McGuffey's Second Eclectic Reader eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 72 pages of information about McGuffey's Second Eclectic Reader.

McGuffey's Second Eclectic Reader eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 72 pages of information about McGuffey's Second Eclectic Reader.

There are Tom and Charley,
   And their sister Nell;
There are John and Willie,
   Kate and Isabel,—­
Eyes with pleasure beaming,
   Cheeks with health aglow;
Bless the merry children,
   Trudging through the snow!

Now I hear them shouting,
   “Ready!  Clear the track!”
Down the slope they’re rushing,
   Now they’re trotting back.

Full of fun and frolic,
   Thus they come and go. 
Coating down the hillside,
   Trudging through the snow.

]

LESSON XLVIII.

heed sight sly’ly stream drift’ing

flock flight snaps hid’den cir’cling

THE FOX AND THE DUCKS.

1.  On a summer day, a man sitting on the bank of a river, in the shade of some bushes, watched a flock of ducks on the stream.

2.  Soon a branch with leaves came drifting among them, and they all took wing.  After circling in the air for a little time, they settled down again on their feeding ground.

[Illustration:  Fox watching ducks from a distance.]

3.  Soon another branch came drifting down among them, and again they took flight from the river; but when they found the branch had drifted by and done them no harm, they flew down to the water as before.

4.  After four or five branches had drifted by in this way, the ducks gave little heed to them.  At length, they hardly tried to fly out of their way, even when the branches nearly touched them.

5.  The man who had been watching all this, now began to wonder who had set these branches adrift.  He looked up the stream, and spied a fox slyly watching the ducks.  “What will he do next?” thought the man.

6.  When the fox saw that the ducks were no longer afraid of the branches, he took a much larger branch than any he had yet used, and stretched himself upon it so as to be almost hidden.  Then he set it afloat as he had the others.

7.  Right among the flock drifted the sly old fox, and, making quick snaps to right and left, he seized two fine young ducks, and floated off with them.

8.  The rest of the flock flew away in fright, and did not come back for a long time.

9.  The fox must have had a fine dinner to pay him for his cunning, patient work.

LESSON XLIX.

saint silk’en sim’ple pov’er ty plain sin’ner

spin’ner splen’dor worth stead’y mur’der plan’ning

sil’ver ten’der prov’erb re mem’ber

[Illustration:  Spider spinning web.]

PRETTY IS THAT PRETTY DOES.

1.  The spider wears a plain brown dress,
     And she is a steady spinner;
   To see her, quiet as a mouse,
   Going about her silver house,
   You would never, never, never guess
     The way she gets her dinner.

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McGuffey's Second Eclectic Reader from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.