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indow, hark!
 Are ripples lapping upon its strand.

 There, where the mirror is glancing dim,
 A lake lies shimmering, cool and still.
 Blossoms are waving above its brim,
 Those over there on the window-sill.

 Rock slow, more slow in the dusky light,
 Silently lower the anchor down;
 Dear little passenger, say "Good-night."
 We've reached the harbor of Shadowtown.

HUSH-A-BYE, BABY

 Hush-a-bye, baby, in the tree top:
 When the wind blows, the cradle will rock;
 When the bough breaks, the cradle will fall,
 Down will come baby, cradle, and all.

THE KITTEN AND THE FALLING LEAVES

BY WILLIAM WORDSWORTH

 See the kitten on the wall,
 Sporting with the leaves that fall,
 Withered leaves--one--two--and three--
 From the lofty elder tree!
 Through the calm and frosty air
 Of this morning bright and fair,
 Eddying round and round they sink
 Softly, slowly: one might think
 From the motions that are made,
 Every little leaf conveyed
 Sylph or fairy hither tending,
 To this lower world descending,
 Each invisible and mute,
 In his wavering parachute.
 But the kitten, how she starts,
 Crouches, stretches, paws and darts!
 First at one and then its fellow,
 Just as light and just as yellow;
 There are many now--now one--
 Now they stop and there are none:
 What intenseness of desire
 In her upward eye of fire!
 With a tiger-leap, halfway,
 Now she meets the coming prey;
 Lets it go as fast and then
 Has it in her power again.
 Now she works with three or four,
 Like an Indian conjuror;
 Quick as he in feats of art,
 Far beyond in joy of heart.

LATE

By Josephine Preston Peabody

 My father brought Somebody up
 To show us all asleep.
 They came as softly up the Stairs
 As you could creep.

 They whispered in the Doorway there,
 And looked at us awhile.
 I had my Eyes shut up, but I
 Could feel him smile.

 I shut my Eyes up close, and lay
 As still as I could keep.
 Because I knew He wanted us
 To be asleep.

From "The Book of the Little Past," by Josephine Preston Peabody;
used by permission of the publishers, Houghton Mifflin Co.

A BLESSING FOR THE BLESSED

BY LAURENCE ALMA-TADEMA

 When the sun has left the hilltop,
 And the daisy-fringe is furled,
 When the birds from wood and meadow
 In their hidden nests are curled,
 Then I think of all the babies
 That are sleeping in the world.

 There are babies in the high lands
 And babies in the low,
 There are pale ones wrapped in furry skins
 On the margin of the snow,
 And brown ones naked in the isles
 Where all the spices grow.

 And some are in the palace,
 On a white and downy bed;
 And some are in the garret,
 With a clout beneath their head;
 And some are on the cold, hard earth,
 Whose mothers have no bread.

 O little men and women,
 Dear flowers yet unblown--
 O little kings and beggars
 Of the pageant yet unshown--
 Sleep soft and dream pale dreams now,
 To-morrow is your own.

MY DOLLY

 Hush, Dolly, bye, Dolly, sleep, Dolly, dear,
 See what a bed, Dolly, I've for you here;
 Therefore, to sleep, Dolly! don't fret and cry;
 Lay down your head, Dolly, shut up your eye.

 When the bright morn, Dolly, once more has come,
 Up gets the sun, and goes forth to roam;
 Then shall my dear Dolly soon get up, too;
 Then shall be playtime for me and for you.

 Now go to sleep, Dolly, good night to you;
 You must to bed, Dolly--I'm going too;
 Just go to sleep without trouble or pain,
 And in the morning I'll come back again.

THE CHILD AND THE WORLD

 I see a nest in a green elm-tree
 With little brown sparrows--one, two, three!
 The elm-tree stretches its branches wide,
 And the nest is soft and warm inside.
 At morn the sun, so golden bright,
 Climbs up to fill the world with light;
 It opens the flowers, it wakens me,
 And wakens the birdies--one, two, three.
 And leaning out of my window high,
 I look far up at the blue, blue sky,
 And then far out at the earth so green,
 And think it the loveliest ever seen--
 The loveliest world that ever was seen!

EVENING SONG

BY C. FRANCES ALEXANDER

 Little birds sleep sweetly
 In their soft round nests,
 Crouching in the cover
 Of their mother's breasts.
 Little lambs lie quiet,
 All the summer night,
 With their old ewe mothers,
 Warm, and soft, and white.

 But more sweet and quiet
 Lie our little heads,
 With our own dear mothers
 Sitting by our beds;
 And their soft sweet voices
 Sing our hush-a-byes,
 While the room grows darker,
 As we shut our eyes.

 And we play at evening
 Round our father's knees;
 Birds are not so merry,
 Singing on the trees,
 Lambs are not so happy,
 'Mid the meadow flowers;
 They have play and pleasure,
 But not love like ours.

ROCK-A-BYE, BABY

 Rock-a-bye, baby, your cradle is green,
 Father's a nobleman, mother's a queen,
 And Betty's a lady, and wears a gold ring,
 And Johnny's a drummer, and drums for the King.

THE SANDMAN

BY MARGARET VANDERGRIFT

 The rosy clouds float overhead
 The sun is going down,
 And now the Sandman's gentle tread
 Comes stealing through the town.
 "White sand, white sand," he softly cries,
 And as he shakes his hand,
 Straightway there lies on babies' eyes
 His gift of shining sand.
 Blue eyes, black eyes, gray eyes and brown,
 As shuts the rose, they softly close,
 when he goes through the town.

 From sunny beaches far away--
 Yes, in another land--
 He gathers up at break of day
 His store of shining sand.
 No tempests beat that shore remote,
 No ships may sail that way,
 His little boat alone may float
 Within that lovely bay.
 Blue eyes, gray eyes, black eyes and brown,
 As shuts the rose, they softly close,
 when he goes through the town.

 He smiles to see the eyelids close
 Above the happy eyes;
 And every child right well he knows--
 Oh, he is very wise!
 But if, as he goes through the land,
 A naughty baby cries,
 His other hand takes dull gray sand
 To close the wakeful eyes.
 Blue eyes, gray eyes, black eyes and brown,
 As shuts the rose, they softly close,
 when he goes through the town.

 So when you hear the Sandman's song
 Sound through the twilight sweet,
 Be sure you do not keep him long
 A-waiting on the street.
 Lie softly down, dear little head,
 Rest quiet, busy hands,
 Till, by your bed his good-night said,
 He strews the shining sands.
 Blue eyes, gray eyes, black eyes and brown,
 As shuts the rose, they softly close,
 when he goes through the town.

THE FAIRY FOLK

BY ROBERT BIRD

 Come cuddle close in daddy's coat
 Beside the fire so bright,
 And hear about the fairy folk
 That wander in the night.
 For when the stars are shining clear
 And all the world is still,
 They float across the silver moon
 From hill to cloudy hill.

 Their caps of red, their cloaks of green,
 Are hung with silver bells,
 And when they're shaken with the wind
 Their merry ringing swells,
 And riding on the crimson moth,
 With black spots on his wings,
 They guide them down the purple sky
 With golden bridle rings.

 They love to visit girls and boys,
 To see how sweet they sleep,
 To stand beside their cozy cots
 And at 

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