



Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Sam W. and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net







Transcriber's Note

The chapter 'PERSONS AND PLACES MENTIONED' contains some less commonly
used characters to indicate pronunciation, including the following:

  upper and lower case c with hyphen through, C̵ and c̵
  s with uptack below, s̝
  y with breve above, y̆
  y with macron above, ȳ
  a with dot above, ȧ

If they do not display correctly, you may wish to adjust your font
settings.




      'ROUND THE YEAR IN
         MYTH AND SONG

              BY
       FLORENCE HOLBROOK


  NEW YORK CINCINNATI CHICAGO
     AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY


      Copyright, 1897, by
    AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY.


      HOL. MYTH AND SONG.
           W. P. II




                 TO
        MRS. ELLA FLAGG YOUNG
              A FRIEND
           WHOSE ZEAL AND
       ABILITY IN THE CAUSE OF
  EDUCATION ARE KNOWN TO THOUSANDS
    THIS LITTLE BOOK IS DEDICATED
     BY ONE OF THE MANY TO WHOM
         HER WORDS HAVE BEEN
          AN INCENTIVE AND
             HER WORK AN
             INSPIRATION




PREFACE.


This book is intended for use in all grades of elementary schools,
the method of presentation varying with the age of the pupils. It
has been welcomed even by pupils in higher schools, because easily
familiarizing them with myths and characters that figure so largely
in the literary texts with which they are to deal.

In the first and second grades the teachers should read or tell some
of the stories to the pupils, thus satisfying the demand of children
for a story, and preparing the way for an appreciation of literature.
The pupils should retell the stories, thus enriching their vocabulary
and learning to express thought clearly, easily, consecutively, and
confidently,--a power so much needed and so valuable to citizens of a
republic.

Some of the poems, as "Daybreak," "The Moss Rose," "Forget-me-not,"
"Sweet and Low," "The Child's World," etc., should be memorized. If
this work has been well done in these grades, the pupils of third and
fourth grades will enjoy reading the stories, continuing the reciting
of myth and poem. The pictures that so well illustrate the myths
should be studied and described. In these classes and in the grammar
grades the stories should be written and the poems reproduced
accurately, serving as valuable lessons in form, in spelling,
punctuation, and capitalization. The reproduction of the myth and
poem both orally and in written papers is an exercise whose value
cannot be overestimated.

While the myths are valuable in themselves as stories which appeal
to and which nourish the imagination, and as aids to expression
in oral and written language, they are also very helpful, when
presented early, to the understanding of references with which our
literature is filled, and make the reading of the best in literature
more of a delight because of this knowledge. It is important that
these myths be given to children who enjoy the world of fairy tale
and myth,--children who in their imagination drive the car of Apollo
with the bold Phaëthon, and see with Narcissus the nymph smiling in
the brook.

The poems and pictures in the book serve to illustrate the debt both
poets and artists owe to the fancies of the beauty-loving Greeks, the
children of our race. With imagination and memory nourished and stored
with stories that have been part of men's literary possessions for
centuries, and which have been embodied in all the arts, the love for
literature which is permanent and valuable will leave no room for the
worthless and transitory.

Acknowledgments are due to Messrs. Houghton, Mifflin & Company for
selections from Holmes, Whittier, and Longfellow; to Messrs. D.
Appleton & Company for selections from Bryant; to Messrs. A. C.
McClurg & Company for the poem, "Rainbow Fairies," from Tomlin's
"Child's Garden of Song"; and to Mr. John Burroughs for permission to
use his poem, "Waiting."




CONTENTS.


                                                            PAGE
  'Round the Year                            _Gary Cooper_    15

  The Seasons                                                 22

  Worship of Nature              _John Greenleaf Whittier_    27

  How the Myths arose                                         28

  The Months--Winter                                          30

  The Voice of Spring            _Felicia Dorothea Hemans_    31

  The Months--Spring                                          33

  On May Morning                             _John Milton_    34

  The Child's Wish in June               _Caroline Gilman_    36

  The Months--Summer                                          37

  Autumn                                       _Anonymous_    38

  The Months--Autumn                                          39

  The Old Year                           _Alfred Tennyson_    41

  The Holidays of the Year                                    43

  The Days of the Week                                        47

  Ode                                     _Joseph Addison_    50

  Ceres                                                       52

  To the Fringed Gentian           _William Cullen Bryant_    54

  Ceres and Persephone                                        55

  Arbutus Asleep                  _William Whitman Bailey_    57

  The Search of Ceres                                         59

  Waiting                                 _John Burroughs_    61

  Apollo                                                      62

  Hark! hark! the Lark               _William Shakespeare_    63

  Diana                                                       65

  Lady Moon                                    _Anonymous_    66

  The Pleiades                                                68

  The Stars                                       _Amelia_    70

  Aurora                                                      73

  Daybreak                    _Henry Wadsworth Longfellow_    75

  Aurora and Tithonus                                         77

  On the Grasshopper and Cricket              _John Keats_    77

  Aurora and Memnon                                           79

  A Walk at Sunset                 _William Cullen Bryant_    79

  The Nymphs and Other Goddesses                              82

  Give                             _Adelaide Anne Procter_    87

  Apollo and the Muses                                        88

  The Descent of the Muses    _Henry Wadsworth Longfellow_    90

  Apollo and Daphne                                           92

  Forget-me-not                                _Anonymous_    94

  Clytie                                                      96

  The Daisy                             _James Montgomery_    99

  Niobe                                                      102

  Apollo                             _George Gordon Byron_   104

  Jupiter                                                    106

  Abou Ben Adhem                              _Leigh Hunt_   108

  Neptune                                                    109

  Neptune                                     _John Keats_   111

  Vulcan                                                     112

  Work                                  _Mary N. Prescott_   114

  Venus                                                      115

  Her Face                               _Robert Browning_   119

  Cupid and Psyche                                           121

  Love                                _Francis Bourdillon_   122

  Psyche and Venus                                           123

  Longing                           _James Russell Lowell_   125

  St. Valentine's Day                                        127

  What March does                        _May Riley Smith_   128

  Phaëthon                                                   129

  Wings                                    _Mary F. Butts_   131

  Mercury                                                    134

  The Finding of the Lyre           _James Russell Lowell_   135

  Æolus                                                      137

  Æolus and Ulysses                                          140

  The Chambered Nautilus           _Oliver Wendell Holmes_   141

  The Wind Tower                                             143

  Mudjekeewis                                                145

  Wabun                                                      146

  Shawondasee                                                149

  Little Dandelion                     _Helen B. Bostwick_   150

  Kabibonokka                                                151

  What the Winds bring           _Edmund Clarence Stedman_   153

  Iris                                                       155

  The Rainbow                         _William Wordsworth_   155

  Rainbow Stories                                            156

  The Rainbow Fairies                   _Lizzie M. Hadley_   157

  Narcissus                                                  158

  The Brook                              _Alfred Tennyson_   159

  Echo and Narcissus                                         161

  Blue                                        _John Keats_   163

  Minerva                                                    164

  Minerva and Arachne                                        166

  Minerva's Weaving                       _Edmund Spenser_   169

  Prometheus                                                 171

  Home Thoughts from Abroad              _Robert Browning_   173

  Adonis                                                     174

  Origin of the Opal                           _Anonymous_   176

  The Apples of the Hesperides                               177

  Cleon and I                             _Charles Mackay_   179

  Pandora                                                    180

  The Gladness of Nature           _William Cullen Bryant_   183

  Hebe and Ganymede                                          185

  May                                          _Macdonald_   186

  Vesta                                                      186

  Sweet and Low                          _Alfred Tennyson_   188

  The Origin of the Moss Rose                                190

  The Moss Rose                               _Krummacher_   192

  Orpheus and Eurydice                                       193

  The Child's World                    _Lilliput Lectures_   197

  Arion                                                      198

  June                              _James Russell Lowell_   200




PERSONS AND PLACES MENTIONED.


    Ä´bou bĕn Äd´hem (ä´bōō)
    A c̵hĭl´lēs̝
    A dō´nis
    Æ ō´li a
    Æ ō´li an Īs´lands̝
    Æ´o lus
    A pŏl´lo
    Aq´ui lo (ăk´wi lo)
    A răc̵h´ne
    A ri´on
    Ăth´ens̝
    Au rō´ra

    Bō´re as

    Cæ´s̝ar Au gŭs´tus
    C̵al lï´o pe
    Cẽr´be rus
    Cē´rēs̝
    C̵hā´ron
    C̵lē´on
    C̵lī´o
    C̵lȳ´tie
    C̵ŏl i sē´um
    C̵ŏr´inth
    C̵ō´rus
    C̵ū´pid
    Cȳ´c̵lops
    Cy̆g´nus
    Cy̆n´thi a

    Dăph´ne
    Di ā´na
    Drȳ´ads̝

    Ec̵h´o
    En dy̆m´i on
    Ep i mē´the us
    Ĕr´a to
    Ē´ris
    Ĕt´na
    Eu rō´pa
    Eū´rus
    Eu ry̆d´i ce
    Eu tẽr´pe

    Flō´ra
    Flŏr´ence
    Frĭg´ga

    Găn y mē´de

    Hā´dēs̝
    Hē´be
    He li´a dēs̝
    Hẽr´c̵u lēs̝
    Hẽr´mēs̝
    Hes pē´ri a
    Hes pĕr´i dēs̝
    Hēs´pe rus
    Hi a wä´tha
    Hō´mer

    Ī´ris
    Ĭt´a ly
    Ĭth´a c̵a
    Ī´da

    Jā´nus
    Jōve
    Jūli us Cæ´s̝ar
    Jū´no
    Jū´pi ter

    Kä´be yun
    Ka bi bon ŏk´ka

    La tō´na
    Lē´da
    Lĭp´ar i Īs´lands̝
    Louvre (lōōvr)

    Mā´i a
    Märs̝
    Mē´los
    Mel pŏm´e ne
    Mĕm´non
    Mẽr´cu ry
    Mĭ nẽr´va
    Mud je kēē´wis

    Nā´iads̝ (yādz)
    Nar cĭs´sus
    Nĕp´tūne
    Nē´re ids̝
    Nĭ´o be
    No kō´mis
    Nō´tus

    O ce ăn´ids̝ (she)
    Oc tā´vi us Cæs̝ar
    Ō´din
    O ly̆m´pus
    Ō´re ads̝
    O rī´on
    Ôr´phe us

    Păl´las A thē´ne
    Pan dō´ra
    Păr´is
    Par năs´sus
    Pär´the non
    Per i ăn´der
    Per sĕph´o ne
    Phā´ë thon
    Phœ´bus (fē)
    Pi ĕr´ i dēs̝
    Pī´e rus
    Plē´ia dēs̝ (yȧ)
    Plū´to
    Pō
    Pol y hy̆m´ni a
    Po mō´na
    Pro mē´the us
    Psȳ´c̵he (sȳ´)

    Rōme

    Sæ´ter
    Sha won dä´see
    Sĭb´y̆ls
    Sĭc´i ly
    Sĭ´rens̝
    Sty̆x

    Ta rĕn´tum
    Tẽrp sĭc̵h´o re
    Tha lĭ´a
    Thēbes̝
    Thē´tis
    Thôr
    Ti thō´nus
    Tiw (tū)
    Tri´tons̝
    Troy

    U ly̆s´sĕs̝
    U rā´ni a

    Val´en tīne
    Vē´nus
    Vẽr´gil
    Vĕs´ta
    Vŭl´c̵an

    Wa bäs´so
    Wä´bun
    Wä´bun-An´nung
    Wō´den

    Zĕph´y̆ rus (zĕf´)




  [Illustration: Spring.
    E. Semenowsky (_modern_).]

'ROUND THE YEAR.


    O beautiful world of green!
      When bluebirds carol clear,
        And rills outleap,
        And new buds peep,
      And the soft sky seems more near;
    With billowy green and leaves,--what then?
    How soon we greet the red again!

  [Illustration: Summer.
    E. Semenowsky (_modern_).]

    O radiant world of red!
      When roses blush so fair,
        And winds blow sweet,
        And lambkins bleat,
      And the bees hum here and there;
    With thrill of bobolinks,--ah, then,
    Before we know, the gold again!

  [Illustration: Autumn.
    E. Semenowsky (_modern_).]

    O beautiful world of gold!
      When waving grain is ripe,
        And apples beam
        Through the hazy gleam,
      And quails on the fence rails pipe;
    With pattering nuts and winds,--why then,
    How swiftly falls the white again!

  [Illustration: Winter.
    E. Semenowsky (_modern_).]

    O wonderful world of white!
      When trees are hung with lace,
        And the rough winds chide,
        And snowflakes hide
      Each bleak unsheltered place;
    When birds and brooks are dumb,--what then?
    O, round we go to the green again!
              --G. Cooper.




  [Illustration: Spring.
    A. B. Thorwaldsen (1770-1844).]

THE SEASONS.


The earth receives light from the sun, and completes its course
through the heavens once a year. Each year brings Spring with her
garlands of flowers, Summer--golden Summer--with her sheaves of sunlit
grain, Autumn with the purple grape, and Winter clad in frost and
snow.

  [Illustration: Summer.
    A. B. Thorwaldsen.]

Every year there is the same order of the seasons. Therefore man knows
when to plant the tiny seeds, when the harvests and fruits will ripen,
and what provision to make for the cold but merry winter.

  [Illustration: Autumn.
    A. B. Thorwaldsen.]

Just as little children, tired with play, and men who work all day,
must have the night for sleep and rest, so Mother Earth, who plays and
works so gaily from March to October, must have the winter season for
rest. Then she covers herself with a mantle of snow, and sings a
sleepy lullaby song.

Each of the seasons has three months to attend her.

  [Illustration: Winter.
    A. B. Thorwaldsen.]

Spring, clad in dainty green, has March with cleansing winds,
changeable April with sunshine and rain, and tender May with the
fragrant flowers.

Summer, in her golden dress, has June, July, and August to attend her.

Autumn, with September, October, and November, comes with her hands
filled with baskets of fruit.

Winter has December, January, and February to cover the earth with
snow, to freeze the rivers, and to paint curious pictures upon the
windowpanes.

Can you compare the passing of the year and the life of man?
Childhood, the springtime of life, is the time for play and dance and
merry song, the time to make the body supple and strong. When the body
is strong and the mind has been trained, comes the summer time of
work--hard work in all the fields of labor, that the harvest may not
fail. In the autumn of life, when the labor of the summer ripens into
fruit, how pleasant to reap the reward of work! Then slowly come the
snowy hair and the winter of life, when we sit by the fire and tell
the story of our battles, our struggles, our defeats, and our
victories.

Each season of the year has its pleasures and its tasks, and so has
each season of life. A youth of cheerful labor and study brings its
own reward of a well-prepared and happy adult life. Then we can repeat
Browning's cheering words,--

    "Grow old along with me!
    The best of life is yet to be,
    The last for which the first is made."




WORSHIP OF NATURE.


    The harp at Nature's advent strung
        Has never ceased to play;
    The song the stars of morning sung
        Has never died away.

    And prayer is made, and praise is given,
        By all things near and far;
    The ocean looketh up to heaven,
        And mirrors every star.

    The green earth sends her incense up
        From many a mountain shrine;
    From folded leaf and dewy cup
        She pours her sacred wine.

    The mists above the morning rills
        Rise white as wings of prayer;
    The altar curtains of the hills
        Are sunset's purple air.

    The blue sky is the temple's arch,
        Its transept earth and air,
    The music of its starry march
        The chorus of a prayer.
              --John Greenleaf Whittier.




HOW THE MYTHS AROSE.


The Greeks lived much in the open air, and dearly loved the trees, the
flowers, the birds, the sea and sky.

They watched the clouds floating in the beautiful azure dome,
sometimes in long lines like soldiers, sometimes looking like great
curly white feathers, and sometimes piled high like mountains of snow.

They saw the sun rise, coloring the clouds and awakening all things on
the earth; and they watched him sink in the western sky, flooding the
heavens with brilliant hues.

In the quiet night, they saw the lovely stars come, one by one at
first, and then in such numbers that their eyes were dazzled, and they
thought of God and of the beauty of His works.

    "The million-handed sculptor molds
    Quaintest bud and blossom folds;
    The million-handed painter pours
      Opal hues and purple dye;
    Azaleas flush the inland floor,
      And the tints of heaven reply."

They listened to the carols of the birds and they believed that the
brooks, the trees, and the flowers could talk to men.

The poets dreamed and sang about the spirits which inhabited all the
forms of nature. All the people loved these fancies, and repeated the
stories again and again. These stories,--these beautiful fancies about
nature, which to the Greeks seemed true,--we call myths, or fairy
tales.

    "The beauty of the sea and sky,
    The airy flight of birds on high,
    The lovely flowers, whose perfume rare
    So softly fills the summer air;
    The rainbow's glow, the shimmering rain
    When springtime buds peep out again,
    The golden glory of the sun
    The fields of ripening grain upon,
    The winds that sigh harmoniously,
    The tempest's wrath o'er land and sea,
    The purple haze of mountains far,
    Or snowy crest, whereon the star
    Of night shines soft and silvery:--
    These joys that nature offers thee,
    Wilt thou not know; wilt thou not feel
    What God and thine own heart reveal?"
              --F. H.




THE MONTHS.--WINTER.


In addition to its four seasons--spring, summer, autumn, and
winter--the year is divided into twelve months. Long ago, there were
but ten months, and the first month was March. But when January and
February were added, the year had twelve months, and January, the
second month of the winter season, is now called the first month of
the year.

"Month" and "moon" come from a word which means "to measure." It takes
the earth three hundred and sixty-five days, or a year, to revolve
around the sun. The moon revolves around the earth about twelve times
in one year; so the moon is the measurer of the year, and the twelve
periods we call months.

From Janus, a Roman god, comes the name of the first month of the
year. Janus is the two-headed god. A temple of this divinity was
placed at the city gate of Rome. His statue had one face looking
toward the city and one beyond the gate. The month of January stands
at the gateway of the year, with one face looking toward the past and
one toward the future.

Our second month, February, receives its name from a Latin word which
means "to purify," for in this month the people used to purify their
homes and offer sacrifices to the gods, who love order and
cleanliness.




THE VOICE OF SPRING.


    I come! I come! ye have called me long;
    I come o'er the mountains, with light and song!
    Ye may trace my steps o'er the wakening earth,
    By the winds which tell of the violet's birth,
    By the primrose stars in the shadowy grass,
    By the green leaves opening as I pass.

    I have sent through the wood paths a glowing sigh,
    And called out each voice of the deep blue sky,
    From the night bird's lay through the starry time,
    In the groves of the soft Hesperian clime,
    To the swan's wild note, by the Iceland lakes,
    Where the dark fir branch into verdure breaks.

    From the streams and founts I have loosed the chain;
    They are sweeping on to the silvery main,
    They are flashing down from the mountain brows,
    They are flinging spray o'er the forest boughs,
    They are bursting fresh from their sparry caves,
    And the earth resounds with the joy of waves!

    Come forth, O ye children of gladness, come!
    Where the violets lie may be now your home.
    Ye of the rose lip and dew-bright eye,
    And the bounding footstep, to meet me fly!
    With the lyre, and the wreath, and the joyous lay,
    Come forth to the sunshine, I may not stay.
              --Felicia Dorothea Hemans.




  [Illustration: Spring.
    F. A. Kaulbach (_modern_).]




THE MONTHS.--SPRING.


The name of the famous Mars, god of war, was given to the first month
of spring. This month, formerly the first of the year, is now the
third. Mars is fond of storm and strife, and his name is very
appropriate for this windy, stormy month. In March the sun turns back
in his journey among the stars, and begins to come north again. The
days grow longer in our part of the world, and we know that summer is
coming.

In April the snows melt, the little brooks awake and chatter over
their pebbly beds, the birds return to gladden us with their songs,
and the tiny leaves peep out of their winter nests. The earth seems to
open to receive the moist rains and the warm winds. April, the
beautiful name given to this second month of spring, comes from a
Latin word meaning "to open."

The lovely month of May is a great favorite with the poets. Many of
them have written charming poems in her honor. Maia, in whose honor
this month was named, is the mother of Mercury, the winged messenger
of the gods. The Romans held this god in great honor, and gave the
name of his mother to the loveliest of the months.




ON MAY MORNING.


    Now the bright morning star, day's harbinger,
    Comes dancing from the east, and leads with her
    The flow'ry May, who from her green lap throws
    The yellow cowslip and the pale primrose.
      Hail, bounteous May! that dost inspire
      Mirth and youth and warm desire;
      Woods and groves are of thy dressing,
      Hill and dale doth boast thy blessing.
    Thus we salute thee with our early song,
    And welcome thee, and wish thee long.
              --John Milton.




  [Illustration: May.
    A. H. Dieffenbach (_modern_).]




THE CHILD'S WISH IN JUNE.


    Mother, mother, the winds are at play;
    Prithee, let me be idle to-day.
    Look, dear mother, the flowers all lie
    Languidly under the bright blue sky.

    See, how slowly the streamlet glides;
    Look, how the violet roguishly hides;
    Even the butterfly rests on the rose,
    And scarcely sips the sweets as he goes.

    Poor Tray is asleep in the noonday sun,
    And the flies go about him, one by one;
    And pussy sits near with a sleepy grace,
    Without ever thinking of washing her face.

    There flies a bird to a neighboring tree,
    But very lazily flieth he;
    And he sits and twitters a gentle note,
    That scarcely ruffles his little throat.

    You bid me be busy. But, mother dear,
    How the humdrum grasshopper soundeth near;
    And the soft west wind is so light in its play,
    It scarcely moves a leaf on the spray.

    I wish, O I wish I were yonder cloud,
    That sails about with its misty shroud;
    Book and work I no more should see,
    And I'd come and float, dear mother, o'er thee.
              --Caroline Gilman.




THE MONTHS.--SUMMER.


June, the month of roses, is named in honor of the stately Juno, queen
of the gods. Juno is the goddess of happy marriages, and June is the
favorite month for weddings.

July is named in honor of Julius Cæsar, the greatest of the Romans in
the art of war. In peace, also, he advanced the condition of the
people, and he was a great statesman and writer. He it was who
reformed the calendar, and so it is just that his name should be given
to one of the months.

Octavius Cæsar was the nephew and heir of Julius Cæsar, the great
commander. After conquering his enemies, he became the master of Rome
and was named Emperor by the Roman Senate. He ruled the empire wisely
and well, and received the title Augustus, which means "worthy of
reverence." From him the eighth month receives its name--August.

Cæsar Augustus was the friend of the poets and orators who lived
during his reign. So many beautiful poems were written at that time,
and all the arts so flourished, that the reign of Augustus has been
called "The Golden Age."




AUTUMN.


    When leaves grow sear, all things take somber hue;
    The wild winds waltz no more the woodside through,
    And all the faded grass is wet with dew.

    The forest's cheeks are crimsoned o'er with shame,
    The cynic frost enlaces every lane,
    The ground with scarlet blushes is aflame.

    The ripened nuts drop downward day by day,
    Sounding the hollow tocsin of decay,
    And bandit squirrels smuggle them away.

    Inconstant Summer to the tropics flees,
    And, as her rose sails catch the amorous breeze,
    Lo! bare, brown Autumn trembles to her knees.

    The stealthy nights encroach upon the days,
    The earth with sudden whiteness is ablaze,
    And all her paths are lost in crystal maze.

    With blooms full-sapped again will smile the land,
    The Fall is but the folding of His hand,
    Anon with fuller glories to expand.

    So shall the truant bluebirds backward fly,
    And all loved things that vanish or that die
    Return to us in some sweet by and by.




THE MONTHS.--AUTUMN.


The months of September, October, November, and December are named
from Latin words that mean "seven," "eight," "nine," and "ten."

When the beginning of the year was placed in March, these months were
named from their position the seventh, eighth, ninth, and tenth
months. When the first day of January was made the first day of the
year, these months became the ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth
months, but their names were not changed. December is, of course, the
first month of winter.

Each year has three hundred and sixty-five days, except leap year,
which comes once in four years. In leap years there are three hundred
and sixty-six days, the extra day being added to the month of
February.

The days are not evenly divided among the twelve months, but, as the
old rhyme says,--

    "Thirty days hath September,
    April, June, and November;
    All the rest have thirty-one,
    Excepting February alone,
    Which hath but twenty-eight, in fine,
    Till leap year gives it twenty-nine."




  [Illustration: The New-year Bells.
    Blashfield (_modern_).]




THE OLD YEAR.


    Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky,
        The flying cloud, the frosty light;
        The year is dying in the night;
    Ring out, wild bells, and let him die.

    Ring out the old, ring in the new,
        Ring, happy bells, across the snow:
        The year is going, let him go;
    Ring out the false, ring in the true.

    Ring out the grief that saps the mind,
        For those that here we see no more;
        Ring out the feud of rich and poor,
    Ring in redress to all mankind.

    Ring out false pride in place and blood,
        The civic slander and the spite;
        Ring in the love of truth and right,
    Ring in the common love of good.

    Ring out old shapes of foul disease,
        Ring out the narrowing lust of gold;
        Ring out the thousand wars of old,
    Ring in the thousand years of peace.

    Ring in the valiant man and free,
        The larger heart, the kindlier hand;
        Ring out the darkness of the land,
    Ring in the Christ that is to be.
              --Alfred Tennyson.




  [Illustration: A May Scene.
    A. H. Waterlow (_modern_).]




THE HOLIDAYS OF THE YEAR.


When the New Year comes, we all hold out our hands to the welcome
guest, and are glad to see his young and smiling face. So we have made
the first day of January a holiday, that friends may wish one another
a "Happy New Year."

February has many days that are dear to us. The birthdays of our noble
presidents, Lincoln and Washington, are always celebrated with honor
for their greatness and rejoicings for our country's prosperity.
Longfellow and Lowell, two of our greatest poets, are also remembered.
St. Valentine's Day is a festival welcome to children, and to all who
love to see young people gay and happy.

In March we have no holiday.

In many of our states a very interesting holiday has been given to
April. It is called "Arbor Day," for on this day trees are planted.
Men have always felt a reverence for trees, and have believed that

    "The groves were God's first temples."

The Greeks gave a personality to trees, and the Druids worshiped the
strong and noble oak. So we are setting aside a day when all the
people shall make holiday, and plant trees whose shade shall refresh
and whose fruit shall nourish us. This is a beautiful holiday, and
one full of meaning. Our poet Bryant says,--

    "What plant we in this apple tree?
    Sweets for a hundred flowery springs
    To load the May wind's restless wings,
    When, from the orchard row, he pours
    Its fragrance through our open doors;
    A world of blossoms for the bee,
    Flowers for the sick girl's silent room,
    For the glad infant sprigs of bloom,
    We plant with the apple tree."

May brings with her one of the most sacred and beautiful days of all
the year. On Memorial, or Decoration, Day we cover with flowers the
graves of those who died to preserve the nation.

In England and in Sweden, May Day is given up to dance and song and
flower shows. This festival began in honor of Odin, the old Norse god
of the sun.

June has no day that is remembered as a universal holiday. But in July
we find the greatest day of the year--the Fourth of July, Independence
Day. Every child knows that on this day our nation was born. The
flags, the drums, the trumpets, the cannon,--all awaken in the breast
of every American a thrill of love and pride that will never pass
away.

  [Illustration: The Christ Child.
    Prescott Davies (_modern_).]

August is passed by; but on the first Monday in September comes Labor
Day. This has been celebrated for only a few years, but the meaning
of the holiday lies deep in the minds and hearts of men who realize
that labor is man's greatest blessing and hope.

Thanksgiving Day, generally the last Thursday in November, is sacred
to the memory of our honored ancestors, who bravely and nobly endured
the cold and want of that first New England winter, confident that the
God whom they trusted and served would not forget them.

    "Aye, call it holy ground,
      The soil where first they trod!
    They have left unstained what there they found,--
      Freedom to worship God!"

December has the children's great festal day,--the blessed Christmas,
when the lessons of Christ's life blossom into deeds, and a loving
spirit seems to spread over all the land. The carols, the Christmas
trees, the merry bells, make the heart gay, and all the air resounds
with Christmas glee. We read the Christmas stories, sing the old
songs, send loving greetings to absent friends, and rejoice with the
happy children, for "of such is the kingdom of heaven."




THE DAYS OF THE WEEK.


In the southern countries of Europe, the days of the week were named
after the gods of the Greeks and Romans. But in our country, and in
some of the countries of northern Europe, the gods of the North have
given their names to the days.

Sunday and Monday received their names from the sun and the moon--the
radiant lamps that light the earth by day and by night.

Tiw is the god of honorable war, the son of Odin and Frigga, the earth
mother. His emblem is the sword, and in olden days the people did him
great homage. Tuesday, the third day of the week, was named in his
honor.

Wednesday was called Woden's day, in honor of Woden, or Odin, the king
of the gods. He was often called the All Father.

Thor, the son of Odin, is one of the twelve great gods of northern
mythology. "Whenever he throws his wonderful hammer," they used to
say, "the noise of thunder is heard through the heavens. He is the
only god who cannot cross from earth to heaven upon the rainbow, for
he is so heavy and powerful that the gods fear it will break under his
weight." Thursday was sacred to Thor.

  [Illustration: Thor.]

    "I am the Thunderer!
    Here in my Northland,
    My fastness and fortress,
    Reign I forever!"
              --Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

Friday was the day sacred to Frigga, queen of the gods.

Saturday received its name from Sæter, god of the harvest.

                    "One poor day!--
    Remember whose, and not how short it is!
    It is God's day, it is Columbus's.
    A lavish day! One day, with life and heart,
    Is more than time enough to find a world."
              --James Russell Lowell.

    "No man is born into the world whose work
    Is not born with him. There is always work,
    And tools to work withal, for those who will;
    And blesséd are the horny hands of toil!
    The busy world shoves angrily aside
    The man who stands with arms akimbo set,
    Until occasion tells him what to do;
    And he who waits to have his task marked out
    Shall die and leave his errand unfulfilled."
              --James Russell Lowell.




ODE.


    The spacious firmament on high,
    With all the blue ethereal sky
    And spangled heavens, a shining frame,
    Their great Original proclaim.
    The unwearied sun, from day to day,
    Does his Creator's power display;
    And publishes to every land
    The work of an Almighty hand.

    Soon as the evening shades prevail,
    The moon takes up the wondrous tale,
    And nightly, to the listening earth,
    Repeats the story of her birth;
    Whilst all the stars that round her burn,
    And all the planets in their turn,
    Confirm the tidings as they roll,
    And spread the truth from pole to pole.

    What though, in solemn silence, all
    Move round this dark terrestrial ball?
    What though no real voice nor sound
    Amidst their radiant orbs be found?
    In reason's ear they all rejoice,
    And utter forth a glorious voice,
    Forever singing, as they shine,
    "The hand that made us is divine!"
              --Joseph Addison.




  [Illustration: Moonlight on the Ocean.]




CERES.


All through the warm days of July and August, the grain ripens in the
rays of the sun, and in September the fields are yellow with nodding
heads of golden grain. Ceres, the earth mother, has been driving north
and south, east and west.

Two beautiful maidens always attend her,--Flora, with garlands of
roses, who cares for the lovely flowers, and Pomona, who ripens the
fruits for man to eat.

As Ceres passes, the fields and woods gleam with color and beauty, and
all the voices of nature join man's in hymns of thanksgiving for her
bounty. The old Greeks tell us, that it is she who taught men how to
cultivate the fields; how to prepare the soil for the seed, when to
plant the many grains and fruits, and how to care for the young and
tender plants.

In autumn, after the work of spring and summer, she rejoices in the
bounteous harvests, in the vineyards filled with purple grapes. Great
golden pumpkins, like huge apples, lie basking in Apollo's rays; the
purple aster and the golden-rod add color to the landscape. Ceres is
glad at heart. She is happy in the results of her labor and in the
presence of her lovely daughter, Persephone. But when Persephone
leaves her mother, Ceres is sad, and winter, cold and drear, settles
over the earth.




  [Illustration: Ceres.
    _Vatican, Rome._]




TO THE FRINGED GENTIAN.


    Thou blossom bright with autumn dew,
    And  with the heaven's own blue,
    That openest when the quiet light
    Succeeds the keen and frosty night.

    Thou comest not when violets lean
    O'er wandering brooks and springs unseen,
    Or columbines, in purple dressed,
    Nod o'er the ground bird's hidden nest.

    Thou waitest late, and com'st alone,
    When woods are bare and birds are flown,
    And frosts and shortening days portend
    The aged year is near his end.

    Then doth thy sweet and quiet eye
    Look through its fringes to the sky,
    Blue--blue--as if that sky let fall
    A flower from its cerulean wall.

    I would that thus, when I shall see
    The hour of death draw near to me,
    Hope, blossoming within my heart,
    May look to heaven as I depart.
              --William Cullen Bryant.




CERES AND PERSEPHONE.


You will wonder why Persephone is not always with her mother. This is
the story the Greeks tell.

As Ceres takes care of the ripening grains and fruits all over the
earth, it is necessary for her to visit every country of the world.
One day she was seated in her chariot drawn by those wonderful winged
dragons, ready to set forth on her travels. She kissed her little
daughter, and warned her not to go far from home. She had never before
felt so anxious about leaving her little girl, but she had to go.

Persephone threw a loving kiss to her fond mother, and then went to
the shore of the sea to play with the sea nymphs. They are graceful,
slender girls, with sea-green hair and eyes like opals. They are
charming playmates, but cannot come out of the water. Persephone
gathered flowers for them, and was obedient to her mother's command.

But Pluto, the god of the palaces of gold and silver under the earth,
looking out from one of the caverns, saw the pretty child, and wanted
to carry her away to his home. So he caused a wonderful flower, all
crimson and gold, to charm Persephone farther away. She stooped to
pick it; and lo! it came up by the roots, a deep cavern yawned, and
the chariot of King Pluto appeared.

The driver, who was King Pluto himself, caught the frightened
Persephone in his arms. Whipping his coal-black steeds, he hurried
away with her to his home in Hades.




  [Illustration: A Winter Scene.
    L. Munthe (_modern_).]




ARBUTUS ASLEEP.


    Arbutus lies beneath the snows,
    While winter waits her brief repose,
    And says, "No fairer flower grows!"

    Of sunny April days she dreams,
    Of robins' notes and murmuring streams,
    And smiling in her sleep she seems.

    She thinks her rosy buds expand
    Beneath the touch of childhood's hand,
    And beauty breathes throughout the land.

    The arching elders bending o'er
    The silent river's sandy shore,
    Their golden tresses trim once more.

    The pussy willows in their play
    Their varnished caps have flung away,
    And hung their furs on every spray.

    The toads their cheery music chant,
    The squirrel seeks his summer haunt,
    And life revives in every plant.

    "I must awake! I hear the bee!
    The butterfly I long to see!
    The buds are bursting on the tree!"

    Ah! blossom, thou art dreaming, dear;
    The wild winds howl about thee here
    The dirges of the dying year!

    Thy gentle eyes with tears are wet;
    In sweeter sleep these pains forget;
    Thy merry morning comes not yet!
              --William Whitman Bailey.




THE SEARCH OF CERES.


When Ceres returned and could not find her little girl, she was
frantic. Over the whole earth she drove her chariot, calling upon all
things to help her in her search--but in vain!

Then she became so sad that she refused to allow the earth to produce
any food for man or beast. The flowers and trees and harvests drooped
and faded. In vain did gods and men plead with her. She would not be
comforted.

At last Jupiter sent the swift-flying Mercury, messenger of the gods,
to Pluto, commanding him to release Persephone. When Ceres saw her
daughter restored to her, what joy was hers! Yet she feared one thing.

"Have you eaten anything in Pluto's kingdom, my child?" was her
anxious question.

"Yes, dear mother," Persephone replied, "six pomegranate seeds."

"Alas! then you must remain with Pluto six months of every year," said
the sad Ceres.

Thus it is that for six months Ceres and Persephone are together, the
earth is covered with the blessed gifts of Ceres, and it is summer
over the land. But when they are separated, the mother grieves, and
winter is king.




  [Illustration: Waiting.
    Nonnenbruch (_modern_).
      Copyright, 1895, by Photographische Gesellschaft.]




WAITING.


    Serene I fold my hands and wait,
    Nor care for wind, nor tide, nor sea;
    I rave no more 'gainst time or fate
    For lo, my own shall come to me.

    I stay my haste, I make delays;
    For what avails this eager pace?
    I stand amid the eternal ways,
    And what is mine shall know my face.

    Asleep, awake, by night or day,
    The friends I seek are seeking me;
    No wind can drive my bark away
    Nor change the tide of destiny.

    What matter if I stand alone?
    I wait with joy the coming years;
    My heart shall reap where it has sown,
    And gather up its fruits of tears.

    The waters know their own and draw
    The brook that springs from yonder height.
    So flows the good with equal law
    Unto the soul of pure delight.

    The stars come nightly to the sky,
    The tidal wave unto the sea;
    Nor time, nor space, nor deep, nor high
    Can keep my own away from me.
              --John Burroughs.




  [Illustration: The Aurora.
    Guido Reni (1575-1642).]

APOLLO.


The palace of the sun is far away in the east. The walls are of
silver, the ceilings of carved ivory, and the pillars of gold shining
with many jewels.

Phœbus Apollo, in a robe of royal purple, sits upon a golden throne,
and the bright rays shining from his golden hair light up the palace
and dazzle the eyes. On either hand stand the Day, the Month, the
Year, and the rosy Hours, who attend him in his daily course through
the heavens.

When his beautiful twin sister, Diana, the queen of the night, has
finished her course through the deep blue sky, and all the stars are
gone, Aurora, the dawn, opens the silvery eastern bars and shows a
path covered with roses. Beautiful, rosy boys hold torches to light up
the path, and to tell the people of the earth that the sun god is
coming. The agile Hours quickly harness the impatient horses, Apollo
mounts his chariot, takes the reins, and away they gallop, delighted
with their task.

The wind arises from the sea, and wafts the clouds along; the birds
stir in the trees, and begin their sweet morning song; the leaves
rustle, and the flowers raise their perfumed heads and say "good
morning!" The little children open their eyes with a laugh and shout,
for another day of play. All the world is awake to give thanks for the
glorious sunlight!




HARK! HARK! THE LARK.


    Hark! hark! the lark at heaven's gate sings,
      And Phœbus 'gins arise,
    His steeds to water at those springs
      On chaliced flowers that lies;
    And winking Mary-buds begin
      To ope their golden eyes;
    With everything that pretty bin
      My lady sweet, arise!
          Arise, arise!
              --William Shakespeare.




  [Illustration: The Moon Goddess.
    Correggio (1494-1534).]




DIANA.


Diana, the goddess of the moon, is the twin sister of Apollo. She
completes her journey around the earth once in a month. Her chariot is
of polished silver, and her horses are dark as night. She is a strong
and beautiful goddess, with a robe of deepest azure, and a golden
crescent in her black hair.

When Apollo sinks in the west, the chariot of Diana appears, and she
drives like a queen over the floor of heaven, which is studded with
twinkling stars. How lovely is the night! Sometimes we see only a
silver crescent, and the rim of the moon. This the children call the
baby moon. But night after night the moon shows more and more of her
silver face, until she seems like a great ball floating high in air.
This we call the full moon. The stars are her maidens, who welcome her
coming and attend her on her journey.

In September, the grains are gathered into the barns, and we call the
full moon in that month the Harvest Moon.

The October full moon is the Hunter's Moon, for in that month Diana
leads the jolly hunters. Then, according to the old Greeks, she leaves
her chariot, sees that her bow and arrows are ready, calls her
maidens, and steps forward, strong and free, to the chase.




  [Illustration: The Harvest Moon.
    Mason (_modern_).]

LADY MOON.


    Lady moon, lady moon,
        Sailing so high!
    Drop down to baby
        From out the blue sky:
    Babykin, babykin,
        Down far below,
    I hear thee calling,
        But I cannot go.

    But lady moon sendeth thee
        Soft, shining rays;
    Moon loves the baby,
        The moonlight says.
    In her house dark and blue,
        Though she must stay,
    Kindly she'll watch thee
        Till dawns the new day.




  [Illustration: Lady Moon.
    F. A. Kaulbach (_modern_).]




THE PLEIADES.


Diana had seven graceful maidens who hunted the deer with her. One day
they saw Orion, a great hunter, coming toward them with his dog and
his big club. Orion was a giant, and the maidens feared him and ran
away.

Orion called to them not to be afraid, for he wished to hunt with
them. But still they fled, and when they were weary and saw that he
was overtaking them, they called upon the gods to save them from the
mighty hunter. The gods loved them, and listened to their cries. When
Orion thought he had at last caught up with them, he saw, not the
maidens, but seven snow-white doves flying away under the azure sky.

At night, when the queenly Diana looked down from her chariot, she saw
that her attendants had been transformed to doves. As she could not
give them their original form, she placed them in the heavens as stars
to attend her during the night.

  [Illustration: The Dance of the Pleiades.
    Elihu Vedder (_modern_).]

These sister stars we call the group of the Pleiades. For a long time
they accompanied their queen in her journey. At last the Trojan war
broke out, and they were terrified and covered their faces. The
youngest of the sweet sisters was so frightened that she hid behind
the others. In some way she became separated from them and lost her
way. Now there are only six stars in the constellation called the
Pleiades, and the little sister is constantly searching for them.

There is a beautiful statue called "The Lost Pleiad" which shows a
lovely young girl borne by the clouds and looking eagerly for her
beloved sisters.




THE STARS.


    Ye snow-white clouds, whose fleecy wings enfold
      The stars, that light yon boundless breadth of blue,
    Roll back your edges, tinged with deepest gold,
      And softly let the peaceful wanderers through;
    Till, one by one, they burst upon my eyes,
    O'ertaking my young heart with sudden sweet surprise.

    How oft, when but a child, in wildest glee,
      I've climbed the summit of some breezy hill,
    Whose mossy sides went sloping to the sea
      Where slept another heaven serenely still;
    While, from the mighty stronghold of the seas,
    The dead send up their dirge upon the twilight breeze.

    And there beneath a fringe of dewy leaves,
      That drooped away from many a bended bough,
    I used to lie on summer's golden eves,
      And gaze about as I am gazing now,
    Thinking each lustrous star a heavenly shrine
    For an immortal soul, and wondered which was mine.

  [Illustration: The Lost Pleiad.
    Randolph Rogers (1825-1892).]

    But now the moon, beside yon lonely hill,
      Lifts high her cup of paly gold;
    And all the planets, following slow and still,
      Along the deep their solemn marches hold;
    While here and there some meteor's startling ray
    Shoots streaks of arrowy fire far down the Milky Way.

    The Milky Way: ah, fair, illumined path,
      That leadeth upward to the gate of heaven;
    My spirit, soaring from this world of scath,
      Is lost with thee among the clouds of even,
    And there, upborne on Fancy's glittering wing,
    Floats by the Golden Gate, and hears the angels sing.
              --Amelia.




AURORA.


Aurora, goddess of the dawn, is the young sister of Diana, the queen
of night. It is her duty to open the eastern doors of the palace of
the sun, and to strew the path of Apollo, the sun god, with roses.
Just before sunrise she appears in the eastern sky, her rosy fingers
tinting the misty clouds.

Aurora is goddess of the evening light, as well as of the dawn. Long
after the chariot of the sun has disappeared below the horizon, the
western clouds are bright with the rosy light of this beauty-loving
goddess.

In some countries the twilights are very long, and Aurora seems to
linger on the hilltops. She sprinkles refreshing dew upon the thirsty
flowers, who have bravely raised their heads to the sun all day. They
revive under her gentle care.

At evening, when she is slowly closing the gates of the west, the eyes
of the little children grow tired of day and close in welcome sleep.
The birds, too, who welcome the fair Aurora with their joyous matin
songs, now seek their nests, and their last chirp is heard as the
twilight deepens. Then Aurora bars the gates, gives the lantern, or
evening star, to Hesperus, and returns to the east for her morning
task.




  [Illustration: Day.
    A. B. Thorwaldsen.]




DAYBREAK.


    A wind came up out of the sea,
    And said, "O mists, make room for me."

    It hailed the ships, and cried, "Sail on,
    Ye mariners, the night is gone."

    And hurried landward far away
    Crying, "Awake! it is the day."

    It said unto the forest, "Shout!
    Hang all your leafy banners out!"

    It touched the wood bird's folded wing,
    And said, "O bird, awake and sing."

    And o'er the farms, "O chanticleer,
    Your clarion blow; the day is near."

    It whispered to the fields of corn,
    "Bow down, and hail the coming morn."

    It shouted through the belfry tower,
    "Awake, O bell! proclaim the hour."

    It crossed the churchyard with a sigh,
    And said, "Not yet! in quiet lie."
              --Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.




  [Illustration: Aurora.
    J. L. Hamon (1821-1874).]




AURORA AND TITHONUS.


Aurora loves the pretty flowers and often wanders among the gardens
watching and caring for the tender blossoms.

One morning she met the handsome youth, Tithonus. Aurora loved
Tithonus, and, as he was a mortal, she begged the gods to give him
immortal life. Unfortunately, she forgot to ask for him immortal
youth, and after a while he began to grow old. Although he still lived
in her palace and fed on ambrosia, the food of the gods, he became
smaller and smaller, until Aurora was ashamed of him and turned him
into a grasshopper.

This is the way you see him to-day--with the face of an old man on the
body of a grasshopper.




ON THE GRASSHOPPER AND CRICKET.


    The poetry of earth is never dead:
        When all the birds are faint with the hot sun,
        And hide in cooling trees, a voice will run
    From hedge to hedge about the new-mown mead.
    That is the grasshopper's,--he takes the lead
        In summer luxury,--he has never done
        With his delights; for, when tired out with fun,
    He rests at ease beneath some pleasant weed.
    The poetry of earth is ceasing never:
    On a lone winter evening, when the frost
        Has wrought a silence, from the stove there shrills
    The cricket's song, in warmth increasing ever,
        And seems, to one in drowsiness half lost,
          The grasshopper's among some grassy hills.
              --John Keats.




  [Illustration: Night.
    A. B. Thorwaldsen.]




AURORA AND MEMNON.


Memnon was the son of Aurora and Tithonus, and was dearly loved by his
young and beautiful mother. He became a very brave man. When the
Trojan war broke out, he came from the East to help the Trojans. At
first he was successful, and he put the Greeks to flight; but when
Achilles met him, a great struggle began. Long they fought and
bravely; but at last Memnon fell.

Aurora, who had witnessed Memnon's defeat, told his brothers, the
Winds, to bear his body to his home in the far East. There in the
evening Aurora came to weep over the body of her son. The Hours, the
rosy sister goddesses, joined in her grief, and the shining Pleiades
veiled their faces in sorrow.

Aurora still laments the untimely death of her son, and her tears you
may find in the early morning as dewdrops upon the bending grass and
flowers.




A WALK AT SUNSET.


    When insect wings are glistening in the beam
      Of the low sun, and mountain tops are bright,
    Oh! let me by the crystal valley stream,
      Wander amid the mild and mellow light;
    And while the wood thrush pipes his evening lay,
    Give me one lonely hour to hymn the setting day.

      O sun! that o'er the western mountains now
        Go'st down in glory! ever beautiful
      And blesséd is thy radiance, whether thou
        Colorest the eastern heaven and night mist cool,
    Till the bright day-star vanish, or on high
    Climbest and streamest thy white splendors from mid-sky.

      Yet, loveliest are thy setting smiles, and fair,
        Fairest of all that earth beholds, the hues
      That live among the clouds, and flush the air,
        Lingering and deepening at the hour of dews.
    Then softest gales are breathed, and softest heard
    The plaining voice of streams, and pensive note of bird.
              --William Cullen Bryant.

  [Illustration: Sunset.
    Leader (_modern_).
      Copyright, 1894, by Photographische Gesellschaft.]




  [Illustration: The Dance of the Nymphs.
    Kray (_modern_).]




THE NYMPHS AND OTHER GODDESSES.


The Greeks, in their love for nature, believed that all her forms had
life and feeling. The mildness of their climate, their out-of-door
life, the apparent nearness of sea and sky, the beauty of mountain,
tree, flower, and glistening rivulet, made nature dear to them. Their
love for the beautiful outside world was nourished, and caused them to
look upon all nature as friendly. Their vivid fancy peopled grove and
dale with forms that returned human affection.

They liked to believe that every stream had a naiad sporting in its
waters, that dryads lived in the graceful trees, and that shrubs and
flowers were the outward forms of spirits imprisoned there.

Oreads, or mountain nymphs, wandered over the mountains, and their
laughter echoed in the valleys. Nereids and oceanids--water
nymphs--sported in the waves of the ocean, and, with the tritons,
attended Neptune, god of the deep blue sea.

The sunflower concealed the sea nymph Clytie, and lovely Echo was
transformed into a voice. The laurel tree, with its glossy green
leaves, was but the nymph Daphne, to whom, when fleeing from Apollo,
her father, the river god, gave this form.

  [Illustration: The Graces.
    Germain Pilon (1515-1590).]

The sirens lived on an island of the sea. They sang so beautifully
that all the sailors who passed that way longed to see the singers,
and, coming too near, were wrecked on the rocks which the water
concealed.

There were some nymphs and goddesses who were always mentioned
together. The Graces were three maidens of charming appearance, who
waited upon Venus. No one was so beautiful that the Graces could not
add to her charm and loveliness, and they were ever welcome guests in
every home.

Spenser says,--

    "These three on men all gracious gifts bestow
    Which deck the body or adorn the mind,
    To make them lovely or well-favored show;
    As comely carriage, entertainment kind,
    Sweet semblance, friendly offices that bind,
    And all the complements of courtesy;
    They teach us how to each degree and kind
    We should ourselves demean, to low, to high,
    To friends, to foes; which skill men call civility."

The Fates also numbered three. These severe goddesses could reveal the
future to men and gods and no one could escape their decrees. Even
Jupiter must obey the Fates, daughters of stern necessity. The decrees
of the gods and the Fates were generally revealed to men by
priestesses called sibyls. These wise women lived in caves. Their
prophecies, or oracles, as they were called, were believed in and
greatly respected by the Greeks and Romans, who often went to the
sibyls for advice and assistance.

  [Illustration: The Fates.
    Paul Thumann (_modern_).]

The Furies were deities who searched out all wicked people and
punished them for their crimes, pursuing them with whips and snakes.
The Furies were really friends to man, because they wished him to
repent of his guilty deeds, live a better and truer life, and do good
and not evil in the world.

The nine Muses, those gracious daughters of Jupiter and Memory, sang
their songs and joined in a graceful dance on Mount Parnassus. Apollo,
god of poesy and song, was their teacher, and from him they learned
how to inspire artists, poets, and musicians with thoughts of
harmonies more beautiful than ordinary mortals know.

The Hours attended Apollo, as he drove his flaming chariot through the
heavens.

    "The rosy Hours, with agile grace, attend
    Apollo, when, as god of the sun, he makes
    His joyful journey through the heavens."

Another group of four graceful beings Keats thus describes in his
poem, "Endymion,"--

                "An ethereal band
        Are visible above: The Seasons four,--
    Green-kirtled Spring, flush Summer, golden store
    In Autumn's sickle, Winter's frosty hoar."




GIVE.


    See the rivers flowing
        Downwards to the sea,
    Pouring all their treasures
        Bountiful and free:
    Yet to help their giving
        Hidden springs arise;
    Or, if need be, showers
        Feed them from the skies!

    Watch the princely flowers
        Their rich fragrance spread,
    Load the air with perfumes,
        From their beauty shed:
    Yet their lavish spending
        Leaves them not in dearth,
    With fresh life replenished
        By their mother earth!

    Give thy heart's best treasures,--
        From fair Nature learn;
    Give thy love, and ask not,
        Wait not a return!
    And the more thou spendest
        From thy little store,
    With a double bounty
        God will give thee more.
              --Adelaide Anne Procter.




  [Illustration: Apollo in his Chariot.
    Raphael (1483-1520).]

APOLLO AND THE MUSES.


When Apollo's daily task is done, he removes the dazzling rays from
his head and places there the wreath of laurel which he much prefers.
Then he goes to Parnassus, the beautiful mountain in Greece, where the
Muses dwell. The Muses are nine maidens, the wonderful daughters of
Memory, to each of whom Apollo has given some department of music or
poetry. All musicians and poets are said to ask Apollo and the Muses
for aid and inspiration.

To Calliope, the muse of epic poetry, Homer and Vergil prayed when
they sang of war and heroes.

Astronomers appeal to Urania, who presides over the stars--their song
makes the music of the spheres; and those who write history must be
aided by Clio.

To Thalia and Melpomene are given the realms of comic and tragic
poetry.

Erato, who presides over the poems of love, generally accompanies the
youngest and gayest of the Muses, Terpsichore. The chief pleasure and
delight of Terpsichore is in the graceful movements of the dance. When
Euterpe, the muse of lyric poetry, strikes her golden lyre, these
three, with their music, song, and dance, create exquisite beauty and
harmony, and they are much beloved by their sister Muses and by
mortals.

The wisest and most dignified of all the Muses is Polyhymnia, who
presides over sacred music. She it is who inspires the hymns of praise
to the Almighty Ruler of the world.

Apollo instructs these maidens in the arts of poetry and music, and
then they unite in a merry dance; for they are graceful beings and
have strong, beautiful bodies. The Greeks believed in the culture of
the body,--the temple of the soul,--and so Apollo, god of the sun, of
poetry and music, was also their ideal of physical perfection.




THE DESCENT OF THE MUSES.


    Nine sisters, beautiful in form and face,
      Came from their convent on the shining heights
      Of Pierus, the mountain of delights,
      To dwell among the people at its base.
    Then seemed the world to change. All time and space,
      Splendor of cloudless days and starry nights,
      And men and manners, and all sounds and sights,
      Had a new meaning, a diviner grace.
    Proud were these sisters, but were not too proud
      To teach in schools of little country towns
      Science and song, and all the arts that please;
    So that while housewives span, and farmers plowed,
      Their comely daughters, clad in homespun gowns
      Learned the sweet songs of the Pierides.
              --Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

  [Illustration: Apollo and the Muses.
    Giulio Romano (1492-1546).]




  [Illustration: Cupid with his Bow.
    V. Tojetti (_modern_).]




APOLLO AND DAPHNE.


One day Apollo found Cupid, the mischievous little god of love,
playing with his arrows, and he said,--"Why are you playing with my
arrows? You are only a boy and should not use manly weapons!" Cupid
did not like to be called a child, and took from his own quiver two
tiny arrows, one tipped with lead, one with gold. The golden arrow he
shot into the heart of Apollo; the leaden, into the heart of a young
and graceful wood nymph, Daphne.

When Apollo saw Daphne, the golden arrow in his heart made him love
her, and he pursued her; but the heavy arrow of dull lead in her heart
made her dislike him, and she fled.

Soon Daphne found that she could not run so fast as Apollo, and she
called upon her father, the river god, to save her. He heard her cry
and changed her into a beautiful laurel tree. When Apollo came up he
saw that her body was growing rough with the bark, her slender feet
were changing into the roots, and her long wavy hair was turning into
the shiny green leaves.

The sun god grieved at this change, but said: "This tree shall be
sacred to poets and musicians and artists. I shall wear a wreath of
laurel, and all who follow the arts shall be crowned with the laurel
wreath."




  [Illustration: Daphne.
    Rylands (_modern_).]




FORGET-ME-NOT.


    When to the flowers so beautiful
      The Father gave a name,
    Back came a little blue-eyed one,--
      All timidly it came.

    And standing at the Father's feet
      And gazing on His face,
    It said, in meek and timid voice,
      Yet with a gentle grace:

    "Dear Lord, the name Thou gavest me,
      Alas, I have forgot."
    The Father kindly looked on her
      And said, "Forget-me-not."




  [Illustration: Forget-me-not.
    G. Schrœdter (_modern_).
      Copyright, 1894, by Photographische Gesellschaft.]




  [Illustration: Clytie.
    _British Museum._]

CLYTIE.


Clytie was a beautiful sea nymph who lived in a wonderful palace under
the sea. Her dress was of pale green sea moss, and she wore ornaments
of delicate pink coral in her sunny curls. Her carriage was an
exquisite shell of many brilliant hues, which glittered in the
sunlight, and gold fish were her strange and beautiful horses.

One day, when she was driving over the surface of the sea, she saw the
glorious god Apollo in his golden chariot. Day after day she watched
him journey through the deep blue sky, and hoped he would see her.
Alas! he never noticed the lonely sea maid, so far below.

At last she left her chariot, and all day long watched him from the
shore. When the sun had gone and she started to return to her home
under the waves, she could not move. Her feet had become fastened to
the soil and her form began to change into the sunflower. Her green
dress became the stalk and leaves, and her golden hair changed into
the yellow petals.

But the flower still loves the sun. In the morning it looks toward the
east and rejoices when the sun appears above the horizon, following
his course and slowly turning its face toward the west.

So this flower is the emblem of constancy. Poets often speak of the
great love and faithfulness of Clytie, and artists paint her picture
or sculpture her form.

In the art galleries may be found a lovely bust of a young girl. The
sculptor is unknown, but the bust is supposed to be one of Clytie, for
the shoulders seem to rise from the leaves of the sunflower.




  [Illustration: Daisies.
    A. Cabanel (1823-1889).]




THE DAISY.


    There is a flower, a little flower,
      With silver crest and golden eye,
    That welcomes every changing hour,
      And weathers every sky.

    The prouder beauties of the field
      In gay but quick succession shine;
    Race after race their honors yield,
      They flourish and decline.

    But this small flower, to Nature dear,
      While moons and stars their courses run,
    Enwreathes the circle of the year,
      Companion of the sun.

    It smiles upon the lap of May,
      To sultry August spreads its charm,
    Lights pale October on his way,
      And twines December's arm.

    The purple heath and golden broom
      On moory mountains catch the gale;
    O'er lawns the lily sheds perfume,
      The violet in the vale.

    But this bold floweret climbs the hill,
      Hides in the forest, haunts the glen,
    Plays on the margin of the rill,
      Peeps round the fox's den.

    Within the garden's cultured round
      It shares the sweet carnation's bed;
    And blooms on consecrated ground
      In honor of the dead.

    The lambkin crops its crimson gem;
      The wild bee murmurs on its breast;
    The blue fly bends its pensile stem
      Light o'er the skylark's nest.

    'Tis Flora's page; in every place,
      In every season, fresh and fair,
    It opens with perennial grace,
      And blossoms everywhere.

    On waste and woodland, rock and plain,
      Its humble buds unheeded rise:
    The rose has but a summer reign;
      The daisy never dies!
              --James Montgomery.




  [Illustration: Niobe and Child.
    _Uffizi Gallery, Florence._]




NIOBE.


Apollo and Diana are both hunters and carry bows and arrows. One day
Niobe, queen of Thebes, boasted that she had more children than
Latona, the mother of Apollo and Diana, and that her children were
more beautiful.

Latona called upon her children to punish Niobe for her pride, and
they shot their arrows at the children of the boasting Niobe. Soon all
were slain, although their mother, in her grief, tried to protect
those she loved so well. Apollo killed the seven handsome sons, and
Diana aimed her arrows at the seven lovely daughters.

Niobe grieved so over the loss of her dear children that she turned
into stone, but her tears still continued to flow.

There is a room in a famous gallery in Florence, Italy, called the
Niobe room, because here are placed the famous statues of Niobe and
her fourteen children, trying, in vain, to escape the fatal arrows of
the divine archers.

Some people believe that this story means that the rays of the sun and
moon are harmful. But others say that it only shows that Apollo, the
sun, battles with Niobe and her children, who are the powers of
winter. When his rays have overcome them, Niobe dissolves in tears,
and the cold snows melt and disappear.




  [Illustration: Diana as Huntress.
    Hamo Thornycroft (_modern_).]




APOLLO.


                      Lord of the unerring bow,
    The God of life and poesy and light--
    The sun in human limbs arrayed, and brow
    All radiant from his triumph in the fight.
    The shaft has just been shot--the arrow bright
    With an immortal's vengeance; in his eye
    And nostril, beautiful disdain and might
    And majesty flash their full lightnings by,
    Developing in that one glance the Deity.
              --George Gordon Byron.




  [Illustration: Apollo Belvedere.
    _Vatican, Rome._]




JUPITER.


Jupiter, or Jove, as he is sometimes called, king of the gods, lives
in high Olympus, a mountain in Greece. All the gods obey him, except
the Fates, who are more powerful than the gods.

Jupiter, Juno, Apollo, Diana, Mars, Minerva, Pluto, Ceres, Mercury,
Venus, Neptune, and Vesta are the twelve gods whose home is on Mount
Olympus. Vulcan prefers his home in Mount Etna, and is generally busy
at work there. Pluto, also, is seldom away from his underground home.

In the palace of Jupiter, all the questions in which the gods are
interested are discussed and settled. Ceres came hither to ask Jupiter
to restore her dear Persephone. Cupid brought Psyche to Olympus after
their many trials on earth. Minerva and Neptune had their celebrated
contest for the honor of naming Athens, in the presence of these gods.

Juno, the wife of Jupiter, sits at his left. She wears a crown, and
holds the royal scepter; for she is queen of gods and men. Peacocks
with many- feathers draw her chariot, and Iris, with her
rainbow wings, is Juno's messenger.

Jupiter holds the terrible thunderbolts in his powerful right hand,
and on his left hand stands the goddess Victory. The eagle, king of
birds, is sacred to Jove.

He has dominion over the sky, the earth, and the sea. As the clouds
are continually changing their shape, now piling up like great white
mountains, now looking like birds or fishes, Jupiter is said to change
his form to an eagle, a swan, a cloud, or a shower of gold. He
sometimes visits earth in mortal form, to see if men are just and
kind. When he finds them cruel or wicked, he punishes them; but he
rejoices to find those who are generous, just, and helpful.

  [Illustration: Jove in his Chariot.
    Raphael.]




ABOU BEN ADHEM.


    Abou Ben Adhem (may his tribe increase!)
    Awoke one night from a deep dream of peace,
    And saw within the moonlight in his room,
    Making it rich and like a lily in bloom,
    An angel writing in a book of gold:
    Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold,
    And to the presence in the room he said,
    "What writest thou?" The vision raised its head,
    And, with a look made of all sweet accord,
    Answered, "The names of those who love the Lord."
    "And is mine one?" said Abou. "Nay, not so,"
    Replied the angel.--Abou spoke more low,
    But cheerly still, and said, "I pray thee, then,
    Write me as one that loves his fellowmen."

    The angel wrote and vanished. The next night
    It came again, with a great wakening light,
    And showed the names whom love of God had blessed,--
    And, lo! Ben Adhem's name led all the rest!
              --Leigh Hunt.




NEPTUNE.


Jupiter gave to Neptune, his brother, dominion over the sea. He rides
over the placid waves in his chariot, made of shells of many colors,
gleaming in the sunlight. If he wishes a storm, he strikes upon the
waves with his trident, and calls the winds, and the huge billows
threaten the clouds. Tritons with wreathed horns follow his chariot,
and naiads as graceful as the waves sport in the opaline waters.

The palaces of the water gods and nymphs are more wonderful than those
on earth. Shells, glistening sand, corals, and sea mosses lend beauty
of color and form. The music of the waves lulls these beings to sleep.
They ride upon a dolphin's back, or are borne onward by the
waves,--free, happy, frolicking water sprites, dashing the spray and
diving in graceful play through the deep waves of the sea.

Neptune is strong and calm. He is represented in art as bearing the
trident, and surrounded by his attendants and the inhabitants of the
sea. There is a celebrated fountain in Rome adorned with a fine statue
of Neptune. It is said that a visitor who throws a coin into its
waters will return to that famous city.

Sailors used to take offerings to the temples of Neptune, so that he
would give them prosperous voyages.




  [Illustration: Neptune.
    Adam (_Louvre, Paris_).]




NEPTUNE.


                      King of the stormy sea!
    Brother of Jove, and coinheritor
    Of elements! Eternally before
    Thee the waves awful bow. Fast, stubborn rock,
    At thy feared trident shrinking, doth unlock
    Its deep foundations, hissing into foam.
    All mountain rivers lost, in the wide home
    Of thy capacious bosom ever flow.
    Thou frownest, and old Æolus, thy foe,
    Skulks to his cavern, 'mid the gruff complaint
    Of all his rebel tempests. Dark clouds faint
    When, from thy diadem, a silver gleam
    Slants over blue dominion. Thy bright team
    Gulfs in the morning light, and scuds along
    To bring thee nearer to that golden song
    Apollo singeth, while his chariot
    Waits at the doors of heaven. Thou art not
    For scenes like this: an empire stern hast thou
    And it hath furrowed that large front: yet now,
    As newly come of heaven, dost thou sit
    To blend and interknit
    Subduéd majesty with this glad time.
    O shell-born king sublime!
    We lay our hearts before thee evermore--
    We sing, and we adore!
              --John Keats.




VULCAN.


Vulcan, the son of Jupiter and Juno, is the blacksmith of the gods.
His forges are in the caverns of volcanic mountains, where the fires
are bright and ready to heat the gold, silver, and iron, of which he
has made many wonderful things.

Vulcan built the magnificent palaces of the gods on Mount Olympus,
Juno's golden throne, and the chariot of Apollo. The delicate girdle
of Venus, the wife of Vulcan, was also made in his workshop. This was
a magic girdle; for whoever wore it inspired love in all she met, and
sometimes the goddesses would beg Venus to lend it to them.

The armor of Mars, god of war, and the shield of Minerva, goddess of
wisdom, were the work of Vulcan. Sometimes he even manufactured armor
for mortals, and Homer tells us of the marvelous shield he wrought for
Achilles, the bravest of the Greeks. The most powerful weapons that
Vulcan made at his forges were the dread thunderbolts of Jove and the
arrows of mischievous Cupid, the winged god of love.

Vulcan is represented as rather short and thickset, lame in one foot,
with a cap on his curly head, and a hammer in his hand. His workmen
are the Cyclops, powerful giants, who excel in all work in metals.




  [Illustration: Blossoms.
    Gamba le Preydour (_modern_).]




WORK.


      Sweet wind, fair wind, where have you been?
    "I've been sweeping the cobwebs out of the sky;
    I've been grinding a grist in the mill hard by;
    I've been laughing at work while others sigh;
            Let those laugh who win!"

      Sweet rain, soft rain, what are you doing?
    "I'm urging the corn to fill out its cells;
    I'm helping the lily to fashion its bells;
    I'm swelling the torrent and brimming the wells:
            Is that worth pursuing?"

      Redbreast, redbreast, what have you done?
    "I've been watching the nest where my fledgelings lie;
    I've sung them to sleep with a lullaby;
    By and by I shall teach them to fly,
            Up and away, every one!"

      Honeybee, honeybee, where are you going?
    "To fill my basket with precious pelf;
    To toil for my neighbor as well as myself;
    To find out the sweetest flower that grows,
    Be it a thistle or be it a rose--
            A secret worth the knowing!"

      Wind and rain fulfilling His word!
    Tell me, was ever a legend heard
    Where the wind, commanded to blow, deferred;
    Or the rain, that was bidden to fall, demurred?
              --Mary N. Prescott.




VENUS.


Venus is the goddess of beauty, born of the ocean spray. When the
tritons and nymphs who live in the sea beheld her, they loved her for
her beauty, and the waves and gentle breezes bore her to Olympus.

Venus is attended by three maidens called the Graces, who give to the
beauty of the goddess a charm which makes her lovely to all.

When she came to Olympus, all the gods loved her, but she proudly
rejected the eager suitors. When Jupiter, the king of the gods, fared
no better than the rest, he declared that she should be punished for
her pride and must marry Vulcan, the lame blacksmith god who lived in
the volcano, Mount Etna. Vulcan was delighted with her grace and
beauty, and made for her a magic girdle, and the wonderful arrows of
Cupid.

Joy and mirth always attend the goddess of beauty. Cupid, her son, the
roguish god of love, is her constant companion, and he sends his
arrows wherever she directs. Venus drives in a chariot drawn by
graceful swans. Cooing doves are her favorite birds, and roses and
myrtle are sacred to her.

  [Illustration: Venus de Milo.
    _Louvre, Paris._]

At the wedding of Thetis, a water nymph, all the gods and goddesses
except Eris were seated at the banquet. Eris is the goddess of
discord, and she had not been invited, as she always causes people to
quarrel and so is loved by no one. She was angry at this slight, and,
coming to the door of the banquet hall, she threw a golden apple upon
the table.

On the apple was written, "To the fairest." Eris knew that this would
be an apple of discord, because all the nymphs and goddesses were
fair, and each would claim to be fairer than the others.

After much discussion, the guests agreed that Juno, Minerva, and Venus
were fairer than all the others. These three at last decided to go to
Paris and let him judge between them. Paris was a shepherd of Mount
Ida, in Troy, and before him the lovely trio appeared in all their
wonderful beauty. He held the apple long in his hand, for all were so
fair that it was very difficult to decide. At last he gave the apple
to Venus, and thus decided that she was fairest of all the goddesses.

This decision is called the "Judgment of Paris."

Artists have often tried to paint their ideals of Venus. The most
beautiful statues in the world, ideals of womanly beauty, are those of
this goddess. They are in the galleries of the Old World. The one said
to be the most lovely is the Venus de Milo, in the gallery of the
Louvre, Paris.




  [Illustration: A Star.]




HER FACE.


    Such a starved bank of moss
        Till, that May morn,
    Blue ran the flash across:
        Violets were born!

    Sky--what a scowl of cloud
        Till, near and far,
    Ray on ray split the shroud:
        Splendid, a star!

    World--how it walled about
        Life with disgrace,
    Till God's own smile came out:
        That was thy face!
              --Robert Browning.




  [Illustration: Psyche.
    Kray (_modern_).]




CUPID AND PSYCHE.


There once lived a maid, called Psyche, who was so very beautiful that
the people who knew her thought her more lovely than Venus. So they
worshiped her, and refused to place garlands and offerings upon the
shrines of the goddess.

Desiring to punish the people for their impiety, Venus sent Cupid to
destroy the innocent Psyche. Although Cupid had used his weapons upon
others, he himself had never loved. But when he saw Psyche, he started
in surprise at her wonderful youthful beauty, and one of his own
arrows pricked his heart. So he loved her, and, instead of obeying his
mother's command, he carried her away to his home on a distant
mountain.

Here she lived in a palace of gleaming marble, surrounded by gardens
wherein were fragrant flowers and sparkling fountains. But one thing
troubled her. Cupid had told her that he could visit her only during
the night, and so she had never seen his face.

One night Psyche yielded to her curiosity, and held a lamp over him
while he slept. Dear Love was so beautiful as he lay there asleep,
that she tipped the lamp in her surprise, and a drop of oil fell upon
his rounded arm. Then he awoke and blamed Psyche for her curiosity and
lack of confidence, and, spreading his wings, flew far away to his
home with the gods. Poor Psyche wept bitterly, but Cupid did not
return.

Psyche means the soul, and this story teaches that love comes unsought
and unseen to the soul which is faithful and worthy; but if doubt and
curiosity possess the soul, love departs.

The Greeks chose the butterfly as the best emblem of the soul of man,
because it emerges from the chrysalis state into which the caterpillar
entered more beautiful than before. Psyche, the soul, is thus shown in
the works of art with the wings of a butterfly, or holding one of the
exquisite creatures in her hand.




LOVE.


    The night has a thousand eyes,
        And the day but one;
    Yet the light of the bright world dies
        With the dying sun.

    The mind has a thousand eyes,
        And the heart but one;
    Yet the light of a whole life dies
        When love is done.
              --Francis Bourdillon.




  [Illustration: Psyche and Charon.
    E. Neide (_modern_).]

PSYCHE AND VENUS.


Poor Psyche wandered far. At last she found Venus, whom she begged to
have pity and restore Cupid to her. Venus gave her many tasks to
perform. Although Psyche was often very tired, she knew she deserved
to work and suffer, because of her lack of faith in Cupid. Finally,
Venus sent her down to Hades, where King Pluto and Queen Persephone
reign, to bring back a box of beauty ointment.

The way was long and rough and dark. But Psyche persevered, and
finally reached the river Styx. She called to the grim boatman,
Charon, to row her across. He obeyed, and rowed her over the black
river in his dingy boat, and Persephone gave her the box. Psyche was
frightened by the terrible cries and the wretched dark faces of the
souls in Hades. But she thought only of Love. Then all the monsters
ceased to annoy her, and she came safely to earth again.

Alas, when her work was so bravely done, why did she yield to
temptation? She thought Love would think more of her if she were
fairer, and she opened the box to take just a little of the precious
beauty ointment. There was nothing in the box but a bad dream, which
immediately seized her, and she fell down in sleep.

Cupid loved and was sorry for Psyche, and he feared that some
misfortune had befallen her; so he spread his wings and flew in search
of the soul he loved. He soon found her asleep by the roadside. He
awoke her, and together they went to Olympus, where Venus forgave
them, and permitted them to be married.

Now Love and the Soul belong together, and although the way is dark
and lonely and difficult, you must believe that

    "Love leads the soul to its perfection."




LONGING.


    Of all the myriad moods of mind
        That through the soul come thronging
    Which one was e'er so dear, so kind,
        So beautiful as Longing?
    The thing we long for, that we are
        For one transcendent moment,
    Before the Present poor and bare
        Can make its sneering comment.

    Still, through our paltry stir and strife,
        Glows down the wished Ideal,
    And Longing molds in clay what Life
        Carves in the marble Real:
    To let the new life in, we know,
        Desire must ope the portal;
    Perhaps the longing to be so
        Helps make the soul immortal.

    Ah! let us hope that to our praise
        Good God not only reckons
    The moments when we tread His ways,
        But when the spirit beckons,
    That some slight good is also wrought
        Beyond self-satisfaction,
    When we are simply good in thought,
        Howe'er we fail in action.
              --James Russell Lowell.




  [Illustration: Cupid and Psyche.
    W. A. Bouguereau (_modern_).]




ST. VALENTINE'S DAY.


In the old Roman days, the people, in the month of February, had a
great feast, when they purified their homes and made sacrifices to the
gods. After this, the young people had games, and one of them was like
that of our valentine box. In this box were placed the names of
maidens. The young men drew out the names, and each must be a true and
loyal knight, for the following year, to the young woman whose name he
drew.

The name "valentine" comes from a kind Christian monk, who was the
friend of youth. We send valentines to those we love, and you know
there are emblems of love and fidelity upon these pretty gifts. Here
are the cooing doves, the graceful swan, the rose, and the myrtle--all
sacred to Venus, goddess of love and beauty. Cupid, her mischievous
son, has his bow and quiver filled with arrows with which to pierce
the hearts of the young. Here is the butterfly, the emblem of Psyche,
the Soul, whom Love chose to be his wife.

From the story of Cupid and Psyche we learn how love ennobles the
soul, purifying it of doubt, and raising it to perfect faith. For this
reason, we may well celebrate the day of kind St. Valentine, by
sending words of love and gifts of affection to our friends, in the
form of dainty valentines.




WHAT MARCH DOES.


    In the dark silence of her chamber low
    March works sweeter things than mortals know.
    Her noiseless looms ply on with busy care,
    Weaving the fine cloth that the flowers wear;
    She sews the seams in violet's queer hood,
    And paints the sweet arbutus of the wood.
    Out of a bit of sky's delicious blue
    She fashions hyacinths, and harebells too;
    And from a sunbeam makes a cowslip fair,
    Or spins a gown for a daffodil to wear.
    She pulls the cover from the crocus beds
    And bids the sleepers lift their drowsy heads.
    "Come, early risers; come, anemone,
    My pale windflower, awake, awake," calls she.
    "The world expects you, and your lovers wait
    To give you welcome at Spring's open gate."
    She marshals the close armies of the grass,
    And polishes their green blades as they pass
    And all the blossoms of the fruit trees sweet
    Are piled in rosy shells about her feet.
    Within her great alembic she distills
    The dainty odor which each flower fills.
    Nor does she ever give to mignonette
    The perfume that belongs to violet.
    Nature does well whatever task she tries
    Because _obedient_,--there the secret lies.
              --May Riley Smith.




PHAËTHON.


Phaëthon was the son of Apollo. One day he approached the palace of
his father and begged a favor. Apollo was pleased with his youthful
grace and beauty, and promised to grant his desire. Phaëthon then
boldly asked the great god of the sun for permission to drive his
horses for a single day.

Then did Apollo regret his hasty promise, and beg Phaëthon to ask
anything but that--because it is so dangerous to drive those fiery
steeds.

"You know not what you ask, my son, I am the only one who can drive
the chariot of the sun safely through the heavens. Even Jupiter
himself would not attempt so dangerous a task."

But Phaëthon was bold and proud, and finally Apollo yielded. The
horses were harnessed, the gates unbarred, Phaëthon seized the reins,
and away they flew! The horses knew that a weak hand held them, but
they were going uphill and kept well in the course. So Phaëthon grew
careless, and when the zenith was reached the horses paid no heed to
his guidance.

Exulting in their freedom from Apollo's masterful hand, they galloped
far from the path, now on this side, now on that.

  [Illustration: Phaëthon driving Apollo's Chariot.
    Max F. Klepper (_modern_).]

Sometimes they came so near the earth that the leaves and grass
withered, the crops were all destroyed, and the streams disappeared.
Then they turned so far away that snow fell, and the people shivered
and suffered from the cold.

All the people on earth were afraid, and even the gods on high Olympus
wondered what was amiss with Apollo, that his horses were so unruly.

Finally Jupiter looked over the heavens, and, seeing the reckless
Phaëthon, hurled a thunderbolt at him, and he fell headlong into the
river Po.

Hither every day came his sisters, the Heliades, wringing their hands
and weeping for their beloved brother. At length the gods changed them
into poplar trees, and their tears into amber.

Phaëthon's dearest friend, Cygnus, was continually plunging into the
river, hoping to find the body of the rash youth, and he was changed
into a swan. This bird now sails mournfully upon the waters,
frequently dipping his head below the surface, as if still searching
for his friend Phaëthon.




WINGS.


    Wings that flutter in sunny air;
    Wings that dive and dip and dare;
    Wings of the humming bird flashing by;
    Wings of the lark in the purple sky;
    Wings of the eagle aloft, aloof;
    Wings of the pigeon upon the roof;
    Wings of the storm bird swift and free,
    With wild winds sweeping across the sea:
        Often and often a voice in me sings,--
        O, for the freedom, the freedom of wings!

    O, to winnow the air with wings;
    O, to float far above hurtful things--
    Things that weary and wear and fret;
    Deep in the azure to fly and forget;
    To touch in a moment the mountain's crest,
    Or haste to the valley for home and rest;
    To rock with the pine tree as wild birds may;
    To follow the sailor a summer's day:
        Over and over a voice in me sings,--
        O, for the freedom, the freedom of wings!

    Softly responsive a voice in me sings,--
    Thou hast the freedom, the freedom of wings;
    Soon as the glass a second can count,
    Into the heavens thy heart may mount;
    Hope may fly to the topmost peak;
    Love its nest in the vale may seek;
    Outspeeding the sailor, Faith's pinions may
    Touch the ends of the earth in a summer's day.
        Softly responsive a voice in me sings,--
        Thou hast the freedom, the freedom of wings.
              --Mary F. Butts.




  [Illustration: Winged Mercury.
    _National Museum, Florence._]




  [Illustration: Mercury in his Chariot.
    Raphael (_Rome_).]

MERCURY.


Mercury, or Hermes, is a very interesting god. He is the messenger of
Jupiter, and has wings on his cap and sandals. He flies swifter than
the wind and wears a cloak which makes him invisible. As the wind
carries things away, Mercury is sometimes called the captain of
thieves, and he likes to play tricks.

While walking along a river bank one day, he carelessly hit a tortoise
shell, and it gave forth a musical sound. Mercury at once fashioned it
into a lyre. This musical instrument he gave to his brother Apollo,
who was so delighted with it that he gave Mercury a wonderful wand
called the caduceus. When animals or people quarrel, this wand will
make them friends again. One day Mercury threw it upon the ground
where two snakes were fighting, and at once they twined lovingly about
it, and Mercury kept them there as an emblem of the power of the wand.

The caduceus represents the gift of language; for when men quarrel and
are angry, if they use this wand and talk with each other, their
differences will soon disappear and they will become friends.

You will recognize the statues of Mercury by his caduceus and by his
winged cap and sandals. He is sometimes represented as standing upon a
tongue; for he gave to man the gift of speech, and is the god of
eloquence. Mercury is also the god of commerce; for if men could not
speak and converse with one another, there would be no commerce in the
world.




THE FINDING OF THE LYRE.


    There lay upon the ocean's shore
    What once a tortoise served to cover.
    A year and more, with rush and roar,
    The surf had rolled it over,
    Had played with it and flung it by,
    As wind and weather might decide it,
    Then tossed it high where sand drifts dry
    Cheap burial might provide it.

    It rested there to bleach or tan,
    The rains had soaked, the suns had burned it;
    With many a ban the fisherman
    Had stumbled o'er and spurned it;
    And there the fisher girl would stay,
    Conjecturing with her brother
    How in their play the poor estray
    Might serve some use or other.

    So there it lay, through wet and dry,
    As empty as the last new sonnet,
    Till by and by came Mercury,
    And, having mused upon it,
    "Why, here," cried he, "the thing of things
    In shape, material, and dimensions!
    Give it but strings, and lo, it sings,
    A wonderful invention!"

    So said, so done; the chords he strained,
    And, as his fingers o'er them hovered,
    The shell disdained a soul had gained,
    The lyre had been discovered.
    O empty world that round us lies,
    Dead shell, of soul and thought forsaken,
    Brought we but eyes like Mercury's,
    In thee what songs should waken!
              --James Russell Lowell.




  [Illustration: Storm King.
    Le Sénéschal (_modern_).
      Carbon by Braun, Clement & Co.]

ÆOLUS.


All nature is musical. If you will listen, you can hear the leaves
singing sweet songs, and the reeds along the river banks join in with
their voices. The brooks and the rivers sing and laugh; they are so
happy shining in the golden sun, or hiding in the cool shade.

The fairies have the flowers for their musical bells, and the grasses
sing softly to the dear mother earth. But the sweetest songs are the
carols of the merry birds, and the songs of happy children.

The winds are often noisy, but sometimes they seem to sing a musical
song. Some instruments in the orchestra, the flute and the horn, are
called wind instruments. There is a simple stringed instrument, called
the æolian harp. When the winds blow upon its sensitive, delicate
strings, musical sounds are heard, and we say that Æolus, king of the
winds, is playing upon his harp.

Long ago, the Lipari Islands, off the coast of Italy, were called the
Æolian Islands. Here in a rocky cave lived Æolus and the winds, who
were the children of Aurora and Æolus. All the winds were noisy and
fond of strife except Zephyrus, the youngest. Æolus kept them fastened
in the rocky cave, generally letting out but one at a time. They were
always rushing to the iron doors, quarreling and fighting among
themselves, and begging Æolus to let them out of the narrow cave.

Whenever one of the gods wished a storm at sea, he would ask Æolus to
release his sons; they would rush out of the cave, sweeping over the
seas in a whirlwind, raising the waves mountain high. Then the ships
were in great danger from wave and rock, as the winds rolled the
billows over the ships, or drove the vessels against the sharp cliffs.

Vergil, the great Latin poet, thus describes a storm raised by Æolus,
at the request of Juno,--

    "Æolus thus in reply: 'It is yours, O queen, to determine
    What you may wish to accomplish; to do your command is my
        duty;
    You have procured me my place, my scepter, and Jupiter's favor;
    You, too, the privilege grant to recline with the gods at their
        banquet;
    Over the tempest and storm, it is you who have made me the ruler.'
    Turning, he struck with his spear the side of the cavernous mountain,
    And, as in martial array, wherever an egress is granted,
    Eagerly pour forth the winds, and sweep o'er the earth in a
        whirlwind;
    Now on the sea have they fallen, and stirred to its deepest
        foundations;
    Eastward and southward together, and blasts of the gusty southwest
        wind
    Lash it all into a fury, and roll to the shore the vast billows.
    Now come the cries of the men, and the shrieks of the wind through
        the rigging;
    Then on a sudden collecting, the clouds, from the sight of the
        Trojans
    Shut out the sky and the day, o'er the sea broods the darkness of
        midnight;
    Thunder resounds through the sky, the air seems ablaze with the
        lightning;
    Everything seems to portend immediate death to the heroes."




ÆOLUS AND ULYSSES.


The famous Trojan war lasted ten years. After the Greeks had captured
the city, they were anxious to return to their homes in Greece. One of
the heroes, the wise Ulysses, had many strange adventures on his way
home from Troy. At last he and his men came in their ship to Æolia,
the home of the winds, where they were welcomed and entertained by
Æolus.

Æolus was so pleased with his guests that, when the time came for
Ulysses to continue his journey, the god gave him a bag with all the
dangerous winds shut up within it. Only one wind was not inclosed in
the bag--Zephyrus, the gentle south wind, which filled the sails and
bore him on his journey.

After eight days, Ulysses came in sight of Ithaca, the home he had so
long desired to see. He had not slept since leaving Æolia. Now, within
sight of his home, he believed that he and his ship were safe, and he
yielded to his desire for rest. The sailors were very glad to see him
sleep, for they wanted to know what Ulysses had in the bag he so
carefully guarded. They thought it was filled with gold and precious
stones.

Alas! when the avaricious sailors opened the bag, the winds rushed out
in fury and drove them far from their homes. At last they were again
cast upon the shores of the Æolian Islands.




THE CHAMBERED NAUTILUS.


    This is the ship of pearl, which, poets feign,
          Sails the unshadowed main,--
          The venturous bark that flings
    On the sweet summer wind its purpled wings
    In gulfs enchanted, where the Siren sings,
          And coral reefs lie bare,
    Where the cold sea maids rise to sun their streaming hair.

    Its webs of living gauze no more unfurl!
          Wrecked is the ship of pearl!
          And every chambered cell,
    Where its dim dreaming life was wont to dwell,
    As the frail tenant shaped his growing shell,
          Before thee lies revealed,--
    Its irised ceiling rent, its sunless crypt unsealed!

    Year after year beheld the silent toil
          That spread his lustrous coil;
          Still, as the spiral grew,
    He left the past year's dwelling for the new,
    Stole with soft step its shining archway through,
          Built up its idle door,
    Stretched in his last-found home, and knew the old no more.

    Thanks for the heavenly message brought by thee,
          Child of the wandering sea,
          Cast from her lap, forlorn!
    From thy dead lips a clearer note is born
    Than ever Triton blew from wreathéd horn!
          While on mine ear it rings,
    Through the deep caves of thought I hear a voice that sings:--

    Build thee more stately mansions, O my soul,
          As the swift seasons roll!
          Leave thy low-vaulted past!
    Let each new temple, nobler than the last,
    Shut thee from heaven with a dome more vast,
          Till thou at length art free,
    Leaving thine outgrown shell by life's unresting sea!
              --Oliver Wendell Holmes.




  [Illustration: Tower of the Winds.
    _Athens._]




THE WIND TOWER.


In Athens is a temple called the Tower of the Winds. There the people
came to offer sacrifices to the winds, and to hold games in their
honor. The Athenians felt that the winds had great power, and
therefore they built this beautiful tower. The tower has eight sides,
and on each side is sculptured a representation of one of the winds.

All of the winds are shown with wings, and in a flying posture.
Boreas, Aquilo, and Corus are the destructive winds, and are terrible
in appearance. Boreas, the north wind, is the father of storms at sea,
and carries a triton's horn. Aquilo, the northeast wind, is showering
hailstones, and Corus, the dry and parching northwest wind, has in his
hand a vessel of charcoal.

The east wind, which in Greece is a pleasant wind, is carrying fruit
and flowers. The rainy southeast wind, Eurus, is forming rain clouds;
while Notus, the south wind, who brings the sudden storms of rain, is
pouring rain from a jar. The southwest wind carries an ornament which
was always placed at the stern of every ancient ship, for it was an
important wind to the sailors of Greece. Zephyrus, the welcome west
wind, has a lap filled with spring flowers.

The gentle Zephyrus married Flora, goddess of the springtime. Together
they wander joyously over all lands, bringing happiness to the people.
The south wind wakes the flowers, and as Zephyrus and Flora pass,
violets, <DW29>s, daffodils, and roses lift their pretty heads, and
fill the land with beauty and fragrance.

  [Illustration: Zephyrus and Flora.
    Saintpierre (_modern_).
      Carbon by Braun, Clement & Co.]




MUDJEKEEWIS.


The Indians tell the story that once Mudjekeewis, a mighty hunter,
killed the great bear of the mountains. Mudjekeewis found the bear
asleep, and after stealthily taking off the belt of wampum which the
bear wore, he smote him in the middle of his forehead and stunned him.
They fought, and Mudjekeewis conquered.

When he returned home, he told of his victory, and showed the magic
belt. The Indians praised him for his bravery, and said,--"Mudjekeewis
shall rule over the winds of heaven. He shall be king of the winds,
and shall be called Kabeyun, the West-Wind."

Mudjekeewis has three sons--Wabun, Shawondasee, and Kabibonokka. To
Wabun, young and beautiful, he gave the east wind; to Shawondasee the
south wind, and the north wind to the fierce Kabibonokka.

Longfellow thus tells the story in "Hiawatha,"--

    "'Honor be to Mudjekeewis!'
    With a shout proclaimed the people,
    'Honor be to Mudjekeewis!
    Henceforth he shall be the West-Wind,
    And hereafter and forever
    Shall he hold supreme dominion
    Over all the winds of heaven.
    Call him no more Mudjekeewis,
    Call him Kabeyun, the West-Wind!'

    "Thus was Mudjekeewis chosen
    Father of the Winds of Heaven.
    For himself he kept the West-Wind,
    Gave the others to his children;
    Unto Wabun gave the East-Wind,
    Gave the South to Shawondasee,
    And the North-Wind, wild and cruel,
    To the fierce Kabibonokka."
              --Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.




WABUN.


Wabun was the son of Mudjekeewis. He was young and beautiful. When he
came from the east in the morning, his breath was fresh with the
perfume of flowers, and he painted the sky with streaks of crimson and
gold. He woke the deer and called the hunters, and chased the dark
over hill and valley.

But Wabun was lonely in the sky, and, although the birds sang to him
and the rivers and the forests shouted at his coming, he longed for a
friend to be with him always.

One day, when a fog lay on the river, he looked toward the earth and
saw a slender maiden walking all alone upon the meadow. She was
gathering water flags and bulrushes, which grew along the margin of
the river. Her eyes were as blue as two blue lakes.

Wabun loved the graceful maiden, for she was alone on the earth as he
was alone in the heavens. So he drew her to his bosom, and changed her
into a beautiful star.

They are still found together in the eastern sky, Wabun and the
Wabun-Annung, the east wind and the morning star.

    "Young and beautiful was Wabun;
    He it was who brought the morning,
    He it was whose silver arrows
    Chased the dark o'er hill and valley;
    He it was whose cheeks were painted
    With the brightest streaks of crimson,
    And whose voice awoke the village,
    Called the deer, and called the hunter.

    "Lonely in the sky was Wabun;
    Though the birds sang gaily to him,
    Though the wild flowers of the meadow
    Filled the air with odors for him,
    Though the forests and the rivers
    Sang and shouted at his coming,
    Still his heart was sad within him,
    For he was alone in heaven.

    "But one morning, gazing earthward
    While the village still was sleeping,
    And the fog lay on the river,
    Like a ghost, that goes at sunrise,
    He beheld a maiden walking
    All alone upon a meadow,
    Gathering water flags and rushes
    By a river in the meadow.

    "Every morning, gazing earthward,
    Still the first thing he beheld there
    Was her blue eyes looking at him,
    Two blue lakes among the rushes.
    And he loved the lonely maiden,
    Who thus waited for his coming;
    For they both were solitary,
    She on earth, and he in heaven.

    "And he wooed her with caresses,
    Wooed her with his smile of sunshine,
    With his flattering words he wooed her,
    With his sighing and his singing.
    Gentlest whispers in the branches,
    Softest music, sweetest odors,
    Till he drew her to his bosom
    Folded in his robes of crimson,
    Till into a star he changed her,
    Trembling still upon his bosom;
    And forever in the heavens
    They are seen together walking
    Wabun and the Wabun-Annung,
    Wabun and the Star of Morning."
              --Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.




SHAWONDASEE.


Shawondasee, fat and lazy, rules the south wind. He lives in the warm
and pleasant south land, the land of perpetual summer. He sends us the
beautiful Indian summer in November, the month of snowshoes, that we
may not forget him during the long, cold winter.

    "From his pipe the smoke ascending
    Filled the sky with haze and vapor,
    Filled the air with dreamy softness,
    Gave a twinkle to the water,
    Touched the rugged hills with smoothness,
    Brought the tender Indian Summer
    To the melancholy north-land,
    In the dreary moon of Snow-shoes."
              --Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

Once Shawondasee thought he saw a maiden with golden tresses standing
far away in the meadow. He loved her, but was too lazy to bestir
himself to woo her. After watching her for some time, and always
loving her, alas! her golden hair changed to white floss and was blown
about the prairie.

Shawondasee was sad, and he thought that his brother Kabibonokka had
turned her hair from gold to white. But it was no maiden he had seen.
It was only the prairie dandelion.




LITTLE DANDELION.


    Gay little Dandelion
      Lights up the meads,
    Swings on her slender foot,
      Telleth her beads;
    Lists to the robin's note
      Poured from above:
    Wise little Dandelion
      Asks not for love.

    Cold lie the daisy banks
      Clothed but in green,
    Where in the days agone
      Bright hues were seen.
    Wild pinks are slumbering;
      Violets delay:
    True little Dandelion
      Greeteth the May.

    Brave little Dandelion;
      Fast falls the snow,
    Bending the daffodil's
      Haughty head low.
    Under that fleecy tent,
      Careless of cold,
    Blithe little Dandelion
      Counteth her gold.

    Meek little Dandelion
      Groweth more fair,
    Till dies the amber dew
      Out from her hair.
    High rides the thirsty sun,
      Fiercely and high;
    Faint little Dandelion
      Closeth her eye.

    Pale little Dandelion,
      In her white shroud,
    Heareth the angel breeze
      Call from the cloud.
    Tiny plumes fluttering
      Make no delay;
    Little winged Dandelion
      Soareth away.
              --Helen B. Bostwick.




KABIBONOKKA.


To the fierce Kabibonokka, Mudjekeewis gave the cold and cruel north
wind. He lives far away toward the north in the regions of ice and
snow. In the autumn and winter he comes out from his home, and travels
toward the south.

He stamps upon the rivers, and the waters freeze. Frost pictures
appear upon the windowpanes, the birds fly southward, and no one
remains in the kingdom of the north wind but the Diver. This brave
Diver cares not for the cold or for the stormy north wind. He sits in
his wigwam, merry and warm; for he has four great logs for his fire,
and each log will last a month. Kabibonokka enters the wigwam, but
cannot stand the heat, and so taunts the Diver and dares him to a
combat in the open air. Long they fight; but at length the Diver
conquers, and the cold and fierce Kabibonokka is driven back into his
kingdom of the north.

The Diver is the glorious sun, who, with his warm golden beams, beats
back the cold, and brings the pleasant summer with the birds and
flowers.

    "But the fierce Kabibonokka
    Had his dwelling among icebergs,
    In the everlasting snowdrifts,
    In the kingdom of Wabasso,
    In the land of the White Rabbit.
    He it was whose hand in Autumn
    Painted all the trees with scarlet,
    Stained the leaves with red and yellow;
    He it was who sent the snowflakes,
    Sifting, hissing, through the forest,
    Froze the ponds, the lakes, the rivers,
    Drove the loon and sea gull southward,
    Drove the cormorant and curlew
    To their nests of sedge and sea tang
    In the realms of Shawondasee."
              --Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.




WHAT THE WINDS BRING.


    Which is the wind that brings the cold?
      The north wind, Freddy, and all the snow;
    And the sheep will scamper into the fold
      When the north begins to blow.

    Which is the wind that brings the heat?
      The south wind, Katy; and corn will grow,
    And peaches redden for you to eat,
      When the south begins to blow.

    Which is the wind that brings the rain?
      The east wind, Arty; and farmers know
    That cows come shivering up the lane,
      When the east begins to blow.

    Which is the wind that brings the flowers?
      The west wind, Bessy; and soft and low
    The birdies sing in the summer hours,
      When the west begins to blow.
              --Edmund Clarence Stedman.




  [Illustration: Iris.
    Guy Head (_Rome_).]




IRIS.


The Greeks lived much in the open air, and they loved to watch the
fleecy clouds float lazily across the blue heavens, or at night to see
the bright, golden stars shine down upon them like friendly eyes. They
believed that Juno was goddess of the heavens when they were calm and
peaceful, as Jupiter was god of the storm cloud and of the
thunderbolt.

Whenever they saw the radiant rainbow, they said, "There is the
glowing Iris, the messenger of Juno, carrying some message from the
sky to the earth." They thought that Iris had shining wings of various
colors, and that while she stayed upon earth, you could see her path
in the heavens marked by the many- rainbow.




THE RAINBOW.


    My heart looks up when I behold
        A rainbow in the sky.
    So was it when my life began;
    So is it now I am a man;
    So be it when I shall grow old
        Or let me die!
    The child is father of the man;
    And I could wish my days to be
    Bound each to each by natural piety.
              --William Wordsworth.




RAINBOW STORIES.


The Indians had a lovely thought about the rainbow,--perhaps more
beautiful than the belief of the Greeks.

You know how sweet and beautiful the flowers are, how we love the
roses, the lilies, the <DW29>s, and the golden-rod, and how sorry we
are to have them leave us when the cold winds blow.

The Indians also loved the flowers; and they fancied, when they saw
such lovely colors in the rainbow which spans the heavens, that all
the wild flowers--the lilies, the buttercups, and windflowers, the
dainty violets and the moss of the woods--were still living and
blossoming in the heavens.

Our poet Longfellow has told us about this myth in his "Song of
Hiawatha." The little Hiawatha

    "Saw the rainbow in the heaven,
    In the eastern sky, the rainbow,
    Whispered, 'What is that, Nokomis?'
    And the good Nokomis answered:
    ''Tis the heaven of flowers you see there;
    All the wild flowers of the forest,
    All the lilies of the prairie,
    When on earth they fade and perish,
    Blossom in that heaven above us.'"

In the Old Testament we are told that many, many years ago there was a
great flood. It had rained for forty days and forty nights, when
suddenly the rain ceased, and a beautiful rainbow was seen by the
people on the earth. How glad they were to see it! For they knew it
was God's promise not to send another flood, and they were happy in
this thought.

"And the bow shall be in the cloud; and I will look upon it, that I
may remember the everlasting covenant."




THE RAINBOW FAIRIES.


    Two little clouds one summer's day
      Went flying through the sky.
    They went so fast they bumped their heads,
      And both began to cry.
    Old Father Sun looked out and said,
      "O, never mind, my dears,
    I'll send my little fairy folk
      To dry your falling tears."

    One fairy came in violet,
      And one in indigo,
    In blue, green, yellow, orange, red,--
      They made a pretty row.
    They wiped the cloud tears all away,
      And then, from out the sky,
    Upon a line the sunbeams made
      They hung their gowns to dry.
              --Lizzie M. Hadley.




NARCISSUS.


Narcissus was a vain youth, and loved no one but himself. One day,
while looking into a quiet stream, he thought he saw a lovely naiad in
the water gazing up at him.

He smiled upon her, and she also smiled. Day after day he came to the
bank and begged the lovely naiad to come out of the water, and roam
with him through the flowery meadows of earth. Every day he believed
she would come; for she seemed to smile upon him and welcome him, even
as he spoke and smiled upon her.

Some days, when the waters were dark and ruffled by the wind, he could
not see her blue eyes and golden ringlets, and he thought she was
vexed with him.

He never knew it was his own face he saw reflected in the water, and
at last, after weary watching and waiting, he pined away and died.
Echo and all the nymphs of the stream and of the grove mourned for
him. He was beautiful even in death, for the gods had changed him into
a flower. His pale face and golden hair were changed into the delicate
narcissus, which delights us with its graceful form and rare
fragrance.

The narcissus grows upon the margin of streams, and, bending over the
waters, seems to admire its image mirrored there.




  [Illustration: The Brook.]

THE BROOK.


    I come from haunts of coot and hern,
      I make a sudden sally,
    And sparkle out among the fern,
      To bicker down a valley.

    By thirty hills I hurry down,
      Or slip between the ridges,
    By twenty thorps, a little town,
      And half a hundred bridges.

    I chatter over stony ways,
      In little sharps and trebles,
    I bubble into eddying bays,
      I babble on the pebbles.

    I wind about, and in and out,
      With here a blossom sailing,
    And here and there a lusty trout,
      And here and there a grayling.

    And here and there a foamy flake
      Upon me, as I travel
    With many a silvery water break
      Above the golden gravel,

    And draw them all along, and flow
      To join the brimming river;
    For men may come and men may go,
      But I go on forever.

    I steal by lawns and grassy plots,
      I slide by hazel covers;
    I move the sweet forget-me-nots,
      That grow for happy lovers.

    I slip, I slide, I gloom, I glance,
      Among my skimming swallows;
    I make the netted sunbeam dance
      Against my sandy shallows.

    And out again I curve and flow
      To join the brimming river;
    For men may come and men may go,
      But I go on forever.
              --Alfred Tennyson.




ECHO AND NARCISSUS.


Diana had many young and lovely nymphs, who attended her in her
rambles over the wooded hills. Among these maids was Echo, a very
graceful and merry nymph of the mountain. Echo had one serious fault,
however. She was too fond of talking, and was always anxious to say
the last word.

One day she angered Juno, with whom she was talking, and the goddess
punished her severely. She said,--"Echo, this shall be your punishment
for trying to deceive me. You may still have the last word as you are
so fond of it, but never the first. You shall not have the power to
begin the conversation; you may only reply."

Soon after this Echo met Narcissus, a handsome youth who was hunting
upon the mountain. She admired his grace and skill in the hunt and
wished very much to join in the chase. But she could not speak to him,
and when he called to his companions she could only repeat the last
words. Narcissus did not care to please the nymph, and so refused to
speak with her or to allow her to join in the hunt.

  [Illustration: Echo.
    Copyright, 1893, by Photographische Gesellschaft.]

After Narcissus left the mountain, Echo sought a lonely cave amid the
rocks; and she grieved so over her punishment, that she pined away
until nothing was left of the lovely nymph but her voice. Sometimes,
in the lonely mountain paths, if you call, you will hear Echo
repeating your words softly from a distance. But you will never see
her; she is nothing but a voice.




BLUE.


    Blue! 'Tis the life of heaven,--the domain
      Of Cynthia,--the wide palace of the sun,--
    The tent of Hesperus, and all his train,--
      The bosomer of clouds, gold, gray, and dun.

    Blue! 'Tis the life of waters--ocean
      And all its vassal streams; pools numberless
    May range, and foam, and fret, but never can
      Subside, if not to dark-blue nativeness.

    Blue! Gentle cousin of the forest green,
      Married to green in all the sweetest flowers--
    Forget-me-not, the bluebell, and that queen
      Of secrecy, the violet: what strange powers
    Hast thou, as a mere shadow! But how great
    When in an eye thou art alive with fate!
              --John Keats.




  [Illustration: The Parthenon.
    _Athens._]

MINERVA.


The wonderful goddess Minerva is said to have come full-grown from the
brain of her father, Jupiter, king of the gods. She is tall, and clad
in full armor. Her name Minerva means "mind." She is called the
goddess of wisdom, and she took the throne which the stupid goddess
Dullness had held before. Unlike Mars, Minerva does not love war, but
she is very brave when compelled to fight.

A city in Greece was to be named, and Neptune and Minerva contended
for the honor. The gods decided that the one who produced the article
most valuable to man should name the city.

Neptune struck the ground with his trident, and there sprang forth a
horse, strong and noble. All admired Neptune's gift, and did not
believe that Minerva could surpass him.

When Minerva produced the olive tree, they laughed, and all thought
that Neptune had won. But the goddess told them that the olive tree
could furnish wood for fire, for building houses, and for making many
useful articles; that food and oil could be obtained from it; and that
even clothing could be made from its fiber.

The gods then said that, while men could live without horses, they
could not live without food, warmth, and shelter, and Minerva had the
honor of naming the city.

Minerva was called Pallas Athene by the Greeks, and so the city in
Greece was named Athens. In this city was erected a beautiful temple
in her honor, called the Parthenon. Its ruins are still standing.

In this temple was a magnificent statue of Minerva, made by the great
sculptor Phidias. It was of ivory and gold. The goddess wears a long
cloak and a helmet, and carries a shield and spear. At her feet is
coiled a serpent, the emblem of wisdom. Minerva has clear blue eyes,
is always calm and dignified, and helps all those who wish to excel in
wisdom, or to obtain skill in the arts of peace.




MINERVA AND ARACHNE.


Arachne was a young girl who was famous for her skill in embroidery
and weaving. All the women of Greece knew that she excelled in this
feminine work, and they liked to see her with her loom or needle. Even
the nymphs, who love to sport about the fountains and in the groves,
would leave their play to watch her.

It was pleasant to see her deftly separate the wool, and card it until
it was soft and fleecy as down. Then dexterously twirling the spindle,
she wove the web so quickly and easily that one watched her fingers
with delight. Under her skillful touch, the trees in her tapestry
seemed to bend before the gentle breeze, and the flowers were so
perfect that they were as beautiful as those growing in the gardens.

"Minerva, the goddess of weaving, must be her teacher," said all who
saw her wonderful work.

But this did not please Arachne, who was vain and proud. "I am my own
teacher," she said, with a saucy toss of her pretty head, "and Minerva
herself cannot compete with me."

This proud boast Minerva heard. The gods do not like such boasting,
and Minerva determined to correct her or to punish her. She changed
her form, and appeared before Arachne as a wise old woman.

  [Illustration: Minerva.
    _Vatican, Rome._]

"My child," she said, "do not challenge a goddess. Your work is
beautiful and deserves praise, but Minerva's skill is that of a
goddess. You are a mortal, and you should ask forgiveness of Minerva
for your rash speech."

Arachne was angry at these wise words, and replied: "I do not wish
your advice. I do not fear the goddess, and do not ask her
forgiveness. If she is not afraid, let her come, and we will compare
our work."

Lo! as she spoke, Minerva dropped her disguise, and stood revealed--a
goddess. All around were amazed, and trembled before the glorious
Minerva, except the angry Arachne.

Her friends tried to influence her to give up the contest, and to ask
Minerva to forgive her irreverent words. But Arachne still thought she
could excel the goddess in weaving, and, as Minerva said no more, the
contest began.

Each took her place. Wools of different dyes were given them. Both
worked with speed, and the slender shuttle seemed to fly under their
fingers.

Arachne showed Leda and the swan, and Europa and the bull, with such
fidelity to nature that they seemed to move and breathe. But the
goddess showed her contest with Neptune. Twelve of the great gods were
represented. Neptune with his trident had just produced the horse,
that animal so strong and so useful to man. Minerva stood with her
helmet and shield, showing her gift to man--the olive tree.

All the beholders saw that Minerva had surpassed Arachne, and felt
that the proud girl must be punished for her pride and impiety.
Minerva, more in pity than in anger, touched Arachne's forehead and
said, "Live, guilty woman, and thus shall you preserve the memory of
this lesson to all future times."

Speaking thus, the goddess changed the hapless Arachne into a spider.
If you look at a spider's web, you will see that the descendants of
Arachne still show great patience and skill, and spin wonderful webs.




MINERVA'S WEAVING.


    She made the story of the old debate
    Which she with Neptune did for Athens try:
    Twelve gods do sit around in royal state,
    And Jove in midst with awful majesty,
    To judge the strife between them stirréd late;
    Each of the gods, by his like visnomy
    Is to be known, but Jove above them all,
    By his great looks and power imperial.

    Before them stands the god of seas in place,
    Claiming that seacoast city as his right;
    And strikes the rocks with his three-forkéd mace;
    Whenceforth issues a warlike steed in sight,
    The sign by which he challengeth the place;
    That all the gods, which saw his wondrous might,
    Did surely deem the victory his due;
    But seldom seen, forejudgment proveth true.

    Then to herself she gives her Ægide shield,
    And steel-head spear, and morion on her head
    Such as she oft is seen in warlike field:
    Then sets she forth, how with her weapon dread
    She smote the ground, the which straightforth did yield
    A fruitful olive tree, with berries spread,
    That all the gods admired: then, all the story
    She compassed with a wreath of olives hoary.

    Amongst these leaves she made a butterfly,
    With excellent device and wondrous slight,
    Flutt'ring among the olives wantonly,
    That seemed to live, so like it was in sight:
    The velvet nap which on his wings doth lie,
    The silken down with which his back is dight,
    His broad outstretchéd horns, his hairy thighs,
    His glorious colors, and his glistening eyes.
              --Edmund Spenser.




  [Illustration: Minerva, Prometheus, and Man.
    A. B. Thorwaldsen.]

PROMETHEUS.


The gods told the wise Prometheus to bestow gifts upon all the animals
of the earth, according to their need. So to the deer he gave
swiftness; to the lion, courage; to the horse, strength; to the eagle,
strong pinions; to the ox, patience; to the dog, keenness of scent;
and to the nightingale, a melodious voice.

After the animals had all received special gifts, the gods told
Prometheus to make man to rule over them. Prometheus made man after
the image of the gods, but smaller and weaker, and Minerva gave to him
mind and soul. Prometheus loved the man he had made, but as he had
already bestowed all the gifts he had upon the animals, for a long
time he could not think of a way in which to give man power over them.
At last he decided that he must obtain for man the gift of fire.

But how could he get this wonderful element? He knew that Jupiter
would never grant it; for fire belonged to Apollo, the god of the sun,
and punishment would be inflicted upon any one who attempted to obtain
it by stealth or by force. Yet his love for man prevailed over his
fear and by night he approached the chariot wheels of the sun and
stole some fire, bringing it to earth in a hollow tube. With this
power, man conquers the cold, makes the minerals plastic, forces his
way through mountains, and crosses deep seas.

When Jupiter discovered that Prometheus had bestowed this great gift
on man, he punished him very severely; but Prometheus endured the
punishment bravely, conscious that man would always profit by his
daring. Prometheus has always been called the friend of man, and many
poets have written in his honor.




HOME THOUGHTS FROM ABROAD.


    Oh, to be in England
    Now that April's there,
    And whoever wakes in England
    Sees, some morning, unaware,
    That the lowest boughs and the brushwood sheaf
    Round the elm-tree bole are in tiny leaf,
    While the chaffinch sings on the orchard bough
          In England--now!

    And after April, when May follows,
    And the whitethroat builds, and all the swallows!
    Hark, where my blossomed pear tree in the hedge
    Leans to the field, and scatters on the clover
    Blossoms and dewdrops at the bent spray's edge--
    That's the wise thrush; he sings each song twice over,
    Lest you should think he never could recapture
          That first fine careless rapture!

    And though the fields look rough with hoary dew,
    All will be gay when noontide wakes anew
    The buttercups, the little children's dower
    Far brighter than this gaudy melon flower!
              --Robert Browning.




ADONIS.


Adonis was a youth of wonderful beauty. Tall and lithe and graceful,
he seemed like a young god, although he was but a mortal. He was fond
of hunting, and day after day found him roaming over the hills and
through the forests with his bow and arrows. His step was light and
bounding, and he seemed to belong to the life of the hills as much as
the trees and flowers.

Tired with the hunt, he would throw himself upon the leafy turf and
look up through the great branches of the trees to the azure skies.

It seemed to him that he could understand what the leaves were saying,
as they rustled in the breeze. The clouds made him think of
white-sailed boats floating on a blue sea, and he wished that he could
sail with them to the home of the god of the golden sun. The grass
seemed to whisper to him and tell him the secrets of the earth mother,
and the streams leaping down the mountain sides seemed to laugh
joyously and to call upon him to follow.

Adonis did not care for city life; the woods held all of beauty for
him. And he was not at all surprised, one day, when he saw Venus
coming towards him, her beauty radiant in the sunlight. She seemed to
him to be at home in the woods he loved so well.

Venus loved Adonis, and they went hunting together. Adonis was bold,
and wished to chase the larger game; but Venus warned him against the
fierce wild boars and the wolves. When Venus was with Adonis, he
listened to her advice. But in her absence, one day, he pursued a wild
boar. His arrow struck the boar and angered him. Fiercely the animal
sprang upon the youthful hunter, and thrust his tusks through his
side, and Adonis sank in death.

Venus grieved for his death. "Alas!" she cried, "why did you hunt the
cruel beasts which care not for youth or grace or beauty? Long shall I
lament your untimely death, Adonis. From your blood a flower shall
spring to keep your memory upon the earth, and people shall say, 'This
is the flower of Adonis.'" At that moment blossomed the tender
anemone, the windflower, which every spring adorns the warm hillsides.

This myth has almost the same meaning as the myth of Ceres and
Persephone. When the youthful Adonis, the springtime of the year, is
hunting over the hills and valleys, Venus, the cherishing mother, is
glad and happy in his presence, and all the earth is filled with
flower and fruit.

But before the tusk of the wild boar, the cruel and frosty winter,
Adonis is slain; and Venus grieves, as Ceres laments when Persephone
is in the kingdom of Pluto.




ORIGIN OF THE OPAL.


    A dewdrop came, with a spark of flame
        He had caught from the sun's last ray,
    To a violet's breast, where he lay at rest
        Till the hours brought back the day.

    The rose looked down, with a blush and frown;
        But she smiled all at once, to view
    Her own bright form, with its coloring warm,
        Reflected back by the dew.

    Then the stranger took a stolen look
        At the sky, so soft and blue;
    And a leaflet green with its silver sheen,
        Was seen by the idler too.

    A cold north wind, as he thus reclined,
        Of a sudden raged around;
    And a maiden fair, who was walking there,
        Next morning, an opal found.




THE APPLES OF THE HESPERIDES.


Far away in the west was a beautiful land that belonged to King
Hesperus. This king had three lovely daughters who cared for the
fruits and flowers of the gardens. In the gardens were many graceful
trees whose boughs bent under the weight of delicious fruit. Flowers
red, yellow, and orange adorned the walks.

When Juno, goddess of the sky, married Jupiter, her sister Ceres gave
her a handsome present. Ceres is the earth goddess who cultivates the
fruits, flowers, and grains, and the best gift she could bestow upon
her sister was some golden apples.

Juno prized these apples highly, and gave them to the Hesperides, the
daughters of Hesperus. They placed them upon the shadiest tree of the
garden, and watched and cared for them very carefully.

Once they were taken away by Hercules, the strong hero who performed
many wonderful labors, but they were afterwards restored to the
careful hands of the maidens.

Many heroes heard of the beautiful land, Hesperia, and of the
wonderful apples growing there, and sailed westward to find them. Some
people think that the golden apples were really the oranges of Spain,
a rich and famous country west of Greece.




  [Illustration: Juno.
    _National Museum, Naples._]




CLEON AND I.


    Cleon hath ten thousand acres,
      Ne'er a one have I;
    Cleon dwelleth in a palace.
      In a cottage I;
    Cleon hath a dozen fortunes,
      Not a penny I:
    Yet the poorer of the twain is
      Cleon, and not I.

    Cleon is a slave to grandeur,
      Free as thought am I;
    Cleon fees a score of doctors,
      Need of none have I;
    Wealth surrounded, care environed,
      Cleon fears to die;
    Death may come--he'll find me ready,
      Happier man am I.

    Cleon sees no charms in Nature,
      In a daisy I;
    Cleon hears no anthems ringing
      'Twixt the sea and sky;
    Nature sings to me forever,
      Earnest listener I:
    State for state, with all attendants--
      Who would change? Not I.
              --Charles Mackay.




PANDORA.


Vulcan was always trying his skill, and he made many wonderful and
beautiful things. One day he invited the gods to see his latest
creation. Here stood a beautiful figure, resembling Venus in beauty.
The gods were delighted with his work, and decided each to bestow upon
the woman some excellent gift.

Minerva gave skill in handicraft, Mercury gave wit in conversation,
Venus the power to please, the Graces added charm to her beauty, and
Jupiter at last gave life and immortality. Because of these many
gifts, she was named Pandora, a Greek word meaning "all gifts."

The gods sent Pandora to Prometheus and Epimetheus, the brothers who
loved mankind. Prometheus would not receive the lovely maiden, for he
knew the gods did not love him and he feared their gifts. But
Epimetheus welcomed her to his home.

For some time they lived happily, but trouble came to them because of
Pandora's curiosity. In the palace of Epimetheus was a quaintly carved
box. Pandora had wondered what was in it, for Epimetheus did not know.

"The winged messenger brought it," he told her, "and said that it
contained a secret of the immortal gods. We must not open it, dear
Pandora, for mortals should not know the secrets of the immortals."

But Pandora was not to be satisfied. Day after day the longing grew
upon her to open the box. She believed it contained beautiful garments
or ornaments, and she said to herself: "Why should the gods leave the
box here, if we must not open it? There are many places where they
could have hidden it." So she persuaded herself that she would not be
doing wrong to open the box, although a little voice seemed to warn
her not to disobey.

Slowly she approached the box. The figures upon it seemed to smile
upon her. She thought she would open it just a little and peep in.
Poor Pandora! The moment she lifted the cover, all the sorrow and
sickness and sin which had been shut up in this wonderful box, flew
out and winged their way all over the earth.

Pandora was overcome with remorse and let the cover fall. In the midst
of her grief, she heard a sweet voice say, "Pandora, dear Pandora, do
not grieve so; let me out to comfort you."

"No, indeed," replied Pandora; "too many of your sisters and brothers
have I let out already."

But the voice persisted, and was so kind and gentle that at last
Pandora yielded, and Hope came forth to comfort and help man to endure
all the evils of this life. In sickness or sorrow, hope points to
happier to-morrows, and when we have done wrong and repent, hope
encourages us to do what we know is right.




  [Illustration: A Landscape.
    J. B. C. Corot (1796-1878).]




THE GLADNESS OF NATURE.


    Is this a time to be cloudy and sad,
      When our mother nature laughs around;
    When even the deep blue heavens look glad,
      And gladness breathes from the blossoming ground?

    There are notes of joy from the hangbird and wren,
      And the gossip of swallows through all the sky;
    The ground squirrel gayly chirps by his den,
      And the wilding bee hums merrily by.

    The clouds are at play in the azure space
      And their shadows at play on the bright green vale;
    And here they stretch to the frolic chase,
      And there they roll on the easy gale.

    There's a dance of leaves in that aspen bower,
      There's a titter of winds in that beechen tree,
    There's a smile on the fruit, and a smile on the flower,
      And a laugh from the brook that runs to the sea.

    And look at the broad-faced sun, how he smiles,
      On the dewy earth that smiles in his ray,
    On the leaping waters and gay young isles;
      Ay, look, and he'll smile thy gloom away.
              --William Cullen Bryant.




  [Illustration: Hebe.
    A. Canova (1757-1822).]




HEBE AND GANYMEDE.


As you know, the home of the gods and goddesses was a mountain in
Greece called Olympus. It is the loftiest mountain of that country,
and its top is often encircled by clouds. Here were the marble palaces
of the gods. On this mountain, they would meet in council to decide
upon the fate of mortals, or they would come together for a merry
feast.

Fair Hebe, the goddess of youth, was their cupbearer. It was her duty
to pour out the delicious nectar. She was so graceful and light-footed
that she seemed to float rather than to walk. The rosy light of youth
and health shone from her bright eyes and glowing cheeks.

But, alas! one day she stumbled, and some of the nectar fell upon the
marble floor. The gods demand perfect service, and dislike
awkwardness, so poor Hebe was in disgrace. Although she was the
daughter of Jupiter and Juno, she could no longer serve the gods, and
Jupiter sought another cupbearer.

This god can assume any shape he chooses, and as an eagle he flew over
the lands until he saw Ganymede, the son of a Trojan king. Jupiter was
so pleased with him that he carried him to high Olympus for cupbearer
in place of Hebe.




MAY.


    Merry, rollicking, frolicking May
    Into the woods came skipping one day;
    She teased the brook till he laughed outright,
    And gurgled and scolded with all his might;
    She chirped to the birds and bade them sing
    A chorus of welcome to Lady Spring;
    And the bees and butterflies she set
    To waking the flowers that were sleeping yet.
    She shook the trees till the buds looked out
    To see what the trouble was all about,
    And nothing in Nature escaped that day
    The touch of the life-giving, bright, young May.
              --Macdonald.




VESTA.


A beautiful little building in Rome is called the Temple of Vesta.
Hundreds of years have passed since the Romans built this shrine. Many
buildings and temples erected since have been destroyed, but this
little temple still stands to show the thought and the artistic taste
of the old Romans.

Vesta is the goddess of the hearth. Fire is the emblem of friendship
and hospitality, and in the temple of Vesta the fire was kept burning
night and day. The Romans believed that if this fire went out, great
trouble would come upon the people. So maidens were chosen to guard
the fire and honor the goddess.

Little girls, six years old, were taken from the best families in
Rome, for it was considered a great honor to be chosen. For ten years
they were taught the duties of a vestal virgin. Then for ten years
they served the goddess at her altar fires, and after that they became
the teachers of the young children.

When a great general had won a victory over the enemies of Rome, and
all the people gathered to celebrate the return of the soldiers from
the battlefield, the vestal virgins had an honored place in the
procession. At the great games held in the Coliseum, the vestals sat
next to the emperor; for they guarded the fire of home--the dearest
place on earth.




SWEET AND LOW.


    Sweet and low, sweet and low,
      Wind of the western sea,
    Low, low, breathe and blow,
      Wind of the western sea!
    Over the rolling waters go,
    Come from the dying moon, and blow,
      Blow him again to me;
    While my little one, while my pretty one, sleeps.

    Sleep and rest, sleep and rest,
      Father will come to thee soon;
    Rest, rest, on mother's breast,
      Father will come to thee soon;
    Father will come to his babe in the nest,
    Silver sails all out of the west
      Under the silver moon:
    Sleep, my little one, sleep, my pretty one, sleep.
              --Alfred Tennyson.




  [Illustration: Mother and Child.
    Saubès (_modern_).]




THE ORIGIN OF THE MOSS ROSE.


One beautiful summer day a fairy saw a butterfly with golden wings. He
tried to catch the lovely insect, and it led him a merry chase from
flower to flower. At last the fairy found himself in a strange wood,
and he did not know the way home. The sun had set, the wind had gone
away, and no one could direct him.

Wearied with his search, he determined to rest until the moon rose,
when the fairies would come forth to dance upon the mossy banks. He
looked about him for a resting place, and asked a stately lily to let
him sleep on her broad leaves; but the petals were closed, and she
would not receive him. Many flowers refused him shelter. At last, worn
out and almost hopeless, he came to a rose. This lovely flower spread
wide her soft, fragrant petals as a downy couch for the tired fairy.

After a quiet nap he awoke, rested and grateful, and asked the rose
what return he could make for her kindness. The rose bowed her pretty
head, and replied, "Make me more beautiful."

The fairy looked at the rose blushing in the silvery moonlight, and
wondered how she could be more lovely. Soon he noticed the dainty
green moss at his feet, and drew a delicate veil of it over the rose.




  [Illustration: Cupid Asleep.
    L. Perrault (_modern_).]




THE MOSS ROSE.


    The angel of the flowers, one day,
    Beneath a rose tree sleeping lay,--
    That spirit to whose charge 'tis given
    To bathe young buds in dews of heaven;
    Awaking from his light repose,
    The angel whispered to the rose:
    "O fondest object of my care,
    Still fairest found, where all are fair;
    For the sweet shade thou giv'st to me,
    Ask what thou wilt, 'tis granted thee."
    "Then," said the rose, with deepened glow,
    "On me another grace bestow."
    The spirit paused, in silent thought,--
    What grace was there that flower had not?
    'Twas but a moment,--o'er the rose
    A veil of moss the angel throws;
    And, robed in nature's simplest weed,
    Could there a flower that rose exceed?
              --Krummacher.




ORPHEUS AND EURYDICE.


The Greeks said that Orpheus was a handsome youth, who loved music and
song. He was the son of Apollo and the muse Calliope.

Apollo, who is god of music, loved his son, and gave him a lyre with
golden strings. When he played upon this musical lyre, and sang words
of harmony and love, all the voices of nature became silent to listen.
The ocean waves ceased their strife, the noisy winds said "Hush," and
the flowers turned their pretty heads to listen to his strains.

Orpheus loved his wife Eurydice dearly, and when she died, he would
not be comforted. One day, lonely and sad, he took his lyre and
wandered to the mountains.

Soon he struck his strings, and the words he sang were so mournful
that the trees leaned down their branches to comfort him, the rocks on
the mountain side moved to follow him, the flowers bent their tender
heads and their eyes filled with tears of sympathy, while the rippling
brooks sighed in pity. All nature seemed sad, and the glorious sun
drew a heavy cloud about him.

  [Illustration: Orpheus.
    J. B. C. Corot.]

Now the gods who dwell on high Olympus heard his lamentations, and
begged Jupiter to relieve his sorrow. Therefore, the king of gods sent
Mercury to tell Orpheus to search for his loved Eurydice in Hades.
Such was the power of his music that Cerberus with the three great
heads, the fierce watchdog of Hades, licked his feet, and let him
pass. All the souls of the wicked who were suffering punishment for
their sins, when they heard his heavenly music, forgot their torments,
and ceased from suffering.

Finally Eurydice appeared. Imagine the joy of that meeting! Pluto, won
by the melody of Orpheus, said that Eurydice might return to earth
with her husband, if Orpheus would lead the way, and not look back
until after she had crossed the threshold.

But, alas! Just as the lovely Eurydice stood in the doorway, the
anxious Orpheus looked back. His great love and longing overcame his
prudence. A last loving glance, and they were separated, until gentle
Death took Orpheus by the hand and led him to her.

This charming myth shows us how music wins all hearts, and, with those
wonderful harmonies which tell us that God, who is the maker of all
harmony, is guiding us all, helps us to endure pain and loneliness.




  [Illustration: Child.
    Sir Joshua Reynolds (1723-1792).]




THE CHILD'S WORLD.


    Great, wide, wonderful, beautiful world,
    With the wonderful water about you curled,
    And the wonderful grass upon your breast--
    World, you are beautifully dressed!

    The wonderful air is over me,
    And the wonderful wind is shaking the tree;
    It walks on the water and whirls the mills,
    And talks to itself on the tops of the hills.

    You friendly earth; how far do you go
    With the wheat fields that nod and the rivers that flow,
    With cities and gardens, and cliffs and isles,
    And people upon you for thousands of miles?

    Ah, you are so great, and I am so small,
    I tremble to think of you, world, at all;
    And yet, when I said my prayer to-day,
    A whisper within me seemed to say:

    "You are more than the earth, though you're such a dot;
    You can love and think, and the world cannot."
              --Lilliput Lectures.




ARION.


Arion was a famous musician who lived at the court of Periander, King
of Corinth. He wished to compete for the prize in the musical contest,
celebrated in Sicily in honor of Apollo. But Periander, who loved the
musician, dreaded to have him go so far away. Arion entreated him,
saying,--"I wish to make the people better and happier by the gift
which the gods have given me. It is my duty to Apollo to sing in his
honor."

So Arion went to Sicily, and his music was so excellent and so sweet
that he won the great prize. The gold and the laurel wreath were put
on board the ship, and he embarked for home. Wind and wave were
favorable, the sky was clear. He gave thanks to Apollo for his good
fortune, and promised to offer sacrifices in the temple.

The wicked sailors, however, knew that Arion had a large amount of
gold and jewels in his chests. They gathered around him and told him
that he must die.

"Do you want my gold?" he asked. "That you may have and welcome, but
spare my life."

But the sailors did not dare let him go to Periander, knowing that the
king loved him and would have them punished for the robbery. They said
they would kill him in the ship, or he might plunge into the sea.

Arion was brave and chose to give his life to the waves. He dressed
as if going to a festival, with his handsomest garments, his jewels,
and a crown of golden laurel leaves. Taking his lyre, he played so
exquisitely that even the cruel sailors were moved to pity, but the
thought of his gold hardened their hearts.

As he plunged beneath the waves, a dolphin, charmed by his music,
offered its broad back for him to ride upon.

The sailors thought him drowned and continued on their way. Meanwhile
Arion journeyed on, singing and playing as he went. The dolphin bore
him safely to the shore. He reached Corinth, and told his friend
Periander of the treachery of the sailors.

When the ship arrived, the sailors landed and were conducted to the
palace. "Where is Arion?" asked Periander. "Has he not returned?" The
sailors replied that he was safe in Tarentum.

At this moment Arion appeared, tall and handsome, wearing elegant
robes and shining jewels. Amazed to see one whom they believed dead,
the sailors fell on their knees and cried,--"We murdered him, and he
has become a god! O earth, open and receive us!"

"Yes," replied the king, "the gods delight to honor the poet, and they
have saved the life of one whose music charms all hearts but yours.
Arion does not desire your death. Go, avaricious souls, and never know
the joy that beauty and music can bring."




JUNE.


    No price is set on the lavish summer;
    June may be had by the poorest comer.
    And what is so rare as a day in June?
    Then, if ever, come perfect days;
    Then Heaven tries the earth if it be in tune,
      And over it softly her warm ear lays:
    Whether we look, or whether we listen,
    We hear life murmur, or see it glisten;
    Every clod feels a stir of might,
      An instinct within it that reaches and towers,
    And, groping blindly above it for light,
      Climbs to a soul in grass and flowers;
    The flush of life may well be seen
      Thrilling back over hills and valleys;
    The cowslip startles in meadows green,
      The buttercup catches the sun in its chalice,
    And there's never a leaf nor a blade too mean
      To be some happy creature's palace;
    The little bird sits at his door in the sun,
      Atilt like a blossom among the leaves,
    And lets his illumined being o'errun
      With the deluge of summer it receives;
    His mate feels the eggs beneath her wings,
    And the heart in her dumb breast flutters and sings;
    He sings to the wide world, and she to her nest,--
    In the nice ear of nature which song is the best?
              --James Russell Lowell.




SUPPLEMENTARY READING


FAMOUS STORIES AND LITERATURE

¶ This grading, which is simply suggestive, represents the earliest
years in which these books can be read to advantage.

  Year
    7  Arnold's Sohrab and Rustum                           $0.20
    2  Baldwin's Fifty Famous Stories Retold                  .35
    4         Golden Fleece                                   .50
    8         Nine Choice Poems                               .25
    3         Old Greek Stories                               .45
    3         Old Stories of the East                         .45
    2         Robinson Crusoe for Children                    .35
    3         Thirty More Famous Stories Retold               .50
    3  Bradish's Old Norse Stories                            .45
    4  Clarke's Arabian Nights                                .60
    6         Story of Troy                                   .60
    6         Story of Ulysses                                .60
    6         Story of Aeneas                                 .45
    4  Defoe's Robinson Crusoe (Stephens)                     .50
    4  Dickens's Child's Oliver Twist and David Copperfield
         (Severance)                                          .40
    5         Story of Little Nell (Gordon)                   .50
    6         Tale of Two Cities (Kirk)                       .50
    6         Twelve Christmas Stories (Gordon)               .50
    7  Franklin's Autobiography                               .35
    7  Guerber's Myths of Greece and Rome                    1.50
    7         Myths of Northern Lands                        1.50
    7         Legends of the Middle Ages                     1.50
    4  Hall's Homeric Stories                                 .40
    8  Irving's Sketch Book. Selections                       .20
    8         Tales of a Traveler                             .50
    3  Johnson's Waste Not, Want Not Stories                  .50
    3  Kupfer's Lives and Stories Worth Remembering           .45
    8  Lambs' Tales from Shakespeare. Comedies (Rolfe)        .50
    8         Tales from Shakespeare. Tragedies (Rolfe)       .50
    8  Macaulay's Lays of Ancient Rome (Rolfe)                .56
    8  Scott's Ivanhoe                                        .50
    6         Kenilworth (Norris)                             .50
    8         Lady of the Lake (Gateway)                      .40
    6         Quentin Durward (Norris)                        .50
    6         Talisman (Dewey)                                .50
    8  Shakespeare's Julius Cæsar                             .20
    8         Merchant of Venice                              .20
    8         As You Like It                                  .20
    1  Smythe's Reynard the Fox                               .30

AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY


BROOKS'S READERS

By STRATTON D. BROOKS, Superintendent of Schools, Boston, Mass.

FIVE BOOK SERIES

    First Year                       $0.25
    Second Year                        .35
    Third Year                         .40
    Fourth and Fifth Years             .50
    Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth Years   .60

EIGHT BOOK SERIES

    First Year                       $0.25
    Second Year                        .35
    Third Year                         .40
    Fourth Year                        .40
    Fifth Year                         .40
    Sixth Year                         .40
    Seventh Year                       .40
    Eighth Year                        .40

These readers form a good all-round basal series, suitable for use in
any school; but they will appeal to teachers particularly, because of
their very easy gradation. Both in thought and expression, the books
are so carefully graded that each selection is but slightly more
difficult than the preceding one, and there is no real gap anywhere.

¶ Although a wide variety of reading matter is provided, good
literature, embodying child interests, has been considered of
fundamental importance. Lessons of a similar nature are grouped
together, and topics relating to kindred subjects recur somewhat
regularly. All are designed to quicken the child's observation, and
increase his appreciation.

¶ By the use of this series, the child will be taught to read in such
a manner as will appeal to his interests, and at the same time he will
be made acquainted with the masterpieces of many famous writers. He
will gain a knowledge of many subjects, and acquire pure and
attractive ideals of life and conduct. His imagination will be
cultivated by pleasing tales of fancy, and he will also be taught a
love of country, and given glimpses into the life of other lands.

¶ The books are very attractive in mechanical appearance, and contain
a large number of original illustrations, besides reproductions of
many celebrated paintings.

AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY


HUNT'S PROGRESSIVE COURSE IN SPELLING

    Complete                                         $0.20
    Part One. For Third, Fourth, and Fifth Grades      .15
    Part Two. For Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth Grades    .15

The purpose of this book is to assist the pupil in using words
correctly in any one of three relations, viz.: in speech, in oral
reading, and in written composition. Its exercises recognize the laws
of association, and provide a systematic drill in orthography,
orthoepy, word-building, word-analysis, and other phases of
word-study.

¶ The vocabulary of the book is made up of words used by the pupil in
his other studies, and in his every-day experience. The work is
clearly laid out and graded; reviews are amply provided, both by
duplication and by dictation work.

¶ PART ONE contains a vocabulary of some 4,000 word-forms in common
use, selected and graded with great care. The arrangement is such that
there is afforded a variety of exercises, each containing an average
of 20 words. The phonetic, the topical, the grammatical, and the
antithetic and synonymic methods have received special treatment.
Dictation exercises, including memory gems, illustrative sentences,
and reviews, are also given.

¶ PART TWO includes a vocabulary of about 5,000 word-forms, the
exercises being devoted to topical lessons, phonetic drills,
pronouncing drill, grammatical forms, synonyms and antonyms,
applications of rules of spelling, drill on homophones, word-building
and word-analysis, words the derivation of which is indicated, and
derivatives from Latin and Greek roots. Great emphasis is laid on
prefixes and suffixes, the origin of words, and pronunciation.

AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY


SPENCERS' PRACTICAL WRITING

By PLATT R. SPENCER'S SONS

    Books 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8      Per dozen, $0.60

Spencers' Practical Writing has been devised because of the distinct
and wide-spread reaction from the use of vertical writing in schools.
It is thoroughly up-to-date, embodying all the advantages of the old
and of the new. Each word can be written by one continuous movement of
the pen.

¶ The books teach a plain, practical hand, moderate in slant, and free
from ornamental curves, shades, and meaningless lines. The stem
letters are long enough to be clear and unmistakable. The capitals are
about two spaces in height.

¶ The copies begin with words and gradually develop into sentences.
The letters, both large and small, are taught systematically. In the
first two books the writing is somewhat larger than is customary
because it is more easily learned by young children. These books also
contain many illustrations in outline. The ruling is very simple.

¶ Instruction is afforded showing how the pupil should sit at the
desk, and hold the pen and paper. A series of drill movement
exercises, thirty-three in number, with directions for their use,
accompanies each book.


SPENCERIAN PRACTICAL WRITING SPELLER

Per dozen, $0.48

This simple, inexpensive device provides abundant drill in writing
words. At the same time it trains pupils to form their copies in
accordance with the most modern and popular system of penmanship, and
saves much valuable time for both teacher and pupil.

AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY


MILNE'S PROGRESSIVE ARITHMETICS

By WILLIAM J. MILNE, Ph.D., LL.D., President of New York State Normal
College, Albany, N. Y.

THREE BOOK SERIES

    First Book      $0.35
    Second Book       .40
    Third Book        .45

TWO BOOK SERIES

    First Book      $0.35
    Complete Book     .65

In these series the best modern methods of instruction have been
combined with those older features which gave the author's previous
arithmetics such marvelous popularity.

¶ Built upon a definite pedagogical plan, these books teach the
processes of arithmetic in such a way as to develop the reasoning
faculties, and to train the power of rapid, accurate, and skillful
manipulation of numbers. The inductive method is applied, leading the
pupils to discover truths for themselves; but it is supplemented by
model solutions and careful explanations of each step.

¶ Each new topic is first carefully developed, and then enforced by
sufficient practice to fix it thoroughly in the mind. The problems,
which have been framed with the greatest care, relate to a wide range
of subjects drawn from modern life and industries. Reviews in various
forms are a marked feature. Usefulness is the keynote.

¶ In the First and Second Books the amount of work that may be
accomplished in a half year is taken as the unit of classification,
and the various subjects are treated topically, each being preceded by
a brief résumé of the concepts already acquired. In the Third Book the
purely topical method is used in order to give the pupil a coherent
knowledge of each subject. The Complete Book covers the work usually
given to pupils during the last four years of school.

AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY


STEPS IN ENGLISH

    By A. C. McLEAN, A.M., Principal of Luckey School, Pittsburg;
    THOMAS C. BLAISDELL, A.M., Professor of English, Fifth Avenue
    Normal High School, Pittsburg; and JOHN MORROW,
    Superintendent of Schools, Allegheny, Pa.

    Book One.  For third, fourth, and fifth years        $0.40
    Book Two.  For sixth, seventh, and eighth years        .60

This series presents a new method of teaching language which is in
marked contrast with the antiquated systems in vogue a generation ago.
The books meet modern conditions in every respect, and teach the child
how to express his thoughts in language rather than furnish an undue
amount of grammar and rules.

¶ From the start the attempt has been made to base the work on
subjects in which the child is genuinely interested. Lessons in
writing language are employed simultaneously with those in
conversation, while picture-study, the study of literary selections,
and letter-writing are presented at frequent intervals. The lessons
are of a proper length, well arranged, and well graded. The books mark
out the daily work for the teacher in a clearly defined manner by
telling him what to do, and when to do it. Many unique mechanical
devices, _e. g._, a labor-saving method of correcting papers, a
graphic system of diagramming, etc., form a valuable feature of the
work.

¶ These books are unlike any other series now on the market. They do
not shoot over the heads of the pupils, nor do they show a marked
effort in writing down to the supposed level of young minds. They do
not contain too much technical grammar, nor are they filled with what
is sentimental and meaningless. No exaggerated attention is given to
analyzing by diagramming, and to exceptions to ordinary rules, which
have proved so unsatisfactory.

AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY


NEW SERIES OF THE NATURAL GEOGRAPHIES

REDWAY AND HINMAN

TWO BOOK OR FOUR BOOK EDITION

    Introductory Geography      $0.60
      In two parts, each          .40

    School Geography             1.25
      In two parts, each          .75

In the new series of these sterling geographies emphasis is laid on
industrial, commercial, and political geography, with just enough
physiography to bring out the causal relations.

¶ The text is clear, simple, interesting, and explicit. The pictures
are distinguished for their aptness and perfect illustrative
character. Two sets of maps are provided, one for reference, and the
other for study, the latter having corresponding maps drawn to the
same scale.

¶ The INTRODUCTORY GEOGRAPHY develops the subject in accordance with
the child's comprehension, each lesson paving the way for the next. In
the treatment of the United States the physiographic, historical,
political, industrial, and commercial conditions are taken up in their
respective order, the chief industries and the localities devoted
largely to each receiving more than usual consideration. The country
is regarded as being divided into five industrial sections.

¶ In the SCHOOL GEOGRAPHY a special feature is the presentation of the
basal principles of physical and general geography in simple,
untechnical language, arranged in numbered paragraphs. In subsequent
pages constant reference is made to these principles, but in each case
accompanied by the paragraph number. This greatly simplifies the work,
and makes it possible to take up the formal study of these
introductory lessons after the remainder of the book has been
completed. With a view to enriching the course, numerous specific
references are given to selected geographical reading.

AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY


APPLIED PHYSIOLOGIES

By FRANK OVERTON, A.M., M.D., late House Surgeon to the City Hospital,
New York City

    Primary Physiology           $0.30
    Intermediate Physiology      $0.50
    Advanced Physiology          $0.80

OVERTON'S APPLIED PHYSIOLOGIES form a series of text-books for
primary, grammar, and high schools, which departs radically from the
old-time methods pursued in the teaching of physiology. These books
combine the latest results of study and research in biological,
medical, and chemical science with the best methods of teaching.

¶ The fundamental principle throughout this series is the study of the
cells where the essential functions of the body are carried on.
Consequently, the study of anatomy and physiology is here made the
study of the cells from the most elementary structure in organic life
to their highest and most complex form in the human body.

¶ This treatment of the cell principle, and its development in its
relation to life, the employment of laboratory methods, the numerous
original and effective illustrations, the clearness of the author's
style, the wealth of new physiological facts, and the logical
arrangement and gradation of the subject-matter, give these books a
strength and individuality peculiarly their own.

¶ The effects of alcohol and other stimulants and narcotics are
treated in each book sensibly, and with sufficient fullness. But while
this important form of intemperance is singled out, it is borne in
mind that the breaking of any of nature's laws is also a form of
intemperance, and that the whole study of applied physiology is to
encourage a more healthful and a more self-denying mode of life.

¶ In the preparation of this series the needs of the various school
grades have been fully considered. Each book is well suited to the
pupils for whom it is designed.

AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY




Transcriber's Note

Minor punctuation errors have been repaired.

Archaic and variable spelling is preserved as printed.

Page 73--repeated 'the' deleted--... and to strew the path of Apollo,
...

Illustrations have been moved where necessary so that they are not in
the middle of a paragraph.





End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of 'Round the Year in Myth and Song, by 
Florence Holbrook

*** 