A Theme Written and Submitted in Literature Class By Barbara Putnam Archibald, 1917

DEFINITION OF A THEME: A theme is a piece of writing, either true or made up by the author,

and consisting of Introduction, Body and Conclusion. It should contain

Unity, Coherence, Emphasis, Perspecuity, Vivacity, and Presision. It may

be ornamented with dialogue, discription and choice quotations.

SUBJECT OF THEME: An interesting Incident of My Christmas Holadays.

Introduction: "A tyrant's power in rigor is exprest."--DRYDEN.

I HAVE decided to relate with Presision what occurred during my recent

Christmas holaday. Although I was away from this school only four days,

returning unexpectedly the day after Christmas, a number of Incidents

occurred which I believe I should narate.

It is only just and fair that the Upper House, at least, should know

of the injustice of my exile, and that it is all the result of

Circumstances over which I had no controll.

For I make this apeal, and with good reason. Is it any fault of mine

that my sister Leila is 20 months older than I am? Naturaly, no.

Is it fair also, I ask, that in the best society, a girl is a Sub-Deb

the year before she comes out, and although mature in mind, and even

maturer in many ways than her older sister, the latter is treated as a

young lady, enjoying many privileges, while the former is treated as a

mere child, in spite, as I have observed, of only 20 months difference?

I wish to place myself on record that it is NOT fair.

I shall go back, for a short time, to the way things were at home when I

was small. I was very strictly raised. With the exception of Tommy Gray,

who lives next door and only is about my age, I was never permitted to

know any of the Other Sex.

Looking back, I am sure that the present way society is organized is

really to blame for everything. I am being frank, and that is the way I

feel. I was too strictly raised. I always had a Governess taging along.

Until I came here to school I had never walked to the corner of the next

street unattended. If it wasn't Mademoiselle it was mother's maid, and

if it wasn't either of them, it was mother herself, telling me to hold

my toes out and my shoulder blades in. As I have said, I never knew any

of the Other Sex, except the miserable little beasts at dancing school.

I used to make faces at them when Mademoiselle was putting on my

slippers and pulling out my hair bow. They were totaly uninteresting,

and I used to put pins in my sash, so that they would get scratched.




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