Required Poems for Reading and Memorizing eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 130 pages of information about Required Poems for Reading and Memorizing.

Required Poems for Reading and Memorizing eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 130 pages of information about Required Poems for Reading and Memorizing.

He must be a rich old fellow,
  What money he gives away! 
There is not a lord in England
  Could equal him any day.

Good luck unto old Christmas,
  And long life, let us sing,
For he doth more good unto the poor
  Than many a crowned king.

* * * * *

POEMS BY ALICE AND PHOEBE CARY

THE PIG AND THE HEN

  The pig and the hen,
  They both got in one pen,
And the hen said she wouldn’t go out. 
  “Mistress Hen,” says the pig,
  “Don’t you be quite so big!”
And he gave her a push with his snout.

  “You are rough, and you’re fat,
  But who cares for all that;
I will stay if I choose,” says the hen. 
  “No, mistress, no longer!”
  Says pig, “I’m the stronger,
And mean to be boss of my pen!”

  Then the hen cackled out
  Just as close to his snout
As she dare:  “You’re an ill-natured brute,
  And if I had the corn,
  Just as sure as I’m born,
I would send you to starve or to root!”

  “But you don’t own the cribs;
  So I think that my ribs
Will be never the leaner for you: 
  This trough is my trough,
  And the sooner you’re off,”
Says the pig, “why the better you’ll do!”

  “You’re not a bit fair,
  And you’re cross as a bear;
What harm do I do in your pen? 
  But a pig is a pig,
  And I don’t care a fig
For the worst you can say,” says the hen.

  Says the pig, “You will care
  If I act like a bear
And tear your two wings from your neck,”
  “What a nice little pen
  You have got!” says the hen,
Beginning to scratch and to peck.

  Now the pig stood amazed
  And the bristles, upraised
A moment past, fell down so sleek. 
  “Neighbor Biddy,” says he,
  “If you’ll just allow me,
I will show you a nice place to pick!”

  So she followed him off,
  And they ate from one trough—­

They had quarreled for nothing, they saw;
  And when they had fed,
  “Neighbor Hen,” the pig said,
“Won’t you stay here and roost in my straw?”

  “No, I thank you; you see
  That I sleep in a tree,”
Says the hen; “but I must go away;
  So a grateful good-by.” 
  “Make your home in my sty,”
Says the pig, “and come in every day.”

  Now my child will not miss
  The true moral of this
Little story of anger and strife;
  For a word spoken soft
  Will turn enemies oft
Into friends that will stay friends for life.

A LESSON OF MERCY

A boy named Peter
 Found once in the road
All harmless and helpless,
 A poor little toad;

And ran to his playmate,
 And all out of breath
Cried, “John, come and help,
 And we’ll stone him to death!”

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Required Poems for Reading and Memorizing from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.