STORIES FOR CHILDREN THREE AND FOUR YEARS OLD.
The arrangement is in the order of degree of difficulty. Where the title would naturally appear in the library catalogue, the author’s name only is given. Where a title appears in several lists, the source is given only in one, which is indicated by giving the page number in bold face type preceding title in the index at the end of this pamphlet.
Many of the stories listed may be found in simplified form in the primers and readers on the little children’s shelves.
Rhymes from Mother Goose.
A was an apple pie.
A was an archer who shot at a frog.
This is the house that Jack built.
Three little kittens lost their mittens.
Old Mother Hubbard.
Sing a song of sixpence.
The Queen of Hearts.
I saw a ship a-sailing.
Tom he was a piper’s son.
London Bridge is broken down.
Cock Robin and Jenny Wren.
Who killed Cock Robin?
Best versions of Mother Goose:
Lang. Nursery rhyme book.
Norton. Heart of oak books, v.
I.
Book of nursery rhymes; Welsh.
Mother Goose’s melodies. Wheeler.
See also the Caldecott picture books.
The old woman and her pig.
Best versions:
Jacobs. English fairy
tales.
Lang. Nursery rhyme book.
Other versions:
Bailey and Lewis. For
the children’s hour.
Bryant. How to tell stories.
Lansing. Rhymes and stories.
Norton. Heart of oak
books, v. I.
O’Shea. Six nursery
classics.
Scudder. Book of folk
stories.
Wiggin and Smith.
Tales of laughter.
Chicken Licken or Henny Penny.
Best versions:
Jacobs. English fairy
tales.
Scudder. Book of folk
stories.
Other versions:
Arnold and Gilbert.
Stepping stones to literature,
v. 2. (Chicken Little.)
Asbjoernsen. Fairy tales
from the far north.
(Hen who went to Dovrefjeld.)
Bailey and Lewis.
For the children’s hour.
(Chicken Little.)
Blaisdell. Child life
in tale and fable. (Chicken
Little.)
Darton. Wonder book of
beasts.
Lansing. Rhymes and stories.
Norton. Heart of oak
books, v. I.
Scudder. Book of folk
stories.
Scudder. Children’s
book.
Tappan. Folk stories
and fables.
Peter Rabbit. Potter.
The gingerbread man.[1]
Three little pigs.[1]
The pancake.[1]
Three goats.
Poulsson. Through the
farmyard gate.
[Footnote 1: For source, see page number preceding title in index.]
Golden cobwebs.
Best versions:
Bryant. Best stories
to tell.
Bryant. How to tell stories.