The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Nursery, June 1881, Vol. XXIX, by Various.
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Title: The Nursery, June 1881, Vol. XXIX
Author: Various
Release date: September 14, 2012 [eBook #40757]
Most recently updated: October 23, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Emmy, Juliet Sutherland and the Online
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE NURSERY, JUNE 1881, VOL. XXIX ***
THE
NURSERY
A Monthly Magazine
For Youngest Readers.
VOLUME XXIX.—No. 6.
BOSTON:
THE NURSERY PUBLISHING COMPANY, No. 36 Bromfield Street.
1881.
Entered according to act of Congress, in the year 1881, by
THE NURSERY PUBLISHING COMPANY,
In the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington.
HE rights of man do not give me much concern;
neither do I trouble myself much about the rights
of woman. My mission is to look after the rights of
children. I never forget this wherever I may be.
Some people may think that the rights of children are
safe enough in the care of the fathers and mothers.
Are they indeed! How many children are sent out, day
after day, in charge of nurses? Who protects the children
against careless and cruel nurses? Anxious mother, answer
me that.
Many cases of gross neglect have come under my eye. I
will mention one case that took place last summer at the
seaside.
I was out in my yacht at the time. Scanning the shore
with my spy-glass, this is what I saw:—
A good-looking young woman was pushing a baby-carriage
before her. In the carriage was a little child. The young
woman seemed to be singing, and all went well until a
young man came up and walked by her side.
From his dress I should say that he was a sailor. Perhaps
he had just landed from a man-of-war. His trousers had
the man-of-war cut.
The young man and the young woman talked and laughed
together as they went along. They seemed to be very good
friends. But what became of the infant in the carriage?
Poor child! She fell off the seat. Her head hung over
the side of the carriage, just in front of the wheel, and there
she lay shrieking for help.
I could not hear her shrieks, for I was a mile away; but
the sight was enough for me. I seized my trumpet. "Shipmate,
ahoy!" I shouted to the sailor-chap.
No answer. It was plain that the sailor-chap did not
care in the slightest degree for that poor suffering child.
Nobody offered to help her.
"Steer for the shore!" I said to my helmsman. "Bear
down to the rescue!" We landed as soon as we could, but
not without some delay, and when we reached the place[163]
it was too late. Nurse, carriage, sailor-chap, and all were
gone.
What was the fate of that poor infant is a mystery to me
to this day. But I tell the story as a warning to all mothers
against trusting their children to a careless nurse.
JACK TAR.
FEEDING THE FOWLS.
Pecking away, and looking so knowing,
Feathers and tails in the breezes blowing,
"Cluck, cluck, cluck!" come the hens to be fed,
And Edith is scattering crumbs of bread.
The peacock comes also, strutting so grandly,
His long tail behind him trailing so blandly,
Doesn't he look as proud as a king,
With his crown, and his tail, and his brilliant wing!
ASTER BABY has been playing in the park all
the morning. He has been chasing a butterfly.
He did not catch the butterfly. But he has come
home with two rosy cheeks and a good appetite.
Now he must have his dinner. Tie his bib
around his neck. Seat him at the table. Give him some
soup. Now cut him up some meat and potato, and let him
feed himself.
He is a little awkward; but a hungry boy will soon learn
how to handle a fork. Let him alone for that. It will not
take long to teach him how to use a knife too.
Boys need a good deal of food to make them strong and
hearty. Give them plenty of fresh air. Let the sun shine
on them. Then they will be sure to eat with a relish.
This is our Sam. He is the
boy who goes to sea in a bowl.
He throws out a
line, and catches a
fish. What does
the fish look like?
Where would Sam
be if the bowl should tip over?
Would he get wet?
This is Billy with his whip.
He thinks he would
like to drive a coach.
But where will he get
his team? He will find
it, I dare say, without
going out of the room.
An arm-chair will do for a
coach, and a pair of boots will
make a fine span of horses.
Joanna scolds my kitty every day: I'm filled with grief.
Just now to Mary Ann I heard her say, "That cat's a thief!"
Poor kit! you did not wish for milk to-day, But wanted meat.
You took a little bit from off the tray, [168]And, with your feet,
A glass of water, standing in the way, You tumbled down;
And just for this you had to bear, all day, Joanna's frown.
I think that Miss Joanna must be seen to;
For, kitty, I am sure you didn't mean to.
AMANDA SHAW ELSEFFER.
A SAUCY VISITOR.
NCE upon a time a mother-sparrow and her three
children lived in a great big maple-tree, which stood
before a great big house, which had a broad piazza
in front of it. The mother-bird often used to talk
to her children about the people who lived in the
house, and their pets.
"See, Polly Dolly Adeline," she said to her oldest child
one day, "see those lazy yellow canaries down there on the
piazza. They have every thing they want. See how they
are coddled while we are left to shift for ourselves."
"Boo-hoo!" said Polly Dolly. "I don't think it is a bit
fair."
"I don't either," said the youngest of all. He was a
pert little fellow. His name was Flop. He was so called,
because, when he first began to fly, he would flop over on
one side.
But he could fly well enough now, and so he said boldly,
"I mean to go down to one of those cages, and eat some of
that nice seed myself. I'll let young Canary know that I
am as good as he."
At these words Mrs. Sparrow was so frightened that she
fell off the branch; but she soon flew back, and said, "Flop,
you naughty boy, don't you go! you may get killed."
"Cats, you know, Flop!" said Polly Dolly Adeline. "Cats
with green eyes!"
"Pooh!" said Flop. "Who cares? I'm not afraid."
Flop flew gaily down to the piazza railing. Here he
stopped, and looked around; while his mother and sisters
watched him in fear and trembling. Nobody was on the
piazza: so Flop flew straight to one of the cages.
"How do you do, my young friend?" he said, saucily[170]
helping himself to the seed that had been scattered. "I've
come to take dinner with you."
Mr. Canary did not like this at all. "You've not been
invited," he squeaked out, ruffling up his feathers, and flying
at Flop with all his might. But the bars were between
them; and Flop went on eating his dinner as calmly as
possible.
Then the canary became so angry that he danced back
and forth on his perch, and screamed. Flop made another
very polite bow. "Oh, how good that hemp-seed tastes!"
said he. "The rape-seed, too, is very nice,—nice as the
fattest canker-worm I ever ate."
So he went on eating, looking up now and then to wink
at his angry host. When he had eaten all he could find, he
made his best bow and said saucily, "Thank you, sir, thank
you. Don't urge me to stay longer now. I'll come again
some other day," and he flew back to his anxious mother
and sisters.
EORGIE stood at the kitchen-door with a piece of
bread in his hand to feed his pet fawn. There
was the fawn chained to a post in the grass-plat.
Between them was a long gravel walk. How was
Georgie to get the bread to the fawn?
Easily enough, one would think,—by carrying it straight
to the fawn. But Georgie didn't find this such an easy
thing to do. He met with difficulties.
In the first place there was Rover, the big brown pup.
Georgie had not taken three steps, when Rover spied the
bread, and, thinking it was for him, began jumping after
it. Georgie thought he would have to run back to the
house; but, seeing a stick on the ground, he picked it up,
and shook it at Rover. Rover was afraid of the stick, and
ran meekly away.
Nothing else happened to trouble Georgie until he had
gone halfway up the walk. Then he met another difficulty.
Two big turkey-gobblers, looking very red about the head,
and with feathers all ruffled up, rushed towards him for the
bread, crying, "Gobble, gobble!" in a frightful manner.
Georgie hesitated. Dare he go past them? "Gobble,
gobble!" screeched the turkeys. Down went the bread on
the ground, and back to the house, as fast as his legs could
carry him, ran Georgie.
His mother saw two big tears in the little fellow's eyes
and felt sorry for him. She cut another piece of bread,
turned his apron up over it so the turkeys could not see it,
and told him to run bravely past them. He hoped they
were still eating the other piece, and would not notice him;[172]
but they had swallowed every crumb and ran toward him
for more.
He screwed up his courage, and tried to run by them.
Alas! he stumbled and fell. Away rolled the bread, and,
before he could get it again, the gobblers had it and were
quarrelling noisily, each trying to pull it away from the
other one.
This second loss was more than little
Georgie could bear. He went crying
into the house. Then his sister Jennie
said she would go with him, and
keep off the turkeys. She took
some bread in one hand, and
held Georgie's hand with
the other, and this time
the turkeys were
passed
safely.
Georgie fed the pretty fawn, who took the bread from his
hand, and capered about with delight, for he likes to have
Georgie pet him, and pines for his company. Georgie is
going to ask the gardener to buy two chains and fasten
the two old gobblers in some other part of the yard. Then
he can visit the fawn often.
F I should ask you children to tell me what a garden
is, I think you would all say, "A place where trees,
flowers, and grass grow." That would be a good
answer.
But the garden where this picnic took place is of a very
different kind. Instead of bright leaves and flowers, there
are hundreds of rocks of many sizes and shapes. Its name
is the "Garden of the Gods," and it lies at the foot of the
Rocky Mountains, in Colorado.
The color of most of the rocks is red; but some are silvery
gray, and some nearly white. Seen together they make a
fine contrast. Many have strange shapes, and look like nuns
and priests, animals, birds, and fishes turned into stone.
On one high rock may be seen the image of a man and a
bear; on another, the outline of a lion's head, and part of its
body, so perfect in shape, that it seems as though some one
must have drawn it.
Some of the rocks are very high. One reaches up three
hundred and thirty feet. Near the top of it is a hole, which
looks from the ground to be about the size of a dinner-plate,
but is really large enough for a horse and buggy to pass
through.
A few trees manage to live high up on the rocks, and the
prickly cactus grows in the soil around them.
To this garden went, one bright summer day, a wagon-load
of people—six happy little girls and boys, with their
mothers and fathers—on a picnic.
The children were dressed in big shade hats, and clothes
that they might tear and tumble all they wished. Such fun
as they had! The older ones climbed the smaller rocks, and
made speeches to the little ones on the ground below. Then[179]
they all played "hide-and-seek," and never were there such
grand hiding-places.
At noon they had lunch. Their table was a large flat
rock. Mountain air and play give good appetites. How
they did enjoy eating the nice things, chatting and laughing
all the while!
After lunch away they ran in search of "specimens," by
which they meant pretty stones. They chipped pieces off
the rocks with hammers, playing they were miners finding
gold and silver. They filled their baskets, and pretended to
have made great fortunes.
They kept up the sport until five o'clock, when their
mammas said it was time to start for home, and counted[180]
the children to see if all were there. Only five could be
found. There should have been six. Who was missing?
It was four-year-old Willie. "Willie, Willie!" shouted
every one, and from the great red rock came a faint reply.
Then began "hide-and-seek" in earnest, and soon they spied
the little fellow sitting on the side of the rock full five
yards up.
"Why, Willie!" called his mamma. "What are you
doing up there?"
"Going to climb through the little hole, mamma; but I'm
tired."
His uncle climbed after him, and soon brought him down.
Six tired little children went early to bed that night, and
dreamed of stony men and women, lions and bears.
AUNT SADIE.
MARGIE'S TRIAL.
My beautiful Evelina, Come listen to me, my dear;
I want to tell you a secret That nobody else must hear:
We're going away to the country,— Mamma and baby and I,
And grandmamma doesn't like dollies, Now please, my darling, don't cry.
Oh, don't you remember last winter She called you an image, my pet!
Just think, like those ugly old idols: [181]I'm sure I shall never forget.
She's the loveliest grandma, my precious; But some things are not to be borne:
I'm sure that my heart would be broken If she should treat you with scorn.
I'll put on your very best bonnet, Your pretty pink shoes on your feet;
And you shall sit up by the window, And look at the folks in the street.
Oh, dear! but I never can leave you A whole summer long on the shelf;
If you are an "image," my baby, I'll just be a heathen myself.
Ann is not yet five years old.
But she knows how to read,
and is very fond of her
book. She does not
care to sit down, but
reads her book as she
walks. This is not a
good plan. It hurts the
eyes.
Grace, who is nine years old,
often has a book in her
hand. But she does not
read and walk at
the same time. She
sits down on the
floor. It would be quite as well
for her to take a chair and sit
up straight.
HIS is little Grace taking Dolly out for an airing. It
is a bright June day. The birds are singing. The
flowers are in bloom. It is so warm that Grace goes
without a hat.
Dolly is snugly seated in her carriage; and Snip
the dog, who barks, but never bites, has a place in it too.[184]
He is one of the breed known as the toy dog. He does not
bark unless you squeeze him. He is never cross.
Grace rolls them down the broad path through the garden.
She gives Dolly a nice ride, and then takes her home, and
puts her to sleep in her little bed. She never lets Dolly miss
her nap. Grace is a careful nurse.
JANE OLIVER.
WHY THE CHICK CAME OUT.
Benny Bright-Eyes, climbing over
Heaps of crisp and fragrant clover,
Spies the dearest, cutest thing,
Hiding under Biddy's wing.
What sees Benny next? A wonder!
Rudely pushed quite out from under
Biddy's breast, an egg comes sliding,
In its shell a chicken hiding.
"Ah!" says Benny as he gazes,
And his merry blue eyes raises,
"I know why his house he's spoiled:
He's afraid of being boiled."
ISS EASTMAN, the pretty drawing-teacher at the
academy, boards in our family. Some time ago
she chanced to take up an old, faded daguerrotype-likeness
of my grandmother. She proposed copying it; and
a lovely picture in crayon, of Ralph's great-grandmother, is
the result.
My grandmother was ninety years old when the likeness
was taken; yet she appears in it erect and vigorous, sitting
in her high-backed chair, with her knitting-work in her
hand. She wears a snug cap, and a plain Quaker kerchief
folded smoothly over her black silk dress.
Naturally we have talked much about her; and my boys,
Ralph and Fred, who have a happy faculty for drawing me
out, have well-nigh exhausted all my memories of their
great-grandmother.[186]
"Can't you think of something else about her?" Fred
pleaded, a few nights ago when, tired of his books and
games, he had seated himself comfortably before the fire.
"Yes," I replied, "I have been thinking of another story
as I sit here knitting. It is about going to Southampton on
a canal-boat."
"Oh, that's splendid, I know!" said both boys in a breath.
"Hurry up, and count your stitches quick, mamma."
I paused a moment to knit to the seam-needle, and then
began:—
"My father and mother lived in Westfield, on the banks of the New-Haven
and Northampton Canal. My grandmother lived in Southampton,
the town next north of ours. She, too, lived near the canal. We
children used to think that the trip we often took from our house to hers
was like a journey through fairy-land.
"The first time I ever went out from under my mother's wing was
with my grandmother, who took me from home with her one bright June
day. I was a little sober on parting with my mother; but the negro
cook, on board the boat a fat, jolly-looking woman, took me under her
special care.
"I went down in her cabin, and she gave me cookies and great puffy
doughnuts, and a pink stick of candy, and I watched her while she
cleaned the lamps."
"Is that all?" said Ralph, as I paused a moment to
secure a dropped stitch in the red stocking.
"Oh, no indeed!" I say as I go on,—
"By and by my grandmother's family were all scattered. My grandfather
died, and left her sad and lonely; but she still lived in the old
homestead.
"I can see her room now. There were four windows in it,—two
looking east, towards Mounts Tom and Holyoke, and two south, over a
lovely old-fashioned garden filled with tulips, hollyhocks, southernwood,
thyme, cinnamon-roses, spice-pinks, lavender, white-lilies, and violets.
"There was an open Franklin stove in the room; and a little, chubby[187]
black teapot always stood on its top. One sunny south window was
filled with flowers. Grandmother always carried a bunch of flowers to
church with her, and she had a black velvet bag, in which she carried
sugar-plums, to give to us drowsy children on Sunday afternoon, when
the minister preached one of his long sermons."
"Just one story more," said Ralph, as I again paused to
observe what progress I was making in my knitting.
"Will you promise not to ask for another one to-night?"
"We promise certain sure," said Fred.
"Only tell a long one for the last."
"Very well," said I.
"Once my grandmother made a party for a
circle of cousins. We counted nine cousins in
all when we took our seats at the supper-table."
"What did you have for supper?"
observed Fred.
"We had nice seed-cookies cut into hearts,
diamonds, leaves, and rounds; frosted cup-cakes
powdered with pink sugar sand; little sweet
biscuits, currant-tarts, dried beef, plum preserves,
honey in a great glass dish, and jelly from a blue
mug. We poured milk from a great green pitcher
into pink china cups, and used grandma's tiny
silver tea-spoons for our preserves."
"Wasn't that splendid!" said Ralph. "I wish some one
would invite me to such a supper."
"In the evening we drew up before the open fire, and each had a
great plateful of nuts, raisins, figs, and candy. Then grandma told us
all about when she was a little girl,—what funny dresses she wore,
what strange houses people lived in, and how they were furnished; and[188]
she remembered a little about the Revolutionary war, and the dark day,
and Gen. Washington, and the Indians.
"When grandma grew very old, she came to live with my mother.
My uncle in Florida used to send her oranges and other nice fruit; and
my pretty aunt Eleanor in New York gave her all her caps and fine
muslin neckerchiefs. All her sons and daughters were very thoughtful
for her happiness.
"By and by she fell asleep, and there was a funeral at our house one
lovely day in early autumn. It did not seem sad or gloomy. We
returned from the quiet country graveyard in the twilight of the beautiful
day, and gathered in grandma's pleasant room, and talked with tears
and smiles of her long and useful life."
"What a good grandmother!" said Ralph, almost tearfully.
"I wish I could have seen her just once."
We have had the picture framed, and it hangs in my
boys' room now; and often in the early morning, as I linger
on the stairs, I hear them tell in a very familiar way all
they have learned of Ralph's great-grandmother.
SARAH THAXTER THAYER.
JUNE.
My sister May Has gone away
With April and his showers. I come apace To take her place.
Accept my gift of flowers!
The original text for the January issue had a table of contents
that spanned six issues. This was divided amongst those issues.
Additionally, only the January issue had a title page. This page
was copied for the remaining five issues. Each issue had the number
added on the title page after the Volume number.
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