What was Bo-Peep? Can anyone guess?
Why, little Bo-Peep was a
shepherdess!
And she dressed in a short white petticoat,
And a kirtle of blue, with
a looped-up look,
And a snowy kerchief about her throat,
And held in her hand a crook.
What eyes she had, the little Bo-Peep!
They had tears to laugh with, and tears
to weep.
So fringy, and shy, and blue,
and sweet,
That even the
summer skies in color,
Or the autumn gentians under
her feet,
Less tender were
and duller.
Now, a shepherdess ought to watch her
sheep;
But the careless little girl, Bo-Peep,
Was hunting for late wild
strawberries,
The sweetest her
tongue had ever tasted;
They were few in number, and
small in size,
Too good, though,
to be wasted.
And in that way the little Bo-Peep,
The first she knew, had lost her sheep!
To the top of the nearest
knoll she ran,
The better to
look the pasture over;
She shaded her face, and called,
“Nan! Nan!”
But none of them
could discover.
About and about went little Bo-Peep;
Her feet grew tired, the hills were steep;
And in trying her fears to
overcome
She sighed, “I
don’t know where to find ’em.
But let ’em alone, and
they’ll come home,
And bring their
tails behind ’em!”
So down sat trustful little Bo-Peep,
And in a minute was fast asleep!
Arm over her head, and her
finger-ends
All red with the
fruit she had been eating;
While her thoughts were only
of her lost friends,
And she dreamed
she heard them bleating.
’Twas a happy dream for little Bo-Peep;
As she lay on the grass, her flock of
sheep,
With scatter and clatter and
patter of feet,
Came hastening
from all ways hither, thither;
First one would bleat, then
another would bleat,
Then “b-a-a a-a!”
all together!
But ah, it was only while Bo-Peep
Was tired enough to stay asleep
That her flock was with her;
for when she woke,
Rubbing her eyes
to see the clearer,
She found that her dream was
all a joke,
And they were
nowhere near her.
Tearful and sorrowful grew Bo-Peep!
Down from her lashes the tears would creep;
But she started out, as there
was need,
Before it should
be too dark to find them;
She found them indeed, but
it made her heart bleed,
For they’d
left their tails behind them!
Did she laugh or cry, our little Bo-Peep,
To see such a comical crowd of sheep?
There were plenty of bodies,
white and fat;
And plenty of
wide mouths, eating, eating;
Plenty of soft wool, and all
that:
And plenty of
noisy bleating;
Yet all of them stood, and tried to keep
At a little distance from Bo-Peep!
They knew her voice, and were
very glad
To have her come
with her crook to find them,
But they felt so strangely
because they had
Not a single tail
behind them.
The innocent-faced old mother-sheep,
Who bleated and stamped to greet Bo-Peep,
With their tails shorn close,
were odd enough;
But the very oddest
of all was when a
Group of the lambs went galloping
off,
All legs, and
hadn’t any!
Though sorry enough was little Bo-Peep
That the tails were lost from her pretty
sheep,
She murmured, “I’ll
find them easily,
And there’s
very little good in crying!”
So away she went, and at last,
in a tree,
She saw them hung
a-drying!
She piled them up in a great white heap,
And the best she could do, poor little
Bo-Peep!
Was to try to fasten them
where they grew
Or that was, at
least, what she intended,
But if she did it I never
knew,
For now my story
is ended!
[Color Plate:]
Buz, Buz, Buz says the Great
buzzing Bee.
Go away butterfly this flower
is for me.
Why? Why? Why? says the little
butterfly,
If you may sit on this flower, why may’nt
I?