Mother Stories 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mother Stories, by Maud Lindsay 
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Title: Mother Stories 
Author: Maud Lindsay 
Illustrator: Sarah Noble-Ives 
Release Date: May 28, 2005 [EBook #15929] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOTHER 
STORIES *** 
 
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed 
Proofreading Team. 
 
MOTHER STORIES 
BY 
MAUD LINDSAY 
ILLUSTRATED by SARAH NOBLE-IVES 
"_Mother, a story told at the right time Is a looking-glass for the 
mind_." FROEBEL. 
TWENTY-EIGHTH EDITION 
MILTON BRADLEY COMPANY SPRINGFIELD MASS. 1928
=Bradley Quality Books= PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF 
AMERICA 
DEDICATED to MY MOTHER 
 
PREFACE 
I have endeavored to write, for mothers and dear little children, a few 
simple stories, embodying some of the truths of Froebel's Mother Play. 
The Mother Play is such a vast treasure house of Truth, that each one 
who seeks among its stores may bring to light some gem; and though, 
perhaps, I have missed its diamonds and rubies, I trust my string of 
pearls may find acceptance with some mother who is trying to live with 
her children. 
I have written my own mottoes, with a few exceptions, that I might 
emphasize the particular lesson which I endeavor to teach in the story; 
for every motto in the Mother Play comprehends so much that it is 
impossible to use the whole for a single subject. From "The Bridge" for 
instance, which is replete with lessons, I have taken only one,--for the 
story of the "Little Traveler." 
Most of these stories have been told and retold to little children, and are 
surrounded, in my eyes, by a halo of listening faces. 
"Mrs. Tabby Gray" is founded on a true story of a favorite cat. "The 
Journey" is a new version of the old Stage Coach game, much loved by 
our grandmothers; and I am indebted to some old story, read in 
childhood, for the suggestion of "Dust Under the Rug," which was a 
successful experiment in a kindergarten to test the possibility of 
interesting little children in a story after the order of Grimm, with the 
wicked stepmother and her violent daughter eradicated. 
Elizabeth Peabody says we are all free to look out of each other's 
windows; and so I place mine at the service of all who care to see what 
its tiny panes command. 
MAUD LINDSAY. 
 
LIST OF STORIES 
 
The Wind's Work 
Mrs. Tabby Gray
Fleet Wing and Sweet Voice 
The Little Girl with the Light 
The Little Gray Pony 
How the Home Was Built 
The Little Traveler 
The Open Gate 
Inside the Garden Gate 
The Journey 
Giant Energy and Fairy Skill 
The Search for a Good Child 
The Closing Door 
The Minstrel's Song 
Dust Under the Rug 
The Story of Gretchen 
The King's Birthday 
 
_THE WIND'S WORK_ 
MOTTO FOR THE MOTHER 
_Power invisible that God reveals, The child within all nature feels, 
Like the great wind that unseen goes, Yet helps the world's work as it 
blows_. 
One morning Jan waked up very early, and the first thing he saw when 
he opened his eyes was his great kite in the corner. His big brother had 
made it for him; and it had a smiling face, and a long tail that reached 
from the bed to the fireplace. It did not smile at Jan that morning 
though, but looked very sorrowful and seemed to say "Why was I made? 
Not to stand in a corner, I hope!" for it had been finished for two whole 
days and not a breeze had blown to carry it up like a bird in the air. 
Jan jumped out of bed, dressed himself, and ran to the door to see if the 
windmill on the hill was at work; for he hoped that the wind had come 
in the night. But the mill was silent and its arms stood still. Not even a 
leaf turned over in the yard. 
The windmill stood on a high hill where all the people could see it, and 
when its long arms went whirling around every one knew that there 
was no danger of being hungry, for then the Miller was busy from morn 
to night grinding the grain that the farmers brought him. 
When Jan looked out, however, the Miller had nothing to do, and was
standing in his doorway, watching the clouds, and saying to himself 
(though Jan could not hear him):-- 
"_Oh! how I wish the wind would blow So that my windmill's sails 
might go, To turn my heavy millstones    
    
		
	
	
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