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Fassett, James H.

"The Beacon Second Reader"


How the Indians laughed!
They thought it was a great joke.
Each of them in turn tried on the skates.
How they sprawled and fell upon the ice!
What fun it was for the other Indians!
When they were tired of the sport they held out the skates to John and
asked him to put them on.
John strapped on the skates with great care. He was a good skater, but
he made believe that he could not skate at all.
He fell down and bumped his head.
He tripped over his toes and made great fun for the Indians.
They did not see that each time he fell he was a little farther out on
the ice.
All at once John jumped up.
Away he flew, skating for his life.
Down the river he went, swift as a bird.
The Indians rushed after him, but he had too great a start.
[Illustration]
The Indians were swift runners, but John, on his skates, was swifter
still.
He knew that the river must flow toward the ocean, and that near the
ocean lived the white people.
On and on he skated.
Two days later he saw the smoke of a white man's cabin and knew that he
was safe.
John soon found his father and mother.
How glad they were to see him!


A GOOD PLAY
We built a ship upon the stairs,
All made of the back-bedroom chairs,
And filled it full of sofa pillows,
To go a-sailing on the billows.


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