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Arnold, Gertrude Weld

"A Mother's List of Books for Children"


. . . . . . .
He gave us eyes to see them,
And lips that we might tell,
How great is God Almighty,
Who hath made all things well.
KEBLE.

AIKEN, JOHN, and A.L. (A.) BARBAULD.
Eyes and No Eyes, and Other Stories.
Heath. 20
"Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, in Over the Teacups, says of the
story Eyes and No Eyes: I have never seen anything of the kind
half so good. I advise you, if you are a child anywhere under
forty-five, and do not yet wear glasses, to send at once for
Evenings at Home, and read that story. For myself, I am always
grateful to the writer of it for calling my attention to common
things."
Eyes and No Eyes, and Travellers' Wonders, from Aiken and Barbauld's
Evenings at Home, The Three Giants, by Mrs. Marcet, and A Curious (p. 70)
Instrument, by Jane Taylor, are the tales given. They all encourage a
child's powers of observation.

PARSONS, F.T. (S.) (formerly Mrs. W.S. Dana).
Plants and Their Children.
American Book. .65
While these elementary talks have been arranged to accompany the
school year, they give so much information about fruits and seeds,
young plants, roots and stems, flowers, et cetera, told in Mrs.


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