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And tell Avery to get ready. And this afternoon you can tell me more about what goes on in Uncle Homer’s barn. Aren’t you spending quite a lot of time there? You go there almost every afternoon, don’t you?’

      ‘I like it there,’ replied Fern. She wiped her mouth and ran upstairs. After she had left the room, Mrs Arable spoke in a low voice to her husband.

      ‘I worry about Fern,’ she said. ‘Did you hear the way she rambled on about the animals, pretending that they talked?’

      Mr Arable chuckled. ‘Maybe they do talk,’ he said. ‘I’ve sometimes wondered. At any rate, don’t worry about Fern – she’s just got a lively imagination. Kids think they hear all sorts of things.’

      ‘Just the same, I do worry about her,’ replied Mrs Arable. ‘I think I shall ask Dr Dorian about her the next time I see him. He loves Fern almost as much as we do, and I want him to know how queerly she is acting about that pig and everything. I don’t think it’s normal. You know perfectly well animals don’t talk.’

      Mr Arable grinned. ‘Maybe our ears aren’t as sharp as Fern’s,’ he said.

      A SPIDER’S web is stronger than it looks. Although it is made of thin, delicate strands, the web is not easily broken. However, a web gets torn every day by the insects that kick around in it, and a spider must rebuild it when it gets full of holes. Charlotte liked to do her weaving during the late afternoon, and Fern liked to sit nearby and watch. One afternoon she heard a most interesting conversation and witnessed a strange event.

      ‘You have awfully hairy legs, Charlotte,’ said Wilbur, as the spider busily worked at her task.

      ‘My legs are hairy for a good reason,’ replied Charlotte. ‘Furthermore, each leg of mine has seven sections – the coxa, the trochanter, the femur, the patella, the tibia, the metatarsus, and the tarsus.’

      Wilbur sat bolt upright. ‘You’re kidding,’ he said.

      ‘No, I’m not, either.’

      ‘Say those names again, I didn’t catch them the first time.’

      ‘Coxa, trochanter, femur, patella, tibia, metatarsus, and tarsus.’

      ‘Goodness!’ said Wilbur, looking down at his own chubby legs. ‘I don’t think my legs have seven sections.’

      ‘Well,’ said Charlotte, ‘you and I lead different lives. You don’t have to spin a web. That takes real leg work.’

      ‘I could spin a web if I tried,’ said Wilbur, boasting. ‘I’ve just never tried.’

      ‘Let’s see you do it,’ said Charlotte. Fern chuckled softly, and her eyes grew wide with love for the pig.

      ‘OK,’ replied Wilbur. ‘You coach me and I’ll spin one. It must be a lot of fun to spin a web. How do I start?’

      ‘Take a deep breath!’ said Charlotte, smiling. Wilbur breathed deeply. ‘Now climb to the highest place you can get to, like this.’ Charlotte raced up to the top of the doorway. Wilbur scrambled to the top of the manure pile.

      ‘Very good!’ said Charlotte. ‘Now make an attachment with your spinnerets, hurl yourself into space, and let out a dragline as you go down!’

      Wilbur hesitated a moment, then jumped out into the air. He glanced hastily behind to see if a piece of rope was following him to check his fall, but nothing seemed to be happening in his rear, and the next thing he knew he landed with a thump. ‘Ooomp!’ he grunted.

      Charlotte laughed so hard her web began to sway.

      ‘What did I do wrong?’ asked the pig, when he recovered from his bump.

      ‘Nothing,’ said Charlotte. ‘It was a nice try.’

      ‘I think I’ll try again,’ said Wilbur, cheerfully. ‘I believe what I need is a little piece of string to hold me.’

      The pig walked out to his yard. ‘You there, Templeton?’ he called. The rat poked his head out from under the trough.

      ‘Got a little piece of string I could borrow?’ asked Wilbur. ‘I need it to spin a web.’

      ‘Yes, indeed,’ replied Templeton, who saved string. ‘No trouble at all. Anything to oblige.’ He crept down into his hole, pushed the goose egg out of the way, and returned with an old piece of dirty white string. Wilbur examined it.

      ‘That’s just the thing,’ he said. ‘Tie one end to my tail, will you, Templeton?’

      Wilbur crouched low, with his thin, curly tail towards the rat. Templeton seized the string, passed it round the end of the pig’s tail, and tied two half hitches. Charlotte watched in delight. Like Fern, she was truly fond of Wilbur, whose smelly pen and stale food attracted the flies that she needed, and she was proud to see that he was not a quitter and was willing to try again to spin a web.

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      While the rat and the spider and the little girl watched, Wilbur climbed again to the top of the manure pile, full of energy and hope.

      ‘Everybody watch!’ he cried. And summoning all his strength, he threw himself into the air, head first. The string trailed behind him. But as he had neglected to fasten the other end to anything, it didn’t really do any good, and Wilbur landed with a thud, crushed and hurt. Tears came to his eyes. Templeton grinned. Charlotte just sat quietly. After a bit she spoke.

      ‘You can’t spin a web, Wilbur, and I advise you to put the idea out of your mind. You lack two things needed for spinning a web.’

      ‘What are they?’ asked Wilbur, sadly.

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      ‘You lack a set of spinnerets, and you lack know-how. But cheer up, you don’t need a web. Zuckerman supplies you with three big meals a day. Why should you worry about trapping food?’

      Wilbur sighed. ‘You’re ever so much cleverer and brighter than I am, Charlotte. I guess I was just trying to show off. Serves me right.’

      Templeton untied his string and took it back to his home. Charlotte returned to her weaving.

      ‘You needn’t feel too badly, Wilbur,’ she said. ‘Not many creatures can spin webs. Even men aren’t as good at it as spiders, although they think they’re pretty good, and they’ll try anything. Did you ever hear of the Queensborough Bridge?’

      Wilbur shook his head. ‘Is it a web?’

      ‘Sort of,’ replied Charlotte. ‘But do you know how long it took men to build it? Eight whole years. My goodness, I would have starved to death waiting that long. I can make a web in a single evening.’

      ‘What do people catch in the Queensborough Bridge – bugs?’ asked Wilbur.

      ‘No,’ said Charlotte. ‘They don’t catch anything. They just keep trotting back and forth across the bridge thinking there is something better on the other side. If they’d hang head down at the top of the thing and wait quietly, maybe something good would come along. But no – with men it’s rush, rush, rush, every minute. I’m glad I’m a sedentary spider.’

      ‘What does sedentary mean?’ asked Wilbur.

      ‘Means I sit still a good part of the time and don’t go wandering all over creation. I know a good thing when I see it, and my web is a good thing. I stay put and wait for what comes. Gives me a chance to think.’

      ‘Well, I’m sort of sedentary myself, I guess,’ said the pig. ‘I have to hang around here whether I want to or not. You know where I’d really like

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