The Story of Doctor Dolittle by Hugh Lofting (books to read for 12 year olds .txt) đ
- Author: Hugh Lofting
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âListen,â whispered the parrot, when John Dolittleâs face appeared: âPrince Bumpo is coming here to-night to see you. And youâve got to find some way to turn him white. But be sure to make him promise you first that he will open the prison-door and find a ship for you to cross the sea in.â
âThis is all very well,â said the Doctor. âBut it isnât so easy to turn a black man white. You speak as though he were a dress to be re-dyed. Itâs not so simple. `Shall the leopard change his spots, or the Ethiopian his skin,â you know?â
âI donât know anything about that,â said Polynesia impatiently. âBut you MUST turn this man white. Think of a wayâthink hard. Youâve got plenty of medicines left in the bag. Heâll do anything for you if you change his color. It is your only chance to get out of prison.â
âWell, I suppose it MIGHT be possible,â said the Doctor. âLet me seeâ,â and he went over to his medicine-bag, murmuring something about âliberated chlorine on animal-pigmentâ perhaps zinc-ointment, as a temporary measure, spread thickââ
Well, that night Prince Bumpo came secretly to the Doctor in prison and said to him,
âWhite Man, I am an unhappy prince. Years ago I went in search of The Sleeping Beauty, whom I had read of in a book. And having traveled through the world many days, I at last found her and kissed the lady very gently to awaken herâas the book said I should. âTis true indeed that she awoke. But when she saw my face she cried out, `Oh, heâs black!â And she ran away and wouldnât marry meâbut went to sleep again somewhere else. So I came back, full of sadness, to my fatherâs kingdom. Now I hear that you are a wonderful magician and have many powerful potions. So I come to you for help. If you will turn me white, so that I may go back to The Sleeping Beauty, I will give you half my kingdom and anything besides you ask.â
âPrince Bumpo,â said the Doctor, looking thoughtfully at the bottles in his medicine-bag, âsupposing I made your hair a nice blonde colorâwould not that do instead to make you happy?â
âNo,â said Bumpo. âNothing else will satisfy me. I must be a white prince.â
âYou know it is very hard to change the color of a prince,â said the Doctorââone of the hardest things a magician can do. You only want your face white, do you not?â
âYes, that is all,â said Bumpo. âBecause I shall wear shining armor and gauntlets of steel, like the other white princes, and ride on a horse.â
âMust your face be white all over?â asked the Doctor.
âYes, all over,â said Bumpoââand I would like my eyes blue too, but I suppose that would be very hard to do.â
âYes, it would,â said the Doctor quickly. âWell, I will do what I can for you. You will have to be very patient thoughâyou know with some medicines you can never be very sure. I might have to try two or three times. You have a strong skinâyes? Well thatâs all right. Now come over here by the lightâOh, but before I do anything, you must first go down to the beach and get a ship ready, with food in it, to take me across the sea. Do not speak a word of this to any one. And when I have done as you ask, you must let me and all my animals out of prison. Promiseâby the crown of Jolliginki!â
So the Prince promised and went away to get a ship ready at the seashore.
When he came back and said that it was done, the Doctor asked Dab-Dab to bring a basin. Then he mixed a lot of medicines in the basin and told Bumpo to dip his face in it.
The Prince leaned down and put his face in âright up to the ears.
He held it there a long timeâso long that the Doctor seemed to get dreadfully anxious and fidgety, standing first on one leg and then on the other, looking at all the bottles he had used for the mixture, and reading the labels on them again and again. A strong smell filled the prison, like the smell of brown paper burning.
At last the Prince lifted his face up out of the basin, breathing very hard. And all the animals cried out in surprise.
For the Princeâs face had turned as white as snow, and his eyes, which had been mud-colored, were a manly gray!
When John Dolittle lent him a little looking-glass to see himself in, he sang for joy and began dancing around the prison. But the Doctor asked him not to make so much noise about it; and when he had closed his medicine-bag in a hurry he told him to open the prison-door.
Bumpo begged that he might keep the looking-glass, as it was the only one in the Kingdom of Jolliginki, and he wanted to look at himself all day long. But the Doctor said he needed it to shave with.
Then the Prince, taking a bunch of copper keys from his pocket, undid the great double locks. And the Doctor with all his animals ran as fast as they could down to the seashore; while Bumpo leaned against the wall of the empty dungeon, smiling after them happily, his big face shining like polished ivory in the light of the moon.
When they came to the beach they saw Polynesia and Chee-Chee waiting for them on the rocks near the ship.
âI feel sorry about Bumpo,â said the Doctor.
âI am afraid that medicine I used will never last. Most likely he will be as black as ever when he wakes up in the morningâthatâs one reason why I didnât like to leave the mirror with him. But then again, he MIGHT stay whiteâI had never used that mixture before. To tell the truth, I was surprised, myself, that it worked so well. But I had to do something, didnât I? âI couldnât possibly scrub the Kingâs kitchen for the rest of my life. It was such a dirty kitchen!âI could see it from the prison-window.âWell, well!âPoor Bumpo!â
âOh, of course he will know we were just joking with him,â said the parrot.
âThey had no business to lock us up,â said Dab-Dab, waggling her tail angrily. âWe never did them any harm. Serve him right, if he does turn black again! I hope itâs a dark black.â
âBut HE didnât have anything to do with it,â said the Doctor. âIt was the King, his father, who had us locked upâit wasnât Bumpoâs fault. âŠI wonder if I ought to go back and apologizeâ Oh, wellâIâll send him some candy when I get to Puddleby. And who knows?â he may stay white after all.â
âThe Sleeping Beauty would never have him, even if he did,â said Dab-Dab. âHe looked better the way he was, I thought. But heâd never be anything but ugly, no matter what color he was made.â
âStill, he had a good heart,â said the Doctor ââromantic, of courseâbut a good heart. After all, `handsome is as handsome does.ââ
âI donât believe the poor booby found The Sleeping Beauty at all,â said Jip, the dog. âMost likely he kissed some farmerâs fat wife who was taking a snooze under an apple-tree. Canât blame her for getting scared! I wonder who heâll go and kiss this time. Silly business!â
Then the pushmi-pullyu, the white mouse, Gub-Gub, Dab-Dab, Jip and the owl, Too-Too, went on to the ship with the Doctor. But Chee-Chee, Polynesia and the crocodile stayed behind, because Africa was their proper home, the land where they were born.
And when the Doctor stood upon the boat, he looked over the side across the water. And then he remembered that they had no one with them to guide them back to Puddleby.
The wide, wide sea looked terribly big and lonesome in the moonlight; and he began to wonder if they would lose their way when they passed out of sight of land.
But even while he was wondering, they heard a strange whispering noise, high in the air, coming through the night. And the animals all stopped saying Good-by and listened.
The noise grew louder and bigger. It seemed to be coming nearer to themâa sound like the Autumn wind blowing through the leaves of a poplar-tree, or a great, great rain beating down upon a roof.
And Jip, with his nose pointing and his tail quite straight, said,
âBirds!âmillions of themâflying fastâthatâs it!â
And then they all looked up. And there, streaming across the face of the moon, like a huge swarm of tiny ants, they could see thousands and thousands of little birds. Soon the whole sky seemed full of them, and still more kept comingâmore and more. There were so many that for a little they covered the whole moon so it could not shine, and the sea grew dark and blackâlike when a storm-cloud passes over the sun.
And presently all these birds came down close, skimming over the water and the land; and the night-sky was left clear above, and the moon shone as before. Still never a call nor a cry nor a song they madeâno sound but this great rustling of feathers which grew greater now than ever. When they began to settle on the sands, along the ropes of the shipâanywhere and everywhere except the treesâthe Doctor could see that they had blue wings and white breasts and very short, feathered legs. As soon as they had all found a place to sit, suddenly, there was no noise left anywhereâall was quiet; all was still.
And in the silent moonlight John Dolittle spoke:
âI had no idea that we had been in Africa so long. It will be nearly Summer when we get home. For these are the swallows going back. Swallows, I thank you for waiting for us. It is very thoughtful of you. Now we need not be afraid that we will lose our way upon the seaâŠ. Pull up the anchor and set the sail!â
When the ship moved out upon the water, those who stayed behind, Chee-Chee, Polynesia and the crocodile, grew terribly sad. For never in their lives had they known any one they liked so well as Doctor John Dolittle of Puddleby-on- the-Marsh.
And after they had called Good-by to him again and again and again, they still stood there upon the rocks, crying bitterly and waving till the ship was out of sight.
THE THIRTEENTH CHAPTER RED SAILS AND BLUE WINGSSAILING homeward, the Doctorâs ship had to pass the coast of Barbary. This coast is the seashore of the Great Desert. It is a wild, lonely placeâall sand and stones. And it was here that the Barbary pirates lived.
These pirates, a bad lot of men, used to wait for sailors to be shipwrecked on their shores. And often, if they saw a boat passing, they would come out in their fast sailing-ships and chase it. When they caught a boat like this at sea, they would steal everything on it; and after they had taken the people off they would sink the ship and sail back to Barbary singing songs and feeling proud of the mischief they had done. Then they used to make the people they had caught write home to their friends for money. And if the friends sent no money, the pirates often threw the people into the sea.
Now one
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