Journeys Through Bookland: A New and Original Plan for Reading, Applied to the World's Best Literature for Children, Volume 1Bellows-Reeve Company, 1909 - Anthologies |
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Page 20
... never thought of Humpty as an egg . What answer would you give to the question , Who was Taffy ( page 51 ) ? For similar rid- dles , see Nancy Netticoat ( Volume I , page 105 ) , The Andiron ( page 176 ) and St. Ives ( page 210 ) . II ...
... never thought of Humpty as an egg . What answer would you give to the question , Who was Taffy ( page 51 ) ? For similar rid- dles , see Nancy Netticoat ( Volume I , page 105 ) , The Andiron ( page 176 ) and St. Ives ( page 210 ) . II ...
Page 38
... never thought could be expressed with a paint - brush ; third , it is well composed , and a landscape requires compo- sition as well as a figure piece ; fourth , ' values ' are well maintained , its qualities good , its poetic feeling ...
... never thought could be expressed with a paint - brush ; third , it is well composed , and a landscape requires compo- sition as well as a figure piece ; fourth , ' values ' are well maintained , its qualities good , its poetic feeling ...
Page 49
... never been seen by him . Gradually through such pictures he is led to seek an ideal beauty in the real world . He also becomes able not only to appreciate the poetic rendering of this expression of the ideal but is capable of forming ...
... never been seen by him . Gradually through such pictures he is led to seek an ideal beauty in the real world . He also becomes able not only to appreciate the poetic rendering of this expression of the ideal but is capable of forming ...
Page 55
... never really know ; perhaps their little feet were encased in moccasins , or they may have been bare and ornamented with rings : what we do know is that Jack broke his crown and Jill came tumbling after . So we will give the artists all ...
... never really know ; perhaps their little feet were encased in moccasins , or they may have been bare and ornamented with rings : what we do know is that Jack broke his crown and Jill came tumbling after . So we will give the artists all ...
Page 70
... never wearies of our oldest poem , Beowulf , while Alice wants only Cinderella , or at most Bluebeard . It is nothing less than cruelty to fill the imaginations of sensi- tive children with deeds of violence and tales of sadness and woe ...
... never wearies of our oldest poem , Beowulf , while Alice wants only Cinderella , or at most Bluebeard . It is nothing less than cruelty to fill the imaginations of sensi- tive children with deeds of violence and tales of sadness and woe ...
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appear Arthur artist battle Baucis and Philemon beautiful Bedivere begin bird Blynken Brown Thrush Cæsar called Canoe Race character child Cinderella cloud color Crow Drummer English essay eyes fable facts fairy fairy tales father feel figures flowers Gelert Gettysburg Address girls give Hervé Riel idea imagination incidents inspiration interest Journeys Through Bookland Julius Cæsar King King Arthur lessons light lines literature lives look lyric masterpieces meaning mind mother nature never night nursery rhymes paragraph parent person phrases picture plot poem poet poetry prose questions reader Robin Hood scenes selections sentence song stanza story style talk teacher teaching tell things thou thought tion trees VIII Volume VII Warren Hastings Water Baby Wee Willie Winkie wind words write written young