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diff --git a/24117.txt b/24117.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5a87404 --- /dev/null +++ b/24117.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1051 @@ +Project Gutenberg's A Apple Pie and Other Nursery Tales, by Unknown + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: A Apple Pie and Other Nursery Tales + +Author: Unknown + +Release Date: January 2, 2008 [EBook #24117] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A APPLE PIE *** + + + + +Produced by Jacqueline Jeremy, Janet Blenkinship and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net +(This file was produced from images generously made +available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + + + + =A= + + APPLE PIE + + AND + + OTHER NURSERY TALES. + + [Illustration: THE CATS' TEA PARTY.] + + + + + =A= + + APPLE PIE + + AND + + OTHER NURSERY TALES. + + + _FORTY-EIGHT PAGES OF ILLUSTRATIONS_ + + + PRINTED IN COLOURS BY + KRONHEIM & Co. + + + + LONDON AND NEW YORK: + GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS. + + + + + _CONTENTS._ + + + A APPLE PIE. + + THE CATS' TEA PARTY. + + THIS LITTLE PIG WENT TO MARKET. + + NURSERY RHYMES. II. + + THE THREE BEARS. + + LITTLE RED RIDING-HOOD. + + + + + THE HISTORY OF + + =A= + + APPLE PIE. + + + + A Apple Pie. + + B Bit it. + + C Cut it. + + [Illustration: THE HISTORY OF A APPLE PIE. + + A Apple Pie. B bit it. C cut it.] + + [Illustration: D dealt it. E eat it. F fought for it.] + + D Dealt it. + + E Eat it. + + F Fought for it. + + G Got it. + + H Hid it. + + J Joined it. + + [Illustration: G got it. H hid it. J joined it.] + + [Illustration: K kept it. L longed for it. M mourned for it.] + + K Kept it. + + L Longed for it. + + M Mourned for it. + + N Nodded at it. + + O Opened it. + + P Peeped at it. + + [Illustration: N nodded at it. O opened it. P peeped at it.] + + [Illustration: Q quartered it. R ran for it. S stole it.] + + Q Quartered it. + + R Ran for it. + + S Stole it. + + T Took it. + + V Viewed it. + + W Wanted it. + + [Illustration: T took it. V viewed it. W wanted it.] + + [Illustration: X Y Z & Amperse and All wished for a piece in hand.] + + X Y Z & + + Amperse and + + All wished for + + A piece in hand. + + + + +MISS PUSSYCAT'S TEA +PARTY. + + +[Illustration: THE CATS' TEA PARTY. Jacko the Monkey is sent with the +invitations.] + +[Illustration: Mr. Velvet-Purr and other visitors arrive at Miss +Tabitha's.] + +Miss Tabitha Pussycat was a quiet, sleek, old creature, and was so prim, +that her friends called her an old maid; and some of them even said that +she was an old cat, but they were the people who were not asked to her +nice tea parties. When she gave a tea party, she sent her page Jacko to +invite her friends. Jacko was a clever monkey, who had come from his +last place at the Zoological Gardens, where he had been used to see a +great deal of company. + +One day Miss Tabitha made up her mind to have a larger party than usual, +so she sent out for a dish of pink shrimps, a bag of muffins, a +tea-cake, a new French loaf, and a pound of fresh butter. Then she sent +Jacko out in his new coat to invite her friends. + +First, there was Mr. Velvet Purr, a quiet old bachelor, who sat nearly +all day in the sun on a garden seat watching the birds, but who was much +too well fed to catch mice. Miss Velveteen Purr, his sister, went with +him, she was a very pretty singer, wore a fur tippet, and drank a good +deal of milk to soften her voice. + +Sir Claude Scratch was a very different person. He was proud of his +high family, for his father was second cousin to Dick Whittington's Cat, +and had seen a great deal of the world. Sir Claude was very proud of his +whiskers, and before he went to the tea party, he called on Frizzle +Frog, the barber, to be shaved. While he sat there, with the towel under +his chin, who should look in, but his friend Captain Black, a very +fierce looking fellow, who had killed hundreds of rats, and was always +ready to fight. He was a great favourite of the ladies, and said he +would go to tea though he had not been invited. + +[Illustration: Sir Claude Scratch calls on Frizzle Frog the barber, and +while he is being shaved, Captain Black drops in.] + +The four Misses White were already on their way to Miss Pussycat's house +in their clean stockings, and the nice silky dresses that their mother +had given them. Old Mrs. White lived at the baker's round the corner, +and her daughters' names were Fluffy, Tibby, Titty, and Tip; all of them +famous for their beautiful skins and their bright eyes. You may be sure +that the four Masters Tortoise Shell were waiting for them, for they had +been ready all the afternoon, with their tail-coats on, for the purpose +of walking with these charming young ladies. They were very young +gentlemen, so that they were quite proud at being asked. + +It was a very grand tea table, and when all the party sat down it was +more than Jacko could do to wait upon them,--but the gentlemen handed +the tea to the ladies, and picked out the largest shrimps for the Misses +White, and nearly emptied the cream jug for Miss Velvet Purr, and helped +themselves to muffins, and were very merry indeed. + +Captain Black was so attentive that he would hand round the bread and +butter. He took the plate from under the very nose of Sir Claude +Scratch, which made that person so angry, that nothing but a smile from +Miss Tabitha would please him. + +[Illustration: Miss Velvet-Purr sings a song, which is much admired.] + +After tea Miss Purr was asked to sing, and when she had taken another +sip of milk she said she would give them an old song with variations. +It was called Moll Rowdy, and the accompaniment was by Spitz, and +everybody said that there never was anything more striking. Then Miss +Tabitha, who had a very fine ear, gave them a little French song which +had a chorus of Tant Mieux, and they all joined in, Captain Black and +Mr. Velvet Purr singing the bass. Then the Captain told a story of his +travels to the Isle of Dogs, and Sir Claude related an adventure at St. +Kitts, which set them all laughing. + +But the great fun of the evening was when the four Masters Tortoise +Shell, whose names were Bobstay, Rattle, Clipper, and Dick, came into +the room with great white collars and black faces, and began to sing +like the Ethiopian Serenaders. Bobstay played the Fiddle, Rattle the +Bones, Clipper the Banjo, and Dick the Tambourine, when they sang "Old +Dan Tucker," and "Kafoozlum." The four Misses White almost fell off +their seats with laughing, and Sir Claude was seen to put the tail of +his coat into his mouth; Captain Black didn't like it much, for he had a +dark complexion and thought they were laughing at him. + +[Illustration: But the great fun of the evening was when the four +Masters Tortoise Shell appeared as Ethiopian Serenaders.] + +At last it was time for them to be going, and Mr. Velvet Purr who was +very careful not to be out too late, brushed his coat in the hall, and +said good night. Captain Black smoothed his fur jacket; Sir Claude +Scratch stroked his whiskers, and the ladies began to arrange their +dress for walking. Then there was such a fuss as they all said +"Good-bye," that some of the neighbours looked out of window to see what +was the matter; especially as Captain Black and Sir Claude quarrelled +and fought in the street. At last, however, all the party got safely +home. + +[Illustration: Departure of the Guests. Captain Black and Sir Claude +Scratch quarrel in the street.] + + + + + THIS LITTLE PIG WENT TO + MARKET. + + + THIS + + LITTLE + + PIG + + [Illustration: THIS LITTLE PIG] + + [Illustration: WENT TO MARKET.] + + WENT + + TO + + MARKET, + + THIS + + LITTLE + + PIG + + STAYED + + AT + + HOME, + + [Illustration: THIS LITTLE PIG STAYED AT HOME.] + + [Illustration: THIS LITTLE PIG HAD ROAST BEEF.] + + THIS + + LITTLE + + PIG + + HAD + + ROAST + + BEEF, + + THIS + + LITTLE + + PIG + + HAD + + NONE. + + [Illustration: THIS LITTLE PIG HAD NONE.] + + [Illustration: THIS LITTLE PIG CRIED "WEE WEE!"] + + THIS + + LITTLE + + PIG + + CRIED + + WEE! + + WEE! + + ALL + + THE + + WAY + + [Illustration: ALL THE WAY] + + [Illustration: HOME.] + + HOME. + + + + + NURSERY RHYMES. + + II. + + + [Illustration: + + Ride a cockhorse, to Banbury Cross, + To see little Jenny upon a white horse.] + + Ride a cockhorse, to Banbury Cross, + To see little Jenny upon a white horse. + + [Illustration: + + There was an old woman and what do you think, + She lived upon nothing but victuals and drink. + Victuals and drink were the chief of her diet, + Yet the plaguey old woman could never be quiet.] + + There was an old woman, and what do you think, + She lived upon nothing but victuals and drink. + Victuals and drink were the chief of her diet, + Yet the plaguey old woman could never be quiet. + + A fox jumped up on a moonlight night, + The stars were shining and all things bright, + "Oh, ho!" said the fox, "it's a very fine night + For me to go through the town, heigho!" + + [Illustration: + + A fox jumped up on a moonlight night, + The stars were shining and all things bright. + "Oh, ho!" said the Fox, "it's a very fine night + For me to go through the town, heigho!"] + + [Illustration: + + Ding dong bell, Pussy's in the well. + Who put her in? Little Tommy Green. + Who got her out? Dog with long snout. + What a naughty boy was that, to try to drown poor Pussy-cat.] + + Ding dong bell, Pussy's in the well. + Who put her in? Little Tommy Green. + Who got her out? Dog with long snout. + What a naughty boy was that, to try to drown poor Pussy-cat. + + There was an old woman tossed up in a basket, + Ninety times as high as the moon; + And where she was going I couldn't but ask it, + For in her hand she carried a broom. + + [Illustration: + + There was an old woman tossed up in a basket, + Ninety times as high as the moon; + And where she was going I couldn't but ask it, + For in her hand she carried a broom.] + + [Illustration: + + Old Mother Hubbard she went to the cupboard, + To get her poor dog a bone. + When she came there the cupboard was bare, + And so the poor dog had none.] + + Old Mother Hubbard she went to the cupboard, + To get the poor dog a bone. + When she came there the cupboard was bare, + And so the poor dog had none. + + I had a little pony, + They called him Dapple Grey; + I lent him to a lady + To ride a mile away. + + [Illustration: + + I had a little pony, + They called him Dapple Grey; + I lent him to a lady + To ride a mile away.] + + [Illustration: + + Pussy sits beside the fire, how can she be fair? + In walks a little doggy, "Pussy are you there?"] + + Pussy sits beside the fire, how can she be fair? + In walks a little doggy, "Pussy, are you there?" + + + + +THE THREE BEARS. + + +[Illustration: The Three Bears take a walk.] + +[Illustration: Little Silverlocks enters the Bears' dwelling.] + +In a far-off country there was once a little girl, who was called +Silver-Locks, because her curly hair shone so very brightly. But she was +not so good as she was pretty, for she was a sad romp, and so restless +that she could not be kept quiet at home, and would often run out when +she was told not to do so. One day, she started off into a wood, to +gather wild flowers and to chase butterflies. She ran here, and ran +there, and went so far, at last, that she found herself in quite a +lonely place, and there she saw a snug little house, in which three +Bears lived; but they were not then at home. The door and the parlour +window being open, Silver-Locks peeped in, and soon found the place was +empty; so the saucy puss made up her mind to go in boldly, and look all +about the place, little thinking what sort of folks lived there. + +Now the three Bears had gone out to take a walk, a little while before +this. The biggest of them was the Papa Bear, who had a very rough coat, +and was named Mr. Bruin. The next Bear in size was his wife, called +Mammy Muff, from her smooth skin; and the smallest of the three was +their little darling, Tiny. Before going out, Mammy Muff put the nice +soup she had made for dinner on a great chest in the parlour to cool; as +they were very hungry, they meant to be back in a short time. + +When Silverlocks went into the house, she soon found by the smell that +something nice had been cooked. On going into the parlour, sure enough +she saw there three jars smoking away: the first, a very large one, for +Mr. Bruin; the next of middling size, for Mammy Muff; and the smallest +of all was Tiny's jar; and in each of them was a wooden spoon. The +little busy-body now went to work tasting the soup in each jar by +turns; but she found that in the smallest jar was the nicest to her +taste. + +[Illustration: Silverlocks finds three jars of soup set for the Bears' +dinner.] + +[Illustration: Silverlocks tastes the soup and chooses the jar set for +Tiny, the little Bear.] + +Silver-Locks was now in high glee, and thought to enjoy herself, hungry +as she was, by eating up all the soup in the little jar. But she was too +weary to be standing all the time, so she looked about for a seat. There +were three chairs in the parlour, a very large one for Mr. Bruin, +another of middling size for Mrs. B., and a nice little chair for Tiny. +The little girl tried them all in turn; she found that the smallest +suited her best, and down she sat, and began to eat her soup with great +relish. + +When Silver-Locks had nearly eaten up all poor Tiny's soup, she began +to rock herself to and fro in his little chair: she had often been +punished for this naughty trick, but without effect. While she was +indulging this silly whim, out came the rush-bottom of the chair, and +she and the soup jar rolled on the floor. But she did not mind this at +all, thinking it was fine fun. She now thought she would go up stairs, +and see all that was to be seen: and there we will leave her for the +present. + +[Illustration: Silverlocks seats herself in Tiny's little chair and eats +his soup.] + +[Illustration: Silverlocks goes upstairs to the Bears' bedroom.] + +When the three Bears came back, they found that some one had been there. +"Who has been to my soup?" roared out Mr. Bruin. "And who has been to my +soup?" said Mrs. B., with a low growl. Then poor Tiny cried, +"Somebody has been to my soup, and has eaten it all up!" Then said the +big Bear, fiercely, "Who has moved my chair about?" Mrs. B., too, said, +"Who has moved my chair about?" Then Tiny cried pitifully, "Somebody has +sat in my chair, and broken it in pieces!" + +In the room up stairs there were three beds: the largest was Mr. Bruin's +bed; the next was Mrs. B.'s; and the smallest of the three was Tiny's +bed. Silver-Locks tried them all, but she found the little one the most +comfortable; and as she was very sleepy, she crept into it, and fell +fast asleep. The three Bears, thinking that somebody was in the house, +came up stairs to look, and found their beds had been disturbed, and +they all, in angry voices, asked who had dared to do it. + +[Illustration: And lying down on Tiny's bed, falls asleep.] + +[Illustration: The Bears come home and find Silverlocks on the bed, but +she awakes in time and escapes through the window.] + +Silver-Locks did not hear the gruff voices of Mr. and Mrs. Bruin, but +the sharp squeak of Master Tiny's voice aroused her from her slumber. +"Somebody has disturbed my bed," cried he; and in a moment after he +added, "and here she is!" looking at the same time as fierce as a little +Bear who had lost his dinner could do. The little girl was now almost +frightened to death, especially when she saw at the other end of the +room two larger Bears, in a terrible rage. Luckily for her, there was an +open window close to Tiny's bed, and seeing this, she jumped out of +bed in a moment, and then took a spring, and escaped out of window, +falling on some soft grass below. The three Bears came to the open +window, and stared wildly at her, so she soon got up, and ran as fast as +she could, until she got safe home again. Here she was properly punished +for her wilful behaviour, besides the great fright she suffered from the +savage looks and angry growling of the THREE BEARS. + + + + +LITTLE RED RIDING-HOOD. + + +[Illustration: + +Little Red Riding-Hood sets out to visit her Grandmother.] + +[Illustration: Little Red Riding-Hood meets the Wolf.] + +Once upon a time a nice little girl lived in a country village, and she +was the sweetest creature that ever was seen; her mother loved her with +great fondness, and her grandmother doted on her still more. A pretty +red-coloured hood had been made for the little girl, which so much +became her, that every one called her Little Red Riding-Hood. One +day, her mother having made some cheesecakes, said to her: "Go, my +child, and see how your grandmother does, for I hear she is ill; carry +her some of these cakes, and a little pot of butter." + +Little Red Riding-Hood immediately set out, with a basket filled with +the cakes and the pot of butter, for her grandmother's house, which was +in a village a little distant from her mother's. + +As she was crossing a wood, which lay in her road, she met a Gaffer +Wolf, who had a great mind to eat her up, but dared not indulge his +wicked wish, because of some woodcutters who were at work near them in +the forest. He ventured, however, to ask her whither she was going. The +little girl, not knowing how dangerous it was to talk to a wolf, +replied: "I am going to see my grandmamma, and carry her these cakes and +a pot of butter." + +"Does she live far off?" said the Wolf. "Oh, yes," answered Little Red +Riding-Hood, "beyond the mill you see yonder, at the first house in the +village." + +[Illustration: Little Red Riding-Hood loiters by the way.] + +[Illustration: The Wolf arrives at the Grandmother's house before Little +Red Riding-Hood.] + +"Well," said the Wolf, "I will go and see her too; I will take this +way, and you take that, and let us see which will be there the sooner." +The Wolf set out, running as fast as he could, and taking the nearest +way; while the little girl took the longest, and amused herself as she +went along with gathering nuts, running after butterflies, and making +nosegays of such flowers as she found within her reach. The Wolf soon +arrived at the dwelling of the grandmother, and knocked at the door. +"Who is there?" said the old woman. "It is your grandchild, Little Red +Riding-Hood," replied the Wolf, in the voice of the little girl; "I +have brought you some cheesecakes, and a little pot of butter, that +mamma has sent you." + +The good old woman, who was ill in bed, then called out, "Pull the +bobbin, and the latch will go up." The Wolf pulled the bobbin, and the +door opened. He sprang upon the poor old grandmother, and ate her up in +a few minutes, for it was three days since he had tasted any food. + +[Illustration: The Wolf attacks the poor Grandmother.] + +The Wolf then shut the door, and laid himself down in the bed, and +waited for Little Red Riding-Hood, who very soon after reached the +door. Tap, tap! "Who is there?" She was at first a little frightened at +the hoarse voice of the Wolf, but believing that her grandmother had got +a cold she answered: "It is your grandchild, Little Red Riding-Hood. +Mamma has sent you some cheesecakes, and a little pot of butter." The +Wolf called out, softening his voice: "Pull the bobbin, and the latch +will go up." Little Red Riding-Hood pulled the bobbin, and the door +opened. + +[Illustration: The Wolf puts on the Grandmother's night-gown and cap,] + +When she came into the room, the Wolf, hiding himself under the +bed-clothes, said to her, trying all he could to speak in a feeble +voice, "Put the basket, my child, on the stool, take off your clothes, +and come into bed with me." + +[Illustration: And deceives Little Red Riding-Hood.] + +[Illustration: "Grandmamma! what great teeth you have!"] + +Little Red Riding-Hood accordingly undressed herself, and stepped into +bed; where, wondering to see how her grandmother looked in her +nightclothes, she said to her: "Grandmother, what great arms you have +got!" "The better to hug thee, my child." "Grandmother, what great ears +you have got!" "The better to hear thee, my child." "Grandmother, +what great eyes, you have got!" "The better to see thee, my child." +"Grandmother, what great teeth you have got!" "They are to eat thee up;" +and saying these words the wicked Wolf fell upon poor Little Red +Riding-Hood, and ate her up at a few mouthfuls. + + + * * * * * + + +_Also, uniform with this Volume_, + +THE ROBIN REDBREAST +PICTURE BOOK. + +With Forty-eight Pages of Illustrations, Printed +in Colours by Kronheim & Co. + + +_Contents._ + +ROBIN REDBREAST. + +THE FARM-YARD A B C. + +MY MOTHER. + +NURSERY RHYMES. + +THE DOGS' DINNER PARTY. + +JACK THE GIANT KILLER. + + * * * * * + +ROUTLEDGE + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's A Apple Pie and Other Nursery Tales, by Unknown + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A APPLE PIE *** + +***** This file should be named 24117.txt or 24117.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/1/1/24117/ + +Produced by Jacqueline Jeremy, Janet Blenkinship and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net +(This file was produced from images generously made +available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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