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← Mother Goose Melodies

Grades 9–12 reading level

Mother Goose Melodies

Adapted with AI from the original open resource by Internet Archive. Nothing is invented — only the reading level changes.

This audio recording of Mother Goose in Prose was read by the following volunteers:

Barbara Wedge, Westwinds12, Patricia Oakley, Andrew Lebrun, Christie Nowak, Julian Jamison, Cynthia Lyons, JemmaBlythe, Charlene Harris, Judy Bierber, Christiane Levesque, Brennan Holtzclaw, and David Barnes.

Contents

  • Introduction – 00:09:55 — Read by Barbara Wedge
  • Sing a Song o' Sixpence – 00:14:10 — Read by Westwinds12
  • Little Boy Blue – 00:18:22 — Read by Westwinds12
  • The Cat and the Fiddle – 00:10:00 — Read by Westwinds12
  • The Black Sheep – 00:09:57 — Read by Westwinds12
  • Old King Cole – 00:13:06 — Read by Westwinds12
  • Mistress Mary – 00:17:36 — Read by Patricia Oakley
  • The Wondrous Wise Man – 00:12:14 — Read by Andrew Lebrun
  • What Little Jack Horner Did – 00:09:39 — Read by Christie Nowak
  • The Man in the Moon – 00:12:29 — Read by Julian Jamison
  • The Jolly Miller – 00:10:59 — Read by Christie Nowak
  • The Little Man and His Little Gun – 00:11:42 — Read by Cynthia Lyons
  • Hickory Dickory Dock – 00:10:32 — Read by Patricia Oakley
  • Little Bo-Peep – 00:12:08 — Read by Barbara Wedge
  • The Story of Tommy Tucker – 00:10:35 — Read by JemmaBlythe
  • Pussy Cat Mew – 00:07:27 — Read by Patricia Oakley
  • How the Beggars Came to Town – 00:19:18 — Read by Charlene Harris
  • Tom the Piper's Son – 00:08:21 — Read by Judy Bieber
  • Humpty Dumpty – 00:16:22 — Read by Patricia Oakley
  • The Woman Who Lived in a Shoe – 00:11:00 — Read by Christiane Levesque
  • Little Miss Muffet – 00:11:49 — Read by Brennan Holtzclaw
  • Three Wise Men of Gotham – 00:16:14 — Read by David Barnes
  • Little Bun Rabbit – 00:12:29 — Read by Judy Bieber

LibriVox Audio Recording: Public Domain Certification

The person or people connected to this work (called the "Dedicator" or "Certifier") make one of two claims. Either (a) they confirm, to the best of their knowledge, that the work is in the public domain — meaning no one owns its copyright, so anyone may use it freely — in the country where it was published; or (b) they give up any copyright they personally hold in the work, placing it in the public domain for everyone to use.

The certifier has made a reasonable effort to check the copyright status of this work. Even so, the certifier understands that acting in good faith doesn't guarantee legal protection if it later turns out the work isn't actually in the public domain.

The Dedicator makes this decision for the benefit of the public — even if it means giving up rights that could otherwise pass to their heirs or successors. The Dedicator means for this act to permanently and completely give up every right — present and future — that copyright law would normally provide for this work. This includes giving up the right to take legal action (or any other action) to enforce those copyrights.

The Dedicator understands that once a work enters the public domain, anyone may copy, share, transmit, use, change, build upon, or otherwise make use of it — for any purpose, commercial or not — using any method, including techniques that haven't been invented yet.

Available audio formats:

  • 128 kbit MP3 — MP3 folder
  • 64 kbit Ogg Vorbis (variable bit rate) — OGG folder
  • Apple AAC audiobook (16 kbit mono) — M4B folder
  • Speex — SPX folder

Original licensed under Public Domain. This adaptation is provided free by OER.ai.