Browse all books

Books with title The Bible-Time Nursery Rhyme Book

  • The Big Book of Nursery Rhymes

    Various, Charles Henry Robinson, Walter Jerrold

    eBook
    This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.
  • The Nursery Rhyme Book

    Various, L. Leslie (Leonard Leslie) Brooke, Andrew Lang

    eBook
    None
  • The Bible-Time Nursery Rhyme Book

    Emily Hunter

    Hardcover (Outskirts Press, May 15, 2013)
    Deluxe Gift Edition "A gift that will beautify a child's life!" The Bible-Time Nursery Rhyme Book Takes the child on a delightful journey through the Bible, introducing the child to Bible characters and Bible principles in fascinating, nursery rhyme style! Why in Rhyme? For the same reason many television advertisers use jingles in their commercials. They know that ideas presented in rhyme linger longer in the mind than those presented in prose! What mother has not heard her child "sing-songing" commercials throughout the day? And what adult cannot recite nursery rhymes from his childhood? The Bible-Time Nursery Rhyme Book makes use of this proven method to impress the child's mind unforgettably with truths from God's Word! The Bible-Time Nursery Rhyme Book Educates While it entertains! Delights the EYE and the EAR while it feeds the MIND! More than 250 eye-catching illustrations! A priceless treasure for the growing child! Excellent for classroom or nursery school use! Makes Bible-learning FUN! For pre-schoolers and young readers alike-it "it grows with the child"-even adults can't lay it down!
  • The Bible-Time Nursery Rhyme Book

    Emily Hunter

    Hardcover (Manna Publications, March 15, 1981)
    Hard Back book with binding intact. No marks, tears. All pages are in excellent condition.
  • The Bible-Time Nursery Rhyme Book

    Emily Hunter

    Hardcover (Harvest House Pub, June 1, 1988)
    The Bible Time Nursery Rhyme Book takes the child on a delightful journey through the Bible, introducing the child to Bible characters and Bible principles in fascinating, nursery rhyme style!.
    WB
  • The Nursery Rhyme Book

    Ed. Andrew Lang

    Hardcover (Penguin Books Ltd, Dec. 31, 1985)
    None
  • The Oxford Nursery Rhyme Book

    Iona Opie, Peter Opie, Joan Hassall

    Hardcover (Oxford University Press, March 15, 1955)
    Baby games, lullabies, rhymes, street cries and folk ballads comprise these selections from the British oral tradition
    T
  • The Nursery Rhyme Book

    Various Various

    eBook (anboco, Aug. 17, 2016)
    To read the old Nursery Rhymes brings back queer lost memories of a man's own childhood. One seems to see the loose floppy picture-books of long ago, with their boldly coloured pictures. The books were tattered and worn, and my first library consisted of a wooden box full of these volumes. And I can remember being imprisoned for some crime in the closet where the box was, and how my gaolers found me, happy and impenitent, sitting on the box, with its contents all round me, reading.
  • The Nursery Rhyme Book

    Andrew Lang, L. Leslie Brooke

    Paperback (Dover Publications, Nov. 21, 2012)
    Nursery rhymes are the cornerstone of poetry and perhaps of wisdom itself, and the three hundred gems in this Andrew Lang collection are some of the best ever assembled. Rhymes about King Arthur, an old woman and her pig, Hector Protector, and more are grouped by Historical, Literal, Proverbs, Songs, Riddles, and other categories.
    W
  • The Big Book of Nursery Rhymes

    Walter Jerrold, Charles Robinson

    Hardcover (Calla Editions, Sept. 19, 2012)
    A magnificent treasury of popular folklore, this rare, hardcover compilation offers a bounty of delightful illustrations by Charles Robinson — there are black-and-white illustrations on every page as well as 16 plates of full- and two-color images. Decorative initials and borders, hand lettering, silhouettes, and other ornaments embellish renderings of 300 traditional verses, from "Little Tom Tucker" and "Baa, Baa Black Sheep" to "Good King Arthur" and "Shave a Pig."
  • The Nursery Rhyme Book

    Andrew Lang, Leonard Leslie Brooke

    language (, Sept. 14, 2015)
    *This Book is annotated (it contains a detailed biography of the author). *An active Table of Contents has been added by the publisher for a better customer experience. *This book has been checked and corrected for spelling errors.This publication contains original illustrations by Leonard Leslie Brooke.TO read the old Nursery Rhymes brings back queer lost memories of aman's own childhood. One seems to see the loose floppy picture-books oflong ago, with their boldly coloured pictures. The books were tatteredand worn, and my first library consisted of a wooden box full of thesevolumes. And I can remember being imprisoned for some crime in thecloset where the box was, and how my gaolers found me, happy andimpenitent, sitting on the box, with its contents all round me,reading.There was "Who Killed Cock Robin?" which I knew by heart before I couldread, and I learned to read (entirely "without tears") by picking outthe letters in the familiar words. I remember the Lark dressed as aclerk, but what a clerk might be I did not ask. Other children, who arelittle now, will read this book, and remember it well when they haveforgotten a great deal of history and geography. We do not know whatpoets wrote the old Nursery Rhymes, but certainly some of them werewritten down, or even printed, three hundred years ago. Grandmothershave sung them to their grandchildren, and they again to theirs, formany centuries. In Scotland an old fellow will take a child on his kneefor a ride, and sing-- "This is the way the ladies ride, Jimp and sma',--"a smooth ride, then a rough trot,-- "This is the way the cadgers ride. Creels and a'!"Such songs are sometimes not printed, but they are never forgotten.About the people mentioned in this book:--We do not exactly know who OldKing Cole was, but King Arthur must have reigned some time about 500 to600 A.D. As a child grows up, he will, if he is fond of poetry, readthousands of lines about this Prince, and the Table Round where hisKnights dined, and how four weeping Queens carried him from his lastfight to Avalon, a country where the apple-trees are always in bloom.But the reader will never forget the bag-pudding, which "the Queen nextmorning fried." Her name was Guinevere, and the historian says that she"was a true lover, and therefore made she a good end." But she had agreat deal of unhappiness in her life.I cannot tell what King of France went up the hill with twenty thousandmen, and did nothing when he got there. But I do know who Charley wasthat "loved good ale and wine," and also "loved good brandy," and wasfond of a pretty girl, "as sweet as sugar-candy." This was the banishedPrince of Wales, who tried to win back his father's kingdom more than ahundred years ago, and gained battles, and took cities, and would haverecovered the throne if his officers had followed him. But he was asunfortunate as he was brave, and when he had no longer a chance, perhapshe _did_ love good ale and wine rather too dearly. As for the prettygirls, they all ran after him, and he could not run away like GeorgeyPorgey. There is plenty of poetry about Charley, as well as about KingArthur.About King Charles the First, "upon a black horse," a child will soonhear at least as much as he can want, and perhaps his heart "will beready to burst," as the rhyme says, with sorrow for the unhappy King.After he had his head cut off, "the Parliament soldiers went to theKing," that is, to his son Charles, and crowned him in his turn, but hewas thought a little too gay. Then we come to the King "who had adaughter fair, and gave the Prince of Orange her."
  • The Big Book of Nursery Rhymes

    Debbie Barry, Walter Jerrold, Charles Robinson

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, June 27, 2017)
    This republication of “The Big Book of Nursery Rhymes,” newly arranged to best display the rhymes and their original illustrations, while maintaining the original pagination, is intended to reintroduce the nursery rhymes of a century past to the children of today. Nursery rhymes carry fragments of the history, culture, religion, and ideas of the 15th or 16th through the 19th Centuries, which should be preserved and passed on to new generations. Parents and children will love reading these rhymes, and will delight in the wonderful illustrations. Originally Edited by Walter Jerrold. Illustrated by Charles Robinson. Published by Blackie and Son, Ltd., London, 1920. From the Introduction: “The very title, Nursery Rhymes, which has come to be associated with a great body of familiar verse, is in itself sufficient indication of the manner in which that verse has been passed down from generation to generation. Who composed the little pieces it is, save in a few cases, impossible to say: some are certainly very old and were doubtless repeated thousands of times before their first appearance in print. References to certain favourites may be found in the pages of the dramatists of Elizabeth's time. “Attempts are sometimes made to read into these Rhymes a deeper significance than the obvious and simple one which has accounted for their enduring popularity in the Nursery, but this volume has no concern with such profound interpretations, any more than have the little people who love the old jingles best. “Students divide our rhymes into narrative pieces, historical, folk-lore, game rhymes, counting-out rhymes, jingles, fragments, and so forth, but for the children for whom and by whom they are remembered, and for whose sake they are here collected and pictured anew, they are just—Nursery Nursery Rhymes.” Caution to Parents: Nursery rhymes that were acceptable for children of the 19th Century might prove confusing or unsettling for children of the 21st Century, so far removed in tiome from the manners and issues of that time; parents are encouraged to read these rhymes with their children.
    P