. American cookery . Buy advertised Goods — Do not accept substitutes 168 The Seasons End Closed the summer byways To the straying feet,Only dreams may wander, love, Where the hours were sweet —Ah, the golden moments, Gold of dreams they were,Scattered where the flowers Wooed the loiterer! Silent are the thickets; In the twilight hush,We shall hear no more, love, The fluting of the thrush —Ah, the voiceless silence, How it brings againLilt as if the fairies Sang within the glen! Closed the summer byways, Silence in the vale,On the hills the fires, love, Of the autumn pale —Ah, the joy of knowi


. American cookery . Buy advertised Goods — Do not accept substitutes 168 The Seasons End Closed the summer byways To the straying feet,Only dreams may wander, love, Where the hours were sweet —Ah, the golden moments, Gold of dreams they were,Scattered where the flowers Wooed the loiterer! Silent are the thickets; In the twilight hush,We shall hear no more, love, The fluting of the thrush —Ah, the voiceless silence, How it brings againLilt as if the fairies Sang within the glen! Closed the summer byways, Silence in the vale,On the hills the fires, love, Of the autumn pale —Ah, the joy of knowing In our hearts we keepBlooms that winters sickle Nevermore shall reap! — Arthur Wallace Peach. m 169. THE SQUARE PORCH —AFINE EXAMPLE OF CO-LONIAL DOORWAYI - A merican Cook ery VOL. XXIV OCTOBER No. 3 The Charm of the Beacon Hill Doorway By Mary H. Northend WE love to linger over the roman-tic storv connected with BeaconHill, recalling the time whenit was the heart of military, social andliterary life. In the earliest days, whenwar was rife, the military pitched theirtents on this goodly eminence, and theirsentries paced up and down, everwatchful over land and sea, to announcethe approach of any invading the top of the Hill was a highmast, surmounted by a beacon (fromwhich it took its name). This was firsterected in 1634, and was used extensivelyuntil after the Revolution. When fired,it could be seen at a great distanceinland. Originally Beacon Hill comprised overone hundred acres, and was used prin-cipally for the pasturing of cedars and native shrubbery grewalong its sides, broken here and thereby cow-paths, through which the wan-dering herds ranged unmol


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