قراءة كتاب Gems of Poetry, for Girls and Boys

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‏اللغة: English
Gems of Poetry, for Girls and Boys

Gems of Poetry, for Girls and Boys

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 5

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Though I am now in younger days,

Nor can tell what shall befall me,

I'll prepare for every place

Where my growing age shall call me.

 

Should I e'er be rich or great,

Others shall partake my goodness;

I'll supply the poor with meat,

Never showing scorn or rudeness.

 

When I see the blind or lame,

Deaf or dumb, I'll kindly treat them;

I deserve to feel the same,

If I mock, or hurt, or cheat them.

 

If I meet with railing tongues,

Why should I return their railing?

Since I best revenge my wrongs

By my patience never failing.

 

When I hear them telling lies,

Talking foolish, cursing, swearing,

First I'll try to make them wise,

Or I'll soon go out of hearing.

 

What though I be low and mean,

I'll engage the rich to love me,

While I'm modest, neat and clean,

And submit when they reprove me.

If I should be poor and sick,

I shall meet, I hope, with pity;

Since I love to help the weak,

Though they're neither fair nor witty.

 

I'll not willingly offend,

Nor be easily offended;

What's amiss I'll strive to mend,

And endure what can't be mended.

 

 

 

 

 

LOVE AND DUTY TO PARENTS.

M

My father, my mother, I know,

I cannot your kindness repay;

But I hope that, as older I grow,

I shall learn your commands to obey.

 

You loved me before I could tell

Who it was that so tenderly smiled;

But now that I know it so well,

I should be a dutiful child.

 

I am sorry that ever I should

Be naughty and give you a pain;

I hope I shall learn to be good,

And so never grieve you again.

 

But, for fear that I should dare

From all your commands to depart,

Whenever I'm saying my prayer

I'll ask for a dutiful heart.

 

 

 

 

 

THE APPLE-TREE.

L

Let them sing of bright red gold;

Let them sing of silver fair;

Sing of all that's on the earth,

All that's in the air;

All that's in the sunny air,

All that's in the sea;

And I'll sing a song as rare,

Of the apple-tree!

 

The red-bloomed apple-tree;

The red-cheeked apple-tree;

That's the tree for you and me,

The ripe, rosy apple-tree!

 

Learned men have learned books,

Which they ponder night and day;

Easier leaves than theirs I read,—

Blossoms pink and white;

Blossom-leaves all pink and white,

Wherein I can see

Charactered, as clear as light,

The old apple-tree;

 

The gold-cheeked apple-tree;

The red-streaked apple-tree;

All the fruit that groweth on

The ripe, rosy apple-tree!

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