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    Pippi Goes on Board

    Page 3
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    whole class."

      "Alas!" said Pippi, biting one of her braids. "Alas! And of course

      I can't come just because I don't go to school. Seems as if people

      think they can treat you just any way if you haven't been to school

      and learned pluttification."

      "Multiplication," said Annika emphatically.

      "Yes, isn't that what I said?-'pluttification.'"

      "We're going to walk about seven miles-way, way out into the

      woods. And then we're going to play there," said Tommy.

      "Alas," said Pippi once again.

      The next day was so warm and beautiful that all the school

      children in the little town found it very hard to sit still in their

      seats. The teacher opened all the windows and let the sun come

      streaming in. Just outside the school window stood a birch tree, and

      high up in it sat a little starling, singing so cheerily that the

      children just listened to him and didn't care at all that nine times

      nine equals eighty-one.

      Suddenly Tommy jumped up in amazement. "Look, Teacher," he cried,

      pointing out of the window, "there's Pippi!" All the children turned

      to look and, sure enough, there sat Pippi on a branch of the birch

      tree. She was sitting very close to the window, for the branch

      reached almost down to the window sill.

      "Hi, Teacher!" she cried. "Hi, kids!"

      "Good morning, little Pippi," said Teacher. Once Pippi had come to

      school for a whole day, so Teacher knew her very well. Pippi and

      Teacher had agreed that Pippi might come back to school when she grew

      a little older and more sensible.

      "What do you want, little Pippi?" asked Teacher.

      "Oh, I was just going to ask you to throw a little pluttification

      out of the window," said Pippi, "as much as would be necessary for me

      to be allowed to go to the picnic with you. And if you have

      discovered any new letters, you might throw them out at the same

      time."

      "Don't you want to come in for a little while?" askedTeacher.

      "I'd rather not," said Pippi honestly, leaning back comfortably on

      the branch. "I just get dizzy. The knowledge in there is so thick you

      can cut it with a knife. But don't you think, Teacher," she continued

      hopefully, "that a little of that knowledge might fly out through the

      window and stick to me-just enough so that I could go with you on the

      picnic?"

      "It might," said Teacher, and then went on with the arithmetic

      lesson. All the children thought it was very pleasant to have Pippi

      sitting in a tree outside. She had given them all candy and toys that

      day when she went shopping. Pippi had Mr. Nilsson with her, of

      course, and the children thought it was fun to see how he threw

      himself from one branch to another. Sometimes he even hopped down

      into the window, and once he took a long jump and landed right on

      Tommy's head and began to scratch his hair. But then Teacher told

      Pippi she'd have to call Mr. Nilsson because Tommy was just going to

      figure out how much 315 divided by 7 is, and you can't do that when

      you have a monkey in your hair. But anyway, lessons just wouldn't go

      right that morning. The spring sunshine, the starling, and Pippi and

      Mr. Nilsson -all this was just too much for the children.

      "I don't know what's got into you, children," said Teacher.

      "Do you know what, Teacher?" said Pippi out in the tree. "To tell

      the truth, I don't think this is the right kind of a day for

      pluttification."

      "We're doing division," said Teacher.

      "On this kind of day you shouldn't have any kind of 'shun,'" said

      Pippi, "unless of course it's recreation."

      Teacher gave up. "Maybe you can furnish some recreation, Pippi,"

      she said.

      "No, I'm not very good at recreation," said Pippi, suddenly

      hanging over the branch by her knee joints so that her red braids

      almost touched the ground. "But I know a school where they don't have

      anything but recreation. 'All Day: Recreation' is what it says on the

      school program."

      "Is that so?" said Teacher. "And where is that school?"

      "In Australia," said Pippi. "In a little village in Australia. Way

      down in the southern part." She sat up on the branch again, and her

      eyes began to sparkle.

      "What kind of recreation do they have?" asked Teacher.

      "Oh, all kinds," said Pippi. "Usually they begin by jumping out of

      the window, one after another. Then they give a terrific yell and

      rush into the schoolroom again and skip around on the seats as fast

      as ever they can.

      "But what does their teacher say then?" asked Teacher.

      "She?" said Pippi. "Oh, she skips too-faster than anyone else.

      Then the children usually fight for half an hour or so, and the

      teacher stands near and cheers them on. When the weather is rainy all

      the kids take off their clothes and rush out into the rain and dance

      and jump. The teacher plays a march on the organ for them so that

      they can keep time. Some of them stand under the rain spout so that

      they can have a real shower."

      "Do they indeed?" said Teacher.

      "They certainly do," said Pippi, "and it's an awfully good school,

      one of the better ones in Australia. But it is very far down in the

      south."

      "Yes, I can imagine so," said Teacher. "But I don't think we'll

      have as much fun as all that in this school."

      "Too bad," said Pippi. "If it was only a matter of skipping around

      on the seats I'd dare to come in for a while."

      "You'll have to wait to skip until we have the picnic," said

      Teacher.

      "Oh, may I really go to the picnic?" cried Pippi, and was so happy

      that she turned a somersault backward right out of the tree. "I'll

      certainly write and tell them about that in Australia. Then they can

      keep on with their recreation as much as they want to. Because a

      picnic is certainly more fun."

      4.

      Pippi Goes to the School Picnic

      THERE was a tramping of many feet on the ground, and much talk and

      laughter. There was Tommy with a knapsack on his back, and Annika in

      a brand- new cotton dress, and their teacher and all their classmates

      except one poor child who had the misfortune to get a sore throat on

      the very day of the picnic. And there in front of all the others was

      Pippi, riding on her horse. Back of her sat Mr. Nilsson with his

      pocket mirror in his hand. Yes, there he sat, making "sun cats" with

      the mirror and looking extraordinarily pleased when he managed to put

      a sun cat right in Tommy's eye.

      Annika had been absolutely sure it would rain on this important

      day. In fact, she had been so sure of it that she had almost been

      angry at the weather in advance. But just think how lucky you can be

      sometimes-the sun continued to shine just as usual, even if it was

      picnic day, and Annika's heart almost jumped for joy as she walked

      along the road in her brand-new cotton dress. For that matter, all

      the children looked happy and eager. Pussy willows were growing

      everywhere along the roadside, and in one place there was a whole

      field of wild flowers. All the children decided to pick big bunches

     
    ; of pussy willows and bouquets of yellow wild flowers on the way

      home.

      "Such a glorious, glorious day," said Annika with a sigh, looking

      up at Pippi, who sat on her horse as straight as a general.

      "Yes, I haven't had so much fun since I fought with the champion

      boxer in San Francisco," said Pippi. "Would you like to ride a little

      while?"

      Annika would indeed, so Pippi lifted her up onto the horse's back,

      and there she rode, right in front of Pippi. When the other children

      saw her, of course they all wanted to ride too. And Pippi let them,

      each in turn. But Tommy and Annika were allowed to ride a little

      longer than most of the others. There was one girl who had a blister

      on her heel. She was allowed to sit behind Pippi and ride all the

      way. Mr. Nilsson pulled her braids whenever he could get hold of

      them.

      The picnic was to be held in a wood which was called the Monsters'

      Forest-probably Pippi thought because it was so monstrously

      beautiful. When they were almost there Pippi jumped out of the

      saddle, patted her horse, and said, "Now you've carried us for such a

      long time that you must be tired. It isn't right for one person to do

      all the work."

      And she lifted the horse up in her strong arms and carried him

      until they came to a little clearing in the woods and Teacher said,

      "We'll stop here."

      Pippi looked around and screamed, "Come out now, all you monsters,

      and let's see who is the strongest."

      Teacher explained that there were no monsters in the woods, and

      Pippi was much disappointed.

      "A Forest of Monsters without any monsters! What will folks think

      of next? Soon they'll invent fires without any fire and a

      Christmas-tree gift party without any Christmas tree-just out of

      stinginess.. But on the day they begin having candy stores without

      any candy, I'll go and tell them a thing or two. Oh, ,well, I'll have

      to be a monster myself, I suppose. I don't see any other way out of

      it."

      She let out such a terrific roar that Teacher had to hold her

      hands over her ears and several of the children were scared almost to

      death.

      "Oh, yes, we'll play that Pippi is a monster," cried Tommy,

      enchanted, and clapped his hands. All the children thought that was a

      fine idea. The Monster then went into a deep crevice between the

      rocks, which was to be its den, and all the children ran around

      outside, teasing and yelling, "Stupid, stupid Monster, stupid, stupid

      Monster!"

      Out rushed the Monster, bellowing and chasing the children, who

      ran in all directions to hide. Those who were captured were dragged

      home to the den in the rocks, and the Monster said they were to be

      cooked for dinner. Sometimes they managed to escape while the Monster

      was out hunting for more children, although in order to get away they

      had to climb up a steep rock and that was hard work. There was only

      one little pine tree to get hold of, and it was difficult to know

      where to put one's feet. But it was very exciting, and the children

      thought it was the best game they had ever played.

      Teacher lay in the green grass, reading a book and casting a

      glance at the children every now and then. "That's the wildest

      monster I ever saw," she mumbled to herself.

      And it certainly was. The Monster jumped around and bellowed and

      threw three or four boys over its shoulder at once and dragged them

      down into the den. Sometimes the Monster climbed furiously up into

      the highest treetops and skipped from branch to branch, just as if it

      were a monkey. Sometimes it threw itself upon the horse's back and

      chased a whole crowd of children who were trying to escape through

      the trees. With the horse still in full gallop, the Monster would

      lean down from the saddle, snatch up the children, place them in

      front of itself on the horse, and gallop madly back to the den,

      yelling, "Now I'm going to cook you for dinner!"

      It was such fun the children thought they'd never want to stop.

      But suddenly everything was quiet, and when Tommy and Annika came

      running to see what was the matter they found the Monster sitting on

      a stone with a very strange expression on its face, looking at

      something in its hand.

      "He's dead. Look, he's absolutely dead," said the Monster.

      It was a little baby bird that was dead. It had fallen out of the

      nest and killed itself.

      "Oh, what a shame!" said Annika. The Monster nodded.

      "Pippi, you're crying," said Tommy suddenly.

      "Crying? Me?" said Pippi. "Of course I'm not crying."

      "Yes, but your eyes are all red," insisted Tommy.

      "My eyes red?" said Pippi, and borrowed Mr. Nils-son's pocket

      mirror to see. "Do you call that red? Then you ought to have been

      with Father and me in Batavia. There was a man there whose eyes were

      so red that the police refused to allow him on the streets."

      "Why?" asked Tommy.

      "Because people thought he was a stop sign, of course. And there

      was a dreadful traffic jam every time he came out. Red eyes? Me? No

      sir-ee, you needn't think I'd cry for a little scrap of a bird like

      this," said Pippi.

      "Stupid, stupid Monster! Stupid, stupid Monster!" From all

      directions the children came running to see where the Monster was

      hiding. The Monster took the little scrap of a bird and laid it down

      very carefully on a bed of soft moss.

      "If I could, I'd bring you to life again," she said with a deep

      sigh.

      Then she let out a terrific yell. "Now I'll cook you for dinner,"

      she shrieked. And with happy shouts the children disappeared into the

      bushes.

      One of the girls in the class-her name was Ulla- lived right near

      the Forest of the Monsters. Ulla's mother had promised her that she

      could invite her teacher and her classmates-and Pippi, too, of

      course-for refreshments in the garden. So when the children had

      played the monster game for a long time, and climbed about among the

      rocks for a while, and sailed their birch-bark boats on a large pool,

      and seen how many of them dared to jump off a high stone, then Ulla

      said that it must be time to go to her house and have their fruit

      punch. And Teacher, who had read her book from cover to cover,

      agreed. She gathered the children together and they left the Forest

      of the Monsters.

      Out on the road they met a man with a wagonload of sacks. They

      were heavy sacks and there were many of them, and the man's horse was

      tired. All of a sudden one of the wagon wheels went down into the

      ditch. The man, whose name was Mr. Blomsterlund, became terrifically

      angry. He thought it was the horse's fault. He got out his whip and

      immediately began to beat the horse fast and furiously. The horse

      pulled and tugged and tried with all its might to pull the load up

      onto the road again, but it couldn't do it. Mr. Blomsterlund grew

      angrier and angrier and beat harder and harder. Then Teacher noticed

      him and was almost overcome with sympathy for the poor horse.

      "How can you bear to beat an animal that way?" she said
    to Mr.

      Blomsterlund.

      He let the whip rest a moment and spat before he answered. "Don't

      interfere with what doesn't concern you," said he. "Otherwise it

      might just happen that I'll give you a taste of the whip too, the

      whole lot of you."

      He spat once more and picked up the whip again. The poor horse

      trembled through its whole body. Then something came dashing through

      the crowd of children like a flash of lightning. It was Pippi. She

      was absolutely white around the nose, and when Pippi was white around

      the nose she was angry. Tommy and An- nika knew that. She rushed at

      Mr. Bldrnsterlund, caught him around the waist, and threw him high up

      in the air. When he came down, she caught himand threw him up again.

      Four, five, six times he had to take a trip up into the air. He

      didn't know what had happened to him.

      "Help! Help!" he cried, terrified. At last he landed with a thump

      on the road. He had lost the whip.

      Pippi went and stood in front of him with her hands on her hips.

      "You are not to hit that horse any more. You are not to do it, I tell

      you. Once down in Cape Town I met another man who was whipping his

      horse. He had on such a beautiful uniform, that man, and I told him

      that if he ever whipped his horse again I'd scratch and claw him so

      that there wouldn't be one single thread left whole in his beautiful

      uniform. Just imagine, a week later he did whip his horse again.

      Wasn't it too bad about such a nice uniform?"

      Mr. Blomsterlund was still sitting in the road, completely

      bewildered.

      "Where are you going with your load?" asked Pippi.

      Mr. Blomsterlund, still frightened, pointed at a cottage a little

      way down the road. "Home, over there," he said.

      Then Pippi unhitched the horse, which stood there trembling with

      weariness and fright. "There, there, little horsie!" she said. "Now

      you'll see another kettle of fish!"

      With that she lifted it up in her strong arms and carried it home

      to its stall. The horse looked just as astonished as Mr. Blomsterlund

      did.

      All the children were standing with Teacher, waiting for Pippi.

      And Mr. Blomsterlund stood by his load, scratching his head. He

      didn't know how he was going to get it home.

      Then Pippi came back. She took one of the big, heavy sacks and

      hung it on Mr. Blomsterlund's back.

      "There now!" said she. "Let's see if you're as good at carrying as

      you were at whipping." She picked up the whip. "I really ought to

      give you a few whacks with this, since you seem to be so fond of

      whippings. But the whip is beginning to wear out," she added and

      broke off a piece of it. "Completely worn out, sad to say," she

      continued, and broke the whole whip into tiny, tiny pieces.

      Mr. Blomsterlund with his sack was trudging along the road without

      saying a word. He only puffed a little.

      And Pippi took hold of the wagon shafts and pulled the wagon home

      for him.

      "There, that won't cost you a cent," said she when she had

      deposited the wagon outside Mr. Blomsterlund's barn. "I was glad to

      do it. The trips up into the air were free too."

      Then she went away. Mr. Blomsterlund stood staring after her for a

      long time.

      "Three cheers for Pippi," cried the children when she came

      back.

      Teacher too was much pleased with Pippi and praised her. "That was

      well done," she said. "We should always be kind to animals-and to

      people too, of course."

      Pippi sat on her horse, looking perfectly satisfied. "Well, I

      certainly was good to Mr. Blomsterlund, anyway," she said. "All that

      flying in the air for nothing!"

      "That is why we are here," said Teacher, "to be good and kind to

      other people."

      Pippi stood on her head on the horse's back and waved her legs in

      the air. "Heigh-ho," said she, "then why are the other people

     


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