The Wild Little House
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Illustrated hy F. iD587w
DILLON H. Drummond
US1008853
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The Wild Little House
#M*
^.7:>l^^[^'
^y
ElLIS
Illustrated hy F. iD587w
DILLON H. Drummond
US1008853
JD..37W
Dillon Wild little house
y UJ
go fee Zen
^5 PUBLIC LIBRARY FORT WAYNE AND ALLEN COUNTY,
IND.
-3-4833.00694 2129
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Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2011
http://www.archive.org/details/wildlittlehouseOOdill
r
A CRITERION
BOOK
FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
<6&-
The Wild
Little
House
by the same author •
Books for Children
THE LOST ISLAND THE SAN SEBASTIAN THE HOUSE BY THE SHORE •
Detective Stories
DEATH AT CRANE'S COURT SENT TO HIS ACCOUNT
The Wild Little House by
EILiS
DILLON
illustrated
V. H.
by
DRUMMOND
CRITERION BOOKS
NEW YORK,
N.Y.
All
rights reserved
First published in the
United States
1957 ^y Criterion Books, Inc. Library of Congress Catalog Card
Number
Printed in Great Britain
3y-gi62
**•
*1008833
The Wild Ita
really
was
street
of
a wild
tall stiff
little
on four
house.
was
it
little
was John. Through
a
boy who
sailing by,
far
when
and
would have
lived in
could get right in under
it
its
away down
there
was a
often did
the
fog,
it
go
this.
front, the
His
wild httle
the sea.
hill to
name
AU
day
watched the great ships
timbers stirred a
liked to
hill. It
high above the ground
gap between the houses in
house could look long, except
set
One
stout posts, like legs.
and the
stood in the middle of
It
houses in a town on top of a
was made of wood, and
it
House
Little
little,
restlessly,
for
it
sailing too.
The house had been built by an old sailor home from made all the rooms inside look hke ships'
the sea, and he had cabins. rails
There were swinging lamps and shelves with brass
on them, and beds
like bunks, set in the walls.
"He should have put me thought to
itself.
with gold ear-rings, and trees
right
on the
"There would be stories
lots
sea-shore," the house
of people
about islands
and monkeys. Nothing happens here." 7
there, sailors full
of palm
And right,
it
and
looked up the
down
but they just Tall
stiff
street at the tall stiff
the street at the
stared, as
tall stiff
houses on
houses on
its
its left,
they always did.
people lived in the 8
tall
stiff
houses,
and they
The Wild
Little
House
never had any fun. But in the Httle house there lived John
and
his father
who went
and mother,
fishing with
John's father
was
who were
always laughing, and
John on Saturday He had
a shoemaker.
afternoons. a httle
workshop
The Wild at the
mended
other end of the town, where he
day. Sometimes he for people
whose
made
feet
hammer
all
shoes for very particular people, or
so
feet,
when new
in the nails
shoes
were the wrong shape. All the
people had big long
stiff
House
Little
took a long time to
it
soles
tall,
were being put on
their
shoes.
Sometimes,
brought
home
tea,
he would
and
tell
John
and more and
when he had work a bundle sit
stories
faster, until
"So he and they
At
of shoes under
his
night,
arm. Then,
after
lamp
while he worked. As the story got more
would go
into the leather faster
would
give one last mighty
the shoemaker
hammer and
killed the giant all
his
shoemaker
in the kitchen under the swinging
exciting, the nails
thump with
to finish, the
say:
and married the king's daughter
hved happily ever
when
the lamps
everyone in the town was
after."
had gone out one by one and
asleep, the tall stiff
houses whis-
pered to each other. But they took no notice of the wild httle house, because
it
was
so small.
So
it
just stood there
on
four legs and thought wild thoughts about sailing the "If
I
could even walk around the town,
something," little
Like
house. little
seas.
would be
thought one night. "Perhaps there are other
houses like
Just then little
it
it
its
me
around the corner of the
two big black
cats
One of them was
slinking tigers, they
came
street."
into the garden of the
carrying a piece of
padded
10
all
raw meat.
around the garden.
The Wild when
Little
House
they were sure no one else was there, they settled
down by one of
the house's legs to share the meat.
After they had each had a few
"This
is
much
bites,
one
said to the other:
nicer than hunting rats and mice."
II
The Wild "And
if
people will leave their pantry windows open,"
must expect trouble."
said the other, "they
"Dirty "I'll
it
lifted the leg
and hoisted
itself angrily.
up
a
near which the two cats were sitting
one and then the other over the garden
first
wall into the
at
house to
the
thieves," said
little
soon deal with them."
And
set
House
Little
street.
The
about the meat. They
cats forgot
howl and dashed
off
up the
street.
The shoemaker and his wife sat up each other. The shoemaker said: "I
in
bed and looked
thought the whole house shook."
"So did
They
I," said his
wife.
listened for a while,
and then they decided
to sleep again and forget about
"We
were imagining
All night long the
happened and
it
it,"
little
to
go
it.
they said.
house thought of what had
was the most astonished
little
house in
the world.
moved my leg," it said to itself over and over again. "I really did move my leg. If I hadn't got so angry with the cats I might never have known I could do it." But it didn't dare to move it again that night, for fear "I
of awakening the shoemaker and his wife again.
The next for
night, the wild little house waited impatiently
everyone in "I
it
to
must fmd out
fall
asleep.
how much 12
At I
last all
can do,"
was it
quiet.
said to itself
The Wild And
Then
garden.
of exitement,
though
a httle stiffly.
two hind
a fool I've been,"
"All diese years
I
know
didn't even
And
its
walked
it
cats
out of the
other front leg, and then, with
tried its
it
shivers
"What
had hoisted the
the leg that
it lifted
House
Little
Each one moved,
legs.
thought the wild
httle house.
could have been moving around and
I
it."
awkwardly.
a step forward,
The shoemaker and his wife turned over in their sleep, but diey didn't wake up. The house walked another step, very carefully still, but much more easily. "I'm getting used to
it,"
it
diought, and walked
two
steps.
And
then
it
stepped over die low front garden wall into
the street.
"Now to
what
see
I'll
the rest of the
town
is
like," it said
itself.
The
tall
street!
stop
little
house was brazenly marching up the
But they had no
it.
They
they were
whispered together indignantly.
houses
stiff
That bad wild
legs, so
they could do nothing to
leaned across the street threateningly, but
afraid
to
lean
too
far,
lest
they crack
their
foundations.
Up
to die top
of the
street
ing very softly.
Then
the next until
was many
it
it
went
the
little
house, walkstreet,
and
away from home.
All
turned into the next streets
14
The Wild the time
it
was hoping
House
Little
to see another Httle house
but every house in that town was
tall
John woke up just as the house was own garden. It was moving so gently all
frightened.
When was
He
and
hke
itself;
stiff.
starting
back to
its
that he
was not
at
got out of bed and ran to the window.
he saw what was happening he nearly
out, he
fell
so surprised.
"Our house
is
walking!" he
said, "I
knew
always
it
was
a wild Htde house."
Then he into
all
"I
won't
window
leaned happily on the
the upstairs tell
"They'd say
The wild
I
my
windows of father
sill
and looked
the houses they passed.
and mother," he
said to himself
was only dreaming."
little
when
house was very uneasy
it
reaHsed
John was awake. Of course it did not want anyone know it was now able to walk.
that to
But, as if
John knew what
it
was thinking about, he
whispered: "It's all right, httle
house.
Every night for three
I
won't
nights, the
and
house
like itself.
lane,
but never did
it
anyone."
house stepped over the
garden wall and explored the town. street
tell
It
went
see another
"I'm the only one in the whole town,"
on the
third night,
and
it felt
wild
every little
said to itself
very lonely.
John had stayed awake each night 15
it
into
to see
what the house
The Wild would
do.
He
noticed that
Little it
went
House
to a different place each
time, but of course he could not understand
looking
for.
i6
what
it
was
The Wild On
House
Little
the second night they passed his father's workshop,
and John whispered loudly:
"Oh
look! There's
The house stopped
where
my
father works!"
to look, but
only saw a
it
row of
long thin shoes waiting to be mended, in the ground-floor
window of
On
a tall stiff house.
the third
evening a
John's father and mother.
captain
came
navy-blue
suit
ship's
He had
a
to
visit
with brass
buttons, and he stayed very late telling stories about ships that he
had
sailed in.
The wild
house had not heard
little
such good stories since the days of the old sea-captain that
had
built
it.
It
was true
that this sailor
was not wearing
gold ear-rings, but then he probably had them in his pocket.
At last the sailor started for home. The house watched him striding off down the hill under the moon. "That must be the road to the
must be another town down be so
far
away, or he would not
thought. "There
sea," it
by the
there
sea.
set off to
And
it
can't
walk there
so
late at night."
And night the
it
hill to
shore,
began to think
how
when everyone would be the next town. It
easy
it
would
asleep early, to
must
little
some
on the
sea-
houses like
itself
surely be
and there might even be other
be,
walk down
there.
The next night, the shoemaker and his wife began to yawn very early. John was tired too, because he had been c
17
The Wild awake and
for three nights.
fast asleep.
little
to walk down the
had
It
to
No
House
ten o'clock they
The house stepped
wall into the street.
The wild
By
Little
one
were
all
in
bed
gently over the garden
stirred,
not even John.
house went out of die town and began hill to
the sea.
go very slowly, for the
hill
was
steep.
A
stumble might have jerked John and his father and mother out of bed.
and
trees
It
was
moonlight night again, and the fences
a
looked very strange to the
house,
little
who had
never been out in the country before. For a long time
was
so
much
how
did not notice
very
it felt
new
interested in looking at
things that
It
tired.
never reach the sea
trees,
again.
and
it
tall stiff
But
how
soon from "I
But
come
it felt
it
thought.
at all!"
paused for a while, feeling very sorry for
go home
the
I'll
to be done? Having
was
it
long the road was. Then suddenly
"This must be the longest road in the world,"
"I'm sure
it
queer and lost
almost wished to see the
itself
What
did not want to
so far it
silly
among
the dark
staring faces
of
houses again. they would snigger
if it arrived
back again so
its travels!
must go on
at
any
cost,"
again the slow descent of the All night long
it
it
said to
and
it
began
hill.
Summer dawn was when it caught sight of
walked, and the
just beginning to lighten the sky,
i8
itself,
The Wild a
group of houses, with a
a httle faster then, but its
And
occupants.
town by
reached the It
had
when
It
went
to be careful not to
wake
of water beyond.
flash
it still
just
House
Little
it
was
delight.
though
For they were
their paint
was not
fat
httle
at all
house walked
It
looked through the
cheerful people chuckling
Nothing could have been more unlike the
town
it
in
their stiff
tall
left.
Halfway down the main the wild
itself,
Some of them even
sleep.
had
it
the other houses
houses, just like
all little
so spruce.
had bunks and swinging lamps.
windows and saw
morning
the sea.
was well worth the long walk. The
right through the town and looked
with
really
little
street there
was a tiny
field,
house stepped over the low fence into
the very middle of the field
stood
it
still,
planted
its
and
it.
In
four
posts squarely in the grass and said:
"Here
I
stay!"
moment it added: "Anyway I wouldn't have
After a
time to walk
home now,
before the people get up." It fell
houses
into a lovely
all
boats rising and falling
At
his usual
himself
A
dream
as it
saw the
cheerful
little
around, and at the end of the street a pier with
on the slow waves.
woke up and stretched woke up too, and he said
time the shoeqiaker
minute
later his
wife
to her:
20
^^^ "I feel
very happy
this
morning, though
I
don't quite
know why." "So do
was
a
"I
I,"
said his wife. "I
baby being rocked
dreamed
that
I
was
had
a
funny dream, that
I
in a cradle." in a boat going
the waves," said the shoemaker.
21
up and down on
Little
House
head in
at the door.
The Wild Just then
John poked
his
"Get up and look out of the window," he
said.
His father and mother rushed to the window.
"What
know where we
town by
are
Where have
we?
all
the
are," said the
is
the
shoemaker. "This
the sea!"
how
"But "I
Where
houses gone?"
tall stiff
"I
has happened?
did
know,"
we
get here?" asked his wife, bewildered.
"The house walked
said John.
here,
by
all
itself"
no time
"This
is
"But
it's
true,"
nights the house
"Last night
I
for jokes," said his
had walked
was
and
tired
must have walked
all
the
mother
and he told
said John,
all I
crossly.
how
for three
over the town on the
fell
asleep,"
way down
the
he
said,
hill until
hill.
"and it
it
came
here." "It
but
must have done
his
mother
that, right
enough," said his
father,
said:
"I don't believe it."
So they little field
all
went out of
the front door and stood in the
where the house had decided
to stay,
and John
said:
"Please,
little
house,
show
my
mother that you
really able to walk."
"I don't see
And
it
why
not," thought the house to
lifted its legs
and took a step forward. 22
itself.
are
The Wild "It's true,
House
then," said John's mother, with respect.
Suddenly she "Just
Little
said to the house:
you walk
straight
back again
this instant!"
"That's another story," said the house to
stepped back hastily to
So they were
its
in a fix.
itself,
and
it
old position.
Though
the shoemaker and his
wife implored the house to go home,
it
would not
leg for them. It just stood there, feeling pleased with
warm
and enjoying the sun and the
stir
a
itself,
salty air.
At first the shoemaker made up his mind to stay in the town by the sea, as the house would not leave it. He made the front parlour into a workshop and announced to all
mend their shoes, make them. But he soon found out that the fat people had hardly any work for him to do. The the people that he was ready to
or even
to
cheerful tall
stiff
people walked heavily, clump, clump, clump, so their shoes
wore out
quickly, but the fat cheerful people danced along
so lightly and happily that the soles of their shoes rarely
wore out before the all
had
buy
feet that
uppers.
their shoes in the
shops,
them specially made. As soon as they heard walked down the out to see
Then
the fat cheerful people
were the right shape, so they were able to
hill
and did not need to have
that a
wild httle house had
to their town,
all
the people
came
it.
"We're sorry we have no shoes 23
for
you
to
mend," they
The Wild said,
Httle
we
"but
house
And
is,
t
How
help that.
compared with
it
bright and neat your
said:
will be just like ours."
The wild proud of
House
ours!"
one of them laughed and
"Soon
sprucest
can
Little
its
little
"I suppose
little
house
felt
uneasy about
that.
It
was
shining paint, and proud, too, of being the
house in the town. But then
even
fat cheerful
it
said to
itself:
people can sometimes be
jealous."
After a few days a the house for a
man came and took
photographs of
newspaper. Then hundreds of people came
^7
2^
''':. >v^?^t_^
^^/u
24
^-^S^r ^,,
1008833
from
all
street
and looked into the
over the country to see
"Just an ordinary
little
it.
They stood
little field at it,
house on
legs.
in
and they
the said:
There's nothing
to see!
The house did not like that. "I'll show them if I'm an ordinary and
it
began to walk around the
"It's a
wild
little
house,
all
25
little
house,"
it said,
field.
right," said all the people.
The Wild Twice it
the house
went back
to the
walked around
everyone
tell
House
it
Uttle field,
its
middle and stood
The people clapped and "We'll
Little
and then
there.
cheered.
can really walk," they said before
they went home.
So the Summer passed away, and crowds of people came every day to see the house that
coming
a while they got tired of
was no one
left
who had
not seen
could walk. But so
far,
after
and then there
it.
John loved being by the sea. He spent all day in on the shore, and he soon knew all the
boats and captains
who
called there in their ships.
when he saw
not so pleased
work many
to do;
But even he was
that his father
was getting no
and though he asked the wild
times to go home,
In September the
it
first
would
the sea-
Uttle
house
not.
storm came. The wind howled
and the rain poured down. Thunder roared and lightning flickered across the sky
and any boats that had been
left in
the water banged against each other and were smashed to pieces.
Mountainous waves crashed spray rose high in the to
all
the houses.
much. The spray was drying a
When
little.
air.
The wild
Then little
bitter,
That was not
the storm
in it
on
the beach and the
was blown inshore on
house didn't
and
it
could
like that so
feel
its
paint
pleasant.
was over the sun shone 26
ac^ain,
and one
The Wild golden
long
And
day followed another.
and November.
came,
House
Little
October
then
Other storms came, more often
now. In between the storms the sun only shone for an hour or two, and soon the house of the
free
and began to peel off in looked little
little flakes.
at itself in horror. It
caked with
salt,
and
all
"If
I
it
little
house
houses.
Its
to look
roof was
timbers had begun to shrink. little
house to
itself
thought:
stay here
much
"So one night of rain
no
The wild
little
"This won't do," said the wild
And
shrivelled,
was beginning
It
the other
its
was never
was no longer the only spruce
shiny house in the town.
drab and grey, like
it
and
that
felt
bitter salt spray. Its paint dried
longer,
it
may even fall asunder!" and wind, when it could stand it
longer
I
began the long journey up the
hill
again.
woke up, and John windows and watched
This time the shoemaker and his wife too,
how
and they
all
leaned out of their
the house toiled along
"We're going home
on
to the
its
tall
wooden stiff
legs.
people
who wear
out their shoes quickly," said the shoemaker to his wife,
and they were very pleased.
But although John knew it was a good thing home, he was sorry to be leaving
to be going
for
them
the boats
and the sea-captains behind. Just before the people got up, in the the
hill,
the wild Httle house reached
27
its
town on top of
own
garden.
It
was
tired out,
but glad to be
safe
from the withering
salty
spray.
When
the townspeople got
find that the
everyone
brought
little
knew
it
their shoes to
they hoped still
house had come back.
that
workshop, just so it
was
able
to
By
this
to
time
walk, and they
all
be mended instead of going to the
as that
they could see the house. Perhaps
would dance
and didn't move
up they were amazed
at
for them; but
all.
28
it
stayed quite
The Wild
House
Little
Winter passed away and Spring came. house began to
little
"But
I
would Hke want
it,
if
the wild
feel restless again.
don't think the I
Now
went
good shoemaker and
travelling,"
it
wife
his
thought, "and
I
don't
to injure them."
One
evening
when John and
his father
and mother were
kitchen they began to talk about the whole
sitting in the
adventure.
was a lovely summer, by the
"It
"though "Yes,
sea," said his
mother,
we were so anxious to come home." I wish we could go again," said John, "when we
have summer hohdays." "I could take
for a
month. But what's the use of
maker sea,
some work with me and we could
sadly.
and
I
"We
talking," said the shoe-
couldn't afford to rent a house
think our wild httle house has
Httle house,
and
it
will
become
go walking no more."
29
stay
by a
the
tame
But
it
did.
When
and the winds blew
fme night reached
the days began to get
up the
softly
hill
warm
and long,
from the
sea,
one
the wild httle house started downhill again.
its
own
little
field
stayed for a whole month.
and
settled
down
John swam and
there,
sailed,
and
It
and his
and mother took him out fishing nearly every day. Then one morning they woke up to find themselves at
father
home
again.
30
The Wild Every year the wild Its
legs got a little
ones for
it,
Little
little
House
house took them to the
sea.
worn, and the shoemaker made new
for as well as being a
shoemaker he was
a
good
carpenter.
After that the
little
house was quite
one excursion every year, and
satisfied
with
its
of the time
for the rest
it
stayed solidly at home.
When John it
to
grew up and became
home altogether. It come home between voyages,
stayed at
stories
he had to
tell
a sea-captain himself,
waited patiently for him so that
of strange and
it
could hear the
terrible adventures
he
had had, and of queer places he had been. For in
its
heart
it
always remained a wild
31
little
house.
i
I
i