The Project Gutenberg eBook of Story Hour Readers — Book Three This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook. Title: Story Hour Readers — Book Three Author: Ida Coe Alice Christie Dillon Release date: October 1, 2004 [eBook #6685] Most recently updated: March 21, 2015 Language: English Credits: Produced by Naomi Parkhurst, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORY HOUR READERS — BOOK THREE *** Produced by Naomi Parkhurst, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. STORY HOUR READERS THIRD YEAR BOOK THREE BY IDA COE, Pd.M. ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL, PUBLIC SCHOOLS CITY OF NEW YORK AND ALICE J. CHRISTIE PRIMARY TEACHER. PUBLIC SCHOOLS CITY OF NEW YORK CONTENTS THE LAND OF STORY BOOKS _Robert Louis Stevenson_ HANSEL AND GRETEL _Fairy Tale_ THE EAGLE AND THE FOX _Fable_ HIAWATHA'S BROTHERS _Henry W. Longfellow_ THE BEAVERS' LODGE _Indian Folklore_ MANITOU AND THE SQUIRRELS _Indian Folklore_ THE SWIFT RUNNER _Indian Folklore_ BROTHER RABBIT _Indian Folklore_ QUEEN MAB _Thomas Hood_ CINDERELLA _Fairy Tale_ THE WIND _Robert Louis Stevenson_ THE BAG OF WINDS _Greek Mythology_ DIANA AND APOLLO _Greek Mythology_ THE TREE _Adapted from Bjornson_ THE FAIRY TREE _Fairy Tale_ HIAWATHA'S SAILING _Henry W. Longfellow_ GRAY MOLE AND THE INDIAN _Indian Folklore_ THE WATER LILIES _Indian Folklore_ WHERE GO THE BOATS? _Robert Louis Stevenson_ WHY THE SEA IS SALT _Northern Folklore_ SENNIN THE HERMIT _From the Japanese_ GREAT AND LITTLE BEAR _Greek Mythology_ THE BOY AND THE SHEEP _Ann Taylor_ THE BOY WHO CRIED WOLF _Aesop_ THE LION'S SHARE _Aesop_ ROBIN REDBREAST _William Allingham_ THORN ROSE _Fairy Tale_ THE WOLVES AND THE DEER _Fable_ THE CORNFIELDS _Henry W. Longfellow_ THE GIFT OF CORN _Indian Folklore_ A BOY'S SONG _James Hogg_ THE FROGS' TRAVELS _From the Japanese_ THE MERCHANT'S CARAVAN _East Indian Tale_ QUEEN HULDA AND THE FLAX _European Folklore_ ALADDIN'S LAMP _Ida Coe_ ALADDIN AND THE MAGIC LAMP _Arabian Nights_ THE WHITING AND THE SNAIL _Lewis Carroll_ THE BONFIRE IN THE SEA _Australian Folklore_ ROBINSON CRUSOE _Daniel Defoe_ THE WONDERFUL WORLD THE MAGIC GIRDLE _The Brothers Grimm_ THE LAND OF STORY BOOKS At evening when the lamp is lit, Around the fire my parents sit; They sit at home and talk and sing, And do not play at anything. Now with my little gun I crawl, All in the dark, along the wall. And follow round the forest track Away behind the sofa back. There in the night, where none can spy, All in my hunter's camp I lie, And play at books that I have read, Till it is time to go to bed. * * * * * So, when my nurse comes in for me, Home I return across the sea, And go to bed with backward looks At my dear Land of Story Books. ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. HANSEL AND GRETEL In a little cottage at the edge of a forest in Germany, lived Peter, a poor broom maker, and his wife Gertrude. They had two children, Hansel and Gretel. One day Hansel and Gretel were left alone at home. Their father had gone to the village to sell brooms. Their mother was away, too. The children were left busily at work. The boy was mending brooms, the girl knitting stockings. After a time they became tired of their hard work. "Come, Gretel, let us have some fun!" cried Hansel. As he spoke, he threw the broom upon the floor, and pulled the stocking from his sister's hand. "Oh, yes!" said Gretel. "I will teach you a song, and you can learn the steps of the dance." Hansel and Gretel danced about the room. Gretel sang, while she and Hansel danced, "First your foot you tap, tap, tap, Then your hands you clap, clap, clap; Right foot first, left foot then, Round about and back again." Presently the mother returned home. She entered the room and found Hansel and Gretel at play. "You lazy children!" she exclaimed. "Why have you not finished your work?" Taking the broom that Hansel had thrown upon the floor, the mother started to punish him, but the boy was too quick for her. Hansel ran nimbly about, and as she was trying to catch him, the mother upset a jug of milk. It was all the food there was in the house. "Oh, mother!" cried Gretel. "You have spilled the milk, and we shall have nothing to eat." "Go out into the woods and gather some strawberries. Do not return until you have filled the basket to the brim," commanded the mother. "Hansel, help your sister pick the berries, and hurry back, both of you, for there is nothing else for supper." Towards evening the father returned from the village. "Ho, ho, good wife!" called Peter. "I have had great luck to-day, and have sold all my brooms. Now for a good supper! See here--bread and butter, some potatoes, ham and eggs. But where are the children?" "They have gone to the woods to gather strawberries," replied Gertrude. "It is growing dark. Hansel and Gretel should have been here long ago," said Peter anxiously. The wife began to prepare supper. The husband went to the door of the cottage and looked out into the darkness. "Alas, my children!" cried Peter. "I fear that the terrible Witch of the Forest may find them, and that we shall never see them again!" Meanwhile Hansel and Gretel had filled the basket with strawberries, and then had wandered into the forest. They sat down upon a mossy bank under a fir tree, to rest. "Here is a fine strawberry! Taste it," said Gretel. She put a berry into Hansel's mouth and took one for herself. "I am so hungry! Give me another berry," said Hansel. The children tasted another and another of the strawberries, until all were gone. "Oh, Hansel! We have eaten all of the strawberries," cried Gretel. "We must fill the basket again." The children began to hunt for more berries, but it was now growing dark, and they could find none. To make matters worse, they had lost their way. Gretel began to cry, but Hansel tried to be very brave. "I will take care of you, sister," said he. "Hark!" said Gretel. They could hear soft voices among the trees. The children became more frightened than before. "What is that, near the dark bushes?" whispered Gretel. "It is only the stump of a tree," replied Hansel. "It is making faces at me!" said Gretel. Hansel made faces back again, trying to drive the strange form away. Suddenly a light came toward them. "Oh, here are father and mother looking for us!" cried Gretel. But no, it was only the light of the will-o'-the-wisp. Hansel called, "Who is there?" Echo answered, "Who is there?" Poor Babes in the Wood! They fled in terror, back to the mossy bank under the fir tree. There they huddled close together. Presently a little man with a long white beard stood before them. He was dressed in gray clothes, and he carried a gray sack upon his back. Hansel and Gretel were not afraid of the little man, for he seemed very friendly. The little man sang softly, "Golden slumbers close your eyes, Smiles awake you when you rise. Sleep, pretty darlings, do not cry, And I will sing a lullaby. Lullaby, lullaby, the Sandman am I." Then the Sandman threw into their tired eyes the sand of sleep. Soon the children had gone safely to Slumberland. At midnight a little elf, whose home was deep in the heart of an oak tree, came forth and rang a fairy bell. He sang, "Twelve small strokes on my tinkling bell-- 'Twas made of the white snail's pearly shell;-- Midnight comes, and all is well! Hither, hither, wing your way, 'Tis the dawn of the fairy day!" At the last stroke of twelve, a troop of fairies and wood nymphs appeared. They danced merrily to the tune of the flower bells, forming a ring around the children. When the sun's rays began to shine through the branches of the trees, the fairies tripped away. Only the Dew Fairy remained. She sprinkled dew upon the children's faces with her magic wand. The Dew Fairy sang, "Awake you, O children dear, Wake you and rise! The sun glowing brightly, peeps Into your eyes!" Then the Dew Fairy departed. "O Hansel! Hear the birds singing! Where are we?" exclaimed Gretel. "Come, Hansel, wake up!" The children looked about them in wonder. The giant trees had disappeared, and near them stood a little house. "What a pretty cottage!" said Hansel. "Why, it is a candy house! The roof is chocolate, and the windows are sugar plums. What a queer fence! It is gingerbread!" Soon they heard some one say, in a squeaky voice, "Nibble, nibble, little mouse, Who is nibbling my sweet house?" The children only ate and sang and laughed. Suddenly the door of the house flew open. An old witch came out. On her head she wore a pointed hat, and in her hand she carried a stick. The candy cottage belonged to the Witch of the Forest. "Oh, ho!" cried the witch. "You dear children, who led you here? Come in, and I will give you candies, cakes, apples, and nuts--all that you wish to eat!" Hansel and Gretel were frightened. They started to run away, but the old witch waved her Elder Bush above her head. It cast a spell over the children. They could not move. Then the witch put Hansel into a cage. She brought from the cottage a basket of sugar plums, candies, and nuts. She gave him the sweets to eat. "You will soon be fat enough to cook," she muttered. "I will bake the girl first." Grasping the little girl's arm, she shook her roughly, saying, "Go into the house and set the table while I build a fire." The old witch gathered some wood. As she threw it upon the fire, she said, "Now for a ride through the air on my broom, while the oven is heating!" Astride her big broom, the witch rode high above the cottage. She circled around like a huge bird, over the trees and back again, while she sang a strange song. Hansel, shut up in the cage, watched her in terror. At last the witch flew down to the ground, on her broom. She alighted close beside the oven, which stood in the front yard. Calling the little girl out of the house she said, "Open the oven door. Then creep inside and see if it is hot enough to bake the bread." But Gretel guessed that the witch meant to shut the door upon her, so she said, "I am afraid to creep into the oven." "Silly child!" said the witch. "The door is wide enough. Why, even I could pass through!" As she spoke, she popped her head into the oven. Gretel sprang toward her and shut the oven door. That was the end of the old witch! Then Gretel ran and unfastened the door of the cage. "We are saved, Hansel!" she exclaimed. Then she danced about, singing merrily, "First your foot you tap, tap, tap, Then your hands you clap, clap, clap; Right foot first, left foot then, Round about and back again." Then, taking the Elder Bush, Gretel waved it above her head as the witch had done. Instantly the candy house became a log cabin. Sunflowers and morning-glories were growing in the front yard, where the witch's cage and the oven had stood. Soon voices were heard. The sounds came nearer, and the father and mother clasped their children in their arms. Peter and Gertrude lived with the two children in the log cabin in the forest, for many happy years. And the fairies always took good care of both Hansel and Gretel. THE EAGLE AND THE FOX One morning the fox said to his children, "I will find some eggs for breakfast." Then he went to the woods. The fox saw an eagle's nest in the top branch of a tree. "How can I reach those eggs?" thought he. "Ha, ha! Now I have a plan." He put some grass stalks into his ears and knocked on the tree with them. "Throw an egg to me," cried the fox. "If you do not throw an egg to me, I will knock this great tree over with these grass stalks." The eagle was terribly frightened, and she threw an egg down to the fox. "Throw another egg down to me at once," demanded the fox, when he saw that he had frightened the eagle. "One egg is enough," said the eagle. "I shall not throw down any more eggs." "Throw another egg to me, or I shall knock the tree over with these grass stalks, and take all your eggs," said the fox. The eagle was still more frightened, and she threw down another egg. Then the fox laughed and said, "How could I knock down a great tree with these small grass stalks?" The eagle became very angry. She flew down from her nest and grasped the fox with her talons. Then she lifted the fox up and flew with him far out to sea. She dropped him upon a lonely island. The fox was left on the lonely island. One day he said to himself, "Am I going to die on this island?" Then the fox began to sing softly. Seals, walruses, porpoises, and whales swam near the island. "What are you singing about?" asked the sea people. "This is what I am singing about," said the fox. "Are there more large animals in the waters of the sea, or on dry land?" "Certainly there are more animals in the waters of the sea than on dry land," replied the sea people. "Well, then, prove it to me!" said the fox. "Come up to the surface of the water and form a raft that will reach from this island to the mainland. Then I can walk over all of you, and I shall be able to count you." So the large sea people--seals, walruses, porpoises, and whales--came up to the surface of the water. The sea people formed a great raft, that reached from the island across to the mainland. This was what the fox wanted. He ran over the great raft, pretending to count the animals. When at last the fox reached the mainland, he jumped ashore and hastened home. HIAWATHA'S BROTHERS Of all beasts he learned the language, Learned their names and all their secrets, How the beavers built their lodges, Where the squirrels hid their acorns, How the reindeer ran so swiftly, Why the rabbit was so timid, Talked with them whene'er he met them, Called them "Hiawatha's Brothers." HENRY W. LONGFELLOW. THE BEAVERS' LODGE Big Chief had traveled a long distance through the forest. At last he reached the shore of a lake. He was very tired, so he sat down upon a rock to rest. Suddenly a large beaver came up from the water and stood before Big Chief. "Who are you, that you dare to enter my kingdom?" demanded the beaver. "I am Big Chief," replied the Indian. "The Great Spirit has given me power over all the animals. Who are you?" "I am Master Beaver. All the beavers follow me and obey my commands. We are busy people. We always have plenty to do." Big Chief was not afraid. He showed Master Beaver his bow and arrows and his wampum belt, saying, "These gifts were bestowed upon me by the Great Spirit. I am ruler over the animals of field and forest, over the birds, and over the fish." When Master Beaver saw the bow and arrows and the wampum belt, he knew that the Indian was very powerful. So he said, less proudly, "Will you come with me and see how the beavers build their lodges?" Big Chief followed Master Beaver for a short distance along the shore of the lake. He saw many beavers at work cutting down trees with their sharp teeth. Some of the trees had fallen across the water and reached to an island in the lake. On the island, other beavers were plastering the spaces between the trees with mud and leaves. Master Beaver said that this was the way the beavers built a dam. Then he led Big Chief to the beavers' village on the island. Here were many lodges, built of sticks, grass and moss, and plastered with clay. At last Master Beaver paused before one of the lodges. "Enter! This is my home. You are welcome, Big Chief," said Master Beaver. The Indian followed the beaver through a long, winding tunnel. They came to a large room. The floor of the room was covered with grass and bark. Big Chief admired the dainty house with its dome-shaped roof. Master Beaver's wife and his daughter gave the stranger a hearty welcome. They at once prepared a meal of poplar, birch and willow bark, and roots of water lilies. This was choice food for beavers, but it was not the kind of dinner that Big Chief liked. Nevertheless he was very happy. Master Beaver's daughter waited upon her father and his guest. She was so very fair that she won the heart of Big Chief. He no longer wished to live alone. He asked Master Beaver to give the maiden to him, to be his bride. This pleased Master Beaver very much, for he liked Big Chief. All the beavers and their neighbors were invited to the wedding. The next morning, some of the beavers arrived bringing clay. Then came otters, each carrying a large fish in his mouth as a present for the bride. They were followed by the weasels, the minks, and the muskrats. The guests enjoyed the wedding breakfast in the lodge of Master Beaver. After the feast, the beavers invited the other animals to meet them on the bank of the lake. There they held a council. They said, "We will build a lodge, which shall be the wedding gift of the beavers." Then they chose a place under the birch trees that grew near the shore of the lake. Here the beavers began to build a lodge, of sticks of wood and the clay which they had brought with them. Soon the cozy lodge was finished. Now came the greatest wonder of all. It pleased the Great Spirit to change the bride into a beautiful woman--a wife suited to the noble and handsome Big Chief. Amid the cheers of their friends, Master Beaver led the happy couple to the cozy lodge near the lake. There they made their home. MANITOU AND THE SQUIRRELS "Please tell me one more story about the great Manitou, Grandmother," begged the little Indian boy. The grandmother liked to tell stories to the boy. She sat down facing him and told him the story of the great Manitou and the squirrels. This was the story she told: Once upon a time, there was scarcely any food to be found. The great Manitou and his wife had fasted for many days, and they were very hungry. "We must have meat," said Manitou. Then he thought of a plan. He lifted his bow and aimed a magic arrow through the door of the wigwam. The arrow sped onward in the forest, until it passed through the body of a bear. It held the bear fast to a tree. Manitou and his wife went into the forest together. There they found the bear. Then Manitou said, "We will have a feast and invite our friends." The birds and beasts were glad to accept the invitation. A large company arrived. The woodpecker was the first to taste the food. He began to eat greedily, for he was very hungry. When he put the meat into his mouth, it turned to ashes. The woodpecker began to cough. "This is very impolite; I must not let Manitou hear me cough," thought he. The fox was the next to taste the meat. It turned to ashes, and he began to cough. All the other guests began to cough as soon as they had tasted the meat. They tried very hard not to let Manitou hear them. They kept on tasting, but the more they tasted the harder they coughed. At last Manitou became very angry. "I will make you remember this," said he. In an instant, the woodpecker, the fox, and all the other guests had disappeared. In their place were many squirrels, running up and down the trees and coughing as squirrels always do when taken by surprise. To this day, squirrels do not eat meat, but instead they nibble acorns and nuts. "If you have sharp eyes," added the grandmother, "you will find hollow places in the trees, where the squirrels hide their acorns and nuts." THE SWIFT RUNNER In the olden times, the animals were fond of sports. They often held contests, with prizes for those that won. Once a prize was offered for the animal who could prove himself the swiftest runner. The reward was to be a pair of great antlers. Each animal was to carry the antlers on his head, while running the race. The animal that should win, would have the antlers for his own. A path through the woods was chosen for the race course. There were many bushes and brambles along the way. All the animals gathered at the place of meeting. They chose Black Bear to be judge of the race. It was decided that the rabbit and the deer alone should try for the prize. "They are the best runners. None of the rest of us could hope to win," said the other animals. White Rabbit was given the first chance. "I am willing to try for the prize," White Rabbit said, "but I would like first to look over the ground where I am to run." So White Rabbit disappeared in the woods. He was gone so long that Red Fox was sent to look for him. Red Fox found the rabbit hard at work, cutting off twigs to clear a path along which to run. Red Fox went back and told the other animals what White Rabbit was doing. Pretty soon White Rabbit came out of the woods. He was all ready to put on the antlers and begin the race for the great prize. "Oh, no!" said Judge Bear. "We cannot allow you to enter the great race. You are too fond of gnawing twigs. You may keep on gnawing twigs instead of trying for the prize." So little White Rabbit was not allowed to run for the prize. Red Fox placed the horns upon the head of the deer and said, "It is your turn to try to win the race." Then the animals gave three loud cheers and told the deer to do his best. The deer ran swiftly along the woodland path. He carried the antlers so skillfully that they were not once caught in the bushes. When the deer returned to the place of meeting, Judge Bear proclaimed him winner of the race. As Black Bear gave the prize to the deer, he said, "Henceforth you shall wear the antlers on your head. You shall always be called the Swift Runner." BROTHER RABBIT One autumn day in the long ago, Eagle Eye, the great Indian chief, was very sad. All summer long there had been no rain. The prairie grass was crisp and brown. The little streams were dry. The animals, finding neither water nor green grass, had gone to the mountains many miles away. The Indians of the plains had no food to eat. "I will go and search for the place where the animals have gone, so that I may tell my hunters and save the lives of my people," said Eagle Eye. So, carrying his canoe to the river, Eagle Eye paddled up the stream for many days and nights. He watched to see if any of the animals came to the river to drink, but there was not even a squirrel. One night the clouds hung low in the sky. "There will be snow before morning," said Eagle Eye. Then the great chief hauled his canoe up the river bank. He made a shelter with branches of trees. Here he slept through the night. In the morning, the ground was covered with snow. "The Great Spirit is kind," said Eagle Eye. "Now I shall see the footprints of some of the animals, and I can follow them." Soon he found the footprints of deer that had been to the river to drink. Eagle Eye followed the footprints for many miles. At last he found where the animals lived. Eagle Eye marked some trees, so that he might find the place again. Then he started to return to the river bank where he had left his canoe. Snow had fallen, and everything was white. Eagle Eye could not find the canoe. "I am lost!" cried Eagle Eye. "If only there were some way of finding my canoe!" Just then he saw a rabbit peering out from behind the stump of a tree. "O Brother Rabbit!" called Eagle Eye. "How glad I am to see you! I am lost. I cannot find the river bank." "Let me lead the way," Brother Rabbit replied. "If you will watch my dark fur against the snow, you can easily follow close behind me." So Brother Rabbit hopped along, and Eagle Eye, watching the dark fur against the snow, followed close behind. At last they reached the river bank, and there they found Eagle Eye's canoe. Eagle Eye pushed the canoe into the water and stepped in. Before he paddled away he said, "You have saved my life, Brother Rabbit. Hereafter your brown fur shall be white when the cold winter comes. Then no one will see your body against the snow, and you will always be safe." The rabbit turned pure white. He looked like a ball of snow beside the bushes. Then Eagle Eye smiled. "Your enemies will have a long chase after this," he said, "before they will find Brother Rabbit!" After many days, Eagle Eye reached his home once more. The chief told his people that he had followed the footprints of deer, and had found where the animals lived. The Indians went with Eagle Eye after the deer, and soon they had plenty of food. QUEEN MAB A little fairy comes at night, Her eyes are blue, her hair is brown, With silver spots upon her wings, And from the moon she flutters down. She has a little silver wand, And when a good child goes to bed, She waves her hand from right to left, And makes a circle round its head. And then it dreams of pleasant things-- Of fountains filled with fairy fish, And trees that bear delicious fruit, And bow their branches at a wish. Of arbors filled with dainty scents From lovely flowers that never fade; Bright flies that glitter in the sun, And glowworms shining in the shade. And talking birds with gifted tongues, For singing songs and telling tales, And pretty dwarfs to show the way Through fairy hills and fairy dales. But when a bad child goes to bed, From left to right she weaves her rings, And then it dreams all through the night Of only ugly, horrid things! Then lions come with glaring eyes, And tigers growl, a dreadful noise, And ogres draw their cruel knives, To shed the blood of girls and boys. Then stormy waves rush on to drown, Or raging flames come scorching round, Fierce dragons hover in the air, And serpents crawl along the ground. Then wicked children wake and weep, And wish the long black gloom away; But good ones love the dark, and find The night as pleasant as the day. THOMAS HOOD. CINDERELLA Once upon a time, there was a proud, selfish woman who had three daughters. The youngest was prettier than her sisters, and they were jealous of her beauty. They made her do all the housework, while they went to parties and balls. The girl washed the dishes and swept the floors. She tended the fire and fed the parrot whose cage hung by the kitchen window. She spent so much time among the ashes and cinders, that her sisters called her Cinderella. Now it happened that the king was to give a ball, in honor of the young prince. Cinderella's mother and sisters were invited. How pleased they were to receive the invitation! They could think of nothing but the fine clothes they intended to wear. They sent for the best dressmaker they could find. The oldest sister chose a pink silk gown. "I shall wear my red satin cloak trimmed with swan's-down," said she. The second sister chose a gown of green velvet, saying, "The green velvet will show my diamonds to advantage." The night of the great ball came at last. Cinderella helped her sisters to dress. "Do you not wish that you were going to the ball?" said one of them. "Yes, indeed!" sighed poor Cinderella. But her sisters only laughed. Cinderella watched them from the kitchen window as they drove away in their fine carriage. Then she sat down by the fire and began to cry. "Why are you crying, Cinderella?" said some one gently. There stood her Fairy Godmother. "I wish I could--I wish I could--" sobbed Cinderella. "You wish that you could go to the prince's ball," said the Fairy Godmother. "Yes," nodded Cinderella. "Stop crying and you may go," said the Fairy Godmother. "Run into the garden and bring me the largest pumpkin that you can find." Cinderella could not think how a pumpkin would help her to go, but she obeyed. The Fairy Godmother scooped out the inside of the pumpkin, leaving only the rind. She carried it to the kitchen door. Then she touched the rind with her wand. Instantly there stood a great coach covered with gold. "Where shall we find horses for such a great coach?" cried Cinderella. "Bring the mouse trap from the cellar," the Fairy Godmother replied. "Here are six live mice in the trap," said Cinderella breathlessly. The Fairy Godmother lifted the door of the trap. She touched each of the mice with her wand as it ran out. The mice became six beautiful white horses standing before the coach. "Where shall we find a coachman to drive the horses?" asked Cinderella. "Bring the rat trap to me," replied the Fairy Godmother. Cinderella brought the rat trap, and in it was a large gray rat. At a touch of the wand, the rat was changed into a coachman. He sat in state upon the coach. "Now run into the garden again. You will find two lizards behind the watering pot. Bring them to me." The Fairy Godmother touched the lizards with her wand. In their place stood two footmen in splendid livery. They stepped to the back of the coach as if they had been footmen all their lives. Then the kind Fairy Godmother touched Cinderella's clothes with her wand. The rags became a beautiful costume of satin, covered with pearls. In place of her old shoes were glass slippers that had been made by the fairies. They were the very prettiest little slippers in the world. Never had Cinderella been so happy! "Now you may go to the ball, but do not fail to leave before midnight," said the Fairy Godmother. "If you stay until the clock strikes twelve," added the Fairy Godmother, "your coach will again become a pumpkin; your horses will be mice; your coachman will be a rat; your footmen will be lizards, and your beautiful dress will become rags." Cinderella stepped into the coach. A few minutes later, the white horses dashed into the royal courtyard. The door of the coach was flung open, and Cinderella stepped out. As Cinderella entered the ball room, the prince hastened to meet her. "Never," said he to himself, "have I seen anyone so lovely!" Cinderella was so beautiful, so elegantly dressed, and she danced so well, that the prince fell in love with her. He would dance with no one else. The evening passed away like a dream. Suddenly Cinderella heard a clock chime three quarters past eleven. She bade the prince good-night and was soon on her way home in the pumpkin coach. When Cinderella reached home, she found her Fairy Godmother waiting to hear about the ball. "It was fine!" said Cinderella. "The prince has invited me to attend the ball to be given to-morrow night. Oh, how I wish that I might go!" "You may certainly go to the prince's ball to-morrow night. I wish to make you very happy, dear child," said the Fairy Godmother. By the time the mother and sisters had returned home from the ball, the Fairy Godmother had disappeared. Cinderella was sitting by the kitchen fire in her rags. "Do you not wish that you had been to the ball?" asked the sisters. "There was a wonderful princess there. The prince would dance with no one else." "Who was she?" asked Cinderella. "That we cannot say," answered the two sisters. "She would not tell her name, though the prince, on bended knee, begged her to do so." The next night, as soon as the mother and sisters had started in their carriage to attend the ball, the Fairy Godmother appeared once more. Again, at the touch of her wand, the pumpkin became a coach; the mice became horses; the rat became a coachman, and the lizards became footmen. The Fairy Godmother touched Cinderella's clothes with her wand, and this time her rags became a beautiful costume of silver cloth, covered with rubies. In place of the worn-out shoes were the wonderful glass slippers. "Whatever you do, remember to leave before the clock strikes twelve," said the Fairy Godmother, as Cinderella drove away. When Cinderella arrived at the king's palace, the prince met her at the door. He would dance with no one else. Cinderella was very happy. The hours passed swiftly away, but she left the palace before the clock struck twelve. The king gave another ball the third night. This time Cinderella wore a costume of gold cloth, covered with sparkling diamonds; and on her feet were the wonderful glass slippers. The prince met her at the door. He led her to the ball room and again would dance with no one else. This time Cinderella was enjoying the ball so much that she forgot the warning of the Fairy Godmother. Suddenly the clock began to strike twelve. With a cry of alarm she fled from the ball room, dropping one of her glass slippers in her haste. The prince hurried after her, but by the time he reached the royal courtyard the beautiful maiden had disappeared. As Cinderella arrived at her own gate, the coach became a pumpkin; the horses became mice; the coachman became a rat and the footmen lizards. Cinderella was again clothed in rags, but in her hand she carried one of the glass slippers that she had worn at the prince's ball. The mother and sisters came home soon afterwards. They could talk of nothing but the sudden disappearance of the beautiful princess. On the following morning, there was a noise of trumpets and drums. The king's messengers passed through the town, crying, "The king's son will marry the fair maiden whose foot the glass slipper exactly fits." The prince rode behind in his coach. He was followed by a company of attendants, who carried the glass slipper upon a velvet cushion. At last the procession arrived at the home of Cinderella. The mother and sisters saw the prince coming. They at once hid pretty Cinderella under a tub in the kitchen. The prince tried to fit the glass slipper to the foot of the oldest daughter. The foot was too long and too thin at the heel. "You can pare off the heel," said the mother. But the prince only laughed. He tried the glass slipper on the foot of the second daughter. Her foot was too short and too fat at the toe. "You can pare off the toe," said the mother. But the prince only laughed. Suddenly the parrot called, from his cage by the kitchen window, "You may pare off the heels, Or pare off the toes, But under the tub The slipper goes." The prince ordered his attendants to lift the tub. Crouching under it sat Cinderella, clothed in rags but wearing on one foot the mate to the glass slipper. The prince knelt upon the velvet cushion, and tried on Cinderella's foot the little glass slipper which he had found in the ball room. It fitted exactly. It was like the slipper that Cinderella had on the other foot. At that moment, the Fairy Godmother appeared. She touched Cinderella's clothes with her wand. There stood Cinderella, dressed in a costume even more beautiful than those she had worn at the palace. Then the prince saw that Cinderella was indeed the lovely maiden for whom he was searching. He arose and kissed her, and begged her to become his wife. The prince and Cinderella were married, and in time they became king and queen. They ruled the kingdom long and well. THE WIND I saw yon toss the kites on high And blow the birds about the sky; And all around I heard you pass, Like ladies' skirts across the grass-- O wind, a-blowing all day long! O wind, that sings so loud a song! I saw the different things you did, But always you yourself you hid. I felt you push, I heard you call, I could not see yourself at all-- O wind, a-blowing all day long! O wind, that sings so loud a song! O you that are so strong and cold, O blower, are you young or old? Are you a beast of field and tree, Or just a stronger child than me? O wind, a-blowing all day long! O wind, that sings so loud a song! ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. THE BAG OF WINDS The great caves of an island, far away in the midst of the sea, were the home of the Winds. Eolus was ruler of the Winds. He kept them imprisoned in the caves. Sometimes he allowed them to go free for a time, to have a frolic or take exercise. Although the Winds were often unruly and were fond of mischief, they always obeyed the voice of Eolus. North Wind was the roughest of all. He would go from his cave on the wildest errands. Sometimes he would pile the waves mountains high and would lash them into a tempest. He would tear the sails and break the masts of the vessels. He would uproot the forest trees and tear the roofs from the houses. But at the command of Eolus, North Wind would cease his roaring and would go sullenly back to his cave. "South Wind!" Eolus would call. "Send a gentle, playful breeze among the flowers. Bring gay sunshine and soft showers. Sing a song of spring. "West Wind! Blow steadily against the sails of the ships and speed them on their journey. "East Wind! Go forth in a jolly, merry mood. Whirl the leaves over the ground and scatter the seeds far and wide. "North Wind! Cover the earth with a blanket of snow. Freeze the waters of the lakes and rivers." Thus Eolus would command the Winds, and they would do his bidding. One day a ship stopped near the island of the Winds, and anchored. The captain of the ship and the sailors went ashore. Eolus treated the visitors very kindly. When the sailors discovered that they had come to the home of the Winds, they cried, "O Eolus! Tell West Wind to blow and help us reach home quickly:" Then Eolus took a leather bag and put into it all the unruly Winds. He tied the end of the bag with a silver string. Giving the bag to the captain, he said, "Fasten the bag to the mast of your ship. Do not open it, or trouble will follow." Then Eolus called West Wind from his island cave. The captain and the sailors thanked Eolus and started off in the ship. West Wind blew gently, and the ship sailed over smooth waters day and night. Each day found them nearer home. At last, on the evening of the ninth day, they saw the shores of their own land. The captain cried, "Land, ahoy! We shall anchor in the harbor to-morrow." Tired with long watching, and thinking that the ship was safe, he went to sleep. Then the sailors began to whisper softly to each other. "What do you suppose there is in the bag?" said one. "It is tied with a silver cord. I am sure that it is full of gold," said another. Then they planned to rob the captain of his treasure. One of the sailors untied the bag. Out rushed the angry Winds! They raged and roared. A storm arose, and the ship was sent far out of its course. The captain begged West Wind to help the sailors, but he could not. At last the ship was driven back to the home of the Winds. Eolus was surprised when he saw the ship again. "Why have you returned?" asked Eolus. "The sailors untied the silver cord at the end of the bag and set the unruly Winds free," replied the captain. "Please call them back to their caves and help us." "Depart!" cried Eolus angrily. "I will show you no more favors." Sadly they sailed away, and no kind West Wind helped them. They toiled for many days and nights, and they suffered great hardship before they came once more in sight of their own land. DIANA AND APOLLO On an island in the sea, there lived a beautiful woman who had two children, twins. The girl's name was Diana, the boy's Apollo. It was a floating island. Neptune, the king of the sea, had placed four marble pillars under it, and had fastened it with heavy chains. The two children grew rapidly. Diana became tall and graceful. Jupiter, king of heaven and earth, saw that she was very fair. One day as Diana was walking through the forest, Jupiter met her and spoke to her, saying, "Fair Diana, hereafter you shall be called Queen of the Woods." Diana, followed by her maids the wood nymphs, often wandered through the forest. She took care of the deer and all helpless creatures, but she hunted fierce animals. Apollo, also, grew to be fair and strong. Jupiter bestowed many gifts upon the youth. He gave Apollo a pair of swans and a golden chariot, so that the boy could go anywhere, on land or sea. The most wonderful present that Jupiter gave to Apollo was a silver bow, with sharp arrows which never missed the mark. Apollo prized the bow so highly and used it so very skillfully, that he came to be called "Master of the Silver Bow." THE TREE Green stood the Tree, With its leaves tender bright. "Shall I take them?" said Frost, As he breathed thro' the night. "Oh! pray let them be, Till my blossoms you see!" Begged the Tree, as she shivered And shook in affright. Sweet sang the birds The fair blossoms among. "Shall I take them?" said Wind, As he swayed them and swung. "Oh! pray let them be, Till my berries you see!" Begged the Tree, as its branches All quivering hung. Bright grew the berries Beneath the sun's heat. "Shall I take them?" said Lassie So young and so sweet. "Ah! take them, I crave! Take all that I have!" Begged the Tree, as it bent Its full boughs to her feet. ADAPTED. THE FAIRY TREE Long, long ago, on an island in the sea, lived a family of seven sisters. The oldest girl ruled the household, and her sisters obeyed her commands. Flora, the youngest sister, was sent to the forest each day, to gather wood for the kitchen fire. Near the edge of the forest was a cave under some rocks. A stream of water fell over the rocks into a basin in the cave. This was a delightfully cool spot, and Flora often rested here on her way home after gathering wood in the forest. She would lie on the mossy bank of the stream, for hours, and dream. One morning as Flora ran along the grassy path that led to the cave, she saw a little fish in the stream. Its scales flashed out all the colors of the rainbow. "I am going to keep the fish for a pet," said the girl to herself. "I will call him Rainbow." So she caught the pretty fish and put him into the basin in the cave. The next day Flora went to the forest for wood. She carried some crumbs of bread which she had saved from her breakfast. On the way home she stopped at the cave. The fish was waiting for her. He came to the edge of the basin, and she fed the crumbs to him. How delighted the girl was! She had been so lonely, and now she had a playfellow! Every morning, instead of eating the bread which her sister gave to her, Flora would save it and feed the crumbs to her pet. The fish would leap to catch them. "Here are some crumbs, Rainbow," she would say. "This is all to-day, but I shall come again to-morrow." Then she would sing a little song. Flora began to grow thin, and her sisters wondered what could be the matter. One day the oldest sister followed her to the cave and saw her feed the crumbs of bread to the fish. While Flora was away in the forest, the oldest sister caught the fish, carried him home and baked him for supper. The bones were buried under the kitchen fire. The next morning, Flora went to the cave as usual, but no fish was there. She sang her little song, and still he did not come. "Rainbow cannot be dead," she said, "for I do not see him in the water." Then Flora hastened home. She threw herself upon her bed and was soon fast asleep. The following morning, a rooster flew up to Flora's window and crowed, "Cock-a-doodle-doodle-doo! The bones of Rainbow wait for you, Under the kitchen fire, too." Flora arose at once and went downstairs. There, under the kitchen fire, she found the bones of her pet. She wept as she gathered the bones and placed them in a box. She went to the forest and buried the box near the cave. Then Flora sat down on a mossy bank near the cave and sang this song: "Rainbow, Rainbow, hear my cry, My great wish do not deny. If you can't come back to me, Pray, O pray, become a tree!" As the last words of the song echoed through the cave, there sprang up beside the girl a wonderful Fairy Tree. Its trunk was of ivory. Its leaves were of silver fringed with pearls. Its flowers were gold, and its fruit gems from which sparkled the bright colors of the rainbow. One day the summer breeze carried a leaf from the Fairy Tree across the sea to another island. It fell at the feet of the king. He picked up the wonderful leaf, saying, "I shall never rest until I find the tree from which this leaf came." The king set sail with his attendants. He soon landed on the island where the seven sisters lived. As the king and his men were marching through the forest, they found the Fairy Tree growing at the entrance to the cave. The king tried to pick some of the leaves, but he could not. Then he heard the sweet voice of a girl. She was singing, "Rainbow, Rainbow, speak to me! Bend your branches, Fairy Tree!" And Flora came tripping along the grassy path that led to the cave. The king said, "Fair maiden, if you can pick a leaf or a flower from this tree, you shall be my queen." As Flora reached to pick a flower, the tree bowed low, and every leaf trembled with delight. The maiden at once presented the flower to the king. As he took the flower, the king exclaimed, "To you belongs the Fairy Tree; Pray be my bride and rule with me." Flora thought she must be dreaming, but they were married next day, beneath the branches of the Fairy Tree. Adapted from "The Lilac Fairy Book" by Andrew Lang HIAWATHA'S SAILING Thus the Birch Canoe was builded In the valley, by the river, In the bosom of the forest; And the forest life was in it, All its mystery and its magic, All the lightness of the birch tree, All the toughness of the cedar, All the larch's supple sinews; And it floated on the river Like a yellow leaf in autumn, Like a yellow water lily. HENRY W LONGFELLOW GRAY MOLE AND THE INDIAN An Indian was once wandering across the prairie. He was tired, and hungry, and very lonely. He had traveled many miles. At last he came to a brook, in a meadow at the foot of a hill. "I will rest here until noon," thought the Indian. He sat down upon the mossy bank beside the brook. Presently he heard some one whisper, "Lift me up and carry me with you, and I will be your friend." The Indian looked carefully about him, to find who was speaking. He saw a small, gray animal peeping from out of the moss. "Ha, ha, Gray Mole!" laughed the Indian. "Why should I carry you?" "I am far from my island home. If you will carry me to the cliff near the Place of Breaking Light, I can then reach my burrow safely," replied Gray Mole. The Indian placed Gray Mole in his large wampum belt. "Very well, little friend," he said. "You may travel with me, but I shall rest here for a time before starting on the journey." Then, covering himself with his deerskin robe, he lay down upon the moss. He was soon fast asleep. At about noon Sun passed overhead. Sun traveled so close to the earth that his rays scorched and shriveled the deerskin robe. When the Indian awoke, he found that his deerskin robe had been scorched and shriveled by Sun. He was furiously angry. "I will follow Sun and punish him," said the Indian. Sun had traveled far beyond the meadow and was now fast disappearing behind the hill. The Indian started to follow. At last the Indian reached the summit of the hill and could look down the other side. Sun could no longer be seen. He had hidden in his cave beyond the Western Sea. The Indian traveled until he came to the edge of a cliff. The Shining Big Sea Water beat high against the rocks, and in the distance he could see the Place of Breaking Light. "We have come to the cliff, little friend. Jump out of my wampum belt," said the Indian. "But how are you going to reach your burrow on the island yonder?" "I shall wait here with you until the break of day," replied Gray Mole. Many trees grew near the cliff. East Wind blew gently through their branches, rustling the leaves and carrying messages to the Indian. Oak Tree said proudly, "I am King of the Forest. The Great Chief summons his warriors beneath my boughs. Here he holds his councils. Of my branches the strong arrows are made." Ash Tree whispered, "My pliant branches make the bows which speed the arrows in their flight." Maple Tree said softly, "I am the food of the Great Chief. My sap is sweet and wholesome. People of all nations delight to show me honor." Red Willow bowed low and said, "My bark is used for the peace pipe of the Great Chief. Of my branches the women weave baskets and mats for their wigwams." Marsh Reeds, growing near Red Willow, chimed sweetly, "Our stalks are used for the stems of the peace pipes." Linden Tree swayed to and fro, saying, "I am used for the cradles in which the children are rocked." Pine Tree said gently, "My sweet singing lulls the children to sleep." And she murmured a soft lullaby. Birch Tree was standing near the path. "Of what use are you, O Birch Tree?" said the Indian. Birch Tree replied, "My bark covers the canoes that sail upon the lakes and rivers. I am used also for the picture-writing of the people." East Wind again blew gently, stirring the leaves of the trees. Then Cedar Tree said, "My pliant branches make the canoes strong and steady." Larch Tree whispered, "I give my fibrous roots to bind the parts together." Fir Tree said, "My rosin closes the seams of the canoes, to make them safe." Then the Indian looked at a cluster of alder trees growing near a stream of water. "Of what use are you, O Alder Trees?" The Alder Trees replied, "The Indian Chief comes here to fish in the cool stream. He finds shelter, beneath our branches, from the hot rays of Sun!" All this time, Gray Mole had been busily gathering fibrous roots from the larch tree. He had made a rope to snare Sun. Then Gray Mole called to the Indian to look toward the Place of Breaking Light. There, in a little bay on Gray Mole's island, stood a birch canoe. Soon the canoe floated to where the Indian stood. "Follow me," said Gray Mole. "Step into the magic canoe. We will go to the island and there set a snare for Sun." The magic canoe carried them safely over the water, and they soon reached the island. Then the Indian set the snare for Sun. Presently Sun came out of his cave and was at once caught in the snare. For seven days the world was dark. The people suffered from hunger and cold. Then the Indian cried, "Alas, what have I done! Who will unfasten the rope and set Sun free?" "I can set Sun free again," said Gray Mole. The little mole crept to the snare. Nibble, nibble, he went, until the rope gave way. Then Sun burst forth in all his might. In his anger he blazed a path across the sky. The poor little mole was scorched in the fierce heat, and his eyes were blinded. Never again could he see well. The Indian was sorry, but he said, "Gray Mole, you are a true friend. You shall always live with me, and all the moles shall be my forest brothers." Then, placing Gray Mole in his wampum belt once more, he stepped into the canoe, and together they sailed to the Indian's home. THE WATER LILIES Beautiful white flowers with hearts of gold floated on the surface of the lily pond. An Indian girl was paddling a canoe gently about among the lily pads. She reached out to pick one of the flowers. Suddenly there appeared before her a little man. The little man sat upon a lily pad. He smiled at the girl and said, "Listen, and I will tell you the story of the water lilies." This is the story the little man told: Once there was a star in the heavens, it shone more brightly than any of the other stars. An Indian youth watched it for many nights. Each night it seemed to move nearer to the earth. One night the young man had a strange dream. In his dream a beautiful maiden appeared before him and spoke to him. Her words were like music. She said that she was the star that shone so brightly in the heavens. She loved the birds and the flowers, and the people of the earth. "I wish to leave my sister stars and dwell upon the earth," said the Star Maiden. "What form is the best for me to take, to be loved by all?" The young man awoke. At once he hastened to tell his dream to the wise men of the tribe. "The beautiful maiden is the star that we have seen in the south," said the wise men. Again the Star Maiden appeared to the young man in a dream. Once more she asked him where she might dwell in safety upon the earth, and what form she should take, to be loved by the Indians. "Choose for yourself," said the young man. At first the Star Maiden chose to live in the heart of a white rose that grew on a mountain side. But there she was hidden from sight, so that no one could enjoy her beauty. Then she searched among the flowers of the prairie, until she found the blossom of a painted cup. "I will rest here," thought the Star Maiden as she swung to and fro on the yellow cup. Alas! She was not safe there, for a herd of buffaloes came rushing over the prairie. Finally the Star Maiden thought of a place where she was sure she would be safe. "I will live upon the lake," she said. "Canoes glide gently over the water, and I shall see the children at their play." In the morning, hundreds of white flowers with hearts of gold floated upon the water. The Star Maiden lived upon earth in the form of water lilies. When the little man had finished telling the story of the lilies, he jumped into the water and disappeared. "I shall always love the water lilies," said the Indian girl as she paddled away. WHERE GO THE BOATS? Dark brown is the river, Golden is the sand, It flows along forever, With trees on either hand. Green leaves a-floating, Castles of the foam, Boats of mine a-boating-- Where will all come home? On goes the river And out past the mill, Away down the valley, Away down the hill; Away down the river, A hundred miles or more; Other little children Shall bring my boats ashore. ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. WHY THE SEA IS SALT Long ago, there were two brothers, one rich and one poor. The Rich Brother was stingy. It was winter. The wind howled down the chimney, and the snow almost covered the hut in which the Poor Brother lived. "We cannot starve," said the Poor Brother to his wife. "I will ask my brother to help us." Now it annoyed the Rich Brother to have the Poor Brother ask for help. When the Poor Brother asked for bread, the Rich Brother said angrily, "Here, take this ham and go to the dwarfs. They will boil it for you." So the Poor Brother started out, with the ham under his arm, to find the home of the dwarfs. He trudged on through the snow until he saw seven queer little dwarfs rolling a huge snowball, at the foot of a hill. The dwarfs paid no attention to the Poor Brother, but kept on rolling the snowball, which grew larger and larger each moment, as they sang, "Behind the door The Mill you'll find, But snow, the Mill Will never grind. We'll gather snow, And still more snow, Then roll it down To cool Below." "Ha, ha, ha!" laughed the Chief Dwarf. "We have snow enough here to put out a dozen fires. Come, brothers, let us roll the snowball Below!" "Heave ho! Heave ho!" cried the other six dwarfs. In the twinkling of an eye, the seven little dwarfs had rolled the snowball through an entrance in the side of the hill. Down, down, the snowball rolled, until it reached the place where the fires burned. Then sizzle, sizzle, came the hot steam pouring out of the entrance. All this time the Poor Brother had stood watching the seven dwarfs, and saying not a word. But suddenly he thought, "If I do not go Below at once, there will be no fire left to boil my ham." So the Poor Brother groped his way through the steam and the smoke, and at last he found his way into the home of the seven dwarfs. It certainly was a very queer place! There were great fires burning on every side. Although the huge snowball had cooled the air, it had not quenched the fires. The Chief Dwarf was stirring some fat that was boiling in a kettle. When he saw the Poor Brother standing before him with the ham under his arm, he cried, "Ho, ho! Who comes here?" Before the Poor Brother could answer, the seven little dwarfs had crowded around him, teasing for the ham. It was many a day since they had tasted ham, and they were very fond of it. "What will you give me for the ham?" asked the Poor Brother. "We have neither silver nor gold," said the dwarfs, "but we will give you the Mill that stands behind the door." "Of what use would the Mill be to me? I am hungry and have come to boil the ham," said the Poor Brother. "It is a wonderful Mill," the Chief Dwarf replied. "It will grind anything in the world that you might wish, excepting snow and ham. I will show you how to use it." The Poor Brother agreed to give the ham in exchange for the Mill, and the Chief Dwarf told him how to use it. The dwarf said, "When you wish the Mill to grind, use these words: Grind, quickly grind, little Mill, Grind--with a right good will! "When you wish the Mill to stop grinding, you must say, Halt, halt, little Mill! The Mill will obey you." Taking the little Mill under his arm, the Poor Brother climbed up and up, until he came to the entrance in the side of the hill. Then he trudged home again through the snow. When he arrived in front of the hut, he put the little Mill down on the snow, and said at once, "Grind, quickly grind, little Mill, Grind a HOUSE--with a right good will!" The little Mill ground and ground, until there stood, in place of the hut, the finest house in the world. It had fine large windows and broad stairways, and the house was furnished from garret to cellar. By spring, the Mill had ground out the last article that was needed for the house, and the Poor Brother cried, "Halt, halt, little Mill!" The Mill obeyed him. Then the Poor Brother placed the Mill in the barnyard and told it to grind horses, cows, woolly sheep, and fat little pigs. When he told it to halt, the Mill stopped grinding. The Poor Brother carried the Mill to the fields and commanded it to grind rich crops of wheat, oats, barley, and corn. Then he took the Mill into the house and asked it to grind fine clothing for his wife and his daughters, and to keep all the cupboards filled with good things to eat. At last the Poor Brother had everything that he wanted. He placed the Mill behind the kitchen door and sat down, with his wife and daughters, to eat the choicest food he had ever tasted. The Rich Brother heard about all the strange things that had happened, and he went to visit the Poor Brother. "How did you manage to become so rich?" he asked in astonishment. The Poor Brother told about the Mill, and that he need only say, "Grind, quickly grind, little Mill, Grind--with a right good will!" And the Mill would grind anything he might wish to have. The Rich Brother did not wait to hear any more but said, "Lend the Mill to me for an hour." Taking it under his arm, the stingy Rich Brother ran across the fields toward home. His wife was in the hayfield, spreading the hay after the mowers. He passed her on the way home and told her that he would attend to breakfast that morning. "I will call you when all is ready," said he. When the Rich Brother reached home, he placed the Mill on the table, and told it to grind porridge and red herrings. The Mill began at once to grind oatmeal porridge and fat red herrings. All the dishes and pans were soon filled. Then the porridge and herrings began to flow over the kitchen floor into the yard. The Rich Brother tried to stop the Mill. He turned and twisted and screwed the handle, but he could not stop it, for he did not know the magic words. At last he waded through the porridge across the fields to the mowers, crying, "Help! Help!" When he told the mowers about the Mill, they said, "Ask your brother to stop the Mill, or we shall be drowned in porridge." Then the Rich Brother ran to the Poor Brother's house, crying and shouting for help. The Poor Brother laughed when he found out what had happened. They rowed back to the kitchen in a boat, and the Poor Brother whispered the magic words. The Mill stopped grinding. In the course of time, the porridge soaked into the ground, but after that nothing would grow there excepting oats, and afterwards the brooks and ponds were always filled with herrings. The Rich Brother no longer wished to keep the Mill. The Poor Brother carried it home once more and placed it behind the door. Years afterwards, a rich merchant sailed from a distant land and anchored his ship in the harbor. He visited the home of the Poor Brother and asked about the Mill, for he had heard how wonderful it was. "Will it grind salt?" the merchant asked. "Yes, indeed!" said the Poor Brother. "It will grind anything in the whole world excepting snow and ham." "Let me borrow the Mill for a short time, and great will be your reward," said the merchant. He thought it would be much easier to fill his ship with salt from the Mill, than to make a long voyage across the ocean to procure his cargo. The Poor Brother consented gladly. The merchant went away with the Mill. He did not wait to find out how to stop the grinding. When the merchant went aboard the ship, he said to the captain, "Here is a great treasure. Guard it carefully." The captain thought that the little Mill did not appear very wonderful, but he placed it upon the deck of the ship. Then he ordered the sailors to their posts of duty, and the ship sailed away. When they were out at sea, the merchant said, "Captain, we need not go any further upon our voyage. The Mill will grind out salt enough to fill the hold of the ship." So saying he cried, "Grind, quickly grind, little Mill, Grind SALT--with a right good will!" And the Mill ground salt, and more salt, and still more salt. When the hold of the ship was full of salt, the merchant cried, "Now you must stop, little Mill." But the little Mill did not stop. It kept on grinding salt, and more salt, and still more salt. The captain shouted, "We shall be lost! The ship will sink!" One of the sailors called, "Ahoy, captain! Throw the Mill overboard." So, heave ho! Heave ho! And overboard went the wonderful Mill, down to the bottom of the deep sea. The captain and his crew sailed home with the merchant's cargo of salt. But the Mill kept on grinding salt at the bottom of the sea. AND THAT IS WHY THE SEA IS SALT. At least, so some people say. SENNIN THE HERMIT In the far-away land of Japan, there was a little village that lay at the foot of a high mountain. Every day the children went to play on the grassy bank near a pond at one end of the village. They threw stones into the water. They fished, and they sailed their toy boats. They picked the wild flowers that grew in the fields near by. They carried with them rice to eat, and from morning until evening they played near the pond. One day, while they were at play, the children were surprised to see an old man with a long, white beard walking toward them. He came from the direction of the mountain. The children stopped their games to watch the old man. He came into their midst, and patting them upon their heads easily made them his friends. The children continued their play, for they knew that the old man was kind. The man watched the children, and when it was time for them to go home, he said, "Come to the flat rock on the side of the mountain to-morrow, and I will show you some wonderful games." Then he climbed up the mountain once more and disappeared. The following morning, the children went to the flat rock. They found the old man waiting for them. "Now, my dear children," said he, "I am going to amuse you. Look here!" He picked up some dry sticks. He blew at the ends of the sticks, and at once they became sprays of beautiful cherry, plum, and peach blossoms. He passed a branch of each of the flowers to the girls. Then he took a stone and threw it into the air. The stone turned into a dove! Another stone became an eagle, another a nightingale, or any bird a boy chose to name. "Now," said the old man, "I will show you some animals that I am sure will make you laugh." The children clapped their hands. He recited some verses, and a company of monkeys came leaping upon the rock. The monkeys jumped about, grinning at the same time and performing funny tricks. The children clapped their hands again. Then the old man bowed to them and said, "Children, I can play no more games to-day. It is time for you to go back to the village. Farewell!" The old man turned to go. He went up the mountain in the direction of a cave. The children tried to follow him, but in spite of his age he was more nimble than they. They ran far enough, however, to see him enter the cave. When they reached the entrance, the old man had disappeared. The cave was surrounded by fragrant flowers; but into its depths the children did not dare to go. Suddenly one of the girls pointed upwards, crying, "There is the old grandfather!" The others looked up, and there, standing on a cloud over the top of the mountain, was the old man. "Let us go home now," said one of the boys. On the way, they met two men of the village, whom their parents had sent to search for them. When the children had told their story, one of the men exclaimed, "Ah, happy children! The kind old man is surely Sennin, the wonderful Hermit of the Mountain!" FOREIGN CHILDREN Little Indian, Sioux or Crow, Little frosty Eskimo, Little Turk or Japanee, O! Don't you wish that you were me? You have seen the scarlet trees And the lions over seas; You have eaten ostrich eggs, And turned the turtles off their legs. Such a life is very fine, But it's not so nice as mine; You must often, as you trod, Have wearied NOT to be abroad. You have curious things to eat, I am fed on proper meat; You must dwell beyond the foam, But I am safe and live at home. Little Turk or Japanee, O! Don't you wish that you were me? ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON GREAT AND LITTLE BEAR Callisto was a beautiful woman whom the god Jupiter admired. The goddess Juno was very angry because Jupiter was kind to Callisto. She decided to be revenged. "I will take away her beauty, so that no one shall admire her," said Juno. Night and day she thought and planned, until she found a way to punish Callisto. One morning as the fair and gentle Callisto was gathering wild flowers in a field, she was suddenly changed into a bear. Then she was driven into a forest near by. "You shall live in this forest forever! A cave under the rocks shall be your home!" exclaimed Juno. Although she had the form of a bear, Callisto was still a woman at heart. She feared all the animals that she met. The hunting dogs frightened her, and she would hide in terror from the hunters. One day a young man was hunting in the forest. Callisto recognized him at once as her son Arcas. She rushed toward her son to embrace him, but thinking the bear was going to attack him, Arcas lifted his hunting spear. As he was about to strike the bear, Jupiter appeared. The god snatched away the spear just in time to save Callisto's life. Jupiter took both Callisto and Arcas, and placed them in the sky. Callisto became the Great Bear, and Arcas the Little Bear. They have remained in the sky ever since. On pleasant nights you can see them in the sky, as they move around the North Star. THE BOY AND THE SHEEP "Lazy sheep, pray tell me why In the pleasant field you lie, Eating grass and daisies white, From the morning till the night: Everything can something do, But what kind of use are you?" "Nay, my little master, nay, Do not serve me so, I pray! Don't you see the wool that grows On my back to make you clothes? Cold, ah, very cold you'd be, If you had not wool from me! "True, it seems a pleasant thing Nipping daisies in the spring; But what chilly nights I pass On the cold and dewy grass, Or pick my scanty dinner where All the ground is brown and bare! "Then the farmer comes at last, When the merry spring is past, Cuts my woolly fleece away, For your coat in wintry day. Little master, this is why In the pleasant fields I lie." ANN TAYLOR. THE BOY WHO CRIED WOLF There was once a boy who tended his father's sheep on the side of a mountain, near a dark forest. It was a lonely place. No one was near, excepting three men whom the boy could see working in the fields, in the valley below. One day the boy thought he would have some fun. He rushed down toward the valley, crying, "Wolf! Wolf!" The men ran to meet him, and one of them remained with him for a while. The boy enjoyed the company and the fun so much, that he tried the same trick again, a few days later. Again the men ran to help him. Soon after this, a wolf really came from the forest and began to steal the sheep. The boy ran after the men, crying more loudly than ever, "Wolf! Wolf!" But it was of no use for him to call. The men had been fooled twice, and now no one went to help him. So the wolf had a good meal from the herd of sheep. THE LION'S SHARE The fox and the donkey were friends. One day they agreed to go hunting together. On their way through the forest, they stopped at the den of the lion. "Ho, ho, King Lion!" called the fox. "Friend Donkey and I are going to hunt for game. Will you go with us?" "Certainly," said the lion. "I am ready for a good dinner." The lion, the fox, and the donkey set a trap near the lion's den. Then they hid behind the trees near by. Soon a wolf came prowling along and was caught in the trap. They attacked the wolf and killed him. "Let us have our dinner now. I am hungry," said the lion. "Friend Donkey," added the lion, "you may divide the animal and give each of us his portion." So the donkey divided the wolf into three equal parts. Then he said to the lion, "Which part will you have, King Lion?" The lion saw how the donkey had divided the animal. King Lion was very angry. He said with a roar, "What do you mean, Friend Donkey, by taking so much for your share?" "I have divided the wolf into three equal parts," said the donkey. "If you do not like the way I have divided the animal, you need not take any." At this the lion was furious. Springing upon the poor donkey, he killed him instantly. Then the lion turned to the fox. "There are only two of us now," said the lion. "Let me see how you will divide the animal." The fox bowed low before King Lion. He took one very small piece of meat for himself. Then he put all the rest of the animal in a heap for the lion. The lion watched greedily to see what the fox would do next. "This is your share, King Lion," said the fox. The lion was pleased with the way the fox had divided the meat. "Who taught you how to divide the wolf?" he said. Once more the fox bowed low before King Lion. Then he said humbly, "Friend Donkey taught me how to divide the wolf!" ROBIN REDBREAST Good-by, good-by to summer! For summer's nearly done; The garden smiling faintly, Cool breezes in the sun. Our thrushes now are silent, Our swallows flown away-- But Robin's here with coat of brown, And ruddy breast-knot gay. Robin, Robin Redbreast, O Robin dear! Robin sings so sweetly In the falling of the year. Bright yellow, red, and orange, The leaves come down in hosts; The trees are Indian princes, But soon they'll turn to ghosts; The leathery pears and apples Hang russet on the bough; It's autumn, autumn, autumn late, 'Twill soon be winter now. Robin, Robin Redbreast, O Robin dear! And what will this poor robin do? For pinching days are near. The fireside for the cricket, The wheat stack for the mouse, When trembling night winds whistle And moan all round the house; The frosty ways like iron, The branches plumed with snow-- Alas! In winter dead and dark, Where can poor Robin go? Robin, Robin Redbreast, O Robin dear! And a crumb of bread for Robin, His little heart to cheer! WILLIAM ALLINGHAM. THORN ROSE In the long, long ago, there lived a king and queen who for many years had no children. At last a lovely baby was born to them--a little princess. There was great rejoicing over all the land. The king and queen decided to have a party in honor of the princess. In the palace there was hurry and stir to make ready. Messengers were sent far and near, to invite the lords and ladies of the land to the great feast. Among the guests invited to the party were seven good fairies. It was a beautiful summer afternoon. The roses on the palace wall were nodding their heads sleepily in the warm breeze, when the chariot with the seven fairies arrived. The good fairies entered the princess' room. There the tiny baby lay, sleeping in a dainty pearl cradle. "She is as sweet and fair as a rose!" they exclaimed. "We will call her Rose." Now it happened that the king and queen had failed to invite a spiteful and ill-tempered old witch. The old witch was very angry, because she had not been invited to the party. After the guests had all arrived, she entered through the keyhole. No one saw her enter. Each of the good fairies bestowed on the princess a precious gift. "I bestow upon you, sweet princess, the gifts of health and cheerfulness," said the first fairy. "You shall be the most beautiful princess in the world," said the second fairy. "You shall be witty and wise," said the third. "You shall have the sweetest voice that ever was heard," said the fourth. "You shall be generous and kind," said the fifth. "Everyone shall love you," said the sixth of the good fairies. Just then a spiteful laugh was heard. "Ah, ah, ah!" some one called. The king and queen saw the old witch who had not been invited to the party. "I will tell you what shall happen to this little wonder," said the witch. "She will cut her finger with a spindle before she is fifteen years old, and then she will die!" The old witch shook her black stick at the princess. Then she disappeared, as she had entered, through the keyhole. The king and queen were troubled when they heard the witch's words, but the seventh fairy, who had not yet spoken, stepped forward. "The king's daughter shall not die, but she shall sleep for a hundred years. When the princess falls asleep, everyone in the palace will go to sleep, too. They will all sleep for a hundred years." Then the king ordered that every spindle in the kingdom should be destroyed. Not a spindle was to be used, anywhere in the country, until after the princess had passed her fifteenth birthday. The gifts of the fairies proved true. The princess was so beautiful and so good that she was loved by all. She was witty and wise and her voice was like a silver bell. One day, when the princess was nearly fifteen years old, she wandered through the palace and up the winding stairs to an old tower. There, in a little room, sat an old woman, busily twisting thread upon a spinning wheel. The old woman had never heard the king's command. "How merrily the wheel goes round! Let me see if I can spin!" said the princess. Scarcely had the princess touched the spindle when she cut her finger. The girl fell at once into a deep sleep. She lay upon the floor beside the spinning wheel, fast asleep. In the castle below, the king, the queen, and all the servants fell asleep, too. The horses slept in their stalls. The dogs slept in their kennels. The pigeons on the roof, and the birds in their nests, all went sound asleep. Even the fire flaming on the hearth became still. Deep shadows darkened the sunny rooms of the palace, and the garden round about. A hedge of thorns at once began to grow around the palace. The hedge became thicker and higher as the days went by, until at last it was so tall that not even the palace towers could be seen. The story of the princess, the beautiful Thorn Rose, was told far and wide. At last a hundred years had passed. Prince Courageous was traveling through the land. He heard from an old man the story of the thorn hedge, and of the princess who lay in the palace behind the hedge, fast asleep. The old man told the prince that the time had come when the long enchantment was at an end. "But who knows how great the danger may be?" added the old man. "No one has entered the palace for a hundred years!" "I will brave the danger, whatever it may be!" exclaimed Prince Courageous. "I will find the sleeping princess or lose my life!" So Prince Courageous mounted his horse and rode through the woods until he came to the tall thorn hedge. He made his way through the underbrush. The briers were thick and the thorns sharp, but Prince Courageous was strong and brave. He knocked at the gate, but there was no answer. The prince opened the gate and entered the courtyard. All was silence in the palace hall. Only the sound of his own footsteps could Prince Courageous hear. Everybody was fast asleep--the horses in their stalls, the pigeons on the roof, the birds in their nests, the servants in the halls, the king and queen on their golden throne. Prince Courageous tiptoed through the silent rooms. Finally, he reached the narrow stairway that led to the tower. The prince climbed the winding stairs. There, beside the spinning wheel, lay the beautiful princess, fast asleep. Stepping softly to her side, he kissed the princess on the cheek. Thorn Rose opened her eyes--and there stood the prince! And now all the court awoke. The horses began to neigh. The dogs began to bark. The pigeons cooed. The birds sang. The kitchen fire burst into flame. The sun shone brightly, and the roses on the palace wall swayed in the breeze. The prince and the princess were married next day, and the seven good fairies danced at the wedding feast. THE WOLVES AND THE DEER Long ago, a pack of wolves lived on a prairie. Some deer lived near by. The wolves could run swiftly, but they knew that the deer were swift runners, too. The hungry wolves wondered how they might catch the deer and eat them. At last they thought of a fine plan. They invited the deer to run a race with them. The wolves and the deer started in the race side by side, but the deer ran much the faster. The wolves were very angry. "We will eat the deer yet," they said. One day they prepared a great feast. They invited the deer to dine with them. The deer sat down facing the wolves. Then the wolves said to the deer, "Laugh, you on the other side!" "No," said the deer. "You laugh first." "Very well," said the wolves. "We will laugh first." And they laughed, "Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha!" "Now you on the other side laugh, too," said the wolves. Then the deer laughed, "Mm, mm, mm, mm, mm!" "Laugh again," said the deer. "Very well," said the wolves, and they laughed, "Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha!" The deer were frightened when they saw the great, sharp teeth of the hungry wolves. They wanted to run away at once and hide from the wolves, but they were afraid. Again the wolves said, "Laugh, you on the other side! But do not keep your mouths closed when you laugh. Nobody laughs like that." Then the deer laughed, "Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha!" This time they opened their mouths. The wolves could not see any teeth in the mouths of the deer. At once the wolves attacked the deer. They killed and ate them. Only a few of the deer escaped. To this day, all deer are afraid of wolves. The wolves laugh and show their teeth when they see the deer. And deer run as fast as they can when they see the wolves. THE CORNFIELDS Then Nokomis, the old woman, Spake and said to Minnehaha, "'Tis the Moon when leaves are falling; All the wild rice has been gathered, And the maize is ripe and ready, Let us gather in the harvest, Let us wrestle with Mondamin, Strip him of his plumes and tassels, Of his garments, green and yellow." HENRY W. LONGFELLOW. THE GIFT OF CORN Long, long ago, a tribe of Indians lived on a beautiful island in the Great Lakes. An enemy attacked the Indians, and they were driven from home. They wandered far away and settled on the shore of a small lake. Brave Heart, a strong and powerful Indian, remained to guard the beautiful island. One morning Brave Heart stepped into his canoe. He was planning to paddle around the island. The canoe glided swiftly along by the tall trees that grew near the water. At last Brave Heart had gone beyond the trees. He saw a vast plain. He paddled to the shore and drew his canoe up the beach. Then Brave Heart started to walk across the plain. Suddenly a little man stood in front of him. The stranger was dressed in green, and he wore a green cap with red feathers in it. "Ho, ho, Brave Heart!" cried he. "You are very strong, are you not?" "Yes," said Brave Heart, "I am as strong as any man. But who are you?" "I am Red Plume," replied the little man. "Stay and smoke the peace pipe with me." Presently Red Plume said, "I am small, but I am strong. Let us wrestle together, to see which of us is the stronger. If I fall, you must say, 'I have conquered Red Plume.'" Then Brave Heart wrestled with the little man. He found that Red Plume was indeed very strong. He felt himself growing weaker each moment. But at last he succeeded in tripping the man. Then Brave Heart cried, "I have conquered Red Plume!" Instantly, to Brave Heart's surprise, the little man vanished. On the spot where he had stood lay an ear of corn. The corn was covered with greenish husks, and the red silk at the top was like a plume. It looked like the little man. Brave Heart looked down at the corn in amazement. Suddenly the ear of corn spoke. "Take me and pull off my green garments," said the ear of corn. "Plant my kernels in the ground and cover them with soft soil. Break my cob into small pieces and throw them near the trees at the edge of the forest. Then depart, and return when the next moon is high in the heavens." Brave Heart did as he was told. Then he went to his canoe and paddled back to his home. He returned when the next moon was high in the heavens. He found the plain covered with tender green plants. Near the edge of the forest green vines were growing. Brave Heart heard some one speaking from the ground. "Come again, before the Moon of Falling Leaves," were the words he heard. One day, when the summer was nearly over, Brave Heart paddled his canoe along the island as far as the plain. It was almost time for the Moon of Falling Leaves. There, near the spot where he had wrestled with the little man, stood a field of ripe corn. The red tassels nodded in the breezes, and the leaves rustled in the wind. Near the forest were great yellow pumpkins ripening on the vines. Brave Heart pulled some ears of ripe corn and gathered some of the pumpkins. Then he built a hot fire and roasted the ears of corn. How delicious the roasted corn tasted! Once more Red Plume spoke, again from the cornfield. "You have conquered me, Brave Heart. If you had not done so, you would have been destroyed. By your strength, you have won the Gift of Corn." Then Brave Heart was glad. He hastened to his people and brought them back once more to live, ever after, on their beautiful island. And always the people blessed him for the gift of the precious corn. Brave Heart had conquered Red Plume. A BOY'S SONG Where the pools are bright and deep, Where the gray trout lies asleep, Up the river and o'er the lea, That's the way for Billy and me. Where the blackbird sings the latest, Where the hawthorn blooms the sweetest, Where the nestlings chirp and flee, That's the way for Billy and me. Where the mowers mow the cleanest, Where the hay lies thick and greenest, There to trace the homeward bee, That's the way for Billy and me. Where the hazel bank is steepest, Where the shadow falls the deepest, Where the clustering nuts fall free, That's the way for Billy and me. Why the boys should drive away Little sweet maidens from the play, Or love to banter and fight so well, That's the thing I never could tell. But this I know, I love to play Through the meadow, amid the hay; Up the water and o'er the lea, That's the way for Billy and me. JAMES HOGG. THE FROGS' TRAVELS Long, long ago, in the country of Japan, there were two frogs. One of the frogs lived in a pond near Tokio, and the other lived in a little stream near Kioto. One fine morning in early spring, these two frogs decided that they would travel forth to see the world. Strangely enough, though they had never heard of each other, the same thought came to each frog at the same time. The first frog started along the road which led from Tokio to Kioto. He found the journey difficult and the road hard to travel. So, when he had hopped to the top of a high hill halfway, he decided to stop a while and rest. The other frog started out on the same road, but from Kioto. It took him a long time to reach the hill where the first frog was resting. The two frogs met at the top of the hill. They were delighted to make each other's acquaintance. "Greetings, friend!" said the first of the two frogs. "Where are you going?" "I have a great desire to see the world, and especially to visit Tokio. I am on my way for a visit to Tokio now," replied the second frog. "There is no need of hurrying. Let us rest here and stretch our limbs," said the first frog. "What a pity that we are not taller!" said the Kioto frog. "Why?" asked the Tokio frog. "If we were taller, we could see both towns from this hill. Then we should be able to tell whether or not it were worth while to continue our journey," said the Kioto frog. "Oh, we can easily find that out!" replied the other. "We can stand on our hind legs and take hold of one another. Then each can look at the town toward which he is traveling," he added. "A fine idea! Let us try it at once." The two frogs stood upon their hind legs, holding each other tightly to keep from falling. The Tokio frog turned toward Kioto, and the Kioto frog turned toward Tokio. The foolish frogs forgot that their eyes were on the backs of their heads. Although their noses pointed toward the places to which they wished to go, their eyes beheld the towns from which they had just come. "Indeed, I shall travel no further!" the first frog exclaimed. "Kioto is exactly like Tokio. I shall go home at once," he added. "Tokio is only a copy of Kioto," said the other frog. "It is not worth while to take the trouble to journey there!" he added disdainfully. The two frogs bade each other a polite farewell, and each returned to his own home town. To the end of their lives, the two frogs believed that Tokio and Kioto were really exactly alike. Neither of the frogs ever again tried to see the world. THE MERCHANT'S CARAVAN Once there was a merchant who had fine silks and rugs to sell. He wished to send his goods to a country on the other side of the sandy desert. The merchant owned a large caravan of camels, and he employed many men. Camels were the only animals strong enough to travel over the desert with the heavy loads. For many days, Abdul the merchant and his men had been preparing for the journey. The canvas tents and the poles were placed upon one camel. Great leather bottles of water were loaded upon another camel. Firewood and bags of rice and barley meal were placed upon still another. It required many camels to carry the merchant's goods. At last the caravan was ready for the journey. The sun shone steadily, making the sand so hot that no one could walk upon it in the daytime. But at night both men and camels could travel easily. So Abdul the merchant said to the men, "Be ready to start after sunset to-night. Give the camels plenty of water to drink, and feed them well, for we shall have a long, hard journey." Abdul and his men traveled all that night. One man was the pilot. He rode ahead, for he knew the stars, and by them he could guide the caravan. At daybreak they stopped. They spread the canvas tents and fed the camels. They built fires, cooked the rice, and made cakes of the barley meal. During the day, the men rested in the shade of the tents. After the evening meal, the caravan started again on its way. They had traveled thus for three long, silent nights. Early on the third morning, the camels raised their heads, stretched their nostrils, and hastened eagerly forward. The pilot cried, "The camels smell water and grass. An oasis is near!" Before long they could see palm trees, with their spreading leaves waving in the soft breeze. Joyfully they rested during the day. The camels drank freely from the cool spring. The men filled the great leather bottles with fresh water. In the evening, refreshed and happy, the men continued the journey. So they traveled night after night, resting during the heat of the day. At last, one morning the pilot said, "We shall soon reach the end of our journey." The men were very glad to hear this, for they were weary, and the camels needed rest. After supper that night Abdul said, "Throw away the firewood and most of the water. It will lighten the burden of the camels. By to-morrow we shall reach the city." When the caravan started that evening, the pilot led the way as usual, but after a while, weary with many nights of watching, he fell asleep. All night long the caravan traveled. At daybreak the pilot awoke and looked at the last star, fading in the morning light. "Halt!" he called. "The camels must have turned while I slept. We are at the place from which we started yesterday." There was no water to drink. There was no firewood to cook the food. The men spread the tents and lay down under them, saying, "The wood and the water are gone. We are lost!" But Abdul said to himself, "This is no time to rest. I must find water. If I give way to despair, all will be lost." Then Abdul started away from the tent, watching the ground closely. He walked and walked. At last he saw a tuft of grass. "There must be water somewhere under the sand, or this grass would not be here," thought the merchant. He ran back to the tent, shouting and calling, "Bring an ax and a spade. Come quickly!" The men jumped up and ran with the merchant to the place where the grass was growing. They began to dig in the sand, and presently they struck a rock. Abdul jumped down into the hole and put his ear close to the rock. "Water! Water!" he cried. "I hear water running under this great rock. We must not despair!" Then, raising his ax above his head, he struck a heavy blow. Again and again he struck the rock. At last the rock broke, and a stream of water, clear as crystal, filled the hole almost before the merchant could jump out of it. A shout of joy burst from the lips of the men. They drank the water eagerly, and afterwards led the camels to the spring. Then they set up a pole, to which they fastened a flag, so that other traders might find the well. In the evening, the men again started on their journey, and they reached the city the very next day. QUEEN HULDA AND THE FLAX There was once a poor peasant, Hans by name. He lived with his wife and children in a valley at the foot of a snow-capped mountain. Hans often drove his sheep to pasture up the mountain side. He always carried his crossbow with him, to protect the sheep. He was a skillful marksman. Once in a while, Hans would shoot a deer. The deer meat would serve as food for his family during many days. One day Hans was watching his sheep while they grazed on the mountain side. Suddenly a deer appeared. Its spreading antlers glittered in the morning sunlight with wonderful brightness. The deer bounded across the pasture to the rocks higher up the mountain. Hans followed quickly, hoping to approach near enough to shoot an arrow. From rock to rock, higher and higher, Hans followed the deer, until at last they were at the summit of the mountain. They sped over the snow until the deer disappeared in the Blue Grotto. Hans followed more slowly, along a dark and narrow tunnel that led to the Blue Grotto. Suddenly he caught a glimpse of a bright light in the distance. He walked on and soon reached a brightly lighted cave. From the walls and ceiling of the cave hung many wonderful crystals and precious stones. A tall woman dressed in pure white stood in the midst of the cave. A golden girdle was fastened about her waist. A crown set with jewels rested on her head. In her hand she held a bunch of blue flowers. Lovely maidens in dainty robes, with graceful wreaths of Alpine roses on their heads, attended their queen. Overcome with wonder, Hans knelt before the beautiful woman. As in a dream, he heard her say very softly, "Choose for yourself what you will of my treasures--gold, or silver, or precious stones." "Most gracious queen," replied Hans, "I ask only for the flowers in your hand." The queen was pleased, and she gave the flowers to Hans at once. "You have chosen well," said she. "Take also these seeds and sow them in your fields." Suddenly a peal of thunder shook the grotto. When it had ceased, Hans found himself standing alone on the mountain. When Hans reached home, he showed his wife the blue flowers and the seeds that had been given him by the queen. "Wonderful crystals and precious stones hang from the walls and ceiling of the cave, but the queen is more beautiful than all!" exclaimed Hans. "Why did you not choose some of the diamonds and gold?" cried his wife, and she scolded Hans roundly, because he had taken only flowers and seeds. Hans made no reply, but he went to the fields and plowed the ground. Then he sowed carefully the seeds that the queen had given him. The weeks passed by. Tiny green leaves began to show above the ground. The plants grew taller and taller, and then the blue flowers began to appear. The flowers were so beautiful that even the angry wife was pleased. She had never seen anything like them. Hans watched his fields day and night. One moonlight night, he saw the lovely queen of the Blue Grotto walking about among the flowers, with her maidens. They seemed to be guarding the blossoms. At last the flowers had withered, and the seeds were ripe. Then the queen of the Blue Grotto appeared at the cottage door. The queen of the Blue Grotto said, "I am Queen Hulda. I have come to teach you how to spin and weave." "The blue flowers that your husband chose were the wonderful flax," added the queen. "I love it very much." Queen Hulda taught Hans and his wife how to spin and weave linen cloth. Many people bought the linen and the flax seeds, so that Hans and his wife became very rich. Every year Queen Hulda and her maidens watched over the fields. Hans was very happy, because he had chosen the blue flowers of the wonderful flax. ALADDIN'S LAMP Oh, whither away, ye children dear! To Fairy Grove in Wonderland! The trees bend low with a wondrous glows Diamonds and rubies the fruit, and lo, Gather the gems, for you they grow. So hither hie, ye children dear! To Fairy Grove in Wonderland! Welcome prince and princess gay, Elf and fay and sprite at play, Dancing till the dawn of day. Then hasten all, ye children dear! To enter the Realm of Wonderland! No giant or genie need cause you alarm, Treasures they'll give, and keep away harm, For ALADDIN'S LAMP is the hidden charm. ALADDIN AND THE MAGIC LAMP Aladdin was a poor boy who lived in a city of Persia. His mother was a widow. She supported herself by weaving mats. One day Aladdin was playing in the street. A tall, dark man stood watching him. When the game was finished, the man beckoned to Aladdin to come to him. "What is your name, my boy?" asked the man, who was a Magician. "My name is Aladdin," answered the boy. He wondered who the stranger might be. "And what is your father's name?" the Magician asked. "My father was Mustapha the tailor, but he died when I was only two years of age," replied Aladdin. "Alas!" cried the Magician, pretending to weep. "He was my brother, and you must be my nephew. I am your long lost uncle." Then he embraced Aladdin and gave him five gold coins, saying, "Come with me, and I will show you the sights." They went from the city, through pretty gardens, into the open country. They walked a long distance. The Magician gave Aladdin some delicious fruit to eat and told him wonderful stories. The lad scarcely noticed how very far they had gone. At last they reached a valley between two mountains. The Magician stood still for a moment and looked about him. "Ah!" he exclaimed. "This is the very place for which I have been searching. Gather some sticks. I will kindle a fire." Soon the fire was burning merrily. The Magician took a curious powder from his girdle. He mumbled strange words as he sprinkled it upon the flames. In an instant, the earth beneath their feet trembled, and they heard a rumbling sound like distant thunder. Then the ground opened in front of them. There lay a large flat stone with a brass ring fastened to the top. "A wonderful treasure lies hidden below," said the Magician. "Obey me, and it will soon be ours." Then Aladdin grasped the ring in the way the Magician told him to do, and easily lifted the stone. "Now," said the Magician, "go down the steps which you see before you. You will come to three great halls. "Pass through the halls, but be careful to touch nothing, not even the walls, for if you do, you will certainly die. When you have passed through the halls, you will reach a garden of fruit trees. In a niche in the garden wall, you will see a lighted lamp. Put out the light, pour the oil from the bowl, and bring the lamp to me." Then the Magician placed a magic ring upon Aladdin's finger, to guard him, and commanded him to go at once in search of the lamp. Aladdin found everything exactly as the Magician had said. He went through the halls and the garden until he found the lighted lamp. When he had poured out the oil and had placed the lamp inside his coat, he began to look about him. Upon the trees were fruits of every color of the rainbow. Some were clear as crystal, some were ruby red, and others sparkled with a green, blue, or purple light. The leaves of the trees were silver and gold. Aladdin did not know that these fruits were precious stones--diamonds, rubies, emeralds, and amethysts, but they looked so beautiful that he filled his pockets with them as he passed back through the garden. The Magician stood at the top of the steps as Aladdin began to climb upward. "Give the lamp to me," he cried, holding out his hand. "Wait until I reach the top of the steps," Aladdin answered. "Hand the lamp to me at once!" screamed the Magician. "Not until I am safely out," replied Aladdin. Then in a rage the Magician rushed to the fire. He threw more of the curious powder upon the fire and muttered the same strange words as before. Instantly the stone slipped back into its place. The earth closed over it, and Aladdin was left in darkness. The Magician at once left Persia and went to Africa. Poor Aladdin! He groped his way back through the halls to the beautiful garden of shining fruits, but he could find no way of escape. For two days, he cried and shouted for help. At last, as he clasped his hands in despair, he happened to rub the magic ring which the Magician had placed on his finger. Instantly a Genie rose out of the earth and stood before him. "What is thy will, my master?" asked the Genie. "I am the Slave of the Ring. I serve the one who wears it." "Deliver me from this place!" cried Aladdin. Scarcely had he spoken these words when the earth opened. Aladdin found himself at his mother's door. He showed his mother the lamp and the colored fruit, which he still carried in his pockets. "I will tell you all that has happened," he said, "but first give me something to eat, for I am very hungry." "Alas!" said the mother. "I have neither money nor food." "Sell the old lamp that I brought back with me," said Aladdin. "The lamp would bring a higher price if it were clean and bright," replied his mother, and she began to rub the lamp. No sooner had she given the first rub than a great Genie appeared. "What is thy will?" asked the Genie. "I am the Slave of the Lamp. I serve the one who holds the lamp." Aladdin's mother was so terrified that she dropped the lamp. Aladdin managed to grasp it, and say, "Bring me something to eat." The Slave of the Lamp disappeared. He returned, bringing a dainty breakfast served upon plates of pure gold. Aladdin now knew what use to make of the magic ring and the wonderful lamp. His mother and he lived happily for years. One day the Sultan ordered all of the people to stay at home and close their shutters, while his daughter, the Princess, passed by on her way to the bath. Aladdin had heard how beautiful the Princess was, and he greatly desired to see her face. This seemed impossible, for the Princess never went out without a veil which covered her entirely. He peeped through the shutters as she passed by. The Princess happened to raise her veil, and Aladdin saw her face. The moment Aladdin's eyes rested upon the Princess, he loved her with all his heart. "Mother," he cried, "I have seen the Princess, and I have made up my mind to marry her. Go at once to the Sultan and beg him to give his daughter to me." Aladdin's mother laughed at the idea. The next day, however, she went to the palace, carrying the magic fruit as a gift. No one paid any attention to her. She went every day for a week, before the Sultan noticed that she was there. "Who is the poor woman who comes here every day?" he asked. "Bring her forward. I wish to speak to her." Aladdin's mother knelt before the throne and told the Sultan of her son's love for the Princess. "He sends you this gift," she continued, presenting the magic fruit. The Sultan was astonished at the gift. He exclaimed, "Here indeed is a gift worthy of my daughter! Shall I not give her to the one who sends it?" Then the Sultan told Aladdin's mother to return in three months' time, and he would give the Princess to her son in marriage. When the time had passed, Aladdin again sent his mother to the Sultan. "I shall abide by my word," said the Sultan, "but he who marries my daughter must first send me forty golden basins filled to the brim with precious stones. "These basins must be carried by forty black slaves led by forty white ones, all of them dressed in rich attire." Aladdin's mother returned home. "Your hopes are ended," she cried. "Not so, mother," answered Aladdin. Then he rubbed the Magician's lamp. When the Genie appeared, Aladdin told him to provide the forty golden basins filled with jewels, and the eighty slaves. When the procession reached the palace, the slaves presented the jewels to the Sultan. He was so delighted with the gift that he was willing to have Aladdin marry the Princess without delay. "Go and tell your son that he may wed my daughter this very day," he said to Aladdin's mother. Aladdin was delighted to hear the news. He ordered the Genie to bring a rich purple robe for him to wear; a beautiful white horse to ride upon; twenty slaves to attend him; six slaves to attend his mother; and ten thousand gold pieces to give to the people. At last everything was ready. Aladdin, dressed in his royal robe, started for the palace. As he rode on the beautiful white horse, he scattered the gold coins among the people. They shouted with joy as they followed the procession. At the palace the Sultan greeted Aladdin joyfully and ordered the wedding feast to be prepared at once. But Aladdin said, "Not so, your Majesty. I will not marry the Princess until I have built her a palace." Then he returned home and once more summoned the Slave of the Lamp. "Build the finest palace in the world," ordered Aladdin. "Let the walls be of marble set with precious stones. In the center build a great hall whose walls shall be of silver and gold, lighted by great windows on each side. These windows are to be set with diamonds and rubies. Depart! Lose no time in obeying my commands!" When Aladdin looked out of the window the next morning, there stood the most beautiful palace in the world. Then Aladdin and his mother returned to the Sultan's palace, and the wedding took place amid great rejoicing. Aladdin was gentle and kind to all. He became a great favorite at the court, and the people loved him well. For a time, Aladdin and his bride lived happily. But there was trouble coming. Far away in Africa, the Magician who had pretended to be Aladdin's uncle learned of his escape with the magic lamp. The Magician traveled from Africa to Persia, disguised as a merchant. He carried some copper lamps and went through the streets of the city crying, "New lamps for old!" Now it happened that Aladdin had gone hunting, and the Princess sat alone near an open window. She saw the merchant and sent a slave to find out what the man called. The slave came back laughing. He told the Princess that the merchant offered to give new lamps for old ones. The Princess laughed, too. Then she pointed to the old lamp that stood in a niche of the wall. "There is an old lamp," she said. "Take it and see if the man really will exchange it for a new one." When the Magician saw the lamp, he knew that it was the one for which he was searching. He took the magic lamp eagerly and gave the slave all of the new lamps. Then the Magician hurried out of the city. When he was alone, he rubbed the magic lamp, and the Genie stood before him. "What is thy will, master?" said he. "I command thee to carry the palace of Aladdin, with the Princess inside, to Africa," said the Magician. Instantly the palace disappeared. The Sultan looked out of his window the next morning. No palace was to be seen. "This has been done by magic!" the Sultan exclaimed. He sent his soldiers to bring Aladdin home in chains. They met him riding back from the hunt. They carried him to the Sultan. When Aladdin was allowed to speak, he asked why he was made prisoner. "Wretch!" exclaimed the Sultan. "Come and I will show you." Then he led Aladdin to the window and showed him that where the palace had been there was only an empty space. Aladdin begged the Sultan to spare his life and grant him forty days in which to find the Princess. So Aladdin was set free. He searched everywhere, but he could find no trace of the Princess. In despair, he wrung his hands. As he did so, he rubbed the magic ring. Instantly the Slave of the Ring appeared. "What is thy will, master?" asked the Genie. "Bring back the Princess and the palace," said Aladdin. "That is not within my power," said the Genie. "Only the Slave of the Lamp can bring back the palace." "Then take me to the place where the palace now stands, and set me down under the window of the Princess." Almost before Aladdin had finished these words, he found himself in Africa, beneath a window of his own palace. "Princess! Princess!" called Aladdin. The Princess opened the window. With a cry of joy, Aladdin entered and embraced the Princess. "Tell me, dear," said he, "what has become of the old lamp that stood in the niche of the wall?" "Alas!" replied the Princess. "A man came through the streets, crying, 'New lamps for old!' I gave him the lamp that stood in the niche, and the next I knew I was here." "The man is a Magician. He wished only to secure the magic lamp," said Aladdin. "The Magician is here," said the Princess. "He carries the magic lamp hidden in his robes during the day, and he places it under his pillow at night." While the Magician was sleeping that night, Aladdin stole softly into the room and took the magic lamp from under the pillow. Then he rubbed the lamp and the Genie appeared. "I command you to carry the Princess and the palace back to Persia," cried Aladdin. The following morning, the Sultan looked out of the window. There, to his surprise, stood the palace of Aladdin, in the very place from which it had disappeared. Aladdin and the Princess lived happily for many years. When the Sultan died, they ruled in his place. They were beloved by the people, and there was peace in all the land. THE WHITING AND THE SNAIL "Will you walk a little faster?" Said a whiting to a snail, "There's a porpoise close behind us, And he's treading on my tail. See how eagerly the lobsters And the turtles all advance! They are waiting on the shingle-- Will you come and join the dance? "You can really have no notion How delightful it will be, When they take us up and throw us With the lobsters out to sea! But the snail replied, "Too far, too far!" And gave a look askance-- Said he thanked the whiting kindly, But he would not join the dance. "What matters it how far we go?" His scaly friend replied, "There is another shore you know, Upon the other side. The further off from England The nearer is to France; Then turn not pale, beloved snail, But come and join the dance." LEWIS CARROLL. THE BONFIRE IN THE SEA Long, long ago, in Australia, it is said, fishes could travel as easily on land as they could swim in water. It happened, so the story goes, that the whole fish tribe had been playing tag along a sandy beach near the sea. At last they became tired of the game, Fin-fin, the leader of the fishes, said, "Let us coast down the great, black rock." Now beyond the level shore where the fishes had been playing tag, there were cliffs and rocks. Some of the rocks rose straight out of the water, others sloped toward the sandy beach. High above the rest towered the great, black rock. The fishes climbed to the top Then, one after another, they followed the leader, each gliding head foremost down the rock. It was fine sport! Then the fishes formed a circle and danced, while Fin-fin slid down the rock alone. Again and again he climbed to the top and slid down, as swiftly as an arrow glides from the bow. Finally he turned a somersault at the foot of the rock, and then called to the fishes to stop dancing. "It is time to cook dinner," said Fin-fin. "There is a good place for a camp under the trees on the tall cliff yonder." The fishes climbed to the top of the cliff overhanging the sea. They gathered wood and heaped it high at the edge of the cliff. When all was ready for the bonfire, Fin-fin rubbed two sticks briskly together. Soon a spark fell upon the wood, and instantly the flames leaped upward. Then the fishes put some roots in front of the fire to roast. While the roots were cooking, the fishes stretched themselves under the trees. They had almost fallen asleep, when suddenly great drops of rain came splashing down. A dark cloud, which they had not noticed, had covered the sun. The rain fell hard and fast and soon put out the fire. Now, you know, this was very serious, for people in those days had no matches, and it was difficult to light a fire. Then, too, an icy wind began to blow, and the fishes were soon shivering in the cold. "We shall freeze to death unless we can build a fire again," cried Fin-fin. He tried to kindle a flame by rubbing two sticks together. He could not produce even one spark. "It is of no use," said Fin-fin. "The wood is too wet. We shall have to wait for the sun to shine again." A tiny fish came forward and bowed before Fin-fin, saying, "Ask my father, Flying-fish, to light the fire. He is skilled in magic, and he can do more than most fishes." So Fin-fin asked Flying-fish to light the fire once more. Flying-fish knelt before the smoldering ashes and fanned briskly with his fins. A tiny thread of smoke curled upward, and a feeble red glow could be seen in the ashes. When the tribe of fishes saw this, they crowded close around Flying-fish, keeping their backs toward the cold wind. He told them to go to the other side, because he wanted to fan the fire. By and by the spark grew into a flame, and the bonfire burned brightly. "Bring more wood," cried Flying-fish. The fishes gathered wood and piled it upon the fire. The red flames roared, and sputtered, and crackled. "We shall soon be warm now," said Fin-fin. Then the fishes crowded around the fire, closer and closer. Suddenly a blast of wind swept across the cliff from the direction of the land, and blew the fire toward the fishes. They sprang back, forgetting that they were on the edge of the cliff. And down, down, down, went the whole fish tribe to the bottom of the sea. The water felt warm, for the strong wind had driven the fire down below, too. There, indeed, was the bonfire at the bottom of the sea, burning as brightly as ever. More wonderful still, the fire never went out, as fires do on land. The water at the bottom of the sea has been warm ever since that day. That is why, on frosty days, the fishes disappear from the surface of the water. They dive to the bottom of the sea, where they can keep warm and comfortable, around the magic bonfire. AT LEAST, SO SOME PEOPLE SAY. ROBINSON CRUSOE Many years ago, there lived in England a boy whose name was Robinson Crusoe. Though he had never been near the sea, Crusoe's dearest wish was to become a sailor and go on a ship to foreign lands. This grieved his mother very much, and she begged the boy to remain at home. His father also warned him of danger, saying, "If you go abroad, you will be most miserable. I cannot give my consent." It happened that Crusoe visited Hull, a large town by the sea, to say good-by to a companion who was about to sail for London. He could not resist the chance of going on a voyage, and without even sending a message to his father and mother, he went aboard the ship and sailed away. Robinson Crusoe met with many strange adventures at sea. On his first voyage, the ship was wrecked in a fearful storm, and the crew was saved by sailors from another ship. Next, Crusoe went on a voyage to Africa. On the way there the ship was captured by pirates. The captain of the pirates made a slave of the boy. The man took Crusoe to his home and made him dig in the garden and work in the house. One day Crusoe hid some food in a small boat and managed to escape, with a boy. They sailed for many long days and nights, keeping close to shore. They did not dare to land, because of the lions and other wild animals. After a time they saw a Portuguese vessel. The captain allowed them to go aboard. This ship was bound for South America. They finally landed in Brazil. Robinson Crusoe lived on a plantation in Brazil for several years. He raised sugar and tobacco. For a time he was happy and made money. But Robinson Crusoe was never contented anywhere for very long. When a merchant asked him to go on another voyage to the coast of Africa, he consented, and he had soon started on this new venture. At first the weather was very hot. Then one day, without warning, a hurricane burst upon them. The wind raged for twelve days, and the ship was nearly torn to pieces. No one expected to escape. After a time the wind abated somewhat. The captain ordered the course of the ship changed, but soon another storm followed, even worse than the first. Early one morning, while the wind was still roaring and the ship was rolling from side to side, a sailor who was peering through the fog suddenly cried out, "Land! Land!" At the same moment, the vessel struck on a sand bar, with a grating sound. The waves dashed over the deck of the ship. With great difficulty, the boats were lowered at the side of the ship. All the sailors climbed into the boats, for they knew not at what moment the ship would break to pieces. The men rowed bravely toward the shore, but suddenly a mountain-like wave rolled over them and upset the boats. Crusoe was a very fine swimmer, but no one could swim in such a sea. It was only good fortune and his alertness that landed him safely ashore. Wave after wave washed him further and further upon the beach. At last a wave left him beside a rock, to which he clung until the water flowed back to the sea. Then he jumped up and ran for his life. Robinson Crusoe was the only person from the ship who was not drowned. He was thankful indeed for his escape. After resting for a time, Crusoe looked about him. He was wet, cold, and hungry. It was growing very dark, and he was afraid of wild animals. He found his knife still in his pocket, so he cut a stick with which to protect himself. Then he climbed into a tree and hid among the branches. He was soon sound asleep. When Crusoe awoke in the morning, the storm was over, and the sea was calm. He found that the ship had been driven by the waves much nearer to the shore. By noon the water was low. The tide had ebbed so far out that he could walk almost to the ship. He swam for a short distance. When lie reached the vessel, he could find no way to climb up, but at last he discovered a rope hanging over the side. By the help of the rope, he managed to pull himself to the deck. Everything in the stern of the ship was safe and dry, and the food was not spoiled. Crusoe filled his pockets with biscuits and ate them as he went about his work. He had no time to spare. Crusoe needed a boat, to carry to the shore many necessary things. "It is of no use to wish for a boat," he thought, "I must set to work to make one." First he took some spars of wood and a topmast or two, that were on the deck, and threw them overboard, tying each with a rope so that it would not drift away. Then he climbed down the side of the ship, and fastened the spars together to make a raft. It was a long time before he was able to make the raft strong enough to hold the things that he wished to take ashore. Crusoe loaded the raft with three seamen's chests. He had filled these chests with bread, rice, cheese, dried goat's flesh, and other articles of food. He also took all the clothing he could find. Then Crusoe dragged a carpenter's tool chest to the side of the ship. He placed this on the raft. Nothing on the ship was of more use to him than the tools in this chest. He secured guns, pistols, and shot, also two barrels of dry gunpowder. The trouble now was to land his cargo safely. Crusoe had only a broken oar, but he rigged up a sail, and the tide helped him. At last he reached the mouth of a little river. The strong tide carried him to land. He was able to push the raft into a little bay. When the tide flowed out, the raft was left high and dry on the sand, and everything was taken safely ashore. Then Crusoe thought he would look about the country. He climbed to the top of a high hill. He found that he was on an island, and that there was no sign of people, and nothing living in sight excepting great flocks of birds. Day after day, Crusoe returned to the ship. He built more rafts and brought from the vessel everything that he considered useful. He made a tent of sails to protect the things that could be spoiled by the sun or rain. After several weeks, the weather changed, and a high wind began to blow. One morning, when Crusoe awoke, he found that the ship had broken to pieces and was no longer to be seen. However, he had saved from the wreck everything that he needed. Then Robinson Crusoe decided to find a better place for his tent. There was a little plain on the bide of a hill. At the further end was a rock with a hollow place like the entrance to a cave; but there was really not any cave or way into the rock at all. Here he placed his tent. In a half circle, in front of the tent, Crusoe drove two rows of strong stakes sharpened at the top, about six inches apart. He laid pieces of rope between the stakes. The fence was about five arid a half feet high and so strong that no one could enter. There was no door, so Crusoe climbed in and out by means of a ladder which he always drew up after him. Before closing up the end of the fence, Crusoe carried within all the articles that he had saved from the wreck. He rigged a double tent inside the fence, to protect all from the sun and rain. When this was finished, Crusoe began to dig out the rock. It was not very hard, and soon, behind his tent, he had a cave in which he placed his powder, in small parcels. Robinson Crusoe was very comfortable. He had saved from the wreck two cats and a dog. He had ink, pens, and paper, so that he could write down all that happened. "But what shall I do when the ink is gone?" thought Crusoe. "I must find some way of keeping track of the time." He set up a wooden cross, upon which he cut with a knife the date of his landing. Each day he cut another notch in the wood. Every seventh notch was twice as long as those for the days between, and the notch for every first day of the month was twice as long again. Thus Crusoe kept a calendar, or weekly, monthly, and yearly reckoning of time. By and by, he found that there were many goats on the island, and many pigeons which he could obtain for food. After a time, Crusoe decided that his cave was too small. As he was sure that there were no wild beasts on the island, he began to make his cave larger, and he finally built a tunnel through the rock outside his fence. Then he began to hang his belongings upon the sides of the cave, and to arrange them in order. He even built shelves on the walls, and made a door for the entrance. He also made a table and some chairs. During all this time, Robinson Crusoe climbed the hill daily. He looked over the lonely waters hoping--always hoping--to see the sail of a ship. At last he gave up all hope of ever leaving the island. Several years passed by. The clothing that Crusoe had saved from the ship was worn out. He made himself clothes from the skins of the goats on the island. He made also an umbrella of goat skins, to shield him from the hot rays of the sun. Though the food which he had taken from the ship had long since been eaten, he raised plenty of barley from seed which he had found in a little bag on the ship. The goats and pigeons on the island supplied him with meat. He had become very tired of never hearing a voice. There were many green parrots among the trees and he decided to catch one and teach it to talk. He found it difficult to obtain one, but finally he did catch a young parrot. At first he could not teach it to say a word, but at last when he came back to his tent from a day on the island, the parrot called, "Robin, Robin Crusoe! Poor Robin Crusoe, where have you been?" One morning, as Crusoe started for his canoe, a strange thing happened. He was walking along, and what do you suppose he saw? The print of a man's foot in the sand! The sight made him cold all over. He looked around. He listened, but there was not a sound, yet there in the sand was the print of a man's foot--the toes, the heel, and the sole. He did not go to the boat. Instead he hastened back to his cave. He was so frightened that it was some time before he ventured out again. About a year after this, Crusoe was surprised one morning to see a bonfire on the shore. He looked through his spyglass and saw a company of savages who had landed in canoes and had built a fire. They had two prisoners whom they were about to kill. One of them saw a chance to escape, and he made a sudden dash for his life, running with great speed straight toward Robinson Crusoe. Crusoe rescued this man. The man was very grateful. Crusoe made him understand, after a time, that his name was to be Friday. It was on Friday that the man had been saved. Crusoe taught him to say "Yes," and "No," and also to say "Master." Friday became the faithful servant and companion of Robinson Crusoe. Many more years passed. One morning Friday came running toward Crusoe, shouting, "Master! Master! They come!" Crusoe ran to the beach and looked toward the sea. There he saw a large sailing vessel making for the shore. The sailing vessel proved to be an English ship. Crusoe's stay on the desert island had come to an end. When he took leave of the island, he carried on board the sailing vessel his goat skin cap and umbrella, also the parrot. So after twenty-eight long years Robinson Crusoe and his faithful servant, Friday, sailed away. The voyage was long and hard, but at last they reached the coast of England. THE WONDERFUL WORLD Great, wide, beautiful, wonderful World, With the wonderful water round you curled, And the wonderful grass upon your breast, World, you are beautifully dressed! The wonderful air is over me, And the wonderful wind is shaking the tree; It walks on the water, and whirls the mills, And talks to itself on the tops of the hills. You friendly Earth, how far do you go, With wheat fields that nod, and rivers that flow, And cities and gardens and oceans and isles, And people upon you for thousands of miles? Ah! you are so great, and I am so small, I hardly can think of you, World, at all; And yet, when I said my prayers to-day, A whisper within me seemed to say: You are more than the Earth, Though you are such a dot; You can love and think, and the Earth cannot. THE MAGIC GIRDLE Once upon a time, a little cobbler sat at his bench mending a pair of shoes. He whistled a merry tune as he worked. The day was very warm, and the wax which he had been using began to melt. In less time than it takes to tell it, a swarm, of flies lighted upon the melting wax. "Ho, ho!" exclaimed the little cobbler. "Who invited you to a feast?" He threw the shoe that he was mending, at the flies, and many fell dead from the blow. The cobbler counted the flies as they lay dead, and he said, "Not so bad! That blow should make me famous." Then the cobbler took a girdle and painted this rhyme upon it: Ha, ha! Ho, ho! Ten at one blow. "Now I shall travel around the world wearing this girdle, and it will make me famous," said the cobbler. So the queer little man put on the girdle and started out to seek his fortune. As he was entering a forest, he saw a bear walking along a narrow path. The cobbler was frightened. There was no way of escape. He waited to see what would happen. The bear growled and ran toward him. The cobbler stood with his girdle in sight. The bear read the words on the girdle: Ha, ha! Ho, ho! Ten at one blow. "Is it possible that this little man can kill TEN BEARS at one blow?" thought the bear, "I will be careful not to offend him." So the bear stood still and said, "Where are you going, my friend?" "Around the world to seek my fortune," proudly replied the cobbler. "Stay here for a time and dine with me. I know where there is some choice honey," said the bear, and he led the way to a hollow tree where the bees had stored their honey. But a hunter had set a trap in the tree, and as the bear reached for the honey--snap! His paw was caught fast in the trap. And that was the end of Mr. Bear! The cobbler quickly stripped off the skin of the animal, saying, "This will make a fine, warm blanket." Then he walked away, carrying the skin over his arm and whistling a merry tune. At last the cobbler reached the edge of the forest and began to climb a hill. Sitting on a rock overlooking the valley below was a giant. The cobbler's heart beat fast with fear. He walked bravely up to the giant, with his girdle in plain sight. "Good-day, friend," said the cobbler. "Here you sit at your ease. Do you not wish to travel with me to see the world?" the cobbler added. When the giant saw the little stranger walking up to him so boldly, he was greatly surprised. "How dare you enter the land of the giants!" he was about to exclaim. At that moment, he saw the girdle and read the words: Ha, ha! Ho, ho! Ten at one blow. "Is it possible that this little man can kill TEN GIANTS at one blow?" thought the giant. "I will be careful not to offend him." So the giant said, "Good-day, my friend. I see that though you are a little man, you have great strength. Let us prove which of us is the stronger." Then the giant led the cobbler to a great oak tree that had fallen to the ground. "Help me carry this tree to yonder cave," he said. "Certainly," said the cobbler. "You take the trunk on your shoulder, and I will carry the top and branches of the tree, which, of course, are the heaviest part." The giant laid the trunk of the tree on his shoulder, but the cobbler sat at his ease among the branches, enjoying the ride. So the giant, who could not see what was going on behind him, had to carry the whole tree, and the little man in the bargain. There the cobbler sat, in the best of spirits, whistling a merry tune as though carrying a tree was mere sport. At last the giant could bear the weight no longer, and he shouted, "Hi, hi! I must let the tree fall." Then the cobbler sprang nimbly down, seized the tree with both hands, as if he had carried it all the way, and called to the giant, "Think of a big fellow like you not being able to carry a tree!" "Well," said the giant, "I will admit that you are the stronger. Come and spend the night in my cave." The cobbler followed the giant into the cave. There, sitting around a fire, were a number of giants. They were laughing and talking in a noisy manner, and they scarcely noticed the little man. The cobbler spread the bear's skin upon the floor near the fire. Then he lay down and pretended to sleep, but all the time he was watching to find a way of escape. At about midnight, the giants went to bed, and they were soon sleeping soundly. The cobbler seized a club which belonged to one of the giants, placed the bear's skin over his arm, and tiptoed out of the cave. He was soon far away from the giants. After many days, the cobbler reached the courtyard of the king's palace. He was very tired, so he spread the bear's skin upon the grass and lay down upon it. He placed the giant's club by his side. Soon he was fast asleep. Presently one of the king's soldiers came near. He was surprised to find the little man sleeping there, with a giant's club by his side. Then he spied the girdle and read the words: Ha, ha! Ho, ho! Ten at one blow. "Indeed!" thought the soldier. "This little man must have killed TEN BEARS at one blow, and TEN GIANTS besides." Then the soldier hurried away and told every one he met about the queer little man. The news spread until it reached the king. "Bring this mighty man to me," the king commanded. When the king read the words upon the girdle, he said, "You are the very one I wish to have fight for me in time of war." "I am ready to fight for you, O King!" said the cobbler. The king at once appointed the cobbler commander of his army. Not long after this, a war broke out. The king promised the hand of his daughter to the man who should conquer the enemy. The little cobbler, riding upon a white horse, commanded the king's army. What a queer leader he was! About his shoulders was thrown the bear's skin, held firmly by the wonderful girdle, and in one hand he carried the giant's club. When the enemy advanced, and the leader saw the queer commander of the king's army, he smiled and said, "We have little to fear from such a commander." Then he saw the curious girdle and read the words: Ha, ha! Ho, ho! Ten at one blow. "Is it possible that this little man can kill TEN COMMANDERS at one blow?" thought the leader. He turned his horse quickly and gave orders for the army to retreat. The cobbler followed the enemy and soon overtook the leader, whom he made prisoner. When the king saw the cobbler returning with the leader, he was delighted. But all at once he remembered the reward that he had promised to the victor. The princess refused to become the bride of one so small and so ugly as the cobbler. "What shall I do?" asked the king. "A king should never break his promise." Then the princess whispered to the king, "Try to take the little man's girdle from him. He will then lose his power." So the king said to the cobbler, "You may have the hand of the princess if you will give your girdle to me." This made the cobbler very unhappy, for he knew what good fortune the girdle had brought to him. But he smiled and answered in a cheerful voice. "I shall be honored, if your majesty will accept my girdle." He handed the precious girdle to the king. At that moment, something wonderful happened. Instead of an ugly little man, there stood a tall, handsome youth. The princess was very willing to become the bride of so handsome a youth. The king now gladly gave his consent to the marriage. Next day a great wedding feast was spread in honor of the marriage. After the king's death, the princess and her husband ruled the country. The magic girdle was placed over the throne. Ever afterwards, when the new king and queen appeared, the people would shout with great pride, "Ha, ha! Ho, ho! Ten at one blow." *** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORY HOUR READERS — BOOK THREE *** Updated editions will replace the previous one—the old editions will be renamed. Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project Gutenberg™ electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG™ concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away—you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark license, especially commercial redistribution. START: FULL LICENSE THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK To protect the Project Gutenberg™ mission of promoting the free distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work (or any other work associated in any way with the phrase “Project Gutenberg”), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project Gutenberg™ License available with this file or online at www.gutenberg.org/license. Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg™ electronic works 1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg™ electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property (trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works in your possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project Gutenberg™ electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8. 1.B. “Project Gutenberg” is a registered trademark. It may only be used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg™ electronic works even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project Gutenberg™ electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg™ electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below. 1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (“the Foundation” or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the United States and you are located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project Gutenberg™ mission of promoting free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg™ works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg™ name associated with the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg™ License when you share it without charge with others. 1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project Gutenberg™ work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any country other than the United States. 1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: 1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg™ License must appear prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg™ work (any work on which the phrase “Project Gutenberg” appears, or with which the phrase “Project Gutenberg” is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, copied or distributed: This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook. 1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg™ electronic work is derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase “Project Gutenberg” associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg™ trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. 1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg™ electronic work is posted with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked to the Project Gutenberg™ License for all works posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work. 1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg™ License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg™. 1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project Gutenberg™ License. 1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg™ work in a format other than “Plain Vanilla ASCII” or other format used in the official version posted on the official Project Gutenberg™ website (www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original “Plain Vanilla ASCII” or other form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg™ License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. 1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg™ works unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. 1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing access to or distributing Project Gutenberg™ electronic works provided that: • You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from the use of Project Gutenberg™ works calculated using the method you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg™ trademark, but he has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in Section 4, “Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.” • You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg™ License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg™ works. • You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of receipt of the work. • You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free distribution of Project Gutenberg™ works. 1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg™ electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of the Project Gutenberg™ trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. 1.F. 1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project Gutenberg™ collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg™ electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain “Defects,” such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment. 1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the “Right of Replacement or Refund” described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project Gutenberg™ trademark, and any other party distributing a Project Gutenberg™ electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further opportunities to fix the problem. 1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you ‘AS-IS’, WITH NO OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. 1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions. 1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone providing copies of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works in accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg™ work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg™ work, and (c) any Defect you cause. Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg™ Project Gutenberg™ is synonymous with the free distribution of electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from people in all walks of life. Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg™’s goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg™ collection will remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure and permanent future for Project Gutenberg™ and future generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org. Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit 501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal Revenue Service. The Foundation’s EIN or federal tax identification number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state’s laws. The Foundation’s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the Foundation’s website and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation Project Gutenberg™ depends upon and cannot survive without widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations ($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt status with the IRS. The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate. While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who approach us with offers to donate. International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate. Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg™ electronic works Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg™ concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project Gutenberg™ eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. Project Gutenberg™ eBooks are often created from several printed editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. Most people start at our website which has the main PG search facility: www.gutenberg.org. This website includes information about Project Gutenberg™, including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.