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you always seem just in my way, sir?" "Little Bo-peep, it is your sheep, Not you, that I come to see, ma'am; Their wool is so soft, that I want it oft In my nest for my young ones and me, ma'am." Said little Bo-peep, "The wool you may sweep From the hedges and many a thorn, sir; But don't make your attacks upon my sheep's backs, For I will not have their wool torn, sir." The rook he cawed, and he hummed and hawed, And muttered, "What matter, what matter?" Bo-peep she said, "Go--I have said no, no; So it's useless for you to chatter." * * * * * "There's a merry brown thrush sitting up in the tree; He's singing to me! He's singing to me!" "And what does he say, little girl, little boy?" "'Oh, the world's running over with joy! Don't you hear? Don't you see? Hush! Look! In my tree I'm as happy as happy can be.'" LESSON XXIV. _THE MOUSE AND ITS WAYS._ [Illustration] 1. Here are some of our near neighbors, little fellows in fur, who are so very friendly that they visit us by night and by day, and seem as much at home in our house as we are. 2. When, in the night, we hear tiny feet as they patter over the floor, or scamper across the pillow, or we find in the morning that the loaf for breakfast has been gnawed and spoiled, we are not apt to feel friendly toward the mouse. [Illustration] 3. But, as he stands here by the trap, let us take a good look at him. We find that he has a coat of fine fur, which he always keeps clean, and a long tail that has no hair. He has whiskers like the cat; sharp claws, so that he can run up the side of a house, or climb anything that is a little rough; and eyes that can see in the night. 4. He has large ears, so that he can hear the faintest sound; and short legs, so that he can creep into the smallest hole. 5. His nose is pointed, and his under jaw is shorter than the upper one. In front, on each jaw, he has two sharp teeth, shaped like the edge of a chisel, and these he uses to gnaw with. 6. These teeth are growing all the while; and if he does not gnaw something hard nearly every day, so as to wear them off, they will soon become so long that he can not use them. LESSON XXV. _STORIES ABOUT MICE._ [Illustration: When the cat's away The mice will play.] 1. Mice increase so fast that, if we did not have some wa
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