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Cibrarp ofChe Cheolocjicai ^emmarjp
PRINCETON • NEW JERSEY
PRESENTED BY
C.M. Nichols
PL\735.C74-
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2016
https://archive.org/details/englishchinesereOOcond
READER,BY REV. I. M. CONDIT,
MISSIONARY TO THE CHINESE.
American Tract Society,150 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.
_h *m
H "rjSL PrifrM .
\ 1
w* Anmm.
± *
ft
¥
PREFACE TO TIHIIE IRZEAVZDIETR,.
This Reader contains nearly 1500 different
words. The lessons are graded as slowly, as the
limited space, and introduction of as many new
words as possible, would allow. The lessons are
on a variety of subjects, aud include a great
many sentences used in ordinary conversation.
Gospel truths have been introduced as far as
practicable. The Chinese portion is in the Canton
dialect, which is the spoken language of the
Chinese in America, Australia, and the Sandwich
Islands. The object of using this dialect, instead
of the more elegant style of their language,
is to give the learner the meaning of the English
in plain and simple words, such as he himself
would use in expressing the same thine.
i. m. a
& m I 1 1 i £P U A Ui I IJ. I 1 ^ M f*J ^t m m % s? & s mm& & & jy m # ft pi ^ m w
m x * ^ m ft ft
jib Wl U m + & t it % z m n 1$
M * rT & £ m • » -f
£ m m ft % £ * id ? m itCOPYRIGHT. 1882.
BY AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY
ENGLISH AND CHINESE HEADER. 5
lesson x.
I
an ax An ox. — ft tij *my ox My ox. ft ft *I am I am. ft $we go We go. ft to £I do I do. ft M
ftwe do We do. ft to,
ft
we ft iife
am ft, ft,
ft. ft.do
to
LESSON II.
ax £ 90 he IE
on A is ft ft
in £ S no Hg ft
it to up 1at ft. ft. an “
an ax An ax.|
— ft sg
my ax My ax. ft ft bi
it is It is. to ft
he is He is.;
ie ft. IE ft*
pro in Go in. s 516g° up Go up.
!± £
6 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
Do it SO.
It is I.
It is he.
I am on.
He IB in.
It 1£ so.
LESSONT XXT.
me ft a —as to. {0. so to it, i’ll
to 4. if fS
no Pg by J£h Si
do jS. 2=5. my ft P&
* * ft.
£ «£ IE
« « ±ie « *to Btf
LESSONT TV.
U8 ^ ^ oh V§
ye ft’v j& ah UJ
be£>to. or Dl gg.-lS
at f±.j^ of
as in, Itl. on £ ±
Do as l do. n tt mI do it so. ft & m MHe is on it. IE &. to lDc so to me. & m 1$
It is my ox. to to 8 $31 4Oh! is it so? m m m
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 7
L see
It is
It is
A dog
It is a
He bit
a dog.
a dog.
my dog.
can run.
bad dog.
my leg.
LESSONT "V-
dog % K bad Ssee Bfft SI leg W, $can ft, -ft. bit tit tit
run ifc pit
fun Vt 4i sit £
£ -
ft •S
ft € «- R ft
ft £ —Iti U a
R fS|
R ft
f!'J ft
ft # £R B ft
& 6^ U ft
Is it a cat ?
[t is a cat.
Do you see it 'f
Yes, I can see it.
It’
is not my cat.
A cat is sly.
lessont vt.
cat IS o°t
you cot d>
yes "ftdot HjS
sly n Hi pot ?*Mtie SB, *8, got ill T
ft ft - R » &ft ft - R «ft ft £ 15 £ft ft £ if1-
|ig P5 ft ft p& $— R ft ft s Hi
8 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSON VII.
rat ^ M.
wa-s
got @ Tthe ©, it.
see gf, £
saw £ 7hid gf Tbid l$> pfo
kid Oi # ff
lid ir
See the rat.
Do you see the rat ?
I can see the rat.
The rat was hid.
The cat saw it.
The cat got the rat.
w [iT © P/N £ mft £ © D/> * tft ft £ © D
/ \ SL
© p H to m m t© D
/ \ ffi £ m is
© R JK m © % M
LESSON VIII.
bog ft pig ij> -ft .
fat|)E big ^
how p$ Pgf fig M ft ^too dig ^hot ifc wig (g §|
1 see a hog.
Ffow fat it is !
Yes, it is a fat hog.
It is a bis: ho".
Can the pig run ?
Ft is too fat to run.
ft £ - r ft
fa m m urn mm %.fa « - r nc ^
{& - r * Ft
© r ft t it nfa
m
r si
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 9
A boy and a top.
It is a new top.
You may buy one.
Do not beg one.
I do not beg.
LESSOIT IX.
boy M ? newtop 0f$ *§ andmay pI jy beg £,one — buy ^two - say
;
ft si “ ft M ¥1 - m s ? # is of*
ft £ ~ IS Sf nf* IS
j
ft pT £1 1 - ft
n s - n« « tf £ i®f
LESSON X.
COW *¥ (3 sea mhas n hay ft ftred it pay £ $old ft nay £run £ lay 1
Do you see the cow ? ft « £ ft £ ft ns nThe cow is old. m p/N m ft ¥ £It is an old cow. ft ft
— p/> ftThe cow has no hay. m p/>
AntEl It ft
It is a red cow. ft ft— p
ifl £ ft 43ft is not my cow. € s ft fa ft m
IC ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
I fed the hen.
The hen can run.
The hen can lay an egg.
I may eat an egg.
Can the hen fly far ?
A hen can not fly far.
LESSONT XI.
hen $£ (kg far gr
eat fed flg "flay T, ft, fly faegg 3f fly J|the |U t
_tt(
cry liw,
% pg t m r m m® H i S t Ifi ” i fi is 4 t i
^ T1 k $t MI fa r n m t m m. nft K ft ft ? ft ft S
Do you see the man ?
How old is the man ]
Is he an old man ?
No, he is not old.
How old are you ?
I am ten. He is six.
LESSON XII.
man A age £*,
are ft six ^his fi-j ten -f'
him ig dry $£how fij Sn sly ^
i
ft ft £ fS Ais a ft & 3 a mIS ft * % A (4
m ft ie * ft * *ft ft ft £ A 06
35c ft + A. fS ft * A
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. II
LESSOR XIII.
fly M ®fan %cup ft
eye 01-
lie %%
[ can see a fly.
Is it a fan or not?
Yes, it is a fan.
A fly and a fan.
A cup and an eye.
A fly bit my eye.
*b JL
m % ~® f%
- R £- R ft
~ R .%
get If. JR,
ink #hot Mgot U 7sot $- r a& m & n %# le
if * - ft is
ih — p&
*£ ® bk
TRIES''OUST XIV.
box 0 use Jfl
lid let ff
out % net #j
put $, M wet fahas get
The box has a lid.
The lid of the box is up.
Let us go and see it.
lhe box is of use.
Put a cat in the box.
The cat can get out.
m ® p$ n # ft gg ^a m. ® ® wfta m n® - R 5iu ft & ® 0P
IB R ® t& $ W
12 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
The fox ate the hen.
A dog saw him. Thefox ran and hid. Thedog can not get him.
It was my hen. Donot cry. Why are youso sad ?
See the kid. It is mypet kid. It is shy.
He has one. He has a
few. Go and get meone. Get two for me.
Why do you not go ?
He has not a-ny.
LESSON XV.
fox m now 7 ^ate * T cry %ran # why Bl
hid m T sad m mhen m m mad m u
10 m m m m m—
fa STi^Oi% m m I ± X 1 TIK & fa ?§ m n t'j is
m ft % ft m m a o% « O ifc @ U ptf
m %
kid uj ft one
pet % iKi two ;
shy tfi A for ft. ftfew ft a-ny - 10
dew * why % -11
1$ 7 10 tlJ ¥ ft O ffe
m ft fl? ft ft oIB I* tfl A O IB ft
!
—10 0 IB ft ft 10 o
£ ft ft « - 10 O ft
! ft M (0 O 17 ® fqj
A O IB - (0 & ft
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 13
Ad ape and a jug.
The ape has a nut. It
can eat a nut. May 1
get the nut ? Yes, if
you can. I can not
get it. It is my key.
It is not my jug.
LESSON 2LTTI.
ape ? nut
hat ti bat jft Hjug if IS matkey m It sat £ Tbee % 4f fat BEL
— & ft ft
m m * ~ ft « C€ Of ft m 0if ft =» m c ft
ft fig if ft 0 ft T'
fig if O ft ft m ft
ss 0 * ft Pgt % IS
cap * m tin $old fiC ^ win Mfor fin P mbuy son ft IT
Is it a cap ? No, it ft ftis a hat. Did you buy S? ft
it ? Did he buy it for ft ft
you ? It was a new ft
hat. Now it is old. fi ft
Can you let me see it? H PK
It is too big for me. lit
Buy me a new one ft ft
tea
bee H'
nap #1 lg§
led $| T
- m n ft s ois — is x fli oiipic ft is
ft m m o m u$T IPI O -? 4* ft
O ft # & Bfc Sft ± o •
“ IK ft p&
14 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
Do you see my bed ?
It is for me to lie on.
Do not lie on my bed ?
Do not lie all day in
bed. Get up and go
out. Do as I say. I
can not, for I am ill
LESSONT XVT1.
bed a* will &lie IK m day nill $ try IKall — did $ awho IM lid
ft « m % a w ft
te ft a m IK P£ 0 £m IK m a W * 0 a
H IK £ ft & o& k X ,41 * O a aIS u O a * a da
lay * cut a bud ufix & hut s & raw 7 ft
mix 3c m pup $ ft paw #six but saw £ m
It is of no use. Fix & ft ff JB « 0 # ait for me. i can not Sf IF. c a 7 fie ado it. Why do you say *§> O ft a u Ptl aso ? do you act BE o ft IS 11 Wso ? You can try and be o ft SC T fli odo it. Do not cut it. a m is 0 fa 0'! *
It is not my fan. Lay a te lw c iA
it on the bed. is & US ft ±
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READEP. *5
LESSON xvmtub 7K tfi
gun jg msat T fuu if ic
top iRf il rocl ^sip m n°d is mlip P| scd ^ )x
The tub is big. It is m 7k w k Pi O €of use. I can use it. w M & m ry. t IS
He sat on the box. is o is 5§ 1® fa UPut it on top the box. pit o $ is #. 1®
Why do you do it sc? i o If PM- mcan not do it. I fl* m. a ft P5 # It odo it for you. m # {ft {& i'll
howfgj
has ^hit ff had ^pen Jg |£ have 0ten -f did T
who ||
will E. tH $give p/
live ^ {£
How do you do ? Whoare you ? You are not
as bio- as I am. HaveO -
you got my pen ? Give
it to me. He had mypen. He has it now.
He will not give it
to me He hit me.
{ft m 0 m o {ft hti iy o {ft ^ in id ^PH k O fc Pit Sit£ {ft ni l) pi o i^ PH o $ P|t M ^ Htft & id Pi ^ O H WiS % O Id P§ f $ ii
i i O IS IT i
16 ENGLISH AND CHINESE REA D EE
Who can see God \ Noman can see God, but
he can see us. God can
see all I do. The eye
of God can see us if
we sin. Do not sin.
God will see you.
men A 14 aid ??
our 14 If? ask jfc
0 Pf , fct. way it
she 1g & all H
God is one. Re is the
God of all men. He is
our God. He can aid
all men. Ask our Godto aid you. O God, let
me not sin. God will
aid you. Go in the
way of bis law.
LESSON XXX.
God it rug m &eye m bug asin m 25
1U-' hoe i® HS
but m toe m fit
bet m odd
-u It & E it PJt c Tf
A m s7L it fa is £ E
ft % 0 it m e $ Affr fir £ o g ft 14
m m it £ & E «0 M m 3E # O it
& E
law ^ &ra bid n Pft
» her 1g -kdfc his ^g ^ £ «
it £ - ft O ig fs mA £ it O lg « 14
2 it 0 1g f& n !a mA O & ft & £ it
Hj O it & ^ f® <»
8 IE P O it St & £« lb ft 0 * fiHE fc
! # & £ P*
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 1 7
The sun is up. It is
in the sky. Now it is
day. The sun is red.
Why is the sun so red ?
I can not tell. The
sun has not yet set.
God made the sun.
LESSONT XXsun b ft made it
sky n % tell IS to
yet fa a well
set * sell
let a. fa. fell
0 m in « 0 fa ft
a a ± 0 ft ft ft 0
ft 0 b i| ft ft fa oa fa b W ft m ft ^a * ft ft to O 0
m fa t ft o 3* ft
is n 9H
owe tall ^end J{& H, -f£, fall ?£
pay 3c, fa. ball ?!
hay It wall feS.
AA#f #03*
lie A fS
ill
act ff
fun 5c M
All men sin. It is a
sin to lie. Do not lie.
Say ill of no man. Dono bad act. Pay all
you owe. Do not as bad
men do. Do as Godsays. A bad man has
a bad end.
16 ft ip o f® RA 16 0 if oil A *?z O Jl ft ft m ff a/L ft #r & ft it o# ft ft A 5 ft o
ft ft £ 16 fa ff o ft
A a ft ft
is ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
What do you see ? I see
a li-on. He has a long
tail. The li-on can kill
a man. Have you seen
a li-on ? A li-on is big.
He can eat a man. Hemay hurt you.
LESSOU XXI.li-on $$ T what H ®tail it have ft
long X seen E i®
kill ft hurt IMs iS,
some ft give
ft w ft ® m o %li-fijioiW “ O IB ft
tffJE AOfrW 1 si Ifidm & m ? # * o ib
bird ^ ,t)
bark gR, 2fc.
play ^ Mbear ^ ft, iek
give ft
milk ^ mwill St, Iff
mi % m
sing HI
tree 1$
eggs Mweak H
A bird can sing. It
wall sing on a tree. Donot kill the bird. A dog
can bark. It can play.
A cow can give us milk,
it is of use. A hen can
lay eggs. I saw a hen.
T can eat an egg.
fSttgO-gJfiJtElOi^tSIO^
t O4BWJ80-&*i4Sft £ $ O 3$ M a -
ISOOlilH
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 19
LBSSOisr xxii
I like to see a
Some trees bear fruit.
Do not eat too much. It
will make you sick. Bekind to the sick. Help
the poor and weak. Let
us be kind to all men.
| tree a help m HJ]
Spli trees pooi- ft M‘i sick like 41 *
g^4jj make fitkind if
fjgfj much fruit M -T
tree. fJc 41 M i$ PT 1® M k
w m m & m h o %t % :a m o # m ft
% f i O ^ Li P|
t
a n if & o m & ®^11* iH Pi Aft ffe Jft if I# A
that fi lean :pg
this P£ been
well S time
soon Tf jjjjfmuch ^
That man is lean. This
man is ver-y weak.
He has been sick. Hehas been sick a long
time. He is near-ly well
now. He will be well
soon. Have you been
sick? iS’o, not much.
weak ||ver-y fi. Hi,
near-ly _L Jlead ‘ $% 5|,
f@ i A ^ i Pff o Pig
m a # + ft & m pfl
IE 1ft % ffi O IE £#i if A p# O iE W 4# J: 7 if SI O IE ft
if #£ if SI O ffc ft ft
M ft PA O ft ft &$ ^ *@f
20 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
Do you see the duck ?
The duck can swim. It
can swim ill the pond.
A fish can swim too.
It can swim fast. Afish has fins. Can you
swim ? I can.
LSSSON XXIII.
duck fish
swim J? fins ff\ %pond ?J< too Sh iS.
fast $ ev-er #past iS 7 o-pen
ft 4& p„ (@ R !.| o1® R IS Pt ?0 * O IE
0. & ti5 (S ng rn 5*c OIE Pt 10 $ tfe O - £^ I i II o ft
m
tN ng nig O ft “i
comewalk ft
slow ii 11
will Jff
with fpT* ^when fpj
back jg,
shut $rv
soon S,ft It
live Jg ft
from th. &some ft 1ft
Do not walk so fast.
Do not walk so slow.
I will go with you. Doyou live far from here ? '
Not far. When will yoube back ? I will be back
soon. I will come as
soon as I can.
f® ft Pt 0 f®
ft nil H 0 IeO m ft
o ft ft iPS /i
»dbJS. 0 ft m it
ft ff & itf n Jg oft ft It IS opi n Pt JP ii «fc 8*
JP
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 2 T
LESSON"
deer
look %horns p.
head pf(
lead ^Look at that deer.
The deer is ver-y shy.
He is al-so ver-y wild.
See his horns. Howlong his horns are.
Have you ev-er seen a
deer ? I have not.
XXIV.
sky M Athey C?
wild jgf ££
al-so
in-to A f*l
b# Ph m RKOSRm # & $ a m o% ^ u & £ p§i o $ITF IB ^ ft O IB m n% Pt £ "8 O fr' t Ia is k i ^ 1
1
oft * t
true Hfalse jg
hear gg |3
near
Is it true or
I do not know,
not a-ble to say.
he says is true,
glad to hear it.
er tell a lie.
must not do so
can hear all we
glad W: tsays m ISsale # Jpale ± t.&.
false ?i Mi 'f#
I am ps. £n it
mat %l If ft
know £p gfj
a-ble Pf
nev-er
a-gain H, X.
is % o mo SR * ft
O IE 0r SS
O ft ft fij
Ncv- t % |f. o & fi II
You A st O fr # Pg #God p[i m Wl O ft ft ifsay. $ |f ft MS V&. fS
2 2 ENGLISH AND C
TTie la-dy is tail. Thegirl is low. Her hair
is long. This cane is
long. That tree is high.
Her hand is soft. Thechair is low.
lamb ft foot
large A; nail
small fti nose
came PH must
The lamb is small. Aba-by is small. That
man is not large. His
nose is large. A hard
bed. A. large nail. Asmall boat. That boat
is large. The dish is
small. A small foot.
H1NESE READER.
LESSON XXV.La-d) & ? chair tfk f!
girl k ft high
hair % 4. low &banc soft to
camt hard «tall that aa (®
m 4$ ft ft its a 0 f®
k ft ft m pa u IB
m ft ft g pa o %% fet ft n pa 0 f®
-A.7/rT
m ft m pa O IB
ft to a 0 ® ft & Pg?
a boat *$r dish
M ba-by ha-bout i T
\ m K * ff ft fti pa 0—
(® m ft ft pa 0i i® (® A % ft * pa 0!IB PK M ft * pa o —m J£ O - p * »~ K >b 0 i® Rft * pa o (®
D m m, ft 19 pa o - a
/*> & m
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 2 3
lessont xxti.
black ^white t*
dull
sharp f'J
knife JJ
like 4
coat ^calf fj
snow ^ice
cold
hold il H
That dog is black. Ablack dog. His coat
is black. The calf is
white. A sharp knife.
Her hand is white. Myknife is dull. Snow is
sold. Ice is cold.
IS K ft fll 1 W O.HI ft O IE # & #•
m PR O IR & ^ # #
i£ PR & PR O $^ JJ tfc pR O © $^ C » ffc ^
gate 1*3 PI door FJ
she 1£»(la A,) cake ft
wind 5. fire ^soon 'ft © take fi&*
wide $9
roomwarm ft
on-ly d' iMl »©*
The gate is wide. Awide room. The door
is wide. This cake is
warm. The fire is hot.
The wind is cold. Awarm fire. That girl is
lean. She is sick.
m is m o ft ft. ra #m PR G IB ft ft «pr o fa * ^IB M ft * PR CJ if ft
-X O I ^ ft ^ ® pPl
1£ ft. # «
24 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
A. large and strong dog.
A wise and good man.
A fat and la-zy boy.
A tall and slim man.
A wide and deep well.
A large and fat cow.
A small and low chair.
LESSOIT XXVII.wise ^ jg- strongW ij
good ft, la-zy ft
deep jjg kind fc #well 7k # star Mslim d> call H,
room M fab 5^
-a*****®- IN § .1 * if & A
~ IB ® * |,
ft A- m m ^ as p& * #- IB * £ £ ^ o- & IH A & * ft
house it
sour it
ripe
kind
peach 1%
dimbright %large A
fine ^ mheav-y Hi
ap-ple if Hto-day ^ 0
A large and fine house.
A kind and good man.
A hard and sour ap-ple.
A ripe and soft peach.
A large and heav-y box.
A large and bright star.
A small and dim star.
- Fui a * m n m. §- HU ft & * # m A- m m * m w ^ i
- S I ® 1 O- n m « b pa s
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 25
A largo and good horse.
A lean and ug-ly horsa
A deaf and dumb man.
A new and strong boat
A large and high house.
A high and steep hill
A large and long knifa
LESSON XXVIII.
horse hill OJ ff
boot Kt stee] 1 i} ndeaf H ug-lv m.. sfe
dumb © gave \n
does M dont
sees cant T' a
- & A & *J ^ & O- p t ^ j^< m
- r if * n @ m n- ill] i ® i o- m \% * ^ a
^
- * * # s
mule J0| colt ff
spare ^ rose Ik f£
nar-row young £broad |®J
called pij-
That ta-ble is high and
nar-row. The colt is
young and wild. A large
and ug-ly mule. The
wo-man is tall and spare.
A pret-ty rose. A young,
oret-ty girl.
ta-ble I#pret-ty $&
wo-mank Aal-most *T
f® m ft # i3 ^ ^f® A g§ ff ^ «I *Sf £ PR O - R A £08 II II o I i A
! $ a a ^ pr -k ff
26 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER
Have you a book ! i
have a book. Can youread ? I cant read. I
will teach you. Headthis page first. Whatdoes this word mean 1
Spell this word.
book H first W *"
read al word 'pJ jifi
teach jt spell $ dJ
page mean il^i
find lean Ig, 0c*
ft M —If: ft o
a M gf> E3 U ft ft
nil m ng CB o tH 0 * ft ft O "=r^rUl
% ft o % « na ft » B9 1% 0 $tu m ft IS *
name 35
live % ftwere fa gdead % ^
your ft «born ffl IS
where fbj
what ft #
Chi-na Iff ill
cit-y ± lib&a-gain X.
thing # «
What is your Dame ?
My name is Ah Sam.
Where were you born ?
In Chi-na. Where do
you live ? In the cit-y.
Come and see me. I
will come a-gain. Call
a-gain ver-y soon.
ft ft n ft ft s %^ eft .« n-> H -!S
ft & & ® m tft
£ JS Oi A o ft £a ft O £ A: if
ft x % n pt o nH * @ * O * ft #B £ & £
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 27
lesson xxx.
work X dc year
cook Jgf X wish 0,here |JJ£ p* home ^been when H
What do you work at ?
I am a cook. How long
have you been here ?
One year. When will
you go home ? I wish
to go next year. I want
to go ver-y much, but
I am still poor.
love earth
made jfr Pfllife
moon H fear
gave & T hear
God made the earth.
He made the sun aud
moon. God made us.
He gave us life. Wemust love and o-bey
God. We must fear him.
We must pray to God.
He will hear us pray.
want fty
still tfr s ft
next fj| %
R* ver-y + &
ft M U If ft X *UB O * # ® M O fit
# & M & ill Ft O- * PU 11 O fit M Mi|# HI ^ O ft * XT X ft * 0 ft X
± ft ft H ft
ft S?
IS * pray ®r ft
£ must £o-bev ft fig
ft ft a-ny •H if
Jit # it IS fv O IE is
© 0 * M O JRt If 5s
« ® O IS $ k & ft
ft ft O ft ft & H^ * m « * if O ft
ft M H .PC IE O ft
% H >j£ g ®f iff II If
IE & ft ft ft Ur ft
2 8 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER,
LESSON XXXI.
bird %sing pg
nest J|build
eggs M
'•age % 1hear M gr!
hurt f| f|like #likes 4* M
A bird is in the cage.
The boy likes to look
at it. The bird cansing, I like to hear it.
A bird can build a nest.
It can lay eggs. Donthurt the pret-ty birds.
“ p1 % ff £ t i ni c i t T 41 t iT IK O m K % f-
ft 4s M m 1g o -% % ft m o is &^ o Mm mm &m £ %
call u?f
could ej\
bite
want
Call him back. 1 wantto see him. He lias
not come back yet. Heis gone a long time.
He will be back soon.
1 am glad to see you.
Why were you gone so
long ? I lost the way.
place
take
m-to m.A. ft*
thus p$ ^PT IS % O ft
a t is pt o is
M M % O IS
m n ® p# o isIt ig & O ft #ft S £ T fa PT OfT ^ * II pg* it
BE O $ ® »
P£
g°^ *find ^mill
r back it
m
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 2 9
LESSON XXXI.plow Mtwo IT.
field 0wheatwith fe]
raise Hgrind
flour mbread %%
mill $1
Can the man plow7 with
one horse? He has two.
He can plow the field
and raise wheat. The
mill grinds wheat in-to
flour. With flour we
make bread.
i A ffl - K s nm nf pi pi o 15
m K o 15 tu Dr
^ ^ O © F«3
M- ft i f i i ^j& J8 #5 # jft
# &
How do you do ? 1 amwell, thank you. Whatare you do-ing now ?
I have no work now.
Have you spent all your
mon-ey ? I have not
spent all yet. I still
have some.
pit-y If* Iffl
do-ing ffl Mmon-eyt§lit-tie $3 ij>
fc ftHi om ft -3 ft n ofr hn ^ 1 U If P/'b
n n ^ # x n&
n m & m m mM PJb o ft &« n m o ft
m M w
still H, §?>
spent '§*
wife ^life £ ft
some M «thanks HI
work X ^well .
SSin&^OO
W
30 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSOLT XXXIIGod M, j$ Ho-ly ^men A Jill
Bi-ble ggdied ft a-bout Ashelf Je-sus J|{S £$book fs ver-y -f
t*
1 have a new book.
A kind la-dy gave it
to me. f like it 'ver-y
much. It is the Ho-lyBi-ble. God gave the
Bi-ble to man. It tells
men a-bout Je-sus whodied for us.
ft M - « §r * c
$ ft O if +# IS O f® ft $ n# O A fill ft n f@
ft II ® iS A O fill
AIfe®»«# ft it £ *
take ft,®,wait
rain ^gaiu J&
ngbtsuit & $loaf fB-
does f&,$,
just iE J£^fua-way A T '
hors-es
din-nerA It
Put this a-way. It is
of no use. I do not
want it. It does not
suit me. This is too
large. That one is just
riaht. May I take this ?©You may have it.
m n m m o % ft
jb m o ft pfi ®is o m & ft cm m ft a it ^ of® is ft $ w & o$ PT ® f® If o
I ft; H M
ENGLISH AMD (JHIMESE READER. 31
LESSON XXXIII.count ft ££
add #P, Jf
.
bear ft
.
right ft, M
Can you count ? One,
two, three, four, five,
six, se-ven, eight, nine,
ten. Can you add ?
Yes, let me try. Howman-y are six and four ?
Six and four are ten.
That is right.
se-ven -ft
eight Anine it
man-y M,
ft pf tt m ^ % o -O1OHO0O5j^O^OAOIO+ o ft Pi to tt pg gig
# pf O ft
f® *d ra ib f£ & 5 %ft 1® #n ® f® f& -f 1®
Pfl- # 3?
three 3four 29
five 5.
six ft
dear H.think it?., f&.
worth fit
much ^
can’t ft
trust ft
price IS
noon t1* ft*
sale Htwelve+ 3mouse % B. &stop f$ Jh
Is this for sale? You i
ask too high a price.
I can not give so much.
How much will you
give me? How much do|
you think it is worth ?
Will you trust me ? 1
can not trust you.
be m <r hi w ift pg
be o ft g ft if.
1 i o $ ps n nm % o ft ft $ mit pi o ft ft fa
it ft £ BE O ft ft
* ft $ $ P£ BE om x & * ft ft
52 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LiESSOKT
wake Hsleep ill
half 32
black M g,
late jg t
past -ft f
calf ^ fpthink ft.
fruit || dPclothes^ JJg
goose ||time fl!
Wake up Get up. It n % m o & Pf'l ois late. Let me sleep. * * m o $ a ill pp
Is it time to get up. m P3- o & # Pgt
What time is it ? If is p# o m £ It it PJt,
half past sev-en. I did % f; it n O nnot think it was so late. m % {% m Pit o fa
Put on your clothes. ft & UR G » mDo not be so la-zy.
nil 'If m
please tf 4 ^noise Pf,®,mind ,fc % pf J3g,
make
mice ^ M Ifo-pen ^fath-er £ .
home
shut ij
lock
bolt pij
door[
,£
J
O-pen the door. Shut
the door. Lock the door.
Bolt the door. Do not
make a noise. Go and
see who is at the door.
Tell him to come in.
Please give me your
name. He is at home..
Ki h m o n a p?
m o m ii p*j m odj a pi m o m pf
Pf O ± ® np ff: -u
it r± n o mis a ^ P$1 O It
11 f® ?j M ^ 5:d Ois m *
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 33
LESSON XXXV.
where fnj S desk $S ^ hang £from pen-cil §5 go-ing i. SR
lay m ft feet |& K re-turn &hold ts ft held m m let-ter ft
Where is it ? Where PR ft e % O ft •i
did you go ? Where & PS 0 ft ib
did you come from ? & S # P£ 0 ft iWhere have you been ? & s $ PJb 0 ft
Where are you go-ing ? * SR ii s % oWhere is my pen-cil ? ft £5 m & P£ oWhere shall I put it ? ft s » OLay it on the desk. ft IS € is ft * **
while ft ft lit-tie >j? %world IS $?. bus-y W ^kept 81 ® un-til
keep *51, {§ T, on-ly ft i§
here ft
there f@ ft
bring $$
take iA
Come here. Bring it
here. Wait a lit-tle
while. I am bus-y.
Why do you come so
late ? The rain kept
me. Stay here un-til I
re-turn. Mind what I
say. Do not go there.
3
& % ft o » ft PTl
O ft pi ft ft
ft ¥ o ft % ft
Pit a % o ft 1B. 83 pa- 0 PR mPH m & ft 0 n
pfi pa- o PH 4? *m pi
34 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSOU XXX-VI.
A horse has four feet.
He has a head, neck,
and tail. His skin and
hair are soft. He is
ver-y use-ful. Men ride
on his back.
flat ify 3s
sure Msaid of- $true M
Are you sure it is so ? i
I am sure it is so.
Wlio says so ? I said so.
Ask him if it is true.
Do it right. I will try.
Is it right ? It is quite
right.
horse Sneck
skin ]fc
ride ]§§
back f? &use-ful H Id
use-less iff $
ie w m ft m $ £ «M o ig m ik * pit ^^ & m o ie % a wm qt o a s§ £ is m» # ft
draw {S'.
load mtreat M '
heard P ^
i fo sg {$ at r# o #£n if ^ PH- fit O Hm pit m Vn ^ o $ ft
pH o ra uh ie ^ *p$ pg & o s m n m
ps m % o #. & n
quite ft
right
wrong P? ^pair — It
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER 35
tear $3
tore tfl
miik ^ mfood ^ #J
Whc tore my book ? 1
did not tear it. "W bo
broke my knife ? I did
not break it Who spilt
the milk on the floor?
It was I who spilt it.
Do not do so a-gain
I did not mean to.
spilt Dt nig,
floor Wt
mean S,a-gain H.
u m & mm ft & mm o % % ft m m ie
u it m & m ft & j]
& % o pg n gj Hf
m o -th m & it ^ m&mumo m ft
m
m mm o mm w um oust on
LESSON XXXVII.break 15 $1
broke §£ 1^
knife 71 ff
blade J]
some 6v
seen iS
which f®
what H if
these jlfc
them lg #spare HI, ^light IS.
best 3*
both M 1®
a-like 49 IqJ
killed £5 T
Are they all good ?
No, some are good and
some are not good.
How do you know ? I
have seen them. Whichof these two are the
best ? Both are a-like
Can you spare me one ^
i
ie life- w m & m ^
p= m W fr) if ft fi'j »g
if O fa SA M to PE
$4 a i£ pf om ps m % & m s nmo m m m +a eP« O ffcpTHg-# a « ^ he
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSON XXXVIIIwork ^ Xwork xweek jjg #night fa
morewhen
f]§
child ffthree -
oft-en d?
wag-es Xdol-lar ~ i maft-er
Will you work for me ?
What wa-ges will yougive ? Three dol-lars a
week. That is too lit-
tle. I will not give
more. I will give you
more wa-ges when youcan do all my work.
I will work for you.
ft t # $ n x eg if
pi o # i ? 1
1
jft 8KO Sig & o n pg t ft
$ m o ffr & IK ^ $t 1 ^ ® $ ;if % *fc
^ S X ® ^ O S 8i
# (ft fui •»
dor^*
cameface ^ year
comb than
still h, in, where
Does he still live with
you ? He does not live
here now. Where has
he gone ? He has gone
back to Chi-no* He is
now in Can-ton. Hewill re-turn in one year.
£ y Chi-na Jg 1J1
tp Can-ton jj$
j§ o-cean ^fCT 1% re-turn 0
1£ 05 B T, If ft; f± P|
IS $n ^ p= ni E Pit f±
Eg O IS £ aIE O 1£ is i g ill
eg O If? 4d ^ 1# £m & o is m - $Ph m wl m & ®
ENGLISH AjNI) CHINESE READER. 37
UBSBOIET XXXIX.
cars * M hour “ Si S May £• ^train— fare % ® ^aPe #start gg
send t| , $ first % —they 1£ long -g 4 A. rail-road ^ &
A. train of cars. They — $$>AcIf£OlliSbti
can run ver-y fast. At # ^ ft O f® ‘K $ It
what hour do the cars % Hfi H 13 Jl Wt O ^start ? What is the fare ? '
HQ 0 M £ % O ffr ft
When do you start ? In 1$ ® fr ^ O — fS
one week. Will you be # P[j g O fa A &gone long ? I don’t £1 f$ O ft 5 £> ii ±know how long. It g
ENGLISH AND CHINESE LEADER.
LESSON XL.quick *£lose at.
lost
hurt
Are you read-y yet ?
Not yet. Can you waita-while ? W hen you areread-y tell me. I willwait for you. Be quickas you can. I am read-ynow to go with you. I
will be back in an hour.
al-ways ^ ^read-y $a-while
jgf
about
fate W 18 % 9SO* t o fo n m n®f ^ BE O ft ^ W fg
liU f?Jt fife %]\ OWt ^ HF ffc O ft ft n
1*
$ M ff $ O in
« & fg fsj to * «g O* - u m « «jl i
& pi
hour — g,$
stand ^whose =f
.ngj
when ^ jj|
things ft f*
some £ fa
sport & ^your to
bod-y £ tsSpir-it gf
a-gain ?l, X.wa-ter 7k
gave ft pa
loves ^ougbt b mknows ^
God is a Spir-it. He hasno bod-y. God can do all
things. God knows all
things. God loves men.How do you know Godloves men ? He gave his
Son Je-sus to die for us.-
You ought to love God.
% a "R o if
# ts o it & & $ft o a a m m ft
w & a o to Ifi ft
it i f A % O15 & m is m # n m^ ft $ A 5 ?E Oto S 0* S' ill If
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 39
xJEeeozcsr xlithief &£
wolf Vi
tooth if
mouth P
»fr
fin-ger #•
care-ful >j>
care-less /fj
hap-py ft S
fear t&
shot It fl
shoot r?n It
bite
Be careful. The dog
may bite you. 1 do not
fear him. Who shot the
dog'? I did not shoot
him. I have cut myfin-ger. Do not be so
care-less. You must not
do it a-gain.
*& O © pft 0
w a ft o n Pf ta 1g
o If « it ft m© K ft O' P§ ft %ft It *T IS 0 m $a 4t 0 ft
* * p# o ft' ’a ft
ft ft
care £ Ssoil 9k
hunt iS. H.help m m
Please lend me your
book. How long do you
want it ? I can’t find it.
It is lost. Help me to
hunt for it. Where did
you leave it ? I have
found it. Take good
care of it Don’t soil it.
leave @ Tplease S*
found ir Tcar-ry fe.
IS fii ft © of) Hr 3® $m o ft ifflii p/t
$ p= n & % m o ft
IB tM O ft' ^ $$ IS
m o n ts % «fr ou & s ib pa- o
H IE ^ II
your ^lend Ih
find %a-ble Pf , ft.
40 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSOR XI,IT
iike 4. -f;
none ff t
make jft.Jg,
best g if
x -=fc»uGmmd
kmds a. m\break +y gg|
think +s,f£.
wa-ter
1 have none now. i have011-ly this one. 1 haveall kinds. I like this
the best. That is still
bet-ter. I al-so think so.
He does not- think so.
1 am not quite sure of
it. Make up your mind.
7k011-ly ubet-ter ]g iftry-iuggj ^
in ^ ft <§ o ft mpe - O & m it
Hi H O ^ + t *fg C fl 1® # F if On u # w m m o m<i # Pit n & o a PI
£n if# ^ & O tf & fk
P® i ;t
wash gfc
iron
each
play 5^ H1 want a good cook.
Can you wash and iron %
Can you cook well ? Yes,
mad-am. How man-yper-sons are in your
fam-i-ly 1 On-ly three.
How man-y meals do
)ou take each day '?
mad-am ifj
per-sons A, fi,
fam-i-ly ^sor-ry 0, ^
I ft ft - « if SfOfa fit
:m u pi m ofa m 11 *# if pi m oit o &fa Pi %i 4- 4i M % fi$
A O ® #, Hfa o fa c h m
\ m % M m
meals^meat $]
rare 42 ^ gk
since|JE
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 41
lesson xliii.
bring ^ /k since It
clean It light ft*
dirt-)' M ¥1 wood
sweep IT $} floor gl
Put some wood in the
stove. Sweep the floor
clean. Make the beds.
Wash them clean and
bring them back. Wash
the win-dows. Take care
and don’t break the
glass. Light the fire.
m stove i
K
tt
glass n mwin-dows. £ ra
« break IT M% & m 'X It O
#r lw ® (i w m mm 0 ffi fcMm It & m w X ft IE
& 0 ^ (@
n O >b
ifi* M fa it m f® Sc
m 0 is m: X
boil
cook
rice IS
meat fa
fry M.
broil
beef
bake fcU
Boil some wa-ter. Boil
the rice. Cook the meat
Bake the bread. Maketea. Get some bread.
Broil some beef. Fry
the beef rare. .It is not
done yet. It is done.
Come to din-ner
bread m Qft din--ner x
P. wa-ter 7k
jR O IS
£ fa O m « hi
& £ Of§ hi & O & G-l
fa O M ft
¥ T m O f£ p$ 0 % P&
* £ A & m
42 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER
LESSON! XLIV
sheep ^bear j:
green ^grass
glass
A sheep and her lambs
They eat green grass.
They bear wool. Woolis used to make cloth.
The flesh of the sheep
is orood food. It is call-oed mut-ton. Are you
fond of mut-ton ?
fond 4* Mused $ -ft
call-ed tty, %mut-ton £]
eat-ing
- * $ * IE ^ ff
H t f f ^ o
# JB * & O ¥ 'to! & if & % m o o f@
$) € ity M ^ $ Oft; n + ® ^ i*i H5 *J*f WS
cloth-ft
flesh r£)
wool ^ £lambs
fj-
strong ^ #
ENGLI8H AND CHINESE READER. 43
lisssonsr
flies & ti
loaves Q,
calves ^ ff
knives JJ
ox-en A*iJ ^
teeth &geese
wives
thieves IS
twelve -f H
wolves It SI
shelves
pag-es t5> jlj
,
child-ren ff ix>
sum-mer JC 7i
A hog. Two hogs. Oneman. Two men. A foot.
Two feet. A knife. Twoknives. A fly. A great
man-y flies. A loaf of
bread. Two loaves. Anox. Two ox-en. A thief.
Five thieves. A goose.
A great man-y geese.
- x m m x % o -
fi A.SI3 AO- Xa m x m o - % n141 )] o - x .%
# & % o ~ m P>
e. i m m & o - x®J *h 1 X AM ^O-m m m o - xu n % x *i
A wife. Two wives. Awolf. Ten wolves. A calf.
Six calves. A tooth. Ten
teeth. A mouse. Twelve
mica, A horse. Eight
hors-es. A shelf. Four
shelves. Read a page of
the book. Read two pa-
ges. He has one child.
I have five child-ren
- x u & -t x » is
- X * ff, A X * ff
- X X ^ Oi iMffi :
i
a ff o - x js. a,ii o - i® & 0 m1h — 45 IF, 1i ® $1g £ - © ff Os fia ff -k
44 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSOET XX.VI.
find ^suit ft $some fit]
want
more ^8taysoon JpL
time
kind
What more do you want ?
I want some of eachkind. Will this kindsuit you ? This is not
the kiod I want. Thatkind is what I want.
Is it done yet ? Not yet.
When can you give it
to me ? In two days.J
each
fault %could pj t
soon-er
At what hour shall I
go ? Where shall I find
him ? I could not find
him It is time for us
to go. You stay here
till I come back. Comeback as soon as you can.
I could not come soon-
Do nor find faulter.
witn me.
\al -most ft ¥
fa n u if % 1% O &m n m 1? 6^ O %m ft fa * ps P£ o Ft
t pg fa $ 1? PIE o ITS
fa r< 0? P&E o 15
M ft/ *
»
7G * 1" P£ c* t O fa ft
ft fit n « PJS O B
it 11 m
4£ ft % sfi a? * m 0n ft % JSl £ 15
m 0 n £m © 15 o * it ft
h# & £ o fa
ft m Jt 45c M *fa n i'll * jg # Hi Pd
# & # na- o 45c * &$ o m
* flc
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 45
LZESSOHSr XLVII.
shop rude\to w po-lite £ #
less earth ftftman-ners jj| ft
life ^ dealJ!,
tem-per i.
goods ^ !$ in-tend rts. cus-tom Msport g| m nev-er
jIS * per-son A.ft.
This maD has good man- I PJb ® A M *T j® ft Otiers. He is po-lite. m ^ if £ it P£t O f@
That per-son is rude.ffl A f] flii Pgf O 1M
He made sport of me. t # n o m — £ «s
I nev-er did so in my ft M m m ft m -=|£ ^
J
life. 1 will do just ft ft ® ft PI $as you tell me. Whose PH o % -n tt Ppf ii
fault is it ? He has a & % o 1g £ p§ if
bad tem-per. & & it
Where is your shop ? J ft Fb^ fit IS £ T-
will come to deal with pjs o n m * ft
you. Please give me 3e fr O $ ft
your cus-tom. What do ft m #! ft O ft
you want to buy? What ft M iL If 1% o ft £goods have you for sale ? •H ft HI M P* O 3Why is it so dear? Will H £ B® if ll ft O ft
you take less for it ? It ilK £•/ Pg m oI will not take a-ny — ^ ^ ft s fl
less for it. » «
46 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER
LESSON- XLVIII.
tenth -+•
month Mtow-el ^ rtl
be-lieve f=
Mon-day H -
dol-lars g
,
Comb your hair. Go ft ft ft 51 na- 0and wash your face. £ ft ft I'd [fU O ft
Wash it clean. That ft # 65 o i: f® wwill do. Wipe your face rh & ft ft fla mwith the tow-el. Hang li p|ij
f'ft ft m
your hat on the nail. £r p#T
You ought not to do so. ft s m fit i% oDo just as I tell you. m ft ft ift 01 do not be-lieve it. $ ft ft
Take these all a-way Wt w — ft ft £ ft 0Have you seen this yet 5 ft £ ift 65 0 >£
I have seen this. That m 65 £ j! ft o ITS
is the one which I want. m ft 1$ oWhat day of the month 3* 0 ft -£ !ft ca 0 *is this ? It is the tenth % O ft. £ li
day of May. What day h « + SI ft O 0of the week is this ? It ft H ft UP 0 ft
is Mon-day. as —
ENOLISH AND CHINESE RKADEit. 47
LBSSOIT XLIX-
blow
once — ^shine ft?,
would &keeps *3%
down ^ T» for-ty 0 +like 41 S a-live £like 111 4n. al-most 1 Ti-ron H ev-er-y ft.
makes ffc. worth fit
God made all things at
first. He takes care of
ev-er-y thing. God makes
the sun shine, the rain
come down, and the wind
blow. He made us and
keeps us a-live. If our
God did not take care
of us, we would die.
m o is t i §m m M o #0 $ D ft? M $ $ 1^ T ^ X # ® ii
« c IS 5h Hi ft
^ x a # ft ^ ^tt # j*i # 15 a $$ $ ^ £ & S *E
I
Of what is this made 7
It is made of i-ron. I
like it very much. Buy
me one just like it.
Is this for sale! Yes,
do you want to buy it !
How much is it worth 1
It is worth for-ty dol-
lars. It is too dear.
The price is too high.
& m O ft
+ ft 4* ^ IS O ft? tic
is M - ffa:A ft
PJt fr;j & Hi ft pK *5
O fli « ft » 1 "S
m o ft ft £ » w10 + 01^01M o ffi a
± ft ® m
48 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
lEESBOHsr is.
I ft turn ^ ft
my, mine ft Iff used
me ft share
we ft 1ft.friend %
our, ours ft ift PR kind-ly & ,& PR
us ft iftwag-on ® M $
thus 4o lit sure-ly — £
i dont want so much. « % ^ Pit £ O *I dont want quite so
much. That is not my # ft m « 0 iename. He is my friend. # « ^ iso®He is a friend of mine. J9B ft % ft WThat is not mine. He ® m % & ftm 0 ie
used to come and see me.
Do you want me ? For g $ if 0 ft gwhat dc you want me ? $ m u if %
We will go with you.j
ft & gfc |FJ g ft £ OIt is our turn to do ffc ft 1$. PR f'j ffi Oit. That is not our
ff£j fKj flg (ft ft 1ft PR Mfault. He says that the % O IE IS f@ fKf
fault is ours. Give us ift PR j® 9c O # “a share. How much do $• $ ift O X ft
I owe you. You owe us 14 $j| ^ ® 0£ O ft £ten dol-lars.
, ift + (® ® ^
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 49
LESSON XjT..
thou ftthy, thine ft Fgf
thee ft
ye, you ft %your, yours ft &you ft &in-deed ft £
bless jj£ fg,
praise §|f Hwish-ed gg.jg,
sev-er-al $£ fg
heav-ens ^for-ev-er j]|
be-cause @ ^
Thou art the on-ly true
God. The heav-ens are
thine, the earth al-so
is thine. I will bless
thy name for-ev-er andev-er. Thou art myGod and I will praise
thee. Come and hear
all ye that fear God.
ft ft m ~ & W% ft i if ft mft 1 If ft pr c
& & ft Hi ft mit M i'J ?i< it tft
ft ft $ m ft nn ft o& & e w* m ft
as
You must do as he says.
You make too much of
him. What is the nameof your shop. Is this
store yours ? It is ours.
Where is yours ? Hesaid that he wish-ed to
see you.
ft n & ®J fSf O ft r”j
o ft m pr mM m m m o mft ft m m p# omm o ft m
m
& m K o IE Ea is ft « ji ft
aM X) ^* 7l<
ffi om m* p.
& a
is mis nM P4-
Ift ffi
ft nft £8 IS
Ml W4
50 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LBSSON LII.
he IS school mhis 1g vis-it ft
him 15 sor-ry
they IE ft stud-y SB
their, theirs iE ft m fa-ther nthem IE ft moth-er fft mmon-ey B. ft* par-ents #
He is not at home. Hehas gone out. AYhen
will he be back ? Hewill come back in an
hour. This is his book.
Please give it to him.
Is it his 'f It is his.
Tell him I will call
a-gain and see him.
IE & % 0 is
Hi dj 0 IS WL
m «F g % % o— & IS m ft o
ft IE PJf n o %m ft ft ft IS o ft ispi* 1# O ft IS mis IS hi ft & n #
a IE
Why do they not come
to school ? They have
no time. Tell them to
come to-night.
They say the mon-ey
is theirs. I say it is
not- their mon-ey. Tell
them to pay it back.
11 is ft * rH
ft 0 IS ft
« o IS IS ft hi
& iii *is ft IS fg 64 ft ft IS
ft m o ft IS
IPi ft is ft Pg? ft oIS ft ft a fg ft ft
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 5 1
LE8SOET
she IS (it £ )
her. hers lg P|*f
her lgthey 1g lib.
their, theirs /fg
them ig ilk
aunt.jfc #JH #
Is your moth-er in ?
She is not in. She has
gone to vis-it her aunt.
Is this her girl ? Is this
girl hers ? No, she is
mine. Tell your moth-er I came to see her.
I am sor-ry that she is
not at home.
Two la-dies were walk-
ing on the street last
e-ven-ing. They drop-
ped their purse. I pick-
ed it up. Per-haps it
was not theirs. I gaveit to them. They said
it was theirs.
LIII.
la-dies & ftS
pick-ed -In & *1
per-haps ^ ^walk-ing fr
drop-ped
e-ven-ing
mat-ter
ft m # n B& pi m mIS W Pi O 4S £m $ 1E P&E 35 & Pu- om f@ 16 IE P$ k ff p¥
m f® k ? IE m pi
% ft IE ft ft m o mfr p^i # $L n #m IE P3- o n m m F4
0 IB ee B& pi &
% M f® & m_L fr R o IE
m P£ IS ilk
O ft ft
& IE o t (J£ ft
1e ilk m o ft ft
* Hi IE ilk o IE 5k
© If IE ilk IK
5 2 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSOIT r.XTT.
it lB(ft m)its IB iff
it IB
they IB 1&
their, theirs IB life
them IBuse-ful W
What do you call this
thing. It is call-ed a
lock. Its name is lock.
It is use-ful to fast-
en the door, so that wecan-not o-pen it with-
out a key. A thief can-
not get in, if the door
is lock-ed.
The wag-on has a load
of goods. They are from
Chi-na. The hors-es can
draw a ver-y heav-y
load. Their legs are
strong. Give them plen-
ty to eat. We ought to
treat them kind-ly.
legs fill ft.
lock
plen-ty fcjj %fast-en Mlock-ed ft PJ|
with-out /ff
,
wag-on ft ifi
K O IS ft ^ $fiUSf o IB W £ ft Mm o iB ft g m m
ft if e st * ft ft ft
IB ft O ft £ft pi ft a f® ft *ft A ft *
ftft$W-ftft$Pi o 1B ife ft *
Ji ill 255 PK ft- o ft
R ft ft ft + & I: ft
ft O IB ft ft fin ft
ft 8 # Iff O ft 82iHEJfc£i3IOft® & 8 ft IB life
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 53
XiBJSSOIT IiV.
who #r, 551* strike tr
whose tt struck tr mwhom #r, II lame to
which FJr> & IS* do-ing M Xwhat W\ , \L PK for-get & IE
that #j\ fft re-mem-ber Ilf
la-zy ti ft ap-ple ft 1Did you strike him ? fo % fr IB ft m O #r
The man, who struck n m ib f® A «£ fe £him, stands there. A f® Pi p# Oman who is la-zy will -ft m a x ft nbe poor. A boy, whose m o —
f@
name is Ah Lun, did m & & * PT tik 35
it. The man, whom you fa mm 0 ft asaw on the street, is % i m £ a « A «my fath-er. n m $e m
Do you re-mem-ber what ft ft. IE % ib m m mhe said ? I for-get. I o a c±r
iCt'
do not know what he ta % o ft ng £d IBis do-ing. The boy ate m x m ^ @ O f® it*
an ap-ple, which made & # * m is ^ Xhim sick. I have a cat, IB M $ o a ft
— Kwhich is black. I saw m ft m & x o x aa man, that is lame. S IS A fUtmt
xjEssodsr i,vi.
gives ft great ^ but-ter ^ -ft
drink cheese ^ ft cof-fee % 1#deal J?r,^* cream ^ re-ceive if* ^grow £ -g would >g let-ters fr' |f’milk ^ jfi taught ffc |g a-round §§
The cow gives a greatdeal of milk. Milk is
good to drink. But-terand cheese are made ofmilk. Cream is used to
put in tea and cof-fee.
The cow has a calf.
The calf will grow up
m K * a ft Hi £*¥ m o * m ft
ft m o * ftdtx > * m * ft
it m o * m *ffi m « & dt
> % n\ ffl
m o is p> D *ff o fc K ff JB
£ n $ - R * *
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 55
LESSON LVII.
my-self ft n a hurt
your-self fr ft a fell n mhim-self ie ft a feed on
her-self ie ft e.(#& -k) hung ».it-self ig a a(# «o throw ?*, s.our-selves ^ 14 a a be-fore iii a#.
your-selves 14 a a riv-er
them-selves lg 14 a a in-fant « ft
al-most m * al-ways fl# ^[ hurt my-self. How ft a a naeidid you hurt your-self? .» at m Sfraa wI fell on the street. a 4ft ± Vk fj fl O1 will do it my-self. ft a a 1$ & PH 0A man hung him-self. —
i® A a a e o1 saw a wo-man throw ft £ — f® ix. A fgher-self in-to the riv-er. a a & ft M 5E
An in-fant can-not take i® ft IE ft a *care of it-self. We will m ft a ft a ogo and see him our- 14 a a fit M IB 0selves. It is cold. Go ft. * 0% o ft
and warm your-selves 14 ft a * £ ft aby the fire. In-fants m O ***
ft ft acan- not feed them-selves. 7 tt pg IE 14 ft aGo your-self. © ft ft a
56 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSOUST LVIII.
good ft
bet-ter Mbest 31
badworse Mworst Hver-y +
The Bi-ble is bet-ter
than all oth-er books.
It is the best book in
the world. It tells us
how God made all
things. It al-so tells
us that Je-sus came in-
to the world to save
men. Read the Bi-ble.
world 1£ 5?.
books Hgrows ^ &on-ly T' iS
moth-er ^ij ft,
e-ver g
ib & m m % M ft &- ® si] m m m oft & % 1 ^ ft Wm o ib e
i!Si O IB X %f£ S & life & BP I* $I f PbI i t A Sil oH IB ® 9 W da-
save &ft paid $ P|g
ft these 56 65
those IB
^ rich "fe” 1? Bi-ble H?
H made $£ Pfl
# al-so X.
He is a very bad boy. IB ** + ft P m la
Hej
grows worse ev-er-y ft o IB 0 0 # Mday. He is the worst m 9 m O «gboy that I ev-er saw. # m Bi % ift la tt
He has no moth-er to ft IB $ 35 m £ 0take care! of him. I
! IB ft # n ft m IB 53-
fear he will grow to a Vi IB Jtr * & ft ft
be a, bad man. m A
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 57
LE8S02N XjI3C.
lit-tle P $B
less sl Pleast M Pmuch, man--y%more m %mosthalf
Do you see those child-
ren on the street ? Theyare ver-y lit-tle child-
ren. The one on this
side is less than the
oth-ers. It is the least
one a-mong them. It
is not more than five
years old.
oth-ers gij Aa-mong 41
Pal
de-cide &num-ber $1,
mom-ingchild-ren &broth-er ft %
a m ft w $_t ni ng % o IE
% ft Ill *3 d' PR ft &pf O P& PJt
*§ f@ f@ ft S SB 1 S'J
^ PR O Ptl IE
& 2. 4* f@ ft MPR O IE £ £ ft
5 a m * pm
How man-y books haveyou ? I have on-ly one.
How much did you payfor your book ? I paid
a dol-lar. You gave
more than I did. Ahalf dol-lar was the
most I would pay
w ft £ * % on T> il
—ft PR o
ft ft II £ IS 8 ft
w P£ O ft d—
IS 8 8 o ft ft ft
K £ 1 * ft O a0 3? ft £ ft (@ 8fg PR
LESSON LX.
tall-er |g ^tall-est jg 7%low 0low-er H 0low-est g? 0my-self ^ Q cl
I am tall-er then youare. He is the tall-est.
Your chair is low-er
than mine. His is the
low-est. He is the kind-
est of men. God is
kind-er than men. Ahorse can run fast-er
than a man.
kind k} <C>
kind-er fr
kind-est gj gyfast
fast-er fi $fast-est 3? $your-self ffc g g,
’a"fBJ ift ft! c
IE •g Pfl PiJ- O ft!
© si ft £ ® £ $m o IE P$
% $ £ O « A3l + IE 1 if & P$
m m if ift A lib
— R K £ 11 m ft
ift - © A
Who can run the fast- *§ © te * £ m ft west ? What is the low- m o ft £ £ 51 Mest price ? That is the m n m O ©low-est price. You must
6-J SC p& fH
de-cidc for your-self. 1 * o ft! n S G ft
will de-eide for my- N o IC sc G G ft
self. He has no mon- & pii o IE fi $ey to pay me. o§ *v
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 59
LS8803S- XJCI-
strong if j? long Astrong-er M if 3? long-er mstrong-est M if >T long-est $ £pret-ty if SB short
pret-ti-er ]g if short--er M &pret-ti-est S if 0# short-est S &smell lah than IS
I am strong-er than n 0 * ft 0you. He is the strong- 15 Ifc £ if U pa cest. This rose is pret- IS ^ IS ft i if
ti-er than that one. » 0 ^ 0 wWhich is the pret-ti-est ? m £ if $ 0 $Is my coat long-er or m ® n ** 1short--er than his? My k. & 15 p$ c a P&
hair is the long-est. i m » ft § s ft o 15
His is the short-est. ft % 5 fft w
Oan you wait a few ft ft ft ft ft ft H if
days long-er ? Do not us C m «keep them any long-er. * if IS ii * 3? o ft
Two days is the long- B Pft ft ft H ft ft
est time I can wait. ft o ft ft
1 will be back in a E ft ft ft pr cshort time. It has a % + ft ts pa
very strong smell. Bfc it
60 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LE88OIT LXII.
large klarg-er ]j£ klarg-est S ksmall $1
small-er M $1
small-est m mnum-ber tfc, 5®.
A colt is larg-er than
a sheep, but small-er
than a horse. This is
the larg-est, and that
is the small-est one
a-mong them. His cap
is new-er than mine.
Yours is the new-esfc.
new tf
new-er ]£ if
new-est Sold H,old-er M %old-est %New-Year if ^
-RE ft ffi W k~ R & ffi % s m is~U O I#
pe o ie pe >j> *1 ^ mif & ^ pft o ffc pft ^
I am old-er than you.
Who is the old-est ? His
book is old-er than
mine. Which is the old-
est ? I wish you a hap-
py New Year. A large
num-ber. He is the larg-
est man 1 e-ver saw.
The larg-er the bet-ter
n m i ^ m m o ie
ns % m i « ;& nm o & rs « mK p& O ^ £if # o » 2pe o a $ ta
flrUi&flSAlfJftg* « O £ A $ &
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 61
LESSOIsT LXIII.
I am a fa please m fthou art fa fa a-sleep m £he is IE fa sleep-y pji API
we are a iik fa thirst-y fi
you are fa ilk fa hun-gry at $they are IE ilk fa wil-ling ft
bus-y is m per-fect £
[ am hun-gry. 1 am not a ill o avery well. I am go-ing % n & o ahome. I am very glad fa. m o n ft +of that. You are not s f® # v o ft
do-ing it right. He is fa a a 0 IE
a-sleep. He is not here. Sr o 1E
He is a very hard man W Pi o IE
to please. He is not IE ffi ft m Awil-ling to come. fa ft « Vi
We are al-most there.
We are very bus-y now.
You are not good men.
They are in bed. Theyare sleep-y. They are
thirst-y. They are all
the same. They are
worse than you are.
% 1$ t T fJ
ft- a fa HEB O fa ilk m ^ie & fa be m mie ilk m m ®i miik fa m m m %iik % w - m& m n & & fa
fa
£ mft (t.
k
fa ^fa mV§ £» IS
O IE
t® pi
« *§
*? Af@ Pi
O IE
O IE
O IE
62 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER
A rfliip sails on the
sea. it has masts andsails. A sail-or works
on a ship. Some ships
go by steam. It is then
called a steam-er.
Has the steam-er sail-j
ed? When will she saill
She is to sail next Fri-
day. When did the
steam-er ar-rive ? Shear-rived this morn-ing.
Did you re-ceive anylet-ters 1 Yes sir, I
re-ceived sev-er-al.
LLESSOirsr LXIW
ship $sails f? J8M1.masts
steam M.
steam-er >X
sail-or 7k XFri-day ft ff 11
ar-rive JiJ.
re-ceive
p/> fr t\. hPJ 0 IS & it
>
111 Hf o — m 7k £M pii M X 0 £ US
m 7jC ff PK Ou 1tt m
* pa # t P£ ois ft if) # % o IS
T if # JL % ft pa
# w * m ft ft
p£ O is 3*
m 0 is £ ti
fa ft fij PJS oft $ E ft ft ft
a <8
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER 63
LESSONTI was ft St ft a-fraid S:
thou wast ft ft an-gry § £?
he was IB St ft stol-en ffj PH
we were tJE ft din-ner ;k Hvour were ft 6E ft break-fast Jf
1- §*
they were IB m St ft yes-ter-dayBfc B
once - # morn-ing |JJ,
I was just there. I
was at home yes-ter-
day. I was at break-
fast when he came.
You were goue when he
came. He was an-gry
when I saw him. Hewas here be-fore din-ner.
He was here first.
ft IE £ ia fa PS oft W n m a PS oIB $ fa m fl# a ft am # s o IB
% fa ft ft ft -A ijg
m c $ a IB
m m «F IB fit n& * fi i % IB
pi o IB ft $ % m PS
We were left by the
boat. You were not
here last night. They
were glad to see me.
They were once poor,
'but now they are rich
men. They were a-
fraid it was stol-en.
ft ® m m ® m.
m o ft itk ft ng
& m ps o ib i*
% ft mib % m $ ft a m n&(B 4o ^ 1R % ft M It
Pfil A o IB ^ ft tfl aa fir p£ W
64 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER
LESSON X.X'VT.
I have been ft E @ %thou hast been#; E j!
he has been IB E M. {&
we have been ft life E 0you have been# life E .Hthey have beenlg life E 1$
school. # It
times IS
read-ing IS ft
wait-ing ^ ft
al-read-y E 0fin-ish-ed % PH
some-time flf
chil-dren ff iz
1 have been used to ft E tft f® *do-ing it. I have been * 0 « E m ft pB
wait-ing for you two 15 if nit It 0 ft
hours. I have been e m $ pithere many times. You m $ 0 ft
have been gone nil day. ft £ Pi B pit It %He has been dead a IB E 0 “i
— ¥ Pit
year. He has been here m o IB E $al-read-y. He has been PJB Pi *5 O IB ft
sick some-times. m M
We have been to see ft life E f£ IS a ft
you. What have you
been do-ing ? We have
been read-ing a book.
They have been fin-ish-
ed for a week. Theyhave been at school.
m G # E l£ M. iS Uif %life % IS ig
IB life ffi $# pit m © o ib
# IS %
o
7C
ofl
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 65
LESSON LXVII.
I shall be ft 'M &thou wilt befit H? %he will be tS ^we shall be ft life 'A% ffc
you will be fit life 'M 2k {&
they will belli life Iff 2k
an-gry If 3?
trust ^a-bout JL To’clock |§
hap-py # is
leis-ure $ fel
to-mor-rowHh U
for-get IE*
I shall be here to-mor-
row a-bout ten o’clock.
I will be more care-
ful next time. I will
be at leis-ure to-mor-
row. He will be back
very soon. He will be
here when they stop
work.
*!BB±T+SfiS#wt m ps $ o b- m ft g & m *u ,&
w o mu & m & n m % o
ig % m wl
£ & o is life
m mm *9
We shall be here in
time. You will be hap-
py if you are good.
They will be an-gry if
you do it. They will
be a-fraid to trust youif you for-get to do it.
I will do it.
m n ft life m & p£ p*
m o « m fit in «A fit & 0S f jfl PCI Pg
® fit ik is life n «m & WOfiSig 0: Jg
IE IK IS life «fc m PS rtf
& ik m5
66 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSONT LXVIII.I may be n s$ * 1ft 8pOt Id
thou mayst beffc ^ tru-ly * ft
he may be 15 J& % ft hur-ry tt ft
we may be ft Jfc ^ # ft pleas-ed ft -§
you may be ft & s£ # ft at-tend mthey may be 15 % t ft bus-i-ness^
be-fore ft.tir iNf. per-haps
[may be there as soon $ ft ft ft P{f m
as you are. He may be m p* O a ft
there. He may be blind. 15 PtS m p$ pa- o 15 $He may be go-ing to ft ft ir m m o $at-tend to some busi- ft 15 ft ft ft ft £ ftness. Per-haps he may a p§t 0 ^ ft 15 ft
be pleas-ed to hear it. m « 0He may be back be-fore ft » ®HS ^ ft It ft
long. @ m
We may be a-ble to
get there be-fore they ^ pf £1 £ij ^ f[41
start. If you do not P!l P|t O ff£ ft Pg 0hur-ry you may be late. 1& 65 ^ # fft It il Pi
They may be tru-ly good O IS £l( ^ ft ^men. It may be a spot ft A Pj}- O f® 65 5$
of ink. He may be gone # M ?JC p!t £5 O 15a long time. ^ f i ® S ®
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 67
LSSSONT LXIX.soul Hdust Sk £hell ft
hates ft-
fig
oughts if
breath M.
spir-it SI
suf-fer
sin-nersfp Abod-y # tl
We have a bod-y anda soul. God made the
bod-y of dust. The soul
is made of the breath
of God. The bod-y will
die, but the soul will
nev-er die. Theis al-so call-ed a
it. The soul of
can think of God.
soul
spir-
man
n It
- m
m &m o5E &?K jE
f®
O03
mile S&
doubt Hfruit ^ dF
truth H %pit-y m 113
M - I® # tl £ft a O it ft K1® # O f®
#> jt ** ir n m.
m * &&&*{& f® si *1 $0* Pi? o is
4 X 'M **
i® it pk m & pi
& vt
All men are sin-ners.
God hates sin. We all
ought to suf-fer in hell.
God had pit-y on men,and found a way to
save them. He sent his
Sou in-to the world to
save us. Jesus is the
Sou of God.
ftftAffUSlffAi* ft m m m m o nit - n m m m it mpi s s O fa pT ft ait pk x is ai - i®
'
1$ik IB It m m ¥ O IB
IT H IB ft & it W1$ & ^ it O HP ®c 75
% m m ft &
6S ENGLISH AND CHINESE READEE.
LESSOU X,XX.love
lov-ing ^ 15
loved ^see Hsaw H 3§
see-ing H Kseen M,
be-fore ^c, 3#,
I love him. He is lov- I
ed by me. I see you.
Yon are seen by me.
I saw him be-fore youdid. He is in the yard
see-ing the flow-ers. It
is a long time since I
have seen him.
walk fjwalk-ing
walk-ed ff |B5f
yard[jg $
a-gainst ^ *0 gflow-ers ftstreet-car ^ ^some-times^' ^
$ # ie o i£ t* $^ pH O n a As Oft « a « £ 15 o
8 IE ft ft a ft
Pf O IE Pi 1 lift
H PH
Some-times I walk andsome-times I ride on the
street-car. A man walks
with a wo-man. That
man is walk-ing fast.
He has walk-ed a long
way. He walk-ed with
me a mile.
n ft & $ fr o “
A M fr O ®AfrftffiftttfcO
1
egr O IE -HUt 8 ~» Pfl- ft: p*
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 69
XJHJSSOISr Xi2CXX-
read Hread-ing H MrSad Hbe-gin ft
be-gan ft ft
be-gin-ning#r f/$ Hbe-gun $£ ft ft
tell IS
tell-ing IS Mtoid is m
I read a book. A book
is r6ad by me. I amread-ing a book. Whendid you be-gin to work ?
I be-gan to work yes-
ter-day. The tree has
be-gun to bear fruit.
ft 1ft pft ilr O “ p?
ilfc M ftt“
pfi iS O ft
m a * ft ff x wftBfcBE^ftft#
ft ft ft ft *3
The trees are begin-
ning to bud. Tell methe truth. I am tell-
ing the truth. Do you
doubt what I have told
you. He told me all
a-bout it.
w ft ft ffl X0 * j¥ pS ft £p
0 ft IS M # *m ft 0 & ra
ft ft
pS m & ft Pit P£ P£
IS e ft iH ft PH ift ft
£p pit ft
70 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSON- LXXII.rain & Mrain-ingi£ & Mrain-ed * m neat £ate £ V&
eat-ing £ jgeat-en ^ pts
brok-enA A
It rains ver-y oft-en.
It is rain-ing now. It
rain-ed hard last night.
We eat bread. Bread
is eat-en by us. Howmany meals do .you eat
in a day. The dog ate
the meat
say IS, Si.
say-ing ^ SR
said ||
meals ^lunch ^be-long ji§
un-der-stand!li %un-der-stood
[jj|
m £ HI M o 4d
S o K0 & * M m pm Oft life £ Q o& A ffc ft life £ m O— 0 £ % ® fi
Ft 0 (0 £ m (0
& P*
He is eat-ing lunch. He 15 A £ SR $ lit O IS
says that he is not wil- % 15 P£_i±=.
p# O 15 Aling. What is he say- m %. H if 0 « *ing? I have not said Pit II & 0 *SO. I do not un-der- * m & # {ft Fr II
stand what you say. PM O 15
He says the book does % 10 if ft • $not be-long to him. 15 m
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER 7
1
LESSOH XjXUXIZCI.
try fit. ir.
try-ing atried a iH
speak li
spoke It ^speak-mg IS
spok-en It
stol-en ffr
T will try and do it.
I am try-ing to learn
Eng-lish. He tried to
es-cape, but could not
do it. I can-not speak
Chi-nese. I have spok-
en to him about it.
He is speak-ing to you.
He spoke in so low a
voice, that no one could
hear him. I am teach-
ing you. You are taught
by me. A la-dy taught
me to speak and read
Eng-lish. She teach-es
me ev-er-y day.
teach ft
teach-ing ,tt
taught ft
learn
es-cape ft*
Eng-lish ^ %Chi-nese f£
teach-es ft fll
a WL a ft IB P* 0a a % oIE « ift i fa * &ft n m o 12
If n £ IS m o 12
& It £ m & IB IS
o ie ft It K& it £n P£
IE it PE a m a. It— m pT B © ft
IE O 12 ft
ft 5K it 0 ft ft
a 12 m O —ft
& a ft 12 II dt p9
eS PJ5- O fE
B *fc ?2f
72 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSON LXXIV.buy jS,
buy-ingK ^bought H ^do f$
did m mdo-ing ffo %.
done ffl Pj£
gone ± 0|
I want to buy a pen-cil.
He is in the store buy-
ing some things. I have
bought a new watch.
If you do so, what will
peo-ple say ? What are
you do-ing now ev-er-y
day ?
feel
feel-ing & Rfelt 0|
watch 0, ^ ft
peo-ple A, 1^
rea-son ^mis-takeH, ?h,
sor-ry M M
ft ft I “ tt ® ft CIB Pg M A* & K R to
# O ft
i i i A ms 15S O ft Piffi Pfc B
B ft R il *F K '
It must be you who did
it. What is the rea-son
you have not done it 1
I feel bet-ter to-day.
Why do you feel so sad 1
I felt sor-ry when he
went a-way. This feels
ver-y hard.
i m ft & >& ft ft Vr
opr O &£ m & ft * « ft »m ft o ^ ti ft r% m % o ft ® & %Pt m & W O 1& A i*
i@ a* ft a # ft ia «m fa ft a 4? 45
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 73
LESSOR LXXY.
think ffc
think-ing
thought mwrite %wrote ^ pS
writ-ing % Jgwrit-ten % ^hid-den (g f
1 think that you have
made a mis-take. Hethinks a-bout it just as I
you do. I thought it
was so. I will think
of it. Will you please
write a let-ter for me to
send to my triend ?
sell if
sell-ing jf §?
sold if P|l
cred-it
wa-ter 7JC
cer-tain-ly $match-es A ^mis-take & *b
$ ft M ft fa J5f ft HPft O 1S
U ft fa PH" Wi M R tpjf o &EU Si§ nil o a &ph ffc i»a- o ^ *1 fa
; i I 1 S
I have writ-ten a let-ter.
I am writ-ing a let-ter.
I wrote your name in
your book. I do not
sell on cred-it. That
man is sell-ing match-
es. i have sold myknife
fi B II % & ~ ft ft
O *n ^ ft ft
Pi fa PK « fftfi fa ft «P| O if tb
Pit O if! j@ A ft sM a ^ it o a m J]
W !£ it A ^
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.nA
hear 55hear-ing 55heard 55
go £went 4^ PH
go-ing -£ Mgone £ F?
sent & PH
Did you hear him say
so ? He is hear-ing myles-son. I have heard
noth-ing of it. I shall
go wheth-er you do or
not. He has been gone
an hour. 1 went homewith him.
When are you go-ing?
Slay here while I amgone. I go to vis-it
him now and then. Youknow better than I do.
I knew it be- fore youdid. I have known hima year
know ftl, fP,
knew ft] PH
know-ingft] W.
known ft] PH
les-son —noth-ing ft pfl
wheth-er ^peo-ple A ft.
ft ft m % m m %Wu o IE ft 3 % ft m~ n « O 7k tis & m o ^ft * pg * a & & %
m e. m & mr~ SH MW M ® O ft1 » 3 IB * ^ @
ft & m * w c is
^ p^ m ft p^ re p*
o $A * X ^ ^ IB
P&E O ft ft] il
$C®#^^fti$% 13 ft O ft E & ss
p§ ib - $ pij- e *§
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 75
ILffiSSOUST LXXVlI.
land it
round f(j
fourth $$ 0a-round J£J g}
or-ange |§
out-side
sur-face "gu _t
The world is not flat.
It is round like an or-
ange. The out-side of
the earth is called its
sur-face. Peo-ple live
on the sur-face of the
earth.
$ ph- m o mit P|t 9b & # P* 1Ha ± O A IS
^ | i I i ® 1 ®ft PH &
The sur-face of the
earth is made up of
land and wa-ter. One
fourth of the earth’s sur-
face is land, and three
fourths is wa-ter. Ships
sail on the o-cean. They
can sail a-round the
world. The earth is
very large.
* 3* £ IB ± ft £ it
£ * M Pit O it
m 2. Tfi 1 0 a —
m a^F- It X ft 0 ft
m ik O ft
« fr £ A $ fS
pt O i@ AS
it In) m 11 fr it ft
z T O © it 3*
m n A Pit
76 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSON- X.OCXI'VIII.
:ase H If
jaU g #tried ^Judge ^ /ft
tri-al ^win 0l> 5$.
prove £ ®fin-ed IP] P§|
ar-rest ^ ft
ap-pear Jg, #en-gage ft. If.
bail-ed H {&
ev-i-denee S &tes-ti-mo-ny Pplain-tiff ^ -g-
de-fend-anfc fj ^post-poned i§
in-tend ;!;
When will the case be
tried ? Tho tri-al will
take place next Mon-day. The case was set-
tled last week. It is
not de-cid-ed yet. TheJudge will cer-tain-ly
con-vict him.
9b o m
' m * * o m « & t
f a ©r O ffl
t M HI * £ & £ ISp£ P
The ju-ry found him f!iSl.l£f§g1S :if!P
guil-ty. Did his wit- O IS P|?
ness give good ev-i-
dence ? His tes-ti-mo- 9b O IS P §1
ny was be-lieved. The tl IS ® (g T O ffl
de-fend-ant want-ed the ftH $£ Hr £ A 1c •§» R
case tried to-day. The f 51 i I O I Hr
plain-tiff post-poned the A Iff il I]M f*.l
case un-til next Fri-day T f® lit ?? 71 _t tF +at 10 a.m. f/i
ENQLISH AND CHINESE READER. 77
LESSON- X.313CI3C-
suit If f&
fees $ It
bail (£ p!
bonds# Hcourt IS PI
sue A, aft.
Call a man to ar-rest
him. Take out an ar-
rest war-rant. He is
de-tained for bail. I
bailed him out of jail.
He gave bonds for one
hund-red dol-lars. Did
he ap-pear in court? Helost his suit.
law-yer $ Cr6
law-suit ^ nj
hund-red —de-tained® ft
ju-ry |fi &de-cid-ed T
PT A ft IB O A tn
It A m wTTC ft o
® ft IB m A «m « » a O a# 7 IB HI &
JILL O IB
s — §f® © ft ft
ft O IB i'i
in m SB o IB &7 IB m t ft ft
guil-ty % Hwit-ness SI Aset-tied % Tcon-vict P Awar-rant Hclear-ed if
He was fined ten dol- IB * S3 T + ffi ft ft
lars. He could not prove ft o IB ft ft ft SI
it. 1 in-tend to sue him. m # O 49•c. * IB
He was cleared. To Hr Hr ft c IB 7 ftwin a case. You will *8 o ft 7 Hr ft 0 fthave to en-gage a law- a
/D >& H In iR o f®
yer. The court fees are & n $ ft ft iff Aheav-y. It is a bad O Hr ft &thing to go to law & ft ft ft «P
ENGLISH AND CHINESE HEADER.
LESSON" 1/2C2CI2C.
loves S ff.
.1 Lif 1 A \ 1 W ^rA V; ^
gives
once «E 19
know 4ai IS
knew n tlose &
/ : fi -i- / iJWT-'..w% said is ft
kept a ft
word EJ
ways & ft eas-y Sr f? dol-lar - nfault f§ eas-i-er 1£ U an-gry ft &night ?£ % thought fath-er ^part H would & >j& play-mate iS ft
THE DOLLAR.
1. I once knew a boywho, for the most part,
was a good boy. Buthe had one great fault;
he would get an-gry.
2. His fa-ther told himhe would give him a
dol-lar, if he would not
get au-gry for one day.
- ft t£ it ta $-mm & ft. ig * ft
ft if aa 4* ft. fa 15
ft - * f§. in ft % &a is » «r is m x ii is
15 So. ft g 15 - U Pd
ftg&BS&igtt<n - x a & is.
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 793.
He said he would|
try. But he thought it
would be very hard
work.
4. His play-mates tried,
in all the ways they
could think of, to makehim an-gry, so as to lose
Lis dol-lar.
5. But he did not
speak one an-gry wordthat day. When night
came, his fath-er foundthat he had tru-ly not
got an-gry that day.
6. So his fath-er gavehim the dol-lar as he
said he would.
7. But he said to him,
“My son, for one dol-lar
you can do right. Canyou not do so from love
to God, who gives youall you have i
”
8. He said he wouldtry. He who loves Godwill find it eas-i-er to
do right.
- m m t* ff fg
15 t U PR 15 ft
10 ze >ik M ~h ft l|
ft m #03 IB i| % Fjg
ff pf u 15 nk
ft & nai m misi & m & *
m is - da is m£ m % is m h
® % m mw m % m fa wtit 15 m X £n, 1g
& ® 0 m * m ® ns m & ma ph- ig m x m
jS^l5E0fSiftl®$ - jC & i§ 15
d: 10 * ft it 15
% m. & ft ^ f*
ft 3 Ptf fit. 0 % A it
it ^ & me» in ft-
» /w M I& fa mA 15 ff IS- 15
SC PF ffl 15 H ® Pft
tfttt&ftBftfltgasr
«
So ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSON L3C3C2CI.
talk house m oft-en & ft
near i£ where & % a-way A Ttook ft Pf| voice M € pret-ty if ft
loud A S speak II pock-et
home ^ please He S sim-ple $ 6. &know IS, taught ifc ^ with-out ft
went A *§! thought m ^ ’mak-ing ft I8t
could ft, pJ» lived ^ ft look-ing W. ft.
would ®fc. loved + # sneak-ing » 8 ft
THE BOY AND THE BIRD.
1. There was a manonce, who kept a bird
in his house.
2. The bird was a ver-y
pret-ty one that had
been taught to speak.
3. When the man said,
“Where are you?” It
would say, “Here I am.”
4. There was a boy wholived near this man’s
house, and oft-en wentto see him.
A IE & m % m ~K i£
- • a * # +# n m * tk a »m if m m ts
= n % is a is
?£. $ p& 5E Pi
P9 W — f@ £H
a m ft x f* ji# nA ft a 4E
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 8l
5. He was very muchpleased with the
.bird.
He loved to hear it
talk.
6. One day, when the
boy went to see it, the
man was not at home.
7. The boy saw the
bird, and thought howeas-y it would be to
take it.
8. He thought no onewould know it, and it
would be his bird.
9. So the boy tookthe bird, and put it
in-to his pock-et. Hewas just sncak-ing a-
way when the mancame in,
10. The man thought
he would please this
boy by mak-ing the
bird talk.
11.
With-out first look-
ing to see where the
bird was, the man said,
_y Where are you ?’’
6
H m SB $ft ft Hft ife m m h, ft
* s: m a m ft, % mHi its
jr f « H fg SB
& £ E (
:B i at. f®
a iff & # ^fl§ m ff §
e n m Pi, -IB 'hC
*U m ft & fe‘ iB -A
PpE
A IB n ft —A ft TJ & H>:#r
f®D/ N Ht « M %71 PH- M f® SB aft
ft El fir m m h i£
;i & £ IB m m &PM ;b ft ff ff £ffi •A, ($:] Pg 'is. is f® As+ f® A Si ® (®
D It ai fS.Pif lit
ML 4aill1 R k sb aft
/£ir
m $+ — ft
PT m D m m ft
Pi m.,f® A njkPis
82 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER
12. The bird in the
boy’s pocket, cried, as
loud as it was able,
“ Here I am.”
+ - m k % hi
pi m ^ ^pi.m % * « n« ts.«pi % Pi
LESSOJST LXXXII.
books § friends 45
young & ^ clothes 'III
should M Hi strength 1/ JJ
health ifj a-lone |pL, $3,
fail
close m.
keep
learn m %trust a asleep EN. Hi.
gifts rx va
drink t*
thank % m.
pa-rents x #for-give it %heav-en * i:
kind-ness fc #
EVENING.
1. At the close of the
day, be-fore you go to
sleep, you should not,
fail to pray.
- m 8 % m $j&
*
t * imm m m & & ft %
fife mJr isS
ENGLISH AND CHINESE HEADER. 83
2. You ask your pa-
rents and friends for
food, and drink, andnion-ey, and clothes.
3. When they give
you these, you - thankthem, and love themfor their kind-ness.
4. So you should ask
your Fath-er in heav-en,
for all those things,
which he a-lone can
give you.
5. You should ask himfor life, and health, andstrength, and help.
6. You should pray to
him to for-give your
sins, and to keep youfrom all sin.
7. You should thank
him for all his goodgifts to you, and put
your trust in God.
8. You ought to give
your heart to Gcd, for
God says, “ My son,
give me thy heart.”
“ ft # ft m £# dt m 0 ® & is
n tz £ n & m m ££ hr m ft
£ IB Hk $ P£ ft
SB ft £ fft ft £ §91
IB X ft % IB if & #ft ni # IB
® Pit ^ ft a Bm & ft ^ ± £X. $ f@ ft & # ^ #.^ ft IB pT # Sft Pft PH
5. ft m m # ib
$ £ ^ & ft $ ^ #1 * 15 m m ft
A ftl i ff iS
* IB $c V ft It IP BX ft ft ft Ml PH £ «Pt IP B
d: ft III il
IB. 0 IB ins Pit £ if p&
4ft # :M il ft X ft
<6 {ft II #A ft S H 1$ ft
p& .& if $ m m 0 mM «4> t ti.ft ft PJ.ft
a *& if «
84 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSON LXXXITT.
aP* tg.fi.thus
pick $ &parts
ft, g,half — 42
soon
there (@ p$j
found£
shell ^broke if fig
woods ^ ftwhose tj|
pft
un-derf fa
e-qual qi
a-gree & f;old-er s# ;g 65
picked £ 7be-gan & ff
be-longs
ker-nel £ -f
quar-rel 4g ^set-tie §g ^set-tling HIlaugh-ing^ Jjg
THE Q I
1. Un-der a great tree
in the woods, two boys
found a fine, large nut.
As soon as they saw it,
they both ran to get
the nut.
2. But one boy got
there first, and picked
it up. “It is mine,”
says the oth-er, “for I
was the first to see it.'*
3 . No, it is mine,”
says the first, “for I
was the first to pick
FAEREL.
ui ft W Pi -^AftAT'if^fili$3 44 ff ffi & ~ f® *1
m * n dMg & jz. mmm, 1 f® ^ && is
r fa # - fi ft
44 ff % fij f@ PEfcfc ft
& is.ti n ® ss. le $$ PM & $ ft 1$ a
|
£1 ft
h -
1
® n %m is m $ p&t.s ^ $#. at m e ie n
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. *5
it up.” Thus they at
once be-gan to quar-rel
a-bout the nut.
4. As they could not
a-gree whose it should
be, they called an old-er
boy. He said, “I will
set-tie this quar-rel.”
5. He took the nut
and broke it. He took
out the ker-nel that wasin it.
6. He broke the shell
of the nut in-to twoparts as near-ly e-qual
as he could.
7. “This half of the
shell,” said he, “be-
longs to the boy whofirst saw the nut.
8. “ And this half be-
longs to the boy whopicked it up.
9. “The ker-nel of the
nut I shall keep as mypay for set-tling the
quar-rel.
IS E f® m n m ft
ft M m fl# & t ft #
119 s IE ft ft ft
& if m ft ft m m if
fla. ft 1H m A m IBhi ft ,1E IS ft ag
$ pm # m m ft
ft IE ft m $$ f®
ft ft ft m IE,M Mm m ft m iz ft ft mns m
/ \ IE ft m m %a n m M PB m± T — HI PH A, fu
B ft
ft* IE §?T PM —
.
ft
m % ft. ft ft M if mm ft ft m ft ft IB
ft
A x m —ft ft
IB M if m f® ft fe ft
ft IB ft
it pm i® ft ft mfc. ft ft ft T g e. mft m X m. M ft ft ag
% PM # m m m nr
86 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
10 . “This is the way,”
said he, laughing, “ in
which quar-els are very
apt to end.”
+ Wi % IS i$E
ff-j # m ^ ^ m &m u* % % m t m && -? m
LBESONT X, X IXX ITT.
hills OJ ff
seek jfc,
rays 11 56
harm IJL S',
walk Utops JJh 31,
grain 3x i*
light Til. IS,
Lord ft
fields £0
praise jifc Hglo-ry # 5fc
love-ly pf £slow-ly ^mer-ciesj£ i%
gar-den ?£ H
seemed » ndressed % ~f ft
re-joice §day-light li %splen-dor '0
glad-ness £§£
good-ness # ^great-ness^c ^
EARLY RISING.
1. I was up one morn- —if—
19 £ing be-fore day-li<^ht. n % it. «£ 4E
As soon as I was dress- Jh m £ UK f®
ed, I went out in-to the WL a m$ ft a 1gar--den to walk. m &O The first rays of
—f® B *1
the sun shone o-ver the ph a m a. & i§ Oj 11
tops of the hills. Soon m ii m 11 1® n si
the sun him-self was pa k n w P ffi ki
se*u in his glo-ry. & it m
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. *7
3. He slow-ly rose, *. 15 ft H m hi
and looked down with m x ft m if IK -& Pgf
glad-ness up-on the gar- & ill-O' ft (@ W
den and fields. Ev-er-y li m dt 51 90 Pi Tthing seemed to re-joice Ft ft ft W t #, Xin the splen-dor of his if 3 $ H hlight. n m 3t
4. I felt glad. I m ft ft ^ if ft
thought of the good-ness a pn n & * PHand great-ness of God, # p& W ft th
who made ev-er-y thing & m p$ «r Ph Eso love-ly. a
5. In the joy of my £ ft *6 m put
heart I said, “ Tru-ly wl i
f
m § e£. i# £God is good. The sun % ft # m 0 m hi
ris-es and sets by his m Jt a ft ±.ft fk ft
will. The trees, and 15 m ± PK.IS #the fruits, and the & M -T dt
> lx ft a ft
grain grow by his 0 n 15 eg? a ft £care.” * m
6. He keeps me from /
\
15 ft n ft ft
harm. He gives me all m i? 13 a - $I have. He keeps me ft 15 ft ft p& 15 &all the day. When I a if ft' ft ill St
sleep, his kind care is 15 £ if *& 30 11 ft,
o-ver me. His mer-cies & II 15 £ m m A ja.
are new ev-er-y hour. m ft ft
7. I will praise God. d: ft & & 81 ft
His face will I ev-er fa ft ft a is p&
88 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
seek. In the morn-ing
I will call up-on the
name of the Lord. In
the even-ing I will sing
his praise. I will lovej
the good God.
ft ft % Wr # IB, £m # ih «#. & m & n
m m mu#. n g & i# m n1&. $ £ £ ^ (B & #ft Mi
LESSON ILIKIIXX'V-
a-rise &sin-ned n fH
want-ed H,wick-ed ft
5S
wor-thy «e-nough £.
a-gainst & S.farm-er 1 •L
hun-gry Jit
rags £spent ft
7*
sight of J|
liked 4’ S young-est 31
hired if. II. an-oth-er gij
fam-i-ly ^ 4* com-pan-ions f£,
THE LOST SON.
I. Once there was a
farm-er, who had twoson® The young-est was
— ^ ff IS ® M- m ® ffl m A At
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER 89
& bad young man. Hedid not wish to live at
home. He want-ed to
go a-way and do as
be liked.
2. He got all the
mon-ey he could from
his fath-er, and wenta-way to an-oth-er place
to live. There he lived
a wick-ed life. For aj
long while he was likeJ
one lost, or dead, to his
fatn-i-ly.
A IS pg & M n£ ni
m ft. is s as * m pb
& ® is m <& m & m
r is m £ n mps m $ m m t*
as a m - Pi it u ss
^ is (H Pi a #1 $“ ® *? 5& B W S fx.
it if IH£f 0 IS
ft ^ t is & - m& pi *e t m a
3. By and by, all his
mon-ey was spent. His
bad com-pan-ions all
left him. Ke was very
poor and hun-gry. So
he hired him-self out to
feed hogs. But his wa-
ges were not e-nough
to buy food.
h it rr it a tis m ® m ft ns
BME ft ® m ft ^ A,
“ & gfl Pfl IS ±- I1.1S
M I S. g d i S® 6 » PR I * * 'ft
I
<b ft. is m x m ^ n& 1
4. His clothes were ® IS 10 P£f ^ 36-
worn out to rags. He fflL §£ ^ iH ^ — fit, IS
was very wretch-ed. He + ^ ® ^ §5'i Fii. ® ®then thought of the fl# IS M f& lit fj
hap-py days he once had S IS §1 1 § it
in hi» fath-er’s house. 5f ^ ^ 7pl PgJ B T\ fil
90 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
At last he made up lit n. IS jfc ± «his mind to go home. m is -£
5. He said, “ I will £ m IS. &a-rise and go to my & iS If pi. if $fath-er, and will say, m m IS. ft im £ ii
Fath-er, I have sin-ned na. ft % IP X, j®.^ % ft
a-gainst heav-en and K m fr m ift Pif
in thy sight, and am u V£ $ 0 > ft
no more worth-y tc be e a uT 5 it fr
called thy son.” %
LESSON I.
off til * mer-ry ft m brought fr P£
ring It do-iugs fr s for-give fr &spite % ft be-come fr for-gave fr
shoes m re-pent ft at con-duct fr"®forth in kissed % T ser-vants ft fr
meantjk.,G-
1H*0 treat-ed ft 7 re-solved *7 S
sto-ry * fr rag-gedo © m til con-di-tion It
MORE ABOUT THE LOST SON.
1 . This bad son was — f® ^ kf ff ,
now sor-ry for his wick- @ T^t lb FT( f$L fi® fr iPS,
ed con-duct. He felt % I’ll, ft ^ Wt kt B
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 91
that he had done very-
wrong, and re-solv-ed
to go home. When he
was yet a long way off,
bis fatb-er saw him.
2. In spite of hit'
poor, rag-ged con-di-
tion, his fath-er knewhim. He ran and fell
on his neck and kissed
him. How glad the
fath-er was to see his
son a-gain. He for-gave
him for all his wrong
do-ings.
1&1E * *3 J9F fit ffi +# fa X £ £ ± Mm ± if. is
& 1* m ft it m ft IE
m x m £ m ie
- is m m nn % IE. WL Pg tr IE nm m, n ie % m mfl§ if ife 1 ti
ffi {fe IE ffl S «l
% IE. IB « tt « W #$ Ft 8$ I. IE fla f@ ff.
P& Pg «l IE ft~
iji & m n ns ft m n
3. Then he broughtj
him to the house, and
said to one of his ser-
vants, “ firing forth the
best robe and put it
on him;
and put a
ring on his hand, andshoes on his feet
;and
let us eat and be mer-
ry. For this my son
was dead, and is a-live
a-gain ;and was lost
h m wt ® n$ m IE a. ]± % m D$
M x ft £ 4« u mz ~ m um m & $ft m ^ & i
Ti if n $
ie m. x t* $ % $ Si
& iE pk x iw gHg ^ ^ IE SIC +, #$ & # ft g§ # s- Pi
& p£. B S $ !% (Ifl ft
5. 5E PI P|f. X 1#. Ft
n # £ a * & ^
92 ENGLISH AND CHINESE REAH Eli
and is found. And they
be-gan to be mer-ry.”
4. What does this
stor-y teach us? By the
fath-er is meant, our
Fath-er in heav-en. Asthe son went a-way from
home, and did so muchthat was wick-ed
;so we
have gone a-way from
the God who made us,
and be-come sin-ners.
5. As that fatb-
treat-ed his son kind-ly,
when he come back, so
if we re-pent of our
sins, and come back to
God, he will treat us
kind-ly, and for-give us
all our sins.
6. If we for-sake our
sins, God, for Je-sus
sake, will for-give our
sins, and make us his
child-ren. If you cometo Je-sus and trust in
him, he will save you.
X S IS # i®, I® ft IS
ft & # # m
a m ii m ~ &*j l n 1 1
1
ma ft ft re. ii m $e na * ft ft ft 35 ±ft ft A 3C ft, & ft ft
x ft ^ pa- ^ g m &B&ftftHfe-lftAXftSI §3 m ft ft life ft
m m % m & m a
5. & ft IE ft ft
£ ft & ft. IB ft ft Kft » * * f# IE. eg ft
ftSftJfeiftAftefi:ft ft tfr w p& IP Xft * ft # PS IB ft £ifr # ifo lift ft, Xa ft ft - & m &A ft £ ft ft ft
ft pr ip ft. ft aeb m m *,# # a ft
ft P£f IP ft. X ft ft ft
ii ib m f-f ft e (4
a ft ms g* Pix^iIB. IB £ # Ml fo p*.
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 95
6. The wolf broke]
into the flock, and
killed a great man-ysheep. If we lie, or de-
ceive oth-ers, they will
not be-1 eve us, when wespeak the truth or whenwe are hon-est.
a i® u m wl ft
a ^ m n % nft % %#i % $ & a m a is.
r5c Pit !|| A Qm n n m is mjg % » $S> ffl
A ft $ Ilk It *£
LESSON LXXXVIII.else 8'J f® tried ^ PT proved IE tit
fail * fi tired ®*fg dis-pute 3U*.vain & length £ be-tween +case ^ 1b fa-ble m % suc-ceed at a.
road it pow-er w n con-quer
wind & gen-tle wrap-ped H tt
force a. A. de-cide & |ij en-tire-ly
cloak A mat-ter Iff pow-er-ful $£
means & A tight-er & It trav-el-ler
THE WTND AND THE SUN.
1. A dis-pute once —#£ iffi 1® Ri ft
a-rose be-tween the wind f® ii itX N s u m ¥r 4b
and the sun, as to » 4e ± % IEwhich of the two was W> 1®
Vi§ f®
the more pow-er-ful. m 8 % ft P£
9^ ENGLISH AND CHINESE KEADEK
2. To de-cide the
mat-ter, they a-greed to
try their power on a
trav-el-ler go-ing a-long
the road. The one
which could make himtake off his cloak, was
to win the case.
3. The wind tried
first. He be-gan to
blow as hard as he
could. But the hard-er
he blew, the tight-er the
man wrap-ped his cloak
a-round him. The windblew till he was tired,
aud then gave up. It
was all in vain.
4. Then came the
sun’s turn. He shone
with all his might. Asit grew warm-er and
warm-er, the trav-el-ler
o-pened out his cloak.
At length it be-came
so hot that he was glad
to take it off en-tire-
ly. So the sun proved
— S & & & 0j
1® & V 'It* IE M f® MlEl M & M ~ f®
fr U m it Pft A, u ^ie & m ffl i§ m tt
Hi IE E A m fig # A% {$ 1# 0 m #
£ m eft ® %
m
ht ie m t£. iE &tt pfe if tu mi a, & fA
PH l£ f£Us # f® 6ft ®m ft pk if & m h nm AJSfil k i®
# A W it PS ft #> f®
6ft ® PA if Um SI IS fit. fi if -6ft i®
0 M H fij j@ B
0M I li iJ Hi $ IE
P?f ft M Bfi & & 0 $|{|!® 6ft. X /i ft $6ft. m m f® i® fr ^ ^A, «£ jR PH ig f® # A
JiJ t I I I sHlft, I'JS f® f® fr ®
Pft A. n it* 4 HI f® ft
1 R ^ fH. t HUH
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 97
to be strong-er than the
wind.
B 9l M HE & % 1} ifi
m m m
5. This is what we 35. BB W ft ft "1?
call a fa-ble. It teach- m fit*: m nfe a mes us that gen--tie means ffc & rf Pi jy
will oft-en suc-ceed $ i# /£ pgf.ift in ij awhere force will fail. & pi as «K.ind-ness is strong-er # *& m a ? &than force, and will R|J & X fig *T % W.
con-quer when noth-ing »|J # *HEHE Pt
else can.
XJEBSS03ST LXXXIX.due X.K. oth-er SI ft. jus-tice Hslice J*. «=. eat-en £ T. ac-count fit,
piece - m stol-en tt T troub-le ‘M
scale m & rath-er % *f con-tent J£
judge t fj ex-cuse % # sec-ond fj|
“court ns. of-fice J$ ft grave-ly j§ jt
course ob-jects hum-bly jj$ Hslight C. ft. di-vide # Pi up-right £V It
though monk-ey JEg » bal-ance J?j ^weighs IS, ft. en-joy $ ? be-seech ^or-der S. tri-fles >b ^ nib-bled P£\ Jt,
like-ly # beg-ged an-i-mals ^ #7
gS ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
THE CATS AND
1. A fa-ble is a sto-ry
in which an-i-mals, or
oth-er ob-jects, are sup-
posed to talk, though
they nev-er do so. Here
is the fa-ble of the cats
and the monk-ey.
2. Two hun-gry cats,
hav-ing stol-en somecheese, could not a-gree
how to di-vide it. So
they called in a monk-eyto de-cide the case.
3. “ Let me see,” says,
the monk-ey, “ this slice
weighs more than the
oth-er.” So then, he bit
off a large piece in or-
der, as he said, to makethem bal-ance.
4. The oth-er scale
was now too heav-y.
This gave the up-right
judge a fine ex-cuse to
take a se-cond mouth-ful - of cheese.
THE MONKEY.
g m m. is m
3$ b»i m is pg
wt pU-U IB ^ H ^ Ift
m un m a. o a tm m & « * n a% m &- £ a g a a
ps » a @ ft * w n* It io # IS a # *1
PH. R® 15 Ml RT If -
~ ft *H fla ft Jg ^ a
is. $ $ $ rt m m -i # n 1 64 1 i -$1. m U IB $ P p£ f~ A °i IB # If! IS. 0® $ IB M M M *%
E £ g ® i& tia
M Pft # X I; iS $Pi ns & Pi n a. ^ w# $ & it PS if ?>J ft
n m if s* m - $^ m m & - $ ps
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 99
5. “Stop ! stop !” cried
the two cats, “give each
of us our share of the
rest, and we Avill be
con-tent.’’
6. “ If you are con-
tent,'5
says the monk-ey,“jus-tice is not. Thelaw, my friends, musthave its course.” So henib-blecl first one piece,
and then the oth-er.A
7. The poor cats sawthat their cheese waslike-ly to be all eat-en
up. So they hum-blybeg-ged the judge not
to trou-ble him-self anymore.
8. The judge said,
“not so fast, my friends,
I be-seeck you, we owejus-tice to our-selves
as well as to you. Whatis left is due to me onac-count of my of-fice.”
9. So say-ing he put
the whole of it in- to
his mouth, and very
£ mm k ffi *M 15, It f± PT.ik f±i !T.m m w & m m n ft
nk. $ m ft m fa
ft m m & z
f® 7b 15,
m % <b ffi hl PiUaffi & m &,ftm m '& P3T m ® & &£ & s ik * & m mPI M IS % P£ —I x e ^ i
t: pt it m m mm £ m ik *& m * mlii,® tfi ffi $ m ~ ft
& m* m wt u ik m mm m t m m m
P£ £ % ‘M IK, & Zit it m <jk if m # v
7k f® If? pJ 15
-a pk m /x Pjt, a & $IT efc nil 1&, fig 6k & xl
m v-m m m n n zn ffi mPJr it f® is & ^ # aiH.jai 8 % ft ft m
tl m ii n ik
U “ W ff f® 6k Wj
n a p..si $ m m
IOO ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
grave-ly dis-missed the
court.
10. This fa-ble teach-
es us, that it is bet-ter
to bear slight wrong,
rath er than to go to
law for tri-fles.
# m n « & it
+ rt & m mm ft, m he a ** a && m ii ii m. m & &m 0 m * & * & w£ JR @
de-
Christ s £Sa-vior ft ±win-ter £ 3c
sum-mer 3c
au-tumn ft 3c
sea-sons ft
fruit-ful r. mgrate-ful ii mde-clare if mpro-vide ft »heav-ens 3c
leaves m &Jfe wings 3|*$j,
££ beasts ^breathe ^ B3
LESSOlsT
cloud §field EB
means jj
ground
snow §*
fresh i$f
frost Hspring ^
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. IOI
THE LOVE
1. “ God is love.” Wemay be sure of this,
for the Bi-ble tells us
so ;and the Bi-ble can-
not lie.
2. The four sea-sons
tell us, “God is love/’
for God gave us the
sea-sons He ga~e us
spring with its fresh,
green leaves.
3. God gave us sum-
mer with its flow-ers,
au-tumn with its corn
and fruit, and win-
ter with its frost and
snow, that pu-ri-fy the
air, and pre-pare the
ground to be more fruit-
ful.
4. The heav-ens tell
us, that “God is love."
The sun, moon and
stars, light our world,
and the clouds give us
grate-ful rain.
OF GOD.
— id 75 ^Id PjS ft Wt ^% ppi. m m # % m miS & &h 34 m ®r
m ± m mr m 0 ^ ^
Id %\ id 75^4,®^Jft jjid fdf §1 Pd ^ ^id, IS # M 5c ^ *F *3 £ PIS © ^ ^ id
& s# p#
£ M. if'T {# 3C 5c* i| P|E ^ >1 ^ id,
n Wi 5c * a IB tt ^I T Jl Tc id
% # m % % a if
'if is ^ n & s,® £f® & x ^ f@
m era ± jig ii.
m n w0 m f® 5c % #Tc id £p, id 73
f® H m ^ ii H H &M M ft $ id m IS #:
34 Ii Hi IB $ ® m ML ^ id
102 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
5. The birds of the
air, the beasts of the
field, and the fish-es
of the sea, all tell us,
that “ God is love.”
6. God has giv-en the
birds wings to fly with,
he has giv-en the
beasts the means to
pro-vide food, and the
fish fins with whichto swim.
7. All crea-tures that
breathe de-clare, that
“God is love.” Look a-
round and see how hap-
py they are ? God madethem to en-joy life.
8. If God were not
love, he would not love
us, who are sin-ners, and
nev-er would have giv-en
his Son to die for us.
9. God has giv-en
Je-sus Christ to be the
Sa-vior of men, and
there-fore, we knowthat he loves us, and
5. IB 6$ & + ft
% f@ ft m + ft m,
ft. * m m * m &J*£~«S&ftfafc.ft Tj ft 4.
A IB ft Jt if* ft
m a ib w a a. $ ib
m m % n n % m ft
a & a ib w vt ft.
a
ib m is ® &. % n m^ a IB 65 ft BE, & IB
®l rS
4 - |0
a ft, a nft is ft 75 ft 4. a aft Hfc S IB 65 £ ft ft
if tfc ft ft. a W IS ffl
IB It ft £ p#
a ft g ft % aft. ib & pg a ft ft fa111 ® A, n & ft
P£ $ IB ft ff & ft g$ fa ft 5E Iff.
Il ft B ft ft @
ft & ±. & lib $ fa 1ft
1 ft A, *n # IB a ft
ft fa x a ft fa ft i
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 103
we all ought to love IS 1c ^and serve him. $8 15 US 1IMS
LESSOIT XCI.
earth life ft part
globe ft shines
eight A through
miles PA ft ax-is
turns & fi cen-tre
stand twen-ty
round m a-round
THE
1. We live on the
earth. It is round like
a ball or globe, but is
so large that it ap-
pears to be flat. Mensail a-round the world
in ships.
2. The world does
not stand still, but it
turns round like a top.
The earth has two m'o-
» mo-tions fr anfi. ft. to-ward |p] ft
51. ih. ap-pears if ia
m caus-es ft.
+ -CS there-fore tt Hb
. + op-po-site m53 [g thou-sand —
-
A
EARTH.
- n to & -tft %± e ft is & ft a fa.
g& fa ft m m mi -x is.
a na *7- ft & ^j& m ft. w a ft ft
il fr i§ ft
n f® fill ft ng
® ft ft ^ pa. <0 ft. IS
it II ft. if ft “ ft Bf*
ft ® ft. ft it ft n ®
104 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
tion8. It turns roundon its ax-is, from west
to east, once ev-er-y
twen-ty four hours. It
al-so goes round the sun
once ev-er-y year.
3. The earth turn-
ing on its ax-is caus-es
day and night. The sun
shines on one half of
the earth at a time.
The side which is to-
ward the sun has day,
and the op-po-site side
has night.
4. If the earth did
not turn round, the
side next to the sun
would have day all the
time, and the op-po-site
side night all the time.
But, as it turns, ev-er-y|
part has day and night
by turns.
5. It is a-bout twen-
ty five thou-sand miles
a-round the world, andeight thou-sand miles
through the cen - tre
m is m ph- © nfe $ «IS fo HI £ is m IS B
I - 0 Ia*? - a »E m life 3* £ is
m « u ps a $$. s ft
t ig # ffi B ft &m b m % ® n# ft a% is % $ - 3s it f
ft % ft B ft til * ft
£ % »E9 f® ft (B til ft
ng tf, ft a ft ^ ph.
m ft ft ft ft # ft b
PH ft 1£ B (ta-
li ft fl# S Iff E &Bfc fa ft 0 1£ ^ fr
PH ft & ft % Pi % ft
ft it ft B £ PH
3L PJS (0 1ft £ pH
^ 1$,, tU 03 fE S’+ ft
— (E 4* ^ ® —
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. !05
from one side to the M M ft A "T $3
otb-er. % £, Sal R3*
LESSON XCII.
heat & $&
nine jL
moonseems ft
night ?£ ffi,
months Mtwelve -f* H
a-way g|
it-self § 2*
near-ly JL fsev-en
six-ty X +thir-ty .n +mil-lion "5 J|
be-cause @ ^fol-lows
sec-onds $$
min-utes ft
sup-pose
dis-tance
di-vid-ed ft ~f
THE SUN AND MOON.
1. The sun is a
great globe or ball.
It seems like a ball
of fire. It is a great
dis-tance a-way from us,
and is near-ly a mil-
lion and a half times
larg-er than our earth.
2. The sun gives us
light and heat. Wecan see the sun byday, but not by night.
- 0 M Tl ft- m x m it £ ie
ft ft n ~ m x m mft -- * ie m §1 m m* * ft + ft m m, h
m K % x s ® m a.
ft £ FbI @— ft U M ft $
ft as & #. ^ a $ it
h i ft At ft m ft aw m a i® q n. ft «
106 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
Why can we not see
the sun in the night ?
Be-cause the earth turns
round on its ax-is,
and at night we are
on the side a-way
from the sun.
3. The sun ris-es in
the east and sets in
the west. The sun seems
to go round the earth,
but it does not. It is
the earth that movesand not the sun.
4. The moon is al-so
a globe or ball, but it
is not so large as the
sun, or the earth. Themoon goes a-round the
earth once in ev-er-y
twen-ty nine and a
half days. Thus it fol-
lows the earth a-round
the sun.
5. The moon it-self
has no light, but gets
its light from the sun.O
E ft ^ & flfc
m J& full 7 'ft £ ft
m q m re. s m $
£ re m m & & a his ^ m e ®
= is b m & mfi ns * (#. w a m £® B IS ft fa I# &m m si g fr* fa pg ftI® pit, m # ft is m um ft % ft m b mm ft
® m n n ft -® # m w. ffi ft ib
I*s fcl *# ffl 0 BM Pf. *Pit. X ft "S *0 tI IS ft
# Ph * Pit. (S ^ “
+ ft 3c %\ ® ft ®lUi I i - ii.i iis ft a is is £ #. ift® BBS^igtrHfj P#
5.
ft PH <B ft. S ® B IS
Pi & 111 IS tii ft IB
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 107
The moon gives light ifc W. % m ^ m wl
to us by night. $ %
LESSOR XCIII.
Jan-u-a-ry £ iE £ No-vem-ber + — ft
Feb-ru-a-ry >0 De-cem-ber + ft
March H ft Sun-day w 5 BA-pril 0 ft Mon-day *! ft
—May £ ft Tues-day m ft
June _Lft Wed-nes-day m ft
Ju-ly d: ft Thurs-day m n 0Au-gust A ft Fri-day m ft £Sep-tem-ber ft ft Sat-ur-day JOi ft
Oc-to-ber + ft hun-dred — IT
DIVISIONS OF TIME.
1. Time is di-vid-edt
— 1% ft
iu-to sec-onds, min-utes, M&OttUOMMhours, days, weeks,
months, and years. ^ ^2. Six - ty sec - onds £ "A + W> & ^
make a min-ute. Six-ty “ ^ i I:, ^ >1
min-utes make an hour. — US iS £ it,~ +
Twen - ty four hours 0 15 If t! “ B £make one day, and sev- X ftL 0 te ^ —
* fS
fn days make a week. H ft £
108 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
3. Some call thir-ty
days a month andsome call four weeksa month There are
twelve months in one
year. Three hun-dred
and six-ty five days
make one year.
4. The days of the
week are Sun-day, Mon-day, Tues-day, Wednes-day, Thurs-day, Fri-day,
Sat-ur-day.
5. The months of
the year are called,
Jan-u-a-ry, Feb-ru-a-ry,
March, A-pril, May,June, July, Au-gust,
Sep-tem-ber, Oc-to-ber,
No-vem-ber, De-cem-ber.
6. We say yes-ter-
day, to-day, to-mor-row;
last week, this week,
next week;last month,
this month, next month;last year, this year,
aiid next year.
H |A?1 = +ft ® - m ft X&MAm w m w & m -m ft o & -
m n o hi* m
is - m is n mei pt o m n bm n - o m m -
w ft ~ o n # h*i ft % o m m -a
5 - ^ m m %pt m oIE ft O ~
ft
Eftownouft* ft o t ft o a ft
Aft O -ft ft
-ft - ft O -ft-
ft
a % m m ft
H # PH ti O flk
^ H O 0jl H O J; i
P| S I O T ® ^ O
ENOT.TSH AND CHINESE READER. I I i
6. Some fruits are ber- I
ries, as the grape, straw-
berry, and cur-rant,j
Some are nuts as the
al-mond and wal-nut.
Many kinds are madeinto dried fruits. Vin-
e-gar, salt, pep-per, !
must-ard, gin-ger, and
other things are used
to sea-son food. Nut-
megs, cloves, mace, cin-
na-mon, and pep-per,
are called spi-ces.
-i- ^fii 3* m it, BP in ®
m it M X, If * ip 0S
W £ M Tsl ft ft,
lip in 2? fc +1 W Pli* tl
# if £ X A ffl
it p® &nwL mft-
i $ t fp,! in. W S£
^ ^ w ja.
m w hi n. js ft * ft
^ O W J3. idh
I T S ft 7H W#. lil ft # 8Pd* it # 'M
LESSON XCV.
build & it cot-tage /j, church jpg # ^bank IS ff kitch-en @ % dwell-ing f±. 0r
trades X ft teach-er jfc gjjjman-sion % ^
sto-ry m fs butch-er j|| ^ mer-chant ]*) Asta-ble B] m dis-ease ^ knowl-edge % fjjg
par-lor % m re-quire % ed-u-ca-tion^; f»]
HOUSES AND TRADES.
1. Men build hous-es. — A #f 5a ft
There are many dif-fer- M,W ftf % fal H ft.
H4 ENGLISH AND CHINESE HEADER.
hear-mg is the ear.
Those who have nev-er
heard are dumb.
2. Peo-ple taste with
the tongue and pal-ate,
and smell with the nose.
Some things taste sour,
or sweet, or bit-ter, or
in-sip-id. Some things
smell a-gree-a-ble, and
some are very dis-a-
gree-a-ble.
3. The or-gan of feel-
ing, or touch, is the fing-
ers, and whole skin. Byfeel-ing we know if
things are hard or soft,
rough or smooth, dry or
damp, warm or cool, and
sharp or blunt.
4. We al-so use the
word feel-ing to speak
of the mind. If we are
struck, or hurt we feel
pain. If we have troub-
le, we feel sad; if wehave pleas-ure, we feel
hap-py.
m w m t ft s 4. is
m jjir * te n ip ft
© ft.
r n a n! m $1
n m m m t «. x ft
m m a m m s*.
^ to to #. m 5k it
S& # ft H ft.lS # ft
I# ft.J$ # ft ¥ ft.i£
# ft ft ft. t W #.H i ft if f ft.^f
ft if ft ft
,
H W ft + 0r
« ft R $ #. ft # £
pp ft 6‘j rn . & pf & &rS ft PjE ft ft ft, sS ft
bit ft if ft. sic ft ffc ft
if, ft.jg ft & ft #ft,^ ft ft ft ft..
09 $ J& X ffi ft
m pi & & it t$ a ft
id\ ft ft ft life 5 kT.j£
ft & £ ft
ft £ ft % £ IS ft. ft
& ft E ft ft M ft. ft
ft £ ft ft g£ ft.
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 115
LESSON ^51CN7EEI.
sky 55 spread gfi pj cat-tie
blue 1 £ plants $ ^ car-pet
bade m placed f£ ^ cur-tain
fills % M filled. T riv-ers
green o-ver •&_,^ o-ceans
bright % un-der "]» beau-ti-ful
THE BEAUTIFUL WORLD.
*ft
M$ ft
1 The world is beau-ti-ful. If we look up,
we see the blue sky If we look down, wesee the green grass.
2-. The sky is like a cur-tain spread o-ver our
heads. The grass is like a car-pet un-der owe
KNGLISH AND CHINESE READER.1 1
6
feet. The bright sun is like a ball of fire to give
us light.
3. Who made this beau-ti-ful world ? Godmade the world. He said, “ Let there be light,
and there was light.”
4. God made the air we breathe, and the clouds
that give us rain. He made the wa-ter that fills
the o-ceaus, riv-ers, and seas. He made the dryland al-so.
5. He made the grass, the pret-ty flow-ers,
and the use-ful plants. He made the trees, that
grow up-on the land, and bear the beau-ti-ful
fruit.
6. God made the sun, and placed it in the
sky and bade it shine all day. He made the
moon to shine at night, and filled the sky with
stars.
7. God made the cat-tie, sheep, birds, fish-es,
and every liv-ing thing. Last of all God mademan also.
LESSOR XCVIII.
town ifh H,,
hurt ft \%
lift 1*1 &kept f±
home If %lame & M
each
pain ^weeks jiff 3$
dress ^ if
arms ^ ff
Dit-y £$ I®
bound Qbrought Tseemed if fJd
be-came (f&
with-out ix
car-ried ft ft
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. U7
THE LAME DO Go
1. One day a man went to take a walk in
the town. On his way home, he saw a lit-tle
dog which had hurt his leg.
2. The poor dog was so lame, that he could
not lift his foot with-out great pain. This kind
man saw there was no one to take pit-y
on the poor dog.
3. So he took him in his arms, car-ried
him home, and bound up his leg. He fed
him, and kept him for two days.
4. He then sent the dog out of his house,
to his old home. As it was not his own dog,
he had no right to keep him.
5. But, each day, the dog came back for
this kind man to dress his leg. This the dogdid, till he be-came quite well.
6. In a few weeks, he came back, andbrought with him a dog that was lame. Thedog that had been lame, first gave the mana look, and then the lame dog a look.
7. He seemed to say, “ You made my lameleg well, and now I wish you to do the
same for this poor dog.
8. The kind man took care of this dog al-so.OHe kept him in his house till he was well,
and could go home.D
US' ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSON XCIX.
nole 4L chasehide gg jji jumpstone £ creptwa]l
tig. M, leapclose flash
^aste B $. sight
catch cheat
quick $ jgM M though m %i
m ff straight ]£ jg t
1% W saved ^ y|jj 3§ uear-er ^01 £ to-ward ^ ^« Si cun-ning |g
A FOX STORY.
1. The fox is very cun-ning. When any oneis very cun-ning, we say, “he is as cun-ningas a fox. I will tell you a story about thecun-ning of the fox.
2. Some dogs were once in chase of a fox.They came very near him, and it seemed asthough they would catch him. There was nohole, or oth-er place, for the fox to hide in.
3. What could the fox do? This is whatthe fox did. There was a low stone wall notfar oft. and the fox ran to-ward it as fast ashe could go. But near-er and near-er came thedogs.
4. When the fox had got to the wall, theywere close to him. The fox made a jump.
ENGLISH AND CHINESE HEADER. I IQ
and went o-ver. But as soon as he was on the
oth-er side he crept to the wall, and lay downclose to it.
5. The dogs, in their haste, went o-ver both
wall and fox at a jump, and ran straight on.
They were going so fast that they could not
stop, and they did not see where the fox
had hid.
6. As soon as the dogs were o-ver, the fox,
quick as a flash, made a leap back over
the wall, and was soon out of sight. Onwent the dogs, but they never, saw the fox
again.
7. Was not that a cun-ning fox ? He knewhow to cheat the dogs, and he saved his
life by it.
LESSOU C.
wrists 3- me-vil 35
cru-el n Hpassed & mseized ft*.bit-ter ftre-turn 0 2Sf5
wo-man k A
hun-ger m christ-ian ft
re-venge # ft mean-time 't K#
al-most it * bleed-ing ft JfiL
ser-vant m A some-thing t ft
gos-pel W scream-ing
learned ip. re-peat-ed W it
or-dered © m un-cov-er II 18
en-e-mies a fin-ished % T
I 20 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER,
THE BEST REVENGE:
1. Two men once lived in the south of Af-ri-ca.
They had a quar-rel, and be-came bit-ter en-e-
mies to each other.
2. Af-ter a-while, one of them met a lit-tle
girl, which be-longed to his en-e-my. It was in
the woods, at some dis-tauce from her fath-er’s
house.
3. He seized her, and cut off both of her
hands. Then he said, “ I have had my re-vengc,”
and sent her home scream-ing, with her bleed-
ing wrists.
4. Years passed a-way. The lit-tle girl hadgrown up to be al-most a young wo-man. Oneday a poor, old, gray-head-ed man came to
her fath-er’s door, and asked for some-tning
to eat.
5. The girl knew him at once as the cru-el
man, who had cut off her hands. She went
into the house, and cr-dered the ser-vant to
give him some bread and milk.
6 When he had fin-ished eat-ing, she then
un-cov-ered her wrists. Hold-ing their, up, she
said, “I have haci my re-'enge. Thus she
re peat-ed the very won Is he had used,
7. Why did this girl act in this way ? Be-
cause, in the mean-tune, she had heard the
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 121
gos-pel of Je-sus, and had be-came a Christ-
ian. She had learned what the Bi-ble says,“ If thine en-e-my hun-ger feed him
;if he
thirst, give him drink.”
8. This is the best kind of re-venge. Youshould not re-turn e-vil for e-vil. You shouldre-turn good for e-vil. The Bi-ble says. “0-ver-come e-vil with good.”
LESSOlsr Cl.
voice
noise ^sound gcease
warns ^ ft. wake gga-rose |B§
ear-ly .fL
a-larm-clock^ Hsev-er-al fig
con-science yi
mom-ing
re-solved 7E-
heed-ing ||
be-cause gj ^plain-ly 0J £3
faith-ful-ly
hab-it fglist-en g§ fill
du-ty jfc &own-er |ji ^
THE ALARM-CLOCK.
1. There was a man, who found it not eas-y
122 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
to wake in the morn-ing, as ear-ly as he wishedSo he brought an a alarm-clock.
2. The own-er of these clocks can make themstrike, with a loud noise, at any hour that
he pleas-es. The man placed this clock at the
head of his bed. At the right time it wTokehim up.
3. He a-rose at once. This he did for sev-
er-al weeks. The clock did its du-tv faith-fnl-%/
ly, and was plain-ly heard so long as it
was o-bey-ed.
4. But, af-ter a time, the man grew tired
of ear-ly ris-ing. When he was waked by the
noise, he on-ly turned over, and went to
sleep again.
5. In a few days, the clock lost its pow-
er to wake him. It spoke just the same as
ev-er;
but he did not hear it, be-cause he
was in the hab-it of not o-bey-ing it
6. The clock was of no use. He might as
well be with-out one. So he re-solved, that
when he heard the sound, he would jump upright a-way,
7. Just so it is with con-science. It is God’s
voice in the heart. It tells us what is wrong,
and what is right. If we o-bey its voice,
then we shall al-ways hear con-science when Tspeaks in the heart
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 123
8. But if we do not lis-ten to its voice, con-
science will lose its pow-er. It we get iu-to the
hab-it of not heed-ing when it warns us, then, by-
and-by we shall cease to hear it.
LESSON- CII.
raP #T, Jfi,
steps
stick ^piece — jfg
trick H ftstrike fystruck n tstreet gj
i-dle
but-ter
fel-low
ly-ing
roared
served
played
howled
pj
m*
.R»
l[*In
wfy
naught-y H )gf
mo-ment tjf^|J
wag-ged % fishow-ing
stretched gfj
a-shamed ;§|
laugh-ing Hheart-i-ly $ &
THE CRUEL BOY PUNISHED.
1. An i-dle boy was one day sit-ting on
the steps of a door. He had a stick in one
hand, and a piece of bread and but-ter in the
oth-er.
2. As he was eat-ing, he saw a clog ly-ing
near, and called him. The clog hear-ing him-
self kind-ly spok-en to, wag-ged his tail and
came up.
124 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
3. The boy held out his piece of bread, andas the dog was a-bout lo take it, the naugh-ty
fel-low struck him on the nose with the stick.
The dog howled, and ran a-way as fast as he
could.
4. The cru-el boy laughed heart-i-ly at the
trick he had played. At this mo-ment, a manon the oth-er side of the street, who had seen
him, called the boy.
5. Show-ing him a half dol-lar, he asked the
boy if he would like to have it. “ Yes,” said the
boy, “to be sure I would.” “Come and get it,
then,” said the man.
6. The boy ran to him, and stretched out his
hand for the mon-ey. Then the man gave him
a rap on the hand with his cane. The boy roared
\v i tli pain.
7. “Why did you do that?” said the boy. “I
did not hurt you, or ask you for mon-ey.” V Whydid you strike the poor dog just now ?” said
the man. “ Had he hurt you, or asked you for
bread? I have served you just as you served
him.”
8. The bad boy hung his head, and felt very
much a-shamed. If you treat oth-ers bad-ly, they
are apt to treat you bad-ly. Be kind to oth-ers,
and they will be kind to you.
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 125
LESSOR cm.oil m lash f§! 47 whale m §afond d* # ports P yields us
rage & spear It 77 throat m mpain flfh ig\ beast Hi tongue »j. slids H dives lUi dang-er t El
back ft
1
# watch M com-mon ¥ nfoam $ casks M e tS an-i-mal & mdead 5E throw some-times *
»
THE WHALE.
1. The whale is a very large an-i-mal. There
is no fish or beast, so large as a whale. Theyhave a large mouth, but so small a throat that
they can’t eat large fish.
2. Their tongue is very fat, and yields a
great deal of oil. Their eyes are small, andhave lids to them. The com-mon whale is fromfor-ty to six-ty feet long.
3. Whales are very fond of their young. If
they are in dan-ger, the whale takes them on
her back, and puts up her fins so that they
cannot fall off.
4. The have a large and strong tail, whichhelps them to swim. When they are at play,
Dr in a rage from pain, they lash the sea into
a foam with their tail.
120 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
5. Ships are sent out from some of our ports
to take whales, for the sake of the oil they yield.
These ships are some-times gone two or three
years. They kill the whale with a spear whichthey throw at it.
6. When the whale is struck it dives downin-to the sea, far out of sight
;but it soon comes
up to the top for want of air. The men are on
the watch for this.
7. As soon as they see it rise, they strike it
with their spears till it dies. When it is dead
ihey cut it up, and put the oil which it yields
in-to casks. If the men find man-y whales,
they come back with so much oil, as to feel
quite rich.
fun % mblue
soft 11:, f£,
wild if-
fair II Hscent H m.
lips P J§
beams If %
LESSOlsT CIV.
tin-y ^ >J>
ha-zy If! Bll
do-eth ffc,
col-ors H 15.
for-est
beau-ty ^ %sun-est ndis-tant
mead-ow %glow-ing %pleas-ant $moun-tain Lb
green-wood pf
beau-it-ful I$L f|
won-der-ful fij pf
Al-might-y & tu
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. I2f
THE LORD MADE THEM ALL,
1. All things bright and beau-ti-ful,
All crea-tures great and small
;
All things wise and won-der-ful—
-
The Lord hath made them all.
2. Each lit-tle flow-er that o-pens,
Each lit-tle bird that sings-
He made their glow-i'ng col-ors.
He made their tin-y wings.
3. The dis-tant ha-zy moun-tain.
The riv-er run-ning by,
The morn-ing, and the sun-set,
Which both light up the sky;
4. The tall trees in the green-wood,
The pleas-ant sum-mei sun,
The ripe fruits in the gar-den
—
He made them, every one.
5. He gave us eyes to see them,
And lips that we might tell
How great is God Al-might-y,
He do-eth all things well.
who-ev-er ^ faj Awhen-ev-er ^ fa fl#
wher-ev-er fa fawkat-ev-er ^ fa %
which-ev-er ^how-ev-er g(|
where-fore fa fathere-fore
128 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
LESSON CV.
dim t> m power 1] jt ach-ing ^want m a en-ter A. burn-ing >Ac ^brim &.JB. hum-ble ff| 2! sooth-ing
share sor-row ‘M PiU faint-ing '$£ |gpress m tt com-fort mis-er-y
brow m m re-deem neigh-bor ^ ^
WHO IS MY NEIGHBOR.
1. Who is my neigh-bor? He whom thou
Hast power to aid or bless
;
Whose ach-ing head, or burn-ing browThy sooth-ing hand may press.
2. Thy neigh-bor is the faint-iug poor,
Whose eye with want is dim;
Oh, en-ter then his hum-ble door
With aid and peace for him.
3. Thy neigh-bor l He who drinks the cup
When sor-row drowns the brim
;
With words of ever-cheer-ing hope,
Go thou and com-fort him.
4. Thy neigh-bor 7 Pass no mourner by :
Per-haps thou canst re-deem
A break-ing heart from mis-e-ry;
Go share thy lot with him.
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. i 29
LSSSONT CVI.
kneel
wor-ship
Ma-ker
ben-e-fits
gra-cious
n& «A AA ft
com-pas-sion ^ ’[$
due !£, ft.
slow ft, ft,
wait ^,ft,nigh
trust f§, |g.
taste a-loud k *ten-der ful-fil fit
an-ger JO' sea-son ft mmer-cies j§§ to-ward fa ftde-sire 6 m sat-is-fy >& £
THE GOODNESS OF GOD.
1 0 come, let us wor-ship, and bow down
;
let us kneel be-fore the Lord our Ma-ker.
2. The Lord is good to all;
and his ten-
der mer-cies are over all his works.
3. The Lord is gra-cious, and full of com-
pas-sion;slow to an-ger, and of great mer-cy.
4. The Lord is nigh unto all them that call
upon him;
he will ful-fil the de-sire of themthat fear him
;he will also hear their cry and
will save them.9
130 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
5. As the heav-en is high a-bove the earth,
so great is his mer-cy to-ward them that fear
him.
6. The eyes of all wait up-on thee, 0 Lord,
and thou giv-est them their meat in duesea-son.
7. Thou open-est thy hand, and sat-is-fi-est
the desire of every living thing.
8. As for me, I will call up-on the Lord, andhe shall save me. E-ven-ing, and morn-iug, andat noon, will I pray and cry a-loud
;and he
shall hear my voice.
9. In God have I put my trust;and I will
not fear what man can do un-to me.
10. 0 taste and see that the Lord is good
:
blessed is the man that trust-eth in him.
11. Bless the Lord, 0 my soul, and all that
is with -in me bless his ho-ly name.
12.
Bless the Lord, 0 my soul, and for-get
not all his ben-e-fits.
LESSON CVII.
rest 3f ^sure £n $1
truth
name Jg
be-lieve fs faith-ful & ifr
saved & say-ing ii , tf.
la-bor & ^ bap-tize JE ft |§
la-den f| M sin-ners fp A
ENGL13H AND CHINESE READER. 1 3 1
world 1ft % worth-y m ft ev-er-last- ) * mChrist ® If damned §p iug
J £ aliv-ing ^ fg be-got-ten m ac-cep-ta-
) H %per-ish ft jfr king-dom m tion ) & $
BIBLE WORDS.
1. God so loved the world, that he gave hia
only be-got-ten Son, that who-so-ev-er be-liev-
eth in him should not per-ish, but have ev-
er-last-ing life.
2. Be-lieve on the Lord Je-sus Christ, andthou shalt be saved.
3. This is a faith-ful say-ing and worth-y
of all ac-cep-ta-tion, that Christ Je-sus cameinto the world to save sin-ners.
4. He that be-liev-eth and is bap-tized shall
be saved;
but he that be-liev-eth not shall
be damned.
5. Je-sus said, Come unto me, all ye that
la-bor and are heav-y la-den, and I will give
you rest.
6. We be-lieve and are sure that thou art that
Christ, the Son of the liv-ing God.
7. Je-sus said, I am the way, the truth, andthe life.
8. Je-sus said, What-so-ev-er ye shall ask the
Fath-er in my name, he will give it you.
132 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
A LIST OF IRREGULAR VERBS,
@ to a a * mArise arose arising arisen
Be was being been
* Bear bore, bare bearing borne
iq- m Bid bade bidding bidden
m m Bind bound binding bound
$ Bite bit biting bitten
ft Blow blew blowing blown
ft iH Break broke breaking broken
te * Bring brought bringing brought
M Buy bought buying bought
m Choose chose choosing chosen
Come came coming come
m u3c &
ft.
ft
m
it.#
Creep
Deal
DoDrawDrinkDrive
EatFall
FeedFeel
crept
dealt
did
drewdrank
drove
ate
fell
fed
felt
creeping
dealing
doing
drawingdrinking
driving
eating
falling
feeding
feeling
crept
dealt
done
drawndrunkdriven
eaten
fallen
fed
felt
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 133
g# aft ¥ H- =r 3**
Find found finding found* Fiy flew flying- flown
Get got getting gottenGive gave giving given
•i Go went goingO O goneft £ Grow grew growing grown¥ Have had having hadas h Hear heard hearing heard
1 si Hide hid hiding. hidden4k. 36. Hold held holding held
3f.pL Keep kept keeping kept
£n.Pi. Know knew knowing- knownt *fc Lay laid laying laid
51 m
f&
asiL.
j§- w,3c.
Is
Lead led
Leave left
Lend lent
Lie lay
Lose lost
Make madeMean meantMeet metPay paid
Read read
Ride rode
Rise rose
leading- led
leaving left
lending lent
lying- lain
losing lost
making mademeaning- meantmeeting metpaying- paid
reading read
riding ridden
rising risen
134 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
a # a ft mm ¥ *# Run ran running run
Say said saying said
ft £ See saw seeing seen
R Sell sold selling sold
Send sent sending sent
m fj Shake shook shaking shaken
M Shoot shot shooting shot
<1 Sing sang singing sung
£ Sit sat sitting sat
IS U Sleep slept sleeping slept
m i
«
Speak spoke speaking spoken
a « Spend spent spending spent
a Stand stood standing stood
it Steal stole stealing stolen
Strike struck striking struck
If Sweep swept sweeping swept
Take took taking taken
» m Teach taught teaching taught
s m Tear tore tearing torn
% £n Tell told telling told
Think thought thinking thought
Throw threw throwing thrown
m ft Wear wore wearing worn
Weep wept weeping wept
% ^ Write wrote writing written
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 135
WORDS WITH OPPOSITE MEANINGS.
Buy Sell-
Cold Hot
Easy HardSoft HardDry WetFalse True
Begin EndFar Near
Day Night
Come GoHigh LowSick Well
Late Early
Large Small
Warm Cool
Top Bottom
Clean Dirty
Fat Lean
Fast Slow
Deep Shallow
Cheap Dear
First Last
Strong WeakBegin Finish
Tall Short
Yes NoNew Old
Open Shut
More Less
Most Least
Lost FoundUgly Pretty
Thick Thin
Sharp Dull
Poor Rich
Much Little
(Had Sorry
Find Lose
Clean Filthy
Few ManyIn Out
Busy Idle
Hit Miss
High LowGreat Small
Life Death
Light HeavyLight DarkFull EmptyAwake Asleep
136 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
Bad GoodAble UnableBest WorstEven OddEven UnevenCover UncoverBetter WorseTie UntieLend BorrowHumble ProudProfit LossInside OutsideInner OuterJust Unjust
Plen ty ScarceLoose TightMend BreakSafe UnsafeReturn DepartPrivate PublicHonest DishonestSpeak Silent
Either NeitherDown UpAll NoneExpand ContractCa reful Careless
Belief Unbelief
Peace WarHill Plain
Sober DrunkQuiet NoisyKind UnkindConfess DenyBroad NarrowWide NarrowLeast GreatestCoarse FineCan CannotBefore BehindWild TameTough Tonder
Long ShortLike UnlikeLike Dislike
Right WrongQuick SlowPoverty WealthHost GuestTired RestedDouble Single
Alive DeadFall Rise
Exports ImportsCertain UncertainAscend Descend
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. 137
Above Below
Hope Despair
Male FemaleBright DimLove HatePast Future
Often SeldomSuperior Inferior
Fail Succeed
Affirm DenyTruth Falsehood
Obey DisobeyAlike Unlike
Same Different
Bless Curse
Joy Grief
Front BackBig Little
Accept Decline
Present Absen t
Heaven Hell
Legal Illegal
Lawful Unlawful
Easy Difficult
Sinful HolyPlease Displease
Fertile Barren
Fertile Unfertile
Head FootOver UnderMourn Rejoice
Noisy Still
Join Separate
Unite Separate
Straight CrookedFail- Unfair
Fair Foul
Agree Disagree
Trust Distrust
Brave CowardFriend EnemySenior Junior
Black WhiteGain Lose
To FromForth BackAdd Subtract
Give Receive
Former Latter
Stingy Liberal
Help' Hinder
Order Disorder
Fresh Stale
Real Apparent
Defeat Victory
Willing Unwilling
138 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER.
Wise Foolish WinNative Foreign CheapForget Remember Ill-will
Will Wont Partial
Mortal Immortal ShadyPolite Impolite RipeSelfish Unselfish Pull
Rare Common EqualHappy Unhappy Fierce
Ever Never ExternalFlat Round CompleteSolid Fluid AgreeableFold Unfold Definite
Common Uncommon Increase
Debtor Creditor Increase
Correct Incorrect Capable
Regard Disregard AwkwardIgnorance Knowledge WickedUsual Unusual Trifling-
Proper Improper Doubtful
Perfect Imperfect Patient
Modest Immodest Grateful
Forward Backward Faithful
Opposite Same LockedNearer Farther Sickness
Heretofore Hereafter Possible
Lazv Industrious Guilty
Plural Singular Valuable
LoseDearGood-will
Impartial
SunnyGreenPushUnequalGentleInternal
Incomplete
Disagreeable
Indefinite
Decrease
Diminish
Incapable
Graceful
Righteous
ImportantCertain
Impatient
Ungrateful
Unfaithful
UnlockedHealth
Impossible
Innocent
Worthless
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. <39
ABBREVIATIONS.
I’ll I will
You 'll you will
He'll he will
We ’ll we will
They 'll they will
I ’ve I have
You ’ve you have
We ’ve we have
They ’ve the}" have
I m I amHe’s he is
It’s it is
We ’re we are
You ’re you are
Thev ’re they are
Isn’t is not
Was n't was not
Doesn't does not
Wouldn’t would not
Haven't have not
Did n’t did not
Won’t will not
Sha’n’t shall not
Don’t do not
That’s that is
What’s what is
Let’s let us
I ’ll see him.
You’ll be sick.
He’ll uot promise.
We ’ll help you.
They’ll come soon.
I’ve forgotten.
You've cion e w r < >ng.
We 've seen him.
They’ve run awayI’m much obliged.
He's not afraid.
It ’s all wrong.
We ’re just in time.
You’re deceiving me.
They’re unwilling.
It isn't done.
There wasn’t one.
He doesn't care.
He would n't stay.
I have n't seen him.
I did n't do it.
He won’t come.
He sha’n’t stay lien-.
Don’t mind him.
That's not true.
What’s your name •?
Lei 's go and see him.
I40 ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER;
Acct. Account.
A. D. Anno Domini. In
the year of our Lord.
B. C. Before Christ.
A. M. Before noon.
P. M. After noon.
P. 0. Postoffice.
Bbl. Barrel.
Bu. Bushel.
Lb. Pound.
Cwt. 100 weight.
Chap. Chapter.
Cal. California.
Co. Company.Xo. Number.Do. Ditto. The same.
(’t. Cts. Cent. Cents.
$ Dollars.
D.D. Doctor of Divinity.
Doz. Dozen.
Eno;. England.
U. S. United States.
Etc. Et Cetera.
Ac. And so forth.
Hon. Honorable.
Rev. Reverend.
Gov. Governor.
Inst. This month.
Ult. LaG month.
Viz. Namely.
Mr. Mister.
Mrs. Mistress.
M. D. Medical Doctor.
Dr. Debtor, Doctor.
Cr. Creditor, Credit.
Esq. Esquire.
Capt. Captain.
Messrs. Gentlemen. Sir
Pres. President.
Prof. Professor.
P. S. Postscript.
Ans. Answer.I. E. That is.
& And.Yd. Yard.Via. By the way of.
R. R. Railroad.
Yol. Volume.Jan. January.
Feb. February.
Apr. April.
Aug. August.
Sep. Sept. September.
Oct. October.
Nov. November.Dec. December.X. Xorth. S. South.
E. East. W. West.
St. Street, Saint.
Mt. Mountain.
ENGLISH AND CHINESE READER. I43
THE LORD’S PRAYER.
Our Fa-ther, which art in heav-en, hal-lowed
be thy name. Thy king-dom come. Thy will
be clone on earth as it is in heav-en. Give us
this day our dai-ly bread. And for-give us our
debts as we for-give our debt-ors. And lead us
not in-to temp-ta-tion, but de-liv-er us from e-vil.
For thine is the king-dom, and the pow-er, and
the glo-ry for ev-er. A-raen.
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THE CREED.
I be-lieve in God the Fa-ther . Al-migh-ty,
Ma-ker of heav-en and earth; and in Je-sus
Christ, his on-ly Son, our Lord, who was con-
ceived b}' the Holy Ghost, born of the vir-gin
Ma-ry;
suf-fered un-der Pon-tius Pi-late, wascru-ci-fied, dead and bur-ied
;he de-scend-ed in-to
hell; the third day he rose from the dead; he
as-cend-ed in-to heav-en, and sit-teth on the right
hand of God the Fath-er Al-migh-ty;from thence
he shall come to judge the quick and the dead.
I be-lieve in the Ho-ly Ghost;
the ho-ly
cath-o-lic church;
the com-mun-ion of saints
;
the for-give-ness of sins;
the res-ur-rec-tion of
the bod-y;and life ev-er-last-ing. A-men.
Date Due