Class f i^.J_ Copyii^ht N". COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT: _^ •^C!33C55: :r!!fe^C!320C!320i ^ ^ _P__^ !o! j-'.,.o_ 1— 1 „.o_ 1— 1 (S5^ FATHER TIMES RECEPTION. P«ttt |Int«rjairtwet(t firr llie ||ttltt(ags, I -2SiV2 ARRANGED BY F. AND M. MAC. ^^2-'i>-?0"^' "It was once on a time and 'twas long, long ago," Father Time gave a party unique To which he invited the Centuries all, And the months and the days were to speak. PRICE FIFTY CENTS. [Copyriglited :!^ovember sflk-d, 1SS9.] --H « .►- O ^ ^ —— — ~nnn — 'aoe^'" « -_~-~ ^'V— l^-^aoo V_ 3^o=.„ SO'sS^D^*^ 33s;:34 (—1 _o_ _^_ O « -H o « ^^pm r^)^, i g>_ H. o '-, o O =C!ftc:5C!330C!!fes:5C!!^s:5C!^s;;::| i-hQi-'O'-'O'-iO'-'O :s>^ FATHER TIME S RECEPTION. i Jim 3ii|feriaiitmtnt far \\\t %(iMm. -^^\r^^ ARRANGED BY F. AND M. MAC. ^-oZA^^^o-^ "It was once on a time and 'twas long-, long ago,' Father Time gave a party unique To which he invited the Centuries all, And the months and the da;^s were to speak. „ \. DEC 20 18?^^ G/j,'/- ly Ml;,7.M. „,v^^.^. / , ,&^ 2. FATHER TIME S RECErTIOX. 1st. — Musk: Ordicntia . 2nd. — Recitation hcfon' the curtain rises for the reception. A LEGEND OF HAS VEST. So long ago that history pays No heed noi' record of how long, Back in the lovely dreamy days, ' The id-nodI — Youth's Comjmnion. FATHER TIME. "Sleep on; and dream ©f Heaven awhile; Though shut so close thy laughing eyes. Thy rosy lips still wear a smile. And move, and breathe delicious sighs " NOVEMBER. They say that November is cold and bleak. With only a bluster and roar. Toppling down chimneys and shaking the house And rattling the blinds and the door. That he's good for nothing under the sun; But freezes and pinches and kills Whatever he touches, seeking his prey In the valleys and on the hills. 14- FATHER TIMES RECEPTION. I'm noisy, I know, and perhaps I am A blustering boy, as they say, But in spite of all my terrible ways, Don't I bring you Thanksgiving DayV Don't I make the coasting on all the hills'? Don't I bring you every year Rosy-cheeked apples, and j^op-corn and nuts? Don't I whisper of Christmas cheer? I am trying my best to do what I can. And to give far more than I take Of everything good; and I want you all To love me for Thanksgiving's sake! — Youth'' s Comjmnion. FATHER TIME. "Spring tide is the year's gay youth. Summer is it's prime; In faith we watch the growth of spiking. In hope, the summer time; But mellow autumn, like God's love, Showers gifts on every clime." (Then the "Old Year" comes in wnlking with slow, feeble step, followed closely by the "New Year," who speaks first and says:) "The night is starry and cold, my friend. And the New Year, blithe and bold, my friend, Comes to take up his own," "A Happy New Year!" Here is a year to be had! A whole magnificent year held out to each lass and lad; Days and weeks and months! Joys and labors and pains! Take it, spenl it, buy with it, lend it, and presently count yo'jr grins. —H. H. FATHER TIMES RECEPTION. I 5. THE OLD YEAR TO THE NEW. With hands full of gifts and cheeks like a i-ose, There you wait At my gate While my winter wind blows; And you laugh as you stand there, a laugh full of scorn, At the sight Of the flight Of the graybeard forlorn. And the stories he tells of the months that have sped; — "What I— I," You cry, "When my twelve months have fled, To bend and to totter, to sigh and to shake. And like you There to rue The vows that I break V "Not I, oh, not I,'" you scornfully say; "I shall stand Where you sta.nd. As blitiie as to-day, When one after one, my twelve months have sped, Not a fear, Not a tear. Shall I murmur or shed.'- So, my youngster, you laugh, as you stand there untried, As you wait At my gate In your ignorant pride. So I boasted and laughed when I stood in your place, But to-day. Ah, to-day. At the end of my race, I 6. FATHER time's RECEPTION. I count up the gifts that I sold for a song, In that time Of my prime. When lusty and strong. My plans were so easy, my promises rife. And pleasure. The measure. And limit of life. But my easy-laid plans, not so easily sped. And alas, And alas, Ere the twelve months had fled, I found what my line boasted wisdom was worth. And that haste Had made waste On my kingdom of earth. But what US3 for me here to counsel and pray, When you heed Not indeed A word that I say. When impatient you wait for my gate to unclose. With that air. Debonair, And that cheek like a rose! Well, well, enter in — The gates are flung wide. There or here, God is near, Whatsoever betide. — Nora Perr-y. (The Old Year then passes off the stage, and Father Time says:) The year Has gone, and with it many a glorious throng Of happy dreams. Its mark is on each bi'ow, FATHER time's RECEPTION. I 7. Its shadow in each, heart. In its swift coui^se It waved its scepter o'er the beautiful, And they are not It laid it's pallid hand Upon the strong man, and the haughty form Is fallen, and the flashing eye is dim. It trod tlie hall of revelry, where thronged The bright and joyous, and the tearful wail 0f stricken ones is heard when erst the song And reckless shout resounded. — George D. Prentice. A Mighty Hand, from an exhaustless arm. Pours forth the never ending Flood of Years Among the nations. How the rushing waves Bear all before them. On their foremost edge, And there alone, is life! the Present there Tosses and foams and fills the air with roar Of mingled noises. Looking back, Where that tumultuous flood has passed, I see The silent Ocean of the Past, a waste Of waters. In the room Of this grief-shadowed Present there shall be A Present in whose reign no grief shall gnaw The heart, and never shall a tender' tie Be broken— in whose reign the eternal change That waits on growth and action shall proceed With evei^lasting Concord hand in hand. — Bryant. 'Tis midnight, holy hour, and silence now Is brooding like a gentle spix-it o'er The still and pulseless world. Hark! on the winds. The bell's deep tones are swelling— 'tis the knell Of the departed year. — Prentke. 15. FATHER TIMES RECEPTION. SONG. — RING OUT THE OLD, RING IN THE NEW. Ring out the Old, Ring- in the New, Ring- happy bells, across the snow; Ring out the false ring in the true; The year is going, let him go. Ring out the grief that saps the mind, For those that here we see no more; Ring in redress of all mankind. Ring out the fend of rich and poor. Ring out false pride in place and blood, The civic slander and the spite; Ring in the common love of good. Ring in the love of truth and righti Ring in the valient man and free, The larger heart the kindlier hand; Ring in the Christ that is to be, Ring out the darkness of the land. — Ihinyson. Note. — The closing song is to be sung by all on the stage except Father Time and the Centuries. This en- tertainment can be made more elaborate by having each Century appear in the costume appropriate to the par- ticular Century he represents. If desired the enter- tainment can close with a tableaux representing the four seasons. More music can be added if needed, and singers behind the curtain can assist those on the stage if necessary. THE WE3TEKX SPIRIT PRINT, PAOLA, KANSAS. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS lilliiillliiilllillilL^ 015 988 510 ^