A tale of a nest. By the author of 'Aunt Annie's stories'.1872 |
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... sometimes , ' replied Mimi , rather reluctantly ; it reminds me of her sweet face , and I love the feather for her sake . You need not look so cross , my love ; it is quite true . ' ' And is it possible , ' Dickon exclaimed angrily ...
... sometimes , ' replied Mimi , rather reluctantly ; it reminds me of her sweet face , and I love the feather for her sake . You need not look so cross , my love ; it is quite true . ' ' And is it possible , ' Dickon exclaimed angrily ...
64 ページ
... sometimes , May , ' re- marked Maude : ' don't you remember how the cat ate the poor little sparrow ? ' ' Yes ; and what a fuss the mother made about it ! ' replied May , indignantly : ' just as if she'd never eaten anything in her life ...
... sometimes , May , ' re- marked Maude : ' don't you remember how the cat ate the poor little sparrow ? ' ' Yes ; and what a fuss the mother made about it ! ' replied May , indignantly : ' just as if she'd never eaten anything in her life ...
65 ページ
... sometimes got eaten up by the cats , because it is so cruel and wicked of them to eat the spiders and flies and but- terflies , who never do them any harm . ' 6 And what do you think about it , Maude ? ' in- quired her aunt , smiling ...
... sometimes got eaten up by the cats , because it is so cruel and wicked of them to eat the spiders and flies and but- terflies , who never do them any harm . ' 6 And what do you think about it , Maude ? ' in- quired her aunt , smiling ...
66 ページ
... die of ' Oh , no , Miss Vaughan , ' exclaimed May , eagerly ; ' but they might eat leaves and grass , and not insects . ' " They do eat leaves sometimes . But how would you like it , May , if we gave you 66 A Tale of a Nest .
... die of ' Oh , no , Miss Vaughan , ' exclaimed May , eagerly ; ' but they might eat leaves and grass , and not insects . ' " They do eat leaves sometimes . But how would you like it , May , if we gave you 66 A Tale of a Nest .
68 ページ
... sometimes to ask the poor worm whether it would object to being eaten , perhaps like some little girls of my acquaintance , who forget to see if grandmamma has everything she wants at dinner - time , they too might plead in excuse they ...
... sometimes to ask the poor worm whether it would object to being eaten , perhaps like some little girls of my acquaintance , who forget to see if grandmamma has everything she wants at dinner - time , they too might plead in excuse they ...
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多く使われている語句
afraid alarm anxious Aunt Louey Auntie beautiful believe black cat bough bright caterpillars child cold creature cruel Cuckoo dare say dear delicious Dickon and Mimi doubt eager eggs eldest exclaimed Dickon eyes fairies fairy tales fear feathers feeling fighting FLEET STREET flew folks Frog garden glad happened hard hawk head hear heard heart hedge hope hopping horrid husband impa kill knew laugh linnet little birds little Maude look Magpie Maude's Maudie Mimi replied Mimi's Miss Maude Miss Vaughan mother nest never noise nurse old bird old Chaffinch parents pathy perhaps quiet quired remarked replied Dickon replied Mimi rooks safe screaming seemed seen shook sighed sister sparrows spot story strange sure sweet talk tell terrible thing thought thrushes told tomtits tree trouble tumble voice watching wings winter wish wonder young bird young chaffinch
人気のある引用
151 ページ - Come up, come up, for the world is fair, Where the merry leaves dance in the summer air!" And the birds below give back the cry, " We come, we come, to the branches high...
151 ページ - They have left their nests in the forest bough, Those homes of delight they need not now; , And the young and the old they wander out, And traverse their green world round about : And hark ! at the top of this leafy hall, How one to the other they lovingly call ; " Come up, come up !" they seem to say, " Where the topmost twigs in the breezes sway ! " Come up, come up, for the world is fair, Where the merry leaves dance in the summer air...
55 ページ - WHEN day declining sheds a milder gleam, What time the May-fly haunts the pool or stream When the still owl skims round the grassy mead, What time the timorous hare limps forth to feed : Then be the time to steal adow.n the vale, And listen to the vagrant cuckoo's tale ; To hear the clamorous curlew * call his mate, Or the soft quail his tender pain relate ; To see the swallow sweep the...
82 ページ - Rockabye Baby, on the tree top, When the wind blows the cradle will rock, When the bough breaks the cradle will fall, Down will come baby, cradle and all.
156 ページ - There is a path which no fowl knoweth, And which the vulture's eye hath not seen: The lion's whelps have not trodden it, Nor the fierce lion passed by it.