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¾î¸°À̸¦ À§ÇÑ ½ÃÀÇ Ä·ºê¸®ÁöÃ¥ (The Cambridge Book of Poetry for Children, by Various)

¾î¸°À̸¦ À§ÇÑ ½ÃÀÇ Ä·ºê¸®ÁöÃ¥ (The Cambridge Book of Poetry for Children, by Various)

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¾î¸°À̸¦À§ÇÑ ½ÃÀÇ Ä·ºê¸®ÁöÃ¥.The Cambridge Book of Poetry for Children, by Various
PREFACE
IN compiling a selection of Poetry for Children, a conscientious Editor is
bound to find himself confronted with limitations so numerous as to be almost
disheartening. For he has to remember that his task is, not to provide simple
examples of the whole range of English poetry, but to set up a wicket- gate
giving attractive admission to that wide domain, with its woodland glades, its
pasture and arable, its walled and scented gardens here and there, and so to
its sunlit, and sometimes misty, mountain- tops¡ªall to be more fully explored
later by those who are tempted on by the first glimpse. And always he must be
proclaiming to the small tourists that there is joy, light and fresh air in that
delectable country.
v Briefly, I think that blank verse generally, and the drama as a whole, may
very well be left for readers of a riper age. Indeed, I believe that those who can
ignore the plays of Shakespeare and his fellow- Elizabethans till they are sixteen
will be no losers in the long run. The bulk, too, of seventeenth and eighteenth
century poetry, bending under its burden of classical form and crowded
classical allusion, requires a completed education and a wide range of reading
for its proper appreciation.
Much else also is barred. There are the questions of subject, of archaic
language and thought, and of occasional expression, which will occur to
everyone. Then there is dialect, and here one has to remember that these
poems are intended for use at the very time that a child is painfully acquiring a
normal¡ªoften quite arbitrary¡ªorthography. Is it fair to that child to hammer into
him¡ªperhaps literally¡ªthat porridge is spelt porridge, and next minute to
present it to him, in an official ¡®Reader,¡¯ under the guise of parritch? I think not;
and I have accordingly kept as far as possible to the normal, though at some
loss of material.
vi In the output of those writers who have deliberately written for children, it is
surprising how largely the subject of death is found to bulk. Dead fathers and
mothers, dead brothers and sisters, dead uncles and aunts, dead puppies and
kittens, dead birds, dead flowers, dead dolls¡ªa compiler of Obituary Verse for
the delight of children could make a fine fat volume with little difficulty. I have
turned off this mournful tap of tears as far as possible, preferring that children
should read of the joy of life, rather than revel in sentimental thrills of imagined
bereavement.
There exists, moreover, any quantity of verse for children, which is merely
verse and nothing more. It lacks the vital spark of heavenly flame, and is
useless to a selector of Poetry. And then there is the whole corpus of verse¡ª
most of it of the present day¡ªwhich is written about children, and this has even
more carefully to be avoided. When the time comes that we send our parents to
school, it will prove very useful to the compilers of their primers.
vii All these restrictions have necessarily led to two results. First, that this
collection is chiefly lyrical¡ªand that, after all, is no bad thing. Lyric verse may
not be representative of the whole range of English poetry, but as an
introduction to it, as a Wicket- gate, there is no better portal. The second result
is, that it is but a small sheaf that these gleanings amount to; but for those
children who frankly do not care for poetry it will be more than enough; and for
those who love it and delight in it, no ¡®selection¡¯ could ever be sufficiently
satisfying.
KENNETH GRAHAME.
October 1915.

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¾î¸°À̸¦À§ÇÑ ½ÃÀÇ Ä·ºê¸®ÁöÃ¥.The Cambridge Book of Poetry for Children, by Various
part 1.

CONTENTS


PAGE
PREFACE v
For the Very Smallest Ones
RHYMES AND JINGLES
Merry are the Bells 1
Safe in Bed 2
Jenny Wren 2
Curly Locks 3
Pussy- Cat Mew 3
Draw a Pail of Water 4
I Saw a Ship a- sailing 4
The Nut- Tree 5
My Maid Mary 5
The Wind and the Fisherman 6
Blow, Wind, Blow 6
All Busy 6
Winter has Come 7
Poor Robin 7
I have a Little Sister 7
In Marble Walls 8
FAMILIAR OBJECTS
The Moon Eliza Lee Follen 8
The Star A. & J. Taylor 9
Kitty Mrs E. Prentiss 10
ix Kitty: How to Treat Her 11
Kitty: what She thinks of Herself W. B. Rands 12
The Sea Shell Amy Lowell 12
COUNTRY BOYS¡¯ SONGS
The Cuckoo 13
The Bird- Scarer¡¯s Song 13
Cradle Song 13
Good Night! A. & J. Taylor 14
For Those a Little Older
A BUNCH OF LENT LILIES
Daffodils W. Shakespeare 15
To Daffodils R. Herrick 15
Daffodils W. Wordsworth 16
SEASONS AND WEATHER
The Months Sara Coleridge 17
The Wind in a Frolic William Howitt 19
The Four Sweet Months R. Herrick 22
Glad Day W. G. Robertson 22
Buttercups and Daisies Mary Howitt 24
The Merry Month of March W. Wordsworth 24
What the Birds Say S. T. Coleridge 25
Spring¡¯s Procession Sydney Dobell 26
The Call of the Woods W. Shakespeare 28
A Prescription for a Spring Morning John Davidson 28
x The Country Faith Norman Gale 29
The Butterfly¡¯s Ball W. Roscoe 30
TASTES AND PREFERENCES
A Wish Samuel Rogers 33
Wishing W. Allingham 34
Bunches of Grapes Walter Ramal 35
Contentment Eugene Field 36
TOYS AND PLAY, IN- DOORS AND OUT
The Land of Story- Books R. L. Stevenson 38
Sand Castles W. G. Robertson 39
Ring o¡¯ Roses ¡± 41
DREAM- LAND
Wynken, Blynken, and Nod Eugene Field 42
The Drummer- Boy and the Shepherdess W. B. Rands 44
The Land of Dreams William Blake 45
Sweet and Low Lord Tennyson 45
Cradle Song Sir Walter Scott 46
Mother and I Eugene Field 47
FAIRY- LAND
The Fairies W. Allingham 48
Shakespeare¡¯s Fairies W. Shakespeare 51
The Lavender Beds W. B. Rands 54
Farewell to the Fairies Richard Corbet 55
Death of Oberon G. W. Thornbury 57
Kilmeny James Hogg 58
xi TWO SONGS
A Boy¡¯s Song James Hogg 62
A Girl¡¯s Song Thomas Moore 63
FUR AND FEATHER
Three Things to Remember William Blake 65
The Knight of Bethlehem H. N. Maugham 65
The Lamb William Blake 65
The Tiger ¡± 66
I had a Dove J. Keats 67
Robin Redbreast W. Allingham 68
Black Bunny W. B. Rands 69
The Cow A. & J. Taylor 71
The Skylark James Hogg 72
CHRISTMAS POEMS
Christmas Eve John Davidson 73
A Christmas Carol R. Herrick 75
A Child¡¯s Present ¡± 76
The Peace- Giver A. C. Swinburne 77
VARIOUS
To a Singer P. B. Shelley 78
The Happy Piper William Blake 80
The Destruction of Sennacherib Lord Byron 81
Sheridan¡¯s Ride T. Buchanan Read 83
Columbus Joaquin Miller 86
Horatius Lord Macaulay 88
INDEX OF AUTHORS 113
INDEX OF FIRST LINES 115