WE SAT ON THE STOOP. | s hush of the country’s stillness, as falling on hill and vale, B tree, with its dark, green branches, Seemed to spread a sheltering wing, MWhen we sat on the stoop in the evening To hear the brown thrush sing. “The koneysuckle watted its fragrance + From its climb on the south porch door; And the sweet, rich scent of the new-mown hay : + Came afar—from the hizh barn floor; “The moon was new, and shining . Inizsquaint, half-circle ring, “When sve sab on the stoop in the evening To hear the brown thrush sing Fhe light and shallows tremble— The picture is fading—slow— anishing quite—into dreamland: The mystical dong ago, _A wave of thy wand, good fairy, at Yor the days when love was kingy) And we sat on the stoop in the ns ° 0 hear the brown thrush sing! Anna B. Lowell, in Boston Transcript. ER XETTY GLADIS CURTIS, BY MERASB MITCHELL. 41 was thinking of a compliment fo “pay you, so I have done it.” -. “*Really! Well, you are one of those + frierds who grow: pleazanter and pleas- ~anter till one—" £ip. a. That means I am to go; it “wants just ten minutes tn one.’ ¢i&g you like; but I did not sayp. a.” And Gladis ‘Curtis gave he head a proud little bend that said ‘‘Good-morn- oy as plain as could be to her compan- “Ton, who stood leaning lazily against the railing of the piazza, “watching her with Aig heart in Lis eyes, and a question on “the tip of his tongue. #May J come again at four?” ¢