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.

8.  ‘What food is there in the ground?  What food do the roots find?’

’Lime and iron’——­

‘Iron!’ cried Harry.

9.  ’Yes, there is iron in green peas!  There are sugar, too, and starch, and fat, and water, and other things.  Some come out of the earth, some come out of the air and the sunlight, and some the plant makes for itself.  Oh, it is a very clever plant!  But all plants are clever, I think.’

IRON AND METAL.

pock’-ets mar’-bles wrapped size heav’-y weight light’-er though cop’-per thought zinc met’-als sup-pose’ wheat i’-ron ket’-tle

1.  ‘What have you in your pockets, father?’ asked Harry, pulling at them.  ‘Nuts? stones? marbles?’

’Put your hand in, and find out.  Here, Dora, you can try the other pocket.’

2.  In went two hands, and out came little hard lumps, each wrapped in paper.  The children laid them on the table in a row, and wanted to know what they were.

[Illustration:  ‘What have you in your pockets, father?’]

3.  They were not nuts, nor marbles, and not quite like stones.  They were all about the same size, but one was very heavy.  Harry and Dora held it in their hands to feel how heavy it was.

4.  ‘That is a bit of lead,’ said their father.  ’Which do you think is the next in weight?’

‘This red one.  It is a good deal lighter, though!’

‘That is called copper.  Now, what comes next?’

5.  They were not sure, but thought that iron came next, and then tin, and then zinc.  Their father told them these names as they went on.  He told them also that all these things were metals, and had been dug out of the earth.

6.  ‘Suppose we make a box to keep them in?’

‘Oh yes!’ cried both.

’And if we find any more things like these, we will put them in.

7.  ‘Would you put in a buttercup?’

‘No, no!’

‘Or a grain of wheat?’

‘No, it is not at all like these.’

‘Or a bit of slate?’

‘I think so,’ said Harry.

Dora was not quite sure.

8.  ’Yes, we will put the slate into the box.  It is not a metal, but it came out of the ground.  Now, what do you say to this?’ And he pulled out a lump that looked like earth and stone.

9.  What could this be?  It was iron, just as it had come out of the ground, with clay and earth about it.

10.  ‘Once upon a time,’ said father, ’the kettle, and the poker, and the fender, all looked like this!’

THE FAIRY RING.

danc’-ing fair’-y queen sea’-sons year cir’-cle sphere sum’-mer glide au’-tumn tress’-es cheeks

    1.  Let us dance and let us sing,
        Dancing in a merry ring;
        We’ll be fairies on the green,
        Sporting round the fairy queen.

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