Chambers's Elementary Science Readers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 84 pages of information about Chambers's Elementary Science Readers.

Chambers's Elementary Science Readers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 84 pages of information about Chambers's Elementary Science Readers.

In Dora’s plate she laid a bit of flannel, poured water on it, and sowed seed.  The children carried off their plates to a safe place, and thought it would be fine fun to see roots and leaves come out of the tiny seeds.

7.  Then mother called them into the garden to see her parsley.  She told them that hares and rabbits would come a long way to feed on a parsley-bed if they could get at it.

8.  Close by grew mint, sage, and thyme.  ‘All these are herbs,’ she said.  ‘They are not like trees, are they?’

‘No; they have no bark, no hard wood, and they are so small.’

[Illustration:  Leaves of Mint, Parsley, Thyme, and Sage.]

9.  Dora picked a mint-leaf, a parsley-leaf, a thyme-leaf, and a sage-leaf, and laid them side by side.  She wanted to see if they were like each other.  But when she looked at them she found that they were not alike.

COFFEE.

cof’-fee beans kneel’-ing chair win’-dow bus’-y stock’-ings ket’-tle rat’-tled coun’-try cher’-ry to-geth’-er blos’-som cov’-ered cloths ber’-ries

1.  ‘What is coffee, mother dear?  Does it grow?’

2.  It was Dora who asked this.  She and Harry were putting away some things that had come from the shop, and she was now filling a tin with coffee-beans.

3.  She was kneeling on a chair by the table in the window.  Her mother was busy mending stockings, and the cat and the dog were both asleep.  The kettle was singing, and all was cosy.

4.  The coffee-beans rattled into the tin, and Dora picked one out and looked at it.

When Harry heard Dora asking about it, he also put his hand in and took a coffee-bean.  It smelt very nice, he thought.  So did Dora.

5.  They found that it had a flat side and a round side.

‘It humps up,’ said Dora.

‘See, I can put the flat side of mine against the flat side of yours,’ said Harry.

‘They grew like that,’ said mother.

‘Oh, then, they did grow?  They were alive once?’

[Illustration:  Coffee branch with Berries.]

6.  ’Yes; they were seeds of a plant that grows in a warm country, far away from here.  They once lived inside a berry.

’The berry was red like a cherry, and the seeds inside were held together in a little bag.’

7.  ‘There must have been a flower before the berry came,’ said Harry, thinking of the pea-flower and its pod.

[Illustration:  Coffee-flower.]

[Illustration:  Berry.]

[Illustration:  Seeds in Berry.]

‘A very pretty white flower,’ said his mother.  ’They say that a coffee-garden looks lovely in blossom-time, just as if it were all covered with snow.

8.  ’In two or three days the snow-like blossoms are gone, and the fruit is left.  When it is ripe, men put cloths under the trees, and shake it down.’

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Chambers's Elementary Science Readers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.