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Twinkle and Chubbins: Their Astonishing Adventures in Nature-Fairyland

Chapter 6  6

Word Count: 537    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

s Taken t

y, crying: "Take her, Daddy! Take her to old Ston

heart?" asked Twinkl

s the reply. "We consider him the wisest and most intelligent of our race; but, wh

anything wrong

ther farmers around here. They fight my people without m

nt, for she knew

n ant if I could help it. Also I am sure you have a kind disposition. But you are a human, and

paths of the garden, followed slowly by their fat mother, who held th

red, and their mother was even more disagreeable than they were. As for Mister Woodchuck, she did not object to h

n quite secure, I must try to prevent your running away when we are outside the wa

T JUDGE ST

kle thought, and proceeded to buckle it around the girl's neck. To the collar was attached a f

lease come along quietly

ng but hard, baked earth, without any grass or other green thing growing upon it, or any tree or shrub to shade it from the hot sun. And not

t even a woodchuck-and Twinkle didn't

is prisoner across the barren space to the round m

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Twinkle and Chubbins: Their Astonishing Adventures in Nature-Fairyland
Twinkle and Chubbins: Their Astonishing Adventures in Nature-Fairyland
“The Twinkle Tales is a 1905 series by L. Frank Baum, published under the pen name Laura Bancroft. The six stories were issued in separate booklets by Baum's publisher Reilly & Britton, with illustrations by Maginel Wright Enright. In 1911, the six eight-chapter stories were collected as Twinkle and Chubbins; Their Astonishing Adventures in Nature-Fairyland - which is a misnomer, since Chubbins appears in only two stories and few are set in "Nature-Fairyland". The book was followed by Policeman Bluejay, which was retitled Babes in Birdland for its second edition.”