You are here

قراءة كتاب The Runaway Donkey and Other Rhymes for Children

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

‏اللغة: English
The Runaway Donkey and Other Rhymes for Children

The Runaway Donkey and Other Rhymes for Children

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


THE
RUNAWAY DONKEY
AND OTHER
RHYMES FOR CHILDREN

BY
EMILIE POULSSON

AUTHOR OF "FINGER PLAYS FOR NURSERY AND KINDERGARTEN,"
"THROUGH THE FARMYARD GATE," "CHILD
STORIES AND RHYMES"

ILLUSTRATED BY L. J. BRIDGMAN

titlepage

BOSTON
LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD COMPANY


Published, August, 1905.
Copyright, 1905, by Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Company.


All Rights Reserved.


The Runaway Donkey.


PREFACE

Several of the rhymed stories in this book are true stories, and children may enjoy them the more for knowing that Barney, a real donkey, did run away and play pranks as the rhymes say; that Midget did ride horseback; that the deer did toss the hay to the hungry pony; and that Queen Victoria did restore the birds' nesting-place in the old round tower at Windsor. Pony Rollo, too, is a real character, clever and lovable, although some liberties have been taken in the portrayal of him and his doings. Barney Gray is still living, petted by his now grown-up owners and enjoyed by all children who visit the farm to which the donkey came about twenty years ago, and a drive with Barney is quite as likely now as in former days to have unexpected features.

The pictures of Barney and some of the other pets have been drawn by Mr. Bridgman from photographs taken expressly for this book.

In the belief that such rhymes as are herein offered gratify and increase in children both the love of animals and the sense of humor, this new volume is sent forth not only to give pleasure, but to contribute what it may to the fostering of these desirable traits.

Kindergartners will find here, as in Through the Farmyard Gate, suitable material for kindergarten use; for example, the cumulative rhyme, The Pigeons, and the tracing-back rhyme, Who Gives us Our Thanksgiving Dinner?

For courteous permission to use such of these rhymes as have already appeared in print, acknowledgments are made to publishers and periodicals as follows: The Century Company, New York (St. Nicholas); S. E. Cassino, Salem, Massachusetts (Little Folks); and Milton Bradley Co., Springfield, Massachusetts (Kindergarten Review).

EMILIE POULSSON.

Boston, Mass., 1905.


CONTENTS

PAGE
The Runaway Donkey 1
The Pony Rollo Rhymes:—
    I. The Pony Needed 11
   II. The Pony's Arrival 14
  III. The Pony's Tricks 18
  IV. The Pony Named 22
   V. The Pony and Teddy 24
  VI. The Pony as Cowboy 28
 VII. The Check-rein Story 33
VIII. Pony Rollo and Little Dog Midget 37
The Kindly Deer 42
Farm Voices 46
By Favor of the Queen 48
The Pigeons 52
The Child and the Pigeons 56
Who gives us our Thanksgiving Dinner? 57
Clothes 60
At the Pond 63
The Ballad of the Bumptious Boy 67

Pages