Framingham State University - Dial Yearbook (Framingham, MA)

 - Class of 1910

Page 28 of 110

 

Framingham State University - Dial Yearbook (Framingham, MA) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 28 of 110
Page 28 of 110



Framingham State University - Dial Yearbook (Framingham, MA) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 27
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Framingham State University - Dial Yearbook (Framingham, MA) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 29
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Page 28 text:

20 One winds your clock when you are gone, Then asks a cent a night. One asks a cent to see her dress, fit was a perfect sight, But things like that, you know, must be To ever win a victory. I They washed your stocks for you, You gave them more, and yet, You never found for several days How much you were in debt. They even held a rummage sale Of everything in their avail. I was dead broke in a short while, And yet I owed still more and moreg My only consolation was ,lust what they used the money for. They made poor babies some warm clothes, And worked, themselves, the buttonholes. Was ever such a crafty lot! We gave what we were meant To give, for manicure, shampoog and all. Our senses left us with our cents. You'll do the same, and it will be , To you as big -a mystery. iiiiil Poetical Geography CURIOSITY led me, recently to purchase The Poetical Geography designed to accompany outline maps or school atlasesf' The book was published at Cincinnati in l852. I wished to see -how geography could be put into a poetical pill so as to please the taste of the average learner. I have had my curiosity satisfied. It has a dedication, a lengthy pref- ace, and an Introduction In reading the preface one is struck by the signilicanceof the follow- ing statement, not only for the statement in itself, but also for its relation to the Introduction. Geography is a branch that is studied by nearly all, but how few among the vast number who spend years in acquiring a knowl- edge of it ever retain or remember it. But the deficit is not to be attribu- ted to the works studied but to the poverty of memory. The Introduc- tion is quoted in full at the end of this communication, because it is the spiritual and literary gem of the whole collection. It shows how the poverty of memoryi' is to be overcome.

Page 27 text:

19 The Battle of the Lend-a-Hands BY SPECIAL PERMISSION OF THE AUTHOR It was an Autumn evening, The senior's work was done, And she, on Normal wooden steps Was sitting in the sun. Before her gambled on the green Two jolly junior girls, I Ween. She saw one child take something Quite small, and hard, and clear, Which she beside an elm tree ' Had found in playing near. She came to ask what she had found That was so clear and almost round. The senior took it from the child Who stood expectant by, And with a heavy shake of head And very heavy sigh- The emblem of the Lend-a-Hand, A cruel, awful, robber band. Now, tell us all about the band And why they call it Lend-a-l-land? Oh, that I cannot tell, said she, It was a perfect mystery. But, do tell us a little more, And what they ever robbed you for. It was a number of the girls Who put us all to rout, But what they ever did it for, I could not well hnd out. But this I can tell you, , said she, They won a perfect victory. They charged ten cents for manicure And, lifteen for shampoo. Took your laundry for a cent, For three, brushed black your shoe. One girl who lost a frat. seal pin, Must pay live cents for it again.



Page 29 text:

21 On one of the first pages, before the leamer begins upon his easy method of acquiring his geographical knowledge, are two very interesting wood cuts. One shows San Francisco in l848, the other San Francisco in IS49. At the time of the publication of the book, Califomia was the most attractive portion of our country. When the States are taken up, there is given under California a wood cut of men at work on the land, and under it is- Gold digging in California. These are some of the poetical arrangements. GEOGRAPHY The surface of the Earth, with all its tribes Of Sea and Land, Geography describes. CONTINENTS A continent is a vast extent of land Where rivers run and boundless plains expand. Where mountains rise, where towns and cities grow, Wfiere nations live and all their cares bestow. THE OCEAN An ocean is a vast extent of brine Or salt water, boundless and sublime. A MAP A map's a picture, of the whole or part Of the earth's surface, to be learned by heart. The top is North, while South points to your breast. The right hand's East, the left hand's always West. More maps than one bound for school or college Is called an Atlas and contains much knowledge. At the bottom of a page not far advanced in the book, we find this very helpful statement- Questions are not inserted in this work from the fact that it was ,deemed superfluous. All the teacher has td do to form a question, is to read over any sentence and prefix the interrogatives What is or HWTICIC is etc. and it becomes a question. He turns to page seven, for instance, and glances his eye upon,the word Geography in full faced letters over the poetry that defines geography and asks the question. ...What is Geography? Then, What is the Earth? and, to answer the question, the pupil repeats the poetry, and, in his oxm language gives the sum and substance of the prose. The teacher in all instances should explain the licensed poetic phrases to juvenile classes. Who dares to say that there is no royal road to learning? Would that these halcyon days were with us now!

Suggestions in the Framingham State University - Dial Yearbook (Framingham, MA) collection:

Framingham State University - Dial Yearbook (Framingham, MA) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908

Framingham State University - Dial Yearbook (Framingham, MA) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

1909

Framingham State University - Dial Yearbook (Framingham, MA) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Framingham State University - Dial Yearbook (Framingham, MA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

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Framingham State University - Dial Yearbook (Framingham, MA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

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Framingham State University - Dial Yearbook (Framingham, MA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

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