Lullaby-Land: Songs of Childhood by Eugene Field
The Story
Lullaby-Land: Songs of Childhood is a collection of poems by Eugene Field (1850-1895), many of which first appeared in newspapers in the late 1800s. There’s no single plot—it’s more like a scrapbook of childhood moments. The poems swing from boisterous, playful rhymes about little boys and girls to haunting lullabies with a dose of fog and hush. Moms put kids to bed; sailors tell wild stories; children tiptoe into imaginary kingdoms where even rocking chairs come alive. You’ll find poems about hugging teddy bears, yes, and poems about the kid with a dead mother. It’s that contrast that makes this a magical yet unsettling ride.
Why You Should Read It
Reading Field feels like sifting through an old family photo album of the mind. I swear, the rhythms get stuck in your head—yes there’s repetition and heavy alliteration, but in a childhood way. he personal connection is why we still buy this book today. Under the simple rhymes he hides real adult emotions like sadness about lost innocence and fierce grief. No character changes, exactly: it’s more like each poem creates its own tiny world. You’ll see echoes of our own lives when your kid pretends to be brave, or when you’re tucking them in but they ask hard questions about the world. The strongest theme is how short, safe childhood is, and how sneaky Big emotions can be. If you want sentimental without feeling poisoned—the spoonful of sugar doesn’t spoil—Eugene Field is the book to bring on a quiet afternoon.
Final Verdict
I’d say Lullaby-Land is perfect for you if you’re a reader who likes classic literature that doesn't take 200 pages to make a point. Share it with your own little li’s, but read it for yourself first: by that deep hush you’ll hear Field’s own heart. Isn’t it funny a hundred-plus-year-old guy gets what it’s like carrying your kid to bed just right? Curmudgeons, purists of high art, and anyone who got weeded with the termian word, look away. For everyone else who ever sat on a grandmother’s, this book will hug your brain one line at a time.
This title is part of the public domain archive. Access is open to everyone around the world.
Richard Garcia
2 years agoFrom a researcher's perspective, the logic behind each conclusion is easy to follow and verify. Truly a masterpiece of digital educational material.