Havergal College - Magazine Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada)

 - Class of 1910

Page 50 of 100

 

Havergal College - Magazine Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 50 of 100
Page 50 of 100



Havergal College - Magazine Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 49
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Page 50 text:

Havergal College Magazine We all went about sight-seeing in the curio stores, etc., had a few rides in the jinrickshaws, which were very amusing to us, and finally we thought we would have lunch at a Japanese restaur- ant. Here was the experience of our lives. First of all we were relieved of our boots (I ' m sorry to say that some of our party had holes in their stockings, which is excusable, as we had all been seasick; this is, however, a side show), and taken up to a table about six inches off the floor, with mats to kneel upon at the sides. Then we were given some raw meat and rice, and three of us shared a charcoal burner and a little frying pan. It was really awful, but a very interesting experience. At three o ' clock our boat pulled out and we stood on deck to watch the setting sun. Really, I had never believed that the Japan- ese were representing sunsets as they really are on their postcards, etc., but when I saw the sunset to-night I was convinced. The colours after the sunset were indescribable. Such rich red tints as we do not see in Western Canada. MY TONIC. (Dedicated to the Hoarders.) Who sympathizes in the Spring When I must take this horrid thing? Who really likes the oil of fish, Or hypophosphites, sweet and rich? Nobody. Who offers kindly in my place To drink it down with smiling face? Who runs to fetch in anxious haste Some sweets to take away the taste? Nobody. And who is sorry for my sake To see the faces that I make? Whoe ' er, if such a thing may be, Would drink the draught instead of me? Nobody. But who reminds me, though I ' m blue, That once again that Dose is due ? Everybody. 40

Page 49 text:

Havergal College Magazine JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH. Throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the name of Bach frequently occurs in the annals of Grafenrode, as ingen- ious musician and composer. It will thus be seen that Johann Sebastian Bach, born at Eisenach, in 1685, inherited his talent from a line of musical ancestors. His predecessors lived in the time of the Thirty Years ' War in Germany. The real musical ancestor was Hans Bach, who was born about 1580. He was called The Player, which meant the profes- sional musician. His second son, Christoph, was the granuxather of Johann Sebastian. This great composer led a very simple and uneventful life. His father taught him to play the violin. i e was left an orphan when he was ten years old, and he then went to live with his elder brother, Ambrosius Bach. Under Ambrosius ' direc- tion he began to study the clavier. At the age of fifteen Bach entered the Convent School of St. Michael at Luneburg. Here the clavichord and organ were his chief studies. In his holidays, Bach travelled 150 miles to hear Reinkin, a famous old Dutch organist, play. In 171 7 Bach was made Direc- tor of Music and Cantor to St. Thomas ' School, Leipzig. He held this appointment until his death. Bach ' s studies af- fected his eyes, and in 1749 he became totally blind. He died the next year. Bach wrote fantasies and forty-eight preludes and fugues in all keys for the piano. His celebrated G Minor Fugue was written in 1720, at the time of his journey to Hamburg. In Leipzig he wrote Von Himmel Hoch. His sacred music, church cantatas, Passion and Christian music are of the best, both for religious spirit and artistic composition. Bach invented an instrument called the Viola Pomposa, and he wrote educational works for his pupils. Bach ' s importance for the history of music lies in the fact that, starting with instrumental music and adhering to the spirit of it, he developed all forms and species of composition in an entirely new and independent manner. Marion Bell and Dorothy Andrews. Form V. Lower. Extracts from letter written by Mrs. Harris (whom we know better as Agnes McLeod), on her way to China: Eighty miles beyond Yokohama. When we reached Yokohama, within a few hundred yards, our boat anchored and Japanese doc- tors examined us and allowed us to pass on. We were met at the wharf by some old friends of Mr. Harris, and Mrs. Kern, Mrs. Coates (a lady whom my husband knew when he was a boy), and Mr. and Mrs. Connolly from Tokio. These two were college mates. It was indeed a joyous meeting for them ; they seemed so pleased to see friends from home. 45



Page 51 text:

Havergal College Magazine HATTIE STARR O, the wildest of F resides is come from the West, Through all the wide border her looks were the best ; And, save her valise, she parcels had none, She rode independent ; she rode all alone. So big in proportion, she half filled the car — - There never was girl like the young Hattie Starr. She stayed not for teacher, she stopped not to phone, She mounted the street car, where steps there were none ; But ere she had reached the Havergal gate The teacher had found her and settled her fate, For a sharp-eyed young schoolma ' am had seen from afar The monsterous stride of young Hattie Starr. So boldly she entered the Havergal hall, ' Mongst teachers, and boarders, and scholars, and all. Then spoke the head mistress, her brain in a whirl : Remarkable conduct for one little girl; Now come you in peace, or our good name to mar — Please answer me quickly now, young Hattie Starr? She made a quick exit with head held up high, While the whispered remarks around her did fly ; She heard them and turned, with a pitiful sigh, A sad, dismal face and a tear in her eye ; She flew up the stairs ere the way they could bar, This poor, misunderstood young Hattie Starr. So green in her ways that she couldn ' t stand The harmonious new orchestra called Sousa ' s Band ; She ate peas with her knife, and her pass-word was (iee! That she was a fresh ' un one could not but see, But study was her pet aversion by far — This amusing, ridiculous, young Hattie Starr. One day she her lessons no longer could bear, Her hair she did puU, and her fists rent the air; She made for the window, and from it she swung, And ere one could stop her, to earth she had sprung ; In jumping the fence, she its framework did jar, And away down the street fled young Hattie Starr. There was fussing ' mong teachers, and pupils, and all, And they moaned her escape with many a bawl ; Next morn at the door they found her outstretched, And the Principal quickly a good doctor fetched ; They could not revive her, she ' d passed away far — Oh, weep for the fate of the wild Hattie Starr ! 47

Suggestions in the Havergal College - Magazine Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada) collection:

Havergal College - Magazine Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

Havergal College - Magazine Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

Havergal College - Magazine Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

Havergal College - Magazine Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 9

1910, pg 9

Havergal College - Magazine Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 36

1910, pg 36

Havergal College - Magazine Yearbook (Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 9

1910, pg 9

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