Lessons for Little Readers |
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Page 18
... thing would say , if it could speak . Boy . Why , aunt ? Aunt . To teach you , my dear . I hope you would not hurt or vex the things which you meet with . If you do as you wish to be done by , you will be a good boy , 18 LESSONS FOR ...
... thing would say , if it could speak . Boy . Why , aunt ? Aunt . To teach you , my dear . I hope you would not hurt or vex the things which you meet with . If you do as you wish to be done by , you will be a good boy , 18 LESSONS FOR ...
Page 19
... things , and play with them . Aunt . Then Then you know what you should do to please Jack , and to please— Boy . O , yes ! aunt . I should lend them my toys and books , and what is fit for them to have ; and I will do so . The Evening ...
... things , and play with them . Aunt . Then Then you know what you should do to please Jack , and to please— Boy . O , yes ! aunt . I should lend them my toys and books , and what is fit for them to have ; and I will do so . The Evening ...
Page 26
... thing will die , for it is quite weak . Girl . But can we not help it , and take it back to its warm hive ? Mother . No , we can do it no good at all , for we do not know which is its own hive ; and if we were to put it in the wrong one ...
... thing will die , for it is quite weak . Girl . But can we not help it , and take it back to its warm hive ? Mother . No , we can do it no good at all , for we do not know which is its own hive ; and if we were to put it in the wrong one ...
Page 31
... things look ; how fresh and how sweet ; and the sun will shine more bright than it did be - fore . Why , then , should you look cross when it rains ? LESSON XXVI . The Hot Day . Boy . How hot it is to day ! The sun shines so warm that ...
... things look ; how fresh and how sweet ; and the sun will shine more bright than it did be - fore . Why , then , should you look cross when it rains ? LESSON XXVI . The Hot Day . Boy . How hot it is to day ! The sun shines so warm that ...
Page 33
... things , you thank them , and love them for the good they do you . So you should ask your God for those things which he can give you , and which no one else can give you . You should ask him for life , and health , and strength ; and ...
... things , you thank them , and love them for the good they do you . So you should ask your God for those things which he can give you , and which no one else can give you . You should ask him for life , and health , and strength ; and ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abram acorn Aunt B. D. EMERSON Bad Boy ball bush carpet catch Charles chickens child clothes cold corn dare say dear drink duck eggs eyes farm yard father feed feel fish Five Senses fond Frank frill frog glad Grapes grass grow hand happy hark head hear hive hope horse hurt Jane keep LESSON lest Let us go Let us sit little boy little girl look cross milk Mother nest nice new book night old birds old hog old sheep pain play pond poor bee poor bird praise pray Puss rain raisins round shell shine shoe string skin soft soon spider spread sweet tell Thee things Thou art told tree walk warm wasp Wet Day wish wool young birds
Popular passages
Page 50 - Let there be no strife, I pray thee, between me and thee, and between my herdmen and thy herdmen; for we be brethren. Is not the whole land before thee ? Separate thyself, I pray thee, from me. If thou wilt take the left hand, then I will go to the right; or if thou depart to the right hand, then I will go to the left.
Page 50 - And he went on his journeys from the South even to Beth-el, unto the place where his tent had been at the beginning, between Bethel and Ai, 4 unto the place of the altar, which he had made there at the first: and there Abram called on the name of Jehovah. 5 And Lot also, who went with Abram, had flocks, and herds, and tents.
Page 65 - Yes, there is a carpet in the parlour, but there is a carpet here too. What is it ? the grass is the carpet out of doors. Pretty green soft carpet ! and it is very large, for it spreads every where, over all the fields, and over all the meadows ; and it is very pleasant for the sheep and the lambs to lie down upon. I do not know what they would do without it, for they have no feather-bed to sleep upon. It is a pleasant evening. Come hither, Charles, look at the sun.
Page 16 - ONE day, an old sheep, with her young lamb, was in a field with the rest of the flock. The sun was warm, and the lamb was quite gay, and full of play. It ran here and there, up and down, round and round; but it ran most by the hedge, as it was a warm spot, and the high hedge kept off the wind.
Page 59 - ... feathers. Puss has a warm fur ; put your hands upon it ; it is like a muff. The Snail has a shell to shelter him from the cold. Has the little boy got any thing ? No; nothing but a soft thin skin ; a pin would scratch it and make it bleed ; poor little naked boy ! But the little boy has got every thing ; fur and wool, and hair, and feathers ; your coat is made of warm wool, shorn from the sheep, your hat is the fur of the rabbit and the beaver, and your shoes are made of skin. Look at this green...
Page 65 - O, here is a large, round stump of a tree: it will do very well for a table. But we have no chairs. Here is a seat of turf, and a bank almost covered with violets: we shall sit here, and you and Billy may lie on the carpet. The carpet is in the parlor. Yes, there is a carpet in the parlor, but there is a carpet here too. What is it ? The grass is the carpet out of doors. Pretty, green, soft carpet! and it is very 'large, for it spreads every where, over all the fields, and over all the meadows ;...
Page 65 - Now the flowers smell sweet, and the sun shines, and the little birds sing again, and it is not so hot as it was before it rained. We will drink tea out of doors. Bring the tea-things. Come, fetch your hat. It is very pleasant. But here is no table. What must we do? O, here is a large round stump of a tree, it will do very well for a table. But we have no chairs. Here is a seat of turf, and a bank almost covered with violets ; we shall sit here, and you and Billy may lie on the carpet. The carpet...
Page 50 - Lot chose him all the plain of Jordan ; and Lot journeyed east : and they separated themselves the one from the other. 12 Abram dwelt in the land of Canaan, and Lot dwelt in the cities of the plain, and pitched his tent toward Sodom.
Page 64 - Come, fetch your hat. It is very pleasant. But here is no table. What must we do? 0, here is a large round stump of a tree, it will do very well for a table. But we have no chairs. Here is a seat of turf, and a bank almost covered with violets; we shall sit here, and you and Billy may lie on the carpet. The carétait nuit ; il pleuvra bientôt.
Page 58 - ... the warm sun of Persia or Hindostan. Wild Geese, and wild Ducks, and Plovers, live in fens and marshes. Man can live every where, in cold Norway or Lapland, in hot Guinea or Persia ; in hilly countries, or marshy plains ; he can bear as much heat as the Ostrich, and as much cold as the Reindeer. The Sheep has a fleece to keep him warm. The Beaver has a thick fur. The Horse has hair, and a fine mane ; how it flows over his neck, and waves in the wind. The Ox has a thick hide. The Ducks have feathers...