Part 31 (1/2)
”It is, indeed,” replied Tip, gravely. ”These pills may be of great use to us. I wonder if old Mombi knew they were in the bottom of the pepper-box. I remember hearing her say that she got the Powder of Life from this same Nikidik.”
”He must be a powerful Sorcerer!” exclaimed the Tin Woodman; ”and since the powder proved a success we ought to have confidence in the pills.”
”But how,” asked the Scarecrow, ”can anyone count seventeen by twos?
Seventeen is an odd number.”
”That is true,” replied Tip, greatly disappointed. ”No one can possibly count seventeen by twos.”
”Then the pills are of no use to us,” wailed the Pumpkinhead; ”and this fact overwhelms me with
209 grief. For I had intended wis.h.i.+ng that my head would never spoil.”
”Nonsense!” said the Scarecrow, sharply. ”If we could use the pills at all we would make far better wishes than that.”
”I do not see how anything could be better,” protested poor Jack. ”If you were liable to spoil at any time you could understand my anxiety.”
”For my part,” said the Tin Woodman, ”I sympathize with you in every respect. But since we cannot count seventeen by twos, sympathy is all you are liable to get.”
By this time it had become quite dark, and the voyagers found above them a cloudy sky, through which the rays of the moon could not penetrate.
The Gump flew steadily on, and for some reason the huge sofa-body rocked more and more dizzily every hour.
The Woggle-Bug declared he was sea-sick; and Tip was also pale and somewhat distressed. But the others clung to the backs of the sofas and did not seem to mind the motion as long as they were not tipped out.
Darker and darker grew the night, and on and on sped the Gump through the black heavens. The
210 travelers could not even see one another, and an oppressive silence settled down upon them.
After a long time Tip, who had been thinking deeply, spoke.
”How are we to know when we come to the pallace of Glinda the Good?” he asked.
”It's a long way to Glinda's palace,” answered the Woodman; ”I've traveled it.”
”But how are we to know how fast the Gump is flying?” persisted the boy. ”We cannot see a single thing down on the earth, and before morning we may be far beyond the place we want to reach.”
”That is all true enough,” the Scarecrow replied, a little uneasily. ”But I do not see how we can stop just now; for we might alight in a river, or on, the top of a steeple; and that would be a great disaster.”
So they permitted the Gump to fly on, with regular flops of its great wings, and waited patiently for morning.
Then Tip's fears were proven to be well founded; for with the first streaks of gray dawn they looked over the sides of the sofas and discovered rolling plains dotted with queer villages, where the houses, instead of being dome- shaped--as they all are in the Land of Oz--had slanting roofs that rose to a peak
211 in the center. Odd looking animals were also moving about upon the open plains, and the country was unfamiliar to both the Tin Woodman and the Scarecrow, who had formerly visited Glinda the Good's domain and knew it well.