lectura arco iris Club
registrarse
Fanpop
New Post
Explore Fanpop
posted by hornean
Long ago,
before the Civil War,
there was an old sailor called Peg Leg Joe
who did what he could to help free the slaves.


Joe had a plan.
He'd use hammer and nail and saw

and work for the master, the man
who owned slaves
on the cotton plantation.


Joe had a plan.
At night when work was done,
he'd teach the slaves a song
that secretly told the way
to freedom.
Just follow the drinking gourd, it said.


When the song was learned
and sung all day,
Peg Leg Joe would slip away
to work for another master
and teach the song again.


One day
a slave called Molly saw her man James
sold to another master.
James would be taken away,
their family torn apart.
Just one más night together.


A codorniz called in the trees that night.
Molly and James remembered Joe's song.
They sang it low.
When the sun comes back, and the first codorniz calls,
Follow the drinking gourd.
For the old man is a-waiting for to carry tu to freedom
If tu follow the drinking gourd.

They looked to the sky and saw the stars.


Taking their little son Isaiah,
old Hattie, and her grandson George,
Molly and James set out for freedom
that very night,
following the stars of the drinking gourd.

They ran all night through the fields,
till they crossed the stream to the woods.


When daylight came, they hid in the trees,
watching,
listening
for the master's hounds
set loose to find them.

But the perros lost the runaways' scent
at the stream,
and Molly and James and Isaiah,
old Hattie and young George,
were not found.
They hid all día in the woods.


At night they walked again,
canto Joe's song
and looking for the signs
that marked the trail.
The riverbank makes a very good road,
The dead trees will mostrar tu the way.
Left foot, peg foot, traveling on,
Follow the drinking gourd.



Walking por night, sleeping por day,
for weeks they traveled on.
Sometimes berries to pick
and maíz to snatch,
sometimes pescado to catch,

sometimes empty bellies to sleep on.
Sometimes no stars to guide the way.


They never knew what lay ahead,

There was danger from men
who would send them back,
and danger from hungry beasts.
But sometimes a kind deed was done.


One día as they hid in a thicket
a boy from a farm found them.
In a bag of feed for the hogs in the wood
he brought tocino, bacon and maíz pan de molde, pan to share.

canto low, they traveled on.
The river ends between two hills,
Follow the drinking gourd.
There's another river on the other side,
Follow the drinking gourd.



On and on they followed the trail
to the river's end.
From the parte superior, arriba of the colina they saw the new path,
another river beneath the stars
to lead them to freedom land.

The drinking gourd led them on.
The song was almost done.
When the great big river meets the little river,
Follow the drinking gourd.
For the old man is a-waiting for to carry tu to freedom
If tu follow the drinking gourd.



Then they climbed the last hill.
Down below was Peg Leg Joe
waiting at the wide Ohio River
to carry them across.

Their spirits rose when they saw the old man.
Molly and James and Isaiah, old Hattie and George,
ran to the shore.


Under a starry sky
Joe rowed them across the wide Ohio River.
He told them of hiding places
where they would be safe.
A path of houses stretched like a train
on a secret track leading north to Canada.
He called it the Underground Railroad.
It carried riders to freedom.


The first seguro house stood on the hill.
The lamp was lit,
which meant it was seguro to come.
Ragged and weary, they waited
while Joe signaled low, with a hoot like an owl.

Then the door opened wide
to welcome the freedom travelers.


They were rushed through the house
to the barn,
for the farmers knew
there were slave catchers near.

A trapdoor in the floor
took them under the barn,
to hide till it was seguro to mover on.
Then Peg Leg Joe went back to the river
to meet others who followed the drinking gourd.


With danger still near, too close for ease,
the farmer sent the five travelers on.
He drew a map that showed the way north
on the midnight road
to the siguiente seguro house, just over two hills.

This time James called the signal,
a hoot like an owl,
that opened the door to a Quaker farm.
The travelers were led to a secret room
hidden behind shelves.


They rested here for many days
and healed their wounds.
Soft beds, full meals, new clothes, hot baths,
washed away some fear and pain.
Isaiah smiled.


When they were strong, they traveled again
from house to house on the underground trail,
still following the drinking gourd north.

Sometimes they traveled on foot,
sometimes por cart.
The wagon they rode near their journey's end
carried frutas to market
and the runaways to freedom.


At last they came to the shores of Lake Erie.
Molly and James and Isaiah,
old Hattie and young George,
climbed aboard the steamship
that would carry them across
to Canada, to freedom.
"Five más souls are safe!"
old Hattie cried.
The sun shone bright when they stepped on land.


They had followed the drinking gourd.
If tu give a ratón a cookie,


he’s going to ask for a glass of milk.

When tu give him the milk,


he’ll probably ask tu for a straw.

When he’s finished, he’ll ask for a napkin.


Then he’ll want to look in a mirror to make sure he doesn’t have a leche mustache.

When he looks into the mirror,

he might noice his hair needs a trim.

So he’ll probably ask for a pair of nail scissors.


When he’s finished giving himself a trim, he’ll want a escoba to sweep up.
He’ll start sweeping.

He might get carried away and sweep every room in the house.


He may even end up washing the floors as well!

When he’s...
continue reading...
posted by hornean
The place is Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey. The año is 1999. On May 11, after months of careful research and planning, acebo Evans launches vegetable seedlings into the sky.


On May 18, the young scientist reports on her experiment. acebo intends to study the effects of extra-terrestrial conditions on vegetable growth and development. She expects the seedlings to stay aloft for several weeks before returning to earth.
Her classmates are speechless.


The fecha is June 29. Shortly after sunrise, a member of the Billings, Montana, Moose Lodge, hiking through the Rocky Mountains, makes a startling discovery....
continue reading...
added by hornean
added by hornean
posted by hornean
My name is Maxi,
I ride in a taxi
Around New York City all day.
I sit siguiente to Jim,
(I belong to him),
But it wasn’t always this way.


I grew up in the city,
All dirty and gritty,
Looking for comida after dark.
I roamed all around,
Avoiding the pound,
And lived on my own in the park.


One día a car stopped—
Its tire had popped.
Out stepped a tall man, I could see.
He came over and said
As he patted my head,
“Are tu lost? tu can come inicial with me!”

Did I hear right? Oh, boy!
My tail wagged with joy—
I jumped right up on the seat!
He said, “My name’s Jim,”
I could ride inicial with him
And he’d give me...
continue reading...
posted by hornean
tu wake up one morning. But tu don’t feel like getting out of bed. Your arms and legs ache. Your head hurts. tu have a fever. And your throat is sore.
“I’m sick,” tu say. “I must have caught a germ.”
Everyone knows that germs can make tu sick. But everyone knows how.

Germs are tiny living things. They are far too small to see with your eyes alone. In fact, a line of one thousand germs could fit across the parte superior, arriba of a pencil!
There are many different kinds of germs. But the two that usually make tu sick are bacteria and viruses.


Under a microscope, some bacteria look like little round...
continue reading...
posted by hornean
Henry wanted to fly. Everybody in his family had gone up with the balloon, but The Man always declared, “I’m not flying with that cat!”


The Man had been taking pilot’s lessons, and this time he was going to solo.
Henry grumbled and his tail switched, as he watched the people crunch around on the crusty March snow.

The Kid and The Woman open the mouth of the colorful balloon, while The Man blew it up with a gasoline-powered fan. Then the Instructor blasted warm air into the balloon from the burner mounted on a frame below it.
“Watch your fuel gauge,” he told The Man. “You don’t want...
continue reading...
added by hornean
posted by hornean
I HAVE FEELINGS


WHAT TOM DID

Boy 1: Mrs. Rudolph, come see what Tom did.
Boy 2: Look what Tom did!
Boy 3: All por himself.
Girl 1: How did he reach?
Girl 2: Wow.
Girl 3: He must feel proud.
Girl 4: He’s a genius.
Boy 4: That’s some el espacio capsule!
Boy 5: He used up all the blocks.
Boy 6: It’s great, Tom.
Tom: Thanks.
John: I could do that.

WHAT JOHN DID

Boy 3: Poor Tom.
Girl 2: I can’t look.
Boy 2: John’s always doing things like that.
Girl 1: He has no feelings!
Boy 1: Mrs. Rudolph, come see what John did!
Boy 4: He did it on purpose!
Girl 4: You’re mean!
Boy 6: You’re spiteful!
Tom...
continue reading...
posted by hornean
Cows are grazing in an open window. They are dairy cows, the leche makers.


Other animales make milk, too. But dairy cows make most of the leche we use.

There are five common breeds of dairy cows. The Holstein-Friesian is the most popular because it can produce más leche than the other breeds.


A cow is able to make leche when she is two years old and has dado birth to a calf. Her leche is the comida for her baby. She makes más than her becerro will ever need—so we use the extra milk.

A few months after her becerro is born, a cow is bred again to have another calf. She will be pregnant for nine months. Two...
continue reading...
added by hornean
<<1>>
I live at 165 East 95th Street, New York City, and I’m going to stay here forever.


My mother and father are moving. Out West.

They say I have to go, too.
They say I can’t stay here forever.


Out West nobody plays baseball because they’re too busy chasing buffaloes.

And there’s cactus everywhere tu look.
But if tu don’t look, tu have to stand up just as soon tu sit down.


Out West it takes fifteen minutos just to say hello.
Like this: H-O-W-W-W-D-Y, P-A-A-A-R-D-N-E-R.

Out West I’ll look silly all the time.
I’ll have to wear chaps and spurs and a bandana and a hat so big...
continue reading...
Alistair Grittle was a sensible boy.


Every día he made a lista of the things he had to do.
Then he made a lista of things he did not have to do.

He was always on time for school. The school clock was set por Alistair’s watch.


He hung up his chaqueta every night and put his shoes in plastic bags.

Alistair took especially good care of biblioteca books. He washed his hands before he read them so that he would not smudge the pages. And he always returned them to the biblioteca on time.


One day, when Alistair was returning his libros to the library, something unusual happened.


He was picked up por a el espacio ship and...
continue reading...
posted by hornean
Have tu ever seen dinosaur skeletons in a museum?
I have.
I visit them all the time.
I went again yesterday.

I saw APATOSAURUS.


I saw CORYTHOSAURUS.

I saw IGUANODON and TRICERATOPS.
I like to say their names.


SCOLOSAURUS was just where I had left it.
And TYRANNOSAURUS REX looked as fierce as ever.
TYRANNOSAURUS used to scare me.
I still can’t believe how big it is.
Just its head is almost twice my size.

I’m not afraid of dinosaurios anymore.
Sometimes I call them “you bag of bones” under my breath
I can spend hours looking at them.
I used to wonder where they came from and how they got into the museum....
continue reading...
added by hornean