Oz, The Complete Collection

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Oz, The Complete Collection Page 19

by L. Frank Baum


  “ ‘My dear children,’ said he, ‘I have captured a Wogglebug—a very rare and interesting specimen. Do any of you know what a Wogglebug is?’

  “ ‘No!’ yelled the scholars, in chorus.

  “ ‘Then,’ said the Professor, ‘I will get out my famous magnifying-glass and throw the insect upon a screen in a highly magnified condition, that you may all study carefully its peculiar construction and become acquainted with its habits and manner of life.’

  “He then brought from a cupboard a most curious instrument, and before I could realize what had happened I found myself thrown upon a screen in a highly magnified state—even as you now behold me.

  “The students stood up on their stools and craned their heads forward to get a better view of me, and two little girls jumped upon the sill of an open window where they could see more plainly.

  “ ‘Behold!’ cried the Professor, in a loud voice, ‘this highly magnified Wogglebug; one of the most curious insects in existence!’

  “Being Thoroughly Educated, and knowing what is required of a cultured gentleman, at this juncture I stood upright and, placing my hand upon my bosom, made a very polite bow. My action, being unexpected, must have startled them, for one of the little girls perched upon the window-sill gave a scream and fell backward out the window, drawing her companion with her as she disappeared.

  “The Professor uttered a cry of horror and rushed away through the door to see if the poor children were injured by the fall. The scholars followed after him in a wild mob, and I was left alone in the school-room, still in a Highly Magnified state and free to do as I pleased.

  “It immediately occurred to me that this was a good opportunity to escape. I was proud of my great size, and realized that now I could safely travel anywhere in the world, while my superior culture would make me a fit associate for the most learned person I might chance to meet.

  “So, while the Professor picked the little girls—who were more frightened than hurt—off the ground, and the pupils clustered around him closely grouped, I calmly walked out of the school-house, turned a corner, and escaped unnoticed to a grove of trees that stood near.”

  “Wonderful!” exclaimed the Pumpkinhead, admiringly.

  “It was, indeed,” agreed the Wogglebug. “I have never ceased to congratulate myself for escaping while I was Highly Magnified; for even my excessive knowledge would have proved of little use to me had I remained a tiny, insignificant insect.”

  “I didn’t know before,” said Tip, looking at the Wogglebug with a puzzled expression, “that insects wore clothes.”

  “Nor do they, in their natural state,” returned the stranger. “But in the course of my wanderings I had the good fortune to save the ninth life of a tailor—tailors having, like cats, nine lives, as you probably know. The fellow was exceedingly grateful, for had he lost that ninth life it would have been the end of him; so he begged permission to furnish me with the stylish costume I now wear. It fits very nicely, does it not?” and the Wogglebug stood up and turned himself around slowly, that all might examine his person.

  “He must have been a good tailor,” said the Scarecrow, somewhat enviously.

  “He was a good-hearted tailor, at any rate,” observed Nick Chopper.

  “But where were you going, when you met us?” Tip asked the Wogglebug.

  “Nowhere in particular,” was the reply, “although it is my intention soon to visit the Emerald City and arrange to give a course of lectures to select audiences on the ‘Advantages of Magnification.’ ”

  “We are bound for the Emerald City now,” said the Tin Woodman; “so, if it pleases you to do so, you are welcome to travel in our company.”

  The Wogglebug bowed with profound grace.

  “It will give me great pleasure,” said he, “to accept your kind invitation; for nowhere in the Land of Oz could I hope to meet with so congenial a company.”

  “That is true,” acknowledged the Pumpkinhead. “We are quite as congenial as flies and honey.”

  “But—pardon me if I seem inquisitive—are you not all rather—ahem!—rather unusual?” asked the Wogglebug, looking from one to another with unconcealed interest.

  “Not more so than yourself,” answered the Scarecrow. “Everything in life is unusual until you get accustomed to it.”

  “What rare philosophy!” exclaimed the Wogglebug, admiringly.

  “Yes; my brains are working well today,” admitted the Scarecrow, an accent of pride in his voice.

  “Then, if you are sufficiently rested and refreshed, let us bend our steps toward the Emerald City,” suggested the magnified one.

  “We can’t,” said Tip. “The Sawhorse has broken a leg, so he can’t bend his steps. And there is no wood around to make him a new limb from. And we can’t leave the horse behind because the Pumpkinhead is so stiff in his joints that he has to ride.”

  “How very unfortunate!” cried the Wogglebug. Then he looked the party over carefully and said:

  “If the Pumpkinhead is to ride, why not use one of his legs to make a leg for the horse that carries him? I judge that both are made of wood.”

  “Now, that is what I call real cleverness,” said the Scarecrow, approvingly. “I wonder my brains did not think of that long ago! Get to work, my dear Nick, and fit the Pumpkinhead’s leg to the Sawhorse.”

  Jack was not especially pleased with this idea; but he submitted to having his left leg amputated by the Tin Woodman and whittled down to fit the left leg of the Sawhorse. Nor was the Sawhorse especially pleased with the operation, either; for he growled a good deal about being “butchered,” as he called it, and afterward declared that the new leg was a disgrace to a respectable Sawhorse.

  “I beg you to be more careful in your speech,” said the Pumpkinhead, sharply. “Remember, if you please, that it is my leg you are abusing.”

  “I cannot forget it,” retorted the Sawhorse, “for it is quite as flimsy as the rest of your person.”

  “Flimsy! me flimsy!” cried Jack, in a rage. “How dare you call me flimsy?”

  “Because you are built as absurdly as a jumping-jack,” sneered the horse, rolling his knotty eyes in a vicious manner. “Even your head won’t stay straight, and you never can tell whether you are looking backward or forward!”

  “Friends, I entreat you not to quarrel!” pleaded the Tin Woodman, anxiously. “As a matter of fact, we are none of us above criticism; so let us bear with each other’s faults.”

  “An excellent suggestion,” said the Wogglebug, approvingly. “You must have an excellent heart, my metallic friend.”

  “I have,” returned Nick, well pleased. “My heart is quite the best part of me. But now let us start upon our journey.

  They perched the one-legged Pumpkinhead upon the Sawhorse, and tied him to his seat with cords, so that he could not possibly fall off.

  And then, following the lead of the Scarecrow, they all advanced in the direction of the Emerald City.

  Chapter 14

  OLD MOMBI INDULGES in WITCHCRAFT

  hey soon discovered that the Sawhorse limped, for his new leg was a trifle too long. So they were obliged to halt while the Tin Woodman chopped it down with his axe, after which the wooden steed paced along more comfortably. But the Sawhorse was not entirely satisfied, even yet.

  “It was a shame that I broke my other leg!” it growled.

  “On the contrary,” airily remarked the Wogglebug, who was walking alongside, “you should consider the accident most fortunate. For a horse is never of much use until he has been broken.”

  “I beg your pardon,” said Tip, rather provoked, for he felt a warm interest in both the Sawhorse and his man Jack; “but permit me to say that your joke is a poor one, and as old as it is poor.”

  “Still, it is a joke,” declared the Wogglebug, firmly, “and a joke derived from a play upon words is considered among educated people to be eminently proper.”

  “What does that mean?” enquired the Pumpkinhead, stupidly.


  “It means, my dear friend,” explained the Wogglebug, “that our language contains many words having a double meaning; and that to pronounce a joke that allows both meanings of a certain word, proves the joker a person of culture and refinement, who has, moreover, a thorough command of the language.”

  “I don’t believe that,” said Tip, plainly; “anybody can make a pun.”

  “Not so,” rejoined the Wogglebug, stiffly. “It requires education of a high order. Are you educated, young sir?”

  “Not especially,” admitted Tip.

  “Then you cannot judge the matter. I myself am Thoroughly Educated, and I say that puns display genius. For instance, were I to ride upon this Sawhorse, he would not only be an animal he would become an equipage. For he would then be a horse-and-buggy.”

  At this the Scarecrow gave a gasp and the Tin Woodman stopped short and looked reproachfully at the Wogglebug. At the same time the Sawhorse loudly snorted his derision; and even the Pumpkinhead put up his hand to hide the smile which, because it was carved upon his face, he could not change to a frown.

  But the Wogglebug strutted along as if he had made some brilliant remark, and the Scarecrow was obliged to say:

  “I have heard, my dear friend, that a person can become over-educated; and although I have a high respect for brains, no matter how they may be arranged or classified, I begin to suspect that yours are slightly tangled. In any event, I must beg you to restrain your superior education while in our society.”

  “We are not very particular,” added the Tin Woodman; “and we are exceedingly kind hearted. But if your superior culture gets leaky again—” He did not complete the sentence, but he twirled his gleaming axe so carelessly that the Wogglebug looked frightened, and shrank away to a safe distance.

  The others marched on in silence, and the Highly Magnified one, after a period of deep thought, said in an humble voice:

  “I will endeavor to restrain myself.”

  “That is all we can expect,” returned the Scarecrow, pleasantly; and good nature being thus happily restored to the party, they proceeded upon their way.

  When they again stopped to allow Tip to rest—the boy being the only one that seemed to tire—the Tin Woodman noticed many small, round holes in the grassy meadow.

  “This must be a village of the Field Mice,” he said to the Scarecrow. “I wonder if my old friend, the Queen of the Mice, is in this neighborhood.”

  “If she is, she may be of great service to us,” answered the Scarecrow, who was impressed by a sudden thought. “See if you can call her, my dear Nick.”

  So the Tin Woodman blew a shrill note upon a silver whistle that hung around his neck, and presently a tiny grey mouse popped from a near-by hole and advanced fearlessly toward them. For the Tin Woodman had once saved her life, and the Queen of the Field Mice knew he was to be trusted.

  “Good day, your Majesty,” said Nick, politely addressing the mouse; “I trust you are enjoying good health?”

  “Thank you, I am quite well,” answered the Queen, demurely, as she sat up and displayed the tiny golden crown upon her head. “Can I do anything to assist my old friends?”

  “You can, indeed,” replied the Scarecrow, eagerly. “Let me, I entreat you, take a dozen of your subjects with me to the Emerald City.”

  “Will they be injured in any way?” asked the Queen, doubtfully.

  “I think not,” replied the Scarecrow. “I will carry them hidden in the straw which stuffs my body, and when I give them the signal by unbuttoning my jacket, they have only to rush out and scamper home again as fast as they can. By doing this they will assist me to regain my throne, which the Army of Revolt has taken from me.”

  “In that case,” said the Queen, “I will not refuse your request. Whenever you are ready, I will call twelve of my most intelligent subjects.”

  “I am ready now,” returned the Scarecrow. Then he lay flat upon the ground and unbuttoned his jacket, displaying the mass of straw with which he was stuffed.

  The Queen uttered a little piping call, and in an instant a dozen pretty field mice had emerged from their holes and stood before their Ruler, awaiting her orders.

  What the Queen said to them none of our travelers could understand, for it was in the mouse language; but the field mice obeyed without hesitation, running one after the other to the Scarecrow and hiding themselves in the straw of his breast.

  When all of the twelve mice had thus concealed themselves, the Scarecrow buttoned his jacket securely and then arose and thanked the Queen for her kindness.

  “One thing more you might do to serve us,” suggested the Tin Woodman; “and that is to run ahead and show us the way to the Emerald City. For some enemy is evidently trying to prevent us from reaching it.”

  “I will do that gladly,” returned the Queen. “Are you ready?”

  The Tin Woodman looked at Tip.

  “I’m rested,” said the boy. “Let us start.”

  Then they resumed their journey, the little grey Queen of the Field Mice running swiftly ahead and then pausing until the travelers drew near, when away she would dart again.

  Without this unerring guide the Scarecrow and his comrades might never have gained the Emerald City; for many were the obstacles thrown in their way by the arts of old Mombi. Yet not one of the obstacles really existed—all were cleverly contrived deceptions. For when they came to the banks of a rushing river that threatened to bar their way the little Queen kept steadily on, passing through the seeming flood in safety; and our travelers followed her without encountering a single drop of water.

  Again, a high wall of granite towered high above their heads and opposed their advance. But the grey Field Mouse walked straight through it, and the others did the same, the wall melting into mist as they passed it.

  Afterward, when they had stopped for a moment to allow Tip to rest, they saw forty roads branching off from their feet in forty different directions; and soon these forty roads began whirling around like a mighty wheel, first in one direction and then in the other, completely bewildering their vision.

  But the Queen called for them to follow her and darted off in a straight line; and when they had gone a few paces the whirling pathways vanished and were seen no more.

  Mombi’s last trick was the most fearful of all. She sent a sheet of crackling flame rushing over the meadow to consume them; and for the first time the Scarecrow became afraid and turned to flee.

  “If that fire reaches me I will be gone in no time!” said he, trembling until his straw rattled. “It’s the most dangerous thing I ever encountered.”

  “I’m off, too!” cried the Sawhorse, turning and prancing with agitation; “for my wood is so dry it would burn like kindlings.”

  “Is fire dangerous to pumpkins?” asked Jack, fearfully.

  “You’ll be baked like a tart—and so will I!” answered the Wogglebug, getting down on all fours so he could run the faster.

  But the Tin Woodman, having no fear of fire, averted the stampede by a few sensible words.

  “Look at the Field Mouse!” he shouted. “The fire does not burn her in the least. In fact, it is no fire at all, but only a deception.”

  Indeed, to watch the little Queen march calmly through the advancing flames restored courage to every member of the party, and they followed her without being even scorched.

  “This is surely a most extraordinary adventure,” said the Wogglebug, who was greatly amazed; “for it upsets all the Natural Laws that I heard Professor Nowitall teach in the school-house.”

  “Of course it does,” said the Scarecrow, wisely. “All magic is unnatural, and for that reason is to be feared and avoided. But I see before us the gates of the Emerald City, so I imagine we have now overcome all the magical obstacles that seemed to oppose us.”

  Indeed, the walls of the city were plainly visible, and the Queen of the Field Mice, who had guided them so faithfully, came near to bid them good-bye.

  “We are very grateful to yo
ur Majesty for your kind assistance,” said the Tin Woodman, bowing before the pretty creature.

  “I am always pleased to be of service to my friends,” answered the Queen, and in a flash she had darted away upon her journey home.

  Chapter 15

  The PRISONERS of the QUEEN

  pproaching the gateway of the Emerald City the travelers found it guarded by two girls of the Army of Revolt, who opposed their entrance by drawing the knitting-needles from their hair and threatening to prod the first that came near.

  But the Tin Woodman was not afraid.

  “At the worst they can but scratch my beautiful nickel-plate,” he said. “But there will be no ‘worst,’ for I think I can manage to frighten these absurd soldiers very easily. Follow me closely, all of you!”

  Then, swinging his axe in a great circle to right and left before him, he advanced upon the gate, and the others followed him without hesitation.

  The girls, who had expected no resistance whatever, were terrified by the sweep of the glittering axe and fled screaming into the city; so that our travelers passed the gates in safety and marched down the green marble pavement of the wide street toward the royal palace.

  “At this rate we will soon have your Majesty upon the throne again,” said the Tin Woodman, laughing at his easy conquest of the guards.

  “Thank you, friend Nick,” returned the Scarecrow, gratefully. “Nothing can resist your kind heart and your sharp axe.”

  As they passed the rows of houses they saw through the open doors that men were sweeping and dusting and washing dishes, while the women sat around in groups, gossiping and laughing.

  “What has happened?” the Scarecrow asked a sad-looking man with a bushy beard, who wore an apron and was wheeling a baby-carriage along the sidewalk.

  “Why, we’ve had a revolution, your Majesty—as you ought to know very well,” replied the man; “and since you went away the women have been running things to suit themselves. I’m glad you have decided to come back and restore order, for doing housework and minding the children is wearing out the strength of every man in the Emerald City.”

 

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