. A second day in Mary Carrow's school. d them if they re-membered what lesson they said on the se-cond day of the week. Carry Deacon said, Oh, yes, this is question-afternoon. Marysaid, That is true, Carry, and I am glad tofind you remember it. These are some of the questions whichM*ry asked her little scholars. How many hands have you ? How many feet have you ? How many fingers ? How many thumbs ? How manjrtoes on each foot ? How many on both feet ? 48 A SECOND DAY IN Which is your right hand ? Which is your left hand ? How many senses have you ? What are your senses called ? What do you tas


. A second day in Mary Carrow's school. d them if they re-membered what lesson they said on the se-cond day of the week. Carry Deacon said, Oh, yes, this is question-afternoon. Marysaid, That is true, Carry, and I am glad tofind you remember it. These are some of the questions whichM*ry asked her little scholars. How many hands have you ? How many feet have you ? How many fingers ? How many thumbs ? How manjrtoes on each foot ? How many on both feet ? 48 A SECOND DAY IN Which is your right hand ? Which is your left hand ? How many senses have you ? What are your senses called ? What do you taste with ? What do you smell with ? What do you hear with ? What do you handle with ? What do you see with ?Now, my little readers, suppose you try toanswer these questions. Your kind mothers,or your older brother or sister, will tell youif you answer them correctly. Marys littlescholars missed some, but they answered mostof them correctly. When they had done answering questions,Mary told them they might go to their seats econtr 13 a The good muffin man. p. 49, MARY CARROWs SCHOOL. 49 and write on their slates. Their copies werealready set. Instead of having a recess, Mary read toher scholars a pretty story. It was a truestory about a good muffin-man. STORY OF THE GOOD MUFFIN-MAN. There was once a muffin-man who carriedmuffins about the streets of a large city tosell. He carried them in two square baskets,on his shoulders. In the street where heserved the people with muffins, a poor sailorswife lived. She was sick, and she could notwork, and she had not any body to give hermoney, for her husband was a sailor, and hewas out at sea in a great ship. She had a 50 A SECOND DAY IN -young child, and she was so poor that she hadnot even enough money to buy bread. Thegood muffin-man stopped every day and gaveher some muffins out of one of his baskets toeat. Whenever the muffin-man stopped, thelittle child would run away from her mo-ther to come to him, because she was soglad to see h


Size: 1373px × 1820px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookau, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, booksubjectconductoflife