Front Matter
Introduction
Nature stories, legends, and poems appeal to the young
reader's interest in various ways. Some of them suggest
or reveal certain facts which stimulate a spirit of
investigation and attract the child's attention to the
beauty and mystery of the world. Others serve an
excellent purpose by quickening his sense of humour.
Seedtime and harvest have always been seasons of
absorbing interest and have furnished the story-teller
with rich themes. The selections in "The Emerald Stoty
Book" emphasize the hope and promise of the spring;
the stories, legends, and poems in this volume, "The
Topaz Story Book," express the joy and blessing which
attend the harvest-time when the fields are rich in
golden grain and the orchard boughs bend low with
mellow fruit.
"The year's work is done. She walks in gorgeous
apparel, looking upon her long labour and her serene
eye saith, 'It is good.' "
The editors' thanks are due to the following authors
and publishers for the use of valuable material in this
book:
To Dr. Carl S. Patton of the First Congregational Church,
Columbus, Ohio, for permission to include his story,
"The Pretending Woodchuck"; to Frances Jenkins Olcott
for "The Green Corn Dance," retold from "The Journal
of American Folk-Lore," published by Houghton, Mifflin
Company; to Ernest Thompson Seton and the Century Company
for "How the Chestnut Burrs Became"; to Dr. J. Dynelly
Prince for permission to retell the legend of "Nipon"
from "Kuloskap the Master"; to Thomas Nelson and Sons
for "Weeds,"by Carl Ewald; to William Herbert Carruth
for the selection from "Each In His Own Tongue"; to
Josephine K. Dodge for two poems by Mary Mapes Dodge; to
A. Flanagan Company for "Golden-rod and Purple Aster,"
from "Nature Myths and Stories," by Flora J. Cooke; to
J. B.
Lippincott Company for "The Willow and the Bamboo," from "Myths and
Legends of the Flowers and Trees," by Chas. M. Skinner;
to Bobbs, Merrill Company for the selection by James
Whitcomb Riley; to Lothrop, Lee, and Shepard Company
for "The Pumpkin Giant," from "The Pot of Gold," by
Mary Wilkins Freeman; to Raymond Macdonald Alden for
"Lost: The Summer"; to the Youth's Companion
for "A Turkey for the Stuffing," by Katherine Grace Hulbert,
and "The News," by Persis Gardiner; to John S. P. Alcott
for "Queen Aster," by Louisa M. Alcott; to G. P. Putnam's
Sons for two poems from "Red Apples and Silver Bells," by
Hamish Henry; to Francis Curtis and St. Nicholas
for "The Debut of Daniel Webster," by Isabel Gordon
Curtis; to Emma F. Bush and Mothers' Magazine
for "The Little Pumpkin"; to Phila Butler Bowman and
Mothers' Magazine for "The Queer Little
Baker Man"; to the Independent for
"The Crown of the Year," by Celia Thaxter; to Ginn and
Company for "Winter's Herald," from Andrew's "The
Story of My Four Friends"; to Frederick A.
Stokes Company for "Lady White and Lady
Yellow," from "Myths and Legends of Japan";
to the State Museum, Albany, New
York, for permission to reprint the legend
"O-na-tah, Spirit of the Corn," published in
the Museum Bulletin ; to Houghton, Mifflin
Company for "The Sickle Moon," by Abbie
Farwell Brown; "Autumn Among the Birds"
and "Autumn Fashions" by Edith M. Thomas,
"The Nutcrackers of Nutcracker Lodge" by
Harriet Beecher Stowe, and "The Three Golden Apples"
by Nathaniel Hawthorne; and to Duffield and Company
for "The Story of the Opal" by Ann de Morgan.
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