Fourth Grade Read Aloud Banquet




The Snake

A narrow fellow in the grass

Occasionally rides;

You may have met him,—did you not,

His notice sudden is.


The grass divides as with a comb,

A spotted shaft is seen;

And then it closes at your feet

And opens further on.


He likes a boggy acre

A floor too cool for corn

Yet when a child, and barefoot,

I more than once, at morn,


Have passed, I thought, a whip-lash

Unbraiding in the sun,—

When, stooping to secure it,

It wrinkled, and was gone.


Several of nature's people

I know, and they know me;

I feel for them a transport

Of cordiality;


But never met this fellow,

Attended or alone,

Without a tighter breathing,

And zero at the bone.


  Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
Week 1 The Beginning of Things from The Railway Children by Edith Nesbit Henry V of Monmouth—The Battle of Agincourt from Our Island Story by H. E. Marshall The Six from The Story Book of Science by Jean Henri Fabre Foreword from Otto of the Silver Hand by Howard Pyle
The Dragon's House from Otto of the Silver Hand by Howard Pyle
William's Invitation from The Awakening of Europe by M. B. Synge How the Whale Got His Throat from Fairy Tales Too Good To Miss—Upon the Rock by Lisa M. Ripperton Ezra's Great Bible Class in Jerusalem from Hurlbut's Story of the Bible by Jesse Lyman Hurlbut
Alaric the Visigoth from Heroes of the Middle Ages by Eva March Tappan Hunting the Snow from Winter by Dallas Lore Sharp Leif the Lucky from Builders of Our Country: Book I by Gertrude van Duyn Southworth The Monkey and the Crocodile from Jataka Tales by Ellen C. Babbitt Far Away and Long Ago from The Children of Odin: A Book of Northern Myths by Padraic Colum What Is an Insect? from Insect Life by Arabella B. Buckley Beautiful as the Day from Five Children and It by Edith Nesbit
Blow, Blow, Thou Winter Wind by William Shakespeare The Night Wind by Eugene Field The New Year by Alfred Lord Tennyson Good Hours by Robert Frost Excerpt from "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" from Poems by Samuel Taylor Coleridge Father William by Lewis Carroll Star-Talk by Robert Graves
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The Aesop for Children  by Milo Winter

The Ant and the Dove

A Dove saw an Ant fall into a brook. The Ant struggled in vain to reach the bank, and in pity, the Dove dropped a blade of straw close beside it. Clinging to the straw like a shipwrecked sailor to a broken spar, the Ant floated safely to shore.


[Illustration]

Soon after, the Ant saw a man getting ready to kill the Dove with a stone. But just as he cast the stone, the Ant stung him in the heel, so that the pain made him miss his aim, and the startled Dove flew to safety in a distant wood.

A kindness is never wasted.