Third Grade Read Aloud Banquet



Songs for September


The Land of Nod

From breakfast on through all the day

At home among my friends I stay,

But every night I go abroad

Afar into the land of Nod.


All by myself I have to go,

With none to tell me what to do—

All alone beside the streams

And up the mountain-sides of dreams.


The strangest things are there for me,

Both things to eat and things to see,

And many frightening sights abroad

Till morning in the land of Nod.


Try as I like to find the way,

I never can get back by day,

Nor can remember plain and clear

The curious music that I hear.


  Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
Week 2 Mistress Mary Quite Contrary from The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett The Coming of the Romans from Our Island Story by H. E. Marshall Peter and Jumper Go to School from The Burgess Animal Book for Children by Thornton Burgess Siegfried Wins the Treasure from Stories of Siegfried Told to the Children by Mary Macgregor Magellan's Straits from The Discovery of New Worlds by M. B. Synge The Fisherman and His Wife from Fairy Tales Too Good To Miss—Beside the Sea by Lisa M. Ripperton The House of God on Mount Moriah from Hurlbut's Story of the Bible by Jesse Lyman Hurlbut
Another Bird Story from Fifty Famous People by James Baldwin The Changing Shore from Holiday Shore by Edith M. Patch How Columbus Discovered America from A First Book in American History by Edward Eggleston The Wolf and the Lion from The Aesop for Children by Milo Winter
The Gods and the Giants from Gods and Heroes by Robert Edward Francillon
What Mrs. Wasp Can Do from Seaside and Wayside, Book One by Julia McNair Wright Winnie-the-Pooh, Some Bees and the Stories Begin (Part 2 of 2) from Winnie-the-Pooh by A. A. Milne
The Old, Old Song by Charles Kingsley A Cradle Song by William Blake Excerpt from "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge The Captain's Daughter by James T. Fields A Fire from Poems by Rachel Lyman Field A Year's Windfalls by Christina Georgina Rossetti The Land of Story-Books by Robert Louis Stevenson
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READING-LITERATURE: Third Reader  by Harriette Taylor Treadwell

The Fox as Herdsman

Once on a time there was a woman who went out to hire a herdsman, and she met a bear.

"Whither away, Goody?" said Bruin.

"Oh, I'm going out to hire a herdsman," answered the woman.

"Why not have me for a herdsman?" said Bruin.

"Well, why not," said the woman, "if you only know how to call the flock? Just let me hear you call."

"Ow, Ow!" growled the bear.

"No, no! I won't have you," said the woman as soon as she heard him say that, and off she went on her way.

When she had gone a bit farther she met a wolf.

"Whither away, Goody?" said the wolf.

"Oh," said she, "I'm going out to hire a herdsman."

"Why not have me for a herdsman?" said the wolf.

"Well, why not, if you can only call the flock? Let me hear you call," said she.

"Uh, Uh!" said the wolf.

"No, no!" said the woman, "you'll never do for me."

Well, after she had gone a while longer she met a fox.

"Whither away, Goody?" asked the fox.

"Oh, I'm just going out to hire a herdsman," said the woman.

"Why not have me for a herdsman?" asked the fox.

"Well, why not," said she, "if you only know how to call the flock? Let me hear you call."

"Dil-dal-holom!" sang out the fox in a fine clear voice.

"Yes, I'll have you for my herdsman," said the woman, and she set the fox to herd her flock.

The first day the fox was herdsman he ate up all the woman's goats; the next day he made an end of all her sheep; and the third day he ate up all her cows. So, when he came home at even, the woman asked what he had done with all her flocks.

"Oh!" said the fox, "their skulls are in the stream, and their bodies in the holt."

Now, the Goody stood and churned when the fox said this, but she thought she might as well step out and see after her flock. While she was away the fox crept into the churn and ate up the cream. When Goody came back and saw that she fell into a rage. She snatched up the little morsel of cream that was left and threw it at the fox as he ran off. He got a dab of it on the end of his tail, and that's the reason why the fox has a white tip to his brush.

Norse Folk Tale