Oz, The Complete Collection

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Oz, The Complete Collection Page 16

by L. Frank Baum


  “To be sure!” said Jack, without in the least comprehending.

  His Majesty then dismissed Jellia Jamb and the Soldier with the Green Whiskers, and when they were gone he took his new friend by the arm and led him into the courtyard to play a game of quoits.

  Chapter 8

  GEN. JINJUR’S ARMY of REVOLT

  ip was so anxious to rejoin his man Jack and the Sawhorse that he walked a full half the distance to the Emerald City without stopping to rest. Then he discovered that he was hungry and the crackers and cheese he had provided for the journey had all been eaten.

  While wondering what he should do in this emergency he came upon a girl sitting by the roadside. She wore a costume that struck the boy as being remarkably brilliant: her silken waist being of emerald green and her skirt of four distinct colors—blue in front, yellow at the left side, red at the back and purple at the right side. Fastening the waist in front were four buttons—the top one blue, the next yellow, a third red and the last purple.

  The splendor of this dress was almost barbaric; so Tip was fully justified in staring at the gown for some moments before his eyes were attracted by the pretty face above it. Yes, the face was pretty enough, he decided; but it wore an expression of discontent coupled to a shade of defiance or audacity.

  While the boy stared the girl looked upon him calmly. A lunch basket stood beside her, and she held a dainty sandwich in one hand and a hard-boiled egg in the other, eating with an evident appetite that aroused Tip’s sympathy.

  He was just about to ask a share of the luncheon when the girl stood up and brushed the crumbs from her lap.

  “There!” said she; “it is time for me to go. Carry that basket for me and help yourself to its contents if you are hungry.”

  Tip seized the basket eagerly and began to eat, following for a time the strange girl without bothering to ask questions. She walked along before him with swift strides, and there was about her an air of decision and importance that led him to suspect she was some great personage.

  Finally, when he had satisfied his hunger, he ran up beside her and tried to keep pace with her swift footsteps—a very difficult feat, for she was much taller than he, and evidently in a hurry.

  “Thank you very much for the sandwiches,” said Tip, as he trotted along. “May I ask your name?”

  “I am General Jinjur,” was the brief reply.

  “Oh!” said the boy, surprised. “What sort of a General?”

  “I command the Army of Revolt in this war,” answered the General, with unnecessary sharpness.

  “Oh!” he again exclaimed. “I didn’t know there was a war.”

  “You were not supposed to know it,” she returned, “for we have kept it a secret; and considering that our army is composed entirely of girls,” she added, with some pride, “it is surely a remarkable thing that our Revolt is not yet discovered.”

  “It is, indeed,” acknowledged Tip. “But where is your army?”

  “About a mile from here,” said General Jinjur. “The forces have assembled from all parts of the Land of Oz, at my express command. For this is the day we are to conquer his Majesty, the Scarecrow, and wrest from him the throne. The Army of Revolt only awaits my coming to march upon the Emerald City.”

  “Well!” declared Tip, drawing a long breath, “this is certainly a surprising thing! May I ask why you wish to conquer his Majesty, the Scarecrow?”

  “Because the Emerald City has been ruled by men long enough, for one reason,” said the girl.

  “Moreover, the city glitters with beautiful gems, which might far better be used for rings, bracelets and necklaces; and there is enough money in the King’s treasury to buy every girl in our army a dozen new gowns. So we intend to conquer the city and run the government to suit ourselves.”

  Jinjur spoke these words with an eagerness and decision that proved she was in earnest.

  “But war is a terrible thing,” said Tip, thoughtfully.

  “This war will be pleasant,” replied the girl, cheerfully.

  “Many of you will be slain!” continued the boy, in an awed voice.

  “Oh, no,” said Jinjur. “What man would oppose a girl, or dare to harm her? And there is not an ugly face in my entire army.”

  Tip laughed.

  “Perhaps you are right,” said he. “But the Guardian of the Gates is considered a faithful Guardian, and the King’s Army will not let the city be conquered without a struggle.”

  “The army is old and feeble,” replied General Jinjur, scornfully. “His strength has all been used to grow whiskers, and his wife has such a temper that she has already pulled more than half of them out by the roots. When the Wonderful Wizard reigned the Soldier with the Green Whiskers was a very good Royal Army, for people feared the Wizard. But no one is afraid of the Scarecrow, so his Royal Army don’t count for much in time of war.”

  After this conversation they proceeded some distance in silence, and before long reached a large clearing in the forest where fully four hundred young women were assembled. These were laughing and talking together as gaily as if they had gathered for a picnic instead of a war of conquest.

  They were divided into four companies, and Tip noticed that all were dressed in costumes similar to that worn by General Jinjur. The only real difference was that while those girls from the Munchkin country had the blue strip in front of their skirts, those from the country of the Quadlings had the red strip in front; and those from the country of the Winkies had the yellow strip in front, and the Gillikin girls wore the purple strip in front. All had green waists, representing the Emerald City they intended to conquer, and the top button on each waist indicated by its color which country the wearer came from. The uniforms were jaunty and becoming, and quite effective when massed together.

  Tip thought this strange army bore no weapons whatever; but in this he was wrong. For each girl had stuck through the knot of her back hair two long, glittering knitting-needles.

  General Jinjur immediately mounted the stump of a tree and addressed her army.

  “Friends, fellow-citizens, and girls!” she said; “we are about to begin our great Revolt against the men of Oz! We march to conquer the Emerald City—to dethrone the Scarecrow King—to acquire thousands of gorgeous gems—to rifle the royal treasury—and to obtain power over our former oppressors!”

  “Hurrah!” said those who had listened; but Tip thought most of the army was too much engaged in chattering to pay attention to the words of the General.

  The command to march was now given, and the girls formed themselves into four bands, or companies, and set off with eager strides toward the Emerald City.

  The boy followed after them, carrying several baskets and wraps and packages which various members of the Army of Revolt had placed in his care. It was not long before they came to the green granite walls of the city and halted before the gateway.

  The Guardian of the Gates at once came out and looked at them curiously, as if a circus had come to town. He carried a bunch of keys swung round his neck by a golden chain; his hands were thrust carelessly into his pockets, and he seemed to have no idea at all that the city was threatened by rebels. Speaking pleasantly to the girls, he said:

  “Good morning, my dears! What can I do for you?”

  “Surrender instantly!” answered General Jinjur, standing before him and frowning as terribly as her pretty face would allow her to.

  “Surrender!” echoed the man, astounded. “Why, it’s impossible. It’s against the law! I never heard of such a thing in my life.”

  “Still, you must surrender!” exclaimed the General, fiercely. “We are revolting!”

  “You don’t look it,” said the Guardian, gazing from one to another, admiringly.

  “But we are!” cried Jinjur, stamping her foot, impatiently; “and we mean to conquer the Emerald City!”

  “Good gracious!” returned the surprised Guardian of the Gates; “what a nonsensical idea! Go home to your mothers, my good girls,
and milk the cows and bake the bread. Don’t you know it’s a dangerous thing to conquer a city?”

  “We are not afraid!” responded the General; and she looked so determined that it made the Guardian uneasy.

  So he rang the bell for the Soldier with the Green Whiskers, and the next minute was sorry he had done so. For immediately he was surrounded by a crowd of girls who drew the knitting-needles from their hair and began jabbing them at the Guardian with the sharp points dangerously near his fat cheeks and blinking eyes.

  The poor man howled loudly for mercy and made no resistance when Jinjur drew the bunch of keys from around his neck.

  Followed by her army the General now rushed to the gateway, where she was confronted by the Royal Army of Oz—which was the other name for the Soldier with the Green Whiskers.

  “Halt!” he cried, and pointed his long gun full in the face of the leader.

  Some of the girls screamed and ran back, but General Jinjur bravely stood her ground and said, reproachfully:

  “Why, how now? Would you shoot a poor, defenceless girl?”

  “No,” replied the Soldier; “for my gun isn’t loaded.”

  “Not loaded?”

  “No; for fear of accidents. And I’ve forgotten where I hid the powder and shot to load it with. But if you’ll wait a short time I’ll try to hunt them up.”

  “Don’t trouble yourself,” said Jinjur, cheerfully. Then she turned to her army and cried:

  “Girls, the gun isn’t loaded!”

  “Hooray,” shrieked the rebels, delighted at this good news, and they proceeded to rush upon the Soldier with the Green Whiskers in such a crowd that it was a wonder they didn’t stick the knitting-needles into one another.

  But the Royal Army of Oz was too much afraid of women to meet the onslaught. He simply turned about and ran with all his might through the gate and toward the royal palace, while General Jinjur and her mob flocked into the unprotected city.

  In this way was the Emerald City captured without a drop of blood being spilled. The Army of Revolt had become an Army of Conquerors!

  Chapter 9

  The SCARECROW PLANS an ESCAPE

  ip slipped away from the girls and followed swiftly after the Soldier with the Green Whiskers. The invading army entered the city more slowly, for they stopped to dig emeralds out of the walls and paving-stones with the points of their knitting-needles. So the Soldier and the boy reached the palace before the news had spread that the city was conquered.

  The Scarecrow and Jack Pumpkinhead were still playing at quoits in the courtyard when the game was interrupted by the abrupt entrance of the Royal Army of Oz, who came flying in without his hat or gun, his clothes in sad disarray and his long beard floating a yard behind him as he ran.

  “Tally one for me,” said the Scarecrow, calmly “What’s wrong, my man?” he added, addressing the Soldier.

  “Oh! your Majesty—your Majesty! The city is conquered!” gasped the Royal Army, who was all out of breath.

  “This is quite sudden,” said the Scarecrow. “But please go and bar all the doors and windows of the palace, while I show this Pumpkinhead how to throw a quoit.”

  The Soldier hastened to do this, while Tip, who had arrived at his heels, remained in the courtyard to look at the Scarecrow with wondering eyes.

  His Majesty continued to throw the quoits as coolly as if no danger threatened his throne, but the Pumpkinhead, having caught sight of Tip, ambled toward the boy as fast as his wooden legs would go.

  “Good afternoon, noble parent!” he cried, delightedly. “I’m glad to see you are here. That terrible Sawhorse ran away with me.”

  “I suspected it,” said Tip. “Did you get hurt? Are you cracked at all?”

  “No, I arrived safely,” answered Jack, “and his Majesty has been very kind indeed to me.”

  At this moment the Soldier with the Green Whiskers returned, and the Scarecrow asked:

  “By the way, who has conquered me?”

  “A regiment of girls, gathered from the four corners of the Land of Oz,” replied the Soldier, still pale with fear.

  “But where was my Standing Army at the time?” inquired his Majesty, looking at the Soldier, gravely.

  “Your Standing Army was running,” answered the fellow, honestly; “for no man could face the terrible weapons of the invaders.”

  “Well,” said the Scarecrow, after a moment’s thought, “I don’t mind much the loss of my throne, for it’s a tiresome job to rule over the Emerald City. And this crown is so heavy that it makes my head ache. But I hope the Conquerors have no intention of injuring me, just because I happen to be the King.”

  “I heard them say,” remarked Tip, with some hesitation, “that they intend to make a rag carpet of your outside and stuff their sofa-cushions with your inside.”

  “Then I am really in danger,” declared his Majesty, positively, “and it will be wise for me to consider a means to escape.”

  “Where can you go?” asked Jack Pumpkinhead.

  “Why, to my friend the Tin Woodman, who rules over the Winkies, and calls himself their Emperor,” was the answer. “I am sure he will protect me.”

  Tip was looking out the window.

  “The palace is surrounded by the enemy,” said he. “It is too late to escape. They would soon tear you to pieces.”

  The Scarecrow sighed.

  “In an emergency,” he announced, “it is always a good thing to pause and reflect. Please excuse me while I pause and reflect.”

  “But we also are in danger,” said the Pumpkinhead, anxiously. “If any of these girls understand cooking, my end is not far off!”

  “Nonsense!” exclaimed the Scarecrow; “they’re too busy to cook, even if they know how!”

  “But should I remain here a prisoner for any length of time,” protested Jack, “I’m liable to spoil.”

  “Ah! then you would not be fit to associate with,” returned the Scarecrow. “The matter is more serious than I suspected.”

  “You,” said the Pumpkinhead, gloomily, “are liable to live for many years. My life is necessarily short. So I must take advantage of the few days that remain to me.”

  “There, there! Don’t worry,” answered the Scarecrow soothingly; “if you’ll keep quiet long enough for me to think, I’ll try to find some way for us all to escape.”

  So the others waited in patient silence while the Scarecrow walked to a corner and stood with his face to the wall for a good five minutes. At the end of that time he faced them with a more cheerful expression upon his painted face.

  “Where is the Sawhorse you rode here?” he asked the Pumpkinhead.

  “Why, I said he was a jewel, and so your man locked him up in the royal treasury,” said Jack.

  “It was the only place I could think of, your Majesty,” added the Soldier, fearing he had made a blunder.

  “It pleases me very much,” said the Scarecrow. “Has the animal been fed?”

  “Oh, yes; I gave him a heaping peck of sawdust.”

  “Excellent!” cried the Scarecrow. “Bring the horse here at once.”

  The Soldier hastened away, and presently they heard the clattering of the horse’s wooden legs upon the pavement as he was led into the courtyard.

  His Majesty regarded the steed critically.

  “He doesn’t seem especially graceful!” he remarked, musingly; “but I suppose he can run?”

  “He can, indeed,” said Tip, gazing upon the Sawhorse admiringly.

  “Then, bearing us upon his back, he must make a dash through the ranks of the rebels and carry us to my friend the Tin Woodman,” announced the Scarecrow.

  “He can’t carry four!” objected Tip.

  “No, but he may be induced to carry three,” said his Majesty. “I shall therefore leave my Royal Army behind. For, from the ease with which he was conquered, I have little confidence in his powers.”

  “Still, he can run,” declared Tip, laughing.

  “I expected this bl
ow,” said the Soldier, sulkily; “but I can bear it. I shall disguise myself by cutting off my lovely green whiskers. And, after all, it is no more dangerous to face those reckless girls than to ride this fiery, untamed wooden horse!”

  “Perhaps you are right,” observed his Majesty. “But, for my part, not being a soldier, I am fond of danger. Now, my boy, you must mount first. And please sit as close to the horse’s neck as possible.”

  Tip climbed quickly to his place, and the Soldier and the Scarecrow managed to hoist the Pumpkinhead to a seat just behind him. There remained so little space for the King that he was liable to fall off as soon as the horse started.

  “Fetch a clothes-line,” said the King to his army, “and tie us all together. Then if one falls off we will all fall off.”

  And while the Soldier was gone for the clothes-line his Majesty continued, “it is well for me to be careful, for my very existence is in danger.”

  “I have to be as careful as you do,” said Jack.

  “Not exactly,” replied the Scarecrow; “for if anything happened to me, that would be the end of me. But if anything happened to you, they could use you for seed.”

  The Soldier now returned with a long line and tied all three firmly together, also lashing them to the body of the Sawhorse; so there seemed little danger of their tumbling off.

  “Now throw open the gates,” commanded the Scarecrow, “and we will make a dash to liberty or to death.”

  The courtyard in which they were standing was located in the center of the great palace, which surrounded it on all sides. But in one place a passage led to an outer gateway, which the Soldier had barred by order of his sovereign. It was through this gateway his Majesty proposed to escape, and the Royal Army now led the Sawhorse along the passage and unbarred the gate, which swung backward with a loud crash.

  “Now,” said Tip to the horse, “you must save us all. Run as fast as you can for the gate of the city, and don’t let anything stop you.”

 

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