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+Project Gutenberg's Little Lucy's Wonderful Globe, by Charlotte M. Yonge
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Little Lucy's Wonderful Globe
+
+Author: Charlotte M. Yonge
+
+Posting Date: August 8, 2009 [EBook #4538]
+Release Date: October, 2003
+First Posted: February 4, 2002
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LITTLE LUCY'S WONDERFUL GLOBE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Doug Levy.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE LUCY'S WONDERFUL GLOBE
+
+
+by Charlotte M. Yonge
+
+
+
+ "Young fingers idly roll
+ The mimic earth or trace
+ In picture bright of blue and gold
+ Each other circling chase"--KEBLE
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+Chapter I. Mother Bunch.
+
+Chapter II. Visitors from the South Seas.
+
+Chapter III. Italy.
+
+Chapter IV. Greenland.
+
+Chapter V. Tyrol.
+
+Chapter VI. Africa.
+
+Chapter VII. Laplanders.
+
+Chapter VIII. China.
+
+Chapter IX. Kamschatka.
+
+Chapter X. The Turk.
+
+Chapter XI. Switzerland.
+
+Chapter XII. The Cossack.
+
+Chapter XIII. Spain.
+
+Chapter XIV. Germany.
+
+Chapter XV. Paris in the Siege.
+
+Chapter XVI. The American Guest.
+
+Chapter XVII. The Dream of all Nations.
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE LUCY'S WONDERFUL GLOBE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+MOTHER BUNCH.
+
+
+There was once a wonderful fortnight in little Lucy's life. One
+evening she went to bed very tired and cross and hot, and in the
+morning when she looked at her arms and legs they were all covered
+with red spots, rather pretty to look at, only they were dry and
+prickly.
+
+Nurse was frightened when she looked at them. She turned all the
+little sisters out of the night nursery, covered Lucy up close, and
+ordered her not to stir, certainly not to go into her bath. Then
+there was a whispering and a running about, and Lucy was half
+alarmed, but more pleased at being so important, for she did not
+feel at all ill, and quite enjoyed the tea and toast that Nurse
+brought up to her. Just as she was beginning to think it rather
+tiresome to lie there with nothing to do, except to watch the flies
+buzzing about, there was a step on the stairs and up came the
+doctor. He was an old friend, very good-natured, and he made fun
+with Lucy about having turned into a spotted leopard, just like
+the cowry shell on Mrs. Bunker's mantel-piece. Indeed, he said
+he thought she was such a curiosity that Mrs. Bunker would come
+for her and set her up in the museum, and then he went away.
+Suppose, oh, suppose she did!
+
+Mrs. Bunker, or Mother Bunch, as Lucy and her brothers and sisters
+called her, was housekeeper to their Uncle Joseph. He was really
+their great uncle, and they thought him any age you can imagine.
+They would not have been much surprised to hear that he sailed with
+Christopher Columbus, though he was a strong, hale, active man, much
+less easily tired than their own papa. He had been a ship's surgeon
+in his younger days, and had sailed all over the world, and
+collected all sorts of curious things, besides which he was a very
+wise and learned man, and had made some great discovery. It was
+_not_ America. Lucy knew that her elderly brother understood what
+it was, but it was not worth troubling her head about, only somehow
+it made ships go safer, and so he had had a pension given him as a
+reward. He had come home and bought a house about a mile out of
+town, and built up a high room from which to look at the stars with
+his telescope, and to try his experiments in, and a long one besides
+for his museum; yet, after all, he was not much there, for whenever
+there was anything wonderful to be seen, he always went off to look
+at it, and, whenever there was a meeting of learned men--scientific
+men was the right word--they always wanted him to help them make
+speeches and show wonders. He was away now. He had gone away to
+wear a red cross on his arm, and help to take care of the wounded
+in the sad war between the French and the Germans.
+
+But he had left Mother Bunch behind him. Nobody knew exactly what
+was Mrs. Bunker's nation; indeed she could hardly be said to have
+any, for she had been born at sea, and had been a sailor's wife;
+but whether she was mostly English, Dutch or Spanish, nobody knew
+and nobody cared. Her husband had been lost at sea, and Uncle
+Joseph had taken her to look after his house, and always said she
+was the only woman who had sense and discretion enough ever to go
+into his laboratory or dust his museum.
+
+She was very kind and good natured, and there was nothing that the
+children liked better than a walk to Uncle Joseph's, and, after a
+play in the garden, tea with her. And such quantities of sugar
+there were in her room! such curious cakes made in the fashion of
+different countries! such funny preserves from all parts of the
+world! And still more delightful, such cupboards and drawers full
+of wonderful things, and such stories about them! The younger ones
+liked Mrs. Bunker's room better than Uncle Joseph's museum, where
+there were some big stuffed beasts with glaring eyes that frightened
+them; and they had to walk round with hands behind, that they might
+not touch anything, or else their uncle's voice was sure to call out
+gruffly, "Paws off!"
+
+Mrs. Bunker was not a bit like the smart house-keepers at other
+houses. To be sure, on Sundays she came out in a black silk gown
+with a little flounce at the bottom, a scarlet crape shawl with a
+blue dragon on it--his wings over her back, and a claw over each
+shoulder, so that whoever sat behind her in church was terribly
+distracted by trying to see the rest of him--and a very big yellow
+Tuscan bonnet, trimmed with sailor's blue ribbon.
+
+But during the week and about the house she wore a green gown, with
+a brown holland apron and bib over it, quite straight all the way
+down, for she had no particular waist, and her hair, which was of
+a funny kind of flaxen grey, she bundled up and tied round, without
+any cap or anything else on her head. One of the little boys had
+once called her Mother Bunch, because of her stories; and the name
+fitted her so well that the whole family, and even Uncle Joseph,
+took it up.
+
+Lucy was very fond of her; but when about an hour after the doctor's
+visit she was waked by a rustling and a lumbering on the stairs, and
+presently the door opened, and the second best big bonnet--the
+go-to-market bonnet with the turned ribbons--came into the room with
+Mother Bunch's face under it, and the good-natured voice told her
+she was to be carried to Uncle Joseph's and have oranges and
+tamarinds, she did begin to feel like the spotted cowry-shell to
+think about being set on the chimney-piece, to cry, and say she
+wanted Mamma.
+
+The Nurse and Mother Bunch began to comfort her, and explain that
+the doctor thought she had the scarlatina; not at all badly; but
+that if any of the others caught it, nobody could guess how bad they
+would be; especially Mamma, who had just been ill; and so she was
+to be rolled up in her blankets, and put into a carriage, and taken
+to her uncle's; and there she would stay till she was not only well,
+but could safely come home without carrying infection about with her.
+
+Lucy was a good little girl, and knew that she must bear it; so,
+though she could not help crying a little when she found she must
+not kiss any one, nay not even see them, and that nobody might go
+with her but Lonicera, her own china doll, she made up her mind
+bravely; and she was a good deal cheered when Clare, the biggest
+and best of all the dolls, was sent into her, with all her clothes,
+by Maude, her eldest sister, to be her companion,--it was such an
+honor and so very kind of Maude that it quite warmed the sad little
+heart.
+
+So Lucy had her little scarlet flannel dressing gown on, and her
+shoes and stockings, and a wonderful old knitted hood with a tippet
+to it, and then she was rolled round and round in all her
+bed-clothes, and Mrs. Bunker took her up like a very big baby, not
+letting any one else touch her. How Mrs. Bunker got safe down all
+the stairs no one can tell, but she did, and into the carriage,
+and there poor Lucy looked back and saw at the windows Mamma's face,
+and Papa's, and Maude's and all the rest, all nodding and smiling
+to her, but Maude was crying all the time, and perhaps Mamma was too.
+
+The journey seemed very long; and Lucy was really tired when she
+was put down at last in a big bed, nicely warmed for her, and with
+a bright fire in the room. As soon as she had had some beef-tea,
+she went off soundly to sleep and only woke to drink tea, give the
+dolls their supper, and put them to sleep.
+
+The next evening she was sitting up by the fire, and the fourth day
+she was running about the house as if nothing had ever been the
+matter with her, but she was not to go home for a fortnight; and
+being wet, cold, dull weather, it was not always easy to amuse
+herself. She had her dolls, to be sure, and the little dog Don,
+to play with, and sometimes Mr. Bunker would let her make funny
+things with the dough, or stone the raisins, or even help make a
+pudding; but still there was a good deal of time on her hands.
+She had only two books with her, and the rash had made her eyes
+weak, so that she did not much like reading them. The notes that
+every one wrote from home were quite enough for her. What she
+liked best--that is, when Mrs. Bunker could not attend to her--was
+to wander about the museum, explaining the things to the dolls:
+"That is a crocodile, Lonicera; it eats people up, and has a little
+bird to pick its teeth. Look, Clare, that bony thing is a
+skeleton--the skeleton of a lizard. Paws off, my dear; mustn't touch.
+That's amber, just like barley sugar, only not so nice; people
+make necklaces of it. There's a poor little dead fly inside.
+Those are the dear delightful humming-birds; look at their crests,
+just like Mamma's jewels. See the shells; aren't they beauties?
+People get pearls out of those great flat ones, and dive all down
+to the bottom of the sea after them; mustn't touch, my dear, only
+look; paws off."
+
+One would think that Lonicera's curved fingers, all in one piece,
+and Clare's blue leather hands had been very moveable and mischievous,
+judging by the number of times this warning came; but of course it
+was Lucy herself who wanted it most, for her own little plump, pinky
+hands did almost tingle to handle and turn round those pretty shells.
+She wanted to know whether the amber tasted like barley-sugar, as it
+looked; and there was a little musk deer, no bigger than Don, whom
+she longed to stroke, or still better to let Lonicera ride; but she
+was a good little girl, and had real sense of honor, which never
+betrays a trust; so she never laid a finger on anything but what
+Uncle Joe had once given them leave to move.
+
+This was a very big pair of globes--bigger than globes commonly are
+now, and with more frames round them--one great flat one, with odd
+names painted on it, and another brass one, nearly upright, going
+half-way round from top to bottom, and with the globe hung upon it
+by two pins, which Lucy's elder sisters called the poles, or the ends
+of the axis. The huge round balls went very easily with a slight
+touch, and there was something very charming in making them go whisk,
+whisk, whisk; now faster, now slower, now spinning so quickly that
+nothing on them could be seen, now turning slowly and gradually over
+and showing all that was on them.
+
+The mere twirling was quite enough for Lucy at first, but soon she
+liked to look at what was on them. One she thought more entertaining
+than the other. It was covered with wonderful creatures: one bear
+was fastened by his long tail to the pole; another bigger one was
+trotting round; a snake was coiling about anywhere; a lady stood
+disconsolate against a rock; another sat in a chair; a giant sprawled
+with a club in one hand and a lion's skin in the other; a big dog
+and a little dog stood on their hind legs; a lion seemed just about
+to spring on a young maiden's head; and all were thickly spotted
+over, just as if they had Lucy's rash, with stars big and little:
+and still more strange, her brothers declared these were the stars
+in the sky, and this was the way people found their road at sea;
+but if Lucy asked how, they always said she was not big enough to
+understand, and it had occurred to Lucy to ask whether the truth
+was not that they were not big enough to explain.
+
+The other globe was all in pale green, with pink and yellow outlines
+on it, and quantities of names. Lucy had had to learn some of these
+names for her geography, and she rather kept out of the way of
+looking at it first, till she had really grown tired of all the odd
+men and women and creatures upon the celestial sphere; but by and
+by she began to roll the other by way of variety.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+VISITORS FROM THE SOUTH SEAS.
+
+
+"Miss Lucy, you're as quiet as a mouse. Not in any mischief?"
+said Mrs. Bunker, looking into the museum; "why, what are you
+doing there?"
+
+"I'm looking at the great big globe, that Uncle Joe said I might
+touch," said Lucy. "Here are all the names just like my lesson-book
+at home: Europe, Africa, and America."
+
+"Why, bless the child! where else should they be? There are all them
+oceans and seas besides that I've crossed over, many's the time, with
+poor Ben Bunker, who was last seen off Cape Hatteras."
+
+"What, all these great green places, with Atlantic and Pacific on
+them; you don't really mean that you've sailed over them! I should
+like to make an ant do it on a sunflower seed! How could you,
+Mother Bunch? You are not small enough."
+
+"Ho! ho!" said the housekeeper, laughing; "does the child think I
+sailed on that very globe there?"
+
+"I know one learns names," said Lucy; "but is it real?"
+
+"Real! Why, Missie, don't you see it's a sort of a picture? There's
+your photograph now, it's not as big as you, but it shows you; and
+so a chart, or a map, or a globe, is just a picture of the shapes
+of the coast-line of the land and the sea, and the rivers in them,
+and mountains, and the like. Look here!" And she made Lucy stand
+on a chair and look at a map of her own town that was hanging against
+the wall, showing her all the chief buildings, the churches, streets,
+the town hall, and at last helping her find her own Papa's house.
+
+When Lucy had traced all the corners she had to turn in going from
+home to Uncle Joe's, and had even found little frizzles for the five
+maple trees before the Parsonage, she understood that the map was
+a small picture of the situation of the buildings in the town, and
+thought she could find her way to some new place if she studied it
+well.
+
+Then Mrs. Bunker showed her a big map of the whole country, and there
+Lucy found the river, and the roads, and the names of the villages
+near, as she had seen or heard of them; and she began to understand
+that a map or globe really brought distant places into an exceedingly
+small picture, and that where she saw a name and a spot she was to
+think of houses and churches; that a branching black line was a
+flowing river full of water; a curve in, a pretty bay shut in with
+rocks and hills; a point jutting out, generally a steep rock with a
+lighthouse on it.
+
+"And all these places are countries, Bunchey, are they, with fields
+and houses like ours?"
+
+"Houses, yes, and fields, but not always like ours, Miss Lucy."
+
+"And are there little children, boys and girls, in them all?"
+
+"To be sure there are, else how would the world go on? Why, I've
+seen them by swarms, white or brown or black, running down to the
+shore as soon as the vessel cast anchor; and whatever color they
+were, you might be sure of two things, Miss Lucy, in which they
+were all alike."
+
+"Oh, what, Mrs. Bunker?"
+
+"Why, in making plenty of noise, and in wanting all they could get
+to eat. But they were little darlings, some of them, if I only
+could have got at them to make them a bit cleaner. Some of them
+looked for all the world like the little bronze images your Uncle
+has got in the museum, which he brought from Italy, and they hadn't
+a rag more clothing on either. They were in India. Dear, dear, to
+see them tumble about in the surf!"
+
+"Oh, what fun! what fun! I wish I could see them."
+
+"You would be right glad, Missie, I can tell you, if you had been
+three or four months aboard a vessel with nothing but dry biscuits
+and salt junk, and may be a tin of preserved vegetables just to keep
+it wholesome, to see the black fellows come grinning alongside with
+their boats and canoes all full of oranges and limes and grape-fruit
+and cocoanuts. Doesn't one's mouth fairly water for them?"
+
+"Do please sit down, there's a good Mother Bunch, and tell me all
+about them. Come, please do."
+
+"Suppose I did, Miss Lucy, where would your poor uncle's preserved
+ginger be, that no one knows from real West Indian ginger?"
+
+"Oh, let me come into your room, and you can tell me all the time
+you are doing the ginger.
+
+"It is very hot there, Missie."
+
+"That will be more like some of the places. I'll suppose I'm there!
+Look, Mrs. Bunker! here's a whole green sea; the tiniest little dots
+all over it."
+
+"Dots? You'd hardly see all over one of those dots if you were in
+one. That's the South Sea, Miss Lucy, and those are the loveliest
+isles, except, may be, the West Indies, that ever I saw."
+
+"Tell me about them, please," entreated Lucy. "Here's one; it's
+name is--is Isabel--such a little wee one."
+
+"I can't tell you much of those South Sea Isles, Missie, as I made
+only one voyage among them, when Bunker chartered the _Penguin_ for
+the sandalwood trade; and we did not touch at many, for the natives
+were fierce and savage, and thought nothing of coming down with
+arrows and spears at a boat's crew. So we only went to such islands
+as the missionaries had been to, and had made the people more gentle
+and civil."
+
+"Tell me all about it," said Lucy, following the old woman hither
+and thither as she bustled about, talking all the time, and stirring
+her pan of ginger over the hot plate.
+
+How it happened, it is not easy to say. The room was very warm, and
+Mother Bunch went on talking as she stirred, and a steam rose up,
+and by and by it seemed to Lucy that she had a great sneezing fit;
+and when she looked again into the smoke, what did she see but two
+little black figures, faces, heads, and feet all black, but with an
+odd sort of white garment round their waists, and some fine red and
+green feathers sticking out of their wooly heads.
+
+"Mrs. Bunker, Mrs. Bunker!" she cried; "what's this? Who are these
+ugly figures?"
+
+"Ugly!" said the foremost; and though it must have been some strange
+language, it sounded like English to Lucy. "Is that the way little
+white girl speaks to boy and girl that have come all the way from
+Isabel to see her?"
+
+"Oh, indeed! little Isabel boy, I beg your pardon. I didn't know
+you were real, nor that you could understand me! I am so glad to
+see you. Hush, Don! don't bark so!"
+
+"Pig, pig; I never heard a pig squeak like that," said the black
+stranger.
+
+"Pig! It is a little dog. Have you no dogs in your country?"
+
+"Pigs go on four legs. That must be pig."
+
+"What, you have nothing that goes on four legs but a pig! What do
+you eat, then, besides pig?"
+
+"Yams, cocoa-nut, fish--oh, so good, and put pig into hole among hot
+stones, make a fire over, bake so nice!"
+
+"You shall have some of my tea and see if that is as nice," said
+Lucy. "What a funny dress you have; what is it made of?"
+
+"Tapa cloth," said the little girl. "We get the bark off the tree,
+and then we go hammer, hammer, thump, thump, till all the hard thick
+stuff comes off;" and Lucy, looking near, saw that the substance was
+really all a lacework of fibre, about as close as the net of Nurse's
+caps.
+
+"Is that all your clothes?" she asked.
+
+"Yes, till I am a warrior," said the boy; "then they will tattoo my
+forehead, and arms, and breast, and legs."
+
+"Tattoo? what's that!"
+
+"Make little holes, and lines all over the skin with a sharp shell,
+and rub in juice that turns it all to blue and purple lines."
+
+"But doesn't it hurt dreadfully?" asked Lucy.
+
+"Hurt! to be sure it does, but that will show that I am brave. When
+father comes home from the war he paints himself white."
+
+"White?"
+
+"With lime made by burning coral, and he jumps and dances and shouts.
+I shall go to the war one of these days."
+
+"Oh no, don't!" said Lucy, "it is horrid."
+
+The boy laughed, but the little girl whispered, "Good white men say
+so. Some day Lavo will go and learn, and leave off fighting."
+
+Lavo shook his head. "No, not yet; I will be brave chief and warrior
+first,--bring home many heads of enemies."
+
+"I--I think it nice to be quiet," said Lucy; "and--and--won't you
+have some dinner?"
+
+"Have you baked a pig?" asked Lavo.
+
+"I think this is mutton," said Lucy, when the dish came up,--"It is
+sheep's flesh."
+
+Lavo and his sister had no notion what sheep were. They wanted to
+sit cross-legged on the floor, but Lucy made each of them sit in a
+chair properly; but then they shocked her by picking up the mutton-chops
+and stuffing them into their mouths with their fingers.
+
+"Look here!" and she showed the knives and forks.
+
+"Oh!" cried Lavo, "what good spikes to catch fish with! and
+knife--knife--I'll kill foes! much better than shell knife."
+
+"And I'll dig yams," said the sister.
+
+"Oh, no!" entreated Lucy, "we have spades to dig with, soldiers have
+swords to fight with; these are to eat with."
+
+"I can eat much better without," said Lavo; but to please Lucy his
+sister did try; slashing hard away with her knife, and digging her
+fork straight into a bit of meat. Then she very nearly ran it into
+her eye, and Lucy, who knew it was not good manners to laugh, was
+very near choking herself. And at last saying the knife and fork
+were "Great good--great good; but none for eating," they stuck them
+through the great tortoise shell rings they had in their ears and
+noses. Lucy was distressed about Uncle Joseph's knives and forks,
+which she knew she ought not to give away; but while she was looking
+about for Mrs. Bunker to interfere, Don seemed to think it his
+business and began to growl and fly at the little black legs.
+
+"A tree, a tree!" cried the Isabelites, "where's a tree?" And while
+they spoke, Lavo had climbed up the side of the door, and was sitting
+astride on the top of it, grinning down at the dog; and his sister
+had her feet on the lock, going up after him.
+
+"Tree houses," they cried; "there we are safe from our enemies."
+
+And Lucy found rising before her, instead of her own nursery, a huge
+tree, on the top of a mound. Basket-work had been woven between the
+branches to make floors, and on these were huts of bamboo cane; there
+were ladders hanging down made of strong creepers twisted together,
+and above and around, the cries of cockatoos and parrots and the
+chirp of grasshoppers rang in her ears. She laid hold of the ladder
+of creeping plants and began to climb, but soon her head swam, she
+grew giddy, and called out to Lavo to help her. Then suddenly she
+found herself curled up in Mrs. Bunker's big beehive chair, and she
+wondered whether she had been asleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ITALY.
+
+
+"If I could have such another funny dream!" said Lucy. "Mother
+Bunch, have you ever been to Italy?" and she put her finger on the
+long leg and foot, kicking at three-cornered Sicily.
+
+"Yes, Missie, that I have; come out of this cold room and I'll
+tell you."
+
+Lucy was soon curled in her chair; but no, she wasn't! She was
+under a blue, blue sky, as she had never dreamt of; clear, sharp,
+purple hills rose up against it. There was a rippling little
+fountain, bursting out of a rock, carved with old, old carvings,
+broken now and defaced, but shadowed over by lovely maidenhair fern
+and trailing bindweed; and in a niche above a little roof, a figure
+of the Blessed Virgin. Some way off stood a long, low house propped
+up against the rich yellow stone walls and pillars of another old,
+old building, and with a great chestnut-tree shadowing it. It had
+a balcony, and the gable end was open, and full of big yellow
+pumpkins and clusters of grapes hung up to dry; and some goats
+were feeding round.
+
+Then came a merry, merry voice singing something about _la vendemmia_;
+and though Lucy had never learnt Italian, her wonderful dream
+knowledge made her sure that this meant the vintage, the
+grape-gathering. Presently there came along a youth playing a violin
+and a little girl singing. And a whole party of other children, all
+loaded with as many grapes as they could carry, came leaping and
+singing after them; their black hair loose, or sometimes twisted
+with vine-leaves; their big black eyes dancing with merriment, and
+their bare, brown legs with glee.
+
+"Ah! Cecco, Cecco!" cried the little girl, pausing as she beat her
+tambourine, "here's a stranger who has no grapes; bring them here!"
+
+"But," said Lucy, "aren't they your mamma's grapes; may you give
+them away?"
+
+"Ah, ah! 'tis the _vendemmia!_ all may eat grapes; as much as they
+will. See, there's the vineyard."
+
+Lucy saw on the slope of the hill above the cottage long poles such
+as hops grow upon, and clusters hanging down. Men in shady, battered
+hats, bright sashes and braces, and white shirt sleeves, and women
+with handkerchiefs folded square over their heads, were cutting the
+grapes down, and piling them up in baskets; and a low cart drawn by
+two mouse-colored oxen, with enormous wide horns and gentle-looking
+eyes, was waiting to be loaded with baskets.
+
+"To the wine-press! to the press!" shouted the children, who were
+politeness itself and wanted to show her everything.
+
+The wine-press was a great marble trough with pipes leading off
+into other vessels around. Into it went the grapes, and in the
+midst were men and boys and little children, all with bare feet
+and legs up to the knees, dancing and leaping, and bounding and
+skipping upon the grapes, while the red juice covered their brown
+skins.
+
+"Come in, come in; you don't know how charming it is!" cried Cecco.
+"It is the best time of all the year, the dear vintage; come in and
+tread the grapes."
+
+"But you must take off your shoes and stockings," said his sister,
+Nunziata; "we never wear them but on Sundays and holidays."
+
+Lucy was not sure that she might, but the children looked so joyous,
+and it seemed to be such fun, that she began fumbling with the
+buttons of her boots, and while she was doing it she opened her eyes,
+and found that her beautiful bunch of grapes was only the cushion in
+the bottom of Mother Bunch's chair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+GREENLAND.
+
+
+"Now suppose I tried what the very cold countries are like!"
+
+And Lucy bent over the globe till she was nearly ready to cut her
+head off with the brass meridian, as she looked at the long, jagged
+tongue, with no particular top to it, hanging down on the east side
+of America. Perhaps it was the making herself so cold that did it,
+but she found herself in the midst of snow, snow, snow! All was
+snow except the sea, and that was a deep green, and in it were
+monstrous, floating white things, pinnacled all over like a Cathedral,
+and as big, and with hollows in them of glorious deep blue and green,
+like jewels; Lucy knew they were icebergs. A sort of fringe of these
+cliffs of ice hemmed in the shore. And on one of them stood what she
+thought at first was a little brown bear, for the light was odd, the
+sun was so very low down, and there was so much glare from the snow
+that it seemed unnatural. However, before she had time to be afraid
+of the bear, she saw that it was really a little boy, with a hood and
+coat and leggings of thick, thick fur, and a spear in his hand, with
+which he every now and then made a dash at a fish,--great cod fish,
+such as Mamma had often on a Friday.
+
+Into them went his spear, up came the poor fish, which was strung
+with some others on a string the boy carried. Lucy crept up as
+well as she could on the slippery ice, and the little Esquimaux
+stared at her with a kind of stupid surprise.
+
+"Is that the way you get fish?" she asked.
+
+"Yes, and seals; father gets them," he said.
+
+"Oh, what's that swimming out there?"
+
+"That's a white bear," he said coolly; "we had better get home."
+
+Lucy thought so indeed; only where was home?--that puzzled her.
+However, she trotted along by the side of her companion, and
+presently came to what might have been an enormous snow-ball, but
+there was a hole in it. Yes, it was hollow; and as her companion
+made for the opening, she saw more little stout figures rolled up
+in furs inside. Then she perceived that it was a house built up of
+blocks of snow, arranged so as to make the shape of a beehive, all
+frozen together, and with a window of ice. It made her shiver to
+think of going in, but she thought the white bear might come after
+her, and in she went. Even her little head had to bend under the
+low doorway, and behold, it was the very closest, stuffiest, if
+not the hottest place she had ever been in! There was a kind of
+lamp burning in the hut; that is, a wick was floating in some oil,
+but there was no glass, such as Lucy had been apt to think the
+chief part of a lamp, and all round it squatted upon skins these
+queer little stumpy figures dressed so much alike that there was
+no knowing the men from the women, except that the women had much
+bigger boots, and used them instead of pockets, and they had their
+babies in bags of skin upon their backs.
+
+They seemed to be kind people, for they made room near their lamp
+for the little girl, and asked her where she had been wrecked.
+Then one of the women cut off a great lump of raw something--was
+it a walrus, with that round head and big tusks?--and held it up
+to her; and when Lucy shook her head and said, "No, thank you," as
+civilly as she could, the woman tore it in two, and handed a lump
+over her shoulder to her baby, who began to gnaw it. Then her
+first friend, the little boy, hoping to please her better, offered
+her some drink. Ah! it was oil, just like the oil that was burning
+in the lamp!--horrid oil from the whales! She could not help
+shaking her head; and so much that she woke herself up!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+TYROL.
+
+
+"Suppose I could see where that dear little black chamois horn came
+from! But Mother Bunch can't tell me about that I'm afraid, for she
+always went by sea, and here's the Tyrol without one bit of sea near
+it. It's just one of the strings to the great knot of mountains
+that tie Europe up in the middle. Oh! what is a mountain like?"
+
+Then suddenly came on Lucy's ears a loud blast like a trumpet; another
+answered it farther off, another fainter still, and as she started up
+she found she was standing on a little shelf of green grass with steep
+slopes of stones and rock above, below, and around her; and rising up
+all round were huge, tall hills, their smooth slopes green and grassy,
+but in the steep places all terrible cliff and precipice; and as they
+were seen further away they looked a beautiful purple, like a
+thunder-cloud.
+
+Close to Lucy grew blue gentians like those in Mamma's garden, and
+Alpine roses, and black orchids; but she did not know how to come
+down, and was getting rather frightened, when a clear little voice
+said, "Little lady, have you lost your way? Wait till the evening
+hymn is over, and I'll come and help you;" and then Lucy stood and
+listened, while from all the peaks whence the horns had been blown
+there came the strong, sweet sound of an evening hymn, all joining
+together, while there arose distant echoes of others farther away.
+When it was over, one shout of "Jodel" echoed from each point, and
+then all was still except for the tinkling of a cow-bell. "That's
+the way we wish each other good night," said the little girl, as
+the shadows mounted high on the tops of the mountains, leaving them
+only peaks of rosy light. "Now come to the chalet, and sister Rose
+will give you some milk."
+
+"Help me. I'm afraid," said Lucy.
+
+"That is nothing," said the mountain maiden springing up to her like
+a kid, in spite of her great heavy shoes; "you should see the places
+Father and Seppel climb when they hunt the chamois."
+
+"What is your name?" asked Lucy, who much liked the looks of her
+little companion in her broad straw hat, with a bunch of Alpine
+roses in it, her thick striped frock, and white body and sleeves,
+braced with black ribbon; it was such a pleasant, fresh, open face,
+with such rosy cheeks and kindly blue eyes, that Lucy felt quite
+at home.
+
+"I am little Katherl. This is the first time I have come up with
+Rose to the chalet, but I am big enough to milk the cows now. Ah!
+do you see Daisy, the black one with a white tuft? She is our
+leading cow, and she knows it, the darling. She never lets the
+others get into dangerous places; she leads them home at the sound
+of a horn; and when we go back to the village she will lead the
+herd with a flower on the point of each horn, and a wreath round
+her neck. The men will come up for us, Seppel and all; and may be
+Seppel will bring the prize medal for shooting with the rifle."
+
+"But what do you do up here?"
+
+"We girls go up for the summer with the cows to the pastures, the
+grass is so rich and good on the mountains, and we make butter and
+cheese. Wait, and you shall taste. Sit down on the stone."
+
+Lucy was glad to hear that promise, for the fresh mountain air had
+made her hungry. Katherl skipped away towards a house with a
+projecting wooden balcony, and deep eaves, beautifully carved, and
+came back with a slice of bread and delicious butter, and a good
+piece of cheese, all on a wooden platter, and a little bowl of new
+milk. Lucy thought she had never tasted anything so nice.
+
+"And now the gracious little lady will rest a little while," said
+Katherl, "whilst I go and help Rose to strain the milk."
+
+So Lucy waited, but she felt so tired with her scramble that she
+could not help nodding off to sleep, though she would have liked
+very much to have stayed longer with the dear little Tyrolese.
+But we know by this time where she always found herself when
+she awoke.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+AFRICA.
+
+
+Oh! oh! here is a little dried crocodile come alive, and opening a
+horrid great mouth, lined with terrible teeth, at her.
+
+No, he is no longer in the museum; he is in a broad river, yellow,
+heavy, and thick with mud; the borders are crowded with enormous
+reeds and rushes; there is no getting through; no breaking away
+from him; here he comes; horrid, horrid beast! Oh, how could Lucy
+have been so foolish as to want to travel in Africa up to the higher
+parts of the Nile? How will she ever get back again? He will gobble
+her up, her and Clare, who was trusted to her, and what will mamma
+and sister do?
+
+Hark! There's a cry, a great shout, and out jumps a little black
+figure, with a stout club in his hand. Crash it goes down on the
+head of master crocodile. The ugly beast is turning over on its
+back and dying. Then Lucy has time to look at the little negro,
+and he has time to look at her. What a droll figure he is, with
+his wooly head and thick lips, the whites of his eyes and his teeth
+gleaming so brightly, and his fat little black person shining all
+over, as well it may, for he is rubbed from head to foot with
+castor-oil. There it grows on the bush, with broad, beautiful, folded
+leaves and red stems and the pretty grey and black nuts. Lucy
+only wishes the negroes would keep it all to polish themselves
+with, and not send any home.
+
+She wants to give the little black fellow some reward for saving her
+from the crocodile, and luckily Clare has on her long necklace of
+blue glass beads. She puts it into his hand, and he twists it round
+his black wool, and cuts such dances and capers for joy that Lucy
+can hardly stand for laughing; but the sun shines scorching hot upon
+her, and she gets under the shade of a tall date palm, with big
+leaves all shooting out together at the top, and fine bunches of
+dates below, all fresh and green, not like those papa sometimes
+gives her at dessert.
+
+The little negro, Tojo, asks if she would like some. He takes her
+by the hand, and leads her into a whole cluster of little round mud
+huts, telling her that he is Tojo, the king's son; she is his little
+sister and these are all his mothers! Which is his real mother Lucy
+cannot quite make out, for she sees an immense party of black women,
+all shiny and polished, with a great many beads wound round their
+heads, necks, ankles, and wrists; and nothing besides the tiniest
+short petticoats: and all the fattest are the smartest; indeed, they
+have gourds of milk beside them, and are drinking it all day long
+to keep themselves fat. No sooner however is Lucy led in among them,
+than they all close round, some singing and dancing, and others
+laughing for joy, and crying, "Welcome, little daughter from the
+land of spirits!" And then she finds out that they think she is
+really Tojo's little sister, who died ten moons ago, come back
+again from the grave as a white spirit.
+
+Tojo's own mother, a very fat woman indeed, holds out her arms, as
+big as bed-posts and terribly greasy, gives her a dose of sour milk
+out of a gourd, makes her lie down with her head in her lap, and
+begins to sing to her, till Lucy goes to sleep; and wakes, very
+glad to see the crocodile as brown and hard and immovable as ever;
+and that odd round gourd with a little hole in it, hanging up near
+the ceiling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+LAPLANDERS.
+
+
+"It shall not be a hot country next time," said Lucy, "though, after
+all, the whale oil was not much worse than the castor oil.--Mother
+Bunch, did your whaler always go to Greenland, and never to any
+nicer place?"
+
+"Well, Missie, once we were driven between foul winds and icebergs
+up into a fiord near North Cape, right at midsummer, and I'll never
+forget what we saw there."
+
+Lucy was not likely to forget, either, for she found herself standing
+by a narrow inlet of sea, as blue and smooth as a lake, and closely
+shut in, except where the bare rock was too steep, or where on a
+somewhat smoother shelf stood a timbered house, with a farm-yard and
+barns all round it. But the odd thing was that the sun was where
+she had never seen him before,--quite in the north, making all the
+shadows come the wrong way. But how came the sun to be visible at
+all so very late? Ah! she knew it now; this was Norway, and at this
+time of the year there was no night at all!
+
+And here beside her was a little fellow with a bow and arrows, such
+as she had never seen before, except in the hands of the little
+Cupids in the pictures in the drawing-room. Mother Bunch had said
+that the little brown boys in India looked like the bronze Cupid who
+was on the mantleshelf, but this little boy was white, or rather
+sallow-faced, and well dressed too, in a tight, round, leather cap,
+and a dark blue kind of shaggy gown with hairy leggings; and what
+he was shooting at was some kind of wild-duck or goose, that came
+tumbling down heavily with the arrow right through its neck.
+
+"There," said the boy, "I'll take that, and sell it to the Norse
+farmer's wife up in the house above there."
+
+"Who are you, then?" said Lucy.
+
+"I'm a Lapp. We live on the hills, where the Norseman has not driven
+us away, and where the reindeer find their grass in summer and moss
+in winter."
+
+"Oh! have you got reindeer? I should so like to see them and to
+drive in a sledge!"
+
+The boy, whose name was Peder, laughed, and said, "You can't go in a
+sledge except when it is winter, with snow and ice to go upon, but
+I'll soon show you a reindeer."
+
+Then he led the way, past the deliciously smelling, whispering pine
+woods that sheltered the Norwegian homestead, past a seater or
+mountain meadow where the girls were pasturing their cows, much like
+Lucy's friends in the Tyrol, then out upon the gray moorland, where
+there was an odd little cluster of tents covered with skins, and
+droll little, short, stumpy people running about them.
+
+Peder gave a curious long cry, put his hand in his pocket, and pulled
+out a lump of salt. Presently, a pair of long horns appeared, then
+another, then a whole herd of the deer with big heads and horns
+growing a good deal forward. The salt was held to them, and a rope
+was fastened to all their horns that they might stand still in a
+line, while the little Lapp women milked them. Peder went up to
+one of the women, and brought back a little cupful of milk for his
+visitor; it was all that one deer gave, but it was so rich as to be
+almost like drinking cream.
+
+He led her into one of the tents, but it was very smoky, and not
+much cleaner than the tent of the Esquimaux. It is a wonder how
+Lucy could go to sleep there, but she did, heartily wishing herself
+somewhere else.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+CHINA.
+
+
+Was it the scent of the perfumed tea, a present from an old sailor
+friend, which Mrs. Bunker was putting away, or was it the sight of
+the red jar ornamented with black-and-gold men, with round caps,
+long petticoats, and pigtails, that caused Lucy next to open her
+eyes upon a cane sofa, with cushions ornamented with figures in
+colored silks? The floor of the room was of shining inlaid wood;
+there were beautifully woven mats all round; stands made of red
+lacquer work, and seats of cane and bamboo; and there was a round
+window, through which could be seen a beautiful garden, full of
+flowering shrubs and trees, a clear pond lined with colored tiles
+in the middle, and over the wall the gilded roof of a pagoda, like
+an umbrella, only all in ridge and furrow, and with a little bell
+at every spoke. Beyond, were beautifully and fantastically shaped
+hills, and a lake below with pleasure boats on it. It was all
+wonderfully like a pretty china bowl come to life, and Lucy knew
+she was in China, even before there came into the room, toddling
+upon her poor little, tiny feet, a young lady with a small yellow
+face, little slips of eyes sloping upwards from her flat nose, and
+black hair combed up very tight from her face and twisted with
+flowers and ornaments. She had ever so many robes on, the edge
+of one peeping out below the other, and at the top a sort of blue
+China-crape tunic, with very wide, loose sleeves dropping an immense
+way from her hands. There was no gathering in at the waist, and
+it reached to her knees, where a still more splendid white silk,
+embroidered, trailed along. She had a big fan in her hand; but
+when she saw the visitor she went up to a beautiful little, low
+table, with an ivory frill round it, where stood some dainty,
+delicate tea-cups and saucers. Into one of these she put a little
+ball, about as big as an oak-apple, of tea-leaves; a maid dressed
+like herself poured hot water on it, and handed it on a lacquer-work
+tray. Lucy took it, said, "Thank you," and then waited.
+
+"Is it not good?" said the little hostess.
+
+"It must be! You are the real tea people," said Lucy: "but I was
+waiting for sugar and milk."
+
+"That would spoil it," said the Chinese damsel; "only outer barbarians
+would think of such a thing. And, ah! I see you are one! See, Ki-hi,
+what monstrous feet!"
+
+"They are not bigger than your maid's," said Lucy rather disgusted.
+"Why are yours so small?"
+
+"Because my mother and nurse took care of me when I was a baby, and
+bound them up that they might not grow big and ugly like those of
+the poor creatures who have to run about for their husbands, feed
+silk worms, and tend ducks!"
+
+"But shouldn't you like to walk without almost tumbling down?"
+said Lucy.
+
+"No, indeed! Me a daughter of a mandarin of the blue button! You
+are a mere barbarian to think a lady ought to want to walk. Do you
+not see that I never do anything? Look at my lovely nails."
+
+"I think they are claws," said Lucy; "do you never break them?"
+
+"No; when they are a little longer, I shall wear silver shields for
+them as my mother does."
+
+"And do you really never work?"
+
+"I should think not," said the young lady, scornfully fanning herself;
+"I leave that to the common folk, who are obliged to. Come with me and
+let me lean on you, and I will give you a peep through the lattice, that
+you may see that my father is far above making his daughter work. See,
+there he sits, with his moustachios hanging down to his chin, and his
+pig-tail to his heels, and the blue dragon embroidered on his breast,
+watching while they prepare the hall for a grand dinner. There will be
+a stew of puppy dog, and another of kittens, and bird's-nest soup; and
+then the players will come and act part of the nine-night tragedy, and
+we will look through the lattice. Ah! father is smoking opium, that he
+may be serene and in good spirits! Does it make your head ache? Ah!
+that is because your are a mere outer barbarian. She is asleep, Ki-hi;
+lay her on the sofa, and let her sleep. How ugly her pale hair is,
+almost as bad as her big feet!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+KAMSCHATKA.
+
+
+Lucy had been disappointed at not having a drive with the reindeer,
+and she had been telling Don how useful his relations were in other
+places. Behold, she awoke in a wide plain, where, as far as her eye
+could reach, there was nothing but snow. The few fir-trees that
+stood in the distance were heavily laden; and Lucy herself,--where
+was she? Going very fast? Yes, whisking over the snow with all
+her might and main, and muffled up in cloaks and furs, as indeed
+was necessary, for her breath froze upon the big muffler round her
+throat, so that it seemed to become as hard as a stone wall; and by
+her side was a little boy, muffled up quite as close, with a cap, or
+rather hood, casing his whole head, his hands gloved in fur up to
+the elbows, and long fur boots. He had an immense long whip in his
+hand, and was flourishing it, and striking with it--at what? They
+were an enormous way off from him, but they really were very big
+dogs, rushing along like the wind, and bearing along with them--what?
+Lucy's ambition--a sledge, a thing without wheels, but gliding
+along most rapidly on the hard snow; flying, flying almost fast
+enough to take away her breath, and leaving birds, foxes, and
+any creature she saw for one instant, far behind. And--what was
+very odd--the young driver had no reins; he shouted at the dogs
+and now and then threw a stick at them, and they quite seemed to
+understand, and turned when he wanted them to turn. Lucy wondered
+how he or they knew the way, it all seemed such a waste of snow.
+They went so fast that at first she was unable to speak; then she
+ventured on gasping out, "Well, I've been in an express train, but
+this beats it! Where are you going?"
+
+"To Petropawlowsky, to change these skins for coffee, and rice, and
+rice," answered the boy.
+
+"What skins are they?" asked Lucy.
+
+"Bears'--big brown bears that father killed in a cave--and wolves'
+and those of the little ermine and sable that we trap. We get much,
+much for the white ermine and his black tail. Father's coming in
+another sledge with, oh! such a big pile. Don't you hear his dogs
+yelp? We'll win the race yet! Ugh! hoo! hoo! ho-o-o-o!--On! on!
+lazy ones, on, I say! don't let the old dogs catch the young ones!"
+
+Crack, crack, went the whip; the dogs yelped with eagerness,--they
+don't bark, those Northern dogs; the little Kamschatkadale bawled
+louder and louder, and never saw when Lucy rolled off behind, and
+was left in the middle of a huge snowdrift, while he flew on with
+his load.
+
+Here were his father's dogs overtaking her; and then some one was
+picking her up. No, it was Don! and here was Mrs. Bunker exclaiming,
+"Well, if here is not Miss Lucy asleep on Master's old bearskin!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE TURK.
+
+
+"What a beautiful long necklace, Mrs. Bunker! May I have it for
+Lonicera?"
+
+"You may play with it while you are here, Missie, if you'll take
+care not to break the string, but it is too curious for you to take
+home and lose. It is what they call a Turkish rosary; they say it
+is made of rose-leaves reduced to a paste and squeezed ever so hard
+together, and that the poor ladies that are shut up in the harems
+have little or nothing to do but to run them through their fingers."
+
+"It has a very nice smell," said Lucy, examining the dark brown beads,
+which hung loosely on their string, and letting them fall one by one
+through her hands, till of course that happened which she was hoping
+for: she woke on a long, low sofa, in the midst of a room all carpet
+and cushions, in bright colors and gorgeous patterns, curling about
+with no particular meaning; and with a window of rich brass
+lattice-work.
+
+And by her side there was an odd bubbling that put her in mind of
+blowing the soap-suds into a froth when preparing them for bubble
+blowing; but when she looked round she saw something very unlike
+the long pipes her big brother used, or the basin of soap-suds.
+There was a beautifully shaped glass bottle, and into it went a
+very long twisting tube, like a snake coiled on the floor, and the
+other end of the serpent, instead of a head, had an amber mouth-piece
+which went between a pair of lips. Lucy knew it for a hubble-bubble
+or Turkish pipe, and saw that the lips were in a brown face,
+with big black eyes, round which dark bluish circles were drawn.
+The jet-black hair was carefully braided with jewels, and over
+it was thrown a purple satin sort of pelisse over a white silk
+embroidered vest, tied in with a sash, striped with all manner
+of colors; also immense wide white trousers, out of which peeped
+a pair of brown bare feet, on which, however, were a splendid pair
+of slippers curled up at the toes.
+
+The owner seemed to be very little older than Lucy, and sat gravely
+looking at her for a little while, then clapped her hands. A black
+woman came, and the young Turkish maiden said, "Bring coffee for the
+little Frank lady."
+
+So a tiny table of mother-of-pearl was brought, and on it some exquisite
+little striped porcelain cups, standing not in saucers, but in silver
+filigree cups into which they exactly fitted. Lucy remembered her
+Chinese experience, and did not venture to ask for milk or sugar, but
+she found that the real Turkish coffee was so pure and delicate that
+she could drink it without.
+
+"Where are your jewels?" then asked the little hostess.
+
+"I'm not old enough to have any."
+
+"How old are you?"
+
+"Nine."
+
+"Nine! I'm only ten, and I shall be married next week---"
+
+"Married! Oh, no, you are joking."
+
+"Yes, I shall. Selim Bey has paid my father the dowry for me, and I
+shall be taken to his house next week."
+
+"And I suppose you like him very much."
+
+"He looks big and tall," said the child with exultation. "I saw him
+riding when I went with my mother to the Sweet Waters. 'Amina,' she
+said, 'there is your lord, in the Frankish coat--with the white horse.'"
+
+"Have you not talked to him?" asked Lucy.
+
+"What should I do that for?" said Amina.
+
+"Aunt Bessie used to like to talk to nobody but Uncle Frank before
+they were married," replied Lucy.
+
+"I shall talk enough when I am married," replied the little Turk.
+"I shall make him give me plenty of sweetmeats, and a carriage with
+two handsome bullocks, and the biggest Nubian black slave in the
+market to drive me to Sweet Waters, in a thin blue veil, with all
+my jewels on. Father says that Selim Bey will give me everything,
+and a Frank governess. What is a governess? Is it anything like
+the little gold case you have round your neck?"
+
+"My locket with Mamma's hair? Oh, no, no," said Lucy, laughing; "a
+governess is a lady to teach you."
+
+"I don't want to learn any more," said Amina, much disgusted; "I
+shall tell him I can make sweetmeats, and roll rose-leaves. What
+should I learn for?"
+
+"Should you not like to read and write?"
+
+"Teaching is only meant for men," replied Amina. "They have got to
+read the Koran, but it is all ugly letters; I won't learn to read."
+
+"You don't know how nice it is to read stories all about different
+countries," said Lucy. "Ah! I wish I was in the schoolroom, at
+home, and I would show you how pleasant it is."
+
+And Lucy seemed to have her wish all at once, for she and Amina stood
+in her own schoolroom, but with no one else there. The first thing
+Amina did was to scream, "Oh, what shocking windows! even men can
+see in; shut them up." She rolled herself up in her veil, and Lucy
+could only satisfy her by pulling down all the blinds, after which
+she ventured to look about a little. "What have you to sit on?" she
+asked with great disgust.
+
+"Chairs and stools," said Lucy, laughing and showing them.
+
+"These little tables with four legs! How can you sit on them?"
+
+Lucy sat down and showed her. "That is not sitting," she said, and
+she tried to curl herself up cross-legged.
+
+"Our teacher always makes us write a long grammar lesson if she sees
+us sitting with our legs crossed," said Lucy, laughing with much
+amusement at Amina's attempts to wriggle herself up on the stool
+from which she nearly fell.
+
+"Ah, I will never have a governess!" cried Amina. "I will cry and cry,
+and give Selim Bey no rest till he promises to let me alone. What a
+dreadful place this is! Where can you sleep?"
+
+"In bed, to be sure," said Lucy.
+
+"I see no cushions to lie on."
+
+"No; we have bedrooms, and beds there. We should not think of taking
+off our clothes here."
+
+"What should you undress for?"
+
+"To sleep, of course."
+
+"How horrible! We sleep in all our clothes wherever we like to lie
+down. We never undress but for the bath. Do you go to the bath?"
+
+"I have a bath every morning, when I get up, in my own room."
+
+"Bathe at home! Then you never see your friends? We meet at the
+bath, and talk and play and laugh."
+
+"Meet bathing! No, indeed! We meet at home, and out of doors,"
+said Lucy; "my friend Annie and I walk together."
+
+"Walk together! what, in the street? Shocking! You cannot be a lady."
+
+"Indeed I am," said Lucy, coloring up. "My papa is a gentleman. And
+see how many books we have, and how much we have to learn! French, and
+music, and sums, and grammar, and history, and geography."
+
+"I WILL not be a Frank! No, no! I will not learn," said the
+alarmed Amina on hearing this catalogue poured forth.
+
+"Geography is very nice," said Lucy; "here are our maps. I will
+show you where you live. This is Constantinople."
+
+"I live at Stamboul," said Amina, scornfully.
+
+"There is Stamboul in little letters below--look."
+
+"That Stamboul! The Frank girl is false; Stamboul is a large, large,
+beautiful place; not a little black speck. I can see it from my
+lattice. White houses and mosques in the sun, and the blue Golden
+Horn, with the little vessels gliding along."
+
+Before Lucy could explain, the door opened, and one of her brothers
+put in his head. At once Amina began to scream and roll herself in
+the window curtain. "A man in the harem! Oh! oh! oh! Were there
+no slippers at the door?" And her screaming awoke Lucy, who found
+herself at her Uncle Joe's again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+SWITZERLAND.
+
+
+"I liked the mountain girl best of all," thought Lucy. "I wonder
+whether I shall ever get among the mountains again. There's a
+great stick in the corner that Uncle Joe calls his alpenstock.
+I'll go and read the names upon it. They are the names of all
+the mountains where he has used it."
+
+She read Mount Blanc, Mount Cenis, the Wengern, and so on; and of
+course as she read and sung them over to herself, they lulled her
+off into her wonderful dreams, and brought her this time into a
+meadow, steep and sloping, but full of flowers, the loveliest
+flowers, of all kinds, growing among the long grass that waved
+over them. The fresh, clear air was so delicious that she almost
+hoped she was back in her dear Tyrol; but the hills were not the
+same. She saw upon the slope quantities of cows, goats, and sheep,
+feeding just as on the Tyrolese Alps; but beyond was a dark row of
+pines, and above, in the sky as it were, rose all round great sharp
+points--like clouds for their whiteness, but not in their straight,
+jagged outlines. And here and there the deep gray clefts between
+seemed to spread into white rivers, or over the ruddy purple of the
+half-distance came sharp white lines darting downwards.
+
+As she sat up in the grass and looked about her, a bark startled
+her. A dog began to growl, bark, and dance round her, so that she
+would have been much frightened if the next moment a voice had not
+called him off--"Fie, Brilliant, down; let the little girl alone.
+He is good, Madamoiselle, never fear. He helps me keep the cows."
+
+"Who are you, then?"
+
+"I am Maurice, the little herd-boy. I live with my grandmother, and
+work for her."
+
+"What, in keeping cows?"
+
+"Yes; and look here!"
+
+"Oh, the delicious little cottage! It has eaves and windows, and
+balconies, and a door, and little cows and sheep, and men and women,
+all in pretty white wood! You did not make it, Maurice?"
+
+"Yes, truly I did; I cut it out with my knife, all myself."
+
+"How clever you must be. And what shall you do with it?"
+
+"I shall watch for a carriage with ladies winding up that long road;
+and then I shall stand and take off my hat, and hold out my cottage.
+Perhaps they will buy it, and then I shall have enough to get
+grandmother a warm gown for the winter. When I grow bigger I will
+be a guide, like my father."
+
+"A guide?"
+
+"Yes, to lead travellers up to the mountain-tops. There is nowhere
+you English will not go. The harder a mountain is to climb, the
+more bent you are on going up. And oh, I shall love it too! There
+are the great glaciers, the broad streams of ice that fill up the
+furrows of the mountains, with the crevasses so blue and beautiful
+and cruel. It was in one of them my father was swallowed up."
+
+"Ah! then how can you love them?" said Lucy.
+
+"Because they are so grand and so beautiful," said Maurice. "No
+other place has the like, and they make one's heart swell with
+wonder, and joy in the God who made them."
+
+And Maurice's eyes sparkled, and Lucy looked at the clear, stern
+glory of the mountain points, and felt as if she understood him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE COSSACK.
+
+
+Caper, caper; dance, dance. What a wonderful dance it was, just as
+if the little fellow had been made of cork, so high did he bound
+the moment he touched the ground; while he jerked out his arms and
+legs as if they were pulled by strings, like the Marionettes that
+had once performed in front of the window. Only, his face was all
+fun and life, and he did look so proud and delighted to show what
+he could do; and it was all in clear, fresh, open air, the whole
+extent covered with short, green grass, upon which were grazing
+herds of small lean horses, and flocks of sheep without tails, but
+with their wool puffed out behind into a sort of bustle or _panier_.
+There was a cluster of clean, white-looking houses in the distance;
+and Lucy knew that she was in the great plains called the Steppes,
+that lie between the rivers Volga and Don.
+
+"Do you live there?" she asked, by way of beginning the conversation.
+
+"Yes; my father is the hetman of the Stantitza, and these are my
+holidays. I go to school at Tcherkask the greater part of the
+year."
+
+"Tcherkask! Oh, what a funny name!"
+
+"And you would think it a funny town if you were there. It is built
+on a great bog by the side of the river Volga; all the houses stand
+on piles of timber, and in the spring the streets are full of water,
+and one has to sail about in boats."
+
+"Oh! that must be delicious."
+
+"I don't like it as much as coming home and riding. See!" and as he
+whistled, one of the horses came whinnying up, and put his nose over
+the boy's shoulder.
+
+"Good fellow! But your horses are thin; they look little."
+
+"Little?" cried the young Cossack. "Why, do you know what our little
+horses can do? There are not many armies in Europe that they have not
+ridden down, at one time or another. Why, the church at Tcherkask is
+hung all round with Colors we have taken from our enemies. There's the
+Swede--didn't Charles XII. get the worst of it when he came in his big
+boots after the Cossack?--ay, and the Turk, and the Austrian, and the
+French? Ah! doesn't my Grandfather tell how he rode his good little
+horse all the way from the Volga to the Seine, and the good Czar
+Alexander himself gave him the medal with 'Not unto us, but unto Thy
+Name be the praise'? Our father the Czar does not think so little of
+us and our horses as you do, young lady."
+
+"I beg your pardon," said Lucy; "I did not know what your horses
+could do."
+
+"Oh, you did not! That is some excuse for you. I'll show you."
+
+And in one moment he was on the back of his little horse, leaning
+down on its neck, and galloping off over the green plain like the
+wind; but it seemed to Lucy as if she had only just watched him
+out of sight on one side before he was close to her on the other,
+having whirled round and cantered close up to her while she was
+looking the other way. "Come up with me," he said; and in one
+moment she had been swept up before him on the little horse's neck,
+and was flying so wildly over the Steppes that her breath and sense
+failed her, and she knew no more till she was safe by Mrs. Bunker's
+fireside again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+SPAIN.
+
+
+"Suppose now I go to sleep again; what should I like to see next?
+A sunny place, I think, where there is sea to look at. Shall it
+be Spain, and shall it be among the poor people? Well, I think I
+should be where there is a little lady girl. I hope they are not
+all as lazy and conceited as the Chinese and the Turk."
+
+So Lucy awoke in a large, cool room with a marble floor and heavy
+curtains, but with little furniture except one table, and a row of
+chairs ranged along the wall. It had two windows, one looking out
+into a garden,--such a garden!--orange-trees with shining leaves
+and green and golden fruit and white flowers, and jasmines, and
+great lilies standing round about a marble court. In the midst of
+this court was a basin of red marble, where a fountain was playing,
+making a delicious splashing; and out beyond these sparkled in the
+sun the loveliest and most delicious of blue seas--the same blue
+sea, indeed, that Lucy had seen in her Italian visit.
+
+That window was empty; but the other, which looked out into the
+street, had cushions laid on the sill, an open-work stone ledge
+beyond, and little looking-glasses on either side. Leaning over this
+sill there was seated a little maiden in a white frock, but with a
+black lace veil fastened by a rose into her jet-black hair, and the
+daintiest, prettiest-shaped little feet imaginable in white satin
+shoes, which could be plainly seen as she knelt on the window-seat.
+
+"What are you looking at?" asked Lucy, coming to her side.
+
+"I'm watching for the procession. Then I shall go to church with
+mamma. Look! That way we shall see it come; these two mirrors
+reflect everything up and down the street."
+
+"Are you dressed for church?" asked Lucy. "You have no hat on."
+
+"Where does your grace come from not to know that a mantilla is
+what is for church? Mamma is being dressed in her black silk and
+her black mantilla."
+
+"And your shoes?"
+
+"I could not wear great, coarse, hard shoes," said the little Dona
+Ines; "It would spoil my feet. Ah! I shall have time to show the
+Senorita what I can do. Can your grace dance?"
+
+"I danced with Uncle Joe at our last Christmas party," said Lucy,
+with great dignity.
+
+"See now," cried the Spaniard; "stand there. Ah! have you no
+castanets?" And she quickly took out two very small ivory shells
+or bowls, each pair fastened together by a loop, through which she
+passed her thumb so that the little spoons hung on her palm, and
+she could snap them together with her fingers.
+
+Then she began to dance round Lucy in the most graceful swimming
+way, now rising, now falling, and cracking her castanets together
+at intervals. Lucy tried to do the same, but her limbs seemed like
+a wooden doll's compared with the suppleness and ease of Ines. She
+made sharp corners and angles, where the Spaniard floated so like a
+sea-bird that it was like seeing her fly or float rather than merely
+dance, till at last the very watching her rendered Lucy drowsy and
+dizzy; and as the church bells began to ring, and the chant of the
+procession to sound, she lost all sense of being in sunny Malaga,
+the home of grapes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+GERMANY.
+
+
+There was a great murmur and buzz of learning lessons; rows upon
+rows of little boys were sitting before desks, studying; very few
+heads looked up as Lucy found herself walking round the room--a
+large clean room, with maps hanging on the walls, but hot and
+weary-feeling, because there were no windows open and so little
+fresh air.
+
+"What are you about, little boy?" she asked.
+
+"I am learning my verb," he said; "moneo, mones, monet."
+
+Lucy waited no longer, but moved off to another desk. "And what are
+you doing?"
+
+"I am writing my analysis."
+
+Lucy did not know what an analysis was, so she went a little further.
+"What are you doing here?" she said timidly, for these were somewhat
+bigger boys.
+
+"We are writing an essay on the individuality of self."
+
+That was enough to frighten any one away, and Lucy betook herself to
+some quite little boys, with fat rosy faces and light hair. "Are
+you busy, too?"
+
+"Oh, yes; we are learning the chief cities of the Fatherland."
+
+Lucy felt like the little boy in the fable, who could not get either
+the dog, or the bird, or the bee, to play with him.
+
+"When do you play?" she asked.
+
+"We have an hour's interval after dinner, and another at supper-time,
+but then we prepare our work for the morrow," said one of the boys,
+looking up well satisfied.
+
+"Work! work! Are you always at work?" exclaimed Lucy; "I only study
+from nine to twelve, and half an hour to get my lessons in the
+afternoon."
+
+"You are a maiden," said the little boy with civil superiority;
+"your brothers study more hours."
+
+"More; yes, but not so many as you do. They play from twelve till
+two, and have a holiday on Saturday."
+
+"So, you are not industrious. We are. That is the reason why we
+can all act together, and think together, so much better than any
+others; and we all stand as one irresistible power, the United
+Germany."
+
+Lucy have a little gasp! it was all so very wise.
+
+"May I see your sisters?" she said.
+
+The little sisters, Gretchens and Katchens, were learning away
+almost as hard as the Hermanns and Fritzes, but the bigger sisters
+had what Lucy thought a better time of it. One of them was helping
+in the kitchen, and another in the ironing; but then they had their
+books and their music, and in the evening all the families came out
+into the pleasure gardens, and had little tables with coffee before
+them, and the mamma knitted, and the papas smoked, and the young
+ladies listened to the band. On the whole, Lucy thought she should
+not mind living in Germany, if they would not have so many lessons
+to learn.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+PARIS IN THE SIEGE.
+
+
+"And Uncle Joe is in France, where the fathers and brothers of those
+little Prussian boys have been fighting. I wish I could see it."
+
+There was a thunder and a whizzing in the air and a sharp rattling
+noise besides; a strange, damp unwholesome smell too, mixed with
+that of gunpowder; and when Lucy looked up, she found herself down
+some steps in a dark, dull, vaulted-looking place, lined with stone,
+however, and open to the street above. A little lamp was burning
+in a corner, piles of straw and bits of furniture were lying about,
+and upon one of the bundles of straw sat a little rough-haired girl.
+
+"Ah! Madamoiselle, good morning," she said. "Are you come here to
+take shelter from the shells? The battery is firing now; I do not
+think Mamma will come home till it slackens a little. She is gone
+to my brother who is weak after his wounds. I wish I could offer
+you something, but we have nothing but water, and it is not even
+sugared."
+
+"Do you live down her?" asked Lucy, looking round at the dreary
+place with wonder.
+
+"Not always. We used to have a pretty little house over this, but
+the cruel shells came crashing in, and flew into pieces, tearing
+everything to splinters, and we are only safe from them down here.
+Ah, if I could only have shown you Mamma's pretty room! But there
+is a great hole in the floor now, and the ceiling is all tumbling
+down, and the table broken."
+
+"But why do you stay here?"
+
+"Mamma and Emily say it is all the same. We are as safe in our
+cellar as we could be anywhere, and we should have to pay elsewhere."
+
+"Then you cannot get out of Paris?"
+
+"Oh no, while the Prussians are all around us, and shut us in. My
+brothers are all in the Garde Mobile, and, you see, so is my doll.
+Every one must be a soldier, now. My dear Adolphe, hold yourself
+straight." (And there the doll certainly showed himself perfectly
+drilled and disciplined.) "March--right foot forward--left foot
+forward." But in this movement, as may be well supposed, little
+Coralie had to help her recruit a good deal.
+
+Lucy was surprised. "So you can play even in this dreadful place?"
+she said.
+
+"Oh yes! What's the use of crying and wearying one's self? I do
+not mind as long as they leave me my kitten, my dear little Minette."
+
+"Oh! what a pretty, long-haired kitten! But how small and thin!"
+
+"Yes, truly, the poor Minette! The cruel people ate her mother, and
+there is no milk--no milk, and my poor Minette is almost starved,
+though I give her bits of my bread and soup; but the bread is only
+bran and sawdust, and she likes it no more than I."
+
+"Ate up her mother!"
+
+"Yes. She was a superb Cyprus cat, all gray; but, alas! one day she
+took a walk in the street, and they caught her, and then indeed it
+was all over with her. I only hope Minette will not get out, but
+she is so lean that they would find little but bones and fur."
+
+"Ah! how I wish I could take you and her home to Uncle Joe, and give
+you both good bread and milk! Take my hand, and shut your eyes, and
+we will wish and wish very hard, and, perhaps, you will come there
+with me. Paris is not very far off."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+THE AMERICAN GUEST.
+
+
+No; wishing very hard did not bring poor little French Coralie home
+with Lucy; but something almost as wonderful happened. Just at the
+time in the afternoon when Lucy used to ride off on her dream to
+visit some wonderful place, there came a ring at the front door; a
+quite real substantial ring, that did not sound at all like any of
+the strange noises of the strange worlds that she had lately been
+hearing, but had the real tinkle of Uncle Joe's own bell.
+
+"Well," said Mrs. Bunker, "what can that be, coming at this time of
+day? It can never be the doctor coming home without sending orders!
+Don't you be running out, Miss Lucy; there'll be a draught of cold
+air right in."
+
+Lucy stood still; very anxious, and wondering whether she should see
+anything alive, or one of her visitors from various countries.
+
+"There is a letter from Mr. Seaman," said a brisk young voice, that
+would have been very pleasant if it had not gone a little through
+the nose; and past Mrs. Bunker there walked into the full light a
+little boy, a year or two older than Lucy, holding out one hand as
+he saw her and taking off his hat with the other. "Good morning,"
+he said, quite at ease; "is this where you live?"
+
+"Good morning," returned Lucy though it was not morning at all; "where
+do you come from?"
+
+"Well, I'm from Paris last; but when I'm at home, I'm at Boston. I
+am Leonidas Saunders, of the great American Republic."
+
+"Oh, then you are not real, after all?"
+
+"Real! I should hope I was a genuine article."
+
+"Well, I was in hopes that you were real, only you say you come from
+a strange country, like the rest of them, and yet you look just like
+an English boy."
+
+"Of course I do! my grandfather came from England," said Leonidas; "we
+all speak English as well, or better, than you do in the old country."
+
+"I can't understand it!" said Lucy; "did you come like other people,
+by the train, not like the children in my dreams?"
+
+And then Leonidas explained all about it to her: how his father had
+brought him last year to Europe and had put him to school at Paris;
+but when the war broke out, and most of the stranger scholars were
+taken away, no orders came about him, because his father was a
+merchant and was away from home, so that no one ever knew whether
+the letters had reached him.
+
+So Leonidas had gone on at school without many tasks to learn, to be
+sure, but not very comfortable: it was so cold, and there was no wood
+to burn; and he disliked eating horses and cats and rats, quite as
+much as Coralie did, though he was not in a part of the town where
+so many shells from the cannons came in.
+
+At last when Lucy's uncle and some other good gentlemen with the red
+cross on their sleeves, obtained leave to enter Paris and take some
+relief to the poor, sick people in the hospitals, the people Leonidas
+was with, told the gentleman that there was a little American left
+behind in their house.
+
+Mr. Seaman, which was Uncle Joe's name, went to see about him, and
+found that he had once known his father. So, after a great deal of
+trouble, it had been managed that the boy should be allowed to leave
+the city. He had been driven in a coach, he told Lucy, with some
+more Americans and English, and with flags with stars and stripes
+or else Union Jacks all over it; and whenever they came to a French
+sentry, or afterwards to a Prussian, they were stopped till he called
+an officer who looked at their papers and let them go on.
+
+Mr. Seaman had taken charge of Leonidas, and given him the best
+dinner he had eaten for a long time, but as he was going to another
+city to other hospitals, he could not keep the boy with him; so he
+had put him in charge of a friend who was going to London, to send
+him down to Mrs. Bunker.
+
+Fear of Lucy's rash was pretty well over now, and she was to go home
+in a day or two; so the children were allowed to be together, and
+enjoyed it very much. Lucy told about her dreams, and Leonidas had
+a good deal to tell of what he had really seen on his travels. They
+wished very much that they could both see one of these wonderful
+dreams together, only--what should it be?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+THE DREAM OF ALL NATIONS.
+
+
+What should it be? She thought of Arabs with their tents and horses,
+and Leonidas told her of Red Indians with their war-paint, and
+little Negroes dancing round the sugar-boiling, till her head began
+quite to swim and her ears to buzz; and all the children she had
+seen seemed to come round her, and join hands and dance.
+
+Oh, such a din! A little Highlander in his tartans stood on a barrel
+in the middle, making his bagpipes squeal away; a Chinese with a bald
+head and long pigtail beat a gong, and capered with a solemn face;
+a Norwegian herd-boy blew a monstrous bark cow-horn; an Indian
+juggler twisted snakes round his neck to the sound of the tom-tom;
+and Lucy found herself and Leonidas whirling round with a young
+Dutch planter between them, and an Indian with a crown of feathers
+upon the other side of her.
+
+"Oh!" she seemed to herself to cry, "what are you doing? How do
+you all come here?"
+
+"We are from all the nations who are friends, brethren," said the
+voices; "we all bring our stores: the sugar, rice, cotton of the
+West; the silk and coffee and spices of the East; the tea of China;
+the furs of the North: it is all exchanged from one to the other,
+and should teach us to be all brethren, since we cannot thrive one
+without the other."
+
+"It all comes to our country, because we are clever to work it up,
+and send it out to be used in its own homes," said the Highlander;
+"it is English and Scotch machines that weave your cottons, ay, and
+make your tools."
+
+"No; it is America that beats you all," cried Leonidas; "what had
+you to do but to sit down and starve, when we sent you no cotton?"
+
+"If you send cotton, 'tis we that weave it," cried the Scot.
+
+Lucy was almost afraid they would come to blows over which was the
+greatest and most skilful country. "It cannot be buying and selling
+that make nations love one another, and be peaceful," she thought.
+"Is it being learned and wise?"
+
+"But the Prussian boys are studious and wise, and the French are
+clever and skilful, and yet they have had that dreadful war: I
+wonder what it is that would make and keep all these countries
+friends!"
+
+And then there came an echo back to little Lucy: "For out of Zion
+shall go forth the Law, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem.
+And He shall judge among the nations, and shall rebuke many people;
+and they shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears
+into pruning-hooks; nations shall not lift up sword against nation,
+neither shall they war any more."
+
+Yes; the more they learn and keep the law of the Lord, the less
+there will be of those wars. To heed the true law of the Lord
+will do more for peace and oneness than all the cleverness in
+book-learning, or all the skilful manufactures in the world.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Little Lucy's Wonderful Globe, by
+Charlotte M. Yonge
+
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