Charlotte’s Web and other classic animal stories: Charlotte’s Web, The Trumpet of the Swan, Stuart Little. Garth Williams
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СКАЧАТЬ a wondrous pig he owned.

      ‘Lurvy!’ he called. ‘There is to be no more cow manure thrown down into that pigpen. I have a terrific pig. I want that pig to have clean, bright straw every day for his bedding. Understand?’

      ‘Yes, sir,’ said Lurvy.

      ‘Furthermore,’ said Mr Zuckerman, ‘I want you to start building a crate for Wilbur. I have decided to take the pig to the County Fair on September sixth. Make the crate large and paint it green with gold letters!’

      ‘What will the letters say?’ asked Lurvy.

      ‘They should say Zuckerman’s Famous Pig.’

      Lurvy picked up a pitchfork and walked away to get some clean straw. Having such an important pig was going to mean plenty of extra work, he could see that.

      Below the apple orchard, at the end of the path, was the dump where Mr Zuckerman threw all sorts of trash and stuff that nobody wanted any more. Here, in a small clearing hidden by young alders and wild raspberry bushes, was an astonishing pile of old bottles and empty tin cans and dirty rags and bits of metal and broken bottles and broken hinges and broken springs and dead batteries and last month’s magazines and old discarded dishmops and tattered overalls and rusty spikes and leaky pails and forgotten stoppers and useless junk of all kinds, including a wrong-size crank for a broken ice-cream freezer.

      Templeton knew the dump and liked it. There were good hiding-places there – excellent cover for a rat. And there was usually a tin can with food still clinging to the inside.

      Templeton was down there now, rummaging around. When he returned to the barn, he carried in his mouth an advertisement he had torn from a crumpled magazine.

      ‘How’s this?’ he asked, showing the ad to Charlotte. ‘It says CRUNCHY. “Crunchy” would be a good word to write in your web.’

      ‘Just the wrong idea,’ replied Charlotte. ‘Couldn’t be worse. We don’t want Zuckerman to think Wilbur is crunchy. He might start thinking about crisp, crunchy bacon and tasty ham. That would put ideas into his head. We must advertise Wilbur’s noble qualities, not his tastiness. Go get another word, please, Templeton!’

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      The rat looked disgusted. But he sneaked away to the dump and was back in a while with a strip of cotton cloth. ‘How’s this?’ he asked. ‘It’s a label off an old shirt.’

      Charlotte examined the label. It said PRESHRUNK.

      ‘I’m sorry, Templeton,’ she said, ‘but PRESHRUNK is out of the question. We want Zuckerman to think Wilbur is nicely filled out, not all shrunk up. I’ll have to ask you to try again.’

      ‘What do you think I am, a messenger boy?’ grumbled the rat. ‘I’m not going to spend all my time chasing down to the dump after advertising material.’

      ‘Just once more – please!’ said Charlotte.

      ‘I’ll tell you what I’ll do,’ said Templeton. ‘I know where there’s a package of soap flakes in the woodshed. It has writing on it. I’ll bring you a piece of the package.’

      He climbed the rope that hung on the wall and disappeared through a hole in the ceiling. When he came back he had a strip of blue-and-white cardboard in his teeth.

      ‘There!’ he said, triumphantly. ‘How’s that?’

      Charlotte read the words. ‘With New Radiant Action.’

      ‘What does it mean?’ asked Charlotte, who had never used any soap flakes in her life.

      ‘How should I know?’ said Templeton. ‘You asked for words and I brought them. I suppose the next thing you’ll want me to fetch is a dictionary.’

      Together they studied the soap ad. ‘With new radiant action,’ repeated Charlotte, slowly. ‘Wilbur!’ she called.

      Wilbur, who was asleep in the straw, jumped up.

      ‘Run around!’ commanded Charlotte. ‘I want to see you in action, to see if you are radiant.’

      Wilbur raced to the end of his yard.

      ‘Now back again, faster!’ said Charlotte.

      Wilbur galloped back. His skin shone. His tail had a fine, tight curl in it.

      ‘Jump into the air!’ cried Charlotte.

      Wilbur jumped as high as he could.

      ‘Keep your knees straight and touch the ground with your ears!’ called Charlotte.

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      Wilbur obeyed.

      ‘Do a back flip with a half twist in it!’ cried Charlotte.

      Wilbur went over backwards, writhing and twisting as he went.

      ‘OK, Wilbur,’ said Charlotte. ‘You can go back to sleep. OK, Templeton, the soap ad. will do, I guess. I’m not sure Wilbur’s action is exactly radiant, but it’s interesting.’

      ‘Actually,’ said Wilbur, ‘I feel radiant.’

      ‘Do you?’ said Charlotte, looking at him with affection. ‘Well, you’re a good little pig, and radiant you shall be. I’m in this thing pretty deep now – I might as well go the limit.’

      Tired from his romp, Wilbur lay down in the clean straw. He closed his eyes. The straw seemed scratchy – not as comfortable as the cow manure, which was always delightfully soft to lie in. So he pushed the straw to one side and stretched out in the manure. Wilbur sighed. It had been a busy day – his first day of being terrific. Dozens of people had visited his yard during the afternoon, and he had had to stand and pose, looking as terrific as he could. Now he was tired. Fern had arrived and seated herself quietly on her stool in the corner.

      ‘Tell me a story, Charlotte!’ said Wilbur, as he lay waiting for sleep to come. ‘Tell me a story!’

      So Charlotte, although she, too, was tired, did what Wilbur wanted.

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      ‘Once upon a time,’ she began, ‘I had a beautiful cousin who managed to build her web across a small stream. One day a tiny fish leaped into the air and got tangled in the web. My cousin was very much surprised, of course. The fish was thrashing wildly. My cousin hardly dared tackle it. But she did. She swooped down and threw great masses of wrapping material around the fish and fought bravely to capture it.’

      ‘Did she succeed?’ asked Wilbur.

      ‘It was a never-to-be-forgotten battle,’ said Charlotte. ‘There was the fish, caught only by one fin, and its tail wildly thrashing and shining in the sun. There was the web, sagging dangerously under the weight of the fish.’

      ‘How much did the fish weigh?’ asked Wilbur eagerly.

      ‘I СКАЧАТЬ