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But Pa said there was lots of honey left for the bees, and there wasanother large, hollow tree near by, into which they could move. For dinner they all had as much of the delicious honey as they couldeat, and Pa told them how he found the bee tree. "Well, Charles, even a pail of honey is something." Then she looked intothe wagon and threw up her hands. Early next morning he started to walk to Uncle Henry's. But before longhe came hurrying back, hitched the horses to the wagon, threw in his ax,the two washtubs, the wash-boiler and all the pails and wooden bucketsthere were. The first day Ma made cheese, Laura tasted the whey.
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But Laura lay awake a little while, listening to Pa's fiddle softlyplaying and to the lonely sound of the wind in the Big Woods. She lookedat Pa sitting on the bench by the hearth, the firelight gleaming on hisbrown hair and beard and glistening on the honey-brown fiddle. The days were growing shorter and the nights were cooler. One night JackFrost passed by, and in the morning there were bright colors here andthere among the green leaves of the Big Woods.
The Story of Pa and the Bear in the Way.
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"At last I came out of the dark woods, by the barn. There stood all thecows, waiting to be let through the bars. I let them in, and then ran tothe house. Laura loved to look at the lamp, with its glass chimney so clean andsparkling, its yellow flame burning so steadily, and its bowl of clearkerosene colored red by the bits of flannel. She loved to look at thefire in the fireplace, flickering and changing all the time, burningyellow and red and sometimes green above the logs, and hovering blueover the golden and ruby coals. Laura and Mary watched, breathless, one on each side of Ma, while thegolden little butter-pats, each with its strawberry on the top, droppedon to the plate as Ma put all the butter through the mold. Then Ma gavethem each a drink of good, fresh buttermilk. The doors and windows were tightly shut, and the cracks of the windowframes stuffed with cloth, to keep out the cold.
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The hole looked like the separator's mouth, and it had long, iron teeth.The teeth were chewing. They chewed the bundles and the separatorswallowed them. Straw blew out at the separator's other end, and wheatpoured out of its side. Afterward Laura and Mary asked questions, and Pa told them that the bigmachine was called the separator, and the rod was called the tumblingrod, and the little machine was called the horsepower.
Laura was proud to be helping Ma with the milking, and she carried thelantern very carefully. Its sides were of tin, with places cut in themfor the candle-light to shine through. Ma was worried, but Pa said that by starting before sun-up and walkingvery fast all day he could get home again before dark. Very early one morning Pa strapped the bundle of furs on his shoulders,and started to walk to town.
The Story of Grandpa and the Panther.
They were cosy and comfortable in their little house made of logs, withthe snow drifted around it and the wind crying because it could not getin by the fire. He settled Laura and Mary more comfortably on his knees and he said,"I'll tell you about Grandpa and the panther." "Yankee Doodle went to town, He wore his striped trousies, He swore hecouldn't see the town, There was so many houses."
Then, standing one on each side, Laura and Mary straightened thecovers, tucked them in well at the foot and the sides, plumped up thepillows and put them in place. Then Ma pushed the trundle bed into itsplace under the big bed. While he greased the traps, Pa told Laura and Mary little jokes andstories, and afterward he would play his fiddle. The large, round, colored pumpkinsmade beautiful chairs and tables. The red peppers and the onions dangledoverhead. The hams and the venison hung in, their paper wrappings, andall the bunches of dried herbs, the spicy herbs for cooking and thebitter herbs for medicine, gave the place a dusty-spicy smell.
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Then Pa gave her a little wooden man he had whittled out of a stick, tobe company for Charlotte. Ma gave her five little cakes, one for eachyear that Laura had lived with her and Pa. Mary had made the dress herself, when Laura thought shewas sewing on her patchwork quilt. That morning when Pa came in to breakfast he caught Laura and said hemust give her a spanking. "But when the sun went down and the Sabbath day was over, their fathertook them out to the woodshed and tanned their jackets, first James,then George, then Grandpa.
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"Peter had takenthe gun, or I would have shot him." "I turned right around and ran into the house where the children were,and slammed the door," Aunt Eliza answered. Alice said they must go outdoors to do it, and Ma thought it was toocold for Laura to play outdoors.
There had beenno fresh meat in the little house since spring, but now the fawns weregrown up, and Pa would go hunting again. But Pa was in the house whenit rained, and he began again to play the fiddle after supper. All the men were working as fast as they possibly could, but the machinekept right up with them.
They had playhouses under the two big oak trees in front of the house.Mary's playhouse was under Mary's tree, and Laura's playhouse was underLaura's tree. The greenleaves were the roofs, and through them they could see bits of the bluesky. Aunt Ruby and Aunt Docia and Ma left the dance and came running. Theyset out pans, big pans and little pans, and as fast as Grandma filledthem with the syrup they set out more. They set the filled ones away, tocool into maple sugar. Laura clapped her hands in time to the music, with all the otherclapping hands.