Fourth Grade Read Aloud Banquet




Hunting Song

Waken, lords and ladies gay,

On the mountain dawns the day,

All the jolly chase is here,

With hawk, and horse, and hunting spear!

Hounds are in their couples yelling,

Hawks are whistling, horns are knelling,

Merrily, merrily, mingle they,

"Waken, lords and ladies gay."


Waken, lords and ladies gay,

The mist has left the mountain gray,

Springlets in the dawn are steaming,

Diamonds on the brake are gleaming;

And foresters have busy been,

To track the buck in thicket green;

Now we come to chant our lay,

"Waken, lords and ladies gay."


Waken, lords and ladies gay,

To the greenwood haste away;

We can show you where he lies,

Fleet of foot and tall of size;

We can show the marks he made,

When 'gainst the oak his antlers fray'd;

You shall see him brought to bay,

"Waken, lords and ladies gay."


Louder, louder chant the lay,

Waken, lords and ladies gay!

Tell them youth, and mirth, and glee

Run a course as well as we;

Time, stern huntsman! who can balk,

Stanch as hound, and fleet as hawk?

Think of this, and rise with day,

Gentle lords and ladies gay.


  Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
Week 3 The Old Gentleman from The Railway Children by Edith Nesbit Henry VI of Windsor—Red Rose and White from Our Island Story by H. E. Marshall The Building of the City from The Story Book of Science by Jean Henri Fabre How the Baron Came Home Shorn from Otto of the Silver Hand by Howard Pyle The Siege of Vienna by the Turks from The Awakening of Europe by M. B. Synge The Lords of the White and Grey Castles from Fairy Tales Too Good To Miss—Upon the Rock by Lisa M. Ripperton The Manger of Bethlehem from Hurlbut's Story of the Bible by Jesse Lyman Hurlbut
Genseric the Vandal from Heroes of the Middle Ages by Eva March Tappan White-Foot from Winter by Dallas Lore Sharp Christopher Columbus from Builders of Our Country: Book I by Gertrude van Duyn Southworth The Merchant of Seri from Jataka Tales by Ellen C. Babbitt Iduna and Her Apples: How Loki Put the Gods in Danger from The Children of Odin: A Book of Northern Myths by Padraic Colum Familiar Moths from Insect Life by Arabella B. Buckley Being Wanted from Five Children and It by Edith Nesbit
He Prayeth Best by Samuel Taylor Coleridge Star-Talk by Robert Graves Hope by Emily Dickinson The Pilgrim by John Bunyan The Better Land from Poems by Felicia Dorothea Hemans The Moon's the North Wind's Cooky by Vachel Lindsay The Snow by Emily Dickinson
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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.