Fourth Grade Read Aloud Banquet




Norse Lullaby

The sky is dark and the hills are white

As the storm-king speeds from the north to-night;

And this is the song the storm-king sings,

As over the world his cloak he flings:

"Sleep, sleep, little one, sleep";

He rustles his wings and gruffly sings:

"Sleep, little one, sleep."


On yonder mountain-side a vine

Clings at the foot of a mother pine;

The tree bends over the trembling thing,

And only the vine can hear her sing:

"Sleep, sleep, little one, sleep—

What shall you fear when I am here?

Sleep, little one, sleep."


The king may sing in his bitter flight,

The tree may croon to the vine to-night,

But the little snowflake at my breast

Liketh the song I  sing the best—

Sleep, sleep, little one, sleep;

Weary thou art, a-next my heart,

Sleep, little one, sleep.


  Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
Week 22 A Pirate Bold To Be from The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain The Story of Guy Fawkes from Our Island Story by H. E. Marshall The Big Eaters from The Story Book of Science by Jean Henri Fabre A Daring Escape from The Little Duke by Charlotte M. Yonge The Boston Tea-Ships from The Struggle for Sea Power by M. B. Synge The Twelve Dancing Princesses from Fairy Tales Too Good To Miss—Across the Lake by Lisa M. Ripperton A Dancing Girl and What Was Given Her from Hurlbut's Story of the Bible by Jesse Lyman Hurlbut
Magna Charta from Heroes of the Middle Ages by Eva March Tappan The Buzzard of Bear Swamp from The Spring of the Year by Dallas Lore Sharp Nathaniel Bacon from Builders of Our Country: Book I by Gertrude van Duyn Southworth The Hunter, the Fox, and the Leopard from The Tortoise and the Geese and Other Fables of Bidpai by Maude Barrows Dutton The Children of Loki from The Children of Odin: A Book of Northern Myths by Padraic Colum Cradle-Cells from The Bee People by Margaret Warner Morley That Night Week from The Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald
Spring by Thomas Nashe Farm-Yard Song by John Townsend Trowbridge May-Flower by Emily Dickinson Night by William Blake Meg Merrilies from Poems by John Keats How Doth the Little Crocodile by Lewis Carroll May 29
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The Aesop for Children  by Milo Winter

The Fox and the Hedgehog

A Fox, swimming across a river, was barely able to reach the bank, where he lay bruised and exhausted from his struggle with the swift current. Soon a swarm of blood-sucking flies settled on him, but he lay quietly, still too weak to run away from them.

A Hedgehog happened by. "Let me drive the flies away," he said kindly.


[Illustration]

"No, no!" exclaimed the Fox, "do not disturb them! They have taken all they can hold. If you drive them away, another greedy swarm will come and take the little blood I have left."

Better to bear a lesser evil than to risk a greater in removing it.