
Lesson:
- ‘Come in, little stranger,’ I said,
As she tapped at my half open door;
While the blanket, pinned over her head,
Just reached to the basket she bore.
- A look full of innocence fell
From her modest and pretty blue eye,
As she said, ‘I have matches to sell,
And hope you are willing to buy.
- ‘A penny a bunch is the price,
I think you’ll not find it too much;
They are tied up so even and nice,
And ready to light with a touch.’
- I asked, ‘What’s your name, little girl?’
”Tis Mary,’ said she, ‘Mary Dow;’
And carelessly tossed off a curl,
That played on her delicate brow.
- ‘My father was lost on the deep;
The ship never got to the shore;
And mother is sad, and will weep,
To hear the wind blow and sea roar.
- ‘She sits there at home, without food,
Beside our poor, sick Willy’s bed;
She paid all her money for wood,
And so I sell matches for bread.
- ‘I’d go to the yard and get chips,
But then it would make me too sad
To see the men building the ships,
And think they had made one so bad.
- ‘But God, I am sure, who can take
Such fatherly care of a bird,
Will never forget nor forsake
The children who trust in his word.
- ‘And now, if I only can sell
The matches I brought out today,
I think I shall do very well,
And we shall rejoice at the pay.’
- ‘Fly home, little bird,’ then I thought,
‘Fly home, full of joy, to your nest;’
For I took all the matches she brought,
And Mary may tell you the rest.
DEFINITIONS
- Blanket: A square of loosely woven woolen cloth.
- Matches: Small splits of wood, one end of which has been dipped in a preparation which will take fire by rubbing.
- Penny: Coin worth one cent.
- Delicate: Soft and fair.
- Forsake: Leave, reject.

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