Showing posts with label May 4. Show all posts
Showing posts with label May 4. Show all posts

Monday, April 29, 2013

RHODE ISLAND

This week we focused on two books in the collection about Rhode Island, the first of the 13 original colonies to declare independence from British rule. Rhode Island made this declaration on May 4, 1776, two months before any other colony did so.

If you'd like to learn more about Rhode Island and its people, we recommend these two Bullis books:


History of Providence County, Rhode Island
by Richard M. Bayless
published in 1891 by W. Preston, New York

and

Re-union of the Sons and Daughters of Newport R.I.
by George C. Mason
published in 1859 by F.A. Pratt, City printers


Though both of these books were written many years following the colony's 1776 declaration, they include information about Rhode Island's early days. These books are a good lead-in to another celebration of our country's independence that is just two months away. Please give us a call if you'd like to look at either of them.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

THE ROBIN

Today is sandwiched in between yesterday's Earth Day and tomorrow's Arbor Day. We celebrate these two occasions by sharing with you Charlie Bullis's poem "written and read Arbor Day, May 4, 1906," when he was 14 years old.

THE ROBIN, by C. R. Bullis

In the bright days of early spring
A robin from the south took wing
Thrilled by memories of the past
He flew to the north straight and fast
Through the pale ethereal blue
Unto his native land he flew
Through the bright day and starlit night
He proceeded in his long flight.
At last all wearied from his flight
As the first rays of the sun's light
Appeared over the eastern hill
At home on a pine he sat still.
For a few weeks he flew about
In every tree and bush and out
And in the balmy evening air
His song resounded clear and fair
And floated up to the pale moon
And died away very much to soon.
His singing soon brought him a mate
And they sang together in state
On a swaying evergreen bough
Never chriping his song enow
Until warmer the day did grow
Melting away the lingering snow
And birds became more numerous
The robins grew less humorous
They worked two or three bright days
And constructed a little maze
Of dry grass interlocked and round
With fine feathers all lined and downed
They constructed their little nest
On a brace high above their pest
The cat that goes prowling around
And catches young birds near the ground
Soon two little blue eggs were laid
In the warm nest all in the shade
In due time the blue eggs were hatched
The robins taking turns to scratch
And sit and search for grubs and slugs
And juicy angle worms and bugs
It was a busy time indeed
With two small gaping mouths to feed
But the robins tended them well
And their forms began to swell
When the sweet hay was being mown
I looked and the young birds had flown.