Charlottes Web - E B White
Charlottes Web - E B White
I. Before Breakfast
II. Wilbur
III. Escape
IV. Loneliness
V. Charlotte
VI. Summer Days
VII. Bad News
VIII. A Talk at Home
IX. Wilbur’s Boast
X. An Explosion
XI. The Miracle
XII. A Meeting
XIII. Good Progress
XIV. Dr. Dorian
XV. The Crickets
XVI. Off to the Fair
XVII. Uncle
XVIII. The Cool of the Evening
XIX. The Egg Sac
XX. The Hour of Triumph
XXI. Last Day
XXII. A Warm Wind
WHERE’S Papa going with that ax?” said Fern to her mother as they
were setting the table for breakfast.
“Out to the hoghouse,” replied Mrs. Arable. “Some pigs were born
last night.”
“I don’t see why he needs an ax,” continued Fern, who was only
eight.
“Well,” said her mother, “one of the pigs is a runt. It’s very small and
weak, and it will never amount to anything. So your father has decided to
do away with it.”
“Do away with it?” shrieked Fern. “You mean kill it? Just because
it’s smaller than the others?”
Mrs. Arable put a pitcher of cream on the table. “Don’t yell, Fern!”
she said. “Your father is right. The pig would probably die anyway.”
Fern pushed a chair out of the way and ran outdoors. The grass was
wet and the earth smelled of springtime. Fern’s sneakers were sopping by
the time she caught up with her father.
“Please don’t kill it!” she sobbed. “It’s unfair.”
Mr. Arable stopped walking.
“Fern,” he said gently, “you will have to learn to control yourself.”
“Control myself?” yelled Fern. “This is a matter of life and death,
and you talk about controlling myself.” Tears ran down her cheeks and
she took hold of the ax and tried to pull it out of her father’s hand.
“Fern,” said Mr. Arable, “I know more about raising a litter of pigs
than you do. A weakling makes trouble. Now run along!”
“But it’s unfair,” cried Fern. “The pig couldn’t help being born small,
could it? If I had been very small at birth, would you have killed me?”
Mr. Arable smiled. “Certainly not,” he said, looking down at his
daughter with love. “But this is different. A little girl is one thing, a little
runty pig is another.”
“I see no difference,” replied Fern, still hanging on to the ax. “This is
the most terrible case of injustice I ever heard of.”
A queer look came over John Arable’s face. He seemed almost ready
to cry himself.
“All right,” he said. “You go back to the house and I will bring the
runt when I come in. I’ll let you start it on a bottle, like a baby. Then
you’ll see what trouble a pig can be.”
When Mr. Arable returned to the house half an hour later, he carried
a carton under his arm. Fern was upstairs changing her sneakers. The
kitchen table was set for breakfast, and the room smelled of coffee,
bacon, damp plaster, and wood smoke from the stove.
“Put it on her chair!” said Mrs. Arable. Mr. Arable set the carton
down at Fern’s place. Then he walked to the sink and washed his hands
and dried them on the roller towel.
Fern came slowly down the stairs. Her eyes were red from crying. As
she approached her chair, the carton wobbled, and there was a scratching
noise. Fern looked at her father. Then she lifted the lid of the carton.
There, inside, looking up at her, was the newborn pig. It was a white one.
The morning light shone through its ears, turning them pink.
“He’s yours,” said Mr. Arable. “Saved from an untimely death. And
may the good Lord forgive me for this foolishness.”
Fern couldn’t take her eyes off the tiny pig. “Oh,” she whispered.
“Oh, look at him! He’s absolutely perfect.”
She closed the carton carefully. First she kissed her father, then she
kissed her mother. Then she opened the lid again, lifted the pig out, and
held it against her cheek. At this moment her brother Avery came into
the room. Avery was ten. He was heavily armed—an air rifle in one
hand, a wooden dagger in the other.
“What’s that?” he demanded. “What’s Fern got?”
“She’s got a guest for breakfast,” said Mrs. Arable. “Wash your
hands and face, Avery!”
“Let’s see it!” said Avery, setting his gun down. “You call that
miserable thing a pig? That’s a fine specimen of a pig—it’s no bigger
than a white rat.”
“Wash up and eat your breakfast, Avery!” said his mother. “The
school bus will be along in half an hour.”
“Can I have a pig, too, Pop?” asked Avery.
“No, I only distribute pigs to early risers,” said Mr. Arable. “Fern
was up at daylight, trying to rid the world of injustice. As a result, she
now has a pig. A small one, to be sure, but nevertheless a pig. It just
shows what can happen if a person gets out of bed promptly. Let’s eat!”
But Fern couldn’t eat until her pig had had a drink of milk. Mrs.
Arable found a baby’s nursing bottle and a rubber nipple. She poured
warm milk into the bottle, fitted the nipple over the top, and handed it to
Fern. “Give him his breakfast!” she said.
A minute later, Fern was seated on the floor in the corner of the
kitchen with her infant between her knees, teaching it to suck from the
bottle. The pig, although tiny, had a good appetite and caught on quickly.
The school bus honked from the road.
“Run!” commanded Mrs. Arable, taking the pig from Fern and
slipping a doughnut into her hand. Avery grabbed his gun and another
doughnut.
The children ran out to the road and climbed into the bus. Fern took
no notice of the others in the bus. She just sat and stared out of the
window, thinking what a blissful world it was and how lucky she was to
have entire charge of a pig. By the time the bus reached school, Fern had
named her pet, selecting the most beautiful name she could think of.
“Its name is Wilbur,” she whispered to herself.
She was still thinking about the pig when the teacher said: “Fern,
what is the capital of Pennsylvania?”
“Wilbur,” replied Fern, dreamily. The pupils giggled. Fern blushed.
II. Wilbur
FERN loved Wilbur more than anything. She loved to stroke him, to
feed him, to put him to bed. Every morning, as soon as she got up, she
warmed his milk, tied his bib on, and held the bottle for him. Every
afternoon, when the school bus stopped in front of her house, she jumped
out and ran to the kitchen to fix another bottle for him. She fed him again
at suppertime, and again just before going to bed. Mrs. Arable gave him
a feeding around noontime each day, when Fern was away in school.
Wilbur loved his milk, and he was never happier than when Fern was
warming up a bottle for him. He would stand and gaze up at her with
adoring eyes.
For the first few days of his life, Wilbur was allowed to live in a box
near the stove in the kitchen. Then, when Mrs. Arable complained, he
was moved to a bigger box in the woodshed. At two weeks of age, he
was moved outdoors. It was apple-blossom time, and the days were
getting warmer. Mr. Arable fixed a small yard specially for Wilbur under
an apple tree, and gave him a large wooden box full of straw, with a
doorway cut in it so he could walk in and out as he pleased.
“Won’t he be cold at night?” asked Fern.
“No,” said her father. “You watch and see what he does.”
Carrying a bottle of milk, Fern sat down under the apple tree inside
the yard. Wilbur ran to her and she held the bottle for him while he
sucked. When he had finished the last drop, he grunted and walked
sleepily into the box. Fern peered through the door. Wilbur was poking
the straw with his snout. In a short time he had dug a tunnel in the straw.
He crawled into the tunnel and disappeared from sight, completely
covered with straw. Fern was enchanted. It relieved her mind to know
that her baby would sleep covered up, and would stay warm.
Every morning after breakfast, Wilbur walked out to the road with
Fern and waited with her till the bus came. She would wave good-bye to
him, and he would stand and watch the bus until it vanished around a
turn. While Fern was in school, Wilbur was shut up inside his yard. But
as soon as she got home in the afternoon, she would take him out and he
would follow her around the place. If she went into the house, Wilbur
went, too. If she went upstairs, Wilbur would wait at the bottom step
until she came down again. If she took her doll for a walk in the doll
carriage, Wilbur followed along. Sometimes, on these journeys, Wilbur
would get tired, and Fern would pick him up and put him in the carriage
alongside the doll. He liked this. And if he was very tired, he would close
his eyes and go to sleep under the doll’s blanket. He looked cute when
his eyes were closed, because his lashes were so long. The doll would
close her eyes, too, and Fern would wheel the carriage very slowly and
smoothly so as not to wake her infants.
One warm afternoon, Fern and Avery put on bathing suits and went
down to the brook for a swim. Wilbur tagged along at Fern’s heels.
When she waded into the brook, Wilbur waded in with her. He found the
water quite cold—too cold for his liking. So while the children swam
and played and splashed water at each other, Wilbur amused himself in
the mud along the edge of the brook, where it was warm and moist and
delightfully sticky and oozy.
Every day was a happy day, and every night was peaceful.
Wilbur was what farmers call a spring pig, which simply means that
he was born in springtime. When he was five weeks old, Mr. Arable said
he was now big enough to sell, and would have to be sold. Fern broke
down and wept. But her father was firm about it. Wilbur’s appetite had
increased; he was beginning to eat scraps of food in addition to milk. Mr.
Arable was not willing to provide for him any longer. He had already
sold Wilbur’s ten brothers and sisters.
“He’s got to go, Fern,” he said. “You have had your fun raising a
baby pig, but Wilbur is not a baby any longer and he has got to be sold.”
“Call up the Zuckermans,” suggested Mrs. Arable to Fern. “Your
Uncle Homer sometimes raises a pig. And if Wilbur goes there to live,
you can walk down the road and visit him as often as you like.”
“How much money should I ask for him?” Fern wanted to know.
“Well,” said her father, “he’s a runt. Tell your Uncle Homer you’ve
got a pig you’ll sell for six dollars, and see what he says.”
It was soon arranged. Fern phoned and got her Aunt Edith, and her
Aunt Edith hollered for Uncle Homer, and Uncle Homer came in from
the barn and talked to Fern. When he heard that the price was only six
dollars, he said he would buy the pig. Next day Wilbur was taken from
his home under the apple tree and went to live in a manure pile in the
cellar of Zuckerman’s barn.
III. Escape
THE BARN was very large. It was very old. It smelled of hay and it
smelled of manure. It smelled of the perspiration of tired horses and the
wonderful sweet breath of patient cows. It often had a sort of peaceful
smell—as though nothing bad could happen ever again in the world. It
smelled of grain and of harness dressing and of axle grease and of rubber
boots and of new rope. And whenever the cat was given a fish-head to
eat, the barn would smell of fish. But mostly it smelled of hay, for there
was always hay in the great loft up overhead. And there was always hay
being pitched down to the cows and the horses and the sheep.
The barn was pleasantly warm in winter when the animals spent most
of their time indoors, and it was pleasantly cool in summer when the big
doors stood wide open to the breeze. The barn had stalls on the main
floor for the work horses, tie-ups on the main floor for the cows, a
sheepfold down below for the sheep, a pigpen down below for Wilbur,
and it was full of all sorts of things that you find in barns: ladders,
grindstones, pitch forks, monkey wrenches, scythes, lawn mowers, snow
shovels, ax handles, milk pails, water buckets, empty grain sacks, and
rusty rat traps. It was the kind of barn that swallows like to build their
nests in. It was the kind of barn that children like to play in. And the
whole thing was owned by Fern’s uncle, Mr. Homer L. Zuckerman.
Wilbur’s new home was in the lower part of the barn, directly
underneath the cows. Mr. Zuckerman knew that a manure pile is a good
place to keep a young pig. Pigs need warmth, and it was warm and
comfortable down there in the barn cellar on the south side.
Fern came almost every day to visit him. She found an old milking
stool that had been discarded, and she placed the stool in the sheepfold
next to Wilbur’s pen. Here she sat quietly during the long afternoons,
thinking and listening and watching Wilbur. The sheep soon got to know
her and trust her. So did the geese, who lived with the sheep. All the
animals trusted her, she was so quiet and friendly. Mr. Zuckerman did
not allow her to take Wilbur out, and he did not allow her to get into the
pigpen. But he told Fern that she could sit on the stool and watch Wilbur
as long as she wanted to. It made her happy just to be near the pig, and it
made Wilbur happy to know that she was sitting there, right outside his
pen. But he never had any fun—no walks, no rides, no swims.
One afternoon in June, when Wilbur was almost two months old, he
wandered out into his small yard outside the barn. Fern had not arrived
for her usual visit. Wilbur stood in the sun feeling lonely and bored.
“There’s never anything to do around here,” he thought. He walked
slowly to his food trough and sniffed to see if anything had been
overlooked at lunch. He found a small strip of potato skin and ate it. His
back itched, so he leaned against the fence and rubbed against the
boards. When he tired of this, he walked indoors, climbed to the top of
the manure pile, and sat down. He didn’t feel like going to sleep, he
didn’t feel like digging, he was tired of standing still, tired of lying
down. “I’m less than two months old and I’m tired of living,” he said. He
walked out to the yard again.
“When I’m out here,” he said, “there’s no place to go but in. When
I’m indoors, there’s no place to go but out in the yard.”
“That’s where you’re wrong, my friend, my friend,” said a voice.
Wilbur looked through the fence and saw the goose standing there.
“You don’t have to stay in that dirty-little dirty-little dirty-little yard,”
said the goose, who talked rather fast. “One of the boards is loose. Push
on it, push-push-push on it, and come on out!”
“What?” said Wilbur. “Say it slower!”
“At-at-at, at the risk of repeating myself,” said the goose, “I suggest
that you come on out. It’s wonderful out here.”
“Did you say a board was loose?”
“That I did, that I did,” said the goose.
Wilbur walked up to the fence and saw that the goose was right—one
board was loose. He put his head down, shut his eyes, and pushed. The
board gave way. In a minute he had squeezed through the fence and was
standing in the long grass outside his yard. The goose chuckled.
“How does it feel to be free?” she asked.
“I like it,” said Wilbur. “That is, I guess I like it.” Actually, Wilbur
felt queer to be outside his fence, with nothing between him and the big
world.
“Where do you think I’d better go?”
“Anywhere you like, anywhere you like,” said the goose. “Go down
through the orchard, root up the sod! Go down through the garden, dig
up the radishes! Root up everything! Eat grass! Look for corn! Look for
oats! Run all over! Skip and dance, jump and prance! Go down through
the orchard and stroll in the woods! The world is a wonderful place when
you’re young.”
“I can see that,” replied Wilbur. He gave a jump in the air, twirled,
ran a few steps, stopped, looked all around, sniffed the smells of
afternoon, and then set off walking down through the orchard. Pausing in
the shade of an apple tree, he put his strong snout into the ground and
began pushing, digging, and rooting. He felt very happy. He had plowed
up quite a piece of ground before anyone noticed him. Mrs. Zuckerman
was the first to see him. She saw him from the kitchen window, and she
immediately shouted for the men.
“Ho-mer!” she cried. “Pig’s out! Lurvy! Pig’s out! Homer! Lurvy!
Pig’s out. He’s down there under that apple tree.”
“Now the trouble starts,” thought Wilbur. “Now I’ll catch it.”
The goose heard the racket and she, too, started hollering. “Run-run-
run downhill, make for the woods, the woods!” she shouted to Wilbur.
“They’ll never-never-never catch you in the woods.”
The cocker spaniel heard the commotion and he ran out from the
barn to join the chase. Mr. Zuckerman heard, and he came out of the
machine shed where he was mending a tool. Lurvy, the hired man, heard
the noise and came up from the asparagus patch where he was pulling
weeds. Everybody walked toward Wilbur and Wilbur didn’t know what
to do. The woods seemed a long way off, and anyway, he had never been
down there in the woods and wasn’t sure he would like it.
“Get around behind him, Lurvy,” said Mr. Zuckerman, “and drive
him toward the barn! And take it easy—don’t rush him! I’ll go and get a
bucket of slops.”
The news of Wilbur’s escape spread rapidly among the animals on
the place. Whenever any creature broke loose on Zuckerman’s farm, the
event was of great interest to the others. The goose shouted to the nearest
cow that Wilbur was free, and soon all the cows knew. Then one of the
cows told one of the sheep, and soon all the sheep knew. The lambs
learned about it from their mothers. The horses, in their stalls in the barn,
pricked up their ears when they heard the goose hollering; and soon the
horses had caught on to what was happening. “Wilbur’s out,” they said.
Every animal stirred and lifted its head and became excited to know that
one of his friends had got free and was no longer penned up or tied fast.
Wilbur didn’t know what to do or which way to run. It seemed as
though everybody was after him. “If this is what it’s like to be free,” he
thought, “I believe I’d rather be penned up in my own yard.”
The cocker spaniel was sneaking up on him from one side, Lurvy the
hired man was sneaking up on him from the other side. Mrs. Zuckerman
stood ready to head him off if he started for the garden, and now Mr.
Zuckerman was coming down toward him carrying a pail. “This is really
awful,” thought Wilbur. “Why doesn’t Fern come?” He began to cry.
The goose took command and began to give orders.
“Don’t just stand there, Wilbur! Dodge about, dodge about!” cried
the goose. “Skip around, run toward me, slip in and out, in and out, in
and out! Make for the woods! Twist and turn!”
The cocker spaniel sprang for Wilbur’s hind leg. Wilbur jumped and
ran. Lurvy reached out and grabbed. Mrs. Zuckerman screamed at Lurvy.
The goose cheered for Wilbur. Wilbur dodged between Lurvy’s legs.
Lurvy missed Wilbur and grabbed the spaniel instead. “Nicely done,
nicely done!” cried the goose. “Try it again, try it again!”
“Run downhill!” suggested the cows.
“Run toward me!” yelled the gander.
“Run uphill!” cried the sheep.
“Turn and twist!” honked the goose.
“Jump and dance!” said the rooster.
“Look out for Lurvy!” called the cows.
“Look out for Zuckerman!” yelled the gander.
“Watch out for the dog!” cried the sheep.
“Listen to me, listen to me!” screamed the goose.
Poor Wilbur was dazed and frightened by this hullabaloo. He didn’t
like being the center of all this fuss. He tried to follow the instructions
his friends were giving him, but he couldn’t run downhill and uphill at
the same time, and he couldn’t turn and twist when he was jumping and
dancing, and he was crying so hard he could barely see anything that was
happening. After all, Wilbur was a very young pig—not much more than
a baby, really. He wished Fern were there to take him in her arms and
comfort him. When he looked up and saw Mr. Zuckerman standing quite
close to him, holding a pail of warm slops, he felt relieved. He lifted his
nose and sniffed. The smell was delicious—warm milk, potato skins,
wheat middlings, Kellogg’s Corn Flakes, and a popover left from the
Zuckermans’ breakfast.
“Come, pig!” said Mr. Zuckerman, tapping the pail. “Come pig!”
Wilbur took a step toward the pail.
“No-no-no!” said the goose. “It’s the old pail trick, Wilbur. Don’t fall
for it, don’t fall for it! He’s trying to lure you back into captivity-ivity.
He’s appealing to your stomach.”
Wilbur didn’t care. The food smelled appetizing. He took another
step toward the pail.
“Pig, pig!” said Mr. Zuckerman in a kind voice, and began walking
slowly toward the barnyard, looking all about him innocently, as if he
didn’t know that a little white pig was following along behind him.
“You’ll be sorry-sorry-sorry,” called the goose.
Wilbur didn’t care. He kept walking toward the pail of slops.
“You’ll miss your freedom,” honked the goose. “An hour of freedom
is worth a barrel of slops.”
Wilbur didn’t care.
When Mr. Zuckerman reached the pigpen, he climbed over the fence
and poured the slops into the trough. Then he pulled the loose board
away from the fence, so that there was a wide hole for Wilbur to walk
through.
“Reconsider, reconsider!” cried the goose.
Wilbur paid no attention. He stepped through the fence into his yard.
He walked to the trough and took a long drink of slops, sucking in the
milk hungrily and chewing the popover. It was good to be home again.
While Wilbur ate, Lurvy fetched a hammer and some 8-penny nails
and nailed the board in place. Then he and Mr. Zuckerman leaned lazily
on the fence and Mr. Zuckerman scratched Wilbur’s back with a stick.
“He’s quite a pig,” said Lurvy.
“Yes, he’ll make a good pig,” said Mr. Zuckerman.
Wilbur heard the words of praise. He felt the warm milk inside his
stomach. He felt the pleasant rubbing of the stick along his itchy back.
He felt peaceful and happy and sleepy. This had been a tiring afternoon.
It was still only about four o’clock but Wilbur was ready for bed.
“I’m really too young to go out into the world alone,” he thought as
he lay down.
IV. Loneliness
THE NEXT day was rainy and dark. Rain fell on the roof of the barn
and dripped steadily from the eaves. Rain fell in the barnyard and ran in
crooked courses down into the lane where thistles and pigweed grew.
Rain spattered against Mrs. Zuckerman’s kitchen windows and came
gushing out of the downspouts. Rain fell on the backs of the sheep as
they grazed in the meadow. When the sheep tired of standing in the rain,
they walked slowly up the lane and into the fold.
Rain upset Wilbur’s plans. Wilbur had planned to go out, this day,
and dig a new hole in his yard. He had other plans, too. His plans for the
day went something like this:
Breakfast at six-thirty. Skim milk, crusts, middlings, bits of
doughnuts, wheat cakes with drops of maple syrup sticking to them,
potato skins, leftover custard pudding with raisins, and bits of Shredded
Wheat.
Breakfast would be finished at seven.
From seven to eight, Wilbur planned to have a talk with Templeton,
the rat that lived under his trough. Talking with Templeton was not the
most interesting occupation in the world but it was better than nothing.
From eight to nine, Wilbur planned to take a nap outdoors in the sun.
From nine to eleven he planned to dig a hole, or trench, and possibly
find something good to eat buried in the dirt.
From eleven to twelve he planned to stand still and watch flies on the
boards, watch bees in the clover, and watch swallows in the air.
Twelve o’clock—lunchtime. Middlings, warm water, apple parings,
meat gravy, carrot scrapings, meat scraps, stale hominy, and the wrapper
off a package of cheese. Lunch would be over at one.
From one to two, Wilbur planned to sleep.
From two to three, he planned to scratch itchy places by rubbing
against the fence.
From three to four, he planned to stand perfectly still and think of
what it was like to be alive, and to wait for Fern.
At four would come supper. Skim milk, provender, leftover sandwich
from Lurvy’s lunchbox, prune skins, a morsel of this, a bit of that, fried
potatoes, marmalade drippings, a little more of this, a little more of that,
a piece of baked apple, a scrap of upsidedown cake.
Wilbur had gone to sleep thinking about these plans. He awoke at six
and saw the rain, and it seemed as though he couldn’t bear it.
“I get everything all beautifully planned out and it has to go and
rain,” he said.
For a while he stood gloomily indoors. Then he walked to the door
and looked out. Drops of rain struck his face. His yard was cold and wet.
His trough had an inch of rainwater in it. Templeton was nowhere to be
seen.
“Are you out there, Templeton?” called Wilbur. There was no
answer. Suddenly Wilbur felt lonely and friendless.
“One day just like another,” he groaned. “I’m very young, I have no
real friend here in the barn, it’s going to rain all morning and all
afternoon, and Fern won’t come in such bad weather. Oh, honestly!” And
Wilbur was crying again, for the second time in two days.
At six-thirty Wilbur heard the banging of a pail. Lurvy was standing
outside in the rain, stirring up breakfast.
“C’mon, pig!” said Lurvy.
Wilbur did not budge. Lurvy dumped the slops, scraped the pail, and
walked away. He noticed that something was wrong with the pig.
Wilbur didn’t want food, he wanted love. He wanted a friend—
someone who would play with him. He mentioned this to the goose, who
was sitting quietly in a corner of the sheepfold.
“Will you come over and play with me?” he asked.
“Sorry, sonny, sorry,” said the goose. “I’m sitting-sitting on my eggs.
Eight of them. Got to keep them toasty-oasty-oasty warm. I have to stay
right here, I’m no flibberty-ibberty-gibbet. I do not play when there are
eggs to hatch. I’m expecting goslings.”
“Well, I didn’t think you were expecting woodpeckers,” said Wilbur,
bitterly.
Wilbur next tried one of the lambs.
“Will you please play with me?” he asked.
“Certainly not,” said the lamb. “In the first place, I cannot get into
your pen, as I am not old enough to jump over the fence. In the second
place, I am not interested in pigs. Pigs mean less than nothing to me.”
“What do you mean, less than nothing?” replied Wilbur. “I don’t
think there is any such thing as less than nothing. Nothing is absolutely
the limit of nothingness. It’s the lowest you can go. It’s the end of the
line. How can something be less than nothing? If there were something
that was less than nothing, then nothing would not be nothing, it would
be something—even though it’s just a very little bit of something. But if
nothing is nothing, then nothing has nothing that is less than it is.”
“Oh, be quiet!” said the lamb. “Go play by yourself! I don’t play
with pigs.”
Sadly, Wilbur lay down and listened to the rain. Soon he saw the rat
climbing down a slanting board that he used as a stairway.
“Will you play with me, Templeton?” asked Wilbur.
THE NIGHT seemed long. Wilbur’s stomach was empty and his mind
was full. And when your stomach is empty and your mind is full, it’s
always hard to sleep.
A dozen times during the night Wilbur woke and stared into the
blackness, listening to the sounds and trying to figure out what time it
was. A barn is never perfectly quiet. Even at midnight there is usually
something stirring.
The first time he woke, he heard Templeton gnawing a hole in the
grain bin. Templeton’s teeth scraped loudly against the wood and made
quite a racket. “That crazy rat!” thought Wilbur. “Why does he have to
stay up all night, grinding his clashers and destroying people’s property?
Why can’t he go to sleep, like any decent animal?”
The second time Wilbur woke, he heard the goose turning on her nest
and chuckling to herself.
“What time is it?” whispered Wilbur to the goose.
“Probably-obably-obably about half-past eleven,” said the goose.
“Why aren’t you asleep, Wilbur?”
“Too many things on my mind,” said Wilbur.
“Well,” said the goose, “that’s not my trouble. I have nothing at all on
my mind, but I’ve too many things under my behind. Have you ever tried
to sleep while sitting on eight eggs?”
“No,” replied Wilbur. “I suppose it is uncomfortable. How long does
it take a goose egg to hatch?”
“Approximately-oximately thirty days, all told,” answered the goose.
“But I cheat a little. On warm afternoons, I just pull a little straw over the
eggs and go out for a walk.”
Wilbur yawned and went back to sleep. In his dreams he heard again
the voice saying, “I’ll be a friend to you. Go to sleep—you’ll see me in
the morning.”
About half an hour before dawn, Wilbur woke and listened. The barn
was still dark. The sheep lay motionless. Even the goose was quiet.
Overhead, on the main floor, nothing stirred: the cows were resting, the
horses dozed. Templeton had quit work and gone off somewhere on an
errand. The only sound was a slight scraping noise from the rooftop,
where the weather-vane swung back and forth. Wilbur loved the barn
when it was like this—calm and quiet, waiting for light.
“Day is almost here,” he thought.
Through a small window, a faint gleam appeared. One by one the
stars went out. Wilbur could see the goose a few feet away. She sat with
head tucked under a wing. Then he could see the sheep and the lambs.
The sky lightened.
“Oh, beautiful day, it is here at last! Today I shall find my friend.”
Wilbur looked everywhere. He searched his pen thoroughly. He
examined the window ledge, stared up at the ceiling. But he saw nothing
new. Finally he decided he would have to speak up. He hated to break
the lovely stillness of dawn by using his voice, but he couldn’t think of
any other way to locate the mysterious new friend who was nowhere to
be seen. So Wilbur cleared his throat.
“Attention, please!” he said in a loud, firm voice. “Will the party who
addressed me at bedtime last night kindly make himself or herself known
by giving an appropriate sign or signal!”
Wilbur paused and listened. All the other animals lifted their heads
and stared at him. Wilbur blushed. But he was determined to get in touch
with his unknown friend.
“Attention, please!” he said. “I will repeat the message. Will the
party who addressed me at bedtime last night kindly speak up. Please tell
me where you are, if you are my friend!”
The sheep looked at each other in disgust.
“Stop your nonsense, Wilbur!” said the oldest sheep. “If you have a
new friend here, you are probably disturbing his rest; and the quickest
way to spoil a friendship is to wake somebody up in the morning before
he is ready. How can you be sure your friend is an early riser?”
“I beg everyone’s pardon,” whispered Wilbur. “I didn’t mean to be
objectionable.”
He lay down meekly in the manure, facing the door. He did not know
it, but his friend was very near. And the old sheep was right—the friend
was still asleep.
Soon Lurvy appeared with slops for breakfast. Wilbur rushed out, ate
everything in a hurry, and licked the trough. The sheep moved off down
the lane, the gander waddled along behind them, pulling grass. And then,
just as Wilbur was settling down for his morning nap, he heard again the
thin voice that had addressed him the night before.
“Salutations!” said the voice.
Wilbur jumped to his feet. “Salu-what?” he cried.
“Salutations!” repeated the voice.
“What are they, and where are you?” screamed Wilbur. “Please,
please, tell me where you are. And what are salutations?”
“Salutations are greetings,” said the voice. “When I say ‘salutations,’
it’s just my fancy way of saying hello or good morning. Actually, it’s a
silly expression, and I am surprised that I used it at all. As for my
whereabouts, that’s easy. Look up here in the corner of the doorway!
Here I am. Look, I’m waving!”
At last Wilbur saw the creature that had spoken to him in such a
kindly way. Stretched across the upper part of the doorway was a big
spiderweb, and hanging from the top of the web, head down, was a large
grey spider. She was about the size of a gumdrop. She had eight legs, and
she was waving one of them at Wilbur in friendly greeting. “See me
now?” she asked.
“Oh, yes indeed,” said Wilbur. “Yes indeed! How are you? Good
morning! Salutations! Very pleased to meet you. What is your name,
please? May I have your name?”
“My name,” said the spider, “is Charlotte.”
“Charlotte what?” asked Wilbur, eagerly.
“Charlotte A. Cavatica. But just call me Charlotte.”
“I think you’re beautiful,” said Wilbur.
“Well, I am pretty,” replied Charlotte. “There’s no denying that.
Almost all spiders are rather nice-looking. I’m not as flashy as some, but
I’ll do. I wish I could see you, Wilbur, as clearly as you can see me.”
“Why can’t you?” asked the pig. “I’m right here.”
“Yes, but I’m near-sighted,” replied Charlotte. “I’ve always been
dreadfully near-sighted. It’s good in some ways, not so good in others.
Watch me wrap up this fly.”
A fly that had been crawling along Wilbur’s trough had flown up and
blundered into the lower part of Charlotte’s web and was tangled in the
sticky threads. The fly was beating its wings furiously, trying to break
loose and free itself.
“First,” said Charlotte, “I dive at him.” She plunged headfirst toward
the fly. As she dropped, a tiny silken thread unwound from her rear end.
“Next, I wrap him up.” She grabbed the fly, threw a few jets of silk
around it, and rolled it over and over, wrapping it so that it couldn’t
move. Wilbur watched in horror. He could hardly believe what he was
seeing, and although he detested flies, he was sorry for this one.
THE EARLY summer days on a farm are the happiest and fairest days
of the year. Lilacs bloom and make the air sweet, and then fade. Apple
blossoms come with the lilacs, and the bees visit around among the apple
trees. The days grow warm and soft. School ends, and children have time
to play and to fish for trouts in the brook. Avery often brought a trout
home in his pocket, warm and stiff and ready to be fried for supper.
Now that school was over, Fern visited the barn almost every day, to
sit quietly on her stool. The animals treated her as an equal. The sheep
lay calmly at her feet.
Around the first of July, the work horses were hitched to the mowing
machine, and Mr. Zuckerman climbed into the seat and drove into the
field. All morning you could hear the rattle of the machine as it went
round and round, while the tall grass fell down behind the cutter bar in
long green swathes. Next day, if there was no thunder shower, all hands
would help rake and pitch and load, and the hay would be hauled to the
barn in the high hay wagon, with Fern and Avery riding at the top of the
load. Then the hay would be hoisted, sweet and warm, into the big loft,
until the whole barn seemed like a wonderful bed of timothy and clover.
It was fine to jump in, and perfect to hide in. And sometimes Avery
would find a little grass snake in the hay, and would add it to the other
things in his pocket.
Early summer days are a jubilee time for birds. In the fields, around
the house, in the barn, in the woods, in the swamp—everywhere love and
songs and nests and eggs. From the edge of the woods, the white-
throated sparrow (which must come all the way from Boston) calls, “Oh,
Peabody, Peabody, Peabody!” On an apple bough, the phoebe teeters and
wags its tail and says, “Phoebe, phoe-bee!” The song sparrow, who
knows how brief and lovely life is, says, “Sweet, sweet, sweet interlude;
sweet, sweet, sweet interlude.” If you enter the barn, the swallows swoop
down from their nests and scold. “Cheeky, cheeky!” they say.
In early summer there are plenty of things for a child to eat and drink
and suck and chew. Dandelion stems are full of milk, clover heads are
loaded with nectar, the Frigidaire is full of ice-cold drinks. Everywhere
you look is life; even the little ball of spit on the weed stalk, if you poke
it apart, has a green worm inside it. And on the under side of the leaf of
the potato vine are the bright orange eggs of the potato bug.
It was on a day in early summer that the goose eggs hatched. This
was an important event in the barn cellar. Fern was there, sitting on her
stool, when it happened.
Except for the goose herself, Charlotte was the first to know that the
goslings had at last arrived. The goose knew a day in advance that they
were coming—she could hear their weak voices calling from inside the
egg. She knew that they were in a desperately cramped position inside
the shell and were most anxious to break through and get out. So she sat
quite still, and talked less than usual.
When the first gosling poked its grey-green head through the goose’s
feathers and looked around, Charlotte spied it and made the
announcement.
“I am sure,” she said, “that every one of us here will be gratified to
learn that after four weeks of unremitting effort and patience on the part
of our friend the goose, she now has something to show for it. The
goslings have arrived. May I offer my sincere congratulations!”
“Thank you, thank you, thank you!” said the goose, nodding and
bowing shamelessly.
“Thank you,” said the gander.
“Congratulations!” shouted Wilbur. “How many goslings are there? I
can only see one.”
“There are seven,” said the goose.
“Fine!” said Charlotte. “Seven is a lucky number.”
“Luck had nothing to do with this,” said the goose. “It was good
management and hard work.”
At this point, Templeton showed his nose from his hiding place under
Wilbur’s trough. He glanced at Fern, then crept cautiously toward the
goose, keeping close to the wall. Everyone watched him, for he was not
well liked, not trusted.
“Look,” he began in his sharp voice, “you say you have seven
goslings. There were eight eggs. What happened to the other egg? Why
didn’t it hatch?”
“It’s a dud, I guess,” said the goose.
“What are you going to do with it?” continued Templeton, his little
round beady eyes fixed on the goose.
“You can have it,” replied the goose. “Roll it away and add it to that
nasty collection of yours.” (Templeton had a habit of picking up unusual
objects around the farm and storing them in his home. He saved
everything.)
WILBUR liked Charlotte better and better each day. Her campaign
against insects seemed sensible and useful. Hardly anybody around the
farm had a good word to say for a fly. Flies spent their time pestering
others. The cows hated them. The horses detested them. The sheep
loathed them. Mr. and Mrs. Zuckerman were always complaining about
them, and putting up screens.
Wilbur admired the way Charlotte managed. He was particularly glad
that she always put her victim to sleep before eating it.
“It’s real thoughtful of you to do that, Charlotte,” he said.
“Yes,” she replied in her sweet, musical voice, “I always give them
an anaesthetic so they won’t feel pain. It’s a little service I throw in.”
As the days went by, Wilbur grew and grew. He ate three big meals a
day. He spent long hours lying on his side, half asleep, dreaming pleasant
dreams. He enjoyed good health and he gained a lot of weight. One
afternoon, when Fern was sitting on her stool, the oldest sheep walked
into the barn, and stopped to pay a call on Wilbur.
“Hello!” she said. “Seems to me you’re putting on weight.”
“Yes, I guess I am,” replied Wilbur. “At my age it’s a good idea to
keep gaining.”
“Just the same, I don’t envy you,” said the old sheep. “You know
why they’re fattening you up, don’t you?”
“No,” said Wilbur.
“Well, I don’t like to spread bad news,” said the sheep, “but they’re
fattening you up because they’re going to kill you, that’s why.”
“They’re going to what?” screamed Wilbur. Fern grew rigid on her
stool.
“Kill you. Turn you into smoked bacon and ham,” continued the old
sheep. “Almost all young pigs get murdered by the farmer as soon as the
real cold weather sets in. There’s a regular conspiracy around here to kill
you at Christmastime. Everybody is in the plot—Lurvy, Zuckerman,
even John Arable.”
“Mr. Arable?” sobbed Wilbur. “Fern’s father?”
“Certainly. When a pig is to be butchered, everybody helps. I’m an
old sheep and I see the same thing, same old business, year after year.
Arable arrives with his .22, shoots the . . .”
“Stop!” screamed Wilbur. “I don’t want to die! Save me, somebody!
Save me!” Fern was just about to jump up when a voice was heard.
“Be quiet, Wilbur!” said Charlotte, who had been listening to this
awful conversation.
ON SUNDAY morning Mr. and Mrs. Arable and Fern were sitting at
breakfast in the kitchen. Avery had finished and was upstairs looking for
his slingshot.
“Did you know that Uncle Homer’s goslings had hatched?” asked
Fern.
“How many?” asked Mr. Arable.
“Seven,” replied Fern. “There were eight eggs but one egg didn’t
hatch and the goose told Templeton she didn’t want it any more, so he
took it away.”
“The goose did what?” asked Mrs. Arable, gazing at her daughter
with a queer, worried look.
“Told Templeton she didn’t want the egg any more,” repeated Fern.
“Who is Templeton?” asked Mrs. Arable.
“He’s the rat,” replied Fern. “None of us like him much.”
“Who’s ‘us’?” asked Mr. Arable.
“Oh, everybody in the barn cellar. Wilbur and the sheep and the
lambs and the goose and the gander and the goslings and Charlotte and
me.”
“Charlotte?” said Mrs. Arable. “Who’s Charlotte?”
“She’s Wilbur’s best friend. She’s terribly clever.”
“What does she look like?” asked Mrs. Arable.
“Well-l,” said Fern, thoughtfully, “she has eight legs. All spiders do, I
guess.”
“Charlotte is a spider?” asked Fern’s mother.
Fern nodded. “A big grey one. She has a web across the top of
Wilbur’s doorway. She catches flies and sucks their blood. Wilbur adores
her.”
“Does he really?” said Mrs. Arable, rather vaguely. She was staring
at Fern with a worried expression on her face.
“Oh, yes, Wilbur adores Charlotte,” said Fern. “Do you know what
Charlotte said when the goslings hatched?”
“I haven’t the faintest idea,” said Mr. Arable. “Tell us.”
“Well, when the first gosling stuck its little head out from under the
goose, I was sitting on my stool in the corner and Charlotte was on her
web. She made a speech. She said: ‘I am sure that every one of us here in
the barn cellar will be gratified to learn that after four weeks of
unremitting effort and patience on the part of the goose, she now has
something to show for it.’ Don’t you think that was a pleasant thing for
her to say?”
“Yes, I do,” said Mrs. Arable. “And now, Fern, it’s time to get ready
for Sunday School. And tell Avery to get ready. And this afternoon you
can tell me more about what goes on in Uncle Homer’s barn. Aren’t you
spending quite a lot of time there? You go there almost every afternoon,
don’t you?”
“I like it there,” replied Fern. She wiped her mouth and ran upstairs.
After she had left the room, Mrs. Arable spoke in a low voice to her
husband.
“I worry about Fern,” she said. “Did you hear the way she rambled
on about the animals, pretending that they talked?”
Mr. Arable chuckled. “Maybe they do talk,” he said. “I’ve sometimes
wondered. At any rate, don’t worry about Fern—she’s just got a lively
imagination. Kids think they hear all sorts of things.”
“Just the same, I do worry about her,” replied Mrs. Arable. “I think I
shall ask Dr. Dorian about her the next time I see him. He loves Fern
almost as much as we do, and I want him to know how queerly she is
acting about that pig and everything. I don’t think it’s normal. You know
perfectly well animals don’t talk.”
Mr. Arable grinned. “Maybe our ears aren’t as sharp as Fern’s,” he
said.
IX. Wilbur’s Boast
DAY AFTER day the spider waited, head-down, for an idea to come to
her. Hour by hour she sat motionless, deep in thought. Having promised
Wilbur that she would save his life, she was determined to keep her
promise. Charlotte was naturally patient. She knew from experience that
if she waited long enough, a fly would come to her web; and she felt sure
that if she thought long enough about Wilbur’s problem, an idea would
come to her mind.
Finally, one morning toward the middle of July, the idea came. “Why,
how perfectly simple!” she said to herself. “The way to save Wilbur’s
life is to play a trick on Zuckerman. If I can fool a bug,” thought
Charlotte, “I can surely fool a man. People are not as smart as bugs.”
Wilbur walked into his yard just at that moment.
“What are you thinking about, Charlotte?” he asked.
“I was just thinking,” said the spider, “that people are very gullible.”
“What does ‘gullible’ mean?”
“Easy to fool,” said Charlotte.
“That’s a mercy,” replied Wilbur, and he lay down in the shade of his
fence and went fast asleep. The spider, however, stayed wide awake,
gazing affectionately at him and making plans for his future. Summer
was half gone. She knew she didn’t have much time.
That morning, just as Wilbur fell asleep, Avery Arable wandered into
the Zuckermans’ front yard, followed by Fern. Avery carried a live frog
in his hand. Fern had a crown of daisies in her hair. The children ran for
the kitchen.
“Just in time for a piece of blueberry pie,” said Mrs. Zuckerman.
“Look at my frog!” said Avery, placing the frog on the drainboard
and holding out his hand for pie.
“Take that thing out of here!” said Mrs. Zuckerman.
“He’s hot,” said Fern. “He’s almost dead, that frog.”
“He is not,” said Avery. “He lets me scratch him between the eyes.”
The frog jumped and landed in Mrs. Zuckerman’s dishpan full of soapy
water.
“You’re getting your pie on you,” said Fern. “Can I look for eggs in
the henhouse, Aunt Edith?”
“Run outdoors, both of you! And don’t bother the hens!”
“It’s getting all over everything,” shouted Fern. “His pie is all over
his front.”
“Come on, frog!” cried Avery. He scooped up his frog. The frog
kicked, splashing soapy water onto the blueberry pie.
“Another crisis!” groaned Fern.
“Let’s swing in the swing!” said Avery.
The children ran to the barn.
Mr. Zuckerman had the best swing in the county. It was a single long
piece of heavy rope tied to the beam over the north doorway. At the
bottom end of the rope was a fat knot to sit on. It was arranged so that
you could swing without being pushed. You climbed a ladder to the
hayloft. Then, holding the rope, you stood at the edge and looked down,
and were scared and dizzy. Then you straddled the knot, so that it acted
as a seat. Then you got up all your nerve, took a deep breath, and
jumped. For a second you seemed to be falling to the barn floor far
below, but then suddenly the rope would begin to catch you, and you
would sail through the barn door going a mile a minute, with the wind
whistling in your eyes and ears and hair. Then you would zoom upward
into the sky, and look up at the clouds, and the rope would twist and you
would twist and turn with the rope. Then you would drop down, down,
down out of the sky and come sailing back into the barn almost into the
hayloft, then sail out again (not quite so far this time), then in again (not
quite so high), then out again, then in again, then out, then in; and then
you’d jump off and fall down and let somebody else try it.
Mothers for miles around worried about Zuckerman’s swing. They
feared some child would fall off. But no child ever did. Children almost
always hang onto things tighter than their parents think they will.
Avery put the frog in his pocket and climbed to the hayloft. “The last
time I swang in this swing, I almost crashed into a barn swallow,” he
yelled.
“Take that frog out!” ordered Fern.
Avery straddled the rope and jumped. He sailed out through the door,
frog and all, and into the sky, frog and all. Then he sailed back into the
barn.
“Your tongue is purple!” screamed Fern.
“So is yours!” cried Avery, sailing out again with the frog.
“I have hay inside my dress! It itches!” called Fern.
“Scratch it!” yelled Avery, as he sailed back.
“It’s my turn,” said Fern. “Jump off!”
“Fern’s got the itch!” sang Avery.
When he jumped off, he threw the swing up to his sister. She shut her
eyes tight and jumped. She felt the dizzy drop, then the supporting lift of
the swing. When she opened her eyes she was looking up into the blue
sky and was about to fly back through the door.
They took turns for an hour.
When the children grew tired of swinging, they went down toward
the pasture and picked wild raspberries and ate them. Their tongues
turned from purple to red. Fern bit into a raspberry that had a bad-tasting
bug inside it, and got discouraged. Avery found an empty candy box and
put his frog in it. The frog seemed tired after his morning in the swing.
The children walked slowly up toward the barn. They, too, were tired
and hardly had energy enough to walk.
“Let’s build a tree house,” suggested Avery. “I want to live in a tree,
with my frog.”
THE NEXT day was foggy. Everything on the farm was dripping wet.
The grass looked like a magic carpet. The asparagus patch looked like a
silver forest.
On foggy mornings, Charlotte’s web was truly a thing of beauty. This
morning each thin strand was decorated with dozens of tiny beads of
water. The web glistened in the light and made a pattern of loveliness
and mystery, like a delicate veil. Even Lurvy, who wasn’t particularly
interested in beauty, noticed the web when he came with the pig’s
breakfast. He noted how clearly it showed up and he noted how big and
carefully built it was. And then he took another look and he saw
something that made him set his pail down. There, in the center of the
web, neatly woven in block letters, was a message. It said:
SOME PIG!
Lurvy felt weak. He brushed his hand across his eyes and stared
harder at Charlotte’s web.
“I’m seeing things,” he whispered. He dropped to his knees and
uttered a short prayer. Then, forgetting all about Wilbur’s breakfast, he
walked back to the house and called Mr. Zuckerman.
“I think you’d better come down to the pigpen,” he said.
“What’s the trouble?” asked Mr. Zuckerman. “Anything wrong with
the pig?”
“N-not exactly,” said Lurvy. “Come and see for yourself.”
The two men walked silently down to Wilbur’s yard. Lurvy pointed
to the spider’s web. “Do you see what I see?” he asked.
Zuckerman stared at the writing on the web. Then he murmured the
words “Some Pig.” Then he looked at Lurvy. Then they both began to
tremble. Charlotte, sleepy after her night’s exertions, smiled as she
watched. Wilbur came and stood directly under the web.
“Some pig!” muttered Lurvy in a low voice.
“Some pig!” whispered Mr. Zuckerman. They stared and stared for a
long time at Wilbur. Then they stared at Charlotte.
“You don’t suppose that that spider . . .” began Mr. Zuckerman—but
he shook his head and didn’t finish the sentence. Instead, he walked
solemnly back up to the house and spoke to his wife. “Edith, something
has happened,” he said, in a weak voice. He went into the living room
and sat down, and Mrs. Zuckerman followed.
“I’ve got something to tell you, Edith,” he said. “You better sit
down.”
Mrs. Zuckerman sank into a chair. She looked pale and frightened.
“Edith,” he said, trying to keep his voice steady, “I think you had best
be told that we have a very unusual pig.”
A look of complete bewilderment came over Mrs. Zuckerman’s face.
“Homer Zuckerman, what in the world are you talking about?” she said.
“This is a very serious thing, Edith,” he replied. “Our pig is
completely out of the ordinary.”
“What’s unusual about the pig?” asked Mrs. Zuckerman, who was
beginning to recover from her scare.
“Well, I don’t really know yet,” said Mr. Zuckerman. “But we have
received a sign, Edith—a mysterious sign. A miracle has happened on
this farm. There is a large spider’s web in the doorway of the barn cellar,
right over the pigpen, and when Lurvy went to feed the pig this morning,
he noticed the web because it was foggy, and you know how a spider’s
web looks very distinct in a fog. And right spang in the middle of the
web there were the words ‘Some Pig.’ The words were woven right into
the web. They were actually part of the web, Edith. I know, because I
have been down there and seen them. It says, ‘Some Pig,’ just as clear as
clear can be. There can be no mistake about it. A miracle has happened
and a sign has occurred here on earth, right on our farm, and we have no
ordinary pig.”
“Well,” said Mrs. Zuckerman, “it seems to me you’re a little off. It
seems to me we have no ordinary spider.”
“Oh, no,” said Zuckerman. “It’s the pig that’s unusual. It says so,
right there in the middle of the web.”
“Maybe so,” said Mrs. Zuckerman. “Just the same, I intend to have a
look at that spider.”
“It’s just a common grey spider,” said Zuckerman.
They got up, and together they walked down to Wilbur’s yard. “You
see, Edith? It’s just a common grey spider.”
Wilbur was pleased to receive so much attention. Lurvy was still
standing there, and Mr. and Mrs. Zuckerman, all three, stood for about an
hour, reading the words on the web over and over, and watching Wilbur.
Charlotte was delighted with the way her trick was working. She sat
without moving a muscle, and listened to the conversation of the people.
When a small fly blundered into the web, just beyond the word “pig,”
Charlotte dropped quickly down, rolled the fly up, and carried it out of
the way.
After a while the fog lifted. The web dried off and the words didn’t
show up so plainly. The Zuckermans and Lurvy walked back to the
house. Just before they left the pigpen, Mr. Zuckerman took one last look
at Wilbur.
“You know,” he said, in an important voice, “I’ve thought all along
that that pig of ours was an extra good one. He’s a solid pig. That pig is
as solid as they come. You notice how solid he is around the shoulders,
Lurvy?”
“Sure. Sure I do,” said Lurvy. “I’ve always noticed that pig. He’s
quite a pig.”
“He’s long, and he’s smooth,” said Zuckerman.
“That’s right,” agreed Lurvy. “He’s as smooth as they come. He’s
some pig.”
When Mr. Zuckerman got back to the house, he took off his work
clothes and put on his best suit. Then he got into his car and drove to the
minister’s house. He stayed for an hour and explained to the minister that
a miracle had happened on the farm.
“So far,” said Zuckerman, “only four people on earth know about this
miracle—myself, my wife Edith, my hired man Lurvy, and you.”
“Don’t tell anybody else,” said the minister. “We don’t know what it
means yet, but perhaps if I give thought to it, I can explain it in my
sermon next Sunday. There can be no doubt that you have a most
unusual pig. I intend to speak about it in my sermon and point out the
fact that this community has been visited with a wondrous animal. By
the way, does the pig have a name?”
“Why, yes,” said Mr. Zuckerman. “My little niece calls him Wilbur.
She’s a rather queer child—full of notions. She raised the pig on a bottle
and I bought him from her when he was a month old.”
He shook hands with the minister, and left.
Secrets are hard to keep. Long before Sunday came, the news spread
all over the county. Everybody knew that a sign had appeared in a
spider’s web on the Zuckerman place. Everybody knew that the
Zuckermans had a wondrous pig. People came from miles around to look
at Wilbur and to read the words on Charlotte’s web. The Zuckermans’
driveway was full of cars and trucks from morning till night—Fords and
Chevvies and Buick roadmasters and GMC pickups and Plymouths and
Studebakers and Packards and De Sotos with gyromatic transmissions
and Oldsmobiles with rocket engines and Jeep station wagons and
Pontiacs. The news of the wonderful pig spread clear up into the hills,
and farmers came rattling down in buggies and buckboards, to stand hour
after hour at Wilbur’s pen admiring the miraculous animal. All said they
had never seen such a pig before in their lives.
When Fern told her mother that Avery had tried to hit the
Zuckermans’ spider with a stick, Mrs. Arable was so shocked that she
sent Avery to bed without any supper, as punishment.
In the days that followed, Mr. Zuckerman was so busy entertaining
visitors that he neglected his farm work. He wore his good clothes all the
time now—got right into them when he got up in the morning. Mrs.
Zuckerman prepared special meals for Wilbur. Lurvy shaved and got a
haircut; and his principal farm duty was to feed the pig while people
looked on.
Mr. Zuckerman ordered Lurvy to increase Wilbur’s feedings from
three meals a day to four meals a day. The Zuckermans were so busy
with visitors they forgot about other things on the farm. The blackberries
got ripe, and Mrs. Zuckerman failed to put up any blackberry jam. The
corn needed hoeing, and Lurvy didn’t find time to hoe it.
On Sunday the church was full. The minister explained the miracle.
He said that the words on the spider’s web proved that human beings
must always be on the watch for the coming of wonders.
All in all, the Zuckermans’ pigpen was the center of attraction. Fern
was happy, for she felt that Charlotte’s trick was working and that
Wilbur’s life would be saved. But she found that the barn was not nearly
as pleasant—too many people. She liked it better when she could be all
alone with her friends the animals.
XII. A Meeting
FAR INTO the night, while the other creatures slept, Charlotte worked
on her web. First she ripped out a few of the orb lines near the center.
She left the radial lines alone, as they were needed for support. As she
worked, her eight legs were a great help to her. So were her teeth. She
loved to weave and she was an expert at it. When she was finished
ripping things out, her web looked something like this:
A spider can produce several kinds of thread. She uses a dry, tough
thread for foundation lines, and she uses a sticky thread for snare lines—
the ones that catch and hold insects. Charlotte decided to use her dry
thread for writing the new message.
“If I write the word ‘Terrific’ with sticky thread,” she thought, “every
bug that comes along will get stuck in it and spoil the effect.”
“Now let’s see, the first letter is T.”
Charlotte climbed to a point at the top of the left hand side of the
web. Swinging her spinnerets into position, she attached her thread and
then dropped down. As she dropped, her spinning tubes went into action
and she let out thread. At the bottom, she attached the thread. This
formed the upright part of the letter T. Charlotte was not satisfied,
however. She climbed up and made another attachment, right next to the
first. Then she carried the line down, so that she had a double line instead
of a single line. “It will show up better if I make the whole thing with
double lines.”
She climbed back up, moved over about an inch to the left, touched
her spinnerets to the web, and then carried a line across to the right,
forming the top of the T. She repeated this, making it double. Her eight
legs were very busy helping.
“Now for the E!”
Charlotte got so interested in her work, she began to talk to herself,
as though to cheer herself on. If you had been sitting quietly in the barn
cellar that evening, you would have heard something like this:
“Now for the R! Up we go! Attach! Descend! Pay out line! Whoa!
Attach! Good! Up you go! Repeat! Attach! Descend! Pay out line.
Whoa, girl! Steady now! Attach! Climb! Attach! Over to the right! Pay
out line! Attach! Now right and down and swing that loop and around
and around! Now in to the left! Attach! Climb! Repeat! O.K.! Easy, keep
those lines together! Now, then, out and down for the leg of the R! Pay
out line! Whoa! Attach! Ascend! Repeat! Good girl!”
And so, talking to herself, the spider worked at her difficult task.
When it was completed, she felt hungry. She ate a small bug that she had
been saving. Then she slept.
Next morning, Wilbur arose and stood beneath the web. He breathed
the morning air into his lungs. Drops of dew, catching the sun, made the
web stand out clearly. When Lurvy arrived with breakfast, there was the
handsome pig, and over him, woven neatly in block letters, was the word
TERRIFIC. Another miracle.
Lurvy rushed and called Mr. Zuckerman. Mr. Zuckerman rushed and
called Mrs. Zuckerman. Mrs. Zuckerman ran to the phone and called the
Arables. The Arables climbed into their truck and hurried over.
Everybody stood at the pigpen and stared at the web and read the word,
over and over, while Wilbur, who really felt terrific, stood quietly
swelling out his chest and swinging his snout from side to side.
“Terrific!” breathed Zuckerman, in joyful admiration. “Edith, you
better phone the reporter on the Weekly Chronicle and tell him what has
happened. He will want to know about this. He may want to bring a
photographer. There isn’t a pig in the whole state that is as terrific as our
pig.”
The news spread. People who had journeyed to see Wilbur when he
was “some pig” came back again to see him now that he was “terrific.”
That afternoon, when Mr. Zuckerman went to milk the cows and
clean out the tie-ups, he was still thinking about what a wondrous pig he
owned.
“Lurvy!” he called. “There is to be no more cow manure thrown
down into that pigpen. I have a terrific pig. I want that pig to have clean,
bright straw every day for his bedding. Understand?”
“Yes, sir,” said Lurvy.
“Furthermore,” said Mr. Zuckerman, “I want you to start building a
crate for Wilbur. I have decided to take the pig to the County Fair on
September sixth. Make the crate large and paint it green with gold
letters!”
“What will the letters say?” asked Lurvy.
“They should say Zuckerman’s Famous Pig.”
Lurvy picked up a pitchfork and walked away to get some clean
straw. Having such an important pig was going to mean plenty of extra
work, he could see that.
Below the apple orchard, at the end of a path, was the dump where
Mr. Zuckerman threw all sorts of trash and stuff that nobody wanted any
more. Here, in a small clearing hidden by young alders and wild
raspberry bushes, was an astonishing pile of old bottles and empty tin
cans and dirty rags and bits of metal and broken bottles and broken
hinges and broken springs and dead batteries and last month’s magazines
and old discarded dishmops and tattered overalls and rusty spikes and
leaky pails and forgotten stoppers and useless junk of all kinds, including
a wrong-size crank for a broken ice-cream freezer.
Templeton knew the dump and liked it. There were good hiding
places there—excellent cover for a rat. And there was usually a tin can
with food still clinging to the inside.
Templeton was down there now, rummaging around. When he
returned to the barn, he carried in his mouth an advertisement he had torn
from a crumpled magazine.
“How’s this?” he asked, showing the ad to Charlotte. “It says
‘Crunchy.’ ‘Crunchy’ would be a good word to write in your web.”
“Just the wrong idea,” replied Charlotte. “Couldn’t be worse. We
don’t want Zuckerman to think Wilbur is crunchy. He might start
thinking about crisp, crunchy bacon and tasty ham. That would put ideas
into his head. We must advertise Wilbur’s noble qualities, not his
tastiness. Go get another word, please, Templeton!”
The rat looked disgusted. But he sneaked away to the dump and was
back in a while with a strip of cotton cloth. “How’s this?” he asked. “It’s
a label off an old shirt.”
Charlotte examined the label. It said PRE-SHRUNK.
“I’m sorry, Templeton,” she said, “but ‘Pre-shrunk’ is out of the
question. We want Zuckerman to think Wilbur is nicely filled out, not all
shrunk up. I’ll have to ask you to try again.”
“What do you think I am, a messenger boy?” grumbled the rat. “I’m
not going to spend all my time chasing down to the dump after
advertising material.”
“Just once more—please!” said Charlotte.
“I’ll tell you what I’ll do,” said Templeton. “I know where there’s a
package of soap flakes in the woodshed. It has writing on it. I’ll bring
you a piece of the package.”
He climbed the rope that hung on the wall and disappeared through a
hole in the ceiling. When he came back he had a strip of blue-and-white
cardboard in his teeth.
“There!” he said, triumphantly. “How’s that?”
Charlotte read the words: “With New Radiant Action.”
“What does it mean?” asked Charlotte, who had never used any soap
flakes in her life.
“How should I know?” said Templeton. “You asked for words and I
brought them. I suppose the next thing you’ll want me to fetch is a
dictionary.”
Together they studied the soap ad. “‘With new radiant action,’”
repeated Charlotte, slowly. “Wilbur!” she called.
Wilbur, who was asleep in the straw, jumped up.
“Run around!” commanded Charlotte. “I want to see you in action, to
see if you are radiant.”
Wilbur raced to the end of his yard.
“Now back again, faster!” said Charlotte.
Wilbur galloped back. His skin shone. His tail had a fine, tight curl in
it.
“Jump into the air!” cried Charlotte.
Wilbur jumped as high as he could.
“Keep your knees straight and touch the ground with your ears!”
called Charlotte.
Wilbur obeyed.
“Do a back flip with a half twist in it!” cried Charlotte.
Wilbur went over backwards, writhing and twisting as he went.
“O.K., Wilbur,” said Charlotte. “You can go back to sleep. O.K.,
Templeton, the soap ad will do, I guess. I’m not sure Wilbur’s action is
exactly radiant, but it’s interesting.”
“Actually,” said Wilbur, “I feel radiant.”
“Do you?” said Charlotte, looking at him with affection. “Well,
you’re a good little pig, and radiant you shall be. I’m in this thing pretty
deep now—I might as well go the limit.”
Tired from his romp, Wilbur lay down in the clean straw. He closed
his eyes. The straw seemed scratchy—not as comfortable as the cow
manure, which was always delightfully soft to lie in. So he pushed the
straw to one side and stretched out in the manure. Wilbur sighed. It had
been a busy day—his first day of being terrific. Dozens of people had
visited his yard during the afternoon, and he had had to stand and pose,
looking as terrific as he could. Now he was tired. Fern had arrived and
seated herself quietly on her stool in the corner.
“Tell me a story, Charlotte!” said Wilbur, as he lay waiting for sleep
to come. “Tell me a story!”
So Charlotte, although she, too, was tired, did what Wilbur wanted.
But Wilbur was already asleep. When the song ended, Fern got up and
went home.
XIV. Dr. Dorian
THE NEXT day was Saturday. Fern stood at the kitchen sink drying the
breakfast dishes as her mother washed them. Mrs. Arable worked
silently. She hoped Fern would go out and play with other children,
instead of heading for the Zuckermans’ barn to sit and watch animals.
“Charlotte is the best storyteller I ever heard,” said Fern, poking her
dish towel into a cereal bowl.
“Fern,” said her mother sternly, “you must not invent things. You
know spiders don’t tell stories. Spiders can’t talk.”
“Charlotte can,” replied Fern. “She doesn’t talk very loud, but she
talks.”
“What kind of story did she tell?” asked Mrs. Arable.
“Well,” began Fern, “she told us about a cousin of hers who caught a
fish in her web. Don’t you think that’s fascinating?”
“Fern, dear, how would a fish get in a spider’s web?” said Mrs.
Arable. “You know it couldn’t happen. You’re making this up.”
“Oh, it happened all right,” replied Fern. “Charlotte never fibs. This
cousin of hers built a web across a stream. One day she was hanging
around on the web and a tiny fish leaped into the air and got tangled in
the web. The fish was caught by one fin, Mother; its tail was wildly
thrashing and shining in the sun. Can’t you just see the web, sagging
dangerously under the weight of the fish? Charlotte’s cousin kept
slipping in, dodging out, and she was beaten mercilessly over the head
by the wildly thrashing fish, dancing in, dancing out, throwing . . .”
“Fern!” snapped her mother. “Stop it! Stop inventing these wild
tales!”
“I’m not inventing,” said Fern. “I’m just telling you the facts.”
“What finally happened?” asked her mother, whose curiosity began
to get the better of her.
“Charlotte’s cousin won. She wrapped the fish up, then she ate him
when she got good and ready. Spiders have to eat, the same as the rest of
us.”
“Yes, I suppose they do,” said Mrs. Arable, vaguely.
“Charlotte has another cousin who is a balloonist. She stands on her
head, lets out a lot of line, and is carried aloft on the wind. Mother,
wouldn’t you simply love to do that?”
“Yes, I would, come to think of it,” replied Mrs. Arable. “But Fern,
darling, I wish you would play outdoors today instead of going to Uncle
Homer’s barn. Find some of your playmates and do something nice
outdoors. You’re spending too much time in that barn—it isn’t good for
you to be alone so much.”
“Alone?” said Fern. “Alone? My best friends are in the barn cellar. It
is a very sociable place. Not at all lonely.”
Fern disappeared after a while, walking down the road toward
Zuckermans’. Her mother dusted the sitting room. As she worked she
kept thinking about Fern. It didn’t seem natural for a little girl to be so
interested in animals. Finally Mrs. Arable made up her mind she would
pay a call on old Doctor Dorian and ask his advice. She got in the car
and drove to his office in the village.
Dr. Dorian had a thick beard. He was glad to see Mrs. Arable and
gave her a comfortable chair.
“It’s about Fern,” she explained. “Fern spends entirely too much time
in the Zuckermans’ barn. It doesn’t seem normal. She sits on a milk stool
in a corner of the barn cellar, near the pigpen, and watches animals, hour
after hour. She just sits and listens.”
Dr. Dorian leaned back and closed his eyes.
“How enchanting!” he said. “It must be real nice and quiet down
there. Homer has some sheep, hasn’t he?”
“Yes,” said Mrs. Arable. “But it all started with that pig we let Fern
raise on a bottle. She calls him Wilbur. Homer bought the pig, and ever
since it left our place Fern has been going to her uncle’s to be near it.”
“I’ve been hearing things about that pig,” said Dr. Dorian, opening
his eyes. “They say he’s quite a pig.”
“Have you heard about the words that appeared in the spider’s web?”
asked Mrs. Arable nervously.
“Yes,” replied the doctor.
“Well, do you understand it?” asked Mrs. Arable.
“Understand what?”
“Do you understand how there could be any writing in a spider’s
web?”
“Oh, no,” said Dr. Dorian. “I don’t understand it. But for that matter I
don’t understand how a spider learned to spin a web in the first place.
When the words appeared, everyone said they were a miracle. But
nobody pointed out that the web itself is a miracle.”
“What’s miraculous about a spider’s web?” said Mrs. Arable. “I
don’t see why you say a web is a miracle—it’s just a web.”
“Ever try to spin one?” asked Dr. Dorian.
Mrs. Arable shifted uneasily in her chair. “No,” she replied. “But I
can crochet a doily and I can knit a sock.”
“Sure,” said the doctor. “But somebody taught you, didn’t they?”
“My mother taught me.”
“Well, who taught a spider? A young spider knows how to spin a
web without any instructions from anybody. Don’t you regard that as a
miracle?”
“I suppose so,” said Mrs. Arable. “I never looked at it that way
before. Still, I don’t understand how those words got into the web. I
don’t understand it, and I don’t like what I can’t understand.”
“None of us do,” said Dr. Dorian, sighing. “I’m a doctor. Doctors are
supposed to understand everything. But I don’t understand everything,
and I don’t intend to let it worry me.”
Mrs. Arable fidgeted. “Fern says the animals talk to each other. Dr.
Dorian, do you believe animals talk?”
“I never heard one say anything,” he replied. “But that proves
nothing. It is quite possible that an animal has spoken civilly to me and
that I didn’t catch the remark because I wasn’t paying attention. Children
pay better attention than grownups. If Fern says that the animals in
Zuckerman’s barn talk, I’m quite ready to believe her. Perhaps if people
talked less, animals would talk more. People are incessant talkers—I can
give you my word on that.”
“Well, I feel better about Fern,” said Mrs. Arable. “You don’t think I
need worry about her?”
“Does she look well?” asked the doctor.
“Oh, yes.”
“Appetite good?”
“Oh, yes, she’s always hungry.”
“Sleep well at night?”
“Oh, yes.”
“Then don’t worry,” said the doctor.
“Do you think she’ll ever start thinking about something besides pigs
and sheep and geese and spiders?”
“How old is Fern?”
“She’s eight.”
“Well,” said Dr. Dorian, “I think she will always love animals. But I
doubt that she spends her entire life in Homer Zuckerman’s barn cellar.
How about boys—does she know any boys?”
“She knows Henry Fussy,” said Mrs. Arable brightly.
Dr. Dorian closed his eyes again and went into deep thought. “Henry
Fussy,” he mumbled. “Hmm. Remarkable. Well, I don’t think you have
anything to worry about. Let Fern associate with her friends in the barn if
she wants to. I would say, offhand, that spiders and pigs were fully as
interesting as Henry Fussy. Yet I predict that the day will come when
even Henry will drop some chance remark that catches Fern’s attention.
It’s amazing how children change from year to year. How’s Avery?” he
asked, opening his eyes wide.
“Oh, Avery,” chuckled Mrs. Arable. “Avery is always fine. Of
course, he gets into poison ivy and gets stung by wasps and bees and
brings frogs and snakes home and breaks everything he lays his hands
on. He’s fine.”
“Good!” said the doctor.
Mrs. Arable said goodbye and thanked Dr. Dorian very much for his
advice. She felt greatly relieved.
XV. The Crickets
THE CRICKETS sang in the grasses. They sang the song of summer’s
ending, a sad, monotonous song. “Summer is over and gone,” they sang.
“Over and gone, over and gone. Summer is dying, dying.”
The crickets felt it was their duty to warn everybody that
summertime cannot last forever. Even on the most beautiful days in the
whole year—the days when summer is changing into fall—the crickets
spread the rumor of sadness and change.
Everybody heard the song of the crickets. Avery and Fern Arable
heard it as they walked the dusty road. They knew that school would
soon begin again. The young geese heard it and knew that they would
never be little goslings again. Charlotte heard it and knew that she hadn’t
much time left. Mrs. Zuckerman, at work in the kitchen, heard the
crickets, and a sadness came over her, too. “Another summer gone,” she
sighed. Lurvy, at work building a crate for Wilbur, heard the song and
knew it was time to dig potatoes.
“Summer is over and gone,” repeated the crickets. “How many nights
till frost?” sang the crickets. “Good-bye, summer, good-bye, good-bye!”
The sheep heard the crickets, and they felt so uneasy they broke a
hole in the pasture fence and wandered up into the field across the road.
The gander discovered the hole and led his family through, and they
walked to the orchard and ate the apples that were lying on the ground. A
little maple tree in the swamp heard the cricket song and turned bright
red with anxiety.
Wilbur was now the center of attraction on the farm. Good food and
regular hours were showing results: Wilbur was a pig any man would be
proud of. One day more than a hundred people came to stand at his yard
and admire him. Charlotte had written the word RADIANT, and Wilbur
really looked radiant as he stood in the golden sunlight. Ever since the
spider had befriended him, he had done his best to live up to his
reputation. When Charlotte’s web said SOME PIG, Wilbur had tried hard
to look like some pig. When Charlotte’s web said TERRIFIC, Wilbur
had tried to look terrific. And now that the web said RADIANT, he did
everything possible to make himself glow.
It is not easy to look radiant, but Wilbur threw himself into it with a
will. He would turn his head slightly and blink his long eye-lashes. Then
he would breathe deeply. And when his audience grew bored, he would
spring into the air and do a back flip with a half twist. At this the crowd
would yell and cheer. “How’s that for a pig?” Mr. Zuckerman would ask,
well pleased with himself. “That pig is radiant.”
Some of Wilbur’s friends in the barn worried for fear all this
attention would go to his head and make him stuck up. But it never did.
Wilbur was modest; fame did not spoil him. He still worried some about
the future, as he could hardly believe that a mere spider would be able to
save his life. Sometimes at night he would have a bad dream. He would
dream that men were coming to get him with knives and guns. But that
was only a dream. In the daytime, Wilbur usually felt happy and
confident. No pig ever had truer friends, and he realized that friendship is
one of the most satisfying things in the world. Even the song of the
crickets did not make Wilbur too sad. He knew it was almost time for the
County Fair, and he was looking forward to the trip. If he could
distinguish himself at the Fair, and maybe win some prize money, he was
sure Zuckerman would let him live.
Charlotte had worries of her own, but she kept quiet about them. One
morning Wilbur asked her about the Fair.
“You’re going with me, aren’t you, Charlotte?” he said.
“Well, I don’t know,” replied Charlotte. “The Fair comes at a bad
time for me. I shall find it inconvenient to leave home, even for a few
days.”
“Why?” asked Wilbur.
“Oh, I just don’t feel like leaving my web. Too much going on
around here.”
“Please come with me!” begged Wilbur. “I need you, Charlotte. I
can’t stand going to the Fair without you. You’ve just got to come.”
“No,” said Charlotte, “I believe I’d better stay home and see if I can’t
get some work done.”
“What kind of work?” asked Wilbur.
“Egg laying. It’s time I made an egg sac and filled it with eggs.”
“I didn’t know you could lay eggs,” said Wilbur in amazement.
“Oh, sure,” said the spider. “I’m versatile.”
“What does ‘versatile’ mean—full of eggs?” asked Wilbur.
“Certainly not,” said Charlotte. “‘Versatile’ means I can turn with
ease from one thing to another. It means I don’t have to limit my
activities to spinning and trapping and stunts like that.”
“Why don’t you come with me to the Fair Grounds and lay your eggs
there?” pleaded Wilbur. “It would be wonderful fun.”
Charlotte gave her web a twitch and moodily watched it sway. “I’m
afraid not,” she said. “You don’t know the first thing about egg laying,
Wilbur. I can’t arrange my family duties to suit the management of the
County Fair. When I get ready to lay eggs, I have to lay eggs, Fair or no
Fair. However, I don’t want you to worry about it—you might lose
weight. We’ll leave it this way: I’ll come to the Fair if I possibly can.”
“Oh, good!” said Wilbur. “I knew you wouldn’t forsake me just when
I need you most.”
All that day Wilbur stayed inside, taking life easy in the straw.
Charlotte rested and ate a grasshopper. She knew that she couldn’t help
Wilbur much longer. In a few days she would have to drop everything
and build the beautiful little sac that would hold her eggs.
XVI. Off to the Fair
THE NIGHT before the County Fair, everybody went to bed early. Fern
and Avery were in bed by eight. Avery lay dreaming that the Ferris
wheel had stopped and that he was in the top car. Fern lay dreaming that
she was getting sick in the swings.
Lurvy was in bed by eight-thirty. He lay dreaming that he was
throwing baseballs at a cloth cat and winning a genuine Navajo blanket.
Mr. and Mrs. Zuckerman were in bed by nine. Mrs. Zuckerman lay
dreaming about a deep freeze unit. Mr. Zuckerman lay dreaming about
Wilbur. He dreamt that Wilbur had grown until he was one hundred and
sixteen feet long and ninety-two feet high and that he had won all the
prizes at the Fair and was covered with blue ribbons and even had a blue
ribbon tied to the end of his tail.
Down in the barn cellar, the animals, too, went to sleep early, all
except Charlotte. Tomorrow would be Fair Day. Every creature planned
to get up early to see Wilbur off on his great adventure.
When morning came, everybody got up at daylight. The day was hot.
Up the road at the Arables’ house, Fern lugged a pail of hot water to her
room and took a sponge bath. Then she put on her prettiest dress because
she knew she would see boys at the Fair. Mrs. Arable scrubbed the back
of Avery’s neck, and wet his hair, and parted it, and brushed it down hard
till it stuck to the top of his head—all but about six hairs that stood
straight up. Avery put on clean underwear, clean blue jeans, and a clean
shirt. Mr. Arable dressed, ate breakfast, and then went out and polished
his truck. He had offered to drive everybody to the Fair, including
Wilbur.
Bright and early, Lurvy put clean straw in Wilbur’s crate and lifted it
into the pigpen. The crate was green. In gold letters it said:
Charlotte had her web looking fine for the occasion. Wilbur ate his
breakfast slowly. He tried to look radiant without getting food in his ears.
In the kitchen, Mrs. Zuckerman suddenly made an announcement.
“Homer,” she said to her husband, “I am going to give that pig a
buttermilk bath.”
“A what?” said Mr. Zuckerman.
“A buttermilk bath. My grandmother used to bathe her pig with
buttermilk when it got dirty—I just remembered.”
“Wilbur’s not dirty,” said Mr. Zuckerman proudly.
“He’s filthy behind the ears,” said Mrs. Zuckerman. “Every time
Lurvy slops him, the food runs down around the ears. Then it dries and
forms a crust. He also has a smudge on one side where he lays in the
manure.”
“He lays in clean straw,” corrected Mr. Zuckerman.
“Well, he’s dirty, and he’s going to have a bath.”
Mr. Zuckerman sat down weakly and ate a doughnut. His wife went
to the woodshed. When she returned, she wore rubber boots and an old
raincoat, and she carried a bucket of buttermilk and a small wooden
paddle.
“Edith, you’re crazy,” mumbled Zuckerman.
But she paid no attention to him. Together they walked to the pigpen.
Mrs. Zuckerman wasted no time. She climbed in with Wilbur and went
to work. Dipping her paddle in the buttermilk, she rubbed him all over.
The geese gathered around to see the fun, and so did the sheep and
lambs. Even Templeton poked his head out cautiously, to watch Wilbur
get a buttermilk bath. Charlotte got so interested, she lowered herself on
a dragline so she could see better. Wilbur stood still and closed his eyes.
He could feel the buttermilk trickling down his sides. He opened his
mouth and some buttermilk ran in. It was delicious. He felt radiant and
happy. When Mrs. Zuckerman got through and rubbed him dry, he was
the cleanest, prettiest pig you ever saw. He was pure white, pink around
the ears and snout, and smooth as silk.
“He’s up!” said Mr. Arable. “I guess there’s nothing wrong with
him.”
“I’m hungry,” said Avery. “I want a candied apple.”
“Wilbur’s all right now,” said Fern. “We can start. I want to take a
ride in the Ferris wheel.”
Mr. Zuckerman and Mr. Arable and Lurvy grabbed the pig and
pushed him headfirst toward the crate. Wilbur began to struggle. The
harder the men pushed, the harder he held back. Avery jumped down and
joined the men. Wilbur kicked and thrashed and grunted. “Nothing
wrong with this pig,” said Mr. Zuckerman cheerfully, pressing his knee
against Wilbur’s behind. “All together, now, boys! Shove!”
With a final heave they jammed him into the crate. The geese
cheered. Lurvy nailed some boards across the end, so Wilbur couldn’t
back out. Then, using all their strength, the men picked up the crate and
heaved it aboard the truck. They did not know that under the straw was a
rat, and inside a knothole was a big grey spider. They saw only a pig.
“Everybody in!” called Mr. Arable. He started the motor. The ladies
climbed in beside him. Mr. Zuckerman and Lurvy and Fern and Avery
rode in back, hanging onto the sideboards. The truck began to move
ahead. The geese cheered. The children answered their cheer, and away
went everybody to the Fair.
XVII. Uncle
WHEN they pulled into the Fair Grounds, they could hear music and
see the Ferris wheel turning in the sky. They could smell the dust of the
race track where the sprinkling cart had moistened it; and they could
smell hamburgers frying and see balloons aloft. They could hear sheep
blatting in their pens. An enormous voice over the loudspeaker said:
“Attention, please! Will the owner of a Pontiac car, license number H-
2439, please move your car away from the fireworks shed!”
“Can I have some money?” asked Fern.
“Can I, too?” asked Avery.
“I’m going to win a doll by spinning a wheel and it will stop at the
right number,” said Fern.
“I’m going to steer a jet plane and make it bump into another one.”
“Can I have a balloon?” asked Fern.
“Can I have a frozen custard and a cheeseburger and some raspberry
soda pop?” asked Avery.
“You children be quiet till we get the pig unloaded,” said Mrs.
Arable.
“Let’s let the children go off by themselves,” suggested Mr. Arable.
“The Fair only comes once a year.” Mr. Arable gave Fern two quarters
and two dimes. He gave Avery five dimes and four nickels. “Now run
along!” he said. “And remember, the money has to last all day. Don’t
spend it all the first few minutes. And be back here at the truck at
noontime so we can all have lunch together. And don’t eat a lot of stuff
that’s going to make you sick to your stomachs.”
“And if you go in those swings,” said Mrs. Arable, “you hang on
tight! You hang on very tight. Hear me?”
“And don’t get lost!” said Mrs. Zuckerman.
“And don’t get dirty!”
“Don’t get overheated!” said their mother.
“Watch out for pickpockets!” cautioned their father.
“And don’t cross the race track when the horses are coming!” cried
Mrs. Zuckerman.
The children grabbed each other by the hand and danced off in the
direction of the merry-go-round, toward the wonderful music and the
wonderful adventure and the wonderful excitement, into the wonderful
midway where there would be no parents to guard them and guide them,
and where they could be happy and free and do as they pleased. Mrs.
Arable stood quietly and watched them go. Then she sighed. Then she
blew her nose.
IN THE cool of the evening, when shadows darkened the Fair Grounds,
Templeton crept from the crate and looked around. Wilbur lay asleep in
the straw. Charlotte was building a web. Templeton’s keen nose detected
many fine smells in the air. The rat was hungry and thirsty. He decided to
go exploring. Without saying anything to anybody, he started off.
“Bring me back a word!” Charlotte called after him. “I shall be
writing tonight for the last time.”
The rat mumbled something to himself and disappeared into the
shadows. He did not like being treated like a messenger boy.
After the heat of the day, the evening came as a welcome relief to all.
The Ferris wheel was lighted now. It went round and round in the sky
and seemed twice as high as by day. There were lights on the midway,
and you could hear the crackle of the gambling machines and the music
of the merry-go-round and the voice of the man in the beano booth
calling numbers.
The children felt refreshed after their nap. Fern met her friend Henry
Fussy, and he invited her to ride with him in the Ferris wheel. He even
bought a ticket for her, so it didn’t cost her anything. When Mrs. Arable
happened to look up into the starry sky and saw her little daughter sitting
with Henry Fussy and going higher and higher into the air, and saw how
happy Fern looked, she just shook her head. “My, my!” she said. “Henry
Fussy. Think of that!”
Templeton kept out of sight. In the tall grass behind the cattle barn he
found a folded newspaper. Inside it were leftovers from somebody’s
lunch: a deviled ham sandwich, a piece of Swiss cheese, part of a hard-
boiled egg, and the core of a wormy apple. The rat crawled in and ate
everything. Then he tore a word out of the paper, rolled it up, and started
back to Wilbur’s pen.
Charlotte had her web almost finished when Templeton returned,
carrying the newspaper clipping. She had left a space in the middle of the
web. At this hour, no people were around the pigpen, so the rat and the
spider and the pig were by themselves.
“I hope you brought a good one,” Charlotte said. “It is the last word I
shall ever write.”
“Here,” said Templeton, unrolling the paper.
“What does it say?” asked Charlotte. “You’ll have to read it for me.”
“It says ‘Humble,’” replied the rat.
“Humble?” said Charlotte. “‘Humble’ has two meanings. It means
‘not proud’ and it means ‘near the ground.’ That’s Wilbur all over. He’s
not proud and he’s near the ground.”
“Well, I hope you’re satisfied,” sneered the rat. “I’m not going to
spend all my time fetching and carrying. I came to this Fair to enjoy
myself, not to deliver papers.”
“You’ve been very helpful,” Charlotte said. “Run along, if you want
to see more of the Fair.”
The rat grinned. “I’m going to make a night of it,” he said. “The old
sheep was right—this Fair is a rat’s paradise. What eating! And what
drinking! And everywhere good hiding and good hunting. Bye, bye, my
humble Wilbur! Fare thee well, Charlotte, you old schemer! This will be
a night to remember in a rat’s life.”
He vanished into the shadows.
Charlotte went back to her work. It was quite dark now. In the
distance, fireworks began going off—rockets, scattering fiery balls in the
sky. By the time the Arables and the Zuckermans and Lurvy returned
from the grandstand, Charlotte had finished her web. The word
HUMBLE was woven neatly in the center. Nobody noticed it in the
darkness. Everyone was tired and happy.
Fern and Avery climbed into the truck and lay down. They pulled the
Indian blanket over them. Lurvy gave Wilbur a forkful of fresh straw.
Mr. Arable patted him. “Time for us to go home,” he said to the pig. “See
you tomorrow.”
The grownups climbed slowly into the truck and Wilbur heard the
engine start and then heard the truck moving away in low speed. He
would have felt lonely and homesick, had Charlotte not been with him.
He never felt lonely when she was near. In the distance he could still
hear the music of the merry-go-round.
As he was dropping off to sleep he spoke to Charlotte.
“Sing me that song again, about the dung and the dark,” he begged.
“Not tonight,” she said in a low voice. “I’m too tired.” Her voice
didn’t seem to come from her web.
“Where are you?” asked Wilbur. “I can’t see you. Are you on your
web?”
“I’m back here,” she answered. “Up in this back corner.”
“Why aren’t you on your web?” asked Wilbur. “You almost never
leave your web.”
“I’ve left it tonight,” she said.
Wilbur closed his eyes. “Charlotte,” he said, after a while, “do you
really think Zuckerman will let me live and not kill me when the cold
weather comes? Do you really think so?”
“Of course,” said Charlotte. “You are a famous pig and you are a
good pig. Tomorrow you will probably win a prize. The whole world
will hear about you. Zuckerman will be proud and happy to own such a
pig. You have nothing to fear, Wilbur—nothing to worry about. Maybe
you’ll live forever—who knows? And now, go to sleep.”
For a while there was no sound. Then Wilbur’s voice:
“What are you doing up there, Charlotte?”
“Oh, making something,” she said. “Making something, as usual.”
“Is it something for me?” asked Wilbur.
“No,” said Charlotte. “It’s something for me, for a change.”
“Please tell me what it is,” begged Wilbur.
“I’ll tell you in the morning,” she said. “When the first light comes
into the sky and the sparrows stir and the cows rattle their chains, when
the rooster crows and the stars fade, when early cars whisper along the
highway, you look up here and I’ll show you something. I will show you
my masterpiece.”
Before she finished the sentence, Wilbur was asleep. She could tell
by the sound of his breathing that he was sleeping peacefully, deep in the
straw.
Miles away, at the Arables’ house, the men sat around the kitchen
table eating a dish of canned peaches and talking over the events of the
day. Upstairs, Avery was already in bed and asleep. Mrs. Arable was
tucking Fern into bed.
“Did you have a good time at the Fair?” she asked as she kissed her
daughter.
Fern nodded. “I had the best time I have ever had anywhere or any
time in all of my whole life.”
“Well!” said Mrs. Arable. “Isn’t that nice!”
XIX. The Egg Sac
NEXT morning when the first light came into the sky and the sparrows
stirred in the trees, when the cows rattled their chains and the rooster
crowed and the early automobiles went whispering along the road,
Wilbur awoke and looked for Charlotte. He saw her up overhead in a
corner near the back of his pen. She was very quiet. Her eight legs were
spread wide. She seemed to have shrunk during the night. Next to her,
attached to the ceiling, Wilbur saw a curious object. It was a sort of sac,
or cocoon. It was peach-colored and looked as though it were made of
cotton candy.
“Are you awake, Charlotte?” he said softly.
“Yes,” came the answer.
“What is that nifty little thing? Did you make it?”
“I did indeed,” replied Charlotte in a weak voice.
“Is it a plaything?”
“Plaything? I should say not. It is my egg sac, my magnum opus.”
“I don’t know what a magnum opus is,” said Wilbur.
“That’s Latin,” explained Charlotte. “It means ‘great work.’ This egg
sac is my great work—the finest thing I have ever made.”
“What’s inside it?” asked Wilbur. “Eggs?”
“Five hundred and fourteen of them,” she replied.
“Five hundred and fourteen?” said Wilbur. “You’re kidding.”
“No, I’m not. I counted them. I got started counting, so I kept on—
just to keep my mind occupied.”
“It’s a perfectly beautiful egg sac,” said Wilbur, feeling as happy as
though he had constructed it himself.
“Yes, it is pretty,” replied Charlotte, patting the sac with her two front
legs. “Anyway, I can guarantee that it is strong. It’s made out of the
toughest material I have. It is also waterproof. The eggs are inside and
will be warm and dry.”
“Charlotte,” said Wilbur dreamily, “are you really going to have five
hundred and fourteen children?”
“If nothing happens, yes,” she said. “Of course, they won’t show up
till next spring.” Wilbur noticed that Charlotte’s voice sounded sad.
“What makes you sound so down-hearted? I should think you’d be
terribly happy about this.”
“Oh, don’t pay any attention to me,” said Charlotte. “I just don’t have
much pep any more. I guess I feel sad because I won’t ever see my
children.”
“What do you mean you won’t see your children! Of course you will.
We’ll all see them. It’s going to be simply wonderful next spring in the
barn cellar with five hundred and fourteen baby spiders running around
all over the place. And the geese will have a new set of goslings, and the
sheep will have their new lambs . . .”
“Maybe,” said Charlotte quietly. “However, I have a feeling I’m not
going to see the results of last night’s efforts. I don’t feel good at all. I
think I’m languishing, to tell you the truth.”
Wilbur didn’t understand the word “languish” and he hated to bother
Charlotte by asking her to explain. But he was so worried he felt he had
to ask.
“What does ‘languishing’ mean?”
“It means I’m slowing up, feeling my age. I’m not young any more,
Wilbur. But I don’t want you to worry about me. This is your big day
today. Look at my web—doesn’t it show up well with the dew on it?”
Charlotte’s web never looked more beautiful than it looked this
morning. Each strand held dozens of bright drops of early morning dew.
The light from the east struck it and made it all plain and clear. It was a
perfect piece of designing and building. In another hour or two, a steady
stream of people would pass by, admiring it, and reading it, and looking
at Wilbur, and marveling at the miracle.
As Wilbur was studying the web, a pair of whiskers and a sharp face
appeared. Slowly Templeton dragged himself across the pen and threw
himself down in a corner.
“I’m back,” he said in a husky voice. “What a night!”
The rat was swollen to twice his normal size. His stomach was as big
around as a jelly jar.
At nine o’clock, Mr. Arable’s truck rolled into the Fair Grounds and
came to a stop at Wilbur’s pen. Everybody climbed out.
“Look!” cried Fern. “Look at Charlotte’s web! Look what it says!”
The grownups and the children joined hands and stood there,
studying the new sign.
“‘Humble,’” said Mr. Zuckerman. “Now isn’t that just the word for
Wilbur!”
Everyone rejoiced to find that the miracle of the web had been
repeated. Wilbur gazed up lovingly into their faces. He looked very
humble and very grateful. Fern winked at Charlotte. Lurvy soon got
busy. He poured a bucket of warm slops into the trough, and while
Wilbur ate his breakfast Lurvy scratched him gently with a smooth stick.
“Wait a minute!” cried Avery. “Look at this!” He pointed to the blue
tag on Uncle’s pen. “This pig has won first prize already.”
The Zuckermans and the Arables stared at the tag. Mrs. Zuckerman
began to cry. Nobody said a word. They just stared at the tag. Then they
stared at Uncle. Then they stared at the tag again. Lurvy took out an
enormous handkerchief and blew his nose very loud—so loud, in fact,
that the noise was heard by stableboys over at the horse barn.
“Can I have some money?” asked Fern. “I want to go out on the
midway.”
“You stay right where you are!” said her mother. Tears came to
Fern’s eyes.
“What’s everybody crying about?” asked Mr. Zuckerman. “Let’s get
busy! Edith, bring the buttermilk!”
Mrs. Zuckerman wiped her eyes with her handkerchief. She went to
the truck and came back with a gallon jar of buttermilk.
“Bath time!” said Zuckerman, cheerfully. He and Mrs. Zuckerman
and Avery climbed into Wilbur’s pen. Avery slowly poured buttermilk on
Wilbur’s head and back, and as it trickled down his sides and cheeks, Mr.
and Mrs. Zuckerman rubbed it into his hair and skin. Passersby stopped
to watch. Pretty soon quite a crowd had gathered. Wilbur grew
beautifully white and smooth. The morning sun shone through his pink
ears.
“He isn’t as big as that pig next door,” remarked one bystander, “but
he’s cleaner. That’s what I like.”
“So do I,” said another man.
“He’s humble, too,” said a woman, reading the sign on the web.
Everybody who visited the pigpen had a good word to say about
Wilbur. Everyone admired the web. And of course nobody noticed
Charlotte.
Suddenly a voice was heard on the loud speaker.
“Attention, please!” it said. “Will Mr. Homer Zuckerman bring his
famous pig to the judges’ booth in front of the grandstand. A special
award will be made there in twenty minutes. Everyone is invited to
attend. Crate your pig, please, Mr. Zuckerman, and report to the judges’
booth promptly!”
For a moment after this announcement, the Arables and the
Zuckermans were unable to speak or move. Then Avery picked up a
handful of straw and threw it high in the air and gave a loud yell. The
straw fluttered down like confetti into Fern’s hair. Mr. Zuckerman
hugged Mrs. Zuckerman. Mr. Arable kissed Mrs. Arable. Avery kissed
Wilbur. Lurvy shook hands with everybody. Fern hugged her mother.
Avery hugged Fern. Mrs. Arable hugged Mrs. Zuckerman.
Up overhead, in the shadows of the ceiling, Charlotte crouched
unseen, her front legs encircling her egg sac. Her heart was not beating
as strongly as usual and she felt weary and old, but she was sure at last
that she had saved Wilbur’s life, and she felt peaceful and contented.
CHARLOTTE and Wilbur were alone. The families had gone to look
for Fern. Templeton was asleep. Wilbur lay resting after the excitement
and strain of the ceremony. His medal still hung from his neck; by
looking out of the corner of his eye he could see it.
“Charlotte,” said Wilbur after a while, “why are you so quiet?”
“I like to sit still,” she said. “I’ve always been rather quiet.”
“Yes, but you seem specially so today. Do you feel all right?”
“A little tired, perhaps. But I feel peaceful. Your success in the ring
this morning was, to a small degree, my success. Your future is assured.
You will live, secure and safe, Wilbur. Nothing can harm you now. These
autumn days will shorten and grow cold. The leaves will shake loose
from the trees and fall. Christmas will come, then the snows of winter.
You will live to enjoy the beauty of the frozen world, for you mean a
great deal to Zuckerman and he will not harm you, ever. Winter will
pass, the days will lengthen, the ice will melt in the pasture pond. The
song sparrow will return and sing, the frogs will awake, the warm wind
will blow again. All these sights and sounds and smells will be yours to
enjoy, Wilbur—this lovely world, these precious days . . .”
Charlotte stopped. A moment later a tear came to Wilbur’s eye. “Oh,
Charlotte,” he said. “To think that when I first met you I thought you
were cruel and bloodthirsty!”
When he recovered from his emotion, he spoke again.
“Why did you do all this for me?” he asked. “I don’t deserve it. I’ve
never done anything for you.”
“You have been my friend,” replied Charlotte. “That in itself is a
tremendous thing. I wove my webs for you because I liked you. After all,
what’s a life, anyway? We’re born, we live a little while, we die. A
spider’s life can’t help being something of a mess, with all this trapping
and eating flies. By helping you, perhaps I was trying to lift up my life a
trifle. Heaven knows anyone’s life can stand a little of that.”
“Well,” said Wilbur. “I’m no good at making speeches. I haven’t got
your gift for words. But you have saved me, Charlotte, and I would
gladly give my life for you—I really would.”
“I’m sure you would. And I thank you for your generous
sentiments.”
“Charlotte,” said Wilbur. “We’re all going home today. The Fair is
almost over. Won’t it be wonderful to be back home in the barn cellar
again with the sheep and the geese? Aren’t you anxious to get home?”
For a moment Charlotte said nothing. Then she spoke in a voice so
low Wilbur could hardly hear the words.
“I will not be going back to the barn,” she said.
Wilbur leapt to his feet. “Not going back?” he cried. “Charlotte, what
are you talking about?”
“I’m done for,” she replied. “In a day or two I’ll be dead. I haven’t
even strength enough to climb down into the crate. I doubt if I have
enough silk in my spinnerets to lower me to the ground.”
Hearing this, Wilbur threw himself down in an agony of pain and
sorrow. Great sobs racked his body. He heaved and grunted with
desolation. “Charlotte,” he moaned. “Charlotte! My true friend!”
“Come now, let’s not make a scene,” said the spider. “Be quiet,
Wilbur. Stop thrashing about!”
“But I can’t stand it,” shouted Wilbur. “I won’t leave you here alone
to die. If you’re going to stay here I shall stay, too.”
“Don’t be ridiculous,” said Charlotte. “You can’t stay here.
Zuckerman and Lurvy and John Arable and the others will be back any
minute now, and they’ll shove you into that crate and away you’ll go.
Besides, it wouldn’t make any sense for you to stay. There would be no
one to feed you. The Fair Grounds will soon be empty and deserted.”
Wilbur was in a panic. He raced round and round the pen. Suddenly
he had an idea—he thought of the egg sac and the five hundred and
fourteen little spiders that would hatch in the spring. If Charlotte herself
was unable to go home to the barn, at least he must take her children
along.
Wilbur rushed to the front of his pen. He put his front feet up on the
top board and gazed around. In the distance he saw the Arables and the
Zuckermans approaching. He knew he would have to act quickly.
“Where’s Templeton?” he demanded.
“He’s in that corner, under the straw, asleep,” said Charlotte.
Wilbur rushed over, pushed his strong snout under the rat, and tossed
him into the air.
“Templeton!” screamed Wilbur. “Pay attention!”
The rat, surprised out of a sound sleep, looked first dazed then
disgusted.
“What kind of monkeyshine is this?” he growled. “Can’t a rat catch a
wink of sleep without being rudely popped into the air?”
“Listen to me!” cried Wilbur. “Charlotte is very ill. She has only a
short time to live. She cannot accompany us home, because of her
condition. Therefore, it is absolutely necessary that I take her egg sac
with me. I can’t reach it, and I can’t climb. You are the only one that can
get it. There’s not a second to be lost. The people are coming—they’ll be
here in no time. Please, please, please, Templeton, climb up and get the
egg sac.”
The rat yawned. He straightened his whiskers. Then he looked up at
the egg sac.
“So!” he said, in disgust. “So it’s old Templeton to the rescue again,
is it? Templeton do this, Templeton do that, Templeton please run down
to the dump and get me a magazine clipping, Templeton please lend me a
piece of string so I can spin a web.”
“Oh, hurry!” said Wilbur. “Hurry up, Templeton!”
But the rat was in no hurry. He began imitating Wilbur’s voice.
“So it’s ‘Hurry up, Templeton,’ is it?” he said. “Ho, ho. And what
thanks do I ever get for these services, I would like to know? Never a
kind word for old Templeton, only abuse and wisecracks and side
remarks. Never a kind word for a rat.”
“Templeton,” said Wilbur in desperation, “if you don’t stop talking
and get busy, all will be lost, and I will die of a broken heart. Please
climb up!”
Templeton lay back in the straw. Lazily he placed his forepaws
behind his head and crossed his knees, in an attitude of complete
relaxation.
“Die of a broken heart,” he mimicked. “How touching! My, my! I
notice that it’s always me you come to when in trouble. But I’ve never
heard of anyone’s heart breaking on my account. Oh, no. Who cares
anything about old Templeton?”
“Get up!” screamed Wilbur. “Stop acting like a spoiled child!”
Templeton grinned and lay still. “Who made trip after trip to the
dump?” he asked. “Why, it was old Templeton! Who saved Charlotte’s
life by scaring that Arable boy away with a rotten goose egg? Bless my
soul, I believe it was old Templeton. Who bit your tail and got you back
on your feet this morning after you had fainted in front of the crowd?
Old Templeton. Has it ever occurred to you that I’m sick of running
errands and doing favors? What do you think I am, anyway, a rat-of-all-
work?”
Wilbur was desperate. The people were coming. And the rat was
failing him. Suddenly he remembered Templeton’s fondness for food.
“Templeton,” he said, “I will make you a solemn promise. Get
Charlotte’s egg sac for me, and from now on I will let you eat first, when
Lurvy slops me. I will let you have your choice of everything in the
trough and I won’t touch a thing until you’re through.”
The rat sat up. “You mean that?” he said.
“I promise. I cross my heart.”
“All right, it’s a deal,” said the rat. He walked to the wall and started
to climb. His stomach was still swollen from last night’s gorge. Groaning
and complaining, he pulled himself slowly to the ceiling. He crept along
till he reached the egg sac. Charlotte moved aside for him. She was
dying, but she still had strength enough to move a little. Then Templeton
bared his long ugly teeth and began snipping the threads that fastened the
sac to the ceiling. Wilbur watched from below.
“Use extreme care!” he said. “I don’t want a single one of those eggs
harmed.”
“Thith thtuff thticks in my mouth,” complained the rat. “It’th worth
than caramel candy.”
But Templeton worked away at the job, and managed to cut the sac
adrift and carry it to the ground, where he dropped it in front of Wilbur.
Wilbur heaved a great sigh of relief.
“Thank you, Templeton,” he said. “I will never forget this as long as
I live.”
“Neither will I,” said the rat, picking his teeth. “I feel as though I’d
eaten a spool of thread. Well, home we go!”
Templeton crept into the crate and buried himself in the straw. He got
out of sight just in time. Lurvy and John Arable and Mr. Zuckerman
came along at that moment, followed by Mrs. Arable and Mrs.
Zuckerman and Avery and Fern. Wilbur had already decided how he
would carry the egg sac—there was only one way possible. He carefully
took the little bundle in his mouth and held it there on top of his tongue.
He remembered what Charlotte had told him—that the sac was
waterproof and strong. It felt funny on his tongue and made him drool a
bit. And of course he couldn’t say anything. But as he was being shoved
into the crate, he looked up at Charlotte and gave her a wink. She knew
he was saying good-bye in the only way he could. And she knew her
children were safe.
“Good-bye!” she whispered. Then she summoned all her strength and
waved one of her front legs at him.
She never moved again. Next day, as the Ferris wheel was being
taken apart and the race horses were being loaded into vans and the
entertainers were packing up their belongings and driving away in their
trailers, Charlotte died. The Fair Grounds were soon deserted. The sheds
and buildings were empty and forlorn. The infield was littered with
bottles and trash. Nobody, of the hundreds of people that had visited the
Fair, knew that a grey spider had played the most important part of all.
No one was with her when she died.
XXII. A Warm Wind
AND SO Wilbur came home to his beloved manure pile in the barn
cellar. His was a strange homecoming. Around his neck he wore a medal
of honor; in his mouth he held a sac of spider’s eggs. There is no place
like home, Wilbur thought, as he placed Charlotte’s five hundred and
fourteen unborn children carefully in a safe corner. The barn smelled
good. His friends the sheep and the geese were glad to see him back.
The geese gave him a noisy welcome.
“Congratu-congratu-congratulations!” they cried. “Nice work.”
Mr. Zuckerman took the medal from Wilbur’s neck and hung it on a
nail over the pigpen, where visitors could examine it. Wilbur himself
could look at it whenever he wanted to.
In the days that followed, he was very happy. He grew to a great size.
He no longer worried about being killed, for he knew that Mr.
Zuckerman would keep him as long as he lived. Wilbur often thought of
Charlotte. A few strands of her old web still hung in the doorway. Every
day Wilbur would stand and look at the torn, empty web, and a lump
would come to his throat. No one had ever had such a friend—so
affectionate, so loyal, and so skillful.
The autumn days grew shorter, Lurvy brought the squashes and
pumpkins in from the garden and piled them on the barn floor, where
they wouldn’t get nipped on frosty nights. The maples and birches turned
bright colors and the wind shook them and they dropped their leaves one
by one to the ground. Under the wild apple trees in the pasture, the red
little apples lay thick on the ground, and the sheep gnawed them and the
geese gnawed them and foxes came in the night and sniffed them. One
evening, just before Christmas, snow began falling. It covered house and
barn and fields and woods. Wilbur had never seen snow before. When
morning came he went out and plowed the drifts in his yard, for the fun
of it. Fern and Avery arrived, dragging a sled. They coasted down the
lane and out onto the frozen pond in the pasture.
“Coasting is the most fun there is,” said Avery.
“The most fun there is,” retorted Fern, “is when the Ferris wheel
stops and Henry and I are in the top car and Henry makes the car swing
and we can see everything for miles and miles and miles.”
“Goodness, are you still thinking about that ol’ Ferris wheel?” said
Avery in disgust. “The Fair was weeks and weeks ago.”
“I think about it all the time,” said Fern, picking snow from her ear.
After Christmas the thermometer dropped to ten below zero. Cold
settled on the world. The pasture was bleak and frozen. The cows stayed
in the barn all the time now, except on sunny mornings when they went
out and stood in the barnyard in the lee of the straw pile. The sheep
stayed near the barn, too, for protection. When they were thirsty they ate
snow. The geese hung around the barnyard the way boys hang around a
drug store, and Mr. Zuckerman fed them corn and turnips to keep them
cheerful.
“Many, many, many thanks!” they always said, when they saw food
coming.
Templeton moved indoors when winter came. His ratty home under
the pig trough was too chilly, so he fixed himself a cozy nest in the barn
behind the grain bins. He lined it with bits of dirty newspapers and rags,
and whenever he found a trinket or a keepsake he carried it home and
stored it there. He continued to visit Wilbur three times a day, exactly at
mealtime, and Wilbur kept the promise he had made. Wilbur let the rat
eat first. Then, when Templeton couldn’t hold another mouthful, Wilbur
would eat. As a result of overeating, Templeton grew bigger and fatter
than any rat you ever saw. He was gigantic. He was as big as a young
woodchuck.
The old sheep spoke to him about his size one day. “You would live
longer,” said the old sheep, “if you ate less.”
“Who wants to live forever?” sneered the rat. “I am naturally a heavy
eater and I get untold satisfaction from the pleasures of the feast.” He
patted his stomach, grinned at the sheep, and crept upstairs to lie down.
All winter Wilbur watched over Charlotte’s egg sac as though he
were guarding his own children. He had scooped out a special place in
the manure for the sac, next to the board fence. On very cold nights he
lay so that his breath would warm it. For Wilbur, nothing in life was so
important as this small round object—nothing else mattered. Patiently he
awaited the end of winter and the coming of the little spiders. Life is
always a rich and steady time when you are waiting for something to
happen or to hatch. The winter ended at last.
“I heard the frogs today,” said the old sheep one evening. “Listen!
You can hear them now.”
Wilbur stood still and cocked his ears. From the pond, in shrill
chorus, came the voices of hundreds of little frogs.
“Springtime,” said the old sheep, thoughtfully. “Another spring.” As
she walked away, Wilbur saw a new lamb following her. It was only a
few hours old.
The snows melted and ran away. The streams and ditches bubbled
and chattered with rushing water. A sparrow with a streaky breast arrived
and sang. The light strengthened, the mornings came sooner. Almost
every morning there was another new lamb in the sheepfold. The goose
was sitting on nine eggs. The sky seemed wider and a warm wind blew.
The last remaining strands of Charlotte’s old web floated away and
vanished.
One fine sunny morning, after breakfast, Wilbur stood watching his
precious sac. He wasn’t thinking of anything much. As he stood there, he
noticed something move. He stepped closer and stared. A tiny spider
crawled from the sac. It was no bigger than a grain of sand, no bigger
than the head of a pin. Its body was grey with a black stripe underneath.
Its legs were grey and tan. It looked just like Charlotte.
Wilbur trembled all over when he saw it. The little spider waved at
him. Then Wilbur looked more closely. Two more little spiders crawled
out and waved. They climbed round and round on the sac, exploring their
new world. Then three more little spiders. Then eight. Then ten.
Charlotte’s children were here at last.
Wilbur’s heart pounded. He began to squeal. Then he raced in circles,
kicking manure into the air. Then he turned a back flip. Then he planted
his front feet and came to a stop in front of Charlotte’s children.
“Hello, there!” he said.
The first spider said hello, but its voice was so small Wilbur couldn’t
hear it.
“I am an old friend of your mother’s,” said Wilbur. “I’m glad to see
you. Are you all right? Is everything all right?”
The little spiders waved their forelegs at him. Wilbur could see by
the way they acted that they were glad to see him.
“Is there anything I can get you? Is there anything you need?”
The young spiders just waved. For several days and several nights
they crawled here and there, up and down, around and about, waving at
Wilbur, trailing tiny draglines behind them, and exploring their home.
There were dozens and dozens of them. Wilbur couldn’t count them, but
he knew that he had a great many new friends. They grew quite rapidly.
Soon each was as big as a BB shot. They made tiny webs near the sac.
Then came a quiet morning when Mr. Zuckerman opened a door on
the north side. A warm draft of rising air blew softly through the barn
cellar. The air smelled of the damp earth, of the spruce woods, of the
sweet springtime. The baby spiders felt the warm updraft. One spider
climbed to the top of the fence. Then it did something that came as a
great surprise to Wilbur. The spider stood on its head, pointed its
spinnerets in the air, and let loose a cloud of fine silk. The silk formed a
balloon. As Wilbur watched, the spider let go of the fence and rose into
the air.
“Good-bye!” it said, as it sailed through the doorway.
“Wait a minute!” screamed Wilbur. “Where do you think you’re
going?”
But the spider was already out of sight. Then another baby spider
crawled to the top of the fence, stood on its head, made a balloon, and
sailed away. Then another spider. Then another. The air was soon filled
with tiny balloons, each balloon carrying a spider.
Wilbur was frantic. Charlotte’s babies were disappearing at a great
rate.
The End
Excerpt from Stuart Little
SAM
Sam closed his notebook, undressed, crawled into his bunk, and lay
there with his eyes closed, wondering why a fox barks. In a few minutes
he was asleep.
Back Ad
About the Author and Artists
Charlotte’s Web
Stuart Little
The Trumpet of the Swan
Essays of E. B. White
Letters of E. B. White, Revised Edition
Writings from The New Yorker 1925-1976
Credits
Australia
HarperCollins Publishers Australia Pty. Ltd.
Level 13, 201 Elizabeth Street
Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia
www.harpercollins.com.au
Canada
HarperCollins Canada
2 Bloor Street East - 20th Floor
Toronto, ON M4W 1A8, Canada
www.harpercollins.ca
New Zealand
HarperCollins Publishers New Zealand
Unit D1, 63 Apollo Drive
Rosedale 0632
Auckland, New Zealand
www.harpercollins.co.nz
United Kingdom
HarperCollins Publishers Ltd.
77-85 Fulham Palace Road
London W6 8JB, UK
www.harpercollins.co.uk
United States
HarperCollins Publishers Inc.
195 Broadway
New York, NY 10007
www.harpercollins.com