. The Kindergarten magazine. are still higher levelsahead and Greater things than these shall ye do also. S SOUTH FLY THE BIRDLINGS. JUSTINE STERNS. OUTH fly the birdlings; the flowers are sleeping;Cold is the wind, and the trees are all bare;Under leaf blankets the wee seeds are creeping;South fly the birdlings, for summer is there. Down fall the snowflakes, each light as a the trees all in shining white fur, Keeping the flowers in all kinds of weatherSafe from the wind with his whistle and whirr.[Interlude of wind whistling.] Warm grows the wind, and the rain hammers


. The Kindergarten magazine. are still higher levelsahead and Greater things than these shall ye do also. S SOUTH FLY THE BIRDLINGS. JUSTINE STERNS. OUTH fly the birdlings; the flowers are sleeping;Cold is the wind, and the trees are all bare;Under leaf blankets the wee seeds are creeping;South fly the birdlings, for summer is there. Down fall the snowflakes, each light as a the trees all in shining white fur, Keeping the flowers in all kinds of weatherSafe from the wind with his whistle and whirr.[Interlude of wind whistling.] Warm grows the wind, and the rain hammers small doorways to let in the sun; Flowers spring up, and new leaves flutter gayly;Back fly the birdlings for Winter is done. [The children who are not birds are trees, flowers, or seeds.] The Chickadees Song. Harriette M. Mills. Elsie A. Merriman. i ^- ^-^ iS ^ 5^ ^ ^—^ T ^ ^ F^- 1. Lis - ten uow to the snowbirds song,As lie swings on the branch of a children throw me crumbs to eat, When I sing my chick-a-dee-.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidk, booksubjectkindergarten