The Story of Dago

Annie Fellows Johnston
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The Story of Dago

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Title: The Story of Dago
Author: Annie Fellows-Johnston
Illustrator: Etheldred B. Barry
Release Date: December 31, 2005 [EBook #17429]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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STORY OF DAGO ***

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THE STORY OF DAGO
BY
ANNIE FELLOWS JOHNSTON
[Illustration: "IT WAS HER SWINGING AND JERKING ON THE
ROPE THAT RANG THE BELL."]
THE STORY OF DAGO
BY
ANNIE FELLOWS JOHNSTON
AUTHOR OF "THE LITTLE COLONEL," "BIG BROTHER," "OLE
MAMMY'S TORMENT," "THE GATE OF THE GIANT SCISSORS,"
"TWO LITTLE KNIGHTS OF KENTUCKY," ETC.
Illustrated by
ETHELDRED B. BARRY
BOSTON L.C. PAGE & COMPANY 1900
Copyright, 1900
BY L. C. PAGE AND COMPANY (Incorporated)
TO
"Gin the Monk"
WHOSE PRANKS ARE LINKED WITH THE BOYHOOD
MEMORIES OF DR. GAVIN FULTON, ONE OF THE BEST OF
PHYSICIANS AND FRIENDS, THIS STORY OF DAGO IS
RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED

CONTENTS
PAGE
I. THIS IS THE STORY THAT DAGO TOLD TO THE
MIRROR-MONKEY ON MONDAY 1
II. WHAT DAGO SAID TO THE MIRROR-MONKEY ON
TUESDAY 16
III. WHAT THE MIRROR-MONKEY HEARD ON WEDNESDAY
32
IV. THE TALE THE MIRROR-MONKEY HEARD ON THURSDAY
46
V. WHAT DAGO TOLD ON FRIDAY 60
VI. WHAT DAGO SAID TO THE MIRROR-MONKEY ON
SATURDAY 72
VII. WHAT DAGO TOLD THE MIRROR-MONKEY ON SUNDAY
92
VIII. DAGO BIDS FAREWELL TO THE MIRROR-MONKEY 102
ILLVSTRATIONS
PAGE
"IT WAS HER SWINGING AND JERKING ON THE ROPE THAT
RANG THE BELL" Frontispiece "THE GARDENER FISHED HER
OUT OF THE FOUNTAIN" 9
"HER HANDS WERE FOLDED IN HER LAP" 19
MATCHES'S FUNERAL 25
"SHE FAIRLY STIFFENED WITH HORROR" 43

"AT LAST THE BLUE CUSHION WAS EMPTY, AND I SAT
DOWN ON IT" 48
"'OH, YOU LITTLE TORMENT!' SHE CRIED" 63
"THEIR VOICES RANG OUT LUSTILY" 73
"ALL WENT WELL UNTIL WE REACHED AN ALLEY
CROSSING" 81
"GOOD-BYE! OLD FELLOW!" 103

THE STORY OF DAGO.
CHAPTER I.
THIS IS THE STORY THAT DAGO TOLD TO THE
MIRROR-MONKEY ON MONDAY.
Here I am at last, Ring-tail! The boys have gone to school, thank
fortune, and little Elsie has been taken to kindergarten. Everybody in
the house thinks that I am safe up-stairs in the little prison of a room
that they made for me in the attic. I suppose they never thought how
easy it would be for me to swing out of the open window and climb
down the lightning-rod. Wouldn't Miss Patricia be surprised if she
knew that I am down here now in the parlour, talking to you, and sitting
up here among all these costly, breakable things!
I have been wanting to get back into this room ever since that first
morning that I slipped in and found you sitting here in the looking-glass,
but the door has been shut every time that I have tried to come in. Do
you remember that morning? You were the first ring-tail monkey that I
had seen since I left the Zoo, and you looked so much like my twin
brother, who used to swing with me in the tangled vines of my native
forests, and pelt me with cocoanut-shells, and chatter to me all day long
under those hot, bright skies, that I wanted to put my arms around you
and hug you; but the looking-glass was between us. Some day I shall

break that glass, and crawl back behind there with you.
It is a pity that you are dumb and do not seem to be able to answer me,
for if you could talk to me about the old jungle days I would not be so
homesick. Still, it is some comfort to know that you are not deaf, and I
intend to come in here every morning after the children go to school;
that is, every morning that I find the door open. I've had a very exciting
life in the past, and I think that you'll find my experiences interesting.
Of course I'll not begin at the beginning, for, being a ring-tail monkey
yourself, you know what life is like in the great tropical forests.
Perhaps it would be better to skip the circus part, too, for it was a very
unhappy time that followed, after I was stolen from home by some men
who
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