SWAYING TREE TOPS 



then to dinner, then to the Bungalow 

 to leave our books. We would study 

 them at night, we said; just then 

 there was too much sunshine and 

 beauty. It lay on the mountains 

 yonder, it ran down the valley to Po- 

 mona, and up the other side, and, 

 wondering where it went, we fol- 

 lowed. The call of the out-of-doors 

 was strong upon us in those days, and 

 nothing more than failure in recita- 

 tion would result if we went tramp- 

 ing here and there. We so did, and 

 from this distance I think those les- 

 sons were well missed, and we prof- 

 ited by being truants. 



[ist] 



