4. “You wish you knew? And so do we.
But we can’t tell you, unless
it be
That the same Kind Power that cares
for you
Takes care of poor little berries,
too.
5. “Tucked up snugly, and nestled below
Our coverlid of wind-woven snow,
We peep and listen, all winter long,
For the first spring day and the
bluebird’s song.
6. “When the swallows fly home to the old
brown shed,
And the robins build on the bough
overhead,
Then out from the mold, from the
darkness and cold,
Blossom and runner and leaf unfold.
7. “Good children, then, if they come near,
And hearken a good long while, may
hear
A wonderful tramping of little feet,—
So fast we grow in the summer heat.
8. “Our clocks are the flowers; and they
count the hours
Till we can mellow in suns and showers,
With warmth of the west wind and
heat of the south,
A ripe red berry for a ripe red
month.
9. “Apple blooms whiten, and peach blooms
fall,
And roses are gay by the garden
wall,
Ere the daisy’s dial gives
the sign
That we may invite little Pearl
to dine.
10. “The days are longest, the month is
June,
The year is nearing its golden
noon,
The weather is fine, and our
feast is spread
With a green cloth and berries
red.
11. “Just take us betwixt your finger and
thumb,
And quick, oh, quick! for,
see! there come
Tom on all fours, and Martin
the man,
And Margaret, picking as fast
as they can.
12. “Oh, dear! if you only knew how it
shocks
Nice berries like us to be
sold by the box,
And eaten by strangers, and
paid for with pelf,
You would surely take pity,
and eat us yourself!”
13. And this is the story the small lips told
To dear Pearl Honeydew, six
years old,
When she laid her head on
the strawberry bed
To hear what the red-cheeked
berries said.
Definitions.—3. Thrive, to grow well, to flourish. 5. Nes’tled, gathered closely together. 6. Mold, fine, soft earth. Run’ner, a slender branch running along the ground. 8. Mel’low, to ripen. 9. Di’al, the face of a timepiece. 10. Feast, a festive or joyous meal, a banquet. 12. Pelf, money.
Exercises.—What did little Pearl ask of the strawberries? What did they reply? Can you tell what name is given to this kind of story?
XVV. HARRY’S RICHES. (74)
1. One day, our little Harry spent the morning with his young playmate, Johnny Crane, who lived in a fine house, and on Sundays rode to church in the grandest carriage to be seen in all the country round.
2. When Harry returned home, he said, “Mother, Johnny has money in both pockets!”
3. “Has he, dear?”
4. “Yes, ma’am; and he says he could get ever so much more if he wanted it.”