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With joy she picked the penny up,
The fairy penny good;

And with her fagots dry and brown
Went wandering from the wood.

"Now she has that," said the brownies, Let flax be ever so dear,

"T will buy her clothes of the very best, For many and many a year!"

"And go now," said the grandmother,
"Since falling is the dew,
Go down unto the lonesome glen,
And milk the mother-ewe!"

All down into the lonesome glen,
Through copses thick and wild,

Through moist, rank grass, by trickling streams, Went on the willing child.

And when she came to the lonesome glen,
She kept beside the burn,

And neither plucked the strawberry-flower
Nor broke the lady-fern.

And while she milked the mother-ewe

Within this lonesome glen,

She wished that little Amy

Were strong and well again.

And soon as she had thought this thought,

She heard a coming sound,

As if a thousand fairy-folk

Were gathering all around.

And then she heard a little voice,
Shrill as the midge's wing,

That spake aloud, "A human child
Is here; yet mark this thing,-

"The lady-fern is all unbroke,

The strawberry-flower untaken! What shall be done for her who still From mischief can refrain ?"

"Give her a fairy cake!" said one ; "Grant her a wish!" said three ; "The latest wish that she hath wished," Said all," whate'er it be !”

Kind Mabel heard the words they spake,
And from the lonesome glen
Unto the good old grandmother
Went gladly back again.

Thus happened it to Mabel
On that midsummer day,
And these three fairy-blessings
She took with her away.

'T is good to make all duty sweet, To be alert and kind;

'T is good, like little Mabel,

To have a willing mind.

THE ATHEIST AND THE ACORN.

"METHINKS this world seems oddly made,
And every thing amiss,"
A dull, complaining atheist said,
As stretched he lay beneath the shade,
And instanced it in this:

"Behold," quoth he, "that mighty thing, A pumpkin large and round,

Is held but by a little string,

Which upward cannot make it spring,
Nor bear it from the ground,

"While on this oak an acorn small,
So disproportioned, grows,

That whosoe'er surveys this all,
This universal casual ball,

Its ill contrivance knows.

"My better judgment would have hung The pumpkin on the tree, And left the acorn slightly strung, 'Mong things that on the surface sprung, And weak and feeble be."

No more the caviller could say,
No farther faults descry;
For, upwards gazing as he lay,
An acorn, loosened from its spray,
Fell down upon his eye.

The wounded part with tears ran o'er,
As punished for the sin;
Fool! had that bough a pumpkin bore,
Thy whimsies would have worked no more,
Nor skull have kept them in.

THE PIN, NEEDLE, AND SCISSORS.- Mrs. Follen.

"T is true, although 't is sad to say,
Disputes are rising every day.
You'd think, if no one did deny it,
A little work-box might be quiet;
But 't is not so, for I did hear
Or else I dreamed it, 't is so queer
A Pin and Needle in the cushion
Maintain the following discussion.
The Needle, "extra-fine, gold-eyed,"
Was very sharp and full of pride.
And thus, methought, she did begin : -
"You clumsy, thick, short, ugly Pin,
I wish you were not quite so near;
How could my mistress stick me here?
She should have put me in my place,
With my bright sisters in the case."
"Would you were there!" the Pin replied;
"I do not want you by my side.
I'm rather short and thick, 't is true;
Who'd be so long and thin as you?

I've got a head, though, of my own,
That you had better let alone."

"You make me laugh," the Needle cried;
"That you 've a head can't be denied ;
For you a very proper head,

Without an eye and full of lead."

"You are so cross and sharp and thin,"
Replied the poor, insulted Pin,
"I hardly dare a word to say,
And wish, indeed, you were away.
That golden eye in your poor head
Was only made to hold a thread;
All your fine airs are foolish fudge,
For you are nothing but a drudge;
But I, in spite of your abuse,
Am made for pleasure and for use.
I fasten the bouquet and sash,
And help the ladies make a dash;
I go abroad and gaily roam,

While you are rusting here at home."

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Stop!" cried the Needle, "you 're too much; You 've brass enough to beat the Dutch :

Do I not make the ladies' clothes,

Ere I retire to my repose?

Then who, forsooth, the glory wins?
Alas! 't is finery and pins.
This is the world's unjust decree,
But what is this vain world to me?
I'd rather live with my own kin,
Than dance about like you, vain Pin.
I'm taken care of every day;

You 're used awhile, then thrown away;
Or else you get all bent up double,
And a snug crack for all your trouble."
"True," said the Pin, "I am abused,
And sometimes very roughly used;
I often get an ugly crook,
Or fall into a dirty nook;

But there I lie, and never mind it;
Who wants a pin is sure to find it.
In time I am picked up, and then
I lead a merry life again.

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