1. ROSE.
1. The first time that I ever
used my wings was in flying from behind a red curtain.
It was in a warm nice breakfast-room. The master
of it was called Mr. Sutton.
2. I settled on a pretty white
cap on the head of his wife. She was just making
the tea, and her husband was sitting on the other side
of the table.
3. “Well,” said Mr.
Sutton, “when I talk of lazy folks, of course
I do not suppose that any person thinks himself idle.
4. “Some people think that
so long as they are doing something or other they
are busy. I suppose that I am an idle old fellow
myself, for spending time in reading the paper.
5. “The right thing to
think is, have I been doing what is of any use, eh?”
said the old man, pushing up his glasses and looking
at his little grandchild.
6. “Have you done a single
thing that is of any use this morning, Rose?”
Rose hung her head for a moment. Then she lifted
her face brightly, and said, “Only one little
thing, grandpa.”
7. “What was it, dear?”
“I am not quite sure that it
was a real good thing,” Rose went on, “but
I found a poor little butterfly that had fallen into
a pool in the garden, where the rain had come.
8. “Its wings were wet,
and it could not fly up. So I took it up and
put it in the sun on the wall, and soon it was well.”
9. Mrs. Sutton looked at Rose
in a loving way. “I am quite sure that it
was a ‘real good thing’ if you are not,”
said the old lady. “And so that was partly
why you were late?”
10. “Yes, granny.”
“Well, the little butterfly
is all the better, though you were the worse for having
cold toast. But that is not much to bear for the
sake of saving a little life, is it?”
11. And all this time I had been
feasting on the sweet white lumps of sugar. No
one took any notice of me, and so I went on, till one
lump began to grow quite small.
12. “Look, here is a little
house-fly!” said Rose. “He is standing
quite still on a lump of sugar. What is he doing,
granny?”
“He is eating it, dear.”
“Can he bite it up?”
13. “Bite it up! No,”
said Mr. Sutton, putting down his paper and coming
up to us. “The fly has no teeth, he has
a trunk. He sends down some juice through his
trunk on to the sugar.
14 “This juice melts it, and
then he sucks it up again.”
“How clever!” said Rose.
“I wish he would let me touch him.”
And she put out one finger very softly towards me.
15. Now though I am a brave fly
now, I could not bear at that time to see the hand
of any person come near me. Though I would perch
on the top of it, I did not like to be touched by
it.
16. So I flew up in a great hurry,
and pitched on some dark stuff which smelt like new
hay, and which stood on the side table in a box.
Rose did not see where I went. “Oh, how
fast he went off!” she said.
Write: Rose saved the life
of a butterfly. She found it in a little pool.
She set it in the sun to dry its wings. It was
a useful thing to do.
Questions: 1. What had Rose
found in the garden? 2. What did she do
for the little butterfly? 3. How did the fly eat
sugar without any teeth? 4. What did Rose
wish to do? 5. What did the fly think about
being touched? 6. What did he do when he
saw the hand of Rose near him?
2. IN THE TEA-CADDY.
1. “Now, granny,”
said Rose, when the breakfast was done, “I will
not forget, to-day at least, to lock up the tea-caddy.”
2. So she took up the sugar-basin,
fitted it into a little place made for it inside the
box where I sat, and, before I had any idea of what
she was doing, she shut down the lid.
3. I was now, for the first time,
left in the dark. And I began to think what a
pleasant thing the sunshine was, and to wonder when
I should be let out again.
4. But I must say that I found
the sugar a great comfort. I went on eating it
as long as I could. If I was to be locked up at
all, I could not have been locked into a better place.
5. The sugar-basin was full and
there were enough lumps in it to last a fly of my
size all his life. But of course one might get
tired of it, in time.
6. But I was not tired yet.
So I ate and ate, until I began to feel my legs ache
and my wings very heavy. Just then I heard a loud
noise, and a light broke into my prison.
7. It was Rose turning the key
in the lock and lifting the lid of the tea-caddy.
“Oh, granny!” cried she, “here is
a poor fly that can hardly move.”
8. “I am afraid, dear,
that the poor fly must thank himself for that,”
said Mrs. Sutton, looking closely at me. “He
has been a little glutton, I fear, and has eaten so
much sugar that he can hardly move.”
9. “Poor little fellow,”
said Rose, “I will not hurt him. He shall
go out of doors on to the cool grass and get well
again.
10. “I dare say that, though
he is not quite so pretty as a butterfly, he likes
to be alive.” So Rose took me up between
her finger and thumb as gently as she could, but oh,
what great big hands they seemed to me!
11. And my poor sides were pinched
black and blue. That is the reason why I cannot
bear one of the great hands which belong to men and
women to catch hold of me.
12. You see we tiny flies are
made so lightly, and we are so small. A mere
touch will crush our dainty wings, or break our slender
legs, or hurt our eyes.
13. How thankful I am that we
have eyes that can see behind and all round us as
well as in front!
14. We are able to get away,
thanks to these eyes, when we see a great hand coming
to catch us. Even a baby’s hand seems like
that of a giant to us.
15. But dear Rose did her best
for me, and put me in a spoon to carry. At the
same time I did wish that the sugar had not been quite
so nice, and that I had not taken so much of it.
16. The fresh air of the garden,
the sunshine, and the flowers did me a great deal
of good, after being shut up in the tea-caddy.
At night I slept in a lily bell.
Write: The fly was shut into
a tea-caddy by mistake. He ate so much sugar
that he could hardly fly. Rose put him out of
doors to get well.
Questions: 1. What did Rose
do after breakfast? 2. What did the fly
do inside the tea-caddy? 3. What did Rose say
when she opened it again? 4. What did her
grandmother say? 5. What did Rose do for
the fly? 6. Why does not the fly like to
be touched?
3. I FALL INTO THE CREAM.
1. The next morning I flew in
at the window. Rose had soon done her breakfast,
and she locked up the caddy again, with me outside
this time.
2. Though I did not fancy any
sweets on that morning, I saw something in a small
jug on the table which I thought looked even nicer.
It was yellow and rather thick.
3. I went down to see what sort
of stuff it was. It could not hurt me, at any
rate, to dip one of my feet in, or the tip of my trunk,
and see whether cream was better and more wholesome
than sugar.
4. I slid with care down the
sides of the jug, holding firmly on with the little
soles of my feet, which, I am thankful to say, have
suckers on them which make it easy for me to run where
I like without falling.
5. I tasted cream for the first
time In my life. What a happy moment it was!
I tasted it a second time, a third, and a fourth time,
and after that I became so greedy for more that I
lost my balance and in I went plump!
6. At first I kicked about as
hard as I could, and tried to keep my wings clear.
But they soon got cold, and stuck to my sides.
7. And then I could only go round
and round the place, looking with despair at the steep
sides of the cream-jug, which seemed far larger and
steeper than they had done before my sad mishap.
8. I was growing tired of the
struggle, my body began to sink in the cream, and
even my eyes were dimmed by it, so that I could hardly
see where I was going.
9. Thomas the servant came in
to take away the breakfast things, and the jolt he
gave the cream-jug in moving it closer to the tea-pot
nearly drowned me. I was half dead.
10. But Rose was again my friend,
though she did not mean to do what she then did.
Rushing into the room to fetch a book which she had
left on the window seat, she ran against Thomas, and
pushed his elbow.
11. This jerked the cream-jug
so that it upset and I was upset with it. I felt
myself crawling along in a great white flood over the
table-cloth, but still I had land under my feet.
12. “My dear Rose,”
said Mrs. Sutton, “how often I have begged you
not to rush into the room in that rough way.
You nearly knocked down Thomas, and see how his sleeve
is messed with greasy cream!”
13. “I am very sorry, granny,”
said Rose, “but I forgot this book, and Miss
Bush is waiting.”
“I am sorry too,” said
Mrs. Sutton, “and so is Thomas, I dare say.”
Write: The fly wished to taste
cream. He fell into the jug and was nearly drowned.
Rose pushed the servant, the jug upset, and the fly
crawled out.
Questions: 1. What did the
fly wish to taste next? 2. What had he on
his feet which helped him to walk? 3. What became
of him after the fourth sip of cream? 4.
Who came into the room to fetch the breakfast
things? 5. Who came in next? 6. What
happened to the cream-jug and to the fly?
4. SWEET AS HONEY.
1. Rose had to go away, to finish
her lessons, and Thomas also went out of the room
to get a cloth to wipe up the spilt cream.
2. I was in danger of being swept
away by this, but, just as Rose was going out at the
door, she saw me still in the midst of the cream.
3. In an instant I found myself
nearly drowned again in a spoonful of it, and the
next moment I was again placed on the grass of the
lawn.
4. Rose had scooped me up in
the spoon and carried me there. I really think
that she had a liking for me. How thankful I felt
to be in the grass!
5. I hid myself under a daisy
flower and took a good rest, for I felt very tired
after my struggles. A good shower of rain came
on, and I was quite glad to hear it patter on the
leaves.
6. For I still felt a trifle
sticky, and was glad to get my legs moist, so that
I might wash myself all the better. At this time
the sun was so warm, that I lived out of doors for
some days.
7. I think that three days passed
before I sat again on the white cap of Mrs. Sutton.
But one morning, when she sat at the open window, I
thought I should like to pay my old friend a visit.
8. It was breakfast time again.
Mr. Sutton was reading the paper through his new glasses,
and Rose was busy eating her breakfast.
9. As I had had nothing but a
few tastes of dew, and such small meals as were to
be had from the flowers, for three days, I was rather
hungry.
10. I thought that Rose would
spare me a bit of what was on her plate. But,
as I was on the way to it, I had to pass a pot of something
which had a better smell than what she was then eating.
11. It was honey. It made
me forget all about Rose, and her bread and butter.
I pitched on the honey-pot, and began to feast as hard
as I could.
12. But before I had eaten much,
I saw Rose take some and spread it on a piece of bread.
At the same moment Mrs. Sutton rose and put the honey
into a cupboard.
13. “The flies will get
at this, if it is left without a cover,” she
said. “I cannot think why Thomas has brought
it in to table without one.”
14. Now I thought this a most
unkind speech. They were all eating twenty times
as much as I could do in a week at each mouthful.
Yet the honey was put into a dark cupboard out of
my reach!
Write: The fly was glad to
clean his wings and legs. He came back to the
room and sat on the cap of the old lady. He was
pleased to get some honey.
Questions: 1. What did Rose
do for the fly in the cream? 2. What did
the fly do in the garden? 3. What did the fly
find on the breakfast-table? 4. Where did
he pitch next? 5. What did the old lady
do with the honey-pot? 6. What did the fly think
of what she said?
5. A NEW MISHAP.
1. This vexed me, I must say,
so I went and buzzed against the window panes for
a little while, to see if that would do me any good.
2. At the end of that time I
heard Rose say, “Granny, I do not want this
bread and honey now. May I keep it for my lunch?”
3. “Yes, dear,” said
her granny. It seemed a wonder to me that Rose
should wish to leave her bread and honey till some
hours later, when she might have had it at once.
4. Mr. Sutton got up and went
away to his study. His wife rose too, and she
told Rose to put the plate of bread and honey on the
sideboard, that Thomas might take it away till lunch
time.
5. But Rose forgot to tell Thomas,
and he did not seem to see the plate, so there the
tempting dish was left all the morning. The sun
began to shine upon it, and I sniffed and sniffed many
times.
6. At last I left the white cap
where I was sitting, and went towards it. I settled
upon something far nicer now than either sugar or cream.
I sipped and sucked away for some time.
7. At last I thought that I had
eaten enough and had better tear myself away before
I had taken more than was good for me. But, to
my horror, I found that when I tried to lift up my
legs I could not stir them!
8. In my other troubles I had
at least been able to move a little. I could
climb up and down the mountains of sugar, and I could
swim about in the ocean of cream.
9. But now I was fixed fast,
either to be eaten by Rose without her knowing it,
or to die a wretched death in the kitchen if she did
not choose to finish me off.
10. I had never thought very
much of my out-door cousins, the bees. It seemed
to me that they made a great fuss and took a lot of
trouble for nothing, in making honey for men and women
to take away.
11. How much better to eat it
straight from the flowers! And now I thought
worse of the bees than ever, because I was sticking
fast in their stuff.
12. I tried in vain to drag out
one front leg after the other, and next my middle
and back legs. It was just as a man would feel
if he were stuck in a bog.
13. The sound of the lunch bell
went to my heart. The sight of the nice bread
and honey, which Rose had left at breakfast, would
be sure to make her feel hungry. She very soon
saw me!
Write: The fly stood on a plate
of bread and honey. He stuck fast and felt as
a man might do in a bog. Rose took him out and
set him free.
Questions: 1. What did Rose
do with her bread and honey? 2. What did
the fly do when he smelt it? 3. What happened
to him when he settled on the honey? 4.
What did he try to do in vain? 5. What did
he soon hear? 6. What did Rose very soon
see when she came to lunch?
6. THE FLY’S EYE.
1. I feel sure that she did not
know me, for she cried out, “Oh, granny! here
is a nasty fly on my bread and honey. I dare say
that the horrid thing has been crawling all over it!
2. “I wish a spider would
come and catch it!” went on Rose, quite crossly,
“for I do not like to kill it myself!”
And here she gave me a little poke with a fork.
But not hard enough to hurt me.
3. “Why, Rose, what is
the matter?” said her granny. “I thought
that you were fond of the little, busy, useful flies
that come to dance and play in the house?”
4. “Well, I cannot see
what good they do,” said Rose, “getting
into the cream and sticking on to the bread and honey.”
Something had put little Rose out of temper.
But I felt sure it would not last long.
5. “I wish he would not
get on to my plate,” said she, bending down her
face to hide it, for she began to feel ashamed.
“But I will not hurt him.”
6. And she took one of her granny’s
knitting needles in her hand. I shook with fear
when I saw this great spear coming; but Rose used it
in a most gentle and kind way.
7. She lifted my body out after
setting my legs free, and though I felt strained and
tired after it, I left nothing behind me, no, not even
any of the brushes and combs on my feet.
8. “I will put him out
into the garden,” said she. But, as my wings
had got no honey on them, I saved her the trouble,
by flying away.
9. If Rose had only known half
the trouble I had in washing my feet after the honey,
she would have been ready to forgive me for tasting
her lunch.
10. “I am glad you did
not go on feeling cross with the poor little fly,
Rose,” said Mrs. Sutton. “We should
miss them much if we had none, for they help to keep
our houses sweet and clean.
11. “No maid with her broom
could get at all the tiny cracks and corners where
the flies go. The eyes of no woman in the world
could see what the fly can.
12. “Do you know that his
round ball of eye is made up of many hundreds of bits,
and that each bit can see a new way?”
13. Rose clapped her hands.
“Then can the fly see a hundred ways at once?”
said she. “Oh, how I wish I could do that!”
14. “You can move your
eyes about,” said her granny, “which does
just as well. The fly cannot move his. And
you would not like to be born in the kitchen sink,
would you?”
15. “Is that where flies
are born?” said Rose, drawing near to her granny
and looking into her face.
16. “Yes,” said Mrs.
Button, “the fly is born in a sink, or in any
place where dirty stuff is found. The young flies
eat the dirty stuff and get rid of it. I will
tell you some day how the little things come into
the world.”
Write: After being set free
from the honey the fly went off. He cleaned his
legs and went back to the old lady. She told Rose
that flies were of great use.
Questions: 1. What did Rose
use to lift the fly up? 2. In what way did
she use the knitting-needle? 3. What did the
fly feel when he saw the knitting-needle coming?
4. What can the fly do to keep a house clean?
5. What sort of eye has the fly? 6.
Tell me where flies are born?
7. BABY FLIES.
1. “Could you not tell
me now?” said Rose, for she wanted to hear about
the little flies. And I too felt very glad to
hear more about my childhood. So I sat still
to listen.
2. “Perhaps you think that
the child of a fly looks just like itself; only smaller,”
said Mrs. Sutton. “But the house-fly lays
a great many little eggs.
3. “She finds some old
dirty rubbish, like rotten cabbage or stuff that is
left by careless cooks lying about. In this she
puts her eggs, and then she dies. Little grubs
are born from them.
4. “They begin to eat as
soon as they are born, and very soon they turn into
flies, after going to sleep for a while first in a
kind of little hard skin or shell. They change
into flies while they are inside this shell.”
5. “What do the flies do
when they cannot find any dirty rubbish?” said
Rose.
“Then they go to look for it
in other places,” said her granny. “So
you see, if we do not wish to have flies in our houses
we must have no rubbish.”
6. “Then the flies are
little servants to us, granny?”
“Yes, to be sure.”
“I wish I could see a baby-fly,” said
Rose.
7. “You would not think
it at all pretty,” said Mrs. Sutton. “It
is a whitish maggot. But some ugly looking things
are very useful to us.”
“I like pretty things best,” said Rose.
8. “Well, the fly is pretty
enough when he is grown up. He has to wait, you
see.” I was pleased to hear the kind old
lady say this, and I nodded my head and washed my
face with my feet.
9. “And so it is your birthday
on Monday, Rose,” went on her granny. “And
I suppose it is time to be thinking about the party
and the fun we are to have?”
10. Rose looked up, beaming with
delight at these words. Though she had not been
born as a grub in a sink, I thought that she looked
pretty too.
11. “We must get Miss Bush
to write the letters for us, Rose, and ask the little
girls, and boys to come and spend the day with you.
Run now and see if she will be so good as to do it
now.”
“Oh, very well,” said
Rose. And she went out with a skip.
Write: A house-fly is born
in the sink. The egg from which it comes is laid
in dirt and rubbish. The grub which creeps out
eats up the dirty stuff.
Questions: 1. Where does
the house-fly lay its eggs? 2. What are
the young flies like at first? 3. What do they
do as soon as they are born? 4. What do
they eat? 6. If we do not wish to have many
flies, what must we do? 6. What treat was Rose
going to have?
8. SAVED AGAIN.
1. I heard a little girl say,
“Oh, Rose, there is a fly in your glass of wine.”
“Poor thing!” said the
little girl next her, “take it out!”
“No, no!” said her brother;
“let it alone. Let us see how he swims.”
2. All this time I felt very
bad. I was drowning, yet this boy could look
on and talk like that.
3. Something seemed to take away
all my breath and strength. I heard the boy say,
“If I fell into a pond I could not swim so well.”
4. “Why, no,” said
Rose, “the fly has not a coat and trousers, as
you have. But I do not think it is fun to see
him drowning, so I will take him out.”
And she pushed the handle of a spoon with care under
me.
5. I could hardly crawl when
I got on to the table-cloth. She saw it and placed
me on a green laurel leaf outside. I sat there
half dead, and yet I heard what they were all saying
inside the summer-house.
6. “Lucy,” said Rose
to the little girl, “you would have been glad
if you could have been lifted out like that poor fly,
when you fell into the pond at home, would you not?
7. “You went to the bottom
before any person came to help you. Were you
in a great fright? How did you feel?”
8. “Why,” said Lucy,
“I was in a great fright when I first fell in,
but after that I think that I must have been asleep,
for I forgot it all. I knew nothing after my
tumble down the bank, till I heard my mother near
me.
9. “She was saying, ‘God
bless you, darling,’ and then I found myself
lying in bed.”
“Ah,” said her brother
Tom, “Neptune, our dog, had a famous supper that
night.”
10. “Why?” asked
a little boy, from the other end of the table.
“Oh, did you not know that it
was Neptune who pulled my sister out of the water?”
said Tom.
11. “He saw her go in,
and without being told, he got her out. She would
have been drowned without him. She had been told
not to go near the pond, but she ran down to it, without
leave, when no one was looking.”
12. The other little girl here
grew very red. “You need not have said
that, Tom,” said she. But Tom was a bit
of a tease. He only laughed and said that his
sister was always doing what she was told not.
Write: Rose took the fly out
of her glass. She put him on a leaf to get dry.
Tom told them about his big dog. It saved the
life of Lucy.
Questions: 1. What did Rose
do for the fly in her glass? 2. What did
the dog do for Lucy? 3. What did Tom say that
his dog could do? 4. What else would he
bring out from the bottom? 5. What did Neptune
have on the night when he saved Lucy’s
life?
9. GRANNY’S CAP ON FIRE.
1. I did not feel much desire
to taste any food next morning. The long swim
on the day before had taken away my wish for eating
and drinking.
2. I nearly flew down to the
flower which Rose had put in water, but I changed
my mind. On the whole I prefer the smell of jam
to that of roses.
3. I felt that a little walk
would do me good, so I went round the tray once or
twice, and then I tried to do the same thing on the
tea-urn, but it was too hot for my feet.
4. I left that quickly enough,
and after running across the toast on Mr. Sutton’s
plate, and crawling up his paper, only to be driven
away, I went to the window.
5. Here I was so lucky as to
meet a few of my friends, and we had a little dance
in the sunshine, which quite brought back my health
and spirits.
6. The day thus passed by, and
it was very warm indeed later on. After tea Mr.
and Mrs. Sutton were seated in the drawing-room, one
on each side of a little table, with a candle between
them.
7. The old lady was knitting,
and her husband was reading aloud the paper to her.
I think he was reading to amuse himself more than his
wife.
8. I could feel, as I sat on
her cap, that her head was nodding now and then, as
if she were dozing. Mr. Sutton at last saw this.
And laying down the paper he said, two or three times,
“You are sleepy, my dear.”
9. Each time that he said this,
granny woke up, sat very upright, and said, “Oh
no, not at all, my love.” But she went off
again to sleep as soon as the reading began.
10. At length she was in so sound
a nap that she did not notice when Mr. Sutton put
down the paper, after reading a long, dull account
of something or other.
11. He took off his glasses,
laid them on the folded paper, and saying something
to himself about resting his eyes, fell fast asleep
too.
12. Granny’s head now nodded
lower and lower. First she gave a nod, and then
her husband gave a bow, just as if they were being
most polite to each other in their sleep.
13. Her cap was very near the
wax candle once or twice, and there was a smell of
burning. She now began to nod sideways, and each
time that she did so there was a great smoke and a
frizzling noise.
Write: Rose went to spend the
day with Lucy. The fly sat on the cap of the
old lady. She fell asleep and the cap caught on
fire.
Questions: 1. Where did Rose
go? 2. Where did the fly stay? 3. What
were Mr. and Mrs. Sutton doing that evening? 4.
What did Mr. Sutton say when his wife’s
head nodded? 5. What did he do himself?
6. What happened to the old lady’s cap?
10. A NARROW ESCAPE.
1. I was afraid of losing my
perch, her nice white cap, on which I had now grown
to feel quite at home. It seemed as if it were
turning into ashes like those in the grate, and it
felt too hot.
2. I flew up, for I could sit
there no longer. And then I pitched on the top
of Mr. Sutton’s head, just in the bald place,
and stamped with one foot as hard as I could.
3. I also ran about and tickled
him a good deal. He woke up in a great hurry,
for he raised his hand to drive me away, and in doing
so, gave himself a smart tap.
4. This roused him. And
he awoke just in time to save the cap and the hair
of his wife from being in a blaze of fire.
5. “Dear, dear, dear!”
said he. “Why, my love, what an escape you
have had!”
“Nonsense, my dear,” said
the old lady, “I have not been asleep, I assure
you.” But it was of no use for her to say
and think this.
6. There was the burnt cap on
her head. “I was not quite asleep,”
said she. “Oh no, neither was I,”
said her husband, laughing.
7. And then, looking grave, he
said, “You were in great danger though, my dear.
I read only a day or two ago, of an old lady who had
been burnt to death from setting her cap on fire.”
8. I had been in great danger
too, though no one seemed to think of that. What
between the flames, and the knock that Mr. Sutton aimed
at me, I might have been killed.
9. Thomas was now heard coming
up the gravel walk. He had been sent to fetch
Rose home. She was full of news to tell, about
all the things she had seen and heard that day.
10. “It is a great mercy,
my dear, that you have a bit of your granny left,”
said Mr. Sutton. “If it had not been for
a fly, which tickled the top of my head, your granny’s
cap would have been on fire.”
11. “Well, well, Mr. Sutton,”
said the old lady, who, somehow or other, did not
seem to like hearing about the cap being on fire.
12. “You see here I am,
without even being singed. And I was not half
so sound asleep as you were, my dear. Depend upon
it I am too old and too wise to let my cap catch fire.”
13. Mr. Sutton did not say any
more about the cap, since it seemed to vex his wife.
“Ah,” said Rose, “if
I had been at home you would not both have fallen
asleep.”
14. “That is very likely,”
said granny, smiling. “Well, and how did
you enjoy yourself?” Rose said that she had been
very happy.
15. She had seen Neptune dive,
and she had been drenched by the shaking which the
big doggie gave himself when he came out of the water.
Write: The fly pitched on the
head of the old man. He gave a stamp with his
foot to wake him up. The old man put out the fire.
Questions: 1. Where did the
fly pitch on leaving the cap? 2. What did
he do to the old man’s head? 3. What did
Mr. Sutton do when he woke up? 4. What did
he say to his wife? 5. Who came home with
Thomas? 6. What sort of day had Rose spent?
11. A GLASS TO MAKE THINGS BIG.
1. “What shall I look at
next?” said Rose, who had a glass thing in her
hand, next day. “Oh, this fly!”
2. The lunch was on the table,
and I was just making a hearty meal on a pat of butter.
I knew that Rose would not hurt me. So I stood
quite still.
3. “How very strange!”
said the little girl. “He looks as big as
a horse. His wings are like shining lace, and
he has hairy brushes on his feet.
4. “Now he is cleaning
his head with one of them. I am glad that flies
are not really so big as he seems now.
5. “What a buzzing we should
have, and what should we do when such huge things
flew about the room or walked on the ceiling!
6. “There would be no room
for us to move, and the house would be too small.
Fancy having such a creature as this fly looks now
jumping and prancing over one’s bread and jam!”
7. I was not pleased with this
speech; I knew that my colour was rather dingy, but
I had always thought my shape to be light and graceful,
and this Rose had taken no notice of.
8. Neither had she so much as
looked at my trunk, of which I am truly proud.
So I flew away in a pet from under the glass, and settled
on the loaf in the middle of the table, out of her
reach.
9. “But for you, dear grand-father,
I should never have thought such tiny creatures worth
taking any notice of. Why, they are made just
as well as big ones, or better.”
10. “Not better, dear,
but quite as well. They are all the work of God’s
hand, and so all must be alike good. Do you know
that you owe the pretty crimson sash that you have
on to a very little creature?”
11. “Oh yes, the silkworm,” said
Rose.
“Yes, and the red colour was
made from the dead body of an insect too. There
is a sort of blight which gives this red colour after
it is dead.
12. “Merchants bring them
from abroad, after they have been taken from the plants
on which they live. As they kill the coffee plants
they must be swept off, and they are made into dye.”
13. Grand-father would have said
much more, but just then Rose saw Tom and Lucy walking
up the lawn to the open window.
14. Behind them walked gravely
Neptune the dog, with his master’s stick in
his mouth, which he thought it a great honour to carry.
Write: Rose saw the fly through
her glass. She felt glad that the fly was not
so big as he looked then. He was as well made
as if he were large.
Questions: 1. What did Rose
look at through her glass? 2. What did she
think about the fly? 3. What did Mr. Sutton say
about great and little creatures? 4. Whom
did Rose see in the garden? 5. Who walked
behind carrying his master’s stick?
12. A LONG SLEEP.
1. About this time I began to
feel a chill in the air. I did not like this,
for it made me feel drowsy. So I kept in the warmth
of the drawing-room all day.
2. But I was shocked to see that
many of my friends began to get quite unfit to run
or fly about. Their wings seemed heavy, and some
of them crept into holes where they went to sleep.
3. One day I went down to the
table and found one of the gayest flies I had ever
known, lying on his back upon the cloth.
4. He was cold and stiff.
Nearly all the friends I had made that summer were
dying or dead around me, or else they had crept into
corners out of sight.
5. I knew that something must
be done, or I too should one day be found lying on
my back with my legs in the air, and Thomas would sweep
me away, as he did the other flies.
6. I made up my mind to choose
the best place I could, and there seemed none better
than the old red curtain from which I had first come
out into that pleasant room.
7. I therefore ran about on the
wall behind it for some time, looking for a proper
hole. I found just the nook I wanted, where a
bit of the wall paper was peeling off.
8. I had hardly crept into it
when I was fast asleep. To my good sense and
quickness I owe my life. If I had not been a clever
fly, I should have died, I dare say, like the rest.
9. As it is, here I am, alive
and merry. When I woke the next warm spring day,
there was little Rose and Mr. and Mrs. Sutton sitting
at breakfast just as they had done when first I saw
them.
10. Rose was perhaps a little
taller, and the bald place on her grand-father’s
head may have been a wee bit wider.
11. But the jam was just as good,
the honey and sugar as sweet, and the white cap just
as clean and nice to sit on. The flowers in the
garden, too, smell as fresh as ever still
I prefer the jam.
12. If I might say one word at
parting, it would be this. Do not forget that
there is room in this big wide world for a poor little
fly as well as for boys and girls.
13. And if you enjoy life and
like a good game at play, why, so do we!
So let us have our harmless games and do our tiny bit
of work for you in peace.
Write: As soon as it felt cold
the fly went to sleep. He did not wake up till
the next spring. There is room in the world for
flies as well as for boys and girls.
Questions: 1. What did the
fly now begin to feel? 2. What did he see
on the table? 3. Where did he hide himself? 4.
When did he wake from his sleep? 5. What
change did he see in Rose? 6. What does
the fly say as a parting word?