The Wonderful Adventures of Nils Selma Lagerlöf (i wanna iguana read aloud .txt) đ
- Author: Selma Lagerlöf
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âWhy canât you let me sleep?â said the boy. âIâm too tired to do anything tonight. Wait until tomorrow!â
âOpen the crock!â said Wind-Rush, shaking him.
âHow shall a poor little child be able to open such a crock? Why, itâs quite as large as I am myself.â
âOpen it!â commanded Wind-Rush once more, âor it will be a sorry thing for you.â The boy got up, tottered over to the crock, fumbled the clasp, and let his arms fall. âIâm not usually so weak,â said he. âIf you will only let me sleep until morning, I think that Iâll be able to manage with that clasp.â
But Wind-Rush was impatient, and he rushed forward and pinched the boy in the leg. That sort of treatment the boy didnât care to suffer from a crow. He jerked himself loose quickly, ran a couple of paces backward, drew his knife from the sheath, and held it extended in front of him. âYouâd better be careful!â he cried to Wind-Rush.
This one too was so enraged that he didnât dodge the danger. He rushed at the boy, just as though heâd been blind, and ran so straight against the knife, that it entered through his eye into the head. The boy drew the knife back quickly, but Wind-Rush only struck out with his wings, then he fell downâ âdead.
âWind-Rush is dead! The stranger has killed our chieftain, Wind-Rush!â cried the nearest crows, and then there was a terrible uproar. Some wailed, others cried for vengeance. They all ran or fluttered up to the boy, with Fumle-Drumle in the lead. But he acted badly as usual. He only fluttered and spread his wings over the boy, and prevented the others from coming forward and running their bills into him.
The boy thought that things looked very bad for him now. He couldnât run away from the crows, and there was no place where he could hide. Then he happened to think of the earthen crock. He took a firm hold on the clasp, and pulled it off. Then he hopped into the crock to hide in it. But the crock was a poor hiding place, for it was nearly filled to the brim with little, thin silver coins. The boy couldnât get far enough down, so he stooped and began to throw out the coins.
Until now the crows had fluttered around him in a thick swarm and pecked at him, but when he threw out the coins they immediately forgot their thirst for vengeance, and hurried to gather the money. The boy threw out handfuls of it, and all the crowsâ âyes, even Wind-Air herselfâ âpicked them up. And everyone who succeeded in picking up a coin ran off to the nest with the utmost speed to conceal it.
When the boy had thrown out all the silver pennies from the crock he glanced up. Not more than a single crow was left in the sandpit. That was Fumle-Drumle, with the white feather in his wing; he who had carried Thumbietot. âYou have rendered me a greater service than you understand,â said the crowâ âwith a very different voice, and a different intonation than the one he had used heretoforeâ ââand I want to save your life. Sit down on my back, and Iâll take you to a hiding place where you can be secure for tonight. Tomorrow, Iâll arrange it so that you will get back to the wild geese.â
The CabinThursday, April fourteenth.
The following morning when the boy awoke, he lay in a bed. When he saw that he was in a house with four walls around him, and a roof over him, he thought that he was at home. âI wonder if mother will come soon with some coffee,â he muttered to himself where he lay half-awake. Then he remembered that he was in a deserted cabin on the crow-ridge, and that Fumle-Drumle with the white feather had borne him there the night before.
The boy was sore all over after the journey he had made the day before, and he thought it was lovely to lie still while he waited for Fumle-Drumle who had promised to come and fetch him.
Curtains of checked cotton hung before the bed, and he drew them aside to look out into the cabin. It dawned upon him instantly that he had never seen the mate to a cabin like this. The walls consisted of nothing but a couple of rows of logs; then the roof began. There was no interior ceiling, so he could look clear up to the rooftree. The cabin was so small that it appeared to have been built rather for such as he than for real people. However, the fireplace and chimney were so large, he thought that he had never seen larger. The entrance door was in a gable-wall at the side of the fireplace, and was so narrow that it was more like a wicket than a door. In the other gable-wall he saw a low and broad window with many panes. There was scarcely any movable furniture in the cabin. The bench on one side, and the table under the window, were also stationaryâ âalso the big bed where he lay, and the many-coloured cupboard.
The boy could not help wondering who owned the cabin, and why it was deserted. It certainly looked as though the people who had lived there expected to return. The coffee-urn and the gruel-pot stood on the hearth, and there was some wood in the fireplace; the oven-rake and bakerâs peel stood in a corner; the spinning wheel was raised on a bench; on the shelf over the window lay oakum and flax, a couple of skeins of yarn, a candle, and a bunch of matches.
Yes, it surely looked as if those who had lived there had intended to come back. There were bedclothes on the bed; and on the walls
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