登陆注册
19490500000046

第46章 MARGERY'S GARDEN(1)

I have always been inclined to avoid, in my work among children, the "how to make" and "how to do" kind of story; it is too likely to trespass on the ground belonging by right to its more artistic and less intentional kinsfolk.Nevertheless, there is a legitimate place for the instruction-story.Within its own limits, and especially in a school use, it has a real purpose to serve, and a real desire to meet.Children have a genuine taste for such morsels of practical information, if the bites aren't made too big and too solid.And to the teacher of the first grades, from whom so much is demanded in the way of practical instruction, I know that these stories are a boon.They must be chosen with care, and used with discretion, but they need never be ignored.

I venture to give some little stories of this type, which I hope may be of use in the schools where country life and country work is an unknown experience to the children.

There was once a little girl named Margery, who had always lived in the city.The flat where her mother and father lived was at the top of a big apartment-house, and you couldn't see a great deal from the windows, except clothes-lines on other people's roofs.Margery did not know much about trees and flowers, but she loved them dearly; whenever it was a pleasant Sunday she used to go with her mother and father to the park and look at the lovely flower-beds.They seemed always to be finished, though, and Margery was always wishing she could see them grow.

One spring, when Margery was nine, her father's work changed so that he could move into the country, and he took a little house a short distance outside the town where his new position was.Margery was delighted.And the very first thing she said, when her father told her about it, was, "Oh, may I have a garden? MAY I have a garden?"Margery's mother was almost as eager for a garden as she was, and Margery's father said he expected to live on their vegetables all the rest of his life! So it was soon agreed that the garden should be the first thing attended to.

Behind the little house were apple trees, a plum tree, and two or three pear trees; then came a stretch of rough grass, and then a stone wall, with a gate leading into the pasture.It was in the grassy land that the garden was to be.A big piece was to be used for corn and peas and beans, and a little piece at the end was to be saved for Margery.

"What shall we have in it?" asked her mother.

"Flowers," said Margery, with shining eyes,--"blue, and white, and yellow, and pink,--every kind of flower!""Surely, flowers," said her mother, "and shall we not have a little salad garden in the midst, as they do in England?""What is a salad garden?" Margery asked.

"It is a garden where you have all the things that make nice salad," said her mother, laughing, for Margery was fond of salads; "you have lettuce, and endive, and romaine, and parsley, and radishes, and cucumbers, and perhaps little beets and young onions.""Oh! how good it sounds!" said Margery."I vote for the salad garden." That very evening, Margery's father took pencil and paper, and drew out a plan for her garden; first, they talked it all over, then he drew whatthey decided on; it looked like the diagram on the next page.

"The outside strip is for flowers," said Margery's father, "and the next marks mean a footpath, all the way round the beds; that is so you can get at the flowers to weed and to pick; there is a wider path through the middle, and the rest is all for rows of salad vegetables.""Papa, it is glorious!" said Margery.

Papa laughed."I hope you will still think it glorious when the weeding time comes," he said, "for you know, you and mother have promised to take care of this garden, while I take care of the big one.""I wouldn't NOT take care of it for anything!" said Margery."I want to feel that it is my very own."Her father kissed her, and said it was certainly her "very own."Two evenings after that, when Margery was called in from her first ramble in a "really, truly pasture," she found the expressman at the door of the little house.

"Something for you, Margery," said her mother, with the look she had when something nice was happening.

It was a box, quite a big box, with a label on it that said:-- MISS MARGERY BROWN, WOODVILLE, MASS.

From Seeds and Plants Company, Boston.

Margery could hardly wait to open it.It was filled with little packages, all with printed labels; and in the packages, of course, were seeds.It made Margery dance, just to read the names,--nasturtium, giant helianthus, coreopsis, calendula, Canterbury bells: more names than I can tell you, and other packages, bigger, that said, "Peas: Dwarf Telephone," and "Sweet Corn," and such things! Margery could almost smell the posies, she was so excited.Only, she had seen so little of flowers that she did not always know what the names meant.She did not know that a helianthus was a sunflower till her mother told her, and she had never seen the dear, blue, bell-shaped flowers that always grow in old-fashioned gardens, and are called Canterbury bells.She thought the calendula must be a strange, grand flower, by its name; but her mother told her it was the gay, sturdy, every-dayish little posy called a marigold.There was a great deal for a little city girl to be surprised about, and it did seem as if morning was a long way off!

"Did you think you could plant them in the morning?" asked her mother."You know, dear, the ground has to be made ready first; it takes a little time,--it may be several days before you can plant."That was another surprise.Margery had thought she could begin to sow the seed right off.

同类推荐
  • 灵应传

    灵应传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 穷通宝鉴

    穷通宝鉴

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 中恶门

    中恶门

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 闲二首

    闲二首

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 十六国春秋

    十六国春秋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 美国FBI重案实录

    美国FBI重案实录

    《美国FBI重案实录》是一本极其难得的外文引进版图书,作者在两年中走访了多位美国FBI联邦调查局退役特工,根据他们口述,将其特工生涯中主办或参与的几十起轰动全美的案件破获过程记录下来,并在此基础上经过加工写成此小说。文中涉及的案件全部为真人真事,许多案例曾被改编为享誉全世界的好莱坞电影。在这些令人发指的案件背后,读者不仅能见识到一个个诡异、狡诈的案犯,也能感受到为正义出击的FBI特工们舍生忘死、追寻真相的气魄,更能体验到破译谜题的快感和学到FBI侦破疑难案件的经验与知识。本书收录案件8起,为重案系列的第一部。
  • 仙国至尊

    仙国至尊

    九界万族,凭何不朽居高庙?天星众生,岂能世代为囚徒?我宁开,誓证至尊,不敬佛魔敬百姓!我宁开,欲立仙国,不问鬼神问苍生!朕在一日,尔等,便休想踏入天星一步!朕在一日,人族,便是九界十族之首!不服者,战!违令者,斩!
  • 红枫杀人事件

    红枫杀人事件

    北漂乐手方咏喻在P市一家酒吧任主音吉他手,受失恋打击无奈迁居,却因此结识了嘴贱嗜赌的烟鬼萧烨,两人开始合租一室的生活。在相处中方咏喻逐渐发现萧烨拥有敏锐的观察力和强大的逻辑推理能力,其真实身份也引起方的好奇。时年,适逢P市著名家族企业阮氏财团大小姐18岁生日,方咏喻所在的乐队意外被相中到生日宴会演出;而同时,萧烨也受到老友委托,调查财团收到恐吓信的事件。看似偶然的巧合下,意外果然发生,恐吓信终于拉开了连环凶杀事件的帷幕,也让方与萧深陷其中……连环杀人案背后,血色的枫叶随风飘荡,唤来如墨一般漆黑、深邃的真相……
  • 红鲤梦之梦红尘

    红鲤梦之梦红尘

    不知是谁年少轻狂盛气凌人,伤人终伤情不知是谁永恒不变专心寻情,一心系一人又不知是谁狼狈不堪气若游丝,魂洒诛仙台还有谁是为了一诺守一人白了三千发?流光不随人齐逝伊人殒难收覆水年华华裳服——舞霓裳一眼两相忘红尘劫中浮光泪何故盼?终是梦一场
  • 海涛汹涌

    海涛汹涌

    本是一个普通人由于一个奇怪的梦,变的不平凡了。是他引导了一个民族的复兴崛起,是他制定了这个世界新的游戏规则。。。。。。。这部书的主体是一个现代的成人童话故事,坚持看下去也许你能在里面找到些什么。
  • 战魔之巅

    战魔之巅

    一神欲绝顶,众神皆陨落。神像崩碎,各界混乱。莱恩,闻名于维亚大陆上的唯一神弃者,得到水晶骷髅头的传承。看他如何成为全才,怎样爽遍天下。
  • 江山送美人

    江山送美人

    皇上对着一个女子说:“我愿送你江山,得你一嫣然,只为,你是我的红颜。”自古美人嫁英雄,宝剑赠英雄,赤兔配吕布。可是我们要说得这位英雄是远古时期鸿锊国的皇上东方嬿起,这个国家至今无人走出国界,也就是说它大的出奇。这位英雄把自己的江山送给了一个女人,是心甘情愿的送,没有任何权谋。那么,她是个什么样的女人呢?她是盗贼,只偷金银珠宝,奇花异草,石雕玉琢。她是美女,是那种倾国倾城,国色天香的美女,而且永远都不会衰老。她的个性是一个字,贪,贪,贪。她的真实身份上古时期遗落人间的仙胎,父母是谁?无从考证。在天山温泉里孕育而成人像,生来会飞,长到十八岁,从此再没变化,距今已活了三亿万年之久。
  • 香巴拉之城

    香巴拉之城

    游侠夏雪在藏南罗布寺失踪,陈风和顾知今赶到,向导说窝拉措湖水突然消失,夏雪进入了湖底。现在,湖水上涨,夏雪没能回来。印度土王公主莲娜宁吉大总管尼泊尔神鹰会那京将军藏地潜水师银骷髅天龙寺高手东天青龙等各方势力纷至沓来,一场寻找失落古城香巴拉之战随即展开。
  • 渡仙道

    渡仙道

    大国的铁骑为了祖国的疆土,让一处处和平的土地硝烟纷飞。一个武力至上的世界,一个枭雄遍地的世界,无数动乱潜藏在暗影之中。有了力量,才能保护阿姐,才能守住村民。十五岁的唐逸,对于力量的渴求从未像现在这般强烈。因为他要站起来,站在最高处,他要证明一些东西,他必须要告诉一些人:“你们是错的,而我,将纠正这一切”-这本书是借用的lol的背景故事已经人物的塑形,本来是想写一篇lol文的,但是写来写去总感觉欠缺了一点什么,自我感觉也不是很良好,况且lol角色深入人心,故事很难塑造,至少以作者的笔力无法做到,所以打了一个擦边球,用另一个世界的故事来讲我心中的lol
  • 棍扫六合

    棍扫六合

    铁血男儿,一诺千金。信守承诺,誓要搅动八荒六合。灭魔棍在手,谁敢挡我成神路。