Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN)

 - Class of 1896

Page 16 of 56

 

Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 16 of 56
Page 16 of 56



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Emmerich Manual High School - Ivian Yearbook (Indianapolis, IN) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 17
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Page 16 text:

LITERARY DEPART MENT. THE GAME-KEEPER OF CHARLCOTE HALL TALKS. AVE you, neighbor GTreen- sheve. By the mass, it fares ill for ye that ven- ture the wilds of unknown » lands. Methitiks the wisp o ' grey on your an- cient poll is thinner by far than mine, and I be a good four years your elder. Ye need a priest to shrive ye gossip, for such tales as ye tell of the new country do pass all believing. Of a truth, travellers returning from that far land do tell of things most curious. Mayhap it would please ye well to know how fares the world wv the folk who found adventure enow for them i ' the forests of Warwickshire. A score of years do show a vast change in men of our age. Old Gossip Patchen lieth i ' the church-yard, and his widow has ta ' en her another spouse. She hath a sad liking to w r edded life and fate had thrice seen fit to set her free. Masters Ellis and Shackley have gone to London, Tinesby to the gallows for an ower love of plunder, and Smedley is at sea. But all the rest do bide i ' the old places like unturned stones. But, marry, the sun doth hide his face to some men and spend all his glory on others. Neighbor Skakespearc hath scarce a penny tor the church — an less for ale — since Dame Fortune reversed her fickle wheel. Have ye heard of his ill luck? Nay? Well of a truth he is shent. Ye wot he knew the rote of making money, but as for keep- ing it he knew no more than doth a month old babe. He hath an uncommon free hand and he did lend and ffive like a lord till his own flesh did creep for want of cloak and the pangs of hunger gnaw for want of gold to buy him food. And now he lacketh naught but the mien and visage to be a beggar. His son, Will, hath risen sith his 2 father went down, for all London weepeth or holdeth his sides to see his wondrous plays. ' Twas chance, sheer chance, that set him up, for when Misfortune seems to cozen 3 us, she may turn our best friend at last. This Will had scarcely left his swad- dling clothes when ye sailed i ' Falcon for America, and then neighbor Shakespeare had all that men could wish i ' the way of worldly goods. So the stripling did grow and flourish in an ower amount of mis- chief. I ' faith, he was a lad to my liking, for the love of sport and adventure did lie as naturally in his heart as doth the love for singing in the linnet ' s throat. The leafy forests of Warwickshire were his play grounds. Do ye mind the mead about the grenewode ? I warrant ye, ye never found a fairer sight i ' the enchanted woods of America than the hazel copses, the treeless downs and the flowery mead, through which the Avon sparkles, in old Warwickshire. But the boy ' s nature allowed him not to be contented with that which was right- fully his own. So he and his fellows did raid my lord Lucy ' s deer park. Ay, full oft hath his bow-string sung the death- knell of his grace ' s game. Of a truth, he feared me not, though oft hath he fled from me i ' the very glare of day. But his legs were winged with mis- chief, and I could scarce hope to catch a prize runner of the May-Day games with my bandy legs. And then he had a fa-

Page 15 text:

.MIND AND HAND. of the Belvedere Apollo, and other rooms as well supplied. One corner of the build- ing is the delight of all the pupils who re- cite there. It is the German room. Since the windows are south and west, it is a very bright room. Begonias, umbrella plants, primroses, geraniums — all sorts of bright flowers fill the windows. A copy of Beatrice Cenci stands on a light easel, near which is a small table, on which rests a magnificent palm in a pretty jardiniere. I. T. S. students have a right to be proud of the beauty of the school, for though the School Board deserves the credit of having; first provided us with a pleasant building and many art treasures, the plants, flowers, pictures and pianos have generally been obtained by a hearty co-operation of teacher and pupil. Valencia Euan. THE editors would call special attention to the article by Dr. George Emory Fellows, of Chicago Uuiversity, which ap- pears in another column. Dr. Fellows was for several years a professor in Indiana University, and now holds the chair of History at Chicago. E. F. K. PRINCIPAL ' S PRIVATE OFFICE.



Page 17 text:

MIND AND HAND. 7 mous good hand at the cross bow, and it likes me not to catch a quarrel 4 i ' the heel. But when neighbor Shakespeare grew ower generous to his own undoing; the lad found little time for his madcap pranks. As a first born son he must needs assist in the maintenance of the younger or help- less ones. And when he winged my lord ' s deer it was to silence a crying hunger, and not for wanton sport. Penury made Will uncommon saving. A wife, he thought, could help him save, and so he wedded Dickon Hathaway ' s daugh- ter, Anne, eight years his elder. And now wi ' wife and babes he found it hard to keep his larder full. So, to his old pranks again, he shot his grace ' s deer. Some other keep- ers caught him in the act. He was an old offender and I knew it would go hard wi ' him. But I could not do withal. 5 Well, in the courts they made him pay thrice the beasties value. Alas, poor, help- less Will ! Starvation tracked him yarely, and hate for my master did rankle in his heart; hut his wit came to his aid and he wrote a sonnet on my lord and nailed it to the lodge gate. Now, although I am a loyal servant and true to Sir Thomas Lucy, privily, I tell ye, gossip, he spake most wonderfully straight at my lord ' s weak- nesses. My memory is no the sharpest more and I can not mind the jingle that he wrote, yet my sides do ache at the very thought of it. My lord waxed full wroth and threat- ened Newgate. Indeed, he delayed this vengeance to invent a worse, but while he waited the bird had flown. Will went to London and left his wife and babes for us to keep while he did seek his fortune. Methinks he found it ower soon. For he is one of my lord Chamber- lain ' s players, and Rumor hath it that his wage is greater and of a better surety than any of his guild. And his wife, Anne, doth strut abroad in such a show of dress that the common folk do stare in wonder and envy. i v, ' ::. Will hath written plays that hath won him favor with the Queen, so that it doth become Sir Thomas to make his peace with the Queen ' s friends. God ' ield ye, gossip, an ' I drink more wi ' ye, it will be to my own undoing, for e ' en now I talk too freely for a good servant. But, friend, I did hut give ye facts, which, an ' it like ye, keep wi ' a cautious tongue, lest my lord hear o ' them, for truly, he liketh not a jest to his own hurt. Bessie Miller. Feb., ' 97. 1 shent— undone. 2 his — the form of the personal pronoun it hail not yet come into u-e. ' cozen— torment. 1 quarrel — arrow. R But I could not do withal— I could not help it. yarely— closely.

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