Sunday, August 23, 2009

May

25 comments:

  1. Planting Time
    Original Author Unknown

    Sung to: "Row, Row, Row Your Boat"

    Dig, dig, dig the earth
    (make digging motion)
    Then you plant your seeds
    (pretend to drop seeds)
    A gentle rain
    (Flutter fingers down)
    And bright sunshine
    (Circle arms above head)
    Will help your flowers grow
    (Hold one arm parallel to ground and move other arm up behind it with
    fingers extended to represent a flower growing)

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  2. Super Mom
    by Joanna Fuchs

    Mom, you're a wonderful mother,
    So gentle, yet so strong.
    The many ways you show you care
    Always make me feel I belong.

    You're patient when I'm foolish;
    You give guidance when I ask;
    It seems you can do most anything;
    You're the master of every task.

    You're a dependable source of comfort;
    You're my cushion when I fall.
    You help in times of trouble;
    You support me whenever I call.

    I love you more than you know;
    You have my total respect.
    If I had my choice of mothers,
    You'd be the one I'd select!

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  3. May by Sara Teasdale

    May's a month of happy sounds,
    The hum of buzzing bees,
    The chirp of little baby birds
    And the song of a gentle breeze.

    The grass is green.
    Flower blossoms I have seen.
    The days are warm.
    By evening it cools.
    It's time to find the garden tools.

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  5. Fuzzy Wuzzy, Creepy Crawly
    Poem by Lilian Schulz.

    Fuzzy wuzzy, creepy crawly
    Caterpillar funny,
    You will be a butterfly
    When the days are sunny.
    Winging, flinging, dancing, springing
    Butterfly so yellow,
    You were once a caterpillar,
    Wiggly, wiggly fellow.

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  6. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  7. April Showers Bring May Flowers

    Leslie Paige

    Shall I compare thee to a summer day?
    'Cause April is the best of all the months.
    When the rain comes down, all I do is play.
    And even though I can't play outside,
    I will find a way not to be very bored.
    I can do something inside by myself,
    Watch television or play a boardgame.
    Maybe my brother can play with me?
    Either way I can play.
    After we have all that fun, fun, fun,
    The next few days will bring the month of May.
    When we wake up, we will see May flowers.
    The May flowers are lots of colors.
    The month of May is my second best month.

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  8. Jason Radel

    "'Tis like the birthday of the world,

    When earth was born in bloom;

    The light is made of many dyes,

    The air is all perfume:

    There's crimson buds, and white and blue,

    The very rainbow showers

    Have turned to blossoms where they fell,

    And sown the earth with flowers."

    - Thomas Hood

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  9. "The wind is tossing the lilacs,
    The new leaves laugh in the sun,
    And the petals fall on the orchard wall,
    But for me the spring is done.

    Beneath the apple blossoms
    I go a wintry way,
    For love that smiled in April
    Is false to me in May."
    - Sara Teasdale, May

    Posted by Rebecca Selfridge

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  10. Mommy I Love You

    Mommy, I love you
    For all that you do.
    I'll kiss you and hug you
    'Cause you love me, too.
    You feed me and need me
    To teach you to play,
    So smile 'cause I love you
    On this Mother's Day.

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  11. Mother's day activity
    I was given a page with this poem on it. It had a picture of my son, and his handprints on it in paint. Even six years later, I still have it hanging on my bulletin board in my home office. LOVE THIS!

    Sometimes you get discouraged
    Because I am so small
    And always leave my fingerprints
    On furniture and walls.

    But every day I'm growing -
    I'll be grown some day
    And all those tiny handprints
    Will surely fade away.

    So here's a little handprint
    Just so you can recall
    Exactly how my fingers looked
    When I was very small.

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  12. Emily Dickinson
    MAY-FLOWER.
    Pink, small, and punctual,
    Aromatic, low,
    Covert in April,
    Candid in May,
    Dear to the moss,
    Known by the knoll,
    Next to the robin
    In every human soul.
    Bold little beauty,
    Bedecked with thee,
    Nature forswears
    Antiquity

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  13. Daffodils a poem
    by William Wordsworth

    I wandered lonely as a cloud
    That floats on high o'er vales and hills,
    When all at once I saw a crowd,
    A host, of golden daffodils;
    Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
    Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.

    Continuous as the stars that shine
    And twinkle on the milky way,
    They stretched in never-ending line
    Along the margin of a bay:
    Ten thousand saw I at a glance,
    Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.

    The waves beside them danced, but they
    Out-did the sparkling leaves in glee;
    A poet could not be but gay,
    In such a jocund company!
    I gazed—and gazed—but little thought
    What wealth the show to me had brought:

    For oft, when on my couch I lie
    In vacant or in pensive mood,
    They flash upon that inward eye
    Which is the bliss of solitude;
    And then my heart with pleasure fills,
    And dances with the daffodils.

    ReplyDelete
  14. The Last Day of School
    by Robert Pottle

    Summer vacation is starting today.
    The teachers are shouting out,
    "Hip, hip, hooray!"
    Our grumpy old principal grins ear to ear,
    and runs down the hall shouting,
    "Summer is here!"
    The buses come early -
    they're usually late.
    The teachers say,
    "Hurry up! Pack up! Don't wait!"
    The school bell is ringing.
    There's no time to chat.
    The whole school is emptied
    in one second flat.
    Everyone's happy.
    Our spirits are flying.
    Except for our parents.
    They're sulking and crying.

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  15. Terra Mangan

    A Song of Flowers
    Sung to “Sing a Song of Sixpence”

    Sing a song of flowers, flowers all around.
    Flowers that are growing, growing in the ground
    Flowers of each color make a pretty view.
    Red and orange and yellow.
    And blue and purple too.

    Unknown author

    ReplyDelete
  16. On Mother's Day
    Aileen Fisher

    On Mother's Day we got up first
    so full of plans we almost burst.

    We started breakfast right away
    as our surprise for Mother's Day.

    We picked some flowers, then hurried back
    to make the coffee- rather black.

    We wrapped our gifts and wrote a card
    and boiled eggs- a little hard.

    And then we sang a serenade,
    which burned the toast, I am afraid.

    But Mother said, amidst our cheers,
    "Oh, what a big surprise, my dears,
    I've not had such a treat in years."
    And she was smiling to her ears!

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  17. The Garden Seat

    By: Thomas Hardy

    Its former green is blue and thin,
    And it's once firm legs sink in and in;
    Soon it will break down unaware.

    At night when reddest flowers are black
    Those who once sat thereon come back;
    Quite a row of them sitting there,
    Quite a row of them sitting there.

    With them the seat does not break
    down,
    Nor winter freeze them, nor floods
    drown,
    For they are as light as upper air,
    They are as light as upper air!

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  18. Daffodowndilly

    by A.A. Milne

    She wore her yellow sun-bonnet,
    She wore her greenest gown;
    She turned to the south wind
    And curtsied up and down.
    She turned to the sunlight
    And shook her yellow head,
    And whispered to her neighbour:
    "Winter is dead." 

    ReplyDelete
  19. Ghost-Flowers

    IN shining groups, each stem a pearly ray,
    Weird flecks of light within the shadowed wood,
    They dwell aloof, a spotless sisterhood.
    No Angelus, except the wild bird's lay,
    Awakes these forest nuns; yet night and day
    Their heads are bent, as if in prayerful mood.
    A touch will mar their snow, and tempests rude
    Defile; but in the mist fresh blossoms stray
    From spirit-gardens just beyond our ken.
    Each year we seek their virgin haunts, to look
    Upon new loveliness, and watch again
    Their shy devotions near the singing brook;
    Then, mingling in the dizzy stir of men,
    Forget the vows made in that cloistered nook.

    By: Mary Thacher Higginson

    ReplyDelete
  20. What is Pink?

    ~Christina Rossetti

    What is pink? A rose is pink
    By the fountain's brink.
    What is red? A poppy's red
    In its barley bed.
    What is blue? The sky is blue
    Where the clouds float through.
    What is white? A swan is white
    Sailing in the light.
    What is yellow? Pears are yellow,
    Rich and ripe and mellow.
    What is green? The grass is green,
    With small flowers between.
    What is violet? Clouds are violet
    In the summer twilight.
    What is orange? Why, an orange,
    Just an orange!

    ReplyDelete
  21. May-Baskets

    by Evaleen Stein

    Let us take our baskets early
    To the meadows green,
    While the wild-flowers still are pearly
    With the dewdrops' sheen.

    Fill them full of blossoms rosy,
    Violets and gay
    Cowslips, every pretty posy
    Welcoming the May.

    Then our lovely loads we'll carry
    Down the village street,
    On each door, with laughter merry,
    Hang a basket sweet.

    Hey-a-day-day! It is spring now,
    Lazy folks, awake!
    See the pretty things we bring now
    For the May-day's sake!

    ReplyDelete
  22. Weeds
    by Charlotte Zolotow

    I can’t understand
    people who hate weeds.
    Dandelions and buttercups
    and clover for the bees
    and maybe some Queen Anne’s lace
    are all a garden needs.

    ReplyDelete
  23. My Spring Garden
    Here is my little garden,
    Some seeds I'm going to sow.
    Here is my rake to rake the ground,
    Here is my handy hoe.
    Here is the big, round yellow sun;
    The sun warms everything.
    Here are the rain clouds in the sky;
    The birds will start to sing.

    Little plants will wake up soon,
    And lift their sleepy heads;
    Little plants will grow and grow
    In their little, warm earth beds.

    ReplyDelete
  24. May-Baskets

    by Evaleen Stein

    Let us take our baskets early
    To the meadows green,
    While the wild-flowers still are pearly
    With the dewdrops' sheen.

    Fill them full of blossoms rosy,
    Violets and gay
    Cowslips, every pretty posy
    Welcoming the May.

    Then our lovely loads we'll carry
    Down the village street,
    On each door, with laughter merry,
    Hang a basket sweet.

    Hey-a-day-day! It is spring now,
    Lazy folks, awake!
    See the pretty things we bring now
    For the May-day's sake!

    ReplyDelete
  25. April Showers Bring May Flowers


    April showers bring May flowers,
    That is what they say.
    But if all the showers turned to flowers, We’d have quite a colourful day!
    There’d be bluebells and cockleshells, Tulips red and green,
    Daffodils and Chinese squill,
    The brightest you’ve ever seen

    ReplyDelete