CHAPTER VII
THE SCHOOL PLAY
"Snap! Snap!" cried Freddie, as he left his seat and put his arms aroundthe dog's neck. "Good dog, Snap!"
Snap liked to be petted, and he wagged his tail faster than before andbarked. Flossie saw a queer look on her teacher's face, and the littlegirl said:
"Snap, you must be quiet. You musn't bark in school any more than wemust whisper. I didn't want to speak out loud," she said to the teacher,"but I had to, or Snap wouldn't hear me."
"Oh, that part's all right, my dear," the teacher said kindly. "But howdid your dog get here?"
"I--I don't know," answered Flossie, while Freddie kept on petting Snap.
Just then the door of the other school room, in which Nan and Bertstudied, opened, and the teacher from there came in. She was a new one.
"Is that dog here?" she asked. Then she could see that Snap was there.The children in Flossie's room were laughing now. Some of the pupilsfrom the other room were standing in the doorway behind the teacher,looking in.
"Whose dog is that?" the new teacher asked.
"He's ours, if you please," said Bert.
"Did you bring him to school?"
"No, ma'am. He must have got loose," answered Nan. "He was chained upwhen we left for school this morning, and he must have got lonesome andcome to find us."
"Well, he found you all right," said Flossie's teacher with a laugh."The doors are open, because it is so warm," she said to the newteacher, "so Snap had no trouble in getting in. He never came to schoolbefore, though."
"He's like Mary's little lamb, isn't he?" asked Freddie.
"Well, he must be put out," said the new teacher, smiling. "Of course itwasn't the fault of you children that he came in. But you had bettertake him home I think, Bert. And see that he is well chained. I'llexcuse you from class long enough to take your dog home. Now, children,go back to your seats."
"Say, Bert," whispered Ned Barton, "I'll help you take Snap home if youwant me to."
"No, indeed!" laughed the new teacher. "One boy is enough to have out ofthe class at a time. I think Bert can manage the dog alone."
"Yes ma'am, I can," said Bert. "Come on, Snap!"
Snap barked and wagged his tail again. He was happy as long as he waswith one of the children.
"Our dog can do tricks," said Freddie. "Make him do a trick, Bert,before you take him home. Snap used to be in a circus," Freddie told theteacher, "and he can turn somersaults. Don't you want to see him do atrick, teacher?"
"Oh, yes, please let him," begged Flossie.
The other children looked eager, and the teacher smiled. The new teacherhad gone back to her classroom with her pupils, except Bert, who hadstayed to look after Snap.
"Well, as it is almost time for recess, I don't mind if Bert makes Snapdo one or two tricks," Flossie's teacher said, smiling. "But only two.School isn't just the place for dogs."
"Ready Snap!" called Bert. "March like a soldier!"
"You may take my blackboard pointer for a gun," the teacher said.
Snap stood up on his hind legs, and in one paw he held the long pointer.Then he marched around the room as nearly like a soldier as a dog canmarch. The children laughed and clapped their hands.
"Now turn a somersault!" ordered Bert. This Snap did, too. This was oneof his best tricks. Over and over he went around the school room,outside the rows of desks. This made the children laugh more thanbefore.
"I think that will be enough, thank you, Bert," the teacher said. "Youhad better take the dog home now."
Bert did so, and saw to it that Snap was well chained.
"We like to see you," said Bert as he was leaving to go back to hisclass, "but you must not come to school after us, Snap."
At recess, which was nearly over when Bert got back to school, thechildren talked and laughed about Snap's visit.
"I wish your dog would come to school every day," said Alice Boyd toFlossie.
"Yes, wouldn't it be fun to have him do tricks," cried Johnnie Wilson.
But Snap did not get loose again, and he soon got used to having thechildren away most of the day. But how glad he was when they came home,and he could romp and play with them!
One day Flossie's teacher said to the class:
"Now, children, you have been very good this week, and you have knownyour lessons well, so I think it is time we had a little fun."
"Oh, are you going to let Snap come to school again?" asked Edna Blake.
"No, hardly that," the teacher answered with a smile, "but we shall havea little play. I'll fix some curtains across the platform where my deskstands, and that will be the stage. You children--at least some ofyou--will be the actors and actresses. It will be a very simple littleplay, and I think you can do it. If you do it well perhaps we may giveour play out on the large platform in the big room before the wholeschool."
"We had a play in Uncle Dan's barn once in the country," said Flossie.
"I was in it, too," spoke up Freddie, "and I fell down in a hen's nestand got all eggs."
Even the teacher laughed at this.
"Well, we hope you'll not fall in any hen's nest in our little schoolplay," said the teacher.
She picked out Flossie, Freddie, Alice Boyd, Johnnie Wilson and someothers to be in the play, and they began to study their parts.
The play was to be called "Mother Goose and her Friends," and thechildren would take the parts of the different characters so well knownto all. The teacher was to be Mother Goose herself, with a tall peakedhat, and a long stick.
"And will you ride on the back of a goosey-gander?" Freddie asked. "It'sthat way in the book."
"No, I hardly think I shall ride on the back of a gander," answered theteacher. "But we will have it as nearly like Mother Goose as we can. Youwill be Little Boy Blue, Freddie, for you have blue eyes."
"And what can I be?" asked Flossie.
"I think I'll call you Little Miss Muffet."
"Only I'm not afraid of spiders," Flossie said. "That is I'm not afraidof them if they don't get on me. One can come and sit down beside me andI won't mind."
"I guess for the spider we'll get a make-believe one, from thefive-and-ten-cent store," said Miss Earle, the teacher. "Now I'll giveout the other parts."
There were about a dozen children who were to take part in the littleplay. They were to dress up with clothes which they could bring fromhome. Freddie had a blue suit, so he looked exactly like Boy Blue.
One Friday afternoon the little play was given in the school room. Theteacher had strung a wire across in front of her platform, and had hunga red curtain on this. Flossie, Freddie and the other players werebehind the curtain, while the remaining children sat at their desks towatch the play.
"Are you all ready now?" asked Miss Earle of the children behind thecurtain. "All ready! I'm going to pull the curtain back in a minute.Remember you are to walk out first, Freddie, and you are to make a bowand then look to the left, then to the right and say: 'Oh, I wonderwhere she can be?' Then along comes Flossie, as Little Miss Muffet, andshe asks you whom you are looking for."
"Yes, and then I say I'm looking for Mary, who had a little lamb, for Ilent her my horn, and she went away with it to help Bo-Peep find hersheep; and now I can't blow my horn to get the cows out of the corn,"Freddie said.
"That's it!" exclaimed the teacher in a whisper, for they had all talkedin low voices behind the curtain, so the other children would not hearthem. "You remember very well, Freddie. Now we will begin."
The curtain was pulled back, and Freddie walked out from one side wheresome boxes had been piled up to look like a house.
"Oh, I wonder where she can be," said Freddie, looking to the left andto the right. "Where can she be?"
"Whom are you looking for?" asked Flossie, coming out from the otherside of the platform.
"For Mary, who had a little lamb," went on Freddie. "I lent her my hornand----"
But just then there was a crash, and down tumbled the pile of boxes th
atwas the make-believe house, and with them tumbled Johnnie Wilson, whowas dressed up like Little Jack Horner.
"Oh, I've hurt my thumb! I've hurt my thumb!" he cried. "Now I can'tpull the plum out of the pie!"