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Page 12 text:
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10 THE CHIMES A DOG ' S LIFE Grace Reynolds, ' 37 On a silk cnshicMi on a gay window seat, in an imposing bay-win- dow in a more imposing house lies Precious. And Precious, as the judges in any of the leading dog shows can tell you, is a pedigreed French ])oodle belonging to Mrs. A. J. F. Van Smythe. Let ' s take a closer look at Precious and see what he thinks about a dog ' s life: Ho hum! what a lazy day this is. I feel just miserable. That stupid cook boiled my cereal too long this morning, and overdone cereal certainly does do things to my temper. If I can ' t have my breakfast just right, my whole day is spoiled. Well, James will be coming in to comb me soon. That ' s a help. I do love to be comb- ed. It ' s so soothing to my nerves. And I ' ve heard my mistress herself say that my nerves are delicate. But then, what can you expect in a neighborhood like this? That ill-bred dog that barks all day long from across the street, for instance. There he is in the yard now. Ugh! How disgustingly dirty he is! And he ' s always digging for bones. Oh ! Here comes my mistress. I do hope she ' ll pet me. Goodness knows I need a little pampering af- ter all I ' ve endured today. M-m-m ! It ' s nice to snuggle down in her lap and have her call me ' mama ' s p ' cious snow-drop! ' It ' s so com- forting to know that somebody cares about me. There! She ' s go- ing away. I might have known it. Oof! She needn ' t drop me down on the pillow so hard. I do believe I need some exercise. I might as well run around the room a bit Goodness, my wind isn ' t as good as it might be. Only one turn around the room and I ' m exhausted! Guess I ' ll have to take a nap. Hum ho! I cer- tainly am tired after all that exertion. And now- we introduce you to The Dog Across the Street. Un- der three or four layers of dust, dirt, and tangled fur he is a strange combination of terrier, collie and si)aniel. And as you might expect from tliis descrii)tion, his name is Pal. ' ' Hurray! What a wonderful morning! Makes me feel like a rousing run around the yard. AAdiee ! I ' ll have to hrush up on my somersaulting. I ' m getting so stiff in my joints I can hardly chase my tail any more. This exercise is making me hungry, by gosh. Hope my boy ' s mother doesn ' t try to give me some of those new- fangled dog biscuits for 1)reakfast. I do hate sissy food. Le ' s see, 1 should have a coupla bones buried around here someplace. Hope my boy ' s father takes me on that fishin ' trip with him. It ' s such
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Page 11 text:
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THE CHIMES 9 of 1812 called Champions of Freedom. He was editor of a weekly during the War of 1812, and later he, with George Morris, founded The New York Mirror. His chief claim to recognition rested on one of his poems called ' ' The Old Oaken Bucket. Many stories have come to us concerning the occasion of the writing of the poem, but there is one that has the widest acceptance and is believed by descendants to be the true one. During the spring or summer of 1817 Samuel Woodworth, then in New York, writ- ing home remarked to his wife, What would I not give for a drink from the old well in Scituate. His wife suggested that it would be a good subject for a poem; and the poet, so the story goes, forth- with sat down and poured out all the longing of his soul in the now famous lyric. The poem received much popularity, and De Witt Clinton, who was then governor of New York, gave his patronage to the volume which contained The Old Oaken Bucket. Anyone who reads the poem cannot but be charmed by the simple, yet delightful description of the scenes surrounding the old well. For over a hundred years it has been sung and resung and it is in- cluded in almost every collection of familiar and famous songs. Mr. Woodworth died at the early age of fifty-seven. He had been an invalid for some time before his death. The old homestead in Greenbush is still preserved along with the famous well. The home is now owned and occupied by descendants of Samuel ' s half- brother. The mill and the pond and the rock so affectionately spok- en of in the poem are still to be seen, and each year hundreds of tourists passing by gaze, sometimes unknowingly, at the very spots that Woodworth wrote about so beautifully. Little did Samuel Woodworth realize on the day he composed the poem that over a century later a grateful people w ould adopt it for their town song. The song now belongs to everyone and is sung and loved by the whole country, and it is gratifying to feel, in this day and age of skyscrapers, stream-line locomotion and modernistic manners, that there are still people who think about and appreciate his offerings. When we hear and enjoy the folk songs of our country and listen to the loveliness and charm of an Old Kentucky Home and Swanee River or the beauty and grandeur of Old Man River. ' ' let us, the people of Scituate, not forget that we, too, have a song, a song as dear to the hearts of American people as any of these.
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Page 13 text:
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THE CHIMES 11 fun to live in the woods an ' chase squirrels. There ' s that funny lookin ' poodle in the window across th ' street. Huh ! what a lazy animal he is. And stuck up too. Wonder if he does anythin ' l)ut sleep an ' eat. I ' m kinda sleepy myself. Gee, though, I haven ' t done anythin ' this mornin ' hut sleep an eat. Ho! Hum! Guess I ' ll crawl under the porch where it ' s quiet an ' have a few ' winks. Ho ! Hum! It ' s a dog ' s life hut a pretty good one, at that. A DAY IN LONDON Betty Bartington, ' 35 At last that day of days had arrived when I would he ahle to see London, a place of dreams to me, a fairy city, a Christmas-card town of small buildings and picturesque side streets. The train, a queer little toy but surprisingly comfortable, blew its tiny whistle at the last station, Waterloo, which finally loomed in front of my compartment window. Then out I stepped into the hurry and scurry of the station, which, like all other stations the world over, was dirty and smoky, and filled with human beings scampering like deer before the hound. After leaving Waterloo Station, I went to Westminster Bridge which spans the historical Thames. Though it is a miniature river, it has seen more of the romance of history than almost any place of its kind in the world. From the l:)rink of the bridge there could be seen to the left the stately and delicately-graceful Houses of Par- liament, and Big Ben. The former is of light-colored stone, darken- ed by the elements, with many slender minarets which are adorned with intricate masonry giving an air of stability and of l)cauty. Big Ben smiles down upon these, with an accurate and much loved smile that has placed this time-piece among the best known l)uildings of the world. On the right was tlie Victoria einl)ankment with the Thames ' boats moored to its sul stantial sides, and the roads leading to the heart of London. Behind Big Ben there soared the huge tapering- tower of Westminster Al)1 ey. I was anxious to enter this famous resting place of kings, cpieens, and honored people of every nation. I walked along l}riskly l]ut suddenly sto])]:)ed, looked down, and saw, drawn on the sidewalk, a picture of a sunset in the hills — - probably in Scotland. Who could foolisli enough to leave so beautiful a piece of workmansliip where it would soon l)e ruined l)v the foot-steps of hundreds of jieople? At last 1 fcnmd cmt that some of the poor artists of London, liaving attained |)ermission from
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