“No, of course not,” replied Cecy, “a lady he was in love with. The next verse is going to tell about her, only you interrupted.

“She wore a turban of silver, with a jewelled crescent. As she stole down the corregidor the beams struck it and it glittered like stars.

“ ‘So you are come, Zuleika?’

“ ‘Yes, my lord.’

“Just then a sound as of steel smote upon the ear, and Zuleika’s mail-clad father rushed in. He drew his sword, so did the other. A moment more, and they both lay dead and stiff in the beams of the moon. Zuleika gave a loud shriek, and threw herself upon their bodies. She was dead, too! And so ends the Tragedy of the Alhambra.”

“That’s lovely,” said Katy, drawing a long breath, “only very sad! What beautiful stories you do write, Cecy! But I wish you wouldn’t always kill the people. Why couldn’t the knight have killed the father, and—no, I suppose Zuleika wouldn’t have married him then. Well, the father might have—oh, bother! why must anybody be killed, anyhow? why not have them fall on each other’s necks, and make up?”

“Why, Katy!” cried Cecy, “it wouldn’t have been a tragedy then. You know the name was A Tragedy of the Alhambra.”

“Oh, well,” said Katy, hurriedly, for Cecy’s lips were beginning to pout, and her fair, pinkish face to redden, as if she were about to cry; “perhaps it was prettier to have them all die; only I thought, for a change, you know!—What a lovely word that was—‘Corregidor’—what does it mean?”

“I don’t know,” replied Cecy, quite consoled. “It was in the ‘Conquest of Granada.’ Something to walk over, I believe.”

“The next,” went on Katy, consulting her paper, “is ‘Yap,’ a Simple Poem, by Clover Carr.”

All the children giggled, but Clover got up composedly, and recited the following verses:

“Did you ever know Yap? The best little dog Who e’er sat on lap Or barked at a frog.  “His eyes were like beads, His tail like a mop, And it waggled as if It never would stop.  “His hair was like silk Of the glossiest sheen, He always ate milk, And once the cold-cream  “Off the nursery bureau (That line is too long!) It made him quite ill, So endeth my song.  “For Yappy he died Just two months ago, And we oughtn’t to sing At a funeral, you know.”

The “Poem” met with immense applause; all the children laughed, and shouted, and clapped, till the loft rang again. But Clover kept her face perfectly, and sat down as demure as ever, except that the little dimples came and went at the corners of her mouth; dimples, partly natural, and partly, I regret to say, the result of a pointed slate- pencil, with which Clover was in the habit of deepening them every day while she studied her lessons.

“Now,” said Katy, after the noise had subsided, “now come ‘Scripture Verses,’ by Miss Elsie and Joanna Carr. Hold up your head, Elsie, and speak distinctly; and oh, Johnnie, you mustn’t giggle in that way when it comes your turn!”

But Johnnie only giggled the harder at this appeal, keeping her hands very tight across her mouth, and peeping out over her fingers. Elsie, however, was solemn as a little judge, and with great dignity began:

“An angel with a fiery sword, Came to send Adam and Eve abroad And as they journeyed through the skies They took one look at Paradise. They thought of all the happy hours Among the birds and fragrant bowers, And Eve she wept, and Adam bawled, And both together loudly squalled.”

Dorry snickered at this, but sedate Clover hushed him.

“You mustn’t,” she said; “it’s about the Bible, you know. Now John, it’s your turn.”

But Johnnie would persist in holding her hands over her mouth, while her fat little shoulders shook with laughter. At last, with a great effort, she pulled her face straight, and speaking as fast as she possibly could, repeated, in a sort of burst:

“Balaam’s donkey saw the Angel, And stopped short in fear. Balaam didn’t see the Angel, Which is very queer.”

After which she took refuge again behind her fingers, while Elsie went on—

“Elijah by the creek, He by ravens fed, Took from their horny beak Pieces of meat and bread.”

“Come, Johnnie,” said Katy, but the incorrigible Johnnie was shaking again, and all they could make out

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