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Page 21 text:
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jM A Y INDEX [NETEEN HUNDRED SEVENTEEN U ' Boat Warfare HARRY BRONSON The Kaiser built a submarine To use upon the seas, He sent it out to keep unseen And strike what it might please. The U-Boat hit a merry clip In sinking liners great; It cared not for a neutral ship, If passenger or freight. Now ammunition, mules or food Are all the same it seems. For all are bad and none are good Is what the Kaiser deems. The Lusitania was destroyed, A hidden shot the cause; The Kaiser thought he could make void All International laws The Sussex, too, was sent below. Her hull a missle tore, Then Uncle Sam, to wrath so slow. Declared he ' d stand no more. Our people always have been told That they might cross the foam In safety, and we still do hold They have the right to roam. We gave you warning, Kaiser Bill, To call off your war cat; Of insults we have had our fill. Please just remember that. We have been thought too proud to fight, We did not want our youth To be gunfodder, but ' tis right To stand up for the truth And we must keep the Stars and Stripes Unsullied from disgrace Else we ' ll become the laughing stock Of every clime and race The call to arms has now been made Although we wanted peace; But we will enter unafraid And hope war soon will cease.
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Page 20 text:
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MAY INDEX FOR NINETEEN HUNDRED SEVENTEEN the influence of birds and flowers on one writer, suppose we continue and give otfiers. Emerson seems to have been quite a nature writer. What bird has he immortalized by a poem? The pupils vied with each other in an- swering this. Finally a fourth grader who had just finished reading this poem answered, The Chicka-dee. Now name another author who has taken up the cause of a simple flower, which, because of its abundance, is ignored. Probably many of you tO|day have trampled upon it, seeing many of the flowers less numerous ahead of you. Soon all came to the conclusion that it must be the dande- lion and that the teacher had in mind Lowell ' s poem To a Dandelion. Then Miss Jane asked her pupils what poet had sung the praises of the bluebird. All shouted, Longfellow. What bird does Thoreau tell us says to the farmer planting corn Drop it, drop it, cover it up, cover it up? Accordingly, as all were farmer chil- dren, they answered The Brown Thrasher. You see now how a very small call which you would not interpret at all probably is an inspiration to a poet or writer. Yes, the sparrow for example, some boys kill it simply for the sake of shooting something, said a girl who had hitherto remained silent. Mr. Lathrop wrote about the sparrow. The poem is in one of father ' s books at home. Another girl who had until now paid very little attention to the conver- sation, asked: Miss Jane, have you read the ' Skylark? ' Miss Jane confessed that she had not. Well you know at the Mother ' s club, the ladies were discussing the subject of birds. One woman told a story which John Burroughs wrote about an American. It seems the man became enthusiastic over the poem and when he went to England he went out with the book and wandered through the fields. He thought that it would help him to understand the bird language just as Shelley understood it. When he went back to the house he said he had heard no larks, although they sang and soared above him all the time. y Mfss Jane asked her pupils if they knew why the man did not under- stand the bird notes. She waited a moment and then said: Why, simply because he did not hear the song as Shelley heard it. So it is with us, even the commonest birds and flowers are looked upon as pests by some people while to others they are beautiful. Page eighteen
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