WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Stories and ballads for young folks cover

Stories and ballads for young folks

Chapter 38: WINSOME MAGGIE.
Open in WeRead

About This Book

A mixed collection of short narratives and lyrical pieces aimed at young readers, blending domestic vignettes, playful adventures, and brief moral sketches. Many items focus on childhood scenes—games, family interactions, small acts of kindness and perseverance—while others drift into fairy-tale or fanciful territory with giants, princesses, and imaginative escapades. Interspersed ballads and poems celebrate nature, simple joys, and consolation, shifting tone between humor, tenderness, and gentle instruction. The pieces are concise and varied, alternating story and verse to amuse, soothe, and offer mild ethical reflections appropriate for a youthful audience.

WINSOME MAGGIE.

When winsome little Maggie
Comes dancing down the street,
The people smile upon her,
And pause, and kindly greet.
The white-haired parson gently
Lays hand upon her head,
The roguish doctor pinches
Her cheek so round and red.
The grim old judge’s visage,
Forever in a frown,
Relaxes for an instant,
As, passing, he looks down.
The matrons stoop to kiss her,
The children, at their play,
Call out, as little Maggie
Goes tripping on her way.
Not e’en the dreaded gossip,
Who through her half-closed blind
Peeps forth, with little Maggie
Has any fault to find.
When winsome little Maggie,
With basket on her arm,
In which her father’s luncheon
Is wrapped so nice and warm—
When she enters the long workshop
And pauses at his side,
Quick down he lays his hammer
And turns in love and pride,
To look into her limpid eyes,
And stroke her sunny hair,
And jest and frolic with her—
Forgetting toil and care—
For the music of her laughter
And the mirth of her replies,
The while there’s not a happier man,
Or richer, ’neath the skies.
Ah, well, it is a blessing
To have a heart so gay
That it keeps your feet a-dancing,
Your face alight alway,
And that, like winsome Maggie,
It seems, where’er you go,
As if the clouds had parted
To let a sunbeam thro’.