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<div class="lesson">LESSON XXIV.</div>
<div class="chaphead">A MAP</div>
<p>A drawing made to show a room, or a house; or the school-yard, or
even a village, is called a plan.</p>
<p><SPAN href="images/042_l.gif" target="_blank" id="ill42"><ANTIMG src=
"images/042.jpg" alt="A MAP" border="0" align="left" /></SPAN>
Drawings which represent land and water are called maps. You may
learn from maps where the countries, and mountains, and rivers, and
cities are that you have seen. It also shows how far places are
from one another.</p>
<p>Here is a map showing mountains and rivers. The many short lines
facing each other represent mountains. To show the very high part
of the mountains, the lines are drawn close to each other, making
that part of the map look dark. The line winding about, like the
stream itself, represents a river. The line, as you see, is made
thicker and thicker toward its mouth. From this you may know that
the river itself becomes broader and broader as it flows toward the
sea.</p>
<p>But you must not think that the crooked line on the map is a river,
or the lines which face each other are mountains. If you do, you
will learn very little of geography. When you look at these lines,
you must <i>think</i> of the real things which they stand for--the
lofty mountains, with their covering of forests, and with long,
narrow valleys between them; the winding, gently flowing river,
bearing boats upon its waters.</p>
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