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قراءة كتاب My Father's Dragon

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My Father's Dragon

My Father's Dragon

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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MY FATHER'S DRAGON

 

STORY BY

RUTH STILES GANNETT

ILLUSTRATIONS BY

RUTH CHRISMAN GANNETT

 

 

RANDOM HOUSE          .          NEW YORK

 

 

COPYRIGHT 1948 BY RANDOM HOUSE, INC.

For My

FATHER


CONTENTS

1.   My Father Meets the Cat 9
2.   My Father Runs Away 15
3.   My Father Finds the Island 22
4.   My Father Finds the River 31
5.   My Father Meets Some Tigers 39
6.   My Father Meets A Rhinoceros 48
7.   My Father Meets A Lion 56
8.   My Father Meets A Gorilla 63
9.   My Father Makes A Bridge 73
10.   My Father Finds the Dragon 79


Chapter One

MY FATHER MEETS THE CAT

One cold rainy day when my father was a little boy, he met an old alley cat on his street. The cat was very drippy and uncomfortable so my father said, "Wouldn't you like to come home with me?"

This surprised the cat—she had never before met anyone who cared about old alley cats—but she said, "I'd be very much obliged if I could sit by a warm furnace, and perhaps have a saucer of milk."

"We have a very nice furnace to sit by," said my father, "and I'm sure my mother has an extra saucer of milk."

My father and the cat became good friends but my father's mother was very upset about the cat. She hated cats, particularly ugly old alley cats. "Elmer Elevator," she said to my father, "if you think I'm going to give that cat a saucer of milk, you're very wrong. Once you start feeding stray alley cats you might as well expect to feed every stray in town, and I am not going to do it!"

This made my father very sad, and he apologized to the cat because his mother had been so rude. He told the cat to stay anyway, and that somehow he would bring her a saucer of milk each day. My father fed the cat for three weeks, but one day his mother found the cat's saucer in the cellar and she was extremely angry. She whipped my father and threw the cat out the door, but later on my father sneaked out and found the cat. Together they went for a walk in the park and tried to think of nice things to talk about. My father said, "When I grow up I'm going to have an airplane. Wouldn't it be wonderful to fly just anywhere you might think of!"

"Would you like to fly very, very much?" asked the cat.

"I certainly would. I'd do anything if I could fly."

"Well," said the cat, "If you'd really like to fly that much, I think I know of a sort of a way you might get to fly while you're still a little boy."

"You mean you know where I could get an airplane?"

"Well, not exactly an airplane, but something even better. As you can see,

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