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"And now more cages come rumbling by With glittering people throned on high; So many spangles and precious things, They surely must all be queens and kings!",
"AND NOW MORE CAGES COME RUMBLING BY WITH GLITTERING PEOPLE THRONED ON HIGH SO MANY SPANGLES AND PRECIOUS THINGS THEY SURELY MUST ALL BE QUEENS AND KINGS"
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"ng the tail of a spotted horse And shouting out things to make folks laugh, And grinning up at the tall giraffe That placidly paces along and looks Just like giraffes in the picture-books! And there are the elephants, two and two, Lumbering on as they always do! The men who lead them look so small I wonder the elephants mind at all As they wag their queer Long trunks, and peer Through their beady eyes,--folks say they know No end of things, and I'm sure it's so! And you never must do a thing that's bad Or that possibly might make an elephant mad, For he'll never forgive you, it appears, And will punish you sure, if it takes him _years!_ So do not stare But take good care To mind your manners, and always try To smile politely as they go by! But the camels don't care if you laugh at them With their bumpy humps like a capital M, They lurch and sway And seem to say, As they wrinkle their noses, long and gray, \"This swaggering stride is quite the plan, It's the way we walked in the caravan!",
" IS COMING OF COURSE FACING THE TAIL OF A SPOTTED HORSE AND SHOUTING OUT THINGS TO MAKE FOLKS LAUGH AND GRINNING UP AT THE TALL GIRAFFE THAT PLACIDLY PACES ALONG AND LOOKS JUST LIKE DRAUGHTS IN THE PICTURE BOOKS AND THERE ARE THE ELEPHANTS TWO AND TWO LUMBERING ON AS THEY ALWAYS DO THE MEN WHO LEAD THEM LOOK SO SMALL I WONDER THE ELEPHANTS MIND AT ALL AS THEY WAKE THEIR QUEER LONG TRUNKS AND PEER THROUGH THEIR BEADY EYES FOLKS SAY THEY KNOW NO END OF THINGS AND I'M SURE IT'S SO AND YOU NEVER MUST DO A THING THAT'S BAD OR THAT POSSIBLY MIGHT MAKE AN ELEPHANT MAD FOR HE'LL NEVER FORGIVE YOU IT APPEARS AND WILL PUNISH YOU SURE IF IT TAKES HIM YEARS SO DO NOT STARE BUT TAKE GOOD CARE TO MIND YOUR MANNERS AND ALWAYS TRY TO SMILE POLITELY AS THEY GO BY BUT THE CAMELS DON'T CARE IF YOU LAUGH AT THEM WITH THEIR BUMPY HUMPS LIKE A CAPITAL M THEY LURCH AND SWAY AND SEEM TO SAY AS THEY WRINKLE THEIR NOSES LONG AND GRAY THIS SWAGGERING STRIDE IS QUITE THE PLAN IT'S THE WAY WE WALKED IN THE CARAVAN"
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"Then our lovely loads we'll carry Down the village street, On each door, with laughter merry, Hang a basket sweet.",
"THEN OUR LOVELY LOADS WILL CARRY DOWN THE VILLAGE STREET ON EACH DOOR WITH LAUGHTER MERRY HANG A BASKET SWEET"
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"ey lurch and sway And seem to say, As they wrinkle their noses, long and gray, \"This swaggering stride is quite the plan, It's the way we walked in the caravan!\" And now more cages come rumbling by With glittering people throned on high; So many spangles and precious things, They surely must all be queens and kings! They look so proud Above the crowd, O my, how fine it must feel to ride On golden wagons that hide inside Strange animals caught in cannibal isles And brought in ships for a million miles! But hark! it's near The end, for hear That sudden screeching in piercing key! The steaming, screaming _cal-li-o-pe_! Just plain pianos sound terribly tame Beside this one with the wonderful name, And wouldn't you love some day to sit In a circus wagon and play on it? MAY-BASKETS Let us take our baskets early To the meadows green, While the wild-flowers still are pearly With the dewdrops' sheen. Fill them full of blossoms rosy, Violets and gay Cowslips, every pretty posy Welcoming the May.",
" MAY BASKETS BY EVELEEN STEIN RED FOR LEAVOX DOT ORK BY SWEET HOME LET US TAKE OUR BASKETS EARLY TO THE MEADOWS GREEN WHILE THE WILD FLOWERS STILL ARE PEARLY WITH THE DEWDROPS SHEEN FILL THEM FULL OF BLOSSOMS ROSY VIOLETS AND GAY COWSLIPS EVERY PRETTY POESY WELCOMING THE MAY"
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"Hey a day day! It is spring now, Lazy folks, awake!",
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" plan, It's the way we walked in the caravan!\" And now more cages come rumbling by With glittering people throned on high; So many spangles and precious things, They surely must all be queens and kings! They look so proud Above the crowd, O my, how fine it must feel to ride On golden wagons that hide inside Strange animals caught in cannibal isles And brought in ships for a million miles! But hark! it's near The end, for hear That sudden screeching in piercing key! The steaming, screaming _cal-li-o-pe_! Just plain pianos sound terribly tame Beside this one with the wonderful name, And wouldn't you love some day to sit In a circus wagon and play on it? MAY-BASKETS Let us take our baskets early To the meadows green, While the wild-flowers still are pearly With the dewdrops' sheen. Fill them full of blossoms rosy, Violets and gay Cowslips, every pretty posy Welcoming the May. Then our lovely loads we'll carry Down the village street, On each door, with laughter merry, Hang a basket sweet.",
" MAY BASKETS BY EVELEEN STEIN RED FOR LEAVOX DOT ORK BY SWEET HOME LET US TAKE OUR BASKETS EARLY TO THE MEADOWS GREEN WHILE THE WILD FLOWERS STILL ARE PEARLY WITH THE DEWDROPS SHEEN FILL THEM FULL OF BLOSSOMS ROSY VIOLETS AND GAY COWSLIPS EVERY PRETTY POESY WELCOMING THE MAY THEN OUR LOVELY LOADS WILL CARRY DOWN THE VILLAGE STREET ON EACH DOOR WITH LAUGHTER MERRY HANG A BASKET SWEET"
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"THE PICTURE BOOK GIANT Once there was a fierce, defiant, Greedy, grumpy, grizzly giant In the pages of a picture book, and he Sometimes screamed, in sudden rages, \"I must jump out from these pages, For this life's a much too humdrum one for me! Fiddle dee! Yes, this life's a quite too quiet one for me!\"",
"BY SWEET HOME ONCE THERE WAS A FIERCE DEFIANT GREEDY GRUMPY GRISLY GIANT IN THE PAGES OF A PICTURE BOOK AND HE SOMETIMES SCREAMED IN SUDDEN RAGES I MUST JUMP OUT FROM THESE PAGES FOR THIS LIFE'S A MUCH TOO HUMDRUM ONE FOR ME FIDDLEDY YES THIS LIFE'S A QUITE TOO QUIET ONE FOR ME"
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"ed on high; So many spangles and precious things, They surely must all be queens and kings! They look so proud Above the crowd, O my, how fine it must feel to ride On golden wagons that hide inside Strange animals caught in cannibal isles And brought in ships for a million miles! But hark! it's near The end, for hear That sudden screeching in piercing key! The steaming, screaming _cal-li-o-pe_! Just plain pianos sound terribly tame Beside this one with the wonderful name, And wouldn't you love some day to sit In a circus wagon and play on it? MAY-BASKETS Let us take our baskets early To the meadows green, While the wild-flowers still are pearly With the dewdrops' sheen. Fill them full of blossoms rosy, Violets and gay Cowslips, every pretty posy Welcoming the May. Then our lovely loads we'll carry Down the village street, On each door, with laughter merry, Hang a basket sweet. Hey-a-day-day! It is spring now, Lazy folks, awake! See the pretty things we bring now For the May-day's sake!",
" THE PICTURE BOOK GIANT BY EVELEEN STEYNE READ FOR LIVERBOX DOT ORK"
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"Did you ever see one waken very thirsty and drink up All the honey dew that glimmered in a golden buttercup? Did you ever see one fly away on rainbow twinkling wings? If you did not, why, how comes it that you never see such things?",
"DID YOU EVER SEE ONE WAKEN VERY THIRSTY AND DRINK UP ALL THE HONEY DEW THAT GLIMMERED IN A GOLDEN BUTTER CUP DID YOU EVER SEE ONE FLY AWAY ON RAINBOW TWINKLING WINGS IF YOU DID NOT WHY HOW COMES IT THAT YOU NEVER SEE SUCH THINGS"
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" Violets and gay Cowslips, every pretty posy Welcoming the May. Then our lovely loads we'll carry Down the village street, On each door, with laughter merry, Hang a basket sweet. Hey-a-day-day! It is spring now, Lazy folks, awake! See the pretty things we bring now For the May-day's sake! THE PICTURE-BOOK GIANT Once there was a fierce, defiant, Greedy, grumpy, grizzly giant In the pages of a picture-book, and he Sometimes screamed, in sudden rages, \"I must jump out from these pages, For this life's a much too humdrum one for me! Fiddle-dee! Yes, this life's a quite too quiet one for me!\" So one rainy day he did it, Took the picture-book and hid it, Stamped his foot, and shouting loudly, \"Now I'm free!\" Boldly started out, forgetting That he could not stand a wetting! He was just a paper giant, don't you see? Dearie me! Just a gaudy, picture giant, don't you see? DID YOU EVER? Did you ever see a fairy in a rose-leaf coat and cap Swinging in a cobweb hammock as he napped his noonday nap?",
" DID YOU EVER BY EVELEEN STEIN READ FOR LEAP OF OX DOT ORG BY SWEET HOME DID YOU EVER SEE A FAIRY IN A ROSE LEAF COAT AND CAP SWINGING IN A COBWEB HAMMOCK AS HE NAPPED HIS NOONDAY NAP"
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"Hark the drummers' beat! See them with their flags and guns Marching down the street!",
"HARK THE DRUMMERS BEAT SEE THEM WITH THEIR FLAGS AND GUNS MARCHING DOWN THE STREET"
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"ay's sake! THE PICTURE-BOOK GIANT Once there was a fierce, defiant, Greedy, grumpy, grizzly giant In the pages of a picture-book, and he Sometimes screamed, in sudden rages, \"I must jump out from these pages, For this life's a much too humdrum one for me! Fiddle-dee! Yes, this life's a quite too quiet one for me!\" So one rainy day he did it, Took the picture-book and hid it, Stamped his foot, and shouting loudly, \"Now I'm free!\" Boldly started out, forgetting That he could not stand a wetting! He was just a paper giant, don't you see? Dearie me! Just a gaudy, picture giant, don't you see? DID YOU EVER? Did you ever see a fairy in a rose-leaf coat and cap Swinging in a cobweb hammock as he napped his noonday nap? Did you ever see one waken very thirsty and drink up All the honey-dew that glimmered in a golden buttercup? Did you ever see one fly away on rainbow-twinkling wings? If you did not, why, how comes it that you never see such things? DECORATION DAY See the soldiers, little ones!",
" DECORATION DAY BY EVELEEN STEYNE READ FOR DE BERVOX DOT ORG BY SWEET HOME SEE THE SOLDIERS LITTLE ONES"
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"Jump off, some one! Quick! and go To the pantry, for, you know, We must have the cookie jar For our Pullman dining car!",
"JUMP OFF SOME ONE QUICK AND GO TO THE PANTRY FOR YOU KNOW WE MUST HAVE THE COOKY JAR FOR OUR PULLMAN DINING"
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"we keep. Let us bring our blossoms, too, All our gardens grow; Lilacs honey-sweet with dew, And the lilies' snow. Every posy of the May, Every bloomy stem, Every bud that breaks to-day Gather now for them. Lay the lilies o'er them thus, Lovingly, for so Down they laid their lives for us, Long and long ago. Heap above them bud and bough; Softly, ere we cease, God, we pray Thee, gently now Fold them in Thy peace! CHU-CHU CARS Turn the chairs down in a row Each behind the other, so; _Chu-chu! Chu-chu!_ there they are, Passenger and baggage-car, _Chu-chu-chu!_ the Morris chair Is the engine puffing there, _Chu-chu! Chu-chu! Ting-a-ling!_ Don't you hear its big bell ring? All aboard! Jump on! if you Want to take this train. _Chu-chu!!_ Off we start now, rushing fast Through the fields and valleys, past Noisy cities, over bridges, Hills and plains and mountain ridges, _Chu-chu! Chu-chu! Chu-chu-chu!!_ At such speed it must be true Since we started we have come Most a million miles from home!",
" TOO CHOO CARS BY EVELEEN'S STEIN READ FOR LIVERPOCK STOT ORG BY SWEET HOME TURN THE CHAIRS DOWN IN A ROW EACH BEHIND THE OTHER'S SO CHOO CHOO TOO CHOO THERE THEY ARE PASSENGER AND BAGGAGE CAR CHOO CHEO CHEO THE MORRIS CHAIR IS THE ENGINE PUFFING THERE CHOO CHOO TOO CHOO TINGLING DON'T YOU HEAR ITS BIG BELL RING ALL ABOARD JUMP ON IF YOU WANT TO TAKE THIS TRAIN CHOO CHOO OFF WE START NOW RUSHING FAST THROUGH THE FIELDS AND VALLEYS PAST NOISY CITIES OVER BRIDGES HILLS AND PLAINS AND MOUNTAIN RIDGES CHOO CHOO CHOO CHOO CHOO CHOO CHOO AT SUCH SPEED IT MUST BE TRUE SINCE WE STARTED WE HAVE COME MOST A MILLION MILES FROM HOME"
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"FAIRY RINGS Softly in the gloaming Flitting through the vale, Fairy folk are roaming Over hill and dale. Pixies in the hollow, Elves upon the height, Let us follow, follow Through the paling light.",
"SWEET HOME SOFTLY IN THE GLOAMING FLITTING THROUGH THE VALE FAIRY FOLK ARE ROAMING OVER HILL AND DALE PIXIES IN THE HOLLOW ELVES UPON THE HEIGHT LET US FOLLOW FOLLOW THROUGH THE PALING LIGHT"
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"posy of the May, Every bloomy stem, Every bud that breaks to-day Gather now for them. Lay the lilies o'er them thus, Lovingly, for so Down they laid their lives for us, Long and long ago. Heap above them bud and bough; Softly, ere we cease, God, we pray Thee, gently now Fold them in Thy peace! CHU-CHU CARS Turn the chairs down in a row Each behind the other, so; _Chu-chu! Chu-chu!_ there they are, Passenger and baggage-car, _Chu-chu-chu!_ the Morris chair Is the engine puffing there, _Chu-chu! Chu-chu! Ting-a-ling!_ Don't you hear its big bell ring? All aboard! Jump on! if you Want to take this train. _Chu-chu!!_ Off we start now, rushing fast Through the fields and valleys, past Noisy cities, over bridges, Hills and plains and mountain ridges, _Chu-chu! Chu-chu! Chu-chu-chu!!_ At such speed it must be true Since we started we have come Most a million miles from home! Jump off, some one! Quick! and go To the pantry, for, you know, We must have the cookie-jar For our Pullman dining-car!",
" FAIRY RINGS BY EVELEEN'S STEIN RED FOR LIVERPOX DOT ORG BY"
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"As once the apostolic twelve Of goods allotment made, So equity dealt out with care The widow's and the orphan's share, And of the aged forced to delve At drudging task or trade.",
"AS ONCE THE APOSTOLIC TWELVE OF GOODS ALLOTMENT MADE SO ECHOEDY DEALT OUT WITH CARE THE WIDOW'S AND THE ORPHAN'S SHARE AND OF THE AGED FORCED TO DELVE AT DRUDGING TASK OR TRADE"
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"racity's revolving eyes Looked up as if to read the skies: \"Why, Lor'-a-miss, see dar-- De bell is in de air! Lan' sakes! of all de missteries Yo' nebber learn before! Why, don' yo' know 'Big Sam'? _He_ is De bell of Baltimore!\" Christmas at Church. 'Twas drawing near the holiday, When piety and pity met In whisp'ring council, and agreed That Christmas time, in homes of need, Should be remembered in a way They never could forget. Then noble generosity Took youth and goodness by the hand, And planned a thousand charming ways To celebrate this best of days, While hearts were held in sympathy By love's encircling band. So multitudes together came, Like wandering magi from the East With precious gifts unto the King, With every good and perfect thing To satisfy a shivering frame Or amplify a feast. The angels had looked long and far The happy scene to parallel, When through the sanctuary door Were carried gifts from shop and store, The treasures of the rich bazaar, To give--but not to sell.",
" CHRISTMAS AT CHURCH BY HATTIE HOWARD READ FOR LIEVERBOXT AT ORG BY SWEETHELM TWAS DRAWING NEAR THE HOLIDAY WHEN PIETY AND PITY MET IN WHISPERING COUNSEL AND AGREED THAT CHRISTMAS TIME IN HOMES OF NEED SHOULD BE REMEMBERED IN A WAY THEY NEVER COULD FORGET THEN NOBLE GENEROSITY TOOK YOUTH AND GOODNESS BY THE HAND AND PLANNED A THOUSAND CHARMING WAYS TO CELEBRATE THIS BEST OF DAYS WHILE HEARTS WERE HELD IN SYMPATHY BY LOVE'S ENCIRCLING BAND SO MULTITUDES TOGETHER CAME LIKE WANDERING MAGI FROM THE EAST WITH PRECIOUS GIFTS UNTO THE KING WITH EVERY GOOD AND PERFECT THING TO SATISFY A SHIVERING FRAME OR AMPLIFY A FEAST THE ANGELS HAD LOOKED LONG AND FAR THE HAPPY SCENE TO PARALLEL WHEN THROUGH THE SANCTUARY DOOR WERE CARRIED GIFTS FROM SHOP AND STORE THE TREASURES OF THE RICH BAZAAR TO GIVE BUT NOT TO SELL"
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"If every year and everywhere Could kindness thus expand In bounteous gratuity, To all her children earth would be A flowery vale like Eden fair, A milk and honey land.",
"IF EVERY YEAR AND EVERYWHERE COULD KINDNESS THUS EXPAND IN BOUNTEOUS GRATUITY TO ALL HER CHILDREN EARTH WOULD BE A FLOWERY VEIL LIKE EDEN FAIR A MILK AND HONEY LAND"
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" homes of need, Should be remembered in a way They never could forget. Then noble generosity Took youth and goodness by the hand, And planned a thousand charming ways To celebrate this best of days, While hearts were held in sympathy By love's encircling band. So multitudes together came, Like wandering magi from the East With precious gifts unto the King, With every good and perfect thing To satisfy a shivering frame Or amplify a feast. The angels had looked long and far The happy scene to parallel, When through the sanctuary door Were carried gifts from shop and store, The treasures of the rich bazaar, To give--but not to sell. As once the apostolic twelve Of goods allotment made, So equity dealt out with care The widow's and the orphan's share, And of the aged forced to delve At drudging task or trade. Oh, could the joy which tears express That out of gladness come Be mirrored in its tender glow, Before the beautiful tableau Ingratitude and selfishness Would shrink abashed and dumb!",
"T CHRISTMAS TIME IN HOMES OF NEED SHOULD BE REMEMBERED IN A WAY THEY NEVER COULD FORGET THEN NOBLE GENEROSITY TOOK YOUTH AND GOODNESS BY THE HAND AND PLANNED A THOUSAND CHARMING WAYS TO CELEBRATE THIS BEST OF DAYS WHILE HEARTS WERE HELD IN SYMPATHY BY LOVE'S ENCIRCLING BAND SO MULTITUDES TOGETHER CAME LIKE WANDERING MAGI FROM THE EAST WITH PRECIOUS GIFTS UNTO THE KING WITH EVERY GOOD AND PERFECT THING TO SATISFY A SHIVERING FRAME OR AMPLIFY A FEAST THE ANGELS HAD LOOKED LONG AND FAR THE HAPPY SCENE TO PARALLEL WHEN THROUGH THE SANCTUARY DOOR WERE CARRIED GIFTS FROM SHOP AND STORE THE TREASURES OF THE RICH BAZAAR TO GIVE BUT NOT TO SELL AS ONCE THE APOSTOLIC TWELVE OF GOODS ALLOTMENT MADE SO ECHOEDY DEALT OUT WITH CARE THE WIDOW'S AND THE ORPHAN'S SHARE AND OF THE AGED FORCED TO DELVE AT DRUDGING TASK OR TRADE O COULD THE JOY WHICH TEARS EXPRESS THAT OUT OF GLADNESS COME BE MIRRORED IN ITS TENDER GLOW BEFORE THE BEAUTIFUL TABLEAU INGRATITUDE AND SELFISHNESS WOULD SHRINK ABASHED AND DUMB"
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"At first, it seemed that the only difference between isotopes might be in their radioactive properties and that only radioactive atoms were involved. Quickly that proved not to be so.",
"AT FIRST IT SEEMED THAT THE ONLY DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ISOTOPES MIGHT BE IN THEIR RADIOACTIVE PROPERTIES AND THAT ONLY RADIOACTIVE ATOMS WERE INVOLVED QUICKLY THAT PROVED NOT TO BE SO"
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"ife is 14 billion years! Uranium X₁, and ordinary thorium were in the same place in the list of elements by chemical standards, and yet there was clearly something different about the two. Here is another case. In 1913 the British chemist Alexander Fleck (1889- ) studied “radium B” and “radium D”, the names given to two different kinds of atoms in the uranium radioactive series. He also studied “thorium B” in the thorium radioactive series and “actinium B” in the actinium radioactive series. All four are chemically the same as ordinary lead; all four are in the same place in the list of elements. Yet each is different from the radioactive standpoint. Though all give off beta particles, radium B has a half-life of 27 minutes, radium D one of 19 years, thorium B one of 11 hours, and actinium B one of 36 minutes. In 1913 Soddy called atoms that were in the same place in the list of elements, but which had different radioactive properties, “isotopes”, from Greek words meaning “same place”.",
"NARY THORIUM WERE IN THE SAME PLACE IN THE LIST OF ELEMENTS BY CHEMICAL STANDARDS AND YET THERE WAS CLEARLY SOMETHING DIFFERENT ABOUT THE TWO HERE IS ANOTHER CASE IN NINETEEN THIRTEEN THE BRITISH CHEMIST ALEXANDER FLECK BORN EIGHTEEN EIGHTY NINE STUDIED RADIUM B AND RADIUM D THE NAMES GIVEN TO TWO DIFFERENT KINDS OF ATOMS IN THE URANIUM RADIOACTIVE SERIES HE ALSO STUDIED THORIUM B IN THEIR THORIUM RADIOACTIVE SERIES AND ACTINIUM B IN THE ACTINIUM RADIOACTIVE SERIES ALL FOUR ARE CHEMICALLY THE SAME AS ORDINARY LEAD ALL FOUR ARE IN THE SAME PLACE IN THE LIST OF ELEMENTS YET EACH IS DIFFERENT FROM THE RADIOACTIVE STANDPOINT THOUGH ALL GIVE OFF BATEER PARTICLES RADIUM B HAS A HALF LIFE OF TWENTY SEVEN MINUTES RADIUM D ONE OF NINETEEN YEARS THORIUM B ONE OF ELEVEN HOURS AND ACTINIUM B ONE OF THIRTY SIX MINUTES IN NINETEEN THIRTEEN SODDY CALLED ATOMS THAT WERE IN THE SAME PLACE IN THE LIST OF ELEMENTS BUT WHICH HAD DIFFERENT RADIOACTIVE PROPERTIES ISOTOPES FROM GREEK WORDS MEANING SAME PLACE"
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"at were roughly 90% ²⁰Ne and 10% ²²Ne. The overall atomic weight of neon, 20.2, was the average atomic weight of these 2 isotopes. Thomson’s instrument was the first one capable of separating isotopes and such instruments came to be called “mass spectrometers”. The first to use the name was the English physicist Francis William Aston (1877-1945), who built the first efficient instrument of this type in 1919. He used it to study as many elements as he could. He and those who followed him located many isotopes and determined the frequency of their occurrence with considerable precision. It turned out, for instance, that neon is actually 90.9% ²⁰Ne, and 8.8% ²²Ne. Very small quantities of still a third isotope, ²¹Ne, are also present, making up 0.3%. As for ordinary lead in nonradioactive rocks, it is made up of 23.6% ²⁰⁶Pb, 22.6% ²⁰⁷Pb, and 52.3% ²⁰⁸Pb. There is still a fourth isotope, ²⁰⁴Pb, which makes up the remaining 1.5% and which is not the product of any radioactive series at all.",
"OMETERS THE FIRST TO USE THE NAME WAS THE ENGLISH PHYSICIST FRANCIS WILLIAM ASTON EIGHTEEN SEVENTY SEVEN NINETEEN FORTY FIVE WHO BUILT THE FIRST EFFICIENT INSTRUMENT OF THIS TYPE IN NINETEEN NINETEEN HE USED IT TO STUDY AS MANY ELEMENTS AS HE COULD HE AND THOSE WHO FOLLOWED HIM LOCATED MANY ISOTOPES AND DETERMINED THE FREQUENCY OF THEIR OCCURRENCE WITH CONSIDERABLE PRECISION IT TURNED OUT FOR INSTANCE THAT NEEON IS ACTUALLY NINETY POINT NINE PER CENT NEON TWENTY AND EIGHT POINT EIGHT PER CENT NEON TWENTY TWO VERY SMALL QUANTITIES OF STILL A THIRD ISOTOPE NION TWENTY ONE ARE ALSO PRESENT MAKING UP THREE TENTHS OF ONE PER CENT AS FOR ORDINARY LEAD IN NON RADIOACTIVE ROCKS IT IS MADE UP OF TWENTY THREE POINT SIX PER CENT LEAD TO O SIX TWENTY TWO POINT SIX PER CENT LEAD TO O SEVEN AND FIFTY TWO POINT THREE PER CENT LEAD TO O EIGHT THERE IS STILL A FOURTH ISOTOPE LEAD TO O FOUR WHICH MAKES UP THE REMAINING ONE POINT FIVE PER CENT AND WHICH IS NOT THE PRODUCT OF ANY RADIOACTIVE SERIES AT ALL"
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"The neon ions ended on a photographic plate, which was darkened at the point of landing. There were two regions of darkening, because there were neon ions of two different masses that curved in two different degrees and ended in two different places.",
"THE NEEON IONS ENDED ON A PHOTOGRAPHIC PLATE WHICH WAS DARKENED AT THE POINT OF LANDING THERE WERE TWO REGIONS OF DARKENING BECAUSE THERE WERE NEON IONS OF TWO DIFFERENT MASSES THAT CURVED IN TWO DIFFERENT DEGREES AND ENDED IN TWO DIFFERENT PLACES"
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"nal atomic weight something that was possessed by all neon atoms without exception or was it the average of some lightweight atoms and some heavyweight ones? It would be a matter of crucial importance if isotopes of neon could be found, for neon had nothing to do with any of the radioactive series. If neon had isotopes then any element might have them. In 1912 Thomson was working on neon. He sent a stream of cathode-ray electrons through neon gas. The electrons smashed into the neon atoms and knocked an electron off some of them. That left a neon ion carrying a single positive charge—an ion that could be written Ne⁺. The neon ions move in the electric field as electrons do, but in the opposite direction since they have an opposite charge. In the combined presence of a magnet and of an electric field, the neon ions move in a curved path. If all the neon ions had the same mass, all would follow the same curve. If some were more massive than others, the more massive ones would curve less.",
"IGHT SOMETHING THAT WAS POSSESSED BY ALL NEEON ATOMS WITHOUT EXCEPTION OR WAS IT THE AVERAGE OF SOME LIGHT WEIGHT ATOMS AND SOME HEAVY WEIGHT ONES IT WOULD BE A MATTER OF CRUCIAL IMPORTANCE IF ISOTOPES OF NEEON COULD BE FOUND FOR NEEON HAD NOTHING TO DO WITH ANY OF THE RADIOACTIVE SERIES IF NEEON HAD ISOTOPES THEN ANY ELEMENT MIGHT HAVE THEM IN NINETEEN TWELVE THOMPSON WAS WORKING ON NEEON HE SENT A STREAM OF CATHODE RE ELECTRONS THROUGH NEEON GAS THE ELECTRONS SMASHED INTO THE NEEON ATOMS AND KNOCKED AN ELECTRON OFF SOME OF THEM THAT LEFT A NEON ION CARRYING A SINGLE POSITIVE CHARGE AN ION THAT COULD BE WRITTEN IN E PLUS THE NEEON IONS MOVE IN THE ELECTRIC FIELD AS ELECTRONS DO BUT IN THE OPPOSITE DIRECTION SINCE THEY HAVE AN OPPOSITE CHARGE IN THE COMBINED PRESENCE OF A MAGNET AND OF AN ELECTRIC FIELD THE NEEON IONS MOVE IN A CURVED PATH IF ALL THE NEEAN IONS HAD THE SAME MASS ALL WOULD FOLLOW THE SAME CURVE IF SOME WERE MORE MASSIVE THAN OTHERS THE MORE MASSIVE ONES WOULD CURVE LESS"
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"Still another part didn't swerve at all but moved on in a straight line. The conclusion was that uranium and thorium gave off three kinds of radiation. One carried a positive charge of electricity, one a negative charge, and one no charge at all.",
"STILL ANOTHER PART DIDN'T SWERVE AT ALL BUT MOVED ON IN A STRAIGHT LINE THE CONCLUSION WAS THAT URANIUM AND THORIUM GAVE OFF THREE KINDS OF RADIATION ONE CARRIED A POSITIVE CHARGE OF ELECTRICITY ONE A NEGATIVE CHARGE AND ONE NO CHARGE AT ALL"
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"s elements, they found, however, that, of the elements then known, uranium had the highest atomic weight of all—238. Once uranium was discovered to be an endless source of radiation, it gained interest that has risen ever since. Madame Curie gave the name “radioactivity” to this phenomenon of continuously giving off rays. Uranium was the first element found to be radioactive. It did not remain alone, however. It was soon shown that thorium was also radioactive. Thorium, which had been discovered in 1829 by Berzelius, was made up of atoms that were the second most massive known at the time. Thorium’s atomic weight is 232. But what was the mysterious radiation emitted by uranium and thorium? Almost at once it was learned that whatever the radiation was, it was not uniform in properties. In 1899 Becquerel (and others) showed that, in the presence of a magnet, some of the radiation swerved in a particular direction. Later it was found that a portion of it swerved in the opposite direction.",
"F THE ELEMENTS THEN KNOWN URANIUM HAD THE HIGHEST ATOMIC WEIGHT OF ALL TWO HUNDRED THIRTY EIGHT ONCE URANIUM WAS DISCOVERED TO BE AN ENDLESS SOURCE OF RADIATION IT GAINED INTEREST THAT HAS RISEN EVER SINCE MADAME CURI GAVE THE NAME RADIOA ACTIVITY TO THIS PHENOMENON OF CONTINUOUSLY GIVING OFF RAYS URANIUM WAS THE FIRST ELEMENT FOUND TO BE RADIOACTIVE IT DID NOT REMAIN ALONE HOWEVER IT WAS SOON SHOWN THAT THORIUM WAS ALSO RADIOACTIVE THORIUM WHICH HAD BEEN DISCOVERED IN EIGHTEEN TWENTY NINE BY BRAZILIUS WAS MADE UP OF ATOMS THAT WERE THE SECOND MOST MASSIVE KNOWN AT THE TIME THORIUM'S ATOMIC WEIGHT IS TWO THIRTY TWO BUT WHAT WAS THE MYSTERIOUS RADIATION EMITTED BY URANIUM AND THORIUM ALMOST AT ONCE IT WAS LEARNED THAT WHATEVER THE RADIATION WAS IT WAS NOT UNIFORM IN PROPERTIES IN EIGHTEEN NINETY NINE BECAREL AND OTHERS SHOWED THAT IN THE PRESENCE OF A MAGNET SOME OF THE RADIATIONS SWERVED IN A PARTICULAR DIRECTION LATER IT WAS FOUND THAT A PORTION OF IT SWERVED IN THE OPPOSITE DIRECTION"
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"Rutherford's model of the \"nuclear atom\" is still accepted today. Atomic Numbers Since the atom consisted of a positively charged nucleus at the center, and a number of negatively charged electrons outside, the next step was to find the exact size of the nuclear charge and the exact number of electrons for the different varieties of atoms.",
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"e mass of the atom was concentrated into a very tiny, positively charged “nucleus” at its center. The diameter of the nucleus was only about 1/10,000 the diameter of the atom. All the rest of the atom was filled with the very light electrons. [Illustration: _Hans Geiger (left) and Ernest Rutherford at Manchester University about 1910._] According to Rutherford’s notion, the atom consisted of a single tiny positively charged lead shot at the center of a foam of electrons. It was Thomson’s notion in reverse. Still, the nucleus carried a positive charge of a particular size and was balanced by negatively charged electrons. Rutherford’s model of the atom explained the existence of ions just as easily as Thomson’s did and it explained more besides. For instance, if all the electrons are removed so that only the nucleus remains, this nucleus is as massive as an atom but is so tiny in size that it can penetrate matter. The alpha particle would be a bare atomic nucleus from this point of view.",
" NINETEEN ELEVEN RUTHERFORD ANNOUNCED HIS RESULTS TO THE WORLD HE SUGGESTED THAT JUST ABOUT ALL OF THE MASS OF THE ATOM WAS CONCENTRATED INTO A VERY TINY POSITIVELY CHARGED NUCLEUS AT ITS CENTRE THE DIAMETER OF THE NUCLEUS WAS ONLY ABOUT ONE TEN THOUSANDTH THE DIAMETER OF THE ATOM ALL THE REST OF THE ATOM WAS FILLED WITH THE VERY LIGHT ELECTRONS ACCORDING TO RUTHERFORD'S NOTION THE ATOM CONSISTED OF A SINGLE TINY POSITIVELY CHARGED LEAD SHOT AT THE CENTRE OF A FOAM OF ELECTRONS IT WAS THOMSON'S NOTION IN REVERSE STILL THE NUCLEUS CARRIED A POSITIVE CHARGE OF A PARTICULAR SIZE AND WAS BALANCED BY NEGATIVELY CHARGED ELECTRONS RUTHERFORD'S MODEL OF THE ATOM EXPLAINED THE EXISTENCE OF IONS JUST AS EASILY AS THOMPSON'S DID AND IT EXPLAINED MORE BESIDES FOR INSTANCE IF ALL THE ELECTRONS ARE REMOVED SO THAT ONLY THE NUCLEUS REMAINS THIS NUCLEUS IS AS MASSIVE AS AN ATOM BUT IS SO TINY IN SIZE THAT IT CAN PENETRATE MATTER THE ALPHA PARTICLE WOULD BE A BARE ATOMIC NUCLEUS FROM THIS POINT OF VIEW"
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"ely charged nucleus at the center, and a number of negatively charged electrons outside, the next step was to find the exact size of the nuclear charge and the exact number of electrons for the different varieties of atoms. The answer came through a line of research that began with the English physicist Charles Glover Barkla (1877-1944). In 1911 he noted that when X rays passed through atoms, some were absorbed and some bounced back. Those that bounced back had a certain ability to penetrate other matter. When the X rays struck atoms of high atomic weight, the X rays that bounced back were particularly penetrating. In fact, each different type of atom seemed associated with reflected X rays of a particular penetrating power, so Barkla called these “characteristic X rays”. In 1913 another English physicist, Henry Gwyn-Jeffreys Moseley (1887-1915), went into the matter more thoroughly. He measured the exact wavelength of the characteristic X rays by reflecting them from certain crystals.",
" ELECTRONS OUTSIDE THE NEXT STEP WAS TO FIND THE EXACT SIZE OF THE NUCLEAR CHARGE AND THE EXACT NUMBER OF ELECTRONS FOR THE DIFFERENT VARIETIES OF ATOMS THE ANSWER CAME THROUGH A LINE OF RESEARCH THAT BEGAN WITH THE ENGLISH PHYSICIST CHARLES GLOVER BARCLAY EIGHTEEN SEVENTY SEVEN TO NINETEEN FORTY FOUR IN NINETEEN ELEVEN HE NOTED THAT WHEN X RAYS PASSED THROUGH ATOMS SOME WERE ABSORBED AND SOME BOUNCED BACK THOSE THAT BOUNCED BACK HAD A CERTAIN ABILITY TO PENETRATE OTHER MATTER WHEN THE X RAYS STRUCK ATOMS OF HIGH ATONIC WEIGHT THE X RAYS THAT BOUNCED BACK WERE PARTICULARLY PENETRATING IN FACT EACH DIFFERENT TYPE OF ATOM SEEMED ASSOCIATED WITH REFLECTED X RAYS OF A PARTICULAR PENETRATING POWER SO BARKLA CALLED THESE CHARACTERISTIC X RAYS IN NINETEEN THIRTEEN ANOTHER ENGLISH PHYSICIST HENRY GWEN JEFFREYS MOSELY EIGHTEEN EIGHTY SEVEN NINETEEN FIFTEEN WENT INTO THE MATTER MORE THOROUGHLY HE MEASURED THE EXACT WAVE LENGTH OF THE CHARACTERISTIC X RAYS BY REFLECTING THEM FROM CERTAIN CRYSTALS"
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"stance, the atomic weight of chlorine (chemical symbol Cl) is 35.5, but this is because it is made up of a mixture of 2 isotopes. About one quarter of chlorine’s atoms are ³⁷Cl and about three-quarters are ³⁵Cl. [Illustration: _Francis W. Aston_] [Illustration: _Mass spectrograph as used by Thomson and Aston to measure the atomic weight of neon._] To avoid confusion, the average mass of the isotopes that make up a particular element is still called the atomic weight of that element. The integer closest to the mass of the individual isotope is spoken of as the “mass number” of that isotope. Thus, chlorine is made up of isotopes with mass numbers 35 and 37, but the atomic weight of chlorine as it is found in nature is 35.5 (or, to be more accurate, 35.453). In the same way, ordinary lead is made up of isotopes with mass numbers 204, 206, 207, and 208, and its atomic weight is 207.19; neon is made up of isotopes with mass numbers 20, 21, and 22, and its atomic weight is 20.183, and so on.",
"ICAL SYMBOL C L IS THIRTY FIVE POINT FIVE BUT THIS IS BECAUSE IT IS MADE UP OF A MIXTURE OF TWO ISOTOPES ABOUT ONE QUARTER OF CHLORANE'S ATOMS ARE CHLORING THIRTY SEVEN AND ABOUT THREE QUARTERS ARE CHLORINE THIRTY FIVE TO AVOID CONFUSION THE AVERAGE MASS OF THE ISOTOPES THAT MAKE UP A PARTICULAR ELEMENT IS STILL CALLED THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF THAT ELEMENT THE ENTER CLOSEST TO THE MASS OF THE INDIVIDUAL ISOTOPE IS SPOKEN OF AS THE MASS NUMBER OF THAT ISOTOPE THUS CHLORINE IS MADE UP OF ISOTOPES WITH MASS NUMBERS THIRTY FIVE AND THIRTY SEVEN BUT THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF CHLORINE AS IT IS FOUND IN NATURE IS THIRTY FIVE POINT FIVE OR TO BE MORE ACCURATE THIRTY FIVE POINT FOUR FIVE THREE IN THE SAME WAY ORDINARY LEAD IS MADE UP OF ISOTOPES WITH MASS NUMBERS TWO O FOUR TWO O SIX TWO O SEVEN AND TWO O EIGHT AND ITS ATOMIC WEIGHT IS TWO O SEVEN POINT ONE NINE NEEON IS MADE UP OF ISOTOPES WITH MASS NUMBERS TWENTY TWENTY ONE AND TWENTY TWO AND ITS ATOMIC WEIGHT IS TWENTY POINT ONE EIGHT THREE AND SO ON"
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"n a way in which atoms cannot, so that it seems much smaller in diameter than atoms are. The alpha particle, despite its mass, is another subatomic particle. Here, then, is the meeting point of electrons and of atoms—the particles of electricity and of matter. Ever since Dalton had first advanced the atomic theory over a century earlier, chemists had assumed that atoms were the fundamental units of matter. They had assumed atoms were as small as anything could be and that they could not possibly be broken up into anything smaller. The discovery of the electron, however, had shown that some particles, at least, might be far smaller than any atom. Then, the investigations into radioactivity had shown that atoms of uranium and thorium spontaneously broke up into smaller particles, including electrons and alpha particles. It would seem, then, that atoms of these elements and, presumably, of all elements, were made up of still smaller particles and that among these particles were electrons.",
"ICLE CAN PENETRATE MATTER IN A WAY WHICH ATOMS CANNOT SO THAT IT SEEMS MUCH SMALLER IN DIAMETER THAN ATOMS ARE THE ALPHA PARTICLE DESPITE ITS MASS IS ANOTHER SUB ATOMIC PARTICLE HERE THEN IS THE MEETING POINT OF ELECTRONS AND OF ATOMS THE PARTICLES OF ELECTRICITY AND OF MATTER EVER SINCE DALTON HAD FIRST ADVANCED THE ATOMIC THEORY OVER A CENTURY EARLIER CHEMISTS HAD ASSUMED THAT ATOMS WERE THE FUNDAMENTAL UNITS OF MATTER THEY HAD ASSUMED ATOMS WERE AS SMALL AS ANYTHING COULD BE AND THAT THEY COULD NOT POSSIBLY BE BROKEN UP INTO ANYTHING SMALLER THE DISCOVERY OF THE ELECTRON HOWEVER HAD SHOWN THAT SOME PARTICLES AT LEAST MIGHT BE FAR SMALLER THAN ANY ATOM THEN THE INVESTIGATIONS INTO RADIOA ACTIVITY HAD SHOWN THAT ATOMS OF URANIUM ANTHORIUM SPONTANEOUSLY BROKE UP INTO SMALLER PARTICLES INCLUDING ELECTRONS AND ALPHA PARTICLES IT WOULD SEEM THEN THAT ATOMS OF THESE ELEMENTS AND PRESUMABLY OF ALL ELEMENTS WERE MADE UP OF STILL SMALLER PARTICLES AND THAT AMONG THESE PARTICLES WERE ELECTRONS"
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"remained elusive. In 1891, though, the Irish physicist George Johnstone Stoney (1826-1911) suggested that the supposed unit of electricity be given a name at least. He called the unit an “electron”. Cathode Rays An electric current flows through a closed circuit of some conducting material, such as metal wires. It starts at one pole of a battery, or of some other electricity generating device, and ends at the other. The two poles are the positive pole or “anode” and the negative pole or “cathode”. If there is a break in the circuit, the current will usually not flow at all. If, however, the break is not a large one, and the current is under a high driving force (which is called the “voltage”), then the current may leap across the break. If two ends of a wire, making up part of a broken circuit, are brought close to each other with nothing but air between, a spark may leap across the narrowing gap before they actually meet and, while it persists, the current will flow despite the break.",
"ED ELUSIVE IN EIGHTEEN NINETY ONE THOUGH THE IRISH PHYSICIST GEORGE JOHNSTONE STONEY EIGHTEEN TWENTY SIX NINETEEN ELEVEN SUGGESTED THAT THE SUPPOSED UNIT OF ELECTRICITY BE GIVEN A NAME AT LEAST HE CALLED THE UNIT AN ELECTRON CATHODE RAYS AN ELECTRIC CURRENT FLOWS THROUGH A CLOSED CIRCUIT OF SOME CONDUCTING MATERIAL SUCH AS METAL WIRES IT STARTS AT ONE POLE OF A BATTERY OR OF SOME OTHER ELECTRICITY GENERATING DEVICE AND ENDS AT THE OTHER THE TWO POLES ARE THE POSITIVE POLE OR ANNODE AND THE NEGATIVE POLE OR CATHODE IF THERE IS A BREAK IN THE CIRCUIT THE CURRENT WILL USUALLY NOT FLOW AT ALL IF HOWEVER THE BREAK IS NOT A LARGE ONE AND THE CURRENT IS UNDER A HIGH DRIVING FORCE WHICH IS CALLED THE VOLTAGE THEN THE CURRENT MAY LEAP ACROSS THE BREAK IF TWO ENDS OF A WIRE MAKING UP PART OF A BROKEN CIRCUIT ARE BROUGHT CLOSE TO EACH OTHER WITH NOTHING BUT AIR BETWEEN A SPARK MAY LEAP ACROSS THE NARROWING GAP BEFORE THEY ACTUALLY MEET AND WHILE IT PERSISTS THE CURRENT WILL FLOW DESPITE THE BREAK"
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"ielded results not compatible with the raisins-in-the-pound-cake notion. In 1906 Rutherford began to study what happened when massive subatomic particles, such as alpha particles, passed through matter. When alpha particles passed through a thin film of gold, for instance, they raced through, for the most part, as though nothing were there. The alpha particles seemed to push the light electrons aside and to act as though the positively charged main body of the atom that Thomson had pictured was not solid, but was soft and spongy. The only trouble was that every once in a while an alpha particle seemed to strike something in the gold film and bounce to one side. Sometimes it even bounced directly backward. It was as though somewhere in each atom there was something at least as massive as the alpha particle. How large was this massive portion of the atom? It couldn’t be very large for if it were the alpha particles would hit it frequently. Instead, the alpha particles made very few hits.",
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" number it turned out that there were still 7 elements that were not discovered. At least elements with atomic numbers of 43, 61, 72, 75, 85, 87, and 91 were still not known. By 1945, all seven had been discovered. It quickly turned out that the atomic number was more fundamental and more characteristic of a particular element than was the atomic weight. [Illustration: _Niels Bohr_] [Illustration: _Bohr’s study._] Since Dalton’s time it had been assumed that all the atoms of a particular element were of equal atomic weight and that atoms of two different elements were always of different atomic weight. The first inkling and the first proof that this might not be so came through the study of radioactivity. [Illustration: showing Helium atom, Hydrogen atom; Nucleus, Proton, Neutron, Electron labelled] Isotopes In 1902 Rutherford and his co-worker Frederick Soddy (1877-1956) showed that when uranium atoms gave off alpha particles, a new kind of atom was formed that was not uranium at all.",
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"Physicists, however, felt uneasy at using an average as standard for they were more interested in working with individual isotopes.",
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"xistence of a more massive isotope, ²H. This isotope has almost twice the mass of the lighter one. No other isotopes of a particular atom differ in mass by so large a factor. For that reason ²H and ¹H differ in ordinary chemical properties more than isotopes usually do and Urey therefore gave ²H the special name of “deuterium” from a Greek word meaning “second”. [Illustration: _W. F. Giauque_] In 1929 the American chemist William Francis Giauque (1895- ) found that oxygen was composed of more than 1 isotope. Its atomic weight had been set arbitrarily at 16.0000 so it was a relief that 99.76% of its atoms were ¹⁶O. However, 0.20% were ¹⁸O, and 0.04% were ¹⁷O. As you see, ¹⁶O must have a mass number of slightly less than 16.0000 and it must be the more massive isotopes ¹⁷O and ¹⁸O that pull the average up to 16.0000. Disregarding this, chemists clung to a standard atomic weight of 16.000 for oxygen as it appeared in nature, preferring not to concern themselves with the separate isotopes.",
" DIFFER IN ORDINARY CHEMICAL PROPERTIES MORE THAN ISOTOPES USUALLY DO AND UREE THEREFORE GAVE HYDROGEN TWO THE SPECIAL NAME OF DETERIUM FROM A GREEK WORD MEANING SECOND IN NINETEEN TWENTY NINE THE AMERICAN CHEMIST WILLIAM FRANCIS GIAE BORN EIGHTEEN NINETY FIVE FOUND THAT OXYGEN WAS COMPOSED OF MORE THAN ONE ISOTOPE ITS ATOMIC WEIGHT HAD BEEN SET ARBITRARILY AT SIXTEEN EXACTLY SO IT WAS A RELIEF THAT NINETY NINE POINT SEVEN SIX PER CENT OF ITS ATOMS WERE OXYGEN SIXTEEN HOWEVER ZERO POINT TWO ZERO PER CENT WERE OXYGEN EIGHTEEN AND ZERO POINT ZERO FOUR PER CENT WERE OXYGEN SEVENTEEN AS YOU SEE OXYGEN SIXTEEN MUST HAVE A MASS NUMBER OF SLIGHTLY LESS THAN SIXTEEN POINT ZERO ZERO AND IT MUST BE THE MORE MASSIVE ISOTOPES OXYGEN SEVENTEEN AND OXYGEN EIGHTEEN THAT PULL THE AVERAGE UP TO SIXTEEN POINT ZERO ZERO DISREGARDING THIS CHEMISTS CLUNG TO A STANDARD ATOMIC WEIGHT OF SIXTEEN POINT ZERO ZERO FOR OXYGEN AS IT APPEARED IN NATURE PREFERRING NOT TO CONCERN THEMSELVES WITH THE SEPARATE ISOTOPES"
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"was formed. This work of Rutherford and Soddy began a line of investigation that by 1907 had shown that there was a whole radioactive chain of elements, each one breaking down to the next in line by giving off either an alpha particle or a beta particle, until finally a lead atom was formed that was not radioactive. [Illustration: _Frederick Soddy_] There was, in short, a “radioactive series” beginning with uranium (atomic number 92) and ending with lead (atomic number 82). The same was true of thorium (atomic number 90), which began a series that also ended with lead. Still a third element, actinium (atomic number 89) was, at that time, the first known member of a series that also ended in lead. The various atoms formed in these three radioactive series were not all different in every way. When the uranium atom gives off an alpha particle, it forms an atom originally called “uranium X₁”. On close investigation, it turned out that this uranium X₁ had the chemical properties of thorium.",
"TILL ANOTHER ELEMENT WAS FORMED THIS WORK OF RUTHORD AND SODDY BEGAN A LINE OF INVESTIGATION THAT BY NINETEEN O SEVEN HAD SHOWN THAT THERE WAS A WHOLE RADIOACTIVE CHAIN OF ELEMENTS EACH ONE BREAKING DOWN TO THE NEXT IN LINE BY GIVING OFF EITHER AN ALPHI PARTICLE OR A BEETA PARTICLE UNTIL FINALLY A LEAD ATOM WAS FORMED THAT WAS NOT RADIOACTIVE THERE WAS IN SHORT A RADIOACTIVE SERIES BEGINNING WITH URANIUM ATOMIC NUMBER NINETY TWO AND ENDING WITH LEAD ATOMIC NUMBER EIGHTY TWO THE SAME WAS TRUE OF THORIUM ATOMIC NUMBER NINETY WHICH BEGAN A SERIES THAT ALSO ENDED WITH LEAD STILL A THIRD ELEMENT ACTINIUM ATOMIC NUMBER EIGHTY NINE WAS AT THAT TIME THE FIRST KNOWN MEMBER OF A SERIES THAT ALSO ENDED IN LEAD THE VARIOUS ATOMS FORMED IN THESE THREE RADIOACTIVE SERIES WERE NOT ALL DIFFERENT IN EVERY WAY WHEN THE URANIUM ATOM GIVES OFF AN ALPHA PARTICLE IT FORMS AN ATOM ORIGINALLY CALLED URANIUM X ONE ON CLOSE EXAMINATION IT TURNED OUT THAT THIS URANIUM X ONE HAD THE CHEMICAL PROPERTIES OF THORIUM"
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"It was soon shown that thorium was also radioactive. Thorium, which had been discovered in 1829 by Berzelius, was made up of atoms that were the second most massive known at the time.",
"IT WAS SOON SHOWN THAT THORIUM WAS ALSO RADIOACTIVE THORIUM WHICH HAD BEEN DISCOVERED IN EIGHTEEN TWENTY NINE BY BRAZILIUS WAS MADE UP OF ATOMS THAT WERE THE SECOND MOST MASSIVE KNOWN AT THE TIME"
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"vestigating the new phenomenon. In 1898 the Polish (later French) physicist Marie Sklodowska Curie (1867-1934) showed that it was the uranium atom that was the source of the radiation, and that any compound containing the uranium atom would give off these penetrating rays. Until then, uranium had not been of much interest to chemists. It was a comparatively rare metal that was first discovered in 1789 by the German chemist Martin Heinrich Klaproth (1743-1817). It had no particular uses and remained an obscure element. As chemists learned to work out the atomic weights of the various elements, they found, however, that, of the elements then known, uranium had the highest atomic weight of all—238. Once uranium was discovered to be an endless source of radiation, it gained interest that has risen ever since. Madame Curie gave the name “radioactivity” to this phenomenon of continuously giving off rays. Uranium was the first element found to be radioactive. It did not remain alone, however.",
"RIE SKWARDOWSKA CURI EIGHTEEN SIXTY SEVEN NINETEEN THIRTY FOUR SHOWED THAT IT WAS THE URANIUM ATOM THAT WAS THE SOURCE OF THE RADIATION AND THAT ANY COMPOUND CONTAINING THE URANIUM ATOM WOULD GIVE OFF THESE PENETRATING RAYS UNTIL THEN URANIUM HAD NOT BEEN OF MUCH INTEREST TO CHEMISTS IT WAS A COMPARATIVELY RARE METAL THAT WAS FIRST DISCOVERED IN SEVENTEEN EIGHTY NINE BY THE GERMAN CHEMIST MARTIN HEINRICH CLAPROTH SEVENTEEN FORTY THREE EIGHTEEN SEVENTEEN IT HAD NO PARTICULAR USES AND REMAINED AN OBSCURE ELEMENT AS CHEMISTS LEARNED TO WORK OUT THE ATOMIC WEIGHTS OF THE VARIOUS ELEMENTS THEY FOUND HOWEVER THAT OF THE ELEMENTS THEN KNOWN URANIUM HAD THE HIGHEST ATOMIC WEIGHT OF ALL TWO HUNDRED THIRTY EIGHT ONCE URANIUM WAS DISCOVERED TO BE AN ENDLESS SOURCE OF RADIATION IT GAINED INTEREST THAT HAS RISEN EVER SINCE MADAME CURI GAVE THE NAME RADIOA ACTIVITY TO THIS PHENOMENON OF CONTINUOUSLY GIVING OFF RAYS URANIUM WAS THE FIRST ELEMENT FOUND TO BE RADIOACTIVE IT DID NOT REMAIN ALONE HOWEVER"
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"THE ELEMENTS IN THIS TABLE WERE SOMETIMES NUMBERED CONSECUTIVELY ATOMIC NUMBER BUT THIS WAS INCONVENIENT SINCE WHEN NEW ELEMENTS WERE DISCOVERED THE LIST OF ATOMIC NUMBERS MIGHT HAVE TO BE REORGANIZED"
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"distances from each other. X rays reflecting from (or more accurately, diffracting from) crystals are bent out of their path by the rows of atoms. The longer their waves, the more they are bent. From the degree of bending the wavelength of the waves can be determined. [Illustration: _Charles Glover Barkla_] [Illustration: _Henry Gwyn-Jeffreys Moseley_] Moseley found that the greater the atomic weight of an atom, the shorter the waves of the characteristic X rays associated with it and the more penetrating those X rays were. There was such a close connection, in fact, that Moseley could arrange the elements in order according to the wavelength of the characteristic X rays. For some 40 years prior to this, the elements had been listed in order of atomic weight. This was useful especially since the Russian chemist Dmitri I. Mendeléev (1834-1907) had arranged them in a “periodic table” based on the atomic weight order in such a way that elements of similar properties were grouped together.",
"N CRYSTALS IN CRYSTALS ATOMS ARE ARRANGED IN REGULAR ORDER AND AT KNOWN DISTANCES FROM EACH OTHER X RAYS REFLECTING FROM OR MORE ACCURATELY DIFFRACTING FROM CRYSTALS ARE BENT OUT OF THEIR PATH BY THE ROWS OF ATOMS THE LONGER THEIR WAVES THE MORE THEY ARE BENT FROM THE DEGREE OF BENDING THE WAVE LENGTH OF THE WAVES CAN BE DETERMINED MOSELY FOUND THAT THE GREATER THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF AN ATOM THE SHORTER THE WAVES OF THE CHARACTERISTIC X RAYS ASSOCIATED WITH IT AND THE MORE PENETRATING THOSE X RAYS WERE THERE WAS SUCH A CLOSE CONNECTION IN FACT THAT MOSELY COULD ARRANGE THE ELEMENTS IN ORDER ACCORDING TO THE WAVE LENGTH OF THE CHARACTERISTIC X RAYS FOR SOME FORTY YEARS PRIOR TO THIS THE ELEMENTS HAD BEEN LISTED IN ORDER OF ATOMIC WEIGHT THIS WAS USEFUL ESPECIALLY SINCE THE RUSSIAN CHEMIST DMITRI EI MENDELIEV EIGHTEEN THIRTY FOUR TO NINETEEN O SEVEN HAD ARRANGED THEM IN A PERIODIC TABLE BASED ON THE ATOMIC WEIGHT ORDER IN SUCH A WAY THAT ELEMENTS OF SIMILAR PROPERTIES WERE GROUPED TOGETHER"
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"For that reason, he set the atomic weight of oxygen at exactly 16 and in that case, the atomic weight of hydrogen had to be placed just a trifle higher than 1.",
"FOR THAT REASON HE SET THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF OXYGEN AT EXACTLY SIXTEEN AND IN THAT CASE THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF HYDROGEN HAD TO BE PLACED JUST A TRIFLE HIGHER THAN O"
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"mist Jöns Jakob Berzelius (1779-1848) continued Dalton’s work and found that elements did not combine in quite such simple ratios. A given quantity of hydrogen actually combined with a little bit less than eight times its mass of oxygen. Therefore if the atomic weight of hydrogen were considered to be 1, the atomic weight of oxygen would have to be not 16, but 15.87. [Illustration: _Jöns Jakob Berzelius_] As it happens, oxygen combines with more elements (and more easily) than hydrogen does. The ratio of its atomic weight to that of other elements is also more often a whole number. In working out the atomic weight of elements it was therefore more convenient to set the atomic weight of oxygen at a whole number than that of hydrogen. Berzelius did this, for instance, in the table of atomic weights he published in 1828. At first he called the atomic weight of oxygen 100. Then he decided to make the atomic weights as small as possible, without allowing any atomic weight to be less than 1.",
"NTEEN SEVENTY NINE EIGHTEEN FORTY EIGHT CONTINUED DALTON'S WORK AND FOUND THAT ELEMENTS DID NOT COMBINE IN QUITE SUCH SIMPLE RATIOS A GIVEN QUANTITY OF HYDROGEN ACTUALLY COMBINED WITH A LITTLE BIT LESS THAN EIGHT TIMES ITS MASS OF OXYGEN THEREFORE IF THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF HYDROGEN WERE CONSIDERED TO BE ONE THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF OXYGEN WOULD HAVE TO BE NOT SIXTEEN BUT FIFTEEN POINT EIGHT SEVEN AS IT HAPPENS OXYGEN COMBINES WITH MORE ELEMENTS AND MORE EASILY THAN HYDROGEN DOES THE RATIO OF ITS ATOMIC WEIGHT TO THAT OF OTHER ELEMENTS IS ALSO MORE OFTEN A WHOLE NUMBER IN WORKING OUT THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF ELEMENTS IT WAS THEREFORE MORE CONVENIENT TO SET THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF OXYGEN AT A WHOLE NUMBER THAN THAT OF HYDROGEN BRAZILIUS DID THIS FOR INSTANCE IN THE TABLE OF ATOMIC WEIGHTS HE PUBLISHED IN EIGHTEEN TWENTY EIGHT AT FIRST HE CALLED THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF OXYGEN ONE HUNDRED THEN HE DECIDED TO MAKE THE ATOMIC WEIGHTS AS SMALL AS POSSIBLE WITHOUT ALLOWING ANY ATOMIC WEIGHT TO BE LESS THAN ONE"
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"It appeared that if an atom attached a positive unit of electricity to itself it would be pulled in one direction through the solution by the voltage. If it attached a negative unit of electricity to itself it would be pulled in the other direction. [Illustration: _Michael Faraday_] The units of electricity were a great deal more difficult to study than the atomic units of matter, and throughout the 19th century they remained elusive.",
"IT APPEARED THAT IF AN ATOM ATTACHED A POSITIVE UNIT OF ELECTRICITY TO ITSELF IT WOULD BE PULLED IN ONE DIRECTION THROUGH THE SOLUTION BY THE VOLTAGE IF IT ATTACHED A NEGATIVE UNIT OF ELECTRICITY TO ITSELF IT WOULD BE PULLED IN THE OTHER DIRECTION THE UNITS OF ELECTRICITY WERE A GREAT DEAL MORE DIFFICULT TO STUDY THAN THE ATOMIC UNITS OF MATTER AND THROUGHOUT THE NINETEENTH CENTURY THEY REMAINED ELUSIVE"
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"number of atoms of a variety of different elements. In some cases, though, it liberated just half the expected number of atoms; or even, in a few cases, just a third. Scientists began to speculate that electricity, like matter, might consist of tiny units. When electricity broke up a molecule, perhaps a unit of electricity attached itself to each atom. In that case, the same quantity of electricity, containing the same number of units, would liberate the same number of atoms. In the case of some elements, each atom could attach 2 units of electricity to itself, or perhaps even 3. When that happened a given quantity of electricity would liberate only one-half, or only one-third, the usual number of atoms. (Thus, 18 units of electricity would liberate 18 atoms if distributed 1 to an atom; only 9 atoms if distributed 2 to an atom; and only 6 atoms if distributed 3 to an atom.) It was understood at the time that electricity existed in two varieties, which were called positive and negative.",
"UMBER OF ATOMS OF A VARIETY OF DIFFERENT ELEMENTS IN SOME CASES THOUGH IT LIBERATED JUST HALF THE EXPECTED NUMBER OF ATOMS OR EVEN IN A FEW CASES JUST A THIRD SCIENTISTS BEGAN TO SPECULATE THAT ELECTRICITY LIKE MATTER MIGHT CONSIST OF TINY UNITS WHEN ELECTRICITY BROKE UP A MOLECULE PERHAPS A UNIT OF ELECTRICITY ATTACHED ITSELF TO EACH ATOM IN THAT CASE THE SAME QUANTITY OF ELECTRICITY CONTAINING THE SAME NUMBER OF UNITS WOULD LIBERATE THE SAME NUMBER OF ATOMS IN THE CASE OF SOME ELEMENTS EACH ATOM COULD ATTACH TWO UNITS OF ELECTRICITY TO ITSELF OR PERHAPS EVEN THREE WHEN THAT HAPPENED A GIVEN QUANTITY OF ELECTRICITY WOULD LIBERATE ONLY ONE HALF OR ONLY ONE THIRD THE USUAL NUMBER OF ATOMS THUS EIGHTEEN UNITS OF ELECTRICITY WOULD LIBERATE EIGHTEEN ATOMS IF DISTRIBUTED ONE TO AN ATOM ONLY NINE ATOMS IF DISTRIBUTED TWO TO AN ATOM AND ONLY SIX ATOMS IF DISTRIBUTED THREE TO AN ATOM IT WAS UNDERSTOOD AT THE TIME THAT ELECTRICITY EXISTED IN TWO VARIETIES WHICH WERE CALLED POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE"
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"were ¹⁶O. However, 0.20% were ¹⁸O, and 0.04% were ¹⁷O. As you see, ¹⁶O must have a mass number of slightly less than 16.0000 and it must be the more massive isotopes ¹⁷O and ¹⁸O that pull the average up to 16.0000. Disregarding this, chemists clung to a standard atomic weight of 16.000 for oxygen as it appeared in nature, preferring not to concern themselves with the separate isotopes. Physicists, however, felt uneasy at using an average as standard for they were more interested in working with individual isotopes. They preferred to set ¹⁶O at 16.0000 so that the average atomic weight of oxygen was 16.0044 and all other atomic weights rose in proportion. Atomic weights determined by this system were “physical atomic weights”. Finally, in 1961, a compromise was struck. Chemists and physicists alike decided to consider the atomic weight of ¹²C as exactly 12 and to use that as a standard. By this system, the atomic weight of oxygen became 15.9994, which is only very slightly less than 16.",
"E MASSIVE ISOTOPES OXYGEN SEVENTEEN AND OXYGEN EIGHTEEN THAT PULL THE AVERAGE UP TO SIXTEEN POINT ZERO ZERO DISREGARDING THIS CHEMISTS CLUNG TO A STANDARD ATOMIC WEIGHT OF SIXTEEN POINT ZERO ZERO FOR OXYGEN AS IT APPEARED IN NATURE PREFERRING NOT TO CONCERN THEMSELVES WITH THE SEPARATE ISOTOPES PHYSICISTS HOWEVER FELT UNEASY AT USING AN AVERAGE AS STANDARD FOR THEY WERE MORE INTERESTED IN WORKING WITH INDIVIDUAL ISOTOPES THEY PREFERRED TO SET OXYGEN SIXTEEN AT SIXTEEN POINT ZERO ZERO SO THAT THE AVERAGE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF OXYGEN WAS SIXTEEN POINT ZERO ZERO FOUR FOUR AND ALL OTHER ATOMIC WEIGHTS ROSE IN PROPORTION ATOMIC WEIGHTS DETERMINED BY THIS SYSTEM WERE PHYSICAL ATOMIC WEIGHTS FINALLY IN NINETEEN SIXTY ONE A COMPROMISE WAS STRUCK CHEMISTS AND PHYSICISTS ALIKE DECIDED TO CONSIDER THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF CARBON TWELVE AS EXACTLY TWELVE AND TO USE THAT AS A STANDARD BY THIS SYSTEM THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF OXYGEN BECAME FIFTEEN POINT NINE NINE NINE FOUR WHICH IS ONLY VERY SLIGHTLY LESS THAN SI"
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"Its atomic weight is just about 1 and most of its atoms are ¹H. The American chemist Harold Clayton Urey (1893 ) detected the existence of a more massive isotope, ²H. This isotope has almost twice the mass of the lighter one. No other isotopes of a particular atom differ in mass by so large a factor.",
"ITS ATOMIC WEIGHT IS JUST ABOUT ONE AND MOST OF ITS ATOMS ARE HYDROGEN ONE THE AMERICAN CHEMIST HAROLD CLAYTON UREE BORN EIGHTEEN NINETY THREE DETECTED THE EXISTENCE OF A MORE MASSIVE ISOTOPE HYDROGEN TWO THIS ISOTOPE HAS ALMOST TWICE THE MASS OF THE LIGHTER ONE NO OTHER ISOTOPES OF A PARTICULAR ATOM DIFFER IN MASS BY SO LARGE A FACTOR"
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"ile that of the metal sodium (chemical symbol Na) is nearly 23. As it turns out, all the atoms of fluorine are of the single variety ¹⁹F, while all the atoms of sodium are ²³Na. Sometimes the atomic weight of an element, as it occurs in nature, is nearly a whole number and yet it is made up of more than 1 isotope. In that case, one of the isotopes makes up very nearly all of it, while the others are present in such minor quantities that the average is hardly affected. Helium, for instance (atomic symbol He) has an atomic weight of just about 4 and, indeed, almost all the atoms making it up are ⁴He. However, 0.0001% of the atoms, or one out of a million, are ³He. Again, 99.6% of all the nitrogen atoms (atomic symbol N) are ¹⁴N, but 0.4% are ¹⁵N. Then, 98.9% of all carbon atoms (atomic symbol C) are ¹²C, but 1.1% are ¹³C. It is not surprising that the atomic weights of nitrogen and carbon are just about 14 and 12, respectively. [Illustration: _Harold Urey_] Even hydrogen does not escape.",
" ATOMS OF SODIUM ARE SODIUM TWENTY THREE SOMETIMES THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF AN ELEMENT AS IT OCCURS IN NATURE IS NEARLY A WHOLE NUMBER AND YET IT IS MADE UP OF MORE THAN ONE ISOTOPE IN THAT CASE ONE OF THE ISOTOPES MAKE UP VERY NEARLY ALL OF IT WHILE THE OTHERS ARE PRESENT IN SUCH MINOR QUANTITIES THAT THE AVERAGE IS HARDLY AFFECTED HELIUM FOR INSTANCE ATOMIC SYMBOL H E HAS AN ATOMIC WEIGHT OF JUST ABOUT FOUR AND INDEED ALMOST ALL THE ATOMS MAKING IT UP ARE HELIUM FOUR HOWEVER ONE ONE THOUSANDTH OF ONE PER CENT OF THE ATOMS OR ONE OUT OF A MILLION R HELIUM THREE AGAIN NINETY NINE POINT SIX PER CENT OF ALL THE NITROGEN ATOMS ATOMIC SYMBOL N ARE NITROGEN FOURTEEN BUT ZERO POINT FOUR PER CENT ARE NITROGEN FIFTEEN THEN NINETY EIGHT POINT NINE PER CENT OF ALL CARBON ATOMS ATOMIC SYMBOL C ARE CARBON TWELVE BUT ONE POINT ONE PER CENT ARE CARBON THIRTEEN IT IS NOT SURPRISING THAT THE ATOMIC WEIGHTS OF NITROGEN AND CARBON ARE JUST ABOUT FOURTEEN AND TWELVE RESPECTIVELY EVEN HYDROGEN DOES NOT ESCAPE"
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"A number of elements had atomic weights that were nearly whole numbers on the \"oxygen = 16\" standard. The atomic weight of aluminum was just about 27, that of calcium almost 40, that of carbon almost 12, that of gold almost 197, and so on. On the other hand, some elements had atomic weights that were far removed from whole numbers.",
"A NUMBER OF ELEMENTS HAD ATOMIC WEIGHTS THAT WERE NEARLY WHOLE NUMBERS ON THE OXYGEN EQUALS SIXTEEN STANDARD THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF ALUMINIUM WAS JUST ABOUT TWENTY SEVEN THAT OF CALCIUM WAS ALMOST FORTY THAT OF CARBON ALMOST TWELVE THAT OF GOLD ALMOST ONE HUNDRED NINETY SEVEN AND SO ON ON THE OTHER HAND SOME ELEMENTS HAD ATOMIC WEIGHTS THAT WERE FAR REMOVED FROM WHOLE NUMBERS"
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"drogen does. The ratio of its atomic weight to that of other elements is also more often a whole number. In working out the atomic weight of elements it was therefore more convenient to set the atomic weight of oxygen at a whole number than that of hydrogen. Berzelius did this, for instance, in the table of atomic weights he published in 1828. At first he called the atomic weight of oxygen 100. Then he decided to make the atomic weights as small as possible, without allowing any atomic weight to be less than 1. For that reason, he set the atomic weight of oxygen at exactly 16 and in that case, the atomic weight of hydrogen had to be placed just a trifle higher than 1. The atomic weight of hydrogen became 1.008. This system was retained for nearly a century and a half. Throughout the 19th century, chemists kept on working out atomic weights more and more carefully. By the start of the 20th century, most elements had their atomic weights worked out to two decimal places, sometimes three.",
" THAT OF OTHER ELEMENTS IS ALSO MORE OFTEN A WHOLE NUMBER IN WORKING OUT THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF ELEMENTS IT WAS THEREFORE MORE CONVENIENT TO SET THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF OXYGEN AT A WHOLE NUMBER THAN THAT OF HYDROGEN BRAZILIUS DID THIS FOR INSTANCE IN THE TABLE OF ATOMIC WEIGHTS HE PUBLISHED IN EIGHTEEN TWENTY EIGHT AT FIRST HE CALLED THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF OXYGEN ONE HUNDRED THEN HE DECIDED TO MAKE THE ATOMIC WEIGHTS AS SMALL AS POSSIBLE WITHOUT ALLOWING ANY ATOMIC WEIGHT TO BE LESS THAN ONE FOR THAT REASON HE SET THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF OXYGEN AT EXACTLY SIXTEEN AND IN THAT CASE THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF HYDROGEN HAD TO BE PLACED JUST A TRIFLE HIGHER THAN ONE THE ATOMIC WEIGHT OF HYDROGEN BECAME ONE POINT ZEROZERO EIGHT THIS SYSTEM WAS RETAINED FOR NEARLY A CENTURY AND A HALF THROUGHOUT THE NINETEENTH CENTURY CHEMISTS KEPT ON WORKING OUT ATOMIC WEIGHTS MORE AND MORE CAREFULLY BY THE START OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY MOST ELEMENTS HAD THEIR ATOMIC WEIGHTS WORKED OUT TO TWO DECIMAL PLACES SOMETIMES THREE"
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"Thorium, which had been discovered in 1829 by Berzelius, was made up of atoms that were the second most massive known at the time. Thorium's atomic weight is 232. But what was the mysterious radiation emitted by uranium and thorium? Almost at once it was learned that whatever the radiation was, it was not uniform in properties.",
"THORIUM WHICH HAD BEEN DISCOVERED IN EIGHTEEN TWENTY NINE BY BRAZILIUS WAS MADE UP OF ATOMS THAT WERE THE SECOND MOST MASSIVE KNOWN AT THE TIME THORIUM'S ATOMIC WEIGHT IS TWO THIRTY TWO BUT WHAT WAS THE MYSTERIOUS RADIATION EMITTED BY URANIUM AND THORIUM ALMOST AT ONCE IT WAS LEARNED THAT WHATEVER THE RADIATION WAS IT WAS NOT UNIFORM IN PROPERTIES"
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"ater French) physicist Marie Sklodowska Curie (1867-1934) showed that it was the uranium atom that was the source of the radiation, and that any compound containing the uranium atom would give off these penetrating rays. Until then, uranium had not been of much interest to chemists. It was a comparatively rare metal that was first discovered in 1789 by the German chemist Martin Heinrich Klaproth (1743-1817). It had no particular uses and remained an obscure element. As chemists learned to work out the atomic weights of the various elements, they found, however, that, of the elements then known, uranium had the highest atomic weight of all—238. Once uranium was discovered to be an endless source of radiation, it gained interest that has risen ever since. Madame Curie gave the name “radioactivity” to this phenomenon of continuously giving off rays. Uranium was the first element found to be radioactive. It did not remain alone, however. It was soon shown that thorium was also radioactive.",
"HIRTY FOUR SHOWED THAT IT WAS THE URANIUM ATOM THAT WAS THE SOURCE OF THE RADIATION AND THAT ANY COMPOUND CONTAINING THE URANIUM ATOM WOULD GIVE OFF THESE PENETRATING RAYS UNTIL THEN URANIUM HAD NOT BEEN OF MUCH INTEREST TO CHEMISTS IT WAS A COMPARATIVELY RARE METAL THAT WAS FIRST DISCOVERED IN SEVENTEEN EIGHTY NINE BY THE GERMAN CHEMIST MARTIN HEINRICH CLAPROTH SEVENTEEN FORTY THREE EIGHTEEN SEVENTEEN IT HAD NO PARTICULAR USES AND REMAINED AN OBSCURE ELEMENT AS CHEMISTS LEARNED TO WORK OUT THE ATOMIC WEIGHTS OF THE VARIOUS ELEMENTS THEY FOUND HOWEVER THAT OF THE ELEMENTS THEN KNOWN URANIUM HAD THE HIGHEST ATOMIC WEIGHT OF ALL TWO HUNDRED THIRTY EIGHT ONCE URANIUM WAS DISCOVERED TO BE AN ENDLESS SOURCE OF RADIATION IT GAINED INTEREST THAT HAS RISEN EVER SINCE MADAME CURI GAVE THE NAME RADIOA ACTIVITY TO THIS PHENOMENON OF CONTINUOUSLY GIVING OFF RAYS URANIUM WAS THE FIRST ELEMENT FOUND TO BE RADIOACTIVE IT DID NOT REMAIN ALONE HOWEVER IT WAS SOON SHOWN THAT THORIUM WAS ALSO RADIOACTIVE"
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"One carried a positive charge of electricity, one a negative charge, and one no charge at all. The New Zealand born physicist Ernest Rutherford (1871 1937) called the first two kinds of radiation \"alpha rays\" and \"beta rays\", after the first two letters of the Greek alphabet. The third was soon called \"gamma rays\" after the third letter.",
"ONE CARRIED A POSITIVE CHARGE OF ELECTRICITY ONE A NEGATIVE CHARGE AND ONE NO CHARGE AT ALL THE NEW ZEALAND BORN PHYSICIST ERNEST RUTHERFORD EIGHTEEN SEVENTY ONE NINETEEN THIRTY SEVEN CALLED THE FIRST TWO KINDS OF RADIATION ALPHARAS AND BATAYS AFTER THE FIRST TWO LETTERS OF THE GREEK ALPHABET THE THIRD WAS SOON CALLED GAMAREZ AFTER THE THIRD LET"
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"n endless source of radiation, it gained interest that has risen ever since. Madame Curie gave the name “radioactivity” to this phenomenon of continuously giving off rays. Uranium was the first element found to be radioactive. It did not remain alone, however. It was soon shown that thorium was also radioactive. Thorium, which had been discovered in 1829 by Berzelius, was made up of atoms that were the second most massive known at the time. Thorium’s atomic weight is 232. But what was the mysterious radiation emitted by uranium and thorium? Almost at once it was learned that whatever the radiation was, it was not uniform in properties. In 1899 Becquerel (and others) showed that, in the presence of a magnet, some of the radiation swerved in a particular direction. Later it was found that a portion of it swerved in the opposite direction. Still another part didn’t swerve at all but moved on in a straight line. The conclusion was that uranium and thorium gave off three kinds of radiation.",
" RADIATION IT GAINED INTEREST THAT HAS RISEN EVER SINCE MADAME CURI GAVE THE NAME RADIOA ACTIVITY TO THIS PHENOMENON OF CONTINUOUSLY GIVING OFF RAYS URANIUM WAS THE FIRST ELEMENT FOUND TO BE RADIOACTIVE IT DID NOT REMAIN ALONE HOWEVER IT WAS SOON SHOWN THAT THORIUM WAS ALSO RADIOACTIVE THORIUM WHICH HAD BEEN DISCOVERED IN EIGHTEEN TWENTY NINE BY BRAZILIUS WAS MADE UP OF ATOMS THAT WERE THE SECOND MOST MASSIVE KNOWN AT THE TIME THORIUM'S ATOMIC WEIGHT IS TWO THIRTY TWO BUT WHAT WAS THE MYSTERIOUS RADIATION EMITTED BY URANIUM AND THORIUM ALMOST AT ONCE IT WAS LEARNED THAT WHATEVER THE RADIATION WAS IT WAS NOT UNIFORM IN PROPERTIES IN EIGHTEEN NINETY NINE BECAREL AND OTHERS SHOWED THAT IN THE PRESENCE OF A MAGNET SOME OF THE RADIATIONS SWERVED IN A PARTICULAR DIRECTION LATER IT WAS FOUND THAT A PORTION OF IT SWERVED IN THE OPPOSITE DIRECTION STILL ANOTHER PART DIDN'T SWERVE AT ALL BUT MOVED ON IN A STRAIGHT LINE THE CONCLUSION WAS THAT URANIUM AND THORIUM GAVE OFF THREE KINDS OF RADIATION"
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" escaping or from gaining additional quantity from outside, as it was in the case of mass. Beginning in 1840, however, the English physicist James Prescott Joule (1818-1889) began a series of experiments in which he made use of every form of energy he could think of. In each case he turned it into heat and allowed the heat to raise the temperature of a given quantity of water. He used the rise in temperature as a measure of the energy. By 1847 he was convinced that any form of energy could be turned into fixed and predictable amounts of heat; that a certain amount of work was equivalent to a certain amount of heat. In that same year, the German physicist Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz (1821-1894) advanced the general notion that a fixed amount of energy in one form was equal to the same amount of energy in any other form. Energy might change its form over and over, but not change its amount. None could either be destroyed or created. This is the “law of conservation of energy”.",
"WAS IN THE CASE OF MASS BEGINNING IN EIGHTEEN FORTY HOWEVER THE ENGLISH PHYSICIST JAMES PRESCOTT JEWEL EIGHTEEN EIGHTEEN EIGHTEEN EIGHTY NINE BEGAN A SERIES OF EXPERIMENTS IN WHICH HE MADE USE OF EVERY FORM OF ENERGY HE COULD THINK OF IN EACH CASE HE TURNED IT INTO HEAT AND ALLOWED THE HEAT TO RAISE THE TEMPERATURE OF A GIVEN QUANTITY OF WATER HE USED THE RISE IN TEMPERATURE AS A MEASURE OF THE ENERGY BY EIGHTEEN FORTY SEVEN HE WAS CONVINCED THAT ANY FORM OF ENERGY COULD BE TURNED INTO FIXED AND PREDICTABLE AMOUNTS OF HEAT THAT A CERTAIN AMOUNT OF WORK WAS EQUIVALENT TO A CERTAIN AMOUNT OF HEAT IN THAT SAME YEAR THE GERMAN PHYSICIST HERMANN LUDWIG FERDINAND VON HELMHOLTZ EIGHTEEN TWENTY ONE EIGHTEEN NINETY FOUR ADVANCED THE GENERAL NOTION THAT A FIXED AMOUNT OF ENERGY IN ONE FORM WAS EQUAL TO THE SAME AMOUNT OF ENERGY IN ANY OTHER FORM ENERGY MIGHT CHANGE ITS FORM OVER AND OVER BUT NOT CHANGE ITS AMOUNT NONE COULD EITHER BE DESTROYED OR CREATED THIS IS THE LAW OF CONSERVATION OF ENERGY"
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"COULD THE RADIOACTIVE ATOMS SOMEHOW COLLECT ENERGY FROM THEIR SURROUNDINGS CONCENTRATE IT SEVERAL MILLIONFOLD AND THEN LET IT OUT ALL AT ONCE"
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" very aware of chemical reactions was, first, that the most common radioactive processes are so slow that their great energies were stretched over such enormous blocks of time as to be insignificant on a per second basis. Secondly, chemical reactions are easily controlled by changing quantities, concentrations, temperatures, pressures, states of mixtures, and so on, and this makes them easy to take note of and to study. The rate of radioactive changes, however, could not apparently be altered. The early investigators quickly found that the breakdown of uranium-238, for instance, could not be hastened by heat, pressure, changes in chemical combination, or, indeed, anything else they could think of. It remained incredibly slow. But despite all this, radioactivity had at last been discovered and the intensity of its energies was recognized and pointed out in 1902 by Marie Curie and her husband Pierre Curie (1859-1906). Where, then, did the energy come from? Could it come from the outside?",
" CHEMICAL REACTIONS WAS FIRST THAT THE MOST COMMON RADIOACTIVE PROCESSES ARE SO SLOW THAT THEIR GREAT ENERGIES WERE STRETCHED OVER SUCH ENORMOUS BLOCKS OF TIME AS TO BE INSIGNIFICANT ON A PER SECOND BASIS SECONDLY CHEMICAL REACTIONS ARE EASILY CONTROLLED BY CHANGING QUANTITIES CONCENTRATIONS TEMPERATURES PRESSURES STATES OF MIXTURE AND SO ON AND THIS MAKES THEM EASY TO TAKE NOTE OF AND TO STUDY THE RATE OF RADIOACTIVE CHANGES HOWEVER COULD NOT APPARENTLY BE ALTERED THE EARLY INVESTIGATORS QUICKLY FOUND THAT THE BREAK DOWN OF URANIUM TWO THIRTY EIGHT FOR INSTANCE COULD NOT BE HASTENED BY HEAT PRESSURE CHANGES IN CHEMICAL COMBINATION OR INDEED ANYTHING ELSE THEY COULD THINK OF IT REMAINED INCREDIBLY SLOW BUT DESPITE ALL THIS RADIO ACTIVITY HAD AT LAST BEEN DISCOVERED AND THE INTENSITY OF ITS ENERGIES WAS RECOGNIZED AND POINTED OUT IN NINETEEN O TWO BY MARIE CURIE AND HER HUSBAND PIERRE CURRIE EIGHTEEN FIFTY NINETEEN O SIX WHERE THEN DID THE ENERGY COME FROM COULD IT COME FROM THE OUTSIDE"
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" IT WOULD TAKE ENERGY TO PULL THEM APART AND BREAK UP THE SHARED POOL JUST AS IT WOULD TAKE ENERGY TO PULL TWO IONS APART AGAINST THE ATTRACTION OF OPPOSITE CHARGES IN THIS WAY THE VAGUE NOTIONS OF ADAMS CLINGING TOGETHER IN MOLECULES AND BEING FORCED APART GAVE WAY TO A MUCH MORE PRECISE PICTURE OF ELECTRON'S BEING TRANSFERRED OR SHARED THE ELECTRON SHIFTS COULD BE DEALT WITH MATHEMATICALLY BY A SYSTEM THAT CAME TO BE CALLED QUANTUM MECHANICS AND CHEMISTRY WAS THUS MADE A MORE EXACT SCIENCE THAN IT HAD EVER BEEN BEFORE THE ENERGY OF THE SUN THE MOST SERIOUS PROBLEM RAISED BY THE LA LAW OF CONSERVATION OF ENERGY INVOLVED THE SUN UNTIL EIGHTEEN FORTY SEVEN SCIENTISTS DID NOT QUESTION SUNLIGHT THE SUN RADIATED VAST QUANTITIES OF ENERGY BUT THAT APPARENTLY WAS ITS NATURE AND WAS NO MORE TO BE PUZZLED OVER THAN THE FACT THAT THE EARTH ROTATED ON ITS AXIS ONCE HELMHOLTZ HAD STATED THAT ENERGY COULD NEITHER BE CREATED NOR DESTROYED HOWEVER HE WAS BOUND TO ASK WHERE THE SUN'S ENERGY CAME FROM"
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"transfer of 1 or more electrons, but through sharing pairs of electrons. This sharing could only take place if the atoms remained close neighbors, and it would take energy to pull them apart and break up the shared pool, just as it would take energy to pull 2 ions apart against the attraction of opposite charges. In this way the vague notions of atoms clinging together in molecules and being forced apart gave way to a much more precise picture of electrons being transferred or shared. The electron shifts could be dealt with mathematically by a system that came to be called “quantum mechanics” and chemistry was thus made a more exact science than it had ever been before. The Energy of the Sun The most serious problem raised by the law of conservation of energy involved the sun. Until 1847, scientists did not question sunlight. The sun radiated vast quantities of energy but that apparently was its nature and was no more to be puzzled over than the fact that the earth rotated on its axis.",
"NE OR MORE ELECTRODES BUT THROUGH SHARING PAIRS OF ELECTRODES THIS SHARING COULD ONLY TAKE PLACE IF THE ATOMS REMAINED CLOSE NEIGHBORS AND IT WOULD TAKE ENERGY TO PULL THEM APART AND BREAK UP THE SHARED POOL JUST AS IT WOULD TAKE ENERGY TO PULL TWO IONS APART AGAINST THE ATTRACTION OF OPPOSITE CHARGES IN THIS WAY THE VAGUE NOTIONS OF ADAMS CLINGING TOGETHER IN MOLECULES AND BEING FORCED APART GAVE WAY TO A MUCH MORE PRECISE PICTURE OF ELECTRON'S BEING TRANSFERRED OR SHARED THE ELECTRON SHIFTS COULD BE DEALT WITH MATHEMATICALLY BY A SYSTEM THAT CAME TO BE CALLED QUANTUM MECHANICS AND CHEMISTRY WAS THUS MADE A MORE EXACT SCIENCE THAN IT HAD EVER BEEN BEFORE THE ENERGY OF THE SUN THE MOST SERIOUS PROBLEM RAISED BY THE LA LAW OF CONSERVATION OF ENERGY INVOLVED THE SUN UNTIL EIGHTEEN FORTY SEVEN SCIENTISTS DID NOT QUESTION SUNLIGHT THE SUN RADIATED VAST QUANTITIES OF ENERGY BUT THAT APPARENTLY WAS ITS NATURE AND WAS NO MORE TO BE PUZZLED OVER THAN THE FACT THAT THE EARTH ROTATED ON ITS AXIS"
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"ames Prescott Joule (1818-1889) began a series of experiments in which he made use of every form of energy he could think of. In each case he turned it into heat and allowed the heat to raise the temperature of a given quantity of water. He used the rise in temperature as a measure of the energy. By 1847 he was convinced that any form of energy could be turned into fixed and predictable amounts of heat; that a certain amount of work was equivalent to a certain amount of heat. In that same year, the German physicist Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz (1821-1894) advanced the general notion that a fixed amount of energy in one form was equal to the same amount of energy in any other form. Energy might change its form over and over, but not change its amount. None could either be destroyed or created. This is the “law of conservation of energy”. Chemical Energy There is energy in a piece of wood. Left quietly to itself, it seems completely incapable of bringing about any kind of work.",
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"reat that an explosion occurs. Such a situation, in which each reacting bit of the system adds energy to the system by its reaction and brings about more reactions like itself, is called a “chain reaction”. Thus, a match flame put to one corner of a large sheet of paper will set that corner burning. The heat of the burning will ignite a neighboring portion of the sheet and so on till the entire sheet is burned. For that matter a single smoldering cigarette end can serve to burn down an entire forest in a vastly destructive chain reaction. Electrons and Energy The discovery of the structure of the atom sharpened the understanding of chemical energy. In 1904 the German chemist Richard Abegg (1869-1910) first suggested that atoms were held together through the transfer of electrons from one atom to another. To see how this worked, one began by noting that electrons in an atom existed in a series of shells. The innermost shell could hold only 2 electrons, the next 8, the next 18 and so on.",
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"THE EARLY INVESTIGATORS QUICKLY FOUND THAT THE BREAK DOWN OF URANIUM TWO THIRTY EIGHT FOR INSTANCE COULD NOT BE HASTENED BY HEAT PRESSURE CHANGES IN CHEMICAL COMBINATION OR INDEED ANYTHING ELSE THEY COULD THINK OF IT REMAINED INCREDIBLY SLOW"
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". Let’s put it another way. We might think of a single uranium atom breaking down and shooting off an alpha particle. We might also think of a single carbon atom combining with 2 oxygen atoms to form carbon dioxide. The uranium atom would give off 2,000,000 times as much energy in breaking down, as the carbon atom would in combining. The energy of radioactivity is millions of times as intense as the energy released by chemical reactions. The reason mankind had remained unaware of radioactivity and very aware of chemical reactions was, first, that the most common radioactive processes are so slow that their great energies were stretched over such enormous blocks of time as to be insignificant on a per second basis. Secondly, chemical reactions are easily controlled by changing quantities, concentrations, temperatures, pressures, states of mixtures, and so on, and this makes them easy to take note of and to study. The rate of radioactive changes, however, could not apparently be altered.",
"THAT OF URANIUM LET'S PUT IT ANOTHER WAY WE MIGHT THINK OF A SINGLE GERANIUM ATOM BREAKING DOWN AND SHOOTING OFF AN ALPHA PARTICLE WE MIGHT ALSO THINK OF A SINGLE CARBON ATOM COMBINING WITH TWO OXYGEN ATOMS TO FORM CARBON DIOXIDE THE URANIUM ATOM WOULD GIVE OFF TWO MILLION TIMES AS MUCH ENERGY IN BREAKING DOWN AS THE CARBON ATOM WOULD IN COMBINING THE ENERGY OF RADIO ACTIVITY IS MILLIONS OF TIMES AS INTENSE AS THE ENERGY RELEASED BY CHEMICAL REACTIONS THE REASON MANKIND HAD REMAINED UNAWARE OF RADIO ACTIVITY AND VERY AWARE OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS WAS FIRST THAT THE MOST COMMON RADIOACTIVE PROCESSES ARE SO SLOW THAT THEIR GREAT ENERGIES WERE STRETCHED OVER SUCH ENORMOUS BLOCKS OF TIME AS TO BE INSIGNIFICANT ON A PER SECOND BASIS SECONDLY CHEMICAL REACTIONS ARE EASILY CONTROLLED BY CHANGING QUANTITIES CONCENTRATIONS TEMPERATURES PRESSURES STATES OF MIXTURE AND SO ON AND THIS MAKES THEM EASY TO TAKE NOTE OF AND TO STUDY THE RATE OF RADIOACTIVE CHANGES HOWEVER COULD NOT APPARENTLY BE ALTERED"
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"Electrons and Energy The discovery of the structure of the atom sharpened the understanding of chemical energy. In 1904 the German chemist Richard Abegg (1869 1910) first suggested that atoms were held together through the transfer of electrons from one atom to another.",
"ELECTRONS AND ENERGY THE DISCOVERY OF THE STRUCTURE OF THE ATOM SHARPENED THE UNDERSTANDING OF CHEMICAL ENERGY IN NINETEEN O FOUR THE GERMAN CHEMIST RICHARD A BEG EIGHTEEN SIXTY NINE NINETEEN TEN FIRST SUGGESTED THAT ATOMS WERE HELD TOGETHER THROUGH THE TRANSFER OF ELECTRONS FROM ONE ATOM TO ANOTHER"
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"atch flame. The temperature goes up still higher so that further breakup among the oxygen and hydrogen molecules is encouraged. [Illustration: _The formation of a sodium chloride molecule._] This happens over and over again so that in very little time, the temperature is very high and the hydrogen and oxygen are combining to form water at an enormous rate. If a great deal of hydrogen and oxygen are well-mixed to begin with, the rate of reaction is so great that an explosion occurs. Such a situation, in which each reacting bit of the system adds energy to the system by its reaction and brings about more reactions like itself, is called a “chain reaction”. Thus, a match flame put to one corner of a large sheet of paper will set that corner burning. The heat of the burning will ignite a neighboring portion of the sheet and so on till the entire sheet is burned. For that matter a single smoldering cigarette end can serve to burn down an entire forest in a vastly destructive chain reaction.",
"LECULE TO FORM WATER AND MORE ENERGY IS GIVEN OFF THAN WAS ABSORBED FROM THE MATCH FLAME THE TEMPERATURE GOES UP STILL HIGHER SO THAT FURTHER BREAK UP AMONG OXYGEN AND HYDROGEN MOLECULES IS ENCOURAGED THIS HAPPENS OVER AND OVER AGAIN SO THAT IN A VERY LITTLE TIME THE TEMPERATURE IS VERY HIGH AND THE HYDROGEN AND OXYGEN ARE COMBINING TO FORM WATER AT AN ENORMOUS RATE IF A GREAT DEAL OF HYDROGEN AND OXYGEN ARE WELL MIXED TO BEGIN WITH THE RATE OF REACTION IS SO GREAT THAT AN EXPLOSION OCCURS SUCH A SITUATION IN WHICH EACH REACTING BIT OF THE SYSTEM ADDS ENERGY TO THE SYSTEM BY ITS REACTION AND BRINGS ABOUT MORE REACTIONS LIKE ITSELF IS CALLED A CHAIN REACTION THUS A MATCH FLAME PUT TO ONE CORNER OF A LARGE SHEET OF PAPER WILL SET THAT CORNER BURNING THE HEAT OF THE BURNING WILL IGNITE A NEIGHBORING PORTION OF THE SHEET AND SO ON TILL THE ENTIRE SHEET IS BURNED FOR THAT MATTER A SINGLE SMOULDERING CIGARETTE END CAN SERVE TO BURN DOWN AN ENTIRE FOREST IN A VASTLY DESTRUCTIVE CHAIN REACTION"
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"THAT IS THE PROPER NAME FOR IT AND IN THE NEXT SECTION WE WILL CONSIDER THE SUBSEQUENT HISTORY OF THE NUCLEAR ENERGY THAT BROKE UPON THE STARTLED CONSCIOUSNESS OF SCIENTISTS AS THE TWENTIETH CENTURY OPENED AND WHICH LESS THAN HALF A CENTURY LATER WAS TO FACE MANKIND WITH UNTOLD CONSEQUENCES FOR GOOD AND FOR EVIL"
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"supposition. No one had any idea of what it actually might be or where in the atom it might be located. It could only be spoken of as existing “within the atom” and was therefore called “atomic energy”. Through long habit, it is still called that much of the time. And yet “atomic energy” is not a good name. In the first couple of decades of the 20th century, it became apparent that ordinary chemical energy involved electron shifts and those electrons were certainly components of atoms. This meant that a wood fire was a kind of atomic energy. The electrons, however, existed only in the outer regions of the atom. Once Rutherford worked out the theory of the nuclear atom, it became apparent that the energy involved in radioactivity and in solar radiation had to involve components of the atom that were more massive and more energetic than the light electrons. The energy had to come, somehow, from the atomic nucleus. What is involved then in radioactivity and in the sun is “nuclear energy”.",
"ERGY WAS JUST A VAGUE SUPPOSITION NO ONE HAD ANY IDEA OF WHAT IT ACTUALLY MIGHT BE OR WHERE IN THE ATOM IT MIGHT BE LOCATED IT COULD ONLY BE SPOKEN OF AS EXISTING WITHIN THE ATOM AND THEREFORE WAS CALLED ATOMIC ENERGY THROUGH LONG HABIT IT IS STILL CALLED THAT MUCH OF THE TIME AND YET ATOMIC ENERGY IS NOT A GOOD NAME IN THE FIRST COUPLE OF DECADES OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY IT BECAME APPARENT THAT ORDINARY CHEMICAL ENERGY INVOLVED ELECTRON SHIFTS AND THOSE ELECTRONS WERE CERTAINLY COMPONENTS OF ATOM THIS MEANT THAT A WOOD FIRE WAS A KIND OF ATOMIC ENERGY THE ELECTRONS HOWEVER EXISTED ONLY IN THE OUTER REGIONS OF THE ATOM ONCE RUTHERFORD WORKED OUT THE THEORY OF THE NUCLEAR ATOM IT BECAME APPARENT THAT THE ENERGY INVOLVED IN RADIOACTIVITY AND IN SOLAR RADIATION HAD TO INVOLVE COMPONENTS OF THE ATOM THAT WERE MORE MASSIVE AND MORE ENERGETIC THAN THE LIGHT ELECTRONS THE ENERGY HAD TO COME SOMEHOW FROM THE ATOMIC NUCLEUS WHAT IS INVOLVED THEN IN RADIOACTIVITY AND IN THE SUN IS NUCLEAR ENERGY"
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" solemn little girls filed into the big hall. Bettie groped nervously for her pocket, found it and endeavored to extract the cards. But the large, stiff envelope stuck and, for a long, embarrassing moment, Bettie fumbled in vain; while the butler, his chin \"very high and scornful\" as Marjory said afterwards, waited. At last the cards were out. Diffident Bettie dropped them, envelope and all, on the extended plate; but Jean deftly seized the envelope and shook out the cards. Next followed a most unhappy moment. Simmons was evidently expecting them to do _something_, they hadn't the remotest idea what. Then, to their great relief, there was a sudden \"swish\" of silken skirts, a flash of scarlet and lively Henrietta, who had slid down the broad banister, was greeting them warmly. \"Grandmother's out,\" said she. \"Come up to my room and have a real visit before she gets back. Simmons, just toddle down to the lower regions for some fruit and anything else you can find; send them up to my room.",
"NTLY THE GIGGLING CEASED FOUR EXCEEDINGLY SOLEMN LITTLE GIRLS FILED INTO THE BIG HALL BETTY GROPED NERVOUSLY FOR HER POCKET FOUND IT AND ENDEAVORED TO EXTRACT THE CARDS BUT THE LARGE STIFF ENVELOPE STUCK AND FOR A LONG EMBARRASSING MOMENT BETTY FUMBLED IN VAIN WHILE THE BUTLER HIS CHIN VERY HIGH AND SCORNFUL AS MARJORIE SAID AFTERWARDS WAITED AT LAST THE CARDS WERE OUT DIFFIDENT BETTY DROPPED THEM ENVELOPE AND ALL ON THE EXTENDED PLATE BUT JEAN DEFTLY SEIZED THE ENVELOPE AND SHOOK OUT THE CARDS NEXT FOLLOWED A MOST UNHAPPY MOMENT SIMMONS WAS EVIDENTLY EXPECTING THEM TO DO SOMETHING THEY HADN'T THE REMOTEST IDEA WHAT THEN TO THEIR GREAT RELIEF THERE WAS A SUDDEN SWISH OF SILKEN SKIRTS A FLASH OF SCARLET AND LIVELY HENRIETTA WHO HAD SLID DOWN THE BROAD BANISTER WAS GREETING THEM WARMLY GRANDMOTHER'S ALPS SAID SHE COME UP TO MY ROOM AND HAVE A REAL VISIT BEFORE SHE GETS BACK SIMMONS JUST TODDLE DOWN TO THE LOWER REGIONS FOR SOME FRUIT AND ANYTHING ELSE YOU CAN FIND SEND THEM UP TO MY ROOM"
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", as they turned the corner. \"That big one with the covered driveway.\" \"Ugh!\" shuddered Marjory, \"it gives me chills to think of ringing such a wealthy doorbell. Are the cards safe, Bettie? My! I hope you haven't lost them.\" \"In my pocket in an envelope,\" assured Bettie. \"Can you see any white?\" queried Jean, nervously. \"I think my top petticoat has broken loose.\" \"It seems all right,\" said Marjory, stooping to test it with little sharp jerks. \"Firm as the Rock of Gibraltar.\" \"It won't be if you pull like that,\" objected Jean. \"Somebody open the gate,\" requested Mabel. \"I can't touch things.\" \"Everybody stand up straight,\" commanded Marjory. \"We must look our best when we go up the walk.\" \"I wish I hadn't come,\" demurred Bettie, hanging back, diffidently. \"Let's wait till it's darker.\" \"No,\" asserted Jean. \"We'd better get it over.\" \"Yes,\" agreed Mabel, \"I don't want to wear these gloves a minute longer than I have to.\" \"All right,\" sighed Bettie, despondently, \"but you go first, Jean.",
"PING OVER ONE EYE STRUTTED MUFFLESS DOWN THE STREET THAT'S THE HOUSE ANNOUNCED JEAN AS THEY TURNED THE CORNER THAT BIG ONE WITH THE COVERED DRIVEWAY AH SHUDDERED MARJORIE IT GIVES ME CHILLS TO THINK OF RINGING SUCH A WEALTHY DOORBELL ARE THE CARDS SAFE BETTY MY I HOPE YOU HAVEN'T LOST THEM IN MY POCKET AND AN ENVELOPE ASSURED BETTY CAN YOU SEE ANY WHITE QUERIED JEAN NERVOUSLY I THINK MY TOP PETTICOAT HAS BROKEN LOOSE IT SEEMS ALL RIGHT SAID MARJORIE STOOPING TO TEST IT WITH LITTLE SHARP JERKS FIRM AS THE ROCK OF GIBRALTAR IT WON'T BE IF YOU PULL IT LIKE THAT OBJECTED JEAN SOMEBODY OPEN THE GATE REQUESTED MABEL I CAN'T TOUCH THINGS EVERYBODY STAND UP STRAIGHT COMMANDED MARJORIE WE MUST LOOK OUR BEST WHEN WE GO UP THE WALK I WISH I HADN'T COME DEMURRED BETTY HANGING BACK DIFFIDENTLY LET'S WAIT TILL IT'S DARKER NO ASSERTED JEAN WE'D BETTER GET IT OVER YES AGREED MABEL I DON'T WANT TO WEAR THESE GLOVES A MINUTE LONGER THAN I HAVE TO ALL RIGHT SIGHED BETTY DESPONDENTLY BUT YOU GO FIRST JEAN"
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"ored Marjory. \"That yellow splendor lights up the whole street.\" \"No, siree,\" declined Mabel. \"If Mrs. Slater wants gloves she's going to have 'em. Do you think I'm going to suffer like this and not have 'em _show_?\" So Mabel, a swollen, imprisoned but gorgeous hand dangling at each side, a big navy-blue hat flopping over one eye, strutted muffless down the street. \"That's the house,\" announced Jean, as they turned the corner. \"That big one with the covered driveway.\" \"Ugh!\" shuddered Marjory, \"it gives me chills to think of ringing such a wealthy doorbell. Are the cards safe, Bettie? My! I hope you haven't lost them.\" \"In my pocket in an envelope,\" assured Bettie. \"Can you see any white?\" queried Jean, nervously. \"I think my top petticoat has broken loose.\" \"It seems all right,\" said Marjory, stooping to test it with little sharp jerks. \"Firm as the Rock of Gibraltar.\" \"It won't be if you pull like that,\" objected Jean. \"Somebody open the gate,\" requested Mabel. \"I can't touch things.",
"RISK DAMAGING THOSE IMMACULATE LEMON HUED GLOVES TAKE MY MUFF IMPLORED MARJORIE THAT YELLOW SPLENDOUR LIGHTS UP THE WHOLE STREET NO SIR RECLINED MABEL IF MISSUS SLATER WANTS GLOVES SHE'S GOING TO HAVE EM DO YOU THINK I'M GOING TO SUFFER LIKE THIS AND NOT HAVE EM SHOW SO MABEL A SWOLLEN IMPRISONED BUT GORGEOUS HAND DANGLING AT EACH SIDE A BIG NAVY BLUE HAT FLOPPING OVER ONE EYE STRUTTED MUFFLESS DOWN THE STREET THAT'S THE HOUSE ANNOUNCED JEAN AS THEY TURNED THE CORNER THAT BIG ONE WITH THE COVERED DRIVEWAY AH SHUDDERED MARJORIE IT GIVES ME CHILLS TO THINK OF RINGING SUCH A WEALTHY DOORBELL ARE THE CARDS SAFE BETTY MY I HOPE YOU HAVEN'T LOST THEM IN MY POCKET AND AN ENVELOPE ASSURED BETTY CAN YOU SEE ANY WHITE QUERIED JEAN NERVOUSLY I THINK MY TOP PETTICOAT HAS BROKEN LOOSE IT SEEMS ALL RIGHT SAID MARJORIE STOOPING TO TEST IT WITH LITTLE SHARP JERKS FIRM AS THE ROCK OF GIBRALTAR IT WON'T BE IF YOU PULL IT LIKE THAT OBJECTED JEAN SOMEBODY OPEN THE GATE REQUESTED MABEL I CAN'T TOUCH THINGS"
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"aw up closer. You mustn't spot your gloves, so I'll feed you. First, a bit of sponge cake all around. Now an almond. Now the orange. Oh, I'm forgetting myself! Now more sponge cake.\" \"This is fine,\" said Bettie. \"I'm always hungry after school.\" \"So am I,\" said Jean. \"If I'd s'posed,\" said Mabel, \"that formal calls were like this, I'd have started sooner.\" \"Are you a different person every time anybody sees you?\" asked Bettie, curiously. \"Why?\" queried Henrietta. \"Because,\" explained Bettie, \"you seem so very changeable. You're a mischief in school, yesterday you seemed almost sad and to-day you're so polite.\" \"Oh, _thank_ you,\" said Henrietta, rising to sweep a deep and very much exaggerated courtesy. \"Nobody _ever_ before said that I was polite.\" \"Miss Henrietta,\" said Greta, tapping at the door, \"the carriage has just turned the corner.\" \"Follow me,\" said Henrietta, with an instant change of tone, as she hurriedly brushed the crumbs from her lap and pulled Mabel's jacket into place.",
" KNOW YOU MUST BE VERY FORMAL WITH GRANDMOTHER I'LL PAIL THEM FOR YOU NOW DRAW UP CLOSER YOU MUSTN'T SPOT YOUR GLOVES SO I'LL FEED YOU FIRST A BIT OF SPONGE CAKE ALL ROUND NOW AN ALMOND NOW THE ORANGE OH I'M FORGETTING MYSELF NOW MORE SPONGE CAKE THIS IS FINE SAID BETTY I'M ALWAYS HUNGRY AFTER SCHOOL SO AM I SAID JEAN IF I'D S'POSED SAID MABEL THAT FORMAL CALLS WERE LIKE THIS I'D HAVE STARTED SOONER ARE YOU A DIFFERENT PERSON IN EVERY TIME ANYBODY SEES YOU ASKED BETTY CURIOUSLY WHY QUERIED HENRIETTA BECAUSE EXPLAINED BETTY YOU SEEM SO VERY CHANGEABLE YOU'RE A MISCHIEF IN SCHOOL YESTERDAY YOU SEEMED ALMOST SAD AND TO DAY YOU'RE SO POLITE OH THANK YOU SAID HENRIETTA RISING TO SLEEP A DEEP AND VERY MUCH EXAGGERATED CURTSEY NOBODY EVER BEFORE SAID THAT I WAS POLITE MISS HENRIETTA SAID GRETTA TAPPING AT THE DOOR THE CARRIAGE HAS JUST TURNED THE CORNER FOLLOW ME SAID HENRIETTA WITH AN INSTANT CHANGE OF TONE AS SHE HURRIEDLY BRUSHED THE CRUMBS FROM HER LAP AND PULLED MABEL'S JACKET INTO PLACE"
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"SIMMONS JUST TODDLE DOWN TO THE LOWER REGIONS FOR SOME FRUIT AND ANYTHING ELSE YOU CAN FIND SEND THEM UP TO MY ROOM"
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"h-bell and Simmons, the imposing, much-dreaded butler, opened the door. Instantly the giggling ceased. Four exceedingly solemn little girls filed into the big hall. Bettie groped nervously for her pocket, found it and endeavored to extract the cards. But the large, stiff envelope stuck and, for a long, embarrassing moment, Bettie fumbled in vain; while the butler, his chin \"very high and scornful\" as Marjory said afterwards, waited. At last the cards were out. Diffident Bettie dropped them, envelope and all, on the extended plate; but Jean deftly seized the envelope and shook out the cards. Next followed a most unhappy moment. Simmons was evidently expecting them to do _something_, they hadn't the remotest idea what. Then, to their great relief, there was a sudden \"swish\" of silken skirts, a flash of scarlet and lively Henrietta, who had slid down the broad banister, was greeting them warmly. \"Grandmother's out,\" said she. \"Come up to my room and have a real visit before she gets back.",
"E'S SHARP ELBOW INADVERTENTLY STRUCK THE PUSHBELL AND SIMMONS THE IMPOSING MUCH DREADED BUTLER OPENED THE DOOR INSTANTLY THE GIGGLING CEASED FOUR EXCEEDINGLY SOLEMN LITTLE GIRLS FILED INTO THE BIG HALL BETTY GROPED NERVOUSLY FOR HER POCKET FOUND IT AND ENDEAVORED TO EXTRACT THE CARDS BUT THE LARGE STIFF ENVELOPE STUCK AND FOR A LONG EMBARRASSING MOMENT BETTY FUMBLED IN VAIN WHILE THE BUTLER HIS CHIN VERY HIGH AND SCORNFUL AS MARJORIE SAID AFTERWARDS WAITED AT LAST THE CARDS WERE OUT DIFFIDENT BETTY DROPPED THEM ENVELOPE AND ALL ON THE EXTENDED PLATE BUT JEAN DEFTLY SEIZED THE ENVELOPE AND SHOOK OUT THE CARDS NEXT FOLLOWED A MOST UNHAPPY MOMENT SIMMONS WAS EVIDENTLY EXPECTING THEM TO DO SOMETHING THEY HADN'T THE REMOTEST IDEA WHAT THEN TO THEIR GREAT RELIEF THERE WAS A SUDDEN SWISH OF SILKEN SKIRTS A FLASH OF SCARLET AND LIVELY HENRIETTA WHO HAD SLID DOWN THE BROAD BANISTER WAS GREETING THEM WARMLY GRANDMOTHER'S ALPS SAID SHE COME UP TO MY ROOM AND HAVE A REAL VISIT BEFORE SHE GETS BACK"
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"\"You won't forget my shoes, will you?\" reminded anxious Jean. \"I'd like to know how I _could_,\" demanded Wallace, feelingly. Although Mabel had taken a most complete bath the night before, she spent the noon hour taking another. She put on her best stockings and shoes, but looked doubtfully at her Sunday suit.",
"YOU WON'T FORGET MY SHOES WILL YOU REMINDED ANXIOUS JEAN I'D LIKE TO KNOW HOW I COULD DEMANDED WALLACE FEELINGLY ALTHOUGH MABEL HAD TAKEN A MOST COMPLETE BATH THE NIGHT BEFORE SHE SPENT THE NOON HOUR TAKING ANOTHER SHE PUT ON HER BEST STOCKINGS AND SHOES BUT LOOKED DOUBTFULLY AT HER SUNDAY SUIT"
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"\"A body would think,\" scoffed Aunty Jane, at noon, \"that you were going to your own wedding. Don't worry so. I'll have everything ready for you to put on the moment you get out of school.\" \"Oh, thank you,\" breathed Marjory, fervently. \"That'll help a lot; but I do hope that Bettie's father will remember to do those cards. And, Aunty Jane, _could_ you lend me a perfectly inkless hankerchief?\" \"Jumping January!\" growled Wallace Mapes, Jean's older brother. \"That makes nineteen times, Jean, that you've reminded me of those miserable shoes. I'll black them when I've finished lunch. I'm not going to rush off in the middle of my oyster soup to black _any_body's best shoes.\" \"Is it a reception?\" asked Roger. \"No,\" replied Wallace, \"just a formal call on Henrietta Bedford.\" \"She's in my French class,\" said Roger. \"And kippered snakes! You ought to hear her recite. She talks up and down and all around poor little Miss McGinnis, whose French was made right here in Lakeville. It's a daily picnic.",
"NEXT DAY THEY WERE RESTLESS IN SCHOOL AND FIDGETY AT HOME A BODY WOULD THINK SCOFFED AUNTIE JANE AT NOON THAT YOU ARE GOING TO YOUR OWN WEDDING DON'T WORRY SO I'LL HAVE EVERYTHING READY FOR YOU TO PUT ON THE MOMENT YOU GET OUT OF SCHOOL OH THANK YOU BREATHED MARJORIE FERVENTLY THAT'LL HELP A LOT BUT I DO HOPE THAT BETTY'S FATHER WILL REMEMBER TO DO THOSE CARDS AND AUNTIE JANE COULD YOU LEND ME A PERFECTLY ENKLESS HANDKERCHIEF JUMPING JANUARY GROWLED WALLACE MAPS JEAN'S OLDER BROTHER THAT MAKES NINETEEN TIMES JEAN THAT YOU HAVE REMINDED ME OF THOSE MISERABLE SHOES I'LL BLACK THEM WHEN I'VE FINISHED LUNCH I'M NOT GOING TO RUSH OFF IN THE MIDDLE OF MY OYSTER SOUP TO BLACK ANYBODY'S BEST SHOES IS IT A RECEPTION ASKED ROGER NO REPLIED WALLACE JUST A FORMAL CALL ON HENRIETTA BEDFORD SHE'S IN MY FRENCH CLASS SAID ROGER AND KIPPARD SNAKES YOU OUGHT TO HEAR HER RECITE SHE TOOK UP AND DOWN AND ALL AROUND POOR LITTLE MISS MC GINNIS WHOSE FRENCH WAS MADE RIGHT HERE IN LAKEVILLE IT'S A DAILY PICNIC"
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"\"That's the house,\" announced Jean, as they turned the corner. \"That big one with the covered driveway.\" \"Ugh!\" shuddered Marjory, \"it gives me chills to think of ringing such a wealthy doorbell. Are the cards safe, Bettie? My! I hope you haven't lost them.\"",
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" look much better in mittens.\" \"Mittens!\" snubbed Mabel. \"You can't make formal calls in mittens! Now, Somebody, please put me into my jacket and hat, if I'm not to touch anything.\" The decidedly depressed four, in their Sunday best, started down the street. Mabel's gloves, owing to their brilliant color, were certainly conspicuous, and unconsciously she made them more so by the careful and rigid manner in which she carried them. It was plain that she had them very much on her mind. And when her hat tilted forward over one eye she left it there rather than risk damaging those immaculate lemon-hued gloves. \"Take my muff,\" implored Marjory. \"That yellow splendor lights up the whole street.\" \"No, siree,\" declined Mabel. \"If Mrs. Slater wants gloves she's going to have 'em. Do you think I'm going to suffer like this and not have 'em _show_?\" So Mabel, a swollen, imprisoned but gorgeous hand dangling at each side, a big navy-blue hat flopping over one eye, strutted muffless down the street.",
"AN WRESTLE WITH ANOTHER JOB LIKE THAT SHOULD LOOK MUCH BETTER IN MITTENS MITTENS SNAPPED MABEL YOU CAN'T MAKE FORMAL CALLS AND MITTENS NOW SOMEBODY PLEASE PUT ME INTO MY JACKET AND HAT IF I'M NOT TO TOUCH ANYTHING THE DECIDEDLY DEPRESSED FOUR IN THEIR SUNDAY BEST STARTED DOWN THE STREET MABEL'S GLOVES OWING TO THEIR BRILLIANT COLOR WERE CERTAINLY CONSPICUOUS AND UNCONSCIOUSLY SHE MADE THEM MORE SO BY THE CAREFUL AND RIGID MANNER IN WHICH SHE CARRIED THEM IT WAS PLAIN THAT SHE HAD THEM VERY MUCH ON HER MIND AND WHEN HER HAT TILTED FORWARD OVER ONE EYE SHE LEFT IT THERE RATHER THAN RISK DAMAGING THOSE IMMACULATE LEMON HUED GLOVES TAKE MY MUFF IMPLORED MARJORIE THAT YELLOW SPLENDOUR LIGHTS UP THE WHOLE STREET NO SIR RECLINED MABEL IF MISSUS SLATER WANTS GLOVES SHE'S GOING TO HAVE EM DO YOU THINK I'M GOING TO SUFFER LIKE THIS AND NOT HAVE EM SHOW SO MABEL A SWOLLEN IMPRISONED BUT GORGEOUS HAND DANGLING AT EACH SIDE A BIG NAVY BLUE HAT FLOPPING OVER ONE EYE STRUTTED MUFFLESS DOWN THE STREET"
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"You're a mischief in school, yesterday you seemed almost sad and to day you're so polite.\" \"Oh, _thank_ you,\" said Henrietta, rising to sweep a deep and very much exaggerated courtesy.",
"YOU'RE A MISCHIEF IN SCHOOL YESTERDAY YOU SEEMED ALMOST SAD AND TO DAY YOU'RE SO POLITE OH THANK YOU SAID HENRIETTA RISING TO SLEEP A DEEP AND VERY MUCH EXAGGERATED CURTSEY"
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"the heavy tray. \"Tangerines, nuts, figs and sponge cake,\" chattered Henrietta. \"That's very nice, Greta. Help yourselves to chairs, girls. Here's a tabouret for you, little Marjory. Catch, Jean,\" and the merry little hostess tossed a golden tangerine to Jean. \"Oh, wait,\" she added. \"You mustn't take off your gloves or get them soiled, because Grandmother always gets in about this time, and you know you must be very formal with Grandmother. I'll peel them for you. Now draw up closer. You mustn't spot your gloves, so I'll feed you. First, a bit of sponge cake all around. Now an almond. Now the orange. Oh, I'm forgetting myself! Now more sponge cake.\" \"This is fine,\" said Bettie. \"I'm always hungry after school.\" \"So am I,\" said Jean. \"If I'd s'posed,\" said Mabel, \"that formal calls were like this, I'd have started sooner.\" \"Are you a different person every time anybody sees you?\" asked Bettie, curiously. \"Why?\" queried Henrietta. \"Because,\" explained Bettie, \"you seem so very changeable.",
" HER BELONGINGS FROM THE DAINTY LITTLE TABLE AND THE SMILING MAID DEPOSITED THE HEAVY TRAY TANGERINES NUTS FIGS AND SPONGE CAKE CHATTED HENRIETTA THAT'S VERY NICE GRETTA HELP YOURSELVES TO CHAIRS GIRLS HERE'S A TABERET FOR YOU LITTLE MARGERY CATCH JEAN AND THE MERRY LITTLE HOSTESS TOSSED A GOLDEN TANGERINE TO JEAN OH WAIT SHE ADDED YOU MUSTN'T TAKE OFF YOUR GLOVES OR GET THEM SOILED BECAUSE GRANDMOTHER ALWAYS GETS IN ABOUT THIS TIME AND YOU KNOW YOU MUST BE VERY FORMAL WITH GRANDMOTHER I'LL PAIL THEM FOR YOU NOW DRAW UP CLOSER YOU MUSTN'T SPOT YOUR GLOVES SO I'LL FEED YOU FIRST A BIT OF SPONGE CAKE ALL ROUND NOW AN ALMOND NOW THE ORANGE OH I'M FORGETTING MYSELF NOW MORE SPONGE CAKE THIS IS FINE SAID BETTY I'M ALWAYS HUNGRY AFTER SCHOOL SO AM I SAID JEAN IF I'D S'POSED SAID MABEL THAT FORMAL CALLS WERE LIKE THIS I'D HAVE STARTED SOONER ARE YOU A DIFFERENT PERSON IN EVERY TIME ANYBODY SEES YOU ASKED BETTY CURIOUSLY WHY QUERIED HENRIETTA BECAUSE EXPLAINED BETTY YOU SEEM SO VERY CHANGEABLE"
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"is the matter with you? You haven't said a word for fifteen minutes. I never knew you to be still for so long a time.\" \"It's my conscience,\" groaned Henrietta, dolefully. \"I'm in another scrape.\" \"What have you done now?\" asked Mrs. Slater, who seemed very much less terrifying than the girls had expected to find her. \"Confession is good for the soul, my dear.\" Henrietta's infectious laugh gurgled out suddenly and merrily. \"I've frightened four girls almost into spasms,\" said she. \"You see, Grannie, I told them that they'd _have_ to call formally if they wanted me to visit them. When they came you were out, so I took them upstairs, gave them things to eat and a jolly good time, generally. Then, just for a joke, I had Greta tell me when you were coming and I led them carefully down the back way, made them go round the block and do it all over again, cards and all. You see, Grannie, they don't know you. They haven't seen anything but your husk; and I had them scared blue; didn't I, girls?",
"G SUDDENLY TO HER GRANDDAUGHTER WHAT IN THE WORLD IS THE MATTER WITH YOU YOU HAVEN'T SAID A WORD FOR FIFTEEN MINUTES I NEVER KNEW YOU TO BE STILL FOR SO LONG A TIME IT'S MY CONSCIENCE GROANED HENRIETTA DOLEFULLY I'M IN ANOTHER SCRAPE WHAT HAVE YOU DONE NOW ASKED MISSUS SLATER WHO SEEMED VERY MUCH LESS TERRIFYING THAN THE GIRLS HAD EXPECTED TO FIND HER CONFESSION IS GOOD FOR THE SOUL MY DEAR HENRIETTA'S INFECTIOUS LAUGH GURGLED OUT SUDDENLY AND MERRILY I'VE FRIGHTENED FOUR GIRLS INTO ALMOST SPASMS SAID SHE YOU SEE GRANNIE I TOLD THEM THEY'D HAVE TO CALL FORMALLY IF THEY WANTED ME TO VISIT THEM WHEN THEY CAME YOU WERE OUT SO I TOOK THEM UPSTAIRS GAVE THEM THINGS TO EAT IN A JOLLY GOOD TIME GENERALLY THEN JUST FOR A JOKE I HAD GROW TO TELL ME WHEN YOU WERE COMING AND I LED THEM CAREFULLY DOWN THE BACK WAY MADE THEM GO ROUND THE BLOCK AND DO IT ALL OVER AGAIN CARDS AND ALL YOU SEE GRANNIE THEY DON'T KNOW YOU THEY HAVEN'T SEEN ANYTHING BUT YOUR HUSK AND I HAD THEM SCARED BLUE DIDN'T I GIRLS"
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"iled encouragingly; but Henrietta, from her post behind her grandmother's chair, displayed every sign of abject terror. \"We--we came to call,\" faltered Jean. \"That was pleasant,\" responded Mrs. Slater. \"You are just in time to have some tea. Midge, will you please ring for Greta? I'm very glad you came, for I wanted my granddaughter to meet some of the young people.\" Mrs. Slater, her slender, beringed fingers moving daintily among the cups, made the tea. Henrietta, in absolute silence and much subdued in manner, passed the cups, the delicate sandwiches and the little frosted tea cakes. \"Midge,\" demanded Mrs. Slater, turning suddenly to her granddaughter, \"what in the world is the matter with you? You haven't said a word for fifteen minutes. I never knew you to be still for so long a time.\" \"It's my conscience,\" groaned Henrietta, dolefully. \"I'm in another scrape.\" \"What have you done now?\" asked Mrs. Slater, who seemed very much less terrifying than the girls had expected to find her.",
"THE NEAREST FOUR CHAIRS MISSUS SLATER SMILED ENCOURAGINGLY BUT HENRIETTA FROM HER POST BEHIND HER GRANDMOTHER'S CHAIR DISPLAYED EVERY SIGN OF ABJECT TERROR WE WE CAME TO CALL FALTERED JEAN THAT WAS PLEASANT RESPONDED MISSUS SLATER YOU ARE JUST IN TIME TO HAVE SOME TEA MITCH WILL YOU PLEASE RING FOR GRETTA I'M VERY GLAD YOU CAME FOR I WANTED MY GRANDDAUGHTER TO MEET SOME OF THE YOUNG PEOPLE MISSUS SLATER WHOSE SLENDER BERINGED FINGERS MOVING DAINTILY AMONG THE CUPS MADE THE TEA HENRIETTA IN ABSOLUTE SILENCE AND MUCH SUBDUED IN MANNER PASSED THE CUPS THE DELICATE SANDWICHES AND THE LITTLE FROSTED TEA CAKES MITCH DEMANDED MISSUS SLATER TURNING SUDDENLY TO HER GRANDDAUGHTER WHAT IN THE WORLD IS THE MATTER WITH YOU YOU HAVEN'T SAID A WORD FOR FIFTEEN MINUTES I NEVER KNEW YOU TO BE STILL FOR SO LONG A TIME IT'S MY CONSCIENCE GROANED HENRIETTA DOLEFULLY I'M IN ANOTHER SCRAPE WHAT HAVE YOU DONE NOW ASKED MISSUS SLATER WHO SEEMED VERY MUCH LESS TERRIFYING THAN THE GIRLS HAD EXPECTED TO FIND HER"
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"ing for Greta? I'm very glad you came, for I wanted my granddaughter to meet some of the young people.\" Mrs. Slater, her slender, beringed fingers moving daintily among the cups, made the tea. Henrietta, in absolute silence and much subdued in manner, passed the cups, the delicate sandwiches and the little frosted tea cakes. \"Midge,\" demanded Mrs. Slater, turning suddenly to her granddaughter, \"what in the world is the matter with you? You haven't said a word for fifteen minutes. I never knew you to be still for so long a time.\" \"It's my conscience,\" groaned Henrietta, dolefully. \"I'm in another scrape.\" \"What have you done now?\" asked Mrs. Slater, who seemed very much less terrifying than the girls had expected to find her. \"Confession is good for the soul, my dear.\" Henrietta's infectious laugh gurgled out suddenly and merrily. \"I've frightened four girls almost into spasms,\" said she. \"You see, Grannie, I told them that they'd _have_ to call formally if they wanted me to visit them.",
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"\"I _think_ I like her,\" said Bettie. \"I know _I_ don't,\" asserted Mabel, waving her throbbing hands in the evening breeze to cool them. \"I do and I don't,\" said Marjory. \"I admire her, but she makes me uncomfortable. I feel as if she were just playing with me.\" \"She seems more than fourteen,\" murmured Jean, dreamily.",
"I THINK I LIKE HER SAID BETTY I KNOW I DON'T ASSERTED MABEL WAVING HER THROBBING HANDS IN THE EVENING BREEZE TO COOL THEM I DO AND I DON'T SAID MARGERY I ADMIRE HER BUT SHE MAKES ME UNCOMFORTABLE I FEEL AS IF SHE WERE JUST PLAYING WITH SHE SEEMS MORE THAN FOURTEEN MURMURED JEAN DREAMILY"
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" I began earlier to restrain my prankishness. Midge, unfortunately, has a lenient father and a doting grandmother. Between them she is having pretty much her own way.\" \"I'll be good,\" promised Henrietta, comically, \"in spite of them; but you see, girls, with such a pair of relatives dogging my footsteps, it's uphill work.\" After a little more conversation, the girls rose to depart. Mrs. Slater begged them to come again. She said that she enjoyed young people. Then the big front door was closed behind them and the dreaded visit was over. \"So,\" said Marjory, \"_that's_ what Mrs. Slater is like inside.\" Mabel, unable to bear them longer, was recklessly peeling off her lemon-colored gloves. \"She's lovely, inside and out,\" declared Bettie, \"but I never dreamed that she was like _that_.\" \"She wouldn't have cared if I _had_ gone without gloves,\" mourned aggrieved Mabel. \"I'd like to pay Henrietta back for _that_.\" \"Girls,\" asked Marjory, \"do you _like_ Henrietta?\" \"I adore her,\" declared Jean.",
"CH A PIECE OF IMPISHNESS BUT MY FATHER WAS VERY SEVERE AND I THINK I BEGAN EARLIER TO RESTRAIN MY PRANKISHNESS MIDGE UNFORTUNATELY HAS A LENIENT FATHER AND A DOTING GRANDMOTHER BETWEEN THEM SHE IS HAVING PRETTY MUCH HER OWN WAY I'LL BE GOOD PROMISED HENRIETTA COMICALLY IN SPITE OF THEM BUT YOU SEE GIRLS WITH SUCH A PAIR OF RELATIVES DOGGING MY FOOTSTEPS IT'S UPHILL WORK AFTER A LITTLE MORE CONVERSATION THE GIRLS ROSE TO DEPART MISSUS SLATER BEGGED THEM TO COME AGAIN SHE SAID THAT SHE ENJOYED YOUNG PEOPLE THEN THE BIG FRONT DOOR WAS CLOSED BEHIND THEM AND THE DREADED VISIT WAS OVER SO SAID MARGERY THAT'S WHAT MISSUS SLATER IS LIKE INSIDE MABEL UNABLE TO BEAR THEM LONGER WAS RECKLESSLY PEELING OFF HER LEMON COLORED GLOVES SHE'S LOVELY INSIDE AND OUT DECLARED BETTY BUT I NEVER DREAMED THAT SHE WAS LIKE THAT SHE WOULDN'T HAVE CARED IF I HAD GONE WITHOUT GLOVES WARNED AGGRIEVED MABEL I'D LIKE TO PAY HENRIETTA BACK FOR THAT GIRLS ASKED MARJORIE DO YOU LIKE HENRIETTA I ADORE HER DECLARED JEAN"
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"\"What luck!\" cried Henrietta, pulling off her gloves. \"Now I can make a long, long call instead of four short ones. What are you doing Christmas presents? Give me a spool of fine white thread, some pins and a sofa pillow. I'm going to make one, too.\"",
"WHAT LUCK SAID HENRIETTA PULLING OFF HER GLOVES NOW I CAN MAKE A LONG LONG CALL INSTEAD OF FOUR SHORT ONES WHAT ARE YOU DOING CHRISTO'S PRESENCE GIVE ME A SPOOL OF FINE WHITE THREADS SOME PENS ON A SOFA PILLOW I AM GOING TO MAKE ONE TOO"
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"te heap, \"that's so.\" \"Never mind,\" said Bettie. \"Give me the bag, and I'll fix those pockets.\" Bettie was embroidering an elaborate pincushion for her mother, but she stopped so often to help the others that there seemed small hope of its ever getting finished. Marjory, who was making one just like it for her Aunty Jane, was progressing much more rapidly. Jean, rummaging in her work-bag, was trying to decide which of four partly completed articles to sew on when a carriage stopped at Mrs. Mapes's gate. \"It's a caller,\" said Jean. \"We'll have to vacate. Here, scurry into the dining-room with all your stuff. I'll answer the bell; and you, Bettie, remind Mother to take off her apron--she's apt to forget it.\" Jean, stopping long enough to twitch the chairs into place, went primly to the door. \"Good-morning,\" said a familiar voice, \"I've come to return your visit. It's all right, James. You needn't wait.\" \"Come back, girls,\" called Jean, when she had ushered the caller in. \"It's Henrietta.",
" THE SAME SIZE OH GROANED MABEL SETTLING INTO A DISCONSOLATE HEAP THAT'S SO NEVER MIND SAID BETTY GIVE ME THE BAG AND I'LL FIX THOSE POCKETS BETTY WAS EMBROIDERING AN ELABORATE PINCUSHION FOR HER MOTHER BUT SHE STOPPED SO OFTEN TO HELP THE OTHERS THAT THERE SEEMED SMALL HOPE OF ITS EVER GETTING FINISHED MARJORIE WHO WAS MAKING ONE JUST LIKE IT FOR HER AUNTIE JANE WAS PROGRESSING MUCH MORE RAPIDLY JEAN RUMMAGING IN HER WORK BAG WAS TRYING TO DECIDE WHICH OR FOUR PARTLY COMPLETED ARTICLES TO SO ON WHEN A CARRIAGE STOPPED AT MISSUS MAPE'S GATE IT'S A CALLER SAID JEAN WE'LL HAVE TO VACATE HERE SCURRY INTO THE DINING ROOM WITH ALL YOUR STUFF I'LL ANSWER THE BELL AND YOU BETTY REMIND MOTHER TO TAKE OFF HER APRON SHE'S APT TO FORGET IT JEAN STOPPING LONG ENOUGH TO TWITCH THE CHAIRS INTO PLACE WENT PRIMLY TO THE DOOR GOOD MORNING SAID A FAMILIAR VOICE I'VE COME TO RETURN YOUR VISIT IT'S ALL RIGHT JAMES YOU NEEDN'T WAIT COME BACK GIRLS SAID JEAN WHEN SHE HAD USHERED THE CALLER IN IT'S HENRIETTA"
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"\"Look!\" cried Mabel, her eyes bulging with astonishment. \"She's really making lace!\" \"It's for you,\" said Henrietta, flashing a bright glance at Mabel. \"It's an apology, Mam'selle, for my past and perhaps my future misdeeds.\" \"I _said_ I didn't like you,\" blurted honest Mabel, \"but I do.\"",
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" I've always lived with grown folks, so I need to renew my youth.\" \"Mother's been reading the boarding-school advertisements in the magazines lately,\" said Mabel. \"I heard her read some of them aloud to Father. But of course they couldn't have been thinking about _me_. But they sounded interesting.\" \"Perhaps,\" offered Bettie, \"they had read all the stories and those boarding schools were all they had left to read.\" \"I guess so,\" said Mabel. \"Aunt Jane reads them, too,\" added Marjory. \"There's some money that is to be used for my education and for nothing else. When I've finished with High School I'm to go to College.\" \"Oh well,\" laughed, Jean, lightly, \"you're safe for another five years.\" \"_I_'m not,\" returned Henrietta. \"I'm going next September, and if Grandmother had known how the schools were going to be you wouldn't be having the pleasure of my company now. She says I'm getting thin in the pursuit of knowledge--it's too scattered, in Lakeville. That's why she made me ride to-day.",
" GRANNIE THINKS IT'LL BE GOOD FOR ME TO BE WITH OTHER GIRLS YOU SEE I'VE ALWAYS LIVED WITH GROWN FOLKS SO I NEED TO RENEW MY YOUTH MOTHER'S BEEN READING THE BOARDING SCHOOL ADVERTISEMENTS IN THE MAGAZINES LATELY SAID MABEL I HEARD HER READ SOME OF THEM ALOUD TO FATHER BUT OF COURSE THEY COULDN'T HAVE BEEN THINKING ABOUT ME BUT THEY SOUNDED INTERESTING PERHAPS OFFERED BETTY THEY HAD READ ALL THE STORIES AND THOSE BOARDING SCHOOLS WERE ALL THEY HAD LEFT TO READ I GUESS SO SAID MABEL AUNT JANE READS THEM TOO ADDED MARJORIE THERE'S SOME MONEY THAT IS TO BE USED FOR MY EDUCATION AND NOTHING ELSE WHEN I'VE FINISHED WITH ISCOE I'M GOING TO COLLEGE OH WELL LAUGHED JEAN LIGHTLY YOU'RE SAFE FOR ANOTHER FIVE YEARS I'M NOT RETURNED HENRIETTA I'M GOING NEXT SEPTEMBER AND IF GRANDMOTHER HAD KNOWN HOW THE SCHOOLS WERE GOING TO BE YOU WOULDN'T BE HAVING THE PLEASURE OF MY COMPANY NOW SHE SAYS I'M GETTING THIN IN THE PURSUIT OF KNOWLEDGE IT'S TOO SCATTERED AND LATEFUL THAT'S WHY SHE MADE ME RIDE TO DAY"
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"MOTHER'S BEEN READING THE BOARDING SCHOOL ADVERTISEMENTS IN THE MAGAZINES LATELY SAID MABEL I HEARD HER READ SOME OF THEM ALOUD TO FATHER BUT OF COURSE THEY COULDN'T HAVE BEEN THINKING ABOUT ME BUT THEY SOUNDED INTERESTING"
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"ing Domestic Science under the Methodist church, Senior Latin in the Council Chamber, Post-graduate French in a cloak-room off the A. O. U. W. Hall, Sophomore American History with the Baptists, and I'm doing mathematics in the kindergarten--or somewhere down there. I had to go back to the very beginning. If I ever tell you anything with numbers in it don't believe it. I don't know six from six hundred. But I'm doing lessons in five different buildings and getting lots of exercise besides. That's doing pretty well for my first year in school.\" \"Your first year!\" cried Marjory. \"Surely you're fooling!\" \"Not this time,\" assured Henrietta. \"I've had governesses and tutors ever since I could think, but this is truly my first school year. And it's great fun. But if I stay in America, I'm to go to boarding school, Grandmother says. I've always wanted to, and Grannie thinks it will be good for me to be with other girls. You see, I've always lived with grown folks, so I need to renew my youth.",
"TTERN I COULDN'T BE GRADED I'M HAVING DOMESTIC SCIENCE UNDER THE METHODIST CHURCH SENIOR LATIN IN THE COUNCIL CHAMBER POST GRADUATE FRENCH IN THE CLOAK ROOM OF THE A O U W HALL SOPHOMORE AMERICAN HISTUE AT THE BAPTIST'S AND I'M DOING MATHEMATICS IN THE KINDERGARTEN ALL SOMEWHERE DOWN THERE I HAD TO GO BACK TO THE VERY BEGINNING IF I EVER TELL YOU ANYTHING WITH NUMBERS IN IT DON'T BELIEVE IT I DON'T KNOW SIX FROM SIX HUNDRED BUT I'M DOING LESSONS IN FIVE DIFFERENT BUILDINGS AND GETTING LOTS OF EXERCISE BESIDES THAT'S DOING PRETTY WELL FOR MY FIRST YEAR IN SCHOOL YOUR FIRST YEAR CRIED MARJORIE SURELY YOU'RE FOOLING NOT THIS TIME ASSURED HENRIETTA I'VE HAD GOVERNESSES AND TUTORS EVER SINCE I COULD THINK BUT THIS IS TRULY MY FIRST SCHOOL YEAR AND IT'S GREAT FUN BUT IF I STAY IN AMERICA I'M GOING TO GO TO BOARDING SCHOOL GRANDMOTHER SAYS I'VE ALWAYS WANTED TO AND GRANNIE THINKS IT'LL BE GOOD FOR ME TO BE WITH OTHER GIRLS YOU SEE I'VE ALWAYS LIVED WITH GROWN FOLKS SO I NEED TO RENEW MY YOUTH"
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"\"Where's that baby you adopted?\" asked Henrietta, abruptly changing the subject. \"Didn't one of you adopt a baby or something like that?\" \"It was Mabel,\" replied Marjory. \"The rest of us are pretty good, but Mabel's sort of thoughtless about borrowing things. She just happened to borrow an unreturnable baby, one day.\" \"Where is it now?\"",
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"apology, Mam'selle, for my past--and perhaps my future--misdeeds.\" \"I _said_ I didn't like you,\" blurted honest Mabel, \"but I do.\" \"Don't depend on me,\" sighed Henrietta. \"I don't wear well. You'll find the real me rubbing through in spots. Granny says I'm an imp that came in one of Dad's Hindoo boxes.\" \"Why does your grandmother call you Midge?\" asked Bettie. \"Because she doesn't like Henrietta. You see, I have five names--they do that sort of thing on the other side--and I take turns with them. When I find out which one suits me best, I'll choose that one for keeps.\" \"What are they?\" demanded Mabel. \"Henrietta Constance Louise Frederika Francesca--you see, there isn't a really suitable name in the lot. But when you have five quarrelsome aunts, as Father had, you have to please all or none of them by giving your poor helpless baby all their horrid names. Call me Sallie--I've _always_ wanted to be Sallie.\" \"Think of anybody,\" laughed Jean, \"with as many names as that wanting a new one.",
"AID HENRIETTA FLASHING A BRIGHT GLANCE AT MABEL IT'S AN APOLOGY MA'AMSELLE FOR MY PAST AND PERHAPS MY FUTURE MISDEEDS I SAID I DIDN'T LIKE YOU BLURTED HONEST MABEL BUT I DO DON'T DEPEND ON ME SIGHED HENRIETTA I DON'T WEAR WELL YOU'LL FIND THE REALMY RUBBING THROUGH IN SPOTS GRANNIE SAYS I'M AN IMP THAT CAME IN ON ONE OF DAD'S HINDOO BOXES WHY DOES YOUR GRANDMOTHER CALL YOU MIDGE ASKED BETTY BECAUSE SHE DOESN'T LIKE HENRIETTA YOU SEE I HAVE FIVE NAMES THEY DO THAT SORT OF THING ON THE OTHER SIDE AND I TAKE TURNS WITH THEM WHEN I FIND OUT WHICH ONE SUITS ME BEST I'LL CHOOSE THAT ONE FOR KEEPS WHAT ARE THEY DEMANDED MABEL HENRIETTA CONSTANCE LOUISE FREDERICA FRANCESCA YOU SEE THERE ISN'T A REALLY SUITABLE NAME IN THE LOT BUT WHEN YOU HAVE FIVE QUARRELSOME AUNTS HIS FATHER SAID YOU HAVE TO PLEASE ALL OR NONE OF THEM BY GIVING YOUR POOR HELPLESS BABY ALL THEIR HORRID NAMES CALL ME SALLY I'VE ALWAYS WANTED TO BE SALLY THINK OF ANYBODY LAUGHED JEAN WITH AS MANY NAMES AS THAT WANTING A NEW ONE"
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"oses regarding the two small children about to be placed in their charge, and no two visitors could have caused more excitement and preparation in the quiet household than did this little couple from India. 'Well,' asked Miss Amabel, as, after a great deal of bustle and talk in the hall, the sisters came back to the drawing-room, 'and what are your impressions of the kids?' 'Poor little mites!' said Miss Sibyl; 'they seem so very white and sickly in appearance, that we were quite astonished at the way they scampered upstairs. I am thankful they were sent back in charge of an English nurse. Those ayahs are always so unsatisfactory.' Before many days the children astonished their aunts still more by their agility and ingenuity in mischief of all sorts. Roland, a fair, curly-haired little fellow of seven, led his smaller sister Olive into every kind of audacious escapade. Their spirits were unflagging, though at times their frail-looking little bodies seemed to droop under their activity.",
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"'We can't be idle, auntie,' said Roland, shaking his curls back, and speaking with decision. 'Nurse has the toothache, and won't take us out. Father says people can be idle very easily, and put it down to the climate, and \"idle hands find mischief,\" he says, and father is never idle. If we don't run up and down stairs, where can we run? We like the stairs best, because we never have stairs in India.' [Illustration] 'Send them into the garden, Marion,' called out Miss Amabel, from the garden door; 'I am going to the stables, and then I will look after them.'",
"WE CAN'T BE IDLE AUNTIE SAID ROLAND SHAKING HIS CURLS BACK AND SPEAKING WITH DECISION NURSE SAYS THE TOOTHACHE AND WON'T TAKE US OUT FATHER SAYS PEOPLE CAN BE IDLE VERY EASILY AND PUT IT DOWN TO THE CLIMATE AND IDLE HANDS FIND MISCHIEF HE SAYS AND FATHER IS NEVER IDLE IF WE DON'T RUN UP AND DOWNSTAIRS WHERE CAN WE RUN WE LIKE THE STAIRS BEST BECAUSE WE NEVER HAD STAIRS IN INDIA SEND THEM INTO THE GARDEN MARIAN CALLED OUT MISS AMABEL FROM THE GARDEN DOOR I AM GOING TO THE STABLES AND THEN I WILL LOOK AFTER THEM"
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"y seem so very white and sickly in appearance, that we were quite astonished at the way they scampered upstairs. I am thankful they were sent back in charge of an English nurse. Those ayahs are always so unsatisfactory.' Before many days the children astonished their aunts still more by their agility and ingenuity in mischief of all sorts. Roland, a fair, curly-haired little fellow of seven, led his smaller sister Olive into every kind of audacious escapade. Their spirits were unflagging, though at times their frail-looking little bodies seemed to droop under their activity. Miss Hunter came upon little Olive one afternoon sitting on the stairs in a breathless, exhausted state, and Roland was remonstrating with her. 'You've only run up twenty-five times, Olive, and you're tired already; it's a mile race, and you _must_ go on.' 'She must do nothing of the sort, Roland,' said Miss Hunter sternly. 'I will not let you tear up and down stairs all day in this fashion. What do you mean by it?",
"DS POOR LITTLE MITES SAID MISS SYLL THEY SEEM SO VERY WHITE AND SICKLY IN APPEARANCE THAT WE WERE QUITE ASTONISHED AT THE WAY THEY SCAMPERED UPSTAIRS I AM THANKFUL THEY WERE SENT BACK IN CHARGE OF AN ENGLISH NURSE THOSE EYES ARE ALWAYS SO UNSATISFACTORY BEFORE MANY DAYS THE CHILDREN ASTONISHED THEIR AUNTS STILL MORE BY THEIR AGILITY AND INGENUITY IN MISCHIEF OF ALL SORTS ROLAND A FAIR CURLY HEADED LITTLE FELLOW OF SEVEN LED HIS SMALLER SISTER OLIVE INTO EVERY KIND OF AUDACIOUS EXCAPADE THEIR SPIRITS WERE INFLAGGING THOUGH AT TIMES THEIR FRAIL LOOKING LITTLE BODY SEEMED TO DROOP UNDER THEIR ACTIVITY MISS HUNTER CAME UPON LITTLE OLIVE ONE AFTERNOON SITTING ON THE STAIRS IN A BREATHLESS EXHAUSTED STATE AND ROLAND WAS REMONSTRATING WITH HER YOU'VE ONLY RUN UP TWENTY FIVE TIMES OLIVE AND YOU'RE TIRED ALREADY IT'S A MILE RACE YOU MUST GO ON SHE MUST DO NOTHING OF THE SORT ROLLIN SAID MISS HUNTER STERNLY I WILL NOT LET YOU TEAR UP AND DOWN STAIRS ALL DAY IN THIS FASHION WHAT DO YOU MEAN BY IT"
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"Sitting by the cheery wood fire was the youngest of the sisters, a frail and delicate invalid. She was turning her face anxiously towards the speaker, and now put in her word very gently.",
"SITTING BY THE CHEERY WOOD FIRE WAS THE YOUNGEST OF THE SISTERS A FRAIL AND DELICATE INVALID SHE WAS TURNING HER FACE ANXIOUSLY TOWARDS THE SPEAKER AND NOW PUT IN HER WORD VERY GENTLY"
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"pgdp.net) Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this file which includes the original illustrations. See 23944-h.htm or 23944-h.zip: (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/3/9/4/23944/23944-h/23944-h.htm) or (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/3/9/4/23944/23944-h.zip) BULBS AND BLOSSOMS by AMY LE FEUVRE Author of \"Probable Sons\", \"Teddy's Button\", etc Illustrated by Eveline Lance [Illustration: (_See page 23._)] [Illustration: Rise up, for, lo, the winter is past.] London The Religious Tract Society 56 Paternoster Row & 65 St Pauls Churchyard [Illustration] CHAPTER I The Ugly Flower Pots [Illustration: I] It was five o'clock in the afternoon. Miss Hunter, a tall, dignified-looking woman, was presiding at the afternoon tea-table in the drawing-room of Chatts Chase. Miss Amabel Hunter stood at the window in a rather muddy riding-habit, and she was speaking in her sharp, short tones to her twin sister Hester, who lay back in the depths of a large armchair, a novel open in her lap. ",
" CHAPTER ONE OF BULBS AND BLOSSOMS THIS IS A LIBER OF OX RECORDING ALL LIBRAVOX RECORDINGS ARE IN THE PUBLIC DOMAIN FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO VOLUNTEER PLEASE VISIT LIBERVOX DOTTOR RECORDING BY EMILY ISABELLA BULBS AND BLOSSOMS BY AMY LE FURVE CHAPTER ONE THE UGLY FLOWER POTS IT WAS FIVE O'CLOCK IN THE AFTERNOON MISS HUNTER A TALL DIGNIFIED LOOKING WOMAN WAS PRESIDING AT THE AFTERNOON TEA TABLE IN THE DRAWING ROOM OF CHAT'S CHAISE MISS AMABEL HUNTER STOOD AT THE WINDOW IN A RATHER MUDDY RIDING HABIT AND SHE WAS SPEAKING IN HER SHARP SHORT TONES TO HER TWIN SISTER HESTER WHO LAY BACK IN THE DEPTHS OF A LARGE ARM CHAIR A NOVEL OPEN IN HER LAP "
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"'Frosts kill all the flowers that is why James does not like it coming; but it is the flowers out of doors that feel it most.' 'But,' said Roland, edging up to his aunt, 'there are no flowers to kill; there are only bare, dried up trees and dark bushes. Mr. Bob told us they had all gone to sleep under the ground.'",
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"y had so lately left. 'I wish Mr. Bob had a nice glass house like this,' said Olive thoughtfully. 'Why doesn't he, Roly?' 'We'll ask him next time we see him. I expect he is too poor.' 'And, Roly, do you think Jack Frost is a thief who tries to steal James's flowers?' 'I don't know.' A little later, when nurse was taking them into the house, Olive inquired again, rather anxiously, 'Nurse, I hope Jack Frost won't come to us when we're in bed; James seemed to think we should feel him.' 'No, no, Miss Olive; I'll tuck you up too warm for that. There will be no Jack Frost in our nursery, I can tell you. I keep too big a fire.' But the little girl was anxious and ill at ease, till at last she unburdened her mind to Miss Sibyl, when she went to wish her 'good-night' in the drawing-room. 'Why, Olive dear, Jack Frost isn't a man; that is only a joke. When it is very cold the air freezes, and the pretty dew-drops on the grass and flowers all turn to ice. Have you never seen a frost?' 'No, never.",
"ARING THEIR PRESENT LIFE WITH THE ONE THEY HAD SO LATELY LEFT I WISH MISTER BOB HAD A NICE GLASS HOUSE LIKE THIS SAID OLIVE THOUGHTFULLY WHY DOESN'T HE ROLEY WE'LL ASK HIM NEXT TIME WE SEE HIM I EXPECT HE'S TOO POOR AND REALLY DO YOU THINK JACK FROSTED A THIEF WHO TRACED TO STEAL JAMES'S FLOWERS I DON'T KNOW A LITTLE WHILE LATER WHEN NURSE WAS TAKING THEM INTO THE HOUSE OLIVE INQUIRED AGAIN RATHER ANXIOUSLY NURSE I HOPE JACK FROST WON'T COME TO US WHEN WE ARE IN BED JAMES SEEMED TO THINK WE SHOULD FEEL HIM NO NO MISS OLIVE I'LL TUCK YOU UP TOO WARM FOR THAT THERE WILL BE NO JACK FROST IN OUR NURSERY I CAN TELL YOU I KEEP TOO BIG A FIRE BUT THE LITTLE GIRL WAS TOO ANXIOUS AND ILL AT EASE TILL AT LAST SHE UNBURDENED HER MIND TO MISS SYBIL WHEN SHE WENT TO WISH HER GOOD NIGHT IN THE DRAWING ROOM WHY OLIVE DEAR JOCK FROST ISN'T A MAN THAT IS ONLY A JOKE WHEN IT IS VERY COLD THE AIR FREEZES AND THE PRETTY DEWDROPS ON THE GRASS AND FLOWERS ALL TURN TO ICE HAVE YOU NEVER SEEN A FROST NO NEVER"
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"'Now come and talk to us,' said Miss Amabel briskly, as the children appeared; 'we are all bored to death, and we want you to entertain us.' Roland sat down on a footstool, and clasped his knees in an old fashioned way.",
"NOW COME AND TALK TO US SAID MISS AMABEL BRISKLY AS THE CHILDREN APPEARED WE ARE ALL BORED TO DEATH AND WE WANT YOU TO ENTERTAIN US ROLLIN SAT DOWN ON A FOOTSTOOL AND CLASPED HIS KNEES IN AN OLD FASHIONED WAY"
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"a little shiver. 'What an extraordinary child you are! You don't know the meaning of graves, or you wouldn't talk so!' 'Yes, I do,' said Roland earnestly; 'the earth is full of graves in winter; these graves in the churchyard belong to dead people, but the dead flowers are everywhere, and they're all coming up at Easter--Mr. Bob said so.' 'Bob fills your head with a lot of nonsense; come along.' The boy felt snubbed, and said no more; but that afternoon, when he and his little sister came down to the drawing-room, the subject was opened afresh. [Illustration] Their aunts found Sunday afternoon long and tedious, especially as now a heavy downpour of sleet and rain had set in, and it was in the hope of being amused that Miss Hunter sent for the children. Miss Hester was on one of the sofas half asleep; Miss Amabel standing on the hearthrug with her back to the fire; whilst Miss Sibyl and Miss Hunter were both trying to read books of a religious character, and feeling very dull and bored.",
" BOB HAS TOO MANY HASN'T HE MISS HESTER GAVE A LITTLE SHIVER WHAT AN EXTRAORDINARY CHILD YOU ARE YOU DON'T KNOW THE MEANING OF GRAVES OR YOU WOULDN'T TALK SO YES I DO SAID ROLAND EARNESTLY THE EARTH IS FULL OF GRAVES IN WINTER THESE GRAVES IN THE CHURCHCHYARD BELONG TO DEAD PEOPLE BUT THE DEAD FLOWERS ARE EVERYWHERE AND THEY ARE ALL COMING UP AT EASTER MISTER BOB SAID SO BOB FILLS YOUR HEAD WITH A LOT OF NONSENSE COME ALONG THE BOY FELT SNUBBED AND SAID NO MORE BUT THAT AFTERNOON WHEN HE AND HIS LITTLE SISTER CAME DOWN TO THE DRAWING ROOM THE SUBJECT WAS OPENED AFRESH THEIR AUNTS FOUND SUNDAY AFTERNOON LONG AND TEDIOUS ESPECIALLY AS NOW A HEAVY DOWNPOUR OF SLEET AND RAIN HAD SET IN AND IT WAS IN THE HOPE OF BEING AMUSED THAT MISS HUNTER SENT FOR THE CHILDREN MISS HESTER WAS ON ONE OF THE SOFAS HALF ASLEEP MISS AMABEL STANDING ON THE HALF RUG WITH HER BACK TO THE FIRE WHILE MISS SYBIL AND MISS HUNTER WERE BOTH TRYING TO READ BOOKS OF A RELIGIOUS CHARACTER AND FEELING VERY DULL AND BORED"
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"LITTLE OLIVE SQUEEZED THE OLD MAN'S HAND TIGHTLY I FEEL AS IF I WAS GOING TO CRY SHE SAID"
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" lay just outside the lodge gates on the other side of the road. 'This is my other garden,' he said gravely, 'for I gets so much from the rector every year for keeping the ground tidy.' Roland and Olive looked round them with much interest. Old Bob took them to a quiet corner soon, and pointed out five grassy mounds all in a row. 'There!' he said, his old face quivering all over; 'underneath them mounds are my dear wife and four children, all taken from me in less than one month.' 'Did they die?' asked Roland with solemn eyes. 'The Lord took 'em. 'Twas the scarlet fever was ragin' in our village; little Bessie, our baby, was the first one to take it. She were only five year old, and as merry as a cricket; then Rob and Harry, big lads o' twelve and thirteen, were stricken next, and then Nellie, her mother's right hand; and the poor wife nursed 'em all through herself, and just lived to see the last o' the four buried, and then she follered them, and I were left in the empty house alone.",
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"'Yes, and so will we, when we see the dead flowers come up, and all the dead people too!' 'Oh, don't get them on the subject of \"dead people\" and graves,' murmured Miss Hester sleepily; 'they can talk of nothing else at present.'",
"YES AND SO WILL WE WHEN WE SEE THE DEAD FLOWERS COME UP AND ALL THE DEAD PEOPLE TOO OH DON'T GET THEM ON THE SUBJECT OF DEAD PEOPLE AND GRAVES MURMURED MISS HESTER SLEEPILY THEY COULD TALK OF NOTHING ELSE AT PRESENT"
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"ew down from heaven, and Jesus Christ came rising up from the grave quite well and strong again, and the soldiers ran away, and the good women came near.' 'And the good women were sobbing and crying,' put in Olive again, 'and they thought they were never going to see Him again, _never_!' 'And then one of them, called Mary, saw some one in the garden, and she didn't quite know who it was; and then He called out her name, and then she saw it was Jesus Himself.' [Illustration] 'Jesus Himself, quite well and strong, and wasn't she glad!' repeated little Olive. 'And that's what happened on Easter Sunday,' said Roland. There was silence. The children's soft, earnest voices and the sweet Bible story touched the hearts of those who heard it. 'And how long will it be before Easter?' asked Olive, after a pause. 'Oh, a long, long time. Why, we haven't come to Christmas! We don't want Easter to come yet.' 'Mr. Bob says Easter is the happiest time in all the year; he likes it better than Christmas.",
" THE GREAT STONE GRAVE BROKE OPEN AND TWO BEAUTIFUL ANGELS FLEW DOWN FROM HEAVEN AND JESUS CHRIST CAME RISING UP FROM THE GRAVE QUITE WELL AND STRONG AGAIN AND THE SOLDIERS RAN AWAY AND THE GOOD WOMAN CAME NEAR AND THE GOOD WOMAN WAS SOBBING AND CRYING FOOT ON OLIVE AGAIN AND THEY THOUGHT THEY WERE NEVER GOING TO SEE HIM AGAIN NEVER AND THEN ONE OF THEM CALLED MARY SAW SOME ONE IN THE GARDEN AND SHE DIDN'T QUITE KNOW WHO IT WAS AND THEN HE CALLED OUT HER NAME AND THEN SHE SAW IT WAS JESUS HIMSELF JESUS HIMSELF QUITE WELL AND STRONG AND WASN'T SHE GLAD REPEATED LITTLE OLIVE AND THAT'S WHAT HAPPENED ON EASTER SUNDAY SAID ROLAND THERE WAS SILENCE THE CHILDREN'S SOFT EARNEST VOICES AND THE SWEET BIBLE'S STORY TOUCHED THE HEARTS OF THOSE WHO HEARD IT AND HOW LONG WILL IT BE BEFORE EASTER ASKED OLIVE AFTER A PAUSE OH A LONG LONG TIME WHY WE HAVEN'T COME TO CHRISTMAS WE DON'T WANT EASTERY TO COME YET MISTER BOB SAYS EASTER IS THE HAPPIEST TIME IN ALL THE YEAR HE LIKES IT BETTER THAN CHRISTMAS"
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"Them were the very two tex's she said to me, and then she says: \"The nex' time you'll see me, Bob, will be in my body o' glory! Unless you foller me first, but I can't help thinking,\" she says, \"that the Resurrection mayn't be far off!\" And so she left me!'",
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"f the fireplace, the old man began,-- 'My dear wife were powerful fond o' flowers, and she were quite as clever at rearing 'em as ever I were. She would get cuttin's from James Green up at the house, and in summer our garden was just a pictur.' Just before she were a taken ill, James had sent her down a lily bulb, a beautiful pure white one, and she'd put it in a pot in our cellar, and says she to me, \"Bob, I means to bring that lily out by Easter; with care I'm sure I shall do it!\" Then when she were near her end, and she seed me a-frettin' my heart out, she calls me to her bed. \"Bob,\" says she, \"take care o' my lily, and, Bob dear, when Easter comes and you see it a-burstin' out in all its beauty, then think o' me and the children.\" \"So also is the resurrection of the dead.... It is sown in dishonour, it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power.\" \"For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which sleep in Jesus will God bring with Him!",
"ES AND MAKING ROLAND SIT IN A SMALL CHAIR ON THE OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE FIREPLACE THE OLD MAN BEGAN MY DEAR WIFE WERE POWERFUL FOND OF FLOWERS AND SHE WERE QUITE AS CLEVER AT RARIINDAM AS I EVER WERE SHE WOULD GET CUTTONS FROM JAMES GREEN UP AT THE HOUSE AND IN SUMMER OUR GARDEN WAS JUST A PICTURE JUST BEFORE SHE WERE TAKEN ILL JAMES HAD SENT HER DOWN A LILY BOWL A BEAUTIFUL PURE WHITE ONE AND SHE'D PUT IT IN A POT IN OUR CELLAR AND SHE SAYS TO ME BOB I MEANS TO BRING THAT LILY OUT BY EASTER WITH CARE I'M SURE I SHALL DO IT THEN WHEN SHE WERE NEAR HER END AND SHE SEED ME A FRETTING MY HEART OUT SHE CALLS ME TO HER BED BOB SAYS SHE TAKE GARUMA LILY AND BOB DEAR WHEN EASTER COMES AND YOU SEE TO BURSTIN OUT IN ALL HIS BEAUTY THEN THINK O ME AND THE CHILDREN SO ALSO IS THE RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD IT IS SOWN IN DISHONOUR IT IS RAISED IN GLORY IT IS SOWN IN WEAKNESS IT IS RAISED IN POWER FOR IF WE BELIEVE THAT JESUS DIED AND ROSE AGAIN EVEN SO THEM ALSO ASLEEP IN JESUS WILL GOD BRING WITH HIM"
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"Now you come back with me, and I'll tell you their story. 'Tis too cold for us to be standin' here, but don't forget my five grassy mounds in this corner when I tells the tale!' As the children turned away to follow him, Roland said thoughtfully, 'They're all under the ground, just like you say the flowers are!'",
"NOW YOU COME BACK WITH ME AND I'LL TELL YOU THIS STORY TIS TOO COLD FOR US TO BE STANDING HERE BUT DON'T FORGET MY FIVE GRASSY MOUNDS IN THIS CORNER WHEN I TELLS THE TALE AS THE CHILDREN TURNED AWAY TO FOLLOW HIM ROLLIN SAID THOUGHTFULLY THEY'RE ALL UNDER GROUND JUST LIKE YOU SAY THE FLOWERS ARE"
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"et fever was ragin' in our village; little Bessie, our baby, was the first one to take it. She were only five year old, and as merry as a cricket; then Rob and Harry, big lads o' twelve and thirteen, were stricken next, and then Nellie, her mother's right hand; and the poor wife nursed 'em all through herself, and just lived to see the last o' the four buried, and then she follered them, and I were left in the empty house alone.' Little Olive squeezed the old man's hand tightly. 'I feel as if I was going to cry,' she said. 'Why did God make them die, Mr. Bob?' Bob raised his face to the sky above him. 'He didn't tell me why,' he said; 'but He'll tell me one day. 'Twas just at this time o' year they were taken. Ah, dear! That were a terrible winter for me! It all seemed dark and drear, and not a gleam of sunshine in sight. But thank the good Lord I got my bit o' cheer when Easter came. And it have come reg'lar and fresh like every Easter since. Do you mind them \"ugly pots\" in my window?",
"ND WITH SOLEMN EYES THE LORD TOOK EM TWAS THE SCARLET FEVER WAS REGIN IN OUR VILLAGE LITTLE BESSIE OUR BABY WAS THE FIRST ONE TO TAKE IT SHE WAS ONLY FIVE YEAR OLD AND AS MERRY AS A CRICKET THEN ROB AND HARRY BIG LADS OF TWELVE AND THIRTEEN WERE STRICKEN NEXT AND THEN NALLIE HER MOTHER'S RIGHT HAND AND THE POOR WIFE NURSED EM ALL THROUGH HERSELF JUST LIVED TO SEE THE LAST OF THE FOUR BURIED AND THEN SHE FOLLOWED EM AND I WERE LEFT IN THE EMPTY HOUSE ALONE LITTLE OLIVE SQUEEZED THE OLD MAN'S HAND TIGHTLY I FEEL AS IF I WAS GOING TO CRY SHE SAID WHY DID GOD MAKE THEM DIE MISTER BOB HE RAISED HIS FACE TO THE SKY ABOVE HIM HE DIDN'T TELL ME WHY HE SAID BETTER TO TELL ME ONE DAY TWAS JUST AT THIS TIME A YEAR THEY WERE TAKEN AH DEAR THAT WERE A TERRIBLE WINTER FOR ME IT ALL SEEMED DARK AND DREAR AND NOT A GLEAM OF SUNSHINE IN SIGHT BUT THANK THE GOOD LORD I GOT MY BIT O CHEER WHEN EASTER CAME AND IT HAVE COME REGULAR AND FRESH LIKE EVER A YEASTER SINCE DO YOU MIND THE MUGLY POTS IN MY WINDOW"
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"The boy felt snubbed, and said no more; but that afternoon, when he and his little sister came down to the drawing room, the subject was opened afresh. [Illustration] Their aunts found Sunday afternoon long and tedious, especially as now a heavy downpour of sleet and rain had set in, and it was in the hope of being amused that Miss Hunter sent for the children.",
"THE BOY FELT SNUBBED AND SAID NO MORE BUT THAT AFTERNOON WHEN HE AND HIS LITTLE SISTER CAME DOWN TO THE DRAWING ROOM THE SUBJECT WAS OPENED AFRESH THEIR AUNTS FOUND SUNDAY AFTERNOON LONG AND TEDIOUS ESPECIALLY AS NOW A HEAVY DOWNPOUR OF SLEET AND RAIN HAD SET IN AND IT WAS IN THE HOPE OF BEING AMUSED THAT MISS HUNTER SENT FOR THE CHILDREN"
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"ttimes think that when the Lord do come down from heaven with a shout, He will choose Easter Sunday to wake the dead, for 'tis the day He rose Himself!' Old Bob did not say much more, and Roland and Olive went back to the house thinking busily. The next day was Sunday, and they went to church with their aunts; but directly the service was over, Roland, who was walking with Miss Hester, pulled her by the hand towards Bob's five graves in the corner. 'Do just let me look at them again! Have you got any graves here, Aunt Hester? I wish I had some. Poor Bob has too many, hasn't he?' Miss Hester gave a little shiver. 'What an extraordinary child you are! You don't know the meaning of graves, or you wouldn't talk so!' 'Yes, I do,' said Roland earnestly; 'the earth is full of graves in winter; these graves in the churchyard belong to dead people, but the dead flowers are everywhere, and they're all coming up at Easter--Mr. Bob said so.' 'Bob fills your head with a lot of nonsense; come along.",
"AIT A LITTLE LONGER FOR HOURS I OFTTIMES THINK THOUGH WHEN THE LORD DO COME DOWN FROM HEAVEN WITH A SHOT HE WILL CHOOSE EASTER SUNDAY TO WAIT THE DEAD FOR TIS THE DAY HE ROLLS HIMSELF OLD BOB DID NOT SAY MUCH MORE AND ROLAND AND OLIVE WENT BACK TO THE HOUSE THINKING BUSILY THE NEXT DAY WAS SUNDAY AND THEY WENT TO CHURCH WITH THEIR AUNTS BUT DIRECTLY THE SERVICE WAS OVER ROLAND WHO WAS WALKING WITH MISS ESTHER PULLED HER BY THE HAND TOWARDS BOB'S FIVE GRAVES IN THE CORNER DO JUST LET ME LOOK AT THEM AGAIN HAVE YOU GOT ANY GRAVES HERE AUNT HESTER I WISH I HAD SOME POOR BOB HAS TOO MANY HASN'T HE MISS HESTER GAVE A LITTLE SHIVER WHAT AN EXTRAORDINARY CHILD YOU ARE YOU DON'T KNOW THE MEANING OF GRAVES OR YOU WOULDN'T TALK SO YES I DO SAID ROLAND EARNESTLY THE EARTH IS FULL OF GRAVES IN WINTER THESE GRAVES IN THE CHURCHCHYARD BELONG TO DEAD PEOPLE BUT THE DEAD FLOWERS ARE EVERYWHERE AND THEY ARE ALL COMING UP AT EASTER MISTER BOB SAID SO BOB FILLS YOUR HEAD WITH A LOT OF NONSENSE COME ALONG"
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"'And the good women were sobbing and crying,' put in Olive again, 'and they thought they were never going to see Him again, _never_!' 'And then one of them, called Mary, saw some one in the garden, and she didn't quite know who it was; and then He called out her name, and then she saw it was Jesus Himself.'",
"AND THE GOOD WOMAN WAS SOBBING AND CRYING FOOT ON OLIVE AGAIN AND THEY THOUGHT THEY WERE NEVER GOING TO SEE HIM AGAIN NEVER AND THEN ONE OF THEM CALLED MARY SAW SOME ONE IN THE GARDEN AND SHE DIDN'T QUITE KNOW WHO IT WAS AND THEN HE CALLED OUT HER NAME AND THEN SHE SAW IT WAS JESUS HIMSELF"
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"arion to tell us the story of Easter Sunday,' suggested Olive. 'Yes, nurse doesn't know it properly--she makes it so short.' Miss Hunter looked helplessly at her sisters. 'I'm not good at Bible stories,' she said; 'I forget them so.' 'You tell us what you know about it,' said Miss Amabel. Roland puckered his brows for a moment, then he began,-- 'Jesus was dead--quite, quite dead. He had been hung on the cross, and killed by wicked, cruel men; and all His friends were crying and sobbing, and He was put in a grave, and soldiers stood outside.' 'All His friends were crying and sobbing,' repeated Olive, shaking her little head mournfully at Miss Hunter, 'and they thought they were never going to see Him again; never, _never_!' 'And then,' continued Roland, 'suddenly, bang! bang! the great stone grave broke open, and two beautiful angels flew down from heaven, and Jesus Christ came rising up from the grave quite well and strong again, and the soldiers ran away, and the good women came near.",
"WHAT SHALL WE TALK ABOUT ASKED ROLAND LET'S ASK AUNT MARIAN TO TELL US THE STORY OF EASTER'S SUNDAY SUGGESTED OLIVE YES NURSE DOESN'T KNOW IT PROPERLY SHE MAKES IT SO SHORT MISS HUNTER LOOKED HELPLESSLY AT HER SISTERS I'M NOT GOOD AT BIBLE STORIES SHE SAID I FORGET THEM SO YOU TELL US WHAT YOU KNOW ABOUT IT SAID MISS AMABEL ROLLIN PUCKERED HIS BROWS FOR A MOMENT THEN HE BEGAN JESUS WAS DEAD QUITE QUITE DEAD HE HAD BEEN HUNG ON THE CROSS AND KILLED BY WICKED AND CRUEL MEN AND ALL HIS FRIENDS WERE CRYING AND SOBBING AND HE WAS PUT IN A GRAVE AND SOLDIERS STOOD OUTSIDE ALL HIS FRIENDS WERE CRYING AND SOBBING REPEATED OLIVE SHAKING HER LITTLE HEAD MOURNFULLY AT MISS HUNTER AND THEY THOUGHT THEY WERE NEVER GOING TO SEE HIM AGAIN NEVER NEVER AND THEN CONTINUED ROLAND SUDDENLY BANG BANG THE GREAT STONE GRAVE BROKE OPEN AND TWO BEAUTIFUL ANGELS FLEW DOWN FROM HEAVEN AND JESUS CHRIST CAME RISING UP FROM THE GRAVE QUITE WELL AND STRONG AGAIN AND THE SOLDIERS RAN AWAY AND THE GOOD WOMAN CAME NEAR"
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"ounds are my dear wife and four children, all taken from me in less than one month.' 'Did they die?' asked Roland with solemn eyes. 'The Lord took 'em. 'Twas the scarlet fever was ragin' in our village; little Bessie, our baby, was the first one to take it. She were only five year old, and as merry as a cricket; then Rob and Harry, big lads o' twelve and thirteen, were stricken next, and then Nellie, her mother's right hand; and the poor wife nursed 'em all through herself, and just lived to see the last o' the four buried, and then she follered them, and I were left in the empty house alone.' Little Olive squeezed the old man's hand tightly. 'I feel as if I was going to cry,' she said. 'Why did God make them die, Mr. Bob?' Bob raised his face to the sky above him. 'He didn't tell me why,' he said; 'but He'll tell me one day. 'Twas just at this time o' year they were taken. Ah, dear! That were a terrible winter for me! It all seemed dark and drear, and not a gleam of sunshine in sight.",
"E HE SAID HIS OLD FACE QUIVERING ALL OVER UNDERNEATH THE MOUNDS ARE MY DEAR WIFE AND FOUR CHILDREN ALL TAKEN FROM ME IN LESS THAN ONE MONTH DID THEY DIE ASKED ROLAND WITH SOLEMN EYES THE LORD TOOK EM TWAS THE SCARLET FEVER WAS REGIN IN OUR VILLAGE LITTLE BESSIE OUR BABY WAS THE FIRST ONE TO TAKE IT SHE WAS ONLY FIVE YEAR OLD AND AS MERRY AS A CRICKET THEN ROB AND HARRY BIG LADS OF TWELVE AND THIRTEEN WERE STRICKEN NEXT AND THEN NALLIE HER MOTHER'S RIGHT HAND AND THE POOR WIFE NURSED EM ALL THROUGH HERSELF JUST LIVED TO SEE THE LAST OF THE FOUR BURIED AND THEN SHE FOLLOWED EM AND I WERE LEFT IN THE EMPTY HOUSE ALONE LITTLE OLIVE SQUEEZED THE OLD MAN'S HAND TIGHTLY I FEEL AS IF I WAS GOING TO CRY SHE SAID WHY DID GOD MAKE THEM DIE MISTER BOB HE RAISED HIS FACE TO THE SKY ABOVE HIM HE DIDN'T TELL ME WHY HE SAID BETTER TO TELL ME ONE DAY TWAS JUST AT THIS TIME A YEAR THEY WERE TAKEN AH DEAR THAT WERE A TERRIBLE WINTER FOR ME IT ALL SEEMED DARK AND DREAR AND NOT A GLEAM OF SUNSHINE IN SIGHT"
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" precocious children that die young. Roland has just said, in his little weak, quavering voice, \"Auntie, perhaps Olive and I are going to die and be put in a grave.\" And when I told him that wasn't likely, and he mustn't think of such things, he said in quite a cheerful tone, \"Oh, well we shall come up at Easter, you know. If it isn't this Easter, it will be another one, and you'll have our graves to look after, like Mr. Bob. Jesus will take care of us till we come up, like Mr. Bob takes care of his lily pots.\" I don't half understand their talk.' 'I do,' said Miss Sibyl, with a wistful smile; 'and I believe they are going to get well, and give us more of faith's lessons to learn and understand.' They did get well, though their recovery was somewhat slow; and Easter, late as it came that year, was close at hand before they were quite convalescent. It was a lovely spring morning when, wrapped up in shawls, the two little invalids were brought out of the house to take their first airing.",
"RFUL EYES AS SHE CAME DOWN FROM THE SICK ROOM ONE DAY IT IS ALWAYS THE GOOD PRECOCIOUS CHILDREN THAT DIE YOUNG ROLAND HAS JUST SAID IN HIS LITTLE WEAK QUAVERING VOICE AREN'T HE PERHAPS OLIVE AND I ARE GOING TO DIE AND BE PUT IN A GRAVE AND WHEN I TOLD HIM THAT WASN'T LIKELY AND HE MUSTN'T THINK OF SUCH THINGS HE SAID IN QUITE A CHEERFUL TONE OH WELL WE SHALL COME UP AT EASTER YOU KNOW IF IT ISN'T THIS EASTER IT WILL BE ANOTHER ONE AND YOU'LL HAVE OUR GRAVES TO LOOK AFTER LIKE MISTER BOB JESUS WILL TAKE CARE OF US TILL WE COME UP LIKE MISTER BOB TAKES CARE OF HIS LILYPOTS I DON'T HALF UNDERSTAND THEIR TALK AND I BELIEVE THEY ARE GOING TO GET WELL AND GIVE US MORE FAITHLESS LESSONS TO LEARN AND UNDERSTAND THEY DID GET WELL THOUGH THEIR RECOVERY WAS SOMEWHAT SLOW AND EASTER LATE AS IT CAME THEIR YEAR WAS CLOSE AT HAND BEFORE THEY WERE QUITE CONVALESCENT IT WAS A LOVELY SPRING MORNING WHEN WRAPPED UP IN SHAWLS THE TWO LITTLE INVALIDS WERE BROUGHT OUT OF THE HOUSE TO TAKE THEIR FIRST AIRING"
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"There is a deal goin' on in the silence and darkness that we knows nothin' about, but it's fact all the same.'",
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"d wait, and the good Lord never fails. You won't see the garden at its best at Easter, perhaps, Master Roland, but you'll see the beginning of it all, like \"the shining light that shineth more and more unto the perfect day.\"' So time passed, and then one day when the children were passing by the lodge, Bob called them in with a mysterious face. 'Look inside my dear wife's pot,' he said. Eagerly the little faces peered down into it, and then little Olive laughed and clapped her hands. 'A dear little tiny weeny green stem! It's coming up at last!' [Illustration] 'And look! In two other pots I can see something! exclaimed Roland excitedly. 'Ay, I remember the first sight I ketched of it after my loss,' said Bob. 'I were very broken-hearted, but it seemed to bring a tiny spark of hope to my heart, to see what I had only believed by faith was goin' on underground. It's grand to see the Lord's workin's; but mind, you little ones, that there plant is just as much alive before it shows itself.",
"E DO ANY OF US SAID BOB WITH SHINING EYES WE JUST HOPE AND WAIT AND THE GOOD LORD NEVER FAILS YOU WON'T SEE THE GARDEN AT ITS BEST AT EASTER PERHAPS MASTER ROLAND BUT YOU'LL SEE THE BEGINNING OF IT ALL LIKE THE SHINING LIGHT THAT SHINES MORE AND MORE UNTO THE PERFECT DAY SO TIME PASSED AND THEN ONE DAY WHEN THE CHILDREN WERE PASSING BY THE LODGE BOB CALLED THE MEN WITH A MYSTERIOUS FACE LOOK INSIDE MY DEAR WIFE'S POT HE SAID EAGERLY THE LITTLE FACES PEERED DOWN INTO IT AND THEN LITTLE OLIVE LAUGHED AND CLAPPED HER HANDS A DEAR LITTLE TEENY WEENY GREEN STEM IT'S COMING UP AT LAST AND LOOK INTO OTHER POTS I CAN SEE SOMETHING EXCLAIMED ROLLIN EXCITEDLY AYE I REMEMBER THE FIRST SIGHT I CATCHED OF IT AFTER MY LOSS SAID BOB I WERE VERY BROKEN HEARTED BUT IT SEEMED TO BRING A TINY SPARK OF HOPE TO MY HEART TO SEE WHAT I HAD ONLY BELIEVED BY FAITH WAS GOING ON UNDERGROUND IT'S GRAND TO SEE THE LORD'S WORKINS BUT MIND YOU LITTLE ONES THAT THEIR PLANT IS JUST AS MUCH ALIVE BEFORE IT SHOWS ITSELF"
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"Roland has just said, in his little weak, quavering voice, \"Auntie, perhaps Olive and I are going to die and be put in a grave.\" And when I told him that wasn't likely, and he mustn't think of such things, he said in quite a cheerful tone, \"Oh, well we shall come up at Easter, you know.",
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"hort time after. 'What are you doing here?' asked nurse. 'I've been looking for you everywhere.' 'Mr. Bob's lilies have come through the earth at last, nurse,' said Olive, raising her blue eyes earnestly to her nurse's face; 'so I came to see if these graves were cracking yet. They'll be like Jesus' grave in the garden, you know, at Easter.' Only a few weeks after this, both Olive and her brother lay prostrate in their beds with a severe attack of measles. Their aunts had been so long unaccustomed to children's ailments, that perhaps they may have exaggerated the danger; still, even the family doctor looked grave and talked about 'Indian constitutions,' 'no stamina,' etc., etc., and the old house that had so lately rung with childish voices and laughter now lay hushed and silent in the sweet spring sunshine. [Illustration] 'They're too precocious,' said Miss Hunter with tearful eyes, as she came down from the sick room one day; 'it is always the good precocious children that die young.",
"AVES GIVING THEM MOST CAREFUL SCRUTINY A SHORT TIME AFTER WHAT ARE YOU DOING HERE ASKED NURSE I'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR YOU EVERYWHERE MISTER BOB'S LILIES HAVE COME THROUGH THE EARTH AT LAST NURSE SAID OLIVE RAISING HER BLUE EYES EARNESTLY TO HER NURSE'S FACE SO I CAME TO SEE IF THESE GRAVES WERE CRACKING YET THEY'LL BE LIKE JESUS'S GRAVE IN THE GARDEN YOU KNOW AT EASTER ONLY A FEW WEEKS AFTER THIS BOTH OLIVE AND HER BROTHER LAY PROSTRATE IN THEIR BEDS WITH A SEVERE ATTACK OF MEASLES THEIR AUNTS HAD BEEN SO LONG UNACCUSTOMED TO CHILDREN'S AILMENTS THAT PERHAPS THEY MAY HAVE EXAGGERATED THE DANGER STILL EVEN THE FAMILY DOCTOR LOOKED GRAVE AND TALKED ABOUT INDIAN CONSTITUTIONS NO STAMINA ET CETERA ET CETERA AND THE OLD HOUSE THAT HAD SO LATELY RUNG WITH CHILDISH VOICES AND LAUGHTER NOW LAY HUSHED AND SILENT IN THE SWEET SPRING SUNSHINE THEY'RE TOO PRECOCIOUS SAID MISS HUNTER WITH TEARFUL EYES AS SHE CAME DOWN FROM THE SICK ROOM ONE DAY IT IS ALWAYS THE GOOD PRECOCIOUS CHILDREN THAT DIE YOUNG"
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" broken-hearted, but it seemed to bring a tiny spark of hope to my heart, to see what I had only believed by faith was goin' on underground. It's grand to see the Lord's workin's; but mind, you little ones, that there plant is just as much alive before it shows itself. There is a deal goin' on in the silence and darkness that we knows nothin' about, but it's fact all the same.' The children could talk of nothing else all that day, and little Olive was found by her nurse standing over Bob's graves, giving them most careful scrutiny a short time after. 'What are you doing here?' asked nurse. 'I've been looking for you everywhere.' 'Mr. Bob's lilies have come through the earth at last, nurse,' said Olive, raising her blue eyes earnestly to her nurse's face; 'so I came to see if these graves were cracking yet. They'll be like Jesus' grave in the garden, you know, at Easter.' Only a few weeks after this, both Olive and her brother lay prostrate in their beds with a severe attack of measles.",
" MY LOSS SAID BOB I WERE VERY BROKEN HEARTED BUT IT SEEMED TO BRING A TINY SPARK OF HOPE TO MY HEART TO SEE WHAT I HAD ONLY BELIEVED BY FAITH WAS GOING ON UNDERGROUND IT'S GRAND TO SEE THE LORD'S WORKINS BUT MIND YOU LITTLE ONES THAT THEIR PLANT IS JUST AS MUCH ALIVE BEFORE IT SHOWS ITSELF THERE IS A DEAL GOIN ON IN THE SILENCE AN THE DARKNESS THAT WE KNOWS NOTHING ABOUT BUT IT'S FACT ALL THE SAME THE CHILDREN COULD TALK OF NOTHING ELSE ALL THAT DAY AND LITTLE OLIVE WAS FOUND BY HER NURSE STANDING OVER BOB'S GRAVES GIVING THEM MOST CAREFUL SCRUTINY A SHORT TIME AFTER WHAT ARE YOU DOING HERE ASKED NURSE I'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR YOU EVERYWHERE MISTER BOB'S LILIES HAVE COME THROUGH THE EARTH AT LAST NURSE SAID OLIVE RAISING HER BLUE EYES EARNESTLY TO HER NURSE'S FACE SO I CAME TO SEE IF THESE GRAVES WERE CRACKING YET THEY'LL BE LIKE JESUS'S GRAVE IN THE GARDEN YOU KNOW AT EASTER ONLY A FEW WEEKS AFTER THIS BOTH OLIVE AND HER BROTHER LAY PROSTRATE IN THEIR BEDS WITH A SEVERE ATTACK OF MEASLES"
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"han she had ever felt in it before. 'Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin: but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord.' What did it mean? And then with a burst of triumph the words came to her: 'For as in Adam all die: even so in Christ shall all be made alive.' [Illustration] Like a flash of light Miss Sibyl saw it all, and then and there her poor dead soul reached hold of its Saviour, and life--that 'life more abundant,'--flooded the empty corners of her anxious heart. The service over, the children begged their aunt's permission to speak to Bob. Seizing hold of his hands, they led him to his graves. 'Let's come and see them, Mr. Bob, first, and then we'll see your lilies. Do tell us. Have they come out? We have been ill such a long time, and they wouldn't let us come and see you before. Isn't it a lovely day? And hasn't it all come true about the flowers? We never thought England could have such pretty ones. Oh, I hope the winter will never come again!",
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"BUT HE CAME OUT OF HIS GRAVE FIRST SAID THE CHILD TRIUMPHANTLY THEIR CONVERSATION WAS INTERRUPTED BY ROLAND WHO CAME FLYING OUT OF THE HOUSE AUNT MARIAN HAS CHANGED HER MIND SHE SAYS WE CAN GO TO CHURCH OLIVE COME ALONG AND TELL NURSE"
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"ive, of course it's because it's the proper time,' answered Roland. 'Easter is when people get their new bodies, and the flowers are all new.' Olive was quite satisfied with this explanation. Miss Sibyl, who did not seem quite as bright as usual, looked at them with wistful eyes. After breakfast was over she took Olive into the garden with her. The child begged to be told the 'Easter story,' and Miss Sibyl tried to oblige her, saying as she did so, 'But you know it much better than I do.' When she had finished her rather halting narrative, Olive looked up and added,-- 'So everybody dried their tears and were very happy, because they knew Jesus would never die again.' Then after a pause she asked, 'Why didn't Jesus always stay down in the world, Aunt Sibyl? Why did He go back to heaven so soon?' 'I think He told us He had finished His work, my dear.' 'What work?' 'Well--dying on the cross for us. He came down from heaven to do that. When He had died for our sins, He went back to heaven.",
"OUGHT WE TO WEAR NEW THINGS DEMANDED OLIVE WHY OLIVE OF COURSE IT'S PIGGERS IT'S THE PROPER TIME ANSWERED ROLAND EASTER IS WHEN PEOPLE GET THEIR NEW BODIES AND THE FLOWERS ARE ON NEW OLIVE WAS QUITE SATISFIED WITH THIS EXPLANATION MISS SIBYL WHO DID NOT SEEM QUITE AS BRIGHT AS USUAL LOOKED AT THEM WITH WISTFUL EYES AFTER BREAKFAST WAS OVER SHE TOOK OLIVE INTO THE GARDEN WITH HER THE CHILD BEGGED TO BE TOLD THE EASTER STORY AND MISS SIBYL TRIED TO OBLIGE HER SAYING AS SHE DID SO BUT YOU KNOW IT MUCH BETTER THAN I DO WHEN SHE HAD FINISHED HER RATHER HALTING NARRATIVE OLIVE LOOKED UP AND ADDED SO EVERYBODY DRIED THEIR TEARS AND WERE VERY HAPPY BECAUSE THEY KNEW JESUS WOULD NEVER DIE AGAIN THEN AFTER A PAUSE SHE ASKED WHY DIDN'T JESUS ALWAYS STAY DOWN IN THE WORLD AUNT SYBIL WHY DID HE GO BACK TO HEAVEN SO SOON I THINK HE TOLD US HE HAD FINISHED HIS WORK MY DEAR WHAT WORK WELL DYING ON THE CROSS FOR US HE CAME DOWN FROM HEAVEN TO DO THAT WHEN HE HAD DIED FOR OUR SINS HE WENT BACK TO HEAVEN"
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"lves; the sweet spring flowers in the church, the joyous Easter hymns, and the familiar story read once again by the rector, satisfied their little souls. They sat with radiant faces in the family pew, and when they caught sight of Bob singing away with tearful eyes and a happy smile in the village choir, they nodded across at him with great satisfaction. Miss Sibyl came into church with a burden upon her soul; but when the Easter anthem fell upon her ear, she listened with more interest than she had ever felt in it before. 'Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin: but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord.' What did it mean? And then with a burst of triumph the words came to her: 'For as in Adam all die: even so in Christ shall all be made alive.' [Illustration] Like a flash of light Miss Sibyl saw it all, and then and there her poor dead soul reached hold of its Saviour, and life--that 'life more abundant,'--flooded the empty corners of her anxious heart.",
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"He paused as they came in sight of those grassy mounds, and the children pressed forward with eagerness. There on each mound stood one of the 'ugly flower pots,' but the pot itself was sunk in a bed of moss, and a lovely pure white lily raised its glorious head in the sunshine. Five lilies stood on the five graves, and old Bob, gazing at them through a mist of tears, said in a solemn tone, '\"And white robes were given unto every one of them, and it was said unto them that they should rest yet for a little season.\"",
"HE PAUSED AS THEY CAME IN SIGHT OF THOSE GRASSY MOUNDS AND THE CHILDREN PRESSED FORWARD WITH EAGERNESS THERE ON EACH MOUND STOOD ONE OF THE UGLY FLOWER POTS BUT THE POT ITSELF WAS SUNK IN A BED OF MOSS AND A LOVELY PURE WHITE LILY RAISED ITS GLORIOUS HEAD IN THE SUNSHINE FIVE LILIES STOOD ON THE FIVE GRAVES AND OLD BOB GAZING AT THEM THROUGH A MIST OF TEARS SAID IN A SOLEMN TONE AND WHITE ROBES WERE GIVEN IN TO EVERY ONE OF THEM AND IT WAS SAID UNTO THEM THAT THEY SHOULD REST YET FOR A LITTLE SEASON"
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"mean? And then with a burst of triumph the words came to her: 'For as in Adam all die: even so in Christ shall all be made alive.' [Illustration] Like a flash of light Miss Sibyl saw it all, and then and there her poor dead soul reached hold of its Saviour, and life--that 'life more abundant,'--flooded the empty corners of her anxious heart. The service over, the children begged their aunt's permission to speak to Bob. Seizing hold of his hands, they led him to his graves. 'Let's come and see them, Mr. Bob, first, and then we'll see your lilies. Do tell us. Have they come out? We have been ill such a long time, and they wouldn't let us come and see you before. Isn't it a lovely day? And hasn't it all come true about the flowers? We never thought England could have such pretty ones. Oh, I hope the winter will never come again!' 'Eh, my dears, how you run on! Old Bob has missed you sure enough, and as for his lilies, well, you shall see them, for 'tis my custom to do the same every year.",
"O LIVE UNTO GOD THROUGH JESUS CHRIST OUR LORD WHAT DID IT MEAN AND THEN WITH A BURST OF TRIUMPH THE WORDS CAME TO HER FOR AS IN AN ANIMAL DIE EVEN SO IN CHRIST SHALL ALL BE MADE ALIVE LIKE A FLASH OF LIGHT MISS SYBIL SAW IT ALL AND THEN AND THERE HER POOR DEAD SOUL REACHED HOLD OF ITS SAVIOUR AND LIFE THAT LIFE MORE ABUNDANT FLOODED THE EMPTY CORNERS OF HER ANXIOUS HEART THE SERVICE OVER THE CHILDREN BEGGED THEIR AUNT'S PERMISSION TO SPEAK TO BOB SEIZING HOLD OF HIS HANDS THEY LED HIM TO HIS GRAVES LET'S COME AND SEE THEM MISTER BOB FIRST AND THEN WE'LL SEE YOUR LILIES DO TELL US HAVE THEY COME OUT WE HAVE BEEN ILL SUCH A LONG TIME AND THEY WOULDN'T LET US COME AND SEE YOU BEFORE ISN'T IT A LOVELY DAY AND HASN'T IT ALL COME TRUE ABOUT THE FLOWERS WE NEVER THOUGHT ENGLAND COULD HAVE SUCH PRETTY ONES OH I HOPE THE WINTER WILL NEVER COME AGAIN AH MY DEARS HOW YOU RUN ON OLD BOB HAS MISSED YOU SURE ENOUGH AND AS FOR ZILI'S WELL YOU SHALL SEE THEM FOR TIS MY CUSTOM TO DO THE SAME EVERY YEAR"
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"4 Come, little Amy, come, and walk Within this shining street;' I think they hear me while I talk, They look so kind and sweet.\" \"Dear child, the angels sent from Heaven, Are always near to you, Whenever to your heart is given Some feeling good and true.",
"COME LITTLE AMY COME AND WALK WITHIN THIS SHINY STREET I THINK THEY HEAR ME WHEN I TALK THEY LOOK SO KIND AND SWEET DEAR CHILD THE ANGELS SENT FROM HEAVEN ARE ALWAYS NEAR TO YOU WHENEVER TO YOUR HEART IS GIVEN SOME FEELING GOOD AND TRUE"
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"he precept vain ; Send to my heart the light divine, To make Thy message plain. “Fill her young soul— a sacred well— With true, unselfish thought; That so each act of hers may tell What love of Thee hath wrought.” LITTLE AMY. 42 Daily beside her Mother’s knee, She prays with lisping tone; “ Father in Heaven ! take care of me, And keep me still Thine own. “ Teach me, to Father, Mother, Friend, My constant love to show; Thy Holy Spirit daily send, That I Thy Will may know. “Write on my heart, through every mood, This rule so grand and true: ‘Do unto others as you would That they should do to you.” Midst scattered toys the little child Ran in her careless glee, Then stopped, and gazed, then softly smiled ; “Oh, Mother! come and see. “Upon the wall I see my prayer, Made beautiful and gay; And angel-children smiling there, Look down upon my play. “ They stretch their hands and look so bright, It seems as if they say: ‘We never have your darker night* But only endless day ! 44 LITTLE AMY. “ ",
"OW THE PRECIOUS SEEDS OR PRAISE BE THINE ALONE O GRANT THAT NEVER ACT OF MINE MAY MAKE THE PRECEPT VAIN SEND TO MY HEART THE LIGHT DIVINE TO MAKE THY MESSAGE PLAIN FILL HER YOUNG SOUL A SACRED WELL WITH TRUE UNSELFISH THOUGHT THAT SO EACH ACT OF HERS MAY TELL WHAT LOVE OF THEE HATH WROUGHT DAILY BESIDE HER MOTHER'S KNEE SHE PRAYS WITH LISPING TONE FATHER IN HEAVEN TAKE CARE OF ME AND KEEP ME STILL THINE OWN TEACH ME TO FATHER MOTHER FRIEND MY CONSTANT LOVE TO SHOW THY HOLY SPIRIT DAILY SEND THAT EITHER WILL MAY KNOW RIGHT ON MY HEART THROUGH EVERY MOOD THIS RULE SO GRAND AND TRUE DO UNTO OTHERS AS YOU WOULD THAT THEY SHOULD DO TO YOU MID SCATTERED TOWARDS THE LITTLE CHILD RAN IN HER CARELESS GLEE THEN STOPPED AND GAZED THEN SOFTLY SMILED OH MOTHER COME AND SEE UPON THE WALL I SEE MY PRAYER MADE BEAUTIFUL AND GAY AND ANGEL CHILDREN SMILING THERE LOOK DOWN UPON MY PLAY THEY STRETCH THEIR HANDS AND LOOK SO BRIGHT IT SEEMS AS IF THEY SAY WE NEVER HAVE YOUR DARKER NIGHT BUT ONLY ENDLESS DAY"
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"Within her sight, beyond the wall, A gaudy sunflower grows ; 'Midst fragrant flowers, above them all, Its yellow petals rose. \"I wish, among the other flowers, My happier lot was thrown!\" Still sighed the Bose — one thought that sours All joys that bless her own.",
"WITHIN HER SIGHT BEYOND THE WALL A GAUDY SUNFLOWER GROWS MIST FRAGRANT FLOWERS ABOVE THEM ALL ITS YELLOW PETALS ROSE I WISH AMONG THE OTHER FLOWERS MY HAPPIER LOT WAS THROWN STILL SIGHED THE ROSE ONE THOUGHT THAT SOURS ALL JOYS THAT BLESS HER OWN"
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"ave ! The favorite said it was needless to save, When their Father was rich, and could get what he pleased; Although he was old, and his lungs were diseased. For, earlier in life he had roughed it, you know, And near middle age he once slept in the snow, And took a had cold ; but his doctor had said That “mind would support life, with such a tine head,” And he proved it was true in that old, hollow tree, And grew pompous and fat as a Bear could well be ! THE ENVIOUS ROSE. W ITH fragrant roses, bright green leaves, Beside the hedge it grows, And many a drop of dew receives, At dawn and daylight’s close. The little birds hop, singing round; The chirping cricket came ; The loving breeze with soothing sound, Seemed breathing out her name; THE ENVIOUS ROSE. 63 There humming bees would often come Beneath the shady trees; The Bose, you think, in such a home, With visitors like these, Must he content. It was not so. The foolish little tree In some gay garden longed to grow; Prey to her vanity!",
" THE ENVIOUS ROSE BY F READ FOR LIBERVOX DOTHAG BY EMILY ISABELLA WITH FRAGRANT ROSES BRIGHT GREEN LEAVES BESIDE THE HEDGE IT GROWS AND MANY A DROP OF DEW RECEIVES AT DAWN AND DAYLIGHT'S CLOSE THE LITTLE BIRD'S HOP SINGING ROUND THE CHIRPING CRICKET CAME THE LOVING BREEZE WITH SOOTHING SOUND SEEM BREATHING OUT HER NAME THERE HUMMING BEES WOULD OFTEN COME BENEATH THE SHADY TREES THE ROSE YOU THINK IN SUCH A HOME WITH VISITORS LIKE THESE MUST BE CONTENT IT WAS NOT SO THE FOOLISH LITTLE TREE IN SOME GAY GARDEN LONG TO GROW PRAY TO HER VANITY"
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"W ITH fragrant roses, bright green leaves, Beside the hedge it grows, And many a drop of dew receives, At dawn and daylight's close.",
"WITH FRAGRANT ROSES BRIGHT GREEN LEAVES BESIDE THE HEDGE IT GROWS AND MANY A DROP OF DEW RECEIVES AT DAWN AND DAYLIGHT'S CLOSE"
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"semble that saint, (She would fight to the death, with no sign of a faint,) Would bite his Pa’s leg, or snarl low at the rest; Of all his young Bears, the beloved and best! The animals came in great numbers to him ; The tree was so small that they couldn’t get in, But they stood at the door and did just as he said, If he told them to stand on their feet or their head ; 62 THE ENVIOUS ROSE. And good things in plenty he got for a fee — A better kept table you rarely would see. Such treats as they had at the back of the cave ! The favorite said it was needless to save, When their Father was rich, and could get what he pleased; Although he was old, and his lungs were diseased. For, earlier in life he had roughed it, you know, And near middle age he once slept in the snow, And took a had cold ; but his doctor had said That “mind would support life, with such a tine head,” And he proved it was true in that old, hollow tree, And grew pompous and fat as a Bear could well be ! THE ENVIOUS ROSE.",
" THE ENVIOUS ROSE BY F READ FOR LIBERVOX DOTHAG BY EMILY ISABELLA"
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"But plant to wave upon the wind Above my silent dust, The fairest flowers your hands can find, To breathe of Hope and Trust!\"",
"BUT PLANT TO WAVE UPON THE WIND ABOVE MY SILENT TUST THE FAIREST FLOWERS YOUR HANDS CAN FIND TO BREATHE OF HOPE AND TRUST"
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" precious seeds, “And gathers all in love at last, Within His gardens fair; When Autumn comes with searching blast, Dear child, I may he there ! “ Lift up your face ! no bitter tears, My little one, be shed For one who feels no timid fears; Listen to me instead. “When in the quiet room above, You see a figure pale, That clasped you once in tenderest love, Let not your young heart fail; “Hor think the Father of us all Hath dealt too hard a blow. He sees the little sparrow fall ; He makes these blossoms blow; FRESH FLOWERS. 91 “ And to His children sorrowing here, As o’er those in the skies, His tender blessing, ever near, Bids living Trust arise. “Ho King upon a distant throne, This Father kind and true; You cannot ever be alone; He always watches you. “ A voice within your heart will say, She only went before; A little space you two will stay, Then all will meet once more ! I “ This love of mine will never die, Wherever I may he. Ho mourning robe, no heavy sigh, My little girl, for me.",
"DS TO MEET MY SLIGHTEST NEEDS AND THUS I KNOW IN HOLIER LANDS HE SOWS MORE PRECIOUS SEEDS AND GATHERS ALL IN LOVE AT LAST WITHIN HIS GARDENS FAIR WHEN AUTUMN COMES WITH SEARCHING BLAST DEAR CHILD I MAY BE THERE LIFT UP YOUR FACE NO BITTER TEARS MY LITTLE ONE BE SHED FOR ONE WHO FEELS NO TIMID FEARS LISTEN TO ME INSTEAD WHEN IN THE QUIET ROOM ABOVE YOU SEE A FIGURE PALE THAT CLASPED YOU ONCE IN TENDEREST LOVE LET NOT YOUR YOUNG HEART FAIL NOR THINK THE FATHER OF US ALL HATH DEALT TOO HARD A BLOW HE SEES THE LITTLE SPARROW FALL HE MAKES THESE BLOSSOMS GROW AND TO HIS CHILDREN SORROWING HERE AS O'ER THOSE IN THE SKIES HIS TENDER BLESSING EVER NEAR BIDS LIVING TRUST ARISE NO KING UPON A DISTANT THRONE THIS FATHER KIND AND TRUE YOU CANNOT EVER BE ALONE HE ALWAYS WATCHES YOU A VOICE WITHIN YOUR HEART WILL SAY SHE ONLY WENT BEFORE A LITTLE SPACE YOU TOO WILL STAY THEN ALL WILL MEET ONCE MORE THIS LOVE OF MINE WILL NEVER DIE WHEREVER I MAY BE NO MORNING ROBE NO HEAVY SIGH MY LITTLE GIRL FOR ME"
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"t run. I’ll throw these stalks away ; Go find the boys, and take some fun, This clear, delightful day!” The hoy ran out, as on the stair A step fell soft and slow, And entered soon the Mother fair, Whose children loved her so. Her little daughter drew a chair With softest cushions spread; “Come, Mother, breathe this balmy air!” Most tenderly she said. Then close beside her Mother’s knee Her little chair she brought ; You saw that love most true and free, Had made them one in thought. 90 FRESH FLOWERS. “All is so lovely, dear,” she said; I look upon the flowers, And bless the Giver who has made These fair creations ours, “And given such willing little hands To meet my slightest needs ; And thus I know in holier lands He sows more precious seeds, “And gathers all in love at last, Within His gardens fair; When Autumn comes with searching blast, Dear child, I may he there ! “ Lift up your face ! no bitter tears, My little one, be shed For one who feels no timid fears; Listen to me instead.",
"D WATCHED THAT FACE SO BEAUTIFUL AND GOOD NOW PET GO HAVE A PLEASANT RUN I'LL THROW THESE STORKS AWAY GO FIND THE BOYS AND TAKE SOME FUN THIS CLEAR DELIGHTFUL DAY THE BOY RAN OUT AS ON THE STAIR A STEP FELL SOFT AND SLOW AND ENTERED SOON THE MOTHER FAIR WHOSE CHILDREN LOVED HER SO HER LITTLE DAUGHTER DREW A CHAIR WITH SOFTEST CUSHIONS SPREAD COME MOTHER BREATHE THIS BALMY AIR MOST TENDERLY SHE SAID THEN CLOSE BESIDE HER MOTHER'S KNEE HER LITTLE CHAIR SHE BROUGHT YOU SAW THAT LOVE MOST TRUE AND FREE HAD MADE THEM ONE IN THOUGHT ALL IS SO LOVELY DEAR SHE SAID I LOOK UPON THE FLOWERS AND BLESS THE GIVER WHO HAS MADE THESE FAIR CREATIONS OURS AND GIVEN SUCH WILLING LITTLE HANDS TO MEET MY SLIGHTEST NEEDS AND THUS I KNOW IN HOLIER LANDS HE SOWS MORE PRECIOUS SEEDS AND GATHERS ALL IN LOVE AT LAST WITHIN HIS GARDENS FAIR WHEN AUTUMN COMES WITH SEARCHING BLAST DEAR CHILD I MAY BE THERE LIFT UP YOUR FACE NO BITTER TEARS MY LITTLE ONE BE SHED FOR ONE WHO FEELS NO TIMID FEARS LISTEN TO ME INSTEAD"
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"\"Not till long afterward,\" Alida Stair had said. Well, supposing Ned had seen one when they first came, and had known only within the last week what had happened to him?",
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"its own past; and if one could only get into close enough communion with the house, one might surprise its secret, and acquire the ghost-sight on one's own account. Perhaps, in his long solitary hours in this very room, where she never trespassed till the afternoon, her husband had acquired it already, and was silently carrying the dread weight of whatever it had revealed to him. Mary was too well-versed in the code of the spectral world not to know that one could not talk about the ghosts one saw: to do so was almost as great a breach of goodbreeding as to name a lady in a club. But this explanation did not really satisfy her. \"What, after all, except for the fun of the frisson,\" she reflected, \"would he really care for any of their old ghosts?\" And thence she was thrown back once more on the fundamental dilemma: the fact that one's greater or less susceptibility to spectral influences had no particular bearing on the case, since, when one did see a ghost at Lyng, one did not know it.",
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"ND SHE COULD COMMAND SHOULD BE USED AS AN ESCAPE FROM IMMEDIATE PREOCCUPATIONS A FLIGHT TO THE LIFE THEY HAD ALWAYS DREAMED OF LIVING ONCE OR TWICE NOW THAT THIS NEW LIFE HAD ACTUALLY DRAWN ITS MAGIC CIRCLE ABOUT THEM SHE HAD ASKED HERSELF IF SHE HAD DONE RIGHT BUT HITHERTO SUCH CONJECTURES HAD BEEN NO MORE THAN THE RETROSPECTIVE EXCURSIONS OF AN ACTIVE FANCY NOW FOR THE FIRST TIME IT STARTLED HER A LITTLE TO FIND HOW LITTLE SHE KNEW OF THE MATERIAL FOUNDATION ON WHICH HER HAPPINESS WAS BUILT SHE GLANCED AT HER HUSBAND AND WAS AGAIN REASSURED BY THE COMPOSURE OF HIS FACE YET SHE FELT THE NEED OF MORE DEFINITE GROUNDS FOR HER REASSURANCE BUT DOESN'T THIS SUIT WORRY YOU WHY HAVE YOU NEVER SPOKEN TO ME ABOUT IT HE ANSWERED BOTH QUESTIONS AT ONCE I DIDN'T SPEAK OF IT AT FIRST BECAUSE IT DID WORRY ME ANNOYED ME RATHER BUT IT'S ALL ANCIENT HISTORY NOW YOUR CORRESPONDENT MUST HAVE GOT HOLD OF A BACK NUMBER OF THE SENTINEL SHE FELT A QUICK THRILL OF RELIEF YOU MEAN IT'S OVER HE'S LOST HIS CASE"
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"low I put into it -- gave him a hand up. I told you all about him at the time.\" \"I daresay. I must have forgotten.\" Vainly she strained back among her memories. \"But if you helped him, why does he make this return?\" \"Oh, probably some shyster lawyer got hold of him and talked him over. It's all rather technical and complicated. I thought that kind of thing bored you.\" His wife felt a sting of compunction. Theoretically, she deprecated the American wife's detachment from her husband's professional interests, but in practice she had always found it difficult to fix her attention on Boyne's report of the transactions in which his varied interests involved him. Besides, she had felt from the first that, in a community where the amenities of living could be obtained only at the cost of efforts as arduous as her husband's professional labors, such brief leisure as they could command should be used as an escape from immediate preoccupations, a flight to the life they always dreamed of living.",
" HE'S A FELLOW I PUT INTO IT GAVE MY HAND UP I TOLD YOU ALL ABOUT HIM AT THE TIME I DARE SAY I MUST HAVE FORGOTTEN VAINLY SHE STRAINED BACK AMONG HER MEMORIES BUT IF YOU HELPED HIM WHY DOES HE MAKE THIS RETURN PROBABLY SOME SCHYSTER LAWYER GOT HOLD OF HIM AND TALKED HIM OVER IT'S ALL RATHER TECHNICAL AND COMPLICATED I THOUGHT THAT KIND OF THING BORED YOU HIS WIFE FELT A STING OF COMPUNCTION THEORETICALLY SHE DEPRECATED THE AMERICAN WIFE'S DETACHMENT FROM HER HUSBAND'S PROFESSIONAL INTERESTS BUT IN PRACTICE SHE HAD ALWAYS FOUND IT DIFFICULT TO FIX HER ATTENTION ON BOYNE'S REPORT OF THE TRANSACTIONS IN WHICH HIS VARIED INTERESTS INVOLVED HIM BESIDES SHE HAD FELT DURING THEIR YEARS OF EXILE THAT IN A COMMUNITY WHERE THE AMENITIES OF LIVING COULD BE OBTAINED ONLY AT THE COST OF EFFORTS AS ARDUOUS AS HER HUSBAND'S PROFESSIONAL LABORS SUCH BRIEF LEISURE AS HE AND SHE COULD COMMAND SHOULD BE USED AS AN ESCAPE FROM IMMEDIATE PREOCCUPATIONS A FLIGHT TO THE LIFE THEY HAD ALWAYS DREAMED OF LIVING"
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"t physically he had gained since they had come to Dorsetshire, grown robuster, ruddier, and fresher-eyed. It was only within a week that she had felt in him the undefinable change that made her restless in his absence, and as tongue-tied in his presence as though it were she who had a secret to keep from him! The thought that there was a secret somewhere between them struck her with a sudden smart rap of wonder, and she looked about her down the dim, long room. \"Can it be the house?\" she mused. The room itself might have been full of secrets. They seemed to be piling themselves up, as evening fell, like the layers and layers of velvet shadow dropping from the low ceiling, the dusky walls of books, the smoke-blurred sculpture of the hooded hearth. \"Why, of course -- the house is haunted!\" she reflected. The ghost -- Alida's imperceptible ghost -- after figuring largely in the banter of their first month or two at Lyng, had been gradually discarded as too ineffectual for imaginative use.",
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"hile their gaze flew to the long, tossed horizon-line of the downs, and then dropped contentedly back to trace the arabesque of yew hedges about the fish-pond, and the shadow of the cedar on the lawn. \"And now the other way,\" he had said, gently turning her about within his arm; and closely pressed to him, she had absorbed, like some long, satisfying draft, the picture of the gray-walled court, the squat lions on the gates, and the lime-avenue reaching up to the highroad under the downs. It was just then, while they gazed and held each other, that she had felt his arm relax, and heard a sharp \"Hullo!\" that made her turn to glance at him. Distinctly, yes, she now recalled she had seen, as she glanced, a shadow of anxiety, of perplexity, rather, fall across his face; and, following his eyes, had beheld the figure of a man -- a man in loose, grayish clothes, as it appeared to her -- who was sauntering down the lime-avenue to the court with the tentative gait of a stranger seeking his way.",
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"SHE LINGERED THERE TILL SOMEWHERE IN THOSE DEPTHS SHE HEARD THE CLOSING OF A DOOR THEN MECHANICALLY IMPELLED SHE WENT DOWN THE SHALLOW FLIGHTS OF STEPS TILL SHE REACHED THE LOWER HALL THE FRONT DOOR STOOD OPEN ON THE SUNLIGHT OF THE COURT AND HALL AND COURT WERE EMPTY"
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" of anxiety, of perplexity, rather, fall across his face; and, following his eyes, had beheld the figure of a man -- a man in loose, grayish clothes, as it appeared to her -- who was sauntering down the lime-avenue to the court with the tentative gait of a stranger seeking his way. Her short-sighted eyes had given her but a blurred impression of slightness and grayness, with something foreign, or at least unlocal, in the cut of the figure or its garb; but her husband had apparently seen more -- seen enough to make him push past her with a sharp \"Wait!\" and dash down the twisting stairs without pausing to give her a hand for the descent. A slight tendency to dizziness obliged her, after a provisional clutch at the chimney against which they had been leaning, to follow him down more cautiously; and when she had reached the attic landing she paused again for a less definite reason, leaning over the oak banister to strain her eyes through the silence of the brown, sun-flecked depths below.",
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"I don't understand. What does this man accuse you of?\" \"Oh, pretty nearly every crime in the calendar.\" Boyne had tossed the clipping down, and thrown himself comfortably into an arm chair near the fire.",
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"boding, but a shifting vigilance of lips and eyes that gave her the sense of his feeling himself invisibly surrounded. Her hand shook so that she could hardly give him the clipping. \"This article -- from the 'Waukesha Sentinel' -- that a man named Elwell has brought suit against you -- that there was something wrong about the Blue Star Mine. I can't understand more than half.\" They continued to face each other as she spoke, and to her astonishment, she saw that her words had the almost immediate effect of dissipating the strained watchfulness of his look. \"Oh, that!\" He glanced down the printed slip, and then folded it with the gesture of one who handles something harmless and familiar. \"What's the matter with you this afternoon, Mary? I thought you'd got bad news.\" She stood before him with her undefinable terror subsiding slowly under the reassuring touch of his composure. \"You knew about this, then -- it's all right?\" \"Certainly I knew about it; and it's all right.\" \"But what is it?",
"NSION WAS ON HIS FACE AGAIN NOT NOW A LOOK OF FIXED FOREBODING BUT A SHIFTING VIGILANCE OF LIPS AND EYES THAT GAVE HER THE SENSE OF HIS FEELING HIMSELF INVISIBLY SURROUNDED HER HAND SHOOK SO THAT SHE COULD HARDLY GIVE HIM THE CLIPPING THIS ARTICLE FROM THE WALKERSHAW SENTINEL THAT A MAN NAMED LWELL HAS BROUGHT SUIT AGAINST YOU THAT THERE WAS SOMETHING WRONG ABOUT THE BLUE STAR MIND I CAN'T UNDERSTAND MORE THAN HALF THEY CONTINUED TO FACE EACH OTHER AS SHE SPOKE AND TO HER ASTONISHMENT SHE SAW THAT HER WORDS HAD THE ALMOST IMMEDIATE EFFECT OF DISSIPATING THE STRANGE WATCHFULNESS OF HIS LOOK OH THAT HE GLANCED DOWN THE PRINTED SLIP AND THEN FOLDED IT WITH THE GESTURE OF ONE WHO HANDLES SOMETHING HARMLESS AND FAMILIAR WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH YOU THIS AFTERNOON MARY I THOUGHT YOU'D GOT BAD NEWS SHE STOOD BEFORE HIM WITH HER UNDEFINABLE TERROR SUBSIDING SLOWLY UNDER THE REASSURANCE OF HIS TONE YOU KNEW ABOUT THIS THEN IT'S ALL RIGHT CERTAINLY I KNEW ABOUT IT AND IT'S ALL RIGHT BUT WHAT IS IT"
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"bert Elwell, who had \"put him on\" to the Blue Star scheme. Parvis, at Mary's first startled cry, had thrown her a sobering glance through his impartial glasses. \"Bob Elwell wasn't smart enough, that's all; if he had been, he might have turned round and served Boyne the same way. It's the kind of thing that happens every day in business. I guess it's what the scientists call the survival of the fittest,\" said Mr. Parvis, evidently pleased with the aptness of his analogy. Mary felt a physical shrinking from the next question she tried to frame; it was as though the words on her lips had a taste that nauseated her. \"But then--you accuse my husband of doing something dishonorable?\" Mr. Parvis surveyed the question dispassionately. \"Oh, no, I don't. I don't even say it wasn't straight.\" He glanced up and down the long lines of books, as if one of them might have supplied him with the definition he sought. \"I don't say it wasn't straight, and yet I don't say it was straight. It was business.",
"THE VICTIM OF HIS INGENUITY WAS YOUNG ROBERT LWELL WHO HAD PUT HIM ON TO THE BLUE STAR SCHEME PARVIS AT MARY'S FIRST CRY HAD THROWN HER A SOBERING GLANCE THROUGH HIS IMPARTIAL GLASSES BOB ALWELL WASN'T SMART ENOUGH THAT'S ALL HE HAD BEEN HE MIGHT HAVE TURNED AROUND AND SERVED BOY IN THE SAME WAY IT'S THE KIND OF THING THAT HAPPENS EVERY DAY IN BUSINESS I GUESS IT'S WHAT THE SCIENTISTS CALL THE SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST SEE SAID MISTER PARVIS EVIDENTLY PLEASED WITH THE APTNESS OF HIS ANALOGY MARY FELT A PHYSICAL SHRINKING FROM THE NEXT QUESTION SHE TRIED TO FRAME IT WAS AS THOUGH THE WORDS ON HER LIPS HAD A TASTE THAT NAUSEATED HER BUT THEN YOU ACCUSE MY HUSBAND OF DOING SOMETHING DISHONORABLE MISTER PARVIS SURVEYED THE QUESTION DISPASSIONATELY OH NO I DON'T I DON'T EVEN SAY WASN'T STRAIGHT HE GLANCED UP AND DOWN THE LONG LINES OF BOOKS AS IF ONE OF THEM MIGHT HAVE SUPPLIED HIM WITH THE DEFINITION HE SOUGHT I DON'T SAY IT WASN'T STRAIGHT AND YET I DON'T SAY IT WAS STRAIGHT IT WAS BUSINESS"
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" \"Oh, no, I don't. I don't even say it wasn't straight.\" He glanced up and down the long lines of books, as if one of them might have supplied him with the definition he sought. \"I don't say it wasn't straight, and yet I don't say it was straight. It was business.\" After all, no definition in his category could be more comprehensive than that. Mary sat staring at him with a look of terror. He seemed to her like the indifferent, implacable emissary of some dark, formless power. \"But Mr. Elwell's lawyers apparently did not take your view, since I suppose the suit was withdrawn by their advice.\" \"Oh, yes, they knew he hadn't a leg to stand on, technically. It was when they advised him to withdraw the suit that he got desperate. You see, he'd borrowed most of the money he lost in the Blue Star, and he was up a tree. That's why he shot himself when they told him he had no show.\" The horror was sweeping over Mary in great, deafening waves. \"He shot himself? He killed himself because of that?",
"ONORABLE MISTER PARVIS SURVEYED THE QUESTION DISPASSIONATELY OH NO I DON'T I DON'T EVEN SAY WASN'T STRAIGHT HE GLANCED UP AND DOWN THE LONG LINES OF BOOKS AS IF ONE OF THEM MIGHT HAVE SUPPLIED HIM WITH THE DEFINITION HE SOUGHT I DON'T SAY IT WASN'T STRAIGHT AND YET I DON'T SAY IT WAS STRAIGHT IT WAS BUSINESS AFTER ALL NO DEFINITION IN HIS CATEGORY COULD BE MORE COMPREHENSIVE THAN THAT MARY SAT STARING AT HIM WITH A LOOK OF TERROR HE SEEMED TO HER LIKE THE INDIFFERENT EMISSARY OF SOME EVIL POWER BUT MISTER LWELL'S LAWYERS APPARENTLY DID NOT TAKE YOUR VIEW SINCE I SUPPOSE THE SUIT WAS WITHDRAWN BY THEIR ADVICE OH YES THEY KNEW HE HADN'T A LEG TO STAND ON TECHNICALLY IT WAS WHEN THEY ADVISED HIM TO WITHDRAW THE SUIT THAT HE GOT DESPERATE YOU SEE HE'D BORROWED MOST OF THE MONEY HE LOST IN THE BLUE STAR AND HE WAS UP A TREE THAT'S WHY HE SHOT HIMSELF WHEN THEY TOLD HIM HE HAD NO SHOW THE HORROR WAS SWEEPING OVER MARY IN GREAT DEAFENING WAVES HE SHOT HIMSELF HE KILLED HIMSELF BECAUSE OF THAT"
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"tegory could be more comprehensive than that. Mary sat staring at him with a look of terror. He seemed to her like the indifferent, implacable emissary of some dark, formless power. \"But Mr. Elwell's lawyers apparently did not take your view, since I suppose the suit was withdrawn by their advice.\" \"Oh, yes, they knew he hadn't a leg to stand on, technically. It was when they advised him to withdraw the suit that he got desperate. You see, he'd borrowed most of the money he lost in the Blue Star, and he was up a tree. That's why he shot himself when they told him he had no show.\" The horror was sweeping over Mary in great, deafening waves. \"He shot himself? He killed himself because of that? \" \"Well, he didn't kill himself, exactly. He dragged on two months before he died.\" Parvis emitted the statement as unemotionally as a gramophone grinding out its \"record.\" \"You mean that he tried to kill himself, and failed? And tried again?\" \"Oh, he didn't have to try again,\" said Parvis, grimly.",
" SAY IT WAS STRAIGHT IT WAS BUSINESS AFTER ALL NO DEFINITION IN HIS CATEGORY COULD BE MORE COMPREHENSIVE THAN THAT MARY SAT STARING AT HIM WITH A LOOK OF TERROR HE SEEMED TO HER LIKE THE INDIFFERENT EMISSARY OF SOME EVIL POWER BUT MISTER LWELL'S LAWYERS APPARENTLY DID NOT TAKE YOUR VIEW SINCE I SUPPOSE THE SUIT WAS WITHDRAWN BY THEIR ADVICE OH YES THEY KNEW HE HADN'T A LEG TO STAND ON TECHNICALLY IT WAS WHEN THEY ADVISED HIM TO WITHDRAW THE SUIT THAT HE GOT DESPERATE YOU SEE HE'D BORROWED MOST OF THE MONEY HE LOST IN THE BLUE STAR AND HE WAS UP A TREE THAT'S WHY HE SHOT HIMSELF WHEN THEY TOLD HIM HE HAD NO SHOW THE HORROR WAS SWEEPING OVER MARY IN GREAT DEAFENING WAVES HE SHOT HIMSELF HE KILLED HIMSELF BECAUSE OF THAT WELL HE DIDN'T KILL HIMSELF EXACTLY HE DRAGGED ON TWO MONTHS BEFORE HE DIED PARBIS EMITTED THE STATEMENT AS UNEMOTIONALLY AS A GRAMOPHONE GRINDING OUT ITS RECORD YOU MEAN THAT HE TRIED TO KILL HIMSELF AND FAILED AND TRIED AGAIN OH HE DID NEVER TRY AGAIN SAID PARBIS GRIMLY"
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" might be safer--\" That was all. The \"risk of trouble\" was easily explained by the newspaper clipping which had apprised Mary of the suit brought against her husband by one of his associates in the Blue Star enterprise. The only new information conveyed in the letter was the fact of its showing Boyne, when he wrote it, to be still apprehensive of the results of the suit, though he had assured his wife that it had been withdrawn, and though the letter itself declared that the plaintiff was dead. It took several weeks of exhaustive cabling to fix the identity of the \"Parvis\" to whom the fragmentary communication was addressed, but even after these inquiries had shown him to be a Waukesha lawyer, no new facts concerning the Elwell suit were elicited. He appeared to have had no direct concern in it, but to have been conversant with the facts merely as an acquaintance, and possible intermediary; and he declared himself unable to divine with what object Boyne intended to seek his assistance.",
" SUPPOSE THERE IS NOW NO FURTHER RISK OF TROUBLE IT MIGHT BE SAFER THAT WAS ALL THE RISK OF TROUBLE WAS EASILY EXPLAINED BY THE NEWSPAPER CLIPPING WHICH HAD APPRISED MARY OF THE SUIT BROUGHT AGAINST HER HUSBAND BY ONE OF HIS ASSOCIATES IN THE BLUE STAR ENTERPRISE THE ONLY NEW INFORMATION CONVEYED BY THE LETTER WAS THE FACT OF ITS SHOWING BOYNE WHEN HE WROTE IT TO BE STILL APPREHENSIVE OF THE RESULTS OF THE SUIT THOUGH HE HAD TOLD HIS WIFE THAT IT HAD BEEN WITHDRAWN AND THOUGH THE LETTER ITSELF PROVED THAT THE PLAINTIFF WAS DEAD IT TOOK SEVERAL DAYS OF CABLELING TO FIX THE IDENTITY OF THE PARVEST TO WHOM THE FRAGMENT WAS ADDRESSED BUT EVEN AFTER THESE INQUIRIES HAD SHOWN HIM TO BE A WALKERSHAW LAWYER NO NEW FACTS CONCERNING THE ALWELL SUIT WERE ELICITED HE APPEARED TO HAVE HAD NO DIRECT CONCERN IN IT BUT TO HAVE BEEN CONVERSANT WITH THE FACTS MERELY AS AN ACQUAINTANCE AND POSSIBLE INTERMEDIARY AND HE DECLARED HIMSELF UNABLE TO GUESS WITH WHAT OBJECT BOYNE INTENDED TO SEEK HIS ASSISTANCE"
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"SHE HAD EVEN RENOUNCED ONE BY ONE THE VARIOUS THEORIES AS TO HIS DISAPPEARANCE WHICH HAD BEEN ADVANCED BY THE PRESS THE POLICE AND HER OWN AGONIZED IMAGINATION IN SHEER LASSITUDE HER MIND TURNED FROM THESE ALTERNATIVES OF HORROR AND SANK BACK INTO THE BLANK FACT THAT HE WAS GONE"
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"with the incurious eye of a savage on whom the meaningless processes of civilization make but the faintest impression. She had come to regard herself as part of the routine, a spoke of the wheel, revolving with its motion; she felt almost like the furniture of the room in which she sat, an insensate object to be dusted and pushed about with the chairs and tables. And this deepening apathy held her fast at Lyng, in spite of the urgent entreaties of friends and the usual medical recommendation of \"change.\" Her friends supposed that her refusal to move was inspired by the belief that her husband would one day return to the spot from which he had vanished, and a beautiful legend grew up about this imaginary state of waiting. But in reality she had no such belief: the depths of anguish inclosing her were no longer lighted by flashes of hope. She was sure that Boyne would never come back, that he had gone out of her sight as completely as if Death itself had waited that day on the threshold.",
" ROUTINE OF DAILY LIFE WITH THE INCURIOUS EYE OF A SAVAGE ON WHOM THE MEANINGLESS PROCESSES OF CIVILIZATION MAKE BUT THE FAINTEST IMPRESSION SHE HAD COME TO REGARD HERSELF AS PART OF THE ROUTINE A SPOKE OF THE WHEEL REVOLVING IN ITS MOTION SHE FELT ALMOST LIKE THE FURNITURE OF THE ROOM IN WHICH SHE SAT AN INSENSATE OBJECT TO BE DUSTED AND PUSHED ABOUT WITH THE CHAIRS AND TABLES AND THIS DEEPENING APATHY HELD HER FAST AT LYING IN SPITE OF THE ENTREATIES OF FRIENDS IN THE USUAL MEDICAL RECOMMENDATIONS OF CHANGE HER FRIENDS SUPPOSED THAT HER REFUSAL TO MOVE WAS INSPIRED BY THE BELIEF THAT HER HUSBAND WOULD ONE DAY RETURN TO THE SPOT FROM WHICH SHE HAD VANISHED AND A BEAUTIFUL LEGEND GREW UP ABOUT THIS IMAGINARY STATE OF WAITING BUT IN REALITY SHE HAD NO SUCH BELIEF THE DEPTHS OF ANGUISH ENCLOSING HER WERE NO LONGER LIGHTED BY FLASHES OF HOPE SHE WAS SURE THAT BOYNE WOULD NEVER COME BACK THAT HE HAD GONE OUT OF HER SIGHT AS COMPLETELY AS IF DEATH ITSELF HAD WAITED THAT DAY ON THE THRESHOLD"
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