The Ontario Readers: Third Book. Ontario. Department of Education

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CARTIER

       ANTS AND THEIR SLAVES

       LEAD, KINDLY LIGHT

       THE JOLLY SANDBOYS

       THE GLADNESS OF NATURE

       OLD ENGLISH LIFE

       PUCK'S SONG

       THE BATTLE OF QUEENSTON HEIGHTS

       THE BUGLE SONG

       CHARITY

       A CHRISTMAS CAROL

       THE BARREN LANDS

       A SPRING MORNING

       CROSSING THE BAR

      ILLUSTRATIONS

       Table of Contents

        Frontispiece

        ALEXANDRA, THE QUEEN MOTHER

        UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO

        AT THE END OF THE MEAL

        IN THE HIGHLANDS OF ONTARIO

        ONTARIO AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE

        NIAGARA FALLS

        IN THE PASTURE

        DEEP SEA FISHERS

        no caption

        Trilobite

       Table of Contents

      I want you to remember what Empire Day means. Empire Day is the festival on which every British subject should reverently remember that the British Empire stands out before the whole world as the fearless champion of freedom, fair play and equal rights; that its watchwords are responsibility, duty, sympathy and self-sacrifice, and that a special responsibility rests with you individually to be true to the traditions and to the mission of your race.

      I also want you to remember that one day Canada will become, if her people are faithful to their high British traditions, the most powerful of all the self-governing nations, not excluding the people of the United Kingdom, which make up the British Empire, and that it rests with each one of you individually to do your utmost by your own conduct and example to make Canada not only the most powerful, but the noblest of all the self-governing nations that are proud to owe allegiance to the King.

      Earl Grey.

       Governor-General of Canada

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      So here hath been dawning

       Another blue day;

       Think, wilt thou let it

       Slip useless away?

      Out of Eternity

       This new day is born;

       Into Eternity

       At night will return.

      Behold it aforetime

       No eye ever did;

       So soon it forever

       From all eyes is hid.

      Here hath been dawning

       Another blue day;

       Think, wilt thou let it

       Slip useless away?

      Carlyle

       Table of Contents

      One day a ragged beggar was creeping along from house to house. He carried an old wallet in his hand, and was asking at every door for a few cents to buy something to eat. As he was grumbling at his lot, he kept wondering why it was that folks who had so much money were never satisfied but were always wanting more.

      "Here," said he, "is the master of this house—I know him well. He was always a good business man, and he made himself wondrously rich a long time ago. Had he been wise he would have stopped then. He would have turned over his business to some one else, and then he could have spent the rest of his life in ease. But what did he do instead? He built ships and sent them to sea to trade with foreign lands. He thought he would get mountains of gold.

      "But there were great storms on the water; his ships were wrecked, and his riches were swallowed up by the waves. Now all his hopes lie at the bottom of the sea, and his great wealth has vanished.

      "There are many such cases. Men seem to be never satisfied unless they gain the whole world.

      "As

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