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American Fairy Tales
By L. FRANK BAUM
Author of
FATHER GOOSE; HIS BOOK, THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF
OZ, ETC.
The BOX OF ROBBERS
No one intended to leave Martha alone that
afternoon, but it happened that everyone was called away, for one reason
or another. Mrs. McFarland was attending the weekly card party held by
the Women's Anti-Gambling League. Sister Nell's young man had called
quite unexpectedly to take her for a long drive. Papa was at the office,
as usual. It was Mary Ann's day out. As for Emeline, she certainly
should have stayed in the house and looked after the little girl; but
Emeline had a restless nature.
"Would you mind, miss, if I just crossed the
alley to speak a word to Mrs. Carleton's girl?" she asked Martha.
"'Course not," replied the child.
"You'd better lock the back door, though, and take the key, for I
shall be upstairs."
"Oh, I'll do that, of course, miss,"
said the delighted maid, and ran away to spend the afternoon with her
friend, leaving Martha quite alone in the big house, and locked in, into
the bargain.
The little girl read a few pages in her new book,
sewed a few stitches in her embroidery and started to "play
visiting" with her four favorite dolls. Then she remembered that in
the attic was a doll's playhouse that hadn't been used for months, so
she decided she would dust it and put it in order.
Filled with this idea, the girl climbed the
winding stairs to the big room under the roof. It was well lighted by
three dormer windows and was warm and pleasant. Around the walls were
rows of boxes and trunks, piles of old carpeting, pieces of damaged
furniture, bundles of discarded clothing and other odds and ends of more
or less value. Every well-regulated house has an attic of this sort, so
I need not describe it.
The doll's house had been moved, but after a
search Martha found it away over in a corner near the big chimney.
She drew it out and noticed that behind it was a
black wooden chest which Uncle Walter had sent over from Italy years and
years ago--before Martha was born, in fact. Mamma had told her about it
one day; how there was no key to it, because Uncle Walter wished it to
remain unopened until he returned home; and how this wandering uncle,
who was a mighty hunter, had gone into Africa to hunt elephants and had
never been heard from afterwards.
The little girl looked at the chest curiously, now
that it had by accident attracted her attention.
It was quite big--bigger even than mamma's
traveling trunk--and was studded all over with tarnished brassheaded
nails. It was heavy, too, for when Martha tried to lift one end of it
she found she could not stir it a bit. But there was a place in the side
of the cover for a key. She stooped to examine the lock, and saw that it
would take a rather big key to open it.
Then, as you may suspect, the little girl longed
to open Uncle Walter's big box and see what was in it. For we are all
curious, and little girls are just as curious as the rest of us.
"I don't b'lieve Uncle Walter'll ever come
back," she thought. "Papa said once that some elephant must
have killed him. If I only had a key--" She stopped and clapped her
little hands together gayly as she remembered a big basket of keys on
the shelf in the linen closet. They were of all sorts and sizes; perhaps
one of them would unlock the mysterious chest!
She flew down the stairs, found the basket and
returned with it to the attic. Then she sat down before the
brass-studded box and began trying one key after another in the curious
old lock. Some were too large, but most were too small. One would go
into the lock but would not turn; another stuck so fast that she feared
for a time that she would never get it out again. But at last, when the
basket was almost empty, an oddly-shaped, ancient brass key slipped
easily into the lock. With a cry of joy Martha turned the key with both
hands; then she heard a sharp "click," and the next moment the
heavy lid flew up of its own accord!
The little girl leaned over the edge of the chest
an instant, and the sight that met her eyes caused her to start back in
amazement.
Slowly and carefully a man unpacked himself from
the chest, stepped out upon the floor, stretched his limbs and then took
off his hat and bowed politely to the astonished child.
He was tall and thin and his face seemed badly
tanned or sunburnt.
Then another man emerged from the chest, yawning
and rubbing his eyes like a sleepy schoolboy. He was of middle size and
his skin seemed as badly tanned as that of the first.
While Martha stared open-mouthed at the remarkable
sight a third man crawled from the chest. He had the same complexion as
his fellows, but was short and fat.
All three were dressed in a curious manner. They
wore short jackets of red velvet braided with gold, and knee breeches of
sky-blue satin with silver buttons. Over their stockings were laced wide
ribbons of red and yellow and blue, while their hats had broad brims
with high, peaked crowns, from which fluttered yards of bright-colored
ribbons.
They had big gold rings in their ears and rows of
knives and pistols in their belts. Their eyes were black and glittering
and they wore long, fierce mustaches, curling at the ends like a pig's
tail.
"My! but you were heavy," exclaimed the
fat one, when he had pulled down his velvet jacket and brushed the dust
from his sky-blue breeches. "And you squeezed me all out of
shape."
"It was unavoidable, Luigi," responded
the thin man, lightly; "the lid of the chest pressed me down upon
you. Yet I tender you my regrets."
"As for me," said the middle-sized man,
carelessly rolling a cigarette and lighting it, "you must
acknowledge I have been your nearest friend for years; so do not be
disagreeable."
"You mustn't smoke in the attic," said
Martha, recovering herself at sight of the cigarette. "You might
set the house on fire."
The middle-sized man, who had not noticed her
before, at this speech turned to the girl and bowed.
"Since a lady requests it," said he,
"I shall abandon my cigarette," and he threw it on the floor
and extinguished it with his foot.
"Who are you?" asked Martha, who until
now had been too astonished to be frightened.
"Permit us to introduce ourselves," said
the thin man, flourishing his hat gracefully. "This is Lugui,"
the fat man nodded; "and this is Beni," the middle-sized man
bowed; "and I am Victor. We are three bandits--Italian
bandits."
"Bandits!" cried Martha, with a look of
horror.
"Exactly. Perhaps in all the world there are
not three other bandits so terrible and fierce as ourselves," said
Victor, proudly.
"'Tis so," said the fat man, nodding
gravely.
"But it's wicked!" exclaimed Martha.
"Yes, indeed," replied Victor. "We
are extremely and tremendously wicked. Perhaps in all the world you
could not find three men more wicked than those who now stand before
you."
"'Tis so," said the fat man,
approvingly.
"But you shouldn't be so wicked," said
the girl; "it's--it's--naughty!"
Victor cast down his eyes and blushed.
"Naughty!" gasped Beni, with a horrified
look.
"'Tis a hard word," said Luigi, sadly,
and buried his face in his hands.
"I little thought," murmured Victor, in
a voice broken by emotion, "ever to be so reviled--and by a lady!
Yet, perhaps you spoke thoughtlessly. You must consider, miss, that our
wickedness has an excuse. For how are we to be bandits, let me ask,
unless we are wicked?"
Martha was puzzled and shook her head,
thoughtfully. Then she remembered something.
"You can't remain bandits any longer,"
said she, "because you are now in America."
"America!" cried the three, together.
"Certainly. You are on Prairie avenue, in
Chicago. Uncle Walter sent you here from Italy in this chest."
The bandits seemed greatly bewildered by this
announcement. Lugui sat down on an old chair with a broken rocker and
wiped his forehead with a yellow silk handkerchief. Beni and Victor fell
back upon the chest and looked at her with pale faces and staring eyes.
When he had somewhat recovered himself Victor
spoke.
"Your Uncle Walter has greatly wronged
us," he said, reproachfully. "He has taken us from our beloved
Italy, where bandits are highly respected, and brought us to a strange
country where we shall not know whom to rob or how much to ask for a
ransom."
"'Tis so!" said the fat man, slapping
his leg sharply.
"And we had won such fine reputations in
Italy!" said Beni, regretfully.
"Perhaps Uncle Walter wanted to reform
you," suggested Martha.
"Are there, then, no bandits in
Chicago?" asked Victor.
"Well," replied the girl, blushing in
her turn, "we do not call them bandits."
"Then what shall we do for a living?"
inquired Beni, despairingly.
"A great deal can be done in a big American
city," said the child. "My father is a lawyer" (the
bandits shuddered), "and my mother's cousin is a police
inspector."
"Ah," said Victor, "that is a good
employment. The police need to be inspected, especially in Italy."
"Everywhere!" added Beni.
"Then you could do other things,"
continued Martha, encouragingly. "You could be motor men on trolley
cars, or clerks in a department store. Some people even become aldermen
to earn a living."
The bandits shook their heads sadly.
"We are not fitted for such work," said
Victor. "Our business is to rob."
Martha tried to think.
"It is rather hard to get positions in the
gas office," she said, "but you might become
politicians."
"No!" cried Beni, with sudden
fierceness; "we must not abandon our high calling. Bandits we have
always been, and bandits we must remain!"
"'Tis so!" agreed the fat man.
"Even in Chicago there must be people to
rob," remarked Victor, with cheerfulness.
Martha was distressed.
"I think they have all been robbed," she
objected.
"Then we can rob the robbers, for we have
experience and talent beyond the ordinary," said Beni.
"Oh, dear; oh, dear!" moaned the girl;
"why did Uncle Walter ever send you here in this chest?"
The bandits became interested.
"That is what we should like to know,"
declared Victor, eagerly.
"But no one will ever know, for Uncle Walter
was lost while hunting elephants in Africa," she continued, with
conviction.
"Then we must accept our fate and rob to the
best of our ability," said Victor. "So long as we are faithful
to our beloved profession we need not be ashamed."
"'Tis so!" cried the fat man.
"Brothers! we will begin now. Let us rob the
house we are in."
"Good!" shouted the others and sprang to
their feet.
Beni turned threateningly upon the child.
"Remain here!" he commanded. "If
you stir one step your blood will be on your own head!" Then he
added, in a gentler voice: "Don't be afraid; that's the way all
bandits talk to their captives. But of course we wouldn't hurt a young
lady under any circumstances."
"Of course not," said Victor.
The fat man drew a big knife from his belt and
flourished it about his head.
"S'blood!" he ejaculated, fiercely.
"S'bananas!" cried Beni, in a terrible
voice.
"Confusion to our foes!" hissed Victor.
And then the three bent themselves nearly double
and crept stealthily down the stairway with cocked pistols in their
hands and glittering knives between their teeth, leaving Martha
trembling with fear and too horrified to even cry for help.
How long she remained alone in the attic she never
knew, but finally she heard the catlike tread of the returning bandits
and saw them coming up the stairs in single file.
All bore heavy loads of plunder in their arms, and
Lugui was balancing a mince pie on the top of a pile of her mother's
best evening dresses. Victor came next with an armful of bric-a-brac, a
brass candelabra and the parlor clock. Beni had the family Bible, the
basket of silverware from the sideboard, a copper kettle and papa's fur
overcoat.
"Oh, joy!" said Victor, putting down his
load; "it is pleasant to rob once more."
"Oh, ecstacy!" said Beni; but he let the
kettle drop on his toe and immediately began dancing around in anguish,
while he muttered queer words in the Italian language.
"We have much wealth," continued Victor,
holding the mince pie while Lugui added his spoils to the heap;
"and all from one house! This America must be a rich place."
With a dagger he then cut himself a piece of the
pie and handed the remainder to his comrades. Whereupon all three sat
upon the floor and consumed the pie while Martha looked on sadly.
"We should have a cave," remarked Beni;
"for we must store our plunder in a safe place. Can you tell us of
a secret cave?" he asked Martha.
"There's a Mammoth cave," she answered,
"but it's in Kentucky. You would be obliged to ride on the cars a
long time to get there."
The three bandits looked thoughtful and munched
their pie silently, but the next moment they were startled by the
ringing of the electric doorbell, which was heard plainly even in the
remote attic.
"What's that?" demanded Victor, in a
hoarse voice, as the three scrambled to their feet with drawn daggers.
Martha ran to the window and saw it was only the
postman, who had dropped a letter in the box and gone away again. But
the incident gave her an idea of how to get rid of her troublesome
bandits, so she began wringing her hands as if in great distress and
cried out:
"It's the police!"
The robbers looked at one another with genuine
alarm, and Lugui asked, tremblingly:
"Are there many of them?"
"A hundred and twelve!" exclaimed
Martha, after pretending to count them.
"Then we are lost!" declared Beni;
"for we could never fight so many and live."
"Are they armed?" inquired Victor, who
was shivering as if cold.
"Oh, yes," said she. "They have
guns and swords and pistols and axes and--and--"
"And what?" demanded Lugui.
"And cannons!"
The three wicked ones groaned aloud and Beni said,
in a hollow voice:
"I hope they will kill us quickly and not put
us to the torture. I have been told these Americans are painted Indians,
who are bloodthirsty and terrible."
"'Tis so!" gasped the fat man, with a
shudder.
Suddenly Martha turned from the window.
"You are my friends, are you not?" she
asked.
"We are devoted!" answered Victor.
"We adore you!" cried Beni.
"We would die for you!" added Lugui,
thinking he was about to die anyway.
"Then I will save you," said the girl.
"How?" asked the three, with one voice.
"Get back into the chest," she said.
"I will then close the lid, so they will be unable to find
you."
They looked around the room in a dazed and
irresolute way, but she exclaimed:
"You must be quick! They will soon be here to
arrest you."
Then Lugui sprang into the chest and lay fat upon
the bottom. Beni tumbled in next and packed himself in the back side.
Victor followed after pausing to kiss her hand to the girl in a graceful
manner.
Then Martha ran up to press down the lid, but
could not make it catch.
"You must squeeze down," she said to
them.
Lugui groaned.
"I am doing my best, miss," said Victor,
who was nearest the top; "but although we fitted in very nicely
before, the chest now seems rather small for us."
"'Tis so!" came the muffled voice of the
fat man from the bottom.
"I know what takes up the room," said
Beni.
"What?" inquired Victor, anxiously.
"The pie," returned Beni.
"'Tis so!" came from the bottom, in
faint accents.
Then Martha sat upon the lid and pressed it down
with all her weight. To her great delight the lock caught, and,
springing down, she exerted all her strength and turned the key.
* * * * *
This story should teach us not to interfere in
matters that do not concern us. For had Martha refrained from opening
Uncle Walter's mysterious chest she would not have been obliged to carry
downstairs all the plunder the robbers had brought into the attic.
THE GLASS DOG.
An accomplished wizard once lived on the top floor
of a tenement house and passed his time in thoughtful study and studious
thought. What he didn't know about wizardry was hardly worth knowing,
for he possessed all the books and recipes of all the wizards who had
lived before him; and, moreover, he had invented several wizardments
himself.
This admirable person would have been completely
happy but for the numerous interruptions to his studies caused by folk
who came to consult him about their troubles (in which he was not
interested), and by the loud knocks of the iceman, the milkman, the
baker's boy, the laundryman and the peanut woman. He never dealt with
any of these people; but they rapped at his door every day to see him
about this or that or to try to sell him their wares. Just when he was
most deeply interested in his books or engaged in watching the bubbling
of a cauldron there would come a knock at his door. And after sending
the intruder away he always found he had lost his train of thought or
ruined his compound.
At length these interruptions aroused his anger,
and he decided he must have a dog to keep people away from his door. He
didn't know where to find a dog, but in the next room lived a poor
glass-blower with whom he had a slight acquaintance; so he went into the
man's apartment and asked:
"Where can I find a dog?"
"What sort of a dog?" inquired the
glass-blower.
"A good dog. One that will bark at people and
drive them away. One that will be no trouble to keep and won't expect to
be fed. One that has no fleas and is neat in his habits. One that will
obey me when I speak to him. In short, a good dog," said the
wizard.
"Such a dog is hard to find," returned
the glass-blower, who was busy making a blue glass flower pot with a
pink glass rosebush in it, having green glass leaves and yellow glass
roses.
The wizard watched him thoughtfully.
"Why cannot you blow me a dog out of
glass?" he asked, presently.
"I can," declared the glass-blower;
"but it would not bark at people, you know."
"Oh, I'll fix that easily enough,"
replied the other. "If I could not make a glass dog bark I would be
a mighty poor wizard."
"Very well; if you can use a glass dog I'll
be pleased to blow one for you. Only, you must pay for my work."
"Certainly," agreed the wizard.
"But I have none of that horrid stuff you call money. You must take
some of my wares in exchange."
The glass-blower considered the matter for a
moment.
"Could you give me something to cure my
rheumatism?" he asked.
"Oh, yes; easily."
"Then it's a bargain. I'll start the dog at
once. What color of glass shall I use?"
"Pink is a pretty color," said the
wizard, "and it's unusual for a dog, isn't it?"
"Very," answered the glass-blower;
"but it shall be pink."
So the wizard went back to his studies and the
glass-blower began to make the dog.
Next morning he entered the wizard's room with the
glass dog under his arm and set it carefully upon the table. It was a
beautiful pink in color, with a fine coat of spun glass, and about its
neck was twisted a blue glass ribbon. Its eyes were specks of black
glass and sparkled intelligently, as do many of the glass eyes worn by
men.
The wizard expressed himself pleased with the
glass-blower's skill and at once handed him a small vial.
"This will cure your rheumatism," he
said.
"But the vial is empty!" protested the
glass-blower.
"Oh, no; there is one drop of liquid in
it," was the wizard's reply.
"Will one drop cure my rheumatism?"
inquired the glass-blower, in wonder.
"Most certainly. That is a marvelous remedy.
The one drop contained in the vial will cure instantly any kind of
disease ever known to humanity. Therefore it is especially good for
rheumatism. But guard it well, for it is the only drop of its kind in
the world, and I've forgotten the recipe."
"Thank you," said the glass-blower, and
went back to his room.
Then the wizard cast a wizzy spell and mumbled
several very learned words in the wizardese language over the glass dog.
Whereupon the little animal first wagged its tail from side to side,
then winked his left eye knowingly, and at last began barking in a most
frightful manner--that is, when you stop to consider the noise came from
a pink glass dog. There is something almost astonishing in the magic
arts of wizards; unless, of course, you know how to do the things
yourself, when you are not expected to be surprised at them.
The wizard was as delighted as a school teacher at
the success of his spell, although he was not astonished. Immediately he
placed the dog outside his door, where it would bark at anyone who dared
knock and so disturb the studies of its master.
The glass-blower, on returning to his room,
decided not to use the one drop of wizard cure-all just then.
"My rheumatism is better to-day," he
reflected, "and I will be wise to save the medicine for a time when
I am very ill, when it will be of more service to me."
So he placed the vial in his cupboard and went to
work blowing more roses out of glass. Presently he happened to think the
medicine might not keep, so he started to ask the wizard about it. But
when he reached the door the glass dog barked so fiercely that he dared
not knock, and returned in great haste to his own room. Indeed, the poor
man was quite upset at so unfriendly a reception from the dog he had
himself so carefully and skillfully made.
The next morning, as he read his newspaper, he
noticed an article stating that the beautiful Miss Mydas, the richest
young lady in town, was very ill, and the doctors had given up hope of
her recovery.
The glass-blower, although miserably poor,
hard-working and homely of feature, was a man of ideas. He suddenly
recollected his precious medicine, and determined to use it to better
advantage than relieving his own ills. He dressed himself in his best
clothes, brushed his hair and combed his whiskers, washed his hands and
tied his necktie, blackened his hoes and sponged his vest, and then put
the vial of magic cure-all in his pocket. Next he locked his door, went
downstairs and walked through the streets to the grand mansion where the
wealthy Miss Mydas resided.
The butler opened the door and said:
"No soap, no chromos, no vegetables, no hair
oil, no books, no baking powder. My young lady is dying and we're well
supplied for the funeral."
The glass-blower was grieved at being taken for a
peddler.
"My friend," he began, proudly; but the
butler interrupted him, saying:
"No tombstones, either; there's a family
graveyard and the monument's built."
"The graveyard won't be needed if you will
permit me to speak," said the glass-blower.
"No doctors, sir; they've given up my young
lady, and she's given up the doctors," continued the butler,
calmly.
"I'm no doctor," returned the
glass-blower.
"Nor are the others. But what is your
errand?"
"I called to cure your young lady by means of
a magical compound."
"Step in, please, and take a seat in the
hall. I'll speak to the housekeeper," said the butler, more
politely.
So he spoke to the housekeeper and the housekeeper
mentioned the matter to the steward and the steward consulted the chef
and the chef kissed the lady's maid and sent her to see the stranger.
Thus are the very wealthy hedged around with ceremony, even when dying.
When the lady's maid heard from the glass-blower
that he had a medicine which would cure her mistress, she said:
"I'm glad you came."
"But," said he, "if I restore your
mistress to health she must marry me."
"I'll make inquiries and see if she's
willing," answered the maid, and went at once to consult Miss Mydas.
The young lady did not hesitate an instant.
"I'd marry any old thing rather than
die!" she cried. "Bring him here at once!"
So the glass-blower came, poured the magic drop
into a little water, gave it to the patient, and the next minute Miss
Mydas was as well as she had ever been in her life.
"Dear me!" she exclaimed; "I've an
engagement at the Fritters' reception to-night. Bring my pearl-colored
silk, Marie, and I will begin my toilet at once. And don't forget to
cancel the order for the funeral flowers and your mourning gown."
"But, Miss Mydas," remonstrated the
glass-blower, who stood by, "you promised to marry me if I cured
you."
"I know," said the young lady, "but
we must have time to make proper announcement in the society papers and
have the wedding cards engraved. Call to-morrow and we'll talk it
over."
The glass-blower had not impressed her favorably
as a husband, and she was glad to find an excuse for getting rid of him
for a time. And she did not want to miss the Fritters' reception.
Yet the man went home filled with joy; for he
thought his stratagem had succeeded and he was about to marry a rich
wife who would keep him in luxury forever afterward.
The first thing he did on reaching his room was to
smash his glass-blowing tools and throw them out of the window.
He then sat down to figure out ways of spending
his wife's money.
The following day he called upon Miss Mydas, who
was reading a novel and eating chocolate creams as happily as if she had
never been ill in her life.
"Where did you get the magic compound that
cured me?" she asked.
"From a learned wizard," said he; and
then, thinking it would interest her, he told how he had made the glass
dog for the wizard, and how it barked and kept everybody from bothering
him.
"How delightful!" she said. "I've
always wanted a glass dog that could bark."
"But there is only one in the world," he
answered, "and it belongs to the wizard."
"You must buy it for me," said the lady.
"The wizard cares nothing for money,"
replied the glass-blower.
"Then you must steal it for me," she
retorted. "I can never live happily another day unless I have a
glass dog that can bark."
The glass-blower was much distressed at this, but
said he would see what he could do. For a man should always try to
please his wife, and Miss Mydas has promised to marry him within a week.
On his way home he purchased a heavy sack, and
when he passed the wizard's door and the pink glass dog ran out to bark
at him he threw the sack over the dog, tied the opening with a piece of
twine, and carried him away to his own room.
The next day he sent the sack by a messenger boy
to Miss Mydas, with his compliments, and later in the afternoon he
called upon her in person, feeling quite sure he would be received with
gratitude for stealing the dog she so greatly desired.
But when he came to the door and the butler opened
it, what was his amazement to see the glass dog rush out and begin
barking at him furiously.
"Call off your dog," he shouted, in
terror.
"I can't, sir," answered the butler.
"My young lady has ordered the glass dog to bark whenever you call
here. You'd better look out, sir," he added, "for if it bites
you, you may have glassophobia!"
This so frightened the poor glass-blower that he
went away hurriedly. But he stopped at a drug store and put his last
dime in the telephone box so he could talk to Miss Mydas without being
bitten by the dog.
"Give me Pelf 6742!" he called.
"Hello! What is it?" said a voice.
"I want to speak with Miss Mydas," said
the glass-blower.
Presently a sweet voice said: "This is Miss
Mydas. What is it?"
"Why have you treated me so cruelly and set
the glass dog on me?" asked the poor fellow.
"Well, to tell the truth," said the
lady, "I don't like your looks. Your cheeks are pale and baggy,
your hair is coarse and long, your eyes are small and red, your hands
are big and rough, and you are bow-legged."
"But I can't help my looks!" pleaded the
glass-blower; "and you really promised to marry me."
"If you were better looking I'd keep my
promise," she returned. "But under the circumstances you are
no fit mate for me, and unless you keep away from my mansion I shall set
my glass dog on you!" Then she dropped the 'phone and would have
nothing more to say.
The miserable glass-blower went home with a heart
bursting with disappointment and began tying a rope to the bedpost by
which to hang himself.
Some one knocked at the door, and, upon opening
it, he saw the wizard.
"I've lost my dog," he announced.
"Have you, indeed?" replied the
glass-blower tying a knot in the rope.
"Yes; some one has stolen him."
"That's too bad," declared the
glass-blower, indifferently.
"You must make me another," said the
wizard.
"But I cannot; I've thrown away my
tools."
"Then what shall I do?" asked the
wizard.
"I do not know, unless you offer a reward for
the dog."
"But I have no money," said the wizard.
"Offer some of your compounds, then,"
suggested the glass-blower, who was making a noose in the rope for his
head to go through.
"The only thing I can spare," replied
the wizard, thoughtfully, "is a Beauty Powder."
"What!" cried the glass-blower, throwing
down the rope, "have you really such a thing?"
"Yes, indeed. Whoever takes the powder will
become the most beautiful person in the world."
"If you will offer that as a reward,"
said the glass-blower, eagerly, "I'll try to find the dog for you,
for above everything else I long to be beautiful."
"But I warn you the beauty will only be skin
deep," said the wizard.
"That's all right," replied the happy
glass-blower; "when I lose my skin I shan't care to remain
beautiful."
"Then tell me where to find my dog and you
shall have the powder," promised the wizard.
So the glass-blower went out and pretended to
search, and by-and-by he returned and said:
"I've discovered the dog. You will find him
in the mansion of Miss Mydas."
The wizard went at once to see if this were true,
and, sure enough, the glass dog ran out and began barking at him. Then
the wizard spread out his hands and chanted a magic spell which sent the
dog fast asleep, when he picked him up and carried him to his own room
on the top floor of the tenement house.
Afterward he carried the Beauty Powder to the
glass-blower as a reward, and the fellow immediately swallowed it and
became the most beautiful man in the world.
The next time he called upon Miss Mydas there was
no dog to bark at him, and when the young lady saw him she fell in love
with his beauty at once.
"If only you were a count or a prince,"
she sighed, "I'd willingly marry you."
"But I am a prince," he answered;
"the Prince of Dogblowers."
"Ah!" said she; "then if you are
willing to accept an allowance of four dollars a week I'll order the
wedding cards engraved."
The man hesitated, but when he thought of the rope
hanging from his bedpost he consented to the terms.
So they were married, and the bride was very
jealous of her husband's beauty and led him a dog's life. So he managed
to get into debt and made her miserable in turn.
* * * * *
As for the glass dog, the wizard set him barking
again by means of his wizardness and put him outside his door. I suppose
he is there yet, and am rather sorry, for I should like to consult the
wizard about the moral to this story.
THE QUEEN OF QUOK
A king once died, as kings are apt to do, being as
liable to shortness of breath as other mortals.
It was high time this king abandoned his earth
life, for he had lived in a sadly extravagant manner, and his subjects
could spare him without the slightest inconvenience.
His father had left him a full treasury, both
money and jewels being in abundance. But the foolish king just deceased
had squandered every penny in riotous living. He had then taxed his
subjects until most of them became paupers, and this money vanished in
more riotous living. Next he sold all the grand old furniture in the
palace; all the silver and gold plate and bric-a-brac; all the rich
carpets and furnishings and even his own kingly wardrobe, reserving only
a soiled and moth-eaten ermine robe to fold over his threadbare raiment.
And he spent the money in further riotous living.
Don't ask me to explain what riotous living is. I
only know, from hearsay, that it is an excellent way to get rid of
money. And so this spendthrift king found it.
He now picked all the magnificent jewels from this
kingly crown and from the round ball on the top of his scepter, and sold
them and spent the money. Riotous living, of course. But at last he was
at the end of his resources. He couldn't sell the crown itself, because
no one but the king had the right to wear it. Neither could he sell the
royal palace, because only the king had the right to live there.
So, finally, he found himself reduced to a bare
palace, containing only a big mahogany bedstead that he slept in, a
small stool on which he sat to pull off his shoes and the moth-eaten
ermine robe.
In this straight he was reduced to the necessity
of borrowing an occasional dime from his chief counselor, with which to
buy a ham sandwich. And the chief counselor hadn't many dimes. One who
counseled his king so foolishly was likely to ruin his own prospects as
well.
So the king, having nothing more to live for, died
suddenly and left a ten-year-old son to inherit the dismantled kingdom,
the moth-eaten robe and the jewel-stripped crown.
No one envied the child, who had scarcely been
thought of until he became king himself. Then he was recognized as a
personage of some importance, and the politicians and hangers-on, headed
by the chief counselor of the kingdom, held a meeting to determine what
could be done for him.
These folk had helped the old king to live
riotously while his money lasted, and now they were poor and too proud
to work. So they tried to think of a plan that would bring more money
into the little king's treasury, where it would be handy for them to
help themselves.
After the meeting was over the chief counselor
came to the young king, who was playing peg-top in the courtyard, and
said:
"Your majesty, we have thought of a way to
restore your kingdom to its former power and magnificence."
"All right," replied his majesty,
carelessly. "How will you do it?"
"By marrying you to a lady of great
wealth," replied the counselor.
"Marrying me!" cried the king.
"Why, I am only ten years old!"
"I know; it is to be regretted. But your
majesty will grow older, and the affairs of the kingdom demand that you
marry a wife."
"Can't I marry a mother, instead?" asked
the poor little king, who had lost his mother when a baby.
"Certainly not," declared the counselor.
"To marry a mother would be illegal; to marry a wife is right and
proper."
"Can't you marry her yourself?" inquired
his majesty, aiming his peg-top at the chief counselor's toe, and
laughing to see how he jumped to escape it.
"Let me explain," said the other.
"You haven't a penny in the world, but you have a kingdom. There
are many rich women who would be glad to give their wealth in exchange
for a queen's coronet--even if the king is but a child. So we have
decided to advertise that the one who bids the highest shall become the
queen of Quok."
"If I must marry at all," said the king,
after a moment's thought, "I prefer to marry Nyana, the armorer's
daughter."
"She is too poor," replied the
counselor.
"Her teeth are pearls, her eyes are
amethysts, and her hair is gold," declared the little king.
"True, your majesty. But consider that your
wife's wealth must be used. How would Nyana look after you have pulled
her teeth of pearls, plucked out her amethyst eyes and shaved her golden
head?"
The boy shuddered.
"Have your own way," he said,
despairingly. "Only let the lady be as dainty as possible and a
good playfellow."
"We shall do our best," returned the
chief counselor, and went away to advertise throughout the neighboring
kingdoms for a wife for the boy king of Quok.
There were so many applicants for the privilege of
marrying the little king that it was decided to put him up at auction,
in order that the largest possible sum of money should be brought into
the kingdom. So, on the day appointed, the ladies gathered at the palace
from all the surrounding kingdoms--from Bilkon, Mulgravia, Junkum and
even as far away as the republic of Macvelt.
The chief counselor came to the palace early in
the morning and had the king's face washed and his hair combed; and then
he padded the inside of the crown with old newspapers to make it small
enough to fit his majesty's head. It was a sorry looking crown, having
many big and little holes in it where the jewels had once been; and it
had been neglected and knocked around until it was quite battered and
tarnished. Yet, as the counselor said, it was the king's crown, and it
was quite proper he should wear it on the solemn occasion of his
auction.
Like all boys, be they kings or paupers, his
majesty had torn and soiled his one suit of clothes, so that they were
hardly presentable; and there was no money to buy new ones. Therefore
the counselor wound the old ermine robe around the king and sat him upon
the stool in the middle of the otherwise empty audience chamber.
And around him stood all the courtiers and
politicians and hangers-on of the kingdom, consisting of such people as
were too proud or lazy to work for a living. There was a great number of
them, you may be sure, and they made an imposing appearance.
Then the doors of the audience chamber were thrown
open, and the wealthy ladies who aspired to being queen of Quok came
trooping in. The king looked them over with much anxiety, and decided
they were each and all old enough to be his grandmother, and ugly enough
to scare away the crows from the royal cornfields. After which he lost
interest in them.
But the rich ladies never looked at the poor
little king squatting upon his stool. They gathered at once about the
chief counselor, who acted as auctioneer.
"How much am I offered for the coronet of the
queen of Quok?" asked the counselor, in a loud voice.
"Where is the coronet?" inquired a fussy
old lady who had just buried her ninth husband and was worth several
millions.
"There isn't any coronet at present,"
explained the chief counselor, "but whoever bids highest will have
the right to wear one, and she can then buy it."
"Oh," said the fussy old lady, "I
see." Then she added: "I'll bid fourteen dollars."
"Fourteen thousand dollars!" cried a
sour-looking woman who was thin and tall and had wrinkles all over her
skin--"like a frosted apple," the king thought.
The bidding now became fast and furious, and the
poverty-stricken courtiers brightened up as the sum began to mount into
the millions.
"He'll bring us a very pretty fortune, after
all," whispered one to his comrade, "and then we shall have
the pleasure of helping him spend it."
The king began to be anxious. All the women who
looked at all kind-hearted or pleasant had stopped bidding for lack of
money, and the slender old dame with the wrinkles seemed determined to
get the coronet at any price, and with it the boy husband. This ancient
creature finally became so excited that her wig got crosswise of her
head and her false teeth kept slipping out, which horrified the little
king greatly; but she would not give up.
At last the chief counselor ended the auction by
crying out:
"Sold to Mary Ann Brodjinsky de la Porkus for
three million, nine hundred thousand, six hundred and twenty-four
dollars and sixteen cents!" And the sour-looking old woman paid the
money in cash and on the spot, which proves this is a fairy story.
The king was so disturbed at the thought that he
must marry this hideous creature that he began to wail and weep;
whereupon the woman boxed his ears soundly. But the counselor reproved
her for punishing her future husband in public, saying:
"You are not married yet. Wait until
to-morrow, after the wedding takes place. Then you can abuse him as much
as you wish. But at present we prefer to have people think this is a
love match."
The poor king slept but little that night, so
filled was he with terror of his future wife. Nor could he get the idea
out of his head that he preferred to marry the armorer's daughter, who
was about his own age. He tossed and tumbled around upon his hard bed
until the moonlight came in at the window and lay like a great white
sheet upon the bare floor. Finally, in turning over for the hundredth
time, his hand struck against a secret spring in the headboard of the
big mahogany bedstead, and at once, with a sharp click, a panel flew
open.
The noise caused the king to look up, and, seeing
the open panel, he stood upon tiptoe, and, reaching within, drew out a
folded paper. It had several leaves fastened together like a book, and
upon the first page was written:
"When the king is in trouble This leaf he
must double And set it on fire To obtain his desire."
This was not very good poetry, but when the king
had spelled it out in the moonlight he was filled with joy.
"There's no doubt about my being in
trouble," he exclaimed; "so I'll burn it at once, and see what
happens."
He tore off the leaf and put the rest of the book
in its secret hiding place. Then, folding the paper double, he placed it
on the top of his stool, lighted a match and set fire to it.
It made a horrid smudge for so small a paper, and
the king sat on the edge of the bed and watched it eagerly.
When the smoke cleared away he was surprised to
see, sitting upon the stool, a round little man, who, with folded arms
and crossed legs, sat calmly facing the king and smoking a black
briarwood pipe.
"Well, here I am," said he.
"So I see," replied the little king.
"But how did you get here?"
"Didn't you burn the paper?" demanded
the round man, by way of answer.
"Yes, I did," acknowledged the king.
"Then you are in trouble, and I've come to
help you out of it. I'm the Slave of the Royal Bedstead."
"Oh!" said the king. "I didn't know
there was one."
"Neither did your father, or he would not
have been so foolish as to sell everything he had for money. By the way,
it's lucky for you he did not sell this bedstead. Now, then, what do you
want?"
"I'm not sure what I want," replied the
king; "but I know what I don't want, and that is the old woman who
is going to marry me."
"That's easy enough," said the Slave of
the Royal Bedstead. "All you need do is to return her the money she
paid the chief counselor and declare the match off. Don't be afraid. You
are the king, and your word is law."
"To be sure," said the majesty.
"But I am in great need of money. How am I going to live if the
chief counselor returns to Mary Ann Brodjinski her millions?"
"Phoo! that's easy enough," again
answered the man, and, putting his hand in his pocket, he drew out and
tossed to the king an old-fashioned leather purse. "Keep that with
you," said he, "and you will always be rich, for you can take
out of the purse as many twenty-five-cent silver pieces as you wish, one
at a time. No matter how often you take one out, another will instantly
appear in its place within the purse."
"Thank you," said the king, gratefully.
"You have rendered me a rare favor; for now I shall have money for
all my needs and will not be obliged to marry anyone. Thank you a
thousand times!"
"Don't mention it," answered the other,
puffing his pipe slowly and watching the smoke curl into the moonlight.
"Such things are easy to me. Is that all you want?"
"All I can think of just now," returned
the king.
"Then, please close that secret panel in the
bedstead," said the man; "the other leaves of the book may be
of use to you some time."
The boy stood upon the bed as before and, reaching
up, closed the opening so that no one else could discover it. Then he
turned to face his visitor, but the Slave of the Royal Bedstead had
disappeared.
"I expected that," said his majesty;
"yet I am sorry he did not wait to say good-by."
With a lightened heart and a sense of great relief
the boy king placed the leathern purse underneath his pillow, and
climbing into bed again slept soundly until morning.
When the sun rose his majesty rose also, refreshed
and comforted, and the first thing he did was to send for the chief
counselor.
That mighty personage arrived looking glum and
unhappy, but the boy was too full of his own good fortune to notice it.
Said he:
"I have decided not to marry anyone, for I
have just come into a fortune of my own. Therefore I command you return
to that old woman the money she has paid you for the right to wear the
coronet of the queen of Quok. And make public declaration that the
wedding will not take place."
Hearing this the counselor began to tremble, for
he saw the young king had decided to reign in earnest; and he looked so
guilty that his majesty inquired:
"Well! what is the matter now?"
"Sire," replied the wretch, in a shaking
voice, "I cannot return the woman her money, for I have lost
it!"
"Lost it!" cried the king, in mingled
astonishment and anger.
"Even so, your majesty. On my way home from
the auction last night I stopped at the drug store to get some potash
lozenges for my throat, which was dry and hoarse with so much loud
talking; and your majesty will admit it was through my efforts the woman
was induced to pay so great a price. Well, going into the drug store I
carelessly left the package of money lying on the seat of my carriage,
and when I came out again it was gone. Nor was the thief anywhere to be
seen."
"Did you call the police?" asked the
king.
"Yes, I called; but they were all on the next
block, and although they have promised to search for the robber I have
little hope they will ever find him."
The king sighed.
"What shall we do now?" he asked.
"I fear you must marry Mary Ann Brodjinski,"
answered the chief counselor; "unless, indeed, you order the
executioner to cut her head off."
"That would be wrong," declared the
king. "The woman must not be harmed. And it is just that we return
her money, for I will not marry her under any circumstances."
"Is that private fortune you mentioned large
enough to repay her?" asked the counselor.
"Why, yes," said the king, thoughtfully,
"but it will take some time to do it, and that shall be your task.
Call the woman here."
The counselor went in search of Mary Ann, who,
when she heard she was not to become a queen, but would receive her
money back, flew into a violent passion and boxed the chief counselor's
ears so viciously that they stung for nearly an hour. But she followed
him into the king's audience chamber, where she demanded her money in a
loud voice, claiming as well the interest due upon it over night.
"The counselor has lost your money,"
said the boy king, "but he shall pay you every penny out of my own
private purse. I fear, however, you will be obliged to take it in small
change."
"That will not matter," she said,
scowling upon the counselor as if she longed to reach his ears again;
"I don't care how small the change is so long as I get every penny
that belongs to me, and the interest. Where is it?"
"Here," answered the king, handing the
counselor the leathern purse. "It is all in silver quarters, and
they must be taken from the purse one at a time; but there will be
plenty to pay your demands, and to spare."
So, there being no chairs, the counselor sat down
upon the floor in one corner and began counting out silver
twenty-five-cent pieces from the purse, one by one. And the old woman
sat upon the floor opposite him and took each piece of money from his
hand.
It was a large sum: three million, nine hundred
thousand, six hundred and twenty-four dollars and sixteen cents. And it
takes four times as many twenty-five-cent pieces as it would dollars to
make up the amount.
The king left them sitting there and went to
school, and often thereafter he came to the counselor and interrupted
him long enough to get from the purse what money he needed to reign in a
proper and dignified manner. This somewhat delayed the counting, but as
it was a long job, anyway, that did not matter much.
The king grew to manhood and married the pretty
daughter of the armorer, and they now have two lovely children of their
own. Once in awhile they go into the big audience chamber of the palace
and let the little ones watch the aged, hoary-headed counselor count out
silver twenty-five-cent pieces to a withered old woman, who watched his
every movement to see that he does not cheat her.
It is a big sum, three million, nine hundred
thousand, six hundred and twenty-four dollars and sixteen cents in
twenty-five-cent pieces.
But this is how the counselor was punished for
being so careless with the woman's money. And this is how Mary Ann
Brodjinski de la Porkus was also punished for wishing to marry a
ten-year-old king in order that she might wear the coronet of the queen
of Quok.
THE GIRL WHO OWNED A BEAR
Mamma had gone down-town to shop. She had asked
Nora to look after Jane Gladys, and Nora promised she would. But it was
her afternoon for polishing the silver, so she stayed in the pantry and
left Jane Gladys to amuse herself alone in the big sitting-room
upstairs.
The little girl did not mind being alone, for she
was working on her first piece of embroidery--a sofa pillow for papa's
birthday present. So she crept into the big bay window and curled
herself up on the broad sill while she bent her brown head over her
work.
Soon the door opened and closed again, quietly.
Jane Gladys thought it was Nora, so she didn't look up until she had
taken a couple more stitches on a forget-me-not. Then she raised her
eyes and was astonished to find a strange man in the middle of the room,
who regarded her earnestly.
He was short and fat, and seemed to be breathing
heavily from his climb up the stairs. He held a work silk hat in one
hand and underneath his other elbow was tucked a good-sized book. He was
dressed in a black suit that looked old and rather shabby, and his head
was bald upon the top.
"Excuse me," he said, while the child
gazed at him in solemn surprise. "Are you Jane Gladys Brown?"
"Yes, sir," she answered.
"Very good; very good, indeed!" he
remarked, with a queer sort of smile. "I've had quite a hunt to
find you, but I've succeeded at last."
"How did you get in?" inquired Jane
Gladys, with a growing distrust of her visitor.
"That is a secret," he said,
mysteriously.
This was enough to put the girl on her guard. She
looked at the man and the man looked at her, and both looks were grave
and somewhat anxious.
"What do you want?" she asked,
straightening herself up with a dignified air.
"Ah!--now we are coming to business,"
said the man, briskly. "I'm going to be quite frank with you. To
begin with, your father has abused me in a most ungentlemanly
manner."
Jane Gladys got off the window sill and pointed
her small finger at the door.
"Leave this room 'meejitly!" she cried,
her voice trembling with indignation. "My papa is the best man in
the world. He never 'bused anybody!"
"Allow me to explain, please," said the
visitor, without paying any attention to her request to go away.
"Your father may be very kind to you, for you are his little girl,
you know. But when he's down-town in his office he's inclined to be
rather severe, especially on book agents. Now, I called on him the other
day and asked him to buy the 'Complete Works of Peter Smith,' and what
do you suppose he did?"
She said nothing.
"Why," continued the man, with growing
excitement, "he ordered me from his office, and had me put out of
the building by the janitor! What do you think of such treatment as that
from the 'best papa in the world,' eh?"
"I think he was quite right," said Jane
Gladys.
"Oh, you do? Well," said the man,
"I resolved to be revenged for the insult. So, as your father is
big and strong and a dangerous man, I have decided to be revenged upon
his little girl."
Jane Gladys shivered.
"What are you going to do?" she asked.
"I'm going to present you with this
book," he answered, taking it from under his arm. Then he sat down
on the edge of a chair, placed his hat on the rug and drew a fountain
pen from his vest pocket.
"I'll write your name in it," said he.
"How do you spell Gladys?"
"G-l-a-d-y-s," she replied.
"Thank you. Now this," he continued,
rising and handing her the book with a bow, "is my revenge for your
father's treatment of me. Perhaps he'll be sorry he didn't buy the
'Complete Works of Peter Smith.' Good-by, my dear."
He walked to the door, gave her another bow, and
left the room, and Jane Gladys could see that he was laughing to himself
as if very much amused.
When the door had closed behind the queer little
man the child sat down in the window again and glanced at the book. It
had a red and yellow cover and the word "Thingamajigs" was
across the front in big letters.
Then she opened it, curiously, and saw her name
written in black letters upon the first white leaf.
"He was a funny little man," she said to
herself, thoughtfully.
She turned the next leaf, and saw a big picture of
a clown, dressed in green and red and yellow, and having a very white
face with three-cornered spots of red on each cheek and over the eyes.
While she looked at this the book trembled in her hands, the leaf
crackled and creaked and suddenly the clown jumped out of it and stood
upon the floor beside her, becoming instantly as big as any ordinary
clown.
After stretching his arms and legs and yawning in
a rather impolite manner, he gave a silly chuckle and said:
"This is better! You don't know how cramped
one gets, standing so long upon a page of flat paper."
Perhaps you can imagine how startled Jane Gladys
was, and how she stared at the clown who had just leaped out of the
book.
"You didn't expect anything of this sort, did
you?" he asked, leering at her in clown fashion. Then he turned
around to take a look at the room and Jane Gladys laughed in spite of
her astonishment.
"What amuses you?" demanded the clown.
"Why, the back of you is all white!"
cried the girl. "You're only a clown in front of you."
"Quite likely," he returned, in an
annoyed tone. "The artist made a front view of me. He wasn't
expected to make the back of me, for that was against the page of the
book."
"But it makes you look so funny!" said
Jane Gladys, laughing until her eyes were moist with tears.
The clown looked sulky and sat down upon a chair
so she couldn't see his back.
"I'm not the only thing in the book," he
remarked, crossly.
This reminded her to turn another page, and she
had scarcely noted that it contained the picture of a monkey when the
animal sprang from the book with a great crumpling of paper and landed
upon the window seat beside her.
"He-he-he-he-he!" chattered the
creature, springing to the girl's shoulder and then to the center table.
"This is great fun! Now I can be a real monkey instead of a picture
of one."
"Real monkeys can't talk," said Jane
Gladys, reprovingly.
"How do you know? Have you ever been one
yourself?" inquired the animal; and then he laughed loudly, and the
clown laughed, too, as if he enjoyed the remark.
The girl was quite bewildered by this time. She
thoughtlessly turned another leaf, and before she had time to look twice
a gray donkey leaped from the book and stumbled from the window seat to
the floor with a great clatter.
"You're clumsy enough, I'm sure!" said
the child, indignantly, for the beast had nearly upset her.
"Clumsy! And why not?" demanded the
donkey, with angry voice. "If the fool artist had drawn you out of
perspective, as he did me, I guess you'd be clumsy yourself."
"What's wrong with you?" asked Jane
Gladys.
"My front and rear legs on the left side are
nearly six inches too short, that's what's the matter! If that artist
didn't know how to draw properly why did he try to make a donkey at
all?"
"I don't know," replied the child,
seeing an answer was expected.
"I can hardly stand up," grumbled the
donkey; "and the least little thing will topple me over."
"Don't mind that," said the monkey,
making a spring at the chandelier and swinging from it by his tail until
Jane Gladys feared he would knock all the globes off; "the same
artist has made my ears as big as that clown's and everyone knows a
monkey hasn't any ears to speak of--much less to draw."
"He should be prosecuted," remarked the
clown, gloomily. "I haven't any back."
Jane Gladys looked from one to the other with a
puzzled expression upon her sweet face, and turned another page of the
book.
Swift as a flash there sprang over her shoulder a
tawney, spotted leopard, which landed upon the back of a big leather
armchair and turned upon the others with a fierce movement.
The monkey climbed to the top of the chandelier
and chattered with fright. The donkey tried to run and straightway
tipped over on his left side. The clown grew paler than ever, but he sat
still in his chair and gave a low whistle of surprise.
The leopard crouched upon the back of the chair,
lashed his tail from side to side and glared at all of them, by turns,
including Jane Gladys.
"Which of us are you going to attack
first?" asked the donkey, trying hard to get upon his feet again.
"I can't attack any of you," snarled the
leopard. "The artist made my mouth shut, so I haven't any teeth;
and he forgot to make my claws. But I'm a frightful looking creature,
nevertheless; am I not?"
"Oh, yes;" said the clown,
indifferently. "I suppose you're frightful looking enough. But if
you have no teeth nor claws we don't mind your looks at all."
This so annoyed the leopard that he growled
horribly, and the monkey laughed at him.
Just then the book slipped from the girl's lap,
and as she made a movement to catch it one of the pages near the back
opened wide. She caught a glimpse of a fierce grizzly bear looking at
her from the page, and quickly threw the book from her. It fell with a
crash in the middle of the room, but beside it stood the great grizzly,
who had wrenched himself from the page before the book closed.
"Now," cried the leopard from his perch,
"you'd better look out for yourselves! You can't laugh at him as
you did at me. The bear has both claws and teeth."
"Indeed I have," said the bear, in a
low, deep, growling voice. "And I know how to use them, too. If you
read in that book you'll find I'm described as a horrible, cruel and
remorseless grizzly, whose only business in life is to eat up little
girls--shoes, dresses, ribbons and all! And then, the author says, I
smack my lips and glory in my wickedness."
"That's awful!" said the donkey, sitting
upon his haunches and shaking his head sadly. "What do you suppose
possessed the author to make you so hungry for girls? Do you eat
animals, also?"
"The author does not mention my eating
anything but little girls," replied the bear.
"Very good," remarked the clown, drawing
a long breath of relief. "you may begin eating Jane Gladys as soon
as you wish. She laughed because I had no back."
"And she laughed because my legs are out of
perspective," brayed the donkey.
"But you also deserve to be eaten,"
screamed the leopard from the back of the leather chair; "for you
laughed and poked fun at me because I had no claws nor teeth! Don't you
suppose Mr. Grizzly, you could manage to eat a clown, a donkey and a
monkey after you finish the girl?"
"Perhaps so, and a leopard into the
bargain," growled the bear. "It will depend on how hungry I
am. But I must begin on the little girl first, because the author says I
prefer girls to anything."
Jane Gladys was much frightened on hearing this
conversation, and she began to realize what the man meant when he said
he gave her the book to be revenged. Surely papa would be sorry he
hadn't bought the "Complete Works of Peter Smith" when he came
home and found his little girl eaten up by a grizzly bear--shoes, dress,
ribbons and all!
The bear stood up and balanced himself on his rear
legs.
"This is the way I look in the book," he
said. "Now watch me eat the little girl."
He advanced slowly toward Jane Gladys, and the
monkey, the leopard, the donkey and the clown all stood around in a
circle and watched the bear with much interest.
But before the grizzly reached her the child had a
sudden thought, and cried out:
"Stop! You mustn't eat me. It would be
wrong."
"Why?" asked the bear, in surprise.
"Because I own you. You're my private
property," she answered.
"I don't see how you make that out,"
said the bear, in a disappointed tone.
"Why, the book was given to me; my name's on
the front leaf. And you belong, by rights, in the book. So you mustn't
dare to eat your owner!"
The Grizzly hesitated.
"Can any of you read?" he asked.
"I can," said the clown.
"Then see if she speaks the truth. Is her
name really in the book?"
The clown picked it up and looked at the name.
"It is," said he. "'Jane Gladys
Brown;' and written quite plainly in big letters."
The bear sighed.
"Then, of course, I can't eat her," he
decided. "That author is as disappointing as most authors
are."
"But he's not as bad as the artist,"
exclaimed the donkey, who was still trying to stand up straight.
"The fault lies with yourselves," said
Jane Gladys, severely. "Why didn't you stay in the book, where you
were put?"
The animals looked at each other in a foolish way,
and the clown blushed under his white paint.
"Really--" began the bear, and then he
stopped short.
The door bell rang loudly.
"It's mamma!" cried Jane Gladys,
springing to her feet. "She's come home at last. Now, you stupid
creatures--"
But she was interrupted by them all making a rush
for the book. There was a swish and a whirr and a rustling of leaves,
and an instant later the book lay upon the floor looking just like any
other book, while Jane Gladys' strange companions had all disappeared.
* * * * *
This story should teach us to think quickly and
clearly upon all occasions; for had Jane Gladys not remembered that she
owned the bear he probably would have eaten her before the bell rang.
THE ENCHANTED TYPES
One time a knook became tired of his beautiful
life and longed for something new to do. The knooks have more wonderful
powers than any other immortal folk--except, perhaps, the fairies and
ryls. So one would suppose that a knook who might gain anything he
desired by a simple wish could not be otherwise than happy and
contented. But such was not the case with Popopo, the knook we are
speaking of. He had lived thousands of years, and had enjoyed all the
wonders he could think of. Yet life had become as tedious to him now as
it might be to one who was unable to gratify a single wish.
Finally, by chance, Popopo thought of the earth
people who dwell in cities, and so he resolved to visit them and see how
they lived. This would surely be fine amusement, and serve to pass away
many wearisome hours.
Therefore one morning, after a breakfast so dainty
that you could scarcely imagine it, Popopo set out for the earth and at
once was in the midst of a big city.
His own dwelling was so quiet and peaceful that
the roaring noise of the town startled him. His nerves were so shocked
that before he had looked around three minutes he decided to give up the
adventure, and instantly returned home.
This satisfied for a time his desire to visit the
earth cities, but soon the monotony of his existence again made him
restless and gave him another thought. At night the people slept and the
cities would be quiet. He would visit them at night.
So at the proper time Popopo transported himself
in a jiffy to a great city, where he began wandering about the streets.
Everyone was in bed. No wagons rattled along the pavements; no throngs
of busy men shouted and halloaed. Even the policemen slumbered slyly and
there happened to be no prowling thieves abroad.
His nerves being soothed by the stillness, Popopo
began to enjoy himself. He entered many of the houses and examined their
rooms with much curiosity. Locks and bolts made no difference to a knook,
and he saw as well in darkness as in daylight.
After a time he strolled into the business portion
of the city. Stores are unknown among the immortals, who have no need of
money or of barter and exchange; so Popopo was greatly interested by the
novel sight of so many collections of goods and merchandise.
During his wanderings he entered a millinery shop,
and was surprised to see within a large glass case a great number of
women's hats, each bearing in one position or another a stuffed bird.
Indeed, some of the most elaborate hats had two or three birds upon
them.
Now knooks are the especial guardians of birds,
and love them dearly. To see so many of his little friends shut up in a
glass case annoyed and grieved Popopo, who had no idea they had
purposely been placed upon the hats by the milliner. So he slid back one
of the doors of the case, gave the little chirruping whistle of the
knooks that all birds know well, and called:
"Come, friends; the door is open--fly
out!"
Popopo did not know the birds were stuffed; but,
stuffed or not, every bird is bound to obey a knook's whistle and a
knook's call. So they left the hats, flew out of the case and began
fluttering about the room.
"Poor dears!" said the kind-hearted
knook, "you long to be in the fields and forests again."
Then he opened the outer door for them and cried:
"Off with you! Fly away, my beauties, and be happy again."
The astonished birds at once obeyed, and when they
had soared away into the night air the knook closed the door and
continued his wandering through the streets.
By dawn he saw many interesting sights, but day
broke before he had finished the city, and he resolved to come the next
evening a few hours earlier.
As soon as it was dark the following day he came
again to the city and on passing the millinery shop noticed a light
within. Entering he found two women, one of whom leaned her head upon
the table and sobbed bitterly, while the other strove to comfort her.
Of course Popopo was invisible to mortal eyes, so
he stood by and listened to their conversation.
"Cheer up, sister," said one. "Even
though your pretty birds have all been stolen the hats themselves
remain."
"Alas!" cried the other, who was the
milliner, "no one will buy my hats partly trimmed, for the fashion
is to wear birds upon them. And if I cannot sell my goods I shall be
utterly ruined."
Then she renewed her sobbing and the knook stole
away, feeling a little ashamed to realized that in his love for the
birds he had unconsciously wronged one of the earth people and made her
unhappy.
This thought brought him back to the millinery
shop later in the night, when the two women had gone home. He wanted, in
some way, to replace the birds upon the hats, that the poor woman might
be happy again. So he searched until he came upon a nearby cellar full
of little gray mice, who lived quite undisturbed and gained a livelihood
by gnawing through the walls into neighboring houses and stealing food
from the pantries.
"Here are just the creatures," thought
Popopo, "to place upon the woman's hats. Their fur is almost as
soft as the plumage of the birds, and it strikes me the mice are
remarkably pretty and graceful animals. Moreover, they now pass their
lives in stealing, and were they obliged to remain always upon women's
hats their morals would be much improved."
So he exercised a charm that drew all the mice
from the cellar and placed them upon the hats in the glass case, where
they occupied the places the birds had vacated and looked very
becoming--at least, in the eyes of the unworldly knook. To prevent their
running about and leaving the hats Popopo rendered them motionless, and
then he was so pleased with his work that he decided to remain in the
shop and witness the delight of the milliner when she saw how daintily
her hats were now trimmed.
She came in the early morning, accompanied by her
sister, and her face wore a sad and resigned expression. After sweeping
and dusting the shop and drawing the blinds she opened the glass case
and took out a hat.
But when she saw a tiny gray mouse nestling among
the ribbons and laces she gave a loud shriek, and, dropping the hat,
sprang with one bound to the top of the table. The sister, knowing the
shriek to be one of fear, leaped upon a chair and exclaimed:
"What is it? Oh! what is it?"
"A mouse!" gasped the milliner,
trembling with terror.
Popopo, seeing this commotion, now realized that
mice are especially disagreeable to human beings, and that he had made a
grave mistake in placing them upon the hats; so he gave a low whistle of
command that was heard only by the mice.
Instantly they all jumpped from the hats, dashed
out the open door of the glass case and scampered away to their cellar.
But this action so frightened the milliner and her sister that after
giving several loud screams they fell upon their backs on the floor and
fainted away.
Popopo was a kind-hearted knook, but on witnessing
all this misery, caused by his own ignorance of the ways of humans, he
straightway wished himself at home, and so left the poor women to
recover as best they could.
Yet he could not escape a sad feeling of
responsibility, and after thinking upon the matter he decided that since
he had caused the milliner's unhappiness by freeing the birds, he could
set the matter right by restoring them to the glass case. He loved the
birds, and disliked to condemn them to slavery again; but that seemed
the only way to end the trouble.
So he set off to find the birds. They had flown a
long distance, but it was nothing to Popopo to reach them in a second,
and he discovered them sitting upon the branches of a big chestnut tree
and singing gayly.
When they saw the knook the birds cried:
"Thank you, Popopo. Thank you for setting us
free."
"Do not thank me," returned the knook,
"for I have come to send you back to the millinery shop."
"Why?" demanded a blue jay, angrily,
while the others stopped their songs.
"Because I find the woman considers you her
property, and your loss has caused her much unhappiness," answered
Popopo.
"But remember how unhappy we were in her
glass case," said a robin redbreast, gravely. "And as for
being her property, you are a knook, and the natural guardian of all
birds; so you know that Nature created us free. To be sure, wicked men
shot and stuffed us, and sold us to the milliner; but the idea of our
being her property is nonsense!"
Popopo was puzzled.
"If I leave you free," he said,
"wicked men will shoot you again, and you will be no better off
than before."
"Pooh!" exclaimed the blue jay, "we
cannot be shot now, for we are stuffed. Indeed, two men fired several
shots at us this morning, but the bullets only ruffled our feathers and
buried themselves in our stuffing. We do not fear men now."
"Listen!" said Popopo, sternly, for he
felt the birds were getting the best of the argument; "the poor
milliner's business will be ruined if I do not return you to her shop.
It seems you are necessary to trim the hats properly. It is the fashion
for women to wear birds upon their headgear. So the poor milliner's
wares, although beautified by lace and ribbons, are worthless unless you
are perched upon them."
"Fashions," said a black bird, solemnly,
"are made by men. What law is there, among birds or knooks, that
requires us to be the slaves of fashion?"
"What have we to do with fashions,
anyway?" screamed a linnet. "If it were the fashion to wear
knooks perched upon women's hats would you be contented to stay there?
Answer me, Popopo!"
But Popopo was in despair. He could not wrong the
birds by sending them back to the milliner, nor did he wish the milliner
to suffer by their loss. So he went home to think what could be done.
After much meditation he decided to consult the
king of the knooks, and going at once to his majesty he told him the
whole story.
The king frowned.
"This should teach you the folly of
interfering with earth people," he said. "But since you have
caused all this trouble, it is your duty to remedy it. Our birds cannot
be enslaved, that is certain; therefore you must have the fashions
changed, so it will no longer be stylish for women to wear birds upon
their hats."
"How shall I do that?" asked Popopo.
"Easily enough. Fashions often change among
the earth people, who tire quickly of any one thing. When they read in
their newspapers and magazines that the style is so-and-so, they never
question the matter, but at once obey the mandate of fashion. So you
must visit the newspapers and magazines and enchant the types."
"Enchant the types!" echoed Popopo, in
wonder.
"Just so. Make them read that it is no longer
the fashion to wear birds upon hats. That will afford relief to your
poor milliner and at the same time set free thousands of our darling
birds who have been so cruelly used."
Popopo thanked the wise king and followed his
advice.
The office of every newspaper and magazine in the
city was visited by the knook, and then he went to other cities, until
there was not a publication in the land that had not a "new fashion
note" in its pages. Sometimes Popopo enchanted the types, so that
whoever read the print would see only what the knook wished them to.
Sometimes he called upon the busy editors and befuddled their brains
until they wrote exactly what he wanted them to. Mortals seldom know how
greatly they are influenced by fairies, knooks and ryls, who often put
thoughts into their heads that only the wise little immortals could have
conceived.
The following morning when the poor milliner
looked over her newspaper she was overjoyed to read that "no woman
could now wear a bird upon her hat and be in style, for the newest
fashion required only ribbons and laces."
Popopo after this found much enjoyment in visiting
every millinery shop he could find and giving new life to the stuffed
birds which were carelessly tossed aside as useless. And they flew to
the fields and forests with songs of thanks to the good knook who had
rescued them.
Sometimes a hunter fires his gun at a bird and
then wonders why he did not hit it. But, having read this story, you
will understand that the bird must have been a stuffed one from some
millinery shop, which cannot, of course, be killed by a gun.
THE LAUGHING HIPPOPOTAMUS
On one of the upper branches of the Congo river
lived an ancient and aristocratic family of hippopotamuses, which
boasted a pedigree dating back beyond the days of Noah--beyond the
existence of mankind--far into the dim ages when the world was new.
They had always lived upon the banks of this same
river, so that every curve and sweep of its waters, every pit and
shallow of its bed, every rock and stump and wallow upon its bank was as
familiar to them as their own mothers. And they are living there yet, I
suppose.
Not long ago the queen of this tribe of
hippopotamuses had a child which she named Keo, because it was so fat
and round. Still, that you may not be misled, I will say that in the
hippopotamus language "Keo," properly translated, means
"fat and lazy" instead of fat and round. However, no one
called the queen's attention to this error, because her tusks were
monstrous long and sharp, and she thought Keo the sweetest baby in the
world.
He was, indeed, all right for a hippopotamus. He
rolled and played in the soft mud of the river bank, and waddled inland
to nibble the leaves of the wild cabbage that grew there, and was happy
and contented from morning till night. And he was the jolliest
hippopotamus that ancient family had ever known. His little red eyes
were forever twinkling with fun, and he laughed his merry laugh on all
occasions, whether there was anything to laugh at or not.
Therefore the black people who dwelt in that
region called him "Ippi"--the jolly one, although they dared
not come anigh him on account of his fierce mother, and his equally
fierce uncles and aunts and cousins, who lived in a vast colony upon the
river bank.
And while these black people, who lived in little
villages scattered among the trees, dared not openly attack the royal
family of hippopotamuses, they were amazingly fond of eating
hippopotamus meat whenever they could get it. This was no secret to the
hippopotamuses. And, again, when the blacks managed to catch these
animals alive, they had a trick of riding them through the jungles as if
they were horses, thus reducing them to a condition of slavery.
Therefore, having these things in mind, whenever
the tribe of hippopotamuses smelled the oily odor of black people they
were accustomed to charge upon them furiously, and if by chance they
overtook one of the enemy they would rip him with their sharp tusks or
stamp him into the earth with their huge feet.
It was continual warfare between the
hippopotamuses and the black people.
Gouie lived in one of the little villages of the
blacks. He was the son of the chief's brother and grandson of the
village sorcerer, the latter being an aged man known as the "the
boneless wonder," because he could twist himself into as many coils
as a serpent and had no bones to hinder his bending his flesh into any
position. This made him walk in a wabbly fashion, but the black people
had great respect for him.
Gouie's hut was made of branches of trees stuck
together with mud, and his clothing consisted of a grass mat tied around
his middle. But his relationship to the chief and the sorcerer gave him
a certain dignity, and he was much addicted to solitary thought. Perhaps
it was natural that these thoughts frequently turned upon his enemies,
the hippopotamuses, and that he should consider many ways of capturing
them.
Finally he completed his plans, and set about
digging a great pit in the ground, midway between two sharp curves of
the river. When the pit was finished he covered it over with small
branches of trees, and strewed earth upon them, smoothing the surface so
artfully that no one would suspect there was a big hole underneath. Then
Gouie laughed softly to himself and went home to supper.
That evening the queen said to Keo, who was
growing to be a fine child for his age:
"I wish you'd run across the bend and ask
your Uncle Nikki to come here. I have found a strange plant, and want
him to tell me if it is good to eat."
The jolly one laughed heartily as he started upon
his errand, for he felt as important as a boy does when he is sent for
the first time to the corner grocery to buy a yeast cake.
"Guk-uk-uk-uk! guk-uk-uk-uk!" was the
way he laughed; and if you think a hippopotamus does not laugh this way
you have but to listen to one and you will find I am right.
He crawled out of the mud where he was wallowing
and tramped away through the bushes, and the last his mother heard as
she lay half in and half out of the water was his musical "guk-uk-uk-uk!"
dying away in the distance.
Keo was in such a happy mood that he scarcely
noticed where he stepped, so he was much surprised when, in the middle
of a laugh, the ground gave way beneath him, and he fell to the bottom
of Gouie's deep pit. He was not badly hurt, but had bumped his nose
severely as he went down; so he stopped laughing and began to think how
he should get out again. Then he found the walls were higher than his
head, and that he was a prisoner.
So he laughed a little at his own misfortune, and
the laughter soothed him to sleep, so that he snored all through the
night until daylight came.
When Gouie peered over the edge of the pit next
morning he exclaimed:
"Why, 'tis Ippi--the Jolly One!"
Keo recognized the scent of a black man and tried
to raise his head high enough to bite him. Seeing which Gouie spoke in
the hippopotamus language, which he had learned from his grandfather,
the sorcerer.
"Have peace, little one; you are my
captive."
"Yes; I will have a piece of your leg, if I
can reach it," retorted Keo; and then he laughed at his own joke:
"Guk-uk-uk-uk!"
But Gouie, being a thoughtful black man, went away
without further talk, and did not return until the following morning.
When he again leaned over the pit Keo was so weak from hunger that he
could hardly laugh at all.
"Do you give up?" asked Gouie, "or
do you still wish to fight?"
"What will happen if I give up?"
inquired Keo.
The black man scratched his woolly head in
perplexity.
"It is hard to say, Ippi. You are too young
to work, and if I kill you for food I shall lose your tusks, which are
not yet grown. Why, O Jolly One, did you fall into my hole? I wanted to
catch your mother or one of your uncles."
"Guk-uk-uk-uk!" laughed Keo. "You
must let me go, after all, black man; for I am of no use to you!"
"That I will not do," declared Gouie;
"unless," he added, as an afterthought, "you will make a
bargain with me."
"Let me hear about the bargain, black one,
for I am hungry," said Keo.
"I will let your go if you swear by the tusks
of your grandfather that you will return to me in a year and a day and
become my prisoner again."
The youthful hippopotamus paused to think, for he
knew it was a solemn thing to swear by the tusks of his grandfather; but
he was exceedingly hungry, and a year and a day seemed a long time off;
so he said, with another careless laugh:
"Very well; if you will now let me go I swear
by the tusks of my grandfather to return to you in a year and a day and
become your prisoner."
Gouie was much pleased, for he knew that in a year
and a day Keo would be almost full grown. So he began digging away one
end of the pit and filling it up with the earth until he had made an
incline which would allow the hippopotamus to climb out.
Keo was so pleased when he found himself upon the
surface of the earth again that he indulged in a merry fit of laughter,
after which he said:
"Good-by, Gouie; in a year and a day you will
see me again."
Then he waddled away toward the river to see his
mother and get his breakfast, and Gouie returned to his village.
During the months that followed, as the black man
lay in his hut or hunted in the forest, he heard at times the faraway
"Guk-uk-uk-uk!" of the laughing hippopotamus. But he only
smiled to himself and thought: "A year and a day will soon pass
away!"
Now when Keo returned to his mother safe and well
every member of his tribe was filled with joy, for the Jolly One was a
general favorite. But when he told them that in a year and a day he must
again become the slave of the black man, they began to wail and weep,
and so many were their tears that the river rose several inches.
Of course Keo only laughed at their sorrow; but a
great meeting of the tribe was called and the matter discussed
seriously.
"Having sworn by the tusks of his
grandfather," said Uncle Nikki, "he must keep his promise. But
it is our duty to try in some way to rescue him from death or a life of
slavery."
To this all agreed, but no one could think of any
method of saving Keo from his fate. So months passed away, during which
all the royal hippopotamuses were sad and gloomy except the Jolly One
himself.
Finally but a week of freedom remained to Keo, and
his mother, the queen, became so nervous and worried that another
meeting of the tribe was called. By this time the laughing hippopotamus
had grown to enormous size, and measured nearly fifteen feet long and
six feet high, while his sharp tusks were whiter and harder than those
of an elephant.
"Unless something is done to save my
child," said the mother, "I shall die of grief."
Then some of her relations began to make foolish
suggestions; but presently Uncle Nep, a wise and very big hippopotamus,
said:
"We must go to Glinkomok and implore his
aid."
Then all were silent, for it was a bold thing to
face the mighty Glinkomok. But the mother's love was equal to any
heroism.
"I will myself go to him, if Uncle Nep will
accompany me," she said, quickly.
Uncle Nep thoughtfully patted the soft mud with
his fore foot and wagged his short tail leisurely from side to side.
"We have always been obedient to Glinkomok,
and shown him great respect," said he. "Therefore I fear no
danger in facing him. I will go with you."
All the others snorted approval, being very glad
they were not called upon to go themselves.
So the queen and Uncle Nep, with Keo swimming
between them, set out upon their journey. They swam up the river all
that day and all the next, until they came at sundown to a high, rocky
wall, beneath which was the cave where the might Glinkomok dwelt.
This fearful creature was part beast, part man,
part fowl and part fish. It had lived since the world began. Through
years of wisdom it had become part sorcerer, part wizard, part magician
and part fairy. Mankind knew it not, but the ancient beasts knew and
feared it.
The three hippopotamuses paused before the cave,
with their front feet upon the bank and their bodies in the water, and
called in chorus a greeting to Glinkomok. Instantly thereafter the mouth
of the cave darkened and the creature glided silently toward them.
The hippopotamuses were afraid to look upon it,
and bowed their heads between their legs.
"We come, O Glinkomok, to implore your mercy
and friendly assistance!" began Uncle Nep; and then he told the
story of Keo's capture, and how he had promised to return to the black
man.
"He must keep his promise," said the
creature, in a voice that sounded like a sigh.
The mother hippopotamus groaned aloud.
"But I will prepare him to overcome the black
man, and to regain his liberty," continued Glinkomok.
Keo laughed.
"Lift your right paw," commanded
Glinkomok. Keo obeyed, and the creature touched it with its long, hairy
tongue. Then it held four skinny hands over Keo's bowed head and mumbled
some words in a language unknown to man or beast or fowl or fish. After
this it spoke again in hippopotamese:
"Your skin has now become so tough that no
man can hurt you. Your strength is greater than that of ten elephants.
Your foot is so swift that you can distance the wind. Your wit is
sharper than the bulthorn. Let the man fear, but drive fear from your
own breast forever; for of all your race you are the mightiest!"
Then the terrible Glinkomok leaned over, and Keo
felt its fiery breath scorch him as it whispered some further
instructions in his ear. The next moment it glided back into its cave,
followed by the loud thanks of the three hippopotamuses, who slid into
the water and immediately began their journey home.
The mother's heart was full of joy; Uncle Nep
shivered once or twice as he remembered a glimpse he had caught of
Glinkomok; but Keo was as jolly as possible, and, not content to swim
with his dignified elders, he dived under their bodies, raced all around
them and laughed merrily every inch of the way home.
Then all the tribe held high jinks and praised the
mighty Glinkomok for befriending their queen's son. And when the day
came for the Jolly One to give himself up to the black man they all
kissed him good-by without a single fear for his safety.
Keo went away in good spirits, and they could hear
his laughing "guk-uk-uk-uk!" long after he was lost in sight
in the jungle.
Gouie had counted the days and knew when to expect
Keo; but he was astonished at the monstrous size to which his captive
had grown, and congratulated himself on the wise bargain he had made.
And Keo was so fat that Gouie determined to eat him--that is, all of him
he possibly could, and the remainder of the carcass he would trade off
to his fellow villagers.
So he took a knife and tried to stick it into the
hippopotamus, but the skin was so tough the knife was blunted against
it. Then he tried other means; but Keo remained unhurt.
And now indeed the Jolly One laughed his most
gleeful laugh, till all the forest echoed the "guk-uk-uk-uk-uk!"
And Gouie decided not to kill him, since that was impossible, but to use
him for a beast of burden. He mounted upon Keo's back and commanded him
to march. So Keo trotted briskly through the village, his little eyes
twinkling with merriment.
The other blacks were delighted with Gouie's
captive, and begged permission to ride upon the Jolly One's back. So
Gouie bargained with them for bracelets and shell necklaces and little
gold ornaments, until he had acquired quite a heap of trinkets. Then a
dozen black men climbed upon Keo's back to enjoy a ride, and the one
nearest his nose cried out:
"Run, Mud-dog--run!"
And Keo ran. Swift as the wind he strode, away
from the village, through the forest and straight up the river bank. The
black men howled with fear; the Jolly One roared with laughter; and on,
on, on they rushed!
Then before them, on the opposite side of the
river, appeared the black mouth of Glinkomok's cave. Keo dashed into the
water, dived to the bottom and left the black people struggling to swim
out. But Glinkomok had heard the laughter of Keo and knew what to do.
When the Jolly One rose to the surface and blew the water from his
throat there was no black man to be seen.
Keo returned alone to the village, and Gouie
asked, with surprise:
"Where are my brothers:"
"I do not know," answered Keo. "I
took them far away, and they remained where I left them."
Gouie would have asked more questions then, but
another crowd of black men impatiently waited to ride on the back of the
laughing hippopotamus. So they paid the price and climbed to their
seats, after which the foremost said:
"Run, mud-wallower--run!"
And Keo ran as before and carried them to the
mouth of Glinkomok's cave, and returned alone.
But now Gouie became anxious to know the fate of
his fellows, for he was the only black man left in his village. So he
mounted the hippopotamus and cried:
"Run, river-hog--run!"
Keo laughed his jolly "guk-uk-uk-uk!"
and ran with the speed of the wind. But this time he made straight for
the river bank where his own tribe lived, and when he reached it he
waded into the river, dived to the bottom and left Gouie floating in the
middle of the stream.
The black man began swimming toward the right
bank, but there he saw Uncle Nep and half the royal tribe waiting to
stamp him into the soft mud. So he turned toward the left bank, and
there stood the queen mother and Uncle Nikki, red-eyed and angry,
waiting to tear him with their tusks.
Then Gouie uttered loud screams of terror, and,
spying the Jolly One, who swam near him, he cried:
"Save me, Keo! Save me, and I will release
you from slavery!"
"That is not enough," laughed Keo.
"I will serve you all my life!" screamed
Gouie; "I will do everything you bid me!"
"Will you return to me in a year and a day
and become my captive, if I allow you to escape?" asked Keo.
"I will! I will! I will!" cried Gouie.
"Swear it by the bones of your
grandfather!" commanded Keo, remembering that black men have no
tusks to swear by.
And Gouie swore it by the bones of his
grandfather.
Then Keo swam to the black one, who clambered upon
his back again. In this fashion they came to the bank, where Keo told
his mother and all the tribe of the bargain he had made with Gouie, who
was to return in a year and a day and become his slave.
Therefore the black man was permitted to depart in
peace, and once more the Jolly One lived with his own people and was
happy.
When a year and a day had passed Keo began
watching for the return of Gouie; but he did not come, then or ever
afterwards.
For the black man had made a bundle of his
bracelets and shell necklaces and little gold ornaments and had traveled
many miles into another country, where the ancient and royal tribe of
hippopotamuses was unknown. And he set up for a great chief, because of
his riches, and people bowed down before him.
By day he was proud and swaggering. But at night
he tumbled and tossed upon his bed and could not sleep. His conscience
troubled him.
For he had sworn by the bones of his grandfather;
and his grandfather had no bones.
THE MAGIC BON BONS
There lived in Boston a wise and ancient chemist
by the name of Dr. Daws, who dabbled somewhat in magic. There also lived
in Boston a young lady by the name of Claribel Sudds, who was possessed
of much money, little wit and an intense desire to go upon the stage.
So Claribel went to Dr. Daws and said:
"I can neither sing nor dance; I cannot
recite verse nor play upon the piano; I am no acrobat nor leaper nor
high kicker; yet I wish to go upon the stage. What shall I do?"
"Are you willing to pay for such
accomplishments?" asked the wise chemist.
"Certainly," answered Claribel, jingling
her purse.
"Then come to me to-morrow at two
o'clock," said he.
All that night he practiced what is known as
chemical sorcery; so that when Claribel Sudds came next day at two
o'clock he showed her a small box filled with compounds that closely
resembled French bonbons.
"This is a progressive age," said the
old man, "and I flatter myself your Uncle Daws keeps right along
with the procession. Now, one of your old-fashioned sorcerers would have
made you some nasty, bitter pills to swallow; but I have consulted your
taste and convenience. Here are some magic bonbons. If you eat this one
with the lavender color you can dance thereafter as lightly and
gracefully as if you had been trained a lifetime. After you consume the
pink confection you will sing like a nightingale. Eating the white one
will enable you to become the finest elocutionist in the land. The
chocolate piece will charm you into playing the piano better than
Rubenstein, while after eating you lemon-yellow bonbon you can easily
kick six feet above your head."
"How delightful!" exclaimed Claribel,
who was truly enraptured. "You are certainly a most clever sorcerer
as well as a considerate compounder," and she held out her hand for
the box.
"Ahem!" said the wise one; "a
check, please."
"Oh, yes; to be sure! How stupid of me to
forget it," she returned.
He considerately retained the box in his own hand
while she signed a check for a large amount of money, after which he
allowed her to hold the box herself.
"Are you sure you have made them strong
enough?" she inquired, anxiously; "it usually takes a great
deal to affect me."
"My only fear," replied Dr. Daws,
"is that I have made them too strong. For this is the first time I
have ever been called upon to prepare these wonderful confections."
"Don't worry," said Claribel; "the
stronger they act the better I shall act myself."
She went away, after saying this, but stopping in
at a dry goods store to shop, she forgot the precious box in her new
interest and left it lying on the ribbon counter.
Then little Bessie Bostwick came to the counter to
buy a hair ribbon and laid her parcels beside the box. When she went
away she gathered up the box with her other bundles and trotted off home
with it.
Bessie never knew, until after she had hung her
coat in the hall closet and counted up her parcels, that she had one too
many. Then she opened it and exclaimed:
"Why, it's a box of candy! Someone must have
mislaid it. But it is too small a matter to worry about; there are only
a few pieces." So she dumped the contents of the box into a bonbon
dish that stood upon the hall table and picking out the chocolate
piece--she was fond of chocolates--ate it daintily while she examined
her purchases.
These were not many, for Bessie was only twelve
years old and was not yet trusted by her parents to expend much money at
the stores. But while she tried on the hair ribbon she suddenly felt a
great desire to play upon the piano, and the desire at last became so
overpowering that she went into the parlor and opened the instrument.
The little girl had, with infinite pains,
contrived to learn two "pieces" which she usually executed
with a jerky movement of her right hand and a left hand that forgot to
keep up and so made dreadful discords. But under the influence of the
chocolate bonbon she sat down and ran her fingers lightly over the keys
producing such exquisite harmony that she was filled with amazement at
her own performance.
That was the prelude, however. The next moment she
dashed into Beethoven's seventh sonata and played it magnificently.
Her mother, hearing the unusual burst of melody,
came downstairs to see what musical guest had arrived; but when she
discovered it was her own little daughter who was playing so divinely
she had an attack of palpitation of the heart (to which she was subject)
and sat down upon a sofa until it should pass away.
Meanwhile Bessie played one piece after another
with untiring energy. She loved music, and now found that all she need
do was to sit at the piano and listen and watch her hands twinkle over
the keyboard.
Twilight deepened in the room and Bessie's father
came home and hung up his hat and overcoat and placed his umbrella in
the rack. Then he peeped into the parlor to see who was playing.
"Great Caesar!" he exclaimed. But the
mother came to him softly with her finger on her lips and whispered:
"Don't interrupt her, John. Our child seems to be in a trance. Did
you ever hear such superb music?"
"Why, she's an infant prodigy!" gasped
the astounded father. "Beats Blind Tom all hollow! It's--it's
wonderful!"
As they stood listening the senator arrived,
having been invited to dine with them that evening. And before he had
taken off his coat the Yale professor--a man of deep learning and
scholarly attainments--joined the party.
Bessie played on; and the four elders stood in a
huddled but silent and amazed group, listening to the music and waiting
for the sound of the dinner gong.
Mr. Bostwick, who was hungry, picked up the bonbon
dish that lay on the table beside him and ate the pink confection. The
professor was watching him, so Mr. Bostwick courteously held the dish
toward him. The professor ate the lemon-yellow piece and the senator
reached out his hand and took the lavender piece. He did not eat it,
however, for, chancing to remember that it might spoil his dinner, he
put it in his vest pocket. Mrs. Bostwick, still intently listening to
her precocious daughter, without thinking what she did, took the
remaining piece, which was the white one, and slowly devoured it.
The dish was now empty, and Claribel Sudds'
precious bonbons had passed from her possession forever!
Suddenly Mr. Bostwick, who was a big man, began to
sing in a shrill, tremolo soprano voice. It was not the same song Bessie
was playing, and the discord was shocking that the professor smiled, the
senator put his hands to his ears and Mrs. Bostwick cried in a horrified
voice:
"William!"
Her husband continued to sing as if endeavoring to
emulate the famous Christine Nillson, and paid no attention whatever to
his wife or his guests.
Fortunately the dinner gong now sounded, and Mrs.
Bostwick dragged Bessie from the piano and ushered her guests into the
dining-room. Mr. Bostwick followed, singing "The Last Rose of
Summer" as if it had been an encore demanded by a thousand
delighted hearers.
The poor woman was in despair at witnessing her
husband's undignified actions and wondered what she might do to control
him. The professor seemed more grave than usual; the senator's face wore
an offended expression, and Bessie kept moving her fingers as if she
still wanted to play the piano.
Mrs. Bostwick managed to get them all seated,
although her husband had broken into another aria; and then the maid
brought in the soup.
When she carried a plate to the professor, he
cried, in an excited voice:
"Hold it higher! Higher--I say!" And
springing up he gave it a sudden kick that sent it nearly to the
ceiling, from whence the dish descended to scatter soup over Bessie and
the maid and to smash in pieces upon the crown of the professor's bald
head.
At this atrocious act the senator rose from his
seat with an exclamation of horror and glanced at his hostess.
For some time Mrs. Bostwick had been staring
straight ahead, with a dazed expression; but now, catching the senator's
eye, she bowed gracefully and began reciting "The Charge of the
Light Brigade" in forceful tones.
The senator shuddered. Such disgraceful rioting he
had never seen nor heard before in a decent private family. He felt that
his reputation was at stake, and, being the only sane person,
apparently, in the room, there was no one to whom he might appeal.
The maid had run away to cry hysterically in the
kitchen; Mr. Bostwick was singing "O Promise Me;" the
professor was trying to kick the globes off the chandelier; Mrs.
Bostwick had switched her recitation to "The Boy Stood on the
Burning Deck," and Bessie had stolen into the parlor and was
pounding out the overture from the "Flying Dutchman."
The senator was not at all sure he would not go
crazy himself, presently; so he slipped away from the turmoil, and,
catching up his had and coat in the hall, hurried from the house.
That night he sat up late writing a political
speech he was to deliver the next afternoon at Faneuil hall, but his
experiences at the Bostwicks' had so unnerved him that he could scarcely
collect his thoughts, and often he would pause and shake his head
pityingly as he remembered the strange things he had seen in that
usually respectable home.
The next day he met Mr. Bostwick in the street,
but passed him by with a stony glare of oblivion. He felt he really
could not afford to know this gentleman in the future. Mr. Bostwick was
naturally indignant at the direct snub; yet in his mind lingered a faint
memory of some quite unusual occurrences at his dinner party the evening
before, and he hardly knew whether he dared resent the senator's
treatment or not.
The political meeting was the feature of the day,
for the senator's eloquence was well known in Boston. So the big hall
was crowded with people, and in one of the front rows sat the Bostwick
family, with the learned Yale professor beside them. They all looked
tired and pale, as if they had passed a rather dissipated evening, and
the senator was rendered so nervous by seeing them that he refused to
look in their direction a second time.
While the mayor was introducing him the great man
sat fidgeting in his chair; and, happening to put his thumb and finger
into his vest pocket, he found the lavender-colored bonbon he had placed
there the evening before.
"This may clear my throat," thought the
senator, and slipped the bonbon into his mouth.
A few minutes afterwards he arose before the vast
audience, which greeted him with enthusiastic plaudits.
"My friends," began the senator, in a
grave voice, "this is a most impressive and important
occasion."
Then he paused, balanced himself upon his left
foot, and kicked his right leg into the air in the way favored by
ballet-dancers!
There was a hum of amazement and horror from the
spectators, but the senator appeared not to notice it. He whirled around
upon the tips of his toes, kicked right and left in a graceful manner,
and startled a bald-headed man in the front row by casting a languishing
glance in his direction.
Suddenly Claribel Sudds, who happened to be
present, uttered a scream and sprang to her feet. Pointing an accusing
finger at the dancing senator, she cried in a loud voice:
"That's the man who stole my bonbons! Seize
him! Arrest him! Don't let him escape!"
But the ushers rushed her out of the hall,
thinking she had gone suddenly insane; and the senator's friends seized
him firmly and carried him out the stage entrance to the street, where
they put him into an open carriage and instructed the driver to take him
home.
The effect of the magic bonbon was still powerful
enough to control the poor senator, who stood upon the rear seat of the
carriage and danced energetically all the way home, to the delight of
the crowd of small boys who followed the carriage and the grief of the
sober-minded citizens, who shook their heads sadly and whispered that
"another good man had gone wrong."
It took the senator several months to recover from
the shame and humiliation of this escapade; and, curiously enough, he
never had the slightest idea what had induced him to act in so
extraordinary a manner. Perhaps it was fortunate the last bonbon had now
been eaten, for they might easily have caused considerably more trouble
than they did.
Of course Claribel went again to the wise chemist
and signed a check for another box of magic bonbons; but she must have
taken better care of these, for she is now a famous vaudeville actress.
* * * * *
This story should teach us the folly of condemning
others for actions that we do not understand, for we never know what may
happen to ourselves. It may also serve as a hint to be careful about
leaving parcels in public places, and, incidentally, to let other
people's packages severely alone.
The CAPTURE of FATHER TIME
Jim was the son of a cowboy, and lived on the
broad plains of Arizona. His father had trained him to lasso a bronco or
a young bull with perfect accuracy, and had Jim possessed the strength
to back up his skill he would have been as good a cowboy as any in all
Arizona.
When he was twelve years old he made his first
visit to the east, where Uncle Charles, his father's brother, lived. Of
course Jim took his lasso with him, for he was proud of his skill in
casting it, and wanted to show his cousins what a cowboy could do.
At first the city boys and girls were much
interested in watching Jim lasso posts and fence pickets, but they soon
tired of it, and even Jim decided it was not the right sort of sport for
cities.
But one day the butcher asked Jim to ride one of
his horses into the country, to a pasture that had been engaged, and Jim
eagerly consented. He had been longing for a horseback ride, and to make
it seem like old times he took his lasso with him.
He rode through the streets demurely enough, but
on reaching the open country roads his spirits broke forth into wild
jubilation, and, urging the butcher's horse to full gallop, he dashed
away in true cowboy fashion.
Then he wanted still more liberty, and letting
down the bars that led into a big field he began riding over the meadow
and throwing his lasso at imaginary cattle, while he yelled and whooped
to his heart's content.
Suddenly, on making a long cast with his lasso,
the loop caught upon something and rested about three feet from the
ground, while the rope drew taut and nearly pulled Jim from his horse.
This was unexpected. More than that, it was
wonderful; for the field seemed bare of even a stump. Jim's eyes grew
big with amazement, but he knew he had caught something when a voice
cried out:
"Here, let go! Let go, I say! Can't you see
what you've done?"
No, Jim couldn't see, nor did he intend to let go
until he found out what was holding the loop of the lasso. So he
resorted to an old trick his father had taught him and, putting the
butcher's horse to a run, began riding in a circle around the spot where
his lasso had caught.
As he thus drew nearer and nearer his quarry he
saw the rope coil up, yet it looked to be coiling over nothing but air.
One end of the lasso was made fast to a ring in the saddle, and when the
rope was almost wound up and the horse began to pull away and snort with
fear, Jim dismounted. Holding the reins of the bridle in one hand, he
followed the rope, and an instant later saw an old man caught fast in
the coils of the lasso.
His head was bald and uncovered, but long white
whiskers grew down to his waist. About his body was thrown a loose robe
of fine white linen. In one hand he bore a great scythe, and beneath the
other arm he carried an hourglass.
While Jim gazed wonderingly upon him, this
venerable old man spoke in an angry voice:
"Now, then--get that rope off as fast as you
can! You've brought everything on earth to a standstill by your
foolishness! Well--what are you staring at? Don't you know who I
am?"
"No," said Jim, stupidly.
"Well, I'm Time--Father Time! Now, make haste
and set me free--if you want the world to run properly."
"How did I happen to catch you?" asked
Jim, without making a move to release his captive.
"I don't know. I've never been caught
before," growled Father Time. "But I suppose it was because
you were foolishly throwing your lasso at nothing."
"I didn't see you," said Jim.
"Of course you didn't. I'm invisible to the
eyes of human beings unless they get within three feet of me, and I take
care to keep more than that distance away from them. That's why I was
crossing this field, where I supposed no one would be. And I should have
been perfectly safe had it not been for your beastly lasso. Now,
then," he added, crossly, "are you going to get that rope
off?"
"Why should I?" asked Jim.
"Because everything in the world stopped
moving the moment you caught me. I don't suppose you want to make an end
of all business and pleasure, and war and love, and misery and ambition
and everything else, do you? Not a watch has ticked since you tied me up
here like a mummy!"
Jim laughed. It really was funny to see the old
man wound round and round with coils of rope from his knees up to his
chin.
"It'll do you good to rest," said the
boy. "From all I've heard you lead a rather busy life."
"Indeed I do," replied Father Time, with
a sigh. "I'm due in Kamchatka this very minute. And to think one
small boy is upsetting all my regular habits!"
"Too bad!" said Jim, with a grin.
"But since the world has stopped anyhow, it won't matter if it
takes a little longer recess. As soon as I let you go Time will fly
again. Where are your wings?"
"I haven't any," answered the old man.
"That is a story cooked up by some one who never saw me. As a
matter of fact, I move rather slowly."
"I see, you take your time," remarked
the boy. "What do you use that scythe for?"
"To mow down the people," said the
ancient one. "Every time I swing my scythe some one dies."
"Then I ought to win a life-saving medal by
keeping you tied up," said Jim. "Some folks will live this
much longer."
"But they won't know it," said Father
Time, with a sad smile; "so it will do them no good. You may as
well untie me at once."
"No," said Jim, with a determined air.
"I may never capture you again; so I'll hold you for awhile and see
how the world wags without you."
Then he swung the old man, bound as he was, upon
the back of the butcher's horse, and, getting into the saddle himself,
started back toward town, one hand holding his prisoner and the other
guiding the reins.
When he reached the road his eye fell on a strange
tableau. A horse and buggy stood in the middle of the road, the horse in
the act of trotting, with his head held high and two legs in the air,
but perfectly motionless. In the buggy a man and a woman were seated;
but had they been turned into stone they could not have been more still
and stiff.
"There's no Time for them!" sighed the
old man. "Won't you let me go now?"
"Not yet," replied the boy.
He rode on until he reached the city, where all
the people stood in exactly the same positions they were in when Jim
lassoed Father Time. Stopping in front of a big dry goods store, the boy
hitched his horse and went in. The clerks were measuring out goods and
showing patterns to the rows of customers in front of them, but everyone
seemed suddenly to have become a statue.
There was something very unpleasant in this scene,
and a cold shiver began to run up and down Jim's back; so he hurried out
again.
On the edge of the sidewalk sat a poor, crippled
beggar, holding out his hat, and beside him stood a prosperous-looking
gentleman who was about to drop a penny into the beggar's hat. Jim knew
this gentleman to be very rich but rather stingy, so he ventured to run
his hand into the man's pocket and take out his purse, in which was a
$20 gold piece. This glittering coin he put in the gentleman's fingers
instead of the penny and then restored the purse to the rich man's
pocket.
"That donation will surprise him when he
comes to life," thought the boy.
He mounted the horse again and rode up the street.
As he passed the shop of his friend, the butcher, he noticed several
pieces of meat hanging outside.
"I'm afraid that meat'll spoil," he
remarked.
"It takes Time to spoil meat," answered
the old man.
This struck Jim as being queer, but true.
"It seems Time meddles with everything,"
said he.
"Yes; you've made a prisoner of the most
important personage in the world," groaned the old man; "and
you haven't enough sense to let him go again."
Jim did not reply, and soon they came to his
uncle's house, where he again dismounted. The street was filled with
teams and people, but all were motionless. His two little cousins were
just coming out the gate on their way to school, with their books and
slates underneath their arms; so Jim had to jump over the fence to avoid
knocking them down.
In the front room sat his aunt, reading her Bible.
She was just turning a page when Time stopped. In the dining-room was
his uncle, finishing his luncheon. His mouth was open and his fork
poised just before it, while his eyes were fixed upon the newspaper
folded beside him. Jim helped himself to his uncle's pie, and while he
ate it he walked out to his prisoner.
"There's one thing I don't understand,"
said he.
"What's that?" asked Father Time.
"Why is it that I'm able to move around while
everyone else is--is--froze up?"
"That is because I'm your prisoner,"
answered the other. "You can do anything you wish with Time now.
But unless you are careful you'll do something you will be sorry
for."
Jim threw the crust of his pie at a bird that was
suspended in the air, where it had been flying when Time stopped.
"Anyway," he laughed, "I'm living
longer than anyone else. No one will ever be able to catch up with me
again."
"Each life has its allotted span," said
the old man. "When you have lived your proper time my scythe will
mow you down."
"I forgot your scythe," said Jim,
thoughtfully.
Then a spirit of mischief came into the boy's
head, for he happened to think that the present opportunity to have fun
would never occur again. He tied Father Time to his uncle's hitching
post, that he might not escape, and then crossed the road to the corner
grocery.
The grocer had scolded Jim that very morning for
stepping into a basket of turnips by accident. So the boy went to the
back end of the grocery and turned on the faucet of the molasses barrel.
"That'll make a nice mess when Time starts
the molasses running all over the floor," said Jim, with a laugh.
A little further down the street was a barber
shop, and sitting in the barber's chair Jim saw the man that all the
boys declared was the "meanest man in town." He certainly did
not like the boys and the boys knew it. The barber was in the act of
shampooing this person when Time was captured. Jim ran to the drug
store, and, getting a bottle of mucilage, he returned and poured it over
the ruffled hair of the unpopular citizen.
"That'll probably surprise him when he wakes
up," thought Jim.
Near by was the schoolhouse. Jim entered it and
found that only a few of the pupils were assembled. But the teacher sat
at his desk, stern and frowning as usual.
Taking a piece of chalk, Jim marked upon the
blackboard in big letters the following words:
"Every scholar is requested to yell the
minute he enters the room. He will also please throw his books at the
teacher's head. Signed, Prof. Sharpe."
"That ought to raise a nice rumpus,"
murmured the mischiefmaker, as he walked away.
On the corner stood Policeman Mulligan, talking
with old Miss Scrapple, the worst gossip in town, who always delighted
in saying something disagreeable about her neighbors. Jim thought this
opportunity was too good to lose. So he took off the policeman's cap and
brass-buttoned coat and put them on Miss Scrapple, while the lady's
feathered and ribboned hat he placed jauntily upon the policeman's head.
The effect was so comical that the boy laughed
aloud, and as a good many people were standing near the corner Jim
decided that Miss Scrapple and Officer Mulligan would create a sensation
when Time started upon his travels.
Then the young cowboy remembered his prisoner,
and, walking back to the hitching post, he came within three feet of it
and saw Father Time still standing patiently within the toils of the
lasso. He looked angry and annoyed, however, and growled out:
"Well, when do you intend to release
me?"
"I've been thinking about that ugly scythe of
yours," said Jim.
"What about it?" asked Father Time.
"Perhaps if I let you go you'll swing it at
me the first thing, to be revenged," replied the boy.
Father Time gave him a severe look, but said:
"I've known boys for thousands of years, and
of course I know they're mischievous and reckless. But I like boys,
because they grow up to be men and people my world. Now, if a man had
caught me by accident, as you did, I could have scared him into letting
me go instantly; but boys are harder to scare. I don't know as I blame
you. I was a boy myself, long ago, when the world was new. But surely
you've had enough fun with me by this time, and now I hope you'll show
the respect that is due to old age. Let me go, and in return I will
promise to forget all about my capture. The incident won't do much harm,
anyway, for no one will ever know that Time has halted the last three
hours or so."
"All right," said Jim, cheerfully,
"since you've promised not to mow me down, I'll let you go."
But he had a notion some people in the town would suspect Time had
stopped when they returned to life.
He carefully unwound the rope from the old man,
who, when he was free, at once shouldered his scythe, rearranged his
white robe and nodded farewell.
The next moment he had disappeared, and with a
rustle and rumble and roar of activity the world came to life again and
jogged along as it always had before.
Jim wound up his lasso, mounted the butcher's
horse and rode slowly down the street.
Loud screams came from the corner, where a great
crowd of people quickly assembled. From his seat on the horse Jim saw
Miss Scrapple, attired in the policeman's uniform, angrily shaking her
fists in Mulligan's face, while the officer was furiously stamping upon
the lady's hat, which he had torn from his own head amidst the jeers of
the crowd.
As he rode past the schoolhouse he heard a
tremendous chorus of yells, and knew Prof. Sharpe was having a hard time
to quell the riot caused by the sign on the blackboard.
Through the window of the barber shop he saw the
"mean man" frantically belaboring the barber with a hair
brush, while his hair stood up stiff as bayonets in all directions. And
the grocer ran out of his door and yelled "Fire!" while his
shoes left a track of molasses wherever he stepped.
Jim's heart was filled with joy. He was fairly
reveling in the excitement he had caused when some one caught his leg
and pulled him from the horse.
"What're ye doin' hear, ye rascal?"
cried the butcher, angrily; "didn't ye promise to put that beast
inter Plympton's pasture? An' now I find ye ridin' the poor nag around
like a gentleman o' leisure!"
"That's a fact," said Jim, with
surprise; "I clean forgot about the horse!"
* * * * *
This story should teach us the supreme importance
of Time and the folly of trying to stop it. For should you succeed, as
Jim did, in bringing Time to a standstill, the world would soon become a
dreary place and life decidedly unpleasant.
The WONDERFUL PUMP
Not many years ago there lived on a stony, barren
New England farm a man and his wife. They were sober, honest people,
working hard from early morning until dark to enable them to secure a
scanty living from their poor land.
Their house, a small, one-storied building, stood
upon the side of a steep hill, and the stones lay so thickly about it
that scarce anything green could grow from the ground. At the foot of
the hill, a quarter of a mile from the house by the winding path, was a
small brook, and the woman was obliged to go there for water and to
carry it up the hill to the house. This was a tedious task, and with the
other hard work that fell to her share had made her gaunt and bent and
lean.
Yet she never complained, but meekly and
faithfully performed her duties, doing the housework, carrying the water
and helping her husband hoe the scanty crop that grew upon the best part
of their land.
One day, as she walked down the path to the brook,
her big shoes scattering the pebbles right and left, she noticed a large
beetle lying upon its back and struggling hard with its little legs to
turn over, that its feet might again touch the ground. But this it could
not accomplish; so the woman, who had a kind heart, reached down and
gently turned the beetle with her finger. At once it scampered from the
path and she went on to the brook.
The next day, as she came for water, she was
surprised to see the beetle again lying upon its back and struggling
helplessly to turn. Once more the woman stopped and set him upon his
feet; and then, as she stooped over the tiny creature, she heard a small
voice say:
"Oh, thank you! Thank you so much for saving
me!"
Half frightened at hearing a beetle speak in her
own language, the woman started back and exclaimed:
"La sakes! Surely you can't talk like
humans!" Then, recovering from her alarm, she again bent over the
beetle, who answered her:
"Why shouldn't I talk, if I have anything to
say?
"'Cause you're a bug," replied the
woman.
"That is true; and you saved my life--saved
me from my enemies, the sparrows. And this is the second time you have
come to my assistance, so I owe you a debt of gratitude. Bugs value
their lives as much as human beings, and I am a more important creature
than you, in your ignorance, may suppose. But, tell me, why do you come
each day to the brook?"
"For water," she answered, staring
stupidly down at the talking beetle.
"Isn't it hard work?" the creature
inquired.
"Yes; but there's no water on the hill,"
said she.
"Then dig a well and put a pump in it,"
replied the beetle.
She shook her head.
"My man tried it once; but there was no
water," she said, sadly.
"Try it again," commanded the beetle;
"and in return for your kindness to me I will make this promise: if
you do not get water from the well you will get that which is more
precious to you. I must go now. Do not forget. Dig a well."
And then, without pausing to say good-by, it ran
swiftly away and was lost among the stones.
The woman returned to the house much perplexed by
what the beetle had said, and when her husband came in from his work she
told him the whole story.
The poor man thought deeply for a time, and then
declared:
"Wife, there may be truth in what the bug
told you. There must be magic in the world yet, if a beetle can speak;
and if there is such a thing as magic we may get water from the well.
The pump I bought to use in the well which proved to be dry is now lying
in the barn, and the only expense in following the talking bug's advice
will be the labor of digging the hole. Labor I am used to; so I will dig
the well."
Next day he set about it, and dug so far down in
the ground that he could hardly reach the top to climb out again; but
not a drop of water was found.
"Perhaps you did not dig deep enough,"
his wife said, when he told her of his failure.
So the following day he made a long ladder, which
he put into the hole; and then he dug, and dug, and dug, until the top
of the ladder barely reached the top of the hole. But still there was no
water.
When the woman next went to the brook with her
pail she saw the beetle sitting upon a stone beside her path. So she
stopped and said:
"My husband has dug the well; but there is no
water."
"Did he put the pump in the well?" asked
the beetle.
"No," she answered.
"Then do as I commanded; put in the pump, and
if you do not get water I promise you something still more
precious."
Saying which, the beetle swiftly slid from the
stone and disappeared. The woman went back to the house and told her
husband what the bug had said.
"Well," replied the simple fellow,
"there can be no harm in trying."
So he got the pump from the barn and placed it in
the well, and then he took hold of the handle and began to pump, while
his wife stood by to watch what would happen.
No water came, but after a few moments a gold
piece dropped from the spout of the pump, and then another, and another,
until several handfuls of gold lay in a little heap upon the ground.
The man stopped pumping then and ran to help his
wife gather the gold pieces into her apron; but their hands trembled so
greatly through excitement and joy that they could scarcely pick up the
sparkling coins.
At last she gathered them close to her bosom and
together they ran to the house, where they emptied the precious gold
upon the table and counted the pieces.
All were stamped with the design of the United
States mint and were worth five dollars each. Some were worn and
somewhat discolored from use, while others seemed bright and new, as if
they had not been much handled. When the value of the pieces was added
together they were found to be worth three hundred dollars.
Suddenly the woman spoke.
"Husband, the beetle said truly when he
declared we should get something more precious than water from the well.
But run at once and take away the handle from the pump, lest anyone
should pass this way and discover our secret."
So the man ran to the pump and removed the handle,
which he carried to the house and hid underneath the bed.
They hardly slept a wink that night, lying awake
to think of their good fortune and what they should do with their store
of yellow gold. In all their former lives they had never possessed more
than a few dollars at a time, and now the cracked teapot was nearly full
of gold coins.
The following day was Sunday, and they arose early
and ran to see if their treasure was safe. There it lay, heaped snugly
within the teapot, and they were so willing to feast their eyes upon it
that it was long before the man could leave it to build the fire or the
woman to cook the breakfast.
While they ate their simple meal the woman said:
"We will go to church to-day and return
thanks for the riches that have come to us so suddenly. And I will give
the pastor one of the gold pieces."
"It is well enough to go to church,"
replied her husband, "and also to return thanks. But in the night I
decided how we will spend all our money; so there will be none left for
the pastor."
"We can pump more," said the woman.
"Perhaps; and perhaps not," he answered,
cautiously. "What we have we can depend upon, but whether or not
there be more in the well I cannot say."
"Then go and find out," she returned,
"for I am anxious to give something to the pastor, who is a poor
man and deserving."
So the man got the pump handle from beneath the
bed, and, going to the pump, fitted it in place. Then he set a large
wooden bucket under the spout and began to pump. To their joy the gold
pieces soon began flowing into the pail, and, seeing it about to run
over the brim, the woman brought another pail. But now the stream
suddenly stopped, and the man said, cheerfully:
"That is enough for to-day, good wife! We
have added greatly to our treasure, and the parson shall have his gold
piece. Indeed, I think I shall also put a coin into the contribution
box."
Then, because the teapot would hold no more gold,
the farmer emptied the pail into the wood-box, covering the money with
dried leaves and twigs, that no one might suspect what lay underneath.
Afterward they dressed themselves in their best
clothing and started for the church, each taking a bright gold piece
from the teapot as a gift to the pastor.
Over the hill and down into the valley beyond they
walked, feeling so gay and light-hearted that they did not mind the
distance at all. At last they came to the little country church and
entered just as the services began.
Being proud of their wealth and of the gifts they
had brought for the pastor, they could scarcely wait for the moment when
the deacon passed the contribution box. But at last the time came, and
the farmer held his hand high over the box and dropped the gold piece so
that all the congregation could see what he had given. The woman did
likewise, feeling important and happy at being able to give the good
parson so much.
The parson, watching from the pulpit, saw the gold
drop into the box, and could hardly believe that his eyes did not
deceive him. However, when the box was laid upon his desk there were the
two gold pieces, and he was so surprised that he nearly forgot his
sermon.
When the people were leaving the church at the
close of the services the good man stopped the farmer and his wife and
asked:
"Where did you get so much gold?"
The woman gladly told him how she had rescued the
beetle, and how, in return, they had been rewarded with the wonderful
pump. The pastor listened to it all gravely, and when the story was
finished he said:
"According to tradition strange things
happened in this world ages ago, and now I find that strange things may
also happen to-day. For by your tale you have found a beetle that can
speak and also has power to bestow upon you great wealth." Then he
looked carefully at the gold pieces and continued: "Either this
money is fairy gold or it is genuine metal, stamped at the mint of the
United States government. If it is fairy gold it will disappear within
24 hours, and will therefore do no one any good. If it is real money,
then your beetle must have robbed some one of the gold and placed it in
your well. For all money belongs to some one, and if you have not earned
it honestly, but have come by it in the mysterious way you mention, it
was surely taken from the persons who owned it, without their consent.
Where else could real money come from?"
The farmer and his wife were confused by this
statement and looked guiltily at each other, for they were honest people
and wished to wrong no one.
"Then you think the beetle stole the
money?" asked the woman.
"By his magic powers he probably took it from
its rightful owners. Even bugs which can speak have no consciences and
cannot tell the difference between right and wrong. With a desire to
reward you for your kindness the beetle took from its lawful possessors
the money you pumped from the well."
"Perhaps it really is fairy gold,"
suggested the man. "If so, we must go to the town and spend the
money before it disappears."
"That would be wrong," answered the
pastor; "for then the merchants would have neither money nor goods.
To give them fairy gold would be to rob them."
"What, then, shall we do?" asked the
poor woman, wringing her hands with grief and disappointment.
"Go home and wait until to-morrow. If the
gold is then in your possession it is real money and not fairy gold. But
if it is real money you must try to restore it to its rightful owners.
Take, also, these pieces which you have given me, for I cannot accept
gold that is not honestly come by."
Sadly the poor people returned to their home,
being greatly disturbed by what they had heard. Another sleepless night
was passed, and on Monday morning they arose at daylight and ran to see
if the gold was still visible.
"It is real money, after all!" cried the
man; "for not a single piece has disappeared."
When the woman went to the brook that day she
looked for the beetle, and, sure enough, there he sat upon the flat
stone.
"Are you happy now?" asked the beetle,
as the woman paused before him.
"We are very unhappy," she answered;
"for, although you have given us much gold, our good parson says it
surely belongs to some one else, and was stolen by you to reward
us."
"Your parson may be a good man,"
returned the beetle, with some indignation, "but he certainly is
not overwise. Nevertheless, if you do not want the gold I can take it
from you as easily as I gave it."
"But we do want it!" cried the woman,
fearfully. "That is," she added, "if it is honestly come
by."
"It is not stolen," replied the beetle,
sulkily, "and now belongs to no one but yourselves. When you saved
my life I thought how I might reward you; and, knowing you to be poor, I
decided gold would make you happier than anything else.
"You must know," he continued,
"that although I appear so small and insignificant, I am really
king of all the insects, and my people obey my slightest wish. Living,
as they do, close to the ground, the insects often come across gold and
other pieces of money which have been lost by men and have fallen into
cracks or crevasses or become covered with earth or hidden by grass or
weeds. Whenever my people find money in this way they report the fact to
me; but I have always let it lie, because it could be of no possible use
to an insect.
"However, when I decided to give you gold I
knew just where to obtain it without robbing any of your fellow
creatures. Thousands of insects were at once sent by me in every
direction to bring the pieces of lost gold to his hill. It cost my
people several days of hard labor, as you may suppose; but by the time
your husband had finished the well the gold began to arrive from all
parts of the country, and during the night my subjects dumped it all
into the well. So you may use it with a clear conscience, knowing that
you wrong no one."
This explanation delighted the woman, and when she
returned to the house and reported to her husband what the beetle had
said he also was overjoyed.
So they at once took a number of the gold pieces
and went to the town to purchase provisions and clothing and many things
of which they had long stood in need; but so proud were they of their
newly acquired wealth that they took no pains to conceal it. They wanted
everyone to know they had money, and so it was no wonder that when some
of the wicked men in the village saw the gold they longed to possess it
themselves.
"If they spend this money so freely,"
whispered one to another, "there must be a great store of gold at
their home."
"That is true," was the answer.
"Let us hasten there before they return and ransack the
house."
So they left the village and hurried away to the
farm on the hill, where they broke down the door and turned everything
topsy turvy until they had discovered the gold in the wood-box and the
teapot. It did not take them long to make this into bundles, which they
slung upon their backs and carried off, and it was probably because they
were in a great hurry that they did not stop to put the house in order
again.
Presently the good woman and her husband came up
the hill from the village with their arms full of bundles and followed
by a crowd of small boys who had been hired to help carry the purchases.
Then followed others, youngsters and country louts, attracted by the
wealth and prodigality of the pair, who, from simple curiosity, trailed
along behind like the tail of a comet and helped swell the concourse
into a triumphal procession. Last of all came Guggins, the shopkeeper,
carrying with much tenderness a new silk dress which was to be paid for
when they reached the house, all the money they had taken to the village
having been lavishly expended.
The farmer, who had formerly been a modest man,
was now so swelled with pride that he tipped the rim of his hat over his
left ear and smoked a big cigar that was fast making him ill. His wife
strutted along beside him like a peacock, enjoying to the full the
homage and respect her wealth had won from those who formerly deigned
not to notice her, and glancing from time to time at the admiring
procession in the rear.
But, alas for their new-born pride! when they
reached the farmhouse they found the door broken in, the furniture
strewn in all directions and their treasure stolen to the very last gold
piece.
The crowd grinned and made slighting remarks of a
personal nature, and Guggins, the shopkeeper, demanded in a loud voice
the money for the silk dress he had brought.
Then the woman whispered to her husband to run and
pump some more gold while she kept the crowd quiet, and he obeyed
quickly. But after a few moments he returned with a white face to tell
her the pump was dry, and not a gold piece could now be coaxed from the
spout.
The procession marched back to the village
laughing and jeering at the farmer and his wife, who had pretended to be
so rich; and some of the boys were naughty enough to throw stones at the
house from the top of the hill. Mr. Guggins carried away his dress after
severely scolding the woman for deceiving him, and when the couple at
last found themselves alone their pride had turned to humiliation and
their joy to bitter grief.
Just before sundown the woman dried her eyes and,
having resumed her ordinary attire, went to the brook for water. When
she came to the flat stone she saw the King Beetle sitting upon it.
"The well is dry!" she cried out,
angrily.
"Yes," answered the beetle, calmly,
"you have pumped from it all the gold my people could find."
"But we are now ruined," said the woman,
sitting down in the path beginning to weep; "for robbers have
stolen from us every penny we possessed."
"I'm sorry," returned the beetle;
"but it is your own fault. Had you not made so great a show of your
wealth no one would have suspected you possessed a treasure, or thought
to rob you. As it is, you have merely lost the gold which others have
lost before you. It will probably be lost many times more before the
world comes to an end."
"But what are we to do now?" she asked.
"What did you do before I gave you the
money?"
"We worked from morning 'til night,"
said she.
"Then work still remains for you,"
remarked the beetle, composedly; "no one will ever try to rob you
of that, you may be sure!" And he slid from the stone and
disappeared for the last time.
* * * * *
This story should teach us to accept good fortune
with humble hearts and to use it with moderation. For, had the farmer
and his wife resisted the temptation to display their wealth
ostentatiously, they might have retained it to this very day.
THE DUMMY THAT LIVED
In all Fairyland there is no more mischievous a
person than Tanko-Mankie the Yellow Ryl. He flew through the city one
afternoon--quite invisible to moral eyes, but seeing everything
himself--and noticed a figure of a wax lady standing behind the big
plate glass window of Mr. Floman's department store.
The wax lady was beautifully dressed, and extended
in her stiff left hand was a card bearing the words:
"RARE BARGIN! This Stylish Costume (Imported
from Paris) Former Price, $20, REDUCED TO ONLY $19.98."
This impressive announcement had drawn before the
window a crowd of women shoppers, who stood looking at the wax lady with
critical eyes.
Tanko-Mankie laughed to himself the low, gurgling
little laugh that always means mischief. Then he flew close to the wax
figure and breathed twice upon its forehead.
From that instant the dummy began to live, but so
dazed and astonished was she at the unexpected sensation that she
continued to stand stupidly staring at the women outside and holding out
the placard as before.
The ryl laughed again and flew away. Anyone but
Tanko-Mankie would have remained to help the wax lady out of the
troubles that were sure to overtake her; but this naughty elf thought it
rare fun to turn the inexperienced lady loose in a cold and heartless
world and leave her to shift for herself.
Fortunately it was almost six o'clock when the
dummy first realized that she was alive, and before she had collected
her new thoughts and decided what to do a man came around and drew down
all the window shades, shutting off the view from the curious shoppers.
Then the clerks and cashiers and floorwalkers and
cash girls went home and the store was closed for the night, although
the sweepers and scrubbers remained to clean the floors for the
following day.
The window inhabited by the wax lady was boxed in,
like a little room, one small door being left at the side for the
window-trimmer to creep in and out of. So the scrubbers never noticed
that the dummy, when left to herself, dropped the placard to the floor
and sat down upon a pile of silks to wonder who she was, where she was,
and how she happened to be alive.
For you must consider, dear reader, that in spite
of her size and her rich costume, in spite of her pink cheeks and fluffy
yellow hair, this lady was very young--no older, in reality, than a baby
born but half an hour. All she knew of the world was contained in the
glimpse she had secured of the busy street facing her window; all she
knew of people lay in the actions of the group of women which had stood
before her on the other side of the window pane and criticised the fit
of her dress or remarked upon its stylish appearance.
So she had little enough to think about, and her
thoughts moved somewhat slowly; yet one thing she really decided upon,
and that was not to remain in the window and be insolently stared at by
a lot of women who were not nearly so handsome or well dressed as
herself.
By the time she reached this important conclusion,
it was after midnight; but dim lights were burning in the big, deserted
store, so she crept through the door of her window and walked down the
long aisles, pausing now and then to look with much curiosity at the
wealth of finery confronting her on every side.
When she came to the glass cases filled with
trimmed hats she remembered having seen upon the heads of the women in
the street similar creations. So she selected one that suited her fancy
and placed it carefully upon her yellow locks. I won't attempt to
explain what instinct it was that made her glance into a near-by mirror
to see if the hat was straight, but this she certainly did. It didn't
correspond with her dress very well, but the poor thing was too young to
have much taste in matching colors.
When she reached the glove counter she remembered
that gloves were also worn by the women she had seen. She took a pair
from the case and tried to fit them upon her stiff, wax-coated fingers;
but the gloves were too small and ripped in the seams. Then she tried
another pair, and several others, as well; but hours passed before she
finally succeeded in getting her hands covered with a pair of pea-green
kids.
Next she selected a parasol from a large and
varied assortment in the rear of the store. Not that she had any idea
what it was used for; but other ladies carried such things, so she also
would have one.
When she again examined herself critically in the
mirror she decided her outfit was now complete, and to her inexperienced
eyes there was no perceptible difference between her and the women who
had stood outside the window. Whereupon she tried to leave the store,
but found every door fast locked.
The wax lady was in no hurry. She inherited
patience from her previous existence. Just to be alive and to wear
beautiful clothes was sufficient enjoyment for her at present. So she
sat down upon a stool and waited quietly until daylight.
When the janitor unlocked the door in the morning
the wax lady swept past him and walked with stiff but stately strides
down the street. The poor fellow was so completely whuckered at seeing
the well-known wax lady leave her window and march away from the store
that he fell over in a heap and only saved himself from fainting by
striking his funny bone against the doorstep. When he recovered his wits
she had turned the corner and disappeared.
The wax lady's immature mind had reasoned that,
since she had come to life, her evident duty was to mix with the world
and do whatever other folks did. She could not realize how different she
was from people of flesh and blood; nor did she know she was the first
dummy that had ever lived, or that she owed her unique experience to
Tanko-Mankie's love of mischief. So ignorance gave her a confidence in
herself that she was not justly entitled to.
It was yet early in the day, and the few people
she met were hurrying along the streets. Many of them turned into
restaurants and eating houses, and following their example the wax lady
also entered one and sat upon a stool before a lunch counter.
"Coffee 'n' rolls!" said a shop girl on
the next stool.
"Coffee 'n' rolls!" repeated the dummy,
and soon the waiter placed them before her. Of course she had no
appetite, as her constitution, being mostly wood, did not require food;
but she watched the shop girl, and saw her put the coffee to her mouth
and drink it. Therefore the wax lady did the same, and the next instant
was surprised to feel the hot liquid trickling out between her wooden
ribs. The coffee also blistered her wax lips, and so disagreeable was
the experience that she arose and left the restaurant, paying no
attention to the demands of the waiter for "20 cents, mum."
Not that she intended to defraud him, but the poor creature had no idea
what he meant by "20 cents, mum."
As she came out she met the window trimmer at
Floman's store. The man was rather near-sighted, but seeing something
familiar in the lady's features he politely raised his hat. The wax lady
also raised her hat, thinking it the proper thing to do, and the man
hurried away with a horrified face.
Then a woman touched her arm and said:
"Beg pardon, ma'am; but there's a price-mark
hanging on your dress behind."
"Yes, I know," replied the wax lady,
stiffly; "it was originally $20, but it's been reduced to
$19.98."
The woman looked surprised at such indifference
and walked on. Some carriages were standing at the edge of the sidewalk,
and seeing the dummy hesitate a driver approached her and touched his
cap.
"Cab, ma'am?" he asked.
"No," said she, misunderstanding him;
"I'm wax."
"Oh!" he exclaimed, and looked after her
wonderingly.
"Here's yer mornin' paper!" yelled a
newsboy.
"Mine, did you say?" she asked.
"Sure! Chronicle, 'Quirer, R'public 'n' 'Spatch!
Wot'll ye 'ave?"
"What are they for?" inquired the wax
lady, simply.
"W'y, ter read, o' course. All the news, you
know."
She shook her head and glanced at a paper.
"It looks all speckled and mixed up,"
she said. "I'm afraid I can't read."
"Ever ben to school?" asked the boy,
becoming interested.
"No; what's school?" she inquired.
The boy gave her an indignant look.
"Say!" he cried, "ye'r just a
dummy, that's wot ye are!" and ran away to seek a more promising
customer.
"I wonder that he means," thought the
poor lady. "Am I really different in some way from all the others?
I look like them, certainly; and I try to act like them; yet that boy
called me a dummy and seemed to think I acted queerly."
This idea worried her a little, but she walked on
to the corner, where she noticed a street car stop to let some people
on. The wax lady, still determined to do as others did, also boarded the
car and sat down quietly in a corner.
After riding a few blocks the conductor approached
her and said:
"Fare, please!"
"What's that?" she inquired, innocently.
"Your fare!" said the man, impatiently.
She stared at him stupidly, trying to think what
he meant.
"Come, come!" growled the conductor,
"either pay up or get off!"
Still she did not understand, and he grabbed her
rudely by the arm and lifted her to her feet. But when his hand came in
contact with the hard wood of which her arm was made the fellow was
filled with surprise. He stooped down and peered into her face, and,
seeing it was wax instead of flesh, he gave a yell of fear and jumped
from the car, running as if he had seen a ghost.
At this the other passengers also yelled and
sprang from the car, fearing a collision; and the motorman, knowing
something was wrong, followed suit. The wax lady, seeing the others run,
jumped from the car last of all, and stepped in front of another car
coming at full speed from the opposite direction.
She heard cries of fear and of warning on all
sides, but before she understood her danger she was knocked down and
dragged for half a block.
When the car was brought to a stop a policeman
reached down and pulled her from under the wheels. Her dress was badly
torn and soiled. Her left ear was entirely gone, and the left side of
her head was caved in; but she quickly scrambled to her feet and asked
for her hat. This a gentleman had already picked up, and when the
policeman handed it to her and noticed the great hole in her head and
the hollow place it disclosed, the poor fellow trembled so frightfully
that his knees actually knocked together.
"Why--why, ma'am, you're killed!" he
gasped.
"What does it mean to be killed?" asked
the wax lady.
The policeman shuddered and wiped the perspiration
from his forehead.
"You're it!" he answered, with a groan.
The crowd that had collected were looking upon the
lady wonderingly, and a middle-aged gentleman now exclaimed:
"Why, she's wax!"
"Wax!" echoed the policeman.
"Certainly. She's one of those dummies they
put in the windows," declared the middle-aged man.
The people who had collected shouted: "You're
right!" "That's what she is!" "She's a dummy!"
"Are you?" inquired the policeman,
sternly.
The wax lady did not reply. She began to fear she
was getting into trouble, and the staring crowd seemed to embarrass her.
Suddenly a bootblack attempted to solve the
problem by saying: "You guys is all wrong! Can a dummy talk? Can a
dummy walk? Can a dummy live?"
"Hush!" murmured the policeman.
"Look here!" and he pointed to the hold in the lady's head.
The newsboy looked, turned pale and whistled to keep himself from
shivering.
A second policeman now arrived, and after a brief
conference it was decided to take the strange creature to headquarters.
So they called a hurry-up wagon, and the damaged wax lady was helped
inside and driven to the police station. There the policeman locked her
in a cell and hastened to tell Inspector Mugg their wonderful story.
Inspector Mugg had just eaten a poor breakfast,
and was not in a pleasant mood; so he roared and stormed at the unlucky
policemen, saying they were themselves dummies to bring such a fairy
tale to a man of sense. He also hinted that they had been guilty of
intemperance.
The policemen tried to explain, but Inspector Mugg
would not listen; and while they were still disputing in rushed Mr.
Floman, the owner of the department store.
"I want a dozen detectives, at once,
inspector!" he cried.
"What for?" demanded Mugg.
"One of the wax ladies has escaped from my
store and eloped with a $19.98 costume, a $4.23 hat, a $2.19 parasol and
a 76-cent pair of gloves, and I want her arrested!"
While he paused for breath the inspector glared at
him in amazement.
"Is everybody going crazy at the same
time?" he inquired, sarcastically. "How could a wax dummy run
away?"
"I don't know; but she did. When my janitor
opened the door this morning he saw her run out."
"Why didn't he stop her?" asked Mugg.
"He was too frightened. But she's stolen my
property, your honor, and I want her arrested!" declared the
storekeeper.
The inspector thought for a moment.
"You wouldn't be able to prosecute her,"
he said, "for there's no law against dummies stealing."
Mr. Floman sighed bitterly.
"Am I to lose that $19.98 costume and the
$4.25 hat and--"
"By no means," interrupted Inspector
Mugg. "The police of this city are ever prompt to act in defense of
our worthy citizens. We have already arrested the wax lady, and she is
locked up in cell No. 16. You may go there and recover your property, if
you wish, but before you prosecute her for stealing you'd better hunt up
a law that applies to dummies."
"All I want," said Mr. Floman, "is
that $19.98 costume and--"
"Come along!" interrupted the policeman.
"I'll take you to the cell."
But when they entered No. 16 they found only a
lifeless dummy lying prone upon the floor. Its wax was cracked and
blistered, its head was badly damaged, and the bargain costume was
dusty, soiled and much bedraggled. For the mischief-loving Tanko-Mankie
had flown by and breathed once more upon the poor wax lady, and in that
instant her brief life ended.
"It's just as I thought," said Inspector
Mugg, leaning back in his chair contentedly. "I knew all the time
the thing was a fake. It seems sometimes as though the whole world would
go crazy if there wasn't some level-headed man around to bring 'em to
their senses. Dummies are wood an' wax, an' that's all there is of 'em."
"That may be the rule," whispered the
policeman to himself, "but this one were a dummy as lived!"
THE KING of the POLAR BEARS
The King of the Polar Bears lived among the
icebergs in the far north country. He was old and monstrous big; he was
wise and friendly to all who knew him. His body was thickly covered with
long, white hair that glistened like silver under the rays of the
midnight sun. His claws were strong and sharp, that he might walk safely
over the smooth ice or grasp and tear the fishes and seals upon which he
fed.
The seals were afraid when he drew near, and tried
to avoid him; but the gulls, both white and gray, loved him because he
left the remnants of his feasts for them to devour.
Often his subjects, the polar bears, came to him
for advice when ill or in trouble; but they wisely kept away from his
hunting grounds, lest they might interfere with his sport and arouse his
anger.
The wolves, who sometimes came as far north as the
icebergs, whispered among themselves that the King of the Polar Bears
was either a magician or under the protection of a powerful fairy. For
no earthly thing seemed able to harm him; he never failed to secure
plenty of food, and he grew bigger and stronger day by day and year by
year.
Yet the time came when this monarch of the north
met man, and his wisdom failed him.
He came out of his cave among the icebergs one day
and saw a boat moving through the strip of water which had been
uncovered by the shifting of the summer ice. In the boat were men.
The great bear had never seen such creatures
before, and therefore advanced toward the boat, sniffing the strange
scent with aroused curiosity and wondering whether he might take them
for friends or foes, food or carrion.
When the king came near the water's edge a man
stood up in the boat and with a queer instrument made a loud
"bang!" The polar bear felt a shock; his brain became numb;
his thoughts deserted him; his great limbs shook and gave way beneath
him and his body fell heavily upon the hard ice.
That was all he remembered for a time.
When he awoke he was smarting with pain on every
inch of his huge bulk, for the men had cut away his hide with its
glorious white hair and carried it with them to a distant ship.
Above him circled thousands of his friends the
gulls, wondering if their benefactor were really dead and it was proper
to eat him. But when they saw him raise his head and groan and tremble
they knew he still lived, and one of them said to his comrades:
"The wolves were right. The king is a great
magician, for even men cannot kill him. But he suffers for lack of
covering. Let us repay his kindness to us by each giving him as many
feathers as we can spare."
This idea pleased the gulls. One after another
they plucked with their beaks the softest feathers from under their
wings, and, flying down, dropped then gently upon the body of the King
of the Polar Bears.
Then they called to him in a chorus:
"Courage, friend! Our feathers are as soft
and beautiful as your own shaggy hair. They will guard you from the cold
winds and warm you while you sleep. Have courage, then, and live!"
And the King of the Polar Bears had courage to
bear his pain and lived and was strong again.
The feathers grew as they had grown upon the
bodies of the birds and covered him as his own hair had done. Mostly
they were pure white in color, but some from the gray gulls gave his
majesty a slight mottled appearance.
The rest of that summer and all through the six
months of night the king left his icy cavern only to fish or catch seals
for food. He felt no shame at his feathery covering, but it was still
strange to him, and he avoided meeting any of his brother bears.
During this period of retirement he thought much
of the men who had harmed him, and remembered the way they had made the
great "bang!" And he decided it was best to keep away from
such fierce creatures. Thus he added to his store of wisdom.
When the moon fell away from the sky and the sun
came to make the icebergs glitter with the gorgeous tintings of the
rainbow, two of the polar bears arrived at the king's cavern to ask his
advice about the hunting season. But when they saw his great body
covered with feathers instead of hair they began to laugh, and one said:
"Our mighty king has become a bird! Who ever
before heard of a feathered polar bear?"
Then the king gave way to wrath. He advanced upon
them with deep growls and stately tread and with one blow of his
monstrous paw stretched the mocker lifeless at his feet.
The other ran away to his fellows and carried the
news of the king's strange appearance. The result was a meeting of all
the polar bears upon a broad field of ice, where they talked gravely of
the remarkable change that had come upon their monarch.
"He is, in reality, no longer a bear,"
said one; "nor can he justly be called a bird. But he is half bird
and half bear, and so unfitted to remain our king."
"Then who shall take his place?" asked
another.
"He who can fight the bird-bear and overcome
him," answered an aged member of the group. "Only the
strongest is fit to rule our race."
There was silence for a time, but at length a
great bear moved to the front and said:
"I will fight him; I--Woof--the strongest of
our race! And I will be King of the Polar Bears."
The others nodded assent, and dispatched a
messenger to the king to say he must fight the great Woof and master him
or resign his sovereignty.
"For a bear with feathers," added the
messenger, "is no bear at all, and the king we obey must resemble
the rest of us."
"I wear feathers because it pleases me,"
growled the king. "Am I not a great magician? But I will fight,
nevertheless, and if Woof masters me he shall be king in my stead."
Then he visited his friends, the gulls, who were
even then feasting upon the dead bear, and told them of the coming
battle.
"I shall conquer," he said, proudly.
"Yet my people are in the right, for only a hairy one like
themselves can hope to command their obedience."
The queen gull said:
"I met an eagle yesterday, which had made its
escape from a big city of men. And the eagle told me he had seen a
monstrous polar bear skin thrown over the back of a carriage that rolled
along the street. That skin must have been yours, oh king, and if you
wish I will sent an hundred of my gulls to the city to bring it back to
you."
"Let them go!" said the king, gruffly.
And the hundred gulls were soon flying rapidly southward.
For three days they flew straight as an arrow,
until they came to scattered houses, to villages, and to cities. Then
their search began.
The gulls were brave, and cunning, and wise. Upon
the fourth day they reached the great metropolis, and hovered over the
streets until a carriage rolled along with a great white bear robe
thrown over the back seat. Then the birds swooped down--the whole
hundred of them--and seizing the skin in their beaks flew quickly away.
They were late. The king's great battle was upon
the seventh day, and they must fly swiftly to reach the Polar regions by
that time.
Meanwhile the bird-bear was preparing for his
fight. He sharpened his claws in the small crevasses of the ice. He
caught a seal and tested his big yellow teeth by crunching its bones
between them. And the queen gull set her band to pluming the king bear's
feathers until they lay smoothly upon his body.
But every day they cast anxious glances into the
southern sky, watching for the hundred gulls to bring back the king's
own skin.
The seventh day came, and all the Polar bears in
that region gathered around the king's cavern. Among them was Woof,
strong and confident of his success.
"The bird-bear's feathers will fly fast
enough when I get my claws upon him!" he boasted; and the others
laughed and encouraged him.
The king was disappointed at not having recovered
his skin, but he resolved to fight bravely without it. He advanced from
the opening of his cavern with a proud and kingly bearing, and when he
faced his enemy he gave so terrible a growl that Woof's heart stopped
beating for a moment, and he began to realize that a fight with the wise
and mighty king of his race was no laughing matter.
After exchanging one or two heavy blows with his
foe Woof's courage returned, and he determined to dishearten his
adversary by bluster.
"Come nearer, bird-bear!" he cried.
"Come nearer, that I may pluck your plumage!"
The defiance filled the king with rage. He ruffled
his feathers as a bird does, till he appeared to be twice his actual
size, and then he strode forward and struck Woof so powerful a blow that
his skull crackled like an egg-shell and he fell prone upon the ground.
While the assembled bears stood looking with fear
and wonder at their fallen champion the sky became darkened.
An hundred gulls flew down from above and dripped
upon the king's body a skin covered with pure white hair that glittered
in the sun like silver.
And behold! the bears saw before them the
well-known form of their wise and respected master, and with one accord
they bowed their shaggy heads in homage to the mighty King of the Polar
Bears.
* * * * *
This story teaches us that true dignity and
courage depend not upon outward appearance, but come rather from within;
also that brag and bluster are poor weapons to carry into battle.
The MANDARIN and the BUTTERFLY
A mandarin once lived in Kiang-ho who was so
exceedingly cross and disagreeable that everyone hated him. He snarled
and stormed at every person he met and was never known to laugh or be
merry under any circumstances. Especially he hated boys and girls; for
the boys jeered at him, which aroused his wrath, and the girls made fun
of him, which hurt his pride.
When he had become so unpopular that no one would
speak to him, the emperor heard about it and commanded him to emigrate
to America. This suited the mandarin very well; but before he left China
he stole the Great Book of Magic that belonged to the wise magician
Haot-sai. Then, gathering up his little store of money, he took ship for
America.
He settled in a city of the middle west and of
course started a laundry, since that seems to be the natural vocation of
every Chinaman, be he coolie or mandarin.
He made no acquaintances with the other Chinamen
of the town, who, when they met him and saw the red button in his hat,
knew him for a real mandarin and bowed low before him. He put up a red
and white sign and people brought their laundry to him and got paper
checks, with Chinese characters upon them, in exchange, this being the
only sort of character the mandarin had left.
One day as the ugly one was ironing in his shop in
the basement of 263 1/2 Main street, he looked up and saw a crowd of
childish faces pressed against the window. Most Chinamen make friends
with children; this one hated them and tried to drive them away. But as
soon as he returned to his work they were back at the window again,
mischievously smiling down upon him.
The naughty mandarin uttered horrid words in the
Manchu language and made fierce gestures; but this did no good at all.
The children stayed as long as they pleased, and they came again the
very next day as soon as school was over, and likewise the next day, and
the next. For they saw their presence at the window bothered the
Chinaman and were delighted accordingly.
The following day being Sunday the children did
not appear, but as the mandarin, being a heathen, worked in his little
shop a big butterfly flew in at the open door and fluttered about the
room.
The mandarin closed the door and chased the
butterfly until he caught it, when he pinned it against the wall by
sticking two pins through its beautiful wings. This did not hurt the
butterfly, there being no feeling in its wings; but it made him a safe
prisoner.
This butterfly was of large size and its wings
were exquisitely marked by gorgeous colors laid out in regular designs
like the stained glass windows of a cathedral.
The mandarin now opened his wooden chest and drew
forth the Great Book of Magic he had stolen from Haot-sai. Turning the
pages slowly he came to a passage describing "How to understand the
language of butterflies." This he read carefully and then mixed a
magic formula in a tin cup and drank it down with a wry face.
Immediately thereafter he spoke to the butterfly in its own language,
saying:
"Why did you enter this room?"
"I smelled bees-wax," answered the
butterfly; "therefore I thought I might find honey here."
"But you are my prisoner," said the
mandarin. "If I please I can kill you, or leave you on the wall to
starve to death."
"I expect that," replied the butterfly,
with a sigh. "But my race is shortlived, anyway; it doesn't matter
whether death comes sooner or later."
"Yet you like to live, do you not?"
asked the mandarin.
"Yet; life is pleasant and the world is
beautiful. I do not seek death."
"Then," said the mandarin, "I will
give you life--a long and pleasant life--if you will promise to obey me
for a time and carry out my instructions."
"How can a butterfly serve a man?" asked
the creature, in surprise.
"Usually they cannot," was the reply.
"But I have a book of magic which teaches me strange things. Do you
promise?"
"Oh, yes; I promise," answered the
butterfly; "for even as your slave I will get some enjoyment out of
life, while should you kill me--that is the end of everything!"
"Truly," said the mandarin,
"butterflies have no souls, and therefore cannot live again."
"But I have enjoyed three lives
already," returned the butterfly, with some pride. "I have
been a caterpillar and a chrysalis before I became a butterfly. You were
never anything but a Chinaman, although I admit your life is longer than
mine."
"I will extend your life for many days, if
you will obey me," declared the Chinaman. "I can easily do so
by means of my magic."
"Of course I will obey you," said the
butterfly, carelessly.
"Then, listen! You know children, do you
not?--boys and girls?"
"Yes, I know them. They chase me, and try to
catch me, as you have done," replied the butterfly.
"And they mock me, and jeer at me through the
window," continued the mandarin, bitterly. "Therefore, they
are your enemies and mine! But with your aid and the help of the magic
book we shall have a fine revenge for their insults."
"I don't care much for revenge," said
the butterfly. "They are but children, and 'tis natural they should
wish to catch such a beautiful creature as I am."
"Nevertheless, I care! and you must obey
me," retorted the mandarin, harshly. "I, at least, will have
my revenge."
Then he stuck a drop of molasses upon the wall
beside the butterfly's head and said:
"Eat that, while I read my book and prepare
my magic formula."
So the butterfly feasted upon the molasses and the
mandarin studied his book, after which he began to mix a magic compound
in the tin cup.
When the mixture was ready he released the
butterfly from the wall and said to it:
"I command you to dip your two front feet
into this magic compound and then fly away until you meet a child. Fly
close, whether it be a boy or a girl, and touch the child upon its
forehead with your feet. Whosoever is thus touched, the book declares,
will at once become a pig, and will remain such forever after. Then
return to me and dip you legs afresh in the contents of this cup. So
shall all my enemies, the children, become miserable swine, while no one
will think of accusing me of the sorcery."
"Very well; since such is your command, I
obey," said the butterfly. Then it dipped its front legs, which
were the shortest of the six, into the contents of the tin cup, and flew
out of the door and away over the houses to the edge of the town. There
it alighted in a flower garden and soon forgot all about its mission to
turn children into swine.
In going from flower to flower it soon brushed the
magic compound from its legs, so that when the sun began to set and the
butterfly finally remembered its master, the mandarin, it could not have
injured a child had it tried.
But it did not intend to try.
"That horrid old Chinaman," it thought,
"hates children and wishes to destroy them. But I rather like
children myself and shall not harm them. Of course I must return to my
master, for he is a magician, and would seek me out and kill me; but I
can deceive him about this matter easily enough."
When the butterfly flew in at the door of the
mandarin's laundry he asked, eagerly:
"Well, did you meet a child?"
"I did," replied the butterfly, calmly.
"It was a pretty, golden-haired girl--but now 'tis a grunting
pig!"
"Good! Good! Good!" cried the mandarin,
dancing joyfully about the room. "You shall have molasses for your
supper, and to-morrow you must change two children into pigs."
The butterfly did not reply, but ate the molasses
in silence. Having no soul it had no conscience, and having no
conscience it was able to lie to the mandarin with great readiness and a
certain amount of enjoyment.
Next morning, by the mandarin's command, the
butterfly dipped its legs in the mixture and flew away in search of
children.
When it came to the edge of the town it noticed a
pig in a sty, and alighting upon the rail of the sty it looked down at
the creature and thought.
"If I could change a child into a pig by
touching it with the magic compound, what could I change a pig into, I
wonder?"
Being curious to determine this fine point in
sorcery the butterfly fluttered down and touched its front feet to the
pig's nose. Instantly the animal disappeared, and in its place was a
shock-headed, dirty looking boy, which sprang from the sty and ran down
the road uttering load whoops.
"That's funny," said the butterfly to
itself. "The mandarin would be very angry with me if he knew of
this, for I have liberated one more of the creatures that bother
him."
It fluttered along after the boy, who had paused
to throw stones at a cat. But pussy escaped by running up a tree, where
thick branches protected her from the stones. Then the boy discovered a
newly-planted garden, and trampled upon the beds until the seeds were
scattered far and wide, and the garden was ruined. Next he caught up a
switch and struck with it a young calf that stood quietly grazing in a
field. The poor creature ran away with piteous bleats, and the boy
laughed and followed after it, striking the frightened animal again and
again.
"Really," thought the butterfly, "I
do not wonder the mandarin hates children, if they are all so cruel and
wicked as this one."
The calf having escaped him the boy came back to
the road, where he met two little girls on their way to school. One of
them had a red apple in her hand, and the boy snatched it away and began
eating it. The little girl commenced to cry, but her companion, more
brave and sturdy, cried out:
"You ought to be ashamed of yourself, you
nasty boy!"
At this the boy reached out and slapped her pretty
face, whereupon she also began to sob.
Although possessed of neither soul nor conscience,
the butterfly had a very tender heart, and now decided it could endure
this boy no longer.
"If I permitted him to exist," it
reflected, "I should never forgive myself, for the monster would do
nothing but evil from morning 'til night."
So it flew directly into his face and touched his
forehead with its sticky front feet.
The next instant the boy had disappeared, but a
grunting pig ran swiftly up the road in the direction of its sty.
The butterfly gave a sigh of relief.
"This time I have indeed used the mandarin's
magic upon a child," it whispered, as it floated lazily upon the
light breeze; "but since the child was originally a pig I do not
think I have any cause to reproach myself. The little girls were sweet
and gentle, and I would not injure them to save my life, but were all
boys like this transformed pig, I should not hesitate to carry out the
mandarin's orders."
Then it flew into a rose bush, where it remained
comfortably until evening. At sundown it returned to its master.
"Have you changed two of them into
pigs?" he asked, at once.
"I have," replied the butterfly.
"One was a pretty, black-eyed baby, and the other a freckle-faced,
red-haired, barefooted newboy."
"Good! Good! Good!" screamed the
mandarin, in an ecstasy of delight. "Those are the ones who torment
me the most! Change every newboy you meet into a pig!"
"Very well," answered the butterfly,
quietly, and ate its supper of molasses.
Several days were passed by the butterfly in the
same manner. It fluttered aimlessly about the flower gardens while the
sun shone, and returned at night to the mandarin with false tales of
turning children into swine. Sometimes it would be one child which was
transformed, sometimes two, and occasionally three; but the mandarin
always greeted the butterfly's report with intense delight and gave him
molasses for supper.
One evening, however, the butterfly thought it
might be well to vary the report, so that the mandarin might not grow
suspicious; and when its master asked what child had been had been
changed into a pig that day the lying creature answered:
"It was a Chinese boy, and when I touched him
he became a black pig."
This angered the mandarin, who was in an
especially cross mood. He spitefully snapped the butterfly with his
finger, and nearly broke its beautiful wing; for he forgot that Chinese
boys had once mocked him and only remembered his hatred for American
boys.
The butterfly became very indignant at this abuse
from the mandarin. It refused to eat its molasses and sulked all the
evening, for it had grown to hate the mandarin almost as much as the
mandarin hated children.
When morning came it was still trembling with
indignation; but the mandarin cried out:
"Make haste, miserable slave; for to-day you
must change four children into pigs, to make up for yesterday."
The butterfly did not reply. His little black eyes
were sparkling wickedly, and no sooner had he dipped his feet into the
magic compound than he flew full in the mandarin's face, and touched him
upon his ugly, flat forehead.
Soon after a gentleman came into the room for his
laundry. The mandarin was not there, but running around the place was a
repulsive, scrawny pig, which squealed most miserably.
The butterfly flew away to a brook and washed from
its feet all traces of the magic compound. When night came it slept in a
rose bush.
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