CHAPTER IV 



A CHAPTER OF THINGS TO SEE THIS PALL 



OU ought to see the sky every 

 day. You ought to see, as often 

 as possible, the breaking of 

 dawn, the sunset, the moonrise, and 

 the stars. Go up to your roof, if you 

 live in the city, or out into the mid- 

 dle of the Park, or take a street-car 

 ride into the edge of the country 

 just to see the moon come up over the woods or over 

 a rounded hill against the sky. 



II 



You ought to see the light of the October moon, 

 as it falls through a roof of leafless limbs in some si- 

 lent piece of woods. You have seen the woods by 

 daylight ; you have seen the moon from many places ; 

 but to be in the middle of the moonlit woods after 

 the silence of the October frost has fallen is to have 

 one of the most beautiful experiences possible out 



of doors. 



Ill 



You ought to see a wooded hillside in the glorious 

 colors of the fall the glowing hickories, the deep 



