or frightened. + +"You ask a good many questions at once, don't you?" said the silvery +voice. "_Who_ am I? _What_ am I? _Where_ am I? Eh! I'm the Queen of +the Elfs," said her tiny majesty, "and if you look sharply you'll see +where I am." + +Just then a moonbeam streaming through the trees overhead fell across +his path, and, dancing up and down on it, he saw the tiny elfin +queen,--a lovely little creature with long, bright, wavy hair, and +glittering garments fluttering in the breeze, wings like a butterfly, +a mischievous smile on her face, and in her hand a wee wand tipped +with a star. But the brightest thing about her was the twinkle that +played hide-and-seek in her eye. + +Nimble Jim took off his hat and made a low bow. + +"Now, what is all this about?--and why are you neglecting your work, +sir?" demanded she, sternly. + +Jim trembled beneath her royal gaze, little as she was, and replied +humbly: + +"May it please your majesty, I wish I'd some melon-seeds that'd grow +like magic. I am dead tired of being nothin' but a cobbler. I want +to be a melon-merchant, and raise the finest, largest melons ever +seen,--supply the whole kingdom with them, and grow to be as rich as +the king himself." + +"Oh, you do, do you?" she answered, laughing her merry little laugh, +and capering up and down the moonbeam. "Oh! quite a modest youth! +Well, I'll make a bargain with you; and if you will do something for +me, you shall have your wish," said the queen. + +Nimble Jim was about to pour out his gratitude, when she interrupted +him, saying: "Now, Nimble Jim, listen to me. Your wish is a foolish +one, and I warn you that if you gain it you will be sorry. Why will +you not be content as you are?" + +"Your majesty," replied the obstinate youth. "I _cannot_ be content as +I am." + +"Well, since you insist on having your own way, we'll make our +bargain. Here,"--and, sitting down on the moonbeam, she pulled off a +shoe,--"here, sir, I want you to mend my shoe. I tripped just now on +a rough place in this moonbeam. Mend the rip; show me you are a good +cobbler, and I promise that you shall have your wish." + +"But, your majesty," began Nimble Jim, taking the shoe, which was no +bigger than a bean, "I can't sew such a little shoe; my fingers are +----" + +"There, there! Stop! I'm a queen, and people don't say 'can't' or +'wont' to me, sir," interrupted her majesty, with much dignity. "Take +the shoe, and find a way to mend it. I will come for it to-morrow +night at this same place and hour," and off she went up the moonbeam, +half skipping, half flying, while Jim stood stupidly staring until +she had entirely disappeared. Then he began, slowly: "Well,--I--never +--in--all--my--life--saw--such--a----" + +He said no more, but went in, and sat up all night, thinking how and +where he could find needle and thread fine enough to do such a piece +of cobbling as this. About dawn a thought struck him. His mother +thought he had gone crazy when she saw him chasing bees and pulling +down spider-webs. Hours and hours he worked, and though his fingers +were big, they were nimble, like his name; so, by and by, with a +needle made of a bee's sting and thread drawn from a spider-web, he +sewed up the rip in her fairy majesty's dainty shoe. + +He hardly could wait for the hour of meeting, but went into the +garden, with the shoe in his hand, long before the time. At length, +the queen came sliding down the moonbeam, laughing and singing: + +"Hello, Nimble Jim! How are your melons?" + +But he was not angry now; he only laughed respectfully, made a +profound bow, and said: + +"May it please your majesty, I have mended your majesty's shoe." + +The merry little queen took it from him, looked at it closely, saying +to herself: "Humph! I didn't think he could, but he did,"--and, +turning to Jim, said, much more graciously than before: "I suppose you +think yourself quite a cobbler; and so you are--for a mortal. Since +you have done your work so well, I will do as I said. Now," she +continued, handing him a little package about as big as a baby's +thumb, "plant these melon-seeds, and----" + +"Are these little things melon seeds? They look too small," +interrupted Jim,--for he had made no ceremony, even in the queen's +presence, about peeping into the package,--and it must be confessed +that they were very small indeed. + +"Certainly they are, or I would not tell you so. They are the +magic melons of fairy-land. As I was about to say when you rudely +interrupted, plant----" + +"I beg your pardon, your majes----" + +[Illustration: "BEFORE NIMBLE JIM COULD GET BACK TO THE HOUSE, THE +YARD WAS FULL OF MELON-VINE."] + +"_Will_ you keep still? Was there _ever_ such a chatterbox!" said +she. "I say, plant these melon-seeds to-morrow at sunrise, and you +will have your wish, foolish boy." And, while Jim was thinking of +melons and wealth, she skipped away up the moonbeam, singing: + + "Nimble Jim is quite demented,-- + Wants to be a melon-king! + Silly mortal! not contented + With the riches home-joys bring! + Oh! ho! + Oh! ho! + He will be sorry to-morrow; + To-morrow will bring only sorrow." + +But Nimble Jim heeded her not. This night also he could not close his +eyes, and in the early morning he hastened to tell his mother their +good fortune. She looked grave, and said: + +"Ah, my lad! I'd rather you minded the cobbler's bench, nor trafficked +with fairies. I fear me they're uncanny folks to deal with." + +"Never fear, mother; we'll be rich yet, and I'll make you a queen +yourself, and then you need spin no more," said Jim, wild with hope +and excitement. + +"I don't mind the spinnin', my boy. I'd rather be----". + +Jim heard no more, for he dashed off at once to the garden to plant +his precious seeds just at sunrise. With furious energy, he tore up +all his old vines, flung them over the fence, and, after that, spaded +up the melon-bed with the greatest care. Then he opened the paper and +poured the magical seeds into his hand. + +There were only _four_--four wee seeds, each no bigger than a pin's +head! His first impulse was to fling them away in wrath, for he +thought such little things couldn't possibly make as big a fortune as +he wanted. But then he reflected, "Fairies are little, so I suppose +their seeds are little, too. I'll try them, anyhow." And with that he +put them in the ground and carefully covered them. + +In an instant, the ground burst open in four places, and up shot four +sturdy melon-vines, that grew east, west, north, south! + +Grew? No! they raced, they tore, they dashed through the country far +and wide! In no time, before Nimble Jim could get back to the house +door, the whole yard was full of melon-vine, and one great big melon, +bigger than the cottage itself, blocked the door-way. + +[Illustration: THE MAGIC MELON OVERRUNS THE COUNTRY.] + +"Oh! oh! oh!" roared Jim. "What _have_ I done? What _shall_ I do?" And +with his spade he cut a hole through the melon. It took him a whole +hour, and when he got into the house he found that his poor mother had +fainted from fright. + +And all the time the vine and melons kept growing--east, west, north, +south. + +Nimble Jim was frantic! + +But the vines didn't mind Jim. On they went, growing like mad, a mile +a minute, faster than any railroad train. The big arms filled up the +main roads; the smaller ones crammed themselves into the lanes and +by-paths, while the tendrils embraced the tall trees, the houses, and +the church steeples, and snarled up everything. The leaves grew +so large, thick and green that they covered the whole face of the +country, shutting out the sun from the fields so the crops couldn't +grow; and the whole kingdom became so dark from the awful shade of +Nimble Jim's magic melon-vine, that the people had to burn candles day +and night. + +It grew like mad. On! on! Stem, branch, leaf, tendril, fruit--on, on +it went! The melons grew--great, round, smooth, rich, ripe, juicy +melons, as big as houses--at the cross-roads, on the roads, in the +fields, filling barn-yards and door-yards so people and cattle +couldn't pass, or go in or out, till they had eaten their way through +the melons, or got ladders and climbed over, or dug trenches and +crawled under! On, on it went, surrounding the king's palaces and +choking up his forts! Down, down it grew into the brooks and rivers, +and out into the king's harbors, where the tendrils seized and wound +about his ships of war riding at anchor, and climbed up the masts, +while melons grew on the decks till the vessels sank to the bottom! +It choked up and drank up all the rivers and lakes in the kingdom, or +dammed them up so the waters overflowed the land, drowning people and +cattle, and sweeping away houses and barns! + +On, on it grew--melons, melons everywhere! Ruin and starvation stared +the nation in the face; while poor, poor Nimble Jim, hid within the +rind of the melon he had dug out, shivered, cried and bewailed his +folly. + +"I'll be killed! I'll be killed! The people will murder me!" he +shrieked. But no one of them all save his mother knew he had had +anything to do with bringing on the dire calamity that had befallen +the kingdom. + +Then some of the people proposed: "Let us go immediately to our king, +and ask him to make a law that the vine shall stop growing ere it ruin +us forever." + +But when they had eaten and hewed their way to the palace, they found +the king had gone to count his soldiers; and while he was gone the +vine came galloping along, and an enormous melon grew and blocked up +the palace gate. So they had to help the king and his guards force +their way through to the hall of audience. + +When they all were in, and the king had wiped the melon-juice off his +robes and crown, and was fairly seated on his throne, surrounded by +his guards and courtiers, the trumpets sounded, drums beat, banners +waved, and the people fell on their knees and said: + +"O mighty king! We, thy liege subjects, have come to tell thee of the +ruin and desolation this fearful vine maketh in all thy great kingdom, +and to entreat thy majesty to enact a law forbidding it to grow any +more, and commanding it to wither away." + +"Alas!" answered the troubled king, "what can I do? No law of mine can +stop this awful thing. It is an enchanted vine sent to torment us. +Hear me, my people! Proclaim it, ye my heralds! I pledge my kingly +word to give up my crown and kingdom, and change places with any one +of my subjects who will wither and instantly sweep away this direful +vine. I, your king, am as helpless as a child to stop it." + +And the king, who was a good old man, shed tears for the misery of his +people, and commanded the queen and all the court to dress themselves +in mourning and fast night and day. + +The people got home as best they could, and each fell to thinking how +he could stop the vine and so be king. Even Nimble Jim heard of this. +So, every night, he watched, hoping to see the elfin queen. At last +she came, as before, on her moonbeam footpath, saying: "Hello, Nimble +Jim! How are your melons by this time?" + +But he was in no mood to be facetious now. He only said, humbly: + +"May it please your majesty, what can I do to stop the growth of this +horrible vine, and instantly sweep it from the face of the earth? Help +me, I beg your gracious majesty!"--and Jim knelt before her. + +"Ha, ha! Nimble Jim don't seem to like melons! I told you you'd be +sorry," laughed the little elfin queen. "I suppose you still want +to be as rich as the king? Or perhaps you would like to be the king +himself?" said she, tauntingly. + +"Of course I would, your majesty," said Jim, "if the vine can only be +stopped." + +"You are a very good cobbler, Nimble Jim," she answered, "and since +you mended my shoe so nicely, and as the king has promised to exchange +with any one who will wither and destroy the vine, and as you might as +well be king as another (and as you need a good lesson," said she to +herself), "I give you the means to do it all!" + +And the tiny queen pulled off the mended shoe, and cried: "Here, you +silly boy! Take this and run to the palace. Once there, you need touch +but a tendril with this magic shoe, and the vine will wither and +disappear, and the crown and kingdom will be yours. I wish you joy of +both. Good-bye! You will learn contentment yet, poor Jim, I hope," she +added, as he ran out of hearing, with the precious little shoe in his +hand. + +Leaving his poor mother behind, for he had forgotten all about her +during these days, Jim set off for the palace. It was a long, hard +journey, on account of the melon-vines, that not only blocked the +road, but even chased him. Many a narrow escape had he from being +crushed to death in the embrace of some young tendril that would shoot +out, wriggling and writhing toward him like a great green serpent. + +At length, he arrived at the palace gate, which in old times was +marble, but now was only a hole that had been cut through a melon. + +"Halt! Who goes there!" shouted a sentinel, thrusting his spear in +front of Jim's panting breast. + +"It's only Nimble Jim, the Cobbler. I want to see the king," said the +boy. + +"Be off, you fellow!" shouted the sentry. "Our noble king don't +hob-nob with cobblers! Be off, I say, or----" And he shook his spear +at our hero ominously. + +"Hold, there!" shouted the king himself, straining out of a window to +look between the melon-leaves. "Hold, I say! What do you want, young +cobbler?" + +"I want your crown and kingdom, sire," boldly answered Jim. "I've +heard of the new law, and I'll stop the melon-vine." + +"Let him pass, guards," shouted the king; "and send him hither." + +A little page dressed in black led Jim to the throne-room. The king +and his court no longer blazed in gold and jewels. Black covered +everybody and everything, even the golden throne itself, and grief and +dismay were on all faces. + +Then said the king, in a hollow tone: "What know you of this vine? +Speak!" + +And Jim, tremblingly, told the whole story. + +"Wicked boy!" groaned the king. "You well deserve punishment for the +ruin you have brought on the land. But I have passed my royal word, +and you shall try to destroy the vine. If you succeed, bad as you are, +you then will be the king and I the cobbler. But if you fail, you +shall be put where you shall have nothing but melons to eat for the +rest of your days. Guards, take him away!" + +That night, before the king and queen and all the assembled court, +when the moon was fairly risen, Nimble Jim touched with the toe of the +magic shoe the end of a tendril that was running rapidly up a tower. + +In an instant, every vestige of the vine vanished throughout all the +palace grounds; and in the morning the people all over the country +shouted for joy and cried with one voice: "Let us all go up to the +coronation, for to-day we have a new king who has delivered us from +the horrible vine." + +And on they came, in hordes, till the capital was full and the country +about the palace was one vast camp, while throughout the kingdom not a +trace of the vine was to be seen. + +Then the nobles and prelates prepared for the coronation. It was +magnificent. They girt Jim with the sword of state, clothed him in the +imperial robes, placed the scepter in his hand, and, as the golden +crown descended upon his head, all the people shouted: + +"Hail, King Nimblejimble, our deliverer! Long live the king!" + +[Illustration: MAKING AN ENTRANCE FOR THE KING THROUGH THE MELON IN +FRONT OF THE PALACE GATE.] + +And the silly boy was happy. + +Meanwhile, the poor, faithful old king, who cheerfully had given up +all for his people, was hammering and stitching and digging away on +Jim's cobbler-bench off in the village; and Jim's mother, whom the +naughty boy, in his strange elevation, had forgotten all about, +tenderly cared for the humbled old monarch. + +Before long, the elfin queen saw how patient the old king and Jim's +mother were, and how badly Nimble Jim was behaving now he was king, +for he was given up to all sorts of wickedness and tyranny, was fast +becoming hated by every one, and himself was beginning to see that he +was not nearly so happy as he had been while he was a cobbler. + +Jim was really good at heart, only his unreasonable discontent with +his lot had got him into all this misery. At last, he began to repent, +and, one moonlight night when he was walking alone on the palace +terrace, he said: + +"I wish I could see that little elfin queen, and I would ask her to +let me go back home again." + +"Well, here I am!" said the silvery voice; and, sitting on a moonbeam +beside him, there she was. "Tired of being king, Jim?" she asked. + +"Yes, your majesty, indeed I am," he replied. + +"Want any more melons, Jim?" said she, laughing. + +"No, no, no!" groaned Jim. "No more!" + +"How is your mother, Jim?" asked her majesty. + +"Alas! I don't know,"--and he hung his head in shame. + +"Are you ready to go and see her, Jim?" she asked, gently. "And will +you be contented now?" + +"Yes, yes!" was his eager reply. + +Now, the old king had been mending shoes all day, and was at this +moment resting in the cottage porch, when, suddenly, he was whisked +away on a cloud and landed in his palace again. His crown was popped +on his head, and the scepter thrust in his hand, while his old +chamberlain tenderly tucked him up in bed. + +At the same instant, another cloud brought back Nimble Jim to his +bench and his faithful mother, who at once made him some oat-meal +porridge without a murmur or word of reproach. + +"There!" said the elfin queen to herself. "That boy is cured of his +silly notions." + +"Mother, I think I don't care much for melons. I wont plant any more," +said Jim next morning. + +"I don't like 'em myself, lad," said the mother. "I'd a deal rather +you'd stick to the bench, like your auld father." + +"I will, mother dear," answered Nimble Jim. And he is mending shoes +there to this day, as happy as happy can be. + + * * * * * + + + + +[Illustration] + + "Oh! I'm my mamma's lady-girl + And I must sit quite still; + It would not do to jump and whirl, + And get my hair all out of curl, + And rumple up my frill. + No, I'm my mamma's lady-girl, + So I must sit quite still." + + * * * * * + + + + +A BUDGET OF HOME-MADE CHRISTMAS GIFTS. + + + +HINTS FOR GIRLS AND BOYS, LITTLE AND BIG.[1] + + [Footnote 1: The present paper will enable our young friends to + make over seventy different articles for Christmas gifts. While a + few familiar things may be found among them, a great majority of + the objects are entirely novel, and are here described for the + first time. All who may wish for still further hints in regard + to home-made Christmas presents will find very many useful + suggestions in the paper "One Hundred Christmas Presents, and How + to Make Them," published in ST. NICHOLAS for December, 1875--Vol. + III.] + + +[Illustration: W] + +Who is it that every year invents the thousand-and-one new and pretty +things which hang on Christmas-trees, and stuff the toes of Christmas +stockings? Who is it that has so wise and watchful an eye for the +capacities of little people, and the tastes of bigger ones, providing +for each, planning for tiny purses with almost nothing in them, as +well as for fat wallets stuffed with bank-bills, and suggesting +something which can be made, accepted and enjoyed by everybody, large +and small, all the wide world over? Who can it be that possesses +this inexhaustible fertility of invention and kindness of heart? No +ordinary human being, you may be sure. Not Father Santa Claus! He +has enough to do with distributing the presents after they are made; +besides, fancy-work is not in a man's line,--not even a saint's! But +what so likely as that he should have a mate, and that it is to her we +are indebted for all this? What an immense work-basket Mother Santa +Claus's must be! What a glancing thimble and swift needle and thread! +Can't you imagine her throwing aside her scissors and spool-bag to +help the dear saint "tackle up" and load the sledge? And who knows but +she sits behind as he drives over the roofs of the universe on the +blessed eve, and holds the reins while Santa Claus dispenses to +favored chimneys the innumerable pretty things which he and she have +chuckled over together months and months before the rest of us knew +anything about them? + +This is not a fact. It can't be proved in any way, for none of us +knows anything about the Santa Clauses or their abode. There is no +telegraphing, or writing to the selectmen of their town to inquire +about them; they haven't even a post-office address. But admitting it +to be a fiction, it is surely a pleasant one; so, as the children say, +"Let's play that it is true," and proceed to see what Mother Santa +Claus has in her basket for us this year. We will first pull out some +easy things for the benefit of little beginners who are not yet up to +all the tricks of the needle; then some a little harder for the more +advanced class; and, at bottom of all, big girls not afraid to dive +will find plenty of elaborate designs suited to their taste and +powers. + +Here, to begin with, is something nice for papa's pocket: + + +A POSTAGE-STAMP HOLDER. + +Cut two pieces of perforated board, or of stiff morocco, two inches +long by one and a half wide, and stitch them together, leaving one +end open. If you choose the board, a little border in cat-stitch or +feather-stitch should be worked before putting the pieces together, +and, if you like, an initial in the middle of one side. If the morocco +is chosen, an initial in colored silk will be pretty, and the edges +should be bound with narrow ribbon, and over-handed together. + +Cut two other pieces of the material a quarter of an inch smaller than +the first. Bind the morocco with ribbon. Make a fastening at one end +with a ribbon loop; place the stamps between the two, and slip the +little envelope thus filled into the outer case, the open end down. It +fits so snugly that it will not fall out in the pocket, and is easily +drawn forth by means of the loop when papa wants to get at his stamps. + +[Illustration: A POSTAGE-STAMP HOLDER.] + +A letter-case for papa's other pocket: This can be made either of +morocco, oiled silk, or rubber cloth. Cut an envelope-shaped piece, +about an inch larger all round than an ordinary letter envelope. Bind +the edges, work an initial on one side, and for a fastening use a loop +of elastic braid. + + +SAND-BAGS FOR WINDOWS. + +These are capital presents for grandmammas whose windows rattle in +winter weather and let cold air in between the sashes. You must +measure the window, and cut in stout cotton cloth a bag just as long +as the sash is wide, and about four inches across. Stitch this all +round, leaving one end open, and stuff it firmly with fine, dry sand. +Sew up the open end, and slip the bag into an outer case of bright +scarlet flannel, made just a trifle larger than the inner one, so that +it may go in easily. Lay the sand-bag over the crack between the two +sashes, and on cold nights, when you are asleep, grandmamma will +rejoice in the little giver of such a comfortable bulwark against the +wind. + + +RACK FOR TOOTH-BRUSHES, IN RUSTIC-WORK. + +This is very simple, but it is pretty as well. Cut two straight spruce +twigs, each having two or three little branches projecting upward at +an angle of forty-five degrees. These twigs must be as much alike in +shape as possible. Place them six inches apart; lay two cross-twigs +across, as you see them in the picture, and tie the corners with fine +wire, or fasten them with tiny pins. Two diagonal braces will add to +the strength of the rack. Hang it to the wall above the wash-stand by +a wire or ribbon. The tooth-brushes rest on the parallel branches. + +[Illustration: A RACK FOR TOOTH-BRUSHES.] + +For further particulars concerning spruce-wood work, see ST. NICHOLAS, +Vol. III., pp. 114 and 115. + + +MINIATURE HANGING-SHELVES. + +[Illustration: MINIATURE HANGING-SHELVES.] + +Boys who have learned to use their pocket-knives skillfully may make a +very pretty set of hanging-shelves by taking three bits of thin wood +(the sides of a cigar-box, for instance), well smoothed and oiled, +boring a hole in each corner, and suspending them with cords, run in, +and knotted underneath each shelf as in the picture. The wood should +be about eight inches long by three wide, and the shelves, small as +they are, will be found convenient for holding many little articles. + + +PAPER-CUTTERS. + +Another idea for these graduates of the knife is this falchion-shaped +paper-cutter. It can be made of any sort of hard-wood, neatly cut out, +rubbed smooth with sand-paper, and oiled or varnished. It has the +advantage that the materials cost almost nothing. Suggestions for more +elaborate articles in wood will be given further on. + +[Illustration: A FALCHION-SHAPED PAPER-CUTTER.] + + +A WALL LETTER-HOLDER. + +This is something which quite a little boy could make. Cut out three +pieces of thin wood, a foot long by six inches wide; smooth and +sand-paper two of them, bore a hole in each corner and in the middle +of one side, and fasten them together with fine wire, cord, ribbon, +or the small brass pins which are used for holding manuscripts. The +pieces should be held a little apart. Cut one end of the third piece +into some ornamental shape, glue it firmly to the back of one of the +others, and suspend it from the wall by a hole bored in the top. It +will be found a useful thing to hold letters or pamphlets. A clever +boy could make this much handsomer by cutting a pattern over the +front, or an initial, or monogram, or name in the middle. The wood +should be oiled or shellacked. + +[Illustration: A WALL LETTER-HOLDER FOR PAPA.] + + +SHOE-CASES. + +These cases are meant to take the place of paper when shoes are to be +wrapped up to go in a trunk. They are made of brown crash, bound with +red worsted braid. One end is pointed so as to turn over and button +down, or the top has strings over the braid to tie the mouth up. There +should be three or four made at a time, as each holds but one pair of +shoes; and you will find that mamma or your unmarried aunts will like +them very much. + +[Illustration: A SHOE-CASE FOR TRAVELING.] + + +SKATE-BAGS. + +A nice present for a skating boy--and what boy does not skate?--is a +bag made much after the pattern of the shoe-case just described, +only larger and wider, and of stouter material. Water-proof cloth or +cassimere is best. Sew it very strongly, and attach a string of wide +braid, or a strong elastic strap, that the bag may be swung over +the shoulders. A big initial letter cut out in red flannel and +button-holed on will make a pretty effect. + + +A SCALLOP-SHELL ALBUM. + +Young folks who are fortunate enough to have a pair of good-sized +scallop-shells (picked up, perhaps, at the sea-side during the last +summer vacation), can make a very pretty little autograph album in +this way: + +[Illustration: A SCALLOP-SHELL ALBUM.] + +Take a pair of well-mated scallop-shells. Clean them with brush and +soap. When dry, paint them with the white of egg to bring out the +colors, and let them dry again. Now insert between the shells a dozen +or more pages of writing-paper, cut of the same shape and size as the +shells, and very neatly scalloped around the edges. Then secure the +whole loosely, as shown in the picture, by means of a narrow ribbon +passed through two holes previously bored in the shells. Of course, +holes also must be pierced in the sheets of paper to correspond with +those in the shells. + + +A LITTLE NUN. + +This droll figure is cut out in black and white paper. Fastened at the +end of a wide ribbon, it would make an odd and pretty book-mark. The +black paper should be dull black, though the glossy will answer if +no other can be procured. Fig. 1 of the diagrams is cut in white, a +rosary and cross being put in with pen and ink, and is folded in the +middle by the dotted lines, the head and arms being afterward folded +over, as indicated. Figs. 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 are cut in black and pasted +into place, leaving a narrow white border to the bonnet, a mite +of white band at the end of the sleeve, and a suggestion of snowy +stocking above the shoe. Fig. 6, cut double, forms a book, which can +be pasted to look as if held in the hand. + +[Illustration: A LITTLE NUN.] + + +BEAN-BAG CASES. + +Are there any of you who do not know the game of bean-bags? It is +capital exercise for rainy days, besides being very good fun, and we +would advise all of you who are not familiar with it to make a set at +once. Usually, there are four bags to a set, but any number of persons +from two to eight can play at bean-bags. Each player holds two, +flinging to his opponent the one in his right hand, and rapidly +shifting the one in his left to the right, so as to leave the left +hand free to catch the bag which is thrown at him. A set of these bags +would be a nice present for some of you little girls to make for your +small brothers; and there are various ways of ornamenting the bags +gayly and prettily. The real bags must first be made of stout ticking, +over-handed strongly all round, and filled (not too full) with white +baking-beans. Over these are drawn covers of flannel, blue or scarlet, +and you can work an initial in white letters or braid on each, or make +each of the four bags of a different color--yellow, blue, red, green; +anything but black, which is hard to follow with the eye, or white, +which soils too soon to be desirable. + +[Illustration: DIAGRAMS FOR MAKING THE LITTLE NUN.] + + +BABY'S SHOES IN CASHMERE. + +Babies who can't walk are particularly hard on their shoes! We once +heard of one who "wore out" nine pairs in two months! In these +circumstances, it seems very desirable to have a home shoe-maker, and +not have to frequent the shops too often; so we will tell you of an +easy kind, which almost any little sister can make. You must take an +old morocco shoe which fits, and cut out the shape in paper, first +the sole, and then the upper. Then cut the same shape in merino or +cashmere, line the little sole with Canton flannel or silk, and bind +it with very narrow ribbon. Line and bind the upper in the same way, +and feather-stitch round the top and down both sides of the opening in +front; sew on two ends of ribbon to tie round the ankle, and the shoe +is done. It will look very pretty on baby's pink foot, and he will +thank you for your gift in his own way, by kicking his toes joyfully, +and getting the shoes into his mouth as soon as possible. + + +A HEMLOCK PILLOW. + +It is rather late in the year to make these pillows, but you can try +them for next Christmas. They must be prepared for beforehand by +gathering and drying a quantity of the needles of the hemlock, the +fine ones from the ends of the young shrubs being the best. Make a +large square bag of cotton, stuff it full of the needles, and inclose +it in an outer case of soft thick silk or woolen stuff. The one from +which we take our description had "Reve du foret" embroidered on it in +dull yellow floss, and we don't believe any one could help dreaming +of the forest who laid a cheek on the pillow and smelled the mingled +spice and sweetness of its aromatic contents. + + +SACHETS FOR LINEN-CLOSETS. + +If you have any old-fashioned lavender growing in your garden, you can +easily make a delightful sachet for mamma to lay among her sheets and +pillow-cases in the linen-closet, by cutting a square bag of tarletane +or Swiss muslin, made as tastefully as you please, and stuffing it +full of the flowers. Another delightful scent is the _mellilotte_, or +sweet clover, which grows wild in many parts of the country, and has, +when dried, a fragrance like that of the tonquin-bean, only more +delicate. + + +TISSUE-PAPER MATS. + +[Illustration: A TISSUE-PAPER MAT.] + +We like to be able to tell you about these mats, for they cost almost +nothing at all, and are so simple that any little boy or girl can +make them. All the material needed for them is three sheets of +tissue-paper,--a light shade, a medium shade, and a dark shade, or, if +you like, they can also be made of one solid color, but are not quite +so pretty then. Cut a piece of each color nine inches square, fold it +across, and then across again, so as to form a small square, and then +fold from point to point. Lay on it a pattern, like the first diagram +on next page, and cut the tissue paper according to the lines of the +pattern. Opening the paper, you will find it a circle, with the edge +pointed in scallops. Now take a common hair-pin, bend its points over +that they may not tear the paper, slip it in turn over each point, as +shown in the diagram, and draw it down, _crinkling_ the paper into a +sort of double scallop. (The second diagram on next page will explain +this process.) Treat your three rounds in this way, lay them over each +other like a pile of plates, stick a small pin in the middle to hold +them, set a goblet upon them, and gently arrange the crinkled edges +about its base, so as to give a full ruffled effect, like the +petals of a dahlia, although less stiff and regular. These mats are +exceedingly pretty. + +[Illustration: DIAGRAM FOR PAPER MAT, SHOWING MODE OF FOLDING AND +SHAPING.] + +[Illustration: DIAGRAM SHOWING THE MANNER OF CRIMPING EACH SCALLOP OF +THE PAPER MAT OVER A HAIR-PIN.] + + +A WORK BASKET IN VANILLA GRASS. + +If any of you live where the sweet-scented vanilla grass grows +plentifully, you can make a delicious little basket by drying the long +wiry blades, braiding them in strands of three, tying the ends firmly +together to make a long braid, and coiling and sewing as in straw +plaiting. Two circles the size of a dessert plate should be prepared, +one for the bottom of the basket, and the other for the top of the lid +(the latter a trifle the larger). Then draw the braid tighter, and +form a rim to each about two inches deep. The lid, which is separate, +fits over the bottom, and the scent of the grass will impart itself to +everything kept in the basket. + +So much for the dear little people. Our next dip into Mother Santa +Claus's basket brings out a big handful for girls (and boys) who are a +trifle older,--say from twelve to fifteen. + + +HAIR-PIN HOLDERS. + +On the next page is a picture of the hair-pin holder when finished; +and above it you will find a diagram of it when cut out and not yet +put in shape. It is cut, as you will observe, in one piece. The +material is perforated card-board, either white or "silver." The +dotted lines show where to fold it. + +A, A and B, B are lapped outside the end pieces, D, D, and held in +place by stitches of worsted, long below and very short above, where +the sides join. A little border is worked in worsted at top and bottom +before the sides are joined. The inside is stuffed with curled hair, +and topped with a little cover crocheted or knit in worsted--plain +ribbing or the tufted crochet, just as you prefer. A cord and a small +worsted tassel at either end complete it, and it is a convenient +little thing to hang or stand on mamma's or sister's toilet-table. It +will be an easy matter to enlarge the pattern, if this hair-pin holder +would be too small. + +[Illustration: PATTERN OF HAIR-PIN HOLDER.] + +[Illustration: A HAIR-PIN HOLDER.] + +[Illustration: END OF HAIR-PIN HOLDER WHEN FOLDED.] + + +A CRIB-BLANKET FOR BABY. + +The prettiest and simplest crib-blanket which we have seen of late, +was made of thick white flannel, a yard wide, and a yard and a quarter +long. Across each end were basted two rows of scarlet worsted braid, +four inches apart, and between the two a row of bright yellow braid. +These were cat-stitched down on both edges with black worsted, and +between them were rows of feather-stitching in blue. Above, in each +corner, was a small wheel made of rows of feather-stitch--black, red, +yellow and blue. Nothing could be easier to make, but the effect was +extremely gay and bright, and we advise some of you who are lucky +enough to "belong to a baby" to try it. + + +ANOTHER BABY'S BLANKET. + +For this you must buy a real blanket--one of the small ones which come +for use in a baby's crib. Those with blue stripes and a narrow binding +of blue silk are prettiest for the purpose. Baste a narrow strip of +canvas between the stripes and the binding, and with blue saddler's +silk doubled, work in cross-stitch a motto, so arranged that it can be +read when the top of the blanket is folded back. If the stripe is red +instead of blue, the motto must be in red silk, and it should, of +course, have reference to the baby. Here are some pretty ones in +various languages: "_Nun guten ruh, die augen zu_" (Now go to sleep, +and shut your eyes). "_Cap-a-pie_" (From head to foot). "_Ad ogni +ucello, suo nido e bello_" (To every bird its own nest is beautiful). +And here is one in English: + + "Shut little eyes, and shut in the blue; + Sleep, little baby, God loves you." + +The same idea can be beautifully applied to a pair of large blankets, +but this is rather a considerable gift for young people to undertake. + + +SUMMER BLANKETS. + +A pair of thin summer blankets, of the kind which are scarcely heavier +than flannel, can be made very pretty by button-holing them all round +loosely with double zephyr wool in large scallops, and working three +large initials in the middle of the top end. + + +A WORK-BASKET FOR "SISTER." + +For this, you must buy a straw basket, flat in shape, and without a +handle. It can be round, square, oval, or eight-sided, just as you +prefer. You must also buy a yard of silk or cashmere in some pretty +color. Line the whole basket, first of all cutting the shape of the +bottom exactly, and fastening the lining down with deft stitches, +which shall show neither inside nor out. Make four little pockets +of the stuff (six if the basket is large), draw their tops up with +elastic cord, and fasten them round the sides at equal distances. +These are to hold spools of silk, tapes, hooks-and-eyes, and such +small wares, which are always getting into disorder in a pocketless +basket. Between two of the pockets on one side, suspend a small square +pincushion, and on the other a flat needle-book hung by a loop of +ribbon. At the opposite ends, between the pockets, fasten an emery bag +and a sheath of morocco bound with ribbon to hold a pair of scissors. +Finish the top last of all with a quilling of ribbon, and you have as +dainty and complete a gift as any younger sister can wish to make, or +any older one receive. It will cost time and pains, but is pretty and +useful enough to repay both. + + +A FANCY WHEELBARROW. + +This cannot be made easily by any boy or girl who is not already +acquainted with fancy wood-sawing, and to such the illustration gives +all the hint that will be needed. We would simply suggest that the +body of this barrow is about six inches long, that it is lined with +crimson silk, and that standing upon a dressing-bureau, writing-table, +or mantel-shelf, it makes a very pretty receiver of cards or +knick-knacks. Many beautiful Christmas gifts can be made by boys or +girls owning one of the little bracket-saws, which, with books of +directions, can now be bought in almost any hardware shop. + +[Illustration: A FANCY WHEELBARROW.] + +For further particulars on wood-carving, see illustrated articles in +ST. NICHOLAS, Vol. I., pp. 84, 215, 346, 592. + + +A SET OF TEA-NAPKINS. + +There hardly could be a nicer gift for a girl to make for her mother +or married sister than a set of tea-napkins, with a large initial +letter in white, or white and red, embroidered on each. The doily +should be folded in four, and the letter out-lined in lead pencil in +the corner of one of the quarters. If inked very black on paper, and +held dry to the window behind the linen, the initial is easily traced. +The pattern is then run and "stuffed" with heavy working-cotton, and +the letter embroidered in finer cotton. Another nice gift is a long +fringed towel, with three very large letters in white, or blue, or +crimson, worked half-way between the middle and the side edge. Folded +over lengthwise, it is a convenient thing to lay on a bureau-top +or the front of a sideboard, and the large colored letters make it +ornamental as well. Patterns of initials can be bought in any fancy +shop. If desired, they can be bought already worked, requiring only to +be transferred to the napkin. + + +NAPKIN-BANDS. + +Any of you who have mastered cross-stitch, and learned to follow a +pattern, will find these bands easy enough to make. Their use is to +fasten a napkin round a child's neck at dinner, and take the place of +that disobliging "pin," which is never at hand when wanted. You must +cut a strip of Java canvas, two inches wide by a foot long; overcast +the edges, and work on it some easy little vine in worsted, or a +Grecian pattern, or, if you like, a short motto, such as "More haste, +worse speed." Line the strip with silk, turn in the edges, overhand +them, and finish the ends with two of those gilt clasps which are used +to loop up ladies' dresses. + + +A RUSTIC VASE. + +[Illustration] + +It is very easy to get the material out of which this vase is made. +You need only go to your wood-pile, or, if you have none, to the +wood-pile of a neighbor. Choose a round stick four inches in diameter +and eight or ten inches long, with a smooth bark. If you find the +stick, and it is too long, you can easily saw off an end. Now comes +the difficult part of the work: The inside of the stick must be +scooped out to within four inches of the bottom. The easiest way of +accomplishing this will be to send it to a turning-mill if there +is one at hand; if not, patience and a jack-knife will in the end +prevail. Next, with a little oil-color, paint a pretty design on +the bark, if you can,--trailing-arbutus, partridge berry, sprays of +linnea,--any wood thing which can be supposed to cluster naturally +round a stump. Set the stump in a flower-pot saucer, filled with +earth, and planted with mosses and tiny ferns; fit a footless wine +or champagne glass, or a plain cup, into the hollow end, and, with a +bunch of grasses and wild flowers, or autumn leaves, you have a really +exquisite vase, prettier than any formal article bought in a shop, and +costing little more than time and patience, with a touch of that rare +thing--taste! which, after all, is not so very rare as some people +imagine. Any friend will prize such a vase of your own making. + + +A TABLE-COVER. + +A really charming cover for a small table can be made in this way: Cut +a square--or oblong, as the case may be--of that loosely woven linen +which is used for glass-towels, making it about four inches larger all +round than the table it is meant to fit. Pale yellow or brown is the +best color to select. Ravel the edges into a fringe two inches deep; +then, beginning two inches within the edge, draw the linen threads all +round in a band an inch and three-quarters wide. Lace the plain space +thus left with dark-red ribbon of the same width, woven in and out in +regular spaces, and at each corner tie the ribbon in a graceful knot +with drooping ends. + + +ANOTHER TABLE-COVER. + +This cover is made of pale-brown Turkish toweling. Cut a piece of +the size to suit your table, and baste all round it, first a row of +scarlet worsted braid, then of olive, then of yellow, leaving spaces +each an inch and a half wide between the rows. Cat-stitch the braids +down on both edges with saddlers' silk, and feather-stitch between +them in silks, choosing colors which harmonize, and turning the whole +into a wide stripe brilliant and soft at the same time. The choice and +placing of the colors will be excellent practice for your eye, and +after a little while you will be able to tell, as soon as a couple +of inches are done, if you are putting the right tint into the right +place. It is infinitely more interesting to feel your way thus through +a piece of work than to follow any set pattern, however pretty, and it +is far more cultivating to the taste. + + +A PAPER TRANSPARENCY. + +Take a piece of white, or tinted, or silver paper, exactly ten and a +half inches square. Fold it double diagonally. Fold it double again. +Fold it double once more. + +You will now have a triangular-shaped form of eight thicknesses. Now +lay this folded piece on a pine table, or on a smooth piece of pine +board. Next, lay evenly over it, so that it will fit exactly, the +"pattern of transparency," or an exact tracing from it. When so +placed, secure them firmly to the board by pins driven in at each +corner. Now, with a very sharp pen-knife follow and cut _through to +the board_ the lines of the pattern, so as to cut out all the portions +that show black in the design. When this is all done, pull out +the pins, open your folded paper, and you will have a square form +beautifully figured in open-work. It should be laid between two sheets +of white paper and carefully pressed with a hot iron, and then it can +be lined with black or fancy tissue paper, and hung against a pane in +the window as a "transparency;" or you may use it as a picture-frame, +inserting an engraving or photograph in the center. + +The original, from which our pattern is taken, was cut during the late +war by a young Union soldier while in Libby prison. + +[Illustration: PATTERN OF PAPER TRANSPARENCY.] + + +SHAWL-BAGS. + +These bags are capital things to save a shawl from the dust of a +journey, and, if of good size, can be made to serve a useful purpose +by packing into them dressing materials, etc., for which there is +not room in your hand-bag. The best material for them is stout brown +Holland. Cut two round end-pieces eight inches in diameter and a piece +half a yard wide by twenty-four inches long. Stitch these together, +leaving the straight seam open nearly all the way across, and bind its +edges and the edges of the end-pieces with worsted braid (maroon +or dark brown), put on with a machine. Close the opening with five +buttons and button-holes. Bind with braid a band of the Holland two +inches wide, and fasten it over the button-holed side, leaving a large +loop in the middle to carry the bag by. + +By way of ornament you may embroider three large letters in +single-stitch on the side, using worsted of the color of the braid, or +may put a pattern down either side of the opening and round the ends +in braiding, or a braided medallion with initials in the center. + + +A JAPANESE BASKET FOR GRANDMOTHER. + +You will never guess what the top of this droll little basket is made +of, unless we tell you. It is one of those Japanese cuffs of brown +straw which can be bought nowadays for a small price at any of +the Japanese shops. You may embroider a little pattern over +it--diagonally, if you wish to make it look very Japanese-y; line it +with silk or satin, and fasten a small bag of the same material to the +bottom, drawn up with a ribbon bow or a tassel. A band of wide ribbon +is sewed to the top. Grandmamma will find this just the thing to hang +on her arm for holding her knitting-ball, or the knitting itself if +she wishes to lay it aside. This sort of basket also is useful as a +"catch-all" when hung at the side of a dressing-bureau. + +[Illustration: JAPANESE HANGING-BASKET OF STRAW AND SILK] + + +A CATCH-ALL, MADE FROM A SINGLE SQUARE. + +This is very pretty, and very easily made. Take a piece of silver (or +gold) perforated paper, eight inches square, and ornament it with +worsted or silk, as in the diagram, all in one direction. To make the +cornucopia, it is only necessary to join any two edges (as A and B) +by first binding each with ribbon and then sewing them together. Line +with silk, and put box-plaiting at the top. A worsted tassel might be +put at the top (in front) as well as at the bottom, and a loop at C. + +[Illustration: DIAGRAM OF PATTERN TO BE WORKED ON PERFORATED PAPER FOR +A CATCH-ALL.] + +If silver paper is used, the trimmings would better be all red. All +blue would look well with gold paper. But the colors may be varied +according to taste. If your friend is a brunette, you will find that +he or she will be most pleased with the red, while a blonde will +prefer blue. + +[Illustration: A CATCH-ALL MADE OF PERFORATED PAPER.] + + +A WALL-POCKET OF SPLITS. + +Splits, or cigar-lighters as they are sometimes called, are to be +had at any of the fancy shops. They are an inch wide and about seven +inches long, and come in various shades of brown and straw color, +and their flexibility makes it easy to weave them in and out like +basket-work. For the wall-pocket you must weave two squares, each +containing six splits each way, but one made larger than the other, as +seen in the picture. A few stitches in cotton of the same color will +hold the strips in place. Line the smaller of the squares with silk, +and lay it across the face of the other in such a way that the four +points shall make a diamond, touching the middle of each side of the +square. Fasten it to the wall by two of the splits crossed and united +by a bow of ribbons, and fill the pocket with dried autumn leaves and +ferns gracefully arranged. + +[Illustration: WALL-POCKET OF SPLITS.] + + +SILHOUETTE LIKENESSES. + +This is rather a Christmas game than a present, but will answer well +for either; and young folks can get much fun out of an evening spent +in "taking" each other. Each in turn must stand so as to cast a sharp +profile shadow on the wall, to which is previously pinned, white side +out, a large sheet of paper, known as silhouette paper, black on one +side and white on the other. Somebody draws the outline of this shadow +_exactly_ with a pencil; it is then cut out and pasted neatly, black +side up, on a sheet of white paper. Good and expressive likenesses are +often secured, and droll ones _very_ often. Try it, some of you, in +the long evenings which are coming. + +[Illustration: DIAGRAM OF WALL-POCKET.] + + +A LEAF PEN-WIPER. + +Your pattern for this must be a beech-leaf again,--a _long_ one this +time,--or you may trace the shape from the illustration. Outline the +shape as before, and from the model thus secured cut six leaves in +flannel--two green, two brown, and two red, or red, white and blue, or +any combination you like. Snip the edge of each leaf into very tiny +points, and chain-stitch veins upon it with gold-colored floss. Attach +these leaves together by the upper ends, arranging under them three +triply pointed leaves of black broadcloth or silk to receive the ink, +and finish the top with a small bow of ribbon. + +[Illustration: A LEAF PEN-WIPER.] + + +A BIRDS'-NEST PEN-WIPER. + +Girls are always trying to find something which they can make to +delight their papas, and a gay little pen-wiper with fresh uninked +leaves rarely comes amiss to a man who likes an orderly writing-table. +Here is a pretty one which is easily made. For the pattern you may +borrow a moderately large beech-leaf from the nearest tree (or +botanical work); lay it down on paper, pencil the outline and cut it +out neatly. Repeat this six or eight times in black cloth or velvet, +and sew the leaves round a small oval or circle of black cloth. Knit +and ravel out a quantity of yellow worsted or floss silk, and with it +construct a nest in the center of the oval, putting a hen into the +nest. This hen may be made of canton flannel, stuffed with cotton-wool +and painted in water color, with a comb of red flannel, two black +beads for eyes, and a tuft of feathers by way of tail. But better +still and much easier, buy one of the droll little Japanese chicks +which can be had at the shops now for twenty or twenty-five cents, and +fasten it in the middle of the nest. Three plain circles of cloth are +fastened underneath for wiping the pens. + + +JAPANESE PEN-WIPER. + +[Illustration: A JAPANESE PEN-WIPER.] + +A nice little pen-wiper can be made by cutting three circles of black +cloth, snipping the edges or button-holing them with colored silk, and +standing in the middle one of the droll little Japanese birds just +mentioned. Of course it should be secured firmly at the feet. There +are long-legged birds and short-legged ones. A tiny stork is very +pretty. + + +BLEACHED GRASSES. + +Some of you who have been pressing autumn leaves for winter use may +like to hear of a new way of bleaching grasses to mix with them. The +process is exceedingly simple. Take a few of the grasses in your hand +at a time, dip them into a pan of water, shake gently, dip into a pan +of sifted flour, and again shake gently. All the superfluous flour +will fall off, but enough will remain to make the grasses snowy-white. +When dry it is perfectly firm, and you would never guess what process +produced the effect. A bunch of these white grasses in a coral-red +basket is a vivid object. + +Colored grasses, to our thinking, are not half so pretty as the same +grasses when left in their own soft natural browns and yellows. Still, +as some people like them, we will just mention that the same process +can be used for them as for the white grass, by mixing with small +portions of flour, a little dry paint powder, vermilion, green, etc. +A bunch of the deep red mixed with the bleached grass has a gay and +uncommon effect. + + +A NUBE IN TWO COLORS. + +A novelty in knitting is a nube in Shetland wool of two colors--pink +or crimson or blue with white. The skeins are opened, and the two +strands, laid side by side, are wound double in a large ball. The +nube is then knit in the usual way with large needles and common +garter-stitch, and is very fine. + + +LAMP SHADES. + +Plain white porcelain lamp-shades, such as are used on the German +student-lamps, look well when decorated with wreaths of autumn leaves +put on with mucilage. We read lately in the _Tribune_ that leaves +treated with extract of chlorophyl became transparent. This would be +a fine experiment for some of you to try, and a garland of the +transparent leaves would be much more beautiful around a shade than +the ordinary dried ones. + +There are other styles of lamp-shades that can be made with little +difficulty, for instance: A very pretty shade is easily formed by +cutting in thin drawing-board fine scalloped sections, which, tied +together with narrow ribbon, take the form of a shade. Leaves are +glued to the under side of these, and a lining of thin tissue-paper +is pasted on to hold them in place. Still another is made in the same +way, with doubled sections of card-board, between each pair of which +is laid a steel engraving or wood-cut, or an unmounted photograph. The +pictures are invisible till the lamp is lighted: then they gleam forth +with something of the soft glow of a porcelain transparency. + + +A GLOVE-BOX. + +In any of the fancy shops you can now buy the slender frames of +silvered tin on which these boxes are made. Cut out double pieces of +pale-tinted silk to fit the top, bottom, sides and ends, and quilt +each separately with an interlining of cotton batting, on which +sachet-powder has been lightly sprinkled. Slip the pieces between the +double rods of the frame, sew over and over, and finish with a plaited +satin ribbon all round, adding a neat little loop and bow to lift the +lid. + +The small tin boxes in which fancy biscuits are sold can be utilized +for glove-boxes, covered as you choose on the outside, and lined with +wadded silk. + + +ANOTHER GLOVE-BOX. + +This box can be made in very stiff card-board, but tin is better +if you have the pieces which form its shape cut by the tinman, and +punched with holes in rows an inch and a half apart. If you use +card-board, you must punch your own holes, measuring the places for +them with rule and pencil. In either case, you will need the same +number of pieces and of the same size, namely: two strips one foot +long and five inches wide, two strips one foot long and three inches +wide, and two strips five inches long and three inches wide. Cover +each piece with a layer of cotton wadding, sprinkled with sachet +powder, and a layer of silk or satin of any color you prefer. Then +catch the silk firmly down through the holes in the tin, making long +stitches on the wrong side, and small cross-stitches on the right, +so as to form neat regular tufts. A very tiny button sewed in each +depression has a neat effect. When the inside of the box is thus +tufted, baste the pieces together, cover the outside with black or +dark silk or satin, embroidered or ornamented in any way your fancy +may dictate, overhand the edges daintily, and neatly finish with +a small cord. Square boxes made in the same way are pretty for +pocket-handkerchiefs. + +[Illustration: SILK GLOVE-BOX.] + +[Illustration: DIAGRAM SHOWING THE MANNER OF TUFTING THE LINING OF +SILK GLOVE-BOX.] + + +A COAL-SCUTTLE PIN-CUSHION. + +This droll little scuttle is made of black enamel cloth, cut according +to the diagrams on next page. Fig. 1 is cut double and folded over +at G. The two sides marked B and E in Fig. 1 are bound with black +galloon; also the two sides marked with the same letters in Fig. 2. + +[Illustration: COAL-SCUTTLE PINCUSHION AND NEEDLE BOOK.] + +Before binding over, cast a bit of wire around the top and one around +the bottom of the scuttle, and bend each into its proper shape. Figs. +3 and 4 are bound all round, and sewed over and over to the places +indicated. Wrap two bits of wire, one four inches long and the other +an inch and a quarter, with black worsted, and insert them through +little holes made for the purpose to serve as the handles of the +scuttle; stuff the inside firmly with hair or cotton-wool, cover the +top with flannel, cut after Fig. 4, and button-hole the edges down all +round with worsted of the color of the flannel. If you like to add +a needle-book you can do so by cutting three leaves of differently +colored flannels, after the shape of Fig. 4, snipping the edges into +points, or button-holing them, and fastening the leaves to the back of +the scuttle above the pincushion. + +[Illustration: DIAGRAMS OF COAL-SCUTTLE PINCUSHION AND NEEDLE-BOOK. +Fig. 1.--Pattern of Coal-Scuttle Pinchusion. Fig. 2.--Part of Pattern +of Coal-Scuttle Pinchusion. Fig. 3.--Bottom of Coal-Scuttle. Fig. +4.--Top of Coal-Scuttle.] + + +A BIT OF PLAIN WORK. + +There are notable little sempstresses even in these days of machines +("and I am thankful to know that there are," says Mother Santa Claus) +who set their stitches as swiftly and as precisely as ever their +grandmothers did before them, and have the same liking for what used +to be called "white seam." To such we would suggest, what a nice and +useful Christmas present would be a beautifully made under-garment. +It need not of necessity be a shirt, though in old days no girl was +considered educated who could not finish one all by herself, from +cutting out to the last button-hole; but an apron or petticoat or +dressing-jacket or night-gown, over which little fingers had labored +deftly and lovingly, would, it seems to us, be a most wonderful +and delightful novelty for mamma or grandmamma to find on the +Christmas-tree this year. A set of handkerchiefs nicely hemmed and +marked (girls used to cross-stitch the marks in their own hair!), or +a soft flannel petticoat, cat-stitched at the seams, scalloped with +coarse working cotton,--which grows whiter with washing, instead of +yellowing like silk,--with three pretty initials on the waistband, +would be other capital ideas. Try them. + + +WORK APRONS. + +The great convenience of these aprons is that the work can be rolled +up in them and laid aside for use. They are made of brown Holland +trimmed with black or blue or crimson worsted braid. Little loops of +doubled braid ornament the edge, and are held in place by a plain row +of the braid stitched on above them. The lower and largest pocket +should be made full and drawn up with a cord at top, so as to hold +rolls of pieces, worsteds and patterns. The little pockets are for +spools of silk and thread, tapes, buttons, and so on. + +[Illustration: DIAGRAM OF WORK APRON.] + + +A LEAF NEEDLE-BOOK. + +For this needle-book you will need the following materials: One-eighth +of a yard of crimson or green velvet, one-eighth of a yard of lining +silk to match, one-eighth of a yard of fine white flannel, two skeins +of white silk floss, a bit of Bristol-board, and a half yard of narrow +ribbon. + +Cut in the Bristol-board a couple of leaf-shaped pieces like the +illustration. Cover each with the velvet, turning in the edges neatly, +line with the silk, and button-hole both together all round with white +floss. Stitch the veins in the leaves with the floss, held tightly, so +as to depress the lines a little. Cut three leaves of flannel in the +same shape, button-hole the edges, lay them between the leaves, and +fasten all together at top with a bow of ribbon. A tiny loop and +button should be attached to the point to hold the needle-book +together. + +[Illustration: PATTERN OF LEAF NEEDLE-BOOK.] + +[Illustration: PAD OF LEAF NEEDLE-BOOK.] + + +BOOK-MARK. + +A large lace-like cross hanging from the end of a wide ribbon makes +a handsome and appropriate mark for a big bible or prayer-book. The +materials cost almost nothing, all that is required being a bit of +perforated card-board, a sharp penknife, and--patience. Trace the form +of the cross on the card-board, and outline the pattern on one side in +pencil. You will observe that the one given as illustration is made +up of small forms many times repeated, and this is the case with +all patterns used for this purpose. The easiest way to outline it +regularly is to do a square of eight holes at a time, marking the +places to be cut, and leaving the uncut places white. When all is +marked, place on a smooth board and cut, following the markings +exactly with your knife. The work cannot be hurried: it must be done +slowly and very carefully if you hope to succeed. + + * * * * * + +And now we will turn out the more difficult things from the bottom of +the basket, and you big, clever boys and girls who can do what you +like with your fingers and knives and needles and paint-brushes, can +take your pick from them. + + +AUTUMN-LEAF WORK. + +If you have an old work-box, or desk, or table-top, or screen, which +has grown shabby, and which you would like to renew, we can tell you +how to do so. First, you must take those generous friends, the woods, +into your counsel. Gather and press every bright, perfect leaf and +spray which comes in your way this autumn, and every graceful bit of +vine, and a quantity of small brown and gold-colored ferns, and those +white feathery ones which have blanched in the deep shadows. These +ready, paint your box, or whatever it is, with solid black, let it +dry, rub it smooth with fine sand-paper, and repeat the process three +times. Then glue the leaves and ferns on, irregularly scattered, or +in regular bouquets and wreaths, as suits your fancy. Apply a coat of +isinglass, dissolved in water, to the whole surface, and when that is +dry, three coats of copal varnish, allowing each to dry before the +next is put on. The effect is very handsome. And, even without +painting the objects black, this same style of leaf and fern-work can +be applied to earthen vases, wooden boxes, trays and saucers, for +card-receivers. For these, you may get some good hints from the +illustrations on subsequent pages. The same illustrations will apply +to the "novelties in fern-work" given further on. + + +A WINDOW TRANSPARENCY. + +Another pretty use for autumn leaves is a transparency for a window. +Arrange a group of the leaves upon a pane of glass, lay another pane +of same size over these, and glue the edges together, first with a +strip of stout muslin, and then with narrow red ribbon, leaving a +loop at each upper corner to hang it up by. The deep leaf colors seen +against the light are delightful. + + +SIDE-LIGHT TRANSPARENCIES. + +Any of you who happen to live in a house which has, like many old +houses, a narrow side-light on either side of its front-door, and a +row of panes across the top, can make a pretty effect by preparing a +series of these transparencies to fit the door-glasses, and fastening +them on by driving a stout tack into the sashes so as to support +the four corners of each pane. The transparencies could be prepared +secretly and put into place overnight, or on Christmas morning, before +any one is up, so as to give mother a pleasant surprise as she comes +downstairs. + + +A FRAME OF AUTUMN LEAVES. + +Procure an oblong bit of tin, eight inches by ten, or ten inches by +twelve, and have a large oval cut out in the middle. Paint the tin +with two coats of black, glue a small group of leaves in each corner, +with a wire spray or tendril to connect them, varnish with two coats +of copal, and put a small picture behind the oval. + + +A FRAME OF MAIDEN-HAIR. + +Cut a pasteboard frame three inches wide of the size you need, and sew +thickly all over it little sprays of maiden-hair ferns, pressed and +dried. It is fastened to the wall with a pin at each corner, and of +course does not support a glass. The effect of the light fern shapes +against the wall is very delicate and graceful, and unsubstantial as +it may seem, the frame lasts a long time, especially if, when the +maiden-hair first begins to curl, the whole is taken down and +re-pressed for two or three days under a heavy book. + +[Illustration: VASE (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK).] + + +NOVELTIES IN FERN-WORK. + +We hope some of you have collected a good supply of ferns of the +different colors,--deep brown, yellow, green and white,--for by means +of a new process you can make something really beautiful with them. It +requires deft fingers and good eyes, but with practice and patience +any of you could manage it. Supposing it to be a table-top which you +wish to ornament, you proceed as follows: Paint the wood all over with +black or very dark brown; let it dry, and rub it smooth with pumice. +Next varnish. And here comes the point of the process. _While the +varnish is wet_, lay your ferns down upon it, following a design which +you have arranged clearly in your head, or marked beforehand on a +sheet of paper. A pin's point will aid you to move and place the +fragile stems, which must not be much handled, and must lie perfectly +flat, with no little projecting points to mar the effect, which when +done should be like mosaic-work. As soon as the pattern is in place, +varnish again immediately. The ferns, thus inclosed in a double wall +of varnish, will keep their places perfectly. Next day, when all is +dry, varnish once more. Small articles of white holly-wood decorated +in this way are very pretty, and a thin china plate with an overlaying +of these varnished ferns becomes a beautiful and ornamental +card-receiver. + +[Illustration: CARD-RECEIVER (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK).] + + +A SHOE-CHAIR. + +An old cane-seated chair will answer perfectly to make this, provided +the frame-work is strong and good. Cut away the cane and insert in its +place a stout bag of twilled linen, the size of the seat and about ten +inches deep. Around this bag sew eight pockets, each large enough for +a pair of shoes. The round pocket left in the middle will serve to +hold stockings. Have a bit of thin wood cut to fit the seat of the +chair; fasten on this a cushion covered with cretonne, with a deep +frill all around (or a narrow frill, provided you prefer to fasten the +deep ruffle around the chair itself, as shown in the picture), and a +little loop in front by which the seat can be raised like the lid of a +box, when the shoes are wanted. This chair is really a most convenient +piece of furniture for a bedroom. + +[Illustration: A SHOE-CHAIR, WITH COVER (OR SEAT) REMOVED.] + + +SCRAP-BAGS IN TURKISH TOWELING. + +These are convenient little affairs. Hung on the gas-fixture beside a +looking-glass, or on a hook above the work-table, they will be found +just the things to catch odds and ends, such as hair, burnt matches, +ravelings and shreds of cloth, which are always accumulating, and for +which many city bedrooms afford no receptacle. The materials needed +are three-quarters of a yard of pale-brown Turkish toweling, six +yards of red worsted braid, four steel rings (to hold the strings), +one-eighth of a yard each of blue, white, and scarlet cashmere, a +skein each of blue, red, green, yellow, and black worsted, and a small +red tassel in chenille or silk. + +Cut four pieces of the toweling, twelve inches long and six and a half +wide, and shape them according to diagram. + +Bind each around with braid. Cut out a shape in cashmere of the three +colors laid one over the other, and button-hole it on with worsted, +contrasting the shades in as gay and marked a manner as possible. +In the design given, A is white cashmere, B red, and C blue. A is +button-holed with green, B with black, and C with yellow. B is +chain-stitched in blue and white lines, C feather-stitched in white +and yellow. The daisy-like flower above is white, with a yellow center +and a green stem, and the long lines of stitching on either side are +in red and black. Some of these bags are very pretty. + +This bag could be simplified by using no cashmere, and +feather-stitching each quarter diagonally across with alternate black, +red, and yellow lines. + +[Illustration: PATTERN OF EACH OF THE FOUR SIDES OF SCRAP-BAG.] + +[Illustration: SCRAP-BAG IN TURKISH TOWELING.] + + +ANOTHER SCRAP-BAG. + +The upper part of this bag is made of silver perforated paper. Buy a +strip a foot long and six inches wide, and embroider it all over in +alternate lines of cross and single stitching, using single zephyr +worsted, blue or rose-colored. Cut a piece of stiff card-board of +exactly the same size, and line it with pink or blue silk to match the +worsted. Sew the two ends together to form a circle, lay the silver +paper smoothly over it, stitch down, and trim both edges with plaited +satin ribbon three-quarters of an inch wide. + +This is the top of your bag. The bottom is crocheted in worsted by the +ordinary long stitch, and sewed to the silver-paper top piece under +the satin ribbon. A worsted tassel finishes the lower end. + + +ARTISTIC EMBROIDERY. + +Just here a word to the girls about embroidery. In old days, when +embroidery was the chief occupation of noble dames and demoiselles, +the needle was used as a paint-brush might be, to make a picture of +some real thing or some ideal occurrence. For instance: the Bayeux +tapestry, worked in the eleventh century by Matilda, wife of William +the Conqueror, and her ladies, is a continuous series of pictures, two +hundred and fourteen feet long by about two feet wide, which represent +scenes in the invasion and conquest of England. Old as it is, the +colors are still undimmed and brilliant. Even so lately as the last +century, ladies designed their own patterns, and embroidered court +dresses and trimmings with flowers and birds copied from nature. But +for many years back fancy-work has degenerated into the following of +set models, without exercising any "fancy" of one's own at all. Now +the old method is come into fashion again, and it means so much more, +and is so vastly more interesting than copying a cut-and-dried pattern +from a shop, that we long to set you all to trying your hands at it. +For example, if you want a cushion with a group of daisies, gather a +handful of fresh ones,--take a bit of linen or china crape, or fine +crash or pongee, and, with green and white and gray and gold-colored +silks, make a picture of the daisies as they look to you, not using +any particular kind of stitch, but employing long ones or short ones, +or loose or tight ones, just as comes most easily in giving the effect +you want to get. This is much nicer than counting the stitches on a +paper pattern and a bit of canvas, and when done, produces a much +better effect. Even in winter, a real flower or a fern-spray, by way +of model, can always be found in the flower-shops or greenhouses. +Practice will stimulate invention and suggest all sorts of devices and +ideas. Bits of pretty stuffs will catch your eye as adaptable for use, +and oddly tinted silks (the old, faded colors often work in better +than fresh ones), patterns on fans, on rice paper, on Japanese +pictures--all sorts of things--will serve as material for your fancy. +And when your work is done it will be _original_, and, as such, more +valuable and interesting than any shop model, however beautiful in +itself, can possibly be. + +[Illustration: ANOTHER SCRAP-BAG (SILVER PERFORATED PAPER AND +CROCHET-WORK).] + +[Illustration: PAPER-CUTTER (NOVELTIES IN FERN-WORK).] + + +ORIENTAL WORK. + +Very gay and quaint effects are produced with this work, which is an +adaptation of the well-known Eastern embroideries. Its ground-work +is plain cashmere or flannel, red, black or blue, on which small +fantastically shaped figures in variously colored velvets or cashmeres +are laid and button-holed down with floss silks. All sorts of forms +are employed for these figures--stars, crescents, circles, trefoils, +shields, palm-leaves, griffins, imps; and little wheels and comets +in feather-stitch and cat-stitch are inserted between, to add to the +oddity of the whole. These forms can be bought at a low price in +almost any fancy shop. A good deal of ingenuity and taste can be shown +in arranging and blending the figures richly and brilliantly, without +making them too bright and glaring. Table-covers in this work should +have falls of deep points, pinked on the edges. Smaller points of +white cashmere are sometimes inserted between the deep ones, and +similarly decorated. Bright little tassels are swung between the +points by twisted silk cords. The tassels are made of strips of +scarlet and white flannel, cut _almost_ across, in narrow fringes, +rolled into shape, and confined by a tiny heading of flannel +embroidered with silk. Sofa-pillows in this Oriental work are bright +and effective, also wall-pockets and brackets--in fact, it can be +applied in many ways. The bracket shapes must be cut in wood, and +topped with flannel, the embroidered piece hanging across the front +like a miniature drapery. + + +BEDSIDE RUGS. + +The prettiest bedside rug which we ever saw was made in part of a +snow-white lamb's-wool mat. This was laid in the center of a stout +burlap, which projected six inches beyond the fleece all around, and +was bordered with a band of embroidery on canvas six inches wide, the +whole being lined with flannel and finished with a cord and a heavy +tassel at each corner. A simpler rug is made of brown burlap, with +a pattern in cross-stitch, worked in double zephyr worsteds of gay +colors. Initials, or a motto, can be embroidered in the middle. The +burlap can be fringed out around the edges for a finish. + +[Illustration: VASE, PAINTED BLACK AND ORNAMENTED WITH FERNS +(AUTUMN-LEAF WORK).] + + +A RAG RUG. + +An effective rug can be made in this way: Cut long inch-wide strips of +cloths, flannels, and various kinds of material (widening the strip, +however, in proportion as the fabric is thinner). Sew the ends together +so as to make one very long strip, which, for convenience' sake, +can be loosely wound up in a ball. Then, with a very large wooden +crochet-needle, you crochet a circle, a square, or oblong mat of this +rag-strip, just as with cotton or worsted. It makes a strong, durable, +and, with bright and tasteful colors, a very pretty rug. + + +A SCREEN. + +A folding clothes-horse with two leaves, such as is used in laundries, +makes the foundation for this screen. The wood is painted solid +black, and covered inside and out with very yellow unbleached cotton, +stretched tightly over the frame, and held down by black upholstery +braid fastened on with gilt nails. A design in flowers, leaves, birds, +double circles, crescents, and parallel bars, to imitate the Japanese +style of decoration, is painted in oil colors on the cotton, and a +motto on the wood along the top. If the motto is arranged to read +backward, the foreign effect of the whole will be enhanced. We have +seen a striking screen of this sort made by a little girl who, as she +could not paint in oil colors, decorated the surface with figures of +various kinds cut from Japanese picture-papers, such as are now sold +for from ten to twenty cents in the Japanese goods shops. Her figures +were so well pasted and arranged, that the screen was one of the +prettiest things in the bedroom. + +Screens covered with pictures cut from magazines and illustrated +newspapers are very much liked by boys and girls, and by some of their +elders. + + +A COUVRE-PIED. + +This is a large oblong in loosely knitted double zephyr wools, and is +made double, dark brown on one side, for instance, and pale blue on +the other. The two are united with a border in open crochet of the +brown, laced through with light blue ribbon, which is finished at each +corner with a loosely tied bow and ends. The _couvre-pied_, as the +name indicates, is meant to cover the feet of a person who lies on a +sofa, and is an excellent present to make to an elderly or invalid +friend. + + +TILE OR CHINA PAINTING. + +Don't be frightened at the word, dears. China-painting is high art +sometimes, and intricate and difficult work often, but it is quite +possible to produce pretty effects without knowing a great deal about +either china or painting. Neither are the materials of necessity +expensive. All that you need, to begin with, are a few half tubes of +china or mineral paints, which cost about as much as oil colors, +four or five camel's-hair brushes, a palette-knife, a small phial of +oil-of-lavender, and another of oil-of-turpentine, a plain glazed +china cup or plate or tile to work on, and either a china palette or +another plate on which to rub the paints. For colors, black, capuchine +red, rose-pink, yellow, blue, green and brown are an ample assortment +for a novice and for purposes of practice. We would advise only two +tubes, one of black and one of rose pink, which are colors that do +not betray your confidence when it comes to baking. For the chief +difficulty in china-painting is that to be permanent the work must +be "fired,"--that is, fused by a great heat in a furnace,--and it +requires a great deal of experience to learn what the different +tints are likely to do under this test. Some colors--yellow, for +instance--eat up, so to speak, the colors laid over them. Others +change tint. Pinks and some of the greens grow more intense; white +cannot be trusted, and mixing one paint with another, as in oils, can +only be done safely by experts. It is well, therefore, to begin with +two simple colors, and you will be surprised to see how much may be +done with them. (See "Hollenberry Cup," in ST. NICHOLAS for May, 1877, +page 458.) A cup of transparent white china, the handle painted black, +a Japanese-looking bough with black foliage and pink blossoms thrown +over it, and a little motto, has a really charming effect. But be sure +to put on the pink very pale, and the black, not in a hard, solid +streak, but delicately, to suggest shading from dark to light, or the +result of the baking will be disappointment. + +[Illustration: WOODEN BOX, ORNAMENTED WITH FERNS (AUTUMN-LEAF WORK).] + +The method of preparing the colors is to squeeze a very little paint +from each tube upon your palette or plate; take a tiny drop of +oil-of-lavender on the palette-knife, and with it rub the paint +smooth. It should be thinned just enough to work smoothly; every drop +of oil added after that is a disadvantage. Use a separate brush for +each color, and wash them thoroughly with soap and hot water before +putting them aside. The painting should be set away where no dust can +come to it, and it will dry rapidly in forty-eight hours or less. +Elaborate work often requires repainting after baking, the process +being repeated several times; but for simpler designs one baking is +usually enough. There are bakeries in Boston, New York, and others +of our large cities, to which china can be sent, the price of baking +being about ten cents for each article. + +[Illustration: TABLE-TOP (NOVELTIES IN FERN-WORK)] + + +OTHER MODES OF DECORATING CHINA. + +The picture-books which are to be found at the Japanese stores +nowadays suggest numberless excellent designs for china decorating. So +do the "Walter Crane Fairy-tales." A plain olive or cream-colored tile +with a pattern in bamboo-boughs and little birds, a milk-jug in gray +with leaves and a motto in black, a set of tiny butter-plates with +initials and a flower-spray on each, are easy things to attempt and +very effective when done. Pie-dishes can be ornamented with a long, +sketchy branch of blossoms or a flight of swallows across the bottom, +and we have seen those small dishes of Nancy ware, in which eggs are +first poached and then served on table, made very pretty by a painting +on each of a chicken, done in soft browns and reds, with a little line +to frame it in and run down along the handle. What we have mentioned +here are only suggestions; a little patience and practice will soon +help you to other patterns of your own, and we can't help hoping that +some of you will be tempted to try your hands at this delightful art. + + +DRAWING AND PAINTING ON WOOD. + +Articles in plain white wood can be bought almost anywhere nowadays. +Pen-trays, letter-racks, easels, paper-knives, photograph-frames, +watch-cases, needle-books, portfolios, glove-boxes, fans, +silk-winders--there is no end to the variety which can be had, and +had at a very moderate price. Now, any girl or boy among you with a +paint-box and a little taste for drawing, can make a really pretty +gift by decorating some one of these wooden things, either in color or +with pen drawings in brown or black. The pattern need by no means be +elaborate. A wreath of ivy simply out-lined in sepia or india-ink, or +a group of figures sketched with the same, produces a very pleasing +and harmonious effect. "Prout's Brown," a sort of fluent ink of a +burnt-umber tint, will be found excellent for drawing purposes. +For designs, our own ST. NICHOLAS will furnish excellent examples. +Scarcely a number but holds something which a clever artist can +adapt to his purpose. The "Miss Muffett" series, for example, or the +silhouettes, or the sea-side sketches, or the ornamental borders and +leaf-and-flower headings. Look over your back numbers, and you will +see how rich they are in subjects for copies. + +Here is a suggestion for such of you as live by the sea, and who know +something about drawing. Search for clam-shells on the beach, and +select the whitest and most perfectly formed. Separate the two shells, +cleanse them thoroughly, and make on the smooth pearly lining of each +a little drawing in sepia. It will serve as a receiver to stand on a +lady's toilet and hold rings and trinkets, or it can be used as +an ash-holder by a smoking gentleman, or to contain pens on a +writing-table. + + +A SHOE-CHAIR MADE OF A BARREL. + +Another shoe-chair as nice as that pictured on page 56 can be made out +of a barrel by any girl who has a father or big brother to help her a +little with the carpentering. The barrel is cut as in Fig. 1 below, so +as to form a back and a low front. The back is stuffed a little, and +covered with chintz nearly down to the floor. The front has a deep +frill tacked on all around the chair. Four blocks are nailed inside +the barrel to support a round of wood, stuffed and cushioned with the +same chintz, to serve as a seat. + +A straight shoe-bag, with eight pockets, is made in the same chintz, +and tacked firmly all around the inside. A loop of the chintz serves +to raise the seat. Four castors screwed to the bottom of the barrel +will be an improvement, as the chair without them cannot easily be +moved about. About five yards of chintz will be required for the +covering; or you might use the merino of an old dress. + +[Illustration: 1. SHOWS MANNER OF CUTTING BARREL. 2. BARREL SHOE-CHAIR +COMPLETED. 3. INTERIOR OF BARREL SHOE-CHAIR. 4. DIAGRAM SHOWING MODE +OF MAKING POCKETS FOR BARREL SHOE-CHAIR.] + + + +A MUSLIN TIDY. + +Three-quarters of a yard of clear French muslin will be needed for +this. Lay a large dinner-plate down on the muslin, draw the circle +made by its edge with a pencil, cut out, and lightly whip it round, +pulling the thread a little to keep the circle perfect. Measure the +circle, and cut a straight muslin ruffle, five inches wide and a +little less than twice as long as the measure. Roll one edge finely, +and overhand on a plain lace footing an inch and a half wide. Whip +the other edge, and sew it round the circle, graduating the fullness +equally. + +[Illustration: A MUSLIN TIDY TRIMMED WITH LACE FOOTING.] + +Baste a bit of lace footing three-quarters of an inch wide in the +middle of the circle, giving it the form of a bow-knot with two ends. +The lace must be bent and folded into the form, but not cut. Run the +edges with embroidery cotton, and button-hole all round. Then, with +sharp scissors, cut away the muslin underneath, leaving the bow-knot +transparent on a thicker ground. Dry-flute the ruffle. This little +affair is very dainty and odd, one of the prettiest things which we +have seen lately. + + +AN ILLUMINATED BORDER FOR A PHOTOGRAPH. + +St. Nicholas has given us of late such precise directions for the +process of illuminating in color,[2] that it is not needful to repeat +them; but we should like to suggest an idea to those of you who have +begun to practice the art. This is to illuminate a border or "mount" +around a favorite photograph. The picture must first be pasted on a +large sheet of tinted card-board, pale cream or gray being the best +tints to select. You then measure the spaces for your frame, which +should be square if the picture is oval or round, and outline +them lightly in lead-pencil. Next you sketch and paint your +pattern,--flowers, leaves, birds, butterflies, or a set pattern, as +you prefer,--putting the designs thickly together; and, lastly, you +fill all the blank spaces in with gold paint, leaving the pattern +in colors on a gilded ground. The outer edge of the frame should be +broken into little scallops or trefoils in gold, and the card-board +should be large enough to leave a space of at least three inches +between the illuminated border and the frame, which should be a wide +band of dull gilding or pale-colored wood, with a tiny line of black +to relieve it. The ornament should, if possible, chord in some way +with the picture. Thus a photograph of a Madonna might have the +annunciation-lilies and passion-flowers on the gold ground. + + [Footnote 2: SEE ST. NICHOLAS, Vol. IV., page 379.] + + +A BOOK OF TEXTS. + +Another choice thing which can be done by a skillful illuminator is a +small book, containing a few favorite texts, chosen by some friend. +Half-a-dozen will be enough. Each text occupies a separate page, and +is carefully lettered in red or black, with decorated initials, and +a border in colors. A great deal of taste can be shown in the +arrangement of these borders, which should be appropriate to the text +they surround. A title-page is added, and the book is bound in some +quaint way. A cover of parchment or white vellum, illuminated also, +can be made very beautiful. + + +A CARTE-DE-VISITE RECEIVER. + +For this you must procure from the tin-man a strip of tin three times +as long as it is wide--say six inches by eighteen--with each end +shaped to a point, as indicated in the picture. Measure off two bits +of card-board of exactly the same size and shape; cover one with +silk or muslin for a back, and the other with Java canvas, cloth, or +velvet, embroidered with a monogram in the upper point, and a little +pattern or motto in the lower. Lay the double coverings one on each +side of the tin, and cross the outside one with narrow ribbons, +arranged as in the picture. Overhand firmly all around; finish the top +with a plaited ribbon and a little bow and loop to hang it by, and the +bottom with a bullion fringe of the color of the ribbon. + +[Illustration: CARTE-DE-VISITE RECEIVER.] + + +A PAIR OF BELLOWS. + +There seems no end to the pretty devices which proficients in painting +can accomplish. We saw not long since a pair of wooden bellows which +had been decorated with a painting of a tiny owl sitting on a bough, +and the motto "Blow, blow, thou bitter wind." Why should not some of +you try your hands at something similar? Wood fires, thank heaven, are +much more common than they used to be, and most of you must know a +cozy chimney corner where a pretty pair of bellows would be valued. + + +A DOOR-PANEL. + +A great bunch of field-flowers, or fruit-boughs, or Virginia-creeper, +painted in water-paints on the panel of an ordinary door, is another +nice thing for you young artists to attempt. Perhaps you will object +that a picture on a door can hardly be called a Christmas present; but +we don't know. + +Anything which loving fingers can make, and loving hearts enjoy, is a +gift worthy of Christmas or any other time. + + +A SACHET IN WATER-COLORS. + +Another dainty idea for you who can paint is a small perfume-case of +white or pale-colored silk or satin, on which is painted a bunch of +flowers or a little motto. The flowers must be small ones, such as +forget-me-nots or purple and white violets. A great deal of white +paint--body color, as it is called--should be mixed with the color, to +make it thick enough not to soak and stain the silk along the edges of +the pattern. Some people paint the whole design in solid white, let +it dry, and then put on the color over the white. Others mix a little +ox-gall with the paint. + + +DECORATED CANDLES. + +The large wax or composition candles, of a firm texture, are best +for purposes of decoration. Water-color paints can be used, or those +powders which come for coloring wax flowers. In either case it will +be necessary to use a little ox-gall to give the paint consistency. +A band of solid tint--crimson, black, blue or gold--is usually put +around the middle of the candle, with a pattern in flowers or small +bright points above and below. Spirals of blue forget-me-nots all +over the candle are pretty, or sprays of leaves and berries set in a +regular pattern. These gay candles are considered ornamental for a +writing-table, and look well in the brass candlesticks which are +so much used just now, though _we_ confess to a preference for +unornamented candles of one solid tint. + + +A RUSTIC JARDINIERE. + +Boys and girls who live in the country hardly know how lucky they are, +or what mines of materials for clever handiwork lie close by them in +the fruitful, generous woods. What with cones and leaves and moss and +lichens and bark and fungi and twigs and ferns, these great green +store-houses beat all the fancy shops for variety and beauty, and +their "stock" is given away without money or price to all who choose +to take. Most of you know something of the infinite variety of things +which can be made out of these wood treasures, though nobody knows, or +can know, _all_. Now, we want to tell you of a new thing, not at all +difficult to make, and which would be a lovely surprise for some one +this coming Christmas. + +It is a rustic jardiniere, or flower-pot. The first step toward making +it is to find a small stump about ten inches high, and as odd and +twisted in shape as possible. It should have a base broader than its +top, and three or four little branches projecting from its sides. +Carry this treasure home, brush off any dirt which may cling to it, +and ornament it with mosses and lichens, glued on to look as natural +as possible. Make three small cornucopias of pasteboard; cover them +also with mosses and lichens, and fasten them to the stump between the +forks of the branches, using small brads or tacks to keep them firm. +Stuff the cornucopias with dry moss, and arrange in each a bouquet of +grasses, autumn leaves, and dried ferns, dipping the end of each +stem in flour paste, to make it secure in its place. Sprays of +blackberry-vine or michella, and the satin-white pods of the +old-fashioned "honesty," make an effective addition. When done, we +have a delightful winter-garden, which will keep its beauty through +the months of snow and sleet, and brighten any room it stands in. Nor +is its use over when winter ends, for, inserting small glass phials in +the cornucopias, fresh flowers can be kept in them as in a vase, and +the grays and browns of the lichened wood set off their hues far +better than any gay vase could. + + +ANOTHER JARDINIERE. + +Another rustic flower-holder can be made by selecting three knotty +twigs, two and a half feet long and about an inch in diameter, and +nailing them together in the form of a tripod, one half serving as a +base, the other to hold a small flower-pot or a goblet whose foot has +been broken off. The lower half should be strengthened with cross +pieces nailed on, and both halves with twists of wild grape-vine or +green briar, wired at their crossings to hold them firmly in place. +When the frame is ready, melt together half a pound of bees'-wax, a +quarter of a pound of rosin, and enough powdered burnt-umber to give +a dark brown color; and pour the mixture on boiling hot. It will give +the wood a rich tint. Fill the pot with sand, place over the sand a +layer of green moss well pulled apart, and in that arrange a bouquet +of dried leaves, ferns and grasses, or, if it is summer-time, wild +flowers and vines. + + * * * * * + +Now, dear fancy-workers, little and big, surely Mother Santa Claus has +furnished you with ideas enough to keep you busy for more Christmases +than one. Just one thing more, and that is the manner in which the +presents shall be given. Nothing can be droller than to hang up +one's stockings, and nothing prettier or more full of meaning than a +Christmas-tree. But for some of you who may like to make a novelty in +these time-honored ways, we will just mention that it is good fun +to make a "Christmas-pie" in an enormous tin dish-pan, with a +make-believe crust of yellow cartridge paper, ornamented with twirls +and flourishes of the same, held down with pins, and have it served on +Christmas Eve, full of pretty things and sugar-plums, jokes and jolly +little rhymes fastened to the parcels. The cutting should be done +beforehand, and hidden by the twirls of paper; but the carver can +pretend to use his knife and fork, and spooning out the packages will +insure a merry time for all at table. And one more suggestion. Little +articles, wrapped in white paper, can be put inside cakes, baked and +iced, and thus furnish another amusing surprise for the "pie" or the +Christmas-tree. + + * * * * * + +We are indebted to Mrs. L. B. Goodall, Mrs. M. E. Stockton, Mrs. +Tolles, Miss Annie M. Phoebus, Miss M. Meeker, and Miss M. H. D., +for designs and suggestions in aid of this article; and to the +"Ladies' Floral Cabinet" for some valuable hints on "Leaf-work." + + * * * * * + + + + +LITTLE TWEET. + + +There were once some nice little birds who lived together in a great +big cage. This cage was not at all like the bird-cages we generally +see. It was called an aviary, and it was as large as a room. It had +small trees and bushes growing in it, so that the birds could fly +about among the green leaves and settle on the branches. There were +little houses where the birds might make their nests and bring up +their young ones, and there was everything else that the people who +owned this big cage thought their little birds would want. It had +wires all around it to keep the birds from flying away. + +One of the tamest and prettiest of the birds who lived in this place +was called little Tweet, because, whenever she saw any of the family +coming near the cage she would fly up close to the wires and say, +"Tweet! Tweet!" which meant "Good-morning! how do you do?" But they +thought it was only her pretty way of asking for something to eat; and +as she said "Tweet" so much, they gave her that for a name. + +One day there was a boy who came to visit the family who owned the +birds, and very soon he went to see the big cage. He had never seen +anything like it before. He had never been so close to birds that were +sitting on trees or hopping about among the branches. If the birds +at home were as tame as these, he could knock over lots of them, he +thought. + +There was one that seemed tamer than any of the rest. It came up close +to him and said: "Tweet! Tweet!" + +The boy got a little stick and pushed it through the wires at little +Tweet, and struck her. Poor little Tweet was frightened and hurt. She +flew up to a branch of the tree and sat there, feeling very badly. +When the boy found he could not reach her any more with his stick, he +went away. + +Tweet sat on the branch a long time. The other birds saw she was sick, +and came and asked how she felt. Some of them carried nice seeds to +her in their bills. But little Tweet could not eat anything. She ached +all over, and sat very quietly with her head down on her breast. + +[Illustration: "THE OTHER BIRDS BRING SEEDS TO POOR TWEET."] + +She sat on that branch nearly all day. She had a little baby-bird, who +was in a nest in one of the small houses, but the other birds said she +need not go and feed it if she did not wish to move about. They would +take it something to eat. + +But, toward night, she heard her baby cry, and then she thought she +must go to it. So she slowly flew over to her house; and her baby, who +was in a little nest against the wall, was very glad to see her. + +In the morning, two of the birds came to the house to see how little +Tweet was, and found her lying on the floor, dead. The little +baby-bird was looking out of its nest, wondering what it all meant. +How sorry those two birds were when they found that their good little +friend Tweet was really dead! + +"Poor Tweet!" said one of them, "She was the gentlest and best of us +all. And that poor little dear in the nest there, what will become of +it?" + +"Become of it!" replied the other bird, who was sitting by poor Tweet, +"Become of it! Why, it shall never want for anything. I shall take it +for my own, and I will be a kind mother to it, for the sake of poor +little Tweet." + +Now, do you not think that there were good, kind birds in that big +cage? But what do you think of the boy? + +[Illustration: "I WILL BE A KIND MOTHER TO IT, FOR THE SAKE OF POOR +LITTLE TWEET."] + + + +[Illustration] + +JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT. + + +Hurrah for the new volume!--Volume V., I believe it is to be called. +That reminds me of the names of Japanese children, hundreds of years +ago. Instead of being known by the Japanese for Tom, Henry, or John, +it was No. 1, No. 2, No. 3, and so on, through a whole family of +little folks. + +Once you had an article[1] on Japanese Games by a native of Japan, +Ichy Zo Hattori. Well, this name, as you will all admit, is a +fine-sounding appellative enough, but in English it means simply No. 1 +Hattori. + + [Footnote 1: See ST. NICHOLAS for January, 1874.] + +So, welcome to the lovely new child, No. 5 St. Nicholas!--and that he +may grow to be a brave, bright volume, beautiful to look at and useful +to this and many a generation of little folks, is your Jack's earnest +wish. + +Of one thing the little fellow may be sure,--Jack and the Deacon, and +the dear, blessed Little School-ma'am, will stand by him to the end. +And so will you, my chicks, Jack verily believes. He'll be a good +friend to you, bringing you any amount of fun, and telling you more +good things every month than you'll remember in a thousand years. + +Now we'll take up our next subject. + + +AN ARTIFICIAL HORSE THAT CAN GO. + +Well, well! The birds must be joking, for who ever heard of a bird +telling a deliberate lie? And yet it _may_ be true. There have been +artificial men,--manikins, automata, or whatever they are called,--so +why shouldn't there be artificial horses? + +Come to think of it, it was not the birds who told me about them. It +was a letter; and "artificial horses" the letter said, as plainly as +could be. It told how a fine specimen had just been exhibited in the +capital of Prussia. The thing must look like a horse, too, for it is a +hobby between two high wheels (the rider sits on the saddle), and it +travels about as rapidly as a trotting horse. As I understand it, +the rider moves his legs to make the machine go, and yet it isn't a +bicycle. It goes over stony roads, turns corners, and, for aught Jack +knows, rears and kicks like any ordinary charger--that is, when it's +out of order. + +I should like to see one among the boys of the red school-house. How +they would make it go! + + + A LETTER FROM DEACON GREEN. + + DEAR JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT: I wish some of the boys and girls who + think they never have any chance to read could know a little + fellow of my acquaintance, named George. He is fourteen years old + and employed as errand boy in a business house in New York. All + day long he runs, runs,--up-town, down-town, across town,--until + you would suppose that his little legs would be worn out. But, + always on the alert as he is, and ready to do his duty whether + tired or not, he still keeps constantly before his mind the idea + of self-improvement, in business and out. Through a friend he has + of late been able to procure books from the Mercantile Library. + Although his time during the day, as I have said, is wholly taken + up with his duties, yet he managed, during the evenings of last + fall and winter (in five months), to read twelve books, some of + them quite long ones and some of them in two volumes, all selected + with his friend's assistance. From the list, I fancy the little + fellow had an eye to enjoyment as well as profit, for they are not + all what are called instructive books, although every one of them + is a good book for a boy to read, and George tells me he enjoyed + them all heartily. + + As many of your youngsters, friend Jack, may like to know just + what books the little fellow has read, I will give you the list + that he wrote out at my request. It does not seem a very long + list, perhaps, but I think very few hard-working boys in New York + have read more than George in the same space of time. Here is the + list: + + "Robinson Crusoe;" "Benjamin Franklin," 2 vols.; "Life of + Napoleon," 2 vols.; "Schoolmaster Stories;" "Hans Brinker;" + "Swiss Family Robinson;" "Dickens's Child's History of England;" + "Kenilworth;" "The Scottish Chiefs;" "The Boy Emigrants;" "Sparks' + Life of Washington;" "Glaisher's Aerial Navigation." + + This letter, dear Jack, is sent, not by way of puffing George, but + as a sort of spur to studious boys and girls who may follow his + example, if somebody puts them up to it.--Yours truly, + + SILAS GREEN. + + * * * * * + + +"SEE HOW I HELP!" + +One of Jack's good friends, L.W.J. sends you this new fable: + + "See how I help!" said a little mouse + To the reapers that reaped the grain, + As he nibbled away, by the door of his house, + With all of his might and main. + + "See how I help!" he went on with his talk; + But they laid all the wide field low + Before he had finished a single stalk + Of the golden, glittering row. + + As the mouse ran into his hole, he said: + "Indeed, I cannot deny, + Although an idea I had in my head, + Those fellows work better than I." + + * * * * * + + +AMONG THE CRANBERRY BOGS. + + New Jersey, 1877. + + DEAR JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT: You would not think, from their names, + that cranberry bogs are pleasant places, but I enjoyed very much a + visit to one last year in the fall. Seen merely from the road, + a bog doesn't show very well, for the leaves are small, and the + vines are crowded in heavy masses; but, when you get near, the + white and red berries look pretty among the dark-green leaves. + + The meadow is checquered with little canals by means of which the + whole surface is flooded in winter-time, so as to protect the + vines from the ill effects of frosts and thaws. In the spring, the + water is drawn off at low tide through the flood-gates. + + When the cranberry-pickers are at work, they make a curious sight, + for there are people of all ages, odd dresses, and both sexes + among them, and often a tottering old man may be seen working + beside a small child. The little ones can be trusted to gather + cranberries, for the fruit is not easily crushed in handling. + Where cranberries grow thickly, one can almost fill one's hand at + a grasp. + + The overseer's one-roomed shanty, where he cooks, eats and sleeps, + is on a knoll, and near it are the barrels in which the berries + are packed, after they have been sorted according to size and + quality. + + Picking cranberries may be pleasant enough in fine weather, but it + must be miserable work on a cold, drizzly day. + + I hope this short account will be news to some of your chicks, of + whom I am one, dear Jack; and I remain yours truly, + + H. S. + + * * * * * + + + MORE CRYSTALLIZED HORSES. + + Piermont, N. H. + + DEAR JACK-IN-THE-PULPIT: You ask in the March number of the St. + Nicholas if any of us have seen crystallized horses "with our + own eyes." We (Willie and I) have seen them many times; so has + everybody else who lives here; that is, we have seen something + very much like it, though we do not call it the same. When the + thermometer is from thirty to thirty-six degrees below zero, + horses and oxen are all covered with a white frost, so you cannot + tell a black horse or ox from a white one; nor can you tell young + men from old ones. Their whiskers, eyebrows and eyelashes, are all + perfectly white. I've often had my ears frost-bitten in going to + the school-house, which is only about as far as two blocks in a + city. + + When we see these sights, Jack Frost cannot paint his delicate + pictures on the windows, for a thick white frost covers them all + over, or rubs them out. + + We like the St. Nicholas very much, and even our little sister, + Mary, likes to look at the pictures, and she said that she wished + she could see Jack-in-the-Pulpit. We intend to introduce her next + summer to some of your relations that live by the big brook. + We live about one hundred miles north-west of Concord, in the + Connecticut valley, about half a mile from the Connecticut River. + I am thirteen years old.--Good-bye, + + E. A. M. + + * * * * * + + +A TURTLE CART. + + DEAR JACK: Looking over the fence into my neighbor's yard last + summer, I saw what seemed to be a Liliputian load of hay in a tiny + cart, going along the path. Whatever power drew it, was hidden + from my sight; but the motion of the cart made me half expect to + see a yoke of tiny oxen turn the corner. In a few moments, a small + turtle appeared in sight, plodding leisurely along and drawing + behind him the cart I had seen, which was very small and light. + + I was assured by my little neighbor that the turtle liked the + business very much; but, belonging to the S. P. C. A., I felt + obliged to know the facts. I found that the turtle had his liberty + nearly all the time, and a pond of water specially for his use; + and that, when the haying season should end, he would be turned + out to pasture in his native bog for the rest of the year. + + It was a very comical sight, and, knowing my little friend's + tenderness of heart, I was sure the turtle would receive nothing + but kindness at his hands. The shell was not pierced, but the + queer trotter was attached to the cart by means of a harness made + of tape, allowing him free movement of the head, legs, and tail. + If any of your boys should decide to follow my little friend's + example, I trust that they will be as gentle as he in the + treatment of their turtles.--Yours truly, + + E. F. L. + + * * * * * + + +ANOTHER TURTLE STORY. + + DEAR JACK: One day, Rob and I (he's my brother) heard sister + Welthy screaming awfully. We were playing in the barn, but of + course we rushed out as hard as we could to save her life, if + possible. We did not know where she was, but the screams grew + louder as we neared the house. + + At last we found her near the side-door--and what do you think was + the matter? + + Why, she was screaming at a turtle! + + [Illustration:] A CORNER IN TURTLES. + + You don't know how funny it did seem. But we captured the dreadful + monster (?) and comforted her as well as we could. + + Now, Jack, as you and the Little Schoolma'am can do everything, + wont you please get ST. NICHOLAS to show us a picture of this + scene? I do believe Sis would laugh as hard as any of us if she + could see it.--Yours affectionately, + + NED G. P. + + * * * * * + + +HALF SWEET, HALF SOUR. + + +The birds tell me that in a certain country grows an apple one half of +which is sweet and the other half sour. I don't think I should like +that sort of apple. The sweet side might do very well, as far as it +went; but if you happened to bite on the other side,--ugh! + +I like things that are good all through, so that I can be sure how to +take them. Don't you? + + * * * * * + + + + +OUR MUSIC PAGE + + +CAN A LITTLE CHILD, LIKE ME? + + A THANKSGIVING HYMN. + + Words by MARY MAPES DODGE. + Music by WM. K. BASSFORD. + +[Music: + +Key: Bb Major (Bb, Eb); Time: 2/4; Range: F - D (F, G, A, Bb, C, D) + + ['F', 'Bb', etc. indicate notes having a quarter-note value; + '.' extends a note; '__' includes the notes in a quarter-note + value; '0' indicates a rest.] + + __ +{F Bb Bb Bb |Bb A A . |A G A G |G .FF . | + __ +{F Bb Bb Bb |Bb A A . |C A F CBb|A G F . | + __ __ +{G G C Bb |Bb .AA . |Bb Bb D C |Bb .AA . | + __ +{Bb . F .F|A . G . | + __ +{C . G .G|Bb . A . | + +{Bb . D D |D . G C |Bb . A . |Bb . 0 . || ] + + + +1. Can a little child like me, + Thank the Father fittingly? + Yes, oh yes! be good and true. + Patient, kind in all you do; + Love the Lord and do your part, + Learn to say with all your heart: + Father, we thank Thee! + Father, we thank Thee! + Father in Heaven, we thank Thee! + + +2. For the fruit upon the tree, + For the birds that sing of Thee, + For the earth in beauty drest, + Father, mother and the rest, + For thy precious, loving care, + For Thy bounty ev'rywhere, + Father, we thank Thee! + Father, we thank Thee! + Father in Heaven, we thank Thee! + + + + +Music and words copyrighted, 1877, by Wm. K. Bassford + + * * * * * + + + + +"THE BABY'S OPERA" AND WALTER CRANE. + + +Of the many great artists of England, Walter Crane is accounted among +the ablest and most gifted. As a painter on the canvas he stands high +with critics; and in this country he is most widely known by his +designs of colored picture-books for children. This is what one critic +says of him in this regard: "Walter Crane has every charm. His design +is rich, original, and full of discovery. His drawing is at once manly +and sweet, and his color is as delightful as a garden of roses in +June. And with these accomplishments he comes full-handed to the +children,--and to their parents and lovers too!--and makes us all rich +with a pleasure none of us ever knew as children, and never could have +looked to know." + +After this, it is very discouraging to learn, from a letter of Mr. +Crane's to the Editor of SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY, that one may be deceived +in buying Mr. Crane's books. This is particularly the case with "The +Baby's Opera." So now we tell the readers of ST. NICHOLAS that every +true copy of "The Baby's Opera" bears on its title-page the name +of Messrs. George Routledge & Sons, the publishers, as well as Mr. +Crane's, and that of the engraver and printer, Mr. Edmund Evans. To a +purchaser, it would matter little that there were two editions of a +work as long as the unauthorized one was exactly like the original; +but Mr. Crane says that "the pirated edition grossly misrepresents +his drawings, both in style and coloring; that the arrangement of the +pages is different; and that the full-page colored plates are complete +travesties, and very coarse ones, of the originals." And it does not +at all improve the false copy that it is to be bought for less than +the true one costs. It would be bad enough merely to deprive Mr. Crane +of the profits of selling an exact imitation of his book, but it is +far worse to put a _bad_ sham before the people as the work of a true +artist. This not only lessens his gains, but also takes away from his +good name, besides spoiling the taste of the youngsters. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE LETTER-BOX. + + GIRLS AND BOYS: You will all be very sorry, we know, to learn that + the beginning of Miss Alcott's serial story, "Under the Lilacs," + has been postponed to the December number; but in place of it, we + print this month the capital short story of "Mollie's Boyhood," + which, we feel sure, will go far toward repaying you for the + disappointment. We must ask you to wait a month longer for the + opening chapters of the serial, and we mean to give you then a + much longer installment of it than could have been printed in the + present issue. + + Meanwhile, you will find that the splendid article on Christmas + Gifts, which occupies twenty-two pages of this number, contains + novelties, hints, plates, and directions enough to keep your minds + so busy planning, and your hands so busily at work, during the + next few weeks, that the December ST. NICHOLAS will come before + you think of expecting it, and perhaps before you have half + finished your pretty gifts. + + * * * * * + + DEAR LITTLE SCHOOLMA'AM: Please will you tell me if it is warm + or cold, and if it is dark or light, in the places between the + stars?--Yours affectionately, + + CONSTANCE DURIVAGE. + +The Little Schoolma'am respectfully hands over this question to other +little schoolma'ams. + + * * * * * + + DEAR ST. NICHOLAS: I make so many of the "Thistle-Puffs" spoken of + in the September number that I thought I would let you know how + I fix mine. After I get the thistles I cut off all the green + excepting a little at the bottom; then I pull out all the purple, + and leave them out in the sun till they are perfectly round white + balls. They are very pretty in hats. Please put me down as a + Bird-defender.--Your constant reader, + + ALICE GERTRUDE BENEDICT. + + * * * * * + + + Exmouth, England, August 27th. + + DEAR ST. NICHOLAS: I have read the story of the "Blue-Coat Boy," + and like it. I am in England, and almost every day see a Blue-Coat + boy pass our house. I think he looks like the picture in the ST. + NICHOLAS. I should not like to wear the long coat, because I + couldn't run in it; and I should think he would get a sunstroke, + without a hat, if he ever goes to the beach. Aunt Fanny is like my + mamma; she never asks for the right thing at the shops. I like the + ST. NICHOLAS, and wish another one would come. My aunty gave it to + me for a Christmas present for a whole year.--Your friend, + + BENEDICT CROWELL. + + * * * * * + +We are very glad to see the interest which our readers have taken in +the subject of "School-luncheons." Many boys and girls have sent in +letters, thanking us for the article in our September number, and +filled with sage bits of experience. We should like to acknowledge +these separately, and print some of them, but can do no more here than +express our thanks to our young correspondents, one and all, for their +kind and hearty words. + +It will interest them all to know, however, that the article has +attracted attention, and aroused enthusiasm among the older people +too,--their fathers and mothers, and teachers, and even their favorite +writers. For here, among the many letters it has brought us, is one +that is peculiarly welcome. Our readers will have little difficulty in +guessing who the writer is: + + August 26th. + + DEAR LITTLE SCHOOLMA'AM: Being much interested, as well as amused, + by the luncheon article in ST. NICHOLAS for September, I should + like to add one more to the list of odd luncheons. + + A pretty little dish of boiled rice, with a cake of molasses, or + preserve of some sort, in the middle. This, fitted into a basket, + and covered with a plate, goes safely, and, with the addition of a + napkin and two spoons, makes a simple meal for hungry children. + + It may find favor in the eyes, or rather mouths, of the young + readers of ST. NICHOLAS, not only because it is good, but because + it was the favorite lunch once upon a time of two little girls who + are now pretty well known as "Meg and Jo March." It may be well + to add that these young persons never had dyspepsia in their + lives,--pie and pickles, cake and candy being unknown "goodies" to + them. + + With best wishes for the success of this much-needed reform in + school-children's diet, I am, yours truly, + + L.M.A. + + * * * * * + +THE MOONS OF MARS. + +Since Professor Proctor wrote the paper entitled "Mars, the Planet of +War," published in this number, there has been made, in relation to +its subject, a discovery that the scientists say will rank among the +most brilliant achievements of astronomy. + +A great difference once thought to exist between Mars and the other +planets was that he had no moons; but during the night of the 16th of +August, Professor Hall, of the U.S. Naval Observatory at Washington, +D.C., actually saw through his telescope that Mars has a moon. On the +18th of August another was seen, smaller than the first and nearer to +the planet. The larger satellite is believed to be not more than ten +miles in diameter: it is less than 12,000 miles distant from its +primary, and its period of revolution about it is 30 hours 14 minutes. +The distance of the smaller moon is 3,300 miles, and its period 7 +hours 38 minutes. There is no doubt that these newly found celestial +bodies are the smallest known. + +From measurements made by Professor Hall, it is found, with a near +approach to certainty, that the mass of Mars is equal to 1-3,090,000th +part of the mass of the sun. This result was arrived at after only ten +minutes of calculation, and is believed to be more nearly accurate +than that obtained by M. Le Verrier, the great French astronomer, from +observations continued through a century and after several years +of laborious calculation by a corps of computers. This wonderful +difference in the expenditure of time and labor is due to the +vigilance of Professor Hall and to the admirable qualities of his +instrument, the great twenty-six inch refracting telescope made by +Alvan Clark & Sons. + + * * * * * + + Oakland, Cal. + + DEAR ST. NICHOLAS: I do not wish to make you any trouble, but I + would like it very much if you could find room in some number + to give a good explanation of the great war in Europe. I can't + understand it in the newspaper, but I am pretty sure you can make + it plain and simple enough for all of your young readers.--Yours + truly, + + NEB. + +The Turco-Russian war is partly a conflict of religions and partly one +of politics. The Turks came into Europe as the religious emissaries +of the Mohammedan religion. In all the provinces of Turkey in Europe +which they conquered, the Christians of the Greek, Armenian and +Catholic churches were the victims of a bitter persecution. The Czar +of Russia is the head of the Greek church. He has made repeated wars +in defense of the children of his faith. There have been many wars and +long sieges which, like the present, were said to be only in defense +of the faith of the Greek church--a crusade and a holy war, + +But if "Neb" will only look at the map of Russia, he will see, if he +will study climate a little, that the vast empire of Russia has one +thing lacking. It has no good outlet to the Atlantic Ocean, no power +upon the seas. The Baltic Sea is closed half the year by ice. The +great wheat trade of Russia concentrates at Odessa, on the Black Sea, +and to get her grain to market she must pass through the Turkish lanes +of the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles. Russia is a prisoner as to +access to the Mediterranean, and so to the Atlantic, and so to the +world at large. If she is at war, she cannot float her fleets. If +she is at peace, she cannot sell her grain without going roundabout +through her neighbors' lots. Turkey stands the tollman at the +turnpike-gate, controlling and usurping the highway of all nations. + +Maps are fascinating reading. "Neb" must not think that religious +faith ever occasioned a war. Russia sincerely desires the protection +of Greek Christians in Roumania and Bulgaria in Europe, and Armenia in +Asia, but she wants also to send her ships free to the winds through +from the Black Sea to the Mediterranean. Look at the map once more, +"Neb," and see how much of a great country, fertile, strong, and +industrious, is closed and shut against the outer world by the +absolute Turkish control of the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles. + + + * * * * * + + Indianapolis, 1877. + + DEAR ST. NICHOLAS: I have taken every number of your splendid + magazine, and I will now try to do my share to entertain the + others. + + My papa was a soldier in the great civil war, and I was born in + camp just after the close of the war, and am now nearly twelve + years old. + + General Sherman, who made the great "march to the sea," wrote me a + letter, which is very much too good for one boy alone, so I send + it to you to publish, so that other children may have the benefit + of it too.--Your reader, + + BERNIE M. + + "Head-quarters Army of the United States, + "Washington, D.C., April 21, 1877. + + "MASTER BERNIE M. + "Indianapolis: + + "I have received the handsome photograph sent me, and recognize + the features of a fine young lad, who has before him every + opportunity to grow up a man of fine physique, with a mind + cultivated to meet whatever vicissitudes and opportunities the + future may present. Many boys in reading history have a feeling + of regret that their lives had not fallen in some former period, + replete with events of stirring interest, such as our + Revolutionary War, or that in Mexico, or even the Civil War, + wherein they feel that they might have played a conspicuous part. + + "Don't you make this mistake. The next hundred years will present + more opportunities for distinction than the past, for our country + now contains only forty millions of people, which will probably + double every thirty-three years, so that if you live to three + score years and ten you will be a citizen of a republic of two + hundred millions of people. Now, all changes are attended by + conflict of mind or of arms, and you may rest easy that there will + be plenty for you to do, and plenty of honor and fame if you want + them. The true rule of life is to prepare in advance, so as to be + ready for the opportunity when it presents itself. + + "I surely hope you will grow in strength and knowledge, and do a + full man's share in building up the future of this country, which + your fathers have prepared for you. + + "Truly your friend, + "W.T. SHERMAN, General." + + * * * * * + +No doubt many of our readers have read some of the poems of Charles +and Mary Lamb, and all who have will be interested in the following +news concerning one of their books. In 1809 they published a little +volume of "Poetry for Children," but only a few copies were printed, +and these were soon out of print, so that the book has long been +considered lost to the world. It was recently discovered, however, +that the little book had been reprinted in Boston in 1812, and the +only two copies of this edition known to exist in this country have +lately come into possession of Messrs. Scribner, Armstrong & Co., +who intend to republish the volume this fall. The book contains many +delightful little poems for boys and girls, prettily rhymed, and full +of the quaint humor and conceits which mark the other writings of the +authors. We should like to print several of them, but have only room +for these: + + +THE YOUNG LETTER-WRITER. + +_Dear Sir_, _Dear Madam_, or _Dear Friend_, + With ease are written at the top; + When these two happy words are penn'd, + A youthful writer oft will stop, + + And bite his pen, and lift his eyes, + As if he thinks to find in air + The wish'd-for following words, or tries + To fix his thoughts by fixed stare. + + But haply all in vain--the next + Two words may be so long before + They'll come, the writer, sore perplext, + Gives in despair the matter o'er; + + And when maturer age he sees + With ready pen so swift inditing, + With envy he beholds the ease + Of long-accustom'd letter-writing. + + Courage, young friend, the time may be, + When you attain maturer age, + Some young as you are now may see + You with like ease glide down a page. + + Ev'n then, when you, to years a debtor, + In varied phrase your meanings wrap, + The welcom'st words in all your letter + May be those two kind words at top. + + +CRUMBS TO THE BIRDS. + + A bird appears a thoughtless thing, + He's ever living on the wing, + And keeps up such a carolling, + That little else to do but sing + A man would guess had he. + + No doubt he has his little cares, + And very hard he often fares; + The which so patiently he bears, + That, listening to those cheerful airs, + Who knows but he may be + + In want of his next meal of seeds? + I think for _that_ his sweet song pleads; + If so, his pretty art succeeds. + I'll scatter there among the weeds + All the small crumbs I see. + + * * * * * + +We very seldom take up a book only to break the tenth commandment; +but Bayard Taylor's recent volume, "The Boys of Other Countries," +published by the Putnams, always has that effect upon us, for we wish +that every one of the stories in it had been written for ST. NICHOLAS. +The best thing we can say to our boys and girls, of a book so well +described by its title, is that it contains "Jon of Iceland," which +originally appeared in this magazine, and that each of the stories is +as good in its way as "Jon" itself. + + * * * * * + + + + +THE RIDDLE-BOX. + + +DOUBLE ACROSTIC. + +The initials name a noted philosopher, and the finals an eminent +astronomer. + +1. A narrow arm of the sea. 2. A beautiful flower. 3. A tree, usually +growing in moist land. 4. A small marine animal. 5. A river in the +United States. 6. A cone-bearing tree. 7. A tract of land, surrounded +by water. 8. A metal. + +ISOLA. + + +BROKEN WORDS. + +Find a word to fill the single blank, and divide it into smaller words +(without transposing any letters) to fill the other blanks. Thus: Such +_forages_ have gone on in that forest _for ages_. + +1. You must not think the whole were ---- because he ---- ----. +2. One of this boy's minor ---- is his constant climbing ---- ----. +3. When I gave him a pledge, the toper said with a ---- look, "You +---- ---- ---- ----." 6. The alder was pictured against the ----, +every branch, leaf, and ---- ---- standing out clearly. + +B. + + +PICTORIAL NUMERICAL, REBUS. + +Find the sum expressed in each horizontal row, and add together the +four numbers thus found, to form the complete sum expressed by the +rebus. + +[Illustration] + + +HOUR-GLASS PUZZLE. + +1. Unceasing. 2. Of little worth. 3. Habitation. 4. Ancient. 5. A +vowel. 6. Devoured. 7. To muse. 8. A maker of arms. 9. Small flat +fish. The centrals read downward name the act of unfolding. + +GEORGE CHINN. + + +BEHEADINGS AND CURTAILINGS. + +1. Curtail a disgrace, and leave an imposture. Behead, and leave one +of Noah's sons. Curtail, and leave an exclamation denoting surprise, +joy, or grief. Behead again, and leave a vowel. + +2. Curtail a color, and leave a very small part. Behead, and leave +a verb signifying "to strike." Behead again, and leave a pronoun. +Curtail, and leave a simple, personal pronoun. + +3. Curtail a beautiful marine production, and leave a girl's name. +Behead, and leave an ancient coin. Curtail, and leave a conjunction. +Behead, and leave a consonant. + +4. Behead a part of the body, and leave a kind of tree. Curtail, and +leave an article used in toilets. Behead, and leave a preposition. +Curtail, and leave a pronoun. + +5. Curtail a sweet juice collected by bees, and leave a stone for +sharpening razors. Behead, and leave a number. Curtail, and leave a +preposition. Curtail, and leave an invocation. + +N.T.M. + + +NUMERICAL ENIGMA. + +After handing a mug of 9, 2, 3 to the man who was at the 7, 4, 5 of +the 1, 6, 8, Frank resumed reading the life of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, +9. + +ISOLA. + + +EASY DIAMOND PUZZLE. + +1. In dwelling but not in house. 2. A Spanish poem. 3. A girl's name. +4. A precious stone. 5. A term in English law. 6. An insect. 7. In +bird but not in beast. + +O'B. + + +CHARADE. + + I. + + Out on the hill-side, bleak and bare, + In winter's chill and summer's glare, + Down by the ocean's rugged shore, + Where the restless billows toss and roar, + Deep in gloomy caves and mines, + Where mists are foul and the sun ne'er shines, + Man studies my first and second well, + To learn what story they have to tell. + + II. + + Go to the depths of the fathomless sea, + Go where the dew-drop shines on the lea, + Go where are gathered in lands afar, + The treasures of earth for the rich bazaar, + Go to the crowded ball-room, where + All that is lovely, and young, and fair, + Charms the soul with beauty and grace, + And my third shall meet you face to face. + + III. + + When war's red hand was raised to slay, + And front to front great armies lay, + Then, oft in the silent midnight camp, + When naught was heard but the sentry's tramp, + As he patiently paced his lonely round, + My whole was sought, and yet when found, + It sent full many a warrior brave + To his last long rest, in a soldier's grave. + +E.J.A. + + +PUZZLE BOUQUET. + +1. A cunning animal and a covering for the hand. 2. A voracious bird +of prey and a useless plant. 3. A pipe and a flower. 4. A sweetmeat +and a bunch of hair. 5. A noun meaning a quick breaking and a winged +serpent. 6. A stone fence and the blossom of a plant. 7. Fragrant and +a vegetable. 8. An entertainment of dancing and a boy's nickname. +9. Vapor frozen in flakes, and to let fall. 10. To enter into the +conjugal state, and a precious metal. + +GEORGE CHINN. + + +TRANSPOSITIONS. + +Fill the first blank with a certain word, and then, by transposing +the final letter to the place of the initial, form a word to fill the +second blank. Example: In the _halls_ of her ancestors she _shall_ +tread without fear. + +1. There is not on ---- a person of larger ----. 2. On the banks of +the ---- the traveler ---- alone. 3. As the thought of her kindness +---- up in my heart, it causes it to ---- with gratitude. 4. It was +with no ---- intent that ---- destroyed his first will. 5. I noticed +on the ---- of the pond quantities of ----. + +B. + + +LETTER ANAGRAMS. + +Write a line in each case describing the position of the letters +toward each other, and transpose the letters used in this description +to make a word which will answer the definition given. Thus: + + R. } A part of the day. _Ans_. R. on M. (transposed) Morn. + M. } + + 1. { L. } A kind of bird. + { P. } + 2. S. R. Parts of a house. + 3. S. T. A piece of furniture. + 4. { L. } To pillage. + { P. } + 5. { Et. } Not rhythmical. + { Ic. } + +H.H.D. + + +HIDDEN DRESS GOODS. + +1. Seizing the rascal I compelled him to give up the money. 2. Aunt +Nell is fond of singing Hamburg. 3. Belle Prescott only failed once +last year. 4. Eveline never learned to control herself. 5. Where is +Towser, Gertie? 6. I met Homer in Oregon. 7. Where did you find such a +queer fossil, Kenneth? 8. Tom Thumb is a tiny specimen of humanity. 9. +Did Erasmus Lincoln lose all his property by the fire? + + + + +PICTORIAL, PROVERB-ACROSTIC. + +Arrange the words represented by the numbered pictures in their order. +The initials and finals (reading down the former and continuing +down the latter) form a familiar proverb, the sentiment of which is +suggested by the central picture. + +[Illustration] + + * * * * * + + + + +ANSWERS TO PUZZLES IN OCTOBER NUMBER. + + DOUBLE DIAMOND PUZZLE.--M + G A S + M A P L E + S L Y + E + S + N U T + S U G A R + T A R + R + +SQUARE-WORD.--Midas, Ivory, Donor, Arose, Syten. +CHARADE.--Dilapidated. NUMERICAL ENIGMA.--Handsome. +DOUBLE ACROSTIC--Centennial Exposition.--ClovE, EsseX, +NaP, TallyhO, EpiglottiS, NerolI, NahanT, IttaI, ArnO, +LemoN. + +RIDDLE.--Linest, Inlets, Enlist, Tinsel, Silent, Listen. + +DIAGONAL PUZZLE.--Grand, Prate. + + G L A R E + C R A T E + P L A T E + C R A N E + P L A I D + +COMBINATION PUZZLE.--P--rive--T + E--pod--E + A--lid--A + C--ape--S + E--lop--E + +EASY DIAMOND PUZZLE.--I, Asa, Isola, Ale, A. + +PUZZLE.--Gondola. + +ANSWERS TO PUZZLES IN SEPTEMBER NUMBER were received previous to +September 18, from--Emma Elliott, Brainerd P. Emery, Allie Bertram, +Sarah D. Oakley, "Camille and Leonie," "Tip," "Yankee," J.W. Myers, +George G. Champlin, Alice M. Mason, Maria Peckham, Florence E. Hyde, +Minnie Warner, B. O'Hara, "Green Mountain Boy," John Hinkley, Florence +Wilcox, "Bessie and Sue," Julia Kirene Ladd, Grace Austin Smith, +Arthur C. Smith, George Herbert White, William A. Crocker, Jr, +Georgiana Mead, A.G.D., James Iredell, Lizzie and Anna, Agnes E. +Kennedy, Anna E. Mathewson, C.S. Riche, Edith McKeever, Nessie E. +Stevens, Carrie Lawson, Charles G. Todd, Ella and Kittie Blanke, W. +Creighton Spencer, W. Irving Spencer, Edith Heard, M.W.C., Mary +C. Warren, Lena and Annie, Annie Streckewald, Hattie Peck, Jennie +Passmore, George J. Fiske. + + * * * * * + + + + + + + +CONTENTS VOLUME V. + +[Transcriber's note: +Some entries were missing from this index. For completeness they have +been added and marked with an asterisk. +Some parts of the Table of Contents were illegible, and a few missing +page numbers have been replaced with '?'s.] + + ALCOTT, Miss. (Illustrated from photograph) _F. B. S._ 129 + ALPHABET FRANCAIS, Un. (Illustrated) _Laura Caxton_ 816 + ALWAYS BEHINDHAND. Talk with Girls _M. D. K._ 434 + ANNIE AND THE BALLS. (Illustrated by the Author) _H. E. H._ 205 + APRIL'S SUNBEAM. Verses _Joy Allison_ 398 + ARMS OF GREAT BRITAIN, The. (Illustrated by Alfred Kappes) + _Susan Archer Weiss_ 190 + ATLANTIC CABLE, Secrets of the. (Illustrated by A.C. Warren) + _William H. Rideing_ 327 + AX OF RANIER, The. (Illustrated by E.B. Bensell) + _Thomas Dunn English_ 709 + "BABY'S OPERA" AND WALTER CRANE, The. 69 + BARBECUE, The. (Illustrated by Walter Shirlaw) + _Sarah Winter Kellogg_ 602 + BELINDA BLONDE. Verses. _Laura E. Richards_ 272 + BELL-RINGERS, The Stickleback. (Illustrated by James C. Beard) + _C.F. Holder_ 31 + BIRDS AND THEIR FAMILIES. (Illustrated) _Professor W. K. Brooks_ + 606 + BIRDS FLY, How. (Illustrated) _Professor W. K. Brooks_ 734 + BOGGS'S PHOTOGRAPH. Picture. 21 + BORN IN PRISON. (Illustrated by Edwin L. Sheppard) + _Julia P. Ballard_ 730 + BOY IN THE Box, The. (Illustrated by C. S. Reinhart) + _Helen C. Barnard_ 356 + BOY'S EXPERIENCE WITH TAR MARBLES, A. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis) + _C.S.N._ 617 + BOY WHO JUMPED ON TRAINS, The. Poem. (Illustrated by L. Hopkins) + _Mary Hartwell_ 132 + BRUNO'S REVENGE (Illustrated) _{Author of "Alice in Wonderland"_ + 18? + BUTTERFLY-CHASE, The. Poem. _Ellis Gray_ 548 + BUTTS, A Chapter of Five Pictures. 77 + BY THE SAD SEA WAVES. Picture drawn by "_Sphinx_" 716 + CAN A LITTLE CHILD LIKE ME? (Thanksgiving Hymn) _Mary Mapes Dodge_ + 68 + CANARY THAT TALKED TOO MUCH, The. _Margaret Eytinge_ 331 + CARLYLE, Thomas. (Crumbs from Older Reading, III.) _Julia E. Sargent_ + 565 + CAROL, The Minstrel's. A Christmas Colloquy. _I. V. Blake_ 153 + CHARADES, Four. Verses. _C.P. Cranch_ 406 + CHARCOAL-BURNERS' FIRE, The. (Illustrated by J. L. Dickinson) + _David Ker_ 490 + CHASED BY WOLVES. _George Dudley Lawson_ 3 + CHILD-QUEEN, A. (Illustrated by Alfred Fredericks) + _Cecilia Cleveland_ 1 + CHRISTMAS CARD. 91 + CHRISTMAS-GIFTS, A Budget of Home-Made. (Illustrated) 42 + CHURNING. Poem. (Illustrated by J. E. Kelly) _Sara Keables Hunt_ + 676 + COCK AND THE SUN, The. Jingle. (Illustrated by F. S. Church) + _J. P. B_ 359 + COMMON-SENSE IN THE HOUSEHOLD. Verses. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis) + _Margaret Vandegrift_ 326 + COOLEST MAN IN RUSSIA, The. (Illustrated by J. E. Kelly) _David Ker_ + 229 + CRICKET ON THE HEARTH, The. Poem. (Illustrated) _Clara Doty Bates_ + 33 + CRIP'S GARRET-DAY. _Sarah J. Prichard_ 339 + CROW THAT THE CROW CROWED, The. _S. Conant Foster_ 694 + CRUMBS FROM OLDER READING _Julia E. Sargent_ + I. EMERSON 262 + II. IRVING 354 + III. CARLYLE 565 + DAB KINZER: A Story of a Growing Boy. (Illustrated by H. F. Farney, + Geo. Inness, Jr., Sol. Eytinge and H. P. Smith) + _William O. Stoddard_ 553, 620, 679, 744, 798 + DEBBY'S CHRISTMAS. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis) _Ella A. Drinkwater_ + 223 + DICK HARDIN AWAY AT SCHOOL. _Lucy J. Rider_ 386 + DIGGER-WASPS AT HOME, The. (Illustrated by R. Riordan) _E. A. E._ + 667 + DOG-SHOW, A Visit to a London. (Illustrated by J. F. Runge) + _Laura Sked Pomeroy_ 420 + *DOMESTIC TRAGEDY, A. In Two Parts. Illustration. 31 + DRIFTED INTO PORT. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge and Thomas Moran). + _Edwin Hodder_ 342, 425, 494 + EASTER EGGS. Poem. _Clara W. Raymond_ 419 + EASTER IN GERMANY. (Illustrated) _F.E. Corne_ 381 + EASTER LILIES. Picture 399 + EMERGENCY MISTRESS, The. (Illustrated) _Frank R. Stockton_ 669 + EMERSON, RALPH WALDO. (Crumbs from Older Reading, I.) + _Julia E. Sargent_ 262 + EXCITING RIDE An. Picture drawn by _Miss S. A. Rankin_ 652 + FAIR EXCHANGE, A. Poem. _M. F. Butts_ 820 + FATHER CHIRP. Verses. (Illustrated by L. Hopkins) _S. C. Stone_ 476 + FERN-SEED. Poem. _Celia Thaxter_ 705 + FISHING-BIRDS OF FLORIDA, Some. (Illustrated) _Mrs. Mary Treat_ 282 + FORTY, Less One. Poem. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _James Richardson_ 579 + "FOUR LITTLE HOUSES BLUE AND ROUND." Jingle _M. F. B._ 465 + FOX, THE MONKEY, AND THE PIG, The. (Illustrated by the Author) + _Howard Pyle_ 743 + FOX AND THE TURKEYS, The. (Illustrated from Gustave Dore) + _Susan Coolidge_ 756 + FULL STOP, A. Silhouette picture drawn by _L. Hopkins_ 387 + GERTY. (Illustrated by Frederick Dielman) _Margaret W. Hamilton_ + 690 + GET UP! GOT DOWN! Silhouettes drawn by _L. Hopkins_ 461 + GIFTS FOR ST. NICHOLAS. Poem. _Emma E. Brewster_ 294 + GIRL WHO SAVED THE GENERAL, The. (Illustrated by H. F. Farney) + _Charles H. Woodman_ 577 + GUEST, An Agreeable _Susan A. Brown_ 180 + HANSA, The Little Lapp Maiden. (Illustrated) _Kate B. Horton_ 305 + HAPPY FIELDS OF SUMMER. Poem. (Illustrated) _Lucy Larcom_ 666 + "HAPPY LITTLE FROGGY." Poem. (Illustrated by F. S. Church) + _E. Mueller_ 789 + HORSE AT SEA, A. (Illustrated by J.E. Kelly) _C. B._ 367 + HORSES OF VENICE, The Famous. (Illustrated) _Mary Lloyd_ 89 + HOW BIRDS FLY. (Illustrated) _Professor W.K. Brooks_ 734 + HOW HE CAUGHT HIM. Six Pictures. 740 + HOW I WEIGHED THE THANKSGIVING TURKEY. _G. M. Shaw_ 34 + HOW KITTY GOT HER NEW HAT. (Illustrated by J. E. Kelly) _E. P. W._ 182 + HOW KITTY WAS LOST IN A TURKISH BAZAAR. (Illustrated by Howard Pyle) + _Sara Keables Hunt_ 377 + HOW LILY-TOES WAS CAUGHT IN A SHOWER. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis) + _Emily H. Leland_ 731 + HOW MANDY WENT ROWING WITH THE CAP'N. (Illustrated by the Author) + _Mary Hallock Foote_ 449 + HOW MATCHES ARE MADE. (Illustrated by A.C. Warren) _F. H. C_ 315 + HOW SIR WILLIAM PHIPS FOUND THE TREASURE IN THE SEA. (Illustrated + by J. O. Davidson) _S. G. W. Benjamin_ 278 + HOW TEDDY CUT THE PIE. Verses. (Illustrated) _Rossiter Johnson_ 821 + HOW THE PONY WAS TAKEN. (Illustrated) _C. W._ 174 + HOW THE STONE-AGE CHILDREN PLAYED. (Illustrated) + _Charles C. Abbott_ 413 + HOW THE WEATHER IS FORETOLD. (Illustrated by W.H. Gibson) + _James H. Flint_ 581 + HOW TO KEEP A JOURNAL _W. S. Jerome_ 789 + HOW TO MAKE A TELEPHONE. (Illustrated) _M. F._ 549 + HOW TO TRAVEL _Susan Anna Brown_ 650 + HOW WILLY WOLLY WENT A-FISHING. Verses. (Illustrated by Howard Pyle) + _S.C. Stone_ 562 + HUCKLEBERRY. (Illustrated) _Frank R. Stockton_ 274 + ICE-BOAT, How to make an. (Diagrams by the Author) + _J. H. Hubbard_ 220 + "I'M A LITTLE STORY." Poem. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _Margaret Eytinge_ 380 + IRVING, WASHINGTON. (Crumbs from Older Reading, III.) + _Julia E. Sargent_ 354 + ITALIAN FLOWER-MERCHANT, The Little. Picture drawn by + _Miss E. M. S. Scannell_ 475 + JACK'S CHRISTMAS. (Illustrated by Jennie Brownscombe) + _Emma K. Parrish_ 124 + JAPANESE "HOUSE THAT JACK BUILT," The. Picture drawn by + _William McDougal_ 219 + JINGLES. 6, 41, 359, 404, 412, 465 + JOHN AND HIS VELOCIPEDE. Sketches drawn by _B. D._ 650 + JOHNNY. (Illustrated by R. Sayre) _Sargent Flint_ 361 + JOHNNY'S LOST BALL _Lloyd Wyman_ 500 + JUNO'S WONDERFUL TROUBLES. (Illustrated by F. S. Church) _E. Mueller_ + 312 + KEPT IN. Picture drawn by _M. Woolf_ 424 + KING AND THE HARD BREAD, The. (Illustrated) _J. L._ 503 + KING AND THE THREE TRAVELERS, The. (Illustrated by John Lafarge) + _Arlo Bates_ 207 + KING CHEESE. Poem. Versified from story by Maud Christiani. + (Illustrated by L. Hopkins) _J. T. Trowbridge_ 641 + LADY-BIRD, Fly away Home. Picture drawn by _M. Woolf_ 455 + *LARGEST VOLCANO IN THE WORLD, The. (Illustrated.) _Sarah Coan_ 13 + LEFT OUT. Verse. _A. G. W._ 128 + LETTER TO AMERICAN BOYS, A. _George MacDonald_ 202 + LINNET'S FEE, The. Poem. _Mrs. Annie A. Preston_ 798 + LION-KILLER, The. (Illustrated by Alfred Kappes). From the French. + _Mary Wager Fisher_ 78 + LITTLE BEAR. Poem. (Illustrated by Addie Ledyard) + _Samuel W. Duffield_ 726 + "LITTLE BO-PEEP, SHE WENT TO SLEEP." Picture drawn by + _Miss Jessie McDermot_ 268 + LITTLE RED CANAL-BOAT, The. (Illustrated) _M. A. Edwards_ 541 + *LITTLE TWEET. Illustrated. 64 + LIVING SILVER _Mary H. Seymour_ 350 + LONDON CHAIR-MENDER. (Illustrated) _Alexander Wainwright_ 821 + LONDON CHICK-WEED MAN, The. (Illustrated) _Alexander Wainwright_ 361 + LONDON DUST-MAN, The. (Illustrated) _Alexander Wainwright_ 272 + LONDON MILK-WOMAN, The. (Illustrated) _Alexander Wainwright_ 694 + LONG JOURNEY, A. Verses. _Josephine Pollard_ 540 + LORD MAYOR OF LONDON'S SHOW, The. (Illustrated) _Jennie A. Owen_ 22 + MACKEREL-FISHING. (Illustrated by H. P. Smith) _Robert Arnold_ 706 + MAGICIAN AND HIS BEE, The. (Illustrated) _P. F._ 143 + MAKING IT SKIP. Verse. (Illustrated by Thomas Moran) _M. M. D._ 15 + MAKING READY FOR A CRUISE. Picture. 561 + MAN WHO DIDN'T KNOW WHEN TO STOP, The. Verse. _M. M. D._ 415 + MARBLES, Some In-door Games of. (Illustrated) _L. D. Snook_ 295 + MARS, THE PLANET OF WAR. (Illustrated by the Author) + _Richard A. Proctor_ 26 + MARSHAL DE SAXE AND THE DUTCH BLACKSMITH. _David Ker_ 436 + MASTER MONTEZUMA. (Illustrated) _C. C. Haskins_ 535 + MATCHES ARE MADE, How. (Illustrated by A. C. Warren) _F. H. C._ 315 + MAY-DAY, The Story of. (Illustrated by Howard Pyle) _Olive Thorne_ + 486 + MEADOW TALK. Verse. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis) + _Caroline Leslie_ 617 + MERRY MIKE. Poem. (Illustrated by Albert Shults) _Fleta Forrester_ + 176 + MERRY RAIN. Poem. _Fleta Forrester_ 425 + MOCKING-BIRD AND THE DONKEY, The. Poem. _William Cullen Bryant_ 88 + MODERN WILLIAM TELL, A. Picture drawn by _L. Hopkins_ 207 + MOLLIE'S BOYHOOD. (Illustrated by George White) _Sarah E. Chester_ 7 + MONEY is MADE, Where. (Illustrated by Fred. B. Schell) _M. W._ 477 + MONUMENT WITH A STORY, A. _Fannie Roper Feudge_ 364 + MOON, FROM A FROG'S POINT OF VIEW, The. (Illustrated by H.L. Stephens) + _Fleta Forrester_ 677 + *MOONS OF MARS, The. 69 + MOUSIE'S ADVENTURES FROM GARRET TO CELLAR. Picture drawn by + "_Sphinx_" 405 + MUSIC ON ALL FOURS. Poem. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _Josephine Pollard_ 200 + MUSTANG, The Wild. (Illustrated) _Charles Barnard_ 396 + MY GIRL. Poem. _John S. Adams_ 25 + MY ST. GEORGE. (Illustrated by Alfred Kappes) _Alice Maude Eddy_ 726 + NANCY CHIME. Poem. (Illustrated) _S. Smith_ 739 + NAN'S PEACE-OFFERING. (Illustrated by C. S. Reinhart) + _Kate W. Hamilton_ 284 + NEWS-CARRIER, The. Poem. (Illustrated by Jessie Curtis) + _Catharine S. Boyd_ 349 + NEW-YEAR CARD. 182 + NIGHT WITH A BEAR, A. (Illustrated by W. L. Sheppard) + _Jane G. Austin_ 332 + NIMBLE JIM AND THE MAGIC MELON. (Illustrated by E. B. Bensell) + _J.A. Judson_ 34 + NO SCHOOL TO-DAY. Picture. Drawn by F. Opper 146 + NOW, OR THEN? Talk with Girls. _Gail Hamilton_ 123 + "OH, I'M MY MAMMA'S LADY-GIRL." Verse. (Illustrated by Addie Ledyard) + _M. M. D._ 41 + OLD MAN AND THE NERVOUS COW, The. (Illustrated by E.B. Bensell) + _R. E._ 264 + OLD NICOLAI. (Illustrated) _Paul Fort_ 399 + OLD SOUP. (Illustrated by J. E. Kelly) _Mrs. E. W. Latimer_ 463 + "ONE DAY AN ANT WENT TO VISIT HIS NEIGHBOR." Jingle. _M. F. B._ 404 + ONE SATURDAY. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) _Sarah Winter Kellogg_ + 514 + ONLY A DOLL. Poem. _Sarah O. Jewell_ 552 + ON THE ICE. Picture drawn by _L. Hopkins_ 300 + "OPEN THE SNOWY LITTLE BED." Jingle. _M. F. B._ 412 + OUT FISHING. Picture drawn by _J. Hopkins_ 759 + PAINTER'S SCARE-CROW, The. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _C.P. Cranch_ 714 + PARISIAN CHILDREN. (Illustrated by K. Brown) _Henry Bacon_ 456 + PARLOR BALL. (Illustrated by the author) _L. Hopkins_ 492 + PARLOR MAGIC. (Illustrated) _Professor Leo H. Grindon_ 811 + PERSEUS, The Story of. _Mary A. Robinson_ 630 + PETERKINS ARE OBLIGED TO MOVE, The. _Lucretia P. Hale_ 458 + PETERKINS' CHARADES, The. _Lucretia P. Hale_ 91 + PETER PIPER'S PICKLES, Mrs. (Illustrated by F. S. Church) + _E. Mueller_ 519 + POEMS BY TWO LITTLE AMERICAN GIRLS. _Elaine and Dora Goodale_ 109 + POLLY: A Before-Christmas Story. (Illustrated) _Hope Ledyard_ 19 + PORPOISES, About the. (Illustrated by J. O. Davidson) _J. D._ 142 + POTTERY, A Chat about. (Illustrated from photographs) + _Edwin C. Taylor_ 104 + PRIMKINS' SURPRISE, Mrs. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _Olive Thorne_ 794 + PRINCE CUCURBITA. (Illustrated by E. M. Richards) + _Edith A. Edwards_ 792 + PROFESSOR, The. _Clarence Cook_ 402 + PUCK PARKER. (Illustrated by J. Wells Champney) + _Lizzie W. Champney_ 416 + QUICKSILVER. _Mary H. Seymour_ 359 + RAID OF THE CAMANCHES, The. _The Author of "We Boys"_ 267 + RAIN. Poem. _Edgar Fawcett_ 613 + RAVENS AND THE ANGELS, The. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _Author of "The Schonberg-Cotta Family"_ 169, 242 + RIDDLE, A Double. Verses. _J.G. Holland_ 94 + RODS FOR FIVE. (Illustrated) _Sarah Winter Kellogg_ 645 + ROWING AGAINST TIDE. _Theodore Winthrop_ 75 + SAM'S BIRTHDAY. (Ilustrated by Sol. Eytinge) _Irwin Russell_ 482 + SATURDAY AFTERNOON. Picture drawn by _Miss S. W. Smith_ 725 + SCRUBBY'S BEAUTIFUL TREE. (Illustrated by F. A. Chapman and Sol. + Eytinge) _J. C. Purdy_ 147 + SEEING HIMSELF AS OTHERS SEE HIM. Picture drawn by + _J. Wells Champney_ 431 + SHEPHERD-BOY, The. Poem. _Emily S. Oakey_ 241 + SILLY GOOSE, The. Poem. (Illustrated by F. S. Church) + _E.A. Smuller_ 453 + SIMPLE SIMON. Picture, drawn by _E.B. Bensell_ 791 + SING-A-SING. Poem. (Illustrated by Alfred Kappes) _S. C. Stone_ 122 + SING-AWAY BIRD, The. Poem. _Lucy Larcom_ 462 + SINGING PINS. (Illustrated by A. C. Warren) _Harlan H. Ballard_ 14? + SKATING. Poem. _Theodore Winthrop_ 23? + SNEEZE DODSON'S FIRST INDEPENDENCE DAY. (Illustrated by Sol. Eytinge) + _Mrs. M. H. W. Jaquith_ 61? + SOLIMIN: A Ship of the Desert. (Illustrated) _Susan Coolidge_ 26? + SONG OF SPRING, A. _Caroline A. Mason_ 48? + SOMETHING IN THE OLD CLOTHES LINE. (Illustrated) _Paul Fort_ 21? + *STORY THAT WOULDN'T BE TOLD, The. (Illustrated.) _Louise Stockton_ 18 + *WILLOW WAND, The. Poem. Illustrated. _A. E. W._ 16 + + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and +Girls, Vol. 5, Nov 1877-Nov 1878, by Various + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ST. 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