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1905.] French at Paris; in German at Leipsic; in Russian at St. Petersburg; and in Italian at Rome. The French Academy awarded it one of the Monthyon prizes of fifteen hundred francs. In Holland itself a Dutch translation has found a sale of many editions. By a curious coincidence, too, when Mrs. Dodge was in Amsterdam with her son in 1873, a copy of this Dutch edition was recommended to him by a bookseller as the best and most faithful juvenile story of Dutch life that was known in Holland. It was a pleasant experience for Mrs. Dodge when the boy, having purchased a copy, proudly presented it to her, repeating the bookseller’s comment, and confiding to him that she was the author of the story. To-day, in our own country and in all English-speaking lands, “Hans Brinker” is a veritable classic of juvenile literature. Even if Mrs. Dodge had done nothing more than to write this book, her place would be forever secure in the affection of child-readers.

But after bringing out, in 1869, a clever little book of home pastimes entitled “A Few Friends,” she accepted, in 1870, the position of associate editor of ‘Hearth and Home,” a weekly family paper, of which the editors were Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe and Mr. Donald G. Mitchell. On this journal she took charge of the household and juvenile departments, and ere long Mrs. Dodge’s reputation as editor equaled that which she had already attained as author. The circulation of the periodical was greatly increased, and the department itself rapidly grew into a very prominent feature of the weekly issues. It was her work in this field which first attracted the attention of Dr. J. G. Holland and Mr. Roswell Smith when, early in the seventies, as directors of the company which now publishes “The Century Magazine,” they began to consider the publication of a new juvenile monthly. Their decision really hinged upon hers, for they were heartily ready to undertake the project provided they could obtain her consent to assume its management and become its editor.

Let it be confessed that she had other aims. Ambition tempted her. She was eager to try her hand at novel-writing. Her triumphs in juvenile literature had already exceeded her expectations; she longed for other fields to conquer. Thus her mind reasoned; but her heart—her heart turned again to thoughts of the children. Many gifted men and women were writing novels; no one was doing all that could be done—that ought to be done—for the boys and girls. Not without a pang of regret, but without further hesitation, she obeyed the call of duty. How clearly she heard, how faithfully she answered the cry of the children all the world knows to-day.

For thus it was that was founded; and from the choice of its title and its first issue, in November, 1873, the best years of Mrs, Dodge’s life have been devoted to.

Looking back upon it from the standpoint of to-day, what a vast performance it represents! In no wise can it be measured by the size or contents of the single magazine which the postman leaves every mouth at the door. It means twelve of these, each year, for more than thirty years. A complete set, in book-form, means fifty-eight large bound volumes, which would almost fill an ordinary book-case. But it means, also, such a golden treasury of stories, verses, pictures for boys and girls—such a children’s library in itself—as, in the form of a single publication, can be found nowhere else in the world.

We must remember, too, that at the time when first appeared it was such an advance upon any preceding juvenile periodical that it might justly be called an absolutely new creation. A comparison of the best issues of “The Riverside Magazine” or “Our Young Folks” with the very first number of showed at a glance the immeasurable superiority of the new magazine. From the first, Mrs. Dodge set herself to prove the truth of her own statement—

The child’s magazine must not be a milk-and-water variety of the periodical for adults, In fact, it needs to be stronger, truer, bolder, more uncompromising than the other; its cheer mast be the cheer of the bird-song; it must mean freshness and heartiness, life and joy. Therefore took to it that it be strong, warm, beautiful, and true. Most children of the present attend school. Their heads are strained and taxed with the day’s lessons. They do not want to be bothered nor amused or taught nor petted. They just want to have their own way over their own magazine. They want to enter