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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62135 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62135)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Chunky, the Happy Hippo, by Richard Barnum
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Chunky, the Happy Hippo
- His Many Adventures
-
-Author: Richard Barnum
-
-Illustrator: Walter S. Rogers
-
-Release Date: May 15, 2020 [EBook #62135]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHUNKY, THE HAPPY HIPPO ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “There was Alice on Chunky’s broad back!”]
-
-
-
-
- _Kneetime Animal Stories_
-
-
- CHUNKY
- THE HAPPY HIPPO
-
- HIS MANY ADVENTURES
-
-
- BY
- RICHARD BARNUM
-
- Author of “Squinty, the Comical Pig,” “Mappo, the
- Merry Monkey,” “Tum Tum, the Jolly Elephant,”
- “Tinkle, the Trick Pony,”
- “Lightfoot, the Leaping Goat,” etc.
-
-
- _ILLUSTRATED BY
- WALTER S. ROGERS_
-
-
- PUBLISHERS
- BARSE & CO.
- NEW YORK, N. Y. NEWARK, N. J.
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1918
- by
- BARSE & CO.
-
- Chunky, The Happy Hippo
-
-
- _Printed in the United States of America_
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I CHUNKY HAS A LAUGH 7
- II CHUNKY IS SURPRISED 17
- III CHUNKY IS BITTEN 26
- IV CHUNKY IN THE MUD 36
- V CHUNKY IS CAUGHT 45
- VI CHUNKY TAKES A TRIP 55
- VII CHUNKY’S NEW FRIENDS 66
- VIII CHUNKY ON A SHIP 75
- IX CHUNKY FALLS OVERBOARD 84
- X CHUNKY IN THE CIRCUS 91
- XI CHUNKY’S NEW TRICK 102
- XII CHUNKY AND THE LITTLE GIRL 112
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- “There was Alice on Chunky’s broad back!” _Frontispiece_
-
- “He went in backward and made a great splash” 15
-
- “It was the crocodile that had bitten Chunky” 35
-
- “Out came Chunky as nicely as you please” 51
-
- “The little hippo boy was being taken away” 65
-
- “Splash! That was Chunky himself falling overboard” 87
-
- “‘Now he is smiling at you!’” 109
-
-
-
-
-CHUNKY, THE HAPPY HIPPO
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-CHUNKY HAS A LAUGH
-
-
-Once upon a time, some years ago, but not so long that you could not
-easily remember if you tried, there lived in a muddy river of a far-off
-country called Africa, a great, big, animal-baby named “Chunky.” He was
-not a fish, though he could stay under water, not breathing at all, for
-maybe ten minutes, and that is why he swam in the muddy river so much.
-He did not mind the mud in the river. He rather liked it, for when he
-sank away down under the dark, brown water no one could see him.
-
-And Chunky did not want any of the lions or tigers, or perhaps the
-black African hunters to see him, for they might have hurt him.
-
-But, for all that, Chunky was a happy, jolly, little animal-baby, and
-would soon grow up to be a big animal boy, for he ate pecks and pecks
-of the rich, green grass that grew on the bottom and banks of the
-African river.
-
-Now, I suppose, you are wondering what sort of animal-baby Chunky was.
-In the first place he was quite large――as large as the largest fat pig
-on your grandfather’s farm. And Chunky really looked a little like a
-pig, except that his nose was broad and square instead of pointed.
-
-Chunky was a hippopotamus, as perhaps you have guessed. But, as
-hippopotamus is quite a long and hard word for little boys and girls to
-remember, I will first tell you what it means, and then I will make it
-short for you, so you will have no hard work at all to remember it, or
-say it.
-
-Hippopotamus means “river-horse”; and a great many years ago when
-people first saw the queer animals swimming in the African rivers, they
-thought they were horses that liked to be in the water instead of on
-land. So that is how the hippopotamus got its name of river horse. But
-we’ll call them hippos for short, and it will do just as well.
-
-Chunky was called the happy hippo. And he was very happy. In fact when
-he opened his big mouth to swallow grass and river weeds you might have
-thought he was laughing.
-
-Chunky lived with Mr. and Mrs. Hippo, who were his father and mother,
-in a sort of big nest among the reeds and bushes on the bank of the
-river. Near them were other hippos, some large and some small, but
-Chunky liked best to be with his own folks.
-
-Besides his father and mother, there was Mumpy, his sister, and Bumpy,
-his brother. Funny names, aren’t they? And I’ll tell you how the little
-hippos happened to get them.
-
-One day, when Chunky didn’t have any name, nor his brother or sister
-either, a great, big, fat hippo mother came over to see Mrs. Hippo. The
-visitor, whose name was Mrs. Dippo, as we might say, because she liked
-to dip herself under the water so much――this Mrs. Dippo said, talking
-hippopotamus talk of course:
-
-“My, what nice children you have, Mrs. Hippo.”
-
-“Yes, they are rather nice,” said Mrs. Hippo, as she looked at the
-three of them asleep in the soft, warm mud near the edge of the river.
-You may think it queer for the little hippo babies to sleep in the mud.
-But they liked it. The more mud they had on them the better it kept off
-the mosquitoes and other biting bugs.
-
-“Have you named them yet?” asked Mrs. Dippo.
-
-“Not yet,” answered Mrs. Hippo. “I’ve been waiting until I could think
-of good names.”
-
-“Well, I’d call that one Chunky,” said Mrs. Dippo, pointing with her
-left ear at the largest of the three little hippos. Mrs. Dippo had to
-point with her ear, for she was too heavy to raise one foot to point
-and stand on three. She had only her ears to point with. “I’d call him
-Chunky,” said Mrs. Dippo.
-
-“Why?” asked Mrs. Hippo.
-
-“Oh, because he’s so jolly-looking; just like a great, big fat chunk of
-warm mud,” answered Mrs. Dippo. “Call him Chunky.”
-
-“I will,” said Mrs. Hippo, and that is how Chunky got his name.
-
-“Now for your other two children,” went on Mrs. Dippo. “That one,” and
-she pointed her ear at Chunky’s sister, “I should call Mumpy.”
-
-“Why?” Mrs. Hippo again asked.
-
-“Oh, because she looks just as if her cheeks were all swelled out with
-the mumps,” answered Mrs. Dippo. For animals sometimes have mumps,
-or pains and aches just like them. But Chunky’s sister didn’t have
-them――at least not then. The reason her cheeks stuck out so was because
-she had a big mouthful of river grass on which she was chewing.
-
-“Yes, I think Mumpy will be a good name for her,” said Mrs. Hippo, and
-so Chunky’s sister was named. Then there was left only his brother, who
-was younger than Chunky.
-
-Just as Mrs. Dippo finished naming the two little animal children, the
-one who was left without a name awakened from his sleep and got up.
-He slipped on a muddy place near the bank of the river and bumped into
-Chunky, nearly knocking him over.
-
-“Oh, look out, you bumpy boy!” cried Mrs. Hippo, speaking, of course,
-in animal talk.
-
-“Ha! That’s his name!” cried Mrs. Dippo, with a laugh.
-
-“What is?” asked Mrs. Hippo.
-
-“Bumpy!” said Mrs. Dippo. “Don’t you see? He bumped into Chunky, so you
-can call him Bumpy!”
-
-“That’s a fine name,” said Mrs. Hippo, and Bumpy liked it himself.
-
-So that is how the three little hippos were named, and after that they
-kept on eating and growing and growing and eating until they were quite
-large――larger even than pigs.
-
-One day, Mr. and Mrs. Hippo and most of their animal friends were quite
-far out in the river, diving down to dig up the sweet roots that grew
-near the bottom. Chunky, Mumpy and Bumpy were on the bank lying in the
-sun to get dry, for they had been swimming about near shore.
-
-“Are you going in again?” asked Mumpy, of her brothers, talking, of
-course, in the way hippos do.
-
-“No, I’ve been in swimming enough to-day,” said Bumpy. “I’m going back
-into the jungle and sleep,” for the river where the hippos lived was
-near a jungle, in which there were elephants, monkeys and other wild
-animals.
-
-“I’m going in the water once more,” said Mumpy. “I haven’t had enough
-grass to eat.”
-
-“I haven’t, either,” said Chunky, who was fatter than ever and jollier
-looking. “I’ll go in with you, Mumpy.”
-
-So the two young hippos walked slowly down to the edge of the deep,
-muddy river. Far out in the water they could see their father and
-mother, with the larger animals, having a swim. Chunky and Mumpy walked
-slowly now, though they could run fast when they needed to, to get away
-from danger; for though a hippo is fat and seems clumsy, and though his
-legs are very short, he can, at times, run very fast.
-
-And as they went slowly along, Chunky and Mumpy looked about on all
-sides of them, and sniffed the air very hard. They were trying to see
-danger, and also to smell it. In the jungle wild animals can sometimes
-tell better by smelling when there is danger than by looking. For the
-tangled vines do not let them see very far among the trees, but there
-is nothing to stop them from smelling unless the wind blows too hard.
-
-“Is everything all right, Chunky?” asked Mumpy of her brother, as she
-saw him stop on the edge of a patch of reeds just before going into
-the water, and sniff the air very hard.
-
-“Yes, I think so,” he answered in hippo talk. For his father and mother
-had taught him something of how to look for danger and smell for
-it――the danger of lions or of tigers or of the black or white hunter
-men who came into the jungle to shoot or catch the wild animals.
-
-“Come on, Mumpy!” called Chunky. “We’ll have another nice swim.”
-
-“And we’ll get some more sweet grass to eat――I’m hungry yet!” replied
-the little girl hippo; for animals, such as elephants and hippos who
-live in the jungle or river, need a great deal of food.
-
-Out to the edge of the river went Chunky and his sister. They saw some
-other young hippos――some mere babies and others quite large boys and
-girls, as we would say――on the bank or in the water.
-
-Just as Chunky and Mumpy were going to wade in, they noticed, on a high
-part of the bank, not far away, a fat hippo boy who was called Big Foot
-by the jungle animals, as one of his feet was larger than the other
-three.
-
-“Watch me jump into the river!” called Big Foot.
-
-Then, when they were all looking, and he thought, I suppose, that he
-was going to do something smart, he gave a jump and splashed into the
-water. But something went wrong. Big Foot stumbled, just as he jumped,
-and, instead of making a nice dive, he went in backward and made a
-great splash.
-
-“Ha! Ha! Ha!” laughed Chunky, wagging his stubby tail. “Ho! Ho! I can
-jump better than that, and I’m not as large as you, Big Foot! Ha! Ha!”
-and Chunky laughed again. “That was an awful funny jump!”
-
-Big Foot climbed out of the water up on the bank. His eyes, which
-seemed like lumps or bumps on his head, appeared to snap at Chunky as he
-looked at him and Mumpy.
-
-“Some one laughing at me, eh?” growled Big Foot in his deep voice. “Ha!
-I’ll show you! Why are you laughing at me?” he asked, and he went so
-close to Mumpy that he bumped into her and almost knocked her into the
-river.
-
-“Here! You let my sister alone!” bravely cried Chunky, stepping close
-to Big Foot.
-
-“Well, what did she want to laugh for when I splashed in the water?”
-asked Big Foot.
-
-“I didn’t laugh,” answered Mumpy, speaking more gently than did the two
-boy hippos.
-
-“Yes, you did!” exclaimed Big Foot, angrily.
-
-[Illustration: “He went in backward and made a great splash”]
-
-“No, she didn’t laugh. I laughed,” said Chunky, and his sister thought
-he was very brave to say it right out that way. “I laughed at you, Big
-Foot,” said Chunky. “You looked so funny when you fell into the water
-backwards. Ha! Ha!” and Chunky laughed again.
-
-“So! You’ll laugh at me, will you?” asked Big Foot, and his voice was
-more angry. “Well, I’ll fix you!” and with a loud grunt, like a great
-big pig, he rushed straight at Chunky.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-CHUNKY IS SURPRISED
-
-
-“Oh, Chunky!” cried Mumpy, as she saw Big Foot rushing at her brother.
-“Oh, Chunky, come on home!”
-
-“Pooh! I’m not afraid of him!” said Chunky, as he stood still on the
-river bank and looked at the on-rushing Big Foot.
-
-“I’ll go and call father,” went on Mumpy, as she waded into the water
-and began to swim out toward the grown hippos where they were having
-fun of their own in the river.
-
-“I’ll show you that you can’t laugh at me!” grunted Big Foot, who came
-on as fast as he could. “I’ll bite you and push you into the river, and
-see how you like that.”
-
-“Pooh! I’m not afraid!” said Chunky again, but really he was, a little
-bit.
-
-Of course, if you had been in the jungle, or hidden among the reeds
-on the bank of the African river, you would not have understood what
-Chunky and Big Foot said. In fact, you would not even have guessed
-that they were talking; but they were, all the same, though to you
-the noises they made would have sounded only like grunts, squeals
-and puffings. But that is the way the hippos talk among themselves,
-and they mean the same things you mean when you talk, only a little
-different, of course.
-
-“Oh, look! Big Foot is going to do something to Chunky!” cried the
-other boy hippos, and they gathered around to see what would happen.
-For fights often took place among the jungle animals. They did not know
-any better than to bite, kick and bump into one another when they were
-angry.
-
-“I’ll fix you!” said Big Foot again.
-
-“Pooh! I’m not afraid,” answered Chunky once more, just as you may
-often have heard boys say.
-
-To tell the truth, Chunky would have been glad to run away, but he did
-not like to do it with so many of his young hippo friends looking on.
-They would have thought him a coward. So he had to stand and wait to
-see what Big Foot would do.
-
-On came the larger hippo boy, and, all of a sudden, when he was quite
-close to Chunky, he gave a jump and bumped right into him. Chunky tried
-to get out of the way, but he was not quick enough.
-
-The next minute he found himself slipping into the river, for Big Foot
-had knocked him off the bank. But Chunky did not mind falling into the
-water. He had been going in anyhow for a swim with his sister. Chunky
-was not hurt. No water even went up his nose, as it does up yours when
-you fall into the water. For Chunky could close his nose, as you close
-your mouth, and not a drop of water got in.
-
-“There, I told you I’d fix you for laughing at me!” growled Big Foot,
-as he stood on the bank and watched Chunky swimming around in the
-water. “If you laugh at me any more I’ll push you in again!”
-
-“Oh, you will, will you?” exclaimed a voice back of Big Foot. “Well,
-you just let my Chunky alone after this! He can laugh if he wants to, I
-guess!”
-
-And with that Mrs. Hippo, who had quickly swum to shore when Mumpy told
-her what was going on, gave Big Foot a shove, and into the water _he_
-splashed.
-
-“Ha-ha!” laughed all the other hippo boys and girls, as they saw what
-had happened. “Look at Big Foot! Ha-ha-ha!”
-
-Big Foot was very angry because Mrs. Hippo had pushed him in. But when
-he saw all the others laughing at him, he knew that he could not knock
-them all into the water, as he had knocked Chunky, so he made the best
-of it.
-
-“Ha-ha!” laughed Chunky. “So you’re here too, Big Foot! I saw my
-mother push you in. She’s awful strong, she is! I hope she didn’t hurt
-you. She didn’t mean to if she did. Here are some nice sweet grass
-roots I dived down and pulled up off the bottom of the river. Have
-some?” and Chunky held out some in his mouth.
-
-Now Big Foot liked grass roots very much indeed, as did all the hippos.
-So, though he still felt a little angry, he took them from Chunky, and
-when the big boy hippo, with one foot larger than his other three, had
-swallowed the sweet, juicy roots he felt much better.
-
-“They were good,” he said. “Thanks! And say, I hope I didn’t hurt you
-when I shoved you into the river just now, Chunky.”
-
-“No, you didn’t,” Chunky answered. “And I hope my mother didn’t hurt
-you when she shoved you in.”
-
-“Ho! Ho! I should say not!” answered Big Foot, and he laughed now. “I’m
-sorry I got mad,” he went on. “Come on, have a game of water-tag!”
-
-“All right,” said Chunky, “I will. Come on, Mumpy!” he called to his
-sister. “We’re going to have a game of water-tag.”
-
-“Let’s all play!” cried Bumpo, who had not after all gone away. Then he
-slid down the river bank into the water.
-
-“Yes, we’ll all play tag!” chimed in the rest of the hippos, and they
-were soon swimming and diving about in the water, splashing and bumping
-into one another almost as you boys and girls play when you go in
-bathing at the beach in the summer. Only, of course, the hippos, being
-very big, made heavy splashes.
-
-“This is lots of fun!” cried Chunky, as he tagged Bumpy and then dived
-to get out of the way, for sometimes the hippos “tagged back,” just as
-you children play.
-
-“Yes, it’s jolly fun!” yelled Big Foot.
-
-So the animal children swam, splashed and dived in the water, having
-much more fun than when the one was angry at the other and had pushed
-him into the river.
-
-All of a sudden, Mrs. Hippo, who had stayed on the bank after making
-Big Foot behave, gave a grunting cry.
-
-“Quick!” she called in her own language. “Swim ashore, all you little
-hippos! Swim ashore, quick!”
-
-“What’s the matter?” asked Big Foot. He thought he was too large to
-mind without first asking questions.
-
-“Don’t stop to talk! Swim ashore as fast as you can!” cried Mrs. Hippo.
-
-Chunky, Bumpy and Mumpy, her own three children-hippos, did as they
-were told, and paddled for shore as fast as they could. For, though a
-hippopotamus is a very big animal and looks very clumsy, there are few
-as large as he who can swim so well or so fast, or dive so easily.
-
-On and on toward shore swam the hippo children, who, a few seconds
-before, had been playing tag. Last of all came Big Foot. As yet neither
-he nor any of the others knew why Mrs. Hippo wanted them to come ashore.
-
-Big Foot partly turned in the water and looked back. Then he saw what
-it was. A big crocodile, which is something like an alligator, only
-with a longer and more slender nose, or snout, its mouth filled with
-long, sharp teeth, was swimming after the little hippos.
-
-“Is that why you wanted us to come ashore?” asked Big Foot of Chunky’s
-mother, calling to her as he swam toward land.
-
-“Yes, indeed it is!” she answered, in her big deep voice. “And don’t
-stop to ask any more questions! Hurry!”
-
-So they all hurried and got safely into shallow water, where the
-crocodile dared not come, bold and hungry as he was. He thought perhaps
-big Mrs. Hippo would step on him and smash him. A crocodile can grab
-hold of a baby hippo, and take it away, but dare not touch a big hippo.
-So this crocodile, with an angry snap of his teeth, turned and swam
-back into the middle of the river again, to wait for another chance to
-grab a tender, baby hippo.
-
-“My! how frightened I was!” said Mrs. Hippo, when she saw that her own
-and the rest of the animal children were safe. “I saw the crocodile
-coming toward you, but you didn’t see him because you were playing tag
-so hard.”
-
-“It’s a good thing you called to us to swim out of his way,” said Big
-Foot. “I’m much obliged to you, Mrs. Hippo, and I’m sorry I pushed your
-Chunky in!”
-
-“Oh, you didn’t hurt me!” laughed Chunky, as he stood on the bank and
-looked out to the middle of the river, where he could just see the nose
-of the crocodile in the water, as the long animal swam away.
-
-And then Chunky had another surprise, for escaping from the crocodile
-surely was _one_. All of a sudden, out from the jungle flew a lot of
-birds, and before the hippos knew what was happening the birds began to
-settle down on their backs.
-
-“Oh, look!” cried Chunky. “What are the birds going to do?” he asked
-his mother. “Are they going to bite me?”
-
-“No; don’t be afraid, silly little hippo boy!” she answered, with a
-loud laugh. “The birds just came to get the snails and water bugs that
-are sticking to your back. The river is full of snails, and when you go
-in to swim they stick to you. The birds like to pick them off and eat
-them, and that’s what they’re doing now.”
-
-And that is just what the birds were doing. Out of the jungle they had
-flown, and they circled around and lighted, one after another, on the
-broad, flat backs of Chunky and the other hippo children. The skin of
-a hippo is very thick――two inches in some places――but there are tender
-spots where mosquitoes, or bad bugs like that, can bite. But on the
-backs of the hippos nothing could bite through, and even when the birds
-picked off the water spiders and snails with their sharp bills the
-hippos did not feel it.
-
-“Isn’t it funny to have birds on your back?” said Chunky to Big Foot.
-
-“Oh, it has happened to me before,” said the larger hippo boy. “Of
-course you’re young yet――you’ve got lots to learn.”
-
-“Well, I’m glad the birds can get something to eat off me,” laughed
-Chunky in his jolly way. He laughed, in his own fashion, more than any
-of the other hippos, and seemed quite happy, so much so that often,
-when he was spoken of, he was called “Chunky, the happy hippo.”
-
-Here and there fluttered the birds on the backs of the hippos, picking
-off the water insects, which might get under the folds of the skin of
-Chunky and his mates and pain them. So the birds not only got a meal
-for themselves but they helped the animals.
-
-After a while all the bugs and snails were picked off and the birds
-flew back into the jungle. Chunky watched them as they sailed above the
-tree tops, and then he, too, walked slowly into the deep woods.
-
-“Where are you going?” asked his sister.
-
-“Oh, off into the jungle to have a sleep,” he answered. “Want to come
-along?”
-
-“No,” she said. “I’m going with some of the other hippo girls to roll
-in the mud.”
-
-So Chunky went into the jungle by himself. On and on among the trees he
-wandered, making his way through the tangled vines, breaking them off
-without any trouble, because he was very strong.
-
-All at once Chunky heard a funny noise, like a big horn blowing, and,
-looking up, he saw, standing in front of him, a big animal, much taller
-than himself. And this animal had two big long white teeth sticking out
-in front, and he seemed to have two tails, one longer than the other.
-
-“Oh dear!” thought Chunky. “This is a terrible beast! I wonder if he
-will bite me as the crocodile tried to;” and in order to get away,
-Chunky turned to run back through the jungle.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-CHUNKY IS BITTEN
-
-
-“Hold on there! Wait a minute! Don’t be afraid! Wait for me, little
-hippo chap!” cried the big animal to Chunky.
-
-“Oh, no! You’ll bite me!” answered Chunky, as he crashed his way
-through the jungle.
-
-“Bite you? I wouldn’t bite you for the world. I never bite anything
-except the grass and leaves I chew for my dinner. I might tickle you
-with my trunk, if I wanted to have some fun, but I’d never bite,” and
-the big animal talked in such a kind way that Chunky no longer felt
-frightened. He stopped and looked back.
-
-“What do you mean――tickle me with your trunk?” he asked, speaking
-animal talk, of course. “Do you mean with one of your two tails?”
-
-“I haven’t two tails,” answered the big animal. “The little one is a
-tail, to be sure, but the other is my trunk, or nose. See! I can wiggle
-it any way I like to;” and this he did.
-
-“My! that’s wonderful!” cried Chunky. “I can wiggle my tail, even if it
-is shorter than yours, and I can open my mouth real wide, but I can’t
-make my nose go as yours does. And so you call it a trunk! What do you
-do with it?”
-
-“It is like a hand to me,” said the big animal. “I pick up in it things
-to eat, and I pull off the leaves of trees that grow above my head on
-the high branches. What is your name, little hippo boy?”
-
-“My name is Chunky. And what is yours?”
-
-“I’m called Tum Tum, the jolly elephant, and I’m in a book,” said the
-big animal. “Now don’t ask me what a book is, for I don’t know. All I
-know is I’m _in_ one and the book is about a lot of my adventures.”
-
-“What’s adventures?” asked Chunky.
-
-“Things that happen to you,” said Tum Tum, the jolly elephant. “If I
-had tickled you with my trunk, that would have been an adventure.”
-
-“And if the crocodile had bitten me when I was out playing water-tag a
-while ago, would that have been an adventure?” asked Chunky.
-
-“It would,” said Tum Tum. “But that’s all I know about a book――I’m in
-one, and there’s a picture of me. I had a lot of adventures in the
-jungle, and then I was caught and taken away far off and put in a
-circus. There I had lots of fun.”
-
-“Why aren’t you in the circus now?” asked Chunky.
-
-“Well, I’m getting too old to do circus tricks any more, though I feel
-as jolly as ever,” answered Tum Tum. “So the man who owned me said he’d
-take me out of the circus and bring me back to the jungle to help train
-any wild elephants he might catch. That’s why I’m back in the jungle.
-I’m going to help tame and train wild elephants, which the hunters, who
-are with the man who owns me, are going to try to catch.”
-
-“Ha! So there are hunters here, are there?” cried Chunky, for he had
-heard his father and mother speak of these creatures, and they had told
-him always to keep out of their way.
-
-“Yes, there are some hunters in the jungle,” said Tum Tum. “They are
-after elephants.”
-
-“Do you think they’ll want a hippo?” asked Chunky anxiously.
-
-“Well, I can’t tell. Maybe they might. Would you like to be caught and
-put in a circus?”
-
-“Indeed I would not!” cried Chunky. “I want to stay in the jungle, and
-swim in the muddy river with my brother Bumpy and my sister Mumpy. We
-have lots of fun.”
-
-“We had fun in the circus, too,” said Tum Tum, the jolly elephant.
-“There I met Mappo, the merry monkey, and I know lots of other animals,
-about whom those things that are called books have been written.”
-
-“Oh, tell me about the other animals!” begged Chunky. “Was there one
-like me?”
-
-“Yes, there was a hippo in the circus,” said Tum Tum; “but he was old
-and big, and slept in his tank of water most of the time. I didn’t have
-much to say to him. But I like you.
-
-“Then there were other animals in the circus, and out of it, too, for
-that matter, and I liked most of them. I met Squinty, a comical pig,
-and there was Don, a runaway dog, besides Flop Ear, a funny rabbit.
-They all have books written about them, and you’d be surprised at the
-many adventures my friends had.”
-
-“I was surprised, just now, when the jungle birds perched on my back,”
-said Chunky.
-
-“You’d be more surprised if you could read about my adventures in the
-book,” said Tum Tum, with a jolly twinkle in his eyes, as he reached
-his trunk up in a tree and pulled off some sweet, green leaves. “Have
-some,” he invited Chunky, and Chunky did.
-
-“Well, I’m very glad to meet you,” said the little hippo boy, after
-a while, when he and Tum Tum had talked for some time, and the jolly
-elephant had told him a few of his adventures, especially of once
-having been in a fire when the circus barns caught, and of how he had
-helped save some of the animals from being burned, including Dido, a
-dancing bear.
-
-“My! that _was_ an adventure!” cried Chunky.
-
-“Pooh! that’s nothing,” said Tum Tum. “Maybe I’ll have more adventures
-now that I’ve come to the jungle. What! you aren’t going, are you?”
-
-“Yes, I guess I’d better go home,” said Chunky. “Some of those hunter
-friends of yours might try to catch me to put me in a circus, and I
-don’t want to go. Maybe I’ll see you some other time,” and away he went
-through the jungle toward the river, on the edge of which, amid the
-tall reeds, he lived with the other hippos.
-
-“Good-bye!” called Tum Tum. “If ever you get caught by the hunters, and
-you don’t like it, I’ll help you get away if I’m around.”
-
-“Thank you!” said Chunky, and he made up his mind never to be caught if
-he could help it. But you just wait and see what happens to the little
-hippo boy!
-
-Chunky made his way through the jungle to where his father and mother
-had their home. It was not a house, or even a nest, such as birds live
-in, though I have called it a nest. It was just a place where the reeds
-and weeds were trampled down smooth to make a soft place for the hippos
-to sleep.
-
-There was no roof over the top of the hippos’ house, if you can call
-such a place a house. There were no windows in it, nor doors, and when
-it rained the water came in all over. But Chunky and his brother and
-sister did not mind the wetness. They liked being in the water as much
-as being on dry land, and they spent more than half their time in the
-river, anyhow.
-
-So, really, all they needed of a house was a place where they could lie
-down and sleep, and it was easy to make such a place. All Mr. and Mrs.
-Hippo had to do was to lie down in the weeds and reeds, roll over once
-or twice to make them stay down smoothly, and the house was made.
-
-There was no furniture in it――neither tables nor chairs, and not even
-a piano or a talking machine. The hippos had no use for these things.
-All they needed was a place to lie down, and such a place need not even
-be dry. Then all else they wanted was something to eat, and this they
-could get on land or in the water.
-
-“I think I like my home on the river bank better than the circus, even
-if Tum Tum did say it was jolly,” thought Chunky, as he crashed his way
-back through the jungle to where he had left his sister. She was out in
-the river now, playing water-tag with some of the other hippo boys and
-girls.
-
-“Aren’t you afraid of the crocodile?” asked Chunky, as he, too, waded
-out to get some more grass roots, for he was hungry again. Hippos and
-elephants eat very often during the day.
-
-“The crocodile has gone away,” answered Mumpy. “The big hippos swam
-around in the water and drove him to the other side of the river. We
-are not afraid. Come and play tag with us, Chunky.”
-
-“Not now,” he answered. “I’m going to eat. After I eat I will play.”
-
-Chunky waded out into the river until he felt the water coming up over
-his nose. Then he shut the breathing holes, so no water would run into
-them. It was just as if one of you boys had ducked your head under
-water and held your nose closed with your fingers, only Chunky did not
-need to hold his nose.
-
-He could not have done so if he had wanted, for he had no hands, and
-he needed his four feet to walk on. For, though in deep water he could
-swim, as could the other hippos, he now wanted to walk along under
-water on the soft, oozy, muddy bottom of the river and eat grass and
-plant-roots.
-
-Chunky had in his jaw some long, sharp teeth, called tusks. They were
-not as big as the tusks of Tum Tum the elephant, and they did not show
-when Chunky closed his big lips. But when he opened his mouth his tusks
-could easily be seen and so, too, could his other big teeth, called
-molars, which were used for grinding up the grass and other things he
-ate, just as your teeth grind, or chew, your food.
-
-It was with his long, sharp tusks that Chunky dug up from the muddy
-bottom, or from the banks of the river, the roots which he loved so
-well. And now, as the boy hippo waded out, he opened his eyes under
-water to look about and to find a good feeding place.
-
-“Ah, I shall have a fine feast!” thought Chunky to himself, as he saw,
-a little ahead of him, under water, a big clump of rich, green grass.
-“There must be some fine roots there.”
-
-Walking along on the soft mud at the bottom of the river, the little
-hippo boy peered about, trying to decide which was the best place to
-begin his meal. The surface of the water was about a foot over his
-back, and he could see quite well, for the sun was shining overhead in
-the blue sky.
-
-Opening wide his mouth, so he could use his tusk-like teeth to uproot
-the grass, Chunky began his feast. With a motion of his big head, which
-made the water above him boil and bubble, the hippo tore out a lot of
-the juicy roots, getting them into his mouth.
-
-“Ah! but these are good!” he thought to himself. “I don’t believe that
-Tum Tum, even if he was in a circus, and was put in an adventure-book,
-ever had anything as good as this. Yum-yum!” said Chunky, or whatever
-it is hippos say when they have something good to eat.
-
-Chunky was chewing away, wishing his sister Mumpy and his brother Bumpy
-were with him to enjoy the sweet grass roots, when, all of a sudden,
-Chunky felt something sharp nip him on the end of his nose.
-
-“Ouch!” he cried to himself. “I must have run against a sharp stone.”
-
-He tried to step backward, and then he felt the sharp pain again. This
-time he knew he had not struck himself.
-
-“Something has bit me!” cried Chunky. “Oh, it must be a big fish! I
-must get out of here!”
-
-He started to rise to the top of the water, so he could swim ashore,
-but, just as he did so, there came a third bite on his big nose, and he
-saw, right in front of him, a great big crocodile with a lot of teeth
-in his long jaws.
-
-It was the crocodile that had bitten Chunky and which now had hold of
-his nose, hanging on like a mud turtle.
-
-“Oh dear! Oh dear! Oh dear!” blubbered Chunky, as he wiggled about
-under water, trying to get loose from the crocodile.
-
-[Illustration: “It was the crocodile that had bitten Chunky”]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-CHUNKY IN THE MUD
-
-
-Poor Chunky was having a dreadful time. Never before had he been caught
-by a crocodile. It would not have been so bad, he thought in his hippo
-way, if it had happened on top of the water. There some of the big
-animals might have seen him and they would have helped him. But down
-under the muddy river――who could help him there?
-
-Chunky flopped about in the water, sticking his feet deep down in the
-muddy bottom, and pushing back as hard as he could, trying to get his
-nose loose from the crocodile’s teeth. But the crocodile held fast to
-the hippo.
-
-“Let me go! Let me go!” blubbered Chunky, speaking in a strange way
-because his mouth was partly closed by the crocodile.
-
-“Indeed and I’ll not let you loose!” answered the crocodile. “I want
-you for my supper!” At least he might have answered that if his mouth
-had not been busy holding fast to Chunky’s nose.
-
-Chunky pulled and pulled and pulled, but still he could not get loose,
-and the crocodile was slowly, but surely, dragging him out to a deeper
-part of the river, when, all at once, there was a great splashing in
-the water, and something big and heavy sank down beside the little
-hippo boy.
-
-“Get away from here, Mr. Crocodile!” a voice shouted, sounding like
-thunder under the water. “Leave my Chunky alone.”
-
-And then a great, big body began pushing and shoving the crocodile, and
-Chunky saw that it was his father who had come to save him.
-
-Mr. Hippo, being big and strong, squeezed the crocodile up against the
-hard bank of the river, down under the water, and nearly squeezed the
-breath out of him. So the crocodile was very glad, indeed, to take his
-jaws off Chunky’s nose and let the little hippo go. Then, with another
-shove of his big body, Mr. Hippo thrust the crocodile far out into the
-river. The crocodile made a snap at Mr. Hippo, trying to bite him, but
-the big hippo floated out of the way just in time, and that was the end
-of the fight.
-
-“Oh dear!” cried Chunky to his father, who swam up beside him under
-water. “Oh dear! How my nose hurts!”
-
-“Yes, I guess it does, little chap,” said Mr. Hippo. “Come along with
-me and I’ll get your mother to put a grass poultice on it. Or you can
-hold it in the soft, cool mud on the edge of the river. That will cure
-it.”
-
-Of course I don’t mean to say that sick animals really _doctor_
-themselves, but if you ever see your cat or dog eat grass, you may be
-sure it is doing it because it feels ill, so, in a way, it is taking
-medicine.
-
-And if you have ever watched a dog when it has been stung by a bee, you
-may have seen him go to some place where there is cool, wet mud that he
-can lie down in, and so get some plastered on the stung place, to make
-it pain less. So he takes this kind of medicine.
-
-In the jungle wild animals, when they are shot, or hurt by one of their
-own kind, or by another kind, get away if they can, where they can
-drink water and let some of it wash up on their wound. Water, mud and
-some kinds of grass and leaves are jungle medicines for the animal folk.
-
-And that is what Mr. Hippo meant. He did not mean that Mrs. Hippo
-would make a _real_ grass poultice for Chunky’s sore nose, only that
-she might chew up some grass until it was soft and mushy and then her
-little boy hippo could lay his nose against it to make the bites of the
-crocodile feel better.
-
-“Where have you been?” asked Mrs. Hippo, as she saw Mr. Hippo and
-Chunky coming home.
-
-“Oh, the boy got into trouble――one of those crocodiles,” said the
-father hippo, in his own kind of talk. “We’ll have to move away from
-here, I guess, if many more crocodiles come to this river.”
-
-Jungle animals do move from place to place; hippos, monkeys and
-elephants especially. They stay around one spot until they have eaten
-all the good food there, or until all the water is gone, and then they
-move on to a new home. Sometimes they move from one place to another
-because of danger, such as crocodiles or snakes might make.
-
-“Oh, Chunky, your nose is bleeding!” said Mrs. Hippo.
-
-“That’s where the crocodile bit me,” he answered.
-
-His mother showed him a place where he could lie down and put his nose
-in some soft mud. Then she brought him some sweet lily-plant roots to
-eat, and made a little cushion of soft grass for his sore nose to rest
-on that night.
-
-Chunky did not sleep very well. His nose pained him too much, but he
-did not cry. Wild animals do not know anything about crying, no matter
-how much pain they may feel. In the morning the sore nose was a little
-better, but Chunky could not go to play with his brother and sister and
-the other young hippos. He had to stay on the river bank.
-
-Still he was quite happy, for all the other animals were kind to him,
-and brought him nice things to eat. Mumpy and Bumpy came to see him,
-and told him what fun they were having playing water-tag and other
-games in the river.
-
-“I wish I could play!” said Chunky.
-
-“Oh, but you can’t go into deep water until your nose gets better!”
-said his mother. “You must stay on shore. Perhaps you might go in
-wading, but even then you must keep your head out of water. In a few
-days you will be better, and then you can have fun.”
-
-“Did you see any crocodiles?” asked Chunky of Bumpy.
-
-“No. But if I do I’ll step on ’em and make ’em go away!” he answered
-boastfully.
-
-“Better not try that!” said Mr. Hippo. “You are not yet big enough to
-fight the crocodiles. Leave that to me!”
-
-For three days Chunky had to keep out of the deep part of the river. He
-could only wade about and splash near shore, not diving or swimming.
-And as he had been used to going far out in the water ever since he was
-a tiny baby, he missed this very much indeed.
-
-But at last his nose was almost well, and his mother said it would be
-good for him to go in the water. Then Chunky was happy. He splashed in
-the river, dived away down to the bottom, rolled over and over in the
-mud and swam about as much as he pleased.
-
-“Glad to see you!” cried Big Foot, for he and Chunky had become good
-friends since their little quarrel. “Is your nose all well?”
-
-“Almost,” Chunky answered. “But I don’t want to see any more
-crocodiles!”
-
-“I should say not!” agreed Big Foot. “But when I get larger I’m going
-to fight them, same as your father did.”
-
-Then Chunky played with the other hippos in the water, diving and
-having games of what you would call tag, until finally Big Foot said:
-
-“Oh, come on! Let’s wade ashore and go into the jungle!”
-
-“All right!” agreed Chunky. “Maybe we can have some fun there.”
-
-So into the jungle they went, trampling their way through the thick
-tangle of vines, chasing one another and grunting like pigs; and indeed
-they looked something like pigs as they pushed their noses in wet and
-muddy places to get at the sweet roots underneath.
-
-All at once Big Foot, who was walking ahead, cried:
-
-“Look out, Chunky! I hear something coming! Maybe it’s a crocodile!”
-
-“Crocodiles don’t come this far into the jungle,” said Chunky.
-
-“Well, it’s _something_!” went on Big Foot. “Oh, look what a big
-animal, Chunky! I’m going to run back to the river! I’m afraid!”
-
-Chunky looked at the animal to which Big Foot was pointing with his
-ears, and then the little hippo laughed.
-
-“You don’t need to be afraid of him!” he said.
-
-“Why, do you know him?” asked Big Foot.
-
-“Yes, that is Tum Tum, the jolly elephant,” was the answer. “I met him
-here in the jungle the other day, and he told me about being in a book
-and having adventures. Hello, Tum Tum!” cried Chunky in jungle talk.
-
-“Hello yourself,” answered the big, jolly elephant. “I see you have a
-friend with you.”
-
-“Yes, Tum Tum, this is Big Foot,” said Chunky, waving his ears toward
-the other hippo. Big Foot, though older than Chunky, had never seen
-an elephant before, and he was much surprised. Just as Chunky had
-supposed, Big Foot thought Tum Tum had two tails, but he soon learned
-better, and he, too, liked the jolly elephant.
-
-“What are you doing here in the jungle?” asked Chunky of his big friend.
-
-“Oh, I’m looking to see if there are some wild elephants about, so the
-men with whom I am staying can catch them and train them for a circus,”
-was the answer.
-
-“Are there men hunters around here?” Big Foot asked in an awed and very
-rumbling whisper.
-
-“Yes, they are back in the jungle, and they will soon be here,”
-answered Tum Tum.
-
-“Then we’d better run!” cried Big Foot to Chunky. “My folks always told
-me to look out for hunters.”
-
-“That’s right!” agreed Chunky. “We had better go back to the river.”
-
-“Oh, don’t be in a hurry,” said Tum Tum. “The hunters are not here yet.
-I can hear them coming long before they can see you, and I’ll tell you
-in time for you to get away. Still, maybe you _would_ like to be caught
-and sent to a circus.”
-
-“Not _me_!” cried Big Foot.
-
-“Nor I,” added Chunky, though the more he thought about it the more he
-wished he could have some adventures, such as Tum Tum had had, many of
-them being written about in a book like this one you are reading.
-
-So the elephant and the two hippos stayed in the jungle for some little
-time, talking. Then, all of a sudden, Tum Tum raised his big ears,
-lifted his trunk, sniffed the air, and said:
-
-“The hunters are coming now. You had better run if you do not want to
-be caught. Good-bye! I hope I’ll see you again some day.”
-
-“Good-bye!” called Chunky and Big Foot to Tum Tum, and then the hippos
-went back to their river, while Tum Tum began his search for wild
-elephants.
-
-It was two or three days after this that Chunky, who had gone off by
-himself up along the river bank to look for a certain kind of sweet
-grass, had another adventure.
-
-The little hippo was thinking of what Tum Tum had said about the
-circus, and how nice it was there, when, all of a sudden, Chunky
-stepped into a pool of water, which he did not think was very deep. But
-it was, and the worst of it turned out to be that under the water was
-some very sticky mud. So sticky, in fact, that Chunky sank down deep
-in it, being quite heavy and fat for his age. He tried to pull out his
-little short, stumpy legs, one after the other, but he could not. He
-only sank deeper and deeper in the mud. He was held fast there.
-
-“Oh, dear!” thought Chunky. “I’m stuck tight! I wonder if this can be a
-trap of the hunters to catch me for the circus. Oh, I wish Tum Tum were
-here to help me out! Oh, dear!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-CHUNKY IS CAUGHT
-
-
-Chunky, the happy hippo, was not as jolly as he had been when playing
-water-tag in the river with Bumpy, his brother, and Mumpy, his sister.
-In fact, he was rather sad. Stuck fast in the mud as he was, he pulled
-and twisted and wiggled and turned, trying to get loose. But he could
-not. He was still held fast.
-
-“Oh, dear!” said Chunky again, in hippo talk. I guess this was about
-the tenth time he had said it.
-
-Then, all at once, he sort of smiled――that is, he opened his mouth, as
-if he were laughing, though I don’t suppose that jungle animals really
-either smile or laugh as you do.
-
-But, at any rate, Chunky, who was usually a jolly, happy little chap,
-made up his mind there was no use in feeling too bad about what had
-happened to him.
-
-“I am stuck in the mud――that’s true,” he said to himself; “but it is
-better than being held fast at the bottom of the river by a crocodile
-who has you by the nose. This is much better.
-
-“I am out on the land, and I don’t have to hold my breath under water
-for fear of being drowned. And the mud doesn’t hurt me. In fact it is
-rather nice and soft,” continued the hippo boy.
-
-So Chunky made the mud go “squee-gee” between his toes, and tried to
-make himself think he was happy. But he was a little anxious, for he
-feared he had fallen into a trap.
-
-He had heard his father and mother, as well as the other big hippos,
-talk about traps set by hunters in the jungle. Some of the hunters were
-the black or brown people who lived in the big woods, and others were
-white hunters who came from far-off countries. And the traps they set
-were of different kinds.
-
-Some were nets, made of strong jungle vines. Others were great pits,
-or holes, dug in the ground and covered with leaves and grass, so
-the animals could not see them. Whenever they stepped on the grass
-scattered over the hole, the animals fell through and could not get out
-of the pit.
-
-Other traps were made of big stones or of logs, so fixed that they
-would fall on the animals that walked beneath them, and would hurt the
-animals very much. The hole-traps were the most common, though Chunky
-thought a mud trap was very good, for catching hippos.
-
-“Anyhow it has caught me!” thought Chunky.
-
-Then he listened again, waving his ears to and fro for any sound that
-might tell him the hunters were coming to get him. But he heard nothing
-but the noises of the jungle, which he heard every day――the cries of
-the red and green parrots, the trumpeting of elephants afar off, the
-chatter of monkeys and, now and then, the roar of a lion.
-
-“I hope one of the lions doesn’t get me,” thought Chunky. “They could
-easily, now that I am fast in the mud.”
-
-Once more he tried to pull his feet loose, but could not. The mud was
-too sticky. Chunky was sinking deeper and deeper into it. But still he
-tried to be cheerful.
-
-“After all,” he thought to himself, in the queer way that such animals
-have of thinking, “it may not be so bad to be caught and taken to a
-circus. Tum Tum said it was jolly. Maybe it will be so for me.”
-
-So Chunky waited in the mud. He could not do anything to get himself
-loose. He put his nose down in the water and drank some, but it was not
-nice like the water of the river near which he lived. The water in the
-muddy pool where he was held fast was hot, and not at all tasty.
-
-“Still, it is better than none at all,” thought Chunky. “And it is a
-good thing I ate a good breakfast this morning, or I would be hungry
-now.” And it was a good thing, I suppose, for there was nothing to eat
-near the jungle pool, and no sweet grass grew on the muddy bottom.
-
-All at once, after the happy hippo, who was not as jolly as he had
-been at other times, had tried again and again to get loose――all of a
-sudden, I say, he heard a noise back of him. He tried to look around to
-see what it was, but he could not turn far enough.
-
-The noise came closer.
-
-“Oh, I guess it’s the hunters!” thought Chunky, sadly.
-
-He tried very hard, now, to get loose, but it was of no use. He was
-just making up his mind that he would be caught and carried off to the
-circus, as Tum Tum had been, when he heard a voice shout, in animal
-talk:
-
-“Hello there! What’s the matter?”
-
-Then Chunky knew who it was! It was Tum Tum, the jolly elephant!
-
-“What’s the matter?” asked Tum Tum again, and he blew a big lot of
-air through his long hosey-nosey trunk, until it made a noise like a
-Christmas tin horn.
-
-“Oh, is that you, Tum Tum?” asked Chunky, and he felt ever so much
-better――more like his happy self.
-
-“Yes, it is I, Chunky,” answered the jolly elephant. “But what is the
-matter with you?”
-
-“I’ve fallen into one of the hunter traps,” answered the hippo, “and
-now they’ll come and catch me and send me off to a circus as you were
-sent.”
-
-“Oh, no they won’t!” laughed Tum Tum.
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“Because you’re not in a trap at all,” Tum Tum said, laughing again.
-
-“But I’m stuck fast! Look!” and Chunky tried to pull himself loose, but
-he could not.
-
-“Oh yes, you are _stuck_ all right,” laughed Tum Tum. “But don’t let
-that worry you. You are not in a trap. This is just one of those jungle
-pools with sticky mud at the bottom. I often got stuck in them myself,
-years ago.”
-
-“But how am I going to get out?” asked Chunky. “I’ve tried and tried
-and tried, but I can’t!”
-
-“I’ll help you,” said Tum Tum. “Just wait until I get hold of you with
-my trunk. Then I’ll pull you right out of that mud. Just you wait,
-Chunky!”
-
-So Chunky waited, and Tum Tum, the jolly elephant, going as close to
-the edge of the pool as he dared without danger of getting stuck in the
-mud himself, stretched out his trunk, and wound it around Chunky as if
-the little boy hippo were a bundle.
-
-“Now, all ready!” cried Tum Tum.
-
-Then he gave a haul and a pull and another one. There was a squidgy-idgy
-sound, a sort of squeaking in the mud, just as when you step on a rubber
-ball, and out came Chunky as nicely as you please.
-
-“There you are!” cried Tum Tum, as he set the little boy hippo down on
-a firm place in the ground where Chunky could step without sinking in.
-“Now you’re all right!”
-
-“Yes, thank you, I am,” said Chunky, for, though you may not know it,
-jungle animals are often kind to one another, and they do not scratch
-or bite one another unless they are very hungry or very angry. So
-Chunky was polite to Tum Tum.
-
-“Take care, after this,” went on the elephant, “not to step into a pool
-when you can not see the bottom.”
-
-“I’ll be careful,” promised Chunky.
-
-Then he and Tum Tum walked through the jungle, and the elephant reached
-up, with his long trunk, and picked green leaves off the trees, putting
-them where Chunky could get them.
-
-[Illustration: “Out came Chunky as nicely as you please”]
-
-For many months after this Chunky lived in the jungle on the edge
-of the river, which he had known ever since he was a baby hippo. He
-ate lots of green grass and roots, learning to dig the last from the
-bottom of the river with his big front teeth. And Chunky grew to be a
-large hippo, though he was not yet full size, and only about a year
-old. Mumpy, his sister, and Bumpy, his brother, also grew larger and
-stronger, as they also ate grass and roots.
-
-After having lived for quite a while in their home among the reeds near
-the place in the river where the crocodile had caught Chunky, the hippo
-family moved on to a new spot, where the grass was better and where
-there were not so many crocodiles.
-
-“It is getting too dangerous around here for the little ones,” said
-Mrs. Hippo one day, when the little-girl hippo who lived next door had
-been carried off by one of the biting animals.
-
-So Chunky and his family moved away. It was very easy for them to move.
-All they had to do was to walk on the ground or swim in the river. They
-did not have to pack up or take anything with them. That is one of the
-nice parts of being a jungle animal. It’s so easy to move.
-
-“I hope I’ll see Tum Tum again where we are going,” thought Chunky,
-remembering how the jolly elephant had helped him. “I like him very
-much.”
-
-But though the hippo boy looked all over the jungle, near his new home,
-he did not meet Tum Tum. Sometimes he could hear the wild elephants
-trumpeting in the forest, or crashing their way among the big trees.
-But Chunky could not see any of them, and he wondered if the hunters,
-led by Tum Tum, were after the big animals to catch them for a circus.
-
-And then, one day, after Chunky had been playing in the river with his
-brother and sister, and had gone on shore to rest, he thought it would
-be nice to take a walk by himself.
-
-“Maybe I’ll have an adventure, just as Tum Tum did, and somebody will
-put it in a book,” said Chunky to himself.
-
-He did not know what was going to happen to him, or he would not have
-wished for the kind of adventure that came to him.
-
-So, saying nothing to any of the other hippos about what he was going
-to do, Chunky set off by himself. He walked along and along, now and
-then stopping to chew a bit of grass in his big mouth, when all at once
-he happened to see a path leading off through the jungle.
-
-“Maybe if I go along that path,” thought Chunky to himself, “I’ll meet
-Tum Tum again. I wish I could. I’ll try it!”
-
-So he started off along that path. But he had not gone very far when,
-all at once, he felt the ground sinking away from under him, just as
-it feels to you when you go down in an elevator. Down and down went
-Chunky, and a lot of sticks and leaves went with him.
-
-“Oh, I’m going to be stuck in the mud again!” he cried.
-
-But he was not. Instead, he suddenly landed with a hard bump and a
-thump on the ground. It was quite dark around him.
-
-Chunky looked up. He could see some blue sky above him, but all around
-were walls of dark, brown earth.
-
-“Why!” exclaimed Chunky, “I’m in a hole――a deep hole! I must try to get
-out!”
-
-So he raised himself up a little on his hind feet――not very far for he
-was very heavy――and he tried to reach the top of the hole.
-
-But Chunky could not. The top was far above his head. Then he looked
-around him once more. All he could see was dirt, sticks and leaves.
-
-“Oh, I know what’s happened!” cried Chunky. “I’ve fallen into a
-pit-trap! That’s it! I’ve fallen into a trap, and I’m caught! Oh, dear!”
-
-Then Chunky was not the happy hippo――at least just then. He was sad.
-For he really had walked across a hidden pit along the jungle path,
-and was caught. There was no getting out of the deep hole. Chunky was
-surely caught.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-CHUNKY TAKES A TRIP
-
-
-Poor Chunky did not know what to do. He could hardly move around on the
-bottom of the hole, because it was so small. It had not been made to
-catch him, but he did not know that. The black hunters who had dug the
-pit hoped to catch in it a small deer. Chunky was really a little too
-big for the pit-trap, but it was too late to think of that now. He was
-in it.
-
-“Oh dear!” thought Chunky, “I wonder if any of my friends will come to
-help me out? I wish Tum Tum would come. He could lift me out with his
-strong trunk. I’ll call him.”
-
-So, in a sort of grunting voice, Chunky called:
-
-“Tum Tum! where are you? Please come and get me out of the hole!”
-
-After he had called the name of his big animal friend Chunky kept still
-and listened. He could hear nothing but the sounds of the jungle all
-about him. He could not see anything except the earth sides of the deep
-pit.
-
-“Tum Tum! where are you? Come and help me out of this hole!” called the
-hippo boy, in animal talk of course.
-
-But no one answered him. He could hear the birds in the jungle making
-their queer noises, not at all like the sweet sound your canary makes.
-The birds screamed instead of singing, though now and then one or
-another would utter a pleasant note.
-
-And the monkeys! How they chattered! Other animals ran here and there
-through the jungle, going to get something to eat or something to
-drink. None of them, however, paid any attention to Chunky’s calls. Tum
-Tum did not answer him, because the jolly elephant was far away; and if
-any of the other jungle animals heard what Chunky was saying, they did
-not reply to him. Perhaps they, too, were in some sort of trouble, or
-they may have been busy.
-
-“Well, I guess no one is coming to help me out of this hole,” said
-Chunky to himself, after a while. “Oh, dear! I wish I’d been more
-careful, and had not stepped on the dried leaves over the hole. Then I
-wouldn’t have fallen in!”
-
-But it was too late to think of that now. Chunky knew he must try to
-get out before the black or white hunters came, for that he was in a
-pit dug by these men the hippo boy very well knew. Tum Tum, as well as
-his father and mother, had told him about such places and had warned
-him to be careful.
-
-“I _must_ get out!” thought Chunky.
-
-So he turned and twisted himself about on the bottom of the pit, and
-tried to raise himself up to look over the top, but he could not. In
-the first place he was too heavy to raise himself up very far on his
-hind legs. If he had been Lightfoot, the leaping goat, about whom some
-stories have been told you, Chunky might have done this, or he might
-even have jumped out of the pit. But, as it was, he could only bob up a
-little way and then drop back again.
-
-“Maybe I could dig my way out with my big, long teeth, the same as I
-dig up the grass roots at the bottom of the river,” thought Chunky to
-himself. “Oh, dear! I wish I were back in the river now! I’m going to
-try to dig myself out.”
-
-But though Chunky’s front teeth, or tusks, answered well enough for
-digging up grass or lily roots on the bottom of the river, where the
-mud was soft, they were not made for digging in the hard, earthen sides
-of the pit. The hippo boy could only make a few scratches, and these
-did him no good.
-
-“It’s of no use!” sadly thought Chunky. “I guess I’ll have to stay
-here. But if only Tum Tum would come! I’ll call him again!”
-
-So lifting up his head, with his big, broad nose pointing toward the
-opening at the top of the pit, Chunky called:
-
-“Tum Tum! Please come and help me!”
-
-He waited, but no one answered. The jolly elephant was still far away.
-Pretty soon, however, a little bird perched itself on top of a tree
-where it could look down into the pit. The bird saw the hippo and heard
-his big voice calling.
-
-“My! what a funny way you have of singing,” remarked the bird.
-
-“I am not _singing_,” answered Chunky.
-
-“Not singing? Then what do you call it?” asked the bird, looking down
-at Chunky, its little head on one side, just as your canary often looks
-at you.
-
-“No, I wasn’t singing,” went on Chunky. “I can’t sing――at least not
-like you. I was calling for my friend Tum Tum, the jolly elephant, to
-come and help me get out of this hole.”
-
-“What did you want to go and get in the hole for?” asked the bird,
-somewhat pertly.
-
-“I didn’t want to,” Chunky explained patiently. “I fell in. This isn’t
-a regular hole. It’s a trap. It was all covered with leaves, sticks and
-grass, and I didn’t see it until I stepped right into it. Now I can’t
-get out unless my friend Tum Tum comes and lifts me out with his big,
-strong trunk, as he lifted me out of the mud. Oh, if Tum Tum were only
-here!”
-
-“Maybe I can find him for you,” said the bird kindly, realizing now
-that Chunky was in a sad plight.
-
-“I wish you would!” exclaimed Chunky. “You can fly all over the jungle.
-Perhaps you will see Tum Tum, the jolly elephant. If you do, please
-tell him to come and help me.”
-
-“I will,” promised the bird.
-
-“And tell him to hurry, please,” went on Chunky. “If I don’t get out of
-here soon, the black or white hunters――whoever made this pit――will come
-and get me, and then maybe they’ll put me in a circus.”
-
-“What’s a circus?” asked the bird.
-
-“I don’t know, but Tum Tum does,” answered Chunky. “He was in one long
-ago. He can tell you what a circus is when you find him to ask him to
-come to help me.”
-
-“So he can!” chirped the bird. “Well, I’ll go off and see if I can find
-your jolly elephant friend for you. Good-bye, Chunky. Don’t worry; I’ll
-get Tum Tum to help you.”
-
-“Good-bye, birdie, and thank you,” said the hippo boy.
-
-Then the bird flew away across the jungle, and the hippo stayed at the
-bottom of the pit-trap, waiting for what would happen next. Though he
-did not know it, his real adventures had begun, and he was to have a
-great many.
-
-Away flew the bird over the jungle, but it did not find Tum Tum, at
-least in time to be of any use to Chunky. The jolly elephant was
-helping the white hunters catch some wild elephants for the circus.
-And, while this was going on, along came the black hunters who had dug
-the pit into which Chunky had fallen. The black hunters were Africans,
-and they had on very little clothing, for it was very hot.
-
-Along the jungle path they came, with their spears and guns――for the
-white hunters had sold the black hunters guns――jabbering and talking
-in their own language. This would have sounded very queer to you, but
-no queerer than your talk would sound to those black Africans. And it
-sounded queer to Chunky, who heard it, down in the bottom of the pit as
-he was. But then his way of talking in animal language sounded queer to
-the black hunters, so matters were even, you see.
-
-“I wonder if we have caught anything in our trap,” said one black
-hunter to another, as he walked along the jungle.
-
-“I hope we have a nice deer, so we can have a good meal,” observed
-another.
-
-They were close, now, to the pit they had dug, and the black men walked
-more softly along the jungle path, for they wanted to see what was in
-their trap without being seen. One of them went carefully up and looked
-in. When he saw Chunky, the hippo boy, at the bottom, the black man
-gave a cry of delight.
-
-“Oh, we have caught a hippo! We have caught a young hippo!” he shouted,
-leaping about and waving his sharp spear over his head. “It is much
-better than a goat or a pig, for we shall have much more meat to eat.
-Ho! for the hippo!”
-
-Of course the black hunter talked in his own language which his
-friends, the other hunters, understood. They gathered with him about
-the edge of the pit and looked down. They could see poor Chunky there,
-though, of course, they did not know his name.
-
-“Ha!” cried the black hunters. “We shall have a fine meal now! We shall
-have lots to eat!”
-
-For the reason they had dug the pit in the jungle was to get something
-to eat. They had no store or market where they could go to buy
-anything. When they were hungry they had to hunt pigs, elephants or
-hippos with their guns or spears, or trap them in pits or nets.
-
-“We must get him out of the pit,” said the first black hunter. “We
-cannot cook him and eat him if he is down there.”
-
-Chunky did not understand what the men were saying, and he did not
-know what they were going to do to him. But he soon found out. The men
-brought long ropes, made from twisted jungle vines, and lowered them
-down into the pit. They did not dare jump down themselves, for though
-Chunky was only a little hippo, compared to the grown ones, still he
-was strong, and his big teeth could bite very hard. The black hunters
-wanted to tie him with ropes before they lifted him out.
-
-So down into the pit they dangled their strong vine ropes. Chunky saw
-them coming and felt them on his back, but he could not get out of the
-way of them. Soon they were tangled about his legs and body, and then,
-all the black hunters pulling together, they lifted the hippo out of
-the hole.
-
-Chunky grunted and wiggled, but it was of no use. He could not get away
-from the ropes that were soon wound all about him.
-
-Then just as one of the black hunters was about to stick him with a
-spear, to kill him, suddenly there was a loud noise in the jungle that
-made the black hunters look in the direction from which it sounded.
-
-They saw, coming toward them, some white men with black men――servants
-to carry their guns, tents and boxes of food. It was a party of white
-hunters out seeking wild animals.
-
-“What have you there?” asked the leader of the white hunters of the
-head of the black hunters――the one who had first looked down at Chunky
-in the pit. “What have you there?”
-
-“We have a small hippo,” was the answer.
-
-“And what are you going to do with him?”
-
-“We are going to eat him, for we are hungry, and he has much meat on
-him――he is nice and fat.”
-
-“Oh, don’t kill him!” said the white hunter. “I will buy him from you
-alive, and I’ll take him to a far-off land where people who do not see
-many hippos can see him. I can sell him to a circus. Don’t kill the
-little hippo. Sell him to me. Then you can buy other things to eat.”
-
-“Well, we will do that,” said the black hunter. “But how can you carry
-this hippo alive to a far country?”
-
-“I’ll show you,” answered the white hunter. “Leave him to me. Here are
-lots of beads and copper rings and looking glasses that flash in the
-sun like silver. I will give you these for the hippo.”
-
-The black hunters liked very much the pretty things the white man had,
-so they took them and let him take Chunky, though of course the white
-man, as yet, did not know the hippo’s name.
-
-“Make me a strong cage of jungle vines and poles of wood,” said the
-white hunter to his black helpers. “In the cage we will carry the hippo
-through the jungle until we come to the ‘great water,’ as you call the
-ocean. There, in a ship, I can take him to America, where I live. Make
-me a strong cage for the hippo.”
-
-So they made a strong cage for Chunky, and when he was put in it and
-the ropes slipped off him, he could stand up, and move about, though he
-could not get out. And oh! how hot and tired and cramped and thirsty he
-was! How he would have liked to take a swim in his river, dive down out
-of sight and chew some of the sweet grass roots! But this was not to be.
-
-Chunky was caught, and was in a cage, and, pretty soon, many of the
-black men with the white hunter, taking hold of poles thrust through
-the cage, began carrying Chunky through the jungle.
-
-The little hippo boy was being taken away. He was beginning a very long
-trip, and on it he was to have many adventures.
-
-“Oh, dear!” thought Chunky, as he felt himself being lifted up and
-carried along. “I guess that bird didn’t find Tum Tum and tell him to
-come and help me! I wonder what is going to happen to me?”
-
-And well might Chunky, the happy hippo, wonder. He did not feel very
-happy now, but better times were coming, though he did not know it.
-
-[Illustration: “The little hippo boy was being taken away”]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-CHUNKY’S NEW FRIENDS
-
-
-Along through the jungle jogged the black men, carrying the cage with
-Chunky in it. Now and then the black men would sing a funny song. At
-least it would have sounded queer to you, for it was like a lot of
-coughs, sneezes, hiccoughs and giggles. But it was a song the men often
-sang as they marched, so the way would not seem so long, nor their
-burdens so heavy, and Chunky was quite a heavy load, let me tell you!
-
-After a while the men stopped in the jungle, to make a fire and cook
-something to eat. Farther back, the other black hunters who had caught
-Chunky and sold him to the white man, were doing the same thing. They
-had found a deer, which one of them speared, and they cooked it.
-
-The cage, with Chunky in it, was set down in the jungle, not far from
-the fire the men made to cook their meal. This was the first time the
-hippo had seen a blaze, and, for a time, he was frightened, as are all
-jungle animals at the sight of fire. But, after a bit, when Chunky
-found that the fire did not come near him, he was not so much afraid.
-But he was very hungry for some grass, and he wanted very much to swim
-in a lot of water, and wallow in the mud.
-
-Pretty soon, when it had grown dark in the jungle, and the black men
-were eating their meal, along came the white hunter.
-
-“Have you given that little hippo anything to eat?” he asked the black
-men.
-
-“No,” they answered, “we have not.”
-
-“Well, you’d better do so,” said the white man. “He is hungry, as well
-as you. And I want him to be nice and fat and strong when I put him on
-the ship to take him to America to the circus. Get him some grass and
-water.”
-
-Then two or three of the black men, putting their fingers in their
-mouths, and sucking them, which was their way of cleaning them instead
-of using napkins, went down to the river bank, near which they were
-camped, and pulled up a lot of grass for Chunky. They also brought him
-water in hollow gourds, which were as large as a water pail. They knew
-the hippo liked lots of water.
-
-My! how thirsty Chunky was! He drank almost a barrel full, it seemed,
-and then he ate some of the grass the men tossed into his cage. It
-tasted good, and he felt better after that.
-
-The men went to sleep around their jungle fire then, and Chunky,
-having had something to drink and something to eat, fell asleep also.
-
-You might have thought, being carried away from his home as he was,
-Chunky would have felt so bad that he could not sleep. I know you
-would, but animals are not like that――especially jungle animals. As
-long as Chunky had enough to eat he was pretty well satisfied.
-
-And though back in the jungle his father and mother missed him, they
-did not worry much. When night came and Chunky was not home, Bumpy and
-Mumpy, his brother and sister, asked Mrs. Hippo:
-
-“Where is Chunky?”
-
-“I don’t know,” she replied. “He may be lost in the jungle or he may
-have gone away. He is getting old enough, now, to look after himself. I
-guess he is all right.”
-
-And so, after a little while, Chunky’s folks forgot all about him, and
-went to sleep too. They did not know that the little boy hippo was
-being taken on a long journey.
-
-Early in the morning Chunky, in his wooden cage, awoke in the jungle
-camp. It is so hot in Africa that when hunters travel they do so early
-in the morning and late in the afternoon. At mid-day the sun is too hot
-to walk out in it.
-
-So, after breakfast, Chunky being given more grass and water, the black
-men picked up his cage again and set off. As they went along under the
-jungle trees, Chunky could hear, overhead, many monkeys chattering away.
-
-“Oh, look at that poor hippo the hunters have caught,” said one. “Isn’t
-it too bad! I wouldn’t want to be in a cage.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t mind it so much as I did at first,” said Chunky, speaking
-to the monkeys in jungle talk, which the black men and white men could
-not understand. “I’ve had enough to eat and drink and no one is hurting
-me. No crocodiles can get me here.”
-
-“Well, you certainly are a happy chap,” went on the monkey who, by
-leaping from branch to branch overhead in the trees, easily kept up
-with the marching men carrying Chunky. “What makes you so jolly?”
-
-“I guess I must have caught it from Tum Tum, the elephant,” was the
-answer, and Chunky actually opened his big mouth as if he were smiling.
-
-“Oh, I know Tum Tum!” cried one of the monkeys. “He’s a jolly elephant
-who once was in a circus. And he knows a friend of ours.”
-
-“Who?” asked another chattering chap.
-
-“Mappo, the merry monkey,” was the answer. “Don’t you remember Mappo,
-who used to live in the jungle with us?”
-
-“Oh, yes!”
-
-“Well, he went away, and, for a long time we did not see him.”
-
-“Yes,” said the other monkeys. “That’s so!”
-
-“Well, he was caught and sent to a circus, and that is where Tum Tum
-was, only he’s out now. Maybe you’ll go to a circus, Chunky,” said the
-monkey.
-
-“Maybe,” agreed the happy hippo, who smiled again. “I guess it won’t be
-so bad. Tum Tum was telling me about it. Yes, I think I would like to
-go to a circus.”
-
-“Tum Tum said Mappo liked it,” put in another monkey, with a queer
-twist to his tail. “Mappo did tricks, and he had a lot of adventures
-and had a book written about him.”
-
-“Do you know what that is like?” asked Chunky. “I heard Tum Tum speak
-of adventures and a book.”
-
-“No, I don’t know,” was the answer. “I never heard of a book except
-from Tum Tum, and I don’t believe he really knows what it is.”
-
-“Well, perhaps if I go to a circus I shall find out,” went on Chunky.
-
-“Do you want us to go and get Tum Tum, and have him break your cage
-with his big feet and strong trunk, so you can get out?” asked a
-white-whiskered monkey.
-
-Chunky thought about this for a while, as the black men carried him
-through the jungle, while the monkeys leaped along in the tree tops
-overhead.
-
-“No,” said the hippo boy after a while. “I guess you don’t need to
-bother Tum Tum, though it’s kind of you to offer. I sent a little bird
-to find him, but I guess my elephant friend is too far away.
-
-“Besides, I think I won’t try to break loose. I feel very good here,
-though I wish my cage was a bit larger. But I’ve had water to drink,
-and sweet grass to eat, and I am having a nice ride. I think I’ll stay
-longer and see what else happens to me. I want to have some adventures
-and be put in a book.”
-
-“All right, then we won’t get Tum Tum,” said the monkey who had offered
-to try to find the elephant. “And, Chunky, if you do get in a circus,
-and see our old friend Mappo, give him our love, will you?”
-
-“I’ll certainly do that!” promised the hippo boy.
-
-Then, all at once, the hissing of a snake was heard, and as monkeys are
-very much afraid of snakes, they gave loud chatters and scurried away
-through the jungle, leaving Chunky in his cage being carried along by
-the black hunters.
-
-For many mornings and afternoons the white men and their black helpers,
-who were out to get live animals for circuses and parks in big cities,
-traveled on through the jungle. They caught two more hippos, though
-neither was as large as Chunky, and they caught other animals and
-birds, all of which were carefully put in cages to be carried to the
-ship to go across the sea.
-
-Chunky felt happier now that he had some friends with him, and he was
-especially glad there were two more hippos.
-
-“Now I shall not be lonesome,” he said to his new friends, in animal
-talk. “How did you come here?”
-
-“I was caught in a big net as I went through the jungle,” said Short
-Tooth, one of the hippos that had one tusk which was shorter than the
-other.
-
-“And I was caught as I was swimming in the river with my mother,” said
-the other hippo, which was named Gimpy by Chunky and Short Tooth. Gimpy
-walked a little lame from having stepped on a sharp stone when he was a
-baby, cutting his foot.
-
-So the three hippos were kept in cages close together, and were carried
-through the jungle, down toward the seacoast, with the other wild
-animals. Chunky made friends with them all, for he was a happy chap,
-and tried to look on the bright side of everything――as much as any
-animal can.
-
-“We might be a good deal worse off,” he said to a young lion who was
-grumbling because he had been caught and put in a cage. “Just think,
-here we have all we want to eat without ever going after it.”
-
-“Burr-r-r-r-r!” growled the lion. “I don’t like it at all! I want to
-get out of here!” and he leaped about, scratching and clawing at the
-wooden bars of his cage until the black hunters cried in fright and ran
-away. But one of the white men came and stood near the lion’s cage and
-spoke to the lion, which was a small cub.
-
-“Be quiet!” said the white man, though of course the lion could not
-tell what the man was saying. “Be quiet, little King of Beasts! You
-shall have good meat to eat, clean water to drink and you need never
-hunt for food again. Besides, you are going to be in a circus! Be
-quiet!”
-
-And the man spoke in such a kind way that the lion was quiet.
-
-Then the white man, who was the head, or chief, of the others out
-looking for live wild animals, came over to where the hippos were in
-their cages.
-
-“Three of you, eh?” he said, though of course Chunky could not
-understand what he said. “Three nice hippos! Well, you will be worth a
-lot of money if I can get you across the ocean safely and to the big
-city. There I can sell you to a circus or a menagerie in the park.
-
-“Ha! You are a fat, chunky chap!” the man went on, looking at our
-hippo. “And you seem quite contented. I should even say you were happy
-by the way you smile,” continued the white man, for, just then, Chunky
-opened his mouth as wide as he could. Perhaps he was only yawning,
-sleepy-like, but it looked like a big laugh.
-
-“Yes, you are quite fat, I think Chunky would be a good name for you,”
-went on the white hunter, and so the hippo was named over again, the
-same name his mother’s friend had given him in the jungle.
-
-For many more days the white and black men traveled on with the live
-animals they had caught. Then, one morning, after quite a long march,
-Chunky noticed that the black men suddenly stopped singing and broke
-into loud cries. They seemed quite happy.
-
-“What do you suppose has happened?” asked Gimpy, as he stood up in his
-traveling cage.
-
-“I don’t know,” answered Short Tooth. “Maybe they have caught an
-elephant.”
-
-“I hope it’s my friend, Tum Tum,” thought Chunky. “I’d like to see him
-now.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-CHUNKY ON A SHIP
-
-
-Standing up in the cage made of jungle vines, Chunky, the happy
-hippo――happy even though he had been caught and taken away from
-home――listened, hoping to hear the trumpeting of his friend, Tum Tum,
-the jolly elephant. But no such sound came. Instead, the black men
-shouted more loudly than before, and began dancing.
-
-“What is it all about?” asked Chunky of some monkeys who had been
-caught a few days before. “Why are the men shouting?”
-
-“I think it’s because they can see the ocean from the top of the hill,”
-returned one monkey. “I can smell the salt air. I remember it; for
-once, years ago, a troop of monkeys of which I was one, came down to
-the seashore. It smells now just as it did then.”
-
-“But why should the black men be glad to get to the ocean?” asked
-Chunky.
-
-“I can tell you why,” growled the lion. “It means they have come safely
-through the jungle with us animals, and do not have to march and carry
-us any more. I know, for I heard a lion friend of my father’s tell
-about it. He was caught and carried through the jungle to the sea,
-ready to be put on a big floating house and sent across the ocean. But
-he got away and ran back into the jungle.
-
-“And now they are going to take _us_ away. I’m not going! I’m going to
-break out of my cage!” and once more the lion roared and tried to break
-loose, but he could not.
-
-“Quiet! Quiet!” said the white hunter in a gentle voice, but the lion
-roared, and would not be still.
-
-“You are very silly,” said Chunky. “You can’t get out, and you may as
-well make the best of it. Being in a circus may not be so bad. Tum Tum
-liked it.”
-
-“But I am not Tum Tum!” roared the lion, and he would not be quiet
-until they gave him a lot of meat. When he chewed on that he could not
-very well roar.
-
-It was the sight of the ocean that had made the black men shout so
-joyfully, and soon Chunky, in his cage, was carried down to a spot from
-which he could see what, at first, he thought was a big river. But it
-was the sea, not a river.
-
-“I think we’ll give the hippos a bath,” said the head white hunter
-to his men, though the animals, of course, did not know what he was
-saying. “The hippos like lots of water,” went on the man, “and they
-haven’t had a chance to get a good soaking since we caught them. Take
-their cages down to the ocean and dip them in, but don’t let the
-animals out.”
-
-Chunky, Short Tooth and Gimpy did not know what was going to happen
-to them when they found themselves being lifted up again and carried
-forward. But they soon found out.
-
-Long ropes were fastened to their cages, and they were dipped right
-down into the salty ocean. This was the first time Chunky or any of the
-other hippos had been in salt water, for the rivers where they lived
-in the jungle were of fresh water, though it was muddy. But salt water
-or fresh is all the same to a hippo, except for taking a drink. They
-like to swim in one as well as in the other, and often, when the jungle
-where the hippos live is near the sea, they spend all day in the ocean,
-near shore and travel inland at night to feed.
-
-So, though it was the first time Chunky had had a salt bath, he and his
-two friends liked it. In their cages they sank away down on the sandy
-bottom of the ocean near the shore, closing their nose holes, so as not
-to swallow any of the briny water.
-
-Short Tooth thought he could break out of his cage while he was in it
-under water, and he tried, but it was of no use. The black men knew
-how to make cages strong enough to hold even a young hippo.
-
-“Ah ha! Now I feel fine!” cried Chunky, as they raised his cage out of
-the ocean, and he puffed and blew out the air from his nose, which he
-had kept closed under water. “I feel just dandy!”
-
-Of course Chunky didn’t use the word “dandy,” but he used one in animal
-talk which means the same thing, only it would be too hard for you to
-pronounce if I put it in here.
-
-“What makes you so happy?” asked one of the monkeys, who sat in
-his cage near the shore, really shivering, though the day was
-warm――shivering as he saw how the hippos liked the cool water.
-
-“I am happy because I hope I am going to be in a circus,” said Chunky.
-
-“Well, I’m not!” growled the lion; “though I am feeling a little better
-since they fed me.”
-
-“Chunky is always happy,” said Gimpy. “He has been jolly ever since
-I’ve known him.”
-
-“Yes, so he has,” added Short Tooth, as he stood up to let the water
-drip off him.
-
-“Well, why shouldn’t I be?” asked Chunky. “It’s true I’ve been taken
-away from the river I liked so well, away from the jungle, away from
-my father and mother, away from Mumpy, my sister, and Bumpy, my funny
-brother. But what of that? I’d have had to leave them some day, anyhow,
-and why not now? Besides, I am going to be in a circus, and I may meet
-Mappo, the merry monkey.”
-
-“I wish I could be jolly, like you,” said one of the monkeys.
-
-“Well, just think what fun you may be going to have, and not about the
-trouble you’re in now, and you’ll be happy,” said the hippo, and he
-opened his mouth as wide as he could.
-
-The black hunters, who were just then bringing up great quantities of
-grass for the hippos to eat, thought Chunky was opening his mouth to
-take a big bite of the food, but, instead, he was smiling because he
-felt so jolly. It’s hard to tell, sometimes, when a hippo is laughing,
-or when he is smiling, or when he just opens his mouth to eat, but once
-you learn to know the difference, you’ll never make a mistake. Chunky
-was smiling.
-
-None of the other wild animals that had been caught in the jungle and
-brought to the sea, felt as happy as Chunky did, though the other two
-hippos were pretty jolly. Having a bath in the sea and getting sweet
-grass to eat made them that way, I guess.
-
-And now began a busy time, for all the animal cages――in some of
-which were lions, big apes, snakes, monkeys, and deer with big
-horns, besides the hippos――had to be hoisted up into the ship, or the
-“floating house,” as some of the jungle beasts called it. In this ship
-the animals would be carried across the ocean from Africa to America,
-where they were to be put on exhibition in circuses or in zoological
-parks or in menageries.
-
-Of course Chunky and his friends knew nothing of this. They did not
-even know what a circus was, though Chunky had heard Tum Tum talk about
-one, and about books and adventures.
-
-“I shall be very glad to get to a circus, I think, and off this
-floating house, or whatever it is,” thought Chunky, when the ship had
-started. Chunky was in his cage up on deck, as were his two hippo
-friends and some of the larger animals. The others were under the deck,
-in the hold of the ship.
-
-“I don’t like this at all,” Chunky said to the other hippos. “It’s too
-swishy-swashy like!”
-
-He meant the ship was rolling to and fro, and pitching and tossing up
-and down with the waves, for it was soon out of sight of land, and
-going far away from Africa and the jungle.
-
-Though Chunky and his friends were used to being tossed about in the
-river, when they played tag and other water games, this motion of the
-ship was different. It made some of the animals seasick, and the lion,
-especially, was quite sad and miserable. He grumbled and growled, but
-he was too sick to roar, and Chunky, too, did not feel as well as when
-he had been carried through the jungle in the vine cage.
-
-“Still, I suppose I might be worse,” thought the hippo. “I might have
-nothing to eat or be chased by a crocodile,” and he sort of looked down
-cross-eyed at his nose, which was scarred by the teeth of the crocodile
-that had bit Chunky.
-
-Indeed Chunky and the other animals had all they wanted to eat, and
-were kindly treated, for the men who had bought them from the black
-hunters wanted the animals to be well and strong when they were taken
-off the ship. So Chunky, Short Tooth, Gimpy and all the rest were well
-treated, though of course they were not allowed to go around loose.
-
-On and on steamed the big ship with its load of animals. There was
-nothing much Chunky could do except eat and sleep and drink water. He
-wanted a bath, but there seemed to be no way of giving him one.
-
-However, one day, as an animal man passed along the deck and looked
-in at the hippos, he saw that their skin was very dry and that it was
-getting hard and cracking open.
-
-“That will never do!” he said to the captain. “We must fix it so the
-hippos can have a bath.”
-
-“How can we?” asked another animal man.
-
-“Very easily,” put in the captain. “I’ll get a big wooden tank up on
-deck. We can pump it full of sea water from a hose and let the hippos
-have a bath in it.”
-
-“That will be just the thing for them!” said the animal man. “Get a
-tank for the hippos.”
-
-The sailors soon made one, for I guess sailors can do almost anything.
-On deck a big wooden box as large as a room in your house, was set, and
-water was pumped into this. It was salt water from the ocean in which
-the ship was steaming along, but the hippos liked salt water to wash in
-as well as fresh, as I have told you.
-
-“Now we’re all ready,” said the animal man. “We’ll hoist the hippos up,
-one at a time in their cages, and dip them into the tank.”
-
-Chunky and the others rather hoped they might be allowed to come out of
-their cages and splash around loose in the water tank, but this could
-not be. They might have gotten out and run all about the ship, not
-knowing any better. So they had to stay in their jungle cages still.
-
-“Oh, but this is fine!” cried Chunky, as he sank down in the water and
-let it soak into his hard, dry skin. “This is fine!”
-
-“Just what we wanted!” said Short Tooth.
-
-“Couldn’t be better!” gurgled Gimpy, as he let the water come up over
-his back.
-
-“How happy those hippos seem,” said a giraffe. He had stuck his head
-out of a hole in the deck, for he was down below, though he could look
-out, as he was very tall and had a long neck.
-
-“Yes, they are happy,” said the lion. “Especially the one they call
-Chunky. I never saw such a jolly chap. He thinks he’s going to have
-lots of fun in a circus; but wait until he sees how it is! Then he
-won’t open his big mouth and smile any more.”
-
-The hippos liked the tank so much that the animal man said they could
-stay in it during the rest of the voyage. It was not so deep but what
-they could put their heads out to breathe, and this just suited Chunky
-and the others.
-
-One day, when they had been steaming over the ocean a long while, the
-sun went under some clouds and it became very dark, though it was not
-night. The sailors ran here and there about the ship, making everything
-fast.
-
-“We are going to have a bad storm!” cried the captain. “I hope none of
-the animals will get loose.”
-
-“We must take the hippos out of the tank, and tie their cages fast on
-deck,” said the animal man. But, before that could be done, the storm
-came and the ship was in the midst of wind and rain.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-CHUNKY FALLS OVERBOARD
-
-
-The storm was a very hard one, and it tossed the ship, large as she
-was, up and down and sidewise. Sometimes it seemed as if the steamer
-would go entirely down under the water, and again it seemed as if
-she would be tossed up to the angry clouds that blew along so fast
-overhead. The wind blew the rain so hard that the water drops sounded
-like hail stones.
-
-“What shall we do about those hippos?” asked the animal man of the
-captain. “They are in the big tank, and that may slide overboard. It is
-so big you can not very well make it fast.”
-
-“That is so,” answered the captain, who was wet through with the rain.
-“We had better lift the hippos out in their small cages. Those we can
-fasten to the deck more easily.”
-
-So, though it rained and it blew, and the ship pitched and tossed, the
-sailors went to lift from the tank the small cages of the three hippos.
-
-First they hoisted up, with long ropes, the cage which Short Tooth
-occupied. This hippo had not heard much of the storm, for he had stuck
-his head under water. But as soon as he was lifted out and felt the
-wind blowing across the deck, he knew there was great danger.
-
-“Oh, I wouldn’t like to be in the ocean now!” thought Short Tooth, as
-he saw the big waves, almost as high as the masts of the ship.
-
-“Nor I,” added Gimpy, as he, in his cage, was lifted out of the tank.
-“I’d be afraid.”
-
-Then it came the turn of Chunky to be lifted out. The sailors fastened
-ropes to the top of his cage, and began to pull on them to raise him
-out of the tank. All the while the ship was pitching and tossing,
-sometimes almost going in under the big waves that sloshed around on
-deck near the tank in which the hippos had been living. Some of the
-bigger animal cages had been put below the deck to keep them from being
-washed away.
-
-All of a sudden, just as Chunky’s cage was being lifted out, the ship
-was struck by a very big wave――the largest yet. At the same time the
-wind blew very hard and the rain came down twice as bad as before.
-
-“The rope is slipping!” cried one of the sailors, who was helping lift
-Chunky out of the tank. “The hippo’s ropes are slipping!”
-
-“Hold them――don’t let him go overboard!” yelled the animal man.
-
-But one of the sailors must have gotten some rain in his eyes, or else
-the ship went too deep into the water. How it happened, I can’t exactly
-say, but the next instant the big water tank, in which Chunky and his
-two friends had been kept for a while, slid off the deck into the ocean.
-
-At the same time a big wave struck the sailors who had hold of the
-ropes on Chunky’s cage. They let go, and down the cage crashed to the
-deck, with Chunky in it.
-
-“Ugh!” grunted Chunky as he came down with a thump. “Ugh! This is no
-fun!”
-
-And it was even less fun when the cage broke, just as another big wave
-came on deck. The first thing Chunky knew, he was out of his cage in
-which he had been kept ever since he was taken from the jungle pit. Out
-of the broken cage rolled Chunky, turning over and over on the slanting
-deck like a queer football rolling down a cellar door. The cage went
-one way and Chunky another.
-
-“Look! Look!” shouted some of the sailors, but they could hardly be
-heard, for the storm was making so much noise. “Look! The happy hippo
-is out of his cage!”
-
-And so Chunky was. I think it was nice of the sailors, even if they
-were all excited in the storm, to call Chunky the “happy hippo,” for if
-ever there was one, he was.
-
-[Illustration: “Splash! That was Chunky himself falling overboard”]
-
-“Get him!” yelled the animal man! “Get that hippo! He’s the best of the
-three, and I want him for a circus! Get Chunky!”
-
-But this was more easily said than done. The deck of the ship, pitched
-and tossed as it was in the storm, now looked like the slanting roof
-of a house. Anything that was not fast to it would roll off. The other
-hippo cages had been made fast. But Chunky’s, out of which he had been
-tossed when it fell and broke, now began to slide down the wooden deck
-toward the water. And Chunky himself, not being able to stand on the
-slippery deck, began to slide too. Right toward the ocean slid the
-hippo, not as happy now as he had been in the jungle.
-
-“Splash!”
-
-That was Chunky’s broken cage falling into the water off the deck of
-the ship.
-
-“Look out that Chunky doesn’t fall in!” cried the captain.
-
-Some of the sailors, with ropes in their hands, made a rush, intending
-to tie Chunky fast to the deck. But they were too late.
-
-“Splash!”
-
-That was Chunky himself falling overboard. Right into the salty ocean
-he fell, off the deck of the ship, and then the ship steamed on,
-leaving the hippo and his floating cage on the big ocean. For the ship
-had to steam on, or else the big waves would have made her sink.
-
-As for Chunky, as soon as he found himself tossed into the water, he
-did what he had been taught to do by his mother and father when he was
-a little baby hippo. He closed his nose and mouth so he would not choke
-in the water. Fresh water or salt water, did not matter to Chunky. As
-soon as he jumped in, fell in, or was pushed in, shut went his nose and
-mouth!
-
-Down, down, down in the ocean sank Chunky. He thought it safest to
-sink down quite a way at first, until he saw what would happen next.
-Besides, down under the waves it was quieter than on top, where they
-were being tossed about by the wind.
-
-Hippos can dive, sink, float or swim as they please, almost like a big
-fish, but they can not stay under water more than about ten minutes
-without breathing. After ten minutes they have to come up to fill their
-lungs with air. Then they can dive again.
-
-So Chunky dived down in the ocean. He did not know how deep it really
-was, and at first had an idea he might go to the bottom and perhaps
-find some grass or lily roots there.
-
-But the ocean was not like his jungle river, as he very soon found. It
-was much deeper, and there did not seem, at least, in the part where he
-was, to be any grass or other roots.
-
-“I guess I’d better not sink any deeper,” thought Chunky, after a bit.
-“I can’t find any place on which to stand. I’ll go up and get some air.
-I need it.”
-
-So he swam toward the top, and when he stuck his head out of the water,
-to take a breath and to look around, he could see nothing except big
-waves, ever so much bigger than any he had seen in his river.
-
-“Well, now that I am off that floating house, and out of my cage, now
-that I can do as I please,” thought Chunky to himself, as he swam along
-with just his nose and eyes out of water, “I guess I’ll go on shore and
-back to my jungle. I’m free now, and I won’t go to the circus. I’ll go
-back home.”
-
-Ah, Chunky little knew all that was going to happen to him, and the
-adventures he was to have!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-CHUNKY IN THE CIRCUS
-
-
-Chunky began to feel quite happy again. He felt that these were more
-like the times when he had been in the jungle. But he did not open his
-mouth to smile or to laugh, and there was a very good reason for this.
-If he had opened his mouth, as he was swimming in the stormy ocean, he
-would have swallowed a lot of salty water, and he did not want to do
-that. So he kept his mouth closed tightly, and his nose holes also,
-whenever a wave broke over him, which often happened.
-
-“Yes, I’ll swim back to shore and go to my jungle again,” thought
-Chunky to himself. “I guess I don’t want to be in a circus, even if Tum
-Tum said it was so jolly. I’m glad my cage fell and broke so I could
-get out.”
-
-So Chunky began to swim. I have told you that hippos are very good
-swimmers and divers in the water, and Chunky was one of the best. Even
-if his legs were very short, he knew how to use them to paddle himself
-through the ocean waves, and he was soon swimming in fine style.
-
-At first Chunky liked it, but, after awhile, he became tired.
-
-“I wonder how much farther away the shore is,” thought Chunky. “I ought
-to be there pretty soon. And I wonder if I can get down to the bottom
-of this big pond of water and dig up some grass roots to eat. I guess
-I’ll try that.”
-
-Taking a long breath, so he would not have to come up to breathe for
-about ten minutes, Chunky let himself sink under the waves. Down and
-down he went, quite a distance in the ocean, but he did not come to the
-bottom. That was more than a mile down, and quite too far for Chunky to
-sink.
-
-As he was floating around in the water, big fish brushed by him, and
-tried to talk to him, but he could not understand what they said. They
-were asking him what kind of fish _he_ was, and, of course, he was not
-a fish at all!
-
-Then, all of a sudden, a big shark, with a large mouth and very sharp
-teeth, made a rush for Chunky, intending to bite him.
-
-“My!” thought the hippo. “This is as bad as the crocodile! I must get
-away from here!”
-
-He began swimming toward the top as fast as he could go, and the shark
-for some reason or other, not liking to go too near the surface,
-stopped following Chunky.
-
-For two or three hours Chunky swam about in the ocean, and by that
-time the storm had commenced to die down. The wind did not blow so hard
-and the rain did not come down so heavily. The waves, too, were not so
-large.
-
-“But it’s queer I don’t get to shore,” thought Chunky. He did not know
-what a big place the ocean was, especially when one falls overboard in
-the middle of it, as the young hippo had done.
-
-Chunky was beginning to feel tired now. He raised his head as far out
-of the water as he could, and looked all about him. Afar off he saw a
-black speck, and he remembered, once, when he had swum far out in the
-jungle river, and looked back, the shore had seemed to him but a black
-speck.
-
-“That must be the shore,” thought Chunky. “I’ll swim toward that. Then
-I’ll be all right.”
-
-So Chunky swam toward the black speck, which, though it got larger, did
-not seem large enough for the shore. And then Chunky noticed a queer
-thing. When he stopped swimming, which he did now and then to rest his
-legs, the black speck seemed to be coming toward him.
-
-And then, all at once, a lot of black smoke came out of the black speck
-and Chunky knew what it was. It was the very ship off which he had
-fallen earlier in the day during the storm.
-
-“Well,” thought Chunky to himself, “if I can’t get to shore, and it
-doesn’t seem as if I was going to, I suppose I may as well go back to
-that floating house. At least I can rest there, and, even if I have to
-go to the circus, maybe it will be as jolly as Tum Tum said it would
-be. Yes, I’ll go back to the ship.”
-
-At first, those on the steamer knew nothing of Chunky’s swimming about
-in the ocean. They knew he had fallen overboard when his cage fell and
-broke, but, if they thought any more about it, they must have thought
-the hippo was drowned. And so there was much surprise when one of the
-sailors cried:
-
-“I see something in the water! It looks like a big, black pig!”
-
-“A black pig!” exclaimed the captain. “More likely it’s a shark or a
-whale!”
-
-However, the captain had the ship steered toward Chunky, where he was
-swimming, and then, looking through a telescope, the captain saw what
-really was in the water, and cried:
-
-“Why, there’s that hippo we lost overboard! Get ready, men, and we’ll
-hoist him on deck again! Lower a boat.”
-
-The ship was steered close to Chunky where he floated in the water.
-Then a rowboat was lowered, with some sailors in it, carrying ropes to
-put about the hippo and hoist him on deck again. Of course Chunky might
-have dived down, and, keeping under water, out of sight, he could have
-swum far away. But he was tired, and quite ready to go back on deck
-again.
-
-The small boat came close to him. At first some of the sailors were
-afraid, and one called:
-
-“Look out that he doesn’t open his big mouth and bite our boat in two!”
-
-“Oh, he won’t do that!” said one of the animal men, who was in the
-rowboat with the sailors. “This hippo is very good-natured and happy.”
-
-And Chunky showed that he was by letting the sailors put ropes around
-him in the water, for they could not lift him out unless they did this.
-
-Once the ropes were fastened about Chunky, he was towed to the side
-of the ship, and there, by means of a derrick, he was hoisted on deck
-again.
-
-“There you are!” cried the animal man. “I’m glad to get you back again,
-Chunky.”
-
-And so Chunky had fallen overboard and got back on the ship again, for
-the vessel had not moved far from the spot where, in the storm, the
-hippo had slid off the deck.
-
-Chunky was so tired from his swim, and from having been in the water
-so long, that he was very easy to handle. He made no trouble at all,
-though he had been wild in the jungle only a few weeks before, and had
-never seen a man, white or black. He was put in another cage, and then
-the ship kept on, for the storm was over.
-
-“Oh, so you are back with us again!” cried Gimpy, when he saw Chunky.
-
-“Yes,” was the answer. “I started to swim to shore, but it was too far.
-I got tired, and then I saw this ship and swam toward it. I am glad to
-be back.”
-
-“And we are glad to have you back,” said Short Tooth. “We were lonesome
-without you. Now tell us about your adventure.”
-
-“I didn’t have any adventure,” said Chunky, in surprise.
-
-“Yes you did!” declared a monkey in the cage next to Chunky’s.
-“Falling overboard was an adventure. I’ve heard Tum Tum tell about his
-adventures, and some that Mappo, the merry monkey, had, and some of
-them were no more exciting than yours. Tell us about it.”
-
-“Well, I didn’t suppose that was an adventure,” said Chunky. “But I’ll
-tell you about it,” and he did, just as it is set down in this book,
-which tells many more of Chunky’s adventures.
-
-“Well,” said the lion, who had listened to Chunky’s tale, “if _I_ ever
-get off this ship I’ll never come back.”
-
-“Maybe you’ll be glad to,” said the happy hippo. “I was.”
-
-So the ship steamed on and on with its load of wild animals. There were
-one or two other storms, but they did no damage, and no more cages
-slid overboard. Another and larger tank was built for the hippos on
-deck, and in this they took long baths each day. The animal men, for
-there were several of them, would come around to feed and talk to the
-different beasts. One special man always came to the hippos, and they
-learned to know him and watch for him, for he brought them long, yellow
-sweet vegetables every day. They were carrots, of which the hippos grew
-very fond, though they never had had any in the jungle.
-
-“Why are you so good to the hippos?” one of the sailors asked this
-animal man one day.
-
-“I want them to know and like me,” he answered. “Then I can teach them
-a few tricks to do when they are in the circus.”
-
-“Ho! Ho!” laughed the sailor. “What tricks can a great, big clumsy
-hippo do?”
-
-“Well, not very many, it is true,” admitted the animal man. “Not as
-many as an elephant. But maybe I can teach Chunky to do a few.”
-
-The animal man seemed to like Chunky a little better than he did the
-other two hippos, though he was kind to all three. Perhaps he saw that
-Chunky was a little smarter than Gimpy or Short Tooth.
-
-After many days of steaming the ship came, at last, to a big city.
-Chunky did not know it was a city, but he knew it was quite different
-from his jungle. There were only a few trees here and there, and he
-could see no rivers with nice, muddy, oozy banks on which he might
-sleep. And it was very noisy, not at all like the jungle, where the
-only noises were the wind blowing in the trees, the howling of animals,
-the chatter of the monkeys, and the songs and screechings of birds.
-
-With the other animals, some of them still seasick, and most of them
-very lonesome for the forest or jungle they had left, Chunky was
-hoisted off the ship in his cage and put on a big wagon. He was drawn
-through the city, but he could see nothing of it, for his cage was
-covered with a big sheet of canvas, such as tents are made of.
-
-Then Chunky was taken to a large building, where his cage was set down
-among those containing Gimpy, Short Tooth, the lion, the monkeys and
-others.
-
-“What place are we in now?” asked Chunky of the monkey who knew Mappo
-and Tum Tum. “Is this the circus?”
-
-“No, I guess it is just the beginning of it,” was the answer. “Tum Tum
-said the circus was a jolly place. This isn’t!”
-
-And it was not, for it was just a sort of barn, or storehouse, where
-the animals were kept until they were sold to circuses or park
-menageries.
-
-For more than a month Chunky stayed in this animal barn. Every day he
-could go into a tank, specially made for him and the other hippos, and
-have a nice swim, though not for very far.
-
-And every day Chunky had grass or hay or bran-mash to eat, with
-carrots, apples and other fruit. In fact he had much nicer things to
-eat than he had had in the jungle, and he liked them very much.
-
-One day the man who looked after Chunky, feeding him and seeing that
-the hippo had plenty of water to drink and swim in, came to the cage,
-looked in, and said:
-
-“I think you are tame enough now, to be taught a trick or two.”
-
-“You can’t teach a hippo tricks!” said another man. “They are too
-clumsy to stand on their heads.”
-
-“Well, I wouldn’t teach this one that kind of trick,” returned the
-first man. “But I think I can get him to open his mouth wide when I
-tell him to, and I’ll teach him to raise one leg and stand on only
-three. They are not very hard tricks, but they will be something for
-the circus, if ever we sell Chunky to one.”
-
-Of course Chunky did not understand this talk, nor did he know what the
-man wanted when he stood in front of him and said:
-
-“Open your mouth, Chunky! Open your mouth!”
-
-Chunky did not open his mouth until he got ready, which was when he
-wanted to take a bite of hay. And then, as he opened it wide, the man,
-all of a sudden, gave Chunky some carrots, which he liked very much.
-
-“Every time you open your mouth wide when I tell you to, I’ll give you
-some carrots,” the man said.
-
-Chunky did not understand this talk, either, but he soon came to know
-that each time he opened his jaws as wide as he could when the man was
-standing in front of him and making that, to Chunky, queer noise, he
-would get one of the long, sweet, yellow vegetables; so, after a while,
-all the man had to say was:
-
-“Open wide, Chunky!”
-
-Then the jaws would open like a big window, and you could look down
-Chunky’s throat, which seemed to be lined with red flannel.
-
-“Ha!” cried the man. “Chunky has learned to do a trick! Now he is ready
-for a circus.”
-
-And so Chunky was, for, besides learning to do the mouth trick, the
-hippo had learned to be gentle, and not to try to bite the man who fed
-him, knowing the man would not hurt him, but would be kind to him. The
-man could go into the cage with Chunky and pat him on the head, and
-Chunky rather liked that.
-
-Then, one day something new happened to the hippo, who was quite happy
-once more; happier than he had been in the jungle. Some men brought a
-new, small cage up beside Chunky’s big one, in which he stayed with
-Short Tooth and Gimpy, and Chunky was gently pushed into the small
-cage. He went readily enough, for he saw a pile of carrots in the small
-cage. Once inside, the door was shut and the cage was wheeled away.
-
-“Oh! are you going to leave us?” asked Gimpy.
-
-“Why, it seems so!” replied Chunky, rather surprised.
-
-“Where are they taking you?” asked Short Tooth.
-
-“I don’t know,” answered Chunky.
-
-“I can tell you,” said an old elephant, who had lived in the animal
-house many years. “You have been sold to a circus, Chunky, and they are
-taking you there.”
-
-And so it happened. The next day Chunky found himself in a circus, but
-what happened to him there I’ll save for the next chapter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-CHUNKY’S NEW TRICK
-
-
-Chunky thought the circus was a very queer place. When the cage, on
-wheels, in which he was kept, was drawn up for the first time on the
-lot where the circus tent was pitched, the happy hippo thought he had
-never before seen so many people. There was a big crowd trying to get
-in the tents to look at the animals, watch the men and women ride
-horses around the ring, jump from the trapezes, and see the clowns do
-their funny tricks. Of course Chunky knew nothing of that. All he knew
-was that he had been brought to the circus. He knew this much because
-of what the elephant had said.
-
-The circus happened to stop in the town where Chunky was being kept,
-and, as they needed a hippo, one of the men who owned the circus bought
-Chunky.
-
-The circus had been traveling about from place to place, and Chunky’s
-wagon, of which half was a tank containing water in which he could
-float around, had been put on the car and hauled with the other circus
-wagons. At first Chunky was afraid of the train of cars, but he soon
-grew to like it.
-
-So the hippo really came to the show in the middle of the season, when
-it was traveling from city to city. At what was the first performance
-for Chunky, his cage was wheeled into the animal tent, and placed in a
-ring next to a cage of monkeys on one side and a cage with a rhinoceros
-in it on the other.
-
-“How do you do,” said Chunky, as politely as he could to the monkeys.
-
-“Who are you?” asked one of the big monkeys.
-
-“They call me Chunky, the happy hippo,” was the answer. “I used to live
-in the jungle, but I fell into a pit and was caught, put on a ship, and
-then I fell overboard into the ocean.”
-
-“My! you’ve had a lot of adventures!” said the monkey.
-
-“Did you say you just came from the jungle?” asked the rhinoceros.
-
-“Well, not long ago,” answered Chunky.
-
-“Oh, tell me about it!” begged the rhino. “I used to live in the jungle
-myself, and I would like to hear about it again, though it is much
-easier to live here in the circus, where you get all you want to eat.
-Tell me about the jungle.”
-
-So Chunky told about swimming in the muddy river, of the crocodile that
-bit him, and how Tum Tum had pulled him out of the mud.
-
-“Did I hear you speak of Tum Tum?” asked one of the elephants on the
-other side of the animal tent.
-
-“Yes, I met him in the jungle,” said Chunky. “He said he used to be in
-a circus. Perhaps you knew him.”
-
-“Know him? I should say I _did_!” trumpeted a large elephant. “Why, Tum
-Tum used to be in this very circus! He was such a jolly fellow! We were
-all sorry to see him go.”
-
-“Who’s that you’re speaking of?” asked a bear, who came into the tent
-just then. He was dressed up like a clown.
-
-“We were speaking of Tum Tum,” said one of the elephants. “Here is a
-hippo who has just joined our circus. He met Tum Tum in the jungle.”
-
-“I have been wondering what had become of him,” went on the bear, who
-had been out in the ring doing some funny tricks with a clown.
-
-“Did you know Tum Tum?” asked Chunky.
-
-“I should say so!” laughed the bear. “My name is Dido, and I’m a
-dancer. Why, Tum Tum once saved me and some other animals from a fire
-when we were shut in our cages. He opened mine and the others’, and let
-us out, so we did not get burned. Tum Tum is a great elephant! He has a
-book written about his adventures. And so have I!”
-
-“So I heard,” said Chunky, and then he told more of the things that had
-happened to him.
-
-“You’ll have a book written about you before you know it,” said one of
-the monkeys. “You’ve had as many adventures already as Mappo, who was
-one of us once.”
-
-“Yes, I met friends of his in the jungle,” said Chunky.
-
-Then he and the circus animals talked for some time, discussing
-together how the show moved from place to place and how the animal
-cages were put on railroad cars and hauled many miles, from one big
-city to another.
-
-Out in the other tent there was music, as Chunky could hear. It was not
-like the music the black Africans of the jungle made, and which Chunky
-had heard when he and the other hippos ate at night near the jungle
-towns. But it was music that Chunky liked.
-
-“Well, it is time for us to go into the rings and do our tricks,” said
-one of the elephants, as the men came in to lead them away.
-
-“I wish I could do tricks outside my cage,” said Chunky.
-
-“Can you do any tricks at all?” asked Dido, the dancing bear.
-
-“Yes, I can open my mouth wide, and eat carrots,” said the happy hippo.
-“See!” and he did his one and only trick.
-
-“Well, that is very nice,” said Dido, “but I guess it would hardly do
-for the circus ring. You have to jump through hoops, or stand on your
-head or turn somersaults to get taken out to the rings or the platforms
-in the big tent, where the people sit down to watch you.”
-
-“I guess I’ll never be able to do any of those tricks,” said Chunky. “I
-have only one.”
-
-But in a few days he learned another. It happened this way.
-
-Every circus day his wagon stood in a ring with the others in the
-animal tent, and the people used to crowd about to look at him, at the
-elephants, at Dido and the others. Then Chunky’s trainer, who had been
-told about the mouth-opening trick, would call:
-
-“Open, Chunky!” and open would go his big mouth.
-
-“Oh-o-o-o-o!” all the people would cry, and one little boy said:
-
-“I wouldn’t want to fall down _his_ throat. I’d never get up
-again――never!”
-
-“No, indeed!” said the little boy’s mother.
-
-So Chunky did his only trick, and wished he could do more, and pretty
-soon he did. One day a keeper was tossing loaves of bread to the
-elephants who stood in line, that time, next to Chunky’s wagon. One of
-the loaves was not thrown straight, and went toward Chunky’s cage.
-
-Now the happy hippo happened to be hungry; so he opened his mouth as
-wide as he could, as he saw the loaf of bread coming his way, and right
-in it went. And Chunky chewed it with his big teeth, and it tasted very
-well.
-
-“Ha!” cried Chunky’s keeper, who had seen what happened. “If he could
-do that every day it would make a good trick. I’ll try it.”
-
-Chunky learned this trick very easily. Whenever he saw his friend, the
-keeper, standing in front of the cage with a loaf of bread in his hand,
-Chunky knew what was going to happen.
-
-“Catch this now!” the keeper would cry, and, as he tossed the loaf, the
-happy hippo would open his mouth as wide as ever he could, and down it
-would go. Then the boys and girls in the circus tent would laugh and
-clap their hands, and even the big folks would smile, for the loaf of
-bread looked so small in Chunky’s big mouth.
-
-“Now my hippo can do two tricks!” the keeper cried. “Maybe I can teach
-him some others.”
-
-But if you have ever looked at a hippo in a circus or in a menagerie,
-you can easily see that they can not do very many tricks――not as many
-as an elephant or a horse. But, in time, Chunky learned to lie down
-and roll over outside his tank, and that was something to do. He also
-learned to stand on three legs, and raise the other toward his keeper
-when told to do so. Thus Chunky had four tricks he could do, and one
-day the man said:
-
-“My hippo is getting so smart I think I can take him out in the big
-tent where the music is, and have him do his tricks there.”
-
-This the man did, and Chunky was quite proud and happy. He opened his
-mouth wide when his master told him to.
-
-“Now he is smiling at you!” the keeper would say to the circus crowds,
-and then the boys and girls would laugh. It seemed funny for a hippo to
-smile, but that is what Chunky meant it for. He was very happy now, and
-quite jolly among the other animals.
-
-“He is almost as jolly as Tum Tum was, when he was here,” said the
-rhino. “And it needs some one to keep us animals jolly. When I think of
-the jungle where I used to live, I get lonesome.”
-
-“Oh, well, the circus is a nice place!” Chunky would say, and then he
-would open his big mouth and smile in such a way that all the other
-animals had to laugh. So Chunky made them jolly whether they wanted to
-be or not. But most of them did.
-
-Chunky stayed with the circus for a number of years, and grew very
-large and heavy, so that he weighed about five thousand pounds, or more
-than two tons of coal.
-
-[Illustration: “‘Now he is smiling at you!’”]
-
-In fact Chunky grew too large for the circus, as he had to be carried
-around in a tank wagon, and could not walk, as the elephants did, to
-and from the trains. So one day Chunky was sold to a park in a big
-city, and the park had a menagerie in which different animals were
-kept, including some elephants, camels and giraffes.
-
-In this park Chunky had a very fine and large cage, with a big tank at
-one end. Into this he could go whenever he wanted to, and stay as long
-as he liked.
-
-Many people came to the park to see him, for he was one of the largest
-hippos in the world, it was said, and people seem to like to look at
-very large or very small things.
-
-Chunky did not forget his tricks, though soon after he went to live in
-the menagerie he became too heavy to stand on three legs and raise the
-other. And he could hardly roll over when the keeper told him to.
-
-But Chunky could still do his trick of catching a loaf of bread in his
-mouth, and he could open his jaws as wide as ever, and the children who
-came to the park to see the animals never were tired of watching the
-keeper make Chunky do his two best tricks.
-
-One day when Chunky was in the dry part of his cage, at the end where
-there was no water tank, he saw a small animal run in between the
-heavy iron bars――that is, an animal much smaller than he was, but
-almost as large as Dido, the dancing bear, it seemed to Chunky.
-
-“Ho! who are you that dares come into my cage without asking me?”
-inquired Chunky, though he did not speak crossly. “Do you belong to the
-park menagerie? If you do, you must have gotten out of your cage.”
-
-“No, I don’t belong here,” answered the small animal. “I am Don; and
-I am a dog. Once I was a runaway dog, but I am not any more. I’ve had
-lots of adventures, and a book has been written about me.”
-
-“My!” grunted Chunky. “It seems also every animal I meet has had a book
-written about him or her. Well, Don, I am glad to see you.”
-
-“Have you had any adventures?” asked Don, with a friendly bark.
-
-“Oh, yes, many of them,” answered Chunky. “If you want to lie down on
-that pile of hay, I’ll tell you about them.”
-
-So Don lay down on the pile of hay in the cage, and Chunky told some of
-his jungle adventures. And, though the happy hippo did not know it, he
-was soon to have an adventure with Don.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-CHUNKY AND THE LITTLE GIRL
-
-
-Chunky liked it very much in the park menagerie. He could do almost as
-he pleased. There was water always ready for him to swim in, and on
-cold days in winter it was made warm for him.
-
-Chunky had all he wanted to eat, and, though it was not quite the same
-as he had had in the jungle, it was very nice and good for him. He
-could not go down to the bottom of his tank and dig up grass or lily
-roots, but one can’t have everything.
-
-Though it had been quite jolly in the circus, Chunky liked it rather
-better in the park menagerie. For he did not have to be carted from
-city to city each night. The park stayed in one place, and the circus
-moved about nearly every day.
-
-Nor was Chunky lonesome in the park, though there were not so many
-animals near him as there had been in the circus. But across from him
-were the elephants, in great big cages with iron bars in front, and
-next to him was a rhinoceros, almost like the one in the circus.
-
-Chunky made friends with these animals, and often, even when crowds
-came in to see them, he and his friends could talk together in their
-own way.
-
-Don, the runaway dog, about whom a book has been written, often came
-to the park, and he never failed to pay a visit to Chunky, slipping in
-between the bars of the hippo’s cage, and lying down on a pile of hay
-to talk.
-
-“Did you ever live in the jungle?” asked Chunky of Don one day.
-
-“Not that I remember,” Don answered. “I have lived in different places
-though, and once I caught Squinty, the comical pig, when he got out of
-his pen. Did you ever meet Squinty?”
-
-“I don’t believe I did,” said Chunky. “He didn’t live in the jungle,
-did he?”
-
-“No. In a pen. But he got out, and I had to lead him back by the ear.
-And did you ever meet my friend Blackie, the lost cat, or Flop Ear, the
-funny rabbit?”
-
-“I’m sorry, but I don’t believe I did,” answered Chunky.
-
-“Or did you ever know Lightfoot, the leaping goat, or Tinkle, the trick
-pony?” asked Don.
-
-“Never,” answered Chunky.
-
-“Well, you may. They’ve had lots of adventures, and books have been
-written about them,” went on Don. “If I meet Blackie or Tinkle on my
-way home, I’ll tell them to stop in to see you.”
-
-“Do, please,” begged Chunky. “But where do you live, if you don’t come
-from the jungle?”
-
-“Oh, I live in a house in this big city, not far from this park,” said
-Don. “I belong to a little girl who pats me and is very kind to me. She
-gives me nice things to eat.”
-
-“I’d like to see her,” remarked Chunky. “I love children. Does she ever
-come to the park?”
-
-“Oh, yes, when her mother or father brings her. She is too little to
-come alone. Some day when she comes I’ll walk along with her, and then
-I can tell you who she is. I’ll come into your cage and tell you.”
-
-“All right,” said Chunky. “I’d like to see the little girl.” And he was
-going to, soon, in a queer way.
-
-For some time Chunky lived in his cage in the park. Sometimes he
-thought of the jungle he had been taken away from, and he wondered what
-his brother and sister were doing――whether they were playing water-tag
-in the muddy river or sleeping in the soft grass.
-
-Back in the African forest Mr. and Mrs. Hippo had given up thinking
-about Chunky. If they ever remembered him at all, it was only for a
-moment, to wonder what had happened to him that he did not come home
-the last time he went away. But they thought he had been killed by
-some other animal, or perhaps by the black or white hunters, and they
-knew it was of no use to try to find the happy hippo.
-
-One day, just after Chunky had finished doing his trick of catching
-some loaves of bread tossed into his mouth by his keeper, the hippo
-heard a voice saying in animal talk:
-
-“Well, Chunky, to-morrow I will bring my little girl mistress to see
-you,” and in ran Don, the dog.
-
-“Will you, really? That will be fine!” said Chunky. “I’ll be glad to
-see any friend of yours.”
-
-Then he opened his mouth wide, as the keeper told him to, and all the
-people laughed.
-
-The next afternoon, as Chunky was about to go into his tank to have a
-cool swim, for the day was hot, he saw Don run in between the bars of
-the cage. The dog said:
-
-“Here comes my little girl. I’ll bark three times when she gets right
-in front of you, so you’ll know which one is she. And do some of your
-tricks for her, please.”
-
-“I’ll do them all except stand on three legs,” promised Chunky. “I’m
-too fat for that.”
-
-“Thank you; that will be all right,” said Don.
-
-Pretty soon a little girl, wearing a blue dress, and holding her
-father’s hand, came and stood in front of the hippo cage where Don was.
-The dog had run on ahead to tell Chunky who was coming. Don barked
-three times, as he had said he would, then he said:
-
-“Do some nice tricks for my little girl!”
-
-“I will,” said Chunky.
-
-Then the hippo caught loaves of bread in his mouth, and opened his jaws
-as wide as he could. He even rolled over on the floor of his cage, but
-it was hard work, as he was very fat.
-
-“Oh, Daddy! look at the funny hippo!” cried the little girl. “Isn’t he
-happy looking?”
-
-“Well, yes, I guess you could call him happy when he smiles in such a
-broad grin,” answered her father. “He looks very jolly.”
-
-Chunky liked so much the nice way the little girl laughed that he tried
-to do for her the trick of standing on three legs and lifting the other
-up in the air. But he could not, as he was too fat and heavy.
-
-“I like that hippo,” said the little girl.
-
-Of course Chunky could not understand just what she said, but he could
-tell, by the way she talked, that the little girl liked his tricks.
-
-“I’ll do another one for her,” said the happy hippo to Don. “I’ll go in
-the water and roll over and over like a tub. Maybe she’ll like that.”
-
-“I’m sure she will,” said Don.
-
-So, down into the tank of water walked Chunky. The little girl had
-never seen anything like this before, and, very much excited, she let
-go of her father’s hand and cried:
-
-“Oh, Daddy, he’ll be drowned!”
-
-“No; hippos can stay under water a long time,” said her father, for
-by this time Chunky was out of sight. The waters had closed over his
-broad, flat back.
-
-“Oh, he’s gone! My nice, happy hippo is gone!” cried the little girl,
-and before her father, or anyone else, could stop her, she ran right in
-between the bars of the cage toward the tank.
-
-“Come back, Alice!” cried her father.
-
-“Bow-wow!” barked Don, and that was his way of saying the same thing.
-
-But the little girl did not come back. On she ran, right into Chunky’s
-cage, and her father was too big to squeeze in between the bars after
-her. Don ran in, though.
-
-All at once the little girl stumbled and fell, right over the edge of
-the tank, into the water.
-
-“Oh! Oh, my!” cried all the people.
-
-Don the dog saw what had happened, and, while Alice’s father was trying
-to get the keeper to open the door of Chunky’s cage, so they could go
-in and get the little girl, Don was barking:
-
-“Don’t hurt my little girl, Chunky! Don’t hurt her!”
-
-This kind of talk――being animal language――Chunky could understand.
-Down under the water he had heard the splash as Alice fell in, and then
-he saw the little girl sinking down near him.
-
-“This is no place for her!” quickly thought Chunky. “She is not a fish
-to live in the water. I must help her out.”
-
-Then the hippo sank away down in the water and got under the little
-girl, so that she floated right on his broad back. And when Alice was
-there, gasping and choking and grabbing Chunky by the ears, up rose the
-hippo, and there was Alice safe and sound, but very wet, of course, on
-Chunky’s broad back, under water no longer.
-
-“Oh, look!” cried all the people.
-
-“Your little girl is safe,” said the keeper, who opened the door of the
-cage. “The hippo has her on his back.”
-
-Then, with Alice on his back, Chunky swam to the side of the pool, and
-there her father and the keeper lifted her off, Don taking hold of her
-dress as if he were helping also. And how Don did bark! But he was
-happy.
-
-“I knew you wouldn’t let my little girl get hurt,” he said.
-
-“Of course not!” grunted Chunky. “I came to the top as soon as I got
-her on my back, for I knew she couldn’t stay as long under water
-without breathing as I can.”
-
-Alice was very much frightened, and she cried. She was wet, too, but
-not hurt a bit, and her father called an automobile and took her home
-with Don.
-
-“I’ll come and see you to-morrow and let you know how she is,” the dog
-promised the happy hippo.
-
-“I wish you would,” said Chunky.
-
-And Don did. Alice was all right as soon as she got on dry clothes, the
-dog said, and she promised never again to run up to a tank of water to
-see what was happening to a hippo.
-
-What Chunky did――saving Alice from drowning in the pool――became known
-to many people who went to the park, and there was even something in
-the papers about it. It made quite a hero of Chunky, though of course
-he did not know that. All he knew was that crowds of people came to see
-him, and his keepers were good and kind to him.
-
-So Chunky lived in the park menagerie for many years. He did his tricks
-and was glad to have the boys and girls come to look at him.
-
-“It is much better, after all, than the jungle,” he said to one of the
-elephants.
-
-“Yes, we like it better than the jungle,” said the biggest elephant. “I
-was in a circus once.”
-
-“So was I,” said Chunky. “I liked it, but it’s nicer not to have to
-travel at night. I can sleep better here.”
-
-Then, having had a good meal of carrots, he lay down in the hay and
-went to sleep.
-
-Chunky had many more adventures, but this book is full enough of them,
-I think. And I want to write another for you. It will be about a fox,
-and the name of it will be “Sharp Eyes, the Silver Fox. His Many
-Adventures.”
-
-Chunky grunted in his sleep, and talked something in animal language.
-
-“What did I say?” he asked the elephant who told him about it afterward.
-
-“You said: ‘Now you stop pushing, Bumpy.’”
-
-“I guess I was dreaming about my brother in the jungle,” said Chunky.
-
-And so we will let him dream on, and say good-bye to him.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes:
-
- ――Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
-
- ――Printer’s, punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently
- corrected.
-
- ――Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.
-
- ――Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Chunky, the Happy Hippo, by Richard Barnum
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Chunky, the Happy Hippo
- His Many Adventures
-
-Author: Richard Barnum
-
-Illustrator: Walter S. Rogers
-
-Release Date: May 15, 2020 [EBook #62135]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHUNKY, THE HAPPY HIPPO ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="cover" style="width: 600px;">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" width="600" height="764" alt="cover" title="cover" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_frontis" style="width: 391px;">
- <img src="images/i_frontis.jpg" width="391" height="600" alt="" title="" />
- <br />
- <div class="caption"><a href="#Page_118">“There was Alice on Chunky’s broad back!”</a></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p class="noi subtitle"><i>Kneetime Animal Stories</i></p>
-
-
-<h1>CHUNKY<br />
-THE HAPPY HIPPO</h1>
-
-<p class="noi subtitle">HIS MANY ADVENTURES</p>
-
-<p class="p2 noic">BY</p>
-
-<p class="noi author">RICHARD BARNUM</p>
-
-<p class="noi works">Author of “Squinty, the Comical Pig,” “Mappo, the<br />
-Merry Monkey,” “Tum Tum, the Jolly<br />
-Elephant,” “Tinkle, the Trick Pony,”<br />
-“Lightfoot, the Leaping Goat,” etc.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 noi works"><i>ILLUSTRATED BY</i></p>
-
-<p class="noic"><i>WALTER S. ROGERS</i></p>
-
-<p class="p4 noic">PUBLISHERS<br />
-<span class="noi adauthor">BARSE &amp; CO.</span><br />
-NEW YORK, N. Y.            NEWARK, N. J.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p class="noic">Copyright, 1918<br />
-by<br />
-BARSE &amp; CO.</p>
-
-<hr class="r20" />
-
-<p class="noic">Chunky, The Happy Hippo</p>
-
-<p class="p6 noi works"><i>Printed in the United States of America</i></p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
-<col style="width: 20%;" />
-<col style="width: 70%;" />
-<col style="width: 10%;" />
-<tr>
- <th class="smfontr">CHAPTER</th>
- <th class="tdl"></th>
- <th class="smfontr">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">I</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">Chunky has a Laugh</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">7</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">II</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">Chunky is Surprised</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">17</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">III</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">Chunky is Bitten</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">26</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IV</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">Chunky in the Mud</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">36</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">V</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">Chunky is Caught</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">45</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VI</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">Chunky Takes a Trip</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">55</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VII</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">Chunky’s New Friends</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">66</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VIII</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">Chunky on a Ship</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">75</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IX</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">Chunky Falls Overboard</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">84</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">X</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">Chunky in the Circus</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">91</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XI</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">Chunky’s New Trick</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">102</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XII</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">Chunky and the Little Girl</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">112</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" summary="Illustrations">
-<col style="width: 80%;" />
-<col style="width: 20%;" />
-<tr>
- <th class="tdl"></th>
- <th class="smfontr">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_frontis">“There was Alice on Chunky’s broad back!”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb"><i>Frontispiece</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_p015">“He went in backward and made a great splash”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">15</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_p035">“It was the crocodile that had bitten Chunky”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">35</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_p051">“Out came Chunky as nicely as you please”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">51</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_p065">“The little hippo boy was being taken away”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">65</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_p087">“Splash! That was Chunky himself falling
-overboard”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">87</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl hang"><a href="#i_p109">“‘Now he is smiling at you!’”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">109</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="noi title">CHUNKY,<br />
-THE HAPPY HIPPO</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br />
-<small>CHUNKY HAS A LAUGH</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Once upon a time, some years ago, but
-not so long that you could not easily
-remember if you tried, there lived in a
-muddy river of a far-off country called Africa,
-a great, big, animal-baby named “Chunky.”
-He was not a fish, though he could stay under
-water, not breathing at all, for maybe ten minutes,
-and that is why he swam in the muddy river
-so much. He did not mind the mud in the river.
-He rather liked it, for when he sank away down
-under the dark, brown water no one could see
-him.</p>
-
-<p>And Chunky did not want any of the lions or
-tigers, or perhaps the black African hunters to
-see him, for they might have hurt him.</p>
-
-<p>But, for all that, Chunky was a happy, jolly,
-little animal-baby, and would soon grow up to be
-a big animal boy, for he ate pecks and pecks of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span>
-the rich, green grass that grew on the bottom and
-banks of the African river.</p>
-
-<p>Now, I suppose, you are wondering what sort
-of animal-baby Chunky was. In the first place
-he was quite large—as large as the largest fat
-pig on your grandfather’s farm. And Chunky
-really looked a little like a pig, except that his
-nose was broad and square instead of pointed.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky was a hippopotamus, as perhaps you
-have guessed. But, as hippopotamus is quite a
-long and hard word for little boys and girls to
-remember, I will first tell you what it means, and
-then I will make it short for you, so you will have
-no hard work at all to remember it, or say it.</p>
-
-<p>Hippopotamus means “river-horse”; and a
-great many years ago when people first saw the
-queer animals swimming in the African rivers,
-they thought they were horses that liked to be in
-the water instead of on land. So that is how the
-hippopotamus got its name of river horse. But
-we’ll call them hippos for short, and it will do
-just as well.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky was called the happy hippo. And he
-was very happy. In fact when he opened his
-big mouth to swallow grass and river weeds you
-might have thought he was laughing.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky lived with Mr. and Mrs. Hippo, who
-were his father and mother, in a sort of big nest
-among the reeds and bushes on the bank of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>
-river. Near them were other hippos, some large
-and some small, but Chunky liked best to be with
-his own folks.</p>
-
-<p>Besides his father and mother, there was
-Mumpy, his sister, and Bumpy, his brother.
-Funny names, aren’t they? And I’ll tell you
-how the little hippos happened to get them.</p>
-
-<p>One day, when Chunky didn’t have any name,
-nor his brother or sister either, a great, big, fat
-hippo mother came over to see Mrs. Hippo.
-The visitor, whose name was Mrs. Dippo, as we
-might say, because she liked to dip herself under
-the water so much—this Mrs. Dippo said, talking
-hippopotamus talk of course:</p>
-
-<p>“My, what nice children you have, Mrs.
-Hippo.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they are rather nice,” said Mrs. Hippo,
-as she looked at the three of them asleep in the
-soft, warm mud near the edge of the river. You
-may think it queer for the little hippo babies to
-sleep in the mud. But they liked it. The more
-mud they had on them the better it kept off the
-mosquitoes and other biting bugs.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you named them yet?” asked Mrs.
-Dippo.</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet,” answered Mrs. Hippo. “I’ve been
-waiting until I could think of good names.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’d call that one Chunky,” said Mrs.
-Dippo, pointing with her left ear at the largest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-of the three little hippos. Mrs. Dippo had to
-point with her ear, for she was too heavy to raise
-one foot to point and stand on three. She had
-only her ears to point with. “I’d call him
-Chunky,” said Mrs. Dippo.</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” asked Mrs. Hippo.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, because he’s so jolly-looking; just like
-a great, big fat chunk of warm mud,” answered
-Mrs. Dippo. “Call him Chunky.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will,” said Mrs. Hippo, and that is how
-Chunky got his name.</p>
-
-<p>“Now for your other two children,” went on
-Mrs. Dippo. “That one,” and she pointed her
-ear at Chunky’s sister, “I should call Mumpy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” Mrs. Hippo again asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, because she looks just as if her cheeks
-were all swelled out with the mumps,” answered
-Mrs. Dippo. For animals sometimes have
-mumps, or pains and aches just like them. But
-Chunky’s sister didn’t have them—at least not
-then. The reason her cheeks stuck out so was
-because she had a big mouthful of river grass on
-which she was chewing.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I think Mumpy will be a good name for
-her,” said Mrs. Hippo, and so Chunky’s sister
-was named. Then there was left only his
-brother, who was younger than Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>Just as Mrs. Dippo finished naming the two
-little animal children, the one who was left without<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-a name awakened from his sleep and got up.
-He slipped on a muddy place near the bank of
-the river and bumped into Chunky, nearly
-knocking him over.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, look out, you bumpy boy!” cried Mrs.
-Hippo, speaking, of course, in animal talk.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha! That’s his name!” cried Mrs. Dippo,
-with a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“What is?” asked Mrs. Hippo.</p>
-
-<p>“Bumpy!” said Mrs. Dippo. “Don’t you see?
-He bumped into Chunky, so you can call him
-Bumpy!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a fine name,” said Mrs. Hippo, and
-Bumpy liked it himself.</p>
-
-<p>So that is how the three little hippos were
-named, and after that they kept on eating and
-growing and growing and eating until they were
-quite large—larger even than pigs.</p>
-
-<p>One day, Mr. and Mrs. Hippo and most of
-their animal friends were quite far out in the
-river, diving down to dig up the sweet roots that
-grew near the bottom. Chunky, Mumpy and
-Bumpy were on the bank lying in the sun to get
-dry, for they had been swimming about near
-shore.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going in again?” asked Mumpy, of
-her brothers, talking, of course, in the way hippos
-do.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’ve been in swimming enough to-day,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-said Bumpy. “I’m going back into the jungle
-and sleep,” for the river where the hippos lived
-was near a jungle, in which there were elephants,
-monkeys and other wild animals.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going in the water once more,” said
-Mumpy. “I haven’t had enough grass to eat.”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t, either,” said Chunky, who was fatter
-than ever and jollier looking. “I’ll go in
-with you, Mumpy.”</p>
-
-<p>So the two young hippos walked slowly down
-to the edge of the deep, muddy river. Far out
-in the water they could see their father and
-mother, with the larger animals, having a swim.
-Chunky and Mumpy walked slowly now, though
-they could run fast when they needed to, to get
-away from danger; for though a hippo is fat and
-seems clumsy, and though his legs are very short,
-he can, at times, run very fast.</p>
-
-<p>And as they went slowly along, Chunky and
-Mumpy looked about on all sides of them, and
-sniffed the air very hard. They were trying to
-see danger, and also to smell it. In the jungle
-wild animals can sometimes tell better by smelling
-when there is danger than by looking. For
-the tangled vines do not let them see very far
-among the trees, but there is nothing to stop them
-from smelling unless the wind blows too hard.</p>
-
-<p>“Is everything all right, Chunky?” asked
-Mumpy of her brother, as she saw him stop on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-the edge of a patch of reeds just before going into
-the water, and sniff the air very hard.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I think so,” he answered in hippo talk.
-For his father and mother had taught him something
-of how to look for danger and smell for it—the
-danger of lions or of tigers or of the black
-or white hunter men who came into the jungle to
-shoot or catch the wild animals.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on, Mumpy!” called Chunky. “We’ll
-have another nice swim.”</p>
-
-<p>“And we’ll get some more sweet grass to eat—I’m
-hungry yet!” replied the little girl hippo;
-for animals, such as elephants and hippos who
-live in the jungle or river, need a great deal of
-food.</p>
-
-<p>Out to the edge of the river went Chunky and
-his sister. They saw some other young hippos—some
-mere babies and others quite large boys
-and girls, as we would say—on the bank or in
-the water.</p>
-
-<p>Just as Chunky and Mumpy were going to
-wade in, they noticed, on a high part of the bank,
-not far away, a fat hippo boy who was called Big
-Foot by the jungle animals, as one of his feet was
-larger than the other three.</p>
-
-<p>“Watch me jump into the river!” called Big
-Foot.</p>
-
-<p>Then, when they were all looking, and he
-thought, I suppose, that he was going to do something<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-smart, he gave a jump and splashed into
-the water. But something went wrong. Big
-Foot stumbled, just as he jumped, and, instead of
-making a nice dive, <a href="#i_p015">he went in backward and
-made a great splash</a>.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha! Ha! Ha!” laughed Chunky, wagging
-his stubby tail. “Ho! Ho! I can jump better
-than that, and I’m not as large as you, Big Foot!
-Ha! Ha!” and Chunky laughed again. “That
-was an awful funny jump!”</p>
-
-<p>Big Foot climbed out of the water up on the
-bank. His eyes, which seemed like lumps or
-bumps on his head, appeared to snap at Chunky
-as he looked at him and Mumpy.</p>
-
-<p>“Some one laughing at me, eh?” growled Big
-Foot in his deep voice. “Ha! I’ll show you!
-Why are you laughing at me?” he asked, and he
-went so close to Mumpy that he bumped into her
-and almost knocked her into the river.</p>
-
-<p>“Here! You let my sister alone!” bravely
-cried Chunky, stepping close to Big Foot.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what did she want to laugh for when I
-splashed in the water?” asked Big Foot.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t laugh,” answered Mumpy, speaking
-more gently than did the two boy hippos.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you did!” exclaimed Big Foot, angrily.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_p015" style="width: 390px;">
- <img src="images/i_p015.jpg" width="390" height="600" alt="" title="" />
- <br />
- <div class="caption"><a href="#Page_14">“He went in backward and made a great splash”</a></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No, she didn’t laugh. I laughed,” said
-Chunky, and his sister thought he was very brave
-to say it right out that way. “I laughed at you,
-Big Foot,” said Chunky. “You looked so funny
-when you fell into the water backwards. Ha!
-Ha!” and Chunky laughed again.</p>
-
-<p>“So! You’ll laugh at me, will you?” asked
-Big Foot, and his voice was more angry. “Well,
-I’ll fix you!” and with a loud grunt, like a great
-big pig, he rushed straight at Chunky.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br />
-<small>CHUNKY IS SURPRISED</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">“Oh, Chunky!” cried Mumpy, as she
-saw Big Foot rushing at her brother.
-“Oh, Chunky, come on home!”</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh! I’m not afraid of him!” said Chunky,
-as he stood still on the river bank and looked at
-the on-rushing Big Foot.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go and call father,” went on Mumpy, as
-she waded into the water and began to swim out
-toward the grown hippos where they were having
-fun of their own in the river.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll show you that you can’t laugh at me!”
-grunted Big Foot, who came on as fast as he
-could. “I’ll bite you and push you into the
-river, and see how you like that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh! I’m not afraid!” said Chunky again,
-but really he was, a little bit.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, if you had been in the jungle, or
-hidden among the reeds on the bank of the African
-river, you would not have understood what
-Chunky and Big Foot said. In fact, you would
-not even have guessed that they were talking;
-but they were, all the same, though to you the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
-noises they made would have sounded only like
-grunts, squeals and puffings. But that is the way
-the hippos talk among themselves, and they mean
-the same things you mean when you talk, only a
-little different, of course.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, look! Big Foot is going to do something
-to Chunky!” cried the other boy hippos,
-and they gathered around to see what would
-happen. For fights often took place among the
-jungle animals. They did not know any better
-than to bite, kick and bump into one another
-when they were angry.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll fix you!” said Big Foot again.</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh! I’m not afraid,” answered Chunky
-once more, just as you may often have heard boys
-say.</p>
-
-<p>To tell the truth, Chunky would have been
-glad to run away, but he did not like to do it with
-so many of his young hippo friends looking on.
-They would have thought him a coward. So he
-had to stand and wait to see what Big Foot
-would do.</p>
-
-<p>On came the larger hippo boy, and, all of a
-sudden, when he was quite close to Chunky, he
-gave a jump and bumped right into him.
-Chunky tried to get out of the way, but he was
-not quick enough.</p>
-
-<p>The next minute he found himself slipping
-into the river, for Big Foot had knocked him off<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-the bank. But Chunky did not mind falling
-into the water. He had been going in anyhow
-for a swim with his sister. Chunky was not
-hurt. No water even went up his nose, as it
-does up yours when you fall into the water. For
-Chunky could close his nose, as you close your
-mouth, and not a drop of water got in.</p>
-
-<p>“There, I told you I’d fix you for laughing at
-me!” growled Big Foot, as he stood on the bank
-and watched Chunky swimming around in the
-water. “If you laugh at me any more I’ll push
-you in again!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you will, will you?” exclaimed a voice
-back of Big Foot. “Well, you just let my
-Chunky alone after this! He can laugh if he
-wants to, I guess!”</p>
-
-<p>And with that Mrs. Hippo, who had quickly
-swum to shore when Mumpy told her what was
-going on, gave Big Foot a shove, and into the
-water <em>he</em> splashed.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha-ha!” laughed all the other hippo boys
-and girls, as they saw what had happened.
-“Look at Big Foot! Ha-ha-ha!”</p>
-
-<p>Big Foot was very angry because Mrs. Hippo
-had pushed him in. But when he saw all the
-others laughing at him, he knew that he could
-not knock them all into the water, as he had
-knocked Chunky, so he made the best of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha-ha!” laughed Chunky. “So you’re here<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-too, Big Foot! I saw my mother push you in.
-She’s awful strong, she is! I hope she didn’t
-hurt you. She didn’t mean to if she did. Here
-are some nice sweet grass roots I dived down and
-pulled up off the bottom of the river. Have
-some?” and Chunky held out some in his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>Now Big Foot liked grass roots very much
-indeed, as did all the hippos. So, though he
-still felt a little angry, he took them from
-Chunky, and when the big boy hippo, with one
-foot larger than his other three, had swallowed
-the sweet, juicy roots he felt much better.</p>
-
-<p>“They were good,” he said. “Thanks! And
-say, I hope I didn’t hurt you when I shoved you
-into the river just now, Chunky.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you didn’t,” Chunky answered. “And I
-hope my mother didn’t hurt you when she shoved
-you in.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ho! Ho! I should say not!” answered Big
-Foot, and he laughed now. “I’m sorry I got
-mad,” he went on. “Come on, have a game of
-water-tag!”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Chunky, “I will. Come on,
-Mumpy!” he called to his sister. “We’re going
-to have a game of water-tag.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s all play!” cried Bumpo, who had not
-after all gone away. Then he slid down the
-river bank into the water.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, we’ll all play tag!” chimed in the rest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-of the hippos, and they were soon swimming and
-diving about in the water, splashing and bumping
-into one another almost as you boys and girls
-play when you go in bathing at the beach in the
-summer. Only, of course, the hippos, being
-very big, made heavy splashes.</p>
-
-<p>“This is lots of fun!” cried Chunky, as he
-tagged Bumpy and then dived to get out of the
-way, for sometimes the hippos “tagged back,”
-just as you children play.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it’s jolly fun!” yelled Big Foot.</p>
-
-<p>So the animal children swam, splashed and
-dived in the water, having much more fun than
-when the one was angry at the other and had
-pushed him into the river.</p>
-
-<p>All of a sudden, Mrs. Hippo, who had stayed
-on the bank after making Big Foot behave, gave
-a grunting cry.</p>
-
-<p>“Quick!” she called in her own language.
-“Swim ashore, all you little hippos! Swim
-ashore, quick!”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” asked Big Foot. He
-thought he was too large to mind without first
-asking questions.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t stop to talk! Swim ashore as fast as
-you can!” cried Mrs. Hippo.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky, Bumpy and Mumpy, her own three
-children-hippos, did as they were told, and paddled<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-for shore as fast as they could. For, though
-a hippopotamus is a very big animal and looks
-very clumsy, there are few as large as he who
-can swim so well or so fast, or dive so easily.</p>
-
-<p>On and on toward shore swam the hippo children,
-who, a few seconds before, had been playing
-tag. Last of all came Big Foot. As yet
-neither he nor any of the others knew why Mrs.
-Hippo wanted them to come ashore.</p>
-
-<p>Big Foot partly turned in the water and looked
-back. Then he saw what it was. A big crocodile,
-which is something like an alligator, only
-with a longer and more slender nose, or snout, its
-mouth filled with long, sharp teeth, was swimming
-after the little hippos.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that why you wanted us to come ashore?”
-asked Big Foot of Chunky’s mother, calling to
-her as he swam toward land.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, indeed it is!” she answered, in her big
-deep voice. “And don’t stop to ask any more
-questions! Hurry!”</p>
-
-<p>So they all hurried and got safely into shallow
-water, where the crocodile dared not come, bold
-and hungry as he was. He thought perhaps big
-Mrs. Hippo would step on him and smash him.
-A crocodile can grab hold of a baby hippo, and
-take it away, but dare not touch a big hippo. So
-this crocodile, with an angry snap of his teeth,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-turned and swam back into the middle of the
-river again, to wait for another chance to grab a
-tender, baby hippo.</p>
-
-<p>“My! how frightened I was!” said Mrs.
-Hippo, when she saw that her own and the rest
-of the animal children were safe. “I saw the
-crocodile coming toward you, but you didn’t see
-him because you were playing tag so hard.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a good thing you called to us to swim out
-of his way,” said Big Foot. “I’m much obliged
-to you, Mrs. Hippo, and I’m sorry I pushed your
-Chunky in!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you didn’t hurt me!” laughed Chunky,
-as he stood on the bank and looked out to the
-middle of the river, where he could just see the
-nose of the crocodile in the water, as the long animal
-swam away.</p>
-
-<p>And then Chunky had another surprise, for
-escaping from the crocodile surely was <em>one</em>.
-All of a sudden, out from the jungle flew a lot of
-birds, and before the hippos knew what was happening
-the birds began to settle down on their
-backs.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, look!” cried Chunky. “What are the
-birds going to do?” he asked his mother. “Are
-they going to bite me?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; don’t be afraid, silly little hippo boy!”
-she answered, with a loud laugh. “The birds
-just came to get the snails and water bugs that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-are sticking to your back. The river is full of
-snails, and when you go in to swim they stick to
-you. The birds like to pick them off and eat
-them, and that’s what they’re doing now.”</p>
-
-<p>And that is just what the birds were doing.
-Out of the jungle they had flown, and they circled
-around and lighted, one after another, on
-the broad, flat backs of Chunky and the other
-hippo children. The skin of a hippo is very
-thick—two inches in some places—but there are
-tender spots where mosquitoes, or bad bugs like
-that, can bite. But on the backs of the hippos
-nothing could bite through, and even when the
-birds picked off the water spiders and snails with
-their sharp bills the hippos did not feel it.</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it funny to have birds on your back?”
-said Chunky to Big Foot.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it has happened to me before,” said the
-larger hippo boy. “Of course you’re young yet—you’ve
-got lots to learn.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m glad the birds can get something to
-eat off me,” laughed Chunky in his jolly way.
-He laughed, in his own fashion, more than any
-of the other hippos, and seemed quite happy, so
-much so that often, when he was spoken of, he
-was called “Chunky, the happy hippo.”</p>
-
-<p>Here and there fluttered the birds on the backs
-of the hippos, picking off the water insects,
-which might get under the folds of the skin of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-Chunky and his mates and pain them. So the
-birds not only got a meal for themselves but they
-helped the animals.</p>
-
-<p>After a while all the bugs and snails were
-picked off and the birds flew back into the jungle.
-Chunky watched them as they sailed above the
-tree tops, and then he, too, walked slowly into
-the deep woods.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are you going?” asked his sister.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, off into the jungle to have a sleep,” he
-answered. “Want to come along?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” she said. “I’m going with some of the
-other hippo girls to roll in the mud.”</p>
-
-<p>So Chunky went into the jungle by himself.
-On and on among the trees he wandered, making
-his way through the tangled vines, breaking
-them off without any trouble, because he was
-very strong.</p>
-
-<p>All at once Chunky heard a funny noise, like
-a big horn blowing, and, looking up, he saw,
-standing in front of him, a big animal, much
-taller than himself. And this animal had two
-big long white teeth sticking out in front, and he
-seemed to have two tails, one longer than the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh dear!” thought Chunky. “This is a terrible
-beast! I wonder if he will bite me as the
-crocodile tried to;” and in order to get away,
-Chunky turned to run back through the jungle.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br />
-<small>CHUNKY IS BITTEN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">“Hold on there! Wait a minute! Don’t
-be afraid! Wait for me, little hippo
-chap!” cried the big animal to Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no! You’ll bite me!” answered Chunky,
-as he crashed his way through the jungle.</p>
-
-<p>“Bite you? I wouldn’t bite you for the world.
-I never bite anything except the grass and leaves
-I chew for my dinner. I might tickle you with
-my trunk, if I wanted to have some fun, but I’d
-never bite,” and the big animal talked in such a
-kind way that Chunky no longer felt frightened.
-He stopped and looked back.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean—tickle me with your
-trunk?” he asked, speaking animal talk, of
-course. “Do you mean with one of your two
-tails?”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t two tails,” answered the big animal.
-“The little one is a tail, to be sure, but the
-other is my trunk, or nose. See! I can wiggle it
-any way I like to;” and this he did.</p>
-
-<p>“My! that’s wonderful!” cried Chunky. “I
-can wiggle my tail, even if it is shorter than<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-yours, and I can open my mouth real wide, but
-I can’t make my nose go as yours does. And so
-you call it a trunk! What do you do with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is like a hand to me,” said the big animal.
-“I pick up in it things to eat, and I pull off the
-leaves of trees that grow above my head on the
-high branches. What is your name, little hippo
-boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“My name is Chunky. And what is yours?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m called Tum Tum, the jolly elephant, and
-I’m in a book,” said the big animal. “Now don’t
-ask me what a book is, for I don’t know. All I
-know is I’m <em>in</em> one and the book is about a lot of
-my adventures.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s adventures?” asked Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“Things that happen to you,” said Tum Tum,
-the jolly elephant. “If I had tickled you with
-my trunk, that would have been an adventure.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if the crocodile had bitten me when I
-was out playing water-tag a while ago, would
-that have been an adventure?” asked Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“It would,” said Tum Tum. “But that’s all
-I know about a book—I’m in one, and there’s
-a picture of me. I had a lot of adventures in
-the jungle, and then I was caught and taken away
-far off and put in a circus. There I had lots of
-fun.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why aren’t you in the circus now?” asked
-Chunky.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m getting too old to do circus tricks
-any more, though I feel as jolly as ever,” answered
-Tum Tum. “So the man who owned me
-said he’d take me out of the circus and bring me
-back to the jungle to help train any wild elephants
-he might catch. That’s why I’m back in
-the jungle. I’m going to help tame and train
-wild elephants, which the hunters, who are with
-the man who owns me, are going to try to catch.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ha! So there are hunters here, are there?”
-cried Chunky, for he had heard his father and
-mother speak of these creatures, and they had
-told him always to keep out of their way.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, there are some hunters in the jungle,”
-said Tum Tum. “They are after elephants.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think they’ll want a hippo?” asked
-Chunky anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I can’t tell. Maybe they might.
-Would you like to be caught and put in a circus?”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed I would not!” cried Chunky. “I
-want to stay in the jungle, and swim in the
-muddy river with my brother Bumpy and my
-sister Mumpy. We have lots of fun.”</p>
-
-<p>“We had fun in the circus, too,” said Tum
-Tum, the jolly elephant. “There I met Mappo,
-the merry monkey, and I know lots of other animals,
-about whom those things that are called
-books have been written.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, tell me about the other animals!” begged
-Chunky. “Was there one like me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, there was a hippo in the circus,” said
-Tum Tum; “but he was old and big, and slept
-in his tank of water most of the time. I didn’t
-have much to say to him. But I like you.</p>
-
-<p>“Then there were other animals in the circus,
-and out of it, too, for that matter, and I liked
-most of them. I met Squinty, a comical pig,
-and there was Don, a runaway dog, besides Flop
-Ear, a funny rabbit. They all have books written
-about them, and you’d be surprised at the
-many adventures my friends had.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was surprised, just now, when the jungle
-birds perched on my back,” said Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“You’d be more surprised if you could read
-about my adventures in the book,” said Tum
-Tum, with a jolly twinkle in his eyes, as he
-reached his trunk up in a tree and pulled off some
-sweet, green leaves. “Have some,” he invited
-Chunky, and Chunky did.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m very glad to meet you,” said the
-little hippo boy, after a while, when he and Tum
-Tum had talked for some time, and the jolly elephant
-had told him a few of his adventures, especially
-of once having been in a fire when the
-circus barns caught, and of how he had helped
-save some of the animals from being burned, including
-Dido, a dancing bear.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span></p>
-
-<p>“My! that <em>was</em> an adventure!” cried Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh! that’s nothing,” said Tum Tum.
-“Maybe I’ll have more adventures now that I’ve
-come to the jungle. What! you aren’t going,
-are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I guess I’d better go home,” said
-Chunky. “Some of those hunter friends of
-yours might try to catch me to put me in a circus,
-and I don’t want to go. Maybe I’ll see you
-some other time,” and away he went through the
-jungle toward the river, on the edge of which,
-amid the tall reeds, he lived with the other
-hippos.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye!” called Tum Tum. “If ever you
-get caught by the hunters, and you don’t like it,
-I’ll help you get away if I’m around.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you!” said Chunky, and he made up
-his mind never to be caught if he could help it.
-But you just wait and see what happens to the
-little hippo boy!</p>
-
-<p>Chunky made his way through the jungle to
-where his father and mother had their home.
-It was not a house, or even a nest, such as birds
-live in, though I have called it a nest. It was
-just a place where the reeds and weeds were
-trampled down smooth to make a soft place for
-the hippos to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>There was no roof over the top of the hippos’
-house, if you can call such a place a house.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-There were no windows in it, nor doors, and
-when it rained the water came in all over. But
-Chunky and his brother and sister did not mind
-the wetness. They liked being in the water as
-much as being on dry land, and they spent more
-than half their time in the river, anyhow.</p>
-
-<p>So, really, all they needed of a house was a
-place where they could lie down and sleep, and
-it was easy to make such a place. All Mr. and
-Mrs. Hippo had to do was to lie down in the
-weeds and reeds, roll over once or twice to make
-them stay down smoothly, and the house was
-made.</p>
-
-<p>There was no furniture in it—neither tables
-nor chairs, and not even a piano or a talking
-machine. The hippos had no use for these
-things. All they needed was a place to lie down,
-and such a place need not even be dry. Then all
-else they wanted was something to eat, and this
-they could get on land or in the water.</p>
-
-<p>“I think I like my home on the river bank better
-than the circus, even if Tum Tum did say it
-was jolly,” thought Chunky, as he crashed his
-way back through the jungle to where he had left
-his sister. She was out in the river now, playing
-water-tag with some of the other hippo boys and
-girls.</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you afraid of the crocodile?” asked
-Chunky, as he, too, waded out to get some more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-grass roots, for he was hungry again. Hippos
-and elephants eat very often during the day.</p>
-
-<p>“The crocodile has gone away,” answered
-Mumpy. “The big hippos swam around in the
-water and drove him to the other side of the
-river. We are not afraid. Come and play tag
-with us, Chunky.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not now,” he answered. “I’m going to eat.
-After I eat I will play.”</p>
-
-<p>Chunky waded out into the river until he felt
-the water coming up over his nose. Then he
-shut the breathing holes, so no water would run
-into them. It was just as if one of you boys had
-ducked your head under water and held your
-nose closed with your fingers, only Chunky did
-not need to hold his nose.</p>
-
-<p>He could not have done so if he had wanted,
-for he had no hands, and he needed his four feet
-to walk on. For, though in deep water he could
-swim, as could the other hippos, he now wanted
-to walk along under water on the soft, oozy,
-muddy bottom of the river and eat grass and
-plant-roots.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky had in his jaw some long, sharp teeth,
-called tusks. They were not as big as the tusks
-of Tum Tum the elephant, and they did not show
-when Chunky closed his big lips. But when he
-opened his mouth his tusks could easily be seen
-and so, too, could his other big teeth, called molars,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-which were used for grinding up the grass
-and other things he ate, just as your teeth grind,
-or chew, your food.</p>
-
-<p>It was with his long, sharp tusks that Chunky
-dug up from the muddy bottom, or from the
-banks of the river, the roots which he loved so
-well. And now, as the boy hippo waded out, he
-opened his eyes under water to look about and
-to find a good feeding place.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, I shall have a fine feast!” thought
-Chunky to himself, as he saw, a little ahead of
-him, under water, a big clump of rich, green
-grass. “There must be some fine roots there.”</p>
-
-<p>Walking along on the soft mud at the bottom
-of the river, the little hippo boy peered about,
-trying to decide which was the best place to begin
-his meal. The surface of the water was
-about a foot over his back, and he could see quite
-well, for the sun was shining overhead in the
-blue sky.</p>
-
-<p>Opening wide his mouth, so he could use his
-tusk-like teeth to uproot the grass, Chunky began
-his feast. With a motion of his big head, which
-made the water above him boil and bubble, the
-hippo tore out a lot of the juicy roots, getting
-them into his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! but these are good!” he thought to himself.
-“I don’t believe that Tum Tum, even if
-he was in a circus, and was put in an adventure-book,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>
-ever had anything as good as this. Yum-yum!”
-said Chunky, or whatever it is hippos say
-when they have something good to eat.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky was chewing away, wishing his sister
-Mumpy and his brother Bumpy were with him
-to enjoy the sweet grass roots, when, all of a sudden,
-Chunky felt something sharp nip him on
-the end of his nose.</p>
-
-<p>“Ouch!” he cried to himself. “I must have
-run against a sharp stone.”</p>
-
-<p>He tried to step backward, and then he felt the
-sharp pain again. This time he knew he had
-not struck himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Something has bit me!” cried Chunky.
-“Oh, it must be a big fish! I must get out of
-here!”</p>
-
-<p>He started to rise to the top of the water, so he
-could swim ashore, but, just as he did so, there
-came a third bite on his big nose, and he saw,
-right in front of him, a great big crocodile with
-a lot of teeth in his long jaws.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#i_p035">It was the crocodile that had bitten Chunky</a>
-and which now had hold of his nose, hanging on
-like a mud turtle.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh dear! Oh dear! Oh dear!” blubbered
-Chunky, as he wiggled about under water, trying
-to get loose from the crocodile.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_p035" style="width: 391px;">
- <img src="images/i_p035.jpg" width="391" height="600" alt="" title="" />
- <br />
- <div class="caption"><a href="#Page_34">“It was the crocodile that had bitten Chunky”</a></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br />
-<small>CHUNKY IN THE MUD</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Poor Chunky was having a dreadful
-time. Never before had he been caught
-by a crocodile. It would not have been so
-bad, he thought in his hippo way, if it had happened
-on top of the water. There some of the
-big animals might have seen him and they would
-have helped him. But down under the muddy
-river—who could help him there?</p>
-
-<p>Chunky flopped about in the water, sticking
-his feet deep down in the muddy bottom, and
-pushing back as hard as he could, trying to get
-his nose loose from the crocodile’s teeth. But
-the crocodile held fast to the hippo.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me go! Let me go!” blubbered Chunky,
-speaking in a strange way because his mouth was
-partly closed by the crocodile.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed and I’ll not let you loose!” answered
-the crocodile. “I want you for my supper!”
-At least he might have answered that if his
-mouth had not been busy holding fast to
-Chunky’s nose.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky pulled and pulled and pulled, but still
-he could not get loose, and the crocodile was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-slowly, but surely, dragging him out to a deeper
-part of the river, when, all at once, there was a
-great splashing in the water, and something big
-and heavy sank down beside the little hippo boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Get away from here, Mr. Crocodile!” a voice
-shouted, sounding like thunder under the water.
-“Leave my Chunky alone.”</p>
-
-<p>And then a great, big body began pushing and
-shoving the crocodile, and Chunky saw that it
-was his father who had come to save him.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Hippo, being big and strong, squeezed
-the crocodile up against the hard bank of the
-river, down under the water, and nearly squeezed
-the breath out of him. So the crocodile was
-very glad, indeed, to take his jaws off Chunky’s
-nose and let the little hippo go. Then, with
-another shove of his big body, Mr. Hippo thrust
-the crocodile far out into the river. The crocodile
-made a snap at Mr. Hippo, trying to bite
-him, but the big hippo floated out of the way just
-in time, and that was the end of the fight.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh dear!” cried Chunky to his father, who
-swam up beside him under water. “Oh dear!
-How my nose hurts!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I guess it does, little chap,” said Mr.
-Hippo. “Come along with me and I’ll get your
-mother to put a grass poultice on it. Or you can
-hold it in the soft, cool mud on the edge of the
-river. That will cure it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span></p>
-
-<p>Of course I don’t mean to say that sick animals
-really <em>doctor</em> themselves, but if you ever see your
-cat or dog eat grass, you may be sure it is doing
-it because it feels ill, so, in a way, it is taking
-medicine.</p>
-
-<p>And if you have ever watched a dog when it
-has been stung by a bee, you may have seen him
-go to some place where there is cool, wet mud
-that he can lie down in, and so get some plastered
-on the stung place, to make it pain less. So he
-takes this kind of medicine.</p>
-
-<p>In the jungle wild animals, when they are shot,
-or hurt by one of their own kind, or by another
-kind, get away if they can, where they can drink
-water and let some of it wash up on their wound.
-Water, mud and some kinds of grass and leaves
-are jungle medicines for the animal folk.</p>
-
-<p>And that is what Mr. Hippo meant. He did
-not mean that Mrs. Hippo would make a <em>real</em>
-grass poultice for Chunky’s sore nose, only that
-she might chew up some grass until it was soft
-and mushy and then her little boy hippo could
-lay his nose against it to make the bites of the
-crocodile feel better.</p>
-
-<p>“Where have you been?” asked Mrs. Hippo,
-as she saw Mr. Hippo and Chunky coming
-home.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the boy got into trouble—one of those
-crocodiles,” said the father hippo, in his own<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-kind of talk. “We’ll have to move away from
-here, I guess, if many more crocodiles come to
-this river.”</p>
-
-<p>Jungle animals do move from place to place;
-hippos, monkeys and elephants especially.
-They stay around one spot until they have eaten
-all the good food there, or until all the water is
-gone, and then they move on to a new home.
-Sometimes they move from one place to another
-because of danger, such as crocodiles or snakes
-might make.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Chunky, your nose is bleeding!” said
-Mrs. Hippo.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s where the crocodile bit me,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p>His mother showed him a place where he
-could lie down and put his nose in some soft mud.
-Then she brought him some sweet lily-plant
-roots to eat, and made a little cushion of soft
-grass for his sore nose to rest on that night.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky did not sleep very well. His nose
-pained him too much, but he did not cry. Wild
-animals do not know anything about crying, no
-matter how much pain they may feel. In the
-morning the sore nose was a little better, but
-Chunky could not go to play with his brother
-and sister and the other young hippos. He had
-to stay on the river bank.</p>
-
-<p>Still he was quite happy, for all the other animals<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-were kind to him, and brought him nice
-things to eat. Mumpy and Bumpy came to see
-him, and told him what fun they were having
-playing water-tag and other games in the
-river.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I could play!” said Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but you can’t go into deep water until
-your nose gets better!” said his mother. “You
-must stay on shore. Perhaps you might go in
-wading, but even then you must keep your head
-out of water. In a few days you will be better,
-and then you can have fun.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you see any crocodiles?” asked Chunky
-of Bumpy.</p>
-
-<p>“No. But if I do I’ll step on ’em and make
-’em go away!” he answered boastfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Better not try that!” said Mr. Hippo. “You
-are not yet big enough to fight the crocodiles.
-Leave that to me!”</p>
-
-<p>For three days Chunky had to keep out of the
-deep part of the river. He could only wade
-about and splash near shore, not diving or swimming.
-And as he had been used to going far out
-in the water ever since he was a tiny baby, he
-missed this very much indeed.</p>
-
-<p>But at last his nose was almost well, and his
-mother said it would be good for him to go in the
-water. Then Chunky was happy. He splashed
-in the river, dived away down to the bottom,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
-rolled over and over in the mud and swam about
-as much as he pleased.</p>
-
-<p>“Glad to see you!” cried Big Foot, for he and
-Chunky had become good friends since their
-little quarrel. “Is your nose all well?”</p>
-
-<p>“Almost,” Chunky answered. “But I don’t
-want to see any more crocodiles!”</p>
-
-<p>“I should say not!” agreed Big Foot. “But
-when I get larger I’m going to fight them, same
-as your father did.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Chunky played with the other hippos in
-the water, diving and having games of what you
-would call tag, until finally Big Foot said:</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, come on! Let’s wade ashore and go into
-the jungle!”</p>
-
-<p>“All right!” agreed Chunky. “Maybe we can
-have some fun there.”</p>
-
-<p>So into the jungle they went, trampling their
-way through the thick tangle of vines, chasing
-one another and grunting like pigs; and indeed
-they looked something like pigs as they pushed
-their noses in wet and muddy places to get at the
-sweet roots underneath.</p>
-
-<p>All at once Big Foot, who was walking ahead,
-cried:</p>
-
-<p>“Look out, Chunky! I hear something coming!
-Maybe it’s a crocodile!”</p>
-
-<p>“Crocodiles don’t come this far into the
-jungle,” said Chunky.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s <em>something</em>!” went on Big Foot.
-“Oh, look what a big animal, Chunky! I’m going
-to run back to the river! I’m afraid!”</p>
-
-<p>Chunky looked at the animal to which Big
-Foot was pointing with his ears, and then the
-little hippo laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t need to be afraid of him!” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, do you know him?” asked Big Foot.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that is Tum Tum, the jolly elephant,”
-was the answer. “I met him here in the jungle
-the other day, and he told me about being in
-a book and having adventures. Hello, Tum
-Tum!” cried Chunky in jungle talk.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello yourself,” answered the big, jolly elephant.
-“I see you have a friend with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Tum Tum, this is Big Foot,” said
-Chunky, waving his ears toward the other hippo.
-Big Foot, though older than Chunky, had never
-seen an elephant before, and he was much surprised.
-Just as Chunky had supposed, Big Foot
-thought Tum Tum had two tails, but he soon
-learned better, and he, too, liked the jolly elephant.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing here in the jungle?”
-asked Chunky of his big friend.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m looking to see if there are some wild
-elephants about, so the men with whom I am
-staying can catch them and train them for a
-circus,” was the answer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Are there men hunters around here?” Big
-Foot asked in an awed and very rumbling
-whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they are back in the jungle, and they will
-soon be here,” answered Tum Tum.</p>
-
-<p>“Then we’d better run!” cried Big Foot to
-Chunky. “My folks always told me to look out
-for hunters.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right!” agreed Chunky. “We had
-better go back to the river.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t be in a hurry,” said Tum Tum.
-“The hunters are not here yet. I can hear them
-coming long before they can see you, and I’ll
-tell you in time for you to get away. Still,
-maybe you <em>would</em> like to be caught and sent to a
-circus.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not <em>me</em>!” cried Big Foot.</p>
-
-<p>“Nor I,” added Chunky, though the more he
-thought about it the more he wished he could
-have some adventures, such as Tum Tum had
-had, many of them being written about in a
-book like this one you are reading.</p>
-
-<p>So the elephant and the two hippos stayed in
-the jungle for some little time, talking. Then,
-all of a sudden, Tum Tum raised his big ears,
-lifted his trunk, sniffed the air, and said:</p>
-
-<p>“The hunters are coming now. You had better
-run if you do not want to be caught. Good-bye!
-I hope I’ll see you again some day.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye!” called Chunky and Big Foot to
-Tum Tum, and then the hippos went back to
-their river, while Tum Tum began his search
-for wild elephants.</p>
-
-<p>It was two or three days after this that Chunky,
-who had gone off by himself up along the river
-bank to look for a certain kind of sweet grass,
-had another adventure.</p>
-
-<p>The little hippo was thinking of what Tum
-Tum had said about the circus, and how nice it
-was there, when, all of a sudden, Chunky stepped
-into a pool of water, which he did not think was
-very deep. But it was, and the worst of it turned
-out to be that under the water was some very
-sticky mud. So sticky, in fact, that Chunky sank
-down deep in it, being quite heavy and fat for his
-age. He tried to pull out his little short, stumpy
-legs, one after the other, but he could not. He
-only sank deeper and deeper in the mud. He
-was held fast there.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear!” thought Chunky. “I’m stuck
-tight! I wonder if this can be a trap of the
-hunters to catch me for the circus. Oh, I wish
-Tum Tum were here to help me out! Oh,
-dear!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br />
-<small>CHUNKY IS CAUGHT</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Chunky, the happy hippo, was not as
-jolly as he had been when playing water-tag
-in the river with Bumpy, his brother,
-and Mumpy, his sister. In fact, he was rather
-sad. Stuck fast in the mud as he was, he pulled
-and twisted and wiggled and turned, trying to
-get loose. But he could not. He was still held
-fast.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear!” said Chunky again, in hippo talk.
-I guess this was about the tenth time he had said
-it.</p>
-
-<p>Then, all at once, he sort of smiled—that is,
-he opened his mouth, as if he were laughing,
-though I don’t suppose that jungle animals
-really either smile or laugh as you do.</p>
-
-<p>But, at any rate, Chunky, who was usually a
-jolly, happy little chap, made up his mind there
-was no use in feeling too bad about what had
-happened to him.</p>
-
-<p>“I am stuck in the mud—that’s true,” he said
-to himself; “but it is better than being held fast
-at the bottom of the river by a crocodile who has
-you by the nose. This is much better.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I am out on the land, and I don’t have to
-hold my breath under water for fear of being
-drowned. And the mud doesn’t hurt me. In
-fact it is rather nice and soft,” continued the
-hippo boy.</p>
-
-<p>So Chunky made the mud go “squee-gee” between
-his toes, and tried to make himself think he
-was happy. But he was a little anxious, for he
-feared he had fallen into a trap.</p>
-
-<p>He had heard his father and mother, as well
-as the other big hippos, talk about traps set by
-hunters in the jungle. Some of the hunters
-were the black or brown people who lived in the
-big woods, and others were white hunters who
-came from far-off countries. And the traps they
-set were of different kinds.</p>
-
-<p>Some were nets, made of strong jungle vines.
-Others were great pits, or holes, dug in the
-ground and covered with leaves and grass, so the
-animals could not see them. Whenever they
-stepped on the grass scattered over the hole, the
-animals fell through and could not get out of the
-pit.</p>
-
-<p>Other traps were made of big stones or of logs,
-so fixed that they would fall on the animals that
-walked beneath them, and would hurt the animals
-very much. The hole-traps were the most
-common, though Chunky thought a mud trap
-was very good, for catching hippos.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Anyhow it has caught me!” thought Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>Then he listened again, waving his ears to and
-fro for any sound that might tell him the hunters
-were coming to get him. But he heard nothing
-but the noises of the jungle, which he heard every
-day—the cries of the red and green parrots, the
-trumpeting of elephants afar off, the chatter of
-monkeys and, now and then, the roar of a lion.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope one of the lions doesn’t get me,”
-thought Chunky. “They could easily, now that
-I am fast in the mud.”</p>
-
-<p>Once more he tried to pull his feet loose, but
-could not. The mud was too sticky. Chunky
-was sinking deeper and deeper into it. But still
-he tried to be cheerful.</p>
-
-<p>“After all,” he thought to himself, in the queer
-way that such animals have of thinking, “it may
-not be so bad to be caught and taken to a circus.
-Tum Tum said it was jolly. Maybe it will be
-so for me.”</p>
-
-<p>So Chunky waited in the mud. He could not
-do anything to get himself loose. He put his
-nose down in the water and drank some, but it
-was not nice like the water of the river near
-which he lived. The water in the muddy pool
-where he was held fast was hot, and not at all
-tasty.</p>
-
-<p>“Still, it is better than none at all,” thought
-Chunky. “And it is a good thing I ate a good<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
-breakfast this morning, or I would be hungry
-now.” And it was a good thing, I suppose, for
-there was nothing to eat near the jungle pool,
-and no sweet grass grew on the muddy bottom.</p>
-
-<p>All at once, after the happy hippo, who was
-not as jolly as he had been at other times, had
-tried again and again to get loose—all of a sudden,
-I say, he heard a noise back of him. He
-tried to look around to see what it was, but he
-could not turn far enough.</p>
-
-<p>The noise came closer.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I guess it’s the hunters!” thought
-Chunky, sadly.</p>
-
-<p>He tried very hard, now, to get loose, but it
-was of no use. He was just making up his mind
-that he would be caught and carried off to the
-circus, as Tum Tum had been, when he heard a
-voice shout, in animal talk:</p>
-
-<p>“Hello there! What’s the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>Then Chunky knew who it was! It was Tum
-Tum, the jolly elephant!</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” asked Tum Tum again,
-and he blew a big lot of air through his long
-hosey-nosey trunk, until it made a noise like a
-Christmas tin horn.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, is that you, Tum Tum?” asked Chunky,
-and he felt ever so much better—more like his
-happy self.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it is I, Chunky,” answered the jolly elephant.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
-“But what is the matter with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve fallen into one of the hunter traps,” answered
-the hippo, “and now they’ll come and
-catch me and send me off to a circus as you were
-sent.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no they won’t!” laughed Tum Tum.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because you’re not in a trap at all,” Tum
-Tum said, laughing again.</p>
-
-<p>“But I’m stuck fast! Look!” and Chunky
-tried to pull himself loose, but he could not.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes, you are <em>stuck</em> all right,” laughed
-Tum Tum. “But don’t let that worry you.
-You are not in a trap. This is just one of those
-jungle pools with sticky mud at the bottom. I
-often got stuck in them myself, years ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how am I going to get out?” asked
-Chunky. “I’ve tried and tried and tried, but I
-can’t!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll help you,” said Tum Tum. “Just wait
-until I get hold of you with my trunk. Then
-I’ll pull you right out of that mud. Just you
-wait, Chunky!”</p>
-
-<p>So Chunky waited, and Tum Tum, the jolly
-elephant, going as close to the edge of the pool as
-he dared without danger of getting stuck in the
-mud himself, stretched out his trunk, and wound
-it around Chunky as if the little boy hippo were
-a bundle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Now, all ready!” cried Tum Tum.</p>
-
-<p>Then he gave a haul and a pull and another
-one. There was a squidgy-idgy sound, a sort of
-squeaking in the mud, just as when you step on
-a rubber ball, and <a href="#i_p051">out came Chunky as nicely as
-you please</a>.</p>
-
-<p>“There you are!” cried Tum Tum, as he set
-the little boy hippo down on a firm place in the
-ground where Chunky could step without sinking
-in. “Now you’re all right!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, thank you, I am,” said Chunky, for,
-though you may not know it, jungle animals are
-often kind to one another, and they do not scratch
-or bite one another unless they are very hungry
-or very angry. So Chunky was polite to Tum
-Tum.</p>
-
-<p>“Take care, after this,” went on the elephant,
-“not to step into a pool when you can not see the
-bottom.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be careful,” promised Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>Then he and Tum Tum walked through the
-jungle, and the elephant reached up, with his
-long trunk, and picked green leaves off the trees,
-putting them where Chunky could get them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_p051" style="width: 405px;">
- <img src="images/i_p051.jpg" width="405" height="600" alt="" title="" />
- <br />
- <div class="caption"><a href="#Page_50">“Out came Chunky as nicely as you please”</a></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span></p>
-
-<p>For many months after this Chunky lived in
-the jungle on the edge of the river, which he
-had known ever since he was a baby hippo. He
-ate lots of green grass and roots, learning to dig
-the last from the bottom of the river with his big
-front teeth. And Chunky grew to be a large
-hippo, though he was not yet full size, and only
-about a year old. Mumpy, his sister, and
-Bumpy, his brother, also grew larger and
-stronger, as they also ate grass and roots.</p>
-
-<p>After having lived for quite a while in their
-home among the reeds near the place in the river
-where the crocodile had caught Chunky, the
-hippo family moved on to a new spot, where the
-grass was better and where there were not so
-many crocodiles.</p>
-
-<p>“It is getting too dangerous around here for
-the little ones,” said Mrs. Hippo one day, when
-the little-girl hippo who lived next door had
-been carried off by one of the biting animals.</p>
-
-<p>So Chunky and his family moved away. It
-was very easy for them to move. All they had
-to do was to walk on the ground or swim in the
-river. They did not have to pack up or take
-anything with them. That is one of the nice
-parts of being a jungle animal. It’s so easy to
-move.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope I’ll see Tum Tum again where we
-are going,” thought Chunky, remembering how
-the jolly elephant had helped him. “I like him
-very much.”</p>
-
-<p>But though the hippo boy looked all over the
-jungle, near his new home, he did not meet Tum
-Tum. Sometimes he could hear the wild elephants<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-trumpeting in the forest, or crashing their
-way among the big trees. But Chunky could
-not see any of them, and he wondered if the hunters,
-led by Tum Tum, were after the big animals
-to catch them for a circus.</p>
-
-<p>And then, one day, after Chunky had been
-playing in the river with his brother and sister,
-and had gone on shore to rest, he thought it
-would be nice to take a walk by himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe I’ll have an adventure, just as Tum
-Tum did, and somebody will put it in a book,”
-said Chunky to himself.</p>
-
-<p>He did not know what was going to happen
-to him, or he would not have wished for the kind
-of adventure that came to him.</p>
-
-<p>So, saying nothing to any of the other hippos
-about what he was going to do, Chunky set off by
-himself. He walked along and along, now and
-then stopping to chew a bit of grass in his big
-mouth, when all at once he happened to see a
-path leading off through the jungle.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe if I go along that path,” thought
-Chunky to himself, “I’ll meet Tum Tum again.
-I wish I could. I’ll try it!”</p>
-
-<p>So he started off along that path. But he had
-not gone very far when, all at once, he felt the
-ground sinking away from under him, just as
-it feels to you when you go down in an elevator.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-Down and down went Chunky, and a lot of sticks
-and leaves went with him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m going to be stuck in the mud again!”
-he cried.</p>
-
-<p>But he was not. Instead, he suddenly landed
-with a hard bump and a thump on the ground.
-It was quite dark around him.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky looked up. He could see some blue
-sky above him, but all around were walls of dark,
-brown earth.</p>
-
-<p>“Why!” exclaimed Chunky, “I’m in a hole—a
-deep hole! I must try to get out!”</p>
-
-<p>So he raised himself up a little on his hind
-feet—not very far for he was very heavy—and
-he tried to reach the top of the hole.</p>
-
-<p>But Chunky could not. The top was far
-above his head. Then he looked around him
-once more. All he could see was dirt, sticks and
-leaves.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I know what’s happened!” cried Chunky.
-“I’ve fallen into a pit-trap! That’s it! I’ve
-fallen into a trap, and I’m caught! Oh, dear!”</p>
-
-<p>Then Chunky was not the happy hippo—at
-least just then. He was sad. For he really had
-walked across a hidden pit along the jungle path,
-and was caught. There was no getting out of
-the deep hole. Chunky was surely caught.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br />
-<small>CHUNKY TAKES A TRIP</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Poor Chunky did not know what to do.
-He could hardly move around on the bottom
-of the hole, because it was so small.
-It had not been made to catch him, but he did not
-know that. The black hunters who had dug the
-pit hoped to catch in it a small deer. Chunky
-was really a little too big for the pit-trap, but it
-was too late to think of that now. He was in it.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh dear!” thought Chunky, “I wonder if any
-of my friends will come to help me out? I wish
-Tum Tum would come. He could lift me out
-with his strong trunk. I’ll call him.”</p>
-
-<p>So, in a sort of grunting voice, Chunky called:</p>
-
-<p>“Tum Tum! where are you? Please come
-and get me out of the hole!”</p>
-
-<p>After he had called the name of his big animal
-friend Chunky kept still and listened. He could
-hear nothing but the sounds of the jungle all
-about him. He could not see anything except
-the earth sides of the deep pit.</p>
-
-<p>“Tum Tum! where are you? Come and help
-me out of this hole!” called the hippo boy, in
-animal talk of course.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span></p>
-
-<p>But no one answered him. He could hear the
-birds in the jungle making their queer noises, not
-at all like the sweet sound your canary makes.
-The birds screamed instead of singing, though
-now and then one or another would utter a pleasant
-note.</p>
-
-<p>And the monkeys! How they chattered!
-Other animals ran here and there through the
-jungle, going to get something to eat or something
-to drink. None of them, however, paid
-any attention to Chunky’s calls. Tum Tum did
-not answer him, because the jolly elephant was
-far away; and if any of the other jungle animals
-heard what Chunky was saying, they did not
-reply to him. Perhaps they, too, were in some
-sort of trouble, or they may have been busy.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I guess no one is coming to help me out
-of this hole,” said Chunky to himself, after a
-while. “Oh, dear! I wish I’d been more careful,
-and had not stepped on the dried leaves over
-the hole. Then I wouldn’t have fallen in!”</p>
-
-<p>But it was too late to think of that now.
-Chunky knew he must try to get out before the
-black or white hunters came, for that he was in
-a pit dug by these men the hippo boy very well
-knew. Tum Tum, as well as his father and
-mother, had told him about such places and had
-warned him to be careful.</p>
-
-<p>“I <em>must</em> get out!” thought Chunky.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span></p>
-
-<p>So he turned and twisted himself about on the
-bottom of the pit, and tried to raise himself up
-to look over the top, but he could not. In the
-first place he was too heavy to raise himself up
-very far on his hind legs. If he had been Lightfoot,
-the leaping goat, about whom some stories
-have been told you, Chunky might have done
-this, or he might even have jumped out of the
-pit. But, as it was, he could only bob up a little
-way and then drop back again.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe I could dig my way out with my big,
-long teeth, the same as I dig up the grass roots at
-the bottom of the river,” thought Chunky to himself.
-“Oh, dear! I wish I were back in the
-river now! I’m going to try to dig myself out.”</p>
-
-<p>But though Chunky’s front teeth, or tusks, answered
-well enough for digging up grass or lily
-roots on the bottom of the river, where the mud
-was soft, they were not made for digging in the
-hard, earthen sides of the pit. The hippo boy
-could only make a few scratches, and these did
-him no good.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s of no use!” sadly thought Chunky. “I
-guess I’ll have to stay here. But if only Tum
-Tum would come! I’ll call him again!”</p>
-
-<p>So lifting up his head, with his big, broad
-nose pointing toward the opening at the top of
-the pit, Chunky called:</p>
-
-<p>“Tum Tum! Please come and help me!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span></p>
-
-<p>He waited, but no one answered. The jolly
-elephant was still far away. Pretty soon, however,
-a little bird perched itself on top of a tree
-where it could look down into the pit. The bird
-saw the hippo and heard his big voice calling.</p>
-
-<p>“My! what a funny way you have of singing,”
-remarked the bird.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not <em>singing</em>,” answered Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“Not singing? Then what do you call it?”
-asked the bird, looking down at Chunky, its little
-head on one side, just as your canary often looks
-at you.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I wasn’t singing,” went on Chunky. “I
-can’t sing—at least not like you. I was calling
-for my friend Tum Tum, the jolly elephant, to
-come and help me get out of this hole.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did you want to go and get in the hole
-for?” asked the bird, somewhat pertly.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t want to,” Chunky explained patiently.
-“I fell in. This isn’t a regular hole.
-It’s a trap. It was all covered with leaves, sticks
-and grass, and I didn’t see it until I stepped right
-into it. Now I can’t get out unless my friend
-Tum Tum comes and lifts me out with his big,
-strong trunk, as he lifted me out of the mud.
-Oh, if Tum Tum were only here!”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe I can find him for you,” said the bird
-kindly, realizing now that Chunky was in a sad
-plight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I wish you would!” exclaimed Chunky.
-“You can fly all over the jungle. Perhaps you
-will see Tum Tum, the jolly elephant. If you
-do, please tell him to come and help me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will,” promised the bird.</p>
-
-<p>“And tell him to hurry, please,” went on
-Chunky. “If I don’t get out of here soon, the
-black or white hunters—whoever made this pit—will
-come and get me, and then maybe they’ll
-put me in a circus.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s a circus?” asked the bird.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know, but Tum Tum does,” answered
-Chunky. “He was in one long ago. He can
-tell you what a circus is when you find him to ask
-him to come to help me.”</p>
-
-<p>“So he can!” chirped the bird. “Well, I’ll
-go off and see if I can find your jolly elephant
-friend for you. Good-bye, Chunky. Don’t
-worry; I’ll get Tum Tum to help you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye, birdie, and thank you,” said the
-hippo boy.</p>
-
-<p>Then the bird flew away across the jungle, and
-the hippo stayed at the bottom of the pit-trap,
-waiting for what would happen next. Though
-he did not know it, his real adventures had begun,
-and he was to have a great many.</p>
-
-<p>Away flew the bird over the jungle, but it did
-not find Tum Tum, at least in time to be of any
-use to Chunky. The jolly elephant was helping<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-the white hunters catch some wild elephants for
-the circus. And, while this was going on, along
-came the black hunters who had dug the pit into
-which Chunky had fallen. The black hunters
-were Africans, and they had on very little clothing,
-for it was very hot.</p>
-
-<p>Along the jungle path they came, with their
-spears and guns—for the white hunters had sold
-the black hunters guns—jabbering and talking
-in their own language. This would have
-sounded very queer to you, but no queerer than
-your talk would sound to those black Africans.
-And it sounded queer to Chunky, who heard it,
-down in the bottom of the pit as he was. But
-then his way of talking in animal language
-sounded queer to the black hunters, so matters
-were even, you see.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder if we have caught anything in our
-trap,” said one black hunter to another, as he
-walked along the jungle.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope we have a nice deer, so we can have a
-good meal,” observed another.</p>
-
-<p>They were close, now, to the pit they had dug,
-and the black men walked more softly along the
-jungle path, for they wanted to see what was in
-their trap without being seen. One of them
-went carefully up and looked in. When he saw
-Chunky, the hippo boy, at the bottom, the black
-man gave a cry of delight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, we have caught a hippo! We have
-caught a young hippo!” he shouted, leaping
-about and waving his sharp spear over his head.
-“It is much better than a goat or a pig, for we
-shall have much more meat to eat. Ho! for the
-hippo!”</p>
-
-<p>Of course the black hunter talked in his own
-language which his friends, the other hunters,
-understood. They gathered with him about the
-edge of the pit and looked down. They could
-see poor Chunky there, though, of course, they
-did not know his name.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha!” cried the black hunters. “We shall
-have a fine meal now! We shall have lots to
-eat!”</p>
-
-<p>For the reason they had dug the pit in the
-jungle was to get something to eat. They had no
-store or market where they could go to buy anything.
-When they were hungry they had to
-hunt pigs, elephants or hippos with their guns or
-spears, or trap them in pits or nets.</p>
-
-<p>“We must get him out of the pit,” said the first
-black hunter. “We cannot cook him and eat
-him if he is down there.”</p>
-
-<p>Chunky did not understand what the men were
-saying, and he did not know what they were going
-to do to him. But he soon found out. The
-men brought long ropes, made from twisted
-jungle vines, and lowered them down into the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>
-pit. They did not dare jump down themselves,
-for though Chunky was only a little hippo, compared
-to the grown ones, still he was strong, and
-his big teeth could bite very hard. The black
-hunters wanted to tie him with ropes before they
-lifted him out.</p>
-
-<p>So down into the pit they dangled their strong
-vine ropes. Chunky saw them coming and felt
-them on his back, but he could not get out of the
-way of them. Soon they were tangled about his
-legs and body, and then, all the black hunters
-pulling together, they lifted the hippo out of
-the hole.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky grunted and wiggled, but it was of
-no use. He could not get away from the ropes
-that were soon wound all about him.</p>
-
-<p>Then just as one of the black hunters was about
-to stick him with a spear, to kill him, suddenly
-there was a loud noise in the jungle that made
-the black hunters look in the direction from
-which it sounded.</p>
-
-<p>They saw, coming toward them, some white
-men with black men—servants to carry their
-guns, tents and boxes of food. It was a party of
-white hunters out seeking wild animals.</p>
-
-<p>“What have you there?” asked the leader of
-the white hunters of the head of the black hunters—the
-one who had first looked down at
-Chunky in the pit. “What have you there?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span></p>
-
-<p>“We have a small hippo,” was the answer.</p>
-
-<p>“And what are you going to do with him?”</p>
-
-<p>“We are going to eat him, for we are hungry,
-and he has much meat on him—he is nice and
-fat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t kill him!” said the white hunter.
-“I will buy him from you alive, and I’ll take him
-to a far-off land where people who do not see
-many hippos can see him. I can sell him to a
-circus. Don’t kill the little hippo. Sell him to
-me. Then you can buy other things to eat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we will do that,” said the black
-hunter. “But how can you carry this hippo
-alive to a far country?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll show you,” answered the white hunter.
-“Leave him to me. Here are lots of beads and
-copper rings and looking glasses that flash in the
-sun like silver. I will give you these for the
-hippo.”</p>
-
-<p>The black hunters liked very much the pretty
-things the white man had, so they took them and
-let him take Chunky, though of course the white
-man, as yet, did not know the hippo’s name.</p>
-
-<p>“Make me a strong cage of jungle vines and
-poles of wood,” said the white hunter to his black
-helpers. “In the cage we will carry the hippo
-through the jungle until we come to the ‘great
-water,’ as you call the ocean. There, in a ship,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>
-I can take him to America, where I live. Make
-me a strong cage for the hippo.”</p>
-
-<p>So they made a strong cage for Chunky, and
-when he was put in it and the ropes slipped off
-him, he could stand up, and move about, though
-he could not get out. And oh! how hot and tired
-and cramped and thirsty he was! How he
-would have liked to take a swim in his river,
-dive down out of sight and chew some of the
-sweet grass roots! But this was not to be.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky was caught, and was in a cage, and,
-pretty soon, many of the black men with the
-white hunter, taking hold of poles thrust through
-the cage, began carrying Chunky through the
-jungle.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#i_p065">The little hippo boy was being taken away.</a>
-He was beginning a very long trip, and on it he
-was to have many adventures.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear!” thought Chunky, as he felt himself
-being lifted up and carried along. “I guess
-that bird didn’t find Tum Tum and tell him to
-come and help me! I wonder what is going to
-happen to me?”</p>
-
-<p>And well might Chunky, the happy hippo,
-wonder. He did not feel very happy now, but
-better times were coming, though he did not
-know it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_p065" style="width: 402px;">
- <img src="images/i_p065.jpg" width="402" height="600" alt="" title="" />
- <br />
- <div class="caption"><a href="#Page_64">“The little hippo boy was being taken away”</a></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br />
-<small>CHUNKY’S NEW FRIENDS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Along through the jungle jogged the
-black men, carrying the cage with
-Chunky in it. Now and then the black
-men would sing a funny song. At least it would
-have sounded queer to you, for it was like a lot
-of coughs, sneezes, hiccoughs and giggles. But
-it was a song the men often sang as they marched,
-so the way would not seem so long, nor their
-burdens so heavy, and Chunky was quite a heavy
-load, let me tell you!</p>
-
-<p>After a while the men stopped in the jungle,
-to make a fire and cook something to eat. Farther
-back, the other black hunters who had
-caught Chunky and sold him to the white man,
-were doing the same thing. They had found a
-deer, which one of them speared, and they
-cooked it.</p>
-
-<p>The cage, with Chunky in it, was set down in
-the jungle, not far from the fire the men made to
-cook their meal. This was the first time the
-hippo had seen a blaze, and, for a time, he was
-frightened, as are all jungle animals at the sight
-of fire. But, after a bit, when Chunky found<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>
-that the fire did not come near him, he was not so
-much afraid. But he was very hungry for some
-grass, and he wanted very much to swim in a lot
-of water, and wallow in the mud.</p>
-
-<p>Pretty soon, when it had grown dark in the
-jungle, and the black men were eating their meal,
-along came the white hunter.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you given that little hippo anything to
-eat?” he asked the black men.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” they answered, “we have not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’d better do so,” said the white man.
-“He is hungry, as well as you. And I want him
-to be nice and fat and strong when I put him on
-the ship to take him to America to the circus.
-Get him some grass and water.”</p>
-
-<p>Then two or three of the black men, putting
-their fingers in their mouths, and sucking them,
-which was their way of cleaning them instead of
-using napkins, went down to the river bank, near
-which they were camped, and pulled up a lot of
-grass for Chunky. They also brought him water
-in hollow gourds, which were as large as a
-water pail. They knew the hippo liked lots of
-water.</p>
-
-<p>My! how thirsty Chunky was! He drank almost
-a barrel full, it seemed, and then he ate some
-of the grass the men tossed into his cage. It
-tasted good, and he felt better after that.</p>
-
-<p>The men went to sleep around their jungle fire<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
-then, and Chunky, having had something to
-drink and something to eat, fell asleep also.</p>
-
-<p>You might have thought, being carried away
-from his home as he was, Chunky would have
-felt so bad that he could not sleep. I know
-you would, but animals are not like that—especially
-jungle animals. As long as Chunky
-had enough to eat he was pretty well satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>And though back in the jungle his father and
-mother missed him, they did not worry much.
-When night came and Chunky was not home,
-Bumpy and Mumpy, his brother and sister, asked
-Mrs. Hippo:</p>
-
-<p>“Where is Chunky?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” she replied. “He may be lost
-in the jungle or he may have gone away. He is
-getting old enough, now, to look after himself.
-I guess he is all right.”</p>
-
-<p>And so, after a little while, Chunky’s folks forgot
-all about him, and went to sleep too. They
-did not know that the little boy hippo was being
-taken on a long journey.</p>
-
-<p>Early in the morning Chunky, in his wooden
-cage, awoke in the jungle camp. It is so hot in
-Africa that when hunters travel they do so early
-in the morning and late in the afternoon. At
-mid-day the sun is too hot to walk out in it.</p>
-
-<p>So, after breakfast, Chunky being given more
-grass and water, the black men picked up his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-cage again and set off. As they went along under
-the jungle trees, Chunky could hear, overhead,
-many monkeys chattering away.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, look at that poor hippo the hunters have
-caught,” said one. “Isn’t it too bad! I wouldn’t
-want to be in a cage.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t mind it so much as I did at first,”
-said Chunky, speaking to the monkeys in jungle
-talk, which the black men and white men could
-not understand. “I’ve had enough to eat and
-drink and no one is hurting me. No crocodiles
-can get me here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you certainly are a happy chap,” went
-on the monkey who, by leaping from branch to
-branch overhead in the trees, easily kept up with
-the marching men carrying Chunky. “What
-makes you so jolly?”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess I must have caught it from Tum
-Tum, the elephant,” was the answer, and Chunky
-actually opened his big mouth as if he were
-smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I know Tum Tum!” cried one of the
-monkeys. “He’s a jolly elephant who once was
-in a circus. And he knows a friend of ours.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who?” asked another chattering chap.</p>
-
-<p>“Mappo, the merry monkey,” was the answer.
-“Don’t you remember Mappo, who used to live
-in the jungle with us?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, he went away, and, for a long time we
-did not see him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the other monkeys. “That’s so!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he was caught and sent to a circus, and
-that is where Tum Tum was, only he’s out now.
-Maybe you’ll go to a circus, Chunky,” said the
-monkey.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” agreed the happy hippo, who smiled
-again. “I guess it won’t be so bad. Tum Tum
-was telling me about it. Yes, I think I would
-like to go to a circus.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tum Tum said Mappo liked it,” put in another
-monkey, with a queer twist to his tail.
-“Mappo did tricks, and he had a lot of adventures
-and had a book written about him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know what that is like?” asked
-Chunky. “I heard Tum Tum speak of adventures
-and a book.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t know,” was the answer. “I
-never heard of a book except from Tum Tum,
-and I don’t believe he really knows what it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, perhaps if I go to a circus I shall find
-out,” went on Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you want us to go and get Tum Tum, and
-have him break your cage with his big feet and
-strong trunk, so you can get out?” asked a white-whiskered
-monkey.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky thought about this for a while, as the
-black men carried him through the jungle, while<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-the monkeys leaped along in the tree tops overhead.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the hippo boy after a while. “I
-guess you don’t need to bother Tum Tum,
-though it’s kind of you to offer. I sent a little
-bird to find him, but I guess my elephant friend
-is too far away.</p>
-
-<p>“Besides, I think I won’t try to break loose.
-I feel very good here, though I wish my cage was
-a bit larger. But I’ve had water to drink, and
-sweet grass to eat, and I am having a nice ride.
-I think I’ll stay longer and see what else happens
-to me. I want to have some adventures
-and be put in a book.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, then we won’t get Tum Tum,”
-said the monkey who had offered to try to find
-the elephant. “And, Chunky, if you do get in a
-circus, and see our old friend Mappo, give him
-our love, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll certainly do that!” promised the hippo
-boy.</p>
-
-<p>Then, all at once, the hissing of a snake was
-heard, and as monkeys are very much afraid of
-snakes, they gave loud chatters and scurried
-away through the jungle, leaving Chunky in his
-cage being carried along by the black hunters.</p>
-
-<p>For many mornings and afternoons the white
-men and their black helpers, who were out to get
-live animals for circuses and parks in big cities,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
-traveled on through the jungle. They caught
-two more hippos, though neither was as large as
-Chunky, and they caught other animals and
-birds, all of which were carefully put in cages to
-be carried to the ship to go across the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky felt happier now that he had some
-friends with him, and he was especially glad
-there were two more hippos.</p>
-
-<p>“Now I shall not be lonesome,” he said to his
-new friends, in animal talk. “How did you
-come here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was caught in a big net as I went through
-the jungle,” said Short Tooth, one of the hippos
-that had one tusk which was shorter than the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>“And I was caught as I was swimming in the
-river with my mother,” said the other hippo,
-which was named Gimpy by Chunky and Short
-Tooth. Gimpy walked a little lame from having
-stepped on a sharp stone when he was a baby,
-cutting his foot.</p>
-
-<p>So the three hippos were kept in cages close
-together, and were carried through the jungle,
-down toward the seacoast, with the other wild
-animals. Chunky made friends with them all,
-for he was a happy chap, and tried to look on the
-bright side of everything—as much as any animal
-can.</p>
-
-<p>“We might be a good deal worse off,” he said<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
-to a young lion who was grumbling because he
-had been caught and put in a cage. “Just think,
-here we have all we want to eat without ever going
-after it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Burr-r-r-r-r!” growled the lion. “I don’t
-like it at all! I want to get out of here!” and
-he leaped about, scratching and clawing at the
-wooden bars of his cage until the black hunters
-cried in fright and ran away. But one of the
-white men came and stood near the lion’s cage
-and spoke to the lion, which was a small cub.</p>
-
-<p>“Be quiet!” said the white man, though of
-course the lion could not tell what the man was
-saying. “Be quiet, little King of Beasts! You
-shall have good meat to eat, clean water to drink
-and you need never hunt for food again. Besides,
-you are going to be in a circus! Be quiet!”</p>
-
-<p>And the man spoke in such a kind way that
-the lion was quiet.</p>
-
-<p>Then the white man, who was the head, or
-chief, of the others out looking for live wild animals,
-came over to where the hippos were in
-their cages.</p>
-
-<p>“Three of you, eh?” he said, though of course
-Chunky could not understand what he said.
-“Three nice hippos! Well, you will be worth
-a lot of money if I can get you across the ocean
-safely and to the big city. There I can sell you
-to a circus or a menagerie in the park.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Ha! You are a fat, chunky chap!” the man
-went on, looking at our hippo. “And you seem
-quite contented. I should even say you were
-happy by the way you smile,” continued the
-white man, for, just then, Chunky opened his
-mouth as wide as he could. Perhaps he was
-only yawning, sleepy-like, but it looked like a
-big laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you are quite fat, I think Chunky would
-be a good name for you,” went on the white
-hunter, and so the hippo was named over again,
-the same name his mother’s friend had given him
-in the jungle.</p>
-
-<p>For many more days the white and black men
-traveled on with the live animals they had
-caught. Then, one morning, after quite a long
-march, Chunky noticed that the black men suddenly
-stopped singing and broke into loud cries.
-They seemed quite happy.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you suppose has happened?” asked
-Gimpy, as he stood up in his traveling cage.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” answered Short Tooth.
-“Maybe they have caught an elephant.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope it’s my friend, Tum Tum,” thought
-Chunky. “I’d like to see him now.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-<small>CHUNKY ON A SHIP</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Standing up in the cage made of jungle
-vines, Chunky, the happy hippo—happy
-even though he had been caught and taken
-away from home—listened, hoping to hear the
-trumpeting of his friend, Tum Tum, the jolly
-elephant. But no such sound came. Instead,
-the black men shouted more loudly than before,
-and began dancing.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it all about?” asked Chunky of some
-monkeys who had been caught a few days before.
-“Why are the men shouting?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think it’s because they can see the ocean
-from the top of the hill,” returned one monkey.
-“I can smell the salt air. I remember it; for
-once, years ago, a troop of monkeys of which I
-was one, came down to the seashore. It smells
-now just as it did then.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why should the black men be glad to get
-to the ocean?” asked Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“I can tell you why,” growled the lion. “It
-means they have come safely through the jungle
-with us animals, and do not have to march and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
-carry us any more. I know, for I heard a lion
-friend of my father’s tell about it. He was
-caught and carried through the jungle to the
-sea, ready to be put on a big floating house and
-sent across the ocean. But he got away and ran
-back into the jungle.</p>
-
-<p>“And now they are going to take <em>us</em> away.
-I’m not going! I’m going to break out of my
-cage!” and once more the lion roared and tried to
-break loose, but he could not.</p>
-
-<p>“Quiet! Quiet!” said the white hunter in a
-gentle voice, but the lion roared, and would not
-be still.</p>
-
-<p>“You are very silly,” said Chunky. “You
-can’t get out, and you may as well make the best
-of it. Being in a circus may not be so bad.
-Tum Tum liked it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I am not Tum Tum!” roared the lion,
-and he would not be quiet until they gave him a
-lot of meat. When he chewed on that he could
-not very well roar.</p>
-
-<p>It was the sight of the ocean that had made the
-black men shout so joyfully, and soon Chunky,
-in his cage, was carried down to a spot from
-which he could see what, at first, he thought was
-a big river. But it was the sea, not a river.</p>
-
-<p>“I think we’ll give the hippos a bath,” said
-the head white hunter to his men, though the
-animals, of course, did not know what he was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-saying. “The hippos like lots of water,” went
-on the man, “and they haven’t had a chance to
-get a good soaking since we caught them. Take
-their cages down to the ocean and dip them in,
-but don’t let the animals out.”</p>
-
-<p>Chunky, Short Tooth and Gimpy did not
-know what was going to happen to them when
-they found themselves being lifted up again and
-carried forward. But they soon found out.</p>
-
-<p>Long ropes were fastened to their cages, and
-they were dipped right down into the salty ocean.
-This was the first time Chunky or any of the
-other hippos had been in salt water, for the rivers
-where they lived in the jungle were of fresh
-water, though it was muddy. But salt water or
-fresh is all the same to a hippo, except for taking
-a drink. They like to swim in one as well as
-in the other, and often, when the jungle where
-the hippos live is near the sea, they spend all day
-in the ocean, near shore and travel inland at night
-to feed.</p>
-
-<p>So, though it was the first time Chunky had
-had a salt bath, he and his two friends liked it.
-In their cages they sank away down on the sandy
-bottom of the ocean near the shore, closing their
-nose holes, so as not to swallow any of the briny
-water.</p>
-
-<p>Short Tooth thought he could break out of his
-cage while he was in it under water, and he tried,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
-but it was of no use. The black men knew how
-to make cages strong enough to hold even a
-young hippo.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah ha! Now I feel fine!” cried Chunky, as
-they raised his cage out of the ocean, and he
-puffed and blew out the air from his nose, which
-he had kept closed under water. “I feel just
-dandy!”</p>
-
-<p>Of course Chunky didn’t use the word
-“dandy,” but he used one in animal talk which
-means the same thing, only it would be too hard
-for you to pronounce if I put it in here.</p>
-
-<p>“What makes you so happy?” asked one of the
-monkeys, who sat in his cage near the shore,
-really shivering, though the day was warm—shivering
-as he saw how the hippos liked the
-cool water.</p>
-
-<p>“I am happy because I hope I am going to be
-in a circus,” said Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m not!” growled the lion; “though I
-am feeling a little better since they fed me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Chunky is always happy,” said Gimpy. “He
-has been jolly ever since I’ve known him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, so he has,” added Short Tooth, as he
-stood up to let the water drip off him.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, why shouldn’t I be?” asked Chunky.
-“It’s true I’ve been taken away from the river I
-liked so well, away from the jungle, away from
-my father and mother, away from Mumpy, my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
-sister, and Bumpy, my funny brother. But what
-of that? I’d have had to leave them some day,
-anyhow, and why not now? Besides, I am going
-to be in a circus, and I may meet Mappo, the
-merry monkey.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I could be jolly, like you,” said one of
-the monkeys.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, just think what fun you may be going
-to have, and not about the trouble you’re in now,
-and you’ll be happy,” said the hippo, and he
-opened his mouth as wide as he could.</p>
-
-<p>The black hunters, who were just then bringing
-up great quantities of grass for the hippos to
-eat, thought Chunky was opening his mouth to
-take a big bite of the food, but, instead, he was
-smiling because he felt so jolly. It’s hard to
-tell, sometimes, when a hippo is laughing, or
-when he is smiling, or when he just opens his
-mouth to eat, but once you learn to know the difference,
-you’ll never make a mistake. Chunky
-was smiling.</p>
-
-<p>None of the other wild animals that had been
-caught in the jungle and brought to the sea, felt
-as happy as Chunky did, though the other two
-hippos were pretty jolly. Having a bath in the
-sea and getting sweet grass to eat made them that
-way, I guess.</p>
-
-<p>And now began a busy time, for all the animal
-cages—in some of which were lions, big apes,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
-snakes, monkeys, and deer with big horns, besides
-the hippos—had to be hoisted up into the
-ship, or the “floating house,” as some of the
-jungle beasts called it. In this ship the animals
-would be carried across the ocean from Africa
-to America, where they were to be put on exhibition
-in circuses or in zoological parks or in
-menageries.</p>
-
-<p>Of course Chunky and his friends knew nothing
-of this. They did not even know what a
-circus was, though Chunky had heard Tum Tum
-talk about one, and about books and adventures.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be very glad to get to a circus, I think,
-and off this floating house, or whatever it is,”
-thought Chunky, when the ship had started.
-Chunky was in his cage up on deck, as were his
-two hippo friends and some of the larger animals.
-The others were under the deck, in the
-hold of the ship.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t like this at all,” Chunky said to the
-other hippos. “It’s too swishy-swashy like!”</p>
-
-<p>He meant the ship was rolling to and fro, and
-pitching and tossing up and down with the
-waves, for it was soon out of sight of land, and
-going far away from Africa and the jungle.</p>
-
-<p>Though Chunky and his friends were used to
-being tossed about in the river, when they played
-tag and other water games, this motion of the
-ship was different. It made some of the animals<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-seasick, and the lion, especially, was quite
-sad and miserable. He grumbled and growled,
-but he was too sick to roar, and Chunky, too, did
-not feel as well as when he had been carried
-through the jungle in the vine cage.</p>
-
-<p>“Still, I suppose I might be worse,” thought
-the hippo. “I might have nothing to eat or be
-chased by a crocodile,” and he sort of looked
-down cross-eyed at his nose, which was scarred
-by the teeth of the crocodile that had bit Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed Chunky and the other animals had all
-they wanted to eat, and were kindly treated, for
-the men who had bought them from the black
-hunters wanted the animals to be well and strong
-when they were taken off the ship. So Chunky,
-Short Tooth, Gimpy and all the rest were well
-treated, though of course they were not allowed
-to go around loose.</p>
-
-<p>On and on steamed the big ship with its load of
-animals. There was nothing much Chunky
-could do except eat and sleep and drink water.
-He wanted a bath, but there seemed to be no way
-of giving him one.</p>
-
-<p>However, one day, as an animal man passed
-along the deck and looked in at the hippos, he
-saw that their skin was very dry and that it was
-getting hard and cracking open.</p>
-
-<p>“That will never do!” he said to the captain.
-“We must fix it so the hippos can have a bath.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How can we?” asked another animal man.</p>
-
-<p>“Very easily,” put in the captain. “I’ll get a
-big wooden tank up on deck. We can pump it
-full of sea water from a hose and let the hippos
-have a bath in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“That will be just the thing for them!” said
-the animal man. “Get a tank for the hippos.”</p>
-
-<p>The sailors soon made one, for I guess sailors
-can do almost anything. On deck a big wooden
-box as large as a room in your house, was set, and
-water was pumped into this. It was salt water
-from the ocean in which the ship was steaming
-along, but the hippos liked salt water to wash in
-as well as fresh, as I have told you.</p>
-
-<p>“Now we’re all ready,” said the animal man.
-“We’ll hoist the hippos up, one at a time in their
-cages, and dip them into the tank.”</p>
-
-<p>Chunky and the others rather hoped they
-might be allowed to come out of their cages and
-splash around loose in the water tank, but this
-could not be. They might have gotten out and
-run all about the ship, not knowing any better.
-So they had to stay in their jungle cages still.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but this is fine!” cried Chunky, as he sank
-down in the water and let it soak into his hard,
-dry skin. “This is fine!”</p>
-
-<p>“Just what we wanted!” said Short Tooth.</p>
-
-<p>“Couldn’t be better!” gurgled Gimpy, as he let
-the water come up over his back.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How happy those hippos seem,” said a giraffe.
-He had stuck his head out of a hole in the
-deck, for he was down below, though he could
-look out, as he was very tall and had a long neck.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they are happy,” said the lion. “Especially
-the one they call Chunky. I never saw
-such a jolly chap. He thinks he’s going to have
-lots of fun in a circus; but wait until he sees how
-it is! Then he won’t open his big mouth and
-smile any more.”</p>
-
-<p>The hippos liked the tank so much that the
-animal man said they could stay in it during the
-rest of the voyage. It was not so deep but what
-they could put their heads out to breathe, and
-this just suited Chunky and the others.</p>
-
-<p>One day, when they had been steaming over
-the ocean a long while, the sun went under some
-clouds and it became very dark, though it was
-not night. The sailors ran here and there about
-the ship, making everything fast.</p>
-
-<p>“We are going to have a bad storm!” cried the
-captain. “I hope none of the animals will get
-loose.”</p>
-
-<p>“We must take the hippos out of the tank, and
-tie their cages fast on deck,” said the animal man.
-But, before that could be done, the storm came
-and the ship was in the midst of wind and rain.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br />
-<small>CHUNKY FALLS OVERBOARD</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">The storm was a very hard one, and it
-tossed the ship, large as she was, up
-and down and sidewise. Sometimes it
-seemed as if the steamer would go entirely down
-under the water, and again it seemed as if she
-would be tossed up to the angry clouds that blew
-along so fast overhead. The wind blew the rain
-so hard that the water drops sounded like hail
-stones.</p>
-
-<p>“What shall we do about those hippos?” asked
-the animal man of the captain. “They are in
-the big tank, and that may slide overboard. It
-is so big you can not very well make it fast.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is so,” answered the captain, who was
-wet through with the rain. “We had better lift
-the hippos out in their small cages. Those we
-can fasten to the deck more easily.”</p>
-
-<p>So, though it rained and it blew, and the ship
-pitched and tossed, the sailors went to lift from
-the tank the small cages of the three hippos.</p>
-
-<p>First they hoisted up, with long ropes, the cage
-which Short Tooth occupied. This hippo had
-not heard much of the storm, for he had stuck his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
-head under water. But as soon as he was lifted
-out and felt the wind blowing across the deck, he
-knew there was great danger.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I wouldn’t like to be in the ocean now!”
-thought Short Tooth, as he saw the big waves,
-almost as high as the masts of the ship.</p>
-
-<p>“Nor I,” added Gimpy, as he, in his cage, was
-lifted out of the tank. “I’d be afraid.”</p>
-
-<p>Then it came the turn of Chunky to be lifted
-out. The sailors fastened ropes to the top of his
-cage, and began to pull on them to raise him out
-of the tank. All the while the ship was pitching
-and tossing, sometimes almost going in under
-the big waves that sloshed around on deck near
-the tank in which the hippos had been living.
-Some of the bigger animal cages had been put
-below the deck to keep them from being washed
-away.</p>
-
-<p>All of a sudden, just as Chunky’s cage was being
-lifted out, the ship was struck by a very big
-wave—the largest yet. At the same time the
-wind blew very hard and the rain came down
-twice as bad as before.</p>
-
-<p>“The rope is slipping!” cried one of the sailors,
-who was helping lift Chunky out of the tank.
-“The hippo’s ropes are slipping!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hold them—don’t let him go overboard!”
-yelled the animal man.</p>
-
-<p>But one of the sailors must have gotten some<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>
-rain in his eyes, or else the ship went too deep
-into the water. How it happened, I can’t exactly
-say, but the next instant the big water tank,
-in which Chunky and his two friends had been
-kept for a while, slid off the deck into the ocean.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time a big wave struck the sailors
-who had hold of the ropes on Chunky’s cage.
-They let go, and down the cage crashed to the
-deck, with Chunky in it.</p>
-
-<p>“Ugh!” grunted Chunky as he came down
-with a thump. “Ugh! This is no fun!”</p>
-
-<p>And it was even less fun when the cage broke,
-just as another big wave came on deck. The
-first thing Chunky knew, he was out of his cage
-in which he had been kept ever since he was
-taken from the jungle pit. Out of the broken
-cage rolled Chunky, turning over and over on
-the slanting deck like a queer football rolling
-down a cellar door. The cage went one way and
-Chunky another.</p>
-
-<p>“Look! Look!” shouted some of the sailors,
-but they could hardly be heard, for the storm
-was making so much noise. “Look! The
-happy hippo is out of his cage!”</p>
-
-<p>And so Chunky was. I think it was nice of
-the sailors, even if they were all excited in the
-storm, to call Chunky the “happy hippo,” for
-if ever there was one, he was.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_p087" style="width: 400px;">
- <img src="images/i_p087.jpg" width="400" height="600" alt="" title="" />
- <br />
- <div class="caption"><a href="#Page_88">“Splash! That was Chunky himself falling overboard”</a></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Get him!” yelled the animal man! “Get
-that hippo! He’s the best of the three, and I
-want him for a circus! Get Chunky!”</p>
-
-<p>But this was more easily said than done. The
-deck of the ship, pitched and tossed as it was in
-the storm, now looked like the slanting roof of
-a house. Anything that was not fast to it would
-roll off. The other hippo cages had been made
-fast. But Chunky’s, out of which he had been
-tossed when it fell and broke, now began to slide
-down the wooden deck toward the water. And
-Chunky himself, not being able to stand on the
-slippery deck, began to slide too. Right toward
-the ocean slid the hippo, not as happy now
-as he had been in the jungle.</p>
-
-<p>“Splash!”</p>
-
-<p>That was Chunky’s broken cage falling into
-the water off the deck of the ship.</p>
-
-<p>“Look out that Chunky doesn’t fall in!” cried
-the captain.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the sailors, with ropes in their hands,
-made a rush, intending to tie Chunky fast to the
-deck. But they were too late.</p>
-
-<p>“<a href="#i_p087">Splash!</a>”</p>
-
-<p><a href="#i_p087">That was Chunky himself falling overboard.</a>
-Right into the salty ocean he fell, off the deck
-of the ship, and then the ship steamed on, leaving
-the hippo and his floating cage on the big
-ocean. For the ship had to steam on, or else the
-big waves would have made her sink.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span></p>
-
-<p>As for Chunky, as soon as he found himself
-tossed into the water, he did what he had been
-taught to do by his mother and father when he
-was a little baby hippo. He closed his nose and
-mouth so he would not choke in the water.
-Fresh water or salt water, did not matter to
-Chunky. As soon as he jumped in, fell in, or
-was pushed in, shut went his nose and mouth!</p>
-
-<p>Down, down, down in the ocean sank Chunky.
-He thought it safest to sink down quite a way
-at first, until he saw what would happen next.
-Besides, down under the waves it was quieter
-than on top, where they were being tossed about
-by the wind.</p>
-
-<p>Hippos can dive, sink, float or swim as they
-please, almost like a big fish, but they can not
-stay under water more than about ten minutes
-without breathing. After ten minutes they have
-to come up to fill their lungs with air. Then
-they can dive again.</p>
-
-<p>So Chunky dived down in the ocean. He did
-not know how deep it really was, and at first had
-an idea he might go to the bottom and perhaps
-find some grass or lily roots there.</p>
-
-<p>But the ocean was not like his jungle river,
-as he very soon found. It was much deeper, and
-there did not seem, at least, in the part where he
-was, to be any grass or other roots.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess I’d better not sink any deeper,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-thought Chunky, after a bit. “I can’t find any
-place on which to stand. I’ll go up and get some
-air. I need it.”</p>
-
-<p>So he swam toward the top, and when he stuck
-his head out of the water, to take a breath and to
-look around, he could see nothing except big
-waves, ever so much bigger than any he had
-seen in his river.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, now that I am off that floating house,
-and out of my cage, now that I can do as I
-please,” thought Chunky to himself, as he swam
-along with just his nose and eyes out of water,
-“I guess I’ll go on shore and back to my jungle.
-I’m free now, and I won’t go to the circus. I’ll
-go back home.”</p>
-
-<p>Ah, Chunky little knew all that was going to
-happen to him, and the adventures he was to
-have!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br />
-<small>CHUNKY IN THE CIRCUS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Chunky began to feel quite happy
-again. He felt that these were more
-like the times when he had been in the
-jungle. But he did not open his mouth to smile
-or to laugh, and there was a very good reason for
-this. If he had opened his mouth, as he was
-swimming in the stormy ocean, he would have
-swallowed a lot of salty water, and he did not
-want to do that. So he kept his mouth closed
-tightly, and his nose holes also, whenever a wave
-broke over him, which often happened.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’ll swim back to shore and go to my
-jungle again,” thought Chunky to himself. “I
-guess I don’t want to be in a circus, even if Tum
-Tum said it was so jolly. I’m glad my cage fell
-and broke so I could get out.”</p>
-
-<p>So Chunky began to swim. I have told you
-that hippos are very good swimmers and divers
-in the water, and Chunky was one of the best.
-Even if his legs were very short, he knew how
-to use them to paddle himself through the ocean
-waves, and he was soon swimming in fine style.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span></p>
-
-<p>At first Chunky liked it, but, after awhile, he
-became tired.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder how much farther away the shore
-is,” thought Chunky. “I ought to be there
-pretty soon. And I wonder if I can get down
-to the bottom of this big pond of water and dig
-up some grass roots to eat. I guess I’ll try that.”</p>
-
-<p>Taking a long breath, so he would not have to
-come up to breathe for about ten minutes,
-Chunky let himself sink under the waves.
-Down and down he went, quite a distance in the
-ocean, but he did not come to the bottom. That
-was more than a mile down, and quite too far
-for Chunky to sink.</p>
-
-<p>As he was floating around in the water, big
-fish brushed by him, and tried to talk to him,
-but he could not understand what they said.
-They were asking him what kind of fish <em>he</em> was,
-and, of course, he was not a fish at all!</p>
-
-<p>Then, all of a sudden, a big shark, with a
-large mouth and very sharp teeth, made a rush
-for Chunky, intending to bite him.</p>
-
-<p>“My!” thought the hippo. “This is as bad as
-the crocodile! I must get away from here!”</p>
-
-<p>He began swimming toward the top as fast as
-he could go, and the shark for some reason or
-other, not liking to go too near the surface,
-stopped following Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>For two or three hours Chunky swam about in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-the ocean, and by that time the storm had commenced
-to die down. The wind did not blow so
-hard and the rain did not come down so heavily.
-The waves, too, were not so large.</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s queer I don’t get to shore,” thought
-Chunky. He did not know what a big place the
-ocean was, especially when one falls overboard
-in the middle of it, as the young hippo had done.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky was beginning to feel tired now. He
-raised his head as far out of the water as he
-could, and looked all about him. Afar off he
-saw a black speck, and he remembered, once,
-when he had swum far out in the jungle river,
-and looked back, the shore had seemed to him
-but a black speck.</p>
-
-<p>“That must be the shore,” thought Chunky.
-“I’ll swim toward that. Then I’ll be all right.”</p>
-
-<p>So Chunky swam toward the black speck,
-which, though it got larger, did not seem large
-enough for the shore. And then Chunky noticed
-a queer thing. When he stopped swimming,
-which he did now and then to rest his legs, the
-black speck seemed to be coming toward him.</p>
-
-<p>And then, all at once, a lot of black smoke
-came out of the black speck and Chunky knew
-what it was. It was the very ship off which he
-had fallen earlier in the day during the storm.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” thought Chunky to himself, “if I
-can’t get to shore, and it doesn’t seem as if I was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-going to, I suppose I may as well go back to that
-floating house. At least I can rest there, and,
-even if I have to go to the circus, maybe it will
-be as jolly as Tum Tum said it would be. Yes,
-I’ll go back to the ship.”</p>
-
-<p>At first, those on the steamer knew nothing of
-Chunky’s swimming about in the ocean. They
-knew he had fallen overboard when his cage
-fell and broke, but, if they thought any more
-about it, they must have thought the hippo was
-drowned. And so there was much surprise
-when one of the sailors cried:</p>
-
-<p>“I see something in the water! It looks like a
-big, black pig!”</p>
-
-<p>“A black pig!” exclaimed the captain.
-“More likely it’s a shark or a whale!”</p>
-
-<p>However, the captain had the ship steered toward
-Chunky, where he was swimming, and
-then, looking through a telescope, the captain
-saw what really was in the water, and cried:</p>
-
-<p>“Why, there’s that hippo we lost overboard!
-Get ready, men, and we’ll hoist him on deck
-again! Lower a boat.”</p>
-
-<p>The ship was steered close to Chunky where
-he floated in the water. Then a rowboat was
-lowered, with some sailors in it, carrying ropes
-to put about the hippo and hoist him on deck
-again. Of course Chunky might have dived
-down, and, keeping under water, out of sight,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>
-he could have swum far away. But he was
-tired, and quite ready to go back on deck again.</p>
-
-<p>The small boat came close to him. At first
-some of the sailors were afraid, and one called:</p>
-
-<p>“Look out that he doesn’t open his big mouth
-and bite our boat in two!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he won’t do that!” said one of the animal
-men, who was in the rowboat with the sailors.
-“This hippo is very good-natured and happy.”</p>
-
-<p>And Chunky showed that he was by letting
-the sailors put ropes around him in the water,
-for they could not lift him out unless they did
-this.</p>
-
-<p>Once the ropes were fastened about Chunky,
-he was towed to the side of the ship, and there,
-by means of a derrick, he was hoisted on deck
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“There you are!” cried the animal man.
-“I’m glad to get you back again, Chunky.”</p>
-
-<p>And so Chunky had fallen overboard and
-got back on the ship again, for the vessel had not
-moved far from the spot where, in the storm,
-the hippo had slid off the deck.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky was so tired from his swim, and from
-having been in the water so long, that he was
-very easy to handle. He made no trouble at all,
-though he had been wild in the jungle only a few
-weeks before, and had never seen a man, white<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
-or black. He was put in another cage, and then
-the ship kept on, for the storm was over.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, so you are back with us again!” cried
-Gimpy, when he saw Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” was the answer. “I started to swim
-to shore, but it was too far. I got tired, and
-then I saw this ship and swam toward it. I am
-glad to be back.”</p>
-
-<p>“And we are glad to have you back,” said
-Short Tooth. “We were lonesome without you.
-Now tell us about your adventure.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t have any adventure,” said Chunky,
-in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes you did!” declared a monkey in the cage
-next to Chunky’s. “Falling overboard was an
-adventure. I’ve heard Tum Tum tell about his
-adventures, and some that Mappo, the merry
-monkey, had, and some of them were no more
-exciting than yours. Tell us about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I didn’t suppose that was an adventure,”
-said Chunky. “But I’ll tell you about
-it,” and he did, just as it is set down in this book,
-which tells many more of Chunky’s adventures.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the lion, who had listened to
-Chunky’s tale, “if <em>I</em> ever get off this ship I’ll
-never come back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you’ll be glad to,” said the happy
-hippo. “I was.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span></p>
-
-<p>So the ship steamed on and on with its load of
-wild animals. There were one or two other
-storms, but they did no damage, and no more
-cages slid overboard. Another and larger tank
-was built for the hippos on deck, and in this they
-took long baths each day. The animal men, for
-there were several of them, would come around
-to feed and talk to the different beasts. One
-special man always came to the hippos, and they
-learned to know him and watch for him, for he
-brought them long, yellow sweet vegetables
-every day. They were carrots, of which the
-hippos grew very fond, though they never had
-had any in the jungle.</p>
-
-<p>“Why are you so good to the hippos?” one of
-the sailors asked this animal man one day.</p>
-
-<p>“I want them to know and like me,” he answered.
-“Then I can teach them a few tricks to
-do when they are in the circus.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ho! Ho!” laughed the sailor. “What tricks
-can a great, big clumsy hippo do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, not very many, it is true,” admitted the
-animal man. “Not as many as an elephant.
-But maybe I can teach Chunky to do a few.”</p>
-
-<p>The animal man seemed to like Chunky a
-little better than he did the other two hippos,
-though he was kind to all three. Perhaps he
-saw that Chunky was a little smarter than Gimpy
-or Short Tooth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span></p>
-
-<p>After many days of steaming the ship came, at
-last, to a big city. Chunky did not know it was
-a city, but he knew it was quite different from
-his jungle. There were only a few trees here
-and there, and he could see no rivers with nice,
-muddy, oozy banks on which he might sleep.
-And it was very noisy, not at all like the jungle,
-where the only noises were the wind blowing in
-the trees, the howling of animals, the chatter of
-the monkeys, and the songs and screechings of
-birds.</p>
-
-<p>With the other animals, some of them still
-seasick, and most of them very lonesome for the
-forest or jungle they had left, Chunky was
-hoisted off the ship in his cage and put on a big
-wagon. He was drawn through the city, but he
-could see nothing of it, for his cage was covered
-with a big sheet of canvas, such as tents are made
-of.</p>
-
-<p>Then Chunky was taken to a large building,
-where his cage was set down among those containing
-Gimpy, Short Tooth, the lion, the monkeys
-and others.</p>
-
-<p>“What place are we in now?” asked Chunky
-of the monkey who knew Mappo and Tum Tum.
-“Is this the circus?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I guess it is just the beginning of it,”
-was the answer. “Tum Tum said the circus was
-a jolly place. This isn’t!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span></p>
-
-<p>And it was not, for it was just a sort of barn,
-or storehouse, where the animals were kept until
-they were sold to circuses or park menageries.</p>
-
-<p>For more than a month Chunky stayed in this
-animal barn. Every day he could go into a
-tank, specially made for him and the other
-hippos, and have a nice swim, though not for
-very far.</p>
-
-<p>And every day Chunky had grass or hay or
-bran-mash to eat, with carrots, apples and other
-fruit. In fact he had much nicer things to eat
-than he had had in the jungle, and he liked them
-very much.</p>
-
-<p>One day the man who looked after Chunky,
-feeding him and seeing that the hippo had plenty
-of water to drink and swim in, came to the cage,
-looked in, and said:</p>
-
-<p>“I think you are tame enough now, to be
-taught a trick or two.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t teach a hippo tricks!” said another
-man. “They are too clumsy to stand on
-their heads.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I wouldn’t teach this one that kind of
-trick,” returned the first man. “But I think I
-can get him to open his mouth wide when I tell
-him to, and I’ll teach him to raise one leg and
-stand on only three. They are not very hard
-tricks, but they will be something for the circus,
-if ever we sell Chunky to one.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span></p>
-
-<p>Of course Chunky did not understand this
-talk, nor did he know what the man wanted when
-he stood in front of him and said:</p>
-
-<p>“Open your mouth, Chunky! Open your
-mouth!”</p>
-
-<p>Chunky did not open his mouth until he got
-ready, which was when he wanted to take a bite
-of hay. And then, as he opened it wide, the
-man, all of a sudden, gave Chunky some carrots,
-which he liked very much.</p>
-
-<p>“Every time you open your mouth wide when
-I tell you to, I’ll give you some carrots,” the
-man said.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky did not understand this talk, either,
-but he soon came to know that each time he
-opened his jaws as wide as he could when the
-man was standing in front of him and making
-that, to Chunky, queer noise, he would get one of
-the long, sweet, yellow vegetables; so, after a
-while, all the man had to say was:</p>
-
-<p>“Open wide, Chunky!”</p>
-
-<p>Then the jaws would open like a big window,
-and you could look down Chunky’s throat, which
-seemed to be lined with red flannel.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha!” cried the man. “Chunky has learned
-to do a trick! Now he is ready for a circus.”</p>
-
-<p>And so Chunky was, for, besides learning to do
-the mouth trick, the hippo had learned to be
-gentle, and not to try to bite the man who fed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-him, knowing the man would not hurt him, but
-would be kind to him. The man could go into
-the cage with Chunky and pat him on the head,
-and Chunky rather liked that.</p>
-
-<p>Then, one day something new happened to
-the hippo, who was quite happy once more;
-happier than he had been in the jungle. Some
-men brought a new, small cage up beside
-Chunky’s big one, in which he stayed with Short
-Tooth and Gimpy, and Chunky was gently
-pushed into the small cage. He went readily
-enough, for he saw a pile of carrots in the small
-cage. Once inside, the door was shut and the
-cage was wheeled away.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! are you going to leave us?” asked Gimpy.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, it seems so!” replied Chunky, rather
-surprised.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are they taking you?” asked Short
-Tooth.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” answered Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“I can tell you,” said an old elephant, who had
-lived in the animal house many years. “You
-have been sold to a circus, Chunky, and they are
-taking you there.”</p>
-
-<p>And so it happened. The next day Chunky
-found himself in a circus, but what happened to
-him there I’ll save for the next chapter.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br />
-<small>CHUNKY’S NEW TRICK</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Chunky thought the circus was a very
-queer place. When the cage, on wheels,
-in which he was kept, was drawn up for
-the first time on the lot where the circus tent was
-pitched, the happy hippo thought he had never
-before seen so many people. There was a big
-crowd trying to get in the tents to look at the
-animals, watch the men and women ride horses
-around the ring, jump from the trapezes, and
-see the clowns do their funny tricks. Of course
-Chunky knew nothing of that. All he knew was
-that he had been brought to the circus. He
-knew this much because of what the elephant
-had said.</p>
-
-<p>The circus happened to stop in the town where
-Chunky was being kept, and, as they needed a
-hippo, one of the men who owned the circus
-bought Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>The circus had been traveling about from
-place to place, and Chunky’s wagon, of which
-half was a tank containing water in which he
-could float around, had been put on the car and
-hauled with the other circus wagons. At first<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>
-Chunky was afraid of the train of cars, but he
-soon grew to like it.</p>
-
-<p>So the hippo really came to the show in the
-middle of the season, when it was traveling from
-city to city. At what was the first performance
-for Chunky, his cage was wheeled into the animal
-tent, and placed in a ring next to a cage of
-monkeys on one side and a cage with a rhinoceros
-in it on the other.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you do,” said Chunky, as politely as
-he could to the monkeys.</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you?” asked one of the big monkeys.</p>
-
-<p>“They call me Chunky, the happy hippo,” was
-the answer. “I used to live in the jungle, but I
-fell into a pit and was caught, put on a ship, and
-then I fell overboard into the ocean.”</p>
-
-<p>“My! you’ve had a lot of adventures!” said the
-monkey.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you say you just came from the jungle?”
-asked the rhinoceros.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, not long ago,” answered Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, tell me about it!” begged the rhino. “I
-used to live in the jungle myself, and I would
-like to hear about it again, though it is much easier
-to live here in the circus, where you get all
-you want to eat. Tell me about the jungle.”</p>
-
-<p>So Chunky told about swimming in the muddy
-river, of the crocodile that bit him, and how
-Tum Tum had pulled him out of the mud.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Did I hear you speak of Tum Tum?” asked
-one of the elephants on the other side of the animal
-tent.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I met him in the jungle,” said Chunky.
-“He said he used to be in a circus. Perhaps you
-knew him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Know him? I should say I <em>did</em>!” trumpeted
-a large elephant. “Why, Tum Tum used
-to be in this very circus! He was such a jolly
-fellow! We were all sorry to see him go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s that you’re speaking of?” asked a bear,
-who came into the tent just then. He was
-dressed up like a clown.</p>
-
-<p>“We were speaking of Tum Tum,” said one
-of the elephants. “Here is a hippo who has just
-joined our circus. He met Tum Tum in the
-jungle.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have been wondering what had become of
-him,” went on the bear, who had been out in the
-ring doing some funny tricks with a clown.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you know Tum Tum?” asked Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“I should say so!” laughed the bear. “My
-name is Dido, and I’m a dancer. Why, Tum
-Tum once saved me and some other animals from
-a fire when we were shut in our cages. He
-opened mine and the others’, and let us out, so we
-did not get burned. Tum Tum is a great elephant!
-He has a book written about his adventures.
-And so have I!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span></p>
-
-<p>“So I heard,” said Chunky, and then he told
-more of the things that had happened to him.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll have a book written about you before
-you know it,” said one of the monkeys. “You’ve
-had as many adventures already as Mappo, who
-was one of us once.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I met friends of his in the jungle,” said
-Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>Then he and the circus animals talked for
-some time, discussing together how the show
-moved from place to place and how the animal
-cages were put on railroad cars and hauled many
-miles, from one big city to another.</p>
-
-<p>Out in the other tent there was music, as
-Chunky could hear. It was not like the music
-the black Africans of the jungle made, and
-which Chunky had heard when he and the other
-hippos ate at night near the jungle towns. But
-it was music that Chunky liked.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it is time for us to go into the rings and
-do our tricks,” said one of the elephants, as the
-men came in to lead them away.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I could do tricks outside my cage,”
-said Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you do any tricks at all?” asked Dido,
-the dancing bear.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I can open my mouth wide, and eat carrots,”
-said the happy hippo. “See!” and he did
-his one and only trick.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, that is very nice,” said Dido, “but I
-guess it would hardly do for the circus ring.
-You have to jump through hoops, or stand on
-your head or turn somersaults to get taken out
-to the rings or the platforms in the big tent, where
-the people sit down to watch you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess I’ll never be able to do any of those
-tricks,” said Chunky. “I have only one.”</p>
-
-<p>But in a few days he learned another. It
-happened this way.</p>
-
-<p>Every circus day his wagon stood in a ring
-with the others in the animal tent, and the people
-used to crowd about to look at him, at the elephants,
-at Dido and the others. Then Chunky’s
-trainer, who had been told about the mouth-opening
-trick, would call:</p>
-
-<p>“Open, Chunky!” and open would go his big
-mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh-o-o-o-o!” all the people would cry, and
-one little boy said:</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t want to fall down <em>his</em> throat. I’d
-never get up again—never!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, indeed!” said the little boy’s mother.</p>
-
-<p>So Chunky did his only trick, and wished he
-could do more, and pretty soon he did. One
-day a keeper was tossing loaves of bread to the
-elephants who stood in line, that time, next to
-Chunky’s wagon. One of the loaves was not
-thrown straight, and went toward Chunky’s cage.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span></p>
-
-<p>Now the happy hippo happened to be hungry;
-so he opened his mouth as wide as he could, as he
-saw the loaf of bread coming his way, and right
-in it went. And Chunky chewed it with his big
-teeth, and it tasted very well.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha!” cried Chunky’s keeper, who had seen
-what happened. “If he could do that every day
-it would make a good trick. I’ll try it.”</p>
-
-<p>Chunky learned this trick very easily. Whenever
-he saw his friend, the keeper, standing in
-front of the cage with a loaf of bread in his hand,
-Chunky knew what was going to happen.</p>
-
-<p>“Catch this now!” the keeper would cry, and,
-as he tossed the loaf, the happy hippo would
-open his mouth as wide as ever he could, and
-down it would go. Then the boys and girls in
-the circus tent would laugh and clap their hands,
-and even the big folks would smile, for the loaf
-of bread looked so small in Chunky’s big mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“Now my hippo can do two tricks!” the keeper
-cried. “Maybe I can teach him some others.”</p>
-
-<p>But if you have ever looked at a hippo in a
-circus or in a menagerie, you can easily see that
-they can not do very many tricks—not as many
-as an elephant or a horse. But, in time, Chunky
-learned to lie down and roll over outside his
-tank, and that was something to do. He also
-learned to stand on three legs, and raise the other
-toward his keeper when told to do so. Thus<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-Chunky had four tricks he could do, and one day
-the man said:</p>
-
-<p>“My hippo is getting so smart I think I can
-take him out in the big tent where the music is,
-and have him do his tricks there.”</p>
-
-<p>This the man did, and Chunky was quite
-proud and happy. He opened his mouth wide
-when his master told him to.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#i_p109">“Now he is smiling at you!”</a> the keeper would
-say to the circus crowds, and then the boys and
-girls would laugh. It seemed funny for a hippo
-to smile, but that is what Chunky meant it for.
-He was very happy now, and quite jolly among
-the other animals.</p>
-
-<p>“He is almost as jolly as Tum Tum was, when
-he was here,” said the rhino. “And it needs
-some one to keep us animals jolly. When I
-think of the jungle where I used to live, I get
-lonesome.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, the circus is a nice place!” Chunky
-would say, and then he would open his big mouth
-and smile in such a way that all the other animals
-had to laugh. So Chunky made them jolly
-whether they wanted to be or not. But most of
-them did.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky stayed with the circus for a number of
-years, and grew very large and heavy, so that he
-weighed about five thousand pounds, or more
-than two tons of coal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_p109" style="width: 398px;">
- <img src="images/i_p109.jpg" width="398" height="600" alt="" title="" />
- <br />
- <div class="caption"><a href="#Page_108">“‘Now he is smiling at you!’”</a></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span></p>
-
-<p>In fact Chunky grew too large for the circus,
-as he had to be carried around in a tank wagon,
-and could not walk, as the elephants did, to and
-from the trains. So one day Chunky was sold to
-a park in a big city, and the park had a menagerie
-in which different animals were kept, including
-some elephants, camels and giraffes.</p>
-
-<p>In this park Chunky had a very fine and large
-cage, with a big tank at one end. Into this he
-could go whenever he wanted to, and stay as long
-as he liked.</p>
-
-<p>Many people came to the park to see him, for
-he was one of the largest hippos in the world, it
-was said, and people seem to like to look at very
-large or very small things.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky did not forget his tricks, though soon
-after he went to live in the menagerie he became
-too heavy to stand on three legs and raise the
-other. And he could hardly roll over when the
-keeper told him to.</p>
-
-<p>But Chunky could still do his trick of catching
-a loaf of bread in his mouth, and he could
-open his jaws as wide as ever, and the children
-who came to the park to see the animals never
-were tired of watching the keeper make Chunky
-do his two best tricks.</p>
-
-<p>One day when Chunky was in the dry part of
-his cage, at the end where there was no water
-tank, he saw a small animal run in between the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
-heavy iron bars—that is, an animal much smaller
-than he was, but almost as large as Dido, the
-dancing bear, it seemed to Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“Ho! who are you that dares come into my
-cage without asking me?” inquired Chunky,
-though he did not speak crossly. “Do you belong
-to the park menagerie? If you do, you
-must have gotten out of your cage.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t belong here,” answered the small
-animal. “I am Don; and I am a dog. Once I
-was a runaway dog, but I am not any more. I’ve
-had lots of adventures, and a book has been written
-about me.”</p>
-
-<p>“My!” grunted Chunky. “It seems also every
-animal I meet has had a book written about him
-or her. Well, Don, I am glad to see you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you had any adventures?” asked Don,
-with a friendly bark.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, many of them,” answered Chunky.
-“If you want to lie down on that pile of hay, I’ll
-tell you about them.”</p>
-
-<p>So Don lay down on the pile of hay in the cage,
-and Chunky told some of his jungle adventures.
-And, though the happy hippo did not know it,
-he was soon to have an adventure with Don.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII<br />
-<small>CHUNKY AND THE LITTLE GIRL</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="cap">Chunky liked it very much in the park
-menagerie. He could do almost as he
-pleased. There was water always ready
-for him to swim in, and on cold days in winter it
-was made warm for him.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky had all he wanted to eat, and, though
-it was not quite the same as he had had in the
-jungle, it was very nice and good for him. He
-could not go down to the bottom of his tank and
-dig up grass or lily roots, but one can’t have
-everything.</p>
-
-<p>Though it had been quite jolly in the circus,
-Chunky liked it rather better in the park menagerie.
-For he did not have to be carted from city
-to city each night. The park stayed in one
-place, and the circus moved about nearly every
-day.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was Chunky lonesome in the park, though
-there were not so many animals near him as there
-had been in the circus. But across from him
-were the elephants, in great big cages with iron
-bars in front, and next to him was a rhinoceros,
-almost like the one in the circus.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span></p>
-
-<p>Chunky made friends with these animals, and
-often, even when crowds came in to see them,
-he and his friends could talk together in their
-own way.</p>
-
-<p>Don, the runaway dog, about whom a book has
-been written, often came to the park, and he
-never failed to pay a visit to Chunky, slipping in
-between the bars of the hippo’s cage, and lying
-down on a pile of hay to talk.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you ever live in the jungle?” asked
-Chunky of Don one day.</p>
-
-<p>“Not that I remember,” Don answered. “I
-have lived in different places though, and once I
-caught Squinty, the comical pig, when he got
-out of his pen. Did you ever meet Squinty?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe I did,” said Chunky. “He
-didn’t live in the jungle, did he?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. In a pen. But he got out, and I had to
-lead him back by the ear. And did you ever
-meet my friend Blackie, the lost cat, or Flop
-Ear, the funny rabbit?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry, but I don’t believe I did,” answered
-Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“Or did you ever know Lightfoot, the leaping
-goat, or Tinkle, the trick pony?” asked Don.</p>
-
-<p>“Never,” answered Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you may. They’ve had lots of adventures,
-and books have been written about them,”
-went on Don. “If I meet Blackie or Tinkle on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-my way home, I’ll tell them to stop in to see you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do, please,” begged Chunky. “But where
-do you live, if you don’t come from the jungle?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I live in a house in this big city, not far
-from this park,” said Don. “I belong to a little
-girl who pats me and is very kind to me. She
-gives me nice things to eat.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to see her,” remarked Chunky. “I
-love children. Does she ever come to the park?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, when her mother or father brings
-her. She is too little to come alone. Some day
-when she comes I’ll walk along with her, and
-then I can tell you who she is. I’ll come into
-your cage and tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Chunky. “I’d like to see
-the little girl.” And he was going to, soon, in a
-queer way.</p>
-
-<p>For some time Chunky lived in his cage in the
-park. Sometimes he thought of the jungle he
-had been taken away from, and he wondered
-what his brother and sister were doing—whether
-they were playing water-tag in the muddy river
-or sleeping in the soft grass.</p>
-
-<p>Back in the African forest Mr. and Mrs.
-Hippo had given up thinking about Chunky.
-If they ever remembered him at all, it was only
-for a moment, to wonder what had happened to
-him that he did not come home the last time he
-went away. But they thought he had been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
-killed by some other animal, or perhaps by the
-black or white hunters, and they knew it was of
-no use to try to find the happy hippo.</p>
-
-<p>One day, just after Chunky had finished doing
-his trick of catching some loaves of bread tossed
-into his mouth by his keeper, the hippo heard a
-voice saying in animal talk:</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Chunky, to-morrow I will bring my
-little girl mistress to see you,” and in ran Don,
-the dog.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you, really? That will be fine!” said
-Chunky. “I’ll be glad to see any friend of
-yours.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he opened his mouth wide, as the keeper
-told him to, and all the people laughed.</p>
-
-<p>The next afternoon, as Chunky was about to
-go into his tank to have a cool swim, for the day
-was hot, he saw Don run in between the bars of
-the cage. The dog said:</p>
-
-<p>“Here comes my little girl. I’ll bark three
-times when she gets right in front of you, so
-you’ll know which one is she. And do some of
-your tricks for her, please.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll do them all except stand on three legs,”
-promised Chunky. “I’m too fat for that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you; that will be all right,” said Don.</p>
-
-<p>Pretty soon a little girl, wearing a blue dress,
-and holding her father’s hand, came and stood in
-front of the hippo cage where Don was. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-dog had run on ahead to tell Chunky who was
-coming. Don barked three times, as he had said
-he would, then he said:</p>
-
-<p>“Do some nice tricks for my little girl!”</p>
-
-<p>“I will,” said Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>Then the hippo caught loaves of bread in his
-mouth, and opened his jaws as wide as he could.
-He even rolled over on the floor of his cage, but
-it was hard work, as he was very fat.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Daddy! look at the funny hippo!” cried
-the little girl. “Isn’t he happy looking?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, yes, I guess you could call him happy
-when he smiles in such a broad grin,” answered
-her father. “He looks very jolly.”</p>
-
-<p>Chunky liked so much the nice way the little
-girl laughed that he tried to do for her the trick
-of standing on three legs and lifting the other
-up in the air. But he could not, as he was too
-fat and heavy.</p>
-
-<p>“I like that hippo,” said the little girl.</p>
-
-<p>Of course Chunky could not understand just
-what she said, but he could tell, by the way she
-talked, that the little girl liked his tricks.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll do another one for her,” said the happy
-hippo to Don. “I’ll go in the water and roll
-over and over like a tub. Maybe she’ll like
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure she will,” said Don.</p>
-
-<p>So, down into the tank of water walked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
-Chunky. The little girl had never seen anything
-like this before, and, very much excited,
-she let go of her father’s hand and cried:</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Daddy, he’ll be drowned!”</p>
-
-<p>“No; hippos can stay under water a long
-time,” said her father, for by this time Chunky
-was out of sight. The waters had closed over
-his broad, flat back.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he’s gone! My nice, happy hippo is
-gone!” cried the little girl, and before her father,
-or anyone else, could stop her, she ran right in
-between the bars of the cage toward the tank.</p>
-
-<p>“Come back, Alice!” cried her father.</p>
-
-<p>“Bow-wow!” barked Don, and that was his
-way of saying the same thing.</p>
-
-<p>But the little girl did not come back. On she
-ran, right into Chunky’s cage, and her father
-was too big to squeeze in between the bars after
-her. Don ran in, though.</p>
-
-<p>All at once the little girl stumbled and fell,
-right over the edge of the tank, into the water.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Oh, my!” cried all the people.</p>
-
-<p>Don the dog saw what had happened, and,
-while Alice’s father was trying to get the keeper
-to open the door of Chunky’s cage, so they could
-go in and get the little girl, Don was barking:</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t hurt my little girl, Chunky! Don’t
-hurt her!”</p>
-
-<p>This kind of talk—being animal language—Chunky<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
-could understand. Down under the
-water he had heard the splash as Alice fell in,
-and then he saw the little girl sinking down near
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“This is no place for her!” quickly thought
-Chunky. “She is not a fish to live in the water.
-I must help her out.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the hippo sank away down in the water
-and got under the little girl, so that she floated
-right on his broad back. And when Alice
-was there, gasping and choking and grabbing
-Chunky by the ears, up rose the hippo, and <a href="#i_frontis">there
-was Alice</a> safe and sound, but very wet, of course,
-<a href="#i_frontis">on Chunky’s broad back</a>, under water no longer.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, look!” cried all the people.</p>
-
-<p>“Your little girl is safe,” said the keeper, who
-opened the door of the cage. “The hippo has
-her on his back.”</p>
-
-<p>Then, with Alice on his back, Chunky swam
-to the side of the pool, and there her father and
-the keeper lifted her off, Don taking hold of her
-dress as if he were helping also. And how Don
-did bark! But he was happy.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew you wouldn’t let my little girl get
-hurt,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not!” grunted Chunky. “I came
-to the top as soon as I got her on my back, for I
-knew she couldn’t stay as long under water
-without breathing as I can.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span></p>
-
-<p>Alice was very much frightened, and she cried.
-She was wet, too, but not hurt a bit, and her father
-called an automobile and took her home
-with Don.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll come and see you to-morrow and let you
-know how she is,” the dog promised the happy
-hippo.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you would,” said Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>And Don did. Alice was all right as soon as
-she got on dry clothes, the dog said, and she
-promised never again to run up to a tank of water
-to see what was happening to a hippo.</p>
-
-<p>What Chunky did—saving Alice from drowning
-in the pool—became known to many people
-who went to the park, and there was even something
-in the papers about it. It made quite a
-hero of Chunky, though of course he did not
-know that. All he knew was that crowds of
-people came to see him, and his keepers were
-good and kind to him.</p>
-
-<p>So Chunky lived in the park menagerie for
-many years. He did his tricks and was glad to
-have the boys and girls come to look at him.</p>
-
-<p>“It is much better, after all, than the jungle,”
-he said to one of the elephants.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, we like it better than the jungle,” said
-the biggest elephant. “I was in a circus
-once.”</p>
-
-<p>“So was I,” said Chunky. “I liked it, but it’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>
-nicer not to have to travel at night. I can sleep
-better here.”</p>
-
-<p>Then, having had a good meal of carrots, he
-lay down in the hay and went to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Chunky had many more adventures, but this
-book is full enough of them, I think. And I
-want to write another for you. It will be about
-a fox, and the name of it will be “Sharp Eyes,
-the Silver Fox. His Many Adventures.”</p>
-
-<p>Chunky grunted in his sleep, and talked something
-in animal language.</p>
-
-<p>“What did I say?” he asked the elephant who
-told him about it afterward.</p>
-
-<p>“You said: ‘Now you stop pushing, Bumpy.’”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess I was dreaming about my brother in
-the jungle,” said Chunky.</p>
-
-<p>And so we will let him dream on, and say
-good-bye to him.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p4 noic">THE END</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="tnote">
-<p class="noi tntitle">Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Printer’s, punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently
- corrected.</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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