Round-about Rambles in Lands of Fact and Fancy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 274 pages of information about Round-about Rambles in Lands of Fact and Fancy.

Round-about Rambles in Lands of Fact and Fancy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 274 pages of information about Round-about Rambles in Lands of Fact and Fancy.

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“Those people you speak of,” said he sternly to the frightened Hoopoe, “may have had Cormorants to catch their fish, but I never heard of it before.  Whereas all history is full of the exploits of my ancestors, and monarchs and nobles spent immense fortunes in buying and keeping Falcons that hunted birds grandly.”

Now the Hoopoe knew very well that it was not this Falcon, but the great Gerfalcon, his cousin, that was formerly held in such high esteem; but he did not dare to say so, and, as he must be saying something, he turned to the Pelican.

“I have long wanted to meet with you to ask you if is true that you tear open your breast with your hooked bill, and feed your young with your own blood?”

“Not a word of truth in it!” replied the Pelican scornfully, “I am often obliged to gather food in places far from home.  I do not dive into the water like the Cormorant, but catch, with a sidelong snatch of my bill, the fish that rise to the surface.  This loose skin, that is now so folded up under my beak that you can scarcely see it, I can distend into an enormous pouch.  This I fill with fish, and my wings being wide and powerful, I can easily carry a great weight of fish through the air.  When I reach home I feed my young by pressing my beak against my breast, and thus forcing out the enclosed fish.  And on the tip of my beak is a little curved hook as red as a drop of blood.  And now you know the whole story.”

“Thank you,” said the Hoopoe, “I must go and tell the storks all about it.”  And away he darted like a streak of colored light.  The Falcon, too, lazily spread out his large wings, and soared majestically up into the air, leaving the Pelican and Cormorants to discuss their family affairs and their dinner in peace.

MUMMIES.

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A mummy is not a very pretty thing to look at; but, considered properly, it is certainly interesting.  That stiff form, wrapped up tightly in ever so many dirty cloths, with a black shrivelled face which looks as if it had been cut out of a piece of wood and then smoked, was once, no doubt, a very pleasant person to know.  If it was a woman, it played with the children; sewed a little, perhaps; complained of the heat, and went to parties.  If it was a man, it probably whistled a little, and sang; settled up its accounts, was fond of horses, and took an interest in the vegetable garden.

Most of the mummies that have been brought from Egypt to this country were originally kings, princes, princesses, noblemen, and priests, for few but those high-born folks could afford to be so well preserved as to last all this time; but it is very certain that none of them ever imagined that, thousands of years after their death, they would be carried away to countries never heard of in their day, and be gazed at by people who wore chignons and high-top hats, and who were not born until they had been dead three thousand years.

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Round-about Rambles in Lands of Fact and Fancy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.