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   _THE VOYAGES OF DOCTOR DOLITTLE_
            I    HIS LANDING      ON THE      ISLAND
           II    HIS MEETING      WITH THE       BEETLE
           III    HE LIBERATES      THE LOST      FAMILIES
          IV    HE MAKES      FIRE
            V    HE LEADS THE     PEOPLE TO    VICTORY IN       WAR
         VI     HE IS    CROWNED     KING
   THE POPSIPETEL PICTURE-HISTORY OF KING JONG THINKALOT]
       _The_ VOYAGES _of_    DOCTOR DOLITTLE
       ILLUSTRATED BY THE AUTHOR
       BY HUGH LOFTING
       _Published by    FREDK. A. STOKES Co.    at 443 Fourth Avenue New York A.D. 1922_
       _Copyright, 1922, by_    FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
       _All rights reserved, including that of translation    into foreign languages_
       First Printing,        August 18, 1922    Second Printing,     November 10, 1922    Third Printing,      February 28, 1923    Fourth Printing,         June 20, 1923    Fifth Printing,        August 16, 1923    Sixth Printing,      November 30, 1923    Seventh Printing,       April 18, 1925    Eighth Printing,        March 19, 1926    Ninth Printing,          July 30, 1927    Tenth Printing,         April 11, 1928    Eleventh Printing,       June 19, 1929    Twelfth Printing,   September 12, 1930    Thirteenth Printing,   August 10, 1931    Fourteenth Printing, September 1, 1933
       _Printed in the United States of America_
       _To    Colin    and    Elizabeth_
   _CONTENTS_
       PART ONE    CHAPTER                                      PAGE    PROLOGUE                                        1       I THE COBBLER’S SON                          3      II I HEAR OF THE GREAT NATURALIST             8     III THE DOCTOR’S HOME                         15      IV THE WIFF-WAFF                             24       V POLYNESIA                                 32      VI THE WOUNDED SQUIRREL                      41     VII SHELLFISH TALK                            45    VIII ARE YOU A GOOD NOTICER?                   50      IX THE GARDEN OF DREAMS                      55       X THE PRIVATE ZOO                           60      XI MY SCHOOLMASTER, POLYNESIA                65     XII MY GREAT IDEA                             70    XIII A TRAVELER ARRIVES                        75     XIV CHEE-CHEE’S VOYAGE                        80      XV I BECOME A DOCTOR’S ASSISTANT             84
       PART TWO       I THE CREW OF “THE CURLEW”                  88      II LUKE THE HERMIT                           91     III JIP AND THE SECRET                        95      IV BOB                                       99       V MENDOZA                                  105      VI THE JUDGE’S DOG                          111     VII THE END OF THE MYSTERY                   116    VIII THREE CHEERS                             121      IX THE PURPLE BIRD-OF-PARADISE              126       X LONG ARROW, THE SON OF GOLDEN ARROW      129      XI BLIND TRAVEL                             135     XII DESTINY AND DESTINATION                  140
       PART THREE       I THE THIRD MAN                            144      II GOOD-BYE!                                151     III OUR TROUBLES BEGIN                       155      IV OUR TROUBLES CONTINUE                    160       V POLYNESIA HAS A PLAN                     167      VI THE BED-MAKER OF MONTEVERDE              172     VII THE DOCTOR’S WAGER                       177    VIII THE GREAT BULLFIGHT                      184      IX WE DEPART IN A HURRY                     193
       PART FOUR       I SHELLFISH LANGUAGES AGAIN                198      II THE FIDGIT’S STORY                       205     III BAD WEATHER                              221      IV WRECKED!                                 225       V LAND!                                    233      VI THE JABIZRI                              239     VII HAWK’S-HEAD MOUNTAIN                     245
       PART FIVE       I A GREAT MOMENT                           253      II “THE MEN OF THE MOVING LAND”             262     III FIRE                                     266      IV WHAT MAKES AN ISLAND FLOAT               271       V WAR!                                     275      VI GENERAL POLYNESIA                        282     VII THE PEACE OF THE PARROTS                 287    VIII THE HANGING STONE                        291      IX THE ELECTION                             300       X THE CORONATION OF KING JONG              308
       PART SIX       I NEW POPSIPETEL                           314      II THOUGHTS OF HOME                         322     III THE RED MAN’S SCIENCE                    328      IV THE SEA-SERPENT                          332       V THE SHELLFISH RIDDLE SOLVED AT LAST      340      VI THE LAST CABINET MEETING                 346     VII THE DOCTOR’S DECISION                    350
   _ILLUSTRATIONS_
     The Popsipetel Picture-History of King Jong Thinkalot        (in colors)                                      _Frontispiece_                                                                  PAGE  “I would sit on the river-wall with my feet dangling        over the water”                                              5  “And in her right foot she carried a lighted candle!”             22  “‘Being a good noticer is terribly important’”                    53  A traveler arrives                                                77  “On the bed sat the Hermit”                                      101  “Sat scowling down upon the amazed and gaping jury”              115  “‘What else can I think?’”                                       133  “‘Boy, where’s the skipper?’”                                    147  “In these lower levels we came upon the shadowy shapes        of dead ships” (in colors)                                 162  “The Doctor started chatting in Spanish to the bed-maker”        175  “Did acrobatics on the beast’s horns”                            189  “‘He talks English!’”                                            201  “I was alone in the ocean!”                                      226  “It was a great moment”                                          257  The Terrible Three                                               279  “Working away with their noses against the end of the        island”                                                    293  “The Whispering Rocks”                                           295  “Had to chase his butterflies with a crown upon his head”        317  “‘Tiptoe incognito,’ whispered Bumpo”                            353
   _THE VOYAGES OF DOCTOR DOLITTLE_
   THE VOYAGES OF DOCTOR DOLITTLE
   PROLOGUE
   ALL that I have written so far about Doctor Dolittle I heard long afterit happened from those who had known him—indeed a great deal of it tookplace before I was born. But I now come to set down that part of thegreat man’s life which I myself saw and took part in.
   Many years ago the Doctor gave me permission to do this. But we wereboth of us so busy then voyaging around the world, having adventuresand filling note-books full of natural history that I never seemed toget time to sit down and write of our doings.
   Now of course, when I am quite an old man, my memory isn’t so good anymore. But whenever I am in doubt and have to hesitate and think, Ialways ask Polynesia, the parrot.
   That wonderful bird (she is now nearly two hundred and fifty years old)sits on the top of my desk, usually humming sailor songs to herself,while I write this book. And, as every one who ever met her knows,Polynesia’s memory is the most marvelous memory in the world. Ifthere is any happening I am not quite sure of, she is always able toput me right, to tell me exactly how it took place, who was there andeverything about it. In fact sometimes I almost think I ought to saythat this book was written by Polynesia 
					     					 			 instead of me.
   Very well then, I will begin. And first of all I must tell yousomething about myself and how I came to meet the Doctor.
   PART I
   _THE FIRST CHAPTER_
   THE COBBLER’S SON
   MY name was Tommy Stubbins, son of Jacob Stubbins, the cobbler ofPuddleby-on-the-Marsh; and I was nine and a half years old. At thattime Puddleby was only quite a small town. A river ran through themiddle of it; and over this river there was a very old stone bridge,called Kingsbridge, which led you from the market-place on one side tothe churchyard on the other.
   Sailing-ships came up this river from the sea and anchored near thebridge. I used to go down and watch the sailors unloading the shipsupon the river-wall. The sailors sang strange songs as they pulled uponthe ropes; and I learned these songs by heart. And I would sit on theriver-wall with my feet dangling over the water and sing with the men,pretending to myself that I too was a sailor.
   For I longed always to sail away with those brave ships when theyturned their backs on Puddleby Church and went creeping down the riveragain, across the wide lonely marshes to the sea. I longed to go withthem out into the world to seek my fortune in foreign lands—Africa,India, China and Peru! When they got round the bend in the river andthe water was hidden from view, you could still see their huge brownsails towering over the roofs of the town, moving onward slowly—likesome gentle giants that walked among the houses without noise. Whatstrange things would they have seen, I wondered, when next they cameback to anchor at Kingsbridge! And, dreaming of the lands I had neverseen, I’d sit on there, watching till they were out of sight.
   Three great friends I had in Puddleby in those days. One was Joe, themussel-man, who lived in a tiny hut by the edge of the water under thebridge. This old man was simply marvelous at making things. I never sawa man so clever with his hands. He used to mend my toy ships for mewhich I sailed upon the river; he built windmills out of packing-casesand barrel-staves; and he could make the most wonderful kites from oldumbrellas.
   Joe would sometimes take me in his mussel-boat, and when the tidewas running out we would paddle down the river as far as the edge ofthe sea to get mussels and lobsters to sell. And out there on thecold lonely marshes we would see wild geese flying, and curlews andredshanks and many other kinds of seabirds that live among the samfireand the long grass of the great salt fen. And as we crept up the riverin the evening, when the tide had turned, we would see the lightson Kingsbridge twinkle in the dusk, reminding us of tea-time and warmfires.
    “I would sit on the river-wall with my feet danglingover the water”]
   Another friend I had was Matthew Mugg, the cat’s-meat-man. He was afunny old person with a bad squint. He looked rather awful but hewas really quite nice to talk to. He knew everybody in Puddleby;and he knew all the dogs and all the cats. In those times being acat’s-meat-man was a regular business. And you could see one nearly anyday going through the streets with a wooden tray full of pieces of meatstuck on skewers crying, “Meat! M-E-A-T!” People paid him to give thismeat to their cats and dogs instead of feeding them on dog-biscuits orthe scraps from the table.
   I enjoyed going round with old Matthew and seeing the cats and dogscome running to the garden-gates whenever they heard his call.Sometimes he let me give the meat to the animals myself; and I thoughtthis was great fun. He knew a lot about dogs and he would tell methe names of the different kinds as we went through the town. He hadseveral dogs of his own; one, a whippet, was a very fast runner, andMatthew used to win prizes with her at the Saturday coursing races;another, a terrier, was a fine ratter. The cat’s-meat-man used to makea business of rat-catching for the millers and farmers as well as hisother trade of selling cat’s-meat.
   My third great friend was Luke the Hermit. But of him I will tell youmore later on.
   I did not go to school; because my father was not rich enough to sendme. But I was extremely fond of animals. So I used to spend my timecollecting birds’ eggs and butterflies, fishing in the river, ramblingthrough the countryside after blackberries and mushrooms and helpingthe mussel-man mend his nets.
   Yes, it was a very pleasant life I lived in those days long ago—thoughof course I did not think so then. I was nine and a half years old;and, like all boys, I wanted to grow up—not knowing how well off I waswith no cares and nothing to worry me. Always I longed for the timewhen I should be allowed to leave my father’s house, to take passagein one of those brave ships, to sail down the river through the mistymarshes to the sea—out into the world to seek my fortune.
   _THE SECOND CHAPTER_
   I HEAR OF THE GREAT NATURALIST
   ONE early morning in the Springtime, when I was wandering among thehills at the back of the town, I happened to come upon a hawk with asquirrel in its claws. It was standing on a rock and the squirrel wasfighting very hard for its life. The hawk was so frightened when I cameupon it suddenly like this, that it dropped the poor creature and flewaway. I picked the squirrel up and found that two of its legs werebadly hurt. So I carried it in my arms back to the town.
   When I came to the bridge I went into the mussel-man’s hut and askedhim if he could do anything for it. Joe put on his spectacles andexamined it carefully. Then he shook his head.
   “Yon crittur’s got a broken leg,” he said—“and another badly cut an’all. I can mend you your boats, Tom, but I haven’t the tools nor thelearning to make a broken squirrel seaworthy. This is a job for asurgeon—and for a right smart one an’ all. There be only one man I knowwho could save yon crittur’s life. And that’s John Dolittle.”
   “Who is John Dolittle?” I asked. “Is he a vet?”
   “No,” said the mussel-man. “He’s no vet. Doctor Dolittle is anacheralist.”
   “What’s a nacheralist?”
   “A nacheralist,” said Joe, putting away his glasses and starting tofill his pipe, “is a man who knows all about animals and butterfliesand plants and rocks an’ all. John Dolittle is a very greatnacheralist. I’m surprised you never heard of him—and you daft overanimals. He knows a whole lot about shellfish—that I know from my ownknowledge. He’s a quiet man and don’t talk much; but there’s folks whodo say he’s the greatest nacheralist in the world.”
   “Where does he live?” I asked.
   “Over on the Oxenthorpe Road, t’other side the town. Don’t know justwhich house it is, but ’most anyone ’cross there could tell you, Ireckon. Go and see him. He’s a great man.”
   So I thanked the mussel-man, took up my squirrel again and started offtowards the Oxenthorpe Road.
   The first thing I heard as I came into the market-place was some onecalling “Meat! M-E-A-T!”
   “There’s Matthew Mugg,” I said to myself. “He’ll know where this Doctorlives. Matthew knows everyone.”
   So I hurried across the market-place and caught him up.
   “Matthew,” I said, “do you know Doctor Dolittle?”
   “Do I know John Dolittle!” said he. “Well, I should think I do! I knowhim as well as I know my own wife—better, I sometimes think. He’s agreat man—a very great man.”
   “Can you show me where he lives?” I asked. “I want to take thissquirrel to him. It has a broken leg.”
   “Certainly,” said the cat’s-meat-man. “I’ll be going right by his housedirectly. Come along and I’ll show you.”
   So off we went together.
   “Oh, I’ve known John Dolittle for years and years,” said Matthew as wemade our way out of the market-place. “But I’m pretty sure he ain’thome just now. He’s away on a voyage. But he’s liable to be back anyday. I’ll show you his house and then you’ll know where to find him.”
   All the way down the Oxenthorpe Road Matthew hardly stopped talkingabout his great friend, Doctor John Dolittle—“M. D.” He talked so muchthat he forgot all about calling out “Meat!” until we both suddenlynoticed that we had a whole procession of dogs following us patiently.
   “Where did the Doctor go to on this voyage?” I asked as Matthew handed 
					     					 			round the meat to them.
   “I couldn’t tell you,” he answered. “Nobody never knows where he goes,nor when he’s going, nor when he’s coming back. He lives all aloneexcept for his pets. He’s made some great voyages and some wonderfuldiscoveries. Last time he came back he told me he’d found a tribe ofRed Indians in the Pacific Ocean—lived on two islands, they did. Thehusbands lived on one island and the wives lived on the other. Sensiblepeople, some of them savages. They only met once a year, when thehusbands came over to visit the wives for a great feast—Christmas-time,most likely. Yes, he’s a wonderful man is the Doctor. And as foranimals, well, there ain’t no one knows as much about ’em as what hedoes.”
   “How did he get to know so much about animals?” I asked.
   The cat’s-meat-man stopped and leant down to whisper in my ear.
   “_He talks their language_,” he said in a hoarse, mysterious voice.
   “The animals’ language?” I cried.
   “Why certainly,” said Matthew. “All animals have some kind of alanguage. Some sorts talk more than others; some only speak insign-language, like deaf-and-dumb. But the Doctor, he understands themall—birds as well as animals. We keep it a secret though, him and me,because folks only laugh at you when you speak of it. Why, he caneven write animal-language. He reads aloud to his pets. He’s wrotehistory-books in monkey-talk, poetry in canary language and comicsongs for magpies to sing. It’s a fact. He’s now busy learning thelanguage of the shellfish. But he says it’s hard work—and he has caughtsome terrible colds, holding his head under water so much. He’s a greatman.”