Scituate High School - Chimes Yearbook (Scituate, MA)

 - Class of 1932

Page 19 of 64

 

Scituate High School - Chimes Yearbook (Scituate, MA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 19 of 64
Page 19 of 64



Scituate High School - Chimes Yearbook (Scituate, MA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 18
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Page 19 text:

THE CHIMES 17 POTATO BUGS Catherine looked up from the duH earth at the hright red and yellow of the sky. She watched a small cloud pass through the brilliant colors, — watched it fade from a flame color to pale pink as it drifted away to the east; and she saw the sun hidden by a larger cloud and the light falling over the edges. Catherine forgot the potatoes in the drab earth, forgot her dirty hands and old cotton dress. She was, for a mo- ment, part of that beauty in the sky; she was up there in the clouds; the sky was her world and that cloud her castle. Cath— erine, Cath— erine. Catherine started. That shrill voice brought her back to earth, but the light that had come to her eyes lingered and her cheeks were glowing. ' ' Catherine, hur ry. Her mother ' s voice seemed to scrape along the ground. It reminded one of dishpans and clothespins, and the Fuller Brush man. Catherine even fancied she saw a small squirrel scamper away in great fright at the sound. She laughed and, picking up her bucket of newly-dug potatoes, walked slowly back to the house. ' ' Oh, Kate, said her mother, your Aunt Jennie wrote and wants to know if you ' d like to come up there for a short visit and kinda help out a bit durin ' harvest. Isn ' t that fine? You ' ve never been up there, y ' know. You can take your nice blue dress and wear that brown one Mrs. Murray gave you and — And an old dress for the potato patch, put in Cather- ine. Catherine enjoyed the excitement of the crowded station, the bustling noisy people and the shouting porter. She liked to imagine about the lives of the different travellers and wonder why they hurried so. She got on the train, and when she was seated, she took up a book and lost herself in the charm of Shelley ' s poems. After a while she closed her book and looked up. Oh, hello, Catherine spoke to a young man who had seated himself opposite her. He was a tall, slim man, with long, brown hair- His SCITUATE. M SS

Page 18 text:

16 THE CHIMES They were close enough now for her to hear a sound issu- ing from the mouths of these seemingly-mechanical crea- tures. The sound wasn ' t intelligihle to the horror-stricken girl, liut it sounded more like a groan than anything else. As the monsters got within a few feet of her and stretched those bony claws in her direction, she gathered her last few gasps of breath and uttered an ear-splitting shriek of terror, — then felt herself falling. She looked up into her mother ' s worried eyes, and heard her say, Pauline, what is the matter? Your shriek awoke me with a start. Between gasps of terror and relief, Pauline related the nightmare to her mother, and in conclusion she added, ' T shall never eat rarebit before going to bed again, believe me. SPRING Dorothy Clapp, ' 35 The w orld is waiting for sunny spring, Birds and bees and everything. Little insects on the wing, Wishing to awake and sing. All the flowers long to sprout; x ll the buds are bursting out And green things springing up about Know spring is coming without a doubt. And now spring morn has come at last And winter is a thing now past. The birds and bees are flying fast To fields with flowers deeply massed- Sweet little flowers hidden from the cold Have risen and donned their mantles of gold, For a wee little robin has flown and told That the beauties of spring have begun to unfold.



Page 20 text:

18 THE CHIMES features were fine and his skin was fair. His face seemed to glow witli an inner radiance, and his eyes were very bright bhie. Tie was dressed in the style of the nineteenth century, and his shirt was open at the neck, giving him a boyish look. Suddenly the ugly red plush train seats, the dirty smoky windows and the other passengers disappeared. Catherine and the young man were seated alone on the grass beneath a tall Eucalyptus tree, looking out over the hills that sloped down to a small lake. The sun was an orange ball in tjie western sky; its light falling on the wild poppies seemed to enflame the hillsides. The two watched the pageant of the setting sun breathlessly, and when the sky was blue and gray in the twilight and a cool autumn breeze stirred the poppies gently, Catherine said, Oh, Shelley, if only I could leave a part of as much beauty in the woVld when I die as the sun leaves on the horizon Avhen it disappears in the evening. Shelley smiled and said, You can. You can have and give beauty. YouVe a part of that that you see, and you can enter where it is, wdiere you see it in the sky — for you know the way. Shelley, we can go into the sunset? We can? Oh, come. Catherine ' s eyes were big- She threw her head back and laughed. Shelley, the west wind is here; see the — ' Leaves are driven like ghosts From an enchanter fleeing. Oh, wild west wind ' The conductor looked at Catherine and said, I guess she ' s asleep. Well, asleep or not, ' ' shrilled the fat lady, this is our section and she ' ll have to move. The boy with the freckles, evidently the fat lady ' s son, said, Xaw, she ' s bugs. He tapped his head significantly. Catherine looked up, suddenly wide awake. But not potato bugs, she said triumphantly. A Senior

Suggestions in the Scituate High School - Chimes Yearbook (Scituate, MA) collection:

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Scituate High School - Chimes Yearbook (Scituate, MA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

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Scituate High School - Chimes Yearbook (Scituate, MA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

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