Kellscraft Studio |
Wallpaper Images |
Nekrassoff |
Web
Text-ures© |
Guide to |
Our Cats' |
---|
Our Little English Cousin
By Blanche McManus
Illustrated by The Author
L. C. Page & Company
Boston
MDCCCCV
Copyright, 1905 BY
L. C. PAGE & COMPANY (INCORPORATED)
Published June, 1905
COLONIAL PRESS
Electrotyped and Printed by
C. H. Simonds & Co. Boston, U.S. A.
Edith
Introduction
THE lives of Our Little English Cousins are not so widely different from our own in America. It is only the more ancient associations with which they are surrounded that changes their manners and customs.
Their speech is the same and their amusements and tasks are to a great extent quite similar.
Certain details of home life vary considerably, and when they " take their walks abroad," "Our Little English Cousins," as often as not, visit some ancient historic shrine from whose associations have been built up the great British nation.
Little English cousins and Little American cousins alike, however, would have the same affections for the same things were they but to change places, therefore things are not so very different after all.
What Washington is to America, London is to Britain; meaning in this case England, Ireland, and Scotland as well, for our little Scotch and Irish cousins by no means like one to talk or write of England alone when one really means Britain.
"Our Little English Cousin" lives in a less rigorous climate than that which prevails for the most part in America. Their winters are in general not so cold (though they are quite as long) and not usually so bright and sunny. The summers are by no means so hot as ours and are accordingly most delightful. The open-air pleasures of our English cousins, while existent in our own country, are at least more general than with us, and tea out-of-doors, in the garden, or on the banks of the Thames is an institution which is quite unique, and accordingly, as a summer divertisement, is greatly in vogue.
The Associations which link America with England are many and important; indeed they are so numerous that it were futile to attempt to give place to any in this introductory note beyond recalling to the mind of little American cousins that the great Washington himself was of a well-known English family before they settled in America.
To-day, if the English are not emigrating to America to the extent that they formerly were, our American cousins are returning the visits, if only for pleasure or edification, in astonishingly growing numbers each year.
All this makes for a better understanding and appreciation of each other and cements the growing friendship of years, which in our progressive times is a good thing not to overlook.
"Our Little English Cousin," then, extends a cordial hand of welcome, not only to her cousins across the seas who annually make visits to her native land, but to the stay-at-homes as well, who have that pleasure in store for some future time.
EDITH
OLDHAM MANOR
"IN A FEW MINUTES THEY HAD LANDED"
WINDSOR CASTLE
"AFTER
WATCHING OTHER ANTICS OUR LITTLE FRIENDS
BADE THE 'BEEFEATER' AND HIS PET GOOD-BYE"
"SHE WALKED DOWN THE PATH BY THE RIVER AVON "