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were, with such wild voices. They looked at each other and drew back a step or two, it was well to be near the forest in any case. Further and further they retired toward the shade of the trees, and finally, as the music changed to a furious jig, and the trumpet sounded out like the scream of a panther, the terrified wolves turned tail and ran as fast as their fright and their four legs could carry them. Off as fast in the opposite direction ran also Hans, Karl, and Wilhelm, playing as they went. They played and ran, ran and played till they reached the open fields and the houses; and then they sat down under a haystack and did not move for the rest of the day. Ah! that was a fine concert! but there was no music at the wedding, which is sad to think of."

      With that I kissed my three mice, and bade them good-night, though it was nearly morning; then mounting my moonbeam I whisked away, and soon left mice and mouse-trap far behind.

      Wake! wake! children, wake!

      Here we're singing for your sake.

      Chirrup! chirrup! chirrup! chee!

      Sweet a song as sweet can be.

      Rise! rise! children, rise!

      Shake the poppies from your eyes.

      Sweet! sweet! chirrup! tweet!

      Morning blossoms at your feet.

      Song and sweetness, dawn and dew,

      All are waiting now for you.

      Wake! wake! children, wake!

      Here we're singing for your sake.

      CHAPTER IV.

      JOLLYKALOO

      Now is not that a pretty song? and so simple, I should think a baby might understand it. And yet Downy did not seem to understand a word of it, though the birds that sang it were just outside his window in the great linden-tree.

      He only said, "Oh! so pitty bird finging!" (he cannot say S, so he says F instead, which sounds very funny). And then he rolled out of bed; and then Fluff and Puff rolled out of bed. Puff ran to the window and put back the curtains. The birds were still singing, and the soft May breeze was blowing, and a perfect gust of song and sweetness came in at the little old window as she pushed it open.

      "Oh! lovely, lovely!" cried Puff. "And look, Fluffy, from this other window. What a fine play-ground! Oh! Possy, do give us tubby-rubby quickly, and let us get out of the window!"

      "Out of the window!" cried Mrs. Posset; "The child is mad!" but then she came and looked for herself.

      Yes, it was indeed a fine place. One part of the house was lower than the rest, and this lower part had a flat roof, covered with gravel, and with an iron railing round it. Two of the nursery windows opened directly on this sunny flat place, so that it really was a most delightful spot. In a very few minutes there were three mice tumbling about on the gravel, and then presently there were two more, for other windows opened on the flat roof also, and Nibble and Brighteyes were not the mice to be behindhand when any fun was going on. Ah! that was the way to get an appetite for breakfast. Jump, dance, run, tumble, till the rattle sounded from below; then whirr! downstairs all like a flock of pigeons. They never lost any time in getting from one place to another, these mice.

      "Uncle Jack," said Nibble, "What shall we call this place?"

      "This dear, delightful place!" cried Brighteyes.

      "Dis dear, 'lightful plafe!" murmured Downy, with his mouth full of bread-and-butter.

      "Well," said Uncle Jack, "now let us see. It certainly ought to have a name."

      "Oh! of course!" said all the mice very decidedly.

      "Suppose we call it the Garden House," said Uncle Jack.

      "Oh, no!" said Nibble. "That isn't jolly enough, Uncle Jacket! it's such a jolly place, you know. I want to call it Jollykaloo!"

      And then in a chorus rose the five voices, "Jollykaloo! Jollykaloo!" so Jollykaloo it was named then and there, and it has been called so ever since.

      "And now, children," said Uncle Jack, when breakfast was over, "We must go and see how our four-footed friends have passed the night. You may find some new friends too, I think, with two feet. Come Nibble, Brighteyes, Puff – "

      "Uncle Jack," said Puff, very gravely; "Fluff and I have not unpacked the dolls yet, and I think it is both of our duty to take care of our children first, before we see the animals. Don't you think so, Uncle?"

      "Both of your duty, eh?" said Uncle Jack, laughing. "Well, Puffsy, perhaps it is. It is also both of your duty to learn grammar, but you need not begin just yet. Off with you!"

      So the twins went one way, and Uncle Jack went the other. Which way shall I take you first, all you other children? shall we follow the twins first, and take a peep at the dolls? by all means! I cannot say that I care much for dolls myself, but I always like to see what interests children, and certainly Puff and Fluff did take great interest in their china and wax babies. By and by I shall have some funny stories to tell you about these dolls, for they have seen more of life than any dolls that I have ever known, but we will not stop now, for we all want to go and see the animals, I am sure. We will just take a peep at them and see what they are like.

      See, here they are, six of them. The one sitting in the chair, with curls and flowers, is Vashti Ann. She was the head doll at that time, and a person of great importance. Next to her is Tina, her daughter, a fine baby rather larger than her mother; and then comes Rosalie, a Swiss doll, with fine long hair. The doll in the lower left-hand corner is the unfortunate Sally Bradford, the maid-of-all-work; next comes Fanny Ellsler, the dancer, and the last is Katinka, a Polish lady of high rank.

      The dear little twin mice unpacked all these creatures with the utmost care.

      "I think they are all ill after the journey, Puff!" said Fluffy, with a sigh.

      "We was better put them all to bed. Tina is very pale, and Rosalie is very red."

      "Then one has a chill, and the other has a fever," said Puff.

      "Yes, they must go to bed; and I will get the bed ready, Fluffy, if you will read them a story to amoose them."

      "Oh! but, Puffy, if you put them both in the same bed it will be chills-and-fever, and then we shall catch it and be ill ourselves!" exclaimed Fluff with a distressed look.

      "Fluff," said Miss Puff severely; "You are sometimes a foolish child!"

      Well, Fluff knew that she was foolish, because she was often told so, and she was a child who always believed what was said to her, so she meekly sat down and read a story to the dolls. It was one of "Aunt Bathsheba's" stories, and they are so funny that I always write them down when I hear them. Listen to this, now!

THE PUDDING-STICK AND THE ROLLING-PIN

      Said the Pudding-stick so the Rolling-pin,

      "Let's take a dip in the sugar-bin!"

      Said the Rolling-pin to the Pudding-stick,

      "We'll eat and we'll stuff till we make ourselves sick."

      Off they set with a fine bold stride,

      That brought them soon to the sugar-bin's side.

      "Oh! how shall we reach that keyhole high?

      We might as well try to storm the sky!"

      "Let me mount on your shoulder thin,

      And I'll pick the lock!" said the bold Rolling-pin.

      The Pudding-stick swelled with angry pride,

      "That my figure is fine has ne'er been denied,

      I'll give you a slap for your impudence!"

      "Well!" said the Roller: "This is immense!"

      So they rolled and they fought,

      They thumped and they hit.

      Till they trod on the tail of the cook's pet kit.

      Then the cook rose up in dreadful wrath,

      And laid them out on the kitchen hearth.

      There

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