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Froebel's Gifts
Kate Douglas Wiggin
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R843
Discovery Miles 8 430
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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When Rebecca Rowena Randall goes to live with her spinster aunts in Riverboro, Rebecca's aunts find her to be more of a handful than they bargained for. But even more surprising than the transition of Rebecca into a well-mannered young lady are the effects that Rebecca has on her aunts' humdrum lives. Rebecca, with her wide dark eyes and spirit that no walls can contain, will change their lives -- and the lives of everyone she meets -- forever.
Mrs. Bird thought, as the Christmas music floated in upon her
gentle sleep, that she had slipped into heaven with her new baby,
and that angels were bidding them welcome. But the tiny bundle by
her side stirred a little, though it was scarcely more than the
ruffling of a feather; and she awoke, drew the baby closer, and
listened to the voices outside brimming with joy:
"Carol, brothers, carol,
Carol joyfully,
Carol the good tidings,
Carol merrily "
"Why, my baby," whispered Mrs. Bird in soft surprise, "I had
forgotten what day it was. You are a little Christmas child, and we
will name you 'Carol' -- mother's little Christmas Carol "
Kate Douglas Wiggin (1856-1923), author of such works as
"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, " "Penelope's English Experiences, "
and "A Village Stradivarius," was one of America's most popular
writers of books for young people.
SUMMER MAGIC!
"When Captain Carey went on his long journey into the unknown
and uncharted land, the rest of the Careys tried in vain for a few
months to be still a family, and did not succeed at all. They clung
as closely to one another as ever they could, but there was always
a gap in the circle where father had been. The only thing to do was
to remember father's pride and justify it, to recall his care for
mother and take his place so far as might be; the only thing for
all, as the months went on, was to be what mother called the three
Bs -- brave, bright, and busy."
Can mother Nancy Carey find happy futures for her daughters
Nancy and Kitty in turn-of-the-century Beulah, Maine?
Perhaps? But for certain, she finds some wonderful characters
and sparkling moments of Gilded Age Girl-Power!
This heart-warming classic novel of a better time by the author
of "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm" was the basis for Disney's 1963
film "Summer Magic" with Hayley Mills.
FROEBEL'S GIFTS BY FATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN AND NCRA ARCHIBALD The i rue
teacher is a student of human nature, and the student of human
nature is the pupil of God. HORATIO STEEBINS BOSTON AND NEW YORK
EOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY PEEPACE THE tliree little volumes on tLat
Republic of Childhood, the kindergarten, of which this hand book,
dealing with the gifts, forms the initial number, might well be
called Chips from a Kin dergarten Workshop. They are the outcome of
talks and conferences on Froebels educational principles with
successive groups of earnest young women here, there, and
everywhere, for fifteen years, and represent as much practical work
at the bench as a carpenter could show in a similar length of time.
They are the result of mutual give and take, of question and
answer, of effort and experience, of the friction of minds against
one another, of ideas struck out in the heat of argument, and of
varied experience with many hundred little children of all
nationalities and conditions. They are not theories, written in the
seclusion of the study and if perchance they have the defects, so
should they have the virtues, vi PREFACE too, of work corrected and
revised at every step by the child in the midst. If It is objected
that many things in them have been heard before, we can but say
with Montaigne Truth and reason are common to every one, and are no
more his who spake them first than his who spake them after. The
various talks have been cut down here, enlarged there, condensed in
one place, amplified in another, from year to year, as knowledge
and experience have grown many of the ideas which they advocated in
the beginning have been elimi nated, as being completely reversed
by thepassage of time, and much new matter has been added as the
kindergarten principle has developed. They are as much a growth as
a coral reef, though the authors have little hope that they will be
as enduring. The kindergarten of 1895 is not the kinder garten of
1880, for the science of education has made great strides in these
past fifteen years. Many things which were held to be vital
principles when we began our talks with kindergarten students, we
now find were but lifeless methods after all. It is not that time
has reversed the fundamental principles on which the kindergarten
PBJSFACE vii rests, these are as true as trutli and as change less
but the Interpretation of them has greatly changed and broadened
with the passage of years, and many of the instrumentalities of
education which Froebel devised are destined to further
transformation in the future. For this reason, the last book on the
kindergarten is sometimes the best book, since it naturally
embodies the latest thought and discovery on the subject. These
talks on the kindergarten have purposely been divested of a certain
amount of technicality and detail, in the hope that they will thus
reach not only kindergarten students, but the many mothers and
teachers who really long to know what Froebels system of education
is and what it aims to do. They will never of themselves make a
kindergartner, and are not intended to do so but they certainly
should shed some light on Froebel s theories, and establish a basis
on which they can be worked out in the home and in the school. We
shall attempt no defense of the kindergar ten here. It has passed
the experimental stage It is no longer on trial for its life and no
longer humbly begging, hat in hand, for a place to lay its head. As
an educational idea, it is a recog viii PREFACE nized part of the
great system of child-training and to say, in this year of our
Lord, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-five, that one does not
believe in the kindergarten is as if one said, I do not believe in
electricity, or, I never saw much force in the law of
gravitation...
Shirley Temple did a lot to make Rebecca famous when she won the
world's heart in the movie we all remember. But the story is more
than Temple, the film, or our memory of it: this is the tale of the
little showgirl who, sent to the country to live with prim and
proper relatives, is forbidden to do anything, well, showy.
But Rebecca has other ideas, of course, and you know she'll win
over the hearts and minds of everyone who'll see her show. . .
.
Certainly she won over Jack London. In 1904 he wrote to Wiggin
herself: "May I thank you for Rebecca. . . ? I would have quested
the wide world over to make her mine, only I was born too long ago
and she was born but yesterday.... Why could she not have been my
daughter? Why couldn't it have been I who bought the three hundred
cakes of soap? Why, O, why?" And Mark Twain, too: he described
"Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm" as "beautiful and warm and
satisfying."
Eleven-year-old Rebecca Randall is quite a handful - and now she's
leaving her beloved Sunnybrook Farm to live with her well-to-do
elderly aunts and get an education. But they were expecting
Rebecca's quiet, hard-working older sister instead. Can the
bright-eyed and talkative girl win them over...especially her
strict, rule-bound Aunt Miranda? Just as Rebecca's "grand spirit"
charms everyone in the story, it will captivate readers, too.
Abridged for easier reading and carefully rewritten, with "Classic
Starts[trademark]", young readers can experience the wonder of
timeless stories from an early age.
Hugely popular when it was first published in 1903 and admired by
authors from Jack London to Mark Twain, this delightful novel
introduced a heroine as irrepressible and fun-loving as Tom Sawyer,
who would serve as a role model for a century of American girls and
women. When ten-year-old Rebecca Randall comes to live with flinty
aunt Miranda and her sentimental sister Jane in a small town in
Maine, they expect to turn her into a proper young lady. Instead,
Rebecca will end up changing them. Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm is as
charming today as it was one hundred years ago and is unexpectedly
poignant in its evocation of an America contemplating the choices
open to women facing their futures in a new era. For more than
seventy years, Penguin has been the leading publisher of classic
literature in the English-speaking world. With more than 1,700
titles, Penguin Classics represents a global bookshelf of the best
works throughout history and across genres and disciplines. Readers
trust the series to provide authoritative texts enhanced by
introductions and notes by distinguished scholars and contemporary
authors, as well as up-to-date translations by award-winning
translators.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
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