St Nicholas [serial] . lls me; it beckons me on ;And she answered: Dont shun it; you ought to be gone. 5. Without more ado he departed with speed,Maliciously spurring his dapple-gray steed. 6. He crossed the Atlantic, and later Jill heardThat he sang to the Prussians and French like a bird. 7. And when Kenyon de Ruyter from Europe comes back,Then Jill will need glasses to recognize Jack. ANNA M. MEETING OF THE WISE. 13 6 11 From 2 to 1, King of Pylos, renowned for his wisdom ;3 to 1, a man who was called by Jeffrey The mostShaksperian of our great divines; 4 to I, a greatAmerican sta
St Nicholas [serial] . lls me; it beckons me on ;And she answered: Dont shun it; you ought to be gone. 5. Without more ado he departed with speed,Maliciously spurring his dapple-gray steed. 6. He crossed the Atlantic, and later Jill heardThat he sang to the Prussians and French like a bird. 7. And when Kenyon de Ruyter from Europe comes back,Then Jill will need glasses to recognize Jack. ANNA M. MEETING OF THE WISE. 13 6 11 From 2 to 1, King of Pylos, renowned for his wisdom ;3 to 1, a man who was called by Jeffrey The mostShaksperian of our great divines; 4 to I, a greatAmerican statesman; 5 to I, the surname of FightingJoe ; 13 to 2, one of the Seven Sages; 6 to 2, a greatphilosopher of the Elizabethan period; 7 to 3, a veryfamous author; 8 to 3, a celebrated satirist and man ofletters; 9 to 4, the author of the line, The poetry ofearth is never dead ; 10 to 4, a great Scotch poet; 11to 5, a great American tragedian; 12 to 5, the author ofour national hymn. M. B. C. THE DE VINNE PRESS, NEW COASTING IN CENTRAL PARK. ST. NICHOLAS. Vol. XXV. FEBRUARY, 1898. No. HOW THE BROWNIE PUT ON WEIGHT. By Ambrose Collyer Dearborn. There is a time each year in every academyand college when the students suddenly be-come amazingly well behaved. It is the timejust between Thanksgiving and there are any old fogies on the faculty,they are considerably puzzled by this suddenearnestness, but the younger instructors knowit is only because the foot-ball season has closedand it is yet too early for ice-polo. So theylisten with a smile while ready answers comefrom all over the lecture-room, instead of Notprepared, sir, or the hazy answers of the shock-headed eleven who know that they will bewarned by the faculty if some sort of a recita-tion is not ready. This attention to workwears off after the ponds are frozen, and thenthe boys divide their devotion between booksand polo. At Melden Academy that year, however,there was not the usual reaction after foot-ball.
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