EIGHTH READER

BY

JAMES BALDWIN

AUTHOR OF "SCHOOL READING BY GRADES—BALDWIN'S READERS,"
"HARPER'S READERS," ETC.

AND

IDA C. BENDER

SUPERVISOR OF PRIMARY GRADES, BUFFALO, NEW YORK

EIGHT-BOOK SERIES

NEW YORK ·:· CINCINNATI ·:· CHICAGO

AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY


Copyright, 1911, by
AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY.
Entered at Stationers' Hall, London.
B. & B. EIGHTH READER.
W. P. 2


TO THE TEACHER

The paramount design of this series of School Readers is to help young people to acquire the art and the habit of reading well—that is, of interpreting the printed page in such manner as to give pleasure and instruction to themselves and to those who listen to them. In his eighth year at school the pupil is supposed to be able to read, with ease and with some degree of fluency, anything in the English language that may come to his hand; but, that he may read always with the understanding and in a manner pleasing to his hearers and satisfactory to himself, he must still have daily systematic practice in the rendering of selections not too difficult for comprehension and yet embracing various styles of literary workmanship and illustrating the different forms of English composition. The contents of this volume have been chosen and arranged to supply—or, where not supplying, to suggest—the materials for this kind of practice.

Particular attention is called both to the high quality and to the wide variety of the selections herein presented. They include specimens of many styles of literary workmanship—the products of the best thought of modern times. It is believed that their study will not only prove interesting to pupils, but will inspire them with a desire to read still more upon the same subjects or from the works of the same authors; for it is only by loving books and learning to know them that any one can become a really good reader.

The pupils should be encouraged to seek for and point out the particular passages in each selection that are distinguished for their beauty, their truth, or their peculiar adaptability to the purpose in view. The habit should be cultivated of looking for and enjoying the admirable qualities of any worthy literary production; and special attention should be given to the style of writing which characterizes and gives value to the works of various authors. These points should be the subjects of daily discussions between teacher and pupils.

The notes under the head of "Expression," which follow many of the lessons, are intended, not only to aid in securing correctness of expression, but also to afford suggestions for the appreciative reading of the selections and an intelligent comparison of their literary peculiarities. In the study of new, difficult, or unusual words, the pupils should invariably refer to the dictionary.


CONTENTS

PAGE
[Brother and Sister]George Eliot11
[My Last Day at Salem House]Charles Dickens22
[The Departure from Miss Pinkerton's]W. M. Thackeray27
[Two Gems from Browning:]
I. [Incident of the French Camp]Robert Browning36
II. [Dog Tray]Robert Browning41
[The Discovery of America]Washington Irving43
[The Glove and the Lions]Leigh Hunt48
[St. Francis, the Gentle]William Canton51
[The Sermon of St. Francis]Henry W. Longfellow54
[In the Woods]John Burroughs56
[Bees and Flowers]John Burroughs59
[Song of the River]Abram J. Ryan64
[Song of the Chattahoochee]Sidney Lanier66
[War and Peace:]
I. [War as the Mother of Valor and Civilization]Andrew Carnegie68
II. [Friendship among Nations]Victor Hugo71
III. [Soldier, Rest]Sir Walter Scott74
IV. [The Soldier's Dream]Thomas Campbell75
V. [How Sleep the Brave?]William Collins76
[Early Times in New York]Washington Irving77
[A Winter Evening in Old New England]J. G. Whittier82
[The Old-fashioned Thanksgiving]Donald G. Mitchell84
[A Thanksgiving]Robert Herrick92
[First Days at Wakefield]Oliver Goldsmith94
[Doubting Castle]John Bunyan100
[Shooting with the Longbow]Sir Walter Scott108
[A Christmas Hymn]Alfred Domett117
[Christmas Eve at Fezziwig's]Charles Dickens120
[The Christmas Holly]Eliza Cook124
[The New Year's Dinner Party]Charles Lamb125
[The Town Pump]Nathaniel Hawthorne128
[Come up from the Fields, Father]Walt Whitman135
[The Address at Gettysburg]Abraham Lincoln139
[Ode to the Confederate Dead]Henry Timrod140
[The Chariot Race]From Sophocles141
[The Coliseum at Midnight]Henry W. Longfellow145
[The Deacon's Masterpiece]Oliver Wendell Holmes147
[Dogs and Cats]Alexandre Dumas154
[The Owl Critic]James T. Fields157
[Mrs. Caudle's Umbrella Lecture]Douglas William Jerrold161
[The Dark Day in Connecticut]J. G. Whittier164
[Two Interesting Letters:]
I. [Columbus to the Lord Treasurer of Spain] 167
II. [Governor Winslow to a Friend in England] 171
[Poems of Home and Country:]
I. ["This is My Own, My Native Land"]Sir Walter Scott174
II. [The Green Little Shamrock of Ireland]Andrew Cherry175
III. [My Heart's in the Highlands]Robert Burns176
IV. [The Fatherland]James R. Lowell177
V. [Home]Oliver Goldsmith178
[The Age of Coal]Agnes Giberne179
[Something about the Moon]Richard A. Proctor183
[The Coming of the Birds]Ralph Waldo Emerson187
[The Return of the Birds]John Burroughs188
[The Poet and the Bird:]
I. [The Song of the Lark] 193
II. [To a Skylark]Percy B. Shelley197
[Hark, Hark! the Lark]William Shakespeare201
[Echoes of the American Revolution:]
I. [Patrick Henry's Famous Speech] 202
II. [Marion's Men]W. Gilmore Simms206
III. [In Memory of George Washington]Henry Lee209
[Three Great American Poems:]
I. [Thanatopsis]William Cullen Bryant213
II. [The Bells]Edgar Allan Poe219
III. [Marco Bozzaris]Fitz-Greene Halleck224
[The Indian]Edward Everett228
[National Retribution]Theodore Parker231
[Who are Blessed]The Bible233
[Little Gems from the Older Poets:]
I. [The Noble Nature]Ben Jonson235
II. [A Contented Mind]Joshua Sylvester235
III. [A Happy Life]Sir Henry Wotton236
IV. [Solitude]Alexander Pope237
V. [A Wish]Samuel Rogers238
[How King Arthur got his Name]Fiona Macleod239
[Antony's Oration over Cæsar's Dead Body]William Shakespeare244
[Selections to be Memorized:]
I. [The Prayer Perfect]James Whitcomb Riley250
II. [Be Just and Fear No]William Shakespeare250
III. [If I can Live]Author Unknown251
IV. [The Bugle Song]Alfred Tennyson251
V. [The Ninetieth Psalm]Book of Psalms252
VI. [Recessional]Rudyard Kipling253
[Proper Names] 255
[List of Authors] 257

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Acknowledgment and thanks are proffered to Andrew Carnegie for permission to reprint in this volume his tract on "War as the Mother of Civilization and Valor"; to the Bobbs-Merrill Company for their courtesy in allowing us to use "The Prayer Perfect," from James Whitcomb Riley's Rhymes of Childhood; to David Mackay for the poem by Walt Whitman entitled "Come up from the Fields, Father"; to Charles Scribner's Sons for the "Song of the Chattahoochee," from the Poems of Sidney Lanier; and, also, to the same publishers for the selection, "The Old-fashioned Thanksgiving," from Bound Together by Donald G. Mitchell. The selections from John Burroughs, Ralph Waldo Emerson, James T. Fields, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Henry W. Longfellow, and John G. Whittier are used by permission of, and special arrangement with, Houghton Mifflin Company, the authorized publishers of the works of those authors.


EIGHTH READER


BROTHER AND SISTER[1]