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    Chapter Five. The Little Old Man of the Island - Page 2

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    "If the earth were pushed in a mile, it would be a great calamity, wouldn't it?"

    "I s'pose so," admitted the little girl.

    "Well, here it is pushed in a full inch! That's a twelfth of a foot, or a little more than a millionth part of a mile. Therefore it is one-millionth part of a calamity -- Oh, dear! How dreadful!" said Pessim in a wailing voice.

    "Try to forget it, sir," advised Cap'n Bill, soothingly. "It's beginning to rain. Let's get under your shed and keep dry."

    "Raining! Is it really raining?" asked Pessim, beginning to weep.

    "It is," answered Cap'n Bill, as the drops began to descend, "and I don't see any way to stop it -- although I'm some observer myself."

    "No; we can't stop it, I fear," said the man. "Are you very busy just now?"

    "I won't be after I get to the shed," replied the sailor-man.

    "Then do me a favor, please," begged Pessim, walking briskly along behind them, for they were hastening to the shed.

    "Depends on what it is," said Cap'n Bill.

    "I wish you would take my umbrella down to the shore and hold it over the poor fishes till it stops raining. I'm afraid they'll get wet," said Pessim.

    Trot laughed, but Cap'n Bill thought the little man was poking fun at him and so he scowled upon Pessim in a way that showed he was angry.

    They reached the shed before getting very wet, although the rain was now coming down in big drops. The roof of the shed protected them and while they stood watching the rainstorm something buzzed in and circled around Pessim's head. At once the Observer began beating it away with his hands, crying out:

    "A bumblebee! A bumblebee! The queerest bumblebee I ever saw!"

    Cap'n Bill and Trot both looked at it and the little girl said in surprise:

    "Dear me! It's a wee little Ork!"

    "That's what it is, sure enough," exclaimed Cap'n Bill.

    Really, it wasn't much bigger than a big bumblebee, and when it came toward Trot she allowed it to alight on her shoulder.

    "It's me, all right," said a very small voice in her ear; "but I'm in an awful pickle, just the same!"


    "What, are you our Ork, then?" demanded the girl, much amazed.

    "No, I'm my own Ork. But I'm the only Ork you know," replied the tiny creature.

    "What's happened to you?" asked the sailor, putting his head close to Trot's shoulder in order to hear the reply better. Pessim also put his head close, and the Ork said:

    "You will remember that when I left you I started to fly over the trees, and just as I got to this side of the forest I saw a bush that was loaded down with the most luscious fruit you can
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