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THE THIRD CHAPTER MORE MONEY TROUBLES ND soon now the Doctor began to make
money again; and his sister, Sarah, bought a new dress and was happy.
Some of the animals who came to see him
were so sick that they had to stay at the Doctor's house for a week. And when
they were getting better they used to sit in chairs on the lawn. They used to sit in chairs on the lawn And often even after they got well, they
did not want to go away — they liked the Doctor and his house so much. And he
never had the heart to refuse them when they asked if they could stay with him.
So in this way he went on getting more and more pets. Once when he was sitting on his garden
wall, smoking a pipe in the evening, an Italian organ-grinder came round with a
monkey on a string. The Doctor saw at once that the monkey's collar was too
tight and that he was dirty and unhappy. So he took the monkey away from the
Italian, gave the man a shilling and told him to go. The organ-grinder got
awfully angry and said that he wanted to keep the monkey. But the Doctor told
him that if he didn't go away he would punch him on the nose. John Dolittle was
a strong man, though he wasn't very tall. So the Italian went away saying rude
things and the monkey stayed with Doctor Do-little and had a good home. The
other animals in the house called him "Chee-Chee" — which is a common word in monkey-language,
meaning "ginger." And another time, when the circus came
to Puddleby, the crocodile who had a bad toothache escaped at night and came
into the Doctor's garden. The Doctor talked to him in crocodile-language and
took him into the house and made his tooth better. But when the crocodile saw
what a nice house it was — with all the different places for the different
kinds of animals — he too wanted to live with the Doctor. He asked couldn't he
sleep in the fish-pond at the bottom of the garden, if he promised not to eat
the fish. When the circus-men came to take him back he got so wild and savage
that he frightened them away. But to every one in the house he was always as
gentle as a kitten. But now the old ladies grew afraid to
send their lap-dogs to Doctor Dolittle because of the crocodile; and the
farmers wouldn't believe that he would not eat the lambs and sick calves they
brought to be cured. So the Doctor went to the crocodile and told him he must
go back to his circus. But he wept such big tears, and begged so hard to be
allowed to stay, that the Doctor hadn't the heart to turn him out. So then the Doctor's sister came to him
and said, "John, you must send that creature
away. Now the farmers and the old ladies are afraid to send their animals to
you — just as we were beginning to be well off again. Now we shall be ruined
entirely. This is the last straw. I will no longer be housekeeper for you if
you don't send away that alligator." "It isn't an alligator," said
the Doctor — "it's a crocodile." "I don't care what you call
it," said his sister. "It's a nasty thing to find under the bed. I
won't have it in the house." "But he has promised me," the
Doctor answered, "that he will not bite any one. He doesn't like the
circus; and I haven't the money to send him back to Africa where he comes from.
He minds his own business and on the whole is very well behaved. Don't be so
fussy." "I tell you I will not have him
around," said Sarah. "He eats the linoleum. If you don't send him
away this minute go and get married!" "All right," said the Doctor,
"go and get married. It can't be helped." And he took down his hat
and went out into the garden. So Sarah Dolittle packed up her things
and went off; and the Doctor was left all alone with his animal family. 'All right,' said the Doctor, 'go and get married' And very soon he was poorer than he had
ever been before. With all these mouths to fill, and the house to look after,
and no one to do the mending, and no money coming in to pay the butcher's bill,
things began to look very difficult. But the Doctor didn't worry at all, "Money is a nuisance," he used
to say. "We'd all be much better off if it had never been invented. What
does money matter, so long as we are happy?" One evening when the Doctor was asleep in his chair But soon the animals themselves began to
get worried. And one evening when the Doctor was asleep in his chair before the
kitchen-fire they began talking it over among themselves in whispers. And the
owl, Too-Too, who was good at arithmetic, figured it out that there was only
money enough left to last another week — if they each had one meal a day and no
more. Then the parrot said, "I think we
all ought to do the housework ourselves. At least we can do that much. After
all, it is for our sakes that the old man finds himself so lonely and so
poor." So it was agreed that the monkey,
Chee-Chee, was to do the cooking and mending; the dog was to sweep the floors;
the duck was to dust and make the beds; the owl, Too-Too, was to keep the
accounts, and the pig was to do the gardening. They made Polynesia, the parrot,
housekeeper and laundress, because she was the oldest. Of course at first they all found their
new jobs very hard to do — all except Chee-Chee, who had hands, and could do
things like a man. But they soon got used to it; and they used to think it
great fun to watch Jip, the dog, sweeping his tail over the floor with a rag
tied onto it for a broom. After a little they got to do the work so well that
the Doctor said that he had never had his house kept so tidy or so clean
before. In this way things went along all right
for a while; but without money they found it very hard. Then the animals made a vegetable and
flower stall outside the garden-gate and sold radishes and roses to the people
that passed by along the road. But still they didn't seem to make
enough money to pay all the bills — and still the Doctor wouldn't worry. When
the parrot came to him and told him that the fishmonger wouldn't give them any
more fish, he said, "Never mind. So long as the hens
lay eggs and the cow gives milk we can have omelettes and junket. And there are
plenty of vegetables left in the garden. The Winter is still a long way off.
Don't fuss. That was the trouble with Sarah — she would fuss. I wonder how
Sarah's getting on — an excellent woman — in some ways — Well, well!" But the snow came earlier than usual
that year; and although the old lame horse hauled in plenty of wood from the
forest outside the town, so they could have a big fire in the kitchen, most of
the vegetables in the garden were gone, and the rest were covered with snow;
and many of the animals were really hungry. |