Stories to Tell Children eBook

Sara Cone Bryant
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 204 pages of information about Stories to Tell Children.

Stories to Tell Children eBook

Sara Cone Bryant
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 204 pages of information about Stories to Tell Children.

FOOTNOTES: 

[8] These riddles were taken from the Gaelic, and are charming examples of the naive beauty of the old Irish, and of Dr Hyde’s accurate and sympathetic modern rendering.  From Beside the Fire (David Nutt).

THE COCK-A-DOO-DLE-DOO[9]

A very little boy made this story up “out of his head,” and told it to his papa.  I think you littlest ones will like it; I do.

Once upon a time there was a little boy, and he wanted to be a cock-a-doo-dle-doo.  So he was a cock-a-doo-dle-doo.  And he wanted to fly up into the sky.  So he did fly up into the sky.  And he wanted to get wings and a tail So he did get some wings and a tail.

FOOTNOTES: 

[9] From The Ignominy of being Grown Up, by Dr. Samuel M. Crothers, in the Atlantic Monthly for July 1906.

THE CLOUD[10]

One hot summer morning a little Cloud rose out of the sea and floated lightly and happily across the blue sky.  Far below lay the earth, brown, dry, and desolate, from drought.  The little Cloud could see the poor people of the earth working and suffering in the hot fields, while she herself floated on the morning breeze, hither and thither, without a care.

“Oh, if I could only help the poor people down there!” she thought.  “If I could but make their work easier, or give the hungry ones food, or the thirsty a drink!”

And as the day passed, and the Cloud became larger, this wish to do something for the people of earth was ever greater in her heart.

On earth it grew hotter and hotter; the sun burned down so fiercely that the people were fainting in its rays; it seemed as if they must die of heat, and yet they were obliged to go on with their work, for they were very poor.  Sometimes they stood and looked up at the Cloud, as if they were praying, and saying, “Ah, if you could help us!”

“I will help you; I will!” said the Cloud.  And she began to sink softly down toward the earth.

But suddenly, as she floated down, she remembered something which had been told her when she was a tiny Cloud-child, in the lap of Mother Ocean:  it had been whispered that if the Clouds go too near the earth they die.  When she remembered this she held herself from sinking, and swayed here and there on the breeze, thinking,—­thinking.  But at last she stood quite still, and spoke boldly and proudly.  She said, “Men of earth, I will help you, come what may!”

The thought made her suddenly marvellously big and strong and powerful.  Never had she dreamed that she could be so big.  Like a mighty angel of blessing she stood above the earth, and lifted her head and spread her wings far over the fields and woods.  She was so great, so majestic, that men and animals were awe-struck at the sight; the trees and the grasses bowed before her; yet all the earth-creatures felt that she meant them well.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Stories to Tell Children from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.