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Now We Are Six. A. A. MilneЧитать онлайн книгу.

Now We Are Six - A. A. Milne


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THE LITTLE BLACK HEN

       THE FRIEND

       THE GOOD LITTLE GIRL

       A THOUGHT

       KING HILARY AND THE BEGGARMAN

       SWING SONG

       EXPLAINED

       TWICE TIMES

       THE MORNING WALK

       CRADLE SONG

       WAITING AT THE WINDOW

       PINKLE PURR

       WIND ON THE HILL

       FORGOTTEN

       IN THE DARK

       THE END

       SOLITUDE

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      I have a house where I go

       When there’s too many people,

      I have a house where I go

       Where no one can be;

      I have a house where I go,

      Where nobody ever says ‘No’;

      Where no one says anything – so

       There is no one but me.

       KING JOHN’S CHRISTMAS

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      King John was not a good man –

       He had his little ways.

      And sometimes no one spoke to him

       For days and days and days.

      And men who came across him,

       When walking in the town,

      Gave him a supercilious stare,

      Or passed with noses in the air –

      And bad King John stood dumbly there,

       Blushing beneath his crown.

      King John was not a good man,

       And no good friends had he.

      He stayed in every afternoon …

       But no one came to tea.

      And, round about December,

       The cards upon his shelf

      Which wished him lots of Christmas cheer,

      And fortune in the coming year,

      Were never from his near and dear,

       But only from himself.

image 5

      King John was not a good man,

       Yet had his hopes and fears.

      They’d given him no present now

       For years and years and years.

      But every year at Christmas,

       While minstrels stood about,

      Collecting tribute from the young

      For all the songs they might have sung,

      He stole away upstairs and hung

       A hopeful stocking out.

      King John was not a good man,

       He lived his life aloof;

      Alone he thought a message out

       While climbing up the roof.

      He wrote it down and propped it

       Against the chimney stack:

      ‘TO ALL AND SUNDRY – NEAR AND FAR –

      F. CHRISTMAS IN PARTICULAR.’

      And signed it not ‘Johannes R.’

       But very humbly, ‘JACK.’

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      ‘I want some crackers,

       And I want some candy;

      I think a box of chocolates

       Would come in handy;

      I don’t mind oranges,

       I do like nuts!

      And I SHOULD like a pocket-knife

       That really cuts.

      And, oh! Father Christmas, if you love me at all,

      Bring me a big, red india-rubber ball!’

      King John was not a good man –

       He wrote this message out,

      And gat him to his room again,

       Descending by the spout.

      And all that night he lay there,

       A prey to hopes and fears.

      ‘I think that’s him a-coming now,’

      (Anxiety bedewed his brow.)

      ‘He’ll bring one present, anyhow –

       The first I’ve had for years.’

      ‘Forget about the crackers,

       And forget about the candy;

      I’m sure a box of chocolates

       Would never come in handy;

      I don’t like oranges,

       I don’t want nuts,

      And I HAVE got a pocket-knife

       That almost cuts.

      But, oh! Father Christmas, if you love me at all,

      Bring me a big, red india-rubber ball!’

      King John was not a good man –

       Next morning when the sun

      Rose up to tell a waiting world

       That Christmas had begun,

      And people seized their stockings,

       And opened them with glee,

      And crackers, toys and games appeared,

      And lips with sticky sweets were smeared,

      King John said grimly: ‘As I feared,

      


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