The school managers' series of reading books. Standard 1-6. Intr. primer [and] Standard 1-6, Volume 2Alexander Ronald Grant 1874 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 17
Page 42
... capital bit put it into your Julia . I won't have it in my mouth ! Tie it round my waist , or round my arm . Charles . What an idea ! Have you ever seen a horse with the bit in any other place than its mouth ? Julia . But I'm not a real ...
... capital bit put it into your Julia . I won't have it in my mouth ! Tie it round my waist , or round my arm . Charles . What an idea ! Have you ever seen a horse with the bit in any other place than its mouth ? Julia . But I'm not a real ...
Page 103
... capital milk , which makes that good stuff called Devonshire cream ; much of which , however nice it is , would make you very sick . Next you will reach Cornwall , full of mines and miners ; and having arrived at the inn at the Land's ...
... capital milk , which makes that good stuff called Devonshire cream ; much of which , however nice it is , would make you very sick . Next you will reach Cornwall , full of mines and miners ; and having arrived at the inn at the Land's ...
Page 110
... - naught ; and these again are divided into thirty- two counties . The capital city is Dublin , on the river Liffey , in the county of Dublin . The Irish talk of County Antrim or County Down , not simply Antrim or 110 SECOND STANDARD .
... - naught ; and these again are divided into thirty- two counties . The capital city is Dublin , on the river Liffey , in the county of Dublin . The Irish talk of County Antrim or County Down , not simply Antrim or 110 SECOND STANDARD .
Page 112
... capital soup . The French are very polite ; they always say " Good morning , sir , " or " ma'am , " as the case may be , when they go in or out of a shop , and never say anything rude and uncivil . Men do a good deal of work which in ...
... capital soup . The French are very polite ; they always say " Good morning , sir , " or " ma'am , " as the case may be , when they go in or out of a shop , and never say anything rude and uncivil . Men do a good deal of work which in ...
Page 115
... capital city of Belgium . Leopold was the uncle of Queen Victoria . Near Brussels , was fought the famous battle of Waterloo , between the English - who were helped by the Prussians and Belgians - and the French On the fields , which ...
... capital city of Belgium . Leopold was the uncle of Queen Victoria . Near Brussels , was fought the famous battle of Waterloo , between the English - who were helped by the Prussians and Belgians - and the French On the fields , which ...
Common terms and phrases
Alice arithmetic prize aunt baby battle of Waterloo beasts beautiful Bessie better bird Bob-o-link brings called Charles child clean clever clothes coo-coo cried dear dress drink drowned Emly England English father fish flowers fond garden girl give head heard hope horse hovel Jones Julia keep king kissing and crying land Letty little Robin Redbreast little schooner live look master mistress mother Musgrove nest never night Norris nosegays Number Pat Maloney Patty Larkins plants plenty poor pretty red cook roots round Russia Ruth sail sang schooner Scotland servant shillings sing slate Smith Spain speak stole sums sure tell there's things thought Tim Larkins to-morrow to-whit told town tuberous root Turkey turn for house-work Whale William the Norman Williams Willie woman wonder word
Popular passages
Page 92 - You friendly Earth! how far do you go With the wheat-fields that nod and the rivers that flow, With cities and gardens, and cliffs, and isles And people upon you for thousands of miles? "Ah, you are so great, and I am so small, I...
Page 91 - January brings the snow, Makes our feet and fingers glow. February brings the rain, Thaws the frozen lake again. March brings breezes loud and shrill, Stirs the dancing daffodil. April brings the primrose sweet, Scatters daisies at our feet. May brings flocks of pretty lambs Skipping by their fleecy dams. June brings tulips, lilies, roses, Fills the children's hands with posies. Hot July brings cooling showers, Apricots and gillyflowers. August brings the sheaves of corn, Then the harvest home is...
Page 46 - To-whit! to-whit! to-whee! Will you listen to me? Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made"?" " Not I," said the the cow, " Moo-oo! Such a thing I'd never do. I gave you a wisp of hay, But didn't take your nest away. Not I,
Page 48 - I think I never heard Of anything so mean." "It is very cruel, too," Said little Alice Neal; "I wonder if he knew How sad the bird would feel?
Page 47 - oh, no! I wouldn't treat a poor bird so. I gave wool the nest to line, But the nest was none of mine. Baa ! Baa !" said the sheep ; " oh, no I wouldn't treat a poor bird so.
Page 118 - The children of Holland take pleasure in making, What the children of England take pleasure in breaking;" I believe their bijouterie and nouveautes are chiefly manufactured for the foreign markets.
Page 103 - WALES is a pretty little country, like England's baby brother. It was conquered long ago by a king of England, who promised the people that they should have a prince to govern them who could not speak a word of English. He then told them his own son, a baby, who could not speak any language at all, should be their prince. Since that time the eldest son of the King of England has been called the Prince of Wales. Wales is very mountainous, and numbers of little sheep graze on the green hills. Welsh...
Page 149 - Africa is bounded on the north by the Mediterranean Sea ; on the west, by the Atlantic Ocean ; on the east, by the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean...
Page 91 - Apricots and gillyflowers. August brings the sheaves of corn, Then the harvest home is borne. Warm September brings the fruit, Sportsmen then begin to shoot.
Page 72 - Dip for it, grope for it — Tis such a loss! Jane finds a drop of dew, Fan finds a stone; I find the thimble, Which is mother's own! Run with it, fly with it — Don't let it fall; All did their best for it — Mother thanks all. Just as we give it her, — Think what a shame! — Ned says he's sure That it isn't the same!