<h3>THE HISTORY OF THE SEVEN FAMILIES OF THE LAKE PIPPLE-POPPLE.</h3>
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER I.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">INTRODUCTORY.</p>
<p>In former days,—that is to say, once upon a time,—there lived
in the Land of Gramble-Blamble seven families. They lived
by the side of the great Lake Pipple-Popple (one of the seven
families, indeed, lived <i>in</i> the lake), and on the outskirts of the city
of Tosh, which, excepting when it was quite dark, they could see
plainly. The names of all these places you have probably heard
of; and you have only not to look in your geography-books to
find out all about them.</p>
<p>Now, the seven families who lived on the borders of the great
Lake Pipple-Popple were as follows in the next chapter.</p>
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER II.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">THE SEVEN FAMILIES.</p>
<p>There was a family of two old Parrots and seven young
Parrots.
<SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page139" id="page139" title="139"></SPAN> </p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/160.gif" alt="parrots" /><br/>
<p>There was a family of two old Storks and seven young Storks.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/161.gif" alt="storks" /><br/>
<p>There was a family of two old Geese and seven young Geese.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/162.gif" alt="geese" /><br/>
<SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page140" id="page140" title="140"></SPAN>
<p>There was a family of two old Owls and seven young Owls.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/163.gif" alt="owls" />
<p>There was a family of two old Guinea Pigs and seven young
Guinea Pigs.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/164.gif" alt="guinea pigs" />
<p>There was a family of two old Cats and seven young Cats.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/165.gif" alt="cats" />
<p><SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page141" id="page141" title="141"></SPAN>
And there was a family of two old Fishes and seven young
Fishes.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/166.gif" alt="fishes" />
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER III.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">THE HABITS OF THE SEVEN FAMILIES.</p>
<p>The Parrots lived upon the Soffsky-Poffsky trees, which were
beautiful to behold, and covered with blue leaves; and they
fed upon fruit, artichokes, and striped beetles.</p>
<p>The Storks walked in and out of the Lake Pipple-Popple, and
ate frogs for breakfast, and buttered toast for tea; but on account
of the extreme length of their legs they could not sit down, and so
they walked about continually.</p>
<p>The Geese, having webs to their feet, caught quantities of flies,
which they ate for dinner.</p>
<p>The Owls anxiously looked after mice, which they caught, and
made into sago-puddings.</p>
<p>The Guinea Pigs toddled about the gardens, and ate lettuces
and Cheshire cheese.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page142" id="page142" title="142"></SPAN>
The Cats sate still in the sunshine, and fed upon sponge biscuits.</p>
<p>The Fishes lived in the lake, and fed chiefly on boiled periwinkles.</p>
<p>And all these seven families lived together in the utmost fun and
felicity.</p>
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER IV.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">THE CHILDREN OF THE SEVEN FAMILIES ARE SENT AWAY.</p>
<p>One day all the seven fathers and the seven mothers of the
seven families agreed that they would send their children
out to see the world.</p>
<p>So they called them all together, and gave them each eight
shillings and some good advice, some chocolate-drops, and a small
green morocco pocket-book to set down their expenses in.</p>
<p>They then particularly entreated them not to quarrel; and all
the parents sent off their children with a parting injunction.</p>
<p>"If," said the old Parrots, "you find a cherry, do not fight
about who should have it."</p>
<p>"And," said the old Storks, "if you find a frog, divide it carefully
into seven bits, but on no account quarrel about it."</p>
<p>And the old Geese said to the seven young Geese, "Whatever
you do, be sure you do not touch a plum-pudding flea."</p>
<p>And the old Owls said, "If you find a mouse, tear him up into
seven slices, and eat him cheerfully, but without quarrelling."</p>
<p>And the old Guinea Pigs said, "Have a care that you eat your
lettuces, should you find any, not greedily, but calmly."</p>
<p>And the old Cats said, "Be particularly careful not to meddle
with a clangle-wangle if you should see one."</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page143" id="page143" title="143"></SPAN>
And the old Fishes said, "Above all things, avoid eating a blue
boss-woss; for they do not agree with fishes, and give them a pain
in their toes."</p>
<p>So all the children of each family thanked their parents; and,
making in all forty-nine polite bows, they went into the wide
world.</p>
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER V.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">THE HISTORY OF THE SEVEN YOUNG PARROTS.</p>
<p>The seven young Parrots had not gone far, when they saw
a tree with a single cherry on it, which the oldest Parrot
picked instantly; but the other six, being extremely hungry, tried
to get it also. On which all the seven began to fight; and they
scuffled,<br/>
<span class="i5">and huffled,</span>
<span class="i7">and ruffled,</span>
<span class="i9">and shuffled,</span>
<span class="i11">and puffled,</span>
<span class="i13">and muffled,</span>
<span class="i15">and buffled,</span>
<span class="i17">and duffled,</span>
<span class="i19">and fluffled,</span>
<span class="i21">and guffled,</span>
<span class="i23">and bruffled, and</span>
<span class="i25">screamed, and shrieked, and squealed,</span>
and squeaked, and clawed, and snapped, and bit, and bumped,
and thumped, and dumped, and flumped each other, till they were
all torn into little bits; and at last there was nothing left to record
<SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page144" id="page144" title="144"></SPAN>
this painful incident except the cherry and seven small green
feathers.</p>
<p>And that was the vicious and voluble end of the seven young
Parrots.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/167.gif" alt="The History of the Seven Families of the Lake Pipple-Popple." />
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER VI.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">THE HISTORY OF THE SEVEN YOUNG STORKS.</p>
<p>When the seven young Storks set out, they walked or flew for
fourteen weeks in a straight line, and for six weeks more in
a crooked one; and after that they ran as hard as they could for
one hundred and eight miles; and after that they stood still, and
made a himmeltanious chatter-clatter-blattery noise with their bills.</p>
<p>About the same time they perceived a large frog, spotted with
green, and with a sky-blue stripe under each ear.</p>
<p>So, being hungry, they immediately flew at him, and were going
to divide him into seven pieces, when they began to quarrel as to
which of his legs should be taken off first. One said this, and
another said that; and while they were all quarrelling, the frog
<SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page145" id="page145" title="145"></SPAN>
hopped away. And when they saw that he was gone, they began
to chatter-clatter,<br/>
<span class="i7">blatter-platter,</span>
<span class="i9">patter-blatter,</span>
<span class="i11">matter-clatter,</span>
<span class="i13">flatter-quatter,</span>
more violently than ever; and after they
had fought for a week, they pecked each other all to little pieces,
so that at last nothing was left of any of them except their bills.</p>
<p>And that was the end of the seven young Storks.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/168.gif" alt="The History of the Seven Families of the Lake Pipple-Popple." />
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER VII.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">THE HISTORY OF THE SEVEN YOUNG GEESE.</p>
<p>When the seven young Geese began to travel, they went over
a large plain, on which there was but one tree, and that was,
a very bad one.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page146" id="page146" title="146"></SPAN></p>
<p>So four of them went up to the top of it, and looked about
them; while the other three waddled up and down, and repeated
poetry, and their last six lessons in arithmetic, geography, and
cookery.</p>
<p>Presently they perceived, a long way off, an object of the most
interesting and obese appearance, having a perfectly round body
exactly resembling a boiled plum-pudding, with two little wings, and
a beak, and three feathers growing out of his head, and only one
leg.</p>
<p>So, after a time, all the seven young Geese said to each
other, "Beyond all doubt this beast must be a Plum-pudding
Flea!"</p>
<p>On which they incautiously began to sing aloud,</p>
<blockquote>
<span class="i12">"Plum-pudding Flea,</span>
<span class="i12">Plum-pudding Flea,</span>
<span class="i12">Wherever you be,</span>
<span class="i12">Oh! come to our tree,</span>
<span class="i8">And listen, oh! listen, oh! listen to me!"</span>
</blockquote>
<p>And no sooner had they sung this verse than the Plum-pudding
Flea began to hop and skip on his one leg with the
most dreadful velocity, and came straight to the tree, where he
stopped, and looked about him in a vacant and voluminous
manner.</p>
<p>On which the seven young Geese were greatly alarmed, and all
of a tremble-bemble: so one of them put out his long neck, and
just touched him with the tip of his bill; but no sooner had he
done this than the Plum-pudding Flea skipped and hopped about
more and more, and higher and higher; after which he opened
his mouth, and, to the great surprise and indignation of the seven
Geese, began to bark so loudly and furiously and terribly, that
<SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page147" id="page147" title="147"></SPAN>
they were totally unable to bear the noise; and by degrees every
one of them suddenly tumbled down quite dead.</p>
<p>So that was the end of the seven young Geese.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/169.gif" alt="The History of the Seven Families of the Lake Pipple-Popple." />
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER VIII.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">THE HISTORY OF THE SEVEN YOUNG OWLS.</p>
<p>When the seven young Owls set out, they sate every now and
then on the branches of old trees, and never went far at
one time.</p>
<p>And one night, when it was quite dark, they thought they heard
a mouse; but, as the gas-lamps were not lighted, they could not
see him.</p>
<p>So they called out, "Is that a mouse?"</p>
<p>On which a mouse answered, "Squeaky-peeky-weeky! yes, it is!"</p>
<p>And immediately all the young Owls threw themselves off the
tree, meaning to alight on the ground; but they did not perceive
that there was a large well below them, into which they all fell superficially,
<SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page148" id="page148" title="148"></SPAN>
and were every one of them drowned in less than half a
minute.</p>
<p>So that was the end of the seven young Owls.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/170.gif" alt="The History of the Seven Families of the Lake Pipple-Popple." />
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER IX.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">THE HISTORY OF THE SEVEN YOUNG GUINEA PIGS.</p>
<p>The seven young Guinea Pigs went into a garden full of goose-berry-bushes
and tiggory-trees, under one of which they fell
asleep. When they awoke, they saw a large lettuce, which had
grown out of the ground while they had been sleeping, and which
had an immense number of green leaves. At which they all
exclaimed,—</p>
<blockquote>
"Lettuce! O lettuce<br/>
Let us, O let us,<br/>
O lettuce-leaves,<br/>
O let us leave this tree, and eat<br/>
Lettuce, O let us, lettuce-leaves!"
</blockquote>
<p><SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page149" id="page149" title="149"></SPAN></p>
<p>And instantly the seven young Guinea Pigs rushed with such extreme
force against the lettuce-plant, and hit their heads so vividly
against its stalk, that the concussion brought on directly an incipient
transitional inflammation of their noses, which grew worse and worse
and worse and worse, till it incidentally killed them all seven.</p>
<p>And that was the end of the seven young Guinea Pigs.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/171.gif" alt="The History of the Seven Families of the Lake Pipple-Popple." />
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER X.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">THE HISTORY OF THE SEVEN YOUNG CATS.</p>
<p>The seven young Cats set off on their travels with great delight
and rapacity. But, on coming to the top of a high hill, they
perceived at a long distance off a Clangle-Wangle (or, as it is more
properly written, Clangel-Wangel); and, in spite of the warning
they had had, they ran straight up to it.</p>
<p>(Now, the Clangle-Wangle is a most dangerous and delusive
beast, and by no means commonly to be met with. They live in
the water as well as on land, using their long tail as a sail when in
the former element. Their speed is extreme; but their habits of
life are domestic and superfluous, and their general demeanor pensive
<SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page150" id="page150" title="150"></SPAN>
and pellucid. On summer evenings, they may sometimes be
observed near the Lake Pipple-Popple, standing on their heads, and
humming their national melodies. They subsist entirely on vegetables,
excepting when they eat veal or mutton or pork or beef or
fish or saltpetre.)</p>
<p>The moment the Clangle-Wangle saw the seven young Cats approach,
he ran away; and as he ran straight on for four months,
and the Cats, though they continued to run, could never overtake
him, they all gradually <i>died</i> of fatigue and exhaustion, and never
afterwards recovered.</p>
<p>And this was the end of the seven young Cats.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/172.gif" alt="The History of the Seven Families of the Lake Pipple-Popple." />
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER XI.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">THE HISTORY OF THE SEVEN YOUNG FISHES.</p>
<p>The seven young Fishes swam across the Lake Pipple-Popple,
and into the river, and into the ocean; where, most unhappily
for them, they saw, on the fifteenth day of their travels, a
bright-blue Boss-Woss, and instantly swam after him. But the Blue
Boss-Woss plunged into a perpendicular,<br/>
<span class="i16">spicular,</span>
<span class="i18">orbicular,</span>
<span class="i20">quadrangular,</span>
<span class="i22">circular depth of soft mud;</span>
where, in fact, his house was.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page151" id="page151" title="151"></SPAN>
And the seven young Fishes, swimming with great and uncomfortable
velocity, plunged also into the mud quite against their will,
and, not being accustomed to it, were all suffocated in a very short
period.</p>
<p>And that was the end of the seven young Fishes.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/173.gif" alt="The History of the Seven Families of the Lake Pipple-Popple." />
<p>CHAPTER XII.</p>
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER XII.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">OF WHAT OCCURRED SUBSEQUENTLY.</p>
<p>After it was known that the</p>
<p><span class="i2">seven young Parrots,</span>
and the seven young Storks,<br/>
and the seven young Geese,<br/>
and the seven young Owls,<br/>
and the seven young Guinea Pigs,<br/>
and the seven young Cats,<br/>
and the seven young Fishes,</p>
<p>were all dead, then the Frog, and the Plum-pudding Flea, and the
Mouse, and the Clangle-Wangle, and the Blue Boss-Woss, all met
together to rejoice over their good fortune. And they collected
the seven feathers of the seven young Parrots, and the seven bills of
<SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page152" id="page152" title="152"></SPAN>
the seven young Storks, and the lettuce, and the cherry; and
having placed the latter on the lettuce, and the other objects in a
circular arrangement at their base, they danced a hornpipe round
all these memorials until they were quite tired; after which they
gave a tea-party, and a garden-party, and a ball, and a concert, and
then returned to their respective homes full of joy and respect,
sympathy, satisfaction, and disgust.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/174.gif" alt="The History of the Seven Families of the Lake Pipple-Popple." />
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER XIII.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">OF WHAT BECAME OF THE PARENTS OF THE FORTY-NINE CHILDREN.</p>
<p>BUT when the two old Parrots,<br/>
<span class="i5">and the two old Storks,</span>
<span class="i5">and the two old Geese,</span>
<span class="i5">and the two old Owls,</span>
<span class="i5">and the two old Guinea Pigs,</span>
<span class="i5">and the two old Cats,</span>
<span class="i5">and the two old Fishes,</span>
<SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page153" id="page153" title="153"></SPAN>
became aware, by reading in the newspapers, of the calamitous extinction
of the whole of their families, they refused all further sustenance;
and, sending out to various shops, they purchased great
quantities of Cayenne pepper and brandy and vinegar and blue
sealing-wax, besides seven immense glass bottles with air-tight
stoppers. And, having done this, they ate a light supper of brown-bread
and Jerusalem artichokes, and took an affecting and formal
leave of the whole of their acquaintance, which was very numerous
and distinguished and select and responsible and ridiculous.</p>
<p class="chapternumber">CHAPTER XIV.</p>
<p class="chapterdescription">CONCLUSION.</p>
<p>And after this they filled the bottles with the ingredients for
pickling, and each couple jumped into a separate bottle; by
which effort, of course, they all died immediately, and became
thoroughly pickled in a few minutes; having previously made
their wills (by the assistance of the most eminent lawyers of the
district), in which they left strict orders that the stoppers of the
seven bottles should be carefully sealed up with the blue sealing-wax
they had purchased; and that they themselves, in the bottles,
should be presented to the principal museum of the city of Tosh,
to be labelled with parchment or any other anti-congenial succedaneum,
and to be placed on a marble table with silver-gilt legs, for
the daily inspection and contemplation, and for the perpetual
benefit, of the pusillanimous public.</p>
<p>And if you ever happen to go to Gramble-Blamble, and visit
that museum in the city of Tosh, look for them on the ninety-eighth
<SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page154" id="page154" title="154"></SPAN>
table in the four hundred and twenty-seventh room of the
right-hand corridor of the left wing of the central quadrangle of
that magnificent building; for, if you do not, you certainly will
not see them.</p>
<ANTIMG class="centeredimage" src="images/175.gif" alt="The History of the Seven Families of the Lake Pipple-Popple." />
<SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page155" id="page155" title="155"></SPAN>
<hr />
<SPAN class="pagenumber" name="page156" id="page156" title="156"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />