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How Sammy Went to Coral-Land
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Title: How Sammy Went to Coral-Land
Author: Emily Paret Atwater
Release Date: February, 2005 [EBook #7460] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on May 4, 2003]
Edition: 10
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW SAMMY WENT TO CORAL-LAND ***
Produced by Brendan Lane, Juliet Sutherland, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
[Illustration: "SAMMY".]
HOW SAMMY WENT TO CORAL-LAND
BY EMILY PARET ATWATER Author of "Tommy's Adventures," etc.
_TO THE INHABITANTS OF THE "GREEN SHELL"_
_For much of the Natural History part of this little volume the author is indebted to M. C. Cooke's "Toilers of the Sea," and Dr. G. Hartwig's "Denizens of the Deep." She has thought it desirable to mingle some fiction with the facts, but trusts that the "Gentle Reader" will easily distinguish the one from the other._
CONTENTS
HOW SAMMY WENT TO CORAL-LAND
I. HOW SAMMY WENT OUT TO SEE THE WORLD
II. HOW SAMMY ESCAPED FROM THE SHARK AND MADE THE ACQUAINTANCE OF THE HERMIT-CRAB
III. THE STAR-FISH, THE UNSOCIABLE OYSTERS AND THE PILOT
IV. ON TO CORAL-LAND
V. IN CORAL-LAND
List of Illustrations
"SAMMY"
HERMIT-CRAB
HERMIT-CRAB IN SHELL
CALLING CRAB
STAR-FISH Meteor proved very friendly indeed
HAMMERHEADED SHARK A Terribly Fierce Monster is the Hammerheaded Shark
SWORD-FISH The Enemy the Pilot-Fish Dreaded Most of All
REMORA The Remora Has a Wonderful Flat Apparatus on its Head
TORPEDO-FISH One of the Pilot-Fish's Favorite Yarns was about the Torpedo-Fish
SEA-DEVIL The Treacherous Sea-Devil and an Unwary Fish
FLYING-FISH One of the School of Flying-Fish which Sammy Met
GLOBE-FISH A Curious Inhabitant of Coral-Land
PORCUPINE-FISH Another Curious Inhabitant of Coral-Land
A COLONY OF SEA-ANEMONES
A SCENE IN CORAL-LAND, SHOWING STAR-SHAPED FLOWERS OF CORAL, AND OCTOPUS
SEA-SNAIL
NAUTILUS
COCKLE, SHOWING FOOT
RAZOR-SHELL
HOW SAMMY WENT TO CORAL-LAND
"Well, children," said grandma, "which shall it be, fairy stories, stories about giants, or 'really truly,' stories?"
They had been spending a month at the seashore, grandma, Bob and Eleanor. Little Bob had been very ill in the spring, and when hot weather came the doctor ordered sea air and sea bathing to bring back color to the pale cheeks, and strength to the thin little body.
But Bob's father was a poor country parson and there seemed no way to fill the doctor's prescription. At this juncture grandma, like the charming fairy godmother that she was, appeared on the scene. She knew a quiet spot (one of the few still in existence), where there were no big hotels, no board-walks, and no merry-go-rounds. It was the very place where she wanted to go to get rid of her rheumatism; Bob and Eleanor should go with her, and their father and mother could follow later when the parson's vacation came.
It took but a short time to carry out this delightful plan, and at the opening of my story the children had already been a week at the seashore. Such fun as they had been having bathing, digging in the sand, gathering shells and seaweed, or sitting quietly with grandma under the big umbrella, watching the waves break and roll up on the shore! And after supper there was always that pleasant half hour, on the little balcony overlooking the ocean, when grandma told her bedtime stories.
They were all sitting there on this particular evening, grandma in her big rocking-chair, and Bob and Eleanor on their favorite cushions at her feet. The little folks had been begging for their usual treat, for grandma's stories were delightful, and her fund of knowledge (to the children), quite limitless.
"I'm getting too old for fairy stories," said Eleanor, who was eleven and had advanced ideas. "Only real little children believe in goblins and giants, and I'm in the third reader now."
"I like 'em," said dreamy, nine-year old Bob, "fairies and giants can always do things that just ordinary people can't. Please do tell us some fairy stories, grandma."
"No, true stories," insisted Eleanor.
"How would it do to make a compromise?" suggested grandma. "You were asking me some questions yesterday about the shells, seaweed and all the fascinating things found
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