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Page 63 text:
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Co ., Ennis iii. Ziaummr
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Page 62 text:
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QE The Junior Classic 36 e evening. and the townspeople come up to enjoy the music and watch the crowds of tOl1riStS promenade. French is spoken everywhere. It is impossible to use autos in the city. except on the boulevards leading up to the Chateau. One can take an elevator down to the old town, or walk down flights and flights of steps. Here are old stone houses built two hundred years ago, with little shops tucked among them. There are many beautiful drives out from Quebec. One. very well-known. is to the shrine of St. Anne de Beaupre. ROBERTA XVILSON, TA. The Moon Out of Reach I paused in my walk. And is there one of you who would not have done so? For there above the bridge and laughing waters was the moon, a full, golden moon, just out of reach. it seemed. The faultless picture was divine. The gliding river was the foreground. A beautiful stream, lapping the banks in a melodious rhythm, sounded as if trying to sing some wakeful cloud. star, or moonbeam to sleep. The flickering darts of moonlight glittered on frolicking water as it flowed swiftly and noiselessly westward until it turned in a graceful line toward the south. As it curved. I noticed more its boundaries and banks. High. high, they rose till it seemed as if they were vainly reaching for the magnetic moon. On their crests numerous pines and :naples were whispering softly, while their bright foliage danced and quivered in the re- freshing breeze. Some trees near the river leaned haughtily over the water, trying to see their graceful reflections in the liquid mirror. as if they were jealous of the even more grace- ful moonbeams that ran and darted along the shores. Ah! This was but the earthly and minor part of the pictureg for above the rippling water were the heavens displaying all the glory they could exhibit before man. And the moon! That gorgeous body that gave light to the entire scene was full and ripe-round as it could be, and of a color never mixed in earthly paint, between a gold and a brilliant orange. It seemed to be the attraction of not only human beings but of heavenly bodies. also: for clustered around in uneven spacing were modest little stars, shyly peeping around a blanket of clouds, as if to see what monstrous thing had come to light up the heavens in the golden way, so that they could not be seen in their faded garb. But one giant star. who was prob- ably a son of the moon. and had inherited a portion of her brightness. hopped out from behind a silver-lined cloud and shone with all its brightness. now and then winking and blink ing naughtily. as if. perchance. it were flirting with some smaller star who was blushing pain fully behind a cloud. So it was that the moon revealed that night a picture never gotten. Perhaps if you would stand on Leeper you mifht ner er will briffht for to be for bridge some night under a full moon chance to see a similar picture: but anyone again see the moon quite so about midnight it became so vain and conceited that a bit of Uold dust and fairv light burst from it and fell into space. And no matter how long you may reach out your arms pleadingly toward it, the moon declines to leave its home you see. dear friends. the moon is out of reach Nlaoeu N Sxx1TH 8B St. Augustine, Florida St. Augustine is a quaint city in the heart of the sub-tropical region of the United States The streets are old, and most of them are very narrow. The buildings are made from a queer rock, which' itself is made up of countless tiny shells. This strange rock is called Coquina Old Fort Marion, the city's gates and wall, and the great sea wall are very striking because the white or gray rock of which they are built is so distinct among the brilliant colors of the tropical flowers. YVhen walking down St. George street, we pass the city buildings and come to the end of the street at the city gates. For a moment we might fancy we were in one of the old cities gates. All that remain of these gates. however, are the two stately pillars, twenty feet high, and a few pieces of the wall beyond. The Fountain of Youth, supposed to have been discovered by Ponce de Leon, is a great curiosity of St. Augustine. It has one pecul iarity distinguishing it from other wells, in that the water rises and falls without any ap parent reason or cause. The old Slave Market in the east end of the Plaza is an interesting landmark of antebellum days. It was used as a public market in which slaves were occasionally sold. The famous Secret Dungeon of Fort Marion was accidentally discovered by Lieutenant Tuttle in 18323. The entrance had been walled up so carefully as to almost baffle discovery LQROBERTA YVIL:ox A lPage Fifty-sixl 'Q' E' . So g - - i-v - 1 - 0 - 'E ,gi s 2 5 e . ,-- of Europe. so many of which have walls and - - ee - ii .- F53 5? S it .li 2 N , T . V i rf .33 -Q . fi . 5,
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Page 64 text:
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