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"I should like to know how large it is. Does any one know? Is it as large as the earth?"
"Very much larger," replied Mary. "It is so large that if it were cut up into a million parts, each one of the parts would be larger than the earth.
"If a train should run at the rate of a mile a minute, it would take five years for it to go around the sun. A train going at the same rate could travel the distance around the earth in less than three weeks."
"Then the sun must be very large," said Harry. "It is larger than anything I ever heard about. Let us call it Giant Sun."
"There are stars far away in the sky that are larger than the sun,"
said his sister. "And there are planets like our earth which are near the sun. But I will tell you about them some other day. Now do not forget what I have told you about Giant Sun."
"Forget! How could I, sister? It is better than any fairy tale I have ever heard. Why, you have told me enough about Giant Sun to keep me thinking all day."
_From "Stories of Starland." Copyright, 1898.
By permission of the publishers, Silver, Burdett & Co._
[Ill.u.s.tration]
SUMMER SUN
Great is the sun, and wide he goes, Through empty heavens without repose; And in the blue and glowing days More thick than rain he showers his rays.
Though closer still the blinds we pull To keep the shady parlor cool, Yet he will find a c.h.i.n.k or two To slip his golden fingers through.
The dusty attic, spider clad, He through the keyhole maketh glad; And through the broken edge of tiles Into the laddered hayloft smiles.
Meantime his golden face around He bares to all the garden ground, And sheds a warm and glittering look Among the ivy's inmost nook.
Above the hills, along the blue, Round the bright air with footing true, To please the child, to paint the rose, The gardener of the world, he goes.
--ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
THE STORY OF PHAETHON
Phaethon welcome chariot dawn advice promise columns fiery flashed dwelling lightning hurled
You have read the true story of the great sun. Now you shall hear a strange old tale told of Giant Sun, in the days of long ago.
[Ill.u.s.tration: PHAETHON AND THE SUN CHARIOT.]
Do you remember the beautiful picture of Aurora, and the story of Apollo, the driver of the sun car? Here is another picture of the sun chariot, in its flight across the heavens.
Once upon a time Phaethon, the son of Apollo, said to his mother, "I go to-day to my father's palace," and he started for the land of the sunrise.
For days and for nights he traveled until he came to a high mountain.
On its top was the shining palace of the sun. It had golden columns and silver doors. On its wall were pictures of the wonders of the earth and of the sea.
But Phaethon hurried by these beautiful sights. He entered the great hall and found the Sun G.o.d just ready to drive his horses through the clouds of dawn.
"Welcome, welcome, my son!" said Apollo. "I have waited long for thy coming. What is thy wish? Tell me, and thy wish shall be granted thee."
"Oh, my father," said Phaethon, "let me drive the chariot of the sun for one day across the sky."
"No hand but mine can hold these fiery horses," said Apollo. "Change thy wish, foolish boy. You ask for death, not for honor."
"My father never breaks his promise," said Phaethon. "I will not change my wish."
"Then follow my advice," said Apollo. "Hold fast the reins. Use not the whip, and drive neither too high lest the earth freeze, nor too low lest it burn."
Phaethon sprang into the sun car and grasped the lines. The horses darted across the sky. Lower and lower they plunged. The heat of the shining sun car dried the lakes and the rivers, and burned every green thing upon the land.
The people cried for rain, and the great ruler of earth and air heard their cries, and looked down from his dwelling place. He flashed his lightnings at the mad driver, and hurled him from his seat.
Then the great ruler led the horses and the chariot to their old track across the sky. But Phaethon never rose from the cold waters of the river into which he had fallen.
A SUNFLOWER STORY
Clytie coral blazing Greek maiden petals swiftest lulled
Clytie was a sea maiden, so the old Greek stories tell us. She lived at the bottom of the ocean. The white sea sand was her carpet, a beautiful sh.e.l.l was her bed, and the seaweed was her pillow.
One morning Clytie arose, put on her moss-green dress, and went to ride in her seash.e.l.l boat. A pair of fishes drew her over the beautiful sea bottom. They swam around rocks with sharp, ragged edges, and they pa.s.sed through forests of sea weed and coral.
Indeed, so long and pleasant was the ride that Clytie fell asleep, and she did not awaken until a big wave rolled her boat upon the sh.o.r.e of a green island.
Then the little maiden opened her brown eyes very wide, for she had never before seen the land. There was green gra.s.s at her feet, and such flowers as never grew in her garden at the bottom of the deep sea.
In the trees were birds whose songs sounded sweeter than the music of the waves that had so often lulled her to sleep.
Across the blue sky rode the Sun king in a chariot which shone like blazing gold.
Clytie saw that all living things looked up and smiled when the golden chariot rolled above the earth.
"Oh, that I were a land child!" she said; "then I too might gaze upon the Sun king the whole day long."
Day after day the sea maiden came to the island. There she stood hour after hour watching the bright Sun king until his golden chariot sank into the western sea.
But one evening Clytie found that she could not move. Behold, she was no longer a maid of the sea. Her dress was but a slender green stalk with dark green leaves.