Volume 2. Pippi is a Thing Finder, The Turtle Who Could Not Stop Talking, The Lad Who Went to the North Wind, The Five Hundred Hats

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Classic Children s Tales Volume 2 Pippi is a Thing Finder, The Turtle Who Could Not Stop Talking, The Lad Who Went to the North Wind, The Five Hundred Hats

Children s Classic Tales Volume 2 Table of Contents Pippi is a Thing Finder....................................3 The Turtle Who Could Not Stop Talking.....................14 The Lad Who Went to the North Wind.......................17 The Five Hundred Hats..................................22 EDCON PUBLISHING www.edconpublishing.com

Copyright 2008 A/V Concepts Corp. Edcon Publishing Group 30 Montauk Blvd. Oakdale NY 11769 info@edconpublishing.com www.edconpublishing.com 1-888-553-3266 Fax 1-888-518-1564 Copyright 2008 by EDCON Publishing. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without written permission of the publisher, with the following exception: Student activity pages are intended for reproduction. EDCON Publishing grants to individual purchasers of this book the right to make sufficient copies of reproducible pages for use by all students of a single teacher. This permission is limited to an individual teacher, and does not apply to entire schools or school systems. Printed in U.S.A. ISBN # 1-55576-522-X

Pippi is a Thing-Finder Way out at the end of a tiny little town was an old overgrown garden, and in the garden was an old house, and in the house lived Pippi Longstocking. She was nine years old, and she lived there all alone. Once upon a time Pippi had had a father. Naturally she had had a mother, too, but that was so long ago Pippi didn t remember her at all. Her mother had died when Pippi was just a tiny baby and lay in a cradle and howled all the time. Her father Pippi had not forgotten. He was a sea captain who sailed on the great ocean, and Pippi had sailed with him until one day her father blew overboard in a storm and disappeared. But Pippi was absolutely certain that he would come back sometime. Many years ago Pippi s father had bought the old house to live in someday. So while Pippi was waiting for him to come back, she went straight to Villa Villekulla. That was the name of the house. Beside Villa Villekulla was another garden and another house. In that house lived a mother and 3

4 father and two children, a boy and a girl. The boy s name was Tommy and the girl s Annika. They often wished for a playmate. Before Pippi came, they often used to hang over the fence and say, Isn t it silly that nobody ever moves into that house? Somebody ought to live there-somebody with children. On the summer day when Pippi moved into Villa Villekulla, Tommy and Annika were not at home. They had gone to visit their grandmother for a week. On the first day after they came home again, they stood by the gate, looking out onto the street, and even then they didn t know that there was a playmate so near. As they were standing there, considering what to do and wondering whether it was going to be one of those dull days when they couldn t think of anything to play just then the gate of Villa Villekulla opened, and a little girl stepped out. She was the most remarkable looking girl Tommy and Annika had ever seen. She wore an unusual dress, blue with red on it. On her long, thing legs she wore a pair of long stockings, one brown and the other black. She had on a pair of

black shoes that were exactly twice as long as her feet. The thing that made Tommy and Annika open their eyes widest of all was the monkey sitting on the strange girl s shoulders. It was a little monkey, dressed in blue pants, yellow jacket, and a white straw hat. Pippi walked along the street with one foot on the sidewalk and the other in the gutter. Tommy and Annika watched as long as they could see her. In a little while she came back, and now she was walking backward. When she reached Tommy and Annika s gate, she stopped. The children looked at each other in silence. At last Tommy spoke. Why did you walk backward? Why did I walk backward? said Pippi. Isn t this a free country? Can t a person walk any way he wants to? And that s how Tommy and Annika met Pippi Longstocking. The very next day Pippi said to her new friends, I don t know what you re going to do today, but I can t be lazy. I am a Thing-finder, and I haven t a 5