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On the other side of the tree something moved. Polly saw two large eyes, two long ears, a brown head, and then she knew that it was a pony. |
"Peter, Peter!" she cried, "here is the pony! It is on the Christmas tree! O Peter, Peter, Peter!" |
"Lead her out," said father. "She will come with you. She likes children." |
So Polly took hold of the little strap. And the pony walked out into the room after her. |
"Her name is Brownie," said father. "She is grandmother's present to you and Peter. She is half yours and half Peter's." |
"O grandmother!" cried Polly. "I thank you now, but I will thank you better by and by." |
"Which half is mine, grandmother?" asked Peter. |
"Half of both halves," said grandmother. "Why?" |
"Nothing," said Peter. "I love both her halves. And I love you, too. And I love the tree, and Christmas, and everybody." |
"And so you should," said father. "Come now, we will take Brownie to her stable. Then you may get the presents off the tree." |
The Snow House |
One day there was a heavy snowstorm. At the same time the wind blew. It heaped the snow over the road in front of Polly's house. |
The snow was so deep that horses could not walk through. Men had to dig the road out. |
Mr. Howe helped to do this. Peter and Polly watched the work. They thought it great fun. |
The men threw the snow by the side of the road. Soon the piles were very high. They were twice as high as Polly could reach. |
A few days after this Polly said, "I know what we can do." |
"What?" asked Peter. |
"Let's play Eskimos." |
"How do you play it?" asked Peter. |
"Well," said Polly, "first we must make a snow house. Then we can think of other things to do." |
"We can't," said Peter. |
"Can't what?" asked Polly. "Can't think of things to do? I can, if you can't." |
"No," said Peter, "we can't make a snow house. We tried. It tumbled down. Don't you remember?" |
"I've thought how to do it, Peter. Come on. I will show you." |
Polly took Peter to the great pile of snow by the side of the road. |
"There is our house," she said. "It is all made for us." |
"That isn't any house, Polly. I think I won't play with you to-day. You tease me. I am going to see Tim. Good-by." |
"O Peter! Wait, wait! I won't tease. I will tell you about it now. That is our house really and truly. But it is just the outside. |
"We must make a hole in the pile for a door. Then we must dig out the inside. Can't we do that, Peter?" |
Peter said, "Oh, yes. We can do that. I see about it now. I will help. We can dig very well. |
"We dug our cyclone hole last summer. Perhaps we shall find another box with silver dollars in it." |
"Perhaps we shall not, too," said Polly. "I don't expect to find things in the snow. People hide their gold and silver in the ground. |
"The ground does not melt. Snow does. So it would not hide their gold and silver very long." |
"Why doesn't the ground melt, Polly?" |
"Well, I don't know. You ask father. Snow melts because it is made of water." |
"Butter melts, sugar melts," said Peter. "They are not made of water. I wish to know why the ground does not melt, too. I wish to know now." |
"Peter, can't you stop asking questions and go to work? See, first we must dig a path here. Then we will begin our door." |
It took a long time to dig the path. But at last it was finished. Then they made a hole. It went straight into the side of the big snow pile. That was for the door. |
"Now we must hollow out a place," said Polly. "It will be our room. We must make it large. We shall sleep there and eat there and live there. That is the way the Eskimos do. I read it in a book at school." |
"I'd rather live in a house," said Peter. "Let's live in the house and play out here." |
"Then we will," said Polly. "It would be cold here anyway. I should think Eskimos would freeze in snow houses. But they do not." |
The next day the children scraped out more snow, and the next and the next. At last they had made quite a large room. |
It was nearly round. The floor was packed hard. The white walls were smooth. Polly could stand up straight in the middle. |
Mother gave them an old rug for the floor. |
She said, "Eskimos have fur rugs. You must play that this is bearskin." |
Father said, "Do you know what Eskimos call a snow house? It is igloo. Perhaps some day I will try to crawl into your igloo. I should like to see it." |
"Oh, do, father. Then we will have a party. It is quite warm inside. But we can make the door bigger for you." |
"Never mind about that," said father. "Perhaps I can get a fairy to shrink me. We shall see." |
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