Rootabaga Stories
: Gimm
se G
No Que
icket
ip the
our U
in a B
ve Rus
Peo
on Pi
d Cl
a Do
roke Away
baga
ouse where everything is
e doorknobs open the doors. The windows are always either open or shut. We are always
let his childre
ey learn to make words shall be their nam
the Ax, he was named Please Gimme. When the fi
by night in their eyes and the lights of early mor
turn the doorknobs, open the doors, and run out to have the wind comb thei
mme the Ax said to himself, "My first boy is my last and my l
g is the same as it always was. They learned to say just as their father said, "The chimney sits on top of the house and lets the smoke out, the doork
of the evening after they had eggs for breakfast in the
long anywhere," said the t
n and the tough daughter of Gimme the Ax, answered th
stures, pepper pickers, pitchforks, everyt
erent neighbors said, "They are going to Kansas, to Kokomo, to Cana
ghed in his hat five ways and said, "They are going to the moon and when
, pastures, pepper pickers, pitchforks, Gimme the Ax put in
only son, and Ax Me No Questions, his oldest and younge
at the window selling railroa
g and took out all
you wish a ticket to go away and never come back?"
the sky and never come back-send us far as the railroad rails g
out his eyes. "Then I will give you a new ticket. It blew in. It is
the ticket agent three times he opened the ragbag and took out all the spot cash money he got for selling
e, twice, three times at the long yellow lea
n, showed the conductor his ticket and they started to ride to where the
railroad tracks run off into the blue sky. And it ran on
og's nose choked and spit pfisty-pfoost, pfisty-pfoost, pfisty-pfoost. But no matter what happened to the whistle and the bell and th
his fingers in and took out the long slick yellow
camels, and all their speedy, spotted, lucky lizards,
n the same track. One train was going one way. The other
ppened?" the childre
ered. "This is the Over and Under country. Nobody gets out
rst, was the balloon crop of that summer. The sky was thick with balloons. Red, blue, yellow balloons, white, purple and orange balloons-p
his own stilts, long or short. For picking balloons near the ground he had short s
fell off the stilts the handful of balloons they were holding ke
climbing like a bird in the morning?
"The songs came out of his neck and made him s
down again back t
n his songs are all gone. Then he
en he felt like it. The fireman rang the bell when he felt that way. And somet
owns come from," said Gimme the Ax to hi
short ovens, fat stubby ovens, lean lank ovens, all for baking eit
ut into the sunshine and put up to stand like a big w
l. One man threw a bucket of white fire over it. The second man
rs, wriggled his toes, jumped away from the fence and began turning handsprin
of Liver-and-Onions," said Gimme the Ax, looking again in his pocket to be sur
raight and began running in zigzags like one lette
e train all stopped being straight and changed to zigzags lik
f way and then back up,"
bibs on," said Gimme the Ax. "If the pigs are w
agging cars and the first pigs they saw had bibs on. And
e striped pigs had striped bibs on. And
s to have bibs on?" Pleas
s have checker fathers and mothers. The striped pigs have striped fathers
e tracks and the rails and the spikes and the ties wh
the Village of Liver-and-Onions, known as the
ou get there because the railroad tracks change from straight to zigz
ures, pepper pickers, pitchforks, put the spot cash money in a ragbag and go to the railroad statio
icket agent wipes sleep from his eyes
ing Back th
s When the
A
d-Onions to visit her uncle and her uncle's uncle on her mother
their little relation, their niece. Each one of the four
eyes are so blue, such a clear light blue, they are the same as cornflowers with blue rain
ck, said, "Her eyes are so blue, such a clear light shining blue, they are the same as cornflowers with
about her blue eyes, she did say to herself when they were not listening, "I know
us ask you two questions, first the first
asked her the fi
ns to-morrow morning, and fifty questions any morning. I like to l
"Where do you come from?" and the second question
Cream Puffs, a little light village on the upland corn prairie. From a long ways off it look
er uncle. "Tell it without stopping," added another uncle.
s light the same as a cream puff is light. It sits all by itself on the big long prairie where the prairie goes up in a slope. Ther
hen the wind gets rough it picks up the little Village of C
cle. "Um-m-m-m," said
in summer and winter. And they understand the rough wind who comes sometimes
ll see a big roundhouse. If you take the top off the roundhouse you
string winds loose of the spool, because the village is fastened to the string. So the rough wind blows and blows and t
the fun it wants, then the people of the village all come together and b
cle. "Um-m-m-m," said
aybe she will lead you through the middle of the city to the public square and show you the roundhouse. They call it
y do you have two freckles on your chin?" interrupted
eckle must be the same as a little burnt cream puff kept in the oven too long. After the two freckles looking like two little burnt cream puffs are put on her chin,
her three uncles. And they talked among each other
t blue, the same as cornflowers with blue raindrops shining and danc
elf, "I know for sure now these are sweet uncles and I
Rusty Rats
Vi
lage of Liver-and-Onions, a blizzard came up. Snow filled the sky and th
gravy on a beefsteak. The rat had a basket. In the basket was a catfish. And the rat said, "Please let me have a lit
o time for rats to be around-and we would like to
, the five lucky rats of the Village of Cream Puffs, p
d thought, as they had thought before, how her eyes were clear light blue the same a
the gray rat the way to the kitchen and the fire and the salt. And they watched the rat and kept him company w
Wing Tip the Spick and asked her to tell them about the five rusty lucky rats of the
her gave me a birthday present because I was nine years old. I remember how he said to me, 'You wil
ast. The other clock ran slow. And he told me if I wished to be early anywhere I should go by the
e public square near the Roundhouse of the Big Spool. There he pointed his finger at the statu
hats and how to slip off their slip-on shoes, long ago in the faraway Village of Liver-and-Onions, the people who ate cream puffs came together and met in the streets and picked up their baggage a
e long curved tail
s on their shoulders. And a blizzard came up. Snow filled the sky. The wind
nd changed black and twisted and spit icicles in their faces. They got lost in the bliz
and especially, most especially of all, rust on their long curved tails. They dug their noses down into the snow and their long
where the Village of Cream Puffs now stands. It was the rusty rats who saved their lives and showed them where to put their new village. That is why this statue now stands in th
, long before the snow birds began to wear slip-on hats and slip-on shoes, long befo
e uncles. "Um-m-m-m," sai
nions and cross the Shampoo River and ride many miles across the upland prairie till you co
ore polite she will take you through the middle of the town to the public square and show you the statue of the five rusty lucky rats with their long curved tails s