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It linked all perplexèd meanings
Into one perfect peace,

And trembled away into silence
As if it were loath to cease.

I have sought, but I seek it vainly,
That one lost chord divine,

Which came from the soul of the organ,
And entered into mine.

It may be that Death's bright angel
Will speak in that chord again,-
It may be that only in Heaven

I shall hear that grand Amen.

GLOSSARY. Fevered; infinite; discordant; perplexed; loath. STUDY. Do you know from experience what it means to be greatly moved by music? Under what circumstances was the chord, mentioned here, produced? Read the third, fourth, and fifth stanzas for the effects of the music. It may help you in understanding this to state in your own words the six effects given. Why does the musician seek to recall, or reproduce, the chord? Explain the fitness of the title.

THE BEAR AS A HUMORIST

JOAQUIN MILLER

Not long ago, about the time a party of Americans were setting out for India to hunt the tiger, a young banker from New York came to California to hunt what he rightly considered the nobler beast.

He chartered a small steamer in San Francisco

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Bay, and taking with him a party of friends, as well as a great-grandson of Daniel Boone, a famous hunter, for a guide, he sailed up the coast to the red-wood wilderness of Humboldt. Here he camped on the bank of a small stream in a madrona thicket and began to hunt for his bear. He found his bear, an old female with young cubs. As Boone was naturally in advance when the beast was suddenly stumbled upon, he had to do the fighting, and this gave the banker from the States a chance to scramble up a 15 small madrona. Of course he dropped his gun. They always do drop their guns, by some singularly sad combination of accidents, when they start up a tree with two rows of big teeth in the rear, and it is hardly fair to expect the young bear hunter from New York 20 to prove an exception. Poor Boone was severely maltreated by the savage old mother grizzly in defense of her young. There was a crashing of brush and a crushing of bones, and then all was still.

Suddenly the bear seemed to remember that there 25 was a second party who had been in earnest search for a bear, and looking back down the trail and up in the boughs of a small tree, she saw a pair of boots. She left poor Boone senseless on the ground and went for those boots. Coming forward, she reared up under 30 the tree and began to claw for the capitalist. He told me that she seemed to him, as she stood there, to be about fifty feet high. Then she laid hold of the tree. Fortunately this madrona tree is of a hard and unyielding nature, and with all her strength she could 35

neither break nor bend it. But she kept thrusting up her long nose and longer claws, laying hold first of his boots, which she pulled off, one after the other, with her teeth, then with her claws she took hold of one garment 40 and then another till the man of money had hardly a shred, and his legs were streaming with blood. Fearing that he should faint from loss of blood, he lashed himself to the small trunk of the tree by his belt and then began to scream with all his might for his friends.

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When the bear became weary of clawing up at the dangling legs she went back and began to turn poor Boone over to see if he showed any signs of life. Then she came back and again clawed a while at the screaming man up the madrona tree. It was 50 great fun for the bear!

To cut a thrilling story short, the party in camp on the other side of the creek finally came in hail, when the old bear gathered up her babies and made safe exit up a gulch. Boone, now in Arizona, was 55 so badly crushed and bitten that his life was long despaired of, but he finally got well. The bear, he informed me, showed no disposition to eat him while turning him over and tapping him with her foot and thrusting her nose into his bleeding face to see 60 if he still breathed.

Story after story of this character could be told to prove that the grizzly at home is not entirely brutal and savage; but rather a good-natured lover of his family and fond of his sly joke.

From "True Bear Stories.'

GLOSSARY. Chartered; Daniel Boone; Humboldt; madrona; maltreated; capitalist.

STUDY. Narrate the adventure with the grizzly. Do you think the last paragraph is justified from what takes place? What humorous touches do you find in the story?

THE SONG OF THE WESTERN MEN

ROBERT STEPHEN HAWKER

A good sword and a trusty hand!
A merry heart and true!
King James's men shall understand
What Cornish lads can do!

And have they fixed the where and when?
And shall Trelawny die?

Here's twenty thousand Cornish men
Will know the reason why!

Out spake the Captain brave and bold:
A merry wight was he:-

"If London Tower were Michael's hold,
We'd set Trelawny free!

"We'll cross the Tamar, land to land:
The Severn is no stay:

With 'one and all,' and hand in hand;
And who shall bid us nay?

"And when we come to London Wall,
A pleasant sight to view,

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Come forth! come forth! ye cowards all:
Here's men as good as you.

"Trelawny he's in keep and hold:
Trelawny he may die:

But here's twenty thousand Cornish bold
Will know the reason why!"

GLOSSARY. Trusty; King James; Trelawny; London Tower;
Michael's hold; Tamar; Severn.

STUDY. Imagine yourself a Cornish man whose good bishop has been tyrannically seized and shut up in London Tower. You feel sure he is in great danger of losing his life through his efforts in your cause. This poem is your expression of the way you feel about it. Read it so as to show your defiance of King James and his followers.

LITTLE JOHN

THOMAS BULFINCH

The lieutenant of Robin Hood's band was named Little John, not so much from his smallness in stature (for he was seven feet high and more), as for a reason which I shall tell later. And the manner in which Robin Hood, to whom he was very dear, met him was this.

Robin Hood on one occasion being hunting with his men and finding the sport to be poor, said: “We have had no sport now for some time. So I go abroad 10 alone. And if I should fall into any peril whence I cannot escape I will blow my horn that ye may know of it and bear me aid."

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