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Judith Proctor ([personal profile] watervole) wrote2016-09-27 06:54 pm

Oswin and Edward Lear

 Oswin has recently been enjoying Richard reading Dr Seuss books like 'One Fish Two Fish, Red Fish Blue Fish' to her.  While the illustrations are amusing, it's probably the rhyme and rhythm of the words that are a big part of the appeal.

So, today, I tried 'The Jumblies' on her.  (the last time I tried, she was still too young and wasn't interested, but now she's nearly 2 1/2)

Big success.

Read it half a dozen times throughout the day and followed that up with a couple of readings of 'The Owl and the Pussycat'.

Only a few pictures for each poem.  Definitely the words that she loved. Big smile at the end each time and requests for another reading.

Edward Lear's poems appear to be working for yet another generation of children.  Oswin has no idea what all the made-up words mean, but it doesn't seem to bother her any more than it did my generation.  Personally, I think a runcible spoon is a spoon with holes in it (the kind you use for draining things).  It fits Lear's cheerful illogic.

 Far and few, far and few,
            Are the lands where the Jumblies live;
      Their heads are green, and their hands are blue,
            And they went to sea in a Sieve.

I think the time may have come to get Kipling off my bookshelf.  Oh yes, my best beloved.  I'm itching to read her the 'The Elephant's Child' and the other Just So stories. My father read them to me, and I read them to my children.  They were written to be read aloud, the words roll along.  "What does the crocodile have for dinner?"
"Go to the banks of the great grey-green, greasy Limpopo River, all set about with fever-trees, and find out."

Go and read it again, you know you want to!  And if you've never read it, find a child and read it to them immediately.

[identity profile] la-avispa.livejournal.com 2016-09-29 07:50 pm (UTC)(link)
I know, and I keep trying, and collecting books. But I'm very impatient, because I love reading, and I want to show my daughter the way into the magic world of fiction as soon as possible.

I haven't woven much either, as I have some problems in my family and the current project is too complicated to weave it 5 minutes a day, as you may do with some easy ones, requires concentration. It took me about 6 weeks just to prepare it. But very-very slowly, and not without mistakes it progresses. I have many things I want to make, too.

The knitting needle has proved to be a great idea. When I misthreaded 16 cards out of 50, it was very easy to rethread them mostly because of the knitting needle. Meanwhile I've found out, that when you tie the threads to the knitting needle a rope around the pack works better than a plastic bag clip, but when you work, a pair of clips is better than a rope. And I've worked out my own ways of remembering, which way to turn the cards in double faced weaving. Ah, and I've marked A, B, C, and D holes with different colours - thus I always know, which way they are turend. For example, when I see red and blue, it means A-D side, etc. It has also proved to be helpful.
Edited 2016-09-29 19:52 (UTC)