<h2><SPAN name="4">CHAPTER 4</SPAN></h2><h3>DOROTHY'S LONELY BREAKFAST</h3>
<p>Dorothy, who occupied one of the coziest apartments in Ozma's palace, wakened
the morning after the party with a feeling of great uneasiness. At breakfast,
the Scarecrow was missing. Although he, the Tin Woodman and Scraps did not
require food, they always livened up the table with their conversation.
Ordinarily Dorothy would have thought nothing of the Scarecrow's absence, but
she could not forget his distressed expression when Professor Wogglebug had so
rudely remarked on his family tree. The Professor himself had left before
breakfast, and everybody but Dorothy had forgotten all about the Royal Book
of Oz.</p>
<p>Already many of Ozma's guests who did not live in the palace were preparing
to depart, but Dorothy could not get over her feeling of uneasiness. The
Scarecrow was her very best friend, and it was not like him to go without
saying goodbye. So she hunted through the gardens and in every room of the
palace and questioned all the servants. Unfortunately, Jellia Jamb, who was
the only one who had seen the Scarecrow go, was with her mistress. Ozma
always breakfasted alone and spent the morning over state matters. Knowing
how busy she was, Dorothy did not like to disturb her. Betsy Bobbin and
Trot, real little girls like Dorothy, also lived in the Fairy palace, and
Ozma was a great chum for them. But the Kingdom of Oz had to be governed in
between times, and they all knew that unless Ozma had the mornings to
herself, she could not play with them in the afternoons. So Dorothy
searched by herself.</p>
<p align="center"><ANTIMG src="images/55.jpg" alt="Dorothy searches"></p>
<p>"Perhaps I didn't look hard enough," thought the little girl, and searched
the palace all over again.</p>
<p>"Don't worry," advised the Tin Woodman, who was playing checkers with
Scraps. "He's probably gone home."</p>
<p class="poetry">
"He is a man of brains; why worry<br/>
Because he's left us in a hurry?"</p>
<p>chuckled Scraps with a careless wave of her hand, and Dorothy, laughing in
spite of herself, ran out to have another look in the garden.</p>
<p>"That is just what he has done, and if I hurry, I may overtake him. Anyway,
I believe I'll go and pay him a visit," thought Dorothy.</p>
<p>Trot and Betsy Bobbin were swinging in one of the royal hammocks, and when
Dorothy invited them to go along, they explained that they were going on a
picnic with the Tin Woodman. So without waiting to ask anyone else or even
whistling for Toto, her little dog, Dorothy skipped out of the garden.</p>
<p>The Cowardly Lion, half asleep under a rose bush, caught a glimpse of her blue
dress flashing by, and bounding to his feet thudded after her.</p>
<p>"Where are you going?" he asked, stifling a giant yawn.</p>
<p>"To visit the Scarecrow," explained Dorothy. "He looked so unhappy last
night. I am afraid he is worrying about his family tree, and I thought
p'raps I could cheer him up."</p>
<p>The Cowardly Lion stretched luxuriously. "I'll go too," he rumbled, giving
himself a shake. "But it's the first time I ever heard of the Scarecrow
worrying."</p>
<p>"But you see," Dorothy said gently, "Professor Wogglebug told him he had no
family."</p>
<p>"Family! Family fiddlesticks! Hasn't he got us?" The Cowardly Lion stopped
and waved his tail indignantly.</p>
<p>"Why, you dear old thing!" Dorothy threw her arms around his neck. "You've
given me a lovely idea!" The Cowardly Lion tried not to look pleased.</p>
<p>"Well, as long as I've given it to you, you might tell me what it is," he
suggested mildly.</p>
<p>"Why," said Dorothy, skipping along happily, "we'll let him adopt us and be
his really relations. I'll be his sister, and you'll be—"</p>
<p>"His cousin—that is, if you think he wouldn't mind having a great coward
like me for a cousin," finished the Cowardly Lion in an anxious voice.</p>
<p>"Do you still feel as cowardly as ever?" asked Dorothy sympathetically.</p>
<p>"More so!" sighed the great beast, glancing apprehensively over his
shoulder. This made Dorothy laugh, for although the lion trembled like a
cup custard at the approach of danger, he always managed to fight with
great valor, and the little girl felt safer with him than with the whole
army of Oz, who never were frightened but who always ran away.</p>
<p>Now anyone who is at all familiar with his geozify knows that the Fairyland
of Oz is divided into four parts, exactly like a parchesi board, with the
Emerald City in the very center, the purple Gillikin Country to the north,
the red Quadling Country to the south, the blue Munchkin Country to the
east, and the yellow Country of the Winkies to the west. It was toward the
west that Dorothy and the Cowardly Lion turned their steps, for it was in
the Winkie Country that the Scarecrow had built his gorgeous golden tower
in exactly the shape of a huge ear of corn.</p>
<p>Dorothy ran along beside the Cowardly Lion, chatting over their many
adventures in Oz, and stopping now and then to pick buttercups and daisies
that dotted the roadside. She tied a big bunch to the tip of her friend's tail
and twined some more in his mane, so that he presented a very festive
appearance indeed. Then, when she grew tired, she climbed on his big back, and
swiftly they jogged through the pleasant land of the Winkies. The people waved
to them from windows and fields, for everyone loved little Dorothy and the big
lion, and as they passed a neat yellow cottage, a little Winkie Lady came
running down the path with a cup of tea in one hand and a bucket in the other.</p>
<p>"I saw you coming and thought you might be thirsty," she called hospitably.
Dorothy drank her cup without alighting.</p>
<p align="center"><ANTIMG src="images/59.jpg" alt="Dorothy and the Lion"></p>
<p>"We're in an awful hurry; we're visiting the Scarecrow," she exclaimed
apologetically. The lion drank his bucket of tea at one gulp. It was so hot
that it made his eyes water.</p>
<p>"How I loathe tea! If I hadn't been such a coward, I'd have upset the bucket,"
groaned the lion as the little Winkie Lady went back into her house. "But no,
I was afraid of hurting her feelings. Ugh, what a terrible thing it is to be a
coward!"</p>
<p>"Nonsense!" said Dorothy, wiping her eyes with her handkerchief. "You're not
a coward, you're just polite. But let's run very fast so we can reach the
Scarecrow's in time for lunch."</p>
<p>So like the wind away raced the Cowardly Lion, Dorothy holding fast to his
mane, with her curls blowing straight out behind, and in exactly two Oz
hours and seventeen Winkie minutes they came to the dazzling corn-ear
residence of their old friend. Hurrying through the cornfields that
surrounded his singular mansion, Dorothy and the Cowardly Lion rushed
through the open door.</p>
<p>"We've come for lunch," announced Dorothy.</p>
<p>"And I'm hungry enough to eat crow," rumbled the lion. Then both stopped in
dismay, for the big reception room was empty. From a room above came a
shuffling of feet, and Blink, the Scarecrow's gentlemanly housekeeper, came
running down the stairs.</p>
<p>"Where's the Scarecrow?" asked Dorothy anxiously. "Isn't he here?"</p>
<p>"Here! Isn't he there? Isn't he in the Emerald City?" gasped the little
Winkie, putting his specs on upside down.</p>
<p>"No—at least, I don't think so. Oh, dear, I just felt that something had
happened to him!" wailed Dorothy, sinking into an ebony armchair and
fanning herself with a silk sofa cushion.</p>
<p align="center"><ANTIMG src="images/61.jpg" alt="Blink"></p>
<p>"Now don't be alarmed." The Cowardly Lion rushed to Dorothy's side and
knocked three vases and a clock off a little table, just to show how calm
he was. "Think of his brains! The Scarecrow has never come to harm yet, and
all we have to do is to return to the Emerald City and look in Ozma's Magic
Picture. Then, when we know where he is, we can go and find him and tell
him about our little adoption plan," he added, looking hopefully at Dorothy.</p>
<p>"The Scarecrow himself couldn't have spoken more sensibly," observed Blink
with a great sigh of relief, and even Dorothy felt better.</p>
<p>In Ozma's palace, as many of you know, there is a Magic Picture, and when
Ozma or Dorothy want to see any of their friends, they have merely to wish
to see them, and instantly the picture shows the person wished for and
exactly what he is doing at that certain time.</p>
<p>"Of course!" sighed Dorothy. "Why didn't I think of it myself?"</p>
<p>"Better have some lunch before you start back," suggested Blink, and
bustling about had soon set out an appetizing repast. Dorothy was too busy
worrying about the Scarecrow to have much appetite, but the Cowardly Lion
swallowed seventeen roasts and a bucket of corn syrup.</p>
<p>"To give me courage!" he explained to Dorothy, licking his chops. "There's
nothing that makes me so cowardly as an empty stomach!"</p>
<p>It was quite late in the afternoon before they could get away. Blink
insisted on putting up a lunch, and it took some time to make enough
sandwiches for the Cowardly Lion. But at last it was ready and packed into
an old hat box belonging to Mops, the Scarecrow's cook. Then Dorothy,
balancing the box carefully on her lap, climbed on the Cowardly Lion's
back, and assuring Blink that they would return in a few days with his
master, they bade him farewell. Blink almost spoiled things by bursting
into tears, but he managed to restrain himself long enough to say goodbye,
and Dorothy and the Cowardly Lion, feeling a little solemn themselves,
started toward the Emerald City.</p>
<p>"My, but it's growing dark," said Dorothy after they had gone several miles.
"I believe it's going to storm."</p>
<p>Scarcely had she finished speaking before there was a terrific crash of
thunder. The Cowardly Lion promptly sat down. Off of his back bounced the
sandwich box and into the sandwich box rolled Dorothy, head first.</p>
<p>"How terribly upsetting," coughed the Cowardly Lion.</p>
<p>"I should say it was!" Dorothy crawled indignantly out of the hat box and
began wiping the butter from her nose. "You've simply ruined the supper!"</p>
<p>"It was my heart," explained the Cowardly Lion sorrowfully. "It jumped so
hard that it upset me, but climb on my back again, and I'll run very fast
to some place of shelter."</p>
<p>"But where are you?" Dorothy asked in real alarm, for it had grown
absolutely dark.</p>
<p>"Here," quavered the Cowardly Lion, and guided by his voice, Dorothy
stumbled over to him and climbed again on his back. One crash of thunder
followed another, and at each crash the Cowardly Lion leapt forward a bit
faster until they fairly flew through the dark.</p>
<p>"It won't take us long to reach the Emerald City at this rate!" called
Dorothy, but the wind tossed the words far behind her, and seeing that
conversation was impossible, she clung fast to the lion's mane and began
thinking about the Scarecrow. The thunder continued at frequent intervals, but
there was no rain, and after they had been running for what seemed to Dorothy
hours and hours, a sudden terrific bump sent her flying over the lion's head
into a bush. Too breathless to speak, she felt herself carefully all over.
Then, finding that she was still in one piece, she called to the Cowardly
Lion. She could hear him moaning and muttering about his heart.</p>
<p>"Any bones broken?" she asked anxiously.</p>
<p>"Only my head," groaned the lion dismally. Just then the darkness lifted as
suddenly as it had fallen, and Dorothy saw him leaning against a tree with
his eyes closed. There was a big bump on his head. With a little cry of
sympathy, Dorothy hurried toward him, when all at once something strange
about their surroundings struck her.</p>
<p>"Why, where are we?" cried the little girl, stopping short. The lion's eyes
flew open, and forgetting all about his bump, he looked around in dismay.
No sign of the Emerald City anywhere. Indeed, they were in a great, dim
forest, and considering the number of trees, it is a wonder that they had
not run into one long ago.</p>
<p>"I must have run the wrong way," faltered the Cowardly Lion in a distressed
voice.</p>
<p>"You couldn't help that; anyone would lose his way in the dark," said Dorothy
generously. "But I wish we hadn't fallen in the sandwiches. I'm hungry!"</p>
<p>"So am I. Do you think anyone lives in this forest, Dorothy?"</p>
<p>Dorothy did not answer, for just then she caught sight of a big sign nailed
to one of the trees.</p>
<p>"Turn to the right," directed the sign.</p>
<p>"Oh, come on!" cried Dorothy, cheering up immediately. "I believe we're
going to have another adventure."</p>
<p>"I'd rather have some supper," sighed the Cowardly Lion wistfully, "but
unless we want to spend the night here, we might as well move along. I'm to
be fed up on adventure, I suppose."</p>
<p>"Turn to the left," advised the next sign, and the two turned obediently and
hurried on, trying to keep a straight course through the trees. In a
Fairyland like Oz, where there are no trains or trolleys or even horses for
traveling ('cepting Ozma's sawhorse), there are bound to be unexplored
portions. And though Dorothy had been at one time or another in almost
every part of Oz, the country through which they were now passing was
totally unfamiliar to her. Night was coming on, and it was growing so dark
that she could hardly read the third sign when they presently came upon it.</p>
<p>"Don't sing," directed the sign sternly.</p>
<p>"Sing!" snapped Dorothy indignantly, "Who wants to sing?"</p>
<p>"We might as well keep to the left," said the Cowardly Lion in a resigned
voice, and they walked along for some time in silence. The trees were
thinning out, and as they came to the edge of the forest, another sign
confronted them.</p>
<p>"Slow down," read Dorothy with great difficulty. "What nonsense! If we slow
down, how shall we ever get anywhere?"</p>
<p>"Wait a minute," mused the Cowardly Lion, half closing his eyes. "Aren't
there two roads just ahead, one going up and one going down? We're to take
the down road, I suppose. 'Slow down,' isn't that what it says?"</p>
<p>Slow down it surely was, for the road was so steep and full of stones that
Dorothy and the Cowardly Lion had to pick their way with utmost care. But
even bad roads must end somewhere, and coming suddenly to the edge of the
woods, they saw a great city lying just below. A dim light burned over the
main gate, and toward this the Cowardly Lion and Dorothy hurried as fast as
they could. This was not very fast, for an unaccountable drowsiness was
stealing over them.</p>
<p>Slowly and more slowly, the tired little girl and her great four-footed
companion advanced toward the dimly lighted gate. They were so drowsy that
they had ceased to talk. But they dragged on.</p>
<p>"Hah, hoh, hum!" yawned the Cowardly Lion. "What makes my feet so heavy?"</p>
<p>He stopped short and examined each of his four feet sleepily.</p>
<p>Dorothy swallowed a yawn and tried to run, but a walk was all she could
manage.</p>
<p>"Hah, hoh, hum!" she gaped, stumbling along with her eyes closed.</p>
<p>By the time they had reached the gate, they were yawning so hard that the
Cowardly Lion had nearly dislocated his jaw, and Dorothy was perfectly
breathless. Holding to the lion's mane to steady herself, Dorothy blinked
up uncertainly at the sign over the gate.</p>
<p>"Hah—here we are—Hoh!" She held her hand wearily before her mouth.</p>
<p>Then, with a great effort, she read the words of the sign.</p>
<p>"Um—Great—Grand and Mighty Slow Kingdom of Pokes! Uh-hah—Pokes! Do
you hear? Hah, hoh, hu, uum!"</p>
<p>Dorothy looked about in alarm, despite her sleepiness.</p>
<p>"Do you hear?" she repeated anxiously as no answer came through the gloom.</p>
<p>The Cowardly Lion did not hear. He had fallen down and was fast asleep, and so
in another minute was Dorothy, her head pillowed against his kind,
comfortable, cowardly heart. Fast asleep at the gates of a strange gray city!</p>
<p align="center"><ANTIMG src="images/69.jpg" alt="The Cowardly Lion was fast asleep"></p>
<br/>
<p align="center"><ANTIMG src="images/71.jpg" alt="Pokes"></p>
<br/>
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