"But did you get seasick1?" asked Humpo, the camel. "That's what I want to know. Did you get seasick?"
"No, I did not," answered Umboo. "But I was tired of staying in the dark part of the ship so long. I wanted to get out in the sun. And I wanted to see if I could do that trick again, of taking the white rag from the man's pocket."
"And did you?" asked Snarlie, the tiger.
"I did, the first chance I had," answered Umboo. "But that was not until I had been off the ship for a day or so."
Umboo and the other animals were taken from the ship, and again put in railroad cars to be taken to a sort of training place. Wild animals, fresh from the jungle, are not taken at once to the circus. If they were the lions would roar, the tigers would snarl2 and the elephants would try to break loose and run away, and this would so scare the boys and girls who went to the circus that they would never come again.
So circus men first send the animals to a sort of training camp. There is one in Bridgeport, Conn., and another in New Jersey3, on the Hackensack meadows. There the wild beasts are taken in charge, by men who know how to train them.
And it was to a place like this that Umboo was taken. It was not at all like a circus, except for the number of wild animals about. There was no big white tent; nothing but a sort of large barn, and there were no gay flags fluttering, and no bands playing music. All that would come later.
Umboo was chained in the middle of the barn, with the other elephants, and some hay was given him to eat. At first the elephant, who, not long before, had been wild in the jungle, and later piling teakwood logs, was uneasy and a bit frightened. So were his companions.
"But don't be afraid, Umboo," said the kind man who had come all the way from India with the elephant. "You will soon like it here, though you may not like being taught tricks. But you will like it when you can do funny things, and make the boys and girls laugh. Also, when you do your tricks well, you shall have lumps of sugar."
"Well, I hope there will be no lemons inside the lumps," said Umboo to
"What is that about lemons in sugar?" asked Char.
"Oh, a man on the ship played a trick on me," answered Umboo. "I haven't seen him since, but I am on the lookout5 for him, and when I do see him, if I get near enough—well, I'll make him wish he hadn't fooled me."
"It was a mean trick," said Char. "I hope you find that man."
For a few days the elephants, and other wild jungle animals, who were to be tamed and taught to do things in the circus, were left to themselves. This was to get them quiet after their long trip, and to make them feel at home.
Umboo did not have to be tamed, for he was already kind and gentle. But some of the lions and tigers were fierce and wild, and they had to get to know that the circus men would not harm them. Most of the elephants, like Umboo, were no longer wild, but they knew nothing about being trained to do tricks. None of them could even so much as take a handkerchief out of a man's pocket, so really Umboo was one class ahead of them. But that did not make him proud.
One day, about a week after he had come to the circus-barn, Umboo saw some men coming toward him with ropes and other things. Among the men was the one from India, and this man Umboo liked.
"Now, Umboo" said this man, "you are going to learn a harder trick than that of taking a handkerchief from my pocket. You are going to learn to stand on your hind6 legs. It may seem hard to you at first, but it is easy when you know how, and you will like it. The boys and girls who come to the circus to see you, will like it, too, and you will get sugar if you do the trick well."
Of course Umboo did not know all that the man said to him, but he understood that something new was going on, and he reached out his trunk to touch his friend.
"I haven't any sugar for you now," said the man with a laugh, "but I may have some later. Let me see how you behave."
The men began putting ropes around Umboo's big neck. He did not mind this, for it had been done before, in India, when he was to pull a heavy wagon7 of teakwood logs. But this time it was different.
All of a sudden Umboo felt his front legs being lifted from the ground. His head and trunk went up in the air, and all his weight came on his hind legs. They were strong enough to bear it, but the elephant did not know what was going on.
"It's all right, my elephant friend!" said the man from India. "Up!
Up! Stand up! Stand on your hind legs, Umboo!"
And Umboo had to do this whether he wanted to or not. The rope, on which the men were pulling, and which was fast to a hook in the ceiling of the barn over head, was lifting Umboo's front feet from the ground. This left him only his hind legs, and he had to stand on them whether he wanted to or not.
If you have ever tried to teach your dog to stand on his hind legs, you will know what was being done to Umboo. When you try to teach your dog this trick, you generally take him where he can stand up in a corner, so he can lean against the wall and will not fall over backwards8 or sideways; for that is what he feels like doing when you lift up his front legs.
But an elephant is so big, you see, that it would take a very large corner for him to back into. And he is so big and heavy that not even ten men could lift up his front legs. So they just hitch9 a rope around his head, and then men, hauling on the rope and pulleys, lift the front of the elephant, as men hoist10 up a piano.
"Ugh!" grunted11 Umboo through his trunk, as he felt his head and front legs going up. "What in the world is this?"
"Don't be afraid, my jungle friend," said an old big, tame elephant, who was kept in the circus barn just to make the others feel more at home. "Don't be afraid. You are only being taught the first of your tricks. I was taught the same way. It won't hurt you. Here, throw your weight on your back legs, and stand on them—this way."
And, to the surprise of Umboo, the other elephant, without the help of any ropes, reared himself up in the air and stood on his hind legs just as your dog can do.
"That's the way to do it!" said the trick elephant.
"I wonder if I can?" said Umboo.
"Try it," urged his new friend.
And when the man loosed the ropes, and let Umboo's front legs down, after they had hoisted12 them up once, he suddenly gave a little spring, and up he went, standing13 on his hind legs all by himself, and almost as good as the trick beast could do it.
"Well, I declare!" cried one of the men. "That elephant is the smartest one we ever trained. He does the trick after being shown just once!"
"Oh, yes, I knew he was smart when he did that handkerchief trick," said the man from India. "Umboo will be ready to join the circus before any of the others."
Once more Umboo was hoisted up by the ropes, but there was really no need for it. He knew what was wanted of him, and he did it.
"That's fine!" said the big elephant. "If you learn the other things as easily as you learned this trick, you will have no trouble."
"Are there other tricks to learn." asked Umboo.
"Oh, many of them," answered Wang, the best trick elephant in the circus. "You have only just begun."
And Umboo found that this was so. In the ten days that followed he was taught many more tricks. Some of them he did not learn so easily as he had the one of standing on his hind legs, and the ropes had to be used many times. But the other trick elephants, of whom there was more than one, showed the untrained ones what to do, and, in time, Umboo and his friends could go through many "stunts," as the circus men called them.
Umboo learned to lie down and "play dead," he learned to stand on a little stool, like an over-turned washtub, he learned to kneel down over a man stretched on the ground, and not crush him with the great body, weighing more than two tons of coal.
Other tricks, which Umboo learned, were to take pennies in his trunk, lift up a lid of a "bank," which was a big box, drop the pennies in and ring a bell, as if he had put money in a cash drawer. He also learned to turn the handle of a hand organ with his trunk, to ring a dinner bell, and do many other tricks, such as you have seen elephants do in a circus.
Then, one day, the man from India came where Umboo was, and giving him some peanuts, which our friend had learned to like very much, said:
"Well, now it is time you joined the circus. You know enough tricks to make a start, and your circus-trainer will teach you more. So off to the circus you go, Umboo! Off to the circus!"
And the next day Umboo went.
点击收听单词发音
1 seasick | |
adj.晕船的 | |
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2 snarl | |
v.吼叫,怒骂,纠缠,混乱;n.混乱,缠结,咆哮 | |
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3 jersey | |
n.运动衫 | |
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4 char | |
v.烧焦;使...燃烧成焦炭 | |
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5 lookout | |
n.注意,前途,瞭望台 | |
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6 hind | |
adj.后面的,后部的 | |
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7 wagon | |
n.四轮马车,手推车,面包车;无盖运货列车 | |
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8 backwards | |
adv.往回地,向原处,倒,相反,前后倒置地 | |
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9 hitch | |
v.免费搭(车旅行);系住;急提;n.故障;急拉 | |
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10 hoist | |
n.升高,起重机,推动;v.升起,升高,举起 | |
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11 grunted | |
(猪等)作呼噜声( grunt的过去式和过去分词 ); (指人)发出类似的哼声; 咕哝着说 | |
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12 hoisted | |
把…吊起,升起( hoist的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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13 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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