(Boston Herald)
TEACH CHILDREN LOVE OF ART THROUGH STORY-TELLING
“——And so,” ended the story, “St. George slew the dragon.”
A great sigh, long drawn and sibilant, which for the last five minutes had been swelling 57 little thoraxes, burst out and filled the space of the lecture hall at the Museum of Fine Arts.
“O-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o!” said 27 little girls.
“Aw-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w, gosh!” said 30 little boys. “Say, Mis’ Cronan, there wasn’t no real dragon, was they?” A shock-headed youngster pushed his way to the platform where Mrs. Mary C. Cronan, professional story teller, stood smiling and wistfully looked up at her. “They wasn’t no really dragon, was they?”
“’Course they was a dragon! Whadd’ye think the man wanted to paint the picture for if there wasn’t a dragon? Certn’y there was a dragon. I leave it to Mis’ Cronan if there wasn’t.”
Steering a narrow course between fiction and truth, Mrs. Cronan told her class that she thought there certainly must have been a dragon or the picture wouldn’t have been painted.
It was at one of the regular morning story hours at the Museum of Fine Arts, a department opened three years ago at the museum by Mrs. Cronan and Mrs. Laura Scales, a department which has become so popular that now hundreds of children a week are entertained, children from the public playgrounds and from the settlement houses.
On this particular day it was children from the Bickford street playground under the guidance of two teachers from the Lucretia Crocker School, Miss Roche and Miss Hayes, who had, in some mysterious manner, convoyed these 57 atoms to the museum by car without mishap and who apparently did not dread the necessity of getting them back again, although to the uninitiated it appeared a task beside which grasping a comet by the tail was a pleasant afternoon’s amusement.
For the most part the story of St. George and the Dragon was a new thing to these children. They might stand for St. George, although his costume was a little out of the regular form at Jamaica Plain, but the Dragon was another thing.
“I don’t believe it,” insisted an 8-year-old. “I seen every animal in the Zoo in the park and I don’t see any of them things.” But the wistful little boy kept insisting that there must be such an animal or Mrs. Cronan wouldn’t say so.
“That is the way they nearly always take it at first,” said Mrs. Cronan. “Nearly all of these children are here for the first time. Later they will bring their fathers and mothers on Sunday and you might hear them explaining the pictures upstairs as if they were the docents of the museum.
“The object of the story hour is to familiarize the children with as many as possible of the pictures of the Museum and to get them into the way of coming here of themselves. When they go away they are given cards bearing a reproduction of the picture about which the story of the day has been told, and on these cards is always an invitation to them to bring their families to the Museum on Saturday and Sunday, when there is no entrance fee.”