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Happy Days for Boys and Girls
The widow turned from her work to look.
“Why, so it is,” she exclaimed. “Who painted it, Robbie? Where did you get it from?”
“Robbie did it himself,” cried Thomas, unable to keep the secret any longer.
“Robbie did it?” echoed the widow, with a look of bewilderment. “You painted it, Robbie?”
“Yes, mother,” laughed Robbie, enjoying her perplexity; “I did it all myself. I have been learning unknown to you. If I can learn to paint as well as Mr. Page, mother, eh! Sha’n’t I be able to help you then, mother?”
She smiled and kissed him. His cleverness was pleasing to her, but his loving ambition to be of service to her was still more grateful to her mother’s heart.
The famous Benjamin West said his mother’s kiss made him a painter. Robbie Barnes might have said the same thing, for from that moment he was more than ever determined to persevere. A few weeks after this, Robbie and Thomas were out in the woods together. It was a holiday with them both, and Robbie had determined to spend the time in sketching a certain landscape he had in view. They had brought their dinner with them; and while Robbie was drawing, Thomas laid out the provisions. Having got it all ready, he went off to the brook to fetch a mug of water, and as he returned called to Robbie to come to dinner. But what was his annoyance, as he came near, to see the mischievous dog munching the last piece of cheese? In sudden passion he caught up a stick and gave chase to Pink, who scampered off with the cheese in his mouth. Robbie was so amused at the comical scene that he thought he would attempt a painting of it, and this idea set Thomas laughing as heartily as himself. It was weeks before he had finished the sketch; but when it was completed, it made a striking picture for a boy of his age.
Years passed, and Robbie worked faithfully at his painting, and made such progress that Mr. Moring urged him to go with him on a visit to the neighboring city, where he could see some gentlemen who might be able to assist him in his desire of becoming a painter. Robbie was unwilling to leave his mother, but she was resolved he should not lose the opportunity for her; and shortly afterward Robbie, with Thomas and Mr. Moring, was on his way to the great city, which he had never seen before. Arrived there, Mr. Moring took him to an exhibition of pictures, and there introduced him again to his old friend Mr. Page. The artist, to whom Mr. Moring had already showed the painting of the dog running off with the dinner, was exceedingly surprised that a boy so entirely self-taught should have made such progress, and was pleased indeed to see him again. His judgment of the merits of Robbie’s work was such that Mr. Moring undertook to have the boy instructed by one of the best teachers of drawing, and so put him in a fair way of attaining that upon which his heart was set – the becoming a painter like Mr. Page. Robbie’s mother, though sad to part with him, gratefully consented to his leaving his home for a time for this purpose; and though Robbie was much troubled to think what his mother would do without the little help he had been able to render her, he was persuaded that the best way to serve her was to improve himself. He had not been long away before a message came to his mother telling her that he could earn enough by the sale of his little drawings to pay one of the village-lads to fetch wood and water, and to do other little things for her; that he was improving very fast, and that he had good reason to hope that he should one day be able to earn enough to keep them all in comfort.
Little Maria was busy braiding straw when this message came.
“I shall not want Robbie to work for me, mother,” she said. “I shall soon be able to earn my own living, and I will help to support our dear mother when she grows old.”
“God bless you, my child!” said the happy mother. “With such dutiful children as you and your dear brother, no mother need fear to grow old.”
YOU’RE starting to-day on life’s journey,Along on the highway of life;You’ll meet with a thousand temptations;Each city with evil is rife.This world is a stage of excitement;There’s danger wherever you go;But if you are tempted in weakness,Have courage, my boy, to say NO!THE RUSTIC MIRROR
SADIE’S boudoir is a meadow,Carpeted with blue-eyed grass;Slender birches, rounded maples,Frame her inlaid looking-glass.Curtains woven up in cloud-landTrail their fringes over all,Shifting shadows gray and purple,Which aerial elves let fall.Hither Sadie, morn and evening,Comes for water from the spring,Pausing ere she fills her pitcherWhere the greenest mosses cling, —Pausing where, as in a mirror,She a wistful face beholds;Magic mirror, for within itMany a vision fair unfolds.When the April clouds are drivenOver depths of azure skies,Windows open into heaven,And she sees her mother’s eyes.When she binds upon her foreheadWreath of daisies twined with wheat,She is queen, and wears a jewelledCrown, with slippers on her feet.When the glories of October,Crimson maple, golden birch,Make her mirror finer, richer,Than stained windows of a church, —She of golden-rod and asterWeaves a garland for her hair,Leans above the magic mirror,Murmuring, “Mother called me fair.”But ’tis best when clouds are flyingO’er the clear blue April skies,And through dreamy depths she gazesInto heaven and mother’s eyes.M. R. W.LITTLE RED RIDING-HOOD
COME back, come back together,All ye fancies of the past,Ye days of April weather,Ye shadows that are castBy the haunted hours before!Come back, come back, my childhood;Thou art summoned by a spellFrom the green leaves of the wildwood,From beside the charmed well,For Red Riding-Hood, the darling,The flower of fairy lore.The fields were covered overWith colors as she went;Daisy, buttercup and cloverBelow her footsteps bent;Summer shed its shining store;She was happy as she pressed them;Beneath her little feet;She plucked them and caressed them;They were so very sweet;They had never seemed so sweet beforeTo Red Riding-Hood, the darling,The flower of fairy lore.How the heart of childhood dancesUpon a sunny day!It has its own romances,And a wide, wide world have they —A world where Phantasie is king,Made all of eager dreaming;When once grown up and tall —Now is the time for scheming —Then we shall do them all!Do such pleasant fancies springFor Red Riding-Hood, the darling,The flower of fairy lore?She seems like an ideal love,The poetry of childhood shown,And yet loved with a real love,As if she were our own —A younger sister for the heart;Like the woodland pheasant,Her hair is brown and bright;And her smile is pleasant,With its rosy light.Never can the memory partWith Red Riding-Hood, the darling,The flower of fairy lore.Did the painter, dreamingIn a morning hour,Catch the fairy seemingOf this fairy flower?Winning it with eager eyesFrom the old enchanted stories,Lingering with a long delightOn the unforgotten gloriesOf the infant sight?Giving us a sweet surpriseIn Red Riding-Hood, the darling,The flower of fairy lore?Too long in the meadow staying,Where the cowslip bends,With the buttercups delayingAs with early friends,Did the little maiden stay.Sorrowful the tale for us;We, too, loiter ’mid life’s flowers,A little while so glorious,So soon lost in darker hours,All love lingering on their way,The flower of fairy lore.Lætitia Elizabeth Landon.HOW MAGGIE PAID THE RENT
PRESENCE of mind is one of the rarest, as it is one of the most enviable of endowments. It is the power of instantaneously forming a judgment, and acting upon it, and includes not only moral courage, but self-possession. No matter how brave a man may be in the face of expected peril, – if he lacks presence of mind, he is helpless in a sudden emergency. But, as this quality is an ingredient of the highest courage, the bravest men invariably possess it. The presence of mind of one man has often saved thousands of lives in sudden peril, on sea or land. This is naturally enough regarded as a distinctively masculine virtue; but it is one that both sexes may profitably cultivate, as is shown by the following story. Girls as well as boys should be taught self-reliance – to depend on themselves, to think quickly and act promptly. Perhaps no emergency will arise in their lives in which the importance of such mental training shall be illustrated; but it is well to be prepared “for any fate,” and the discipline which produces this virtue gives strength and symmetry to the whole intellectual organism.
“Is supper nearly ready, Maggie? It is time for Jack to return from his work.”
The speaker was an elderly woman in a widow’s garb, and the person she addressed was her granddaughter, a pleasant-looking girl, who might perhaps have been fourteen years of age.
“Yes, grandmother, it is just ready, such as it is,” replied Maggie; “but I could wish poor Jack had a better meal after his hard work than what we are able to give him.”
“Ay, ay, child, I wish it as much as you can; but what is to be done? Wishing will never make us rich folk, and we may be thankful if worse troubles than a poor supper do not come upon us soon.”
So spoke the grandmother, and taking the spectacles from her nose, she wiped their dim glasses with her apron.
“Why, grandmother, what do you mean?” cried Maggie, looking up in alarm. “What worse troubles can be coming, think you?” And eagerly and anxiously she fixed her bright blue eyes upon her grandmother’s face.
“Well,” replied the old woman, “the truth is just this, Maggie: I hear that the new landlord is going to make some changes among his tenants; the cottages are all to be repaired, and the folks who can pay higher rents will stay, while those who cannot must find lodging elsewhere. And how can we ever pay a higher rent, Maggie? Even now, every penny of poor Jack’s earnings is spent at the end of the week, and yet we live as cheaply as ever we can.”
For a moment or two the girl’s face was as perturbed and downcast as that of her grandmother’s, and she bent over her knitting in silence; but by an evident effort she quickly assumed a more cheerful aspect. And advancing to the old lady’s side, and placing a gentle hand on her shoulder, she said, —
“Don’t fret, dear grandmother; God has cared for us so far, and he will never suffer us to want, if we put our trust in him. That’s what father used to say, and what he said up to the very day of his death.”
So saying, Maggie stooped and kissed the withered cheek of that father’s mother, thereby enforcing, as it were, her encouraging words.
“God bless you, my child!” sobbed the old woman, returning the kiss. “You remind me of what I am too apt to forget. Yes, Maggie, your father’s God is our God, and he will never forsake his people. I will wipe away these tears, and put faith in him for the future.” And the grandmother dried her eyes, and rising from her low seat, said cheerfully, “Maggie, dear, go to the gate, and watch for your brother Jack. When you see him coming across the field, let me know, and I will dish up the supper, so as to have it ready.”
Maggie put down her work, and passing through the low doorway of the cottage, stood presently at the little gate that separated the tiny garden from the meadow of a neighboring farmer, who turned his cattle out there to graze.
Opening the gate, Maggie leaned against it, while with one hand she shaded her eyes from the yet dazzling beams of the sinking sun, which bathed with its parting radiance the western horizon, and crimsoned the landscape around.
A moment or two she thus stood, but Jack did not appear; and wondering why he should be so late, Maggie was about to retrace her steps in order to fetch her knitting, when, from that corner of the field which by a stile communicated with the landlord’s grounds, she saw a little child emerge, dressed in a bright red frock and jacket, and running heedlessly along, nearer and nearer to the cattle, which hitherto had been grazing quietly in the centre of the field.
Now, however, as the little one approached, directing her steps so as to pass them closely, they raised their heads, and a huge bull, the king and guardian of the herd, attracted doubtless and enraged by the color of the scarlet dress, bounded away from his companions, and with his savage head bent, and his tail raised, gave chase to the child, who, frightened at the bellowing of the angry beast, quickened her pace, and fled screaming towards the cottage gate, at which Maggie was standing. But the utmost speed of which the little one was capable was nothing to the long gallop of the bull, and in the first moment that Maggie witnessed the child’s danger, her quick presence of mind and tender heart resolved to do what many strong men, less self-forgetful, would not have dared to attempt.
Tearing from her head a colored kerchief, which she had thrown over it before she came out, she sprang through the gateway into the meadow, and bounding lightly over the turf, in another minute she had placed herself between the fierce animal and the child. On in his headlong fury came the gigantic brute, and was about to pass Maggie, seeing only the scarlet frock just beyond, when the intrepid girl, springing forward, dashed the kerchief across his eyes, and before he had time to recover himself and recommence his pursuit, she had turned, snatched up the little one, and was running towards the cottage gate. Close behind the fugitives followed the bull, now recovered from his momentary astonishment; but Maggie’s feet were winged, for she felt that through God’s help she should save the child.
A few more rapid steps, and the gate was reached and barred, while Maggie tottered into the house, still carrying the child, and in the reaction of the fearful excitement, fell fainting on the floor.
Maggie’s fainting fit, however, did not last long; and she was fully restored, and had told her grandmother the whole story, before Jack arrived, half an hour later.
He, too, had something to recount. On his way home from the landlord’s grounds, where he had been working, he was overtaken by a young woman, who seemed in a great state of alarm. She told Jack that she was the nursery maid, and that while that afternoon she was sitting at work beneath one of the trees, with the children playing around her, one of them – little Gertrude, a child about six years old – must have slipped away from her brother and sisters unobserved; and when tea time came, and the nurse rose to bring the children home, she was nowhere to be found. The nurse had taken the other three little ones home, and had now come in search of Gertrude, fearful lest she should fall into danger of any kind.
Jack would not stop to eat his supper, after telling his own story and hearing Maggie’s, but announced his intention of at once carrying the little truant lady back to her home.
So the kind-hearted youth took Gertrude in his arms, and soon conveyed her safely to the landlord’s house, where she astonished every one by the childish recital of her own danger and Maggie’s courage.
The next morning Gertrude’s mother came down to the cottage to thank Maggie for the preservation of her darling’s life, and to bring a message from her husband.
This message consisted of his grateful acknowledgments, and of the promise that Jack should be promoted to the office of assistant gardener as soon as that post was vacant (which would be in the course of a few weeks). But, best of all, the promise included also this, namely, that the widow and her grandchildren should hold the cottage rent free for the remainder of their lives.
Thus was averted, by means wholly unforeseen, the trial of poverty and want so dreaded by the old widow in her thoughts of the future; and never again was she heard to repine, or even to express a fear for herself or for those whom she loved.
DECLAMATION – FAITHFUL UNTO DEATH;
OR, THE SENTRY OF HERCULANEUM.2DARK’S the night, dun’s the sky with smoke;Never more my guard they’ll change;Three hours ago I could crack my joke,And now e’en the thought seems strange.“Hark! the thunder bellows loud,And the night’s come down apace,And the lava flame, through its sulphurous cloud,Is ruddy on my face.“With a crash did yon temple fall;But ever, through all the din,Shrill rose a death-wail o’er all,The vestals’ screams within.“Men are running, away, away,With tight zones up yonder street;But a soldier of Rome must stayAt his post, as seems him meet.“I remember my levying morn —I remember my sacred vow;And I’d hold it matter of scornIn death’s teeth to break it now.“Jove! lava is all around —It nears me with scorching breath;It hisses along the groundTo my feet, and the hiss means – death.“I’ve fought as a soldier should’Neath many an alien sky,And at home at my post I’ve stoodAmidst cowards, and now, to die.“Great Mars, give me heart of graceTriarii,3 over the bowlSay, ‘He died with a smile on his face,And glory in his soul’!”W. B. B. Stevens.VACATION
O, MASTER, no more of your lessons!For a season we bid them good by,And turn to the manifold teachingsOf ocean, and forest, and sky.We must plunge into billow and breaker;The fields we must ransack anew;And again must the sombre woods echoThe glee of our merry-voiced crew.From teacher’s and preacher’s dictation —From all the dreaded lore of the books —Escaped from the thraldom of study,We turn to the babble of brooks;We hark to the field-minstrels’ music,The lowing of herds on the lea,The surge of the winds in the forest,The roar of the storm-angered sea.To the tree-tops we’ll climb with the squirrels;We will race with the brooks in the glens;The rabbits we’ll chase to their burrows;The foxes we’ll hunt to their dens;The woodchucks, askulk in their caverns,We’ll visit again and again;And we’ll peep into every bird’s nestThe copses and meadows contain.For us are the blackberries ripeningBy many a moss-covered wall;There are bluehats enough in the thicketsTo furnish a treat for us all;In the swamps there are ground-nuts in plenty;The sea-sands their titbits afford;And, O, most delectable banquet,We will feast at the honey-bee’s board!O, comrades, the graybeards assure usThat life is a burden of cares;That the highways and byways of manhoodAre fretted with pitfalls and snares.Well, school-days have their tribulations;Their troubles, as well as their joys.Then give us vacation forever,If we must forever be boys!Beverly Moore.UNCLE JOHN’S SCHOOL-DAYS
THIS picture reminds me, children, of some funny stories that I have heard your uncle John tell, when he and I were boy and girl together, of his exploits as a schoolboy. According to his account, not only he, but most of his schoolfellows, used to lead merry lives enough at school. They had what they called the “Academy Band,” and grand music it made, with a hat-box for a drum, cricket-bat for violoncello, and paper flute and trumpets. You would not recognize Uncle John, whom you know only as a man six feet high, in that little lad on the left side of the picture with a battledore for a fiddle. They had a great deal of what he called excellent fun, though I am afraid it sometimes bordered upon mischief or naughtiness. I used to consider that he and his schoolfellows were regular heroes as I listened to his stories when he came home for the holidays; and even now I must confess I cannot help laughing when I think of some of his naughty pranks.
Uncle John first went to a large school when he was eleven years old, and I remember now the tremendous hamper of good things he took with him. The boys who slept in his bedroom were so pleased with the contents of his hamper that they determined to make a great feast. To add to their enjoyment, they imagined themselves to be settlers in the backwoods of America or Australia. They built a log hut with bolsters, and had a sort of picnic. One of them mounted on the top of the log hut to look out with his telescope for any approaching savages, while the others enjoyed their suppers in and about the hut. When their fun was at its height, the door softly opened, and in walked Dr. Birchall, spectacles on nose and cane in hand. What followed may be imagined.
You know that Uncle John is an engineer now, and even as a little boy he had a great turn for mechanical inventions. Well, he pondered over some means by which such a sudden interruption to the enjoyment of his schoolfellows might be prevented in future; and I will tell you what he did.
It happened that the large room in which he slept formed the upper floor of a wing of the house which had been added to it when it became a school; and there was no access to this room from the principal staircase of the house. You had to pass through the room below and go up a little separate staircase to reach to the floor above. The lower room was also a bedroom for the boys, and Uncle John’s little scheme was this:
He made a hole with a gimlet in the frame of one of the windows of his bedroom, passed a piece of string through the hole, and carried it outside the wall of the house down to a similar hole in a window-frame of the room below. To the end of the string in the upper room was fastened a small rattle, while the other end of the string – that in the room below – was taken into the bed of a boy who slept near the window.
This admirable little invention once in order, there was more rioting in the upper room than ever; and the master, disturbed by the noise, soon went, cane in hand, to stop it. The instant he set foot in the lower room the boy there who held the string in bed gave it a little pull: the rattle sounded – ting! ting! – in the room above, and in an instant every boy was in bed and snoring. Perhaps they had been playing at leap-frog the moment before, but as Dr. Birchall entered the room – and he crept up the staircase very quietly, that he might catch them unawares – he found some twenty boys lying in bed, seemingly sound asleep, though snoring unnaturally loud.
The doctor was so disconcerted by this unexpected state of things that he retired at once, fancying perhaps that his ears had deceived him when he thought he had heard a noise in the room. The same thing happened two or three times; the doctor was puzzled, and the invention appeared a complete success; but at last all was discovered.
The boys one evening began imprudently to play at “tossing in the blanket” before they were undressed. The rattle sounded, and they had just time to hide away the blanket. But the doctor coming in, and finding they were only then beginning to undress, knew they must have been at some mischief, and began questioning one after another. Unluckily, while he was in the room the rattle sounded again by accident; perhaps the boy in the room below had pulled the string by moving in bed. The doctor looked about, found the rattle hanging just below the window, saw the string, opened the window and traced its course outside, went down into the room below, and understood the whole arrangement. Then he put the rattle in his pocket and went away without saying a word. The boys declared he had such difficulty in keeping himself from laughing that he was afraid to speak lest he should burst out.
However, next day every boy in that room had a slight punishment, and so the matter ended.
Now I will tell you another of Uncle John’s pranks at school. There was a large tree in the playground, the upper branches of which spread out very near to the windows of the bedroom I have been describing. One evening Uncle John got hold of a large hand-bell which was used for ringing the boys up in the morning; and climbing up the tree, he fastened it by a piece of string to a branch near the top. Then another boy threw him the end of a long string from a window of the bedroom into the tree, and he fastened it to the bell in such a way that when it was pulled in the bedroom it made the bell ring in the tree. Having accomplished this arrangement, he came down from the tree and went to bed.
At ten o’clock at night the household was disturbed by the loud ringing of this bell. The master, in his dressing-gown, came out into the playground, and soon discovered where the sound came from, but of course supposed that some boy had climbed up into the tree, and was ringing the bell there. It was the middle of summer, and a beautiful moonlight night, so the boys could see from the windows all that took place. Dr. Birchall stood at the foot of the tree, looking up, and exclaimed, angrily,
“Come down, you naughty boy! Come down, I say, directly! Oh, I’ll give you such a flogging! Stop that horrible noise, I tell you, and come down!”