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Title: The Youth's Coronal 
Author: Hannah Flagg Gould 
Release Date: March 3, 2004 [eBook #11432] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: US-ASCII 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
YOUTH'S CORONAL*** 
E-text prepared by Amy Petri and Project Gutenberg Distributed 
Proofreaders from images provided by Internet Archive Children's 
Library and the University of Florida 
Note: Images of the original pages are available through the Florida 
Board of Education, Division of Colleges and Universities, PALMM 
Project, 2001. (Preservation and Access for American and British 
Children's Literature, 1850-1869.) See
http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/dl/UF00001878.jpg
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THE YOUTH'S CORONAL 
BY HANNAH FLAGG GOULD
Author of "Poems," etc., etc. 
1851 
Whate'er the good instruction may reveal,
The head must take_, 
before the heart can _feel.
THE MORALIZER. 
ADDRESS 
TO THE YOUTH OF MY COUNTRY. 
In preparing the following pages, my aim has been, to produce a book 
alike entertaining and instructive;--one which, in the reading, should 
afford an amusement to the mind, pleasant as the spring-blossoms on 
the tree; and, in its influences on the heart in after life, be like the good 
fruits that succeed and ripen, to refresh and nourish us, when the vernal 
season is over and gone, and the voices of the singing-birds are lost in 
the distance. 
Choosing an appropriate title for such a presentation, I have borrowed 
my idea from the words of the wise king of Israel:--"Hear the 
instruction of thy father, and forsake not the law of thy mother; for they 
shall be an ornament of grace unto thy head," &c., and other Scripture 
passages of similar figurative meaning; for, though often given in a 
sportive way, it is my design that no moral shall be conveyed in the 
volume, but such as a good and judicious parent would wish a child to 
imbibe. 
Accept, then, my young Friends, this new CORONAL of the little 
flowers of poesy which I have woven for you. When you shall have 
examined and scented it, and found no thorn to pierce--no juice or odor 
to poison you in its whole circle, wear it for the giver's sake; and enjoy 
it and profit by its healthful influences, for your own. 
Gladly would I feel assured that, in some future years,--when I shall 
have done with earthly flowers, and you will be engaged in the busy 
scenes and arduous duties of mature life,--the import of these leaves 
may from time to time arise to your memory, in all its dewy freshness,
like the fragrance which the summer-breeze wafts after us, from the 
lilies and violets we have passed and left far behind us, in our morning 
rambles. Then, if not to-day, you will be convinced that I was--as now I 
am, 
Your true Friend, 
H. F. GOULD. 
Newburyport, Mass., August, 1850. 
CONTENTS 
The Sale of the Water-Lily 
The Humming-Bird's Anger 
The Butterfly's Dream 
The Boy and the Cricket 
Fanny Spy 
Sudden Elevation 
The Stricken Bird 
The Young Sportsman 
The Pebble and the Acorn 
The Grasshopper and the Ant 
The Rose-Bud of Autumn 
Frost, the Winter-Sprite 
Vivy Vain
The Lost Kite 
The Summer-Morning Ramble 
The Shoemaker 
The Snow-Storm 
The Whirlwind 
The Disobedient Skater Boys 
Winter and Spring 
Tom Tar 
The Envious Lobster 
The Crocus' Soliloquy 
The Bee, Clover, and Thistle 
Poor Old Paul 
The Sea-Eagle's Fall 
The Two Thieves 
Jemmy String 
The Caterpillar 
The Mocking Bird 
The Silk-Worm's Will 
Dame Biddy 
Kit with the Rose
The Captive Butterfly 
The Dissatisfied Angler Boy 
The Stove and Grate-Setter 
Song of the Bees 
Summer is Come 
The Morning-Glory 
The Old Cotter and his Cow 
The Speckled One 
The Blind Musician 
The Lame Horse 
The Mushroom's Soliloquy 
The Lost Nestlings 
The Bat's Flight by Daylight 
Idle Jack 
David and Goliath 
Escape of the Doves 
Edward and Charles 
The Mountain Minstrel 
The Veteran and the Child 
Captain Kidd
The Dying Storm 
The Little Traveller 
=The Sale of the Water-Lily= 
And these would sometimes come, and cheer
The widow with a song,
To let her feel a neighbor near,
And wing an hour along. 
A pond, supplied by hidden springs,
With lilies bordered round,
Was found among the richest things,
That blessed the widow's 
ground. 
She had, besides, a gentle brook,
That wound the meadow through,
Which from the pond its being took,
And had its treasures too. 
Her eldest orphan was a son;
For, children she had three;
She called 
him, though a little one,
Her hope for days to be. 
And well he might be reckoned so;
If, from the tender shoot,
We 
know the way the branch will grow;
Or, by the flower, the fruit. 
His tongue    
    
		
	
	
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