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CHOICE LITERATURE

BOOK FIVE

TO-DAY

THOMAS CARLYLE

Thomas Carlyle is a very interesting character, showing how may rise through per

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sistent effort. He came from a family of peasants. His father was a stone mason. Carlyle was born in Scotland in 1795, and graduated from Edinburgh University in 1814. He began life as a teacher of mathematics, and made a translation of Legendre's Geometry. He was a very voluminous writer, contributing to the leading Scotch and English reviews, writing many critical essays, and making translations from the German. His first great book was "Sartor Resartus."

His most noted work is his history of the French Revolution.

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Out of Eternity

This new day is born;

Into Eternity,

At night will return.

Behold it aforetime

No eye ever did;

So soon it forever

From all eyes is hid.

Here hath been dawning
Another blue day;
Think, wilt thou let it

Slip useless away?

THE SKELETON IN ARMOR

HENRY W. LONGFELLOW

Henry W. Longfellow, born at Portland, Me., in 1807, was a descendant of John Alden. He graduated from Bowdoin in the same class with Nathaniel Hawthorne and Franklin Pierce. At nineteen years of age he went to Europe, where he spent three years. On his return he was made professor of modern languages at Bowdoin College. In 1835 he was appointed to the same position in Harvard College. He resigned his position at Harvard in 1854 to give his time wholly to literature. He died in 1882. Among his longer poems are "Miles Standish," "Evangeline," "Hiawatha," "Tales of a Wayside Inn," The Golden Legend," "Building of the Ship," and "The Spanish Student." His translations are very numerous. "Outre Mer," a book of travels, is one of his earlier works.

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Many who do not care for poetry generally enjoy very much of what Longfellow has written. Many of his minor poems are very beautiful, and nearly all are remarkable for their perfect rhythm, which is often the feature of poetry that first attracts.

More than a thousand years ago a brave, stalwart, and venturesome people lived on the islands of the Baltic

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Sea, and in the country round about it.

were bold and skillful sailors. In their narrow,

sharp-prowed, and shallow vessels they

visited all the western coast of Europe, entered the Mediterranean Sea, discovered and settled Iceland and Greenland, and finally discovered the eastern coast of America.

Leif the Lucky was the first of the Northmen to explore parts of this country. In the year 1000,

with thirty companions,

LONGFELLOW'S LIBRARY

he set out, and probably reached the coast of Massachusetts, where

he landed, built some huts, and spent the winter.

Two years later his brother Thorvald spent two years in America,

OLD TOWER, NEWPORT

probably going as far south as Rhode Island. Later a wealthy Icelander named Karlsefin made a settlement which was. abandoned after a few years because of the hostility of the natives.

Many years ago as some workmen were digging on a hillside near Fall River, Mass., they came upon the skeleton of a large man who had been buried in a sitting posture. In the grave with him was found a plate of brass which may have been used as a breastplate,

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and around the waist was a belt of brass tubes. It was believed that both the plate and the belt of tubes were intended to serve as a pro

tection in battle. Longfellow felt certain that the skeleton was not that of an Indian as they were not known to make use of metal armor. There is a rude stone tower at Newport, R.I., which at the time of the discovery of the skeleton was supposed to have been built by the Northmen, though that is no longer believed.

PEAK! Speak! Thou fearful guest!

"SPEAK

Who, with thy hollow breast

Still in rude armor drest,

Comest to daunt me!

Wrapped not in eastern balms,1
But with thy fleshless palms
Stretched as if asking alms

Why dost thou haunt me?"

Then, from those cavernous eyes,
Pale flashes seem to rise,

As when the northern skies

Gleam in December; 2
And, like the water's flow
Under December's snow,

Came a dull voice of woe

From the heart's chamber.

"I was a Viking 3 old!

My deeds, though manifold,

1 Eastern balms: The meaning is that in the east bodies were embalmed and did not decay, but lacking this there was only the skeleton of the Norseman left.

2 As when the northern skies gleam in December: Refers to the Northern Lights.

3 Viking The Vikings were the northern pirates of the time referred to in the text.

No Skald1 in song has told,

No Saga 2 taught thee!
Take heed that in thy verse
Thou dost the tale rehearse,
Else dread a dead man's curse;
For this I sought thee.

"Far in the Northern Land,
By the wild Baltic's strand,
I with my childish hand
Tamed the gerfalcon ; 3

And, with my skates fast bound,
Skimmed the half-frozen sound,
That the poor whimpering hound
Trembled to walk on.

"Oft to his frozen lair
Tracked I the grizzly bear,

While from my path the hare

Fled like a shadow;
Oft through the forest dark
Followed the werewolf's bark,

Until the soaring lark

Sang from the meadow.

"But when I older grew,
Joining a corsair's crew
O'er the dark sea I flew

1 Skald: An ancient Scandinavian poet.

2 Saga: A Scandinavian myth or hero story.

3 Gerfalcon: A large falcon of the northern regions.

4 Werewolf: A person transformed into a wolf in form and appetite.

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