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The Woman Who Lived in a Shoe There was an old woman Who lived in a shoe, She had so many children She didn’t know what to do; She gave them some broth Without any bread, And whipped them all soundly And sent them to bed. A LONG time ago there lived a woman who had four
daughters, and these in time grew up and married and went to live in
different
parts of the country. And the woman, after that, lived all alone, and
said to
herself, “I have done my duty to the world, and now shall rest quietly
for the
balance of my life. When one has raised a family of four children and
has
married them all happily, she is surely entitled to pass her remaining
days in
peace and comfort.” She
lived in a peculiar little house, that looked something like this
picture. It
was not like most of the houses you see,
but the old woman had it built herself, and liked it, and so it did not
matter
to her how odd it was. It stood upon the top of a little hill, and
there was a
garden at the back and a pretty green lawn in front, with white gravel
paths and
many beds of bright colored flowers. The
old woman was very happy and contented there until one day she received
a
letter saying that her daughter Hannah was dead and had sent her family
of five
children to their grandmother to be taken care of. This misfortune
ruined all
the old woman’s dreams of quiet; but the next day the children arrived
— three boys
and two girls, — and she made the best of it and gave them the beds her
own
daughters had once occupied, and her own cot as well; and she made a
bed for
herself on the parlor sofa. The
youngsters were like all other children, and got into mischief once in
awhile;
but the old woman had much experience with children and managed to keep
them in
order very well, while they quickly learned to obey her, and generally
did as
they were bid. But
scarcely had she succeeded in getting them settled in their new home
when
Margaret, another of her daughters, died, and sent four more children
to her
mother to be taken care of. The
old woman scarcely knew where to keep this new flock that had come to
her fold,
for the house was already full; but she thought the matter over and
finally
decided she must build an addition to her house. So
she hired a carpenter and built what is called a “lean-to” at the right
of her
cottage, making it just big enough to accommodate the four new members
of her
family. When it was completed her house looked very much as it does in
this
picture. She
put four little cots in her new part of the house, and then she sighed
contentedly, and said, “Now all the babies are taken care of and will
be
comfortable until they grow up.” Of course it was much more difficult
to manage
nine small children than five; and they often led each other into
mischief, so
that the flower beds began to be trampled upon and the green grass to
be worn
under the constant tread of little feet, and the furniture to show a
good many
scratches and bruises. But
the old woman continued to look after them, as well as she was able,
until
Sarah, her third daughter, also died, and three mor j children were
sent to
their grandmother to be brought up. The old woman was nearly distracted
when
she heard of this new addition to her family, but she did not give way
to
despair. She sent for the carpenter again, and had him build another
addition to
her house, as the picture shows. Then she put three new cots in the new
part
for the babies to sleep in, and when they arrived they were just as
cozy and
comfortable as peas in a pod. The
grandmother was a lively old woman for one of her years, but she found
her time
now fully occupied in cooking the meals for her twelve small
grandchildren, and
mending their clothes, and washing their faces, and undressing them at
night
and dressing them in the morning. There was just a dozen of the babies
now, and
when you consider they were about the same age you will realize what a
large
family the old woman had, and how fully her time was occupied in caring
for
them all. And
now, to make the matter worse, her fourth daughter, who had been named
Abigail,
suddenly took sick and died, and she also had four small children that
must be
cared for in some way. The
old woman, having taken the other twelve, could not well refuse to
adopt these
little orphans also. "I
may as well have sixteen as a dozen,” she said, with a sigh; “they will
drive me
crazy some day, anyhow, so a few more will not matter at all!” Once
more she sent for the carpenter, and bade him build a third addition to
the house;
and when it was completed she added four more cots to the dozen that
were
already in use. The house presented a very queer appearance now, but
she did
not mind that so long as the babies were comfortable. “I shall not have
to build
again,” she said; “and that is one satisfaction. I have now no more
daughters
to die and leave me their children, and therefore I must make up my
mind to do
the best I can with the sixteen that have already been inflicted upon
me in my
old age.” It
was not long before all the grass about the house was trodden down, and
the
white gravel of the walks all thrown at the birds, and the flower beds
trampled
into shapeless masses by thirty-two little feet that ran about from
morn till
night. But the old woman did not complain at this; her time was too
much taken
up with the babies for her to miss the grass and the flowers. It
cost so much money to clothe them that she decided to dress them all
alike, so
that they looked like the children of a regular orphan asylum. And it
cost so
much to feed them that she was obliged to give them the plainest food;
so there
was bread-and-milk for breakfast and milk-and-bread for dinner and
bread-and-broth
for supper. But it was a good and wholesome diet, and the children
thrived and
grew fat upon it. One
day a stranger came along the road, and when he saw the old woman’s
house he
began to laugh. “What
are you laughing at, sir?” asked the grandmother, who was sitting upon
her
door-steps engaged in mending sixteen pairs of stockings. “At
your house,” the stranger replied; “it looks for all the world like a
big shoe!” “A
shoe!” she said, in surprise. “Why,
yes. The chimneys are shoe-straps, and the steps are the heel, and all
those
additions make the foot of the shoe.” “Never
mind,” said the woman; “it may be a shoe, but it is full of babies, and
that
makes it different from most other shoes.” But
the stranger went on to the village and told all he met that he had
seen an old
woman who lived in a shoe; and soon people came from all parts of the
country
to look at the queer house, and they usually went away laughing. The
old woman did not mind this at all; she was too busy to be angry. Some
of the
children were always getting bumped heads or bruised shins, or falling
down and
hurting themselves, and these had to be comforted. And some were
naughty and
had to be whipped; and some were dirty and had to be washed; and some
were good
and had to be kissed. It was “Gran’ma, do this!” and “Gran’ma, do
that!” from morning
to night, so that the poor grandmother was nearly distracted. The only
peace
she ever got was when they were all safely tucked in their little cots
and were
sound asleep; for then, at least, she was free from worry and had a
chance to
gather her scattered wits. "There
are so many children,” she said one day to the baker-man, “that I often
really
don’t know what to do!” “If
they were mine, ma’am,” he replied, “I'd send them to the poor-house,
or else
they'd send me to the mad-house.” Some
of the children heard him say this, and they resolved to play him a
trick in
return for his ill-natured speech. The
baker-man came every day to the shoe-house, and brought two great
baskets of
bread in his arms for the children to eat with their milk and their
broth. So
one day, when the old woman had gone to the town to buy shoes, the
children all
painted their faces, to look as Indians do when they are on the
war-path; and
they caught the roosters and the turkey-cock and pulled feathers from
their
tails to stick in their hair. And then the boys made wooden tomahawks
for the girls
and bows-and-arrows for their own use, and then all sixteen went out
and hid in
the bushes near the top of the hill. By
and by the baker-man came slowly up the path with a basket of bread on
either
arm; and just as he reached the bushes there sounded in his ears a most
unearthly war-whoop. Then a flight of arrows came from the bushes, and
although
they were blunt and could do him no harm, they rattled all over his
body; and
one hit his nose, and another his chin, while several stuck fast in the
loaves
of bread. Altogether,
the baker-man was terribly frightened; and when all the sixteen small
Indians
rushed from the bushes and flourished their tomahawks, he took to his
heels and
ran down the hill as fast as he could go! When the grandmother returned
she
asked, “Where
is the bread for your supper?” The
children looked at one another in surprise, for they had forgotten all
about
the bread. And then one of them confessed, and told her the whole story
of how
they had frightened the baker-man for saying he would send them to the
poor-house. “You
are sixteen very naughty children!” exclaimed the old woman; “and for
punishment you must eat your broth without any bread, and afterwards
each one
shall have a sound whipping and be sent to bed.” Then
all the children began to cry at once, and there was such an uproar
that their
grandmother had to put cotton in her ears that she might not lose her
hearing. But
she kept her promise, and made them eat their broth without any bread;
for,
indeed, there was no bread to give them. Then
she stood them in a row and undressed them, and as she put the
night-dress on
each one she gave it a sound whipping and sent it to bed. They cried
some, of
course, but they knew very well they deserved the punishment, and it
was not long
before all of them were sound asleep. They took care not to play any
more
tricks on the baker-man, and as they grew older they were naturally
much better
behaved. Before
many years the boys were old enough to work for the neighboring
farmers, and
that made the woman’s family a good deal smaller. And then the girls
grew up
and married, and found homes of their own, so that all the children
were in
time well provided for. But
not one of them forgot the kind grandmother who had taken such good
care of
them, and often they tell their children of the days when they lived
with the
old woman in a shoe and frightened the baker-man almost into fits with
their
wooden tomahawks. |