Название: Uncle Wiggily's Story Book
Автор: Howard R. Garis
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Публицистика: прочее
isbn: 9781420970036
isbn:
“Pull a tooth! Why, your teeth are all right!” cried Dr. Possum.
“It’s to give a little lesson to a boy,” whispered the bunny, and then Dr. Possum blinked one eye, in understanding fashion.
A little later Uncle Wiggily sat himself down on the old stump that looked like a chair, and Dr. Possum stood over him.
“Open your mouth and show me which tooth it is that hurts,” said Dr. Possum, just like a dentist.
“All right,” answered Uncle Wiggily, and, from the corner of his left eye the bunny gentleman could see the Toothache Boy at the window looking out. The boy saw the rabbit and Dr. Possum at the old stump, and he saw Mr. Longears open his mouth and point with his paw to a tooth.
“Oh, Mother!” cried the boy, very much excited. “Look! There’s a funny rabbit, all dressed up in a tall silk hat, having a tooth pulled. Grandma, look!”
“Well, I do declare!” murmured the old lady. “Isn’t that perfectly wonderful! I didn’t know that animals ever had the toothache!”
“Oh, I s’pose they do, once in a while,” said the Toothache Boy’s mother. “But see how brave that rabbit gentleman is! Not to mind having the animal dentist stop his ache! Just fancy!”
Neither Grandma nor Mother said anything to Sonny Boy. All three of them just stood at the window, and watched Uncle Wiggily and Dr. Possum. And, as they looked, Dr. Possum put a little shiny thing, like a buttonhook, in the bunny gentleman’s mouth. He gave a sudden little pull and, a moment later, held up something which sparkled in the sun. It was only a bit of glass, which Uncle Wiggily had held in his paw ready for this part in the little play, but it looked like a tooth.
“Well, I declare!” laughed Grandma. “The bunny had his tooth pulled!”
“And he doesn’t seem to mind it at all,” added Mother.
Surely enough, Uncle Wiggily hopped off the make-believe dentist-stump, and with his red, white and blue striped rheumatism crutch, began to dance a little jiggity-jig with Dr. Possum.
“This dance is to show that it doesn’t hurt even to have a tooth pulled; much less to have one filled,” said the bunny.
“I understand!” laughed Dr. Possum. And as he and Uncle Wiggily danced, they looked, out of the corners of their eyes, and saw the Toothache Boy standing at the window watching them.
“Well, I never, in all my born days, saw a sight like that!” exclaimed Grandma.
“Nor I,” said Mother. “Isn’t it wonderful!”
Sonny Boy took his hand down from his mouth.
“I—I guess, Mother,” he said, as he saw Uncle Wiggily jump over his crutch in a most happy fashion, “I guess I’ll go to the dentist, and have him stop my toothache!”
“Hurray!” softly cried Uncle Wiggily, who heard what the boy said. “This is just what I wanted to happen, Dr. Possum! Our little lesson is over. Now we may go!”
Away hopped the bunny, to tell Nurse Jane about the strange adventure, and Dr. Possum, with his bag of powders and pills on his tail, where he always carried it, shuffled back to his office.
Sonny Boy went to the dentist’s, and soon his tooth was fixed so it would not ache again. He hardly felt at all what the dentist did to him.
“I—I didn’t know how easy it was ’till I saw the rabbit have his tooth pulled,” said the boy to the dentist.
“Hum,” said the dentist, noncommittal-like, “some rabbits are very funny!”
And if the puppy dog doesn’t waggle his tail so hard that he knocks over the milk bottle when it’s trying to slide down the doormat, I shall have the pleasure, next, of telling you the story of Uncle Wiggily and the freckled girl.
Story II. Uncle Wiggily and the Freckled Girl
Uncle Wiggily was hopping through the woods one summer day, when, as he happened to stop to get a drink of some water that the rain-clouds had dropped in the cup of a Jack-in-the-pulpit flower, the bunny gentleman heard a girl saying:
“Oh, I wish I could get them off! I wish I could scrub them off with sandpaper, or something like that! I’ve tried lemon juice and vinegar, but they won’t go. And oh, they make me so homely!”
Uncle Wiggily stopped suddenly and rubbed the end of his pink, twinkling nose with the brim of his tall, silk hat.
“This is very queer,” said the bunny uncle to himself. “I wonder what is it she has tried to take off with lemon juice? She seems very unhappy, this little girl does.”
The bunny uncle looked through the trees and, seated on a green, mossy stump, he saw a girl about ten or twelve years old. She held a looking-glass in her hand, and as she glanced at her likeness in the mirror she kept saying:
“How can I get them off? How can I make them disappear so I will be beautiful? Oh, how I hate them!”
“What in the world can be the matter?” thought Uncle Wiggily to himself. For, as I have told you, the bunny gentleman was now able to hear and understand the talk of girls and boys, though he could not himself speak that language.
He hopped a little closer to the unhappy girl on the green, mossy stump, but the bunny stepped so softly on the leaf carpet of the forest that scarcely a sound did he make, and the girl with the mirror never heard him.
“I wonder if I said a little verse, such as I have read in fairy books, whether they would go away?” murmured the girl. “I’ve tried everything but that. I’ll do it—I’ll say a magical verse! But I must make up one, for I never have read of the kind I want in any book.”
She seemed to be thinking deeply for a moment and then, shutting her eyes, and looking up at the sun which was shining through the trees of the wood, the girl recited this little verse:
“Sun, sun, who made them come,
Make them go away.
Then I’ll be like other girls,
Happy all the day!”
“This is like a puzzle, or a riddle,” whispered Uncle Wiggily to himself, as he kept out of sight behind a bush near the stump. “What is it she wants the sun to make go away? It can’t be rain, or storm clouds, for the sky is as blue as a baby’s eyes. I wonder what it is?”
Then, as the girl took up the mirror again, and looked in it, Uncle Wiggily saw the reflection of her face.
It was covered with dear, little brown freckles!
“Ho! Ho!” softly crooned Uncle Wiggily to himself. “Now I understand. This girl is unhappy because she is freckled. She thinks she doesn’t look pretty with them! Why, if she only knew it, those freckles show how strong and healthy she СКАЧАТЬ