Happy Days for Boys and Girls. Various

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Happy Days for Boys and Girls - Various

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worth of toys, which made them feel as if they were full of business already.

      Later in the forenoon, Mr. Rogers sent for Harry and Sweetie to come and help dress his Christmas tree; and Christmas night his parlor was filled with poor children, for each of whom some useful gift hung on the tree. Milly was there by Sweetie’s invitation, and Mr. Rogers sent her home in his carriage, with the easiest chair that money could buy for her old lame mother. The tears filled his eyes as Milly thanked him again and again for all his kindness; and, as he shut the door after the last one, he said, —

      “Hereafter I will make it always a Merry Christmas for God’s needy ones.”

      I am sure he did, for he had Sweetie always near him. He used to call her his “Christmas Sweeting;” and then she would laugh, and say he was her “Golden Sweeting.”

      What is better than gold he gave the family: he found patrons for Mrs. Lawson, and customers for the shop, and placed Harry in a mercantile house, where he soon rose to be head clerk. The other children he put at school. Sweetie he never would let go very far out of his sight. He had her thoroughly and usefully educated, and no less than her mother, and brothers, and sister, did he bless the day when “Sweetie’s ship came in” —

      A ship which brought for every day

      A welcome hope, an added joy,

      A something sweet to do or say,

      And hosts of pleasures unalloyed,

      Its cargo, made of pleasant cares,

      Of daily duties to be done,

      Of smiles and laughter, songs and prayers,

      The glad, bright life of Happy Ones.

Margaret Field.

      NOTHING TO DO

      I HAVE sailed my boat and spun my top,

      And handled my last new ball;

      I trundled my hoop till I had to stop,

      And I swung till got a fall;

      I tumbled my books all out of the shelves,

      And hunted the pictures through;

      I’ve flung them where they may sort themselves,

      And now – I have nothing to do.

      The tower of Babel I built of blocks

      Came down with a crash to the floor;

      My train of cars ran over the rocks —

      I’ll warrant they’ll run no more;

      I have raced with Grip till I’m out of breath;

      My slate is broken in two,

      So I can’t draw monkeys. I’m tired to death

      Because I have nothing to do.

      I can see where the boys have gone to fish;

      They bothered me, too, to go,

      But for fun like that I hadn’t a wish,

      For I think it’s mighty “slow”

      To sit all day at the end of a rod

      For the sake of a minnow or two,

      Or to land, at the farthest, an eel on the sod:

      I’d rather have nothing to do.

      Maria has gone to the woods for flowers,

      And Lucy and Rose are away

      After berries. I’m sure they’ve been out for hours;

      I wonder what makes them stay?

      Ned wanted to saddle Brunette for me,

      But riding is nothing new;

      “I was thinking you’d relish a canter,” said he,

      “Because you have nothing to do.”

      I wish I was poor Jim Foster’s son,

      For he seems so happy and gay,

      When his wood is chopped and his work all done,

      With his little half hour of play;

      He neither has books nor top nor ball,

      Yet he’s singing the whole day through;

      But then he is never tired at all

      Because he has nothing to do.

      TWO “GENTLEMEN IN FUR CLOAKS.”

      THIS is the name given to the bears in Kamschatka by the Laplanders, who think they will be offended if they are called by their real name; and we may give the same name to the bears in the picture. They are Polar bears, who live in the seas round the North Pole, and fine white fur coats they have of their own. They are white on purpose, so that they may not be seen easily among all the snow and ice in which they live. The head of the Polar bear is very long and flat, the mouth and ears are small in comparison with other bears, the neck is long and thick, and the sole of the foot very large. Perhaps you will wonder how the bear manages to walk on the ice, as nobody is very likely to give him skates or snow-boots. To be sure, he has strong, thick claws, but they would not be of much use – they would only make him slip on the hard ice – but the sole of the foot is covered nearly all over with thick, woolly hair, so the bear walks as safely as old ladies do when they wrap list round their boots.

      The Polar bear likes to eat fish, though he will eat roots and berries when he can get no better, and he is a very good swimmer; he can dive, too, and make long leaps in the water. If he wants a boat, he has only to get on a loose piece of ice, and then he can float about at his ease.

      This is a full-grown bear, of course. Young bears cannot do all these things; they have to stay with their mothers on shore, where they eat seals and seaweed; the seaweed is their vegetable, I suppose. When the young bears travel and get tired, they get on their mother’s back, and ride there quite safely, whether in the water or on land.

      Bears are very fond of their young, and will do anything to defend them. There is a story told of a poor mother-bear and her two cubs which is almost too sad to tell, but it will make us think kindly of the bear, so I will tell it to you.

      Years ago a ship which had gone to the North Pole to make discoveries got fixed tight in the ice; one morning, while the ship was still unable to get loose, a man at the lookout gave warning that three bears were coming across the ice toward the ship. The crew had killed a walrus a few days before, and no doubt the bears had smelled it. The flesh of the walrus was roasting in a fire on the ice, and two of the bears ran eagerly to it, dragged out the bits that were not burnt, and began to eat them; they were the cubs, but were almost as large as their mother.

      The sailors threw some more of the flesh they had on board on to the ice. These the old bear fetched; and putting them before her cubs, she divided them, giving them each a large piece, and only keeping a small bit for herself. When she came to fetch the last piece the sailors shot at the cubs, killing them; they also wounded the mother, but not mortally; the poor mother never thought of herself, only of her cubs. They were not quite dead, only dying, and she crawled to where they lay, with the lump of meat she had fetched, and put it down before them, as she had done the first time. When she found they did not eat, she took hold first of one, then of the other, and tried to lift them up, moaning pitifully all the time, as if she thought it would be of no use. Then she went a little way off and looked back. But the cubs were dead now, and could not move, so she went back to them and began to lick their wounds. Once more she crawled away from them, and then again came back, and went round and round them, pawing them and moaning. At last she seems to have found out that they were dead; and turning to the ship, she raised her head and uttered a loud growl of anger and despair. The cruel sailors fired at her in reply, and she fell between her poor dead cubs, and died licking

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