The Patchwork Girl of Oz

By L. Frank Baum

Author of The Road to Oz, Dorothy and The Wizard in Oz, The Emerald City of Oz, The Land of Oz, Ozma of Oz, etc.

Contents

--Prologue--
1. Ojo and Unc Nunkie
2. The Crooked Magician
3. The Patchwork Girl
4. The Glass Cat
5. A Terrible Accident
6. The Journey
7. The Troublesome Phonograph
8. The Foolish Owl and the Wise Donkey
9. They Meet the Woozy
10. Shaggy Man to the Rescue
11. A Good Friend
12. The Giant Porcupine
13. Scraps and the Scarecrow
14. Ojo Breaks the Law
15. Ozma's Prisoner
16. Princess Dorothy
17. Ozma and Her Friends
18. Ojo is Forgiven
19. Trouble with the Tottenhots
20. The Captive Yoop
21. Hip Hopper the Champion
22. The Joking Horners
23. Peace is Declared
24. Ojo Finds the Dark Well
25. They Bribe the Lazy Quadling
26. The Trick River
27. The Tin Woodman Objects
28. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

Prologue

	Through the kindness of Dorothy Gale of Kansas, afterward Princess
Dorothy of Oz, an humble writer in the United States of America was once
appointed Royal Historian of Oz, with the privilege of writing the
chronicle of that wonderful fairyland.  But after making six books about
the adventures of those interesting but queer people who live in the Land
of Oz, the Historian learned with sorrow that by an edict of the Supreme
Ruler, Ozma of Oz, her country would thereafter be rendered invisible to
all who lived outside its borders and that all communications with Oz
would, in the future, be cut off.
	The children who had learned to look for the books about Oz and
who loved the stories about the gay and happy people inhabiting that
favored country, were as sorry as their Historian that there would be no
more books of Oz stories.  They wrote many letters asking if the
Historian did not know of some adventures to write about that had 
happened before the Land of Oz was shut out from all the rest of the
world.  But he did not know of any.  Finally one of the children inquired
why we couldn't hear from Princess Dorothy by wireless telegraph, which
would enable her to communicate to the Historian whatever happened in the
far-off Land of Oz without his seeing her, or even knowing just where Oz
is.
	That seemed a good idea; so the Historian rigged up a high tower
in his back yard, and took lessons in wireless telegraphy until he
understood it, and then began to call "Princess Dorothy of Oz" by sending
messages into the air.
	Now, it wasn't likely that Dorothy would be looking for wireless
messages or would heed the call; but one thing the Historian was sure of,
and that was that the powerful Sorceress, Glinda, would know what he was
doing and that he desired to communicate with Dorothy.  For Glinda has a
big book in which is recorded every event that takes place anywhere in
the world, just the moment that it happens, and so of course the book
would tell her about the wireless message.
	And that was the way Dorothy heard that the Historian wanted to
speak with her, and there was a Shaggy Man in the Land of Oz who knew how
to telegraph a wireless reply.  The result was that the Historian begged
so hard to be told the latest news of Oz, so that he could write it down
for the children to read, that Dorothy asked permission of Ozma and Ozma
graciously consented.
	That is why, after two long years of waiting, another Oz story is
now presented to the children of America.  This would not have been
possible had not some clever man invented the "wireless" and an equally
clever child suggested the idea of reaching the mysterious Land of Oz by
its means.


L. FRANK BAUM.

"OZCOT"
at HOLLYWOOD
in CALIFORNIA

1. Ojo and Unc Nunkie


	"Where's the butter, Unc Nunkie?" asked Ojo.
	Unc looked out of the window and stroked his long beard.  Then he
turned to the Munchkin boy and shook his head.
	"Isn't," said he.
	"Isn't any butter?  That's too bad, Unc.  Where's the jam then?"
inquired Ojo, standing on a stool so he could look through all the
shelves of the cupboard.  But Unc Nunkie shook his head again.
	"Gone," he said.
	"No jam, either?  And no cake--no jelly--no apples--nothing but
bread?"
	"All," said Unc, again stroking his beard as he gazed from the
window.
	The little boy brought the stool and sat beside his uncle,
munching the dry bread slowly and seeming in deep thought.
	"Nothing grows in our yard but the bread tree," he mused, "and
there are only two more loaves on that tree; and they're not ripe yet.
Tell me, Unc; why are we so poor?"
	The old Munchkin turned and looked at Ojo.  He had kindly eyes,
but he hadn't smiled or laughed in so long that the boy had forgotten
that Unc Nunkie could look any other way than solemn.  And Unc never
spoke any more words than he was obliged to, so his little nephew, who
lived alone with him, had learned to understand a great deal from one word.
	"Why are we so poor, Unc?" repeated the boy.
	"Not," said the old Munchkin.
	"I think we are," declared Ojo.  "What have we got?"
	"House," said Unc Nunkie.
	"I know; but everyone in the Land of Oz has a place to live. What
else, Unc?"
	"Bread."
	"I'm eating the last loaf that's ripe.  There; I've put aside your
share, Unc.  It's on the table, so you can eat it when you get hungry.
But when that is gone, what shall we eat, Unc?"
	The old man shifted in his chair but merely shook his head.
	"Of course," said Ojo, who was obliged to talk because his uncle
would not, "no one starves in the Land of Oz, either.  There is plenty
for everyone, you know; only, if it isn't just where you happen to be,
you must go where it is."
	The aged Munchkin wriggled again and stared at his small nephew as
if disturbed by his argument.
	"By to-morrow morning," the boy went on, "we must go where there
is something to eat, or we shall grow very hungry and become very unhappy."
	"Where?" asked Unc.
	"Where shall we go?  I don't know, I'm sure," replied Ojo.  "But
YOU must know, Unc.  You must have traveled, in your time, because you're
so old.  I don't remember it, because ever since I could remember
anything we've lived right here in this lonesome, round house, with a
little garden back of it and the thick woods all around.  All I've ever
seen of the great Land of Oz, Unc dear, is the view of that mountain over
at the south, where they say the Hammerheads live--who won't let anybody
go by them--and that mountain at the north, where they say nobody lives."
	"One," declared Unc, correcting him.
	"Oh, yes; one family lives there, I've heard.  That's the Crooked
Magician, who is named Dr. Pipt, and his wife Margolotte.  One year you
told me about them; I think it took you a whole year, Unc, to say as much
as I've just said about the Crooked Magician and his wife. They live high 
up on the mountain, and the good Munchkin Country, where the fruits and
flowers grow, is just the other side.  It's funny you and I should live
here all alone, in the middle of the forest, isn't it?"
	"Yes," said Unc.
	"Then let's go away and visit the Munchkin Country and its jolly,
good-natured people.  I'd love to get a sight of something besides woods,
Unc Nunkie."
	"Too little," said Unc.
	"Why, I'm not so little as I used to be," answered the boy
earnestly. "I think I can walk as far and as fast through the woods as
you can, Unc.  And now that nothing grows in our back yard that is good
to eat, we must go where there is food."
	Unc Nunkie made no reply for a time.  Then he shut down the window
and turned his chair to face the room, for the sun was sinking behind the
treetops and it was growing cool.
	By and by Ojo lighted the fire and the logs blazed freely in the
broad fireplace.  The two sat in the firelight a long time--the old,
white-bearded Munchkin and the little boy.  Both were thinking. When it
grew quite dark outside, Ojo said:
	"Eat your bread, Unc, and then we will go to bed."
	But Unc Nunkie did not eat the bread; neither did he go directly
to bed. Long after his little nephew was sound asleep in the corner of
the room the old man sat by the fire, thinking.

2. The Crooked Magician


	Just at dawn next morning, Unc Nunkie laid his hand tenderly on
Ojo's head and awakened him.
	"Come," he said.
	Ojo dressed.  He wore blue silk stockings, blue knee-pants with
gold buckles, a blue ruffled waist and a jacket of bright blue braided
with gold.  His shoes were of blue leather and turned up at the toes, 
which were pointed.  His hat had a peaked crown and a flat brim, and
around the brim was a row of tiny golden bells that tinkled when he
moved.  This was the native costume of those who inhabited the Munchkin
Country of the Land of Oz, so Unc Nunkie's dress was much like that of
his nephew.  Instead of shoes, the old man wore boots with turnover tops
and his blue coat had wide cuffs of gold braid.
	The boy noticed that his uncle had not eaten the bread, and
supposed the old man had not been hungry.  Ojo was hungry, though; so he
divided the piece of bread upon the table and ate his half for breakfast,
washing it down with fresh, cool water from the brook. Unc put the other
piece of bread in his jacket pocket, after which he again said, as he
walked out through the doorway, "Come."
	Ojo was well pleased.  He was dreadfully tired of living all
alone in the woods and wanted to travel and see people.  For a long time
he had wished to explore the beautiful Land of Oz in which they lived.
When they were outside, Unc simply latched the door and started up the
path.  No one would disturb their little house, even if anyone came so
far into the thick forest while they were gone.
	At the foot of the mountain that separated the Country of the
Munchkins from the Country of the Gillikins, the path divided. One way
led to the left and the other to the right--straight up the mountain.
Unc Nunkie took this right-hand path and Ojo followed without asking why.
He knew it would take them to the house of the Crooked Magician, whom he
had never seen but who was their nearest neighbor.
	All the morning they trudged up the mountain path and at noon Unc
and Ojo sat on a fallen tree-trunk and ate the last of the bread which
the old Munchkin had placed in his pocket.  Then they started on again
and two hours later came in sight of the house of Dr. Pipt.
	It was a big house, round, as were all the Munchkin houses, and
painted blue, which is the distinctive color of the Munchkin Country of
Oz.  There was a pretty garden around the house, where blue trees and
blue flowers grew in abundance and in one place were beds of blue
cabbages, blue carrots and blue lettuce, all of which were delicious to
eat.  In Dr. Pipt's garden grew bun-trees, cake-trees, cream-puff bushes,
blue buttercups which yielded excellent blue butter and a row of
chocolate-caramel plants. 


 Paths of blue gravel divided the vegetable and flower beds and a wider
path led up to the front door. The place was in a clearing on the
mountain, but a little way off was the grim forest, which completely
surrounded it.
	Unc knocked at the door of the house and a chubby, pleasant-faced
woman, dressed all in blue, opened it and greeted the visitors with a
smile.
	"Ah," said Ojo; "you must be Dame Margolotte, the good wife of Dr.
Pipt."
	"I am, my dear, and all strangers are welcome to my home."
	"May we see the famous Magician, Madam?"
	"He is very busy just now," she said, shaking her head doubtfully.
"But come in and let me give you something to eat, for you must have
traveled far in order to get to our lonely place."
	"We have," replied Ojo, as he and Unc entered the house.  "We have
come from a far lonelier place than this."
	"A lonelier place!  And in the Munchkin Country?" she exclaimed.
"Then it must be somewhere in the Blue Forest."
	"It is, good Dame Margolotte."
	"Dear me!" she said, looking at the man, "you must be Unc Nunkie,
known as the Silent One."  Then she looked at the boy.  "And you must be
Ojo the Unlucky," she added.
	"Yes," said Unc.
	"I never knew I was called the Unlucky," said Ojo, soberly; "but
it is really a good name for me."
	"Well," remarked the woman, as she bustled around the room and set
the table and brought food from the cupboard, "you were unlucky to live
all alone in that dismal forest, which is much worse than the forest
around here; but perhaps your luck will change, now you are away from it.  
If, during your travels, you can manage to lose that 'Un' at the
beginning of your name 'Unlucky,' you will then become Ojo the Lucky,
which will be a great improvement."
	"How can I lose that 'Un,' Dame Margolotte?"
	"I do not know how, but you must keep the matter in mind and
perhaps the chance will come to you," she replied.
	Ojo had never eaten such a fine meal in all his life.  There was a
savory stew, smoking hot, a dish of blue peas, a bowl of sweet milk of a
delicate blue tint and a blue pudding with blue plums in it.  When the
visitors had eaten heartily of this fare the woman said to them:
	"Do you wish to see Dr. Pipt on business or for pleasure?"
	Unc shook his head.
	"We are traveling," replied Ojo, "and we stopped at your house
just to rest and refresh ourselves.  I do not think Unc Nunkie cares very
much to see the famous Crooked Magician; but for my part I am curious to
look at such a great man."
	The woman seemed thoughtful.
	"I remember that Unc Nunkie and my husband used to be friends,
many years ago," she said, "so perhaps they will be glad to meet again.
The Magician is very busy, as I said, but if you will promise not to
disturb him you may come into his workshop and watch him prepare a
wonderful charm."
	"Thank you," replied the boy, much pleased.  "I would like to do
that."
	She led the way to a great domed hall at the back of the house,
which was the Magician's workshop.  There was a row of windows extending
nearly around the sides of the circular room, which rendered the place
very light, and there was a back door in addition to the one leading to
the front part of the house.  Before the row of windows a broad seat was
built and there were some chairs and benches in the room besides.  At one
end stood a great fireplace, in which a blue log was blazing with a blue
flame, and over the fire hung four kettles in a row, all bubbling and
steaming at a great rate.  The Magician was stirring all four of these
kettles at the same time, two with his hands and two with his feet, to
the latter, wooden ladles being strapped, for this man was so very  
crooked that his legs were as handy as his arms.
	Unc Nunkie came forward to greet his old friend, but not being
able to shake either his hands or his feet, which were all occupied in
stirring, he patted the Magician's bald head and asked: "What?"
	"Ah, it's the Silent One," remarked Dr. Pipt without looking up,
"and he wants to know what I'm making.  Well, when it is quite finished
this compound will be the wonderful Powder of Life, which no one knows
how to make but myself.  Whenever it is sprinkled on anything, that thing
will at once come to life, no matter what it is.  It takes me several
years to make this magic Powder, but at this moment I am pleased to say
it is nearly done.  You see, I am making it for my good wife Margolotte,
who wants to use some of it for a purpose of her own. Sit down and make
yourself comfortable, Unc Nunkie, and after I've finished my task I will
talk to you."
	"You must know," said Margolotte, when they were all seated
together on the broad window-seat, "that my husband foolishly gave away
all the Powder of Life he first made to old Mombi the Witch, who used to
live in the Country of the Gillikins, to the north of here.  Mombi gave
to Dr. Pipt a Powder of Perpetual Youth in exchange for his Powder of
Life, but she cheated him wickedly, for the Powder of Youth was no good
and could work no magic at all."
	"Perhaps the Powder of Life couldn't either," said Ojo.
	"Yes; it is perfection," she declared.  "The first lot we tested
on our Glass Cat, which not only began to live but has lived ever since.
She's somewhere around the house now."
	"A Glass Cat!" exclaimed Ojo, astonished.
	"Yes; she makes a very pleasant companion, but admires herself a
little more than is considered modest, and she positively refuses to
catch mice," explained Margolotte.  "My husband made the cat some pink
brains, but they proved to be too high-bred and particular for a cat, so
she thinks it is undignified in[sic] her to catch mice.  Also, she has a
pretty blood-red heart, but it is made of stone--a ruby, I think--and so
is rather hard and unfeeling.  I think the next Glass Cat the Magician
makes will have neither brains nor heart, for then it will not object to
catching mice and may prove of some use to us."
	"What did old Mombi the Witch do with the Powder of Life your
husband gave her?" asked the boy.
	"She brought Jack Pumpkinhead to life, for one thing," was the
reply. "I suppose you've heard of Jack Pumpkinhead.  He is now living
near the Emerald City and is a great favorite with the Princess Ozma, who
rules all the Land of Oz."
	"No; I've never heard of him," remarked Ojo.  "I'm afraid I don't
know much about the Land of Oz.  You see, I've lived all my life with Unc
Nunkie, the Silent One, and there was no one to tell me anything."
	"That is one reason you are Ojo the Unlucky," said the woman, in
a sympathetic tone.  "The more one knows, the luckier he is, for
knowledge is the greatest gift in life."
	"But tell me, please, what you intend to do with this new lot of
the Powder of Life, which Dr. Pipt is making.  He said his wife wanted it
for some especial purpose."
	"So I do," she answered.  "I want it to bring my Patchwork Girl
to life."
	"Oh!  A Patchwork Girl?  What is that?" Ojo asked, for this
seemed even more strange and unusual than a Glass Cat.
	"I think I must show you my Patchwork Girl," said Margolotte,
laughing at the boy's astonishment, "for she is rather difficult to
explain. But first I will tell you that for many years I have longed for
a servant to help me with the housework and to cook the meals and wash
the dishes.  No servant will come here because the place is so lonely and
out-of-the-way, so my clever husband, the Crooked Magician, proposed that
I make a girl out of some sort of material and he would make her live by
sprinkling over her the Powder of Life.  This seemed an excellent
suggestion and at once Dr. Pipt set to work to make a new batch of his
magic powder.  He has been at it a long, long while, and so I have had
plenty of time to make the girl.  Yet that task was not so easy as you
may suppose.  At first I couldn't think what to make her of, but finally
in searching through a chest I came across an old patchwork quilt, which
my grandmother once made when she was young."
	"What is a patchwork quilt?" asked Ojo.
	"A bed-quilt made of patches of different kinds and colors of
cloth, all neatly sewed together.  The patches are of all shapes and
sizes, so a patchwork quilt is a very pretty and gorgeous thing to look
at. Sometimes it is called a 'crazy-quilt,' because the patches and
colors are so mixed up.  We never have used my grandmother's many-colored
patchwork quilt, handsome as it is, for we Munchkins do not care for any
color other than blue, so it has been packed away in the chest for about
a hundred years.  When I found it, I said to myself that it would do
nicely for my servant girl, for when she was brought to life she would
not be proud or haughty, as the Glass Cat is, for such a dreadful mixture
of colors would discourage her from trying to be as dignified as the blue
Munchkins are."
	"Is blue the only respectable color, then?" inquired Ojo.
	"Yes, for a Munchkin.  All our country is blue, you know.  But in
other parts of Oz the people favor different colors.  At the Emerald
City, where our Princess Ozma lives, green is the popular color.  But all
Munchkins prefer blue to anything else and when my housework girl is
brought to life she will find herself to be of so many unpopular colors
that she'll never dare be rebellious or impudent, as servants are
sometimes liable to be when they are made the same way their mistresses
are."
	Unc Nunkie nodded approval.
	"Good i-dea," he said; and that was a long speech for Unc Nunkie
because it was two words.
	"So I cut up the quilt," continued Margolotte, "and made from it
a very well-shaped girl, which I stuffed with cotton-wadding.  I will
show you what a good job I did," and she went to a tall cupboard and
threw open the doors.
	Then back she came, lugging in her arms the Patchwork Girl, which
she set upon the bench and propped up so that the figure would not tumble
over.

3. The Patchwork Girl


	Ojo examined this curious contrivance with wonder.  The Patchwork
Girl was taller than he, when she stood upright, and her body was plump
and rounded because it had been so neatly stuffed with cotton.
Margolotte had first made the girl's form from the patchwork quilt and
then she had dressed it with a patchwork skirt and an apron with pockets
in it--using the same gay material throughout.  Upon the feet she had
sewn a pair of red leather shoes with pointed toes.  All the fingers and
thumbs of the girl's hands had been carefully formed and stuffed and
stitched at the edges, with gold plates at the ends to serve as finger-nails.
	"She will have to work, when she comes to life," said Margolotte.
	The head of the Patchwork Girl was the most curious part of her.
While she waited for her husband to finish making his Powder of Life the
woman had found ample time to complete the head as her fancy dictated,
and she realized that a good servant's head must be properly constructed.
The hair was of brown yarn and hung down on her neck in several neat
braids.  Her eyes were two silver suspender-buttons cut from a pair of
the Magician's old trousers, and they were sewed on with black threads,
which formed the pupils of the eyes.  Margolotte had puzzled over the
ears for some time, for these were important if the servant was to hear
distinctly, but finally she had made them out of thin plates of gold and
attached them in place by means of stitches through tiny holes bored in
the metal.  Gold is the most common metal in the Land of Oz and is used
for many purposes because it is soft and pliable.
	The woman had cut a slit for the Patchwork Girl's mouth and sewn
two rows of white pearls in it for teeth, using a strip of scarlet plush
for a tongue.  This mouth Ojo considered very artistic and lifelike, and
Margolotte was pleased when the boy praised it.  There were almost too
many patches on the face of the girl for her to be considered strictly
beautiful, for one cheek was yellow and the other red, her chin blue, her
forehead purple and the center, where her nose had been formed and
padded, a bright yellow.
	"You ought to have had her face all pink," suggested the boy.
	"I suppose so; but I had no pink cloth," replied the woman.
"Still, I cannot see as it matters much, for I wish my Patchwork Girl to
be useful rather than ornamental.  If I get tired looking at her patched
face I can whitewash it."
	"Has she any brains?" asked Ojo.
	"No; I forgot all about the brains!" exclaimed the woman.  "I am
glad you reminded me of them, for it is not too late to supply them, by
any means.  Until she is brought to life I can do anything I please with
this girl.  But I must be careful not to give her too much brains, and
those she has must be such as are fitted to the station she is to occupy
in life.  In other words, her brains musn't be very good."
	"Wrong," said Unc Nunkie.
	"No; I am sure I am right about that," returned the woman.
	"He means," explained Ojo, "that unless your servant has good
brains she won't know how to obey you properly, nor do the things you ask
her to do."
	"Well, that may be true," agreed Margolotte; "but, on the
contrary, a servant with too much brains is sure to become independent
and high-and-mighty and feel above her work.  This is a very delicate
task, as I said, and I must take care to give the girl just the right
quantity of the right sort of brains.  I want her to know just enough,
but not too much."
	With this, she went to another cupboard which was filled with
shelves. All the shelves were lined with blue glass bottles, neatly
labeled by the Magician to show what they contained.  One whole shelf was
marked: "Brain Furniture," and the bottles on this shelf were labeled as
follows: "Obedience," "Cleverness," "Judgment," "Courage," "Ingenuity,"
"Amiability," "Learning," "Truth," "Poesy," "Self-Reliance."
	"Let me see," said Margolotte; "of those qualities she must have
'Obedience' first of all," and she took down the bottle bearing that
label and poured from it upon a dish several grains of the contents.
"'Amiability' is also good and 'Truth.'"  She poured into the dish a
quantity from each of these bottles.  "I think that will do," she
continued, "for the other qualities are not needed in a servant."
	Unc Nunkie, who with Ojo stood beside her, touched the bottle
marked "Cleverness."
	"Little," said he.
	"A little 'Cleverness'?  Well, perhaps you are right, sir," said
she, and was about to take down the bottle when the  Crooked Magician
suddenly called to her excitedly from the fireplace.
	"Quick, Margolotte!  Come and help me."
	She ran to her husband's side at once and helped him lift the
four kettles from the fire.  Their contents had all boiled away, leaving
in the bottom of each kettle a few grains of fine white powder.  Very
carefully the Magician removed this powder, placing it all together in a
golden dish, where he mixed it with a golden spoon.  When the mixture was
complete there was scarcely a handful, all told.
	"That," said Dr. Pipt in a pleased and triumphant tone, "is the
wonderful Powder of Life, which I alone in the world know how to make. It
has taken me nearly six years to prepare these precious grains of dust,
but the little heap on that dish is worth the price of a kingdom and many
a king would give all he has to possess it.  When it has become cooled I
will place it in a small bottle; but meantime I must watch it carefully,
lest a gust of wind blow it away or scatter it."
	Unc Nunkie, Margolotte and the Magician all stood looking at the
marvelous Powder, but Ojo was more interested just then in the Patchwork
Girl's brains.  Thinking it both unfair and unkind to deprive her of any
good qualities that were handy, the boy took down every bottle on the
shelf and poured some of the contents in Margolotte's dish.  No one saw
him do this, for all were looking at the Powder of Life; but soon the
woman remembered what she had been doing, and came back to the cupboard.
	"Let's see," she remarked; "I was about to give my girl a little
'Cleverness,' which is the Doctor's substitute for 'Intelligence,'--a
quality he has not yet learned how to manufacture."  Taking down the
bottle of "Cleverness" she added some of the powder to the heap on the
dish.  Ojo became a bit uneasy at this, for he had already put quite a
lot of the "Cleverness" powder in the dish; but he dared not interfere
and so he comforted himself with the thought that one cannot have too
much cleverness.
	Margolotte now carried the dish of brains to the bench.  Ripping
the seam of the patch on the girl's forehead, she placed the powder
within the head and then sewed up the seam as neatly and securely as
before.
	"My girl is all ready for your Powder of Life, my dear," she said
to her husband.  But the Magician replied:
	"This powder must not be used before tomorrow morning; but I
think it is now cool enough to be bottled."  He selected a small gold
bottle with a pepper-box top, so that the powder might be sprinkled on
any object through the small holes.  Very carefully he placed the Powder
of Life in the gold bottle and then locked it up in a drawer of his cabinet.
	"At last," said he, rubbing his hands together gleefully, "I have
ample leisure for a good talk with my old friend Unc Nunkie.  So let us
sit down cozily and enjoy ourselves.  After stirring those four kettles
for six years I am glad to have a little rest."
	"You will have to do most of the talking," said Ojo, "for Unc is
called the Silent One and uses few words."
	"I know; but that renders your uncle a most agreeable companion
and gossip," declared Dr. Pipt.  "Most people talk too much, so it is a
relief to find one who talks too little."
	Ojo looked at the Magician with much awe and curiosity.
	"Don't you find it very annoying to be so crooked?" he asked.
	"No; I am quite proud of my person," was the reply.  "I suppose I
am the only Crooked Magician in all the world.  Some others are accused
of being crooked, but I am the only genuine."
	He was really very crooked and Ojo wondered how he managed to do
so many things with such a twisted body.  When he sat down upon a crooked
chair that had been made to fit him, one knee was under his chin and the
other near the small of his back; but he was a cheerful man and his face
bore a pleasant and agreeable expression.
	"I am not allowed to perform magic, except for my own amusement,"
he told his visitors, as he lighted a pipe with a crooked stem and began
to smoke.  "Too many people were working magic in the Land of Oz, and so
our lovely Princess Ozma put a stop to it.
        I think she was quite right.  There were several wicked Witches
who caused a lot of trouble; but now they are all out of business and only
the great Sorceress, Glinda the Good, is permitted to practice her arts,
which never harm anybody.  The Wizard of Oz, who used to be a humbug and
knew no magic at all, has been taking lessons of Glinda, and I'm told he
is getting to be a pretty good Wizard; but he is merely the assistant of
the great Sorceress.  I've the right to make a servant girl for my wife,
you know, or a Glass Cat to catch our mice--which she refuses to do--but
I am forbidden to work magic for others, or to use it as a profession."
	"Magic must be a very interesting study," said Ojo.
	"It truly is," asserted the Magician.  "In my time I've performed
some magical feats that were worthy of the skill of Glinda the Good. For
instance, there's the Powder of Life, and my Liquid of Petrifaction,
which is contained in that bottle on the shelf yonder--over the window."
	"What does the Liquid of Petrifaction do?" inquired the boy.
	"Turns everything it touches to solid marble.  It's an invention
of my own, and I find it very useful.  Once two of those dreadful
Kalidahs, with bodies like bears and heads like tigers, came here from
the forest to attack us; but I sprinkled some of that Liquid on them, and
instantly they turned to marble.  I now use them as ornamental statuary
in my garden.  This table looks to you like wood, and once it really was
wood; but I sprinkled a few drops of the Liquid of Petrifaction on it and
now it is marble.  It will never break nor wear out."
	"Fine!" said Unc Nunkie, wagging his head and stroking his long
gray beard.
	"Dear me; what a chatterbox you're getting to be, Unc," remarked
the Magician, who was pleased with the compliment.  But just then there
came a scratching at the back door and a shrill voice cried:
	"Let me in!  Hurry up, can't you?  Let me in!"
	Margolotte got up and went to the door.
	"Ask like a good cat, then," she said.
	"Mee-ee-ow-w-w!  There; does that suit your royal highness?"
asked the voice, in scornful accents.
	"Yes; that's proper cat talk," declared the woman, and opened the
door.
	At once a cat entered, came to the center of the room and stopped
short at the sight of strangers.  Ojo and Unc Nunkie both stared at it
with wide open eyes, for surely no such curious creature had ever existed
before--even in the Land of Oz.

4. The Glass Cat


	The cat was made of glass, so clear and transparent that you
could see through it as easily as through a window.  In the top of its
head, however, was a mass of delicate pink balls which looked like
jewels, and it had a heart made of a blood-red ruby.  The eyes were two
large emeralds, but aside from these colors all the rest of the animal
was clear glass, and it had a spun-glass tail that was really beautiful.
	"Well, Doc Pipt, do you mean to introduce us, or not?" demanded
the cat, in a tone of annoyance.  "Seems to me you are forgetting your
manners."
	"Excuse me," returned the Magician.  "This is Unc Nunkie, the
descendant of the former kings of the Munchkins, before this country
became a part of the Land of Oz."
	"He needs a hair-cut," observed the cat, washing its face.
	"True," replied Unc, with a low chuckle of amusement.
	"But he has lived alone in the heart of the forest for many
years," the Magician explained; "and although that is a barbarous
country, there are no barbers there."
	"Who is the dwarf?" asked the cat.
	"That is not a dwarf, but a boy," answered the Magician.  "You
have never seen a boy before.  He is now small because he is young.  With
more years he will grow big and become as tall as Unc Nunkie."
	"Oh, is that magic?" the glass animal inquired.
	"Yes; but it is Nature's magic, which is more wonderful than any
art known to man.  For instance, my magic made you, and made you live;
and it was a poor job because you are useless and a bother to me; but I
can't make you grow.  You will always be the same size--and the same
saucy, inconsiderate Glass Cat, with pink brains and a hard ruby heart."
	"No one can regret more than I the fact that you made me,"
asserted the cat, crouching upon the floor and slowly swaying its
spun-glass tail from side to side.  "Your world is a very uninteresting
place. I've wandered through your gardens and in the forest until I'm
tired of it all, and when I come into the house the conversation of your
fat wife and of yourself bores me dreadfully."
	"That is because I gave you different brains from those we
ourselves possess--and much too good for a cat," returned Dr. Pipt.
	"Can't you take 'em out, then, and replace 'em with pebbles, so
that I won't feel above my station in life?" asked the cat, pleadingly.
	"Perhaps so.  I'll try it after I've brought the Patchwork Girl
to life," he said.
	The cat walked up to the bench on which the Patchwork Girl
reclined and looked at her attentively.
	"Are you going to make that dreadful thing live?" she asked.
	The Magician nodded.
	"It is intended to be my wife's servant maid," he said.  "When
she is alive she will do all our work and mind the house.  But you are
not to order her around, Bungle, as you do us.  You must treat the
Patchwork Girl respectfully."
	"I won't.  I couldn't respect such a bundle of scraps under any
circumstances."
	"If you don't, there will be more scraps than you will like,"
cried Margolotte, angrily.
	"Why didn't you make her pretty to look at?" asked the cat.  "You
made me pretty--very pretty, indeed--and I love to watch my pink brains
roll around when they're working, and to see my precious red heart beat."
She went to a long mirror, as she said this, and stood before it, looking
at herself with an air of much pride.  "But that poor patched thing will
hate herself, when she's once alive," continued the cat. "If I were you,
I'd use her for a mop, and make another servant that is prettier."
	"You have a perverted taste," snapped Margolotte, much annoyed at
this frank criticism.  "I think the Patchwork Girl is beautiful,
considering what she's made of.  Even the rainbow hasn't as many colors,
and you must admit that the rainbow is a pretty thing."
	The Glass Cat yawned and stretched herself upon the floor.
	"Have your own way," she said.  "I'm sorry for the Patchwork
Girl, that's all."
	Ojo and Unc Nunkie slept that night in the Magician's house, and
the boy was glad to stay because he was anxious to see the Patchwork Girl
brought to life.  The Glass Cat was also a wonderful creature to little
Ojo, who had never seen or known anything of magic before, although he
had lived in the Fairyland of Oz ever since he was born. Back there in
the woods nothing unusual ever happened.  Unc Nunkie, who might have been
King of the Munchkins, had not his people united with all the other
countries of Oz in acknowledging Ozma as their sole ruler, had retired
into this forgotten forest nook with his baby nephew and they had lived
all alone there.  Only that the neglected garden had failed to grow food
for them, they would always have lived in the solitary Blue Forest; but
now they had started out to mingle with other people, and the first place
they came to proved so interesting that Ojo could scarcely sleep a wink
all night.
	Margolotte was an excellent cook and gave them a fine breakfast.
While they were all engaged in eating, the good woman said:
	"This is the last meal I shall have to cook for some time, for
right after breakfast Dr. Pipt has promised to bring my new servant to
life. I shall let her wash the breakfast dishes and sweep and dust the
house. What a relief it will be!"
	"It will, indeed, relieve you of much drudgery," said the
Magician. "By the way, Margolotte, I thought I saw you getting some
brains from the cupboard, while I was busy with my kettles.  What
qualities have you given your new servant?"
	"Only those that an humble servant requires," she answered. "I do
not wish her to feel above her station, as the Glass Cat does. That would
make her discontented and unhappy, for of course she must always be a
servant."
	Ojo was somewhat disturbed as he listened to this, and the boy
began to fear he had done wrong in adding all those different qualities
of brains to the lot Margolotte had prepared for the servant.  But it was
too late now for regret, since all the brains were securely sewn up
inside the Patchwork Girl's head.  He might have confessed what he had
done and thus allowed Margolotte and her husband to change the brains;
but he was afraid of incurring their anger.  He believed that Unc had
seen him add to the brains, and Unc had not said a word against it; but
then, Unc never did say anything unless it was absolutely necessary.
	As soon as breakfast was over they all went into the Magician's
big workshop, where the Glass Cat was lying before the mirror and the
Patchwork Girl lay limp and lifeless upon the bench.
	"Now then," said Dr. Pipt, in a brisk tone, "we shall perform one
of the greatest feats of magic possible to man, even in this marvelous
Land of Oz.  In no other country could it be done at all.  I think we
ought to have a little music while the Patchwork Girl comes to life. It
is pleasant to reflect that the first sounds her golden ears will hear
will be delicious music."
	As he spoke he went to a phonograph, which screwed fast to a
small table, and wound up the spring of the instrument and adjusted the
big gold horn.
	"The music my servant will usually hear," remarked Margolotte,
"will be my orders to do her work.  But I see no harm in allowing her to
listen to this unseen band while she wakens to her first realization of
life.  My orders will beat the band, afterward."
	The phonograph was now playing a stirring march tune and the
Magician unlocked his cabinet and took out the gold bottle containing the
Powder of Life.
	They all bent over the bench on which the Patchwork Girl
reclined. Unc Nunkie and Margolotte stood behind, near the windows, Ojo
at one side and the Magician in front, where he would have freedom to
sprinkle the powder.  The Glass Cat came near, too, curious to watch the
important scene.
	"All ready?" asked Dr. Pipt.
	"All is ready," answered his wife.
	So the Magician leaned over and shook from the bottle some grains
of the wonderful Powder, and they fell directly on the Patchwork Girl's
head and arms.

5. A Terrible Accident


	"It will take a few minutes for this powder to do its work,"
remarked the Magician, sprinkling the body up and down with much care.
	But suddenly the Patchwork Girl threw up one arm, which knocked
the bottle of powder from the crooked man's hand and sent it flying
across the room.  Unc Nunkie and Margolotte were so startled that they
both leaped backward and bumped together, and Unc's head joggled the
shelf above them and upset the bottle containing the Liquid of
Petrifaction.
	The Magician uttered such a wild cry that Ojo jumped away and the
Patchwork Girl sprang after him and clasped her stuffed arms around him
in terror.  The Glass Cat snarled and hid under the table, and so it was
that when the powerful Liquid of Petrifaction was spilled it fell only
upon the wife of the Magician and the uncle of Ojo.  With these two the
charm worked promptly.  They stood motionless and stiff as marble
statues, in exactly the positions they were in when the Liquid struck them.
	Ojo pushed the Patchwork Girl away and ran to Unc Nunkie, filled
with a terrible fear for the only friend and protector he had ever known.
When he grasped Unc's hand, it was cold and hard.  Even the long gray
beard was solid marble.  The Crooked Magician was dancing around the room
in a frenzy of despair, calling upon his wife to forgive him, to speak to
him, to come to life again!
	The Patchwork Girl, quickly recovering from her fright, now came
nearer and looked from one to another of the people with deep interest.
Then she looked at herself and laughed.  Noticing the mirror, she stood
before it and examined her extraordinary features with amazement--her
button eyes, pearl-bead teeth and puffy nose. Then, addressing her
reflection in the glass, she exclaimed:

	"Whee, but there's a gaudy dame!
	Makes a paint-box blush with shame.
	Razzle-dazzle, fizzle-fazzle!
	Howdy-do, Miss What's-your-name?"

	She bowed, and the reflection bowed.  Then she laughed again,
long and merrily, and the Glass Cat crept out from under the table and
said:
	"I don't blame you for laughing at yourself.  Aren't you horrid?"
	"Horrid?" she replied.  "Why, I'm thoroughly delightful.  I'm an
Original, if you please, and therefore incomparable.  Of all the comic,
absurd, rare and amusing creatures the world contains, I must be the
supreme freak.  Who but poor Margolotte could have managed to invent such
an unreasonable being as I?  But I'm glad--I'm awfully glad!--that I'm
just what I am, and nothing else."
	"Be quiet, will you?" cried the frantic Magician; "be quiet and
let me think!  If I don't think I shall go mad."
	"Think ahead," said the Patchwork Girl, seating herself in a
chair. "Think all you want to.  I don't mind."
	"Gee! but I'm tired playing that tune," called the phonograph,
speaking through its horn in a brazen, scratchy voice.  "If you don't
mind, Pipt, old boy, I'll cut it out and take a rest."
	The Magician looked gloomily at the music-machine.
	"What dreadful luck!" he wailed, despondently.  "The Powder of
Life must have fallen on the phonograph."
	He went up to it and found that the gold bottle that contained
the precious powder had dropped upon the stand and scattered its
live-giving grains over the machine.  The phonograph was very much alive,
and began dancing a jig with the legs of the table to which it was
attached, and this dance so annoyed Dr. Pipt that he kicked the thing
into a corner and pushed a bench against it, to hold it quiet.
	"You were bad enough before," said the Magician, resentfully;
"but a live phonograph is enough to drive every sane person in the Land
of Oz stark crazy."
	"No insults, please," answered the phonograph in a surly tone.
"You did it, my boy; don't blame me."
	"You've bungled everything, Dr. Pipt," added the Glass Cat,
contemptuously.
	"Except me," said the Patchwork Girl, jumping up to whirl merrily
around the room.
	"I think," said Ojo, almost ready to cry through grief over Unc
Nunkie's sad fate, "it must all be my fault, in some way.  I'm called Ojo
the Unlucky, you know."
	"That's nonsense, kiddie," retorted the Patchwork Girl
cheerfully. "No one can be unlucky who has the intelligence to direct his
own actions.  The unlucky ones are those who beg for a chance to think,
like poor Dr. Pipt here.  What's the row about, anyway, Mr. Magic-maker?"
	"The Liquid of Petrifaction has accidentally fallen upon my dear
wife and Unc Nunkie and turned them into marble," he sadly replied.
	"Well, why don't you sprinkle some of that powder on them and
bring them to life again?" asked the Patchwork Girl.
	The Magician gave a jump.
	"I hadn't thought of that!" he joyfully cried, and grabbed up the
golden bottle, with which he ran to Margolotte.
	Said the Patchwork Girl:

	"Higgledy, piggledy, dee--
	 What fools magicians be!
	 His head's so thick
	 He can't think quick,
	 So he takes advice from me."

	Standing upon the bench, for he was so crooked he could not reach
the top of his wife's head in any other way, Dr. Pipt began shaking the
bottle.  But not a grain of powder came out.  He pulled off the cover,
glanced within, and then threw the bottle from him with a wail of
despair.
	"Gone--gone!  Every bit gone," he cried.  "Wasted on that
miserable phonograph when it might have saved my dear wife!"
	Then the Magician bowed his head on his crooked arms and began to
cry.
	Ojo was sorry for him.  He went up to the sorrowful man and said
softly:
	"You can make more Powder of Life, Dr. Pipt."
	"Yes; but it will take me six years--six long, weary years of
stirring four kettles with both feet and both hands," was the agonized
reply. "Six years! while poor Margolotte stands watching me as a marble image."
	"Can't anything else be done?" asked the Patchwork Girl.
	The Magician shook his head.  Then he seemed to remember
something and looked up.
	"There is one other compound that would destroy the magic spell
of the Liquid of Petrifaction and restore my wife and Unc Nunkie to
life," said he.  "It may be hard to find the things I need to make this
magic compound, but if they were found I could do in an instant what will
otherwise take six long, weary years of stirring kettles with both hands
and both feet."
	"All right; let's find the things, then," suggested the Patchwork
Girl.  "That seems a lot more sensible than those stirring times with the
kettles."
	"That's the idea, Scraps," said the Glass Cat, approvingly.  "I'm
glad to find you have decent brains.  Mine are exceptionally good.  You
can see 'em work; they're pink."
	"Scraps?" repeated the girl.  "Did you call me 'Scraps'?  Is that
my name?"
	"I--I believe my poor wife had intended to name you 'Angeline,'"
said the Magician.
	"But I like 'Scraps' best," she replied with a laugh.  "It fits me
better, for my patchwork is all scraps, and nothing else.  Thank you for
naming me, Miss Cat.  Have you any name of your own?"
	"I have a foolish name that Margolotte once gave me, but which is
quite undignified for one of my importance," answered the cat.  "She
called me 'Bungle.'"
	"Yes," said the Magician; "you were a sad bungle, taken all in
all.  I was wrong to make you as I did, for a more useless, conceited and
brittle thing never before existed."
	"I'm not so brittle as you think," retorted the cat.  "I've been
alive a good many years, for Dr. Pipt experimented on me with the first
magic Powder of Life he ever made, and so far I've never broken or
cracked or chipped any part of me."
	"You seem to have a chip on your shoulder," laughed the Patchwork
Girl, and the cat went to the mirror to see.
	"Tell me," pleaded Ojo, speaking to the Crooked Magician, "what
must we find to make the compound that will save Unc Nunkie?"
	"First," was the reply, "I must have a six-leaved clover.  That
can only be found in the green country around the Emerald City, and
six-leaved clovers are very scarce, even there."
	"I'll find it for you," promised Ojo.
	"The next thing," continued the Magician, "is the left wing of a
yellow butterfly.  That color can only be found in the yellow country of
the Winkies, West of the Emerald City."
	"I'll find it," declared Ojo.  "Is that all?"
	"Oh, no; I'll get my Book of Recipes and see what comes next."
	Saying this, the Magician unlocked a drawer of his cabinet and
drew out a small book covered with blue leather.  Looking through the
pages he found the recipe he wanted and said: "I must have a gill of
water from a dark well."
	"What kind of a well is that, sir?" asked the boy.
	"One where the light of day never penetrates.  The water must be
put in a gold bottle and brought to me without any light ever reaching it."
	"I'll get the water from the dark well," said Ojo.
	"Then I must have three hairs from the tip of a Woozy's tail, and
a drop of oil from a live man's body."
	Ojo looked grave at this.
	"What is a Woozy, please?" he inquired.
	"Some sort of an animal.  I've never seen one, so I can't
describe it," replied the Magician.
	"If I can find a Woozy, I'll get the hairs from its tail," said
Ojo. "But is there ever any oil in a man's body?"
	The Magician looked in the book again, to make sure.
	"That's what the recipe calls for," he replied, "and of course we
must get everything that is called for, or the charm won't work.  The
book doesn't say 'blood'; it says 'oil,' and there must be oil somewhere
in a live man's body or the book wouldn't ask for it."
	"All right," returned Ojo, trying not to feel discouraged; "I'll
try to find it."
	The Magician looked at the little Munchkin boy in a doubtful way
and said:
	"All this will mean a long journey for you; perhaps several long
journeys; for you must search through several of the different countries
of Oz in order to get the things I need."
	"I know it, sir; but I must do my best to save Unc Nunkie."
	"And also my poor wife Margolotte.  If you save one you will save
the other, for both stand there together and the same compound will
restore them both to life.  Do the best you can, Ojo, and while you are
gone I shall begin the six years' job of making a new batch of the Powder
of Life.  Then, if you should unluckily fail to secure any of the things
needed, I will have lost no time.  But if you succeed, you must return
here as quickly as you can, and that will save me much tiresome stirring
of four kettles with both feet and both hands."
	"I will start on my journey at once, sir," said the boy.
	"And I will go with you," declared the Patchwork Girl.
	"No, no!" exclaimed the Magician.  "You have no right to leave
this house.  You are only a servant and have not been discharged."
	Scraps, who had been dancing up and down the room, stopped and
looked at him.
	"What is a servant?" she asked.
	"One who serves.  A--a sort of slave," he explained.
	"Very well," said the Patchwork Girl, "I'm going to serve you and
your wife by helping Ojo find the things you need.  You need a lot, you
know, such as are not easily found."
	"It is true," sighed Dr. Pipt.  "I am well aware that Ojo has
undertaken a serious task."
	Scraps laughed, and resuming her dance, she said:

	"Here's a job for a boy of brains:
	 A drop of oil from a live man's veins;
	 A six-leaved clover; three nice hairs
	 From a Woozy's tail, the book declares
	 Are needed for the magic spell,
	 And water from a pitch-dark well.
	 The yellow wing of a butterfly
	 To find must Ojo also try,
	 And if he gets them without harm,
	 Doc Pipt will make the magic charm;
	 But if he doesn't get 'em, Unc
	 Will always stand a marble chunk."

	The Magician looked at her thoughtfully.
	"Poor Margolotte must have given you some of the quality of poesy,
by mistake," he said.  "And if that is true, I didn't make a very good
article when I prepared it, or else you got an overdose or an underdose.
However, I believe I shall let you go with Ojo, for my poor wife will not
need your services until she is restored to life. Also I think you may be
able to help the boy, for your head seems to contain some thoughts I did
not expect to find in it.  But be very careful of yourself, for you're a 
souvenir of my dear Margolotte.  Try not to get ripped, or your stuffing
may fall out.  One of your eyes seems loose, and you may have to sew it
on tighter.  If you talk too much, you'll wear out your scarlet plush
tongue, which ought to have been hemmed on the edges.  And remember you
belong to me and must return here as soon as your mission is accomplished."
	"I'm going with Scraps and Ojo," announced the Glass Cat.
	"You can't," said the Magician.
	"Why not?"
	"You'd get broken in no time, and you couldn't be a bit of use to
the boy and the Patchwork Girl."
	"I beg to differ with you," returned the cat, in a haughty tone.
"Three heads are better than two, and my pink brains are beautiful. You
can see 'em work."
	"Well, go along," said the Magician, irritably.  "You're only an
annoyance, anyhow, and I'm glad to get rid of you."
	"Thank you for nothing, then," answered the cat, stiffly.
	Dr. Pipt took a small basket from a cupboard and packed several
things in it.  Then he handed it to Ojo.
	"Here is some food and a bundle of charms," he said.  "It is all
I can give you, but I am sure you will find friends on your journey who
will assist you in your search.  Take care of the Patchwork Girl and
bring her safely back, for she ought to prove useful to my wife.  As for
the Glass Cat--properly named Bungle--if she bothers you I now give you
my permission to break her in two, for she is not respectful and does not
obey me.  I made a mistake in giving her the pink brains, you see."
	Then Ojo went to Unc Nunkie and kissed the old man's marble face
very tenderly.
	"I'm going to try to save you, Unc," he said, just as if the
marble image could hear him; and then he shook the crooked hand of the
Crooked Magician, who was already busy hanging the four kettles in the
fireplace, and picking up his basket left the house.
	The Patchwork Girl followed him, and after them came the Glass Cat.

6. The Journey


	Ojo had never traveled before and so he only knew that the path
down the mountainside led into the open Munchkin Country, where large
numbers of people dwelt.  Scraps was quite new and not supposed to know
anything of the Land of Oz, while the Glass Cat admitted she had never
wandered very far away from the Magician's house.  There was only one
path before them, at the beginning, so they could not miss their way, and
for a time they walked through the thick forest in silent thought, each
one impressed with the importance of the adventure they had undertaken.
	Suddenly the Patchwork Girl laughed.  It was funny to see her
laugh, because her cheeks wrinkled up, her nose tipped, her silver button
eyes wrinkled and her mouth curled at the corners in a comical way.
	"Has something pleased you?" asked Ojo, who was feeling solemn
and joyless through thinking upon his uncle's sad fate.
	"Yes," she answered.  "Your world pleases me, for it's a queer
world, and life in it is queerer still.  Here am I, made from an old
bedquilt and intended to be a slave to Margolotte, rendered free as air
by an accident that none of you could foresee.  I am enjoying life and
seeing the world, while the woman who made me is standing helpless as a
block of wood.  If that isn't funny enough to laugh at, I don't know what is."
	"You're not seeing much of the world yet, my poor, innocent
Scraps," remarked the Cat.  "The world doesn't consist wholly of the
trees that are on all sides of us."
	"But they're part of it; and aren't they pretty trees?" returned
Scraps, bobbing her head until her brown yarn curls fluttered in the
breeze. "Growing between them I can see lovely ferns and wild-flowers,
and soft green mosses.  If the rest of your world is half as beautiful I
shall be glad I'm alive."
	"I don't know what the rest of the world is like, I'm sure," said
the cat; "but I mean to find out."
	"I have never been out of the forest," Ojo added; "but to me the
trees are gloomy and sad and the wild-flowers seem lonesome.  It must be
nicer where there are no trees and there is room for lots of people to
live together."
	"I wonder if any of the people we shall meet will be as splendid
as I am," said the Patchwork Girl.  "All I have seen so far, have pale,
colorless skins and clothes as blue as the country they live in, while I
am of many gorgeous colors--face and body and clothes.  That is why I am
bright and contented, Ojo, while you are blue and sad."
	"I think I made a mistake in giving you so many sorts of brains,"
observed the boy.  "Perhaps, as the Magician said, you have an overdose,
and they may not agree with you."
	"What had you to do with my brains?" asked Scraps.
	"A lot," replied Ojo.  "Old Margolotte meant to give you only a
few--just enough to keep you going--but when she wasn't looking I added a
good many more, of the best kinds I could find in the Magician's cupboard."
	"Thanks," said the girl, dancing along the path ahead of Ojo and
then dancing back to his side.  "If a few brains are good, many brains
must be better."
	"But they ought to be evenly balanced," said the boy, "and I had
no time to be careful.  From the way you're acting, I guess the dose was
badly mixed."
	"Scraps hasn't enough brains to hurt her, so don't worry,"
remarked the cat, which was trotting along in a very dainty and graceful
manner. "The only brains worth considering are mine, which are pink.  You
can see 'em work."
	After walking a long time they came to a little brook that
trickled across the path, and here Ojo sat down to rest and eat something
from his basket.  He found that the Magician had given him part of a loaf
of bread and a slice of cheese.  He broke off some of the bread and was
surprised to find the loaf just as large as it was before.  It was the
same way with the cheese: however much he broke off from the slice, it
remained exactly the same size.
	"Ah," said he, nodding wisely; "that's magic.  Dr. Pipt has
enchanted the bread and the cheese, so it will last me all through my
journey, however much I eat."
	"Why do you put those things into your mouth?" asked Scraps,
gazing at him in astonishment.  "Do you need more stuffing?  Then why
don't you use cotton, such as I am stuffed with?"
	"I don't need that kind," said Ojo.
	"But a mouth is to talk with, isn't it?"
	"It is also to eat with," replied the boy.  "If I didn't put food
into my mouth, and eat it, I would get hungry and starve."
	"Ah, I didn't know that," she said.  "Give me some."
	Ojo handed her a bit of the bread and she put it in her mouth.
	"What next?" she asked, scarcely able to speak.
	"Chew it and swallow it," said the boy.
	Scraps tried that.  Her pearl teeth were unable to chew the bread
and beyond her mouth there was no opening.  Being unable to swallow she
threw away the bread and laughed.
	"I must get hungry and starve, for I can't eat," she said.
	"Neither can I," announced the cat; "but I'm not fool enough to
try. Can't you understand that you and I are superior people and not made
like these poor humans?"
	"Why should I understand that, or anything else?" asked the girl.
"Don't bother my head by asking conundrums, I beg of you.  Just let me
discover myself in my own way."
	With this she began amusing herself by leaping across the brook
and back again.
	"Be careful, or you'll fall in the water," warned Ojo.
	"Never mind."
	"You'd better.  If you get wet you'll be soggy and can't walk.
Your colors might run, too," he said.
	"Don't my colors run whenever I run?" she asked.
	"Not in the way I mean.  If they get wet, the reds and greens and
yellows and purples of your patches might run into each other and become
just a blur--no color at all, you know."
	"Then," said the Patchwork Girl, "I'll be careful, for if I
spoiled my splendid colors I would cease to be beautiful."
	"Pah!" sneered the Glass Cat, "such colors are not beautiful;
they're ugly and in bad taste.  Please notice that my body has no color
at all.  I'm transparent, except for my exquisite red heart and my lovely
pink brains--you can see 'em work."
	"Shoo--shoo--shoo!" cried Scraps, dancing around and laughing.
"And your horrid green eyes, Miss Bungle!  You can't see your eyes, but
we can, and I notice you're very proud of what little color you have.
Shoo, Miss Bungle, shoo--shoo--shoo!  If you were all colors and many
colors, as I am, you'd be too stuck up for anything."  She leaped over
the cat and back again, and the startled Bungle crept close to a tree to
escape her.  This made Scraps laugh more heartily than ever, and she said:

	"Whoop-te-doodle-doo!
	 The cat has lost her shoe.
	 Her tootsie's bare, but she don't care,
	 So what's the odds to you?"

	"Dear me, Ojo," said the cat; "don't you think the creature is a
little bit crazy?"
	"It may be," he answered, with a puzzled look.
	"If she continues her insults I'll scratch off her
suspender-button eyes," declared the cat.
	"Don't quarrel, please," pleaded the boy, rising to resume the
journey.  "Let us be good comrades and as happy and cheerful as possible,
for we are likely to meet with plenty of trouble on our way."
	It was nearly sundown when they came to the edge of the forest and
saw spread out before them a delightful landscape.  There were broad blue 
fields stretching out for miles over the valley, which was dotted
everywhere with pretty, blue domed houses, none of which, however, was
very near to the place where they stood.  Just at the point where the
path left the forest stood a tiny house covered with leaves from the
trees, and before this stood a Munchkin man with an axe in his hand.  He
seemed very much surprised when Ojo and Scraps and the Glass Cat came out
of the woods, but as the Patchwork Girl approached nearer he sat down
upon a bench and laughed so hard that he could not speak for a long time.
	This man was a woodchopper and lived all alone in the little
house. He had bushy blue whiskers and merry blue eyes and his blue
clothes were quite old and worn.
	"Mercy me!" exclaimed the woodchopper, when at last he could stop
laughing.  "Who would think such a funny harlequin lived in the Land of
Oz?  Where did you come from, Crazy-quilt?"
	"Do you mean me?" asked the Patchwork Girl.
	"Of course," he replied.
	"You misjudge my ancestry.  I'm not a crazy-quilt; I'm
patchwork," she said.
	"There's no difference," he replied, beginning to laugh again.
"When my old grandmother sews such things together she calls it a
crazy-quilt; but I never thought such a jumble could come to life."
	"It was the Magic Powder that did it," explained Ojo.
	"Oh, then you must have come from the Crooked Magician on the
mountain.  I might have known it, for--Well, I declare! here's a glass
cat.  But the Magician will get in trouble for this; it's against the law
for anyone to work magic except Glinda the Good and the royal Wizard of
Oz.  If you people--or things--or glass spectacles--or crazy-quilts, or
whatever you are, go near the Emerald City, you'll be arrested."
	"We're going there, anyhow," declared Scraps, sitting upon the
bench and swinging her stuffed legs.

	"If any of us takes a rest,
	 We'll be arrested sure,
	 And get no restitution
	'Cause the rest we must endure."

	"I see," said the woodchopper, nodding; "you're as crazy as the
crazy-quilt you're made of."
	"She really IS crazy," remarked the Glass Cat.  "But that isn't to
be wondered at when you remember how many different things she's made of.
For my part, I'm made of pure glass--except my jewel heart and my pretty
pink brains.  Did you notice my brains, stranger?  You can see 'em work."
	"So I can," replied the woodchopper; "but I can't see that they
accomplish much.  A glass cat is a useless sort of thing, but a Patchwork
Girl is really useful.  She makes me laugh, and laughter is the best
thing in life.  There was once a woodchopper, a friend of mine, who was
made all of tin, and I used to laugh every time I saw him."
	"A tin woodchopper?" said Ojo.  "That is strange."
	"My friend wasn't always tin," said the man, "but he was careless
with his axe, and used to chop himself very badly.  Whenever he lost an
arm or a leg, he had it replaced with tin; so after a while he was all tin."
	"And could he chop wood then?" asked the boy.
	"He could if he didn't rust his tin joints.  But one day he met
Dorothy in the forest and went with her to the Emerald City, where he
made his fortune.  He is now one of the favorites of Princess Ozma, and
she has made him the Emperor of the Winkies--the Country where all is
yellow."
	"Who is Dorothy?" inquired the Patchwork Girl.
	"A little maid who used to live in Kansas, but is now a Princess
of Oz.  She's Ozma's best friend, they say, and lives with her in the
royal palace."
	"Is Dorothy made of tin?" inquired Ojo.
	"Is she patchwork, like me?" inquired Scraps.
	"No," said the man; "Dorothy is flesh, just as I am.  I know of
only one tin person, and that is Nick Chopper, the Tin Woodman; and there
will never be but one Patchwork Girl, for any magician that sees you will
refuse to make another one like you."
	"I suppose we shall see the Tin Woodman, for we are going to the
Country of the Winkies," said the boy.
	"What for?" asked the woodchopper.
	"To get the left wing of a yellow butterfly."
	"It is a long journey," declared the man, "and you will go
through lonely parts of Oz and cross rivers and traverse dark forests
before you get there."
	"Suits me all right," said Scraps.  "I'll get a chance to see the
country."
	"You're crazy, girl.  Better crawl into a rag-bag and hide there;
or give yourself to some little girl to play with.  Those who travel are
likely to meet trouble; that's why I stay at home."
	The woodcutter then invited them all to stay the night at his
little hut, but they were anxious to get on and so left him and continued
along the path, which was broader, now, and more distinct.
	They expected to reach some other house before it grew dark, but
the twilight was brief and Ojo soon began to fear they had made a mistake
in leaving the woodchopper.
	"I can scarcely see the path," he said at last.  "Can you see it,
Scraps?"
	"No," replied the Patchwork Girl, who was holding fast to the
boy's arm so he could guide her.
	"I can see," declared the Glass Cat.  "My eyes are better than
yours, and my pink brains--"
	"Never mind your pink brains, please," said Ojo hastily; "just
run ahead and show us the way.  Wait a minute and I'll tie a string to
you; for then you can lead us."
	He got a string from his pocket and tied it around the cat's
neck, and after that the creature guided them along the path.  They had
proceeded in this way for about an hour when a twinkling blue light
appeared ahead of them.
	"Good! there's a house at last," cried Ojo.  "When we reach it
the good people will surely welcome us and give us a night's lodging."
But however far they walked the light seemed to get no nearer, so by and
by the cat stopped short, saying:
	"I think the light is traveling, too, and we shall never be able
to catch up with it.  But here is a house by the roadside, so why go farther?"
	"Where is the house, Bungle?"
	"Just here beside us, Scraps."
	Ojo was now able to see a small house near the pathway.  It was
dark and silent, but the boy was tired and wanted to rest, so he went up
to the door and knocked.
	"Who is there?" cried a voice from within.
	"I am Ojo the Unlucky, and with me are Miss Scraps Patchwork and
the Glass Cat," he replied.
	"What do you want?" asked the Voice.
	"A place to sleep," said Ojo.
	"Come in, then; but don't make any noise, and you must go
directly to bed," returned the Voice.
	Ojo unlatched the door and entered.  It was very dark inside and
he could see nothing at all.  But the cat exclaimed, "Why, there's no one
here!"
	"There must be," said the boy.  "Some one spoke to me."
	"I can see everything in the room," replied the cat, "and no one
is present but ourselves.  But here are three beds, all made up, so we
may as well go to sleep."
	"What is sleep?" inquired the Patchwork Girl.
	"It's what you do when you go to bed," said Ojo.
	"But why do you go to bed?" persisted the Patchwork Girl.
	"Here, here!  You are making altogether too much noise," cried
the Voice they had heard before.  "Keep quiet, strangers, and go to bed."
	The cat, which could see in the dark, looked sharply around for
the owner of the Voice, but could discover no one, although the Voice had
seemed close beside them.  She arched her back a little and seemed
afraid.  Then she whispered to Ojo: "Come!" and led him to a bed.
	With his hands the boy felt of the bed and found it was big and
soft, with feather pillows and plenty of blankets.  So he took off his
shoes and hat and crept into the bed.  Then the cat led Scraps to another
bed and the Patchwork Girl was puzzled to know what to do with it.
	"Lie down and keep quiet," whispered the cat, warningly.
	"Can't I sing?" asked Scraps.
	"No."
	"Can't I whistle?" asked Scraps.
	"No."
	"Can't I dance till morning, if I want to?" asked Scraps.
	"You must keep quiet," said the cat, in a soft voice.
	"I don't want to," replied the Patchwork Girl, speaking as loudly
as usual.  "What right have you to order me around?  If I want to talk,
or yell, or whistle--"
	Before she could say anything more an unseen hand seized her
firmly and threw out of the door, which closed behind her with a sharp
slam. She found herself bumping and rolling in the road and when she got
up and tried to open the door of the house again she found it locked.
	"What has happened to Scraps?" asked Ojo.
	"Never mind.  Let's go to sleep, or something will happen to us,"
answered the Glass Cat.
	So Ojo snuggled down in his bed and fell asleep, and he was so
tired that he never wakened until broad daylight.


7. The Troublesome Phonograph

	

	When the boy opened his eyes the next morning he looked carefully
around the room.  These small Munchkin houses seldom had more than one
room in them.  That in which Ojo now found himself had three beds, set
all in a row on one side of it.  The Glass Cat lay asleep on one bed, Ojo
was in the second, and the third was neatly made up and smoothed for the
day.  On the other side of the room was a round table on which breakfast
was already placed, smoking hot.  Only one chair was drawn up to the
table, where  a place was set for one person.  No one seemed to be in the
room except the boy and Bungle.
	Ojo got up and put on his shoes.  Finding a toilet stand at the
head of his bed he washed his face and hands and brushed his hair.  Then
he went to the table and said:
	"I wonder if this is my breakfast."
	"Eat it!" commanded a Voice at his side, so near that Ojo jumped.
But no person could he see.
	He was hungry, and the breakfast looked good; so he sat down and
ate all he wanted.  Then, rising, he took his hat and wakened the Glass Cat.
	"Come on, Bungle," said he; "we must go."
	He cast another glance about the room and, speaking to the air,
he said: "Whoever lives here has been kind to me, and I'm much obliged."
	There was no answer, so he took his basket and went out the door,
the cat following him.  In the middle of the path sat the Patchwork Girl,
playing with pebbles she had picked up.
	"Oh, there you are!" she exclaimed cheerfully.  "I thought you
were never coming out.  It has been daylight a long time."
	"What did you do all night?" asked the boy.
	"Sat here and watched the stars and the moon," she replied.
"They're interesting.  I never saw them before, you know."
	"Of course not," said Ojo.
	"You were crazy to act so badly and get thrown outdoors,"
remarked Bungle, as they renewed their journey.
	"That's all right," said Scraps.  "If I hadn't been thrown out I
wouldn't have seen the stars, or the big gray wolf."
	"What wolf?" inquired Ojo.
	"The one that came to the door of the house three times during
the night."
	"I don't see why that should be," said the boy, thoughtfully;
"there was plenty to eat in that house, for I had a fine breakfast, and I
slept in a nice bed."
	"Don't you feel tired?" asked the Patchwork Girl, noticing that
the boy yawned.
	"Why, yes; I'm as tired as I was last night; and yet I slept very
well."
	"And aren't you hungry?"
	"It's strange," replied Ojo.  "I had a good breakfast, and yet I
think I'll now eat some of my crackers and cheese."
	Scraps danced up and down the path.  Then she sang:

	"Kizzle-kazzle-kore;
	 The wolf is at the door,
	 There's nothing to eat but a bone without meat,
	 And a bill from the grocery store."

	"What does that mean?" asked Ojo.
	"Don't ask me," replied Scraps.  "I say what comes into my head,
but of course I know nothing of a grocery store or bones without meat
or--very much else."
	"No," said the cat; "she's stark, staring, raving crazy, and her
brains can't be pink, for they don't work properly."
	"Bother the brains!" cried Scraps.  "Who cares for 'em, anyhow?
Have you noticed how beautiful my patches are in this sunlight?"
	Just then they heard a sound as of footsteps pattering along the
path behind them and all three turned to see what was coming.  To their
astonishment they beheld a small round table running as fast as its four
spindle legs could carry it, and to the top was screwed fast a phonograph
with a big gold horn.
	"Hold on!" shouted the phonograph.  "Wait for me!"
	"Goodness me; it's that music thing which the Crooked Magician
scattered the Powder of Life over," said Ojo.
	"So it is," returned Bungle, in a grumpy tone of voice; and then,
as the phonograph overtook them, the Glass Cat added sternly: "What are
you doing here, anyhow?"
	"I've run away," said the music thing.  "After you left, old Dr.
Pipt and I had a dreadful quarrel and he threatened to smash me to pieces
if I didn't keep quiet.  Of course I wouldn't do that, because a
talking-machine is supposed to talk and make a noise--and sometimes
music.  So I slipped out of the house while the Magician was stirring his
four kettles and I've been running after you all night.  Now that I've
found such pleasant company, I can talk and play tunes all I want to."
	Ojo was greatly annoyed by this unwelcome addition to their
party.  At first he did not know what to say to the newcomer, but a
little thought decided him not to make friends.
	"We are traveling on important business," he declared, "and
you'll excuse me if I say we can't be bothered."
	"How very impolite!" exclaimed the phonograph.
	"I'm sorry, but it's true," said the boy.  "You'll have to go
somewhere else."
	"This is very unkind treatment, I must say," whined the
phonograph, in an injured tone.  "Everyone seems to hate me, and yet I
was intended to amuse people."
	"It isn't you we hate, especially," observed the Glass Cat; "it's
your dreadful music.  When I lived in the same room with you I was much
annoyed by your squeaky horn.  It growls and grumbles and clicks and
scratches so it spoils the music, and your machinery rumbles so that the
racket drowns every tune you attempt."
	"That isn't my fault; it's the fault of my records.  I must admit
that I haven't a clear record," answered the machine.
	"Just the same, you'll have to go away," said Ojo.
	"Wait a minute," cried Scraps.  "This music thing interests me.
I remember to have heard music when I first came to life, and I would
like to hear it again.  What is your name, my poor abused phonograph?"
	"Victor Columbia Edison," it answered.
	"Well, I shall call you 'Vic' for short," said the Patchwork
Girl. "Go ahead and play something."
	"It'll drive you crazy," warned the cat.
	"I'm crazy now, according to your statement.  Loosen up and reel
out the music, Vic."
	"The only record I have with me," explained the phonograph, "is
the one the Magician attached just before we had our quarrel.  It's a
highly classical composition."
	"A what?" inquired Scraps.
	"It is classical music, and considered the best and most puzzling
ever manufactured.  You're supposed to like it, whether you do or not,
and if you don't, the proper thing is to look as if you did.  Understand?"
	"Not in the least," said Scraps.
	"Then listen!"
	At once the machine began to play and in a few minutes Ojo put
his hands to his ears to shut out the sounds and the cat snarled and
Scraps began to laugh.
	"Cut it out, Vic," she said.  "That's enough."
	But the phonograph continued playing the dreary tune, so Ojo
seized the crank, jerked it free and threw it into the road.  However,
the moment the crank struck the ground it bounded back to the machine
again and began winding it up.  And still the music played.
	"Let's run!" cried Scraps, and they all started and ran down the
path as fast as they could go.  But the phonograph was right behind them
and could run and play at the same time.  It called out reproachfully:
	"What's the matter?  Don't you love classical music?"
	"No, Vic," said Scraps, halting.  "We will passical the classical
and preserve what joy we have left.  I haven't any nerves, thank
goodness, but your music makes my cotton shrink."
	"Then turn over my record.  There's a rag-time tune on the other
side," said the machine.
	"What's rag-time?"
	"The opposite of classical."
	"All right," said Scraps, and turned over the record.
	The phonograph now began to play a jerky jumble of sounds which
proved so bewildering that after a moment Scraps stuffed her patchwork
apron into the gold horn and cried: "Stop--stop!  That's the other
extreme. It's extremely bad!"
	Muffled as it was, the phonograph played on.
	"If you don't shut off that music I'll smash your record,"
threatened Ojo.
	The music stopped at that and the machine turned its horn from
one to another and said with great indignation: "What's the matter now?
Is it possible you can't appreciate rag-time?"
	"Scraps ought to, being rags herself," said the cat; "but I simply
can't stand it; it makes my whiskers curl."
	"It is, indeed, dreadful!" exclaimed Ojo, with a shudder.
	"It's enough to drive a crazy lady mad," murmured the Patchwork
Girl. "I'll tell you what, Vic," she added as she smoothed out her apron
and put it on again, "for some reason or other you've missed your guess.
You're not a concert; you're a nuisance."
	"Music hath charms to soothe the savage breast," asserted the
phonograph sadly.
	"Then we're not savages.  I advise you to go home and beg the
Magician's pardon."
	"Never!  He'd smash me."
	"That's what we shall do, if you stay here," Ojo declared.
	"Run along, Vic, and bother some one else," advised Scraps. "Find
some one who is real wicked, and stay with him till he repents. In that
way you can do some good in the world."
	The music thing turned silently away and trotted down a side
path, toward a distant Munchkin village.
	"Is that the way WE go?" asked Bungle anxiously.
	"No," said Ojo; "I think we shall keep straight ahead, for this
path is the widest and best.  When we come to some house we will inquire
the way to the Emerald City."


8. The Foolish Owl and the Wise Donkey


	On they went, and half an hour's steady walking brought them to a
house somewhat better than the two they had already passed.  It stood 
close to the roadside and over the door was a sign that read: "Miss
Foolish Owl and Mr. Wise Donkey: Public Advisers."
	When Ojo read this sign aloud Scraps said laughingly, "Well, here
is a place to get all the advice we want, maybe more than we need. Let's
go in."
	The boy knocked at the door.
	"Come in!" called a deep bass voice.
	So they opened the door and entered the house, where a little
light-brown donkey, dressed in a blue apron and a blue cap, was engaged
in dusting the furniture with a blue cloth.  On a shelf over the window
sat a great blue owl with a blue sunbonnet on her head, blinking her big,
round eyes at the visitors.
	"Good morning," said the donkey, in his deep voice, which seemed
bigger than he was.  "Did you come to us for advice?"
	"Why, we came, anyhow," replied Scraps, "and now we are here, we
may as well have some advice.  It's free, isn't it?"
	"Certainly," said the donkey.  "Advice doesn't cost
anything--unless you follow it.  Permit me to say, by the way, that you
are the queerest lot of travelers that ever came to my shop.  Judging you
merely by appearances, I think you'd better talk to the Foolish Owl yonder."
	They turned to look at the bird, which fluttered its wings and
stared back at them with its big eyes.
	"Hoot-ti-toot-ti-toot!" cried the owl.

	"Fiddle-cum-foo,
	 Howdy-do?
	 Riddle-cum, tiddle-cum,
	 Too-ra-la-loo!"

	"That beats your poetry, Scraps," said Ojo.
	"It's just nonsense!" declared the Glass Cat.
	"But it's good advice for the foolish," said the donkey,
admiringly. "Listen to my partner, and you can't go wrong."
	Said the owl in a grumbling voice:

	"Patchwork Girl has come to life;
	 No one's sweetheart, no one's wife;
	 Lacking sense and loving fun,
	 She'll be snubbed by everyone."

	"Quite a compliment!  Quite a compliment, I declare," exclaimed
the donkey, turning to look at Scraps.  "You are certainly a wonder, my
dear, and I fancy you'd make a splendid pincushion.  If you belonged to
me, I'd wear smoked glasses when I looked at you."
	"Why?" asked the Patchwork Girl.
	"Because you are so gay and gaudy."
	"It is my beauty that dazzles you," she asserted.  "You Munchkin
people all strut around in your stupid blue color, while I--"
	"You are wrong in calling me a Munchkin," interrupted the donkey,
"for I was born in the Land of Mo and came to visit the Land of Oz on the
day it was shut off from all the rest of the world.  So here I am obliged
to stay, and I confess it is a very pleasant country to live in."
	"Hoot-ti-toot!" cried the owl:

	"Ojo's searching for a charm,
	'Cause Unc Nunkie's come to harm.
	 Charms are scarce; they're hard to get;
	 Ojo's got a job, you bet!"

	"Is the owl so very foolish?" asked the boy.
	"Extremely so," replied the donkey.  "Notice what vulgar
expressions she uses.  But I admire the owl for the reason that she IS
positively foolish.  Owls are supposed to be so very wise, generally,
that a foolish one is unusual, and you perhaps know that anything or
anyone unusual is sure to be interesting to the wise."
	The owl flapped its wings again, muttering these words:

	"It's hard to be a glassy cat--
	 No cat can be more hard than that;
	 She's so transparent, every act
	Is clear to us, and that's a fact."

	"Have you noticed my pink brains?" inquired Bungle, proudly. "You
can see 'em work."
	"Not in the daytime," said the donkey.  "She can't see very well
by day, poor thing.  But her advice is excellent.  I advise you all to
follow it."
	"The owl hasn't given us any advice, as yet," the boy declared.
	"No?  Then what do you call all those sweet poems?"
	"Just foolishness," replied Ojo.  "Scraps does the same thing."
	"Foolishness!  Of course!  To be sure!  The Foolish Owl must be
foolish or she wouldn't be the Foolish Owl.  You are very complimentary
to my partner, indeed," asserted the donkey, rubbing his front hoofs
together as if highly pleased.
	"The sign says that YOU are wise," remarked Scraps to the donkey.
"I wish you would prove it."
	"With great pleasure," returned the beast.  "Put me to the test,
my dear Patches, and I'll prove my wisdom in the wink of an eye."
	"What is the best way to get to the Emerald City?" asked Ojo.
	"Walk," said the donkey.
	"I know; but what road shall I take?" was the boy's next question.
	"The road of yellow bricks, of course.  It leads directly to the
Emerald City."
	"And how shall we find the road of yellow bricks?"
	"By keeping along the path you have been following.  You'll come
to the yellow bricks pretty soon, and you'll know them when you see them
because they're the only yellow things in the blue country."
	"Thank you," said the boy.  "At last you have told me something."
	"Is that the extent of your wisdom?" asked Scraps.
	"No," replied the donkey; "I know many other things, but they
wouldn't interest you.  So I'll give you a last word of advice: move on,
for the sooner you do that the sooner you'll get to the Emerald City of Oz."
	"Hoot-ti-toot-ti-toot-ti-too!" screeched the owl;

	"Off you go! fast or slow
	 Where you're going you don't know.
	 Patches, Bungle, Munchkin lad,
	 Facing fortunes good and bad,
	 Meeting dangers grave and sad,
	 Sometimes worried, sometimes glad--
	 Where you're going you don't know,
	 Nor do I, but off you go!"

	"Sounds like a hint, to me," said the Patchwork Girl.
	"Then let's take it and go," replied Ojo.
	They said good-bye to the Wise Donkey and the Foolish Owl and at
once resumed their journey.

9. They Meet the Woozy

	

	"There seem to be very few houses around here, after all,"
remarked Ojo, after they had walked for a time in silence.
	"Never mind," said Scraps; "we are not looking for houses, but
rather the road of yellow bricks.  Won't it be funny to run across
something yellow in this dismal blue country?"
	"There are worse colors than yellow in this country," asserted the
Glass Cat, in a spiteful tone.
	"Oh; do you mean the pink pebbles you call your brains, and your
red heart and green eyes?" asked the Patchwork Girl.
	"No; I mean you, if you must know it," growled the cat.
	"You're jealous!" laughed Scraps.  "You'd give your whiskers for a
lovely variegated complexion like mine."
	"I wouldn't!" retorted the cat.  "I've the clearest complexion in
the world, and I don't employ a beauty-doctor, either."
	"I see you don't," said Scraps.
	"Please don't quarrel," begged Ojo.  "This is an important
journey, and quarreling makes me discouraged.  To be brave, one must be
cheerful, so I hope you will be as good-tempered as possible."
	They had traveled some distance when suddenly they faced a high
fence which barred any further progress straight ahead.  It ran directly
across the road and enclosed a small forest of tall trees, set close
together.  When the group of adventurers peered through the bars of the
fence, they thought this forest looked more gloomy and forbidding than
any they had ever seen before.
	They soon discovered that the path they had been following now
made a bend and passed around the enclosure, but what made Ojo stop and
look thoughtful was a sign painted on the fence which read:
	
"BEWARE OF THE WOOZY!"
	

	"That means," he said, "that there's a Woozy inside that fence,
and the Woozy must be a dangerous animal or they wouldn't tell people to
beware of it."
	"Let's keep out, then," replied Scraps.  "That path is outside the
fence, and Mr. Woozy may have all his little forest to himself, for all
we care."
	"But one of our errands is to find a Woozy," Ojo explained.  "The
Magician wants me to get three hairs from the end of a Woozy's tail."
	"Let's go on and find some other Woozy," suggested the cat.  "This
one is ugly and dangerous, or they wouldn't cage him up.  Maybe we shall
find another that is tame and gentle."
	"Perhaps there isn't any other, at all," answered Ojo.  "The sign
doesn't say: 'Beware A Woozy', it says: 'Beware THE Woozy,' which may
mean there's only one in all the Land of Oz."
	"Then," said Scraps, "suppose we go in and find him?  Very likely
if we ask him politely to let us pull three hairs out of the tip of his
tail he won't hurt us."
	"It would hurt HIM, I'm sure, and that would make him cross," said
the cat.
	"You needn't worry, Bungle," remarked the Patchwork Girl; "for if
there is danger you can climb a tree.  Ojo and I are not afraid; are we,
Ojo?"
	"I am, a little," the boy admitted; "but this danger must be
faced, if we intend to save poor Unc Nunkie.  How shall we get over the
fence?"
	"Climb," answered Scraps, and at once she began climbing up the
rows of bars.  Ojo followed and found it more easy than he had expected.
When they got to the top of the fence they began to get down on the other
side and soon were in the forest.  The Glass Cat, being small, crept
between the lower bars and joined them.
	Here there was no path of any sort, so they entered the woods,
the boy leading the way, and wandered through the trees until they were
nearly in the center of the forest.  They now came upon a clear space in
which stood a rocky cave.
	So far they had met no living creature, but when Ojo saw the cave
he knew it must be the den of the Woozy.
	It is hard to face any savage beast without a sinking of the
heart, but still more terrifying is it to face an unknown beast, which
you have never seen even a picture of.  So there is little wonder that
the pulses of the Munchkin boy beat fast as he and his companions stood
facing the cave.  The opening was perfectly square, and about big enough
to admit a goat.
	"I guess the Woozy is asleep," said Scraps.  "Shall I throw in a
stone, to waken him?"
	"No; please don't," answered Ojo, his voice trembling a little.
"I'm in no hurry."
	But he had not long to wait, for the Woozy heard the sound of
voices and came trotting out of his cave.  As this is the only Woozy that
has ever lived, either in the Land of Oz or out of it, I must describe it
to you.
	The creature was all squares and flat surfaces and edges.  Its
head was an exact square, like one of the building-blocks a child plays
with; therefore it had no ears, but heard sounds through two openings in
the upper corners.  Its nose, being in the center of a square surface,
was flat, while the mouth was formed by the opening of the lower edge of
the block.  The body of the Woozy was much larger than its head, but was
likewise block-shaped--being twice as long as it was wide and high.  The
tail was square and stubby and perfectly straight, and the four legs were
made in the same way, each being four-sided. The animal was covered with
a thick, smooth skin and had no hair at all except at the extreme end of
its tail, where there grew exactly three stiff, stubby hairs.  The beast
was dark blue in color and his face was not fierce or ferocious in
expression, but rather good-humored and droll.
	Seeing the strangers, the Woozy folded his hind legs as if they
had been hinged and sat down to look his visitors over.
	"Well, well," he exclaimed; "what a queer lot you are!  At first
I thought some of those miserable Munchkin farmers had come to annoy me,
but I am relieved to find you in their stead.  It is plain to me that you
are a remarkable group--as remarkable in your way as I am in mine--and so
you are welcome to my domain.  Nice place, isn't it?  But
lonesome--dreadfully lonesome."
	"Why did they shut you up in here?" asked Scraps, who was
regarding the queer, square creature with much curiosity.
	"Because I eat up all the honey-bees which the Munchkin farmers
who live around here keep to make them honey."
	"Are you fond of eating honey-bees?" inquired the boy.
	"Very.  They are really delicious.  But the farmers did not like
to lose their bees and so they tried to destroy me.  Of course they
couldn't do that."
	"Why not?"
	"My skin is so thick and tough that nothing can get through it to
hurt me.  So, finding they could not destroy me, they drove me into this
forest and built a fence around me.  Unkind, wasn't it?"
	"But what do you eat now?" asked Ojo.
	"Nothing at all.  I've tried the leaves from the trees and the
mosses and creeping vines, but they don't seem to suit my taste.  So,
there being no honey-bees here, I've eaten nothing for years."
	"You must be awfully hungry," said the boy.  "I've got some bread
and cheese in my basket.  Would you like that kind of food?"
	"Give me a nibble and I will try it; then I can tell you better
whether it is grateful to my appetite," returned the Woozy.
	So the boy opened his basket and broke a piece off the loaf of
bread. He tossed it toward the Woozy, who cleverly caught it in his mouth
and ate it in a twinkling.
	"That's rather good," declared the animal.  "Any more?"
	"Try some cheese," said Ojo, and threw down a piece.
	The Woozy ate that, too, and smacked its long, thin lips.
	"That's mighty good!" it exclaimed.  "Any more?"
	"Plenty," replied Ojo.  So he sat down on a stump and fed the
Woozy bread and cheese for a long time; for, no matter how much the boy
broke off, the loaf and the slice remained just as big.
	"That'll do," said the Woozy, at last; "I'm quite full.  I hope
the strange food won't give me indigestion."
	"I hope not," said Ojo.  "It's what I eat."
	"Well, I must say I'm much obliged, and I'm glad you came,"
announced the beast.  "Is there anything I can do in return for your
kindness?"
	"Yes," said Ojo earnestly, "you have it in your power to do me a
great favor, if you will."
	"What is it?" asked the Woozy.  "Name the favor and I will grant it."
	"I--I want three hairs from the tip of your tail," said Ojo, with
some hesitation.
	"Three hairs!  Why, that's all I have--on my tail or anywhere
else," exclaimed the beast.
	"I know; but I want them very much."
	"They are my sole ornaments, my prettiest feature," said the
Woozy, uneasily.  "If I give up those three hairs I--I'm just a blockhead."
	"Yet I must have them," insisted the boy, firmly, and he then
told the Woozy all about the accident to Unc Nunkie and Margolotte, and
how the three hairs were to be a part of the magic charm that would
restore them to life.  The beast listened with attention and when Ojo had
finished the recital it said, with a sigh:
	"I always keep my word, for I pride myself on being square.  So
you may have the three hairs, and welcome.  I think, under such
circumstances, it would be selfish in me to refuse you."
	"Thank you!  Thank you very much," cried the boy, joyfully.  "May
I pull out the hairs now?"
	"Any time you like," answered the Woozy.
	So Ojo went up to the queer creature and taking hold of one of
the hairs began to pull.  He pulled harder.  He pulled with all his
might; but the hair remained fast.
	"What's the trouble?" asked the Woozy, which Ojo had dragged here
and there all around the clearing in his endeavor to pull out the hair.
	"It won't come," said the boy, panting.
	"I was afraid of that," declared the beast.  "You'll have to pull
harder."
	"I'll help you," exclaimed Scraps, coming to the boy's side. "You
pull the hair, and I'll pull you, and together we ought to get it out easily."
	"Wait a jiffy," called the Woozy, and then it went to a tree and
hugged it with its front paws, so that its body couldn't be dragged
around by the pull.  "All ready now.  Go ahead!"
	Ojo grasped the hair with both hands and pulled with all his
strength, while Scraps seized the boy around his waist and added her
strength to his.  But the hair wouldn't budge.  Instead, it slipped out
of Ojo's hands and he and Scraps both rolled upon the ground in a heap and
never stopped until they bumped against the rocky cave.
	"Give it up," advised the Glass Cat, as the boy arose and
assisted the Patchwork Girl to her feet.  "A dozen strong men couldn't
pull out those hairs.  I believe they're clinched on the under side of
the Woozy's thick skin."
	"Then what shall I do?" asked the boy, despairingly.  "If on our
return I fail to take these three hairs to the Crooked Magician, the
other things I have come to seek will be of no use at all, and we cannot
restore Unc Nunkie and Margolotte to life."
	"They're goners, I guess," said the Patchwork Girl.
	"Never mind," added the cat.  "I can't see that old Unc and
Margolotte are worth all this trouble, anyhow."
	But Ojo did not feel that way.  He was so disheartened that he
sat down upon a stump and began to cry.
	The Woozy looked at the boy thoughtfully.
	"Why don't you take me with you?" asked the beast.  "Then, when
at last you get to the Magician's house, he can surely find some way to
pull out those three hairs."
	Ojo was overjoyed at this suggestion.
	"That's it!" he cried, wiping away the tears and springing to his
feet with a smile.  "If I take the three hairs to the Magician, it won't
matter if they are still in your body."
	"It can't matter in the least," agreed the Woozy.
	"Come on, then," said the boy, picking up his basket; "let us
start at once.  I have several other things to find, you know."
	But the Glass Cat gave a little laugh and inquired in her scornful way:
"How do you intend to get the beast out of this forest?"
	That puzzled them all for a time.
	"Let us go to the fence, and then we may find a way," suggested
Scraps.  So they walked through the forest to the fence, reaching it at a
point exactly opposite that where they had entered the enclosure.
	"How did you get in?" asked the Woozy.
	"We climbed over," answered Ojo.
	"I can't do that," said the beast.  "I'm a very swift runner, for
I can overtake a honey-bee as it flies; and I can jump very high, which
is the reason they made such a tall fence to keep me in.  But I can't
climb at all, and I'm too big to squeeze between the bars of the fence."
	Ojo tried to think what to do.
	"Can you dig?" he asked.
	"No," answered the Woozy, "for I have no claws.  My feet are
quite flat on the bottom of them.  Nor can I gnaw away the boards, as I
have no teeth."
	"You're not such a terrible creature, after all," remarked Scraps.
	"You haven't heard me growl, or you wouldn't say that," declared
the Woozy.  "When I growl, the sound echoes like thunder all through the
valleys and woodlands, and children tremble with fear, and women cover
their heads with their aprons, and big men run and hide.  I suppose there
is nothing in the world so terrible to listen to as the growl of a Woozy."
	"Please don't growl, then," begged Ojo, earnestly.
	"There is no danger of my growling, for I am not angry.  Only
when angry do I utter my fearful, ear-splitting, soul-shuddering growl.
Also, when I am angry, my eyes flash fire, whether I growl or not."
	"Real fire?" asked Ojo.
	"Of course, real fire.  Do you suppose they'd flash imitation
fire?" inquired the Woozy, in an injured tone.
	"In that case, I've solved the riddle," cried Scraps, dancing
with glee.  "Those fence boards are made of wood, and if the Woozy stands
close to the fence and lets his eyes flash fire, they might set fire to
the fence and burn it up.  Then he could walk away with us easily, being
free."
	"Ah, I have never thought of that plan, or I would have been free
long ago," said the Woozy.  "But I cannot flash fire from my eyes unless
I am very angry."
	"Can't you get angry 'bout something, please?" asked Ojo.
	"I'll try.  You just say 'Krizzle-Kroo' to me."
	"Will that make you angry?" inquired the boy.
	"Terribly angry."
	"What does it mean?" asked Scraps.
	"I don't know; that's what makes me so angry," replied the Woozy.
	He then stood close to the fence, with his head near one of the
boards, and Scraps called out "Krizzle-Kroo!"  Then Ojo said
"Krizzle-Kroo!" and the Glass Cat said "Krizzle-Kroo!"  The Woozy began
to tremble with anger and small sparks darted from his eyes.  Seeing
this, they all cried "Krizzle-Kroo!" together, and that made the beast's
eyes flash fire so fiercely that the fence-board caught the sparks and
began to smoke.  Then it burst into flame, and the Woozy stepped back and
said triumphantly:
	"Aha!  That did the business, all right.  It was a happy thought
for you to yell all together, for that made me as angry as I have ever
been. Fine sparks, weren't they?"
	"Reg'lar fireworks," replied Scraps admiringly.
	In a few moments the board had burned to a distance of several
feet, leaving an opening big enough for them all to pass through. Ojo
broke some branches from a tree and with them whipped the fire until it
was extinguished.
	"We don't want to burn the whole fence down," said he, "for the
flames would attract the attention of the Munchkin farmers, who would
then come and capture the Woozy again.  I guess they'll be rather
surprised when they find he's escaped."
	"So they will," declared the Woozy, chuckling gleefully.  "When
they find I'm gone the farmers will be badly scared, for they'll expect
me to eat up their honey-bees, as I did before."
	"That reminds me," said the boy, "that you must promise not to
eat honey-bees while you are in our company."
	"None at all?"
	"Not a bee.  You would get us all into trouble, and we can't
afford to have any more trouble than is necessary.  I'll feed you all the
bread and cheese you want, and that must satisfy you."
	"All right; I'll promise," said the Woozy, cheerfully.  "And when
I promise anything you can depend on it, 'cause I'm square."
	"I don't see what difference that makes," observed the Patchwork
Girl, as they found the path and continued their journey.  "The shape
doesn't make a thing honest, does it?"
	"Of course it does," returned the Woozy, very decidedly.  "No one
could trust that Crooked Magician, for instance, just because he IS
crooked; but a square Woozy couldn't do anything crooked if he wanted to."
	"I am neither square nor crooked," said Scraps, looking down at
her plump body.
	"No; you're round, so you're liable to do anything," asserted the
Woozy.  "Do not blame me, Miss Gorgeous, if I regard you with suspicion.
Many a satin ribbon has a cotton back."
	Scraps didn't understand this, but she had an uneasy misgiving
that she had a cotton back herself.  It would settle down, at times, and
make her squat and dumpy, and then she had to roll herself in the road
until her body stretched out again.

10. Shaggy Man to the Rescue


	They had not gone very far before Bungle, who had run on ahead,
came bounding back to say that the road of yellow bricks was just before
them.  At once they hurried forward to see what this famous road looked
like.
	It was a broad road, but not straight, for it wandered over hill
and dale and picked out the easiest places to go.  All its length and
breadth was paved with smooth bricks of a bright yellow color, so it was
smooth and level except in a few places where the bricks had crumbled or
been removed, leaving holes that might cause the unwary to stumble.
	"I wonder," said Ojo, looking up and down the road, "which way to
go."
	"Where are you bound for?" asked the Woozy.
	"The Emerald City," he replied.
	"Then go west," said the Woozy.  "I know this road pretty well,
for I've chased many a honey-bee over it."
	"Have you ever been to the Emerald City?" asked Scraps.
	"No.  I am very shy by nature, as you may have noticed, so I
haven't mingled much in society."
	"Are you afraid of men?" inquired the Patchwork Girl.
	"Me?  With my heart-rending growl--my horrible, shudderful growl?
I should say not.  I am not afraid of anything," declared the Woozy.
	"I wish I could say the same," sighed Ojo.  "I don't think we
need be afraid when we get to the Emerald City, for Unc Nunkie has told
me that Ozma, our girl Ruler, is very lovely and kind, and tries to help
everyone who is in trouble.  But they say there are many dangers lurking
on the road to the great Fairy City, and so we must be very careful."
	"I hope nothing will break me," said the Glass Cat, in a nervous
voice. "I'm a little brittle, you know, and can't stand many hard
knocks."
	"If anything should fade the colors of my lovely patches it would
break my heart," said the Patchwork Girl.
	"I'm not sure you have a heart," Ojo reminded her.
	"Then it would break my cotton," persisted Scraps.  "Do you think
they are all fast colors, Ojo?" she asked anxiously.
	"They seem fast enough when you run," he replied; and then,
looking ahead of them, he exclaimed: "Oh, what lovely trees!"
	They were certainly pretty to look upon, and the travelers
hurried forward to observe them more closely.
	"Why, they're not trees at all," said Scraps; "they are just
monstrous plants."
	That is what they really were: masses of great broad leaves which
rose from the ground far into the air, until they towered twice as high
as the top of the Patchwork Girl's head, who was a little taller than
Ojo.  The plants formed rows on both sides of the road and from each
plant rose a dozen or more of the big, broad leaves, which swayed
continually from side to side, although no wind was blowing.  But the
most curious thing about the swaying leaves was their color.  They seemed
to have a general groundwork of blue, but here and there other colors
glinted at times through the blue--gorgeous yellows, turning to pink,
purple, orange and scarlet, mingled with more sober browns and
grays--each appearing as a blotch or stripe anywhere on a leaf and then
disappearing, to be replaced by some other color of a different shape.
	The changeful coloring of the leaves was very beautiful, but it
was bewildering, as well, and the novelty of the scene drew our travelers
close to the line of plants, where they stood watching them with rapt
interest.
	Suddenly a leaf bent lower than usual and touched the Patchwork
Girl. Swiftly it enveloped her in its embrace, covering her completely in
its thick folds, and then it swayed back upon its stem.
	"Why, she's gone!" gasped Ojo, in amazement, and listening
carefully he thought he could hear the muffled screams of Scraps coming
from the center of the folded leaf.  But, before he could think what he
ought to do to save her, another leaf bent down and captured the Glass
Cat, rolling around the little creature until she was completely hidden,
and then straightening up again upon its stem.
	"Look out," cried the Woozy.  "Run!  Run fast, or you are lost."
	Ojo turned and saw the Woozy running swiftly up the road.  But
the last leaf of the row of plants seized the beast even as he ran and
instantly he disappeared from sight.
	The boy had no chance to escape.  Half a dozen of the great
leaves were bending toward him from different directions and as he stood
hesitating one of them clutched him in its embrace.  In a flash he was in
the dark.  Then he felt himself gently lifted until he was swaying in the
air, with the folds of the leaf hugging him on all sides.
	At first he struggled hard to escape, crying out in anger: "Let
me go! Let me go!"  But neither struggles nor protests had any effect
whatever.  The leaf held him firmly and he was a prisoner.
	Then Ojo quieted himself and tried to think.  Despair fell upon
him when he remembered that all his little party had been captured, even
as he was, and there was none to save them.
	"I might have expected it," he sobbed, miserably.  "I'm Ojo the
Unlucky, and something dreadful was sure to happen to me."
	He pushed against the leaf that held him and found it to be soft,
but thick and firm.  It was like a great bandage all around him and he
found it difficult to move his body or limbs in order to change their
position.
	The minutes passed and became hours.  Ojo wondered how long one
could live in such a condition and if the leaf would gradually sap his
strength and even his life, in order to feed itself.  The little Munchkin
boy had never heard of any person dying in the Land of Oz, but he knew
one could suffer a great deal of pain.  His greatest fear at this time
was that he would always remain imprisoned in the beautiful leaf and
never see the light of day again.
	No sound came to him through the leaf; all around was intense
silence. Ojo wondered if Scraps had stopped screaming, or if the folds of
the leaf prevented his hearing her.  By and by he thought he heard a
whistle, as of some one whistling a tune.  Yes; it really must be some
one whistling, he decided, for he could follow the strains of a pretty
Munchkin melody that Unc Nunkie used to sing to him.  The sounds were low
and sweet and, although they reached Ojo's ears very faintly, they were
clear and harmonious.
	Could the leaf whistle, Ojo wondered?  Nearer and nearer came the
sounds and then they seemed to be just the other side of the leaf that
was hugging him.
	Suddenly, the whole leaf toppled and fell, carrying the boy with
it, and while he sprawled at full length the folds slowly relaxed and set
him free.  He scrambled quickly to his feet and found that a strange man
was standing before him--a man so curious in appearance that the boy
stared with round eyes.
	He was a big man, with shaggy whiskers, shaggy eyebrows, shaggy
hair--but kindly blue eyes that were gentle as those of a cow.  On his
head was a green velvet hat with a jeweled band, which was all shaggy
around the brim.  Rich but shaggy laces were at his throat; a coat with
shaggy edges was decorated with diamond buttons; the velvet breeches had
jeweled buckles at the knees and shags all around the bottoms.  On his
breast hung a medallion bearing a picture of Princess Dorothy of Oz, and
in his hand, as he stood looking at Ojo, was a sharp knife shaped like a
dagger.
	"Oh!" exclaimed Ojo, greatly astonished at the sight of this
stranger; and then he added: "Who has saved me, sir?"
	"Can't you see?" replied the other, with a smile; "I'm the Shaggy
Man."
	"Yes; I can see that," said the boy, nodding.  "Was it you who
rescued me from the leaf?"
	"None other, you may be sure.  But take care, or I shall have to
rescue you again."
	Ojo gave a jump, for he saw several broad leaves leaning toward
him; but the Shaggy Man began to whistle again, and at the sound the
leaves all straightened up on their stems and kept still.
	The man now took Ojo's arm and led him up the road, past the last
of the great plants, and not till he was safely beyond their reach did he
cease his whistling.
	"You see, the music charms 'em," said he.  "Singing or
whistling--it doesn't matter which--makes 'em behave, and nothing else
will. I always whistle as I go by 'em and so they always let me alone.
To-day as I went by, whistling, I saw a leaf curled and knew there must
be something inside it.  I cut down the leaf with my knife and--out you
popped.  Lucky I passed by, wasn't it?"
	"You were very kind," said Ojo, "and I thank you.  Will you
please rescue my companions, also?"
	"What companions?" asked the Shaggy Man.
	"The leaves grabbed them all," said the boy.  "There's a
Patchwork Girl and--"
	"A what?"
	"A girl made of patchwork, you know.  She's alive and her name is
Scraps.  And there's a Glass Cat--"
	"Glass?" asked the Shaggy Man.
	"All glass."
	"And alive?"
	"Yes," said Ojo; "she has pink brains.  And there's a Woozy--"
	"What's a Woozy?" inquired the Shaggy Man.
	"Why, I--I--can't describe it," answered the boy, greatly
perplexed. "But it's a queer animal with three hairs on the tip of its
tail that won't come out and--"
	"What won't come out?" asked the Shaggy Man; "the tail?"
	"The hairs won't come out.  But you'll see the Woozy, if you'll
please rescue it, and then you'll know just what it is."
	"Of course," said the Shaggy Man, nodding his shaggy head.  And
then he walked back among the plants, still whistling, and found the
three leaves which were curled around Ojo's traveling companions.  The
first leaf he cut down released Scraps, and on seeing her the Shaggy Man
threw back his shaggy head, opened wide his mouth and laughed so shaggily
and yet so merrily that Scraps liked him at once.  Then he took off his
hat and made her a low bow, saying:
	"My dear, you're a wonder.  I must introduce you to my friend the
Scarecrow."
	When he cut down the second leaf he rescued the Glass Cat, and
Bungle was so frightened that she scampered away like a streak and soon
had joined Ojo, when she sat down beside him panting and trembling.  The
last plant of all the row had captured the Woozy, and a big bunch in the
center of the curled leaf showed plainly where he was.  With his sharp
knife the Shaggy Man sliced off the stem of the leaf and as it fell and
unfolded out trotted the Woozy and escaped beyond the reach of any more
of the dangerous plants.


11. A Good Friend


	Soon the entire party was gathered on the road of yellow bricks,
quite beyond the reach of the beautiful but treacherous plants.  The
Shaggy Man, staring first at one and then at the other, seemed greatly
pleased and interested.
	"I've seen queer things since I came to the Land of Oz," said he,
"but never anything queerer than this band of adventurers.  Let us sit
down a while, and have a talk and get acquainted."
	"Haven't you always lived in the Land of Oz?" asked the Munchkin
boy.
	"No; I used to live in the big, outside world.  But I came here
once with Dorothy, and Ozma let me stay."
	"How do you like Oz?" asked Scraps.  "Isn't the country and the
climate grand?"
	"It's the finest country in all the world, even if it is a
fairyland, and I'm happy every minute I live in it," said the Shaggy Man.
"But tell me something about yourselves."
	So Ojo related the story of his visit to the house of the Crooked
Magician, and how he met there the Glass Cat, and how the Patchwork Girl
was brought to life and of the terrible accident to Unc Nunkie and
Margolotte.  Then he told how he had set out to find the five different
things which the Magician needed to make a charm that would restore the
marble figures to life, one requirement being three hairs from a Woozy's
tail.
	"We found the Woozy," explained the boy, "and he agreed to give
us the three hairs; but we couldn't pull them out.  So we had to bring
the Woozy along with us."
	"I see," returned the Shaggy Man, who had listened with interest
to the story.  "But perhaps I, who am big and strong, can pull those
three hairs from the Woozy's tail."
	"Try it, if you like," said the Woozy.
	So the Shaggy Man tried it, but pull as hard as he could he
failed to get the hairs out of the Woozy's tail.  So he sat down again
and wiped his shaggy face with a shaggy silk handkerchief and said: "It
doesn't matter.  If you can keep the Woozy until you get the rest of the
things you need, you can take the beast and his three hairs to the
Crooked Magician and let him find a way to extract 'em.  What are the
other things you are to find?"
	"One," said Ojo, "is a six-leaved clover."
	"You ought to find that in the fields around the Emerald City,"
said the Shaggy Man.  "There is a Law against picking six-leaved clovers,
but I think I can get Ozma to let you have one."
	"Thank you," replied Ojo.  "The next thing is the left wing of a
yellow butterfly."
	"For that you must go to the Winkie Country," the Shaggy Man
declared. "I've never noticed any butterflies there, but that is the
yellow country of Oz and it's ruled by a good friend of mine, the Tin
Woodman."
	"Oh, I've heard of him!" exclaimed Ojo.  "He must be a wonderful man."
	"So he is, and his heart is wonderfully kind.  I'm sure the Tin
Woodman will do all in his power to help you to save your Unc Nunkie and
poor Margolotte."
	"The next thing I must find," said the Munchkin boy, "is a gill
of water from a dark well."
	"Indeed!  Well, that is more difficult," said the Shaggy Man,
scratching his left ear in a puzzled way.  "I've never heard of a dark
well; have you?"
	"No," said Ojo.
	"Do you know where one may be found?" inquired the Shaggy Man.
	"I can't imagine," said Ojo.
	"Then we must ask the Scarecrow."
	"The Scarecrow!  But surely, sir, a scarecrow can't know anything."
	"Most scarecrows don't, I admit," answered the Shaggy Man.  "But
this Scarecrow of whom I speak is very intelligent.  He claims to possess
the best brains in all Oz."
	"Better than mine?" asked Scraps.
	"Better than mine?" echoed the Glass Cat.  "Mine are pink, and
you can see 'em work."
	"Well, you can't see the Scarecrow's brains work, but they do a
lot of clever thinking," asserted the Shaggy Man.  "If anyone knows where
a dark well is, it's my friend the Scarecrow."
	"Where does he live?" inquired Ojo.
	"He has a splendid castle in the Winkie Country, near to the
palace of his friend the Tin Woodman, and he is often to be found in the
Emerald City, where he visits Dorothy at the royal palace."
	"Then we will ask him about the dark well," said Ojo.
	"But what else does this Crooked Magician want?" asked the Shaggy Man.
	"A drop of oil from a live man's body."
	"Oh; but there isn't such a thing."
	"That is what I thought," replied Ojo; "but the Crooked Magician
said it wouldn't be called for by the recipe if it couldn't be found, and
therefore I must search until I find it."
	"I wish you good luck," said the Shaggy Man, shaking his head
doubtfully; "but I imagine you'll have a hard job getting a drop of oil
from a live man's body.  There's blood in a body, but no oil."
	"There's cotton in mine," said Scraps, dancing a little jig.
	"I don't doubt it," returned the Shaggy Man admiringly.  "You're
a regular comforter and as sweet as patchwork can be.  All you lack is
dignity."
	"I hate dignity," cried Scraps, kicking a pebble high in the air
and then trying to catch it as it fell.  "Half the fools and all the wise
folks are dignified, and I'm neither the one nor the other."
	"She's just crazy," explained the Glass Cat.
	The Shaggy Man laughed.
	"She's delightful, in her way," he said.  "I'm sure Dorothy will
be pleased with her, and the Scarecrow will dote on her.  Did you say you
were traveling toward the Emerald City?"
	"Yes," replied Ojo.  "I thought that the best place to go, at
first, because the six-leaved clover may be found there."
	"I'll go with you," said the Shaggy Man, "and show you the way."
	"Thank you," eclaimed Ojo.  "I hope it won't put you out any."
	"No," said the other, "I wasn't going anywhere in particular.
I've been a rover all my life, and although Ozma has given me a suite of
beautiful rooms in her palace I still get the wandering fever once in a
while and start out to roam the country over.  I've been away from the
Emerald City several weeks, this time, and now that I've met you and your
friends I'm sure it will interest me to accompany you to the great city
of Oz and introduce you to my friends."
	"That will be very nice," said the boy, gratefully.
	"I hope your friends are not dignified," observed Scraps.
	"Some are, and some are not," he answered; "but I never criticize
my friends.  If they are really true friends, they may be anything they
like, for all of me."
	"There's some sense in that," said Scraps, nodding her queer head
in approval.  "Come on, and let's get to the Emerald City as soon as
possible."  With this she ran up the path, skipping and dancing, and then
turned to await them.
	"It is quite a distance from here to the Emerald City," remarked
the Shaggy Man, "so we shall not get there to-day, nor to-morrow.
Therefore let us take the jaunt in an easy manner.  I'm an old traveler
and have found that I never gain anything by being in a hurry. 'Take it
easy' is my motto.  If you can't take it easy, take it as easy as you can."
	After walking some distance over the road of yellow bricks Ojo
said he was hungry and would stop to eat some bread and cheese.  He
offered a portion of the food to the Shaggy Man, who thanked him but
refused it.
	"When I start out on my travels," said he, "I carry along enough
square meals to last me several weeks.  Think I'll indulge in one now, as
long as we're stopping anyway."
	Saying this, he took a bottle from his pocket and shook from it a
tablet about the size of one of Ojo's finger-nails.
	"That," announced the Shaggy Man, "is a square meal, in condensed
form.  Invention of the great Professor Woggle-Bug, of the Royal College
of Athletics.  It contains soup, fish, roast meat, salad,
apple-dumplings, ice cream and chocolate-drops, all boiled down to this
small size, so it can be conveniently carried and swallowed when you are
hungry and need a square meal."
	"I'm square," said the Woozy.  "Give me one, please."
	So the Shaggy Man gave the Woozy a tablet from his bottle and the
beast ate it in a twinkling.
	"You have now had a six course dinner," declared the Shaggy Man.
	"Pshaw!" said the Woozy, ungratefully.  "I want to taste
something. There's no fun in that sort of eating."
	"One should only eat to sustain life," replied the Shaggy Man,
"and that tablet is equal to a peck of other food."
	"I don't care for it.  I want something I can chew and taste,"
grumbled the Woozy.
	"You are quite wrong, my poor beast," said the Shaggy Man in a
tone of pity.  "Think how tired your jaws would get chewing a square meal
like this, if it were not condensed to the size of a small tablet--which
you can swallow in a jiffy."
	"Chewing isn't tiresome; it's fun," maintained the Woozy. "I
always chew the honey-bees when I catch them.  Give me some bread and
cheese, Ojo."
	"No, no!  You've already eaten a big dinner!" protested the
Shaggy Man.
	"May be," answered the Woozy; "but I guess I'll fool myself by
munching some bread and cheese.  I may not be hungry, having eaten all
those things you gave me, but I consider this eating business a matter of
taste, and I like to realize what's going into me."
	Ojo gave the beast what he wanted, but the Shaggy Man shook his
shaggy head reproachfully and said there was no animal so obstinate or
hard to convince as a Woozy.
	At this moment a patter of footsteps was heard, and looking up
they saw the live phonograph standing before them.  It seemed to have
passed through many adventures since Ojo and his comrades last saw the
machine, for the varnish of its wooden case was all marred and dented and
scratched in a way that gave it an aged and disreputable appearance.
	"Dear me!" exclaimed Ojo, staring hard.  "What has happened to you?"
	"Nothing much," replied the phonograph in a sad and depressed
voice. "I've had enough things thrown at me, since I left you, to stock a
department store and furnish half a dozen bargain-counters."
	"Are you so broken up that you can't play?" asked Scraps.
	"No, I still am able to grind out delicious music.  Just now I've
a record on tap that is really superb," said the phonograph, growing more
cheerful.
	"That is too bad," remarked Ojo.  "We've no objection to you as a
machine, you know; but as a music-maker we hate you."
	"Then why was I ever invented?" demanded the machine, in a tone
of indignant protest.
	They looked at one another inquiringly, but no one could answer
such a puzzling question.  Finally, the Shaggy Man said:
	"I'd like to hear the phonograph play."
	Ojo sighed.  "We've been very happy since we met you, sir," he said.
	"I know.  But a little misery, at times, makes one appreciate
happiness more.  Tell me, Phony, what is this record like, which you say
you have on tap?"
	"It's a popular song, sir.  In all civilized lands the common
people have gone wild over it."
	"Makes civilized folks wild folks, eh?  Then it's dangerous."
	"Wild with joy, I mean," explained the phonograph.  "Listen.
This song will prove a rare treat to you, I know.  It made the author
rich--for an author.  It is called 'My Lulu.'"
	Then the phonograph began to play.  A strain of odd, jerky sounds
was followed by these words, sung by a man through his nose with great
vigor of expression:

	"Ah wants mah Lulu, mah coal-black Lulu;
	 Ah wants mah loo-loo, loo-loo, loo-loo, Lu!
	 Ah loves mah Lulu, mah coal-black Lulu,
	 There ain't nobody else loves loo-loo, Lu!"

	"Here--shut that off!" cried the Shaggy Man, springing to his
feet. "What do you mean by such impertinence?"
	"It's the latest popular song," declared the phonograph, speaking
in a sulky tone of voice.
	"A popular song?"
	"Yes.  One that the feeble-minded can remember the words of and
those ignorant of music can whistle or sing.  That makes a popular song
popular, and the time is coming when it will take the place of all other
songs."
	"That time won't come to us, just yet," said the Shaggy Man,
sternly; "I'm something of a singer myself, and I don't intend to be
throttled by any Lulus like your coal-black one.  I shall take you all
apart, Mr. Phony, and scatter your pieces far and wide over the country,
as a matter of kindness to the people you might meet if allowed to run
around loose.  Having performed this painful duty I shall--"
	But before he could say more the phonograph turned and dashed up
the road as fast as its four table-legs could carry it, and soon it had
entirely disappeared from their view.
	The Shaggy Man sat down again and seemed well pleased.  "Some one
else will save me the trouble of scattering that phonograph," said he;
"for it is not possible that such a music-maker can last long in the Land
of Oz.  When you are rested, friends, let us go on our way."
	During the afternoon the travelers found themselves in a lonely
and uninhabited part of the country.  Even the fields were no longer
cultivated and the country began to resemble a wilderness.  The road of
yellow bricks seemed to have been neglected and became uneven and more
difficult to walk upon.  Scrubby underbrush grew on either side of the
way, while huge rocks were scattered around in abundance.
	But this did not deter Ojo and his friends from trudging on, and
they beguiled the journey with jokes and cheerful conversation.  Toward
evening they reached a crystal spring which gushed from a tall rock by
the roadside and near this spring stood a deserted cabin.  Said the
Shaggy Man, halting here:
	"We may as well pass the night here, where there is shelter for
our heads and good water to drink.  Road beyond here is pretty hard;
worst we shall have to travel; so let's wait until morning before we
tackle it."
	They agreed to this and Ojo found some brushwood in the cabin and
made a fire on the hearth.  The fire delighted Scraps, who danced before
it until Ojo warned her she might set fire to herself and burn up.  After
that the Patchwork Girl kept at a respectful distance from the darting
flames, but the Woozy lay down before the fire like a big dog and seemed
to enjoy its warmth.
	For supper the Shaggy Man ate one of his tablets, but Ojo stuck
to his bread and cheese as the most satisfying food.  He also gave a
portion to the Woozy.
	When darkness came on and they sat in a circle on the cabin
floor, facing the firelight--there being no furniture of any sort in the
place--Ojo said to the Shaggy Man:
	"Won't you tell us a story?"
	"I'm not good at stories," was the reply; "but I sing like a bird."
	"Raven, or crow?" asked the Glass Cat.
	"Like a song bird.  I'll prove it.  I'll sing a song I composed
myself. Don't tell anyone I'm a poet; they might want me to write a book.
Don't tell 'em I can sing, or they'd want me to make records for that
awful phonograph.  Haven't time to be a public benefactor, so I'll just
sing you this little song for your own amusement."
	They were glad enough to be entertained, and listened with
interest while the Shaggy Man chanted the following verses to a tune that
was not unpleasant:

	"I'll sing a song of Ozland, where wondrous creatures dwell
	 And fruits and flowers and shady bowers abound in every dell,
	 Where magic is a science and where no one shows surprise
	 If some amazing thing takes place before his very eyes.

	 Our Ruler's a bewitching girl whom fairies love to please;
	 She's always kept her magic sceptre to enforce decrees
	 To make her people happy, for her heart is kind and true
	 And to aid the needy and distressed is what she longs to do.

	 And then there's Princess Dorothy, as sweet as any rose,
	 A lass from Kansas, where they don't grow fairies, I suppose;
	 And there's the brainy Scarecrow, with a body stuffed with straw,
	 Who utters words of wisdom rare that fill us all with awe.

	 I'll not forget Nick Chopper, the Woodman made of Tin,
	 Whose tender heart thinks killing time is quite a dreadful sin,
	 Nor old Professor Woggle-Bug, who's highly magnified
	 And looks so big to everyone that he is filled with pride.

	 Jack Pumpkinhead's a dear old chum who might be called a chump,
	 But won renown by riding round upon a magic Gump;
	 The Sawhorse is a splendid steed and though he's made of wood
	 He does as many thrilling stunts as any meat horse could.

	 And now I'll introduce a beast that ev'ryone adores--
	 The Cowardly Lion shakes with fear 'most ev'ry time he roars,
	 And yet he does the bravest things that any lion might,
	 Because he knows that cowardice is not considered right.

	 There's Tiktok--he's a clockwork man and quite a funny sight--
	 He talks and walks mechanically, when he's wound up tight;
	 And we've a Hungry Tiger who would babies love to eat
	 But never does because we feed him other kinds of meat.

	 It's hard to name all of the freaks this noble Land's acquired;
	 'Twould make my song so very long that you would soon be tired;
	 But give attention while I mention one wise Yellow Hen
	 And Nine fine Tiny Piglets living in a golden pen.

	 Just search the whole world over--sail the seas from coast to coast--
	 No other nation in creation queerer folk can boast;
	 And now our rare museum will include a Cat of Glass,
	 A Woozy, and--last but not least--a crazy Patchwork Lass."

	Ojo was so pleased with this song that he applauded the singer by
clapping his hands, and Scraps followed suit by clapping her padded
fingers together, although they made no noise.  The cat pounded on the
floor with her glass paws--gently, so as not to break them--and the
Woozy, which had been asleep, woke up to ask what the row was about.
	"I seldom sing in public, for fear they might want me to start an
opera company," remarked the Shaggy Man, who was pleased to know his
effort was appreciated.  "Voice, just now, is a little out of training;
rusty, perhaps."
	"Tell me," said the Patchwork Girl earnestly, "do all those queer
people you mention really live in the Land of Oz?"
	"Every one of 'em.  I even forgot one thing: Dorothy's Pink
Kitten."
	"For goodness sake!" exclaimed Bungle, sitting up and looking
interested.  "A Pink Kitten?  How absurd!  Is it glass?"
	"No; just ordinary kitten."
	"Then it can't amount to much.  I have pink brains, and you can
see 'em work."
	"Dorothy's kitten is all pink--brains and all--except blue eyes.
Name's Eureka.  Great favorite at the royal palace," said the Shaggy Man,
yawning.
	The Glass Cat seemed annoyed.
	"Do you think a pink kitten--common meat--is as pretty as I am?"
she asked.
	"Can't say.  Tastes differ, you know," replied the Shaggy Man,
yawning again.  "But here's a pointer that may be of service to you: make
friends with Eureka and you'll be solid at the palace."
	"I'm solid now; solid glass."
	"You don't understand," rejoined the Shaggy Man, sleepily.
"Anyhow, make friends with the Pink Kitten and you'll be all right.  If
the Pink Kitten despises you, look out for breakers."
	"Would anyone at the royal palace break a Glass Cat?"
	"Might.  You never can tell.  Advise you to purr soft and look
humble--if you can.  And now I'm going to