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A WEDDING SONG.
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to hang wearily around the wings till the cue is given and they may "go on." Formerly, they were permitted to remain in the green-room until within about five minutes of their appearance, and thus much fatigue was saved. Now, in many cases, the green-room itself has been dispensed with, and the call-boy's occupation is, like Othello's, gone. The disappearance of the green-room was caused by the new fashion of building "stores," warehouses and the like, on the ground story of theatres, which reduced the temples of histrionism to the smallest possible space, scarcely providing for dressing-rooms, much less for the luxury of the green-room. This system prevails principally in the West, for in New York, Boston and Philadelphia theatres are conducted with more liberality than anywhere else in the United States.

Olive Logan.





A WEDDING SONG.


A BREEZE from over the willowy lawn
Is softly swaying the rose so white.
That I found at the window this happy morn,
Waiting to show me how it was born
As I lay asleep last night.
Sister Alice is married to-day:
O rose, have you come to wish her well?—
To waft that blessing you cannot say.
And only the birds can tell?

Right merrily reign her bridal sun,
And bravely, in his realm of blue!
For nobler wife was never won.
And gentler maid the world has none.
Than Alice, through and through.
Along the path the lovers take.
What bounteous bloom the lilacs lift!
I think they have opened for her sweet sake.
And are God's own wedding-gift!