The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Young and Field Literary Readers, Book 2, by Ella Flagg Young and Walter Taylor Field This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org Title: The Young and Field Literary Readers, Book 2 Author: Ella Flagg Young Walter Taylor Field Illustrator: Maginel Wright Enright Release Date: December 26, 2011 [EBook #38412] Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YOUNG AND FIELD LITERARY *** Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Matthew Wheaton and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net [Illustration: THE YOUNG AND FIELD LITERARY READERS _Book Two_ BY ELLA FLAGG YOUNG _Superintendent of the Chicago Public Schools_ AND WALTER TAYLOR FIELD _Author of "Fingerposts to Children's Reading," "Rome," Etc_ _Illustrated by Maginel Wright Enright_ GINN AND COMPANY BOSTON · NEW YORK · CHICAGO · LONDON] COPYRIGHT, 1916, BY ELLA FLAGG YOUNG AND WALTER TAYLOR FIELD ALL RIGHTS RESERVED 116.3 The Athenæum Press GINN AND COMPANY · PROPRIETORS · BOSTON · U.S.A. TO THE BOYS AND GIRLS Dear Boys and Girls: Do you like fairy stories? You do not need to tell us. We know you like them. So we are going to give you some to read. You may have heard some of these stories before, but not many of them. Some have come from far across the sea, and some have come from our own country. Mothers have told them to their children again and again, and children have never been tired of them. We think you will like them, too. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The poems of Mr. Frank Dempster Sherman and Miss Abbie Farwell Brown are used by special arrangement with the Houghton Mifflin Company, publishers. Acknowledgments are also due to the following publishers and authors for permission to use copyrighted material: to Charles Scribner's Sons for poems from Robert Louis Stevenson's "A Child's Garden of Verses" and Mrs. Mary Mapes Dodge's "Rhymes and Jingles"; to the Macmillan Company for poems from Christina Rossetti's "Sing Song"; to Little, Brown, and Company for poems from Mrs. Laura E. Richards's "In My Nursery"; to G. P. Putnam's Sons for the use of Sir George Webbe Dasent's version of the story "East of the Sun and West of the Moon," from "Popular Tales from the Norse," as the basis for our story of the same name; to the A. Flanagan Company and Miss Flora J. Cooke for the use of "The Rainbow Bridge," from Miss Cooke's "Nature Myths," in a similar way; to Miss Marion Florence Lansing for permission to adapt her dramatized Hindu Tale, "The Man's Boot," from "Quaint Old Stories," in our story "The Shoe"; to Mr. William Hawley Smith for permission to use his poem "A Child's Prayer." CONTENTS ENGLISH FAIRY TALES CHILDE ROWLAND TOM TIT TOT POEMS BY CHRISTINA ROSSETTI LAMBKINS FERRY ME ACROSS THE WATER CORAL THE SWALLOW WRENS AND ROBINS BOATS SAIL ON THE RIVERS FABLES FROM ÆSOP THE LION AND THE MOUSE THE HONEST WOODCUTTER THE WOLF AND THE CRANE THE TOWN MOUSE AND THE COUNTRY MOUSE THE WIND AND THE SUN THE ANT AND THE DOVE THE LARK AND HER NEST THE DOG AND HIS SHADOW THE FOX AND THE GRAPES POEMS BY MARY MAPES DODGE FOUR LITTLE BIRDS IN THE BASKET COUSIN JEREMY LITTLE MISS LIMBERKIN SNOWFLAKES HOLLYHOCK GERMAN FAIRY TALES THE LITTLE PINE TREE THE FAITHFUL BEASTS POEMS BY ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON WHERE GO THE BOATS? AT THE SEASIDE RAIN AUTUMN FIRES THE WIND HINDU FABLES THE TIMID HARES THE SHOE THE CAMEL AND THE JACKAL POEMS BY LAURA E. RICHARDS THE BUMBLEBEE LITTLE BROWN BOBBY JIPPY AND JIMMY THE SONG OF THE CORN POPPER A FRENCH FAIRY TALE THE FAIRY A NORSE FOLK TALE EAST OF THE SUN AND WEST OF THE MOON POEMS BY ABBIE FARWELL BROWN THE SAILOR A MUSIC BOX AMERICAN INDIAN LEGENDS LITTLE SCAR-FACE THE HUNTER WHO FORGOT THE WATER LILY RUSSIAN FABLES FORTUNE AND THE BEGGAR THE SPIDER AND THE BEE THE STONE AND THE WORM THE FOX IN THE ICE POEMS BY FRANK DEMPSTER SHERMAN CLOUDS GHOST FAIRIES DAISIES OLD GREEK STORIES THE SUN, THE MOON, AND THE STAR GIANT THE WIND AND THE CLOUDS THE RAINBOW BRIDGE POEMS OLD AND NEW THANK YOU, PRETTY COW _Jane Taylor_ PLAYGROUNDS _Laurence Alma-Tadema_ SLEEP, BABY, SLEEP _German Cradle Song_ A CHILD'S PRAYER _William Hawley Smith_ LISTS OF WORDS FOR PHONETIC DRILL LIST OF NEW WORDS ARRANGED BY LESSONS THE YOUNG AND FIELD LITERARY READERS BOOK TWO ENGLISH FAIRY TALES CHILDE ROWLAND Once upon a time there was a little princess. Her name was Ellen. She lived with her mother the queen in a great house by the sea. She had three brothers. One day, as they were playing ball, one of her brothers threw the ball over the house. Ellen ran to get it, but she did not come back. The three brothers looked for her. They looked and looked, but they could not find her. Day after day went by. At last the oldest brother went to a wise man and asked what to do. "The princess is with the elves. She is in the Dark Tower," said the wise man. "Where is the Dark Tower?" asked the oldest brother. "It is far away," said the wise man. "You cannot find it." "I can and I will find it. Tell me where it is," said the oldest brother. The wise man told him, and the oldest brother set off at once. The other brothers waited. They waited long, but the oldest brother did not come back. Then the next brother went to the wise man. The wise man told him as he had told the oldest brother. Then the next brother set out to find the Dark Tower. The youngest brother waited. He waited long, but no one came. Now the youngest brother was called Childe Rowland. At last Childe Rowland went to his mother the queen and said: "Mother, let me go and find the Dark Tower and bring home Ellen and my brothers." "I cannot let you go. You are all that I have, now," said the queen. But Childe Rowland asked again and again, till at last the queen said, "Go, my boy." Then she gave him his father's sword, and he set out. He went to the wise man and asked the way. The wise man told him and said: "I will tell you two things. One thing is for you to do, and one thing is for you not to do. "The thing to do is this: When you get to the country of the elves, take hold of your father's sword, pull it out quickly, and cut off the head of any one who speaks to you, till you find the princess Ellen. "The thing not to do is this: Bite no bit and drink no drop till you come back. Go hungry and thirsty while you are in the country of the elves." Childe Rowland said the two things over and over, so that he should not forget. Then he went on his way. He went on and on and on, till he came to some horses with eyes of fire. Then he knew he was in the country of the elves. A man was with the horses. "Where is the Dark Tower?" asked Childe Rowland. "I do not know," said the man. "Ask the man that keeps the cows." Childe Rowland thought of what the wise man had told him. He pulled out his father's sword, and off went the man's head. Then Childe Rowland went on and on, till he came to some cows with eyes of fire. The man who kept the cows looked at Childe Rowland. "Where is the Dark Tower?" asked Childe Rowland. "I cannot tell. Ask the woman that keeps the hens," said the man. Childe Rowland took the sword, and off went the man's head. Then Childe Rowland went on and on, till he came to some hens with eyes of fire. An old woman was with them. "Where is the Dark Tower?" asked Childe Rowland. "Go on and look for a hill," said the old woman. "Go around the hill three times. Each time you go around say: 'Open, door! open, door! Let me come in.' When you have gone three times around, a door will open. Go in." Childe Rowland did not like to cut off the head of the old woman, but he thought of what the wise man had told him. So he took hold of the sword, and off went her head. After this he went on and on and on, till he came to a hill. He went three times around it, and each time he said: "Open, door! open, door! Let me come in." When he had gone three times around, a door opened. In he went. The door shut after him, and he was in the dark. Soon he began to see a dim light. It seemed to come from the walls. He went down a long way, and at last he came to another door. All at once it flew open, and he found himself in a great hall. The walls were of gold and silver, and were hung with diamonds. How the diamonds shone! And there sat the princess Ellen in a great chair of gold, with diamonds all about her head. When she saw Childe Rowland, she came to him and said: "Brother, why are you here? If the king of the elves comes, it will be a sad day for you." But this did not frighten Childe Rowland. He sat down and told her all that he had done. She told him that the two brothers were in the tower. The king of the elves had turned them into stone. Soon Childe Rowland began to be very hungry, and asked for something to eat. Ellen went out and soon came back with bread and milk in a golden bowl. Childe Rowland took it and was about to eat. All at once he thought of what the wise man had said. So he threw the bowl down upon the floor, and said: "Not a bit will I bite, Not a drop will I drink, Till Ellen is free." Then they heard a great noise outside, and some one cried out: "Fee-fi-fo-fum! I smell the blood Of an Englishman!" The door of the hall flew open and the king of the elves came in. Childe Rowland took his sword. They fought and they fought. At last Childe Rowland beat the king of the elves down to the ground. "Stop!" cried the king of the elves. "I have had enough." "I will stop when you set free the princess Ellen and my brothers," said Childe Rowland. "I will set them free," said the king. He went at once to a cupboard and took out a blood-red bottle. Out of this bottle he let a drop or two fall upon the eyes of the two brothers, and up they jumped. Childe Rowland took the hand of his sister and went out of the door, and up the long way. The two brothers went after them and left the king of the elves alone. Then they came out from the hill and found their way back to their own country. How glad the queen was! TOM TIT TOT Once a woman made five pies. When she had made them, she found that they were too hard. So the woman said to her daughter: "Put those pies into the cupboard and leave them there a little while and they'll come again." She meant that they would get soft. But the girl said to herself, "Well, if they'll come again, I think I will eat them." So she ate them all up. At supper time the woman said, "Daughter, get one of those pies. I think they must have come again." The girl went to the cupboard and looked, but no pies were there. Then she came back to her mother and said, "No, they have not come again." "Well, bring one," said the mother. "I want one for my supper." "But I can't. They have not come." "Yes, you can. Bring me one." "But I ate them all up." "What!" said the mother, "You bad, bad girl!" The woman could not stop thinking about those five pies. As she sat at the door spinning, she kept mumbling to herself: "My daughter ate five pies to-day, My daughter ate five pies to-day." The king was going by, and he heard the woman mumbling. "What are you saying, woman?" asked the king. The woman did not like to tell him about the pies, so she said: "My daughter spun five skeins to-day, My daughter spun five skeins to-day." "Well, well, well!" said the king, "I didn't know that any one could spin so much as that!" "My daughter knows how to spin," said the woman. The king thought a little while. Then he said: "I want a wife. If your daughter can spin as much as that, I will make her my wife. She shall have fine clothes, and for eleven months in every year she may do anything she wishes. But the last month of the year she must spin five skeins each day. If she doesn't, she must have her head cut off." "Very well," said the woman. She thought how fine it would be if her daughter should be the queen. The girl could have a good time for eleven months, anyway, and there would surely be some way to get the skeins spun. So the king took the girl away and made her queen. For eleven months she had everything she could think of. She had gold and silver and diamonds and fine clothes and good things to eat. But when the last month of the year came, she began to think what she should do about those five skeins. She did not have long to think, for the king took her into a room, all by herself, and said: "Here is a spinning wheel, and here is a chair, and here is some flax. "Now, my dear, sit down and spin five skeins before night, or off goes your head." Then he turned and went out. How frightened she was! She could not spin. She could only sit down and cry. All at once there was a rap at the door. She jumped up and opened it, and what should she see but a little black thing with a long tail! "What are you crying about?" asked the little black thing. "It would do no good to tell you," said the queen. "How do you know that?" asked the little black thing, and he twirled his tail. "Well, I will tell you," she said. And she told him all that the king had said to her. "Then," said the little black thing, "I will come here to your window every morning and take some flax, and bring it back at night all spun. "If you can guess my name, you shall pay nothing for my work. "You may try three times each night, when I bring back the skeins. But if you can't guess my name before the last day of the month, I will carry you off with me." The queen thought that she could surely guess, so she said: "Very well. Take the flax." "Yes," said the little black thing, and my! how he twirled his tail! That night he came back with five skeins of spun flax, but she could not guess his name. So it went on day after day. Every night the little black thing brought five skeins, but she could not guess his name. On the last day of the month the king came in to see her. "You are doing well, my dear," said he. "I think I shall not have to cut off your head, after all." So he had a fine supper brought in, and they ate it together. As they were eating, the king said: "I was hunting to-day in the woods, and I heard a queer song. It came from a hole in the ground. I looked in, and there sat a little black thing with a long tail. He was spinning. He twirled his tail as he spun, and sang: 'Nimmy, nimmy, not! I'm Tom Tit Tot.'" The queen at once jumped up and danced all around the table, but she said nothing. The king thought she was glad because her spinning was done. That night the little black thing brought the last five skeins of flax. "Well," he said, "what is my name? You may guess three times more." How he twirled his tail! "Is it Jack?" she asked. "No, it is not Jack," he said. "Is it Tom?" she asked. "No, it is not Tom." You should have seen him laugh! "One more guess; then I take you," said the little black thing, and he twirled his tail again. This time the queen laughed. She looked at him a long time and then said: "Nimmy, nimmy, not! You're Tom Tit Tot." At that the little black thing gave a great cry, and away he flew, out into the dark. The queen never saw him again. POEMS BY CHRISTINA ROSSETTI LAMBKINS On the grassy banks Lambkins at their pranks; Woolly sisters, woolly brothers, Jumping off their feet, While their woolly mothers Watch by them and bleat. FERRY ME ACROSS THE WATER "Ferry me across the water, Do, boatman, do." "If you've a penny in your purse, I'll ferry you." "I have a penny in my purse, And my eyes are blue; So ferry me across the water, Do, boatman, do." "Step into my ferry-boat, Be they black or blue, And for the penny in your purse I'll ferry you." CORAL "O sailor, come ashore. What have you brought for me?" "Red coral, white coral, Coral from the sea. "I did not dig it from the ground Nor pluck it from a tree; Feeble insects made it In the stormy sea." THE SWALLOW Fly away, fly away over the sea, Sun-loving swallow, for summer is done; Come again, come again, come back to me, Bringing the summer and bringing the sun. WRENS AND ROBINS Wrens and robins in the hedge, Wrens and robins here and there; Building, perching, pecking, fluttering, Everywhere! BOATS SAIL ON THE RIVERS Boats sail on the rivers, And ships sail on the seas; But clouds that sail across the sky Are prettier far than these. There are bridges on the rivers, As pretty as you please; But the bow that bridges heaven, And overtops the trees, And builds a road from earth to sky, Is prettier far than these. FABLES FROM ÆSOP THE LION AND THE MOUSE A lion was asleep in the woods. A little mouse ran over his paw. The lion woke up and caught him. "You are a very little mouse, but I think I will eat you," he said. "Do not eat me," said the mouse, "I am so little! Let me go. Some time I may be of help to you." The lion laughed. "What can you do?" he said. But he let the mouse go. Not very long after this the lion was caught by some men and made fast with a rope. The men left him and went to get more rope, to bind him. "Now is my time!" said the mouse. He ran to the lion and began to gnaw the rope. He gnawed and he gnawed. At last he gnawed through the rope and set the lion free. "You laughed at me," said the mouse, "but have I not helped you?" "You have saved my life," said the lion. THE HONEST WOODCUTTER One day a woodcutter lost his ax in a pond. He sat down by the water and said to himself, "What shall I do? I have lost my ax." All at once a man stood beside him. "What have you lost?" asked the man. "I have lost my ax," said the woodcutter. The man said nothing, but jumped into the pond and soon came out with a golden ax. "Is this your ax?" he asked. "No," said the honest woodcutter, "my ax was not a golden ax." The man jumped in again, and soon came out with a silver ax. "Is this your ax?" asked the man. "No," said the woodcutter, "my ax was not a silver ax." Again the man jumped in. This time he came out with the ax that the woodcutter had lost. "Is this your ax?" he asked. "Yes," said the woodcutter, "thank you! How glad I am! But who are you, kind sir? You must be more than a man." "I am Mercury," said the other, "and you are an honest woodcutter. I will give you the golden ax and the silver ax." The woodcutter thanked him and went home. Soon he met another woodcutter and told what Mercury had done. This other woodcutter thought he should like a golden ax, too. So he went to the pond and threw his ax into the water. Then he sat down and began to cry, "O, I have lost my ax! What shall I do? What shall I do?" Mercury came again and jumped into the water. Soon he came out with a golden ax. "Is this your ax?" he asked. "O, yes, yes! that is my ax," said the man. "No, it is not," said Mercury. "You are not an honest woodcutter, and you shall have no golden ax." "Then get my own ax for me," said the woodcutter. "Get it yourself," said Mercury. With that he went away and was seen no more. THE WOLF AND THE CRANE (Once a wolf was eating his supper. He was hungry and he ate very fast. He ate so fast that he swallowed a bone. A crane was going by. The wolf called to the crane.) WOLF. My dear crane, come, help me. I have a bone in my throat. CRANE. What do you want me to do? WOLF. Put your bill down my throat and pull out the bone. CRANE. You will bite off my head. WOLF. O, no, I will not. I will pay you well. (The crane came and put his head into the wolf's mouth. Then he ran his long bill down the wolf's throat and so pulled out the bone.) CRANE. There, Brother Wolf, there is the bone. Now give me my pay. WOLF. You have had your pay. CRANE. No, I have not. WOLF. You have had your head in the mouth of a wolf, you have pulled it out, and your life is saved. What more can you ask? CRANE. After this, I will keep away from a wolf. THE TOWN MOUSE AND THE COUNTRY MOUSE Once a country mouse asked her cousin, the town mouse, to come and visit her. The town mouse came, and the country mouse gave her the best she had to eat. It was only a little wheat and corn. The town mouse ate some of it. Then she said: "Cousin, how can you live on this poor corn and wheat? Come to town with me, and I will give you something good." So the two mice set off and soon came to town. The town mouse lived well and had everything she wished for. She had cake and pie and cheese and everything good to eat. O, it was so good! The country mouse was hungry, and she ate and ate and ate. "How rich my cousin is," she said, "and how poor I am!" As she said this, there was a great barking at the door. Then two dogs ran into the room. They chased the mice about, barking all the time. At last the mice ran into a hole. "Good-by, cousin, I am going home," said the country mouse. "What! Are you going so soon?" asked the other. "Yes, I do not like that kind of music with my supper. It is better to have corn and wheat and be safe than to have cake and cheese and be always in fear," said the country mouse. THE WIND AND THE SUN Once the wind and the sun had a quarrel. The sun said, "I am stronger than you." The wind said, "No, I am stronger than you." "Let us see," said the sun. "Here comes a man with a big cloak. Can you make him take it off?" "Surely I can," said the wind. "Try," said the sun. The sun went behind the clouds. The wind began to blow. How he did blow! But the man pulled his cloak close about him. He did not care for the wind. At last the wind gave it up. "Now you try," he said to the sun. The sun came out from the clouds. He shone down upon the man. "How warm it is!" said the man. "I must take off my cloak." So he took off his cloak. "You have beaten," said the wind. "You are stronger than I." THE ANT AND THE DOVE A little ant once fell into a pond. A dove was perching in a tree over the water. The dove saw the ant fall. She pulled off a leaf with her bill and let it drop into the water. "There, little ant! get on that leaf, and you will be safe," she said. The ant jumped upon the leaf, and the wind blew it to the shore of the pond. Not long after this, a man laid a net to catch the dove. He pulled it in and found the dove caught fast in it. The ant saw the man with the net, and ran up his leg and bit him. "O!" said the man, "what is that?" He let the net drop to the ground, and the dove flew away. Next time the dove saw the ant, she said: "Good ant, you saved my life." "You saved my life once, and I only tried to pay you back," said the ant. THE LARK AND HER NEST A lark had made her nest in a field of wheat. The wheat was almost ripe. One day the old lark said to her young ones: "The men will soon come to cut this wheat. You must watch for them and tell me all you see or hear while I am away." Then she left them and went to get something for them to eat. When she came home, she asked, "Did you see or hear anything?" "Yes, mother," said the young ones. "The owner of the field came and looked at the wheat. He said, 'This wheat is ripe. It must be cut at once. I will ask my neighbors to come and help me cut it.'" "That is good," said the old lark. "Must we not leave the nest?" asked the young ones. "No," said the mother. "If the man waits for his neighbors to come and help him, he will wait a long time." Next day the owner came again. "This wheat must be cut," said he. "I cannot wait for my neighbors. I must ask my uncles and cousins." When the old lark came home, the young ones said: "O, mother! we must leave the nest now. "The man said that he should ask his uncles and cousins to help him cut the wheat." "We will not go yet," said the mother. "If he waits for his uncles and cousins, he will wait a long time." The next day the man came again. His boy was with him. "We can't wait any longer," he said. "We must cut the wheat ourselves." Soon the mother lark came home. The young ones told her what the man had said. "Now we must be off," she cried. "When a man sets out to do his work himself, it will be done." So the lark and her young ones left the nest and found another home. THE DOG AND HIS SHADOW A dog once had a piece of meat. He was going home with it. On the way he had to go across a bridge over some water. He looked into the water, and there he thought he saw another dog. The dog looked like himself and had a piece of meat in his mouth, too. It was his shadow in the water. "That meat looks good. I want it," said the dog. "My piece is not big enough. I will take the meat away from that other dog." So he barked at the other dog. As he opened his mouth to bark, his piece of meat fell into the water. "Splash!" it went, and that was the last he ever saw of it. "If I had let that dog keep his piece of meat, I should not have lost my own," he said. THE FOX AND THE GRAPES A hungry fox once saw some sweet grapes hanging over a wall. "I want those grapes," he said to himself. So he jumped for them. He did not get them. He jumped again. Still he did not get them. He jumped again and again. They were too high. At last he gave it up and went away. "I don't want those grapes," he said. "They are sour grapes. I know they are sour. They are not fit to eat." POEMS BY MARY MAPES DODGE FOUR LITTLE BIRDS Four little birds all flew from their nest-- Flew north, flew south, flew east and west; They thought they would like a wider view, So they spread their wings and away they flew. IN THE BASKET Hark! do you hear my basket Go "kippy! kippy! peek"? Maybe my funny basket Is learning how to speak. If you want to know the secret, Go ask the speckled hen, And tell her when I've warmed them I'll bring them back again. COUSIN JEREMY He came behind me and covered my eyes; "Who is this?" growled he, so sly. "Why, Cousin Jeremy, how can I tell, When my eyes are shut?" said I. LITTLE MISS LIMBERKIN Little Miss Limberkin, Dreadful to say, Found a mouse in the cupboard Sleeping away. Little Miss Limberkin Gave such a scream, She frightened the little mouse Out of its dream. SNOWFLAKES Little white feathers, Filling the air; Little white feathers, How came you there? "We came from the cloud birds Sailing so high; They're shaking their white wings Up in the sky." Little white feathers, How swift you go! Little white snowflakes, I love you so! "We are swift because We have work to do; But hold up your face, And we'll kiss you true." HOLLYHOCK Hollyhock, hollyhock, bend for me; I need a cheese for my dolly's tea. I'll put it soon on an acorn plate, And dolly and I shall feast in state. GERMAN FAIRY TALES THE LITTLE PINE TREE Once a little pine tree grew in a valley. It was covered with needles that were always beautiful and green. But it did not like the needles. The little tree said: "All the other trees in the woods have beautiful leaves, but I have only needles. I do not like needles. I wish I could have leaves. But I should like to be more beautiful than the other trees. I should not like green leaves. I should like gold leaves." The little tree went to sleep. A fairy happened to be passing and said to herself: "This little pine tree would like gold leaves. It shall have them." Next morning the tree woke up and found that it was covered with leaves of shining gold. "How beautiful!" said the tree. "No other tree has gold leaves!" Soon a man came by with a bag. He saw the gold leaves. He ran to the little pine tree and began to pull them off and to put them into his bag. He pulled them all off and carried them away. The little pine tree was bare. "O," cried the little tree, "I don't want gold leaves any more, for men will take them away. I want something beautiful that they will not take away. I think I should like glass leaves." The little tree went to sleep. The fairy came by again and said: "This little tree wants glass leaves. It shall have them." Next morning the tree woke up and found that it was covered with leaves of shining glass. How they shone in the sun! "These leaves are much better than gold leaves," said the little tree. "They are very beautiful." But a wind came down the valley. It blew and it blew. It blew the glass leaves together and broke them all to pieces. The little pine tree was bare again. "I don't want glass leaves," said the little tree. "I want leaves that will not break. Perhaps green leaves are best, after all, but I want leaves. I don't want needles." The little tree went to sleep. The fairy came by again and said: "This little tree wants green leaves. It shall have them." Next morning when the tree woke up it was covered with green leaves. "This is fine!" said the tree. "Now I am like the other trees, but more beautiful." Soon a goat came down the valley. "These leaves look good," said the goat. So he ate them all up. The little pine tree was bare again. "I think I don't want leaves after all," said the little pine tree. "Gold leaves are beautiful, but men carry them away. Glass leaves are beautiful, but the wind breaks them. Green leaves are beautiful, but goats eat them. My old green needles were best. I wish I could have them back." The little pine tree went to sleep. The fairy came by again, and said: "This little tree has found out that needles were best for it after all. It shall have them back." Next morning the tree woke up and had the old green needles again. Then it was happy. THE FAITHFUL BEASTS Once upon a time a man went out to seek his fortune. As he walked along, he came to a town and saw some boys teasing a mouse. "Let the poor mouse go. I will pay you if you will let it go," said the man. He gave the boys a penny. They let the mouse go, and it ran away. After this the man went on till he came to another town. There he saw some boys playing with a monkey. They had hurt the poor beast so that he cried out with pain. "Let the monkey go," said the man. "I will pay you to let him go." So he gave the boys some money. They let the monkey go, and the monkey ran away. The man went on, and by and by he came to another town. There he saw some boys trying to make a bear dance. They had tied the bear with a rope and were beating him. "Let the poor bear go," said the man. "I will pay you to let him go." He gave the boys some money, and they let the poor beast go. The bear, was glad to be free and walked off as fast as he could. The man had spent all his money. He had not a penny left. He was hungry too, and could get nothing to eat. Then the king's men took him and put him into a great box. They shut and fastened the lid, and threw the box into the water. The man floated about in the water many days and thought he should never see the light again. At last he heard something gnaw and scratch at the lid. Then the lid flew open. The box was on the shore, and there stood the bear, the monkey, and the mouse beside it. They had helped him because he had helped them. As they stood there, a round white stone rolled down to the water. "This has come just in time," said the bear. "It is a magic stone and will take its owner wherever he wishes to go." The man picked up the stone and wished he were in a castle with gardens around it. All at once the castle and the gardens were there, and he was in the castle. It was very beautiful. Soon some merchants came by. "See this fine castle," said one to another. "There was never a castle here till now." The merchants went in and asked the man how he had built the castle so quickly. "I did not do it," said the man. "My magic stone built it." "Let us see the stone," said the merchants. The man showed them the stone. Then the merchants showed him gold and silver and diamonds and other beautiful things, and said: "We will give you all these if you will give us the stone." The things looked very beautiful to the man, so he took them and gave the stone to the merchants. All at once he found himself again in the dark box on the water. As soon as the bear, the monkey, and the mouse saw what had happened, they tried to help him. But the lid was fastened more strongly than before. They could not open it. "We must have that stone again," said the bear. So the three faithful beasts went back to the castle and found the merchants there. The mouse looked under the door and said: "The stone is fastened with a red ribbon under the looking-glass, and beside it are two great cats with eyes of fire." The bear and the monkey said: "Wait till the men go to sleep. Then run quickly under the door, jump quickly up on the bed, scratch the nose of one of the men, and bite off one of his whiskers." The mouse did as he was told. The merchant woke up and rubbed his nose. Then he said: "Those cats are good for nothing. They let the mice in, and the mice eat up my very whiskers." So he drove the cats away. The next night the mouse went in again. The merchants were asleep. The mouse gnawed at the ribbon till it gave way, and the stone fell. Then he rolled the stone out under the door. The monkey took it and carried it down to the water. "How shall we get out to the box?" asked the monkey. "I will tell you," said the bear. "Sit on my back and hold fast. Carry the stone in your mouth. The mouse will sit in my right ear, and I will swim out to the box." They did as the bear said, and were soon out in the water. No one said anything, and it was very still. The bear wanted to talk. "How are you, Monkey?" he asked. The monkey said nothing. "Why don't you talk to me?" asked the bear. "Silly!" said the monkey. "How do you think I can talk when I have a stone in my mouth?" As he said this, the stone rolled out into the water. "Never mind," said the bear. "The frogs will get it for us." So he asked the frogs to get it, and one of them brought it to him. "Thank you," said the bear. "That is what we need." Then the three faithful beasts broke open the great box. They gave the stone to the man. He took it and wished himself in the castle again, and wished the three faithful beasts with him. At once they were in the castle. The merchants were gone. So the man and his three faithful beasts lived there ever after. POEMS BY ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON WHERE GO THE BOATS? Dark brown is the river, Golden is the sand; It flows along for ever, With trees on either hand. Green leaves a-floating, Castles of the foam, Boats of mine a-boating-- Where will all come home? On goes the river And out past the mill, Away down the valley, Away down the hill. Away down the river, A hundred miles or more, Other little children Shall bring my boats ashore. AT THE SEASIDE When I was down beside the sea A wooden spade they gave to me To dig the sandy shore. My holes were empty like a cup; In every hole the sea came up, Till it could come no more. RAIN The rain is raining all around; It falls on field and tree, It rains on the umbrellas here And on the ships at sea. AUTUMN FIRES In the other gardens And all up the vale, From the autumn bonfires See the smoke trail! Pleasant summer over And all the summer flowers; The red fire blazes, The gray smoke towers. Sing a song of seasons! Something bright in all! Flowers in the summer, Fires in the fall! THE WIND I saw you toss the kites on high And blow the birds about the sky, And all around I heard you pass Like ladies' skirts across the grass-- O wind, a-blowing all day long O wind, that sings so loud a song! I saw the different things you did, But always you yourself you hid; I felt you push, I heard you call, I could not see yourself at all-- O wind, a-blowing all day long, O wind, that sings so loud a song! O you that are so strong and cold, O blower, are you young or old? Are you a beast of field and tree, Or just a stronger child than me? O wind, a-blowing all day long, O wind, that sings so loud a song! HINDU FABLES THE TIMID HARES Once there was a timid little hare who was always afraid something dreadful was going to happen. She was always saying, "What if the earth should fall in? What would happen to me then?" One day, after she had been saying this to herself many times, a great coconut fell from a tree. "What was that!" said the hare. She jumped as if she had been shot. "The earth must be falling in!" she cried. So she ran and she ran as fast as she could run. Soon she met another hare. "O Brother Hare," she said, "run for your life! The earth is falling in!" "What is that you say!" cried the other hare. "Then I will run, too." This hare told another hare, and the other hare told other hares, and soon all the hares were running as fast as they could run, and crying: "The earth is falling in! O, the earth is falling in!" The big beasts heard them, and they too began to run and to cry: "O, the earth is falling in! Run for your life!" A wise old lion saw them running and heard them crying. "I cannot see that the earth is falling in," he said. Then he cried out to the poor frightened beasts to stop. "What are you saying?" he asked. "We said the earth is falling in," answered the elephants. "What makes you think so?" asked the lion. "The tigers told us," said the elephants. "What makes the tigers think so?" "The bears told us," said the tigers. "What makes the bears think so?" "The buffaloes told us," said the bears. "Why do the buffaloes think so?" "The deer told us," said the buffaloes. "Why do the deer think so?" "The monkeys told us so," said the deer. "And how did the monkeys know?" "The jackals said so," said the monkeys. "And how did the jackals know?" "The hares said it was so," said the jackals. "And how did the hares know?" One of the hares then said that another hare told him, and the other hare said that another told him, and so it went on until at last they came to the first little hare. "Little hare," said the lion, "why did you say that the earth was falling in?" "I saw it," said the little hare. "Where?" asked the lion. "I saw it there, under that big coconut tree," said the little hare. "Come and show me," said the lion. "O, no, no!" said the little hare. "I am so frightened. I couldn't go." "Jump on my back," said the lion. The little hare at last jumped up on the lion's back, and the lion took her back to the big tree. Just then another coconut fell with a great noise among the leaves. "O, run, run!" cried the timid hare. "There is that dreadful thing again!" "Stop and look," said the lion. As the hare could not get down from the lion's back, she had to stop and look. "Now what do you think it is?" asked the lion. "I think it must be a coconut," said the little hare. "Then I think you had better go and tell the other beasts," said the lion. So the little hare told the other beasts that the earth was not falling in, after all. It was a coconut that was falling. THE SHOE (A man once left his shoe in the woods. The beasts found it. They had never seen anything like it before, so they came together and began to talk about it.) BEAR. It must be the husk or the outside of some fruit. ALL THE BIRDS. O, just hear him! ALL THE BEASTS. O, just hear him! WOLF. No, that is not it. It is some kind of nest. See! Here is the hole at the top, for the bird to go into, and here is the place for the eggs and the young birds. BIRDS. O, just hear him! BEAR. Just hear him talk! GOAT. No, you are both wrong. It is the root of some plant. (He showed them the shoe string hanging at the side.) See this long, fine root. Surely it is a root! BIRDS. O, just hear him talk! BEASTS. Just hear him! BEAR. I tell you it is the husk of a fruit. WOLF. And I tell you it is a nest. GOAT. And I tell you it is a root. Surely it is a root! OWL. Let me speak. I have lived among men, and I have seen many such things as this. It is a man's shoe. BEAR. What is a man? GOAT. What is a shoe? OWL. A man is a thing with two legs. He can stand up like a monkey, he can walk like a bird, but he cannot fly. He can eat and talk, and he can do many things that we cannot do. BEASTS. O, no! BIRDS. No, no! BEAR. How can that be? How can anything with two legs do more than we, who have four? BIRDS. And this thing you call a man cannot be good for much if he cannot fly. GOAT. But what does the man do with this root? OWL. It is not a root. I tell you it is a shoe. WOLF. And what is a shoe? OWL. It is what the man puts on his feet. He puts one of these shoes on each of his feet. BIRDS. Hear the owl talk! BEASTS. Who ever heard of such a thing as a shoe? GOAT. Hear that! The man puts them on his feet! WOLF. It is not true! BEAR. No, it is not true! The owl doesn't know. WOLF. You know nothing, Owl. Get out of our woods. You are not fit to live with us. BEAR. Yes, Owl, go away! BEASTS. Leave us! Go away! BIRDS. Leave us! Leave us, Owl! You surely don't know what you are talking about! (The beasts chase the owl out of the woods.) OWL. (Going off) But it is a shoe, anyway. THE CAMEL AND THE JACKAL Once upon a time a camel and a jackal lived together by the side of a river. One fine morning the jackal said: "There is a big field of sugar cane over on the other side of the river. Take me on your back, Brother Camel, and I will show you where it is. You may eat all the sugar cane, and I will find some crabs or fish on the shore." This pleased the camel very much. So he waded through the river and carried the jackal on his back. The jackal could not swim. The camel found the sugar cane, and the jackal found some crabs. The jackal ate much faster than the camel and soon had enough. "Now, Brother Camel," he said, "take me back. I have had enough." "But I haven't," said the camel. So the camel went on eating. The jackal tried to think how he could make the camel go home. At last he thought of a way. He began to bark and to cry and to make such a noise that all the men from the village ran out to see what was going on. There they found the camel eating the sugar cane, and at once they beat the poor beast with sticks and so drove him out of the field. "Brother Camel, hadn't you better go home now?" asked the jackal. "Yes, jackal, jump on my back," said the camel. The jackal jumped on his back, and the camel waded through the river with him. As he went, he said to the jackal: "Brother Jackal, I think you have not been very good to me to-day. Why did you make such a noise?" "O, I don't know," said the jackal. "It's a way I sometimes have. I like to sing a little, after dinner." The camel waded on. When they got out where the water was deep, the camel stopped and said, "Jackal, I feel as if I must roll a little in the water. "O, no, no!" said the jackal. "Why do you want to do that?" "O, I don't know," said the camel. "It's a way I sometimes have. I like to roll a little, after dinner." With that, he rolled over, and the jackal fell into the water. POEMS BY LAURA E. RICHARDS[1] THE BUMBLEBEE The bumblebee, the bumblebee, He flew to the top of the tulip tree. He flew to the top, But he could not stop, For he had to get home to his early tea. The bumblebee, the bumblebee, He flew away from the tulip tree; But he made a mistake, And flew into the lake, And he never got home to his early tea. [1] Copyright, 1890, by Little, Brown, and Company. LITTLE BROWN BOBBY Little Brown Bobby sat on the barn floor, Little Brown Bossy looked in at the door. Little Brown Bobby said, "Lackaday! Who'll drive me this little Brown Bossy away?" Little Brown Bobby said, "Shoo! shoo! shoo!" Little Brown Bossy said, "Moo! moo! moo!" This frightened them so that both of them cried, And wished they were back at their mammy's side. JIPPY AND JIMMY Jippy and Jimmy were two little dogs. They went to sail on some floating logs; The logs rolled over, the dogs rolled in, And they got very wet, for their clothes were thin. Jippy and Jimmy crept out again. They said, "The river is full of rain!" They said, "The water is far from dry! Ki-hi! ki-hi! ki-_hi_-yi! ki-hi!" Jippy and Jimmy went shivering home. They said, "On the river no more we will roam; And we won't go to sail until we learn how, Bow-wow! bow-wow! bow-_wow_-wow! bow-wow!" THE SONG OF THE CORN POPPER Pip! pop! flippety flop! Here am I, all ready to pop. Girls and boys, the fire burns clear; Gather about the chimney here, Big ones, little ones, all in a row. Hop away! pop away! here we go! Pip! pop! flippety flop! Into the bowl the kernels drop; Sharp and hard and yellow and small, Must say they don't look good at all; But wait till they burst into warm white snow! Hop away! pop away! here we go! Pip! pop! flippety flop! Shake me steadily; do not stop! Backward and forward, not up and down; Don't let me drop, or you'll burn it brown. Never too high and never too low; Hop away! pop away! here we go! A FRENCH FAIRY TALE THE FAIRY Once on a time there was a woman who had two daughters. The older was very much like her mother, and was very ugly. The younger was not like her, but was very good and beautiful. The woman liked the older girl because she was like herself. She did not like the younger; so she made her do all the hard work. One day the younger daughter had gone to the spring to get water. It was a long way from home. As she was standing by the spring, a poor old woman came by and asked her for a drink. "Indeed, you shall have a drink," said the girl. She filled her pitcher and gave the old woman some water. The woman drank, and then said, "You are so kind and good, my dear, that I will give you a gift." Now this old woman was a fairy, but the girl did not know it. "I will give you a gift," she said, "and this shall be the gift: With every word that you speak, either a flower or a jewel shall fall from your mouth." When the younger girl came home, her mother scolded her because she had been so long at the spring. "I am very sorry indeed, mother," said the girl. At once two roses, two pearls, and two diamonds fell from her mouth. "What is this!" cried the mother. "I think I see pearls and diamonds falling out of your mouth! How does this happen, my child?" This was the first time the woman had ever called her "my child." The girl told her all that had happened, and while she spoke, many more diamonds fell from her mouth. "Well, well, well!" said the woman, "I must surely send my dear Fanny to the spring, so that she too may have this gift." Then she called her older daughter. "Fanny, my dear, come here! See what has happened to your sister. Should you not like to have such diamonds whenever you wish them? "All you need to do is to go out to the spring to get some water. An old woman will ask for a drink and you will give it to her." "I think I see myself going out there to the spring to get water!" said the older daughter. "Go at once!" said the mother. So the older daughter went. She took with her the best silver pitcher in the house, and grumbled all the way. When she had come to the spring, she saw a lady in beautiful clothes standing under a tree. The lady came to her and asked for a drink. It was really the fairy, but now she looked like a princess. The older daughter did not know that it was the fairy, so she said: "Do you think that I came to the spring to get water just for you, or that I brought this fine silver pitcher so that you could drink from it? Drink from the spring if you wish." "You are not very polite, I think," said the fairy, "but I will give you a gift, and this shall be the gift: With every word that you speak, either a snake or a toad shall fall from your mouth." When the older daughter went back to the house, her mother called out, "Well, daughter?" "Well, mother," said the girl, and as she spoke, a snake and a toad fell out of her mouth. "What!" cried the mother. "Your sister has done all this, but she shall pay for it!" With that, the mother took a stick and ran after the younger daughter. The poor child ran away from her and hid in the woods. The prince of that country had been hunting and happened to pass through those woods on his way home. He saw the young girl and asked her why she was standing there and crying, all alone in the woods. "O sir, my mother has turned me out of the house," she said. The prince was greatly surprised to see five or six pearls and as many diamonds fall from her mouth as she spoke. "Tell me how all this happened," said the prince. So she told him all about it. The prince took her with him, and they went to the king's house, and there they were married, and were very happy. But the older sister grew more and more ugly in her heart, until even her mother could not live with her. So her mother turned her out, and no one ever heard of her again. A NORSE FOLK TALE EAST OF THE SUN AND WEST OF THE MOON Once there was a poor woodcutter who had so many children that it was hard to get enough for them to eat. They were all pretty children, but the youngest daughter was the prettiest of them all. One cold, dark night in the fall they were sitting around the fire, when all at once something went rap! rap! rap! on the window. The father went out to see what it was, and there stood a big white bear. "Good evening," said the bear. "The same to you," said the man. "Give me your youngest daughter, and you shall be rich," said the bear. "You can't have her," said the man. "Think it over," said the bear, "I will come again next week." Then the bear went away. They talked it over and at last the youngest daughter said that she would go away with the bear when he came back. Next Thursday night they heard the rap! rap! rap! on the window, and there was the white bear again. The girl went out and climbed up on his back and off they went. When they had gone a little way, the bear turned around and asked, "Are you afraid?" No, she was not afraid. "Well, hold fast to me, and there will be nothing to be afraid of," said the bear. They went a long, long way, until they came to a great hill. The bear knocked on the ground, and a door opened. They went in. It was a castle, with many lights, and it shone with silver and gold. The white bear gave to the girl a silver bell, and said to her, "Ring this bell when you want anything." Then he went away. Every night, when all the lights had been put out, the bear came and talked with her. He slept in a bed in the great hall. But it was so dark that she could never see him, or know how he looked, and when she took his paw, it was not like a paw. It was like a hand. She wanted so much to see him! but he told her she must not. At last she felt that she could not wait any longer. So one night, when he was asleep, she lighted a candle and bent over and looked at him. What do you think she saw? It was not a bear, but a prince, and the most beautiful prince that was ever seen! She was so surprised that her hand began to shake, and three drops from the candle fell upon the coat of the prince. This woke him up. "What have you done?" he cried. "You have brought trouble upon us. An ugly witch turned me into a bear, but every night I am myself again, and if you had waited only a year, and had not tried to find me out, I should have been free. "Now I must go back to my other castle and marry an ugly princess with a nose three yards long." The girl cried and cried and cried, but it did no good. She asked if she could go with him, but he said that she could not. "Tell me the way there," she said, "and I will find you." "It is East of the Sun and West of the Moon, but there is no way to it," he said. Next morning when the girl awoke, she found herself all alone in the deep woods. She set out and walked and walked till she came to a very old woman sitting under a hill. The old woman had a golden apple in her hand. The girl asked the woman to tell her the way to the castle of the prince who lived East of the Sun and West of the Moon. The old woman didn't know, but she gave the girl the golden apple, and lent her a horse, and said to her: "Ask my next neighbor. Maybe she will know. And when you find her, switch my horse under the left ear and tell him to be off home." So the girl got on the horse and rode until she came to an old woman with a golden comb. This old woman answered her as the first had done, and lent her another horse and gave her the golden comb. The girl got on the horse and rode till she came to another old woman spinning on a golden spinning wheel. This old woman did as the others had done, and lent her another horse and gave her the golden spinning wheel. "You might ask the East Wind. Maybe he will know," she said. So the girl rode on until she came to the house of the East Wind. "I have heard of the prince and his castle, but I never went so far as that," said the East Wind. "Get on my back, and I will carry you to my brother, the West Wind. Maybe he will know." She got on his back, and away they went. O how fast they went! At last they found the West Wind, but he had never been so far as the castle of the prince. "Get on my back," said West Wind, "and I will take you to our brother, the South Wind. He will know, for he has been everywhere." So she got on the West Wind, and away they went to the South Wind. "It is a long way to that castle," said the South Wind, with a sigh. "I have never been so far as that, but our brother, the North Wind, is stronger than any of us. If he has not been there, you will never find the way, and you might as well give it up. So get on my back, and I will take you to him." The girl got on the back of the South Wind, and soon they came to where the North Wind lived. "Boo-oo-oo! What do you want?" roared the North Wind. "Here is a girl who is looking for the prince that lives East of the Sun and West of the Moon. Do you know where that is?" asked the South Wind. "Yes, once I blew a leaf as far as that, and I was so tired after it that I couldn't blow for a long time. But if you are sure you want to go and are not afraid, I'll take you." Yes, she was sure she wanted to go. North Wind blew himself out so big that he was dreadful to look at. But she jumped on his back, and away they went. How they did go! The North Wind grew so tired that he almost had to stop. His feet began to trail in the sea. "Are you afraid?" he asked. No, she was not afraid. So they kept going on and on, till at last they came to the castle, and the North Wind put her down and went away and left her. The next morning, as she sat there, Princess Long-Nose looked out of the window. "What will you take for your big golden apple?" asked Long-Nose. "It is not for sale," said the girl. "I will give you anything you ask," said Long-Nose. "Let me speak to the prince, and you may have it," said the girl. "Very well," said Long-Nose. She made the girl wait till night, and then let her in, but the prince was fast asleep. He would not wake up. Long-Nose had given him a kind of drink to make him sleep soundly. So the girl went sadly out. Next morning Long-Nose looked out of the window and said to her, "What will you take for the comb?" "It is not for sale," said the girl. Long-Nose said that the girl might see the prince again if she would give her the comb. So she saw the prince again, but he was asleep as before. Next morning Long-Nose looked out and saw the spinning wheel. She wanted that too. So she said she would let the girl come in and see the prince once more if she would give her the spinning wheel. Some one told the prince about it, and that night he did not take the drink which Long-Nose gave to him. He threw it out of the window. When the girl came, he was awake, and she told him her story. "You are just in time," said the prince, "for to-morrow I was to be married to Long-Nose. "Now I will have no one but you. I will tell Long-Nose that I will marry no one who cannot wash three drops of candle grease out of my coat. She cannot do it, but I know that you can." So the next morning the prince said that he must have three drops of grease washed out of his coat, and that he would marry no one who couldn't wash them out. Long-Nose began to wash the coat, but she couldn't get the grease out. It turned black. Then the old witch tried, but she had no better luck. Then the younger witches tried. "You cannot wash," said the prince. "I believe the poor girl out under the window can wash better than you. Let her try." So the girl came in and tried, and as soon as she put the coat into the water it was white as snow. "You are the girl for me!" said the prince. At this the old witch flew into such a rage that she fell to pieces, and Princess Long-Nose fell to pieces, and the younger witches all fell to pieces. And no one could ever put them together again. The prince married the poor girl, and they flew away as far as they could from the castle that lay East of the Sun and West of the Moon. POEMS BY ABBIE FARWELL BROWN THE SAILOR Little girl, O little girl, Where did you sail to-day? The greeny grass is all about; I cannot see the bay. "The greeny grass is water, sir; I'm sailing on the sea, I'm tacking to the Island there Beneath the apple tree. "You ought to come aboard my boat, Or you will soon be drowned! You're standing in the ocean, sir, That billows all around!" Little girl, O little girl, And must I pay a fare? "A penny to the apple tree, A penny back from there. "A penny for a passenger, But sailors voyage free; O, will you be a sailor, sir, And hold the sheet for me?" A MUSIC BOX I am a little music box, Wound up and made to go, And play my little living tune The best way that I know. If I am naughty, cross, or rude, The music will go wrong, My little works be tangled up And spoil the pretty song. I must be very sweet and good And happy all the day, And then the little music box In tune will always play. AMERICAN INDIAN LEGENDS LITTLE SCAR-FACE Among the pine trees, by a quiet lake, stood the wigwam of a great Indian whose name was Big Moose. His sister kept the wigwam for him, and took care of all that was his. Her name was White Maiden. No one but White Maiden had ever seen Big Moose. The Indians could see the marks of his feet in the snow, and they could hear his sled as it ran over the ice, but they could not see him. It was said that this was because they were not kind and good. White Maiden was kind and good, and she could always see him. One day White Maiden called all the Indian maidens and said: "My brother, Big Moose, wishes to marry, but he will not marry any one who cannot see him, and only those who are good can see him." All the Indian maidens were glad when they heard that Big Moose wished to marry. They had all heard how brave and strong he was, and what a great hunter he was, and how kind and good and wonderful he was, in every way. Each wished that he would choose her for his wife, and each was very sure that she could see him. For a long time after that the Indian maidens would go down to the wigwam of Big Moose, by the lake, and try to see him. Every evening some of them would go at sunset and sit and watch for him. When he came they would hear him, and the door of the wigwam would be opened, and he would go in, but they could not see him. At the other end of the village lived an old Indian with his three daughters. The two older daughters were not kind to the youngest one. They made her do all the work and gave her little to eat. The oldest sister had a very hard heart. Once, when she was angry, she threw a pail of hot ashes at the youngest sister. The child's face was burned, and she was called Little Scar-Face. One day in early winter, when the first white snow lay on the ground, the oldest sister said: "Come, Scar-Face, bring me my shell beads and help me to dress. I am going to marry Big Moose." Little Scar-Face brought the beads and put them on the oldest sister and helped her to dress. At sunset the oldest sister went down to the wigwam by the lake. White Maiden asked her to come in. By and by they heard Big Moose. They could hear his sled running through the snow. White Maiden took the sister to the door of the wigwam and said, "Can you see my brother?" "Yes, I can see him very well," answered the other. "Then look and tell me what the string of his sled is made of," said White Maiden. "It is made of moose skin," said the sister of Little Scar-Face. "No, it is not made of moose skin. You have not seen my brother. You must go away," said White Maiden. So she drove out the oldest sister. Next day the next to the oldest sister said to Little Scar-Face: "Come, Scar-Face, bring me my shell beads and help me to dress. I am going to marry Big Moose." Little Scar-Face brought the beads and helped her sister to dress. In the evening, just at sunset, the sister went down through the pine trees to the lake. "Come in," said White Maiden. Soon they heard Big Moose coming. "Can you see my brother?" asked White Maiden. "Yes, I can see him very well," said the other. "Then what is his sled string made of?" asked White Maiden. "It is made of deerskin," said the other. "No, it is not made of deerskin," said White Maiden. "You have not seen my brother. You must go away." And she drove her out. The next morning Little Scar-Face worked very hard. She built the fire and carried out all the ashes and brought in the wood and did everything that she could. Then she said to her two sisters, "Sisters, let me take your beads. I too should like to find out if I can see Big Moose." Her sisters laughed loud and long. They would not let her take their beads. No, indeed! At last one of the sisters said she had an old broken string of beads that Scar-Face might take. So Little Scar-Face took the old broken string of beads and tied it together and put it on. Then she made a queer little dress out of birch bark, and she washed herself all fresh and clean, and brushed her hair, and put on the dress and the old string of beads. So she went down through the village and the dark pine woods to the wigwam of Big Moose. She was not a pretty child, for her face and hair were burned, and her clothes were very queer. But White Maiden asked her to come in and spoke kindly to her. So she went in and sat down. Soon she heard Big Moose coming. White Maiden took her to the door of the wigwam and said: "Little Scar-Face, can you see my brother?" "Yes, indeed, and I am afraid, for his face is very wonderful and very beautiful." "What is his sled string made of?" asked White Maiden. "How wonderful! how wonderful!" cried Little Scar-Face. "His sled string is the rainbow!" Big Moose heard her and said, "Sister, wash the eyes and hair of Little Scar-Face in the magic water." White Maiden did so, and every scar faded away, and the hair of Little Scar-Face grew long and black, and her eyes were like two stars. White Maiden put a wonderful dress of deerskin and a string of golden beads on Little Scar-Face, and she was more beautiful than any of the other maidens. And Big Moose made her his wife. THE HUNTER WHO FORGOT Once there was a great hunter who was very rich. He had many strings of shell money around his neck. The Indians call these shells wampum. In the woods near his home lived a big white elk that used to come and talk to him. The elk told him what was right and what was wrong. The Great Spirit sent the elk to him. When he obeyed the elk, he was happy and everything went well, but when he did not obey, he was not happy, and everything went wrong. One day the elk said to him: "You are too hungry for wampum. Look! your neck and shoulders are covered with long strings of wampum. Some of it belongs to your wife. You took it from her. You took some of it from other Indians and gave them deer meat that was not fit to eat. You are not honest." The hunter was much ashamed, but he would not give back the wampum. He thought too much of it to give it back. "I will give you enough wampum to fill your heart," said the elk, "but you must do just as I tell you. Will you do it?" "I will do it," said the hunter. "Go to the top of the great white mountain. There you will find a black lake. Across the lake are three black rocks. One of them is like the head of a moose. "Dig in the earth before this rock. There you will find a cave full of wampum. It is on strings of elk skin. Take all you want. "While you dig, twelve otters will come out of the black lake. Put a string of wampum around the neck of each of the otters and upon each of the three black rocks." The hunter went back to the village. There he got an elk-horn pick and set out. No one knew where he went. He made his camp that night at the foot of the great white mountain. As soon as it was light, he began to climb up the mountain side. At last he stood on the top, and there before him was a great hollow. It was so great that he could not shoot an arrow across it. The hollow was white with snow, but in the middle was a black lake, and on the other side of the lake stood the three black rocks. The hunter walked around the lake over the snow. Then he took the elk-horn pick and struck one blow before the black rock which looked like the head of a moose. Four great otters came up out of the black lake and sat beside him. He struck another blow. Four more otters came and sat behind him. He struck again. Four more otters came and sat on the other side. At last the pick struck a rock. The hunter dug it out, and beneath it was a cave full of wampum. The hunter put both of his hands into the wampum and played with it. It felt good. He took out great strings of it and put them around his neck and over his shoulders. He worked fast, for the sun was now going down, and he must go home. He put so many strings of wampum around his neck and shoulders that he could hardly walk. But he did not put any around the necks of the twelve otters, nor on the three black rocks. He did not give them one string--not one shell. He forgot what the white elk had told him. He did not obey. Soon it grew dark. He crept along by the shore of the big black lake. The otters jumped into it and swam and beat the water into white foam. A black mist came over the mountain. Then the storm winds came, and the Great Spirit was in the storm. It seemed as if the storm said, "You did not obey! You did not obey!" Then the thunder roared at him, "You did not obey!" The hunter was greatly frightened. He broke a great string of wampum and threw it to the storm winds, but the storm winds only laughed. He broke another string and threw it to the thunder voices, but the thunder roared louder than before. He threw away one string after another until all of them were gone. Then he fell upon the ground and went to sleep. He slept long. When he woke up he was an old man with white hair. He did not know what had happened, but he sat there and looked at the great mountain, and his heart was full of peace. "I have no wampum. I have given it all away. I am not hungry for it any more. I will go home," he said. He could hardly find his way, for the trees had grown across the trail. When at last he got home, no one but his wife knew him. She was now very old and had white hair like himself. She showed him a tall man near by, and said it was their baby. The hunter looked at them. "I have slept many moons," he said. He lived among the Indians long after that and taught them much. He taught them to keep their word, and to obey the Great Spirit. THE WATER LILY One summer evening, many years ago, some Indians were sitting out under the stars, telling stories. All at once they saw a star fall. It fell halfway down the sky. That night one of the Indians had a dream about the star. It seemed to come and stand beside him, and it was like a young girl, dressed all in white. She said, "I have left my home in the sky because I love the Indians and want to live among them. Call your wise men together and ask them what shape I shall take." The Indian woke up and called all the wise men together. Then he told them his dream. The wise men said, "Let her choose what shape she will take. She may live in the top of a tree, or she may live in a flower, or she may live where she will." Every night the star came down a little lower in the sky, and stood over the valley where the Indians lived, and made it very bright. Then one night it fell down upon the side of the mountain and became a white rose. But it was lonely on the mountain. The rose could see the Indians, but it could not hear them talk. So one day it left the mountain and came down into the plain and became a great white prairie flower. Here it lived for a time. But the buffaloes and the other wild beasts of the prairie ran all around it and over it, and it was afraid. One night the Indians saw a star go up from the prairie. They knew that it was the prairie flower and they thought that it was going back into the sky. But it floated toward them until it came over the lake that lay just beside them. It looked down into the lake, and there it saw its shadow and the shadows of the other stars that live in the sky. It came down lower and lower, and at last floated on the top of the water. The next morning the lake was covered with water lilies. "See! the stars have blossomed!" said all the children. But the wise men answered: "It is the white star and her sisters. They will stay with us." RUSSIAN FABLES FORTUNE AND THE BEGGAR A poor beggar, with a ragged old bag, crept along the road one day, begging his bread. As he went he grumbled to himself because there were so many rich men in the world. "The rich never think that they have enough," he said to himself. "They always want more than they have. Now if I had a very little money, I should be happy. I should not want too much." A fairy named Fortune, who brought good gifts to men, heard the poor beggar grumbling to himself and came to him. "Friend," said Fortune, "I have wanted to help you. Open your bag. I will give you all the gold that it will hold. But if any falls out upon the ground, it will turn to dust. Your bag is old. Don't try to have it too full, for if you do, it will break, and you will lose all." The beggar was so happy that he began to dance up and down. He opened his bag and let the gold run into it in a big, yellow stream. Soon the bag was almost full. "Is that enough?" asked Fortune. "No," said the beggar, "not yet." "The bag is old. It is going to break," said Fortune. "Never fear!" said the beggar. "But you are now a rich man. Isn't that enough?" asked Fortune. "A little more," said the beggar. "Now," said Fortune, "the bag is full, but take care, or you will lose it." "Just a little more," said the beggar. Fortune put in just a little more. The bag broke. All the gold fell through upon the ground and turned to dust. The beggar had nothing left but his old broken bag. He was as poor as he had been before. THE SPIDER AND THE BEE A merchant brought some linen to a fair and opened a shop. It was good linen, and many came to buy of him. A spider saw what was going on, and said to herself: "I can spin. Why shouldn't I open a shop, too?" So the spider opened a little shop in the corner of a window, and spun all night, and made a beautiful web. She hung it out where everybody could see it. "That is fine!" said the spider. "Surely, when the morning comes, all will want to buy it." At last the morning came. A man saw the web in the corner and swept it away, spider and all. "That is a pretty thing to do!" cried the spider. "I should like to ask whose work is the finer, mine or that merchant's?" A bee happened to fly past. "Yours is the finer," said the bee. "We all know that. But what is it good for? It will neither warm nor cover any one." THE STONE AND THE WORM (A stone lay in a field. A farmer and his son were talking near by.) FARMER. That was a fine rain we had this morning. SON. Yes, indeed! A rain like that makes everybody glad. FARMER. I have been wishing a long time for such a rain as that. SON. It was better than gold. (As they walked away, a worm crept out from under the stone. The stone called to the worm.) STONE. Friend Worm, did you hear what those men were saying? WORM. Yes, they were saying how good the rain was. STONE. What has the rain done, I should like to know? It rained two hours and made me all wet. WORM. That didn't hurt you. STONE. Yes, it did. But it hurts me more to hear everybody saying how fine the rain was. Why don't they talk about me? I have been here for hundreds of years. I hurt nobody. I wet nobody. I stay quietly where I am put. Yet nobody ever has a kind word for me. WORM. Stop your talk. This rain has helped the wheat and made it grow. And the wheat will help the farmer. It will give him bread. What have you ever given to anybody? THE FOX IN THE ICE Very early one winter morning a fox was drinking at a hole in the ice. While he was drinking, the end of his tail got into the water, and there it froze fast. He could have pulled it out and left some of the hairs behind, but he would not do this. "How can I spoil such a beautiful tail!" said the fox to himself. "No, I will wait a little. The men are asleep and will not catch me. Perhaps when the sun comes up the ice will melt." So he waited, and the water froze harder and harder. At last the sun came up. The fox could see men coming down to the pond. He pulled and pulled, but now his tail was frozen so fast that he could not pull it out. Just then a wolf came by. "Help me, friend," cried the fox, "or I shall be lost." The wolf helped him, and set him free very quickly. He bit off the tail of the fox. So the fox lost all of his fine great tail because he would not give up a little hair from it. POEMS BY FRANK D. SHERMAN CLOUDS The sky is full of clouds to-day, And idly, to and fro, Like sheep across the pasture, they Across the heavens go. I hear the wind with merry noise Around the housetops sweep, And dream it is the shepherd boys-- They're driving home their sheep. The clouds move faster now, and see! The west is red and gold; Each sheep seems hastening to be The first within the fold. I watch them hurry on until The blue is clear and deep, And dream that far beyond the hill The shepherds fold their sheep. Then in the sky the trembling stars Like little flowers shine out, While Night puts up the shadow bars, And darkness falls about. I hear the shepherd wind's good night, "Good night, and happy sleep!" And dream that in the east, all white, Slumber the clouds, the sheep. GHOST FAIRIES When the open fire is lit, In the evening after tea, Then I like to come and sit Where the fire can talk to me. Fairy stories it can tell, Tales of a forgotten race-- Of the fairy ghosts that dwell In the ancient chimney place. They are quite the strangest folk Anybody ever knew, Shapes of shadow and of smoke Living in the chimney flue. "Once," the fire said, "long ago, With the wind they used to rove, Gypsy fairies, to and fro, Camping in the field and grove. "Hither with the trees they came Hidden in the logs; and here, Hovering above the flame, Often some of them appear." So I watch, and sure enough, I can see the fairies! Then Suddenly there comes a puff-- Whish!--and they are gone again! DAISIES At evening when I go to bed I see the stars shine overhead; They are the little daisies white That dot the meadow of the night. And often while I'm dreaming so, Across the sky the moon will go; It is a lady, sweet and fair, Who comes to gather daisies there. For when at morning I arise, There's not a star left in the skies; She's picked them all and dropped them down Into the meadows of the town. OLD GREEK STORIES THE SUN, THE MOON, AND THE STAR GIANT A great many years ago the Greeks told beautiful stories about what they saw in the earth and in the sky and in the sea. They said the Sun drove each day across the sky in a car of fire, and gave light and heat to men. He always had a bow and arrows with him, and his arrows were the sunbeams. When he shot them very hard and struck men with them, the men were said to be sun-struck, but when he let the arrows fall gently on the earth, they did only good. The Sun was called Apollo. He was said to be a beautiful young man with golden hair, and he made wonderful music on a kind of harp called a lyre. Men loved him, but they were a little afraid of him, too; he was so bright and strong. His sister was the Moon. Her name was Artemis, or Diana. She rode through the sky at night in a silver car, and she, too, had a bow and arrows. Her bow was a silver bow, and her arrows were the moonbeams. She loved hunting, and often at night she would come down to earth and roam through the woods with her bow in her hand and her arrows at her side or on her back. In pictures she is always seen with a little new moon in her hair. Artemis was so beautiful that men were afraid to look at her. It was said that if any man should look full at her he would lose his mind. So when she came to those whom she did not wish to hurt, she covered herself with clouds. For a time the good giant Orion helped Artemis in her hunting, for he too was a great hunter. Artemis loved him as well as she loved any one, but she was very cold and did not care much for anybody. After a time Orion left her. He wanted to marry the daughter of a king in one of the islands of the sea. The king said that he might if he would drive all the wild beasts out of the island. Orion did this, but the king did not keep his word. Instead of that, he put out the eyes of Orion, but Orion went to Apollo, and was made to see again. Then Orion went back to help Artemis with her hunting, but Apollo did not like that and wished to get rid of him. He did not wish, himself, to hurt Orion, so he made Artemis do it. "Sister," he said to her one day, "some men say that you can shoot as well as I can, but we all know that is not so." "I should like to know why it is not so!" said Artemis. "Well, let us try," said Apollo. "Do you see that little black speck away out there in the sea?" "Yes, I see it," said Artemis. "Can you hit it?" asked Apollo. "Indeed I can," said Artemis; and with that she let an arrow fly from her bow. It went straight through the black speck. The black speck was the head of Orion. He was swimming back to Artemis from the country of the bad king. The speck at once went under the water and was seen no more. When Artemis found what she had done, she was very sad indeed. She could not bring Orion back to earth, but she took him up into the sky and put him among the stars, and there he is standing to this day. If you will look up into the sky on any clear winter night, you can see him. Just before him is his dog. We call it the Dog Star. THE WIND AND THE CLOUDS The Sun and the Moon had a brother, the Summer Wind. His name was Hermes, but sometimes he was called Mercury. He had shoes with wings on them, which always took him very quickly wherever he wished to go, and he had a magic cap which kept him from being seen. He ran on errands for his father and his older brothers. He went everywhere, and he often picked up things that lay in his way, and that didn't belong to him. One day, when he was a small child, he crept down to the seaside and there found the shell of a tortoise. He stretched some strings tightly across it, and blew upon the strings, and made wonderful music. He called this thing a lyre. On the same day, toward evening, he looked across the meadows and saw some beautiful white cows. His brother Apollo was looking after them. "What fun it would be to drive those cows away!" he said. So he crept up behind the cows while Apollo was not looking, and he drove them away. He drove them far, and at last shut them up in a cave, where he thought Apollo could not find them. Apollo saw that the cows were gone, and went to look for them, but he had a hard time. He thought that Hermes might have had something to do with them. So he went to Hermes. Hermes was playing upon the lyre which he had made, and was singing gently to himself. The music was so beautiful that Apollo forgot all about his cows. "Where did you find that wonderful thing?" asked Apollo. "O, I made it," said Hermes. "Let me see it!" cried Apollo. "Show me how to play upon it." Hermes showed him, and Apollo sat down and played until it grew dark. "O, give me this thing! I must have it," said Apollo. So Hermes gave it to him, and Apollo played upon it, gently at first, and then louder. He made such wild, sweet music as had never before been heard. To pay for the lyre, Apollo gave Hermes a magic stick which would bring sleep to men and would stop all quarreling. One day Hermes saw two snakes fighting. He touched them with the magic stick, and they stopped at once and wound themselves around it, and stayed there ever after. In the pictures of Hermes you will see this magic stick with the snakes around it. You will see, too, the cap and the shoes, with the wings upon them. When Hermes and Apollo had made these gifts to each other, Apollo said: "Hermes, my dear boy, you like my white cows so well that I am going to let you take care of them. I shall not have much time to take care of cows now, for you know I am learning to play upon the lyre." Hermes took care of the white cows after that, and on summer days he used to drive them across the blue meadows of the sky. When the Greeks saw the white clouds running before the wind, they would say: "It is Hermes driving his cows to pasture." THE RAINBOW BRIDGE Hermes was so useful that Juno, the queen of the heavens, thought she must have a messenger, too. So she took Iris, a little sky fairy. Iris lived up among the clouds, and played with the stars, and romped with the little winds. At night she used to sleep in the silver cradle of the Moon. Sometimes Apollo, the Sun, took her in his golden car. Sometimes she slipped down to earth with the rain. Sometimes she went to visit her grandfather, the gray old Sea. Her grandfather was always glad to see her, and when she came down, he would hitch up his white sea horses and drive her over the tops of the waves. What fun that was! Old grandfather Sea loved Iris very much, and Apollo loved her, and Juno loved her. No one who saw her could help loving her; she was so bright and beautiful and good. When Juno sent her down to the earth on errands, the old Sea always wanted her to stay. But Apollo, the Sun, wanted her, too, and Juno wanted her. At last the Sun and the Sea and the Air and the Rain all said they would make a bridge for Iris, so that she might go back and forth more quickly between the earth and the sky, on the errands of Juno. The Earth brought the colors of all her beautiful flowers--rose, and blue, and violet, and yellow, and orange, and the green of the grass. The Sea gave silver mist. The Clouds gave gray and gold. The Sun himself spun the bridge out of all these colors. Then he fastened one end of it to the sky and hung a pot of gold on the other end, to keep it from blowing away; and it is said that the pot of gold is still there in the earth at the end of the rainbow bridge. But no one has ever found it. POEMS OLD AND NEW THANK YOU, PRETTY COW Thank you, pretty cow, that made Pleasant milk to soak my bread, Every day and every night, Warm, and fresh, and sweet, and white. Do not chew the hemlock rank, Growing on the weedy bank; But the yellow cowslip eat, That will make it very sweet. Where the purple violet grows, Where the bubbling water flows, Where the grass is fresh and fine, Pretty cow, go there and dine. JANE TAYLOR PLAYGROUNDS In summer I am very glad We children are so small, For we can see a thousand things That men can't see at all. They don't know much about the moss And all the stones they pass; They never lie and play among The forests in the grass; But when the snow is on the ground, And all the puddles freeze, I wish that I were very tall, High up above the trees. LAURENCE ALMA-TADEMA SLEEP, BABY, SLEEP Sleep, baby, sleep! Thy father watches his sheep; Thy mother is shaking the dreamland tree, And down comes a little dream on thee. Sleep, baby, sleep! Sleep, baby, sleep! The great stars are the sheep; The little stars are the lambs, I guess, And the gentle moon is the shepherdess. Sleep, baby, sleep! FROM THE GERMAN A CHILD'S PRAYER When it gets dark, the birds and flowers Shut up their eyes and say good night; And God, who loves them, counts the hours And keeps them safe till it gets light. Dear Father! Count the hours to-night, When I'm asleep and cannot see; And in the morning may the light Shine for the birds and flowers and me! WILLIAM HAWLEY SMITH PHONETIC TABLES NOTE TO THE TEACHER. The vocabulary of this book is here rearranged for class drill. This should be given daily until the pupils are able to pronounce at least thirty words per minute either by following the columns or the lines. In this grade children may be expected to give the reasons for the several vowel sounds herein taught, but should not be required to commit and apply phonetic rules. As the words in a column are generally in the same phonetic group, column drills tend to fix the principle there presented. But in the line drills and in the review tables children must rely upon their own knowledge of the phonetic elements. Table I consists of monosyllabic words of not more than four letters in which a single consonant precedes a short vowel or in which a short vowel begins the word. There is a column for each vowel. Table II contains words with two consonants final or initial or both. Table III introduces vowels made long by final silent _e_. Table IV is a mixed review with some additional words. Table V contains long vowel digraphs and _y_ equivalent to long _i_, and has a review column of forms ending in _s_. Tables VI, VII, and VIII contain lists of words illustrating the remaining vowel sounds in frequent use throughout the book. Table IX presents groups of words taught by analogy. It also illustrates _c_, _g_, and _dg_, followed by silent _e_. Table X is a review of monosyllables with some additional words. Table XI teaches words of two syllables with the endings _ing_, short _y_, and _er_; also the elision of _e_. Column five is largely a review. Table XII presents three columns of words of two syllables illustrating the phonetic principles previously set forth. Column four illustrates the long vowel ending an accented syllable; column five gives final _ed_ pronounced as _d_ or _t_. Table XIII, column one, gives _a_ and _be_ as prefixes and _ful_ as a suffix; column two, silent letters; column three, contractions and possessives; column four and column five, unclassified phonetic words. Table XIV contains unphonetic words or words but partly phonetic. TABLE I sad met dim box sun ax yet dig fox cup bag wet bill top dug cap bell fit pop puff hand web kiss hop fun man nest lid dot husk sand bend hid not dust camp felt lit got but rap send rid pot must bad bent hit on run TABLE II rich drop still switch things ring spun dress struck banks neck flax flop swept ships witch than fresh whish pranks rank swim shell pluck wings hitch shot swift drink frogs bank thin crept spent rocks such sled stand string logs fish shop speck spring crabs TABLE III safe these fine shone tune crane here white those spoke plate cave life stone rode state shape pine hole rope spade flame side woke froze vale sale dine shore rove shake lake shine drove grove brave name drive smoke more TABLE IV when spade grove thin yes husk shine pranks these dwell ring smoke mist same drive must spent lent banks drove skin whish end tune puff shell logs snake shore here witch white things flame man drink gift melt frogs went drops elk stand pip spring thank still step such crabs dress wave mine dust struck TABLE V bee tea sail boat grapes sweep each pain goat boats three year rain road goats freeze bleat trail throat snakes thee leaf plain cloak shapes queer meat wait foam kites free scream pay toad miles wheel dream play roam flows feet wheat gray coat holes sweet feast bay soak seas need leaves sky goes years green beasts sly bow grows seek clear dry row tales deer grease try show rains deep beads thy low stones feel clean pies snow times week near lie grow seems peek stream tied grown waves sheet heat tried new skies cheese speaks cried knew Greeks TABLE VI far sharp sir nor burn car hard first for hurt dark scar birds corn turn lark stars birch north burst barn marks skirts storm purse hark yards perch horse purr TABLE VII ball glass moo true foot hall past shoo flue stood small grass room blew full tall ant root chew put paw fast moose rude pull walk last choose rule push TABLE VIII soft air word cows sour toss hair words town south moss fair worm brown round cross chair work owl loud strong care works tower wound long fare world flowers hours TABLE IX high kind old ice rage light mind gold mice orange bright find fold face hedge right grind hold place bridges night child told peace head fright wild cold prince spread TABLE X bars trail shore peace grass town grease shape child talk rage dance swift tight blew drink room watch freeze stood struck fair clear flows birch smoke snake soak worm sharp spade noise gray clouds bread south spoil world beasts hold strong counts small hitch shine grown harp wound white skirts queen quite storm bear true throat waves leaves care perch cried brown hedge cross burst TABLE XI spinning grassy never feeble Bossy mumbling woolly summer uncles every hunting ferry rivers needles gipsy pecking stormy owner castle Bobby barking funny sister bottle kippy hanging happy whiskers little Jippy filling sandy blower purple Jimmy shaking empty dinner puddles Fanny passing ugly gather gentle valley shining sorry pitcher beaten lilies trembling marry silver golden fairies sitting greeny hunter gardens teasing tacking thirsty otters wooden evening living angry thunder maiden perching begging lily farmer given camel driving lonely winter frozen jewel camping merry slumber hidden kernels swimming hurry hither frighten ragged growing gently either happen scolded bubbling weedy neither broken floated TABLE XII until errands snowflakes secret saved arrows cowslip boatman faded seemed billows seaside sunbeams waded turned swallow jackals moonbeams table tired yellow carried thousand blazes twirled shadow forests rainbow tigers growled hollow princess wampum tulip happened maybe hundred housetops roses rubbed basket hemlock ourselves lady grumbled magic insects shepherd music surprised flowers forgot wigwam quiet drowned timid within merchants giant tangled visit himself bonfires baby roared sunset window darkness finer used spirit appear strangest wider showed ashes indeed playgrounds cradle brushed voices forget dreamland stories dropped daisies outside sun-struck going stretched linen herself perhaps open romped coral mistake married Iris slipped TABLE XIII ago knew I've God fluttering arise comb I'll Ellen passenger around climb I'm Juno woodcutter ashamed lambs it's Hermes hollyhock across lambkins we'll Orion umbrellas ashore wrens you'll Diana bumblebee along wrong you've Childe lackaday afraid answered you're Jeremy shivering aboard sword they'll Mercury everything among honest they're Indian everywhere Apollo autumn didn't suddenly shepherdess belongs fastened don't overtops elephants before fighting who'll different buffaloes beyond tightly haven't coconut everybody because ought doesn't violet messenger beneath fought won't shouldn't Rowland beside brought ladies' mammy's Limberkin became taught she's myself Tom Tit Tot useful naughty there's polite Artemis faithful daughter dolly's speckled Thursday TABLE XIV son elves prayer building wonderful fro eyes colors together hovering sure to-day touched quarrel to-morrow blood floor instead eleven shoulders meant rolled months dreadful everywhere heard skeins obeyed feathers blossomed guess fruit twelve to-night neighbors warm built toward island hastening love ribbon beggar monkey steadily dove above fortune youngest pictures field pearls voyage seasons overhead piece forth country diamonds grandfather view ready coming chimney wherever buy acorn enough pasture pleasant folk friend anyway backward sugar cane both idly ancient forward learning does ghosts halfway prairie covered earth often loving trouble beautiful lyre sailor pretty anybody prettier lose ocean heaven nobody Englishman WORD LIST This list does not include words used in Book One. The numeral before each group refers to the page on which the words first appear. 11. Childe Rowland princess name Ellen ball 12. elves dark tower far 13. youngest 14. sword things 15. country head speaks 16. drop thirsty forget eyes knew 18. around each 20. dim light seemed himself hall gold silver diamonds shone sad 21. turned stone golden 22. floor free noise outside fee-fi-fo-fum blood Englishman fought 23. enough bottle 24. hand sister left 25. Tom Tit Tot hard daughter those meant soft 26. herself 27. spinning mumbling to-day heard spun skeins 28. fine eleven months every year 29. anyway everything 30. room wheel flax before goes 31. twirled window guess pay work 32. try 33. brought 34. together hunting queer hole nimmy I'm 35. table because 36. never 37. lambkins grassy banks pranks woolly feet watch bleat 38. ferry across boatman you've purse I'll step boat 39. coral sailor ashore white dig nor pluck feeble insects stormy 40. swallow sun-loving summer 41. wrens hedge building perching pecking fluttering everywhere 42. sail rivers ships clouds sky prettier than these bridges pretty bow heaven overtops road earth 43. paw woke 44. saved life 45. honest ax woodcutter stood 46. kind sir 47. Mercury met 49. crane throat bill 51. town visit mice 52. rich barking music 53. safe 54. quarrel cloak care 55. warm 56. ant dove leaf blew shore 58. lark nest field owner 59. neighbors uncles 60. yet ourselves 61. shadow piece meat 63. grapes sweet hanging still high don't sour fit 64. birds north south wider view spread wings 65. bark basket kippy peek maybe funny learning secret speckled 66. Jeremy covered growled sly Limberkin dreadful scream dream 67. snowflakes feathers filling air they're shaking swift love we'll kiss true 68. hollyhock bend need dolly's tea acorn plate feast state 69. pine valley beautiful needles green 70. leaves happened passing shining 71. carried glass 72. perhaps 74. happy 75. faithful beasts seek fortune along teasing monkey hurt pain 76. tied 77. spent box fastened lid 78. floated round rolled magic wherever 79. castle gardens merchants built 80. showed 81. ribbon 82. whiskers rubbed drove 83. swim 84. mind frogs 85. brown sand flows either 86. foam mine past hundred miles 87. seaside wooden spade sandy empty cup rain umbrellas 88. autumn vale bonfires smoke trail pleasant flowers blazes gray seasons bright 89. toss kites ladies' skirts grass loud 90. different hid felt push strong cold blower child 91. timid afraid coconut shot 92. running 93. answered elephants tigers 94. buffaloes deer jackals 95. first show 97. husk fruit 98. top place both wrong root string side 99. owl among stand 100. does 102. camel sugar cane crabs waded 103. haven't 104. dinner 105. deep feel 106. bumblebee tulip mistake lake 107. Bobby barn Bossy lackaday who'll shoo drive moo mammy's 108. Jippy Jimmy logs wet thin crept dry ki-hi 109. shivering roam won't until pip pop flippety flop ready clear gather chimney row hop 110. kernels sharp yellow small burst shake steadily backward forward you'll low 111. ugly spring 112. indeed pitcher gift jewel scolded sorry 113. roses pearls 114. send Fanny myself 115. grumbled lady 116. polite snake toad spoke 117. prince 118. surprised married 119. sitting evening same 120. week Thursday 121. bell ring 122. bent 123. coat trouble witch 123. marry yards 124. lent horse 125. switch 126. rode comb 128. boo-oo-oo roared tired 130. sale 132. to-morrow grease 134. rage 135. greeny bay tacking island beneath ought aboard drowned ocean billows 136. fare passenger voyage sheet 137. wound living tune naughty cross rude tangled spoil 138. scar quiet wigwam Indian moose maiden marks snow sled ice 139. brave hunter wonderful choose 140. sunset end angry ashes 141. shell beads dress 142. skin 145. broken birch fresh clean brushed 146. hair 147. rainbow faded stars 148. forgot neck elk wampum used spirit shoulders obeyed 149. belongs ashamed 150. rocks cave twelve otters camp foot 151. climb hollow middle struck 152. dug 153. mist storm thunder voices 155. peace given grown tall near baby taught 156. lily ago stories halfway shape 157. became lonely plain prairie 158. wild toward 159. blossomed lilies 160. beggar ragged begging 161. friend dust lose stream 163. bee linen fair shop buy shouldn't 164. web everybody swept finer neither 165. worm farmer son 166. hours nobody grow 167. winter froze 168. melt frozen coming 169. idly fro pasture merry housetops sweep shepherd driving hastening within fold hurry beyond 170. shine trembling bars darkness slumber 171. ghost fairies lit tales dwell forgotten ancient 172. quite strangest folk anybody flue rove gypsy camping grove hither hidden flame hovering appear sure suddenly puff whish 173. daisies overhead dot often arise there's skies she's dropped 174. giant Greeks car heat arrows sunbeams sun-struck gently 175. Apollo harp lyre Artemis Diana 176. pictures moonbeams new Orion 177. word instead rid 178. hit speck swimming 180. Hermes cap errands 181. stretched tightly fun 184. quarreling fighting touched themselves 186. useful messenger Juno Iris romped cradle slipped grandfather 187. hitch waves 188. forth colors violet orange 189. soak chew hemlock rank growing weedy cowslip purple bubbling dine 190. playgrounds thousand moss lie forests puddles freeze above 191. thy dreamland thee lambs gentle shepherdess 192. prayer God counts to-night End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Young and Field Literary Readers, Book 2, by Ella Flagg Young and Walter Taylor Field *** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YOUNG AND FIELD LITERARY *** ***** This file should be named 38412-8.txt or 38412-8.zip ***** This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/4/1/38412/ Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Matthew Wheaton and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will be renamed. 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