VI. _Discussion_:
(1) Reading aloud.
(2) Games and music.
VII. _Paper_: Parents as friends.
VIII. _Talk_, followed by general experiences.
XVII--MOTHER AND DAUGHTER
Commencement and Afterward.
The Relation of Parents to the Grown Daughter.
The Training for Housekeeping.
Friends and Entertaining.
Preparations for a Life-Work Away from Home.
The Married Daughter.
The Unmarried Middle-Aged Daughter.
A general discussion.
XVIII--CHRISTMAS PROGRAM
_Song_: "Noel," by Gounod.
_Reading_ from d.i.c.kens: the story of Scrooge"s Christmas.
_Paper or talk_ on Curious Christmas Customs (in England, Germany, Sweden, etc.).
_Song_: "When from the East the Wise Men Came," by Bullard.
_Reading_ from "Sonny," by Ruth McEnery Stuart.
_Reading_ from Howells"s "Christmas Every Day."
_Song_: "The Virgin"s Lullaby," by Dudley Buck.
_Reading_: "George Washington Jones, A Christmas Gift That Went a-Begging," by Ruth McEnery Stuart.
_Song_: "Over the Hills of Bethlehem," by Neidlinger.
Interest will be added to this meeting, of course, by decorating the club rooms with Christmas greens and lighting with candles.
XIX--PROGRAM FOR A COLONIAL MEETING
Home Life in Virginia (paper or talk). Reading from "The Virginians," by Thackeray.
The Love Story of Washington.
Mt. Vernon; Martha Washington"s Housekeeping. (Ill.u.s.trated with pictures of Mt. Vernon.)
The First Inaugural Ball.
Lafayette"s Return to America.
Brief items of interest given by members, of family traditions of these and other events.
Close with two patriotic songs: "The Star-Spangled Banner," "Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean" or "America."
XX--KING ARTHUR AND THE ROUND TABLE
Paper or talk on The Origin of the Arthurian Legend.
Brief outline of the story of the Round Table.
Reading from Lowell"s "Vision of Sir Launfal."
Reading from Sir Thomas Malory"s "Morte d"Arthur."
The story of Glas...o...b..ry and Avalon; description of the abbey.
The legend of the Holy Thorn.
Readings from Howard Pyle"s "Story of King Arthur and His Knights."
Reading from the "Idylls of the King;" "The Pa.s.sing of Arthur."
The chairman in charge of the meeting may procure from her picture-dealer or from the nearest large city inexpensive prints of the Abbey paintings of the Holy Grail in the Boston Public Library, and these, mounted on large sheets of white paper, may be hung about the room.
CHAPTER XXIII
HOW TO MAKE A YEAR BOOK
Many clubs find it difficult to make year books which shall be clear and comprehensive, and yet cover briefly the entire field they have selected. This is a simple plan: