10. 'I should think the sheep must be doing the same thing. Look at this fat one close by! She is just sitting down. Now watch!'
'Yes, I can see her chewing! How funny it is! They all look as if they liked it, don't they?'
THE SHEEP.
| la´-zy | clothes | scant´-y | mer´-ry |
| pleas´-ant | chil´-ly | com´-mon | wool´-ly |
| dai´-sies | dew´-y | brown | coat |
1. 'Lazy sheep, pray tell me why
In the pleasant fields you lie,
Eating grass and daisies white,
From the morning till the night?
Everything can something do;
Oh what kind of use are you?'
2. 'Nay, my little fellow, nay,
Do not serve me so, I pray:
Don't you see the wool that grows
On my back to make you clothes?
Cold and very cold you'd be,
If you had not wool from me.
3. 'True, it seems a pleasant thing,
To nip the daisies in the spring;
But many chilly nights I pass,
On the cold and dewy grass,
Or pick a scanty dinner where
All the common's brown and bare.
4. 'Then the farmer comes at last,
When the merry spring is past,
And cuts my woolly coat away,
To warm you in the winter's day.
Little Master, this is why
In the pleasant fields I lie.'