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TheChildrensFirstBookofPoetry 10184763

This document is the introduction to The Children's First Book of Poetry. It discusses how poetry is still being written and read today, despite claims of poetry's decline. It explains that the anthology aims to introduce both classic and newer poems to children, covering a wide range of themes, in the belief that poetry can provide high educational value for young readers.
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Available Formats
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
139 views227 pages

TheChildrensFirstBookofPoetry 10184763

This document is the introduction to The Children's First Book of Poetry. It discusses how poetry is still being written and read today, despite claims of poetry's decline. It explains that the anthology aims to introduce both classic and newer poems to children, covering a wide range of themes, in the belief that poetry can provide high educational value for young readers.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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TH E CHI LDREN S

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BY E M I L IE KI P B A KE R .


CH I LD R E N S F I R S T B K . OF p o z e
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v
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l

I N T R OD U CT I O N

W E h ear mu c hy ab o ut th e den o wa d a
cl ine of p o
s etry .

N o o n e re ad s p o etry a ny m o re P o ets canno t m ak e a .

l ivin g . T he wo rld h as ceased to ex p res s its id eals i n


ve rs e . T h e n ovel a nd th e sh o rt sto ry rath e r than th e ,

e p ic o r th e lyric fu rn ish o u r in str u c ti o n an d ou r in s p ira


,

tio n . T h e ma gazin e and th e n e ws p a p e r are ou r su b s t i


t u te fo r a l ibrary ; and th e s e p ri nt ve rs e s o n l y to fi l l o u t
a c ol u m n o r a p a g e In sh o rt w eare l ivin g i n a re fl e e
.
,

tive a s cientific a p rose ag e S o w e


, , a re told . .

L ike m o st g e n e ralizati o n s ab o ut th e c o m p l e x p h e
no m e na of m od e rn life this i s o nly partially tr u e
, .

E ve ry year bri n g s n e w vol u m es of d ramati c narrative , ,

and lyri c p o etry of hi g h m e rit Y e ats S yn g e a n d .


, ,

P h illi p s ; N oye s M a s e fi e
l d a nd G ibso n ; — th es e and
, ,

s c o re s of oth e r nam e s c om e to m in d t o p ro ve t hat th e


g ift of s o n g h a s n ot fl e d the earth . N o r are th e old
p o ets fo rg otte n S ha k es p eare .Milto n W o rd s worth , , ,

Keats T e n nys o n Wh itti e r L on gfell o w still s ell by th e


, , , ,
tho u sand s . W em u st believe that th ey a re s till read .

W ek now th at th ey are q u oted and c ite d th o u gh l e s s


, ,

ostentatio u sly than by ou r g rands i r e s W ec ertainly re ad .

m o re p ro se than fo rm e r g e n e ratio n s and p oss ibly l es s , , ,

p o etry B u t we do still read p oetry and fe


. w will do u bt ,

that we are s o m eh o w th e b ette r fo r it .

I nto this h e rita g e of po etry we wo uld ad mit n ot th e ,

ad ults o nly bu t th e c hild ren


, . It i s in th e fi rm beli ef
that child re n can e n ! oy p o etry and can find i n it th e
,

hi gh e st ed u cati o nal val u e that this anth olo gy has be en


,

c ompile d . A s s u ch an anth ol o gy sh ould it has in cl u de d ,


th os e mi n o r clas si c s c om m o nly called old favo rite s ,

oth e r p oem s of equal o r g reate r m e rit that are les s well


kno wn a nd many of th e n e we r thin g s that by th e i r
, ,

p iq u an cy of beauty o r h u m o r s e e m e ntitl e d to a p lac e


,

i n ou r m e ntal treas u re h o u se
-
T his is th e s e rvi ce of an
.

anth ol o gy t hat it b rin g s to g eth e r betwe e n th e c ove rs


, ,

of a small bo ok m any p re c iou s th in g s that a re wid ely


,

s catte red and m i ght be i nac c e ssibl e o r fo rg otten


, Th e .

ra n g e of th em e and ty p e is la rg e : ballads p u re lyric s , ,

l n a r r a t i ve
s and ele iac s a re all rep re s e nted T h e th re e
,
g .

hu nd red o r m o re p o e m s in this se rie s i n cl u din g nearly ,

all th e th eme s ex p res sin g n early all th e ideals and em o


,

tio ns fo und in l ite rat u re a ffo rd a n ima g inative o u tl o ok


,
o n l ife s u ch as c ould hardly b e fo und i n many vol ume s
s o c o mpact s o su g g e stive is p o etry
, .

P e rha p s
no syste m of g radin g p o etry fo r yo un g read
e rs can eve r be wh olly satisfa cto ry Many p o em s can .

n ot be g raded fo r th e s im p le rea s o n that they ap p eal


,

to all a g e s W h o will say wh eth e r S e


. n nae
nem é th e ,

Tw ety Tni d P l m Té eL
n -
n sa ,
a dy f
o S k a /o ff ,
Tn eL oa

te
e Q d m Z/eand B e e ca n

d i S u mm
'

s f s na , n r
g ive m ore
p l e as u re at th e a geof e i g ht o r ei g h te en o r twe nty
e i g ht ? Of c o u rs e th e re a re la rg e dividin g l ines : th e
n u rs e ry rim e s th e ve rs e s abo u t childh o od and fai ries
, ,

best s u it o ne a g estorie s of ch ival ry an oth e r natu re


, ,

p o etry and re fl e ctive o r el e g ia c p o etry ye t a n oth e r


, , .

T h e g rad in g of th i s s e rie s r u ns al on g the s e broad l i nes .

H o w sh o u ld su c h an anth olo gy be u s ed ? O n eis


tem p ted to ans we r fl i ppa n t l y : with g o od taste and g o od
s en s e C e rtai nly it is n ot t o be read strai ght th rou gh
.
,

with re mo rs el e s s c o ntin u ity O n ed o e s n t read p oe t ry



.

s o ; o n e take s it in bits inte rs p e rs e s it b etwe e n oth e r


,

readin g retu rn s to it a gain a nd again d i p s i n h e re and


, ,


th e re reads h is favo rite s ofte n p rove s eve ryth in g and
, , ,


h ol ds fast to th at wh ic h is go od fo r h im O n etrie s .

to u n d e as well as to e

al
r s ta n d
! y
n o ; but h e d o es n t
ways m ake th e attac k with th e p e rs iste nt analys is that
h e b ri n g s to his mathe mati cs . On ewants his p o et ry ,

in b rief to b e s om ethin g fro m wh ic h h e c an ga i n n e


,
w

id eas n e w outl o oks whil e fe ed in g his s o ul with pl easant


, ,

e m otio n s . It is n ot p o etry fo r us if it is arid, .

T h e teach e r can h el p of c o u rs e , . S o m eti m es , n ot al

ways sh e can make c om m e nts that le nd l i gh t and feel in g


, .

Ofte n but n ot al ways s h e can h el p by re adin g al ou d


, , .

S o m etim e s ,
whe re n e c e s sa ry sh e ca n ask qu e stion s to
,

p rovoke th ou ght and b rin g o ut th e m ean in g S o m e .

tim es she sh o uld s imply tell th e m e an in g A l ways he r .

fu nction is to s tim ulate s u gg e st g uid e b u t no t to , , ,


ob stru ct th e sunli gh t of th e p oet s g e n ius ;
Th e re sh o uld be m u ch re adi n g al ou d by th e p u p il s .

R em e mb e rin g th at be in g p o etry it i s rhyth mic utte r


, ,
-I

ance th ey sh o u ld r ead it so ; n ot sin g s on g fash ion n o r


, ,

yet in th e bald and un rhyth mi c fashio n of p ros e .

F inally th e pupil s sh ould be l ed t o c om mit m u c h to


,

me mo r y as m u ch as they can and will


,
S o th ey m ak e .

i
fin e s entim e n t an d beautiful lan g ua g e ” ze ns s o th e /
,



p oet s foll owe rs learned his g reat lan g ua g e c au gh t h is ,


clear ac c e nts .

F R ANKL I N T B AK E R . .

TEAC HE RS COLLE G E ,

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A V i i t f o m S t Nich o l
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C h il d E vei g H ym

s n n n S . B a r i ng - G o u l d
C h o o i g a Ki tt e
s n n N u r s ry R un e e
C o me o t to P l y u a A n o ny mo u s
C d dle
u D oo n e d eA d e
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Fu ll F a t h o m F i ve t h y F at h e
r li e
s

Ga e
lic L ll u ab
y Ol d S o ng
Good -
Nigh t A n t /207 U n k n aw n
R ob et L
r ou i s Stee v n s on

Ga br ie
l Se
t ou n

A u t k or U n k n ow n
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q ey R u e rs r n

Ro bet L
r i S tee
ou s v n son

Alf ed Teyr nn s on

E m i ly H u n t i ng t on M il l e r

A n o ny m o u s
rd eM
n o us e e
Ck r i s t i n a G R os s t t i
.

Ro bet L
r i S tee
ou s v n so n

Ol i eH e f d
v r r or

A u t k or U n k n ow n
R ob et B i
r r d
A n o ny mo u s
H annak F . G o ul d
E dw a r d L e ar

R ob et L
r o uis S tee v n s on

[V ur s ey R i me
r

R ob et L
r ou i s S tee v n s on

xx i i i Psa l m
C/za r l eK i g l e
s y n s

l o ma s We tw s o oa

A a t k ar U n k n ow n
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E l i za e
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A lf erd Te y nn s on

E dw d Le ar ar

E d wa r d L e ar
Th eR ggl eT ggl eG yp i e
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a s s A u t /zo r U n k n ow n
Th e R bi o n L a ur eeA l m
nc e a Ta d m a
The ew r ld m as an o an E dw d Le ar ar

T h ee w r y g l dyas a o un a E dw d Le ar ar

T he S d f De e
an s o Ck l eK g l e ar
y s in s

Th e U e eP l y m t e
ns n a a R be
o t L ri S teeou s v n s on

The V ill geB l ck mi t h a a s W d w t/ L gf e


a s orll wt on o

The W y the M i gd w
a o rn n a ns A u t kor U n k n ow n
The Wi d n e
Cl i r i s t i n a G R o s s t ti
Th e e
.

Wi d n Ro bet L
r i S teou s v n s on

Th e W i d d th e M
n an oon G eg eM d
or ld ac on a

The W de f l W ldon r u or W . B . R a n ds
The W e ck f t h eH e pe Wa d s w or t /z L o ngf e

r o s r us l l ow
Th e Y f th e N
ar n oy Bell anc I/ Vi l l i a m S . Gil b etr

Th e eB g
r u s Al ic eC a ry

Th e eW e
r l h me s n Ol d R i m e
T i met Ri e o s R ob et L
r ouis St ee v n s on

T M t h eF i i e
o o r a r

T o ps y T u r vy W o rl d
-
Wi l l i a m B . R a n ds
T wi n kl et w i n k l eLi tt l eS t a r
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T w o L i tt l eK i tt e
ns A u t l zor U n k n ow n
U ndeM y W i d wr n o Tk o ma s We
s t w oo d

We e S eear v n Wi l l i a m Wor d s w or t /z ‘

W h t th e
a C hi m e y S g n an Br t H e ar t e
W h t th e
a Wi d B i g n s r n

Whe n Cl if t o n B i ng /l a m
W h eg d K i g A t h
n oo n r ur [Vu r s ey R i m e
r

W h eI w n B ch el as a a or N ur s ey R i me
r

Whe e ey g i g my L i tt l eC
r ar ou o n at ? ”
A ut k or U n k n o w n
Whe ed Al l t h eD i i eg
,

r o a s s o A u t /zor U n k n ow n
Whe eg t h eB t
r o oa s ? R ob et L
r oui s St ee v n s on

W h li ket h e
o R i s a n ? Cl a r a D o ty B a t e s

W h t le th e
o s o Bi d N et r

s s Ly d i a M a r i a Cl i zl d
W i n d y Ni gh t s e
R o b r t L o u i s S t v n s on ee
W i s h i ng Wi l l i a m A l l i ngk a m
W ynk e n B l yn k e
n and , , Nd o E ug eeF ie
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I ND E! OF A U TH OR S

AL E ! A N DER C ECI L F ( 1818 ,


.

A l l T hi g B e t i f l n s au u

ALL I N G H A M W I LL I A M ( 182 4
Th e F i ie
,

s a r

W i hi g s n

AL M A T A DEM A L A URE N C E
-

Th e
.
,
R ob i n

L i tt l eGi l r s

AN DERS O N A L E ! A N DE R ( 1845
C d dle
,

u D oo n

B A RI N G G O U L D SA B I N E ( 1 83 4
E vei g H y m
-

C hil d

s n n n

B A T ES C L AR A D O T Y
W h o lik et h e
.
,

R i s a n

B A Y L Y T H O M A S H A Y N ES ( 7 97 I 83 9) I —

Oh ! w h e ed o F i i eH id e
,
.

-
r a r s

B I N G H AM C L IF TO N
Wh e
,
.

B IR D R O B ER T
The
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F i y F o lk a r

B O S TW IC K H E L E N B ( 182 6
L i tt l e de
,
.

D li an on

B U C K R I C H A RD H E N RY ( 1869
Ke t ck y B b e
,

n u a

B UR N S R O B ER T ( 17 5 9
A C hil d G c e
,

s ra

C ARR OLL L E W IS ( C H A R L ES L U T W I D G E D O DG S O N ) 0 83 2
A L o b t eQ d ill e
,

s r ua r

F t h eW illi m
a r a

C A R R YL C H A R L ES E D W A R D ( I 84 I
,

A N a t ic l B ll d u a a a

C A RY A L I C E ( 18 20

Th e eB g
,

r u s

No e mb e v r

To Mot h e
r F a i ri e
C HI LD ,
A M ARI A ( 180 2
LYDI
Th k gi i g D y v n
B i d Ne
an s a

Wh o tol e the St
.


s r s .

C O L E R IDGE SA M U E L T A YLO R ( 17 7 2
,

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un n on

C R AI K D I N A H M U LO C K ( 182 6
eNe
w Ye
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Th ar

FERG US O N J A M E S
Au l d D a dd y D ar k n e
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ss

F IE L D E UGE N E ( 185 0
W yn ken B l nke
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n a n d No d
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F OLL E N EL I Z A L E E 0 7 87
eM
,

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W hee ey r ar ou go g i n an

GI L B ER T W I LL IAM S 1 8 6—
( 3 191 I )
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,

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ar n o .

G O U L D H A NN A H F ( 1 7 89

Th e
.
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F t ro s

G REE N AW A Y K A T E ( I 846 -
1
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,
ry B ro w n

P ri n ceF i n i ki n
H A R T E B RE T ( 183 9
eC hi m e
,

W hat y S g th n an

H ER O R D O L I ER ( 863
F V 1
The d the e
,

El f D m an or o us

H O GG
J A M ES ( 17 7 0 183 5 )
,

A B y So g o 5 n

H OO D T H O M A S ( 17 90 1 845 )
Qu e e
,

n M ab

H O UGH T O N L O R D ( M I L N E S ,
, R I C H ARD M O N C K T O N ) ( I 80 9 I 885 ) .

La dy M o o n
H O W I T T M A RY ( 1 7 99
eF i i e f t h eC l d
,

Th a r s o a on Lo w
IN GE LO W J E A N ( 1820
Se veT i meO e
,

n s n

K I N G S L EY C H A R L ES ( 18 1
9
Th e
,

L t D ll os o

The S d f De e an s o

L E A R E D W A R D 0 8 12
eO wl d th eP yc t
,

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eQ gl e
s

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ua n an S a
L O N G F E LLO W H E N RY W A DS W O R T H ( I 8 7
. o
Hi w th C h il d h o o d

a a a s

Th e V ill g eB l ck mi t h a a s
Th e W e ck o f t h eH e r
pe s r us

M A CD O N AL D G E O R GE 0 82 4
The Wi d d t he
,

nM an oon

M A C K A Y C H A R L ES ( I 8I 4
Th e M ill eo f t h e De e
,

M A S O N M A RY A U G US T A
M y L i tt l e Ne
, .

ig h b o r

M I LL ER E M I L Y H U NT I N G T O N ( 1 833
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,

bi d u r

M OO RE C L EME NT C ( 17 7 9
,
.

A V i i t f o m S t Nich o l s
s r . a

M Y ALL C H A R L ES
,
.

nI di L ll a b y
an u

P R E NT ISS EL I Z A B E T H ( 18 18
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,

L
on Ag o
R A N DS W I LL I A M B R I G H T Y ( 182 3
Th e Wo de
,

f l W ld n r u or
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ur r

R IC H A R DS L A U R A E ( 185 0
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,
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n ns

R I L EY J A M ES W H I T C O M B ( 185 2
L i t tl e ie
,

O ph t A r an nn

R O S SE TT I C H RIS T I N A G ( 183 0
Th e C ity M o e d th e G d eM e
,
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us

Th e
an ar n o us
Wi d n

S E TO UN G A B R IE L ( T H O M A S N IC OL L H E RB U R N ) ( 186 1
R o ma c e
,

J ac k F o t r s

H o w th e F l o we G o w rs r

S H A K E S P E A RE W I LL I A M ( 15 64
F ll F t h o m F i e t h y F t h eli e
,

u a s v a r
H a rk H a rk th eL ark

S HERM A N FR A N K D EM P S T ER ( 186 0
D i ie
,

a s s

SO U T H EY C A R OL I N E B ( 17 86
, .

L d yb i d
a r

SO U T H EY R O B ER T ( 17 74
Aft eB l e he
,

rim n
S E N C ER W I LL I A M R O B ER T ( 7 69 183 4)
P 1 —

Be t h G é l et
,

S T EDM A N E DM U N D C L AR E N C E ( 83 3 9 8) 1 1 0

W h t th e
,

a Wi d b i g n s r n

S T E V E N S O N R O B ER T L O UIS ( 85 0
,
1

A G o d Pl y o a

Be d i S mm e
n u r

F e
ar we ll t o t h eF m ar

Fo er i g C hil d e
n r n

R i
a n

Si gi g
n n

e
T h Co w
e e eP l y m t e
Th U n s n a a

ei
Th W n d
i e Ri e
T m to s
Wheeg t h eB tr o oa s

Wi n dy Ni g h t s

My S
h a do w
ei le
T h L tt Lan d
e
Th M o o n
e li h e
T h L a mp g t r
T AY LO R , J A N E ( 17 83
i l e i l e i tt l eS t
T w nk , tw nk , L ar

e
P r tt y C o w
li e i l e
I k L tt Pussy
T E NN YSO N AL F RED ( 1 80 9
i leB i d i e
,

L tt r

Swe
et an d Low
Th eOw l
T HA C K ER A Y W I LL I A M M A K E P E A C E ( 181 1
L i tt l eB ill ee
,

T H A ! T ER C E L IA ( 183 5
L i tt l e
,

G u s t a va
W ADS W O R T H O L I V E A
e t h eM ed w
, .

Ov r In a o

W E LL S C A R OL Y N ( 868 1
A D e m Le
,

r a ss o n

W ES T W OO D T H M S ( 1 814 O A
e
,

T h L o s t L a mb
e
U n d r my W n d o w
i s
W O R DS W O R T H W I LL I A M , ( 1 77 0
M ch
ar

L cy G y
a e Seve
u ra 20 0

We
-

r n
A C K N OW L E D G M E N T S

TH E p o e ms by A l ic e Ca ry B re t H arte H en ry W ad s , ,

w o rth L on gfellow F rank D e m p s te r S h e rman E dm und


, ,

Cla ren c e S te dman a nd Ce lia T ha x te r are u s ed by p e r


,

m iss ion of and s p e c ial a rran g em ent W ith H o u g hto n


M i ffl i n C om p any th e a u th o rized publishe rs of th e wo rks
,

of th o s e a u th o rs . T h anks are al s o e xtende d t o T h e


C ent u ry Com p any fo r p e rm is s ion to us e “
Th e E l f and

th e D o rm o u s e by O live r H e rfo rd ; to T h e B obbs
,


Me rrill C om p a ny fo r L ittl e O r ph a n t A n nie by Jam e s ,

W h itc o mb R iley ; to T h e Macmillan C om p a ny fo r “


A
” ”
D re am L e s s on fro m “
T h e J in gl e B o ok by Ca rolyn
,

W ells ; to L ittle , B ro wn a nd C om p any fo r th e


, Non “


s e ns e R im e by L a u ra E R ic hard s ; to C harl e s S c r i b
, .

n e r s S o ns fo r th e p o em W ynken B lynke n and N od


’ ”
, , , ,

by E u ge ne F ield ; and to th e W hite S m ith M u s ic


-
P ub

l i sh i n g C o .
, f or K e nt u c ky B abe .
TH E wo r ld i s S O f u ll o f a n u mb ef r o thi ngs
eweh e
,

I am sur s ou ld al l b as h a pp y as ki n gs .

R ob et L
r ou s ee
i St v n s on .

18
C O M E OU T T O P LAY

G I R L S and boys come out to play, ,

Th e
/
m is shining as bri h t as day
o on
g
Le ave yo u r s u pper and le ave yo u r sleep
, ,

An d yo m yo u r pl a
yfellows in the st reet
'

m
.

Co e with a whoop and come with a ca l l ,

Co
newith
l
/
/
a good will or not at all .

Up the ladder and down the wall ,

A halfpenny roll will serve us all .


Yo u fi n d milk and I ll find flo u r ,

An d we ll have a p u dding in half an ho u r



.

T I M E T O RI SE

A B IR D IE wi th a yellow b i ll
Hopped u pon the window sill -

Cocked his shi ning eye and said


“ ’
‘ 9’
Ain t you shamed yo u sleepy head

,

R OBE R T L OUI S S TE V ENS ON .

19
A FA RM E R W E N T RID I N G

A F AR M E R went riding upon his gray m are ’

B u mp e
ty ,
bump
bu e
'
mp t y ,
With his daughter behind h i m so rosy and fair , ,

e
L u mp t y , e
l u mp t y , lump '


A raven cried croak ! and they all t u mbled down ,

e
B u mp t y , e
b u mp t y , b u mp '

The mare broke her knees and the farmer his crown ,

e
L u mp t y , l u mp e
ty ,
lump !

The m ischievous raven flew la u ghing away ,

e
B u mp t y , b u mp t y ,e bump !
And vowed he would serve them the same the ne x t day ,

e e
L u mp t y , l u m p t y , lump !

TH E LIO N AN D TH E U N I C O R N
TH E lion and the unicorn
Were fighting for the crown
The lion beat the u nicorn
All around the town .

Some gave them W hite b read ,

And some gave them b rown ;


Some gave them plum cake ,

An d dr u mmed them o u t of town .

20
WH E N G OOD KIN G A RTHUR

WH EN good King Arth u r ruled this land ,

He was a goodl y king ;


He stole three pecks of barley meal
To make a bag p u dding
-
.

A bag —puddin g the king did make ,

And stu ffed it well with pl u ms ;


And in it p u t great l u mps Of fat ,

As big as my two th u mbs .

The king and q u een did eat thereof ,

And noblemen beside ;


And what they co u ld not eat that night ,

The q u een next morning fried .

WH E N I W AS A B A CH ELO R
WH EN I was a bachelor I lived by myself ,

And all the bread and cheese I got I p u t u pon a S helf


,

The rats and the mice did lead me s u ch a life ,

I h ad t o go to London to get myself a wife .

The streets were so bad and the lanes were so narrow ,

I had to bring my wife home in a wheelbarrow ;


The wheelbarrow broke my wife had a fall
, ,

D o wn t u mbled wheelbarrow little wife and all


,
.

2I
S I N G A SO N G O F S I ! P E N C E

S I N G a song of sixpence ,

A pocket full of rye ;


Fo u r —and twenty blackbirds
-

B aked in a pie .

When the pie was opened


The b irds began to S ing ;

Wasn t that a dainty dish
To set before a king ?

The king was in his co u ntingho u se ,

Counting o u t his money ;


The q u een w as in the parlor ,

E ating b read and honey ;


The maid w as in the garden ,

Hanging out the clothes ,

D own flew a blackbird


And nipped Off her nose .
B IRTHD AY S

M OND AY S child is fair of face



T u esday s chil d is f u ll of grace ;

We d nesday s child is full of woe ,


Th u rsday s child has far to go ;

Friday s child is loving and giving ,


Sat u rday s child works hard for its living ;
B u t the child that is born on the Sabb at h
Is blithe and merry and good and gay .

B O B B Y S H A FT O

B OBB Y S H AE TO S gone to sea



,

Silver b u ckles on his kn ee ,


He ll come back and marry me ,

Pretty B obby Shafto .


B obby S h aft o s fat and fair ,

Combing down his yellow hair .

He s my love for

eem
v r ai r ,

Pretty B obby Shafto .

23
P U SS YC AT RIM ES

P U SS Y CAT p u ssycat with a W hite foot


, ,


To —morrow s my wedding won t you come to

,


I ve cakes to bake and I ve beer to b rew

,

And p u ssycat p u ssycat what would yo u do ?


, ,

P U S S Y CAT mole j u mped over a coal ,

And in her best petticoat burnt a big hole .

’ ’
Poor p u ssy s weeping she ll get no more milk
,


Until her best petticoat s mended with silk .


WH O S that ringing at my doorbell ?
’ ’
I m a little pussycat and I m not very well .

Then rub your little nose with a little mutton fat ,


For that s the best thing for a little p u ssycat .

IV

P U SS Y CAT pussycat where have yo u been ?


, ,


I ve been to London to visit the queen .

Pussycat pussycat what did you there ?


, ,

I fri ghtened a little mouse under her chair .

24
TH E OLD W O MA N

TH E RE was an old woman as I ve heard tell , ,

She went to the market her eggs for to sell ;


She went to the market all on a market day ,

And Sh efell fast asleep on the ki ng s highway ’


.

Al ong came a pe dl er whose name it w as S to u t ,


He c u t her petticoats all ro u nd ab out ;
He cut her petticoats up to the knees ,

Which made the old woman to shiver and free ze .

When the little old woman began to awake ,

She b egan to shiver and she began to sh ake


, ;
She began to wonder and ,
Sh ebegan to cry

Lauk a daisy on me this can t be I ,
!

B u t if it be I as I hope it m ay be
, ,


I have a little dog at home and he l l know me ; ,

If it be I he will wag his little ta i l


,

And if it be not I he will bark and wail


,
.

Home went the old woman al l in the dark ,

Up got the little dog and he began to bark ;


,

He began to bark so she began to cry


, ,


Lauk a daisy on me this cannot be I , .

26
WH E R E A R E Y O U G O I N G MY LITTLE C A T ? ,


W H E R E are you going ,
my little cat ?
I am going to town to get me a hat .


What ! A hat for a ca t !

A cat get a hat !



Who ever yet saw a cat with a hat ?
“ ”
Where are yo u going my little kittens ?
,

We are going to town to g t eu s some mittens .


What ! Mittens for kittens !

D o kittens wear mittens


Who e
ver saw little kittens with mittens ? ”

“ ”
Where are yo u going my little pig ? ,

I am going to town to get me a wig .


What ! A wi g for a pig !

A pig in a wig !


Who ever yet saw a pig in a wig ?
E L IZ A L E E F OL L EN .

CH OOSI N G A K I TT E N

A N OSED kitten will slumber all the day ;


B L ACK -

A white nosed kitten is ever glad to play ;


-

A yellow nosed kitten will answer to yo u r call ;


-


And a gray nosed kitten I wo u ldn t have at all
-
.

27

THR EE W ELS HM E N

TH E R E were three j ovial Welshmen ,

As I have heard them say ,

And they wo ul d go a hunting



Upon St D avid s day
. .

Al l the day they h un ted ,


And nothing could they find
B u t a Ship a -
sailing ,

A -
sailing with the wind .

One said it was a Ship ,

The other he said nay ;


,

The third said it w as a ho u se ,

With the chimney blown away .

And all night they hunted ,

And nothing could they find


B u t the moon a -
gliding ,

A -
gliding with the wind .

One said it w as the moon ,

The other he said nay ;


,

The third said it was a cheese ,

And half of it cu t away .

28
An d all the day they h u nted ,
And nothing co u ld e
th y fi
'

nd

B u t a hedgehog in a b ramble b u sh ,

And that they left behind .

The first said it was a hedgehog ,

The second he said nay ;


,

The third it was a pin c u shion ,

And the pins st u ck in wrong way .

An d all night they h u nted ,


And no thing co u ld they find
B u t an owl in a hollow t ree ,

An d that they left behind .

On esaid it was an owl ,

The other he said nay ;


,


The third said twas an ol d
Whose beard was gro wing

29
A FR O G H E W O UL D A—W OO I N G

A FR OG h e would a- wooing go ,

e
H i gh o , '

s ay s R oly

Whether his mother would let him or no ,

With a roly poly gammon and spinach


-
, ,

Heigho says Anthony


,
R oly !

So o ff he set in his coat and hat ,

Heigho says ,
R oly !

And on the way he met a rat ,

With a roly poly gammon and spinach


-
, ,

Heigho says Anthony


,
R oly !


Please Mr ,
. R at , will yo u go with me ?
Heigho says ,
R oly !

Good Mrs Mouse for to see ?
.

With a roly —poly gammon and Spinach , ,

Heigho says Anthony


,
R oly !


When they came to the door of the mousie s hole ,

Heigho says R oly !


,

They gave a lo u d knock and they gave a lo u d cal l


, ,

With a roly poly gammon and spinach


-
, ,

Heigho says Anthony R oly !


,

30
“ ”
Please M rs Mouse are yo u within ?
,
.
,

Heigho says R oly !


,

Oh yes dear sirs I am sitt ing


, , , to spin ,

With a roly poly gammon and spinach


-
, ,

Heigho says Anthony


,
R oly !

Please Mrs M ouse will yo u give us some beer ?


,
.
,

Heigho s ays R oly !


,

For F ro ggy and I are fond of good cheer ,

With a roly poly gammon and spinach


-
, ,

Heigho says Anthony


,
R oly !


Please M r Frog will yo u give u s a song ?
,
.
,

Heigho says R oly !


,


B ut let it be something that s not very long ,

With a roly poly gammon and spinach


-
, ,

Heigho says An thony


,
R oly !

B ut whil e they were making a terrible din ,

Heigho says
,
R oly !

The cat and her kittens came t u mbling in ,

With a roly poly gammon and spinach


-
, ,

Heigho says Anthony R oly !


,

31
The cat she sei zed Mr . R at by the crown ,

Heigho says
,

R oly
The kittens they pulled Mrs Mo u sie down .
,

With a roly poly gammon and spinach


-
, ,

Heigho says Anthony


,
R oly !

This p u t Mr Frog in a terrib l e fright


.
,

Heigho says
,
R oly !

He took u p his hat and he wished them good night ,

With a roly —poly gammon and spinach


, ,

Heigho says Anthony


,
R oly !

B u t as F r o ggy was crossing over a brook ,

Heigho says
,
R oly !

A lily white d u ck came and swallowed him up


-
,

With a roly poly gammon and spinach


-
, ,

Heigho says
,
R oly !

RAI N

TH E rain is raining all aro u nd ,

It falls on field and tree ,

I t rains on the u mbrel las here ,

And on the ships at sea .

R OBE R T L OU I S S TE VENS ON .

32
Then John went up to the top of the hill ,

And he blew a blast both lo u d and shrill .

Says the Fox ,


That is fine music still ,

I d rather be o ff 0

to my den

e
So the Fox he hurried home to his den ,

To his dear little foxes eight nine t n , ,


.

“ ’ ’
Says he ,
We re in luck here s a big fat d u ck
,

With her legs dangling down behi nd O

Then the Fox sat down with his hungry wife ,

And they made a good meal witho u t fork or knife .

They never had a better time in all their life ,

And the little ones picked the bones O !

FI S HI N G

TH E finest biggest fish yo u see


, , ,


Will be the trout that s caught by
B u t if th emonster will not bite ,


Why then I ll hook a little mite
, .

34
TH E M OO N

OH , look at the moon ,

She is shining up there .

S ee mother she looks


, ,

L i ke a lamp in the air .

Las t week she wa s smaller ,

And shaped like a b OW ‘


B u t nOw She s grown bigger

And ro u nd like an O .

E L IZ A L E E F OL L EN .

SI N G I N G

OE speckl ed eggs the birdie sings ,

And nests among the trees ;


The sailor sings of ropes and thin gs
In ships upon the seas .

The children sing in far Japan ,

The ch i ldren sing in Spain ;


The organ with the organ man
IS singing in the rain .

R OB E R T L OU I S S T E V ENS ON .

35
ALL THI N G S B EA UTIFUL

AL L things bright and beau tif u l


All creatures great and small ,

All thi ngs wise and wonderful ,

The Lord God made them all .

E ach little flower that opens ,

E ach little bird that sings ,

He made their glowi ng colors ,

He made their tiny w mgs .

The p u rple headed mountain


-

The river r u nning by


, ,

The morning and the s u nset


,

That lightet h up the sky .

The tall trees in the greenwood ,

The pleasant summer sun ,

The ripe fru its in the garden ,

He made them every one .

He gave us eyes to see them ,

And lips that we might tell ,

How great is God Almighty ,

Who hath made all thi ngs well .

C E CI L F A L E ! . A ND E R .
TW I N KLE TW I N KLE LI TTLE S TA R
, ,

T WI N KL E twinkle little star


, ,
!

How I wonder what you are ,

Up above the world so high ,

Like a diamond in the sky .

When the glorio u s s u n is set


When the grass wi th dew is wet ,

Then yo u S how your little light ,

Twinkle ,
tw mkl eall
,
the night .

In the dark bl u e sky yo u keep


-
,

And often through my curtains peep ,

For yo u never S h u t your eye ,

Till the s u n is in the sky .

As yo u r b right and tiny Spark


G u ides the traveler in the dark ,

Tho u gh I know not what yo u are ,

Twi nkle t winkle little star


, ,
!

37
P R E TTY C OW

TH ANK you pretty cow that made


, ,

Pleasant milk to soak my bread ,

E very day and every night ,

Warm and fresh and sweet and white


, , , .

D o not chew the hemlock rank ,

Growing on the weedy bank ;


B u t the yellow cowslip eat ,

That will make i t very sweet .

Where the purple Violet grows ,

W here the bubbling water flows ,

Where the grass is fresh and fine ,

Pretty cow go there and di ne


, .

JANE TAY L OR .

38
TH E C OW

TH E friendly cow all red and white ,

I love with all my heart


She gives me cream with al l her might ,

T 0 eat with apple tart -


.

She wanders lowing here and there


, ,

And yet she cannot stray ,

All in the pleasant open a i r,

The pleasant light of day ;

An d blown by all the winds that pass ,


An d wet with all theS howers ,

She walks among the meadow grass ,

An d eats the meadow flowers .

R OBE R T L OU I S S TE V ENS ON .

TH E R E w as an old man who said ,


How
Shall I flee from this horrible cow ?
I will sit on this stile
And contin u e to smile ,

Which may soften the heart of the cow .

E D WARD L E AR .

39
LO N G TIM E A G O

ON CE there w a s a little Kitty ,


White as the snow ;
In a barn she u sed to frolic ,

Long timeago .

In the barn a little mo u sie


R an to and fro ,

For she heard the li ttle Kitty ,

Long time ago .

Tw o black eyes had little Kitty ,

B lack as a sloe
And they spied the little mo u sie ,

Long time ago .

Fo u r soft paws had little


Paws soft as snow ;
And they ca u ght the little mo u sie ,

Long time ago .

Nine pearl teeth had little Kitty ,

Al l in a row ;
And they bit the little mo u sie ,

Long time ago .

40
LI TTLE B I RD I E

WH AT does little birdie say ,

In her nest at peep of day ?


“ ”
Let me fly ,
says little birdie ,

“ ”
Mother let me fly away
,
.

B irdie rest a little longer


, ,

Till the little wings are stronger .

So she rests a little longer ,

Then she flies away .

What does little baby say ,

In her bed at peep of day ?


B aby says like little birdie
, ,


Let me rise and fly away .

B aby sleep a little longer


, ,

Till the little limbs are str onger .

If she sleeps a little longer ,

B aby too shall fly away


, ,
.

A L F R E D T ENNY S ON .

TH E R E was a young lady whose bonnet


Came untied when the birds sat u pon it .

Said she ,
I don t care ’
;
All the birds in the air
Ar ewelcome to sit on my bonnet .

42
TH E CHI L D A N D TH E F A IR IES

TH E woods are full of fairies !

The trees are all alive ;


The river overflows with them ,

S ee how they dip and dive !

What f u nny little fellows !

What dainty little dears !

They dance and leap and prance and peep


, ,

And u tter fairy cheers !


I d l i ke to tame a fairy ,

To keep it on a S helf ,

To see it wash its little face ,

And dress its little self .


I d teach it pretty manners
It always sho u ld say “
Please l ”
,


And then yo u know I d make it sew
, , ,

An d co u rtesy with its knees !

43
AN OL D R AT ’
S T ALE

H E w as a rat and she w as a rat


, ,

An d down in one hole they did dwe l l ;


l

An d both were as black as a witch s cat ,


And they loved each other well .

He had a tail and she had a tail ,

B oth long and c u rling and fine ;


An d each said ,Yo u rs is the finest tail

In the world excepting mine
,
.

He smelt the cheese and she smelt the che e


,
se ,

And they both pronounced it good ;


An d both remarked it wo u ld greatly add
To the charms of their daily food .

SO he vent u red o u t and she vent u red o u t


, ,

And I saw them go with pain ;


B ut what befell them I never can tell ,

For they never came back again .

44
O V E R I N TH E M EA D OW

OV E R in the meadow ,
In the sand in the s u n , ,

Lived an old mother toad


And her little toadie one .


Wi nk ! said the mother ;
I wink ,

said the one
So she winked and she blinked
In the sand in the s u n , .

Over in the meadow ,


Where the stream r u ns bl u e ,

Lived an old mother fish


And her little fishes two .


Swim ! said the mo t her ;

We swim ,
said the two
S o they swam and they leaped
Where the stream r u ns bl u e .

Over in the meadow


In a hole in a tree ,

Lived a m other bluebird


An d h elittle
r birdies three .

45

Sing ! said the mother ;

We sing ,
said the three
SO they sang and were glad ,

In the hole in the tree .

Over in the meadow ,

In the reeds on the shore ,

Lived a mother muskrat


And her little ra t ti efo u r
s .


D ive ! said the mother ;

We dive ,
said the fo u r
S o they dived and they b u rrowed
In the reeds on the S hore .

Over in the meadow ,

In a sn u g beehive ,

Lived a mo ther honeybee


And her little honeys five .

B uzz said the mother



We buzz said the five
SO they buzzed and they hummed
In the snug b eehive .

Over in the meadow ,

In a nest b u ilt of sticks ,

46
Lived a black mother crow
And her little crows six .

Caw said the mo ther ;



We caw , said the six
So they cawed and they cawed
In their nest built of sticks .

Over in the meadow ,

Where the grass is so even ,

Lived a gray mother cricket


And her little crickets seven
C hirp !

said the mother ;

We chirp ,
said the seven
So they chirped cheery notes
In the grass soft and even .

Over in the meadow ,

B y the old mossy gate ,

Lived a brown mother lizard


And her little lizards eight .

B ask l ” said the mother ;


“ ”
We bask ,
said the eight
S o they basked in the s u n
B y the old mossy gate .

47
Over in the meadow ,

Where the clear pools shine ,

Lived a green mother frog


And her little froggies nine .


Croak said the mother ;
l


We croak said the nine ;
,

So they croaked and they splashed


, ,

Where the clear pools shine .

Over in the meadow ,

In a sly little den ,

Lived a gray mother spider


And her little spiders ten .

7)
Spin 1 said the mother ;

We spin ,
said the ten
So they sp u n lace webs
In their sly little den .

Over in the meadow ,

In the soft summer even ,

Lived a mother firefly


And her little flies eleven .


Shine ! said the mother ;

We shine ,
said the eleven
48
TH E OWL AN D TH E P U SS YCA T

TH E Ow l and the Pussycat went to sea


In a b eautiful pea —green boat .

They took some honey and plenty of money ,

Wrapped up in a fi v epound
-
note .

The Owl looked up to the stars above ,

An d sang to a small guitar ,

0 lovely Pussy ! 0 Pussy my love !


What a b eau t iful Pussy you are ,

you are !


What a beau t iful Pussy you are !


P ussy said to the Owl ,
You elegant fowl ,

How wonderfully sweet you sin g !


Oh ! let us be married too long ,
w ehave tarried ,

B ut wha t shall w edo for a ring ? ”

They sailed away for a year and a day


To the land where the bong tree grows ; -

And there in a wood a Piggy wig stood -

With a ring at the end of his nose ,



his nose ,

W ith a ring at the end of his nose .

D ear Pig are you willing to se l l for one shilling


,

” ”
Your ring ? Said the Pig gy ,
I will .

S o they took it away and were married next day


,

B y the T u rkey wh o lives on the hill .

50
They dined u p on mince and slices of quince ,

Which they ate with a runcible spoon ;


And hand in hand on the edge of the sand
,

They danced by the ligh t of the moon ,


the moon
They danced by the light of the moon
E D WAR D L E AR .

I L I K E L ITTLE P U SS Y

I LI K E little pussy , her coat is so warm !

An d if I don t h u rt her she ll do me no harm



,

.


So I ll not pull her tail nor drive her away
, ,

B u t pussy and I very gently will play ;


She shall sit by my side and I ll give her some food ;
,

An d she ll love me because I am gentle and good



.


I ll pat little pussy and then she will p u rr ,

And th us S ho w her thanks for my kindness to her ;



I ll not pinch her ears nor tread on her paws
,

, ,

Lest I sho u ld provoke her to use her S harp claws ;


I never will vex her n or make her displeased
, ,


For p ussy can t bear to be worried or teased .

J ANE T AY L OR .

51
WH E R E G O TH E B OAT S ?
D AR K brown is the river ,

Golden is the sand .

It flows along forever ,

With trees on either hand .

Green leaves a —fl o a t i n g ,

Castles of the foam ,

B oats of mine a- boating


Where will all come home ?

On goes the river ,

And ou t past the mill ,

Away down the valley ,

Away down the hill .

Away down the river ,

A hundred miles or more ,

Other little hildren


C

Shall bring my boats ashore .

R OBE R T L OU I S S TE V ENS ON .

52
P RI N C E FI N I K I N

PR I N C E F I NI K I N and his mamma


Sat sipping their b oh e; a
l

?)
Good gracio u s J said his Highness ,
why ,

What girl is this I see ?


Most certainly it cannot be

A native of our town ;
And he t u rned him round to his mamma ,

Who set her teacup down .

B l i t D olly simply looked at them ,


She did not speak a word ;

She has no voice ! said Finikin ;
“ ’ ”
It s really quite absurd .

F i n i ki n

Then s mamma observed ,


D ear Prince it seems to me , ,


She looks as if she d like to drink

A cup of my bohea .

S o Finikin po u red out her tea ,

And gave her c u rrant pie ;



Then Finikin said ,
D ear mamma ,


What a kind prince am I !
KAT E GR EENAWAY
a a ki n d o f t e
.

b oh e 1
a ,

53
TW O LI TTLE K ITT E N S

Tw o little kittens one stormy night


, ,

B egan to q u arrel and then to fight ;


On ehad a mouse and the other had none
, ,

And that was the w ay the quarrel begun .

! ’
I ll have that mouse ,
said the bigger cat .


!

You l l

have that mouse ! We ll see ab out that

I wi l l have that mouse ,
said the elder son .

!

You won t have t ha t mouse ,
said the little one .


As I told you befo r e ,
twas a stormy night ,

When these two little kittens began to fight ;


Then the old woman seized her sweeping broom ,

And swept the two kittens right out of the room .

Th eground was all covered with frost and snow ,

And the two little kittens had nowhere to go ;


SO they laid themselves down on a mat by the door ,

Wh il e the ang r y old woman w as sweeping the floor .

An d then they crept in as quiet as mice ,


Al l w e
t with snow and as cold as ice ;
For they found it was better that stormy night
, ,

To lie down and sleep than to quarrel and fight , .

54
Q U EE N M AB

A LI TT L E fairy comes at night ;


Her eyes are blue her hair is brown
, ,

W ith silver spots upon her wings ,

And from the moon she flutters down .

She has a little silver wand ,

And when a good child goes to bed ,

She waves her wand from right to left ,

And makes a circle round its head .

And then it dreams of pleasant things


Of fountains filled with fairy fish ,

An d trees that bear delicious fruit ,

And bow their branches at a wish ;

Of arbors filled with dainty scents


From lovely flowers that never fade ,

B right flies that glitter in the sun ,

And glow worms shining in the shade ;


-

And talking birds with gifted tong u es


For singing songs and telling tales ,

And pretty dwarfs to show the way


Through fairy hills and fairy dales .

TH OMA S H OOD .

55
WH O LI K ES TH E R A I N ?
“ ” “
I S AID the d u ck
,
I call i t f u n , ,

For I have my little red r u bbers on ;


They make a cunning three toed track -

In t h esoft cool mud Q u ack ! Q u ack


,
. ! Q u ack !

“ ”
I ,
cried the dandelion ,
I ,

My roots are thirsty my buds are dry ,

An d she lifted a t o w sl d yellow head e


O u t of her green and grassy bed .

’ ’ ”
I hope twill po u r ! I h ope twill po u r !

P u rred the tree toad at his gray back door ,

For wi th a b road leaf for a roof


, ,


I am perfectly weatherproof .

Sang the brook '

I la u gh at every drop ,

And wish they never need to sto p


Till a big big river I grew to be
, ,

And co u ld find my way ou t to the sea .

“ ”
I ,
sho u ted Ted ,
for I can r u n ,

With my high top b oots and my rain coat on


-

Through every puddl e and runle t and pool



That I find on my way to school .

C L ARA D OT Y B ATE S .

56
TH E RA GGLE TA G GLE GY P S I ES
,

TH E R E were three gypsies a— come to my door ,

And downstairs ran this lady ,


0 .

One sang high and another sang low ,


And the other sang B onnie B onnie B iskay
, ,
0 .

Then she p u lled o ff her silken gown ,

And p u t on hose of leather ,


0 .

With the ragged ragged rags about her door


,

She s o ff

with the R aggle , Taggle Gypsies O ,
.


Twas late last night when my lord came home ,

Inquiring fo r his lady o ,


.

The servants said on every hand ,

“ ’
She s gone with the R aggle , Taggle Gypsies 0 ,
.

Oh saddl e for me my milk white steed


,
-
,

Oh saddl e for me my pony


, ,
0,
That I may ride and seek my bride

Who s gone wi th the R aggle , Taggle Gypsies 0 ,
.

Oh he rode high and he rode low


, ,

He rode thro u gh woods and copses 0 , ,

Unt i l he came to an open field ,

And there he espied his lady O ,


.

5 8
What makes yo u leave yo u r ho u se and lands ?
What makes you leave your money 0 ? ,

What makes yo u leave your new wedded lord -

To go with the R aggle , T aggle Gypsies ,

What care I for my house and lands ?


What care I for my money ,
0,
What care I for my new wedded lord ?-


Im Off with the R aggle , Taggle Gypsies 0 ,
.

Last night you slept on a goose feather bed -


,

With the sheet turned down so bravely O ,


.

To night you w i ll sleep in the cold open field


-
,

Along wi th the R aggle , Taggle Gyp sies ,


0 .

What care I for yo u r goose feather bed -

With the sheet turned down so bravely O ,


?

For to night I shall sleep in a cold open field


-
,

Al ong with the R aggle , Taggle Gypsies , 0 .

OL D F OL K S ON G .

59
A G OO D P LAY

WE built a ship u pon the stairs


All made of the back bedroo m chairs -

And filled it f u ll of sofa pil lows


To go a— sailing on the billows .

We took a saw and several nail s ,

And water in the n u rsery pails ;



And Tom said ,
Let us also take
An apple and a slice of cake
Which was enough for Tom and me
To go a -
sailing on till tea
,
.

We sail ed along for days and days ,

An d had the very best of plays ;


B ut Tom fell ou t and h u rt his knee ,

S o there w as no one left bu t me .

R OBE R T L OU I S S TE VENS ON .

60
TH E WI N D
I S AW 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
0 wind ,
a -
blowing all day long ,

0 W l n Cl , that sings so lou d a song !

I saw the di fferent things yo u did ,

B u t always you yourself yo u hid .

I felt yo u p u sh I heard yo u call, ,

I co u ld not see yourself at al l

0 w i nd a blowing all day long


,
-
,

0 wind that sings so loud a song


,
!

0 yo u that are so strong and cold !

0 blower are yo u young or


,
Ol d?
Are yo u a beast of field and tree ,

Or j u st a stronger child tha n me ?


0 wind ,
a -
blowing all day long ,

0 wind that s i ngs so loud a song


,
!

R OBE R T L OU I S S TE VENS ON .

61
THR EE B U G S
TH R EE little bugs in a basket ,

And har dl y room for two !

And one w as yellow and one


,
w as black ,

And one like me or you


,
.

The space w a s small no doubt for


, ,

B ut what should three bugs do ?

Three little bugs in a basket ,

And hardl y cr um bs for two !

And all were selfish in their hearts ,

The Same as I or you ;


So the strong ones said ,
We will eat the

And that is what we ll do .

Three little bugs in a basket ,

And the beds but two would hold '

S o they all three fell to quarreling ,

The white and black and the gold ;


, ,

And two of the bugs got under the rugs ,

And one was out in the cold !

S o he that was left in the basket ,

Without a crumb to chew ,

Or a thre ad to wrap himself withal ,

62
When the W ind across him blew ,

P ul led one of the rugs from one of the bugs ,

And so the quarrel grew .

And so there w as w a r in the basket ,

’ ’
Oh pity tis
, ,
tis true !

B ut he that w a s frozen and starved at last


, ,

A strength from his weakness drew ,

And p ul led the rugs from both of th eb u gs ,

And k illed and ate them too !

Now when bugs live in a basket ,

Though more than it well can hold ,

It seems to me they had better agree ,

The white and the black and the gold


, ,

And share what comes of the beds and the cr umbs ,

And l eave no b u g in the cold !

A L I CE C AR Y .
L ITTLE GU S T AVA

L I TT L E G u stava sits in the s u n ,

S afe in the porch and the little drops r u n


,

From the icicles under the eaves so fast ,

For the bright spring s u n S hines warm at last ,

And glad is little G u stava .

She wears a qu aint little scarlet cap ,

And a little green bowl she holds in her lap ,

Filled with bread and milk to the brim ,

And a wreath of marigolds ro u nd the rim


“ ”
Ha ! ha ! la u ghs little Gustava .

Up comes her little gray coaxing cat


’ ”
With her little pink nose and she mews , ,
What s that ?
Gustava feeds her she begs for more ; ,

And a little brown hen walks in at the door '

“ ”
Good day ! cries little Gustava .

She scatters crumbs for the little brown hen .

There comes a rush and a flu tter and then


.

D own fly her little white doves so sweet ,

With their snowy wings and crimson feet


“ ”
Welcome ! cries little Gustava .

64
Kitty and terrier biddy and doves
, ,

All things harmless G u stava loves .


The shy kind creatures tis j oy to feed
, ,

And oh her breakfast is sweet indeed


, ,

To happy little G u stava !


C E L I A TH A! T E R .

FR O G S A T S CH OOL
TWEN TY froggies went to school
D own beside a rushy pool ,

Twenty little coats of green ;


Twenty vests all ,
White and clean .

“ ’
We must be in time ,
said they
First w estudy ,
then we play :

That is how we keep t he rule ,

When w efroggies go to school .

Master B ullfrog grave and stern


, ,

Called the classes in their turn ;


Taught them how to nobly strive ,

Likewise how to leap and dive ;


From his seat upon the log ,

Showed them how to say Ker chog -

Also h ow to dodge a blow


F rom the sticks that bad boys throw .

66
Twenty froggies grew up fast ;
B u llfrogs they became at last ;
Not one dunce among the lot ;
Not one lesson they forgot ;
Polished in a high degree ,

ASeach froggie ought to be ,

Now they sit on other logs ,

Teaching other little frogs .

WI N D Y N I GHT S
WH ENE VE R the moon and stars are set ,

Whenever the wind is high ,

Al l night long in the dark and wet ,


A man goes riding by .

Late in the night when the fires are o u t ,

Why does he gallop and gallop about ?

Whenever the trees are crying alo u d ,

And ships are tossed at sea ,

B y on t h ehi ghway low and lo u d


, , ,

B y at the gallop goes he .

B y at the gallop he goes and then


,

B y he comes back at the gallop again .

R OBE R T L OU I S S TE VENS ON .

67
WH E R E DO ALL TH E D A I S I ES G O ?
WH E RE do all the daisies go ?
I know I know,
!

Underneath the snow they creep ,

Nod their little heads and sleep ,

In the springtime out they peep ;


That is where they go !

Where do al l the birdies go ?


I know I know,
!

Far away from winter snow ,

To the far warm south they go ;


,

Where they stay till daisies blow ,

That is where they go !

Where do a ll the babies go ?


I know I know !
,

In the glancing fi r e
l i gh t warm ,

Safely sheltered from all harm ,

Soft they lie on mother s arm ’


,

That is where they go !


68
OL D D AM E C RI C K E T
OLD D ame Cricket down in a thicket
, ,

B ro u ght up her children nine ,

Queer lit t le chaps in glossy black caps


,

And brown li ttle suits so fine .

“ ”
My children ,
she said ,

The birds areabed


GO and make the dark et h gl ad !
'

e
ar


Chirp whil yo u can !

And then she began ,

Till oh wha t a concert they had


, ,
!

They hop p ed wi th deligh t


They chirped all nigh t ,

Singing Cheer up ! cheer u p ! cheer l ”


,

Old D ame Cricket ,

D own in the thicke t


Sat awake till dawn to hear .


Nice children ,

Sh esaid ,

And very well bred .

My darlings have done their best .

Their naps they must take :

The birds are awake ;


And they can sing all the rest .

69
TH E CITY M O U SE AN D TH E GA RD E N M OU SE
TH E city mouse lives in a house ;
The ga r den mouse lives in a bower ,


He s frien dl y with the frogs and toads ,

And sees the pretty plants in flower .

The city mouse eats bread and cheese


The garden mouse eats what he can ;
We will not grudge him seeds and stocks ,

Poor little timid furry man


,
.

C H R I S T I NA G . R O SSE TT I .

TH E R O B I N

WHEN f ather takes his spade t o dig ,

Then R obin comes along .

He S it s upon a lit t le twig ,

And sings a little song .

Or if the trees are rather far


, ,

He does not stay alone ,

B u t comes up close to where we are ,

And bobs upon a stone .

LAU R EN CE A L M A TAD E MA -
.

70
TH E U N SEE N P LAYM AT E
WH EN chil dren are playi ng alone on the green ,

In comes the playmate that never w as seen .

When children are happy and lonely and good ,

The Friend of the Children comes o u t of the wood .

Nobody heard him and nobo dy saw ,

His is a picture you never could draw ,


B ut he s sure to be present abroad or at home , ,

When children are happy and playing alone .

He lies in the laurels he runs on the grass


, ,

He sings when you tinkle the musical glass ;



Whene er yo u are happy and cannot tell why ,

The Friend of the Children is s u re to be by !

Heloves to be little he hates to be big


, ,


Tis he that inhabits the caves that you dig ;

Tis he when yo u play with your soldiers of tin
That sides with the Frenchmen and never can
.
-
win .

o ff

Tis he when at night you go
,
to yo u r bed ,

B ids you go to S leep and not trouble yo u r head



For wherever they re lying in cupboard or shelf
, ,


Tis he will take care of your playthings himself !
R OBE R T L OU I S S T E V ENS ON .

71
TH E W O N D E RFUL W O RL D
GR E AT wi de beau tiful wonderful World ;
, , ,

With the wonderful water ro u nd yo u curled ,

An d the wonderful grass upon you r breast ,

World you are beau tifully dressed


,
.

The wonderful air is over me ,

And the wonderful wind 15 shaking the tree ,

It walks on the water and whirls the mills


, ,

And talks to i tself on the top of the hills .

Yo u friendly E arth ! how far do you go


With the wheat fields that nod and the rivers that fl ow ,
With cities and gardens and cli ffs and isles , ,

And people u pon you for thousands of miles ?

Ah ! you are so great and I am so small


, ,

I tremble to think of you World at all ; , ,

And yet when I said my prayers to —day


, , ,

A whisper inside me seemed to say


Yo u are more than the E arth , tho u gh yo u are s u ch a dot

Yo u can love and think and the ,
E arth cannot !
W B . . R AN D S .
GAEL I C L U LLA B Y

e
H U SH ! the waves are rolling in ,

White with foam whi t ,


with foam ;
Father toils amid the din ;
B ut baby sleeps at home .

Hush ! the winds roar hoarse and deep ,

On they come on they come


,
!

B rother seeks the wandering shee p ;


B ut baby Sleeps at home .

’ 1
Hush ! the rain sweeps o er the knowes ,

Where they roam where they roam ;


,

Sister goes to seek the cows ;


B ut baby sleeps at home .

A CHI L D S G RA C E ’

S OM E hae meat and canna eat ,

And some wad eat that want it ;


B u t we hae meat and we can eat ,

And sae the Lord be t h an k i t .

R OB E R T B U R NS .

1
K no w el s, ow h l il s .

74
CHIL D S E V E N I N G HYM N

No w the day is over ,


Nigh t is drawing nigh ,

Shadows of the evening


S teal across the S ky .

Now the darkness gathers ,

S tars begin to peep .

B irds and beasts and fl owers


, ,

S oon will b e asleep .

Jes u give the weary


,

Calm and swee t repose ;


With Thy t ed et blessing
n

r s

May mine eyelids close .

Gran t to little children


V isions bright of Thee ;
G u ard the sailors tossing
On th edeep blue sea .

Comfort every su fferer


Watching late in pain ;
Those wh o plan some evil ,

From their sin restrain .

7S
Thro u gh the long night watches
May Th ine angels spread
Their white wings above me ,

Watching round my bed .

When the morning wakens ,

Then may I arise ,

P u re and fresh and sinless


In Thy holy eyes .

S B AR I N G G OU LD
.
-
.


GOOD NI GHT

G OOD N I GH T
-
Good nigh t -

Far fli es the light



B u t sti ll God s love
Shall flame above ,

Making al l bright .

Good night
-
Goo d night -
TH E w o rld

eh
s a v ry a pp y pl a ce
Wh e ve
,

re e r y c hi ld s h o ul d d a n c eand s i n g,

An d a l w a y s h a ve a s mi li n g f a c e

An d n e ve
,

r s ul k fo r a n y t h i n g

e
.

Ga bri l
WHA T TH E W I N D S B R I N G

WH I CH is the wind that brings the cold ?


The North Wind Freddie and all the snow
, , ,

An d the sheep will scamper into the fold ,


When the North begins to blow .

Which is the wind that brings the hea t ?


The South Wind Katy ; and corn will grow
, ,

And peaches redden for yo u to eat ,

When the S o u th begins to blow .

Which is the wind that brings the rain ?


The E ast Wind Arty ; and farmers know
,

That cows come shivering up the lane ,

When the E ast begins to blow .

Wh ich is the w ind that brings the flowers ?


The West Wind B essy ; and soft and low
,

The birdies sing in t h esummer ho u rs ,

When the West begins to blow .

E D M U ND C L AR EN C E S T E D MAN .

79
F O R E I G N CHI LD R E N

L I TT L E I n dian Sioux or Crow


, ,

Little fros t y E skimo ,

Little Turk or Japanee ,

Oh ! d On t you wish that yo u were me ?


You have seen the scarlet trees


And the lions over seas ;
You have eaten ostrich eggs ,

And turned the turtles o ff their legs .

Such a life is very fine ,

B u t it s not so nice as mine


Yo u must often as you trod


, ,

Have wearied n ot to be abroad .

Y ou have curious things to eat ,

I am fed on proper meat ;


You must dwell beyond the foam ,

B ut I am safe and live at home .

Little Indian Sioux or Crow


,

Little frosty E skimo


Little Turk or Japanee ,


Oh ! don t you wish that yo u were me ?
R OBE R T L OU I S S T E VENS ON .

80
And often while I m drea ming so
,

,

Across the sky the moon w i ll go .

She 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 ski es ;


She s picked them al l and dropped them


Into the mea dows of the town .

F R AN K D E MP S T E R S H E R MAN .

TH E M A N I N TH E M OO N

TH E Man in Moon as h e r sails the


Is a very remar able skipper .

B u t he made a mistake
W hen he tried to take
A drink of milk from the D ipper .

He dipped right into the Milky Way


And slowly and carefully fil l ed it .

The B ig B ear growl ed


And the Li ttle B ear howled
And scared him so that he spilled it .

82
e
T O P S Y TURVY W O R L D
IF the b u tterfly court d the bee ,

And the owl the porcupine ;


If ch u rches were built in the sea ,

And three times one was nine ;


If the pony rode his master ,

If the b u ttercups ate the cows ,

If the cats had the dire disaster


To be worried sir by the mo u se ;
, ,

If mamma sir sold the ba by


, ,

To a gy psy for half a crown ;


If a gentleman sir was a lady
, , ,

The world would be upside down -


!
If any or all of these wonders
Sho ul d ever come about ,

I sho u ld not consider them blunders ,

For I sho u ld be i nside —out .

W I L L IA M B . R AND S .

83
WH E N

WH EN cherries grow on apples trees ,

And ki ttens wear lace caps ,

And boys their sisters n e


Vetease
r ,

And bears wear woolen wraps ;

When al l the n u rsery dolls and


B egin to dance and p lay ,
Then little girls and little boys
May lie in bed al l day .

When donkeys learn to si ng and dance ,

When pigs talk politics ,

When London is a town of France ,

When two and two make six ,

When drops of rain are real pearls ,

When coal is clear and white ,

Then little boys and little girls


M ay sit u p late at ni ght .

C L IF TON B IN GH AM .

84
TH E B L U E B IRD

I KN OW the song that the bluebird is S inging ,

O u t in the apple tree where he is swinging ,

B rave little fellow ! the skies may be dreary ,

Nothing cares he while his heart is so chee ry .

how the m u sic leaps o u t from his throat !


was there ever so merry a note ?
’ ’
awhile and you ll hear what he s saying
, ,

the apple tree s w inging and swaying :


,

D ear little blossoms down u nder the snow


, ,

Yo u m u st be wea ry of winter I know ; ,

Hark ! while I sing yo u a message of cheer ,

S u mmer is coming and springtime is here !

Little whi te snowdro p I p ray yo u arise ;


,

B right yellow croc u s come o p en yo u r eyes ;


, ,

Sweet little violets hid from the cold ,

Put on yo u r mantles of purple and gold ;


D a ffodils da ffodils
,
! say do you hear ?
,

S u mmer is coming and springtime is here l ”


,

E MI L Y H U N T I N G T ON M I L L E R .

85
I N DI A N L U LLA B Y

R OC K -
A B Y,
-
hush —a —b y little papoose
, ,

Th estars
come into the sky ;
The whippoor will s crying the daylight is dying

, ,

The river runs murmuring by .

The pine trees are slumbering little papoose , ,

Th esquirrel has gone to his nest ;



The robins are sleeping the mother bird s keeping ,

The little ones warm with her breast .

The roebuck is dreaming my little papoose , ,

His mate lies asleep at his side ;


The breezes are pining the moonbeams are shining
,

All over the prairie wide .

Then hush -
a -
by, rock -
a -
by, li t tle papoose ,

You sail on the river of dreams ;


D ear Manitou loves you and watches above yo u ;

Till time when the morning light gleams .

C H AR L E S M YALL .

86
S W EE T AN D LOW
S WEE T and low sweet and low
, ,

Wind of the western sea ,

Low low breathe and blow


, , ,

Wind of the western sea !

Over the rolling waters go ,

Come from the dying moon and blow ,

Blow him again to me ;


While my little one while m v pretty one sleeps
,
.

Sleep and rest Sleep and rest


, ,

Father wi l l come to thee soon ;



R est , rest on mother s breast
, ,

Father wi l l come to thee soon ;


Father will come to his babe in the nest ;
Silver sails all o u t of the west ,

Under the Si lver moon


Sleep my little one sleep my pretty one sleep
, , , ,
.

A L F R E D T ENN Y S ON .
TH E W AY TH E M O R N I N G D AW N S
TH I S is the w ay the morning dawns :

R osy tints on flowers and trees ,

Winds that wake the birds and bees ,

D ewdrops on the fields and lawns


This is the w ay the morning dawns

This is the w ay the s u n comes u p


Gold on b rook and glossy leaves ,

Mist that mel ts above the sheaves ,

V ine , and rose and buttercup


,

This is the w ay the s u n comes u p .

This is the w ay the river flows


Here a whirl and there a dance ; ’

Slowly now then like a lance ;


,

Swiftly to the sea i t goes


Thi s is the w ay the river fl ows .

This is the w ay the ra i n comes down


Tinkle tinkle dro p by drop
, , ,

Over roof and chimney top ;


B o u ghs that bend and skies that frown
,

This is the w ay the rain comes down .

88
Over the river and through the wood

Now grandmother s cap I spy !
H u rrah for the f u n ! Is the p u dding done ?
H u rrah for the pumpkin pie
L Y D IA M AR IA CH I L D .

LA DY M OO N

L AD Y M OON Lady Moon where are yo u roving ? ,

“ ”
Over the sea .


Lady Moon Lady Moon W hom are yo u l oving ?
, ,


Al l that love me .

Ar eyou not tired with rolli ng and never


R esting to sleep ?
Wh y look so pale and so sad as forever ,


Wishing to weep ?

Ask me not this little child if yo u love me ;


, ,

You are too bold


I must obey my dear Father above me ,


And do as I m told .


Lady Moon Lady Moon where are yo u roving ?
, ,

“ ”
Over the sea .


Lady Moon Lady Moon whom are you loving ?
, ,


Al l that love me .

L ORD H OU GH T ON .

90
SE V E N TIM ES O N E

TH E R E S no d w e left on the daisies and clover ,


There s no rain left in heave n ;
’ “ ”
I ve said my seven times over and ove r
Seven times one are seven .

I am old ! so old I can write a letter


, ,

My birthday lessons are done


The lambs play always they know no ,
Letter ;
They are only one times one .

0 moon ! in the night I have seen yo u sailing


An d
S hining so round and low ;
Yo u were bright ah bright but yo u r li ght is failing ;
Yo u are nothing now but a bow .

Yo u moon have yo u done something wrong in heaven


, ,

That God has hidden your face ?


I hope if you have yo u will soon b eforgiven ,

And shine again in your place .


0 velvet bee yo u re a dusty fellow
, ,


Yo u ve powdered yo u r legs with gold !

0 brave marsh maryb u ds ,


rich and yellow !

Give me your money to hold .

91
O col u mbine , open your folded wrapper
Where t wo twin turtle doves dwell
-
;
O c uckoopint

! toll me the purple clapper ,

That hangs in your clear green be l l ,


.

And show me your nest with the yo u ng ones


I wi ll not steal them away ;
I am old ! you may trust me linnet linnet , , ,

I am seven times one to day - !

J E AN I N GE L OW .

R O M AN C E
I S AW a ship a- sailing ,

A-
sailing on the sea ;
Her masts were of the shining gold ,

Her deck of ivory ;


An d sails of silk , as soft as milk ,
And silvern shrouds had she .

An d round abou t her sailing ,

The sea was sparkling white ,

Th ewaves all clapped their hands and sang


To see so fair a sight .

Th ey kissed her t w ice they kissed her thrice ,


,

An d m u rmured with delight .


Then came the gallant captain ,

And stood upon the deck ;


In velvet coat and ru ffles whi te
, ,

Witho u t a spot or speck ;


And diamond rings and triple strings
,

Of pearls around his neck .

And four and twenty sailors


- -

Were round him bowing low ;


'

On every j acket three times three


Gold b u ttons in a row ;
And c u tlasses down to their knees ;
They made a goodly show .

An d then the ship went sailing ,


A

-
sailing o er the sea ;
She dived beyond the setting sun ,

B u t never back came she ,

For she fo u nd the lands of the golden sands ,

Where the pearls and diamonds be .

G AB R I E L S E TO U N .

93
LA D Y B IRD

LAD YB I RD ! Ladybird ! fly away home ;


The field mouse is gone to her nest ,

The daisies have sh u t up their sleepy red eyes ,

And the birds and the bees are at rest .

Ladybird ! Ladybird ! fly away home ;


The gloww orm is light i ng her lamp ,


The dew s fallin g fast and yo u r fine speckled wings
, ,

1
Will fl ag with the close clinging damp
-
.

Ladybird ! Ladybird ! fly away home ;


To yo u r house in the old wi l low tree ,

Where yo u r chil dren so dear have invited the ant


And a few cozy neighbors to tea

Ladybird ! Ladybird ! fly away home ;


The fairy bells tinkle afar ;

Make haste or they ll catch yo u and harness yo u fast
,

With a cobweb to Oberon s car


2 ’
.

C AR OL I NE B S OU TH E Y . .

1
fl ag : dr oop .
2
Ob e
ro n : Ki ng of th ef i i e
a r s .

94
TH E F A IRI ES

U P the airy mo u ntain ,

D own the rushy glen ,


We daren t go a -
hunting
For fear of little men ;

Wee folk good folk


, ,

Trooping all together ;


Green j acket red cap
, ,


And white owl s feather !

D own along the rocky shore


Some make their home ;
They live on crispy pancakes
Of yel low tide foam !

Some in the reeds


Of the black mo u ntain lake ,

With frogs for their watchdogs ,

Al l night awake .

High on the hilltop


The old King sits ;
He is now s o old and gray ,


He s nigh los t his wits .

95
With a bridge of white mist
Col um b ki l l he crosses ,

On his stately j ourneys


From S l i e
vele
a gu eto R osses

Or going up with music


On col d s tarry nights ,

To sup with the Queen


Of the gay Northern Lights .

They stole little B ridget


For seven years long ;
When she came down again ,

Her friends were all gone .

They took her lightly back ,

B etween the night and morrow ;


They tho u ght that she was fast asleep ,

B u t she w as dead with sorrow .

They have kept her ever


D eep within the lake ,

On a bed of flag leaves ,

Watching t i ll she wake .

96
The old moon la u ghed and sang a song ,

As they rocked in the wooden shoe ;


And the wind that sped them all night long ’

R u ffled the waves of dew .

The little stars were the herring -


fi sh

That lived in the beautif ul sea ;


Now cast your nets wherever yo u wish .

Never afeard are w e! ”

So cried the stars t o the fishermen three ;


Wyn ken ,

B lynken ,

And Nod .

All night long their nets they threw


To the stars in the twin kling foam ,

Then down from the skies came the wooden shoe ,

B ringing the fishermen home



Twas al l so pretty a sail it seemed
,

As if it co ul d not be ;
’ ’
And some folk thought twas a dream they d dreamed
Of sailing that beautif ul sea ;
B ut I shall name you the fishermen three
Wynken ,

Blynken ,

And Nod .

98
Wyn ken and Blynken are t w o little eyes ,

And Nod is a little head


And the wooden shoe that sailed the skies
Is a w e
eone s tr u n dl e —bed ;

So S hut your eyes while mother sings


Of wonderf u l sights that be ,

And yo u shall see the beautif ul things


As yo u rock on the misty sea
Where the old S hoe rocked the fishermen
Wynken ,

B lynken ,

And Nod .

E U GENE F I E LD .

MR N O B O D Y
.

I K NOW a funny little man ,

As quiet as a mouse
Who does the mischief that

In everybody s ho u se !


There s no one ever sees his face ,

And yet we all agree


That every plate w ebreak was cracked
B y Mr Nobody
. .

Tis he wh o always tears our books ,

W ho leaves the door aj ar ,

He pulls the buttons from our S hirts ,

And scatters pins afar ;

Tha t squeaking d oor will always squeak ,


For prithee don t you see
, , ,

We leave the oiling to be done


B y M r Nobody
. .

He puts damp wood upon the fire


That kettles cannot boil ;
His are the feet that bring in m u d ,

And all the carpets soil .

The finger marks upon the door


By n one of us are made '

W e never leav ethe blinds unclosed


To let the curtains fade .

The ink w enever sp i ll ; the boots


T hat lying round you see
Are not our boots ; they all belong
To Mr Nobody . .

I OO
L ITTLE GIR LS

IF no one ever marries me ,


And I don t see why they sho ul d ,


For nurse says I m not pretty ,


And I m seldom very good

If no one ever marries m e



I shan t mind very m u ch ,

I shal l buy a s quirrel in a cage ,

And a little rabbit hutch ;

I shall have a cottage near a woo d


And a pony all my own ,

And a little lamb quite clean and tame


, ,

That I can take to town

An d when I m getting really old ,


At twenty eight or
— ni ne
I shall buy a little orphan girl
And bring her up as mine .

L AUR EN C E A L MA TAD E M A -

10 2
A N A UTI C AL B ALLA D

A CA P I TAL S hip for an ocean trip ,

Was the Walloping Window Blind -


.

No gale that blew dismayed her crew ,




Nor tro u bled the captain s mind .

The man at the wheel was taught to feel


Contempt for the wildest blow ;
And it often appeared when the weather cleared
He had been in his bunk below .


The boatswain s mate w as very sedate ,

e
Yet fond of am u sement too ;
An d he play d hopscotch with the starboard watch ,
W h il e the captain tickled the crew .

An d the g u nner we had w as apparently mad ,


For he sat on the after rail -


And fired sal u tes with the cap t ain s boots
In the teeth of the booming gale .


The captain sat on the commodore s hat ,

And dined in a royal w ay ,

Off toasted pigs and pickles and figs


And g u nnery bread each day .

10 3
The cook w as D utch and behaved as s u ch ,

For the di et he gave the crew ,

Was a n u mber of tons of hot cross b u ns -

Served up with sugar and glue .

All na u tical pride we laid aside ,

e
And we cast our vessel ashore
On t h Gul l i b y Isles where the Poo Poo sm i les —
,

e
And the R umpl t u m B u nders roar -
.

We sat on the edge of a sandy ledge ,

And sho t a t the whistling bee


And the cin n amon bats wore waterproof hats ,

As they danced by the so u nding sea .

On R ug -
gub bark from dawn till dark
, ,

We fed til l we
,
al l had grown
Uncommonly shrunk when a Chinese j u nk
Came in from the To rr i b y Z one .

She w a s stubby and square bu t ,


w edid n

t m u ch care ,

S o w echeerily put to sea ;


And we left the crew of the j u nk to chew ,

The bark of the R ug -


gub tree
C H AR L E S E D WAR D CAR R Y L .

10 4
And every one said wh o s aw them go ,


Oh ! won t they be soon upset yo u know ?

,

For the sky is dark and the voyage is long ;



And happen what may it s extremely wrong
, ,


In a sieve to sail so fast .

Far and few far and ,


f w, e
Are the lands where the J u mb l i e
s live ;

Their heads are green and their hands are bl u e ;


,

And they went to sea in a sieve .

The water it soon came in it ,


di d ;
The water it s oon came in
S o to keep them dry they wrapped their feet
, ,

In a pin ky paper all folded neat ;


An d they fastened it down with a pin .

And they passed the night in a crockery j ar ;


And each of them said ,
H ow wise we are !

Though the sky be dark and the voyage be long , ,

Yet w enever can think w ewere rash or wrong ,


Wh i le ro u nd in our sieve we spin .

Far and few far and few, ,

Are the lands where the J u mb l i e


s live ;

Their heads are green and their hands are bl u e ;


,

And they went to sea in a sieve .

10 6
And all night long they sailed away ;
And when the s u n went down ,

They whistled and warbled a moony song ,

To the echoing sound of a coppery gong ,

In the shade of the mountains brown .

0 Ti mb al l o o ! How happy we are


When we live in a sieve and a crockery j ar !
All night long in the moonlight pale ,

We sail away with a pea green sa i l -

In the shade of the mo u ntains brown .

Far and few far and few


, ,

Are the lands where the J u mb l i e


s live ;

Their heads are green and their hands are bl u e


, ;
And they went to sea in a S ieve .

They sailed to the Western Sea they did , ,

To a land all covered with trees ;


And they bo u ght an o wl ,
and a useful cart ,

And a po u nd of rice and a cranberry tart


, ,

And a hive of silvery bees ;


And they bought a pig and some green j ackdaws
, ,

And a lovely monkey with lollipop paws ,

And forty bottles of ring -


bo -
ree ,

An d no end of S tilton cheese .

10 7
Far and few far and few
, ,

Are the lands where the J u m bl i e


s live ,

Their heads are green and t heir hand s are


,

And they wen t t o sea in a sieve .

And in twenty years they all came back ,

In twenty years or more ;


“ ’
And every one said ,
How tall they ve grown !

For they ve been t o the Lakes and the ,
To r ri b l e
And the hi lls of the C h an kl y B ore .

An d they drank their health , and gave them a


Of d umpling made of beautiful yeast ;
And every one said ,
If w eonly live ,

We too w i ll go t o sea in a sieve


, , ,

To the hills of the C h an kl y B ore .

Far and e
f w, far and e
f w,
Are the lands where the J um b l i e
s live ;

Their heads are green and their hands are bl u e


, ;
And they went to sea in a sieve .

E D WAR D L E AR .

10 8
Co u nts them f u ll and fairly ,

Trace he fi nd e
th none
Of the little snow —white lamb ,

Left alone alone ,


.

Up the glen he races ,

B reasts the bitter wind


S co u rs across the plain and leaves
Wood and wold behind ;
S torm upon the mountain ,

Nigh t upon its throne


There he finds the little lamb ,

Left alone alone ,


.

S tr u ggling panting sobbing


, , ,

Kneeling on the ground ,


R ound the pretty creature s neck
B oth his arms are wo u nd ;
Soon within his b osom ,

All its bleatings done ,

Home he bears the little lamb ,

Left alone alone


,
.

Oh ! the happy faces ,


B y the shepherd s fire !
I I O
High with ou t the tempest roars ,

B u t the laugh rings higher .

Yo u ng and Ol d together
Make that j oy their own ,

In their midst the little lamb ,

Left alone alone


,
.

TH OM A S W E S T W OOD .

TH E M OO N
moon has a face like the clock in the hall ;
She S hi nes on t hi eves on the garden wall ,

On streets and fields and harbor quays ,

And birdies asleep in the forks of the trees .

The s q u alling cat and the squeaking mouse ,

The howling dog by the door of the house ,

The bat that lies in bed at noon ,

All love to be o u t by the light of the moon .

B ut all of the t h ings that belong to the day


C u ddl e to sleep to be out of her w ay ;
And fl owers and chi ldren close their eyes
Till u p in the m orning the sun shall arise .

R OB E R T L OU I S S T E V ENS ON .

I I I
SAN TA C LA U S

HE comes i n the night ! he comes in the night !


H e softly silently comes ;
,

W hile the li ttle brown heads on the pillows so W hite


Are dreaming of bugles and drums .

He cuts through t he snow like a ship through the foam ,

While the whi te flakes around him whirl ;


Who tells him I know not bu t he ,
fi nd e
th the home
Of each good little boy and girl .

His sleigh i t is long and deep and wi de ;


, ,

It w ill carry a host of things


While dozens of drums hang over the side ,

With the sticks sticking under the strings .

And yet not the sound of a drum is heard ,

Not a bugle blast is blown ,

r
t As he mounts to the chimney top like a bird ,

And drops to the hearth like a stone .

The little red stocki ngs he silently fills ,

Till the stockings will hold no more ;


The brigh t little sleds for the great snow hills
Are quickly set down on the floor .

112
The chi ldren were nestled all sn u g in their beds ,

While vi sions of sugarplums danced in their heads ;


And mam ma her kerchief and I i n my

in cap
'

, ,

Had j ust settled our brains for a long w i nter s nap ’

When ou t on the lawn there arose such a clatter ,

I sprang from the bed to see what was the matter .

Away to the window I flew like a flash ,

Tore open the shutters and threw up the sash .

The moon on the breast of the new —fallen snow


Gave the luster of midday to obj ects below ,

When what to my wondering eyes sho u ld


,
a ppear ,

B ut a miniat u re sleigh and e i ght tiny reindeer


, ,

Wi th a li ttle old driver so lively and q u ick


, ,

I knew in a moment it m u st be S t Nick . .

More rapid than eagles hi s co u rsers they came ,

An d he whistled , and sho u ted and called them by name ; ,

Now D asher
,
! now D ancer
,
! now Prancer and
,
V ixen !
On Comet
,
! on Cupid
,
! on D onder and B litzen
,
!
To the top of the porch ! to the top of the wall !

Now dash away ! dash away ! dash away all !
As dry leaves that before the wild h u rricane fly ,

When they meet wi th an obstacle mo u nt to the sky ; ,

1 14
So u p to the ho u setop the co u rsers they flew ,

With the sleigh f u ll Of toys and S t Nicholas too


,
.
,
.

And then in a twinkling I heard on the roof


, ,

The prancing and pawing of each little hoof .

As I drew in my head and ,


w as turning around ,

D own the chimney S t Nicholas came W ith a bound


. .

He w as dressed all in f u r from his head to his foot


, ,

And his clothes were all tarnished with ashes an d soot


A bundle of toys he had fl ung on his back ,

And he looked like a peddler just opening his pack .

His eyes — how they twinkled ! his dimples how mer r y !

His cheeks were like roses his nose like a cherry ,


!

H i s droll little mo u th was drawn up like a bow ,


And the beard of his chin w as as white as the snow ;

The st u mp of a pipe he held in his teeth ,

And the smoke it encircled his head like a wreath ;


He had a broad face and a little ro u nd belly
That shook when he la u ghed like a b owlf u l of j elly ,
.

He w as ch ub b y . an d pl u mp a right j olly elf


, ,

And I la u ghed when I saw him in Spite of myself ; ,

A wink of his eye and a twist of his head ,


S oon gave me to know I had nothing to dread .

1 15
He spoke not a word b u t went straight to his work
, ,

And fil led all the stockings ; then t u rned with a j erk ,

And laying his fin ger aside of his nose ,

And giving a nod up the chimney he rose ;


,

And sprang to his sleigh t o his team gave a whistle


, ,

And away they all flew like the down of a thistle .

B u t I heard him exclaim ere he drove o u t of sight


, ,


Happy Christmas to all and to all a good night
,
-
.

C L E MEN T C M OOR E . .

AU LD D A D D Y D A R K N ESS

e
A U LD D addy D arkn ss creeps frae his hole

,

B lack as a blackamoor blin as a mole,


:

S tir the fire till it lowes let the bairnie sit


, ,

Auld D addy D arkness is no w an t i t yet .


See him in the corners h i di n frae the l icht ,

mi n

See him at the window gl oo at the nicht ;

T u rn up the gas licht close the shu tters a
, ,

An
’ ’
Auld D addy D arkness will fl ee far awa .


Awa to hide the birdie within its c ozy nest ,

Awa to l ap the

w e
efl e on oo rs their mither s ’
breast ,

116
A LO B S T E R QUA D RI LLE

Will yo u walk a little faster ?
Said a W hiting to a snail ,


There s a porpoise close behind u s ,


And he s treading on my tail .

See how eagerly the lobsters


And the turtles all advance !

They are waiting on the shingle


Wil l you come and j oin the dance ?
’ ’
Wi l l you won t you will you won t yo u
, , , ,

Will yo u join the dance ?

Will you won t you wil l yo u won t yo u


,

, ,

,


Won t yo u j oin the dance ?

Yo u can really have n o notion


How delightf ul it will be
When they take us up and throw u s ,


With the lobsters out to sea ,
!

B u t the snail replied “


Too far too far ! ”
, ,

And gave a l ook askance


S aid he thanked the whiting kindl y ,

B u t he wo uld not j oin the dance .

Wo ul d not could not wo ul d not could not


, , , ,

Co uld not join the dance .

1 18
W oul d not co ul d not wo uld not co u ld not
, , , ,

Co u ld not j oin the dance .


What matters it how far we go ?
His scaly friend replied ,

There is another shore you know , ,

Upon the other side .

The f u rther Off from E ngland

The nearer is to France


Then turn not pale beloved snail
, ,

B u t come and j oin the dance .

Will yo u won t yo u wil l you won t you


,

, ,

,

Wi l l yo u j oin the dance ?


’ ’
Will yo u won t you will you won t yo u
, , , ,


Won t yo u j oin the dance ?
L E W I S CAR R OL L .

1 19
MY S H A D OW
I VE a little S hadow that goes in and o u t with me
HA ,

And what can be the use of h im is more than I can see .

He is very very like me from the heels up to the head ;


,

And I see him j ump before me when I j ump into my bed,


.

The f u nniest thing abo u t h im is the way he likes to grow


No t at all like proper ch i ldren w hi ch is always very slow ;
,

For he sometimes shoots up taller like an Indi a rubbe r ball -


,

And he sometimes gets so little that there s none of h im ’

at all .


He hasn t got a notion of how children o u ght to play ,

And Ca n o nl y make a fool of me in every sort of way s



He stays so close beside me he s a coward yo u can see ;
, ,


I d think shame to stick to n u rsie as that shadow sticks
to me

One morning very early before the s u n was u p


, , ,

I rose and fo u nd the shini ng dew on every buttercup ;


B ut my lazy little shadow like an arrant sleepy head
,
-
,

Had stayed at home behind m e and was fas t asleep


bed .

R OBE R T L OU I S S T E V ENS ON
1 20
Coo coo coo coo coo coo
-
,
-
,
-
!
Let me speak a word or two
Who stole that p retty nest

From little yellow breast ?

Not I ,
said the sheep ; oh no ,
!


I wouldn t treat a poor bird so .

I gave wool the n est to line ,

B u t the nest was none of m ine .

” “
B aa baa
,
! said the sheep ; oh no ,
!


I wouldn t trea t a poor bird so

Caw caw ,
cried the crow ;
I sho u ld li ke to know
What thief took away

A bird s nest to day -
.

Cluck cl u ck ,
said the hen ;

D on t ask m e aga i n ;

Why I haven t a chick
,

Wo u ld do s u ch a trick !

We each gave her a feather


And she wove them together .


I d scorn to intrude
On her and her brood .

122
Cluck cl u ck said the hen ;
“ ”
D on t ask me again .

Chir -
a -
whir chir -
a— whir

We ll make a great stir ,

And fi nd o u t his name ,


And all cry ,
For shame

I wo u ld not rob a bird ,

Said little Mary Green ;


I think I never heard

Of anything so mean .


It is ve ry cr u el too ,

Said little Alice Neal ;


I wonder if he knew
How sad the bird Wo u ld feel !

A little boy h u ng down his head


And went and hid behind the bed :

F or he stole that pretty nest ,

From poor little yellow breast ;


And he felt so f u ll of Shame ,

H ed i d
'

n

t like to tell his name .

L Y D I A M AR I A C H I LD .

1 23
WI S HI N G
RI N G -
TI N G ! I wish I were a primrose ,

A bright yellow primrose blooming in the spring .

The stooping boughs above me ,

The wandering bee to love me ,

The fern and moss to creep across ,

An d the elm tree for our kin g !

Nay — stay ! I wi sh I were an elm tree ,

A great lofty elm tree with green leaves gay


,
!

The winds would set them dancing ,

The s u n and moonshine glance in ,

The birds would house among the bo u ghs ,

And ever sweetly S ing !

Oh —
no ! I wish I were a r obin ,

A robin or a little wren everywhere to go ; ,

Through forest field or garden, , ,

And ask no leave or pardon ,

Till winter comes with icy th u mbs


To r u ffle up our wi ngs !
1 24
TH E L AM P L I GH TER

M Ytea is nearly ready and the s u n has left the sky



It s time to take the window to see L ei egoing
er by ;
For every night at teatime and before you take your seat ,

With lantern and with ladder he comes p osting u p the


street .

Now Tom would be a driver and M aria go to sea ,


And my papa s a banker and as rich as he can be ;

B u t I when I am stronger and can choose what I m to do
, ,

0 L e
ei eI ll
r ,

go ro u nd a t night and light the lamps
with you !

For weare very l u cky with a lamp before the door


, ,

And L e
ei estops to light it as he lights so many more ;
r

An d 0 ! before yo u h u rry by with ladder and with light ,


0 L e
ei esee
r ,
a little child and nod to him to night -
!
R OBE R T L OU I S S T E V ENS ON .

1 26
TH E EL F AN D TH E D O RM OUSE

U ND E R a toadstool
Crept a w e
eE l f ,

Ou t of the rain ,

To shelt e
r himself .

Under the toadstool


So u nd asleep ,

Sat a big D ormo u se


All in a heap .

Trembled the wee E l f,


Frightened and yet
,

Fearing to fly away
Lest he get w t e .

To the ne x t shelter
Maybe a mile !

S u dden the w e
eEl f
Smiled a wee smile ,

T u gged till the toadstool


Toppled in t w o .

Holding it over him ,

Gayly he fl ew .

1 27
Soon he was safe home ,

D ry as co ul d be .

Soon woke the D ormo u se


Good gracio u s me

Where is my toadstool ?
Loud he l amented .


And that s how u mbrellas
First were invented .

OL I V E R

TH E SAN D S O F D EE
O M AR Y go and cal l the cattle home
, ,

And call the cattle home ,

And call the cattle home ,

! ”
Across the sands of Dee
The western wind was wild and dank with foam
And all alone went she .

The western tide crept up along the sand ,

’ ’
And o er and o er the sand ,

And round and round the sand ,

As far as eye could see .

The rolling mis t came down and hid the land :

An d never home came she .

1 28
And when the winter is over ,

The b oughs will get n e


w leaves ,

The quail come back to the clover ,

And the swallow back to the eaves .

The robin wi ll wear on his bosom


A vest that is bright and new ,

And the loveliest wayside blossom


W ill shine w ith the sun and dew .

The leaves to day are whirling


-

The brooks are all d ry and dumb ,

B u t le t me tell you my darling


,

The spring will be sure to come .

There must be rough cold weather, ,

And winds and rains so wild '

Not all good things together


Come to us here my child ,
.

S o when some dear j oy loses


,

Its beau teo u s summer glow ,

Think how the roots of the roses


Are kept alive in the snow .

A L I C E C AR Y .

13 0
J A C K FR OS T
TH E door was shut as doors should be
, ,

B efore you went t o bed las t nigh t ;


Yet Jack Frost has got in , you see ,

And left your window silver whi t e .

He must have waited till you slept


And not a single word he spoke ,


B u t pencilled o er the panes and crept
Away again before you woke .

And now yo u cannot see the trees


Nor fields that stretch beyond the lane ;
B ut there are fairer things than these
His fingers traced on every pane .

R ocks and castles towering high ;


Hills and dales and streams and fi e
ld S
'

An d knights in armo u r riding by ,


With nodding plumes and shini ng shields

An d here are little boats , and there


B ig ships with Sails spread to the breeze ;
And yonder palm trees waving fair
,
-

On islands set in silver seas .

13 1
And b u tterfl ies with ga u zy wings ;
And herds of cows and flocks of sheep ;
And fr u it and flowers and all the things
You see when you are sound asleep .

For creeping softly u nderneath


,

The door when all the lights are out ,

Jack Frost takes every breath you breathe


And knows the thi ngs you t hi nk about .

He paints them on the window pane -

In fairy lines with frozen steam ;


And when you wake you see again
,

The lovely things you saw in dream


G AB R I E L

H OW TH E F LOW E R S GR OW
TH I S is how the flowers grow
I have watched them and I know .

First above the gro u nd is seen


,

A tiny blade of pures t green ,

R eaching up and peeping forth


E ast and west and sou t h and nor t h
,
.

13 2
M A R CH
TH E cock is crowing ,

The stream is flowing ,

The small birds twitter ,

The lake doth glitter ,

The green field sleeps in the s u n ;


The oldest and youngest
Are at work with the strongest ;
The cattle are grazing ,

Their heads never raisi n g '

There are forty feeding like one .

Like an army defeated


The snow hath retreated ,

And now doth fare ill


On the top of the bare hill ;
The plowboy is whooping anon anon ;

There s j oy in t he mountains ,


There s life in the fountains ;
Small clouds are sailing
B lue sky prevailing
The rain is over and gone !
W I L L IA M W ORD S WOR TH .

1 34
M AR G E RY B R OW N

M AR GE R Y B R OW N on the top of the hill ,


Why are yo u standing idle still ?
Oh , I m looking over to London town ;


Shall I see the horsemen if I go down ?

Marge r y B rown on the top of the hill ,


Why are yo u standing listening still ?
,

Oh I hear the bells of London ring


, ,

And I hear the men and the maidens sing .

Margery B rown on the top of the hill ,


Why are you standing waiting still ?
,

Oh , a knight is there , bu t I can t go down ,


For the bells ring strangely in London town .

KA T E GRE ENAWAY .
TH E L ITT LE LAN D

WH EN at home alone I sit


And am very tired of it ,

I have j u st to shut my eyes


To go sailing through the skies
To go sailing far away
To the pleasant Land of Play '

To the fairy land afar


Where the Little People are ;
Where the clover tops are trees ,

And the rain pools are the seas ,

And the leaves like little ships


Sail abo u t on tiny trips ;
And above the daisy tree
Through the grasses ,

High o

eh ed
r a the b u mble bee
H u ms and passes .

In the forest to and fro


I can wander I can go ;,

See the spider and the fly ,

And the ants go marching by


Carrying parcels wi th their feet
D own the green and grassy street .

136
(These have s u re to battle be e
n ! )

Some are pied with ev ry h u e ,

Black and crimson gol d and bl u e ;


,

Some have wings and swift are gone


B ut they all look kin dl y on .

When my eyes I once again


Open and see all things plain
, ,

High bare walls great bare floor ;


,

Great big knobs on drawer and door ;


Great big people perched on chairs ,

Stitchi ng tucks and mendi ng tears ,

E ach a hill that I co u ld climb ,

And t alki ng nonsense all the time


Oh dear me
,
!
That I co ul d be
A sailor on the rain pool sea -
,

A climber in the clover tree ,

And j u st come back a sleepy head,


-
,

Late at night to go to bed !


R OBE R T L OU I S S T E VENS ON .

13 8
TH E FA I RY
OH , who is so merry
As the light hearted fairy ?
-

He dances and sings


To the so u nd of his wi ngs ,

With a hey and a heigh and a


, ,

Oh who is so merry
,

As the light hearted fairy ?


-

His nectar he sips



From the primrose s lips
With a hey and a heigh and a
, ,

Oh w h o is so merry
,

As the light hearted fairy ?


-

His night is the noon ,

And his s u n is the moon ,

With a hey and a heigh and a


, ,

139
N ON SE N SE RI M E

TH E owl and the eel and the warming pan ,

They went to visit the soap —fat man .

The soap fat man he was not withi n


-


He d gone for a ride on his rolling pin .

S o they all came back by the way of the town ,

An d turned the meetinghouse upside down .

LAUR A E . RI CH AR D S .

LI TTLE J A C K FR OS T

L I TT L E Jack Frost went up the hill ,

Watching the stars and the moon so sti l l ,

Watching the stars and moon so brigh t ,

And la u ghing aloud with all his migh t .

Little Jack Frost ran down the hill ,

Late in the nigh t when the winds were still ,

Late in the fall when the leaves fell down ,

R ed and yellow and faded brown .

Little Jack Frost walked thro u gh the trees ,

“ ” “
Oh ! sighed the flowers ,
we freeze we free ze
,
.

Oh ,

sighed the grasses “
we die ,
w edi e .

Said little Jack Frost ,


Good -
by, good -
by .

1 40
TH E F AIRY F OL K

C OM E cuddle close in daddy s coat
B eside the fire so bright ,

And hear about the fairy folk


That wander in the night .

For when the stars are shining clear


And all the world is still ,

They float across the silver moon


From hill to cloudy hill .

Their caps of red their cloaks of green


, ,

Are hung with S ilver bells ,

And when they re shaken with the wind


Their merry ringing swells .

And riding on the crimson m oth ,

With black spots on his wings ,

They guide them down the p u rple sky


With golden bridle rings .

They love to visit girls and boys ,

T 0 see how sweet they sleep ,

To stand beside their cosy cots


An d at their faces peep .

142
For in the whole of fairy l and
They have no finer sight
Than l ittle children sleeping so u nd
With faces rosy bright .

On tiptoe crowding ro u nd their heads ,


When bright the moonlight beams ,

They whisper little tender words


That fi ll their minds with dreams ;
An d when they see a s u nny smile ,
With lightest finger tips
They lay a hundred kisses sweet
Upon the r u ddy lips .

An d then the little spotted moths


Spread ou t their crimson wings ,

And bear away the fairy crowd


With shaking bridle rings .

Come b a i rn i e
s hide in daddy s coat
, ,

B eside the fire so bright


Perhaps the little fa i rv fo l k
Will Visit yo u to nigh t
-
.

R OBE R T B I RD .

1 43
OH ! WH E R E D O F AIRI ES HID E ?

OH ! where do fairies hide their heads


W hen snow lies on the hills ,

When fros t has spoiled their mossy beds ,

And crystall ized their ril l s ?

B eneath the moon they cannot trip



In circles o er the plain ;
And draughts of dew they cannot sip ,

Till green leaves come again .

Perhaps in small blue diving bells


, , ,

They plunge beneath the waves


e
,

Inhabiting the wreath d shell s


That lie in coral caves .

Perhaps in red V esuvius ,

Caro u sals they maintain ;


And cheer their little spirits th u s ,

Till green leaves come again .

When they return there will be mirth ,

And music in the air ,

And fairy wings u pon the earth ,

And mischief everywhere .

1 44
TH E LO RD I S MY S H E P H E RD

TH E Lord is my shepherd ; I shall not want .

He maketh me to lie down in green past u res ;


He leadeth me beside the still waters ;
He restoreth my soul .

He leadeth me in the paths of righteo u sness for His



name s sake .

Yea though I walk through the valley of the shadow


,

of death ,

I will fear no evil for Thou art with me


,
.

e
Thy rod and Th y s t a ff they comfor t me .

Thou preparest a table before me in the presenc of mine


enemies ;
Thou anointest my head with oil ; my c u p r u nneth over .

Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days


of my life ,

And I wi l l dwell in the house of the Lord forever .

! ! III P S AL M .

1 46
LI TTL E d ro p s of te
wa r littl eg r a i n s o f s an d

Ma ke th e m i gh ty o ce
, ,

a n an d t h e pl ea s an t l a n d

th o ugh th e y be
.

Th us t h e m i n u te
,

l i ttl e s h u mb l e ,

M a ke th e
,

mi gh t y a ge s of ete rn it y

eeeC ee
.

Eb n z r o bh a m Br w r .

1 48
Then take me on your k nee , mother ;
And listen mother of m i ne
,

A hundred fairies danced last night ,

An d the harpers they were nine ;

And their harp strings rung so merrily


To their dancing feet so small ;
B ut oh the words Of their talking
,


Were merrier far than all !

And what were the words my ,


M ary ,

That t hen you heard them say ?”


I ll tell you all my mother ;

B ut let me have my way .

Some of them played with the water ,

And rolled it down the hill ;


An d shall speed i ly t u rn
‘ ’ ‘
thi s ,
they said ,


The poor old miller s mill ;

For there has been no water


E ver since the first of May ;
And a busy man will the miller be
At the dawning of the day .

1
50
Oh the miller how he will laugh
, ,

When he sees the mill dam rise .

The j o l ly old miller how he will laugh ,

Till the tears fi ll both his eyes ’

e
.

And some they seized th little w inds

That sounded over the hill ;


And each pu t a horn unto his mouth
-

And blew both loud and shrill ;


’ ‘
And there ,
they said ,
the merry w inds go
Away from every horn ;
And they shall clear the mildew dank

From the blind old widow s corn .

Oh the poor blind widow


, , ,

Tho u gh she has been blind so long



She l l be blithe eno u gh when the mildew s gone

,


And the corn stands tall and strong .

And some they brought the brown lint seed ,

And fl u ng it down from the L OW '

‘ ’ ‘
And this ,
they said ,
by the sunrise ,

In th ew e e av r s

croft shall grow .

1 51
Oh the poor lame weaver
, , ,

How will he laugh o u tright


When he sees his dwindling flax field

All f u ll of flowers by night !

And then o u t spoke a brownie ,

W ith a long beard on his chin


‘ ’
I have spun up all the tow said he , ,


And I want some more to Spin .

“ ‘
I ve spun a piece of hempen cloth

And I want to spin another



A little sheet for Mary s bed ,


And an apron for her mother .

With that I co u ld not help bu t la u gh ,

An d I la u ghed o u t lo u d and free ;


And then on the top of the Caldon Low
There was no one left b u t me .

And all on the top of the Caldon Low


The mists were cold and gray ,

And nothi ng I sa w b u t the mossy stones


That ro u nd abo u t me lay .
'

TO M OTH E R P A IRI E

G OOD old mother P airie ,

Sitting by yo u r fi r e,

Have you any little fol k


Yo u wo ul d like to hi re ?

I want no chubby drudges


To milk and churn and spin
, , ,

Nor old and wrinkl ed B rownies ,

With grizzly beards and thi n ; ,

B ut patient little people ,

With hands of busy care ,

And gentle speech and loving hearts ;


,

Say have you such t o spare ?


,

They must be very cun ni ng


To make the fu t ure S hine
Like leaves and flowers and strawberries
, , ,

A-
growing on one V ine .

Good old mother F airi e


,

Since my need you know ,

Tell me have you any folk


,

Wise enough to go ?
A L I C E C AR Y .

1
54
TH E Y A R N O F TH E NANC Y B E L L

TWAS on the shores that rou n d our c o ast
From Deal to R amsgate span ,

That I found alone on a piece of stone


An elderly naval man .

His hair w as weedy his beard was long


, ,

And weedy and long was he ,

An d I heard this W ight on the shore recite ,

In a singular minor key


Oh ! I am a cook and a captain bold ,

And the mate of the Nan cy brig ,


And a bo s u n tight and a midshipmite
, ,

’ ”
And the crew of the captain s gig .

And he shook his fists and he tore his hair ,

Till I really felt afraid ,

For I couldn t help thinking the man had been drinking



,

And so I simply said

Oh , elderly man , it s little I kn ow


Of the du ties of men of the sea


And I ll eat my hand if I understand

How you can possibly be


15
5
At once a cook and a captain bold , ,

An d the mate of the Na n cy brig ,


And a bo s u n tight and a midshi p mite, ,

’ ”
And the crew of the captain s gig .

Then he gave a hitch to his trousers which ,

Is a trick all seamen learn ,

An d having got rid of a thumping q u id ,


He spun this painf u l yarn

Twas in the good ship N a n cy B ll e


That we sailed to the Indian Sea ,

And there on a reef w ecome to grief ,

Which has often occurred to me .

An d pretty nigh al l the crew w as drowned


(There seventy —seven in all )
w as ,

And only ten of the Na n cy s men ’

‘ ’
Said Here ! to the muster roll -
.

There was me and the cook and the captain


, ,

And the mate of the N an cy brig ,


And the bo sun tight and a midshipmite , ,


And the crew of the captain s gig .

15 6
“ ‘ ’
I ll be eat if yo u dines o ff me ,

says Tom ;
‘ ’ ‘ ’ ’
Yes that
, ,
says I ,
you ll be ,

I m
‘ ’ ’
boiled if I die my friend , ,
q u oth I ;
‘ ’
And E xactly so ,
quoth he .


Says he ,
D ear James to m u rder me ,

Were a foolish thing to do ,

’ ’
For don t you see that you can t cook
While I can and will cook y ou !

So he boils the water and takes the salt ,

And the pepper in portions true


(Which he never forgot ) and some chopped ,

And some sage and parsley too .


Come here ,
says he with a proper
,

Which his smiling features tell ,

Twill s oothing be if I let you see ,

’ ’
How extremely nice you ll smell !

And he stirred it round and round and round ,

And he sni ffed at the foaming froth ;


When I ups wi th his heels and smothers his squeals ,

In the sc u m of the boiling broth .

15 8
And I eat that cook i n a week or less

And as I ea t ing be
The last of his chops why I almost d r ops , ,

For a vessel in sigh t I see .

And I never l a r f, and I never smile ,

And I never larf or play ,

B u t sit and croak and a single joke


,

I have —
which is to say

Oh ! I am a cook and a captain bold ,

And the mate of the N a n cy b r ig ,


And a bo sun tight and a midshipmite ,


And the crew of the captain s gig ! ’

W S G I L BE R T . . .

F ULL F ATH O M FIV E THY F ATH E R L I ES

F U L L fathom fi V ethy father lies :

Of his bones are coral made :

Those are pearls that were his eyes


,

Nothing of him that doth fade ,

B ut doth su ffer a sea change -

Into something rich and strange .

Sea nymphs hourly ring his knell


H ark ! now I hear them ding dong bell , ,
.

W I L L I AM S H AKE SPE AR E .
U N D E R MY WI N D OW

U ND E R my window u nder my window , ,

Al l in the mids ummer weather


Three little girls with fluttering curls
Flit to and fro together :

There s B ell with her bonne t of satin sheen


And M aude with her mantle of silver green -


,

And Kate with her scarlet feather .

Under my window under my window , ,

Leaning stealth i ly over ,

M erry and clear the voice I hear


, ,

Of each glad hearted rover


— .

Oh ! sly little Kate , she steals my roses ;


And M a u de and B ell twine wreaths and
As merry as bees in clover .

Under my window under my window , ,

In the blue mids ummer weather ,

Stealing slow on a h u shed tiptoe


, ,

I catch them al l together


B e l l with her bonn et of satin sheen ,

And Ma u de with her mantle of silver green -


,

And Kate with her scarlet feather .

1 60
B edded soft in moss and rushes ,

Safely bo und with reindeer sinews ;


S tilled his fretful wail by saying ,


H u sh ! the Naked B ear will hear thee !
Lulled him into slumber singing , ,

Ewa -
yea ! my little owlet !

Who is th is that lights the W i gw am ?


With his great eyes lights the W igwam ?
Ewa -
yea ! my little owlet
Many things Nokomis taught him
Of the stars that shine in heaven
Showed him I shk o o d a h , the comet ,

I shk o o d ah , with fiery tresses '

Showed the D eath D ance of the Spirits ,

Warriors wi th their plumes and war clubs ,

Flaring far away to northward


In the frosty nights of Winter ;
Showed the broad white road in heaven ,

Pathway of the ghosts the shadows , ,

R unning straight across the heavens


Crowded with the ghosts the shadows ,
.

At the door on s u mmer evenings


Sat the little Hiawatha ,

162
Heard the whispering of the pine tr e
es ,

Heard the lapping of the waters ,

So u nds of music words of wonder ; ,

Minne wawa -
said the pine t r ees .

u d w ay -
?)
M a u shka J said the water .

Saw the firefly Wah wah ,


- -
t ay s e
e ,

Flitting thro u gh the dusk of evening ,

With the twinkle of its candle


Lighting u p the brakes and bushes ,

And he sang the song of children ,

Sang the song Nokomis taugh t him


Wah wah -
e
-
elittle firefly
t ay s , ,

Little ,
flitting white fi einsect
,
-
r

Little ,
dancing white fi ecreat u re
,
-
r ,

Light me with your little candle ,

Er eupon my bed I lay me ,

Er ein sleep I close my eyelids J ?)

Saw the moon rise from the water ,

R ippling rounding from the water


, ,

Saw the flecks and shadows on i t ,


Whispered ,
What is that Nokomis ? ,

And the good Nokomis answered


Once a warr i or , very angry ,
1 63
Sei zed his grandmother and threw her ,

Up into the Sky at midnigh t ;


R igh t against the moon he threw h e r


Tis her body that you see there .

Saw the rainbow in t he heaven ,

In the eastern sky the rainbow , ,

“ ”
Whispered ,
What is that N okomis ? ,

And the good N o k o m i s answered


“ ’
Tis the heaven of flowers yo u see there ;
Al l the wild flowers of the forest ,
All the lilies of the prairie ,

W hen on earth they fade and perish ,


B lossom in that heaven above us .

When he heard the owls at midnight ,

Hootin g laughing in the forest


,

“ ”
What is that ? he cried in terror ,

” ”
What is that ,
he said ,
N okomis ?
And the good Nokomis answered :


That is bu t the owl and owlet ,

Talking in their native language ,


Talking scolding at each other
,
.

Then the little Hiawatha


Learned of every bird its langu age ,

1 64
That make so m u ch b u stle and noise in vain ,


B u t I ll be as b u sy as they !

S o he flew to the mo u ntain and powdered its crest ;


,

He lit on the trees and their b oughs he dressed


,

In diamond beads and over the breast


Of the quivering lake he spread ,

A coat of mail that it need not fear


,

The downward point of many a spear


That he h u ng on its margin far and near
, ,

Where a rock could rear its head .

He went to the windows of those wh o slept ,

And over each pane like a fairy crept ;


, ,

Wherever he breathed wherever he ste pp ed


, ,

B y the ligh t of the morn were seen


Most beau tiful things ; there were flowers and trees ;
There were bevies of birds and swarms of bees
There were cities with temples and towers ; and these
All p ictured in silver sheen !

B u t he did one thing that was hardly fair ,

He peeped in the cupboard and findi ng there


,

1 66
That all had forgotten for him to prepare ,


Now j ust to se t them
, a -
thinking ,

’ ”
I ll bite this basket of fr u it ,
said he ;

This costly pitcher I ll burst in three ;
.

And the glass of water they ve left for me ’

Shall ‘
tchick to tell them I m dri nking ’
!

H ANN AH F G OU L D . .

WH AT TH E CH I M N E Y SAN G

OVE R the chimney the night wind sang


And chanted a melody no one knew !

And the Woman stop p ed as her babe she tossed


, ,

And thought of the one she had long S ince lost ,

An d said , as her teardrops back Sh eforced ,


I hate the wind in the chimney .

Over the chimney the night wind sang


An d chanted a melody no one knew ;
An d the Children said , as they closer drew ,

Tis some witch that is cleaving the black night through ,


Tis a fai ry tr u mpet that j ust then blew
And w efear the wi nd in the ch imney .

167
Over the chimney the night wind sang
And chanted a melody no one knew ;
An d the Man , as he sa t on his hearth below
Said to himself , It will s u rely sn ow ,

An d f u el is dear and wages low ,



And I ll stop the leak in the chimney .

Over the chimney the night wi nd sang


And chanted a melody no one knew ;
B u t the Poet listened and smiled fo r he ,

Was Man and Woman and Child all three ,

“ ’
And said ,
It is God s o wn harmony
This wind we hear in the chimney .

B RE T HAR TE .

TH E N E W Y EAR

WH O comes dancing over the snow ,

His soft little feet all bare and rosy ?


Open the door , tho u gh the wild winds blow
Take the child in and make him cosy .

Take him in and hold him d ear ,


He is the wonderf ul glad New Year .

D I NAH M C R AIK . .

1 68
She saw her brother P eterkin
R oll something large and ro u nd ,

Which he beside the rivulet


, ,

In playing there had fo u nd ,


.

He came to ask what he had found


That was so large and smooth and ro u nd
, ,
.

Ol d Kaspar took it from the boy ,


Wh o stood expectant by ;
And then the old man shook his head ,

And wi th a nat u ral sigh


, ,


Tis some poor fellow s skull ,
said he ,

Who fell in the great victory

I fi nd them in the garden ,


For there s many here abo u t ;
And often when I go to plow ,

The plowshare t u rns them out ;


For many thousand men ,
said he ,


Were slain in that great victo ry !


Now tell u s what twas all ab out ,

Young Peterkin he cries ; ,

And little Wilhe l mine looks u p


With wonder waiting eyes ;
-

1 70
Now tell us all abou t the war ,

And what they fought each othe r fo r .


I t was the E nglish ,

Kaspar c r i e
d ,


Who put the French to rou t ;
B u t what they fo u ght each other for
I co u ld not well make o u t .

B ut everybody said ,
quoth he ,


That twas a famou s victory !

My father lived at B lenheim then ,

You little stream hard by


They b u rned his dwelling to the ground ,

And he was forced to fly ;


S o with his wife and child he fled ,

Nor had he where to rest his head .


With fire and sword the country round
Was wasted far and wi de ;
An d many a childing mother then
And new b orn baby died
-
.

B u t things like that yo u know m u st be


, ,

At eve r y famo u s victory .


They say i t was a shocking sight
After the field w as w o n ;
171
F or many tho u sand bodies here
Lay rotting in the sun .

B ut th ings like that you know m u st be


, ,

After a famous victory .

Great praise the D uke of Marlborough won ,


And o u r good Prince E u gene .

’ ”
Why ,
twas a ve ry wicked thing !
Said little Wilhelmine .

Nay nay my l ittle girl


, , ,
q u oth he ,

It w as a famo u s V ictory !

And everybody praised the D uke



Who this great fight did win .


B u t what good came of it at last ?
Q u oth little Peterkin .

Why that I cannot tell


,
said he
’ ”
B u t twas a famo u s Victory .

R OBE R T S OU TH E Y .

172
A D R EA M LE SSO N

O N C E there was a little boy that wo u ldn t go to bed ,

When they hinted at the s u bject ,


he wo u ld only shake
his head ,

When they asked him his intentions he informed them ,

pretty straight
That he wouldn t go to bed at all and N u rs e

,
y needn t wait
,

.

As their arguments grew stronger and their attit u de more,

strict ,

I grieve to say that na u ghty boy just yelled an d sc reamed


and kicked .

And he made up awful faces and he told them u p and


,

down

That he wouldn t go to bed for all the nurses in the to wn .

Then Nu r sey lost her patience and although it


,
wasn t right ’
,

R etorted that for all she cared he might sit up all night .

He approve d of this arrangemen t and he danced a jig ,

for j oy
And t u rned a somersaul t with glee ; he was a na u ghty boy .

And so they all went to bed and left hi m sitting there


o ff ,


R ight in the corner by the fire in Grandpa s big armchair .

1 74
He read his books and playe d his games ,

h eeve n

sang a song ,

And thought how lovely it would be to si t up a ll nigh t l o n g .

B u t soon his games grew stupid and his puzzles wouldn t ,


work ;
He drew himself up sti ffly with a sudden l i t t le jerk ,


And he said ,
I am not sleepy and I love t o play alone
,


And I think the rest w as mumbled in a d r owsy
monotone .

He leaned back on the cushions like that night he had the


cro u p ,

His head began to wobble and his eyes began to droop ;


He closed them for a minu te just to see how it would seem , ,

And straightway he was so u nd asleep and dreamed t his ,

awful dream

He tho u ght he saw a garden filled with flowers and roses


gay ,

A great big gardener wi th a hoe came walking down his


w ay ;

Ah ah,
!

exclaimed the gardener as he clutched him by ,

the head ,

’ ’
Here s a fine specimen I ve fo u nd ; I ll plant him in this

be
d !

I 7S
He held the boy in one big hand ,
u nheeding how he
cried ,

And with the o ther d u g a hole enormo u s ,


deep ,
and
wi de .

H ej ammed the little fellow in and said in gr u ffest tone


, ,

“ ’
This is the bed for na u ghty boys who won t go to

their own .

An d then the dirt was shoveled in ,



it covered u p his
toes
His ankles knees and waist and arms and higher yet
, , , , ,

it rose .

For still the gardener shoveled on not noticing hi s cries ;


,

It came u p to his chin and mouth —


it almost reached
hi s eyes ;

J u st then he gathered all his strength and g ave an


awf u l scream ,

And woke himself and pu t an end to that terrific dream


,
.

And he said as Nu r s e
y t u cked him u p and bade hi m
sn u gly rest ,

When I am planted in a bed I like my own the best


, .

C AR OL Y N W E LL S .

1 76
He bl e
w and he blew and she thinned to a thread
,
.

“ ’
One pu ff mo r e s enough
To blow her to snu ff !

One good pu ff more where the last was bred ,

And glimmer glimmer glum will go the thread


, ,
.

He blew a great blast and the thread was gone


, .

In the air nowhere ,

Was a moonbeam bare :

Far o ff and harmless the shy stars shone


S u re and certain the Moon was gone !

The Wind he took to his revels once more ;


On down in to w n, ,

Like a merry mad clown -

He leaped and halloed with whistle and roar


“ ”

What s that ? The glimmering thread once more !

He flew in a rage —h edanced and blew ;


B ut in vain was the pain
Of his b u rsting brain ;
For still the broader the Moon scrap grew -
,

The broader he swelled his big cheeks and


1 78
Slowly she grew till she filled the nig h t ,

And shone on her throne


In the sky alone ,

A matchless wonderful silvery light


, ,

R adiant and lovely the quee n of the night


, .


Said the W ind :W hat a marvel of power am I !
With my breath good faith !
,

I blew her to death


First blew her away right out of the sky
Then blew h e r in ; what strength have I ! ”

B u t the Moon she knew nothing abo u t the a ffair '

For high in the sky ,

With her one white eye ,

Motionless miles above the air


, ,

She had never heard the great Wind blare .

G E OR G E M AC D ON AL D .

1 79
LI TTLE OR P H ANT ANN I E
L I TT L E Orph a n t An n ie s come to our ho u se to stay ’

An wash the cups and saucers up an brush the c r um bs



,

away ,

’ ’
An S hoo the chickens o ff the porch an d u st the hearth
, ,


an sweep ,

An
’ ’ ’
make the fire ,
an bake the bread ,
an earn her ,


board -
an -
keep
An ’
all us other c h il d e
rn , when the s u pper things is
done ,

We set around the ki tche n fire an has the mostest f u n ’

A l ist
’ ’ ’
-
n in to the witch tales at Annie tells about ,

’ ’
An the Gobble uns -
at gits you
Ef you

D on t
Watch
Out


On c
’ ’
t they was a little boy wo ul dn t say his pr a y rs


An when he went to bed at night away upstairs , ,

His mammy h ed
e r him holl er an his daddy ,

h e
ed
r hi m
bawl ,

An ’
when they turn t ’
the ki vv e rs dow n ,
he wasn t ’

there at all !

1 80
An little Or ph an t Annie says when the blaze is blue

, ,


An the lampwick sputters an the wind goes w o o 0 0 !

,
-


An you hear the crickets quit an the moon is gray

, ,

An the lightnin —bugs


’ ’
in dew is all s qe e
u n ch
d away ,

’ ’
You better mind yer parents an yer teachers fond an ,

dear ,

’ ’ ’ ’
An c h u ri sh them at loves yo u ,
an dry the o r ph a n t s

tear ,

’ ’ ’ ’
An he p the pore an needy ones at cl u sters all abo u t ,


E1 the Gobble u ns -
ll git you
Ef you

D on t
Watch
Out
JA ME S WH I T C OM B RI L E Y .

Fro m Aft e r w hi l es b y J ame s Wh i tc o mb R i l e


y C o p y r i gh t 1 898
Us e d b y Sp e
ci a l p e
.

p ub li sh e Th eB o b b s M e
,

rm i s s i o n o f t h e
.
,

rs rr il l ,
-

C o m p an y .

1 82
TH E MILLE R O F TH E D EE

TH E R E dwelt a miller hale a nd bold


B eside the river D e
e;
He worked and sang from mor n till night ,

No lark more blithe than he .

And this the b u rden of his song


Forever used to be ,

I envy nobody no not I , , ,


And nobody envies me !

Th O ’
u r t wrong my friend , ,
said old King

Th o u

wrong as wro ng can be ;
rt

For co u ld my heart be ligh t as thine ,


I d gladly change with thee .

And tell me now wha t makes thee sing,

With voice so lo u d and free ,

Whil e I am sad though I am king


, ,


B eside the river D ee ?
1 83
The miller smil ed and do ffed his cap
, .


I earn my bread ,
q u oth he ,

I love my wife I love my friend


, ,

I love my chil dren three ;

I owe no penny I cannot p ay ;


I tha nk the river D ee ,

That t u rns the mil l and grin ds the corn


To feed my babes a nd me .

Good friend ,
said Hal and sighed the
,


Farewell and happy be ;
,

B ut say no more if th ou d st

,
be tr u e ,

That no man en vies thee

Thy mealy cap is worth my crown ,

Thy mill my kingdom s fee ; ’


Such men as tho u are E ngland s boast ,


O miller of the D ee !
C H AR L E S M ACKAY .

1 84
B u t the l onger I live on th is Cru mpe
t t y Tree

The plainer than ever it seems to me


That very e people
f w come this w ay
! ”
And that life on the whole is far from gay
S aid the Qu an gl eW angle Q u ee .

III
B u t there came to the e
C r u mp t t y Tree
M r and Mrs Canary ;
. .


An d they said D id ever you see
'

Any spot so charmingly airy ?


M ay webuild a nest on yo u r lovely Hat ?
Mr .
Q gl e
u an Wangle ,
grant us that !

Oh please let us come and build a nest


,

Of whatever material suits you best ,

Mr Qu a n gl eWangle Q u ee
.

IV
An d besides , to the C r u mp e
tty Tree
Came the Stork the D uck and the Owl ;
, ,

The Snail and the B umble B ee -

The Frog and the Fimble Fowl


,

(The Fimble Fowl with a corkscrew leg );


,

And all of them said We humbly beg ,

We may bu i ld our h o rri eon your lovely Hat


s ,

1 86
M r .
Qu a n gl eWangle g r an t us t hat
, !
M r Qu a n gl eW angle Quee
.

V
And the Golden Grouse came there ,

And the P o b b l ew h o has no toes ,

And the small Olympian bear ,

And the D ong with a luminous nose .

And the Blue B aboon w h o played the flute ,

And the Orient Calf from t he Land of Tute ,

And the Attery S quash and t he ,


B isk y B at ,

All came and built on the lovely Hat


Of the Qu an gl eWangle Quee .

VI
And the Qu a n gl eWangle said
To himself on the C r u mpet t y Tree ,

When all these creatures move


’ ”
W hat a wonderf ul noise t here ll be !
And at night by the light of t he Mulberry moon
They danced to the Flute of t he B lue B aboon ,

On the broad green leaves of the C r u mpe t t y Tree ,

And all were as happy as happy could be


With the Qu a n gl eWangle Quee .

E D WAR D L E AR .

1 87
TH E VI LLA G E B LA C K S MITH
U ND E R a spreading chestnu t tree
The village smithy stands ;
The smith a mighty man is he
, ,

With large and sinewy hands ;


And the m u scles of his brawny arms
Are strong as iron bands .

His hair is crisp and black and long


, , ,

His face is like the tan ;


His b row is wet with honest sweat ,


He earns whate er he can ,

And looks t he whole world in the face ,

For he owes not any man .

Week in week out from morn till night


, , ,

You can hear his bellows blow ;


You can hear him swing his heavy sledge ,

W ith measured beat and slow ,

Like a sexton ringing the village bell ,

When the evening sun is l ow .

1 88
S omething attempted something done , ,


Has earned a night s repose .

Thanks thanks to thee my worthy friend


, , ,

For the lesson thou hast taught !

Th u s at the flamin g forge of life


Our fortunes must b e wrought ;
Thus on its sounding anvil shaped
E ach b u rning deed and thought .

H ENR Y WAD S W OR TH L ON G F E L L OW .

B UM B LE B EE A N D C LO V E R

CAME a roaring bumble —bee ,

Pockets f u ll of money .

Ah good morning Clover sweet


, , ,

’ ”
What s the price of honey ?

Help yo u rself sir , ,


Clover

B umble you re too funny ;
,

Never Clover yet so poor



She m u st sell her honey .

190
L ITT LE B ILLE E

TH E R E were three sailors of B ristol city


Who took a boat and went to sea .

B u t first with beef and captain s bisc u its ’

And pickled pork they loaded she .

There was gorging Jack and guzzling Jimmy ,

And the yo u ngest he was little B illee ,

Now when they got so far as the E quator



They d nothing left b u t one split pea .

S ays gorging Jack to guzzling Jimmy ,

I am extremely b u ngaree .

To gorging Jack says guzzling Jimmy ,

“ ’
We ve nothing left us must eat we
,
.

Says gorging Jack to guzzling Jimmy ,

With one another w eS ho uld agree !



There s little B ill he,
5 young and tender ,

’ ’ ”
We re old and tough so let s eat he
,
.

1 91
Oh ! B illy we re going to kill and eat
,


S o undo the bu tton of your chemie .

When B ill received this information


He used his pocket -
h an d k eh i e
rc .

First let me say my catechism ,

Which my poor mammy taught to me .


Make haste make haste, ,
says g u zzling Jim my ,

While Jack pull ed out his snickersnee .

S o B illy went up to the main top gallant mast -

And down he fell on his bended knee .

He scarce had come to the twelfth commandm ent



When up he j umps ,
There s land I see

Jerusalem and Madagascar ,

And N orth and S outh Am e


r ik e
e

There s the B ri t ish flag a -
riding at anchor ,

With Adm iral Napier K C B ,


. . .

So when they got aboard of the Adm iral s ’

He hanged fat Jack and flogged J i mm e


e
B ut as for little B ill he made him
,

The captain of a Seventy Three -


.

W I L L IA M M AKEPE AC E TH ACK E R AY ,

1 92
Colder and louder blew the wind ,

A gale from the Northeast ;


The snow fell hissing in the brine ,

And the billows frothed like yeast .

D own came the storm and smote amain


,

The vessel in its strength ;


She shuddered and paused like a frighted ,


Then leaped her cable s length .

Come hither ! come hither ! my little da u ghter ,

And do not tremble 80


'

For I can weather the roughest gale


That ever wind di d blow .


He wrapped her warm in his seaman s
Against the stinging blast ;
He c u t a rope from a broken spar ,

And bound her to the mast .

O father ! I hear the church bells ring -


,


0 say W hat may it be
,
?

Tis a fog bell on a rock bo u nd coast
- -
!
And he steered for the open sea .

1 94
O father ! I hea r t he sound of guns .

Oh say what may


, ,
it be
Some shi p in di stress that ca n not live
,


In s u ch an angry sea !

0 father ! I see a gleaming light ,


Oh , say , what may it be ?
B u t the father answered never a word ,

A fro zen corpse was he .

Lashed to the helm all sti ff and stark


, ,

With his face turned to the skies ;


The lantern gleamed thro u gh the gleaming snow
On his fixed and glassy eyes .

Then the maiden clasped her hands and prayed


e
,

That sav d she might be ;


And she tho u ght of Christ who st i lled the waves
, ,

On the Lake of Galilee .

An d fast thro u gh the midnight dark and


Thro u gh the W histling sleet and snow ,

Like a sheeted ghost the vessel swept


,


Towards the reef of Norman s Woe .

1 95
And ever the fi t fu l g u sts between
A sound came from the land ;
It was the so u nd of the trampling s u rf ,

On the rocks and the hard sea sand -


.

The breakers were right beneath her bows ,

She drifted a weary wreck ,

And a whooping billow swep t the crew


Like icicles from her deck .

She struck where the white and fl e


ec y waves

Looked soft as car d ed wool


B u t the cr u el rocks they gored her side
, ,

Like the horns of an angry b ull .

Her rattling shrouds all sheathed in ice , ,

With the masts went by the board ;


,

Like a vessel of glass she stove and sank , ,

Ho ! ho ! the breakers roared !

At daybreak on the bleak sea beach


,
-
,

A fisherman stood aghast ,

T 0 see the form of a maiden fair


Lashed close to a drifting mast .

1 96
L ITTLE D AN D EL I O N

GAY little D andelion


Lights up the meads ,

Swings on her slender foo t ,

Telleth her beads ,


Lists to the robin s note
Po u red from above
Wise little D andelion
Asks not for love .

Col d lie the daisy banks


Clothed but in green ,

Where in the days agone


, ,

B right h u es were seen .

Wil d pinks are sl um bering ;


V iolets delay
True little D andelion
Greeteth the M ay .

B rave little D andelion


Fast fal l s the snow ,

B ending the da ffodi l s ’

Ha u ghty head l ow .

1 98
Under that fl ey
e
c tent ,

Careless of cold ,

Blithe little D andelion


Co u nteth her gold .

Meek little D andelion

Groweth more fair ,

Til l dies the ambe r dew


O u t from her hair .

High tides the thi rst y sun ,

rc e
Fi e l y and high '

Faint little D andelion


e
Cl o s t h her eye .

Pale little D andelion ,

In her white shro u d ,

Heareth the angel breeze


Call from the cloud !

Tiny pl u mes fluttering


Make no delay !

Little winged D andelion


e
S o ar t h away .

H E L EN B B OS T W I CK
. .
L U CY GR AY

OF T I had heard of L u cy Gray


And when I crossed the wild
, ,

I chanced to see at break of day


, ,

The solitary chil d .

No mate no comrade Lucy knew


,

She dwelt on a wide moor ,

The sweetest thing that ever grew


B eside a h u man door !

Yo u yet may spy the fawn at play ,

The hare u pon the green ;


B u t the sweet face of L u cy Gray
Wil l never m ore be seen .

To night will be a stormy


-
ni ght
Yo u to the town must go ;
And take a lantern Child to light, ,


Your mother through the snow .

That Father w i ll I gladly do


, ,


Tis scarcely afternoon
The minster clock has j u st str u ck two
-
,


An d yonder is the moon !
200
They wept and t u rning homeward
, ,

“ ”
In heaven we all shall meet ;
When in the snow the mother spied

The print of Lucy s feet .

Hal f breathless from the steep hill s edge ’

They tracked the footmarks small ;


And thro u gh the broken hawthorn hedge ,

And by the long stone wall .

And then an open field they crossed ;


The marks were still the same ;
They tracked them on nor ever lost ;
,

And to the bridge they came .

They followed from the snowy bank


Those footmarks one by one
, ,

Into the middl e of the plank ;


And farther there were none !

Yet some maintain that to this day


She is a livi ng child :

That yo u may see sweet L u cy Gray


Upon the l onesome wild .

20 2
O er ro u gh and smooth S h etrips along
’ ‘
,

And never looks behind ;


An d sings a solitary song
That whistles in the wind .

W I L L I AM W OR D S WOR T H .

HU N T I N G SO N G
UP up ,
! ye dames and lasses gay !
To the meadows trip away .


Tis yo u m u st tend the flocks this morn ,

And scare the small birds from the corn .

Not a so ul at home may stay


For the shepherds m u st go
With lance and bow
To h u nt the wolf in the woods to day -
.

Leave the hearth and leave the ho u se


To the cricket and the mo u se
Find grannam out a sunny seat ,

With babe and lambkin at her feet .

Not a so u l at home may stay


For the shepherds m u st go
With lance and bow
To h u nt the wolf in the woods to day -
.

S AM U E L TAY L OR C OL E R ID G E .

20 3
CUD D LE D OO N
TH E b a i r n i ecuddle
s doon at nicht ,

Wi muckle faucht an din


’ ’ '


Oh try an sleep ye waukrife rogues
, , ,

’ ”
Your father s comin in ’
.

They never heed a word I speak ;



I try to gi e a fr o o n ,

B ut aye I hap them up an cry , ,


0 b a i rn i e c u d dl e
s, doon !


Wee Jamie wi the curly heid

He aye sleeps neist the wa ,


B angs up an cries ,
I want a piece

The rascal starts them a .

I rin an fetch them pieces drinks



, ,


They stop awee the so u n
20 4
I lift wee Jamie up the bed ,


An ,
as I straik each croon ,

I w hi sper t i ll my heart fil l s u p
, ,

O b ai r n i e
s c u ddle doon
,

The b a i r n i e
s c u ddle doon at ni cht ,

Wi mirth that s dear to me ;


’ ’

’ ’
B u t sune the big w a rl s cark a n care
Wil l q e doon
u at n their glee .

Yet come what will to ilka ane ,

M ay He wh o sits aboon
Ay ewhisper thou gh their pows
,
be ba uld ,

O b i i e c u ddl e doon

a rn s,

AL E ! A D N E R A ND E R S ON .

fauch t : s cu fi l i ng k i t t l in

: k
ti c l i n g

wau k r ife
: w a ke
fu l tae
s: to e s

gi

e gi e
: v fi t : f o ot
fr o on : frown s te
eks : s hu ts

h ap e : c ov r s t r ai k : s tro k e
ne i t et
s : n x w a rl

s : wor l d

s

pi e e mec thi g t
: so n o q u at e qi e
t n : u

a we e l i ttl e : a il k a eev ey e an : r on

l e l the
c a s : c o s ab n oob e : a ov

pow s h eda s

20 6
W E A R E S EV E N
I MET a little cottage girl ,

She was eight years old she said ; ,

Her hair was thick with many a curl


That cl u stered ro u nd her head .

She had a r u stic woodl and air


, ,

An d she was W il dl y clad ;


Her eyes were fair and very fair ;
,

Her bea u ty made meglad .

Sisters and brothers little Maid , ,


How many may you be ?
How many ? Seven in all ,
she said ,

An d wondering looked at me .

And where are they ? I pray yo u tell .

She answered ,

Seven are w e
;
And two of us at Conway dwell ,

And two are gone to sea .

Two of u s in the ch u rch yard lie -

My sister and my brother ;


An d , in the church yard cottage , I
-

Dwell near them with my mother .

20 7
You say that two at Conway dw e
ll ,

And two are gone to sea ,

Yet ye are seven ! I pray yo u tell



Sweet M aid how this may be
,
.

Then did the little M aid reply ,


Seven boys and girls are we ;
Tw o of us in the church —yard lie ,


B eneath the church yard tree
-
.

Yo u run abo u t my little maid


, ,

Your limbs they are alive ;


If two are in the church yard laid -
,

Then ye are onl y five .

Their graves are green they may be seen


, ,

The little Maid replied ,


Twelve steps or more from my mother s door ,

And they are side by side .

My stockings there I often knit ,

My kerchief there I hem ;

An d there u pon the ground I sit ,


And sing a song to them .

20 8
B ut they are dead ; those two are dead !

Their spirits are in heaven !

Twas throwing words away ; fo r
The little Maid wo ul d have her
An d said ,

Nay ,
w eare seven !

W I L L IA M W OR D S WOR TH .

F ATH E R WILL I A M

Y OU are old Father William the young man said


, , ,


And your hair has become very whi te ;
An d yet you incessantly stand on yo u r head

D o you thi nk at your age it is right ?
, ,

In my yo u th , Father William replied to his son ,


I feared it might inj ure the brain ;

B u t now that I m perfectly sure I have none ,

Why I do it again and again


,
.

You are old said the youth ,


as I mentioned before ,

And have grown most u ncommonly fat ;


Yet you turned a back somersa ul t in at the door
-


Pray what is the reason of that
,
?
2 10
In my youth said the sage as he sho ok his gray locks
, , ,


I kept all my limbs very supple
By the u se of this ointment —
on eshilling the box

Allow me to sell you a couple ?

You are old said the yo u th and your j aws are too weak
, ,

For anything to u gher than suet ;


Yet yo u fi nished the goose with the bones and the beak
,


Pray how did you manage t o do it
,
?

In my youth ,
said his father ,
I took to the law ,

And argued each case with my wife ;


An d the muscular strength which it gave to my j aw

Has lasted the rest of my life .

Yo u are old ,
said the yo u th ,
one wo ul d hardly s u ppose
That your eye w as as steady as ever ;
Yet you balanced an eel on the end of yo u r nose

What made you so awf ul ly clever ?

I have answered three q u estions and that is eno u gh , ,


Said his father ; don t give yo u rself airs !

D o you thi n k I can listen all day to such st u ff ?


Be o ff , or I ll kick yo u down —stairs

L E WI S C ARR OLL .

2I I
MY L ITT LE N E I GH B O R
’ ’
M Y little neighbor s table s set ,

And slyly he comes down the tree ,

His feet firm in each tiny fret


The bark has fashioned cunningly .

He pauses on a favorite knot ;


B eneath the oak his feast is spread ;
He asks no friend to share his lot
Or dine with him on acorn bread .

He keeps his whiskers t rim and neat ,

His tail with care he brushes through ;


He r u ns abo u t on all fo u r feet
When dining he sits up on two
, .

He has the latest stripe in furs ,

And wears them all the year arou nd ;


He does not mind the prick of burs
When there are chestn u ts to be fo u nd .

I watch his home and guard his store ,


A cozy hollow in a tree ;


He often sits within his door ,

And chatters wondro u s things to me .

M AR Y A U G U S T A M AS ON .

And now as o er the rocks and dells
,

The gallant chidings rise ,


All S nowdon s craggy chaos
The many mingled cries -

That day Llewelyn little loved


The chase of hart or hare ,

And scant and small the booty proved


e
,

For G l e
rt w as not there .

Unpleased Llewelyn homeward,

When near the portal seat


e
, ,

His tr u ant G l e
r t he espied

B o u nding his lord to greet .

B ut when he gained his castle door


, ,

Aghast the hieftain stood


C

The ho u nd all o er was ’


s m ed ar

His lips his fangs ran blood


, ,
.

Llewelyn ga zed with fierce s u rprise


Unuse d s u ch looks to meet ,

His ’
fa V r i t eh ek d
c c

his j oyful g u ise ,

’ ’
And c r o u ch d and l i ck d his feet .

2 14
Onward in haste Llewelyn a
p ss

d,
And on went G él et too
r ,


And still where er his eyes he cast
, ,

S h o ck

Fresh blood go u ts -
d his View .

O

et
r u rn

d his infant s bed he fo u nd ’
,


Wi th blood -
s t ai n d covert rent ;
And all a round the walls and gro u nd ,

With recent blood besprent .


He c al l d his child no voice replied ;
,

He sear ched with terror wi ld



B lood blood he fo u nd on ev ry side ;
,

B u t nowhere fo u nd his child .

Hell ho u nd
-
! my c hi ld by thee s ’
d e vo ur

d !

The franti c father cried ;


And to the hilt his vengeful sword
He plunged in G él et
r

s side .

His Su ppliant looks as prone he


No pity co u ld impart ;
B u t still his G él e
r t s dying yell

’ ’
P ass d heavy o er his heart .

2 15
Aro u sed by G l e
e rt s

dying yell
S ome sl u mb

r ew k ed
r a n

nigh

What words the parent s j oy could

To hear his infant s cry !

Co n c el d
a

beneath a tumbled heap
His h u rried search had mi ss ’
d,
Al l glowing from his rosy sleep ,
kiss d

The cher u b boy he .

Nor scath had he nor harm nor dread ; , ,

B u t the same co u ch beneath


Lay a gaunt wolf all torn and dead , ,

Tremendo u s still in death .


Ah what was then Llewelyn s pain
,
!
For now the tr u th was clear ;
His gallant ho u nd the wolf had Slain .


To save Llewelyn s heir .

V ain , vain was all Llewelyn s ’


wo e

B est of thy kind adie u ,
!
The franti c blo w which laid thee low , ,

This heart shall ever r u e .

2 16
I WIL L LIFT UP M IN E EYE S

I W IL L lift up mine eyes u nto the hills from whence cometh


my help .

My help cometh from the Lord which made H eaven an d

earth .

He will not suffer thy foot to be moved .

He t hat keepeth thee will not slumber


B ehold he that keepeth Israel shall neither sl u mb e
r nor
sleep .

The Lord is thy keep er .

The L ord is thy shade u pon thy right hand .

The s u n shall not smit e thee by day nor the moon by


,

night .

The Lord shall preserve thee from all


He shall preserve thy so u l .

The Lord S hall preserve thy going o u t and thy coming i n ,

From t hi s time forth and even for evermore


,
.

C! ! I P S AL M .

2 18
I N D E! OF FI R ST LI N E S

A b i rdi e w i th a y e ll o w b ill
A b l a ck n o se -
d ki tt e n w ill s l u mb e r al l t he d ay ,

A c a p it a l s h i p fo r a n o ce an t r i p ,

A f a r me r we n t r i di n g u p o n h i s gr a y m a r e ,

A f ro g h e w o u ld a w o o i n g go -
,

A littl e f a i ry co me s a t ni gh t ;

All t h i n gs b r igh t an d b e a u tif u l ,


An d w h e re h a ve you b e e n my M a ry , ,

At e ve n i ng wh e n I go t o b e d ,

Au ld D a ddy D a r k n e ss c re ep s f r ae hi s h o le ,

B ob b y S h a ft oet e ’
s go n o s a,

B y the S h e f Gi t h e
or s o G me e c u ,

C me
a . i g b mb l e
a ro a r n be e u -

C me
o c ddl eu cl e i d dd y c t os n a 5 oa ,

D k b w i t h ei e
ar ro n s r v r,

F ll f t h m fi e
u a t h y f t h eli e
o v a r s

G y littl e
a D deli an on

Gi l
r s an d b y c me t t p l yo s, o ou o a ,

Go o d -
n i gh t Go o d -
n i gh t

Go o d ol eF i i e
d mo th r a r ,

Gr as sh o pp eG e
ei c mi
r r n s a o ca l ch a p
2 19
Gr ea t wi d e
,
be a u tif u l
,
won de r f ul Wo r ld
, ,

Ha r k h ar k t h e l a rk a t h eave n s ga t e

si n gs ,

He co mes in t h e n i gh t he co m e s in t h en i gh t

H ew as a r a t , a n d s h ew a s a rat ,

Hi gh u po n H i gh l a n d s an d l o w u p o n T ay ,

H u sh t h e w ave s ar e ro lli n g i n ,

If n o o n e e
ve r m a rr i e s me ,

JI f t he b u tt erfl
y co u r t e d the be e ,

I h ave a littl e S h a d o w t h a t go e s i n a n d o u t w i th m e ,

I k n o w a f u n n y littl e man ,

I kn ow t h e so n g t h a t t h e b l ue b i r d i s s i n gi n g ,

I lik e l i ttl ep u s sy h e
,
r c o a t i s s o w a rm

I me t a littl e c o tt age gi r l ,

I n w i n te r I ge t u p a t n i gh t

I o n ce h a d a sw e e t littl e d o ll d e ars , ,


I s ai d t h e
,

d u ck I c a ll i t fu n
,

,

I saw a sh i p a saili n g-
,

I saw a sh i p a sa ili n g
-
,

I saw y o u t o ss t h e ki te s o n hi gh ,

It w a s a s u mm e r s e

ve ni ng ,

It w as t h e s ch o o n er He s pe rus ,

I w ill lift up m in e eye s u n to t h e h i ll s

L a dy b i r d ! L a d y b i r d ! fl y a w ay h o m e ;

L a dy M o o n L a d y M o o n w h e re are

, ,
Yo u ro vi n g ?

L i ttl e d ro p s o f w a t e r littl e
, gr a i n s o f s an d ,

2 20
k
R oc a y- -
b h
,
u s h-
a —b y l i ttl e
, p a p o o se ,

S a id t h e Wi n d t o t h e “
M o o n I w i ll b l o w y o u o u t ;
,

S i n g a so n g o f s i x p e n ce ,

S ke e te r s a m a h u mm i n o n d e h on e y s u ckl e vi n e

, .

S o me h ae me a t an d can n a e at ,

S to rm u po n t h e m o un t a i n ,

Sw e et a n d l o w swe
,
et and l o w ,

Th an k y o u p re ,
tty c o w th a t m a d e
,

Th e b a i rn i e s c u ddl e d o o n a t n i ch t ,

Th e ci t y m o u s e l i ve s i n a h o u se ;

Th e co a ch i s at t h e do o r at l as t ;
Th e c o ck i s c ro wi n g ,

Th e d o o r w a s S h u t a s do o r s sh o u ld b e
, ,

Th e fi ne s t b i gge
,
s t fi s h y o u se
,
e ,

Th e Fo x se t o u t i n a h u n gry p li gh t ,

Th e f ri e n dl y c o w a l l r e d a n d w h it e ,

Th e Fr o s t l o o k e d fo r th o n e s till cl e a r n i gh t
, ,

Th e le a ve s are f a din g an d f alli n g ,

Th e li o n a n d t h e u n ic o rn

Th e L o r d i s m y sh e ph e r d ; I s h a ll n o t w a n t .

Th e M an i n t h e Mo o n a s h e s a il s t h e sk V

Th e m o o n h as a f a c e lik e the cl o ck i n t h e h a ll

Th e owl an d t h e e e l an d th e w a rm i n g pan ,

Th e Owl a n d t h e P u ssy c a t w e n t t o se a

Th e r a i n i s r a i n i n g al l a r o u n d ,

222
Th e re d we lt a mi ll e r h al e a n d b o ld

Th e re s no de w le ft o n t h e d aisi es a n d cl o v e

r ,

Th e re w a s a n Ol d m a n wh o s a i d H ow ,

Th e re w as a n o l d w o ma n a s I v e he ar d te ll

, ,

Th e re w a s a y o u ng l a dy w h o se b onne t
Th e re we re th re egy p s i e s a c o me -
t o my d o o r ,

Th e re we re th re e! o vi a l We l sh m en ,

Th e re we re th re esai l o r s o f B ri s to l city
Th e sp e a r me n he ar d t h e b ugl e so u n d ,

Th e wo o d s a r e f ull o f f ai ri e s

Th e w o r ld i s s o f u ll o f a n u mb e r o f t hi n gs ,

Th e wo r ld s a v e r y h a pp y p l a c e

,

Th e y we n t t o se a i n a si e ve th ey did ;
,

Th i s i s h o w t h e fl owe rs gr o w

Thi s i s t h e w ay t h e m o rn i n g d aw n s
Th r e el i ttl eb ugs i n a b a sk e t .

To w hi t t o W h i t t o wh e e!
“ - - -
, ,


Tw a s Fr id ay mo rn w h e n we set sai l ,


Tw as o n t h e S h o re s th a t r o un d o u r c o a s t


Tw a s t h e n i gh t b e fo re C h r i s tmas w h e n a l l t h ro u gh
,
th eh e
o us

Tw e n t y f ro ggi e s we n t t o sch o o l

Tw i n kl etw i n kl el i ttl e
, , s tar

Two l i ttl e kitt e ns one ,


s t o r my n i gh t ,

Un d e r a sp r e a di n g c h e s tn u t t re e
Un d e r a to adsto o l

2 23
Un d e r my w i n d o w u n d e
,
r my w i n d o w ,

U p up y e
, dame s a n d l a ss e s gay

Up t h e a i ry m o u n t a i n ,

We b u i lt a sh i p u p o n t h e s ta irs

Wh a t d o e s littl e b i r di e s ay
,

Wh e n at h o me a lo n e I si t

Wh e n c a t s r u n h o me a n d li gh t i s c o m e ,

Wh e n ch e rr i es gr o w o n a pp l e t re,
es

Wh e n c hi ld r e n are p lay i n g a lo n e on the gr een ,

Wh e ne ve r the m o o n a n d s t a rs a r e se t ,

Wh e n f a th e r ta ke s h i s s p a de t o di g ,

Wh e n go o d K i n g Ar t h u r r u l e d t h i s l an d ,

Wh e n I w as a b a ch e l o r I li ve d b y my se lf ,

Wh e re are y o u go i n g m y littl e e
“ ”
,
at ?

Wh e re d o al l t h e d a i si es go ?

Wh e re the po o l s are b r i gh t an d d e e p ,

Wh ich i s t h e w i n d t h a t b r i n gs t h e co ld ?
Wh o co m e s d a n c i n g o ve r t he sn o w
,

Wh o h as s e e n the wi n d ?

Will y o u w a lk a littl e fa s t e
r ?

Wy n k e n B ly n ke
,
n a n d No d o n e
,
n i gh t

Y o u ar e o l d F a th e the
“ ”
,
r Willi a m , y o u n g m an

2 24
I
U N V ER S ITY OF C A L I F O R N I A AT L O S A NG E L E S
TH E U N I V E R S IT Y L I B R A R Y

Th i s b o o k i s D U E on th el
ast d at et
s a mp e
d be
l wo

At 15 195 2
J UN ‘

8 195 4

LESS? E 6 2325 4 .

an 1943 S EE i l 98!
,

J AN 2 2 l 945 .

2o m - 12

, 3 0 ( 3 2913)

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