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Tum Tum, the Jolly Elephant Part 5

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"What is the matter, Tum Tum?" asked Mappo.

"The s.h.i.+p is trying to stand on its head, I think," said the elephant.

"Oh, here I go!" and he fell down on his knees, while Mappo sailed through the air and fell on a pile of hay.

CHAPTER IV

TUM TUM IN THE CIRCUS

With Mappo chattering in his monkey language, and the elephants in the lower part of the s.h.i.+p trumpeting through their trunks, there was so much noise, that it is no wonder many of the animals were frightened.

"Oh, what is it? What is it?" Mappo chattered.

"I don't know," answered Tum Tum, "unless the hunters are coming after us again," and, raising his trunk, he gave the call of danger, as he had heard Mr. Boom, the big leader elephant, give it in the jungle.

"Hus.h.!.+ Be quiet!" called an old elephant near Tum Tum. "Why do you call that way, brother?" he asked in elephant language.

"There is danger," replied Tum Tum. "I must tell the others to get out of here."

"That cannot be done," said the old elephant. "We are in a s.h.i.+p, on the big water, and if we got out now, in the ocean, we would surely drown.

Be quiet!"

"But why am I tossed about so?" asked Tum Tum. "Why can I not stand up straight?"

"Because the s.h.i.+p is in a storm," answered the old elephant. "I know, for I have been on a s.h.i.+p before. The wind is blowing and tossing the s.h.i.+p up and down.

"But there is no danger. Only keep quiet, and, since you are the new leader of the elephants, tell them to be quiet, or some of them may be hurt. See, down come the sailors to see what is the trouble."

Surely enough, down came a whole lot of sailors, in white suits, to see why all the elephants had trumpeted so loudly, and why Mappo, the merry monkey, had squealed.

"Hus.h.!.+ Be quiet!" called Tum Tum to the other elephants. "Be quiet or I shall beat you with my trunk, and make you."

When Tum Tum spoke that way, all the other elephants heard him, and they grew quiet. Some, who had fallen on their knees, when the s.h.i.+p tossed from side to side, now got up. They placed their big legs far apart, so they could stand steadily.

"We will be all right when the storm pa.s.ses," said the old elephant who had spoken to Tum Tum.

Mappo picked himself up off the pile of hay, and, just then, his friend the sailor came to get him.

"I guess you have been here long enough, Mappo," said the sailor. "You might get hurt down here, with all these big elephants."

Mappo was glad enough to go, not that he felt afraid of the elephants, but he knew that one of them might, by accident, fall on him, and an elephant is so large and heavy that, when he falls on a monkey, there is not much left of the little chap.

"Good-by, Tum Tum!" called Mappo to his big friend. "I'll come and see you, when the storm is over."

"All right," answered Tum Tum. "And I hope the storm will soon be over, for I do not like it."

The s.h.i.+p was swinging to and fro, like a rocking chair on the front porch when the wind blows. But finally the elephants became used to it, and some of them could even go to sleep. But Tum Tum stayed awake.

"There might be some danger," he thought to himself, "and if there was, I could warn the others. I am the leader, and must always be on the watch for danger, just as Mr. Boom would be, if he were here."

But I am glad to say no more danger came to the s.h.i.+p. It rode safely through the storm, and in a few days, it was gliding swiftly over the blue sea.

"What will happen to us, when the s.h.i.+p stops sailing?" asked Tum Tum of the old elephant, who seemed to know so much.

"After it gets to the other side of the ocean," said the old elephant, "we shall be taken out--we and all the animals. Then we shall go to the circus."

"Is the circus nice?" asked Tum Tum.

"I have been in one or two, and I like them," said the old elephant, whose name was Hoy. "There is hard work, but there is also fun."

"Tell me about the fun," said Tum Tum. "I do not like to hear about the hard work."

"The work goes with the fun," said Hoy, "so I will tell you about both.

The hard work comes in marching through the hard city streets, that hurt your feet. That is when we go in the parade. I know, for I have been in many parades. But it is fun, too, for we elephants have a little house on our backs, and men and women ride in it. Then the bands play, and the people laugh and shout to see us pa.s.s by. Yes, that is fun," and the old elephant, who had been sent to make the voyage in the s.h.i.+p, so that he might keep the new, wild elephants quiet, shut his eyes as he thought of the circus days.

"Is there other hard work?" asked Tum Tum.

"A great deal," said Hoy. "You will have to push heavy wagons about with your head, and lift heavy poles, as you did in the lumber yard when you came from the jungle. And then you will have to do tricks in the circus ring."

"What are tricks?" asked Tum Tum.

"Tricks are what I call hard work, but they make the people in the circus laugh," answered Hoy. "You will have to stand on your head, turn somersaults and do many things like that."

"Now tell me about the fun," begged Tum Tum.

"Yes, there is some fun," spoke Hoy, slowly. "You will get nice hay to eat, and water to drink, and the children in the circus will give you popcorn b.a.l.l.s and peanuts to eat. Also, you will wear a fine blanket, all gold and spangles, when you march around the ring in the tent. But now I am tired, and I want to go to sleep."

So the old elephant slept, and Tum Tum stood there, swaying backward and forward in the s.h.i.+p, wondering whether he would like a circus.

It took several weeks for the s.h.i.+p to make the journey from jungle land to circus land, and, during that period, Mappo, the merry monkey, came down to see Tum Tum several times.

"I am going to be in the circus, also," said Mappo, when one day Tum Tum spoke of the big show under the white tent.

"Are you?" asked the jolly elephant. "That will be nice. We'll see each other."

"And will you take care of me, so the tiger won't get me?" asked Mappo.

"Indeed I shall!" cried Tum Tum through his big trunk.

At last the day came when the s.h.i.+p reached her dock, and the animals were taken out. The chains were loosed from the legs of Tum Tum and the other elephants, and they were hoisted up from the lower part of the s.h.i.+p, and allowed to go ash.o.r.e. Tum Tum was glad of it, for he was tired of the water. But his journey was not over, for, with the others, he was put in a railroad car, and hauled by an engine. At last, however, he reached a big wooden building, and the old elephant, Hoy, said:

"This is where the circus stays in winter. Now you will begin to have hard work, and also fun."

"Well," thought Tum Tum, as, with the other elephants, he marched toward the big barn-like building, "if there is enough fun, I shall not mind the hard work."

Then, as he felt rather jolly, after getting out of the big freight car, Tum Tum picked up a piece of stick from the ground, and began tickling another elephant in the ribs with it.

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