Lesson:

1. I met a little cottage girl:


She was eight years old, she said;


Her hair was thick with many a curl,


That clustered round her head.





2. She had a rustic, woodland air,


And she was wildly clad:


Her eyes were fair, and very fair;—


Her beauty made me glad.





3. 'Sisters and brothers, little maid,


How many may you be?'


'How many? Seven in all,' she said,


And, wondering, looked at me.





4. 'And where are they? I pray you tell.'


She answered, 'Seven are we;


And two of us at Conway dwell,


And two are gone to sea.





5. 'Two of us in the churchyard lie,


My sister and my brother;


And, in the churchyard cottage, I


Dwell near them with my mother,'





6. 'You say that two at Conway dwell,


And two are gone to sea,


Yet ye are seven! I pray you tell,


Sweet maid, how this may be.'





7. Then did the little maid reply,


'Seven boys and girls are we;


Two of us in the churchyard lie,


Beneath the churchyard tree.'





8. 'You run about, my little maid,


Your limbs, they are alive;


If two are in the churchyard laid,


Then ye are only five.'





9. 'Their graves are green, they may be seen,'


The little maid replied,


'Twelve steps or more from mother's door,


And they are side by side.





10. 'My stockings there I often knit,


My kerchief there I hem;


And there upon the ground I sit,


And sing a song to them.





11. 'And often after sunset, sir,


When it is light and fair,


I take my little porringer,


And eat my supper there.





12. 'The first that died was sister Jane;


In bed she moaning lay,


Till God released her from her pain;


And then she went away.





13. 'So in the churchyard she was laid;


And, when the grass was dry,


Together round her grave we played,


My brother John and I.





14. 'And when the ground was white with snow,


And I could run and slide,


My brother John was forced to go,


And he lies by her side.'





15. 'How many are you, then?' said I,


'If they two are in heaven?'


Quick was the little maid's reply,


'O master! we are seven.'





16. 'But they are dead; those two are dead!


Their spirits are in heaven!'


'T was throwing words away: for still


The little maid would have her will,


And said, 'Nay, we are seven.'





William Wordsworth.





DEFINITIONS


1. Clustered: Hung in bunches.


2. Rustic: Country-like.


10. Kerchief: Handkerchief.


11. Porringer: A small dish for soup or porridge.


12. Released: Freed, relieved.

Teaching Guide:

Step 1: Study the New Words

  • Listen to the new words.
  • Recite each of the new words aloud.

Step 2: Examine the Lesson Image

Describe the image, its setting, and its characters.

Step 3: Read the Lesson Passage

  • Find each new word in the passage.
  • Practice reading the passage, both silently and aloud.
  • Upon mastering the passage, recite it aloud to your instructor.

Step 4: Complete Lesson Vocabulary, Narration, and Copywork

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