You are here

قراءة كتاب The Beacon Second Reader

تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"

‏اللغة: English
The Beacon Second Reader

The Beacon Second Reader

تقييمك:
0
No votes yet
دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 1


THE
BEACON SECOND READER

BY

JAMES H. FASSETT




GINN AND COMPANY
BOSTON - NEW YORK - CHICAGO - LONDON
ATLANTA - DALLAS - COLUMBUS - SAN FRANCISCO




COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY JAMES H. FASSETT
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED



PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
431.1



The Athenæum Press



GINN AND COMPANY - PROPRIETORS -
BOSTON - U.S.A.


PREFACE

In the "Beacon Second Reader" the author has chosen for his stories only those of recognized literary merit; and while it has been necessary to rearrange and sometimes rewrite them for the purpose of simplification, yet he has endeavored to retain the spirit which has served to endear these ancient tales to the children of all ages. The fairy story appeals particularly to children who are in the second school year. It has been proved by our ablest psychologists that at about this period of development, children are especially susceptible to the stimulus of the old folklore. They are in fact passing through the stage which corresponds to the dawn of the human race, when demons, dragons, fairies, and hobgoblins were as firmly believed in as rivers and mountains.

As a test of this theory the author asked hundreds of second-grade and third-grade school children to recall the stories which they had read during the preceding year, and to express their preferences. The choice of more than ninety per cent proved to be either folklore stories, pure and simple, or such tales as contained the folklore element. To be sure, children like other stories, but they respond at once with sparkling eyes and animated voices when the fairy tale is suggested. How unwise, therefore, it is to neglect this powerful stimulus which lies ready at our hands! Even a pupil who is naturally slow will wade painfully and laboriously through a fairy story, while he would throw down in disgust an account of the sprouting of the bean or the mining of coal.

It can hardly be questioned, moreover, that the real culture which the child derives from these literary classics is far greater than that which he would gain from the "information" stories so common in the average second and third readers.


CONTENTS

PAGE
PREFACE
THE SHOEMAKER AND THE ELVES English Folk Tale 7
THE SHIP Old English Rhyme 13
THE WOLF AND THE SEVEN YOUNG KIDS William and Jacob Grimm 14
THEY DIDN'T THINK Phoebe Cary 22
TOM THUMB English Fairy Tale 24
SUPPOSE Alice Cary 34
CINDERELLA English Fairy Tale 36
RAINDROPS Ann Hawkshawe 43
THE FOUR FRIENDS William and Jacob Grimm 44
LITTLE BIRDIE Alfred Tennyson 54
MOTHER FROST William and Jacob Grimm 55
IF EVER I SEE Lydia Maria Child 65
WHY THE BEAR'S TAIL IS SHORT German Folk Tale 66
RUMPELSTILTSKIN William and Jacob Grimm 70
BED IN SUMMER Robert Louis Stevenson 81
THE GOLDEN TOUCH Greek Myth 82
OVER IN THE MEADOW Olive A. Wadsworth 89
public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@15659@[email protected]#THE_BELL_OF_ATRI" class="pginternal"

Pages