The Ontario Readers: The High School Reader, 1886

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SHORT EXTRACTS.

INDEX OF AUTHORS.

INTRODUCTORY.

I . KING SOLOMON'S PRAYER AND BLESSING AT THE DEDICATION OF THE

II . INVITATION. From Isaiah . Translated 1611 Revised 1885.

III .THE TRIAL SCENE IN THE "MERCHANT OF VENICE." [A] William Shakespeare . 1564-1616.

IV . OF BOLDNESS. Lord Bacon . 1561-1626. From Essays .

V . TO DAFFODILS. Robert Herrick . 1594-1674.

VI . OF CONTENTEDNESS IN ALL ESTATES AND ACCIDENTS. Jeremy Taylor . 1613-1667. From Holy Living .

VII . TO LUCASTA, ON GOING TO THE WARS. Richard Lovelace . 1618-1658.

VIII . ANGLING. Izaak Walton . 1593-1683. From The Complete Angler .

IX . ON THE MORNING OF CHRIST'S NATIVITY. (1629). John Milton . 1608-1674.

THE HYMN.

X . CHARACTER OF LORD FALKLAND. Lord Clarendon . 1608-1674. From History of the Rebellion .

XI . VENI, CREATOR SPIRITUS. John Dryden . 1631-1700.

XII . LINES PRINTED UNDER THE PORTRAIT OF MILTON. Dryden .

XIII . REASON. Dryden . From Religio Laici .

XIV . ON THE LOVE OF COUNTRY AS A PRINCIPLE OF ACTION. Richard

XV . THE GOLDEN SCALES. Joseph Addison . 1672-1719. From The Spectator , August 21, 1712.

XVI . MISJUDGED HOSPITALITY. Jonathan Swift . 1667-1745. From The Tatler , March 6, 1711.

XVII . FROM THE "ESSAY ON MAN." [B] Alexander Pope . 1688-1744.

XVIII . RULE, BRITANNIA. James Thomson . 1700-1748.

XIX . THE FIRST CRUSADE. David Hume . 1711-1776. From History of England .

XX . THE BARD. A Pindaric Ode. [D] Thomas Gray . 1716-1771.

XXI . ON AN ADDRESS TO THE THRONE CONCERNING AFFAIRS IN

XXII . FROM "THE VICAR OF WAKEFIELD." THE FAMILY USE ART, WHICH

XXIII . MEETING OF JOHNSON WITH WILKES. (1776). James Boswell .

XXIV . THE POLICY OF THE EMPIRE IN THE FIRST CENTURY. Edward

XXV . ON THE ATTACKS UPON HIS PENSION. [F] Edmund Burke . 1729-1797.

XXVI . TWO EIGHTEENTH CENTURY SCENES. William Cowper .

XXVII . FROM "THE SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL." [G] Richard Brinsley Sheridan . 1751-1816.

XXVIII . THE COTTER'S SATURDAY NIGHT. [H] Robert Burns . 1759-1796.

XXIX . THE LAND O' THE LEAL. Lady Nairn . 1766-1845.

XXX . THE TRIAL BY COMBAT AT THE DIAMOND OF THE DESERT. [I]

XXXI . TO A HIGHLAND GIRL. ( At Inversneyde, upon Loch Lomond .) William Wordsworth . 1770-1850.

XXXII . FRANCE: AN ODE. -1797 Samuel Taylor Coleridge . 1772-1834.

XXXIII . COMPLAINT AND REPROOF. Coleridge .

XXXIV . THE WELL OF ST. KEYNE.

XXXV . THE ISLES OF GREECE. Lord Byron . 1788-1824.

XXXVI . GO WHERE GLORY WAITS THEE. Thomas Moore . 1779-1852.

XXXVII . DEAR HARP OF MY COUNTRY. Moore .

XXXVIII . COME, YE DISCONSOLATE. Moore .

XXXIX . ON A LOCK OF MILTON'S HAIR. Leigh Hunt . 1784-1859.

XL . THE GLOVE AND THE LIONS. Leigh Hunt .

XLI . THE CLOUD. Percy Bysshe Shelley . 1792-1822.

XLII . ON FIRST LOOKING INTO CHAPMAN'S HOMER. John Keats . 1795-1821.

XLIII . ON THE GRASSHOPPER AND THE CRICKET. Keats .

XLIV . THE POWER AND DANGER OF THE C AE SARS. Thomas De Quincey . 1785-1859. From The C AE sars .

XLV . UNTHOUGHTFULNESS. Dr. Arnold . 1795-1842. A Lecture delivered in Rugby Chapel.

XLVI . THE BRIDGE OF SIGHS. Thomas Hood . 1799-1845.

XLVII . A PARENTAL ODE TO MY SON. AGED THREE YEARS AND FIVE MONTHS. Thomas Hood .

XLVIII . METAPHYSICS. Thomas Chandler Haliburton . 1796-1865. From Traits of American Humor .

XLIX . INDIAN SUMMER. [J] Samuel Lover . 1797-1868.

L . TO HELEN. [K] July 7, 1839. Winthrop Mackworth Praed . 1802-1839.

LI . HORATIUS. [L] A LAY MADE ABOUT THE YEAR OF THE CITY CCCLX. Lord Macaulay . 1800-1859.

LII . THE RAVEN. Edgar Allan Poe . 1809-1849.

LIII . DAVID SWAN A FANTASY. Nathaniel Hawthorne . 1804-1864. From " Twice-Told Tales ."

LIV . MY KATE. Elizabeth Barrett Browning . 1809-1861.

LV . A DEAD ROSE. Mrs. Browning .

LVI . TO THE EVENING WIND. William Cullen Bryant . 1794-1878.

LVII . DEATH OF THE PROTECTOR. [M] Thomas Carlyle .

LVIII . EACH AND ALL. Ralph Waldo Emerson . 1803-1882.

LIX . WATERLOO. Charles James Lever . 1806-1872. From Charles O'Malley .

LX . THE DIVER. Edward Bulwer, Lord Lytton . 1805-1873. Translated from the German of Schiller .

LXI . THE PLAGUE OF LOCUSTS. Cardinal Newman . 1801- From Callista .

LXII . THE CANE-BOTTOM'D CHAIR. William Makepeace Thackeray . 1811-1863.

LXIII . THE RECONCILIATION. [N] Thackeray .

LXIV . THE ISLAND OF THE SCOTS. ( December , 1697.) William Edmondstoune Aytoun . 1813-1865.

LXV . THE GAMBLING PARTY. Earl of Beaconsfield . 1805-1881. From The Young Duke .

LXVI . THE PICKWICKIANS DISPORT THEMSELVES ON ICE. [O] Charles

LXVII . THE HANGING OF THE CRANE. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow . 1807-1882.

LXVIII . EARTHWORMS. Charles Darwin 1809-1882. From The

LXIX . "AS SHIPS, BECALMED AT EVE." Arthur Hugh Clough . 1819-1861.

LXX . DUTY. Arthur Hugh Clough .

LXXI . SONNETS. Charles Heavysege . 1816-1876.

LXXII . DOCTOR ARNOLD AT RUGBY. Arthur Penrhyn Stanley . 1815-1880.

LXXIII . ODE TO THE NORTH-EAST WIND. Charles Kingsley . 1819-1875.

LXXIV . FROM "THE MILL ON THE FLOSS." George Eliot . 1820-1880.

LXXV . THE CLOUD CONFINES. Dante Gabriel Rossetti . 1828-1882.

LXXVI . BARBARA FRIETCHIE. John Greenleaf Whittier . 1807-

LXXVII. CONTENTMENT. Oliver Wendell Holmes . 1809- "Man wants but little here below."

LXXVIII . THE BRITISH CONSTITUTION. The Right Hon. William

LXXIX . THE LORD OF BURLEIGH. Lord Tennyson . 1809-

LXXX . "BREAK, BREAK, BREAK." Lord Tennyson .

LXXXI . THE "REVENGE." A BALLAD OF THE FLEET, 1591. Lord Tennyson .

LXXXII . HERV E RIEL. Robert Browning . 1812-

LXXXIII . SONNET. President Wilson . 1816-

LXXXIV . OUR IDEAL. President Wilson .

LXXXV . FROM THE APOLOGY OF SOCRATES. Benjamin Jowett . 1817- From The Dialogues of Plato .

LXXXVI . THE EMPIRE OF THE C AE SARS. James Anthony Froude . 1818- From C AE sar .

LXXXVII . OF THE MYSTERY OF LIFE. John Ruskin 1819- From Sesame and Lilies .

LXXXVIII . THE ROBIN. James Russell Lowell . 1819- From My Garden Acquaintance .

LXXXIX . THE OLD CRADLE. Frederick Locker . 1821-

XC . RUGBY CHAPEL. November , 1857. Matthew Arnold . 1822-

XCI . IN THE ORILLIA WOODS. Charles Sangster . 1822-

XCII . MORALS AND CHARACTER IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. Goldwin Smith . 1823- From Cowper .

XCIII . A LIBERAL EDUCATION. Thomas Henry Huxley . 1825- From Lay Sermons, Addresses, and Reviews .

XCIV . TOO LATE. Dinah Maria Mulock Craik . 1826-

XCV . AMOR MUNDI. Christina Georgina Rossetti . 1830-

XCVI . TOUJOURS AMOUR. Edmund Clarence Stedman . 1833-

XCVII . ENGLAND. Thomas Bailey Aldrich . 1836-

XCVIII . ROCOCO. Thomas Bailey Aldrich .

XCIX . KINGS OF MEN. John Reade . 1837-

C . THALATTA! THALATTA! John Reade .

CI . THE FORSAKEN GARDEN. Algernon Charles Swinburne . 1837-

CII . A BALLAD TO QUEEN ELIZABETH OF THE SPANISH ARMADA. ( Ballade .) Austin Dobson . 1840-

CIII . CIRCE. ( Triolet .) Austin Dobson .

CIV . SCENES FROM "TECUMSEH." [Q] Charles Mair . 1840-

CV . THE RETURN OF THE SWALLOWS. Edmund William Gosse . 1849-

CVI . DAWN ANGELS. A. Mary F. Robinson . 1856-

CVII . LE ROI EST MORT. A. Mary F. Robinson.

CVIII . TO WINTER. Charles G. D. Roberts . 1859-

CIX . ABIGAIL BECKER. ( Off Long Point Island, Lake Erie, November 24th, 1854. ) Amanda T. Jones .

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The Ontario Readers.


THE

HIGH SCHOOL READER.


AUTHORIZED FOR USE IN THE PUBLIC AND HIGH SCHOOLS
AND COLLEGIATE INSTITUTES OF ONTARIO BY THE
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION.

Toronto:

ROSE PUBLISHING COMPANY.

1886.


Entered according to Act of Parliament of Canada, in the year one thousand
eight hundred and eighty-six, by the
Minister of Education for Ontario,
in the Office of the Minister of Agriculture
.


PRINTED AND BOUND BY
Hunter, Rose & Co.,
TORONTO.




PREFACE.


The selections in the High School Reader have been chosen with the belief that to pupils of such advancement as is required for entrance into High Schools and Collegiate Institutes, oral reading should be taught from the best literature, inasmuch as it not only affords a wide range of thought and sentiment, but it also demands for its appropriate vocal interpretation such powers of sympathy and appreciation as are developed only by culture; and it is to impart culture that these institutions of higher learning have been established.

Experience has shown that it is from their ordinary reading books that pupils obtain their chief practical acquaintance with literature, and the selections here presented have been made with this in remembrance. They have been taken from the writings of authors of acknowledged representative character; and they have been arranged for the most part chronologically, so that pupils may unconsciously obtain some little insight into the history of the development of the literary art. They have also been so chosen as to convey a somewhat fair idea of the relative value and productivity of authorship in the three great English-speaking communities of the worldthe mother countries, our neighbours' country, and our own.

While a limited space, if nothing else, prevents the collection here made from being a complete anthology, yet it does pretend to represent the authors selected in characteristic moods, and (in so far as is possible in a school book, and a reading text-book) to present a somewhat fair perspective of the world of authorship. It may be said that, if this be so, some names are conspicuously absent: McGee, Canada's poet-orator; Parkman, who has given to our country a place in the portraiture of nations; William Morris, the chief of the modern school of romanticism; Tyndall, who of the literature of science has made an art; Lamb, daintiest of humorists; Collins, "whose range of flight," as Swinburne says, "was the highest of his generation." Either from lack of space, or from some inherent unsuitableness in such selections as might otherwise have been made, it was found impossible to represent these names worthily; but as they are all more or less adequately represented in the Fourth Reader, the teacher who may wish to correct the perspective here presented may refer his pupils to the pieces from these authors there given. It may be added, too, that the body of recent literature is so enormous, that no adequate representation of it (at any rate as regards quantity) is possible within the limits of one book.

The selections in poetry, with but three necessary exceptions, are complete wholes, and represent, as fairly as single pieces can, the respective merits and styles of their authors. The selections in prose cannot, of course, lay claim to this excellence; but they are all complete in themselves, or have been made so by short introductions; and it is hoped that they too are not unfairly representative of their authors. In many cases they are of somewhat unusual length; by this, however, they gain in interest and in representative character.

In some of the prose selections, passages have occasionally been omitted, either because they interfered with the main narrative, or because, as they added nothing to it, to omit them would be a gain of space. In most cases these omissions are indicated by small asterisks.

All the selections, both in prose and in verse, have been made with constant reference to their suitableness for the teaching of reading. They are fitted to exemplify every mode of expression, except, perhaps, that appropriate to a few of the stronger passions. It is not pretended that they are all simple and easy. Many of them will require much study and preparation before they can be read with that precision of expression which is necessary to perfect intelligibility. The chronological arrangement precludes grading; the teacher will decide in what order the selections are to be read.

The introductory chapter is mainly intended to assist the teacher in imparting to his pupils a somewhat scientific knowledge of the art of reading. Of course the teacher will choose for himself his mode of dealing with the chapter, but it has been written with the thought that he should use it as a convenient series of texts, which he might expand and illustrate in accordance with his opportunities and judgment. Examples for illustration are indispensable to the successful study of the principles described, and they should be sought for and obtained by the teacher and pupils together (whenever possible they should be taken from the Reader), and should be kept labeled for reference and practice. If the application of these principles be thus practically made by the pupils themselves, they will receive a much more lasting impression of their meaning and value than if the examples were given to them at no cost of thought or search on their part.

To the teacher it is recommended that he should not be contented with the short and necessarily imperfect exposition of the art of reading therein given. The more familiar he is with the scientific principles the more successfully will he be able to direct the studies and practices of his pupils. Works on elocution are numerous and accessible. Dr. Rush's Philosophy of the Voice is perhaps the foundation of all subsequent good work in the exposition of voice culture. Professor Murdoch's Analytic Elocution is an exhaustive and scholarly treatise based upon it, and to the plan of treatment therein fully developed the practical part of the introductory chapter has largely conformed.

The pleasing task remains of thanking those authors who have so kindly responded to requests for permission to use selections from their works: to President Wilson, for a sonnet from Spring Wild Roses, and for Our Ideal; to Mr. Charles Sangster, for two sonnets from Hesperus; to Mr. John Reade, for two poems from The Prophecy of Merlin; to Mr. Charles Mair, for the scenes from Tecumseh; and to Professor C. G. D. Roberts, for To Winter.

To Miss A. T. Jones, thanks are due for permission to use Abigail Becker, recently published in the Century Magazine. The heroic acts described in this poem seem so wonderful, so greatly superior to woman's strength, even to human strength and endurance, to accomplish, that were it possible to doubt its truthfulness, doubt one certainly would. Nevertheless the poem is not only strictly in accordance with the facts, it is even within and below them.




CONTENTS.


(The Titles of the Selections in Poetry are printed in Italics.)


NUMBER. TITLE. AUTHOR. PAGE.
I. King Solomon's Prayer and Blessing at the Dedication of the Temple. Holy Bible 33
II. Invitation. Holy Bible 39
III. The Trial Scene in the "Merchant of Venice." Shakespeare 40
IV. Of Boldness. Bacon 53
V. To Daffodils. Herrick 55
VI. Of Contentedness in all Estates and Accidents. Taylor 56
VII. To Lucasta, on Going to the Wars. Lovelace 61
VIII. Angling. Walton 62
IX. On the Morning of Christ's Nativity. Milton 67
X. Character of Lord Falkland. Clarendon 76
XI. Veni, Creator Spiritus. Dryden 81
XII. Lines printed under the Portrait of Milton. Dryden 82
XIII. Reason. Dryden 83
XIV. On the Love of Country as a Principle of Action. Steele 83
XV. The Golden Scales. Addison 88
XVI. Misjudged Hospitality. Swift 93
XVII. From the "Essay on Man." Pope 96
XVIII. Rule, Britannia. Thomson 101
XIX. The First Crusade. Hume 102
XX. The Bard. Gray 111
XXI. On an Address to the Throne concerning Affairs in America. Chatham 116
XXII. From "The Vicar of Wakefield." Goldsmith 127
XXIII. Meeting of Johnson with Wilkes. Boswell 133
XXIV. The Policy of the Empire in the First Century. Gibbon 142
XXV. On the Attacks upon his Pension. Burke 147
XXVI. Two Eighteenth Century Scenes. Cowper 155
XXVII. From "The School for Scandal." Sheridan 159
XXVIII. The Cotter's Saturday Night. Burns 171
XXIX. The Land o' the Leal. Lady Nairn 177
XXX. The Trial by Combat at the Diamond of the Desert. Scott 179
XXXI. To a Highland Girl. Wordsworth 202
XXXII. France: an Ode. Coleridge 205
XXXIII. Complaint and Reproof. Coleridge 208
XXXIV. The Well of St. Keyne. Southey 209
XXXV. The Isles of Greece. Byron 211
XXXVI. Go where Glory Waits Thee. Moore 214
XXXVII. Dear Harp of My Country. Moore 215
XXXVIII. Come, ye Disconsolate. Moore 216
XXXIX. On a Lock of Milton's Hair. Hunt 217
XL. The Glove and the Lions. Hunt 217
XLI. The Cloud. Shelley 219
XLII. On First Looking into Chapman's Homer. Keats 222
XLIII. On the Grasshopper and the Cricket. Keats 222
XLIV. The Power and Danger of the CÆsars. De Quincey 223
XLV. Unthoughtfulness. Dr. Arnold 227
XLVI. The Bridge of Sighs. Hood 234
XLVII. A Parental Ode to my Son. Hood 237
XLVIII. Metaphysics. Haliburton 239
XLIX. Indian Summer. Lover 246
L. To Helen. Praed 246
LI. Horatius. Macaulay 247
LII. The Raven. Poe 258
LIII. David SwanA Fantasy. Hawthorne 262
LIV. My Kate. Mrs. Browning 270
LV. A Dead Rose. Mrs. Browning 271
LVI. To the Evening Wind. Bryant 272
LVII. Death of the Protector. Carlyle 274
LVIII. Each and All. Emerson 282
LIX. Waterloo. Lever 284
LX. The Diver. Lytton 294
LXI. The Plague of Locusts. Newman 299
LXII. The Cane-bottom'd Chair. Thackeray 306
LXIII. The Reconciliation. Thackeray 308
LXIV. The Island of the Scots. Aytoun 315
LXV. The Gambling Party. Beaconsfield 321
LXVI. The Pickwickians Disport themselves on Ice. Dickens 327
LXVII. The Hanging of the Crane. Longfellow 336
LXVIII. Earthworms. Darwin 342
LXIX. "As Ships, Becalmed at Eve." Clough 346
LXX. Duty. Clough 347
LXXI. Sonnets. Heavysege 349
LXXII. Dr. Arnold at Rugby. Dean Stanley 350
LXXIII. Ode to the North-east Wind. Kingsley 354
LXXIV. From "The Mill on the Floss." George Eliot 356
LXXV. The Cloud Confines. Rossetti 359
LXXVI. Barbara Frietchie. Whittier 361
LXXVII. Contentment. Holmes 364
LXXVIII. The British Constitution. Gladstone 367
LXXIX. The Lord of Burleigh. Tennyson 370
LXXX. "Break, Break, Break." Tennyson 373
LXXXI. The "Revenge". Tennyson 373
LXXXII. HervÉ Riel. Browning 378
LXXXIII. Sonnet. Dr. Wilson 383
LXXXIV. Our Ideal. Dr. Wilson 383
LXXXV. From the Apology of Socrates. Jowett 384
LXXXVI. The Empire of the CÆsars. Froude 389
LXXXVII. Of the Mystery of Life. Ruskin 390
LXXXVIII. The Robin. Lowell 397
LXXXIX. The Old Cradle. Locker 400
XC. Rugby Chapel. Matt. Arnold 401
XCI. In the Orillia Woods. Sangster 408
XCII. Morals and Character in the Eighteenth Century. Goldwin Smith 409
XCIII. A Liberal Education. Huxley 412
XCIV. Too Late. Mrs. Craik 416
XCV. Amor Mundi. Miss Rossetti 417
XCVI. Toujours Amour. Stedman 418
XCVII. England. Aldrich 419
XCVIII. Rococo. Aldrich 420
XCIX. Kings of Men. John Reade 420
C. Thalatta! Thalatta! John Reade 421
CI. The Forsaken Garden. Swinburne 422
CII. A Ballad To Queen Elizabeth of the Spanish Armada. Dobson 424
CIII. Circe. Dobson 426
CIV. Scenes from "Tecumseh." Mair 426
CV. The Return of the Swallows. Gosse 437
CVI. Dawn Angels. Miss Robinson 438
CVII. Le Roi Est Mort. Miss Robinson 439
CVIII.<
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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