"07 - Formula 86 Delayed Action Mouse-Maker" - читать интересную книгу автора (pages)BACK *
Table of Contents * NEXT Formula 86 Delayed Action Mouse-Maker "Children
are rrree-volting!" screamed The Grand High Witch. "Vee vill vipe them
all avay! Vee vill scrrrub them off the face of the earth! Vee vill flush them
down the drain!" "Yes,
yes!" chanted the audience. "Wipe them away! Scrub them off the earth!
Flush them down the drain!" "Children
are foul and filthy!" thundered The Grand High Witch. "They
are! They are!" chorused the English witches. "They are foul and
filthy!" "Children
are dirty and stinky!" screamed The Grand High Witch. "Dirty
and stinky!" cried the audience, getting more and more worked up. "Children
are smelling of dogs' drrroppings!" screeched The Grand High Witch. "Pooooooo!"
cried the audience. "Pooooooo! Pooooooo! Pooooooo!" "They
are vurse than dogs' drrroppings!" screeched The Grand High Witch.
"Dogs' drrroppings is smelling like violets and prrrimroses compared vith
children!" "Violets
and primroses!" chanted the audience. They were clapping and cheering
almost every word spoken from the platform. The speaker seemed to have them
completely under her spell. "To
talk about children is making me sick!" screamed The Grand High Witch.
"I am feeling sick even thinking about them! Fetch me a basin!" The
Grand High Witch paused and glared at the mass of eager faces in the audience.
They waited, wanting more. "So
now!" barked The Grand High Witch. "So now I am having a plan! I am
having a giganticus plan for getting rrrid of every single child in the whole of
Inkland!" The
witches gasped. They gaped. They turned and gave each other ghoulish grins of
excitement. "Yes!"
thundered The Grand High Witch. "Vee shall svish them and svollop them and
vee shall make to disappear every single smelly little brrrat in Inkland in vun
strrroke!" "Whoopee!"
cried the witches, clapping their hands. "You are brilliant, O Your
Grandness! You are fantabulous!" "Shut
up and listen!" snapped The Grand High Witch. "Listen very carefully
and let us not be having any muck-ups!" The
audience leaned forward, eager to learn how this magic was going to be
performed. "Each
and every vun of you", thundered The Grand High Witch, "is to go back
to your home towns immediately and rrree-sign from your jobs. Rrree-sign! Give
notice! Rrree-tire!" "We
will!" they cried. "We will resign from our jobs!" "And
after you have rrree-signed from your jobs," The Grand High Witch went on,
"each and every vuri of you vill be going out and you vill be buying...
" She paused. "What
will we be buying?" they cried. "Tell us, O Brilliant One, what is it
we shall be buying?" "Sveet-shops!"
shouted The Grand High Witch. "Sweet-shops!"
they cried. "We are going to buy sweet-shops! What a frumptious
wheeze!" "Each
of you vill be buying for herself a sveetshop. You vill be buying the very best
and most rrree-spectable sweet-shops in Inkland." "We
will! We will!" they answered. Their dreadful voices were like a chorus of
dentists' drills all grinding away together. "I
am vonting no tuppenny-ha'penny crrrummy little
tobacco-selling-newspaper-sweet-shops!" shouted The Grand High Witch.
"I am vonting you to get only the very best shops filled up high with piles
and piles of luscious sweets and tasty chocs!" "The
best!" they cried. "We shall buy the best sweet-shops in town!" "You
will be having no trouble in getting vot you wont," shouted The Grand High
Witch, "because you will be offering four times as much as a shop is vurth
and nobody is rrree-fusing an offer like that! Money is not a prrroblem to us
witches as you know very well. I have brrrought with me six trrrunks stuffed
full of Inklish banknotes, all new and crrrisp. And all of them," she added
with a fiendish leer, "all of them homemade." The
witches in the audience grinned, appreciating this joke. At
that point, one foolish witch got so excited at the possibilities presented by
owning a sweetshop that she leapt to her feet and shouted, "The children
will come flocking to my shop and I will feed them poisoned sweets and poisoned
chocs and wipe them all out like weasels!" The
room became suddenly silent. I saw the tiny body of The Grand High Witch stiffen
and then go rigid with rage. "Who spoke? " she shrieked. "It vos you!
You over there!" The
culprit sat down fast and covered her face with her clawed hands. "You
blithering bumpkin!" screeched The Grand High Witch. "You brrrainless
bogvumper! Are you not rrree-alising that if you are going rrround poisoning
little children you vill be caught in five minutes flat? Never in my life am I
hearing such a boshvolloping suggestion coming from a vitch!" The
entire audience cowered and shook. I'm quite sure they all thought, as I did,
that the terrible white-hot sparks were about to start flying again. Curiously
enough, they didn't. 'If
such a tomfiddling idea is all you can be coming up vith," thundered The
Grand High Witch, "then it is no vunder Inkland is still svorming vith
rrrotten little children!" There
was another silence. The Grand High Witch glared at the witches in the audience.
"Do you not know", she shouted at them, "that vee witches are
vurrrking only with magic?" "We
know, Your Grandness!" they all answered. "Of
course we know!" The
Grand High Witch grated her bony gloved hands against each other and cried out,
"So each of you is owning a magnificent sweet-shop! The next move is that
each of you will be announcing in the window of your shop that on a certain day
you will be having a Great Gala Opening with frree sweets and chocs to every
child!" "That
will bring them in, the greedy little brutes!" cried the audience.
"They'll be fighting to get through the doors!" "Next,"
continued The Grand High Witch, "you will prepare yourselves for this Great
Gala Opening by filling every choc and every sweet in your shop with my very
latest and grrreatest magic formula! This is known as FORMULA 86 DELAYED ACTION
MOUSE-MAKER!" "Delayed
Action Mouse-Maker!" they chanted. "She's done it again! Her Grandness
has concocted yet another of her wondrous magic child-killers! How do we make
it, O Brilliant One?" "Exercise
patience," answered The Grand High Witch. "First, I am explaining to
you how my Formula 86 Delayed Action Mouse-Maker is vurrrking. Listen
carefully." "We
are listening!" cried the audience who were now jumping up and down in
their chairs with excitement. "Delayed
Action Mouse-Maker is a green liqvid," explained The Grand High Witch,
"and vun droplet in each choc or sveet vill be qvite enough. So here is vot
happens: "Child
eats choc vich has in it Delayed Action Mouse-Maker liqvid... "Child
goes home feeling fine... "Child
goes to bed, still feeling fine... "Child
vakes up in the morning still okay... "Child
goes to school still feeling fine... "Formula,
you understand, is delayed action, and is not vurrrking yet." "We
understand, O Brainy One!" cried the audience. "But when does it start
working?" "It
is starting to vurrrk at exactly nine o'clock, vhen the child is arriving at
school!" shouted The Grand High Witch triumphantly. "Child arrives at
school. Delayed Action Mouse-Maker immediately starts to vurrrk. Child starts to
shrrrink. Child is starting to grow fur. Child is starting to grow tail. All is
happening in prrreecisely tventy-six seconds. After tventy-six seconds, child is
not a child any longer. It is a mouse!" "A
mouse!" cried the witches. "What a frumptious thought!" "Classrooms
vill all be svorrrming vith mice!" shouted The Grand High Witch.
"Chaos and pandemonium vill be rrreigning in every school in Inkland!
Teachers vill be hopping up and down! Vimmen teachers vill be standing on desks
and holding up skirts and yelling, 'Help, help, help!' " "They
will! They will!" cried the audience. "And
vot", shouted The Grand High Witch, "is happening next in every
school?" "Tell
us!" they cried. "Tell us, O Brainy One!" The
Grand High Witch stretched her stringy neck forward and grinned at the audience,
showing two rows of pointed teeth, slightly blue. She raised her voice louder
than ever and shouted, "Mouse-trrraps is coming out!" "Mouse-traps!"
cried the witches. "And
cheese!" shouted The Grand High Witch "Teachers is all rrrushing and
rrrunning out and getting mouse-trrraps and baiting them vith cheese and putting
them down all over school! Mice is nibbling cheese! Mouse-trrraps is going off!
All over school, mouse-trrraps is going snappety-snap and mouse-heads is
rrrolling across the floors like marbles! All over Inkland, in everrry school in
Inkland, noise of snapping mouse-trrraps vill be heard!" At
this point, the disgusting old Grand High Witch began to do a sort of witch's
dance up and down the platform, stamping her feet and clapping her hands. The
entire audience joined in the clapping and the foot-stamping. They were making
such a tremendous racket that I thought surely Mr Stringer would hear it and
come banging at the door. But he didn't. Then, above all the noise, I heard the
voice of The Grand High Witch screaming out some sort of an awful gloating song, "Down
vith children! Do them in! Boil
their bones and fry their skin! Bish
them, sqvish them, bash them, mash them! Brrreak
them, shake them, slash them, smash them! Offer
chocs vith magic powder! Say
'Eat up!' then say it louder. Crrram
them full of sticky eats, Send
them home still guzzling sveets. And
in the morning little fools Go
marching off to separate schools. A
girl feels sick and goes all pale. She
yells, 'Hey look! I've grrrown a tail!' A
boy who's standing next to her Screams,
'Help! I think I'm grrrowing fur!' Another
shouts, Wee look like frrreaks! There's
viskers growing on our cheeks!' A
boy who vos extremely tall Cries
out, 'Vot's wrong? I'm grrrowing small!' Four
tiny legs begin to sprrrout From
everybody rrround about. And
all at vunce, all in a trrrice, There
are no children! Only mice! In
every school is mice galore All
rerunning rrround the school-rrroom floor!
And
all the poor demented teachers Is
yelling, 'Hey, who are these crrreatures?' They
stand upon the desks and shout, 'Get
out, you filthy mice! Get out! Vill
someone fetch some mouse-trrraps, please! And
don't forrrget to bring the cheese!' Now
mouse-trrraps come and every trrrap Goes
snippy-snip and snappy-snap. The
mouse-trrraps have a powerful spring, The
springs go crack and snap and ping! Is
lovely noise for us to hear! Is
music to a vitch's ear! Dead
mice is every place arrround, Piled
two feet deep upon the grrround, Vith
teachers searching left and aright, But
not a single child in sight! The
teachers cry, 'Vot's going on? Oh
vhere have all the children gone? Is
half-past nine and as a rrrule They're
never late as this for school!' Poor
teachers don't know vot to do. Some
sit and rrread, and just a few Amuse
themselves throughout the day By
sveeping all the mice avay. AND
ALL US VITCHES SHOUT HOORAY!" BACK *
Table of Contents * NEXT BACK *
Table of Contents * NEXT Formula 86 Delayed Action Mouse-Maker "Children
are rrree-volting!" screamed The Grand High Witch. "Vee vill vipe them
all avay! Vee vill scrrrub them off the face of the earth! Vee vill flush them
down the drain!" "Yes,
yes!" chanted the audience. "Wipe them away! Scrub them off the earth!
Flush them down the drain!" "Children
are foul and filthy!" thundered The Grand High Witch. "They
are! They are!" chorused the English witches. "They are foul and
filthy!" "Children
are dirty and stinky!" screamed The Grand High Witch. "Dirty
and stinky!" cried the audience, getting more and more worked up. "Children
are smelling of dogs' drrroppings!" screeched The Grand High Witch. "Pooooooo!"
cried the audience. "Pooooooo! Pooooooo! Pooooooo!" "They
are vurse than dogs' drrroppings!" screeched The Grand High Witch.
"Dogs' drrroppings is smelling like violets and prrrimroses compared vith
children!" "Violets
and primroses!" chanted the audience. They were clapping and cheering
almost every word spoken from the platform. The speaker seemed to have them
completely under her spell. "To
talk about children is making me sick!" screamed The Grand High Witch.
"I am feeling sick even thinking about them! Fetch me a basin!" The
Grand High Witch paused and glared at the mass of eager faces in the audience.
They waited, wanting more. "So
now!" barked The Grand High Witch. "So now I am having a plan! I am
having a giganticus plan for getting rrrid of every single child in the whole of
Inkland!" The
witches gasped. They gaped. They turned and gave each other ghoulish grins of
excitement. "Yes!"
thundered The Grand High Witch. "Vee shall svish them and svollop them and
vee shall make to disappear every single smelly little brrrat in Inkland in vun
strrroke!" "Whoopee!"
cried the witches, clapping their hands. "You are brilliant, O Your
Grandness! You are fantabulous!" "Shut
up and listen!" snapped The Grand High Witch. "Listen very carefully
and let us not be having any muck-ups!" The
audience leaned forward, eager to learn how this magic was going to be
performed. "Each
and every vun of you", thundered The Grand High Witch, "is to go back
to your home towns immediately and rrree-sign from your jobs. Rrree-sign! Give
notice! Rrree-tire!" "We
will!" they cried. "We will resign from our jobs!" "And
after you have rrree-signed from your jobs," The Grand High Witch went on,
"each and every vuri of you vill be going out and you vill be buying...
" She paused. "What
will we be buying?" they cried. "Tell us, O Brilliant One, what is it
we shall be buying?" "Sveet-shops!"
shouted The Grand High Witch. "Sweet-shops!"
they cried. "We are going to buy sweet-shops! What a frumptious
wheeze!" "Each
of you vill be buying for herself a sveetshop. You vill be buying the very best
and most rrree-spectable sweet-shops in Inkland." "We
will! We will!" they answered. Their dreadful voices were like a chorus of
dentists' drills all grinding away together. "I
am vonting no tuppenny-ha'penny crrrummy little
tobacco-selling-newspaper-sweet-shops!" shouted The Grand High Witch.
"I am vonting you to get only the very best shops filled up high with piles
and piles of luscious sweets and tasty chocs!" "The
best!" they cried. "We shall buy the best sweet-shops in town!" "You
will be having no trouble in getting vot you wont," shouted The Grand High
Witch, "because you will be offering four times as much as a shop is vurth
and nobody is rrree-fusing an offer like that! Money is not a prrroblem to us
witches as you know very well. I have brrrought with me six trrrunks stuffed
full of Inklish banknotes, all new and crrrisp. And all of them," she added
with a fiendish leer, "all of them homemade." The
witches in the audience grinned, appreciating this joke. At
that point, one foolish witch got so excited at the possibilities presented by
owning a sweetshop that she leapt to her feet and shouted, "The children
will come flocking to my shop and I will feed them poisoned sweets and poisoned
chocs and wipe them all out like weasels!" The
room became suddenly silent. I saw the tiny body of The Grand High Witch stiffen
and then go rigid with rage. "Who spoke? " she shrieked. "It vos you!
You over there!" The
culprit sat down fast and covered her face with her clawed hands. "You
blithering bumpkin!" screeched The Grand High Witch. "You brrrainless
bogvumper! Are you not rrree-alising that if you are going rrround poisoning
little children you vill be caught in five minutes flat? Never in my life am I
hearing such a boshvolloping suggestion coming from a vitch!" The
entire audience cowered and shook. I'm quite sure they all thought, as I did,
that the terrible white-hot sparks were about to start flying again. Curiously
enough, they didn't. 'If
such a tomfiddling idea is all you can be coming up vith," thundered The
Grand High Witch, "then it is no vunder Inkland is still svorming vith
rrrotten little children!" There
was another silence. The Grand High Witch glared at the witches in the audience.
"Do you not know", she shouted at them, "that vee witches are
vurrrking only with magic?" "We
know, Your Grandness!" they all answered. "Of
course we know!" The
Grand High Witch grated her bony gloved hands against each other and cried out,
"So each of you is owning a magnificent sweet-shop! The next move is that
each of you will be announcing in the window of your shop that on a certain day
you will be having a Great Gala Opening with frree sweets and chocs to every
child!" "That
will bring them in, the greedy little brutes!" cried the audience.
"They'll be fighting to get through the doors!" "Next,"
continued The Grand High Witch, "you will prepare yourselves for this Great
Gala Opening by filling every choc and every sweet in your shop with my very
latest and grrreatest magic formula! This is known as FORMULA 86 DELAYED ACTION
MOUSE-MAKER!" "Delayed
Action Mouse-Maker!" they chanted. "She's done it again! Her Grandness
has concocted yet another of her wondrous magic child-killers! How do we make
it, O Brilliant One?" "Exercise
patience," answered The Grand High Witch. "First, I am explaining to
you how my Formula 86 Delayed Action Mouse-Maker is vurrrking. Listen
carefully." "We
are listening!" cried the audience who were now jumping up and down in
their chairs with excitement. "Delayed
Action Mouse-Maker is a green liqvid," explained The Grand High Witch,
"and vun droplet in each choc or sveet vill be qvite enough. So here is vot
happens: "Child
eats choc vich has in it Delayed Action Mouse-Maker liqvid... "Child
goes home feeling fine... "Child
goes to bed, still feeling fine... "Child
vakes up in the morning still okay... "Child
goes to school still feeling fine... "Formula,
you understand, is delayed action, and is not vurrrking yet." "We
understand, O Brainy One!" cried the audience. "But when does it start
working?" "It
is starting to vurrrk at exactly nine o'clock, vhen the child is arriving at
school!" shouted The Grand High Witch triumphantly. "Child arrives at
school. Delayed Action Mouse-Maker immediately starts to vurrrk. Child starts to
shrrrink. Child is starting to grow fur. Child is starting to grow tail. All is
happening in prrreecisely tventy-six seconds. After tventy-six seconds, child is
not a child any longer. It is a mouse!" "A
mouse!" cried the witches. "What a frumptious thought!" "Classrooms
vill all be svorrrming vith mice!" shouted The Grand High Witch.
"Chaos and pandemonium vill be rrreigning in every school in Inkland!
Teachers vill be hopping up and down! Vimmen teachers vill be standing on desks
and holding up skirts and yelling, 'Help, help, help!' " "They
will! They will!" cried the audience. "And
vot", shouted The Grand High Witch, "is happening next in every
school?" "Tell
us!" they cried. "Tell us, O Brainy One!" The
Grand High Witch stretched her stringy neck forward and grinned at the audience,
showing two rows of pointed teeth, slightly blue. She raised her voice louder
than ever and shouted, "Mouse-trrraps is coming out!" "Mouse-traps!"
cried the witches. "And
cheese!" shouted The Grand High Witch "Teachers is all rrrushing and
rrrunning out and getting mouse-trrraps and baiting them vith cheese and putting
them down all over school! Mice is nibbling cheese! Mouse-trrraps is going off!
All over school, mouse-trrraps is going snappety-snap and mouse-heads is
rrrolling across the floors like marbles! All over Inkland, in everrry school in
Inkland, noise of snapping mouse-trrraps vill be heard!" At
this point, the disgusting old Grand High Witch began to do a sort of witch's
dance up and down the platform, stamping her feet and clapping her hands. The
entire audience joined in the clapping and the foot-stamping. They were making
such a tremendous racket that I thought surely Mr Stringer would hear it and
come banging at the door. But he didn't. Then, above all the noise, I heard the
voice of The Grand High Witch screaming out some sort of an awful gloating song, "Down
vith children! Do them in! Boil
their bones and fry their skin! Bish
them, sqvish them, bash them, mash them! Brrreak
them, shake them, slash them, smash them! Offer
chocs vith magic powder! Say
'Eat up!' then say it louder. Crrram
them full of sticky eats, Send
them home still guzzling sveets. And
in the morning little fools Go
marching off to separate schools. A
girl feels sick and goes all pale. She
yells, 'Hey look! I've grrrown a tail!' A
boy who's standing next to her Screams,
'Help! I think I'm grrrowing fur!' Another
shouts, Wee look like frrreaks! There's
viskers growing on our cheeks!' A
boy who vos extremely tall Cries
out, 'Vot's wrong? I'm grrrowing small!' Four
tiny legs begin to sprrrout From
everybody rrround about. And
all at vunce, all in a trrrice, There
are no children! Only mice! In
every school is mice galore All
rerunning rrround the school-rrroom floor!
And
all the poor demented teachers Is
yelling, 'Hey, who are these crrreatures?' They
stand upon the desks and shout, 'Get
out, you filthy mice! Get out! Vill
someone fetch some mouse-trrraps, please! And
don't forrrget to bring the cheese!' Now
mouse-trrraps come and every trrrap Goes
snippy-snip and snappy-snap. The
mouse-trrraps have a powerful spring, The
springs go crack and snap and ping! Is
lovely noise for us to hear! Is
music to a vitch's ear! Dead
mice is every place arrround, Piled
two feet deep upon the grrround, Vith
teachers searching left and aright, But
not a single child in sight! The
teachers cry, 'Vot's going on? Oh
vhere have all the children gone? Is
half-past nine and as a rrrule They're
never late as this for school!' Poor
teachers don't know vot to do. Some
sit and rrread, and just a few Amuse
themselves throughout the day By
sveeping all the mice avay. AND
ALL US VITCHES SHOUT HOORAY!" |
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