Lucy and Arthur |
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... THE NURSERY II . THE LITTLE BLACK PONY III . THE LITTLE GARDENS 1 25 65 IV . THE DAY'S WORK 87 V. THE WALK 109 VI . MAMMA'S STORIES 127 VII . PAPA'S STORIES 153 VIII . SUNDAY 173 LUCY AND ARTHUR . CHAPTER I. THE NURSERY . B.
... THE NURSERY II . THE LITTLE BLACK PONY III . THE LITTLE GARDENS 1 25 65 IV . THE DAY'S WORK 87 V. THE WALK 109 VI . MAMMA'S STORIES 127 VII . PAPA'S STORIES 153 VIII . SUNDAY 173 LUCY AND ARTHUR . CHAPTER I. THE NURSERY . B.
Page 34
... walk with her and Richard such a beautiful morning . They were soon all ready to start . They walked into the village , and Richard made many inquiries of persons he met , whether they had seen their little black pony . All were very ...
... walk with her and Richard such a beautiful morning . They were soon all ready to start . They walked into the village , and Richard made many inquiries of persons he met , whether they had seen their little black pony . All were very ...
Page 43
... walk . " " Oh ! what a clever fellow , " cried Ar- thur ; " I should like such a dog , that would do all I told him . ” " Well , I wonder when we shall see any- thing of Taff , " said Susan ; " I am afraid you are getting tired , Miss ...
... walk . " " Oh ! what a clever fellow , " cried Ar- thur ; " I should like such a dog , that would do all I told him . ” " Well , I wonder when we shall see any- thing of Taff , " said Susan ; " I am afraid you are getting tired , Miss ...
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... walk home again . " So they came back , and walked quietly with Susan and Richard , and every now and then there was a very cheerful hop or a jump . Richard said , " Well , I think , it's very likely to be our little runaway . " " How ...
... walk home again . " So they came back , and walked quietly with Susan and Richard , and every now and then there was a very cheerful hop or a jump . Richard said , " Well , I think , it's very likely to be our little runaway . " " How ...
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... walk faster than you do now . " 66 Well , you can indeed , Miss Lucy , " said Susan ; " and here is Farmer Smith's . " Lucy and Arthur had often been to the good farmer's with their Papa ; indeed they could scarcely have a greater treat ...
... walk faster than you do now . " 66 Well , you can indeed , Miss Lucy , " said Susan ; " and here is Farmer Smith's . " Lucy and Arthur had often been to the good farmer's with their Papa ; indeed they could scarcely have a greater treat ...
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Common terms and phrases
afraid ashamed asked basket bear began birds boat breakfast Charles church Cock Robin cow's tail cowslip cried Arthur cried Lucy daisies daisy chain dare say dinner duckweed exclaimed Farmer Smith's flowers give glad Hannah Green hear heard hymn Jarvey Jenny Wren jumped kind knew laughed lessons little black pony Little Bo-peep little boy little children little dog little Frog little gardens little girls little pony little rabbit looked Lucy and Arthur Lucy's mahout Master Arthur Miss Lucy morning naughty never nice night Papa and Mamma pick pigs poor Borwarni poor Froggy poor little poor Taff prayer pretty quietly redde remember replied Richard ride sing sister Smith song soon sorry stairs stay story Sunday sure Taff's ears tell things thought thur tidy tired told took Uncle John walk wish word wrong
Popular passages
Page 23 - A SWARM of bees in May Is worth a load of hay; A swarm of bees in June Is worth a silver spoon; A swarm of bees in July Is not worth a fly.
Page 45 - Little Bo-Peep has lost her sheep, And can't tell where to find them; Leave them alone, and they'll come home, And bring their tails behind them. Little Bo-Peep fell fast asleep, And dreamt she heard them bleating; But when she awoke, she found it a joke, For they were still all fleeting.
Page 186 - WHAT IS THAT, MOTHER? What is that mother?— The lark my child. The morn has but just looked out, and smiled, When he starts from his humble, grassy nest, And is up and away, with the dew on his breast. And a hymn in his heart, to yon pure bright sphere , To warble ¡tout in his Maker's ear. Ever, my child, be thy morn's first lays Tuned, like the lark's, to thy Maker's praise. What is that, mother?— The dove, my son.
Page 61 - Who, being little, was not big, He always walked upon his feet, And never fasted when he eat. When from a place he ran away, He never at that place did stay ; And while he ran, as I am told, He ne'er stood still for young or old. He often squeak'd, and sometimes vi'lent, And when he squeak'd he ne'er was silent : Tho' ne'er instructed by a cat, He knew a mouse was not a rat.
Page 13 - I'll dress you like a goldfinch, Or like a peacock gay; So, if you'll have me, Jenny, Let us appoint the day.
Page 14 - CXL1n. [A CANDLE.] LITTLE Nancy Etticoat, In a white petticoat ; The longer she stands, The shorter she grows. CXLIV. [PAIR OF TONGS.] Long legs, crooked thighs, Little head and no eyes. CXLV. [ONE...
Page 104 - The gentleman did think so at first, and decided that the best thing he could do would be to take the gasping boy to the doctor's.
Page 45 - Then up she took her little crook, Determined for to find them; She found them indeed, but it made her heart bleed, For they'd left their tails behind them! It happened one day, as Bo-peep did stray, Unto a meadow hard by, There she espied their tails side by side, All hung on a tree to dry.
Page 17 - ... untangle or separate. South." " To redd up a room " is a marked provincialism in Pennsylvania, from whence it has passed into Ohio. It originated with the Scotch immigrants, who settled those districts, and brought the word with them from the borders, where the old proverb is current : " A seamstress that sews and would make her work redde, Must use a long needle and a short thread.
Page 42 - I HAD a little dog, and his name was Blue Bell, I gave him some work, and he did it very well ; I sent him up stairs to pick up a pin, He stepped in the coal-scuttle up to the chin . I sent him to the garden to pick some sage, He tumbled down and fell in a rage ; I sent him to the cellar, to draw a pot of beer, He came up again, and said there was none there.