of the Palace garden to this very day.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></SPAN></span></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/gs05.jpg" width-obs="242" height-obs="400" alt="UNCLE JAMES OR THE PURPLE STRANGER" title="UNCLE JAMES OR THE PURPLE STRANGER" /> </div>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></SPAN></span></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2>II. Uncle James, or The Purple Stranger</h2>
<p>The Princess and the gardener's boy were playing in
the backyard.</p>
<p>"What will you do when you grow up, Princess?" asked
the gardener's boy.</p>
<p>"I should like to marry you, Tom," said the Princess.
"Would you mind?"</p>
<p>"No," said the gardener's boy. "I shouldn't mind much.
I'll marry you if you like—if I have time."</p>
<p>For the gardener's boy meant, as soon as he was grown
up, to be a general and a poet and a Prime Minister and
an admiral and a civil engineer. Meanwhile, he was top of
all his classes at school, and tip-top of the geography
class.</p>
<p>As for the Princess Mary Ann, she was a very good little
girl, and everyone loved her. She was always kind and
polite, even to her Uncle James and to other people whom
she did not like very much; and though she was not very
clever, for a Princess, she always tried to do her lessons.
Even if you know perfectly well that you can't do your
lessons, you may as well try, and sometimes you find that
by some fortunate accident they really <i>are</i> done. Then the
Princess had a truly good heart: She was always kind to
her pets. She never slapped her hippopotamus when it
broke her dolls in its playful gambols, and she never forgot
to feed her rhinoceroses in their little hutch in the
backyard. Her elephant was devoted to her, and sometimes
Mary Ann made her nurse quite cross by smuggling<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></SPAN></span>
the dear little thing up to bed with her and letting it go to
sleep with its long trunk laid lovingly across her throat,
and its pretty head cuddled under the Royal right ear.</p>
<p>When the Princess had been good all through the
week—for, like all real, live, nice children, she was sometimes
naughty, but never bad—Nurse would allow her to
ask her little friends to come on Wednesday morning early
and spend the day, because Wednesday is the end of the
week in that country. Then, in the afternoon, when all the
little dukes and duchesses and marquises and countesses
had finished their rice pudding and had had their hands
and faces washed after it, Nurse would say: "Now, my
dears, what would you like to do this afternoon?" just as
if she didn't know. And the answer would be always the
same:</p>
<p>"Oh, do let's go to the Zoological Gardens and ride on
the big guinea pig and feed the rabbits and hear the dormouse
asleep."</p>
<p>So their pinafores were taken off and they all went to
the Zoological Gardens, where twenty of them could ride
at a time on the guinea pig, and where even the little ones
could feed the great rabbits if some grown-up person
were kind enough to lift them up for the purpose.</p>
<p>There always was some such person, because in
Rotundia everybody was kind—except one.</p>
<p>Now that you have read as far as this you know, of
course, that the Kingdom of Rotundia was a very remarkable
place; and if you are a thoughtful child—as of course
you are—you will not need me to tell you what was the
most remarkable thing about it. But in case you are not a
thoughtful child—and it is just possible of course that you
are not—I will tell you at once what that most remarkable
thing was. <i>All the animals were the wrong sizes!</i> And this
was how it happened.</p>
<p>In old, old, olden times, when all our world was just
loose earth and air and fire and water mixed up anyhow
like a pudding, and spinning around like mad trying to get
the different things to settle into their proper places, a<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></SPAN></span>
<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'around'">round</ins> piece of earth got loose and went spinning away by
itself across the water, which was just beginning to try to
get spread out smooth into a real sea. And as the great
round piece of earth flew away, going around and around
as hard as it could, it met a long piece of hard rock that
had got loose from another part of the puddingy mixture,
and the rock was so hard, and was going so fast, that it ran
its point through the round piece of earth and stuck out
on the other side of it, so that the two together were like
a very-very-much-too-big spinning top.</p>
<p>I am afraid all this is very dull, but you know geography
is never quite lively, and after all, I must give you a little
information even in a fairy tale—like the powder in jam.</p>
<p>Well, when the pointed rock smashed into the round bit
of earth the shock was so great that it set them spinning
together through the air—which was just getting into its
proper place, like all the rest of the things—only, as luck
would have it, they forgot which way around they had
been going, and began to spin around the wrong way.
Presently Center of Gravity—a great giant who was managing
the whole business—woke up in the middle of the
earth and began to grumble.</p>
<p>"Hurry up," he said. "Come down and lie still, can't you?"</p>
<p>So the rock with the round piece of earth fell into the
sea, and the point of the rock went into a hole that just fitted
it in the stony sea bottom, and there it spun around
the wrong way seven times and then lay still. And that
round piece of land became, after millions of years, the
Kingdom of Rotundia.</p>
<p>This is the end of the geography lesson. And now for
just a little natural history, so that we may not feel that we
are quite wasting our time. Of course, the consequence of
the island having spun around the wrong way was that
when the animals began to grow on the island they all
grew the wrong sizes. The guinea pig, as you know, was as
big as our elephants, and the elephant—dear little pet—was
the size of the silly, tiny, black-and-tan dogs that
ladies carry sometimes in their muffs. The rabbits were<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></SPAN></span>
about the size of our rhinoceroses, and all about the wild
parts of the island they had made their burrows as big as
railway tunnels. The dormouse, of course, was the biggest
of all the creatures. I can't tell you how big he was. Even
if you think of elephants it will not help you at all. Luckily
there was only one of him, and he was always asleep.
Otherwise I don't think the Rotundians could have borne
with him. As it was, they made him a house, and it saved
the expense of a brass band, because no band could possibly
have been heard when the dormouse was talking in
his sleep.</p>
<p>The men and women and children in this wonderful
island were quite the right size, because their ancestors
had come over with the Conqueror long after the island
had settled down and the animals grown on it.</p>
<p>Now the natural history lesson is over, and if you have
been attending, you know more about Rotundia than anyone
there did, except three people: the Lord Chief
Schoolmaster, the Princess's uncle—who was a magician,
and knew everything without learning it—and Tom, the
gardener's son.</p>
<p>Tom had learned more at school than anyone else,
because he wished to take a prize. The prize offered by
the Lord Chief Schoolmaster was a <i>History of Rotundia</i>,
beautifully bound, with the Royal arms on the back. But
after that day when the Princess said she meant to marry
Tom, the gardener's boy thought it over, and he decided
that the best prize in the world would be the Princess,
and this was the prize Tom meant to take; and when you
are a gardener's son and have decided to marry a
Princess, you will find that the more you learn at school
the better.</p>
<p>The Princess always played with Tom on the days when
the little dukes and marquises did not come to tea—and
when he told her he was almost sure of the first prize, she
clapped her hands and said: "Dear Tom, dear good, clever
Tom, you deserve all the prizes. And I will give you my pet
elephant—and you can keep him till we're married."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The pet elephant was called Fido, and the gardener's
son took him away in his coat pocket. He was the dearest
little elephant you ever saw—about six inches long. But
he was very, very wise—he could not have been wiser if
he had been a mile high. He lay down comfortably in
Tom's pocket, and when Tom put in his hand, Fido curled
his little trunk around Tom's fingers with an affectionate
confidence that made the boy's heart warm to his new little
pet. What with the elephant, and the Princess's affection,
and the knowledge that the very next day he would
receive the <i>History of Rotundia</i>, beautifully bound, with
the Royal arms on the cover, Tom could hardly sleep a
wink. And, besides, the dog did bark so terribly. There
was only one dog in Rotundia—the kingdom could not
afford to keep more than one: He was a Mexican lapdog of
the kind that in most parts of the world only measures
seven inches from the end of his dear nose to the tip of his
darling tail—but in Rotundia he was bigger than I can possibly
expect you to believe. And when he barked, his bark
was so large that it filled up all the night and left no room
for sleep or dreams or polite conversation, or anything
else at all. He never barked at things that went on in the
island—he was too large-minded for that; but when ships
went blundering by in the dark, tumbling over the rocks
at the end of the island, he would bark once or twice, just
to let the ships know that they couldn't come playing
about there just as they liked.</p>
<p>But on this particular night he barked and barked and
barked—and the Princess said, "Oh dear, oh dear, I wish
he wouldn't, I am so sleepy." And Tom said to himself, "I
wonder whatever is the matter. As soon as it's light I'll go
and see."</p>
<p>So when it began to be pretty pink-and-yellow daylight,
Tom got up and went out. And all the time the Mexican
lapdog barked so that the houses shook, and the tiles on
the roof of the palace rattled like milk cans in a cart whose
horse is frisky.</p>
<p>"I'll go to the pillar," thought Tom, as he went through<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26"></SPAN></span>
the town. The pillar, of course, was the top of the piece of
rock that had stuck itself through Rotundia millions of
years before, and made it spin around the wrong way. It
was quite in the middle of the island, and stuck up ever so
far, and when you were at the top you could see a great
deal farther than when you were not.</p>
<p>As Tom went out from the town and across the downs,
he thought what a pretty sight it was to see the rabbits in
the bright, dewy morning, frisking with their young ones
by the mouths of their burrows. He did not go very near
the rabbits, of course, because when a rabbit of that size
is at play it does not always look where it is going, and it
might easily have crushed Tom with its foot, and then it
would have been very sorry afterward. And Tom was a
kind boy, and would not have liked to make even a rabbit
unhappy. Earwigs in our country often get out of the way
when they think you are going to walk on them. They too
have kind hearts, and they would not like you to be sorry
afterward.</p>
<p>So Tom went on, looking at the rabbits and watching
the morning grow more and more red and golden. And the
Mexican lapdog barked all the time, till the church bells
tinkled, and the chimney of the apple factory rocked
again.</p>
<p>But when Tom got to the pillar, he saw that he would
not need to climb to the top to find out what the dog was
barking at.</p>
<p>For there, by the pillar, lay a very large purple dragon.
His wings were like old purple umbrellas that have been
very much rained on, and his head was large and bald,
like the top of a purple toadstool, and his tail, which was
purple too, was very, very, very long and thin and tight,
like the lash of a carriage whip.</p>
<p>It was licking one of its purple umbrella-y wings, and
every now and then it moaned and leaned its head back
against the rocky pillar as though it felt faint. Tom saw at
once what had happened. A flight of purple dragons must
have crossed the island in the night, and this poor one<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27"></SPAN></span>
must have knocked its wing and broken it against the
pillar.</p>
<p>Everyone is kind to everyone in Rotundia, and Tom was
not afraid of the dragon, although he had never spoken to
one before. He had often watched them flying across the
sea, but he had never expected to get to know one
personally.</p>
<p>So now he said: "I am afraid you don't feel quite well."</p>
<p>The dragon shook his large purple head. He could not
speak, but like all other animals, he could understand well
enough when he liked.</p>
<p>"Can I get you anything?" asked Tom, politely.</p>
<p>The dragon opened his purple eyes with an inquiring
smile.</p>
<p>"A bun or two, now," said Tom, coaxingly. "There's a
beautiful bun tree quite close."</p>
<p>The dragon opened a great purple mouth and licked his
purple lips, so Tom ran and shook the bun tree, and soon
came back with an armful of fresh currant buns, and as he
came he picked a few of the Bath kind, which grow on the
low bushes near the pillar.</p>
<p>Because, of course, another consequence of the
island's having spun the wrong way is that all the things
we have to make—buns and cakes and shortbread—grow
on trees and bushes, but in Rotundia they have to make
their cauliflowers and cabbages and carrots and apples
and onions, just as our cooks make puddings and
turnovers.</p>
<p>Tom gave all the buns to the dragon, saying: "Here, try
to eat a little. You'll soon feel better then."</p>
<p>The dragon ate up the buns, nodded rather ungraciously,
and began to lick his wing again. So Tom left him
and went back to the town with the news, and everyone
was so excited at a real live dragon's being on the island—a
thing that had never happened before—that they all
went out to look at it, instead of going to the prize-giving,
and the Lord Chief Schoolmaster went with the rest. Now,
he had Tom's prize, the <i>History of Rotundia</i>, in his<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></SPAN></span>
pocket—the one bound in calf, with the Royal arms on the
cover—and it happened to drop out, and the dragon ate
it, so Tom never got the prize after all. But the dragon,
when he had gotten it, did not like it.</p>
<p>"Perhaps it's all for the best," said Tom. "I might not
have liked that prize either, if I had gotten it."</p>
<p>It happened to be a Wednesday, so when the Princess's
friends were asked what they would like to do, all the little
dukes and marquises and earls said, "Let's go and see
the dragon." But the little duchesses and marchionesses
and countesses said they were afraid.</p>
<p>Then Princess Mary Ann spoke up royally, and said,
"Don't be silly, because it's only in fairy stories and histories
of England and things like that, that people are unkind
and want to hurt each other. In Rotundia everyone is kind,
and no one has anything to be afraid of, unless they're
naughty; and then we know it's for our own good. Let's all
go and see the dragon. We might take him some acid
drops." So they went. And all the titled children took it in
turns to feed the dragon with acid drops, and he seemed
pleased and flattered, and wagged as much of his purple
tail as he could get at conveniently; for it was a very, very
long tail indeed. But when it came to the Princess's turn
to give an acid drop to the dragon, he smiled a very wide
smile, and wagged his tail to the very last long inch of it,
as much as to say, "Oh, you nice, kind, pretty little
Princess." But deep down in his wicked purple heart he
was saying, "Oh, you nice, fat, pretty little Princess, I
should like to eat you instead of these silly acid drops."
But of course nobody heard him except the Princess's
uncle, and he was a magician, and accustomed to listening
at doors. It was part of his trade.</p>
<p>Now, you will remember that I told you there was one
wicked person in Rotundia, and I cannot conceal from you
any longer that this Complete Bad was the Princess's
Uncle James. Magicians are always bad, as you know from
your fairy books, and some uncles are bad, as you see by
the <i>Babes in the Wood</i>, or the <i>Norfolk Tragedy</i>, and one<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></SPAN></span>
James at least was bad, as you have learned from your
English history. And when anyone is a magician, and is
also an uncle, and is named James as well, you need not
expect anything nice from him. He is a Threefold
Complete Bad—and he will come to no good.</p>
<p>Uncle James had long wanted to get rid of the Princess
and have the kingdom to himself. He did not like many
things—a nice kingdom was almost the only thing he
cared for—but he had never seen his way quite clearly,
because everyone is so kind in Rotundia that wicked
spells will not work there, but run off those blameless
islanders like water off a duck's back. Now, however,
Uncle James thought there might be a chance for him—because
he knew that now there were two wicked people
on the island who could stand by each other—himself
and the dragon. He said nothing, but he exchanged a
meaningful glance with the dragon, and everyone went
home to tea. And no one had seen the meaningful glance
except Tom.</p>
<p>Tom went home, and told his elephant all about it. The
intelligent little creature listened carefully, and then
climbed from Tom's knee to the table, on which stood an
ornamental calendar that the Princess had given Tom for
a Christmas present. With its tiny trunk the elephant
pointed out a date—the fifteenth of August, the Princess's
birthday, and looked anxiously at its master.</p>
<p>"What is it, Fido—good little elephant—then?" said
Tom, and the sagacious animal repeated its former gesture.
Then Tom understood.</p>
<p>"Oh, something is to happen on her birthday? All right.
I'll be on the lookout." And he was.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/gs06.jpg" width-obs="300" height-obs="341" alt=""By-and-by he began to wander." See page 29." title=""By-and-by he began to wander." See page 29." />
<span class="caption">"By-and-by he began to wander."<br/><SPAN href="#Page_29"><i>See page 29.</i></SPAN></span></div>
<p>At first the people of Rotundia were quite pleased with
the dragon, who lived by the pillar and fed himself from
the bun trees, but by-and-by he began to wander. He
would creep into the burrows made by the great rabbits;
and excursionists, sporting on the downs, would see his
long, tight, whiplike tail wriggling down a burrow and out
of sight, and before they had time to say, "There he goes,"<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31"></SPAN></span>
his ugly purple head would come poking out from another
rabbit-hole—perhaps just behind them—or laugh softly
to itself just in their ears. And the dragon's laugh was not
a merry one. This sort of hide-and-seek amused people at
first, but by-and-by it began to get on their nerves: and if
you don't know what that means, ask Mother to tell you
next time you are playing blind man's buff when she has a
headache. Then the dragon got into the habit of cracking
his tail, as people crack whips, and this also got on people's
nerves. Then, too, little things began to be missed.
And you know how unpleasant that is, even in a private
school, and in a public kingdom it is, of course, much
worse. The things that were missed were nothing much at
first—a few little elephants, a hippopotamus or two, and
some giraffes, and things like that. It was nothing much,
as I say, but it made people feel uncomfortable. Then one
day a favorite rabbit of the Princess's, called Frederick,
mysteriously disappeared, and then came a terrible morning
when the Mexican lapdog was missing. He had barked
ever since the dragon came to the island, and people had
grown quite used to the noise. So when his barking suddenly
ceased it woke everybody up—and they all went
out to see what was the matter. And the lapdog was gone!</p>
<p>A boy was sent to wake the army, so that it might look
for him. But the army was gone too! And now the people
began to be frightened. Then Uncle James came out onto
the terrace of the palace, and he made the people a
speech. He said: "Friends—fellow citizens—I cannot disguise
from myself or from you that this purple dragon is a
poor penniless exile, a helpless alien in our midst, and,
besides, he is a—is no end of a dragon."</p>
<p>The people thought of the dragon's tail and said, "Hear,
hear."</p>
<p>Uncle James went on: "Something has happened to a
gentle and defenseless member of our community. We
don't know what has happened."</p>
<p>Everyone thought of the rabbit named Frederick, and
groaned.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"The defenses of our country have been swallowed up,"
said Uncle James.</p>
<p>Everyone thought of the poor army.</p>
<p>"There is only one thing to be done." Uncle James was
warming to his subject. "Could we ever forgive ourselves
if by neglecting a simple precaution we lost more rabbits—or
even, perhaps, our navy, our police, and our fire
brigade? For I warn you that the purple dragon will
respect nothing, however sacred."</p>
<p>Everyone thought of themselves—and they said, "What
is the simple precaution?"</p>
<p>Then Uncle James said: "Tomorrow is the dragon's
birthday. He is accustomed to have a present on his birthday.
If he gets a nice present he will be in a hurry to take
it away and show it to his friends, and he will fly off and
never come back."</p>
<p>The crowd cheered wildly—and the Princess from her
balcony clapped her hands.</p>
<p>"The present the dragon expects," said Uncle James,
cheerfully, "is rather an expensive one. But, when we give,
it should not be in a grudging spirit, especially to visitors.
What the dragon wants is a Princess. We have only one
Princess, it is true; but far be it from us to display a miserly
temper at such a moment. And the gift is worthless
that costs the giver nothing. Your readiness to give up
your Princess will only show how generous you are."</p>
<p>The crowd began to cry, for they loved their Princess,
though they quite saw that their first duty was to be generous
and give the poor dragon what it wanted.</p>
<p>The Princess began to cry, for she did not want to be
anybody's birthday present—especially a purple dragon's.
And Tom began to cry because he was so angry.</p>
<p>He went straight home and told his little elephant; and
the elephant cheered him up so much that presently the
two grew quite absorbed in a top that the elephant was
spinning with his little trunk.</p>
<p>Early in the morning Tom went to the palace. He looked
out across the downs—there were hardly any rabbits<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33"></SPAN></span>
playing there now—and then he gathered white roses and
threw them at the Princess's window till she woke up and
looked out.</p>
<p>"Come up and kiss me," she said.</p>
<p>So Tom climbed up the white rosebush and kissed the
Princess through the window, and said: "Many happy
returns of the day."</p>
<p>Then Mary Ann began to cry, and said: "Oh, Tom—how
can you? When you know quite well—"</p>
<p>"Oh, don't," said Tom. "Why, Mary Ann, my precious,
my Princess—what do you think I should be doing while
the dragon was getting his birthday present? Don't cry,
my own little Mary Ann! Fido and I have arranged everything.
You've only got to do as you are told."</p>
<p>"Is that all?" said the Princess. "Oh—that's easy—I've
often done that!"</p>
<p>Then Tom told her what she was to do. And she kissed
him again and again. "Oh, you dear, good, clever Tom,"
she said. "How glad I am that I gave you Fido. You two
have saved me. You dears!"</p>
<p>The next morning Uncle James put on his best coat and
hat and the vest with the gold snakes on it—he was a
magician, and he had a bright taste in vests—and he
called with a cab to take the Princess out.</p>
<p>"Come, little birthday present," he said tenderly. "The
dragon will be so pleased. And I'm glad to see you're not
crying. You know, my child, we cannot begin too young to
learn to think of the happiness of others rather than our
own. I should not like my dear little niece to be selfish, or
to wish to deny a trivial pleasure to a poor, sick dragon,
far from his home and friends."</p>
<p>The Princess said she would try not to be selfish.</p>
<p>Presently the cab drew up near the pillar, and there was
the dragon, his ugly purple head shining in the sun, and
his ugly purple mouth half open.</p>
<p>Uncle James said: "Good morning, sir. We have brought
you a small present for your birthday. We do not like to
let such an anniversary go by without some suitable<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></SPAN></span>
testimonial, especially to one who is a stranger in our
midst. Our means are small, but our hearts are large. We
have but one Princess, but we give her freely—do we not,
my child?"</p>
<p>The Princess said she supposed so, and the dragon
came a little nearer.</p>
<p>Suddenly a voice cried: "Run!" and there was Tom, and
he had brought the Zoological guinea pig and a pair of
Belgian hares with him. "Just to see fair," said Tom.</p>
<p>Uncle James was furious. "What do you mean, sir," he
cried, "by intruding on a State function with your common
rabbits and things? Go away, naughty little boy, and play
with them somewhere else."</p>
<p>But while he was speaking the rabbits had come up one
on each side of him, their great sides towering ever so
high, and now they pressed him between them so that he
was buried in their thick fur and almost choked. The
Princess, meantime, had run to the other side of the pillar
and was peeping around it to see what was going on. A
crowd had followed the cab out of the town; now they
reached the scene of the "State Function"—and they all
cried out: "Fair play—play fair! We can't go back on our
word like this. Give a thing and take a thing? Why, it's
never done. Let the poor exiled stranger dragon have his
birthday present." And they tried to get at Tom—but the
guinea pig stood in the way.</p>
<p>"Yes," Tom cried. "Fair play is a jewel. And your helpless
exile shall have the Princess—if he can catch her.
Now then, Mary Ann."</p>
<p>Mary Ann looked around the big pillar and called to the
dragon: "Bo! you can't catch me," and began to run as fast
as ever she could, and the dragon ran after her. When the
Princess had run a half mile she stopped, dodged around
a tree, and ran back to the pillar and around it, and the
dragon after her. You see, he was so long he could not
turn as quickly as she could. Around and around the pillar
ran the Princess. The first time she ran around a long
way from the pillar, and then nearer and nearer—with the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></SPAN></span>
dragon after her all the time; and he was so busy trying to
catch her that he never noticed that Tom had tied the
very end of his long, tight, whipcordy tail to the rock, so
that the more the dragon ran around, the more times he
twisted his tail around the pillar. It was exactly like winding
a top—only the peg was the pillar, and the dragon's
tail was the string. And the magician was safe between the
Belgian hares, and couldn't see anything but darkness, or
do anything but choke.</p>
<p>When the dragon was wound onto the pillar as much as
he possibly could be, and as tight—like cotton on a reel—the
Princess stopped running, and though she had very
little breath left, she managed to say, "Yah—who's won
now?"</p>
<p>This annoyed the dragon so much that he put out all his
strength—spread his great purple wings, and tried to fly
at her. Of course this pulled his tail, and pulled it very
hard, so hard that as he pulled the tail <i>had</i> to come, and
the pillar <i>had</i> to come around with the tail, and the island
<i>had</i> to come around with the pillar, and in another minute
the tail was loose, and the island was spinning around
exactly like a top. It spun so fast that everyone fell flat on
their faces and held on tight to themselves, because they
felt something was going to happen. All but the magician,
who was choking between the Belgian hares, and felt
nothing but fur and fury.</p>
<p>And something did happen. The dragon had sent the
kingdom of Rotundia spinning the way it ought to have
gone at the beginning of the world, and as it spun around,
all the animals began to change sizes. The guinea pigs got
small, and the elephants got big, and the men and women
and children would have changed sizes too, if they had
not had the sense to hold on to themselves, very tight
indeed, with both hands; which, of course, the animals
could not be expected to know how to do. And the best of
it was that when the small beasts got big and the big
beasts got small the dragon got small too, and fell at the
Princess's feet—a little, crawling, purple newt with wings.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/gs07.jpg" width-obs="223" height-obs="350" alt=""The dragon ran after her." See page 34." title=""The dragon ran after her." See page 34." />
<span class="caption">"The dragon ran after her."<br/><SPAN href="#Page_34"><i>See page 34.</i></SPAN></span></div>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Funny little thing," said the Princess, when she saw it.
"I will take it for a birthday present."</p>
<p>But while all the people were still on their faces, holding
on tight to themselves, Uncle James, the magician,
never thought of holding tight—he only thought of how to
punish Belgian hares and the sons of gardeners; so when
the big beasts grew small, he grew small with the other
beasts, and the little purple dragon, when he fell at the
Princess's feet, saw there a very small magician named
Uncle James. And the dragon took him because it wanted
a birthday present.</p>
<p>So now all the animals were new sizes—and at first it
seemed very strange to everyone to have great lumbering
elephants and a tiny little dormouse, but they have gotten
used to it now, and think no more of it than we do.</p>
<p>All this happened several years ago, and the other day
I saw in the <i>Rotundia Times</i> an account of the wedding of
the Princess with Lord Thomas Gardener, K.C.D., and I
knew she could not have married anyone but Tom, so I
suppose they made him a Lord on purpose for the wedding—and
<i>K.C.D.</i>, of course, means Clever Conqueror of
the Dragon. If you think that is wrong it is only because
you don't know how they spell in Rotundia. The paper
said that among the beautiful presents of the bridegroom
to the bride was an enormous elephant, on which the
bridal pair made their wedding tour. This must have been
Fido. You remember Tom promised to give him back to
the Princess when they were married. The <i>Rotundia Times</i>
called the married couple "the happy pair." It was clever
of the paper to think of calling them that—it is such a
pretty and novel expression, and I think it is truer than
many of the things you see in papers.</p>
<p>Because, you see, the Princess and the gardener's son
were so fond of each other they could not help being
happy—and besides, they had an elephant of their very
own to ride on. If that is not enough to make people
happy, I should like to know what is. Though, of course, I
know there are some people who could not be happy<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></SPAN></span>
unless they had a whale to sail on, and perhaps not even
then. But they are greedy, grasping people, the kind who
would take four helps of pudding, as likely as not, which
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