First Grade Read Aloud Banquet



Songs for September

Dickory Dock



London Bridge



Puss at Court



Ye Frog's Wooing




The Goops—Table Manners

The Goops they lick their fingers

And the Goops they lick their knives;

They spill their broth on the tablecloth—

Oh, they lead disgusting lives!

The Goops they talk while eating,

And loud and fast they chew;

And that is why I'm glad that I

Am not a Goop—are you?


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Week 27 The Fisherman's Town from The Story of Doctor Dolittle by Hugh Lofting
Home Again from The Story of Doctor Dolittle by Hugh Lofting
Captain Clark's Burning Glass from Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans by Edward Eggleston The Story That the Swallow Didn't Tell from Among the Farmyard People by Clara Dillingham Pierson Scrapefoot from Fairy Tales Too Good To Miss—Around the Fire by Lisa M. Ripperton How Leonidas Kept the Pass from On the Shores of the Great Sea by M. B. Synge "Diddy" from The Irish Twins by Lucy Fitch Perkins The River That Ran Blood from Hurlbut's Story of the Bible by Jesse Lyman Hurlbut
Little Wind by Kate Greenaway
The Wrong House by A. A. Milne
My Robin by Kate Greenaway
At the Sea-Side by Robert Louis Stevenson Cunning Bee, Anonymous Thirty Days Hath September, Anonymous Boats Sail on the Rivers by Christina Georgina Rossetti
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The Aesop for Children  by Milo Winter

The Tortoise and the Ducks

The Tortoise, you know, carries his house on his back. No matter how hard he tries, he cannot leave home. They say that Jupiter punished him so, because he was such a lazy stay-at-home that he would not go to Jupiter's wedding, even when especially invited.

After many years, Tortoise began to wish he had gone to that wedding. When he saw how gaily the birds flew about and how the Hare and the Chipmunk and all the other animals ran nimbly by, always eager to see everything there was to be seen, the Tortoise felt very sad and discontented. He wanted to see the world too, and there he was with a house on his back and little short legs that could hardly drag him along.

One day he met a pair of Ducks and told them all his trouble.

"We can help you to see the world," said the Ducks. "Take hold of this stick with your teeth and we will carry you far up in the air where you can see the whole countryside. But keep quiet or you will be sorry."

The Tortoise was very glad indeed. He seized the stick firmly with his teeth, the two Ducks took hold of it one at each end, and away they sailed up toward the clouds.


[Illustration]

Just then a Crow flew by. He was very much astonished at the strange sight and cried:

"This must surely be the King of Tortoises!"

"Why certainly—" began the Tortoise.

But as he opened his mouth to say these foolish words he lost his hold on the stick, and down he fell to the ground, where he was dashed to pieces on a rock.

Foolish curiosity and vanity often lead to misfortune.