2.
knives bot′-tom should tear′-ing poured clean sauc′-er tongue touch rough kit′-chen cous′-ins coun′-tries peo′-ple thought be-lieve′
1. 'What long sharp teeth she has got!' cried Harry, as pussy sat up and opened her mouth. 'They look like knives. There are two at the top, and two at the bottom!
2. 'I should not like my finger to be in the way when you shut your mouth. Your teeth must be for tearing and cutting: I am sure you do not chew your food as I have to do.
3. 'And what a way you have of drinking!
'Here, pussy, would you like some milk?' said Harry, and getting up, he poured a little milk into a clean saucer.
4. The cat ran to it, and Harry went down on the floor close by to watch her drinking it.
5. He saw that pussy's tongue was not smooth like his own, but had tiny points all over it. It came into his mind that she had once licked his face, and her tongue had a 'scrapy' feeling.
6. 'Do it again, pussy, dear,' he said, but she went on lapping up the milk.
'May I touch your tongue, then, with one of my fingers?'
7. But pussy did not like this. Then Harry took a drop or two of the milk into the palm of his hand. And when the cat had taken all she had in the saucer, she came and licked up the milk in his hand.
8. She went on licking even when all was gone, and Harry was able in this way to feel how rough her tongue was.
9. Just then his mother came into the kitchen, and Harry told her what he had been doing.
She asked:
'Have you looked at pussy's eyes?'
10. 'They are funny eyes,' he said; 'they are green, but there is not much of them to be seen.'
'Not just now,' said his mother, 'but she can open them wide when she likes. Then she can see even in the dark.'
11. 'In the dark, mother? Well, she is not a bit like me!'
'No, she is not like you. But she has plenty of cousins. Her cousins are the big lions and tigers, that live in hot countries, and eat sheep and horses, and even people when they can get them.'
12. Harry thought a little, and then said: 'If I were as small as pussy is now, and if pussy were as big as I am now, I believe she would eat me!'
THE DOG.
fol′-lowed moth′-er hun′-gry lone′-ly win′-dow noise la′-zy be-cause′ watched friend bur′-ied e-nough′ Ber′-nard shep′-herd wrong talk′-ing
1. A poor lost dog followed Harry and his little sister home from school, and tried to come into the house.
[Illustration]
2. They shut the door; but, when they opened it again, the dog was still there.
3. He looked so sad that they begged their mother to give him some food. Then they said: 'We can't turn him out again to be hungry and lonely! Let us keep him till some one comes for him.' And very soon all three were happy at play in the garden.
4. The cat sat up on a window-sill, and looked at them. She did not seem to like the fun. What a noise they all made!
5. 'How much nicer he is to play with than pussy!' said Dora. 'He is not nearly so lazy as pussy.
6. 'Look, he is wagging his tail with joy! Now, if pussy wags her tail, it means that she is cross. But I think I like her round face better than his sharp one.'
7. 'I don't,' said Harry. 'See how bright he is, and how he looks as if he would like to do something for us!'
8. 'That is because we have been kind to him. Hi, good dog!' and Dora threw her ball to the very end of the garden, and watched her new friend run after it.
9. 'Do you think, Harry,' she asked, 'that he would save us if we were buried in the snow?'
[Illustration: St Bernard Dog.]
'No, he is not a dog of that kind, and is not big enough. The big St Bernard dogs save people when they are lost in the snow.
10. 'But all dogs are good for something. Look at the shepherd's dog.'
'What can he do?'
11. 'Oh, he is a wise fellow! He knows just where his master means the sheep to go, and, if they go the wrong way, he turns them back, and never hurts one of them. Why, the shepherd does nothing but walk on, telling the dog now and again what to do.'
[Illustration: The Sheep Dog.]
12. Here a dog barked on the road outside, and the dog in the garden pricked up his ears and barked too.
'They are talking to each other,' said Dora.
BUTTERCUPS.
chil′-dren flow′-ers dai′-sy chains hun′-gry bas′-ket ought but′-ter piec′-es hair′-y yel′-low threads mid′-dle break leaves
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.