For the Story Teller: Story Telling and Stories to Tell
Daily Program of Gift and Occupation Work For the Children’s Hour Firelight Stories Stories and Rhymes for a Child Songs of Happiness
FOR THE STORY TELLER
STORY TELLING AND STORIES TO TELL
BY Carolyn Sherwin Bailey
1913 MILTON BRADLEY COMPANY SPRINGFIELD, MASS. New YorkBostonPhiladelphiaAtlantaSan Francisco
Copyright, 1913, By MILTON BRADLEY COMPANY, Springfield, Mass.
The new-old art of story telling is being rediscovered. We are finding that the children’s daily story hour in school, in the neighborhood house, and at home is a real force for mental and moral good in their lives. We are learning that it is possible to educate children by means of stories.
Story telling to be a developing factor in a child’s life must be studied by the story teller. There are good stories and there are poor stories for children. The story that fits a child’s needs to-day may not prove a wise choice for him to-morrow. Some stories teach, some stories only give joy, some stories inspire, some stories just make a child laugh. Each of these story phases is important. To discover these special types of stories, to fit stories to the individual child or child group, and to make over stories for perfect telling has been my aim in writing this book.
Through telling stories to many thousands of children and lecturing to students I have found that story telling is a matter of psychology. The pages that follow give my new theory of story telling to the teacher or parent.
Carolyn Sherwin Bailey.
Carolyn Sherwin Bailey
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FOR THE STORY TELLER
CONTENTS
The Cap that Mother Made
Goody Two Shoes
The Three Cakes
The Prince’s Visit
The Travels of a Fox
Little Lorna Doone
Little In-a-Minute
Old Man Rabbit’s Thanksgiving Dinner
The Great Stone Face
Little Tuk
The Selfish Giant
The Gingerbread Boy
The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse
The Woodpecker Who was Selfish
The Little Rabbit Who Wanted Red Wings
The Little Lame Prince
The Blue Robin
The Girl Who Trod on the Loaf