Part 18 (1/2)
Once more Umboo was hoisted up by the ropes, but there was really no need for it. He knew what was wanted of him, and he did it.
”That's fine!” said the big elephant. ”If you learn the other things as easily as you learned this trick, you will have no trouble.”
”Are there other tricks to learn.” asked Umboo.
”Oh, many of them,” answered w.a.n.g, the best trick elephant in the circus. ”You have only just begun.”
And Umboo found that this was so. In the ten days that followed he was taught many more tricks. Some of them he did not learn so easily as he had the one of standing on his hind legs, and the ropes had to be used many times. But the other trick elephants, of whom there was more than one, showed the untrained ones what to do, and, in time, Umboo and his friends could go through many ”stunts,” as the circus men called them.
Umboo learned to lie down and ”play dead,” he learned to stand on a little stool, like an over-turned washtub, he learned to kneel down over a man stretched on the ground, and not crush him with the great body, weighing more than two tons of coal.
Other tricks, which Umboo learned, were to take pennies in his trunk, lift up a lid of a ”bank,” which was a big box, drop the pennies in and ring a bell, as if he had put money in a cash drawer. He also learned to turn the handle of a hand organ with his trunk, to ring a dinner bell, and do many other tricks, such as you have seen elephants do in a circus.
Then, one day, the man from India came where Umboo was, and giving him some peanuts, which our friend had learned to like very much, said:
”Well, now it is time you joined the circus. You know enough tricks to make a start, and your circus-trainer will teach you more. So off to the circus you go, Umboo! Off to the circus!”
And the next day Umboo went.
CHAPTER XV
UMBOO REMEMBERS
Brightly in the sun gleamed the white tents. In the wind the gay flags fluttered. Here and there were men selling pink lemonade and peanuts.
Around the green gra.s.s were the big wagons--wagons that needed eight or ten horses to pull, wagons s.h.i.+ning with gold and silver mirrors--heavy, rumbling wagons, which Umboo and the other elephants had to push out of the mud when the horses could not pull them.
”And so this is the circus, is it?” asked Umboo, as his friend, w.a.n.g, and he were led up to the tents.
”This is the circus,” spoke w.a.n.g. ”But I forgot. This is your first one; isn't it?”
”The very first,” answered Umboo. ”My! It's lots different from the barn where I learned my tricks, isn't it?”
”Oh, yes, heaps different. It's more jolly,” said w.a.n.g.
”And it's different from the jungle,” went on Umboo.
”Oh, yes indeed! It isn't at all like the jungle,” said w.a.n.g. ”I remember the jungle very well. I always had to be sniffing here and there for danger, and often I had to drink muddy water, or else I went hungry. Here that never happens. All we have to do here is to perform our tricks, push a wagon out of the mud now and then, and eat and sleep. You'll like it here, Umboo.”
”I'm sure I shall,” he answered. ”But what is that funny noise?”
”That is the music playing,” answered w.a.n.g. ”In the circus we do our tricks to band music. It's more fun that way.”
Umboo liked the music, and there was one man who played a big horn--larger than himself, and the horn went: ”Umph-umph!” just as Tusker used to trumpet through his trunk.
Umboo and the other elephants were taken into the animal tent, and placed around the outer ring, their legs chained to stakes driven in the ground. In cages were monkeys, lions, tigers and other beasts of the wood or jungle.
”Was it this circus of ours which you were first taken to, Umboo?”
asked Humpo. ”I came here about a year ago.”