will be found useful and quite available to most
teachers: Andersen's Norse Mythology, Mabie's Norse Stories, Mara
Pratt's Stories from Norseland, Fiske's Myths and Myth Makers,
Taylor's Primitive Culture, Vol. I.; and Longfellow's Poems.
Hoping these stories will interest other children as they have interested
those who helped build them, I send them forth.
E. LOUISE SMYTHE.
_Santa Rosa, California._
CONTENTS.
THE UGLY DUCKLING THE LITTLE PINE TREE THE LITTLE
MATCH GIRL LITTLE RED RIDING-HOOD THE APPLES OF
IDUN HOW THOR GOT THE HAMMER THE HAMMER LOST
AND FOUND THE STORY OF THE SHEEP THE GOOD SHIP
ARGO JASON AND THE HARPIES THE BRASS BULLS JASON
AND THE DRAGON
[Illustration: THEY DRESSED THOR LIKE FREYJA.]
THE UGLY DUCKLING.
under broke does keep only turkey warm ugly water
A duck made her nest under some leaves.
[Illustration: THE DUCK'S NEST.]
She sat on the eggs to keep them warm.
At last the eggs broke, one after the other. Little ducks came out.
Only one egg was left. It was a very large one.
At last it broke, and out came a big, ugly duckling.
"What a big duckling!" said the old duck. "He does not look like us.
Can he be a turkey?--We will see. If he does not like the water, he is
not a duck."
* * * * * * *
mother jumped duckling splash swim bigger called began little
The next day the mother duck took her ducklings to the pond.
[Illustration: THE DUCK TAKES HER DUCKLINGS TO SWIM.]
Splash! Splash! The mother duck was in the water. Then she called the
ducklings to come in. They all jumped in and began to swim. The big,
ugly duckling swam, too.
The mother duck said, "He is not a turkey. He is my own little duck. He
will not be so ugly when he is bigger."
* * * * * * *
yard alone while noise hurt that eating know want
Then she said to the ducklings, "Come with me. I want you to see the
other ducks. Stay by me and look out for the cat."
They all went into the duck yard. What a noise the ducks made!
While the mother duck was eating a big bug, an old duck bit the ugly
duckling.
"Let him alone," said the mother duck. "He did not hurt you."
[Illustration: "HE DID NOT HURT YOU," SAID THE MOTHER
DUCK.]
"I know that," said the duck, "but he is so ugly, I bit him."
* * * * * * *
lovely help there walked bushes afraid
The next duck they met, said, "You have lovely ducklings. They are all
pretty but one. He is very ugly."
[Illustration: "YOUR CHILDREN ARE ALL PRETTY EXCEPT
ONE."]
The mother duck said, "I know he is not pretty. But he is very good."
Then she said to the ducklings, "Now, my dears, have a good time."
But the poor, big, ugly duckling did not have a good time.
The hens all bit him. The big ducks walked on him.
The poor duckling was very sad. He did not want to be so ugly. But he
could not help it.
He ran to hide under some bushes. The little birds in the bushes were
afraid and flew away.
* * * * * * *
because house would away hard lived
"It is all because I am so ugly," said the duckling. So he ran away.
At night he came to an old house. The house looked as if it would fall
down. It was so old. But the wind blew so hard that the duckling went
into the house.
[Illustration: THE UGLY DUCKLING FINDS THE OLD HOUSE.]
An old woman lived there with her cat and her hen.
The old woman said, "I will keep the duck. I will have some eggs."
* * * * * * *
growl walk corner animals
The next day, the cat saw the duckling and began to growl.
The hen said, "Can you lay eggs?" The duckling said, "No."
"Then keep still," said the hen. The cat said, "Can you growl?"
[Illustration: THE CAT SAID, "CAN YOU GROWL?"]
"No," said the duckling.
"Then keep still," said the cat.
And the duckling hid in a corner. The next day he went for a walk. He
saw a big pond. He said, "I will have a good swim."
But all of the animals made fun of him. He was so ugly.
* * * * *
summer away cake winter swans spring flew bread leaves
The summer went by.
Then the leaves fell and it was very cold. The poor duckling had a hard
time.
It is too sad to tell what he did all winter.
At last it was spring.
The birds sang. The ugly duckling
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