Third Grade Read Aloud Banquet



Songs for June


All But Blind

All but blind

In his chambered hole

Gropes for worms

The four-clawed Mole.


All but blind

In the evening sky

The hooded Bat

Twirls softly by.


All but blind

In the burning day

The Barn-Owl blunders

On her way.


And blind as are

These three to me,

So blind to someone

I must be.


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Week 45 Winter in Dorfli from Heidi by Johanna Spyri Edward III of Windsor—The Battle of Sluys from Our Island Story by H. E. Marshall Following the Deer (Part 3 of 6) from Secrets of the Woods by William J. Long The Early Home of Joan from The Beautiful Story of Joan of Arc by Viola Ruth Lowe De Ruyter from The Awakening of Europe by M. B. Synge Molly Whuppie from Fairy Tales Too Good To Miss—Aboard the Ship by Lisa M. Ripperton The Beautiful Queen of Persia (Part 1 of 2) from Hurlbut's Story of the Bible by Jesse Lyman Hurlbut
The Cowherd Who Became a Poet from Fifty Famous People by James Baldwin The Vase and the Plume from Holiday Hill by Edith M. Patch Daniel Webster (Part 5 of 5) from Four Great Americans by James Baldwin The Fox and the Crab from The Aesop for Children by Milo Winter Diana and Actaeon from A Child's Book of Myths and Enchantment Tales by Margaret Evans Price How To Look at a Fly from Seaside and Wayside, Book Two by Julia McNair Wright "Like Summer Tempests Came His Tears" (Part 3 of 3) from The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame
The Splendor Falls by Alfred Lord Tennyson From Auguries of Innocence by William Blake November by Alice Cary ---NOVEMBER--- Sunday from Poems by Rachel Lyman Field The Tiger by William Blake Jack Frost by Hannah Flagg Gould
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READING-LITERATURE: Third Reader  by Harriette Taylor Treadwell

The Bear and the Fox

It was in the spring. The trees were clothed in green and the earth was covered with flowers. It was then that the lion, the king of beasts, called his court together.

Soon all the beasts, both great and small, came in great numbers. Only Reynard the fox was absent. He knew that he was guilty of many misdeeds against the other beasts. He knew that if he came to court he put his life in danger.

The king heard the complaints of the wolf, the hound, and the cock against the fox. He decided that Reynard should appear before the court to answer the complaints. Then he said to Bruin the bear, "You shall take this message to Reynard. But remember, Bruin, that Reynard knows how to flatter even the wisest."

"Let me alone with Reynard," said Bruin; "if he mocks me I shall pay him back."

So the next morning Bruin set out. When he came to Reynard's castle the gate was shut. He knocked and knocked. Then he shouted, "Sir Reynard, are you at home? I am Bruin, your kinsman, with a message from the king. You are summoned to appear at court to answer for your misdeeds. The king has taken a vow that if you fail to appear it shall cost you your life. So take the advice of a friend and come with me."

Reynard was lying near the gate basking in the sun. He lay quiet and listened to the bear. He made sure that Bruin was alone. Then he went into one of his holes. There he thought out what to do to disgrace Bruin and escape going to court.

At last he came forth and said, "Dear Uncle Bruin, how tired you must be. Come in and rest. The king should not have sent you on this long journey; you who are next to him in royal blood and riches. I am going to court to-morrow. I was not well enough to go to-day. I have been eating such strange new meat and it has made me ill."

"What is this strange meat?" asked Bruin.

"Uncle," replied the fox, "why do you care to know? It was only honeycomb. It was simple and mean. I was hungry and I ate too much."

"Do you call honeycomb simple and mean?" cried Bruin. "Come, my dear Reynard, and help me to some of this honey, and I will be your friend as long as I live."

"You are jesting with me," said Reynard.

"I am in earnest," cried Bruin. "For one lick of that honeycomb I will be your friend forever and I will stop the mouths of your enemies."

"If that is true, I can serve you," said the fox. "At the foot of this mountain lives a farmer, who has more honey than you could eat in seven years. I will take you to it."

The bear gave him many thanks and away they went. At last they came to an oak tree in which the farmer had driven a wedge.

"Dear Uncle," said Reynard, "in this tree there is more honey than you can eat. Put your nose inside this gap and you will find it. Do not eat too much. It might do you harm."

"Do not fear for me," said the bear.

Then he put his front paws into the gap and thrust his head in up to his ears.

When the fox saw this he ran and pulled the wedge out and left Bruin locked in the tree. The bear began to howl and to scratch with his hind feet. He made such a noise that the farmer heard it and ran out to see what was the matter.

And the fox from afar off cried, "Is the honey good, Uncle? Do not eat too much."

When the farmer saw the bear he called to his neighbors to come and see. Men, women, and children came running out, some with one weapon and some with another.

Poor Bruin, hearing all this noise, pulled and pulled till he had pulled himself free; but he left his ears behind and the skin of his forepaws. Then he made a leap to get away and fell into the river.

Meanwhile the fox was feeling gay. "All is well," he said, "my enemy is dead and I shall not have to go to court." So he stole a fat hen and started home. When he came to the river he saw the bear resting on the bank. He was filled with fear, but he said, "Well, Uncle, did you eat all the honey? It has made you sick. Where are your ears and your gloves?"

Filled with rage, the bear crept to the water. He plunged in and swam down the stream. When he came to a flat bank he landed and lay there, sick and sore. Then he said to himself, "How can I get back to court? I cannot walk, yet to the court I must go, for Reynard shall pay for this."

So he set his tail on the ground and tumbled his body over and over. After many days he tumbled into court.

"Who can this strange creature be?" they all cried.

But when the king saw him he said, "It is Bruin; who could have wounded him like this?"

"O king," said Bruin, "it was that false Reynard who has brought me to disgrace."

"How dare he do this?" said the king. "I swear now that I shall make him tremble." Whereupon the king sent for his council.

It was decided that Reynard should again be summoned to court. He must be made to answer for all his wrong doing. So Tibert the cat was chosen to get Reynard, for the cat was known for his great wisdom.

Reynard the Fox