Glinda of OzIn Which Are Related the Exciting Experiences of Princess Ozma of Oz, and Dorothy, in Their Hazardous Journey to the Home of the Flatheads, and to the Magic Isle of the Skeezers, and How They Were Rescued from Dire Peril by the Sorcery of Glinda the Good
Ozma, we're anywhere near the Skeezer Country?" 

 "I cannot tell, Dorothy dear, but I know we've been going in the right direction, so we are sure to find it in time." 

 The scrubby brush was almost like a grove of small trees, for it reached as high as the heads of the two girls, neither of whom was very tall. They were obliged to thread their way in and out, until Dorothy was afraid they would get lost, and finally they were halted by a curious thing that barred their further progress. It was a huge web—as if woven by gigantic spiders—and the delicate, lacy film was fastened stoutly to the branches of the bushes and continued to the right and left in the form of a half circle. The threads of this web were of a brilliant purple color and woven into numerous artistic patterns, but it reached from the ground to branches above the heads of the girls and formed a sort of fence that hedged them in. 

 "It doesn't look very strong, though," said Dorothy. "I wonder if we couldn't break through." She tried but found the web stronger than it seemed. All her efforts could not break a single thread. 

 "We must go back, I think, and try to get around this peculiar web," Ozma decided. 

 So they turned to the right and, following the web found that it seemed to spread in a regular circle. On and on they went until finally Ozma said they had returned to the exact spot from which they had started. "Here is a handkerchief you dropped when we were here before," she said to Dorothy. 

 "In that case, they must have built the web behind us, after we walked into the trap," exclaimed the little girl. 

 "True," agreed Ozma, "an enemy has tried to imprison us." 

 "And they did it, too," said Dorothy. "I wonder who it was." 

 "It's a spider-web, I'm quite sure," returned Ozma, "but it must be the work of enormous spiders." 

 "Quite right!" cried a voice behind them. Turning quickly around they beheld a huge purple spider sitting not two yards away and regarding them with its small bright eyes. 

 Then there crawled from the bushes a dozen more great purple spiders, which saluted the first one and said: 

 "The web is finished, O King, and the strangers are our prisoners." 

 Dorothy did not like the looks of these spiders at 
 Prev. P 11/99 next 
Back Top
Privacy Statement Terms of Service Contact