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diff --git a/26618.txt b/26618.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0de642b --- /dev/null +++ b/26618.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1794 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Minnie's Pet Monkey, by Madeline Leslie + +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: Minnie's Pet Monkey + +Author: Madeline Leslie + +Release Date: September 14, 2008 [EBook #26618] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MINNIE'S PET MONKEY *** + + + + +Produced by Julia Miller 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.) + + + + + +Transcriber's Note + +Obvious typographical errors have been corrected. A list of corrections +is found at the end of the text. Oe ligatures have been expanded. + + + + +[Illustration: MONKEY IN CHURCH. Page 88.] + + +[Illustration: MINNIE and her PETS. + BY MRS MADELINE LESLIE. + MINNIE'S PET MONKEY.] + + + + + MINNIE'S PET MONKEY. + + + BY + + MRS. MADELINE LESLIE, + AUTHOR OF "THE LESLIE STORIES," "TIM, THE SCISSORS-GRINDER," + ETC. + + + ILLUSTRATED. + + + BOSTON: + LEE AND SHEPARD, + SUCCESSORS TO PHILLIPS, SAMPSON & CO. + 1864. + + + + +Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1863, by + +A. R. BAKER, + +In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of +Massachusetts. + +ELECTROTYPED AT THE BOSTON STEREOTYPE FOUNDRY. + + + + + TO MY YOUNG FRIEND, + + HENRY FOWLE DURANT, JR. + + =These Little Volumes= + + ARE AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED + + BY THE AUTHOR, + + IN THE EARNEST HOPE THAT THEY MAY INCREASE IN HIM THAT + LOVE OF NATURE AND OF RURAL LIFE WHICH HAS EVER + EXERTED SO SALUTARY AN INFLUENCE IN THE + FORMATION OF THE CHARACTERS OF + THE WISE AND GOOD. + + + + +MINNIE AND HER PETS. + + Minnie's Pet Parrot. + Minnie's Pet Cat. + Minnie's Pet Dog. + Minnie's Pet Horse. + Minnie's Pet Lamb. + Minnie's Pet Monkey. + + + + +MINNIE'S PET MONKEY. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +JACKO AND HIS WOUNDED TAIL. + + +Did you ever see a monkey? If you have not, I suppose you will like to +hear a description of Jacko, Minnie's sixth pet. + +He was about eighteen inches high, with long arms, covered with short +hair, which he used as handily as a boy, flexible fingers, with flat +nails, and a long tail, covered with hair, which seemed to answer the +purpose of a third hand. + +Though monkeys are usually very ugly and unpleasant, from their +approaching so nearly to the human face, and still bearing so strongly +the marks of the mere brute, yet Jacko was a pretty little fellow. + +He had bright eyes, which sparkled like diamonds from beneath his +deep-set eyebrows. His teeth were of the most pearly whiteness, and he +made a constant display of them, grinning and chattering continually. +But I ought to tell you about his passage in uncle Frank's ship. + +On one of Captain Lee's voyages, he touched upon the coast of Africa, +where he saw the little fellow in a hen-coop, just about to be carried +on board a whaler. The gentleman had often thought he should like to +carry his favorite niece a little pet; but as she already had a parrot, +he did not know what she would wish. + +But when he listened to the chattering of the monkey, and heard the +sailor who owned him say what a funny little animal it was, he thought +he would buy it and take it home to her. + +On the voyage, Jacko met with a sad accident. The hen-coop in which he +was confined was too small to contain the whole of his tail, and he was +obliged, when he slept, to let the end of it hang out. This was a great +affliction to the poor animal, for he was very proud of his tail, which +was indeed quite an addition to his good looks. + +It so happened that there were two large cats on board ship; and one +night, as they were prowling about, they saw the tail hanging out while +Jacko was sound asleep; and before he had time to move, one of them +seized it and bit it off. + +The monkey was very indignant, and if he could have had a fair chance at +his enemies, would have soon punished them for their impudence. It was +really amusing to see him afterward. He would pull his bleeding tail in +through the bars of the hen-coop, and give it a malicious bite, as much +as to say,-- + +"I wish you were off. You are of no use to me now; and you look terribly +short." + +When they reached New York, at the end of their voyage, Captain Lee took +Jacko out of the hen-coop, and put him in a bag, which was carried into +the depot while he was purchasing his ticket. The monkey, who must needs +see every thing that was going on, suddenly poked his head out of the +bag, and gave a malicious grin at the ticket-master. + +The man was much frightened, but presently recovered himself, and +returned the insult by saying,-- + +"Sir, that's a dog! It's the rule that no dog can go in the cars without +being paid for." + +It was all in vain that the captain tried to convince him that Jacko +was not a dog, but a monkey. He even took him out of the bag; but in the +face of this evidence, the man would persist in saying,-- + +"He is a dog, and must have a ticket before he enters the cars." + +So a ticket was bought, and Jacko was allowed to proceed on his journey. + +The little fellow was as pleased as the captain when he arrived at the +end of his journey, and took possession of his pleasant quarters in the +shed adjoining Mr. Lee's fine house. He soon grew fond of his little +mistress, and played all manner of tricks, jumping up and down, swinging +with his tail, which had begun to heal, and chattering with all his +might in his efforts to please her. + +Mr. Lee, at the suggestion of his brother, the captain, had a nice +house or cage made for Minnie's new pet, into which he could be put if +he became troublesome, and where he always went to sleep. The rest of +the time he was allowed his liberty, as far as his chain would reach. + +Jacko came from a very warm climate, and therefore often suffered from +the cold in the northern latitude to which he had been brought. + +Mrs. Lee could not endure to see a monkey dressed like a man, as they +sometimes are in shows. She said they looked disgustingly; but she +consented that the little fellow should have a tight red jacket, and +some drawers, to keep him comfortable. Minnie, too, begged from her some +old pieces of carpeting, to make him a bed, when Jacko seemed greatly +delighted. He did not now, as before, often stand in the morning +shaking, and blue with the cold, but laughed, and chattered, and showed +his gratitude in every possible way. + +Not many months after Jacko came, and when he had become well acquainted +with all the family, Fidelle had a family of kittens, which she often +carried in her mouth back and forth through the shed. The very sight of +these little animals seemed to excite Jacko exceedingly. He would +spring the entire length of his chain, trying to reach them. + +One day, when the kittens had begun to run alone, and were getting to be +very playful, the cook heard a great noise in the shed, and Fidelle +crying with all her might. She ran to see what was the matter, and, to +her surprise, found Jacko sitting up in the cage, grinning with delight, +while he held one of the kittens in his arms, hugging it as if it had +been a baby. + +Cook knew the sight would please Minnie, and she ran to call her. But +the child sympathized too deeply in Fidelle's distress to enjoy it. She +tried to get the kitten away from Jacko, but he had no idea of giving it +up, until at last, when Mrs. Lee, who had come to the rescue, gave him a +piece of cake, of which he was very fond, he relaxed his hold, and she +instantly released the poor, frightened little animal. + +Fidelle took warning by this occurrence, and never ventured through the +shed again with her babies, though Jacko might seem to be sound asleep +in his cage. + +Jacko had been at Mr. Lee's more than a year before they knew him to +break his chain and run about by himself. The first visit he made was to +Leo, in the barn, and he liked it so well that, somehow or other, he +contrived to repeat the visit quite as often as it was agreeable to the +dog, who never could endure him. + +After this, he became very mischievous, so that every one of the +servants, though they often had a great laugh at his tricks, would have +been glad to have the little fellow carried back to his home in Africa. + +I don't think even Minnie loved her pet monkey as well as she did her +other pets. She could not take him in her arms as she did Fidelle and +Tiney, nor play with him as she did with Nannie and her lamb, and he +could not carry her on his back, as Star did. + +"Well," she said, one day, after discussing the merits of her animals +with her mamma, "Poll talks to me, and Jacko makes me laugh; but if I +should have to give up one of my pets, I had rather it would be the +monkey." + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +JACKO BLACKING THE TABLE. + + +One morning, cook went to her mistress with loud complaints of Jacko's +tricks. + +"What has he been doing now?" inquired the lady, with some anxiety. + +"All kinds of mischief, ma'am. If I didn't like you, and the master, and +Miss Minnie so well, I wouldn't be living in the same house with a +monkey, no ways." + +Here the woman, having relieved her mind, began to relate Jacko's new +offence, and soon was joining heartily in the laugh her story caused her +mistress. + +"Since the trickish fellow found the way to undo his chain, ma'am, he +watches every thing that is done in the kitchen. Yesterday I polished +the range, and the door to the oven. I suppose he saw me at work, and +thought it would be good fun; for when I was out of the kitchen hanging +some towels to dry on the line, in he walks to the closet where I keep +the blacking and brushes, and what should he do but black the table and +chairs? Such a sight, ma'am, as would make your eyes cry to see. It'll +take me half the forenoon to clean them." + +"I think you will have to take a little stick, Hepsy," said Mrs. Lee, +smiling, "and whip him when he does mischief." + +"Indeed, ma'am, and it's little strength I'd have left me to do the +cooking if I gave him half the whippings he deserves; besides, I'd be +sure to get the cratur's ill will; and they say that's unlucky for any +one." + +"What does she mean, mamma, by its being unlucky?" inquired Minnie, when +the cook had returned to her work in the kitchen. + +"I can't say, my dear. You know Hepsy has some strange ideas which she +brought with her from Ireland. It may be she has heard of the +superstitious reverence some nations have for the monkey." + +"O, mamma, will you please tell me about it?" + +"I have read that in many parts of India, monkeys are made objects of +worship; and splendid temples are dedicated to their honor. + +"At one time, when the Portuguese plundered the Island of Ceylon, they +found, in one of the temples dedicated to these animals, a small golden +casket containing the tooth of a monkey. This was held in such +estimation by the natives, that they offered nearly a million of dollars +to redeem it. But the viceroy, thinking it would be a salutary +punishment to them, ordered it to be burned. + +"Some years after, a Portuguese, having obtained a similar tooth, +pretended that he had recovered the old one, which so rejoiced the +priests that they purchased it from him for more than fifty thousand +dollars." + +Minnie laughed. "I should suppose," she said, "that if cook thinks so +much of monkeys, she would be pleased to live with them. Do you know +any more about monkeys, mamma?" + +"I confess, my dear, that monkeys have never been among my favorites. +There are a great many kinds, but all are mischievous, troublesome, and +thievish. The dispositions of some of them are extremely bad, while +others are so mild and tractable as to be readily tamed and taught a +great variety of tricks. They live together in large groups, leaping +with surprising agility from tree to tree. Travellers say it is very +amusing to listen to the chattering of these animals, which they compare +to the shouting of a grand cavalcade, all speaking together, and yet +seeming perfectly to understand one another. + +"In the countries of the Eastern Peninsula, where they abound, the +matrons are often observed, in the cool of the evening, sitting in a +circle round their little ones, which amuse themselves with their +various gambols. The merriment of the young, as they jump over each +other's heads, and wrestle in sport, is most ludicrously contrasted with +the gravity of their seniors, who are secretly delighted with the fun, +but far too dignified to let it appear. + +"But when any foolish little one behaves ill, the mamma will be seen to +jump into the throng, seize the juvenile by the tail, take it over her +knee, and give it a good whipping." + +"O, how very funny, mamma! I wonder whether Jacko was treated so. Will +you please tell me more? I do like to hear about monkeys." + +"If you will bring me that book from the library next the one about +cats, perhaps I can find some anecdotes to read to you." + +The little girl clapped her hands with delight, and running gayly to the +next room, soon returned with the book, when her mother read as +follows:-- + +"A family in England had a pet monkey. On one occasion, the footman +retired to his room to shave himself, without noticing that the animal +had followed him. The little fellow watched him closely during the +process, and noticed where the man put his razor and brush. + +"No sooner had the footman left the room, than the monkey slyly took the +razor, and, mounting on a chair opposite the small mirror, began to +scrape away at his throat, as he had seen the man do; but alas! not +understanding the nature of the instrument he was using, the poor +creature cut so deep a gash, that he bled profusely. He was found in +the situation described, with the razor still in his fingers, but +unfortunately was too far gone to be recovered, and soon died, leaving a +caution to his fellows against playing with edged tools." + +"I hope Jacko will never see any body shave," said Minnie, in a +faltering voice. + +"Here is a funny story, my dear, about a monkey in the West Indies. The +little fellow was kept tied to a stake in the open air, and was +frequently deprived of his food by the Johnny Crows. He tried to drive +them off, but without success, and at last made the following plan for +punishing the thieves. + +"Perceiving a flock of these birds coming toward him one day just after +his food had been brought, he lay down near his stake, and pretended to +be dead. For some time, he lay perfectly motionless, when the birds, +really deceived, approached by degrees, and got near enough to steal his +food, which he allowed them to do. This game he repeated several times, +till they became so bold as to come within reach of his claws, when he +suddenly sprang up and caught his victim in his firm grasp. Death was +not his plan of punishment. He wished to make a man of him, according +to the ancient definition, 'a biped without feathers,' and therefore, +plucking the crow neatly, he let him go to show himself to his +companions. This proved so effectual a punishment, that he was +afterwards left to eat his food in peace." + +"I don't see," said Minnie, thoughtfully, "how a monkey could ever think +of such a way." + +"It certainly does show a great deal of sagacity," responded the lady, +"and a great deal of cunning in carrying out his plan." + +"I hope there are ever so many anecdotes, mamma." + +Mrs. Lee turned over the leaves. "Yes, my dear," she said, cheerfully, +"there are quite a number; some of them seem to be very amusing, but I +have only time to read you one more to-day." + +"Dr. Guthrie gives an amusing account of a monkey named Jack. + +"Seeing his master and friends drinking whiskey with great apparent +relish, he took the opportunity, when he thought he was unseen, to empty +their half-filled glasses; and while they were roaring with laughter, he +began to hop, skip, and jump. Poor Jack was drunk. + +"The next day, his master wanted to repeat the experiment, but found +Jack had not recovered from the effects of his dissipation. He commanded +him to come to the table; but the poor fellow put his hand to his head, +and not all their endeavors could induce him to taste another drop all +his life. + +"Jack became a thorough teetotaller." + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +JACKO RUNNING AWAY. + + +Minnie had a cousin Frank, the son of Mr. Harry Lee. He was three years +older than Minnie, and was full of life and frolic. + +At one time he came to visit Minnie; and fine fun indeed they had with +the pets, the monkey being his especial favorite. + +Every day some new experiment was to be tried with Jacko, who, as Frank +declared, could be taught any thing that they wished. One time, he took +the little fellow by the chain for a walk, Minnie gayly running by his +side, and wondering what her cousin was going to do. + +On their way to the barn, they met Leo, who at once began to bark +furiously. + +"That will never do, my brave fellow," exclaimed the boy; "for we want +you to turn horse, and take Jacko to ride." + +"O, Frank! Leo will kill him. Don't do that!" urged Minnie, almost +crying. + +"But I mean to make them good friends," responded the lad. "Here, you +take hold of the chain, and I will coax the dog to be quiet while I put +Jacko on his back." + +This was not so easy as he had supposed; for no amount of coaxing or +flattery would induce Leo to be impressed into this service. He hated +the monkey, and was greatly disgusted at his appearance as he hopped, +first on Frank's shoulder, and then to the ground, his head sticking out +of his little red jacket, and his face wearing a malicious grin. + +Finding they could not succeed in this, they went into the stable to +visit Star, when, with a quick motion, Jacko twitched the chain from +Minnie's hand, and running up the rack above the manger, began to laugh +and chatter in great glee. + +His tail, which had now fully healed, was of great use to him on this +occasion, when, to Minnie's great surprise, he clung with it to the bar +of the rack, and began to swing himself about. + +[Illustration: JACKO RUNNING AWAY. Page 52.] + +"I heard of a monkey once," exclaimed Frank, laughing merrily, "who made +great use of his tail. If a nut or apple were thrown to him which fell +beyond his reach, he would run to the full length of his chain, turn his +back, then stretch out his tail, and draw toward him the coveted +delicacy." + +"Let's see whether Jacko would do so," shouted Minnie, greatly excited +with the project. + +"When we can catch him. But see how funny he looks. There he goes up the +hay mow, the chain dangling after him." + +"If we don't try to catch him, he'll come quicker," said Minnie, +gravely. + +"I know another story about a monkey--a real funny one," added the boy. +"I don't know what his name was; but he used to sleep in the barn with +the cattle and horses. I suppose monkeys are always cold here; at any +rate, this one was; and when he saw the hostler give the horse a nice +feed of hay, he said to himself, 'What a comfortable bed that would make +for me!' + +"When the man went away, he jumped into the hay and hid, and every time +the horse came near enough to eat, he sprang forward and bit her ears +with his sharp teeth. + +"Of course, as the poor horse couldn't get her food, she grew very thin, +and at last was so frightened that the hostler could scarcely get her +into the stall. Several times he had to whip her before she would enter +it, and then she stood as far back as possible, trembling like a leaf. + +"It was a long time before they found out what the matter was; and then +the monkey had to take a whipping, I guess." + +"If his mother had been there, she would have whipped him," said Minnie, +laughing. + +"What do you mean?" + +The little girl then repeated what her mother had told her of the +discipline among monkeys, at which he was greatly amused. + +All this time, they were standing at the bottom of the hay mow, and +supposed that Jacko was safe at the top; but the little fellow was more +cunning than they thought. He found the window open near the roof, where +hay was sometimes pitched in, and ran down into the yard as quick as +lightning. + +The first they knew of it was when John called out from the barnyard, +"Jacko, Jacko! Soh, Jacko! Be quiet, sir!" + +It was a wearisome chase they had for the next hour, and at the end they +could not catch the runaway; but at last, when they sat down calmly in +the house, he stole back to his cage, and lay there quiet as a lamb. + +Minnie's face was flushed with her unusual exercise, but in a few +minutes she grew very pale, until her mother became alarmed. After a few +drops of lavender, however, she said she felt better, and that if Frank +would tell her a story she should be quite well. + +"That I will," exclaimed the boy, eagerly. "I know a real funny one; +you like funny stories--don't you?" + +"Yes, when they're true," answered Minnie. + +"Well, this is really true. A man was hunting, and he happened to kill a +monkey that had a little baby on her back. The little one clung so close +to her dead mother, that they could scarcely get it away. When they +reached the gentleman's house, the poor creature began to cry at +finding itself alone. All at once it ran across the room to a block, +where a wig belonging to the hunter's father was placed, and thinking +that was its mother, was so comforted that it lay down and went to +sleep. + +"They fed it with goat's milk, and it grew quite contented, for three +weeks clinging to the wig with great affection. + +"The gentleman had a large and valuable collection of insects, which +were dried upon pins, and placed in a room appropriated to such +purposes. + +"One day, when the monkey had become so familiar as to be a favorite +with all in the family, he found his way to this apartment, and made a +hearty breakfast on the insects. + +"The owner, entering when the meal was almost concluded, was greatly +enraged, and was about to chastise the animal, who had so quickly +destroyed the work of years, when he saw that the act had brought its +own punishment. In eating the insects, the animal had swallowed the +pins, which very soon caused him such agony that he died." + +"I don't call the last part funny at all," said Minnie, gravely. + +"But wasn't it queer for it to think the wig was its mother?" asked the +boy, with a merry laugh. "I don't think it could have had much sense to +do that." + +"But it was only a baby monkey then, Harry." + +"How did it happen," inquired Mrs. Lee, "that Jacko got away from you?" + +"He watched his chance, aunty, and twitched the chain away from Minnie. +Now he's done it once, he'll try the game again, I suppose, he is so +fond of playing us tricks." + +And true enough, the very next morning the lady was surprised at a visit +from the monkey in her chamber, where he made himself very much at home, +pulling open drawers, and turning over the contents, in the hope of +finding some confectionery, of which he was extremely fond. + +"Really," she exclaimed to her husband, "if Jacko goes on so, I shall +be of cook's mind, and not wish to live in the house with him." + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +THE MONKEY IN CHURCH. + + +One day, Jacko observed nurse washing out some fine clothes for her +mistress, and seemed greatly interested in the suds which she made in +the progress of her work. + +Watching his chance, he went to Mrs. Lee's room while the family were at +breakfast one morning, and finding some nice toilet soap on the marble +washstand, began to rub it on some fine lace lying on the bureau. After +a little exertion, he was delighted to find that he had a bowl full of +nice, perfumed suds, and was chattering to himself in great glee, when +Ann came in and spoiled his sport. + +"You good for nothing, mischievous creature," she cried out, in sudden +wrath, "I'll cure you of prowling about the house in this style." +Giving him a cuff across his head with a shoe, "Go back to your cage, +where you belong." + +"Jacko is really getting to be very troublesome," remarked the lady to +her husband. "I can't tell how much longer my patience with him will +last." + +"Would Minnie mourn very much if she were to lose him?" asked Mr. Lee. + +"I suppose she would for a time; but then she has so many pets to take +up her attention." + +Just then the child ran in, her eyes filled with tears, exclaiming,-- + +"Father, does Jacko know any better? Is he to blame for trying to wash?" + +Mr. Lee laughed. + +"Because," she went on, "I found him crouched down in his cage, looking +very sorry; and nurse says he ought to be ashamed of himself, cutting +up such ridiculous capers." + +"I dare say he feels rather guilty," remarked Mr. Lee. "He must be +taught better, or your mother will be tired of him." + +When her father had gone to the city, Minnie looked so grave that her +mother, to comfort her, took the book and read her some stories. A few +of them I will repeat to you. + +"A lady was returning from India, in a ship on board of which there was +a monkey. She was a very mild, gentle creature, and readily learned any +thing that was taught her. When she went to lie down at night, she made +up her bed in imitation of her mistress, then got in and wrapped herself +up neatly with the quilt. Sometimes she would wrap her head with a +handkerchief. + +"When she did wrong, she would kneel and clasp her hands, seeming +earnestly to ask to be forgiven." + +"That's a good story, mamma." + +"Yes, dear; and here is another." + +"A gentleman boarding with his wife at a hotel in Paris had a pet +monkey, who was very polite. One day his master met him going down +stairs; and when the gentleman said 'good morning,' the animal took off +his cap and made a very polite bow. + +"'Are you going away?' asked the owner. 'Where is your passport?' Upon +this the monkey held out a square piece of paper. + +"'See!' said the gentleman; 'your mistress' gown is dusty.' + +"Jack instantly took a small brush from his master's pocket, raised the +hem of the lady's dress, cleaned it, and then did the same to his +master's shoes, which were also dusty. + +"When they gave him any thing to eat, he did not cram his pouches with +it, but delicately and tidily devoured it; and when, as frequently +occurred, strangers gave him money, he always put it in his master's +hands." + +"Do you think, mamma, I could teach Jacko to do so?" inquired Minnie, +eagerly. + +"I can't say, my dear; and indeed I think it would be hardly worth the +pains to spend a great deal of time in teaching him. He seems to learn +quite fast enough by himself. Indeed, he is so full of tricks, and so +troublesome to cook in hiding her kitchen utensils, I am afraid we shall +have to put him in close confinement." + +"I had rather uncle Frank would carry him back to Africa," sighed the +child. "He would be so unhappy." + +"Well, dear, I wouldn't grieve about it now. We must manage somehow till +uncle Frank comes, and then perhaps he can tell us what to do. Now I'll +read you another story." + +"A monkey living with a gentleman in the country became so troublesome +that the servants were constantly complaining." + +"That seems similar to our case," said the lady, smiling, as she +interrupted the reading. + +"One day, having his offers of assistance rudely repulsed, he went into +the next house by a window in the second story, which was unfortunately +open. Here he pulled out a small drawer, where the lady kept ribbons, +laces, and handkerchiefs, and putting them in a foot-tub, rubbed away +vigorously for an hour, with all the soap and water there were to be +found in the room. + +"When the lady returned to the chamber, he was busily engaged in +spreading the torn and disfigured remnants to dry. + +"He knew well enough he was doing wrong; for, without her speaking to +him, he made off quickly and ran home, where he hid himself in the case +of the large kitchen clock. + +"The servants at once knew he had been in mischief, as this was his +place of refuge when he was in disgrace. + +"One day he watched the cook while she was preparing some partridges for +dinner, and concluded that all birds ought to be so treated. He soon +managed to get into the yard, where his mistress kept a few pet bantam +fowls, and, after eating their eggs, he secured one of the hens, and +began plucking it. The noise of the poor bird called some of the +servants to the rescue, when they found the half-plucked creature in +such a pitiable condition that they killed it at once. After this, Mr. +Monkey was chained up, and soon died." + +Minnie looked very grave after hearing this story, and presently said, +"I wonder how old that monkey was." + +"The book does not mention his age, my dear. Why?" + +"I was thinking that perhaps, as Jacko grows older, he may learn better; +and then I said to myself, 'That one must have been young.'" + +"If a monkey is really inclined to be vicious, he is almost unbearable," +remarked the lady. "His company does not begin to compensate for the +trouble he makes. Sometimes he is only cunning, but otherwise mild and +tractable." + +"And which, mamma, do you think Jacko is?" + +"I have always thought, until lately, that he was one of the better +kind; but I have now a good many doubts whether you enjoy her funny +tricks enough to compensate cook for all the mischief she does. If I +knew any one who wanted a pet monkey, and would treat him kindly, I +should be glad to have him go. I should hate to have him killed." + +"Killed!" screamed Minnie, with a look of horror; "O, mamma, I wouldn't +have one of my pets killed for any thing." + +Mrs. Lee thought that would probably be at some time Nannie's fate, but +she wisely said nothing. + +"Please read more, mamma. I don't want to think about such awful +things." + +The lady cast her eyes over the page, and laughed heartily. Presently +she said, "Here is a very curious anecdote, which I will read you; but +first I must explain to you what a sounding-board is. + +"In old fashioned churches, there used to hang, directly over the +pulpit, a large, round board, like the top of a table, which, it was +thought, assisted the minister's voice to be heard by all the +congregation. I can remember, when I was a child, going to visit my +grandmother, and accompanying her to church, where there was a +sounding-board. I worried, through the whole service, for fear it would +fall on the minister's head and kill him. But I will read." + +"There was once an eminent clergyman by the name of Casaubon, who kept +in his family a tame monkey, of which he was very fond. This animal, +which was allowed its liberty, liked to follow the minister, when he +went out, but on the Sabbath was usually shut up till his owner was out +of sight, on his way to church. + +"But one Sabbath morning, when the clergyman, taking his sermon under +his arm, went out, the monkey followed him unobserved, and watching the +opportunity while his master was speaking to a gentleman on the steps, +ran up at the back of the pulpit, and jumped upon the sounding-board. + +"Here he gravely seated himself, looking round in a knowing manner on +the congregation, who were greatly amused at so strange a spectacle. + +"The services proceeded as usual, while the monkey, who evidently much +enjoyed the sight of so many people, occasionally peeped over the +sounding-board, to observe the movements of his master, who was +unconscious of his presence. + +"When the sermon commenced, many little forms were convulsed with +laughter, which conduct so shocked the good pastor, that he thought it +his duty to administer a reproof, which he did with considerable action +of his hands and arms. + +"The monkey, who had now become familiar with the scene, imitated every +motion, until at last a scarcely suppressed smile appeared upon the +countenance of most of the audience. This occurred, too, in one of the +most solemn passages in the discourse; and so horrible did the levity +appear to the good minister, that he launched forth into violent rebuke, +every word being enforced by great energy of action. + +"All this time, the little fellow overhead mimicked every movement with +ardor and exactness. + +"The audience, witnessing this apparent competition between the good man +and his monkey, could no longer retain the least appearance of +composure, and burst into roars of laughter, in the midst of which one +of the congregation kindly relieved the horror of the pastor at the +irreverence and impiety of his flock, by pointing out the cause of the +merriment. + +"Casting his eyes upward, the minister could just discern the animal +standing on the end of the sounding-board, and gesturing with all his +might, when he found it difficult to control himself, though highly +exasperated at the occurrence. He gave directions to have the monkey +removed, and sat down to compose himself, and allow his congregation to +recover their equanimity while the order was being obeyed." + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +JACKO IN THE PANTRY. + + +In his frequent visits to the stable, Jacko amused himself by catching +mice that crept out to pick up the corn. + +The servants, having noticed his skill, thought they would turn it to +good account, and having been troubled with mice in the pantry, +determined to take advantage of the absence of Mrs. Lee on a journey, +and shut the monkey up in it. So, one evening, they took him out of his +comfortable bed, and chained him up in the larder, having removed every +thing except some jam pots, which they thought out of his reach, and +well secured with bladder stretched over the top. + +Poor Jacko was evidently much astonished, and quite indignant, at this +treatment, but presently consoled himself by jumping into a soup +tureen, where he fell sound asleep, while the mice scampered all over +the place. + +As soon as it was dawn, the mice retired to their holes. Jacko awoke +shivering with cold, stretched himself, and then, pushing the soup +tureen from the shelf, broke it to pieces. After this achievement, he +began to look about for something to eat, when he spied the jam pots on +the upper shelf. + +"There is something good," he thought, smelling them. "I'll see." + +His sharp teeth soon worked an entrance, when the treasured jams, plums, +raspberry, strawberry, candied apricots, the pride and care of the cook, +disappeared in an unaccountably short time. + +At last, his appetite for sweets was satisfied, and coiling his tail in +a corner, he lay quietly awaiting the servant's coming to take him out. + +Presently he heard the door cautiously open, when the chamber girl gave +a scream of horror as she saw the elegant China dish broken into a +thousand bits, and lying scattered on the floor. + +She ran in haste to summon Hepsy and the nurse, her heart misgiving her +that this was not the end of the calamity. They easily removed Jacko, +who began already to experience the sad effects of overloading his +stomach, and then found, with alarm and grief, the damage he had done. + +For several days the monkey did not recover from the effects of his +excess. He was never shut up again in the pantry. + +When Mrs. Lee returned she blamed the servants for trying such an +experiment in her absence. Jacko was now well, and ready for some new +mischief; and Minnie, who heard a ludicrous account of the story, +laughed till she cried. + +She repeated it, in great glee, to her father, who looked very grave as +he said, "We think a sea voyage would do the troublesome fellow good; +but you shall have a Canary or a pair of Java sparrows instead." + +"Don't you know any stories of good monkeys, father?" + +"I don't recollect any at this moment, my dear; but I will see whether I +can find any for you." + +He opened the book, and then asked,-- + +"Did you know, Minnie, that almost all monkeys have bags or pouches in +their cheeks, the skin of which is loose, and when empty makes the +animal look wrinkled?" + +"No, sir; I never heard about it." + +"Yes, that is the case. He puts his food in them, and keeps it there +till he wishes to devour it. + +"There are some kinds, too, that have what is called prehensile tails; +that is, tails by which they can hang themselves to the limb of a tree, +and which they use with nearly as much ease as they can their hands. The +facility which this affords them for moving about quickly among the +branches of trees is astonishing. The firmness of the grasp which it +makes is very surprising; for if it winds a single coil around a branch, +it is quite sufficient, not only to support its weight, but to enable it +to swing in such a manner as to gain a fresh hold with its feet." + +"I'm sure, father," eagerly cried Minnie, "that Jacko has a prehensile +tail, for I have often seen him swing from the ladder which goes up the +hay mow." + +"I dare say, child. He seems to be up to every thing. But here is an +account of an Indian monkey, of a light grayish yellow color, with black +hands and feet. The face is black, with a violet tinge. This is called +Hoonuman, and is much venerated by the Hindoos. They believe it to be +one of the animals into which the souls of their friends pass at death. +If one of these monkeys is killed, the murderer is instantly put to +death; and, thus protected, they become a great nuisance, and destroy +great quantities of fruit. But in South America, monkeys are killed by +the natives as game, for the sake of the flesh. Absolute necessity alone +would compel us to eat them. A great naturalist named Humboldt tells us +that their manner of cooking them is especially disgusting. They are +raised a foot from the ground, and bent into a sitting position, in +which they greatly resemble a child, and are roasted in that manner. A +hand and arm of a monkey, roasted in this way, are exhibited in a museum +in Paris." + +"Monkeys have a curious way of introducing their tails into the fissures +or hollows of trees, for the purpose of hooking out eggs and other +substances. On approaching a spot where there is a supply of food, they +do not alight at once, but take a survey of the neighborhood, a general +cry being kept up by the party." + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +THE CRUEL MONKEY. + + +One afternoon, Minnie ran out of breath to the parlor. "Mamma," she +exclaimed, "cook says monkeys are real cruel in their families. Is it +true?" + +The lady smiled. "I suppose, my dear," she responded, "that there is a +difference of disposition among them. I have heard that they are very +fond of their young, and that, when threatened with danger, they mount +them on their back, or clasp them to their breast with great affection. + +"But I saw lately an anecdote of the cruelty of a monkey to his wife, +and if I can find the book, I will read it to you." + +"There is an animal called the fair monkey, which, though the most +beautiful of its tribe, is gloomy and cruel. One of these, which, from +its extreme beauty and apparent gentleness, was allowed to ramble at +liberty over a ship, soon became a great favorite with the crew, and in +order to make him perfectly happy, as they imagined, they procured him a +wife. + +"For some weeks, he was a devoted husband, and showed her every +attention and respect. He then grew cool, and began to use her with much +cruelty. His treatment made her wretched and dull. + +"One day, the crew noticed that he treated her with more kindness than +usual, but did not suspect the wicked scheme he had in mind. At last, +after winning her favor anew, he persuaded her to go aloft with him, and +drew her attention to an object in the distance, when he suddenly gave +her a push, which threw her into the sea. + +"This cruel act seemed to afford him much gratification, for he +descended in high spirits." + +"I should think they would have punished him," said Minnie, with great +indignation. + +"Perhaps they did, love. At any rate, it proves that beauty is by no +means always to be depended upon." + +Mrs. Lee then took her sewing, but Minnie plead so earnestly for one +more story, a good long one, that her mother, who loved to gratify her, +complied, and read the account which I shall give you in closing this +chapter on Minnie's pet monkey. + +"A gentleman, returning from India, brought a monkey, which he presented +to his wife. She called it Sprite, and soon became very fond of it. + +"Sprite was very fond of beetles, and also of spiders, and his mistress +used sometimes to hold his chain, lengthened by a string, and make him +run up the curtains, and clear out the cobwebs for the housekeeper. + +"On one occasion, he watched his opportunity, and snatching the chain, +ran off, and was soon seated on the top of a cottage, grinning and +chattering to the assembled crowd of schoolboys, as much as to say, +'Catch me if you can.' He got the whole town in an uproar, but finally +leaped over every thing, dragging his chain after him, and nestled +himself in his own bed, where he lay with his eyes closed, his mouth +open, his sides ready to burst with his running. + +"Another time, the little fellow got loose, but remembering his former +experience, only stole into the shed, where he tried his hand at +cleaning knives. He did not succeed very well in this, however, for the +handle was the part he attempted to polish, and, cutting his fingers, he +relinquished the sport. + +"Resolved not to be defeated, he next set to work to clean the shoes and +boots, a row of which were awaiting the boy. But Sprite, not remembering +all the steps of the performance, first covered the entire shoe, sole +and all, with the blacking, and then emptied the rest of the Day & +Martin into it, nearly filling it with the precious fluid. His coat was +a nice mess for some days after. + +"One morning, when the servants returned to the kitchen, they found +Sprite had taken all the kitchen candlesticks out of the cupboard, and +arranged them on the fender, as he had once seen done. As soon as he +heard the servants returning, he ran to his basket, and tried to look as +though nothing had happened. + +"Sprite was exceedingly fond of a bath. Occasionally a bowl of water was +given him, when he would cunningly try the temperature by putting in his +finger, after which he gradually stepped in, first one foot, then the +other, till he was comfortably seated. Then he took the soap and rubbed +himself all over. Having made a dreadful splashing all around, he jumped +out and ran to the fire, shivering. If any body laughed at him during +this performance, he made threatening gestures, chattering with all his +might to show his displeasure, and sometimes he splashed water all over +them. + +"Poor Sprite one day nearly committed suicide. As he was brought from a +very warm climate, he often suffered exceedingly, in winter, from the +cold. + +"The cooking was done by a large fire on the open hearth, and as his +basket, where he slept, was in one corner of the kitchen, before morning +he frequently awoke shivering and blue. The cook was in the habit of +making the fire, and then returning to her room to finish her toilet. + +"One morning, having lighted the pile of kindlings as usual, she hung on +the tea-kettle and went out, shutting the door carefully behind her. + +"Sprite thought this a fine opportunity to warm himself. He jumped from +his basket, ran to the hearth, and took the lid of the kettle off. +Cautiously touching the water with the tip of his finger, he found it +just the right heat for a bath, and sprang in, sitting down, leaving +only his head above the water. + +"This he found exceedingly comfortable for a time; but soon the water +began to grow hot. He rose, but the air outside was so cold, he quickly +sat down again. He did this several times, and would, no doubt, have +been boiled to death, and become a martyr to his own want of pluck and +firmness in action, had it not been for the timely return of the cook, +who, seeing him sitting there almost lifeless, seized him by the head +and pulled him out. + +"He was rolled in blankets, and laid in his basket, where he soon +recovered, and, it is to be hoped, learned a lesson from this hot +experience, not to take a bath when the water is on the fire." + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +KEES STEALING EGGS. + + +When Minnie was nine years of age, she accompanied her parents to a +menagerie, and there, among other animals, she saw a baboon. She was +greatly excited by his curious, uncouth manoeuvres, asking twenty +questions about him, without giving her father time to answer. On their +way home, she inquired,-- + +"Are baboons one kind of monkeys, father?" + +"Yes, my daughter; and a more disagreeable, disgusting animal I cannot +conceive of." + +"I hope you are not wishing for a baboon to add to your pets," added her +mother, laughing. + +"I don't believe Jacko would get along with that great fellow at all," +answered the child. "But, father, will you please tell me something +more about the curious animals?" + +The conversation was here interrupted by seeing that a carriage had +stopped just in front of their own, and that quite a crowd had gathered +about some person who seemed to be hurt. + +Minnie's sympathies were alive in an instant. She begged her father to +get out, as possibly he might be of some use. + +The driver stopped of his own accord, and inquired what had happened, +and then they saw that it was a spaniel that was hurt. He had been in +the road, and not getting out of the way quick enough, the wheel had +gone over his body. + +The young lady who was in the buggy was greatly distressed, from which +Minnie argued that she was kind to animals, and that they should like +her. + +The owner of the dog held the poor creature in her arms, though it +seemed to be in convulsions, and wept bitterly as she found it must die. + +Mr. Lee, to please his little daughter, waited a few minutes; but he +found her getting so much excited over the suffering animal, he gave +John orders to proceed. + +During the rest of the drive, she could talk of nothing else, wondering +whether the spaniel was alive now, or whether the young man in the buggy +paid for hurting it. + +The next day, however, having made up her mind that the poor creature +must be dead, and his sufferings ended, and having given Tiney many +admonitions to keep out of the road when carriages were passing, her +thoughts turned once more to the baboon. + +Mr. Lee found in his library a book which gave a short account of the +animal, which he read to her. + +"The baboon is of the monkey tribe, notwithstanding its long, dog-like +head, flat, compressed cheeks, and strong and projecting teeth. The form +and position of the eyes, combined with the similarity of the arms and +hands, give to these creatures a resemblance to humanity as striking as +it is disgusting." + +"Then follows an account," the gentleman went on, "of the peculiarities +of different kinds of baboons, which you would not understand." + +"But can't you tell me something about them yourself, father?" + +"I know very little about the creatures, my dear; but I have read that +they are exceedingly strong, and of a fiery, vicious temper. + +"They can never be wholly tamed, and it is only while restraint of the +severest kind is used, that they can be governed at all. If left to +their own will, their savage nature resumes its sway, and their actions +are cruel, destructive, and disgusting." + +"I saw the man at the menagerie giving them apples," said Minnie; "but +he did not give them any meat all the time I was there." + +"No; they subsist exclusively on fruits, seeds, and other vegetable +matter. In the countries where they live, especially near the Cape of +Good Hope, the inhabitants chase them with dogs and guns in order to +destroy them, on account of the ravages they commit in the fields and +gardens. It is said that they make a very obstinate resistance to the +dogs, and often have fierce battles with them; but they greatly fear the +gun. + +"As the baboon grows older, instead of becoming better, his rage +increases, so that the slightest cause will provoke him to terrible +fury." + +"Is that all you know about them?" + +"Why, Minnie, in order to satisfy you, any one must become a walking +encyclopaedia. What other question have you to ask?" + +"Why, they must have something to eat, and how are they to get it unless +they go into gardens?" + +Mr. Lee laughed aloud. "I rather think I should soon convince them they +were not to enter my garden," he said, emphatically. "But seriously, +they descend in vast numbers upon the orchards of fruit, destroying, in +a few hours, the work of months, or even of years. In these excursions, +they move on a concerted plan, placing sentinels on commanding spots, to +give notice of the approach of an enemy. As soon as he perceives danger, +the sentinel gives a loud yell, and then the whole troop rush away with +the greatest speed, cramming the fruit which they have gathered into +their cheek pouches." + +Minnie looked so much disappointed when he ceased speaking, that her +mother said, "I read somewhere an account of a baboon that was named +Kees, who was the best of his kind that I ever heard of." + +"Yes, that was quite an interesting story, if you can call it to mind," +said the gentleman, rising. + +"It was in a book of travels in Africa," the lady went on. "The +traveller, whose name was Le Vaillant, took Kees through all his +journey, and the creature really made himself very useful. As a +sentinel, he was better than any of the dogs. Indeed, so quick was his +sense of danger, that he often gave notice of the approach of beasts of +prey, when every thing was apparently secure. + +"There was another way in which Kees made himself useful. Whenever they +came across any fruits or roots with which the Hottentots were +unacquainted, they waited to see whether Kees would taste them. If he +threw them down, the traveller concluded they were poisonous or +disagreeable, and left them untasted. + +"Le Vaillant used to hunt, and frequently took Kees with him on these +excursions. The poor fellow understood the preparations making for the +sport, and when his master signified his consent that he should go, he +showed his joy in the most lively manner. On the way, he would dance +about, and then run up into the trees to search for gum, of which he was +very fond. + +"I recall one amusing trick of Kees," said the lady, laughing, "which +pleased me much when I read it. He sometimes found honey in the hollows +of trees, and also a kind of root of which he was very fond, both of +which his master insisted on sharing with him. On such occasions, he +would run away with his treasure, or hide it in his pouches, or eat it +as fast as possible, before Le Vaillant could have time to reach him. + +"These roots were very difficult to pull from the ground. Kees' manner +of doing it was this. He would seize the top of the root with his strong +teeth, and then, planting himself firmly against the sod, drew himself +gradually back, which forced it from the earth. If it proved stubborn, +while he still held it in his teeth he threw himself heels over head, +which gave such a concussion to the root that it never failed to come +out. + +"Another habit that Kees had was very curious. He sometimes grew tired +with the long marches, and then he would jump on the back of one of the +dogs, and oblige it to carry him whole hours. At last the dogs grew +weary of this, and one of them determined not to be pressed into +service. He now adopted an ingenious artifice. As soon as Kees leaped on +his back, he stood still, and let the train pass without moving from the +spot. Kees sat quiet, determined that the dog should carry him, until +the party were almost out of sight, and then they both ran in great +haste to overtake their master. + +"Kees established a kind of authority over the dogs. They were +accustomed to his voice, and in general obeyed without hesitation the +slightest motions by which he communicated his orders, taking their +places about the tent or carriage, as he directed them. If any of them +came too near him when he was eating, he gave them a box on the ear, +and thus compelled them to retire to a respectful distance." + +"Why, mother, I think Kees was a very good animal, indeed," said Minnie, +with considerable warmth. + +"I have told you the best traits of his character," she answered, +smiling. "He was, greatly to his master's sorrow, an incurable thief. He +could not be left alone for a moment with any kind of food. He +understood perfectly how to loose the strings of a basket, or to take +the cork from a bottle. He was very fond of milk, and would drink it +whenever he had a chance. He was whipped repeatedly for these +misdemeanors, but the punishment did him no good. + +"Le Vaillant was accustomed to have eggs for his breakfast; but his +servants complained one morning there were none to be had. Whenever any +thing was amiss, the fault was always laid to Kees, who, indeed, +generally deserved it. The gentleman determined to watch him. + +"The next morning, hearing the cackling of a hen, he started for the +place; but found Kees had been before him, and nothing remained but the +broken shell. Having caught him in his pilfering, his master gave him a +severe beating; but he was soon at his old habit again, and the +gentleman was obliged to train one of his dogs to run for the egg as +soon as it was laid, before he could enjoy his favorite repast. + +"One day, Le Vaillant was eating his dinner, when he heard the voice of +a bird, with which he was not acquainted. Leaving the beans he had +carefully prepared for himself on his plate, he seized his gun, and ran +out of the tent. In a short time he returned, with the bird in his hand, +but found not a bean left, and Kees missing. + +"When he had been stealing, the baboon often staid out of sight for some +hours; but, this time, he hid himself for several days. They searched +every where for him, but in vain, till his master feared he had really +deserted them. On the third day, one of the men, who had gone to a +distance for water, saw him hiding in a tree. Le Vaillant went out and +spoke to him, but he knew he had deserved punishment, and he would not +come down; so that, at last, his master had to go up the tree and take +him." + +"And was he whipped, mother?" + +"No; he was forgiven that time, as he seemed so penitent. There is only +one thing more I can remember about him. An officer who was visiting Le +Vaillant, wishing to try the affection of the baboon for his master, +pretended to strike him. Kees flew into a violent rage, and from that +time could never endure the sight of the officer. If he only saw him at +a distance, he ground his teeth, and used every endeavor to fly at him; +and had he not been chained, he would speedily have revenged the +insult." + + * * * * * + + "Nature is man's best teacher. She unfolds + Her treasures to his search, unseals his eye, + Illumes his mind, and purifies his heart,-- + An influence breathes from all the sights and sounds + Of her existence; she is wisdom's self." + + * * * * * + + "There's not a plant that springeth + But bears some good to earth; + There's not a life but bringeth + Its store of harmless mirth; + The dusty wayside clover + Has honey in her cells,-- + The wild bee, humming over, + Her tale of pleasure tells. + The osiers, o'er the fountain, + Keep cool the water's breast, + And on the roughest mountain + The softest moss is pressed. + Thus holy Nature teaches + The worth of blessings small; + That Love pervades, and reaches, + And forms the bliss of all." + + + + + +MRS. LESLIE'S JUVENILE SERIES. + +16mo. + +FOR BOYS. + + Vol. I. THE MOTHERLESS CHILDREN. + " II. PLAY AND STUDY. + " III. HOWARD AND HIS TEACHER. + " IV. JACK, THE CHIMNEY SWEEPER. + +FOR GIRLS. + + Vol. I. TRYING TO BE USEFUL. + " II. LITTLE AGNES. + " III. I'LL TRY. + " IV. ART AND ARTLESSNESS. + + + + + MINNIE'S PET CAT. + + + BY + + MRS. MADELINE LESLIE, + AUTHOR OF "THE LESLIE STORIES," "TIM, THE SCISSORS-GRINDER," + ETC. + + + ILLUSTRATED. + + + BOSTON: + LEE AND SHEPARD, + SUCCESSORS TO PHILLIPS, SAMPSON & CO. + 1864. + + + + + MINNIE'S PET PARROT. + + + BY + + MRS. MADELINE LESLIE, + AUTHOR OF "THE LESLIE STORIES," "TIM, THE SCISSORS-GRINDER," + ETC. + + + ILLUSTRATED. + + + BOSTON: + LEE AND SHEPARD, + SUCCESSORS TO PHILLIPS, SAMPSON & CO. + 1864. + + + + + MINNIE'S PET DOG. + + + BY + + MRS. MADELINE LESLIE, + AUTHOR OF "THE LESLIE STORIES," "TIM, THE SCISSORS-GRINDER," + ETC. + + + ILLUSTRATED. + + + BOSTON: + LEE AND SHEPARD, + SUCCESSORS TO PHILLIPS, SAMPSON & CO. + 1864. + + + + + MINNIE'S PET LAMB. + + + BY + + MRS. MADELINE LESLIE, + AUTHOR OF "THE LESLIE STORIES," "TIM, THE SCISSORS-GRINDER," + ETC. + + + ILLUSTRATED. + + + BOSTON: + LEE AND SHEPARD, + SUCCESSORS TO PHILLIPS, SAMPSON & CO. + 1864. + + + + + MINNIE'S PET HORSE. + + + BY + + MRS. MADELINE LESLIE, + AUTHOR OF "THE LESLIE STORIES," "TIM, THE SCISSORS-GRINDER," + ETC. + + + ILLUSTRATED. + + + BOSTON: + LEE AND SHEPARD, + SUCCESSORS TO PHILLIPS, SAMPSON & CO. + 1864. + + + + +Transcriber's Note + +The following typographical errors were corrected: + +Page Error +73 "good morning," changed to 'good morning,' +112 pet monkey." changed to pet monkey. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Minnie's Pet Monkey, by Madeline Leslie + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MINNIE'S PET MONKEY *** + +***** This file should be named 26618.txt or 26618.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/6/1/26618/ + +Produced by Julia Miller 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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