Recite poems suitable for children

Open that little white umbrella,

Let the breeze blow your cheeks,

Spread your wings,

Flying again and again,

On the grass in May and June,

I have an agreement with you,

Poetry suitable for children to recite 2: quilt the earth

I was ill and had to stay in bed.

Put two pillows under your head,

Every toy is with me,

Tell me to have fun all day.

Sometimes, it takes an hour.

I watched the leading soldiers marching,

They wear different uniforms,

Practice in the forest covered with bedding.

Sometimes, I let my fleet

Through the waves on the ocean of sheets,

Otherwise, remove trees and houses,

Building a city on a bed.

I am a great and serious elf,

Sitting on a mountain with a pillow,

Gazing at the valleys and plains in front of us,

Become the owner of the interesting quilt earth.

Poem 3 suitable for children to recite: Where does the little fish sleep?

It's dark and quiet at night,

Xiaoyu, where do you sleep?

The fox's footprints lead to the hole,

The puppy's footprints lead to the nest.

Squirrel footprints lead to tree holes,

The mouse's footprints lead to the hole,

Not in the river, not in the water,

Your footprints are missing.

Dark and quiet,

Xiaoyu, where do you sleep?

Poetry suitable for children to recite 4: haha mirror

You laugh, I laugh,

I came here to laugh-

Listen, fatty,

Turn into spaghetti.

Brother skinny, that's great,

Get fat and tall at once.

This head is as big as a hippo,

The man who is too short to see his feet. ...

Sister smiled and thought about it.

Look at everyone:

"If this happens,

Eyes crying into red cherries! "

Poetry 5 suitable for children to recite: the wind on the mountain

Nobody knows.

Nobody can tell me.

Where does the wind come from,

Where does the wind blow?

It comes from somewhere,

With its fastest and fastest speed;

I can't keep it,

I can't keep up even if I run hard!

If I let go of my hand,

The rope tied to the kite,

Then the kite will move with the wind,

A day and a night is hard to say.

I'm going to find a kite,

See which hillside it stops on;

I know it's the wind,

I used to put my feet there.

So I can tell people:

Where did the wind go?

But where does the wind come from,

Still no one can say it.