Third Grade Read Aloud Banquet



Songs for July


The Horseman

I heard a horseman

Ride over the hill;

The moon shone clear,

The night was still;

His helm was silver,

And pale was he;

And the horse he rode

Was of ivory.


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Week 43 A Visitor from Heidi by Johanna Spyri The Story of King Robert the Bruce and Bohun from Our Island Story by H. E. Marshall Following the Deer (Part 1 of 6) from Secrets of the Woods by William J. Long Robin Hood and King Richard from Stories of Robin Hood Told to the Children by H. E. Marshall In the Days of Oliver Cromwell from The Awakening of Europe by M. B. Synge Faithful John, the King's Servant from Fairy Tales Too Good To Miss—Aboard the Ship by Lisa M. Ripperton Saint Ursula (Part 2 of 2) from In God's Garden by Amy Steedman
The Paddle-Wheel Boat from Fifty Famous People by James Baldwin A Strange Cloak from Holiday Hill by Edith M. Patch Daniel Webster (Part 3 of 5) from Four Great Americans by James Baldwin Mercury and the Woodman from The Aesop for Children by Milo Winter The Apple of Discord from Gods and Heroes by Robert Edward Francillon Mr. Worm at Home from Seaside and Wayside, Book Two by Julia McNair Wright "Like Summer Tempests Came His Tears" (Part 1 of 3) from The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame
Lullaby for Titania by William Shakespeare The Chimney Sweeper by William Blake Lord Lovel, Anonymous Friends by L. G. Warner Poem by Rachel Field The Basket-Makers by E. V. Lucas Jack Frost by Gabriel Setoun
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READING-LITERATURE: Third Reader  by Harriette Taylor Treadwell

The Man and the Serpent

Once a serpent, who was going through a hedge, was caught in a snare. The more he struggled, the tighter he drew the cord about his neck. There was no way of escape. He cried out to a man who was passing by, "Help me or I shall perish."

The man took pity on him and said, "I will release you if you will promise to do me no harm." The serpent made a solemn promise not to harm him at that time or any time thereafter. So the man loosed the noose and set the serpent free.

The serpent kept his promise for a time, but one day he became very hungry and struck at the man to kill him. The man started back and cried, "Have you forgotten your promise? Did you not promise to do me no harm?"

Whereupon the serpent answered, "I am hungry and my hunger compels me to kill you. Hunger knows no law."

"Well, at least," said the man, "let me live until we meet someone who will judge fairly between us."

The serpent agreed and they went on together till they met a raven and his son. The serpent told them of his hunger and the raven, hoping to get his share, said, "Yes, hunger frees the serpent from his oath."

But the man said, "Shall a person who lives by robbing be a judge, and shall there be but one judge? Let us submit this matter to three or four and hear them all."

The serpent agreed to this and they went on till they met a wolf and a bear. And the bear and the wolf both said, "Yes, hunger knows no law." Then with a terrible hissing the serpent darted at the man.

But the man leaped aside and said, "Would you kill the friend who saved your lif e ?"

The serpent replied, "Twice have the judges spoken and twice was the judgment against you."

The man replied, "They are thieves themselves. Let us go to your king, whom you all trust. What he says I will abide by."

Then the man, the serpent, the bear, the wolf and the ravens came to the court of the king and told their story. The king was greatly troubled. He said, "It is hard to condemn the man, for he has been kind; but still I have pity for the serpent. He must have food to save his life."

So the king called his court together, but no one was able to judge the case. Then he asked Reynard the fox to give his judgment. Reynard heard both sides. Then he said, "First let me see the serpent in the noose just as the man found him." So they all went to the hedge, and the serpent was again tied in the noose.

Then the king said, "Now, Reynard, what judgment will you give?"

Reynard replied, "O, King, they are now in the same place they were before the promise was given. Let the man loose the serpent if it now please him, knowing that hunger releases the serpent from his promise."

The king honored Reynard's judgment, and said, "Your wisdom has saved the honor of the court."

Reynard the Fox