Uncle Robert's Geography - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
"Well," said Uncle Robert as they went back into the dining-room, "now we have found how many quarts there are in a gallon; how shall we find how many gallons two hundred and sixteen thousand cubic inches will make?"
"If I knew how many cubic inches there are in one gallon," said Frank, "I could do it."
"How shall we find out?" asked Uncle Robert.
"We might measure a gallon," said Donald, "and then if we could empty it into a flat pan couldn't we measure that?"
"We can try," said Uncle Robert, "if your mother has the pan."
"You may use one of those tins I bake biscuit in," said Mrs. Leonard.
"I'll get it," said Susie.
They measured it and found it was eleven inches long, seven inches wide, and two inches deep. The gallon of water filled it one and one half time.
"If it had been three inches deep," said Frank, "the water would have just filled it."
"Well," said Uncle Robert, "can you find out how many inches there are in all?"
It took some time and several suggestions from Uncle Robert, but at last they found it to be two hundred thirty-one cubic inches.
"Now," said Uncle Robert, "can you find how many two hundred thirty-one cubic inches there are in two hundred and sixteen thousand cubic inches?"
"I know how," said Frank, figuring rapidly.
In a short time he found that two hundred and sixteen thousand cubic inches would make over nine hundred thirty-five gallons.
"If you were going to water the garden with the new two-gallon pail,"
said Uncle Robert, "how many times would you have to fill it?"
"If we took two gallons at a time," said Frank, "it would be--wait a minute--it would be four hundred sixty-seven and one half."
"My," said Donald, "it makes my arms ache to think of it."
"I'm going to find out how much fell on the whole farm some time," said Frank, "but I'm just tired out now."
"Where does all the rain come from?" asked Susie. "I don't see how so much water can stay in the clouds."
"It doesn't," said Donald, laughing. "That's why it rains."
"But where does it all go to?" asked Uncle Robert.
"Oh," said Susie, "it just goes into the ground."
"Some of it runs off into the river," said Donald. "That's what makes it rise when it rains hard."
"I wonder if it has risen much to-day?" said Frank.
"We might put on our rubber boots and walk down and see," said Uncle Robert. "It is clearing off finely."
"It is almost supper time now," said Mrs. Leonard. "If you'll wait I'll help Jane get it ready, and then you can go as soon as it is over."
So they waited, and by the time they started the sun was s.h.i.+ning brightly. It would be a whole hour before it would set.
CHAPTER XIV.
THE WALK AFTER THE RAIN.
The sky was clear and bright as if it had been washed by the rain. The trees took on a fresher green. The corn held up its ta.s.seled heads as if conscious of the strength the clouds had given it. The birds, too, rejoiced as they flew from tree to tree, singing their sweetest songs.
"How nice it is to get out after being in the house all day," said Susie, skipping along by Uncle Robert's side. "See that lovely blue sky.
I wish I had a dress for my doll just that color."
"And when we came out this morning," said Uncle Robert, "Donald thought the clouds looked as though they were solid and could never break away."
"They're all gone now," said Donald. "I wonder where they went. Aren't the clouds lovely sometimes, uncle? I love to watch them when they look like great piles of snow."
"Yes," replied Uncle Robert, "when I was a boy I used to lie for hours under an old apple tree and watch the clouds. I fancied they had very wonderful forms, sometimes giants and dragons and all kinds of animals."
[Ill.u.s.tration: The clouds.]
"You can see things in them," said Donald. "I often do."
"What are clouds made of, uncle?" asked Susie. "I wish I could get close to one and see what it is like."
"When people go up in balloons," said Donald, "they go through clouds sometimes."
"Have you never been in a cloud?" asked Uncle Robert, smiling.
"Oh, no," said Susie. "How could I? I've never been up in a balloon."
"I know," was the reply, "but have you never seen anything near the ground that looked at all like a cloud?"
"I don't remember," said Susie, shaking her head.
"We've seen fogs along the river," said Frank. "They look a little like clouds. You know we see them almost every morning."
"Oh, yes," exclaimed Donald. "Don't you remember that fog we had early last spring? Why, uncle, it was so thick we couldn't see the barn from the house."
"And, uncle," said Susie, "I went out to the barn with father, and in a few minutes there were little drops of water on my hair, and all over my cloak."
"Did it last all day?" asked Uncle Robert.
"Oh, no," said Frank, "only for a little while in the morning. Then it went away and the sun came out."