If I were up there With you and my friends, I'd rock in it nicely, you'd see ; I'd sit in the middle And hold by both ends; Oh, what a bright cradle 'twould be! A Language Book - Página 43por James Douglas Williams - 1911 - 238 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| C. C. Long - 1800 - 156 páginas
...it. Harry loves his mother, and she loves him. My father saw the horses, but he did not like them. Dear mother, how pretty The moon looks to-night ! She was never so cunning before ; Her two little horns Are so sharp and so bright, I hope she '11 not grow any more.... | |
| Poetry book - 1854 - 152 páginas
...little Rose. Indeed I cannot tell, In poetry or prose, How beautiful she is, My darling little Rose. THE NEW MOON. DEAR mother, how pretty The moon looks to-night, She was never so cunning before ; Her two little horns Are so sharp and so bright, I hope she'll not grow any more.... | |
| Poetry book - 1854 - 152 páginas
...little Rose. Indeed I cannot tell, In poetry or prose, How beautiful she is, My darling little Rose. THE NEW MOON. DEAR mother, how pretty The moon looks to-night, She was never so cunning before ; Her two little horns Are so sharp and so bright, I hope she'll not grow any more.... | |
| Poetry Book, Poetry book - 1856 - 136 páginas
...little Rose. Indeed I cannot tell, In poetry or prose, How beautiful she is, My darling little Rose. THE NEW MOON. DEAR mother, how pretty The moon looks to-night, She was never so cunning before; Her two little horns Are so sharp and so bright, I hope she'll not grow any more. If... | |
| Eliza Lee Cabot Follen - 1856 - 108 páginas
...among her flowers, Every bright and pleasant day, In her own pretty garden Little Annie went to play. THE NEW MOON. DEAR mother, how pretty The moon looks to-night ! She Avas never so cunning before ; (in Her two little horns Are so sharp and so bright, I hope she'll not... | |
| Mrs. Eliza Lee Follen - 1860 - 104 páginas
...among her flowers, Every bright and pleasant day, In her own pretty garden, Little Annie went to play. THE NEW MOON. DEAR Mother, how pretty The moon looks to-night, She was never so cunning before ; Her two little horns Are so sharp and so bright, I hope she '11 not grow any more.... | |
| 1861 - 316 páginas
...sweet when beauty's past; And the Saviour from above, Views a humble child with love. THE JOURNEY. / DEAR mother, how pretty the moon looks to-night, She was never so cunning before ! Her two little horns are so sharp and so bright, I hope she won't grow any more !... | |
| James Stuart Laurie - 1863 - 104 páginas
...soldiers. Thus Merry Andrew gave up chimneysweeping and lived happily as ever, and well-to-do all his days. THE NEW MOON. DEAR Mother, how pretty The moon looks to-night, She was never so cunning before; Her two little horns / Are so sharp and so bright, I hope she'll not grow any more.... | |
| John Greenleaf Whittier - 1871 - 292 páginas
...roving ? Over the sea. Lady Moon, Lady Moon, whom are you loving 7 All that love me. — Lord Houghton THE NEW MOON. DEAR mother, how pretty The moon looks to-night ! She was never so cunning before ; Her two little horns Are so sharp and so bright, I hope she '11 not grow any more.... | |
| Lewis Baxter Monroe - 1873 - 238 páginas
...bosom. LIX— THE MOON. r. OH, mother, how pretty the moon looks to-night i She was never so cunning before; Her two little horns are so sharp and so bright, I hope they'll not grow any more. iI. If I were up there with you and my friends, We 'd rock in it nicely,... | |
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