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Produced by Annie McGuire | |
[Illustration: HARPER'S | |
YOUNG PEOPLE | |
AN ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY.] | |
* * * * * | |
VOL. I.--NO. 4. PUBLISHED BY HARPER & BROTHERS, NEW YORK. PRICE FOUR | |
CENTS. | |
Tuesday, November 25, 1879. Copyright, 1879, by HARPER & BROTHERS. $1.50 | |
per Year, in Advance. | |
* * * * * | |
[Illustration: THE DAY BEFORE THANKSGIVING. | |
"WE'S STUFFED YOU LONG 'NUFF; GOT TO STUFF OURSELVES TO-MORROW."] | |
[Begun in No. 1 of HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE, Nov. 4.] | |
THE BRAVE SWISS BOY. | |
_III.--THE CHAMOIS-HUNTERS._ | |
Early the next morning the door of the little mountain cottage grated on | |
its hinges, and Mr. Seymour entered the small apartment, eagerly | |
welcomed by Walter, who ran forward to meet him. | |
"What! you are up already, my boy, and as fresh and lively as if nothing | |
had happened!" said he. "I fully expected to find you knocked up and ill | |
after all the exertion and fatigue of yesterday; but I am glad to see | |
that you are so much stronger than I gave you credit for. How is your | |
back, though, Walter? Don't the wounds made by the vulture's claws pain | |
you very much?" | |
"They were very sore last night, Sir," replied the boy; "but father | |
bound them up nicely for me, and says they will be much better in a | |
week." | |
"Delighted to hear it. But where is your father? I don't see him." | |
"He is outside. Sir, with Liesli, the cow that we recovered through your | |
kindness," replied Walter, with a grateful look. "She is the best cow in | |
the valley." | |
"Ah, here comes your father," said Mr. Seymour, with a smile, stepping | |
forward to grasp the hand which Toni Hirzel held out toward him, while | |
thanking him in hearty but simple words for the kindness he had shown to | |
his boy. | |
"Don't mention it, my friend. What I gave to the boy was given very | |
willingly, and he has richly earned not only that, but a few francs | |
more, which I am still owing him. But we will square accounts now. Here, | |
Walter; there is forty francs for the old vulture which you captured so | |
bravely; and here is another sixty francs for the torn trousers and the | |
knife you lost." | |
With these words Mr. Seymour counted out five bright gold pieces on the | |
table, to the wonderment of Toni Hirzel and his son, neither of whom | |
could utter a word. | |
"But, Sir," exclaimed Walter, finding his voice at last, "the vulture, | |
the trousers, and the knife all put together are not worth twenty | |
francs!" | |
"They are worth more to me," replied the gentleman, "and you must allow | |
me to pay for them according to my opinion of their value. So make no | |
more words about it, my boy, but put the money in your pocket. I hope it | |
may prove useful to you." | |
Tears started into Walter's eyes. "Oh, father!" he exclaimed, "only look | |
at all this money! We shall be able to buy another cow, and make twice | |
as much cheese as we do now. We sha'n't have to borrow anything from | |
Neighbor Frieshardt any more, and if everything goes on well, we shall | |
soon be able to build a house as good as his. It will be a blessing for | |
you to have a comfortable home in your old age." | |
But Toni Hirzel shook his head. "Don't talk so fast, my boy," said he, | |
quietly. "That is a great deal more money than we can think of taking. | |
Pray take it back, Mr. Seymour. Watty is quite right. Twenty francs will | |
amply suffice, especially when you were so liberal toward him | |
yesterday." | |
"Very well, friend, so be it," was the reply. "If you won't let me pay | |
you the money as a debt, I hope you will allow me to give it to Walter | |
as a present. I'm sure you won't object to that. He can save it till | |
he's a few years older, if he doesn't require to spend it now; so let | |
the matter drop, unless you really wish to annoy me." | |
Seeing that Mr. Seymour was in earnest, Toni Hirzel made no further | |
objections, and lifted the money from the table. | |
"Well, then, Walter, I will take care of this handsome gift for you | |
until you are old enough to make a good use of it," said his father, as | |
he placed the money in a leather pocket-book, which he deposited in a | |
secret drawer of the cupboard. "Rest there quietly," said he, in a | |
whisper; "when I am dead and gone, it will be a nest-egg for Watty to | |
fall back upon." | |
Mr. Seymour then rose to take his departure: and before saying farewell, | |
Walter asked and obtained leave to visit the friendly traveller soon; | |
but when he went to Rosenlanibad three or four days afterward, he found | |
that Mr. Seymour had received a letter from home, which had compelled | |
him to take his immediate departure. | |
The summer passed away; autumn came, and stripped the leaves from the | |
trees; the first flakes of snow fluttered in the air; the days were | |
growing shorter, and the quiet and solitary valley took its turn in the | |
changes of fortune which so frequently occur in the outer world. | |
Although Toni Hirzel was sober and industrious, he could not escape the | |
common lot of humanity. He sustained a heavy loss at the beginning of | |
winter in the death of his favorite cow. Soon afterward the severity of | |
the weather drove from the mountains the wolves, which broke into the | |
stable during the night and killed two of his five goats. | |
These losses were serious to the poor man. The only property he | |
possessed in addition to his cottage consisted of the cow and the goats, | |
which supplied him with the barest necessaries of life; and now he was | |
deprived of them almost at one stroke. It was hard to bear; but | |
by-and-by the recollection of the money which Mr. Seymour had given him | |
came as a ray of sunshine to Walter, who begged his father to take it | |
and buy another cow. | |
"No, Walter," was his reply. "The money is yours. Mr. Seymour made you a | |
present of it, and it shall remain untouched until you are old enough to | |
spend it for some good purpose. You are too young and inexperienced yet; | |
so don't say any more about it. Now that we have lost Liesli and the | |
goats, we must bestir ourselves to do something else for a living, until | |
the spring, when we may perhaps be fortunate with the chamois. There are | |
plenty of chamois on the hills, and my gun on the wall there has brought | |
down many a fine buck. When spring comes we'll go out together, and you | |
will see that your father has still a firm hand and a sure foot." | |
* * * * * | |
The winter wore away by degrees. The warm south wind crept slowly | |
through the valleys, melting the snow from the mountain-sides, and | |
calling into life hundreds of sparkling streams. Waterfalls foamed and | |
thundered; enormous masses of snow came crashing down from the | |
mountain-peaks; while amid the noise and thunder of avalanches the sun | |
exercised its silent but mighty influence, renewing the mountain | |
greenery, converting the barren ground into a verdant carpet. The birds | |
returned from their winter home, and again burst into joyous song; and | |
again the budding trees proclaimed that winter was over and gone. | |
During the dreary winter-time the simple wants of the two mountaineers | |
had been supplied by much toil and much privation, so that the return of | |
the vernal season was hailed with joyful acclamation. | |
[Illustration: WATTY AND HIS FATHER HUNTING.] | |
"It is time for us to be off now," said the hunter one morning to his | |
boy; and day after day, whenever the weather was favorable, they might | |
have been seen climbing the lofty mountain ranges in search of game, | |
sometimes not returning to their little cottage for several days. At | |
other times, however, after unspeakable trouble and danger, they would | |
return home in great glee, the father bearing a large chamois slung | |
across his shoulders, to be sold for a good price to the landlord of the | |
inn. | |
Toni was looked upon by all the country round as the best hunter in the | |
district, and he was determined to maintain his reputation. By the end | |
of August, when the summer was approaching its end, he had shot thirty | |
chamois, and the best of the season was still before him. | |
"Now, Watty," said he, "we must look out for the winter. We have got on | |
famously through the fine weather, and have made a little money; but | |
there's not enough yet for what we require, and we must work away for | |
some time still before we get as much as will replenish our empty byre." | |
"I will do all I can to help you, father," replied the boy. "I saw a | |
track on the Wellhorn yesterday that promises a finer buck than we have | |
taken yet." | |
"On the Wellhorn! On which side?" | |
"On the glacier side, father. It is not so very difficult to get up | |
there; but I noticed that whenever he was disturbed, the chamois went | |
across the glacier toward the Engelhorn, and I am afraid it would be | |
rather dangerous to follow him. There are cracks in the ice hundreds of | |
feet deep, and how well we know that whoever falls into one of them | |
would never see the light of day again." | |
"That is very true," said his father, thoughtfully. "But we must have | |
the buck at any risk. Do you know the spot on the glacier where he makes | |
for the Engelhorn?" | |
"Yes; it is quite at the top, where the ice is spread out like a sea." | |
"Well, then," said the experienced mountaineer, "we must try and avoid | |
following the chamois over the ice, and rather wait for him on the | |
Engelhorn, and get a shot at him as he passes. You must go to the | |
Wellhorn, my boy, and drive him toward me." | |
"Yes; that will be the best, father," replied Walter. "I thought of that | |
myself." | |
"Well, then, let it be so. We must be off before daybreak to-morrow | |
morning." | |
Toni made the necessary preparations the same evening, and long before | |
the first beams of Sol were visible on the following morning, he left | |
the cottage with his son. After a toilsome ascent of half an hour, they | |
separated. The father turned to the left toward the steep and craggy | |
Engelhorn, after he had described the exact point toward which Walter | |
was to drive the animal, while the boy scrambled up the dangerous ridges | |
of the Wellhorn, to find the chamois, and drive it to the place where | |
his father was to lie in wait. | |
"Be very careful, Watty," said his father to him ere they parted; "don't | |
be reckless or foolhardy." | |
The boy promised to be watchful, and they separated, each to his own | |
share of the toilsome and perilous undertaking. Taking advantage of the | |
rocks and stones which marked the path of a former glacier, Walter | |
reached the summit of the Wellhorn without much difficulty, after an | |
hour and a half's climb. Taking a small telescope from his pocket, he | |
peered anxiously across the field of ice which separated him from the | |
Engelhorn, and descried his father working his way cautiously along the | |
edge of the glacier till he gained a part of the rocks that seemed to | |
afford a possibility of climbing. He then had the satisfaction of seeing | |
him sit down to rest. | |
"He has got just to the right spot," said he to himself. "He must have | |
seen the track. It is just fifty feet from there that the chamois | |
springs across a crack in the ice to get to the pasture higher up; and | |
when he once gets sight of him, father won't let him escape. But, first | |
and foremost, I must find the game, and start it across." | |
No sooner said than done. Clambering from rock to rook, always observant | |
and watchful, the resolute youth pursued his way. Suddenly, however, he | |
stood still, and threw himself flat on the ground. | |
"I thought so--there he is!" said he to himself. "I must work my way | |
carefully round to the right, and then frighten him off with a shout." | |
Taking stealthy advantage of every rock that could screen him from | |
observation, Walter raised his head now and then to make sure that the | |
chamois had not taken fright and removed from the spot. When he had thus | |
reached the right position, he started to his feet and uttered a loud | |
halloo! With a bound the chamois sprang down to the field of ice, which | |
it crossed with light and rapid strides. | |
"The game is ours!" exclaimed Walter, with delight. But his joy was | |
premature. Now began a chase, which lasted nearly an hour, until the | |
animal approached the spot where Walter's father lay, when it suddenly | |
stopped, gave a tremendous spring to the right, fled across the glacier | |
with the speed of an arrow, and was out of sight in an instant. | |
"He must have seen father, or else scented him," said Walter to himself. | |
"Our trouble is all in vain for to-day, so I must go acquaint father | |
with the result." | |
A few minutes brought the lad to where his father was awaiting the | |
appearance of the buck; but Walter saw at once that the older sportsman | |
was aware of what had happened. His father beckoned to him to be silent, | |
and pointed to a small green spot above the steep sides of the | |
Engelhorn. Turning his eyes in that direction, Walter recognized the | |
chamois standing on the scrap of meadow. | |
"Now we've got him," whispered his father. "He can't take the steep | |
sides of the mountain, and we've cut off his retreat; so come along, my | |
boy, as fast as you can." | |
Moving hurriedly over the ice, they soon reached a point from which they | |
could get a good view of the chamois. Unfortunately, however, a large | |
chasm in the ice lay right before them, and stopped their progress. The | |
chamois had cleared it, but it was quite beyond human strength and | |
agility. | |
[TO BE CONTINUED.] | |
SEA-CUCUMBERS. | |
Toward the end of October of every year there is a harvest of cucumbers | |
in mid-ocean. These cucumbers, however, are not at all like those we see | |
on our tables. In the first place, they are not vegetables, but animals, | |
and, in the second place they grow upon the bottom of the sea. The | |
general appearance of the creature can be seen in the accompanying cut. | |
There are many species, but they all possess elongated worm-like bodies, | |
with thick leathery skins, and a crown of feelers, or tentacles, about | |
the forward extremity. All species, likewise, exercise the same | |
astonishing method of resenting any liberties taken with their persons, | |
by suddenly and unexpectedly ejecting their teeth, their stomach, their | |
digestive apparatus--in fact all their insides, so to speak--in the face | |
of the intruder, reducing themselves to a state of collapse, and making | |
of themselves mere empty bags, until such time as their wonderful | |
recuperative powers enable them to replace the organs so summarily | |
disposed of; for, wonderful as it may seem, teeth, stomach, digestive | |
organs, and all soon grow again. Moreover, these stomachs have digestive | |
powers that are not to be despised, far surpassing even those popularly | |
ascribed to the ostrich, for the sea-cucumber actually seems to feed | |
upon coral, and even granite has been found in its stomach. | |
[Illustration: SEA-CUCUMBERS.] | |
[Illustration: GATHERING SEA-CUCUMBERS.] | |
Sea-cucumbers, as they are popularly called, are also known by the name | |
of trepang and sea-slug. Scientific people call them _Holothuroideae_, | |
but why, no one has ever been able to find out, since the name has no | |
meaning. Sea-cucumbers are considered a great delicacy by the Chinese. | |
Thousands of Chinese vessels, called junks, are fitted out every year | |
for these fisheries. Trepangs are caught in different ways. Sometimes | |
the patient fishermen lie along the fore-part of vessels, and with long | |
slender bamboos, terminating in sharp hooks, gather in sea-cucumbers | |
from the bottom of the sea, so practiced in hand and eye that the catch | |
is never missed, and is discerned sometimes at thirty yards' distance. | |
When the water is not more than four or five fathoms deep, divers are | |
sent down to gather these culinary monsters, as seen in the | |
illustration, the boat and junk remaining near to receive the harvest. | |
[Illustration: THE PROCESS OF SCALDING.] | |
As soon as the trepangs are collected they are carried to the shore, | |
when they are scalded by throwing them alive into large iron pots set | |
over little ovens built of stones. Here they are stirred about by means | |
of a long pole resting upon a forked stick, as seen in the illustration. | |
In these vessels they remain a couple of minutes, when they are taken | |
out, disemboweled with a sharp knife, if they haven't already thrown up | |
their stomachs, and then taken to great bamboo sheds containing still | |
larger boilers. In these latter is water seasoned with mimosa bark. A | |
busy scene now ensues; all is bustle, noise, and activity. The bubbling | |
of the great caldrons, the incessant chatter of those engaged in the | |
work, the dumping of fresh loads of sea-cucumbers into the vessels, and | |
the removal of others to hang in clusters on the ropes above, or be | |
deposited on hurdles to dry in the sun, make "confusion worse | |
confounded," and give the spectator a new and realizing sense of the | |
confusion of tongues at the Tower of Babel. | |
[Illustration: BOILING AND CURING.] | |
The sea-cucumbers having been smoked in the large caldrons (for the | |
mimosa bark is consumed in the process), and then dried, are ready for | |
the market, and, packed in bundles, are stowed away in the holds of the | |
junks and proas off shore. | |
They are said to taste like lobsters; but if they look, as one traveller | |
says they do, "like dried sausages rolled in mud and thrown up the | |
chimney," few of us could be induced to try whether we liked them or | |
not. | |
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. | |
Benjamin Franklin, born in Boston in 1706, when a boy laid down certain | |
rules of conduct which he always followed. He made up his mind to be | |
temperate, orderly, frugal, and industrious. When ten years old, he cut | |
wicks for candles, minded the shop, and ran errands for his father, who | |
was a tallow-chandler. He did not, however, neglect his books, for he | |
tells us, "I do not remember when I could not read." Though no boy ever | |
worked harder, he was fond of manly sports, and was an expert swimmer. | |
Not liking the tallow-chandlery business, his father apprenticed him to | |
a printer. This was precisely the kind of work which suited Franklin. | |
When hardly eighteen years old, he was sent to England to buy printing | |
material, and to improve himself in his trade. As a printer in London, a | |
very young man, entirely his own master, with no friends to control him, | |
surrounded by temptations, those rules which he had fixed upon early in | |
life were of singular benefit to him. Returning to America in 1726, in | |
time he opened a modest printing-house in Philadelphia. Industry, | |
honesty, and good work made him successful. He became member of the | |
Assembly, Postmaster, and during the Revolution, while in France, | |
induced that country to espouse our cause. If to-day the world has to | |
thank Americans for making electricity their servant, Benjamin Franklin | |
first discovered its most marked qualities. With a kite he brought down | |
the spark from heaven to earth, and held it under control. Franklin | |
died, honored by all his countrymen, in 1790. | |
[Illustration: FRANKLIN AND HIS LOAF OF BREAD.] | |
When a lad, hungry and tired, he landed in Philadelphia with a dollar in | |
his pocket, he bought some bread, and marched through the streets | |
munching his crust. He happened to see a young lady, a Miss Read, at the | |
door of her father's house. He made up his mind then and there that he | |
would marry her; and so in time he did. Strangely enough, that exact | |
part of New York from whence _Harper's Young People_ is issued is called | |
Franklin Square. | |
MR. AND MRS. MOUSE. | |
Once upon a time there lived a Mr. and Mrs. Mouse. They were sometimes | |
almost tempted to be sorry that they did live, for they were often very | |
short of anything to eat, and it happened once or twice that they were | |
very nearly eaten up by cats, or hunted by dogs, all of which made them | |
very unhappy. They had changed their house over and over again, till | |
they were quite sick of such a wandering life. At last Mr. Mouse said to | |
his wife one day, "My dear, I have made up my mind not to settle down | |
anywhere till I have thoroughly examined the place to see if it will | |
suit, for I am tired of having to change every week like this." | |
"Very well, dear," said his wife, "I quite agree with you. I am as tired | |
of this moving as you can be. Do you know, I am getting quite thin from | |
all this worry of dogs and cats. I feel quite loose in my coat, and I | |
feel so dreadfully nervous of traps every time I venture out at night | |
into the kitchen." | |
"Poor little thing!" said Mr. Mouse; "but I think I know of a place that | |
may suit us. The old lady that lives up stairs in her bedroom is a kind | |
old woman, I have heard cook say. Don't you think we might look behind | |
the wainscot of her room, and see if it would suit?" | |
So they agreed to go up stairs that very night and pay a visit to the | |
old lady's room. The old lady was a great invalid, and hardly ever left | |
her room. Mr. and Mrs. Mouse inspected the whole room carefully, she | |
looking after their lodgings, and he seeing what chances there were of | |
food, and what kinds of it, for Mr. Mouse was rather dainty in his | |
eating, if he were not hard up for food, as they had been a good deal | |
lately. They found everything perfection. As to lodgings, Mrs. Mouse | |
found a hole which delighted her extremely. It was obscurely hid in the | |
wainscot under the wardrobe, where nobody could possibly see them going | |
in and out--just to her liking. With a little nibbling of the wood here | |
and there inside the hole, she thought it would make the most delightful | |
house anybody ever had. There were no nasty draughts to give her colds, | |
and if they wanted a little amusement during the day, there was the | |
whole length of the wardrobe to race along under; for, to tell the | |
truth, Mr. and Mrs. Mouse were both quite young yet, and enjoyed a good | |
scamper immensely. She also found that there had been no other mice for | |
a very long time, if there ever had been. She was very glad of this, as | |
she by no means approved of a lot of other mice being there to interfere | |
with her and her husband. Mr. Mouse was equally pleased with what he | |
found. | |
The old lady who lived in the room was constantly having all kinds of | |
invalid messes, arrowroot, gruel, etc. There would have been quite | |
enough to eat from what she left alone; but besides all her eatables, | |
there was a large cage full of birds, that spattered their seed about in | |
all directions, and Mr. and Mrs. Mouse were very fond of bird seed. Then | |
there were always bread-crumbs about, and lumps of sugar; in fact, both | |
Mr. and Mrs. Mouse agreed in thinking that there had never been a place | |
so thoroughly fitted for them in every way. So, after examining the room | |
in every corner, and being quite satisfied, they both scampered off down | |
stairs again, and, avoiding the cat, got safely home. | |
Next day they set about moving, or rather next night, for they did | |
nothing all day but pack up their trunks and rest themselves before the | |
night came on. They worked very hard, and were all but settled in their | |
new home when the morning came. | |
Then Mrs. Mouse turned her husband out while she arranged the inside of | |
her house. She took great pains about their bedroom, which she filled up | |
with some rose leaves from a "pot-pourri" vase on the landing outside, | |
which made a deliciously soft bed to lie upon. At each corner, to make | |
the posts of the bed, she stuck a clove or bit of cinnamon, and to make | |
the curtains over the top and at the sides she robbed a spider's web, | |
which looked lovely. When she had finished all her arrangements she | |
called Mr. Mouse in, and when she heard his little squeaks and screams | |
of delight, she was fully satisfied. In the mean time he had brushed the | |
floor just outside with his tail till it was quite clean, and on it he | |
had spread their first meal in their new house. And what a good | |
breakfast it was! Bird seed of several kinds, bread-crumbs, a little bit | |
of arrowroot, some lumps of sugar, and as dessert he had with great | |
courage stolen a little piece of chocolate from the old lady's bedside. | |
They were very jolly in their new house; they had never felt so secure | |
anywhere before, and hoped they might now live in peace. After living | |
there some time they found out that the old lady was very fond of all | |
kinds of animals, and the idea of anything being killed was dreadfully | |
painful to her. She was not aware that a cat was kept below stairs, or | |
she would not have allowed it, for she was very fond of mice. Mr. and | |
Mrs. Mouse knew they were perfectly safe with her, but they were not at | |
all as sure of her maid, who looked very cross and grumpy. So things | |
went on for some time very happily, and Mrs. Mouse began to look about | |
for a good place to put her babies in, for she had fifteen of them. She | |
found a large bottle under the wardrobe at one end, and so she told her | |
husband she would put them there. It was not very nice of Mr. Mouse, but | |
he disliked those babies. He thought them hideous, nasty little things, | |
without any hair at all on their bodies, and he thought them horrid for | |
the perpetual squeaking they kept up. He also said that he thought Mrs. | |
Mouse might very well have been satisfied with half the number; but he | |
only said that once, for his wife fired up in a moment, and said he was | |
most unkind, and that he ought to be proud of such a family, for some | |
lady mice had so little pride that they only had six or seven. | |
"Nobody can say that of me," said Mrs. Mouse, holding up her nose in the | |
air; and poor Mr. Mouse gave in utterly, and only ventured an occasional | |
snort every now and then, when one of the fifteen babies squeaked more | |
shrilly than usual. | |
Mrs. Mouse put her babies in the bottle, and they grew up into fine big | |
mice, nearly as big as their father. But these young mice were very | |
noisy; they tore about, and squeaked even in broad daylight, so that the | |
cross maid looked crosser, and at last told her mistress. | |
"Them mice are not to be borne, mum, and I'll set a trap." | |
The old lady said she would not have a trap set, and the dear little | |
things killed, so for some days the mice continued to squeak and scamper | |
as much as ever. But the maid, thinking matters were going too far, got | |
the trap, without saying anything to her mistress, and putting some | |
toasted cheese in it, set it under the wardrobe. | |
Vainly did Mr. and Mrs. Mouse say to their children, in the most solemn | |
tones, "Don't go near that cage; I don't quite know what it is, but I'm | |
sure it is dangerous." The young ones did not mind them. They thought | |
they would only go and look at it, and then the toasted cheese smelled | |
so _very_ good, it could do no harm just to try and taste it; and so | |
_five_ of them were caught, and next morning were given to the cat. | |
All the other brothers and sisters went into deep mourning, and could be | |
seen wiping their eyes with their tails a great many times during the | |
following days. Then one or two of them thought change of air would be | |
the best thing for them, so they went down stairs for a short time, and | |
when they came back, to Mr. Mouse's disgust, they each brought back a | |
wife or a husband. | |
Mr. Mouse was quite angry at such an addition to a family already too | |
large, he thought; so that evening, instead of staying quietly at home, | |
and watching the young ones run races, he was so disturbed in his mind | |
that he went out for a walk. | |
The moonlight was coming in through the window and making a long line of | |
light on the floor as Mr. Mouse slowly walked out from under the | |
wardrobe. He stood for some time looking about him, thinking in which | |
direction should he first go. His bright little eyes twinkled in the | |
moonlight as he looked this way and that, and having made up his mind to | |
go first to the bird-cage and see how the provisions were there, he sat | |
down on the floor and scratched his ear slowly with his hind-foot. The | |
birds were all asleep on their perches; but to Mr. Mouse's indignation | |
he found that his children, not satisfied with taking all the seed that | |
fell outside, had all but emptied the box in the cage. | |
"Young scamps," said Mr. Mouse, "they will be getting us into mischief | |
if they eat up everything like this." | |
From the bird-cage he went on to the old lady's bed, and after running | |
about there for some time, went to sleep under her pillow. He found it | |
so comfortable and warm that next night he went back to the bed, but | |
before going to sleep under the pillow he thought he would like to see | |
what the old lady's night-cap tasted like. He nibbled and nibbled until | |
he had made a large hole; and then, finding it so amusing and nice, he | |
crept under the clothes, and ate several large round holes in her | |
night-gown. But alas for poor Mr. Mouse! The old lady in her sleep | |
happened to roll over on her side: there was a faint squeak, rather | |
muffled by the bedclothes, and Mr. Mouse's days on this earth were over. | |
Next morning the old lady said to her maid, "Brown, I wish you would | |
look at my cap; there was something tickling and pressing my head last | |
night, and also my leg." Brown looked, and was horrified at the big hole | |
she found on her mistress's cap; but she was speechless when on looking | |
into the bed she found Mr. Mouse's dead body, and two more holes in her | |
mistress's night-gown. She wanted to get a dog or a cat, and any amount | |
of traps; but the old lady was so sorry for the mouse she had killed | |
that she made the excuse that perhaps he was the only one left, and that | |
they would wait a little longer and see. Brown gave in, as she could not | |
help it, and looked crosser than ever on account of the mice. | |
Now the young Mrs. Mice were searching for homes for their babies, which | |
had come. They could find no place at all, until one day one of them | |
found a hole in the back of the wardrobe, and calling her sister, they | |
both with great caution crept in and found just what they wanted. One of | |
them took possession of the old lady's bonnet, one of the old-fashioned | |
big ones, all quilted with satin inside; and the other the muff to match | |
the bonnet. There could not have been more comfortable nests for their | |
babies, when the linings were removed and had all been properly cut up | |
into shreds, than the old lady's muff and bonnet made; so the two young | |
mammas were in high delight, and tucked their babies in that night, | |
feeling they had been wiser and luckier than any Mrs. Mouse ever had | |
been in getting such a bed for their little ones. | |
A few days after a young lady came running into the room. She was a very | |
pretty young lady, and she seemed to bring sunshine and happiness into | |
the room with her. "Oh, grandmamma!" she cried, "you must put on your | |
things and come out. I have brought the carriage for you; the sun is | |
shining so brightly; the wind is from the south, and it is quite summer. | |
It will do you so much good to get some fresh air." | |
"Oh, little one, I could not," said grandmamma; "I have not been out for | |
months, and I don't know where my things are. I don't think I can go out | |
to-day. It does me almost as much good to see your bright face." | |
"You must come out, grandmamma; it's no use making excuses," said the | |
young lady; and so the old lady gave in, as everybody did to this | |
sunshiny little woman. | |
As soon as the two young Mrs. Mice heard the doors of the wardrobe | |
opened, they scampered away as fast as they could. The bonnet was taken | |
out, and then the muff, and you can think what a scene there was when | |
the nasty hairless little mice tumbled out, and they found how utterly | |
destroyed both bonnet and muff were. | |
That was the last of the Mouse family. The old lady moved into another | |
room the next day. Her old room was cleared of furniture, the | |
mouse-holes stopped up, a cat put in at night, and a bull-terrier by | |
day, and traps of all kinds. Every mouse was killed, and not a single | |
one from any other part of the house had courage to go into that room | |
after such a tragedy. | |
* * * * * | |
[Illustration: TOO MUCH TURKEY--THE KEEPER'S DREAM.--DRAWN BY F. S. | |
CHURCH.] | |
* * * * * | |
=The Raven Stone.=--In Germany a superstition prevails that if the eggs | |
are taken from a raven's nest, boiled, and replaced, the old raven will | |
bring a root or stone to the nest, which he fetches from the sea. This | |
"raven stone" confers great fortune on its owner, and has the power of | |
rendering him invisible when worn on the arm. The stone is said to make | |
the nest itself invisible; it must be sought with the aid of a mirror. | |
In Pomerania and Ruegen the method is somewhat different. The parent | |
birds must have attained the age of one hundred years, and the would-be | |
possessor of the precious "stone" must climb up and kill one of the | |
young ravens. Then the aggressor descends, taking careful note of the | |
tree. The old raven immediately returns with the stone, which he puts in | |
the dead bird's beak, and thereupon both tree and nest become invisible. | |
The man, however, feels for the tree, and on reaching the nest, he | |
carries off the stone in triumph. The Swabian peasantry maintain that | |
young ravens are nourished solely by the dew from heaven during the | |
first nine days of their existence. As they are naked, and of a light | |
color, the old birds do not believe that they are their progeny, and | |
consequently neglect to feed them; but they occasionally cast a glance | |
at the nest, and when the young ones begin to show a little black down | |
on their breasts, by the tenth day, the parents bring them the first | |
carrion. | |
[Illustration] | |
[Illustration: Music: Good-Night and Good-Morning.] | |
[Illustration: OUR POST-OFFICE BOX.] | |
LETTER FROM A LITTLE GIRL ABOUT "HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE." | |
NEWPORT, RHODE ISLAND, _November 6, 1879_. | |
MR. EDITOR,--I don't know who to put at the head of this letter, | |
because I don't know your first name. I wonder if it is Uncle John. | |
Papa found me reading what he called a "trash paper" the other day, | |
and he said he would take a good paper for me if I would not read | |
any more of that kind of trash; and he said you was going to print | |
a nice paper for young folks, and this morning he brought one | |
home--the very first number; but he said he was disappointed in the | |
size of it, and that it was not quite half so big as an ordinary | |
paper at four cents, and I am afraid he will not take it for me; | |
but mamma says if I wrote to you perhaps you could give me some | |
good reason for the paper being smaller than papa expected, so that | |
he will keep his promise, for I like the paper very much, and I | |
have read about the "Brave Swiss Boy," and so has father; and he | |
says it is better than the kind of paper they throw in the | |
door--"to be continued." So please tell us why your paper is not so | |
big as the "trash papers," as father calls them, and I will be very | |
thankful. | |
LIZZIE M. D. | |
There are several reasons why _Harper's Young People_ is not as large as | |
the journals which you call "trash" papers. In the first place, | |
_Harper's Young People_ is very carefully printed on extra fine paper, | |
which make the type and illustrations look so clear and beautiful. And | |
then a very large price is paid to the artists who draw the pictures, to | |
the engravers who reproduce them on wood, and to the authors who | |
contribute the reading matter which you find so interesting. The picture | |
of "The Tournament," for instance, on the first page of the preceding | |
number, cost over one hundred and fifty dollars for drawing and | |
engraving. Some of the pictures will cost even more than that. If _Young | |
People_ was a larger weekly paper, and just as good in every respect as | |
it is now, the price would necessarily be larger; and then some of our | |
young readers might be deprived of the pleasure of having it. | |
_Harper's Young People_ comes out every Tuesday; and if you read all the | |
stories, poems, etc., and make out the puzzles and enigmas, you will | |
find that it will take all the time you ought to spare from study, play, | |
and other callings. We mean to make _Young People_ the very best weekly | |
for children in the world, so that they will always be glad to see it, | |
as they would welcome a visit from a pleasant companion. | |
* * * * * | |
The following letters have been received in reply to the question, in | |
the first number of _Young People_, as to the originator of cheap | |
postage. | |
NEW YORK CITY. | |
The founder of the system of prepaying postage by placing a small | |
label on one corner of the letter was Sir Rowland Hill. It was | |
first advocated by him in 1837, and stamps were first used by the | |
British Post-office May 6, 1840. They were introduced in the United | |
States in 1847. Sir Rowland was born at Kidderminster in 1795, and | |
died at Hampstead August 27, 1879, at the age of eighty-four. | |
WALTER J. LEE. | |
BROOKLYN, NEW YORK. | |
In answer to your question in the first number of _Young People_, | |
asking if any one knew the name of the man who first thought of | |
cheap postage, I would say that it was Sir Rowland Hill, of | |
England. He died a few months ago at Hampstead, near London, and | |
was buried in Westminster Abbey. | |
The answer to your letter puzzle in the same number is | |
"Longfellow." | |
F. B. HESSE (11 years old). | |
Clara S. Gardiner, St. Louis, Missouri, sends a similar reply. | |
Correct answers to letter puzzle have also been received from Albert E. | |
Seibert, New York city, and Annie B. Stephens, Elizabeth, New Jersey. | |
Several correct answers to the mathematical puzzles have been sent in, | |
and will be published as soon as other correspondents have had time to | |
try their skill. | |
* * * * * | |
LOUIS B. PARSONS, Montclair, New Jersey.--If you will put a very little | |
oil of cloves, or still better, a few drops of creosote, into your ink, | |
it will not trouble you by moulding. You should also keep it corked | |
tight when not in use. | |
[Continued from No. 3, Page 23.] | |
THE STORY OF A PARROT. | |
I soon heard the sound of voices, and in a moment my mistress with the | |
children entered the room. I greeted them with screams and laughter, | |
while the whole party stopped in astonishment at the wrecked condition | |
of the pretty sitting-room. | |
"Oh, Lorito, you bad, bad boy!" said Louis, shaking his finger at me. | |
"Oo-oo-oo, bad boy! bad boy!" I screamed, to the great delight of the | |
children, who forgot in an instant the mischief I had done, and began to | |
laugh heartily. Seeing my advantage, I kept up a constant rattle of all | |
the ridiculous nonsense I knew. The wine was still dancing in my head, | |
and I made a very sorrowful exhibition of myself. | |
The children's mother soon discovered the empty bowl lying tipped over | |
on the hearth. | |
"Poor Lorito is drunk," she said, laughing; "he has swallowed every drop | |
of the wine. We must not blame him for his naughty actions. He is only a | |
bird, and has not enough sense to let wine alone." | |
She then began to lament the loss of my beauty. I was indeed a frightful | |
object; and when I heard my mistress declare that if I could not be | |
cleaned I must be turned out of the house, my terror at the thought of | |
losing what I had begun to realize was a comfortable home brought me to | |
my sober senses at once. I hung my head and was silent. For the first | |
time in my life I was mortified and ashamed of myself. | |
It was now decided to try water on my feathers, and Louis, putting me on | |
his shoulder, carried me to the bath-room. I did feel the greatest | |
inclination to bite his ear, but I contented myself by gently pulling | |
his hair, which made him laugh. | |
It was a great luxury to get into the bath-tub, for no one had even | |
given me water to wet my feet for a very long time; and although parrots | |
do not care to get in the tub every morning and flutter and spatter like | |
canaries, still they like to wet their feet, and, above all things, they | |
enjoy a gentle shower-bath, like a summer rain. | |
I can not say the bath the children gave me was what I would have chosen | |
myself, for they rubbed me and scrubbed me and tumbled me about till I | |
was half dead. At last it was over. The ink stains had nearly | |
disappeared from my feathers, but I was cold and miserable. Then, too, I | |
had proved myself such a destructive personage when free that my feet | |
were chained once more; and although my mistress had kindly covered the | |
rings I wore round my ankles with soft flannel, the chain was still a | |
dreadful burden. When I was at last left alone on my perch, I gave way | |
to the most sorrowful meditations. | |
Still, all my present happiness dates from that troublesome time. The | |
children were with me constantly, and their kind treatment completely | |
cured me of my ugly, malicious temper. I then became acquainted with my | |
dear friend Fritz, in whose company I have spent many happy hours. In | |
order to talk with him I was compelled to learn his language, and soon I | |
could bark so well that little Hope would clap her hands and say, "Our | |
Rito makes a better doggie than Fritz himself." | |
[Illustration: "FRITZ ADORED SUGAR."] | |
Often when I sat on my perch Fritz would lie on the carpet near me, and | |
we would hold long conversations together. He, too, had met with | |
disappointments in life, and we consoled each other. We shared | |
constantly the good things given us, and I soon discovered that Fritz | |
adored sugar. As there were always some pieces in my feed dish, I kept | |
them for him, and many a frolic we have had, for I never could help | |
tantalizing him by holding the tempting morsel higher than he could | |
jump. | |
I have had some nice friends in the garden, for in warm weather I was | |
often carried out and placed on the branch of a tree, where I had the | |
companionship of butterflies and bees and many kinds of birds. Although | |
they were neither so large nor so beautiful in color as those I knew in | |
my childhood on the banks of the Congo, still I found them excellent | |
company. I would have been perfectly happy in the garden had it not been | |
for the chain which fastened me to the branch; but experience had made | |
me wiser than formerly, and I had learned not to expect perfect | |
happiness, so I wore my chain patiently. | |
My feed dish was fastened at my side, and as it was always well filled | |
with sugar, bird seed, and other dainties, I often offered some to my | |
new friends; but so awed were they by my size and grand appearance that | |
they feared to approach me, although they would sit on a neighboring | |
branch and talk to me by the hour. Suddenly an idea occurred to me, | |
which I at once put in practice. Springing from my branch, I hung in the | |
air by my chain, which was not only healthy exercise, but left my feed | |
dish free for my guests. They came in crowds, the sparrows of course, | |
hundreds of them, and also robins and finches. So often was this | |
repeated that, to the great surprise of the children, my feed dish was | |
emptied several times every day. | |
"Mamma," I heard Carrie say once when they were all in the garden | |
together, "Rito eats like an ogre. I am afraid he'll kill himself." | |
"The fresh air makes him hungry," said Louis, who always had a wise | |
reason for everything. "The day you went to grandpa's, and played in the | |
hay meadow, you ate like an ogre too. I heard grandma say so." | |
"Yes, I did eat all the jumbles in grandma's tin cake-box," said Carrie; | |
"but that was only once, and every day nurse has to fill Rito's feed | |
dish seven or eight times. He eats enough for ten Ritos." | |
"Oh, mamma, look at him!" screamed little Hope, who at that moment spied | |
me indulging in my favorite exercise, swinging back and forth on my | |
chain. The children and their mother ran toward me, while I, with one of | |
my loud laughs (which I have heard some people say was a very wicked | |
laugh: _I_ don't think so), skillfully swung myself back to my branch, | |
frightening as I did it a crowd of my feathered friends who were | |
gathered about my feed dish. The children's mother saw them fly away. | |
"Look," she cried; "there go the ogres. It is those thieving sparrows | |
who eat so much, and not Lorito himself." | |
Now the sparrows may be too bold sometimes, but I do not think they are | |
thieves, and it made me very angry to hear them called such a bad name. | |
I screamed and struck my wings together so violently that I slipped from | |
the branch, and was again swinging in the air by my chain. | |
"Mamma, Rito will break his legs, and then we shall have to kill him," | |
screamed Louis, in alarm. | |
"Take off his chain, oh, mamma, do," said kind-hearted Carrie; while | |
little Hope pleaded in her sweet voice: "Poor Rito will be good, mamma. | |
He won't bite things any more." | |
You can not imagine how eagerly I listened to the discussion, for to be | |
free from my chain was now my sole ambition. My heart was touched by the | |
affection of the children, and when, to my intense delight, their mother | |
yielded to their entreaties, I made a firm resolve that I would never | |
bite and tear things again, unless by good luck I could find an old | |
newspaper or a worthless stick, because I knew if I could not use my | |
beak occasionally, it would ache as bad as Carrie's tooth does some | |
nights when she goes crying to bed. | |
Since that time my life has been very peaceful. I am free as air, my | |
wings have recovered their strength, and I go wherever I please. | |
Whenever my little master Louis whistles for me I answer him at once, | |
for I have learned to whistle as well as he, and I always go as fast as | |
I can to perch upon his hand. | |
[Illustration: "I GO INTO MY CAGE."] | |
When night comes, and it grows dark, I go into my cage myself, and my | |
good friend Fritz always sleeps near me. | |
I have not forgotten my dear papa and mamma, nor my brother and sister, | |
and I often wonder if they are still living in the beautiful hollow tree | |
by the Congo; but I have learned to love new things, and to remember my | |
childhood as a sweet dream instead of a lost and longed-for reality. | |
The gray parrot gave a little soft laugh, and was silent. | |
"I declare," said the canary, who had listened very attentively, "you | |
have seen a lot of trouble. But why such a quiet, gentlemanly bird as | |
you should have such a passion to bite and tear things, I can't imagine. | |
Now my family--" But what the canary had to tell will always be a | |
mystery, for at that moment the door opened and in came papa and mamma | |
from the party. | |
"Oh, Fritz, you naughty dog!" said mamma, when she saw her pretty afghan | |
lying in a heap on the floor. But when she lifted it to put it back on | |
the lounge, she found Louis, still hugging his bow and arrow, Carrie, | |
Hope, the white kitty, and Fritz, all curled up in a little warm bunch, | |
sound asleep. | |
At that moment nurse, who had just returned from her party too, came | |
running down stairs in great alarm. | |
"Sure, ma'am, the children ain't in their beds at all," she began, but | |
stopped in astonishment when she saw her little charges sitting on the | |
rug, rubbing their fists into their sleepy eyes. | |
"They did talk," said Louis, as soon as he was wide-awake enough to | |
speak. "Lorito told us all about his brother and sister and everybody." | |
"Yes, mamma, and he's so sorry he tipped over the ink," said Carrie. | |
"Good Rito loves me," said little Hope; "he wouldn't bite me for | |
anything;" and she hugged her white kitty, and went fast asleep, with | |
her little head on mamma's shoulder, while mamma laughed merrily at the | |
children's wonderful dream. | |
The gray parrot did not say a word. He sat very quiet in his cage, his | |
head buried in his feathers, and his eyes shut tight. | |
But if, as mamma said, the children had been dreaming, it was very funny | |
indeed that they all three dreamed exactly the same thing. | |
THE END. | |
* * * * * | |
[Illustration: A GREEDY BOY'S THANKSGIVING DREAM.] | |
* * * * * | |
=Relative Age of Animals.=--The average age of cats is 15 years; of | |
squirrels and hares, 7 or 8 years; rabbits, 7; a bear rarely exceeds 20 | |
years; a dog lives 20 years, a wolf 20, a fox 14 to 16; lions are | |
long-lived, the one known by the name of Pompey living to the age of 70. | |
Elephants have been known to live to the age of 400 years. When | |
Alexander the Great had conquered Porus, King of India, he took a great | |
elephant which had fought valiantly for the king, and named him Ajax, | |
dedicated him to the sun, and let him go with this inscription, | |
"Alexander, the son of Jupiter, dedicated Ajax to the sun." The elephant | |
was found with this inscription 350 years after. Pigs have been known to | |
live to the age of 20, and the rhinoceros to 29; a horse has been known | |
to live to the age of 62, but they average 25 or 30; camels sometimes | |
live to the age of 100; stags are very long-lived; sheep seldom exceed | |
the age of 10; cows live about 15 years. Cuvier considers it probable | |
that whales sometimes live 1000 years. The dolphin and porpoise attain | |
the age of 30; an eagle died at Vienna at the age of 104; ravens have | |
frequently reached the age of 100; swans have been known to live to the | |
age of 300. Mr. Malerton has the skeleton of a swan that attained the | |
age of 200 years. Pelicans are long-lived. A tortoise has been known to | |
live to the age of 107 years. | |
WIGGLES. | |
[Illustration] | |
The thick black line in this picture is a facsimile of the line No. 6 in | |
our last Wiggles, which we submitted to our readers, on which to test | |
their ingenuity. | |
We subjoin another Wiggle, and shall be happy to see what our young | |
friends can do with it. | |
* * * * * | |
[Illustration: A FALL SENTIMENT] | |
A NEW SERIAL | |
BY GEORGE MACDONALD. | |
A brilliant serial story by GEORGE MACDONALD, with illustrations by | |
ALFRED FREDERICKS, will shortly be begun in HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE. | |
_Harper's Young People._ | |
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE will be issued every Tuesday, and may be had at | |
the following rates: | |
Four cents a number. | |
Single subscriptions for one year, $1.50; five subscriptions, one year, | |
$7.00: payable in advance. Postage free. | |
Subscriptions may begin with any number. When no time is specified, it | |
will be understood that the subscriber desires to commence with the | |
number issued after the receipt of order. | |
Remittances should be made by Post-office Money Order, or Draft, to | |
avoid risk of loss. | |
Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York. | |
A LIBERAL OFFER FOR 1880 ONLY. | |
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE _and_ HARPER'S WEEKLY _will be sent to any address | |
for one year, commencing with the first number of_ HARPER'S WEEKLY _for | |
January, 1880, on receipt of $5.00 for the two Periodicals_. | |
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Harper's Young People, November 25, | |
1879, by Various | |
*** |