MARY HAD A LITTLE LAMB.
Mary had one Httle lamb. Mary's father had a hundred
little lambs. Mary's lamb could not stay in the house
with her all of the time ; it stayed out in the meadow,
with the other little lambs and sheep, most of the time.
When Mary went to look at all the lambs playing
together, she could not tell surely which was her own
until she called, " Pet, Pet ! " As soon as she spoke, her
lamb would come bounding toward her, and would go with
her wherever she ,went. When she had to go home to go
to bed, she would shut the gate between her and her
lamb, and then kiss the lamb's woolly head through the
bars, telling him, " Good night ; be sure to be awake when
I go to school in the morning." A part of Mary's path to
school was beside the meadow, and the lamb always went
as far as he could with her ; when she turned the corner so he could go no further, he always put his head through the
fence for Mary to give him a good-by hug and a kiss, and
as long as he could see her he would cry "baa, baa" ; but
when she was quite out of sight, he would go to play with
the other lambs, no doubt thinking that a hundred lambs
were almost as good playfellows as one little girl.
One day all the sheep were taken from the meadow and
driven down the road past the schoolhouse, the lambs
being left alone. Mary was afraid something might happen
to her lamb, left with so many frisky little creatures with-
out a mother-sheep to tell them not to turn heels over head. Mary's father had told her she might bring her lamb
down past the schoolhouse at noon and see what they
were doing with the old sheep ; so Mary let the lamb fol- low her to school in the morning, though her father did
not mean she should do so. It really was no harm, and I am sorry " it made the children laugh and play, " so that
the teacher had to turn the lamb out of doors. But just as soon as school closed, Mary ran out, and hugging the
woolly little lamb, said, " You dear, patient little Pet ! now
we will take a walk "
; and away they went down the road
toward the river. Very soon they heard all sorts of baas, —
big, coarse baas, pretty, soft baas, and coarse and soft baas
all mingled together. [Children can easily produce the
sound.]
It was a strange sight that Mary and Pet saw. Some
men were carrying the sheep into the water and were
washing their warm woolly coats in the clear, cool river.
Mary asked her father if she might wash her lamb, and her
father said she might wash his face and see how he liked
that. Mary took off her shoes and stockings and waded
into the water. Mary's lamb splashed in after her, and
when his face had been neatly washed, Mary's father said
the day was so warm that she might wash all of her lamb's
wool. What fun they had ! The lamb enjoyed it quite as much as Mary did. Mary was afraid the dust would get
into the damp wool and make her lamb look more untidy
than if he had not been washed, so she took off her apron,
and putting the lamb's fore-legs through the sleeves, started
home ; but the lamb would not stir a step while dressed in that way, and Mary took the sleeves off his legs and tied
them in a pretty bow-knot under his chin ; this seemed to
please him much better, for he now trotted briskly ahead of her a part of the way home. I wish you had been at that
schoolhouse when Mary and her lamb went past ; the
teacher and all the children were eating their luncheon out
under the trees, and they laughed as you or I would laugh,
to see a lamb dressed in a girl's apron.
When all the old sheep had been in the sunny meadow
a few days after their bath in the river, their thick coats
of wool had become quite dry, and they were taken to the
barn, where the farmers cut off their wool every summer.
Mary and her lamb went too. Mary said her lamb ought
to be taught to keep very quiet while being sheared, and
her father said the best-behaved lambs always made the
best sheep ; so Mary taught her lamb to keep its feet quite
still while she played that she cut its wool all off to make
herself a dress. Some of the wool from a mother-sheep
was made into a ball for Mary to hang round Pet's neck
so she could tell him from the other lambs, and Mary had
a dress, a hood, a pair of mittens, and some stockings made
from the wool that was cut from the sheep's backs that
day. Mary took a pair of scissors and clipped a tiny lock
of wool from Pet's back, and tying it with a blue ribbon,
put it in a box marked : " Pet's first wool ; washed and cut
off by Mary. "

No comments:
Post a Comment