When Cap’n Bill and Trot and
the Glass Cat had started for the hidden island in
the far-off river to get the Magic Flower, Dorothy
wondered again what she could give Ozma on her birthday.
She met the Patchwork Girl and said:
“What are you going to give Ozma for a birthday
present?”
“I’ve written a song for
her,” answered the strange Patchwork Girl, who
went by the name of “Scraps,” and who,
through stuffed with cotton, had a fair assortment
of mixed brains. “It’s a splendid
song and the chorus runs this way:
I am crazy;
You’re a daisy,
Ozma dear;
I’m demented;
You’re contented,
Ozma dear;
I am patched and gay and glary;
You’re a sweet and lovely fairy;
May your birthdays all be happy,
Ozma dear!”
“How do you like it, Dorothy?”
inquired the Patchwork Girl.
“Is it good poetry, Scraps?” asked Dorothy,
doubtfully.
“It’s as good as any ordinary
song,” was the reply. “I have given
it a dandy title, too. I shall call the song:
’When Ozma Has a Birthday, Everybody’s
Sure to Be Gay, for She Cannot Help the Fact That She
Was Born.’”
“That’s a pretty long title, Scraps,”
said Dorothy.
“That makes it stylish,”
replied the Patchwork Girl, turning a somersault and
alighting on one stuffed foot. “Now-a-days
the titles are sometimes longer than the songs.”
Dorothy left her and walked slowly
toward the place, where she met the Tin Woodman just
going up the front steps.
“What are you going to give
Ozma on her birthday?” she asked.
“It’s a secret, but I’ll
tell you,” replied the Tin Woodman, who was
Emperor of the Winkies. “I am having my
people make Ozma a lovely girdle set with beautiful
tin nuggets. Each tin nugget will be surrounded
by a circle of emeralds, just to set it off to good
advantage. The clasp of the girdle will be pure
tin! Won’t that be fine?”
“I’m sure she’ll
like it,” said Dorothy. “Do you know
what I can give her?”
“I haven’t the slightest
idea, Dorothy. It took me three months to think
of my own present for Ozma.”
The girl walked thoughtfully around
to the back of the palace, and presently came upon
the famous Scarecrow of Oz, who has having two of
the palace servants stuff his legs with fresh straw.
“What are you going to give
Ozma on her birthday?” asked Dorothy.
“I want to surprise her,” answered the
Scarecrow.
“I won’t tell,” promised Dorothy.
“Well, I’m having some
straw slippers made for her all straw, mind
you, and braided very artistically. Ozma has
always admired my straw filling, so I’m sure
she’ll be pleased with these lovely straw slippers.”
“Ozma will be pleased with anything
her loving friends give her,” said the girl.
“What I’m worried about, Scarecrow,
is what to give Ozma that she hasn’t got already.”
“That’s what worried me,
until I thought of the slippers,” said the Scarecrow.
“You’ll have to think, Dorothy; that’s
the only way to get a good idea. If I hadn’t
such wonderful brains, I’d never have thought
of those straw foot-decorations.”
Dorothy left him and went to her room,
where she sat down and tried to think hard.
A Pink Kitten was curled up on the window-sill and
Dorothy asked her:
“What can I give Ozma for her birthday present?”
“Oh, give her some milk,”
replied the Pink Kitten; “that’s the nicest
thing I know of.”
A fuzzy little black dog had squatted
down at Dorothy’s feet and now looked up at
her with intelligent eyes.
“Tell me, Toto,” said
the girl; “what would Ozma like best for a birthday
present?”
The little black dog wagged his tail.
“Your love,” said he. “Ozma
wants to be loved more than anything else.”
“But I already love her, Toto!”
“Then tell her you love her twice as much as
you ever did before.”
“That wouldn’t be true,”
objected Dorothy, “for I’ve always loved
her as much as I could, and, really, Toto, I want
to give Ozma some present, ’cause everyone
else will give her a present.”
“Let me see,” said Toto.
“How would it be to give her that useless Pink
Kitten?”
“No, Toto; that wouldn’t do.”
“Then six kisses.”
“No; that’s no present.”
“Well, I guess you’ll
have to figure it out for yourself, Dorothy,”
said the little dog. “To my notion
you’re more particular than Ozma will be.”
Dorothy decided that if anyone could
help her it would be Glinda the Good, the wonderful
Sorceress of Oz who was Ozma’s faithful subject
and friend. But Glinda’s castle was in
the Quadling Country and quite a journey from the
Emerald City.
So the little girl went to Ozma and
asked permission to use the Wooden Sawhorse and the
royal Red Wagon to pay a visit to Glinda, and the girl
Ruler kissed Princess Dorothy and graciously granted
permission.
The Wooden Sawhorse was one of the
most remarkable creatures in Oz. Its body was
a small log and its legs were limbs of trees stuck
in the body. Its eyes were knots, its mouth
was sawed in the end of the log and its ears were
two chips. A small branch had been left at the
rear end of the log to serve as a tail.
Ozma herself, during one of her early
adventures, had brought this wooden horse to life,
and so she was much attached to the queer animal and
had shod the bottoms of its wooden legs with plates
of gold so they would not wear out. The Sawhorse
was a swift and willing traveler, and though it could
talk if need arose, it seldom said anything unless
spoken to. When the Sawhorse was harnessed to
the Red Wagon there were no reins to guide him because
all that was needed was to tell him where to go.
Dorothy now told him to go to Glinda’s
Castle and the Sawhorse carried her there with marvelous
speed.
“Glinda,” said Dorothy,
when she had been greeted by the Sorceress, who was
tall and stately, with handsome and dignified features
and dressed in a splendid and becoming gown, “what
are you going to give Ozma for a birthday present?”
The Sorceress smiled and answered:
“Come into my patio and I will show you.”
So they entered a place that was surrounded
by the wings of the great castle but had no roof,
and was filled with flowers and fountains and exquisite
statuary and many settees and chairs of polished marble
or filigree gold. Here there were gathered fifty
beautiful young girls, Glinda’s handmaids, who
had been selected from all parts of the Land of Oz
on account of their wit and beauty and sweet dispositions.
It was a great honor to be made one of Glinda’s
handmaidens.
When Dorothy followed the Sorceress
into this delightful patio all the fifty girls were
busily weaving, and their shuttles were filled with
a sparkling green spun glass such as the little girl
had never seen before.
“What is it, Glinda?” she asked.
“One of my recent discoveries,”
explained the Sorceress. “I have found
a way to make threads from emeralds, by softening the
stones and then spinning them into long, silken strands.
With these emerald threads we are weaving cloth to
make Ozma a splendid court gown for her birthday.
You will notice that the threads have all the beautiful
glitter and luster of the emeralds from which they
are made, and so Ozma’s new dress will be the
most magnificent the world has ever seen, and quite
fitting for our lovely Ruler of the Fairyland of Oz.”
Dorothy’s eyes were fairly dazed
by the brilliance of the emerald cloth, some of which
the girls had already woven.
“I’ve never seen ANYthing
so beautiful!” she said, with a sigh. “But
tell me, Glinda, what can I give our lovely Ozma on
her birthday?”
The good Sorceress considered this
question for a long time before she replied.
Finally she said:
“Of course there will be a grand
feast at the Royal Palace on Ozma’s birthday,
and all our friends will be present. So I suggest
that you make a fine big birthday cake of Ozma, and
surround it with candles.”
“Oh, just a cake!” exclaimed Dorothy,
in disappointment.
“Nothing is nicer for a birthday,” said
the Sorceress.
“How many candles should there be on the cake?”
asked the girl.
“Just a row of them,”
replied Glinda, “for no one knows how old Ozma
is, although she appears to us to be just a young girl as
fresh and fair as if she had lived but a few years.”
“A cake doesn’t seem like much of a present,”
Dorothy asserted.
“Make it a surprise cake,”
suggested the Sorceress. “Don’t you
remember the four and twenty blackbirds that were baked
in a pie? Well, you need not use live blackbirds
in your cake, but you could have some surprise of
a different sort.”
“Like what?” questioned Dorothy, eagerly.
“If I told you, it wouldn’t
be your present to Ozma, but mine,”
answered the Sorceress, with a smile. “Think
it over, my dear, and I am sure you can originate
a surprise that will add greatly to the joy and merriment
of Ozma’s birthday banquet.”
Dorothy thanked her friend and entered the Red Wagon
and told the
Sawhorse to take her back home to the palace in the
Emerald City.
On the way she thought the matter
over seriously of making a surprise birthday cake
and finally decided what to do.
As soon as she reached home, she went
to the Wizard of Oz, who had a room fitted up in one
of the high towers of the palace, where he studied
magic so as to be able to perform such wizardry as
Ozma commanded him to do for the welfare of her subjects.
The Wizard and Dorothy were firm friends
and had enjoyed many strange adventures together.
He was a little man with a bald head and sharp eyes
and a round, jolly face, and because he was neither
haughty nor proud he had become a great favorite with
the Oz people.
“Wizard,” said Dorothy,
“I want you to help me fix up a present for
Ozma’s birthday.”
“I’ll be glad to do anything
for you and for Ozma,” he answered. “What’s
on your mind, Dorothy?”
“I’m going to make a great
cake, with frosting and candles, and all that, you
know.”
“Very good,” said the Wizard.
“In the center of this cake
I’m going to leave a hollow place, with just
a roof of the frosting over it,” continued the
girl.
“Very good,” repeated the Wizard, nodding
his bald head.
“In that hollow place,”
said Dorothy, “I want to hide a lot of monkeys
about three inches high, and after the cake is placed
on the banquet table, I want the monkeys to break
through the frosting and dance around on the table-cloth.
Then, I want each monkey to cut out a piece of cake
and hand it to a guest.”
“Mercy me!” cried the
little Wizard, as he chuckled with laughter.
“Is that all you want, Dorothy?”
“Almost,” said she.
“Can you think of anything more the little monkeys
can do, Wizard?”
“Not just now,” he replied.
“But where will you get such tiny monkeys?”
“That’s where you’re
to help me,” said Dorothy. “In some
of those wild forests in the Gillikin Country are
lots of monkeys.”
“Big ones,” said the Wizard.
“Well, you and I will go there,
and we’ll get some of the big monkeys, and you
will make them small just three inches high by
means of your magic, and we’ll put the little
monkeys all in a basket and bring them home with us.
Then you’ll train them to dance up
here in your room, where no one can see them and
on Ozma’s birthday we’ll put ’em
into the cake and they’ll know by that time
just what to do.”
The Wizard looked at Dorothy with
admiring approval, and chuckled again.
“That’s really clever,
my dear,” he said, “and I see no reason
why we can’t do it, just the way you say, if
only we can get the wild monkeys to agree to it.”
“Do you think they’ll object?” asked
the girl.
“Yes; but perhaps we can argue
them into it. Anyhow it’s worth trying,
and I’ll help you if you’ll agree to let
this Surprise Cake be a present to Ozma from you and
me together. I’ve been wondering what I
could give Ozma, and as I’ve got to train the
monkeys as well as make them small, I think you ought
to make me your partner.”
“Of course,” said Dorothy; “I’ll
be glad to do so.”
“Then it’s a bargain,”
declared the Wizard. “We must go to seek
those monkeys at once, however, for it will take time
to train them and we’ll have to travel a good
way to the Gillikin forests where they live.”
“I’m ready to go any time,”
agreed Dorothy. “Shall we ask Ozma to let
us take the Sawhorse?”
The Wizard did not answer that at
once. He took time to think of the suggestion.
“No,” he answered at length,
“the Red Wagon couldn’t get through the
thick forests and there’s some danger to us in
going into the wild places to search for monkeys.
So I propose we take the Cowardly Lion and the Hungry
Tiger. We can ride on their backs as well as
in the Red Wagon, and if there is danger to us from
other beasts, these two friendly champions will protect
us from all harm.”
“That’s a splendid idea!”
exclaimed Dorothy. “Let’s go now
and ask the Hungry Tiger and the Cowardly Lion if
they will help us. Shall we ask Ozma if we can
go?”
“I think not,” said the
Wizard, getting his hat and his black bag of magic
tools. “This is to be a surprise for her
birthday, and so she mustn’t know where we’re
going. We’ll just leave word, in case Ozma
inquires for us, that we’ll be back in a few
days.”