The Child's Day. Woods Hutchinson

The Child's Day - Woods Hutchinson


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       Woods Hutchinson

      The Child's Day

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664568939

       FOREWORD

       THE CHILD’S DAY

       GOOD MORNING

       I. WAKING UP

       II. A GOOD START

       III. BATHING AND BRUSHING

       BREAKFAST

       GOING TO SCHOOL

       I. GETTING READY

       II. AN EARLY ROMP

       III. FRESH AIR—WHY WE NEED IT

       IV. FRESH AIR—HOW WE BREATHE IT

       IN SCHOOL

       I. BRINGING THE FRESH AIR IN

       II. HEARING AND LISTENING

       III. SEEING AND READING

       IV. A DRINK OF WATER

       V. LITTLE COOKS

       VI. TASTING AND SMELLING

       VII. TALKING AND RECITING

       VIII. THINKING AND ANSWERING

       “ABSENT TO-DAY?”

       I. KEEPING WELL

       II. SOME FOES TO FIGHT

       III. PROTECTING OUR FRIENDS

       WORK AND PLAY

       I. GROWING STRONG

       II. ACCIDENTS

       III. THE CITY BEAUTIFUL

       THE EVENING MEAL

       A PLEASANT EVENING

       GOOD NIGHT

       I. GETTING READY FOR BED

       II. THE LAND OF NOD

       QUESTIONS AND EXERCISES

       Good Morning

       Breakfast

       Going to School

       In School

       “Absent To-day?”

       Work and Play

       III. The City Beautiful.

       The Evening Meal

       A Pleasant Evening

       Good Night

      FOREWORD

       Table of Contents

      “If youth only knew, if old age only could!” lamented the philosopher. What is the use, say some, of putting ideas about disease into children’s heads and making them fussy about their health and anxious before their time?

      Precisely because ideas about disease are far less hurtful than disease itself, and because the period for richest returns from sensible living is childhood—and the earlier the better.

      It is abundantly worth while to teach a child how to protect his health and build up his strength; too many of us only begin to take thought of our health when it is too late to do us much good. Almost everything is possible in childhood. The heaviest life handicaps can be fed and played and trained out of existence in a child. Even the most rudimentary knowledge, the simplest and crudest of precautions, in childhood may make all the difference between misery and happiness, success and failure in life.

      Our greatest asset for healthful living is that most of the unspoiled instincts, the primitive likes and dislikes, of the child point in the right direction. There is no need to tell children to eat, to play,


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