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Ideas for integrating art
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- Little drops of water,
Little grains of sand
Make the mighty ocean
And the solid land."
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"Do
Your Bit": A Chalk-Talk for Young Folks" by J. W. Bengough, Bengough's
Chalk-Talks (Toronto: Musson Book Co., 1922).
During the 1800s and early 1900s,
public lectures were a popular form of educational entertainment. Audiences
could hear about current events, politics and world news in an entertaining
way. Soon, cartoonists began giving "Chalk talks" that not only
entertained but informed the audience. One such cartoonist was J. W.
Bengough. Bengough began making "chalk talks" in Canada in 1874,
and by the first decades of the twentieth century cartoonists across the
continent were supplementing their incomes with public performances of the art
they first practiced for print.
Bed Bugs is a story that appeared in the July 12, 1893 edition of the daily
newspaper, the Lake Madison Chautauquan.
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Bed-Bugs |
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We
were startled lately on hearing a lady remark, "I found a
bed-bug." What a woebegone look will cloud a woman's face
when she runs across one of these pests! And what a curiosity
would be a woman who who would acknowledge she had bed-bugs, ahem, ahem!
We mean what a curiosity would be a woman who would acknowledge there
were bugs in her house. A bug is found and the lady hastens to
explain that some lady laid a baby on the bed for a few minutes;
that some visitor had just left, or that some member of the family had
slept away from home a night or two ago and must have contracted
beg-bugs and regardless of a future life she affirms that she never saw
a bed-bug in her house before. Now no many has any respect for a
beg-bug, they are endured from necessity but the bug is blissfully
oblivious of the fact that he is an unwelcome intruders. Did you
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notice the bland smile that illuminates the face
of the first bug of the season as he notices the consternation
depicted on the woman's face when she discovers his presence? It
seems almost a fiendish smile that graces his face. There is
nothing open or honest about the bug, he is a hypocrite of the first
water, in fact a back-biter, we speak from experiences, as he has bitten
our back more that once. The beg-bug like the country visitor at
the world's fair gets his living off some one else. It has been
said that the bug was strictly temperate, that he will not bite a man
who is done up in alcohol or rather who has the alcohol done up in him,
which is most common. Some folks have a propensity for squeezing a
beg-bug whenever found, regardless of the bug’s feelings. This
is wrong, one should never squeeze a bed-bug or a skunk and we always
treat them alike -- give them the right of way. |
After listening to or reading the newspaper article about the bed-bugs, draw
your picture of a bed-bug. Author and illustrator Gary
Harbo gives online drawing lessons each month. Check out his site for
the latest character. For more information about bed-bugs, refer to
Bed-bugs
and Their Relatives.
Variation: The bed-bugs must have their own story. What is
their view of the humans? Write a story about it and draw a picture of
humans from a bed-bug's point-of-view.
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remember...don't let the bed-bugs bite! |
Teacher, enjoy sharing ideas and concerns with other teachers at Chalk Talk
Online for Teachers, a discussion board with resources for teachers.
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