Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

My Country Tis of Thee...

My Country Tis of Thee -- America the Beautiful -- Star Spangled Banner

old glory vintage
My Country, Tis of Thee
My country, tis of thee,
Sweet land of liberty,
Of thee I sing;
Land where my fathers died,
Land of the pilgrims pride,
From every mountainside
Let freedom ring!
 
--Samuel Francis Smith, original poem, 1831






drummer boy
 
America
O beautiful for halcyon skies,
For amber waves of grain,
For purple mountain majesties
Above the enameled plain!
America! America!
God shed His grace on thee,
Till souls wax fair as earth and air
And music-hearted sea!
 
~Katharine Lee Bates, original poem, 1893



celebrate the 4thStar Spangled Banner
O say can you see by the dawn's early light,
What so proudly we hailed
at the twilight's last gleaming,
Whose broad stripes and bright stars
through the perilous fight,
O'er the ramparts we watched,
were so gallantly streaming?
And the rockets' red glare,
the bombs bursting in air,
Gave proof through the night
that our flag was still there;
O say does that star-spangled
banner yet wave,
O'er the land of the free
and the home of the brave?
--Francis Scott Key,
original poem, 1812
 
About the Songs: A Little History Lesson
 
America is one of the national hymns of the United States. The words were written in 1831 for a church school in Boston by Samuel Francis Smith, who was then studying for the ministry. The song was first sung at the school's Fourth of July celebration that year. Smith wrote the words to a melody that was popular in many European countries. He found the tune in a collection of German melodies. "God Save the Queen," the British national anthem, uses the same melody.
Source: Goertzen, V. (2013). America. In World Book Student.
(In World Book Student online by clicking here)
 
"America the Beautiful" also called O Beautiful for Spacious Skies, is one of the most familiar and popular American patriotic songs. Katharine Lee Bates, a college professor, wrote the words as a poem during a visit to Colorado in 1893. She was inspired by the view from Pikes Peak. The poem, which describes the wonders of America, was published on July 4, 1895. Source: Preston, K. K. (2013). America the Beautiful. In World Book Student. (In World Book Student online by clicking here)
 
Star-Spangled Banner is the national anthem of the United States. Francis Scott Key, wrote the song during the War of 1812. The U.S. Congress officially approved "The Star-Spangled Banner" as the national anthem in 1931.
Source: Goertzen, V. (2013). Star-Spangled Banner. In World Book Student. (In World Book Student online by clicking here)
 
America the Beautiful @ SCCLD Libraries

America the Beautiful America the Beautiful Gall, an actual descendant of Bates, illustrates the four verses of this country's other national anthem with bold, clean-lined, heroic American scenes.
America the Beautiful
America the Beautiful
A moving celebration of 'America the Beautiful' featuring artwork from ten distinguished artists and inspiring presidential quotes

America the Beautiful America the Beautiful
From internationally renowned humanitarian Dr. Ben Carson, here is a sobering and inspiring manifesto of America's greatness, her failings, and the values and changes it will take to carry our country into a prosperous future.
America the Beautiful
America the Beautiful
The scrambled states of America. Disenchanted with their fixed places on the map, the states decide to swap spots in hopes that each can get to see a different part of the country and do something different for a change.
 
 
Hear Aretha Franklin sing My Country Tis of Thee:
 
 
 
Happy 4th of July

-by, Lauren
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Friday, March 29, 2013

O Brother Chicken, Sister Chick--Egg-static Spring!

http://www.squidoo.com/hatching-chicken-eggs-chicks-
 
O Brother Chicken! Sister Chick!
 O gracious me! O my!
This broken Eggshell was my home!
I see it with my eye!
However did I get inside? Or how did I get out?
And must my life be evermore, an atmosphere of doubt?


http://www.tradeco-belgium.com/hatching-eggs-and-day-old-chicks.html

Can no one tell? Can no one solve, this mystery of Eggs?
Or why we chirp and flap our wings,—or why we've all two legs?
And since we cannot understand,—
May it not seem to me,
That we were merely born by chance,
Egg-nostics for to be?
--- Edward Lear (1812–88)
 
Alice and Joanie B. have been busy laying eggs - it's that time of year - Spring brings more sunshine, more sunshine means more eggs. The eggs are piling up faster then Laurenjoan can eat 'em.

Joanie B: Wraawwk! There goes another one into the nest box.

Alice: Move over Joanie B. It's my turn to use the nest box.
There were two nest boxes in the coop, but only one was used by both hens. The other box just didn't have the proper cozy feel for laying an egg....so there was always a scramble and a shuffle going on inside the old roost.

Joanie B: AwwwK - I' m egg-static - it's Spring - time for Peter Cottontail to hop down the bunny trail!

Alice: Time to put on our bonnets and fill our baskets with Easter eggs - pink, blue, yellow, green, purple...hey -- my eggs are just speckled brown - I wonder where colored eggs come from??

Joanie B: Peter Cottontail, of course - like the song says:

Here comes Peter Cottontail
Hoppin' down the bunny trail
Hippity hoppin', Easter's on its way....

...He's got jelly beans for Tommy
Colored eggs for sister Sue
There's an orchid for your mommy
And an Easter bonnet too
Notes from Laurenjoan: Jelly Beans and Things
Spring has sprung and with it comes all things jelly bean, chocolate bunny and colored eggs galore. Alice and Joanie B. know where their eggs come from, but as for Peter Cottontail - it's all folklore...as Holiday Symbols and Customs (e-book) states on page 215:

Where do Easter eggs come from? According to German folklore, the Easter Bunny lays the eggs and hides them in the garden, although other creatures have also been given credit for the laying of Easter eggs. In France, children are told that the Easter eggs are dropped by the church bells on their way back from Rome.

You can find more, just take a look at the ebook Holiday Symbols and Customs (e-book), available on the SCCLD Online Resources page under Cultures and Communities.

And, if you're hankering to hear the Peter Cottontail song, you can find the classic Gene Autry version (and more) for free as a member of the SCCLD Library on Freegal Music.

As for Edward Lear, the poet of nonsense verse, you can find O Brother Chicken! Sister Chick! and many more poems on The Columbia Grangers's World of Poetry, another database available to SCCLD members.

Of course, there are always books and cds - like these:
The Golden Egg Book
The Golden Egg Book

The Owl and the Pussycat
The Owl and the Pussycat
 
 
Happy Spring, Everyone!
 
P.S. - The SCCLD Libraries will be closed on Sunday, March 31, 2013 (Easter Sunday) and on Monday, April 1, 2013 (in observance of Cesar Chavez Day).

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Chicks and egg photo sources -
"Here Comes Peter Cottontail" is a popular Easter song composed in 1950 by Steve Nelson and Jack Rollins.