Laronix_Recording / data /Arthur_the_rat.txt
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Set1_Author_01 Once upon a time, there was a young rat named Arthur who couldn't make up his mind.
Set1_Author_02 Whenever the other rats asked him if he would like to go out hunting with them, he would answer in a soft voice, "I don't know."
Set1_Author_03 And when they said, "Would you rather stay inside?" he wouldn't say yes or no either.
Set1_Author_04 He'd always avoid making a choice.
Set1_Author_05 One fine day, his aunt Zelda appealed to him, "Now look here!
Set1_Author_06 No one is going to care about you if you carry on like this.
Set1_Author_07 You have no more mind of your own than a greasy old blade of grass!"
Set1_Author_08 Arthur coughed and looked wise as usual, but said nothing.
Set1_Author_09 "Don't you think so?" said Zelda, stamping her foot, for she couldn't bear to see the poor little rat so coldblooded.
Set1_Author_10 "I don't know," was all he ever answered,
Set1_Author_11 and then he'd walk off to think for an hour or more
Set1_Author_12 about whether he would stay in his hole in the ground or go up into the loft.
Set1_Author_13 One night the rats heard a loud noise.
Set1_Author_14 They lived in a very dark and dreary old place.
Set1_Author_15 The roof let the rain come washing in,
Set1_Author_16 making shallow pools on the muddy floor.
Set1_Author_17 The beams and rafters were all rotten through,
Set1_Author_18 so eventually the whole structure was quite unsafe.
Set1_Author_19 At last, one of the joists gave way and the beams fell down.
Set1_Author_20 The walls shook and the ceiling collapsed with a loud bang.
Set1_Author_21 The rats shrieked and their fur stood on end with fear and horror.
Set1_Author_22 "This won't do," said their leader with a scowl.
Set1_Author_23 "We can't stay cooped up here any longer."
Set1_Author_24 So he sent out scouts to search for a new home.
Set1_Author_25 A little later on in the evening they came back,
Set1_Author_26 having found an old-fashioned barn near a stone house where there would be room,
Set1_Author_27 board and food for all of them.
Set1_Author_28 There, they saw a kindly mare named Alberta,
Set1_Author_29 a cow, and some birds in the garden with an elm tree in the middle.
Set1_Author_30 The leader gave the order at once, "Company fall in!".
Set1_Author_31 The rats crawled out of their holes right away and the sad mob stood on the floor in a long line.
Set1_Author_32 Just then, the old rat caught sight of young Arthur.
Set1_Author_33 He wasn't in the line, and he wasn't exactly outside it;
Set1_Author_34 he stood just nearby, ears pricked.
Set1_Author_35 "Come on, get in line!" growled the old rodent unamused.
Set1_Author_36 "You are coming too, aren’t you?”
Set1_Author_37 "I don't know," said Arthur calmly.
Set1_Author_38 "Why, the idea of it! You don't think it's safe here anymore, do you?"
Set1_Author_39 "I'm not certain," said Arthur undaunted.
Set1_Author_40 "The roof may not fall down yet."
Set1_Author_41 "Well," said the old rat, "you would be stupid not to join us."
Set1_Author_42 Then he turned to the assembled group and shouted,
Set1_Author_43 "Right about face! March!"
Set1_Author_44 and the long line marched out of the barn while the young rat watched them.
Set1_Author_45 "I think I'll go tomorrow," he said to himself,
Set1_Author_46 "but then again, perhaps I won't
Set1_Author_47 it's so nice and snug here.
Set1_Author_48 I guess I'll go back to my hole under the log for a while before I make up my mind."
Set1_Author_49 But during the night there was a big crash.
Set1_Author_50 Down came beams, rafters, joists — the whole business in a pile of rubble.
Set1_Author_51 Next morning, there was a foggy dew.
Set1_Author_52 Some boys and girls ran to the barn and a man in boots came to view the damage.
Set1_Author_53 It seemed odd that the old building was not haunted by rats.
Set1_Author_54 But at last one of the children happened to nudge a board and he saw a puny rat,
Set1_Author_55 quite dead, tail half in and half out of his hole.
Set1_Author_56 Thus the coward got his due, and there was no mourning for him.