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through the wet Wild Woods, waving his wild tail and walking by his wild lone.

That night, when the Man and the Horse and the Dog came home from hunting, the Woman did not tell them of the bargain that she had made with the Cat, because she was afraid that they might not like it.

Cat went far and far away and hid himself in the wet Wild Woods by his wild lone for a long time till the Woman forgot all about him. Only the Bat-the little upside-down Bat-that hung inside the Cave knew where Cat hid, and every evening he would fly to Cat with news of what was happening.

One evening the Bat said: "There is a Baby in the Cave. He is new and pink and fat and small, and the Woman is very fond of him."

"Ah!" said the Cat, listening, "but what is the Baby fond of ?"

"He is fond of things that are soft and tickle," said the Bat. "He is fond of warm things to hold in his arms when he goes to sleep. He is fond of being played with. He is fond of all those things."

"Ah!" said the Cat, listening, "then my time has come."

Next night Cat walked through the wet Wild Woods and hid very near the Cave till morning-time, and Man and Dog and Horse went hunting. The Woman was busy cooking that morning, and the Baby cried and interrupted. So she carried him outside the Cave and gave him a handful of pebbles to play with. But still the Baby cried.

Then the Cat put out his paddy paw and patted the Baby on the cheek, and it cooed; and the Cat rubbed against its fat knees and tickled it under its fat chin with his tail. And the Baby laughed, and the Woman heard him and smiled.

Then the Bat-the little upside-down Bat that hung in the mouth of the Cave said : "O my Hostess and Wife of my Host and Mother of my Host, a Wild Thing from the Wild Woods is most beautifully playing with your Baby."

"A blessing on that Wild Thing, whoever he may be," said the Woman, straightening her back, "for I was a busy woman this morning, and he has done me a service."

That very minute and second, Best Beloved, the dried horse-skin Curtain that was stretched tail-down at the mouth of the Cave fell down-woosh!-because it remembered the bargain she had made with the Cat; and when the Woman went to pick it up-lo and behold!--the Cat was sitting quite comfy inside the Cave,

"O my Enemy and Wife of my Enemy and Mother of my Enemy," said the Cat, "it is I, for you have spoken a word in my praise, and now I can sit within the Cave for always and always and always. But still I am the Cat who walks by himself, and all places are alike to me."

The Woman was very angry, and shut her lips tight and took up her spinning-wheel and began to spin.

But the Baby cried because the Cat had gone away, and the Woman could not hush it, for it struggled and kicked and grew black in the face.

"O my Enemy and Wife of my Enemy and Mother of my Enemy," said the Cat, "take a strand of the thread that you are spinning and tie it to your spinning-whorl and drag it along the floor, and I will show you a Magic that shall make your Baby laugh as loudly as he is now crying."

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I will do so," said the Woman, “because I am at my wits' end; but I will not praise you for it."

She tied the thread to the little clay spindle-whorl and drew it across the floor, and the Cat ran after it and patted it with his paws and rolled head over heels, and tossed it backward over his shoulder and chased it between his hind legs and pretended to lose it, and pounced down upon it again, till the Baby laughed as loudly as it had been crying, and scrambled after the Cat and frolicked all over the Cave till it grew tired and settled down to sleep with the Cat in its arms.

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Now," said the Cat, "I will sing the Baby a song that shall keep him asleep for an hour." And he began to purr, loud and low, low and loud, till the Baby fell fast asleep. The Woman smiled as she looked down upon the two of them and said: "That was wonderfully done. No question but you are very clever, O Cat."

That very minute and second, Best Beloved, the smoke of the Fire at the back of the Cave came down-puff!-from the roof, because it remembered the bargain she had made with the Cat; and when it had cleared away - lo and behold!--the Cat was sitting quite comfy close to the fire.

"O my Enemy and Wife of my Enemy and Mother of my Enemy," said the Cat, "it is I, for you have spoken a second word in my praise, and now I can sit by the warm fire at the back of the Cave for always and always and always. But still I am the Cat who walks by himself, and all places are alike to me."

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"The Woman laughed and said: 'Wild Thing out of the Wild Woods, go back to the Woods again.''

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"O my Enemy and Wife of my Enemy and Mother of my Enemy," said the Cat, "is that little mouse a part of your magic?"

"Ouch! Chee! No, indeed!" said the Woman, and she dropped the blade-bone and jumped upon the footstool in front of the fire and braided up her hair very quick for fear that the mouse should run up it.

"Ah!" said the Cat, watching, "then the mouse will do me no harm if I eat it?"

"No," said the Woman, braiding up her hair; "eat it quick, and I will always be grateful to you."

Cat was lapping up the warm white milk that lay in one of the broken pieces. "O my Enemy and Wife of my Enemy and Mother of my Enemy," said the Cat, "it is I; for you have spoken three words in my praise, and now I can drink the warm white milk three times a day for always and always and always. But still I am the Cat who walks by himself, and all places are alike to me."

Then the Woman laughed and set the Cat a bowl of the warm white milk and said:

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remember that your bargain was not made with the Man or the Dog, and I do not know what they will do when they come home."

"What is that to me?" said the Cat. "If I have my place in the Cave by the fire and my warm white milk three times a day, I do not care what the Man or the Dog may do."

That evening when the Man and the Dog

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came into the Cave, the Woman told them all the story of the bargain, while the Cat sat by the fire and smiled. Then the Man said: "Yes, but he has not made a bargain with me or with all proper Men after me.' Then he took off his two leather boots, and he took up his little stone axe (that makes three), and he fetched a piece of wood and a hatchet (that is five altogether), and he set them out in a row and he said: "Now we

will make our bargain. If you do not catch mice when you are in the Cave for always and always and always, I will throw these five things at you whenever I see you, and so shall all proper Men do after me."

"Ah!" said the Woman, listening, “this is a very clever Cat, but he is not so clever as my Man."

The Cat counted the five things (and they looked very knobby) and he said: "I will catch mice when I am in the Cave for always and always and always; but still I am the Cat who walks by himself, and all places are alike to me."

Not when I am near," said the Man. "If you had not said that last, I would have put all these things away for always and always and always; but now I am going to throw my two boots and my little stone axe (that makes three) at you whenever I meet you. And so shall all proper Men do after me."

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Then the Dog said: "Wait a minute. has not made a bargain with me or with all proper Dogs after me." And he sat down and growled dreadfully and showed all his teeth and said: "If you are not kind to the Baby while I am in the Cave for always and always and always, I will hunt you till I catch you, and when I catch you will bite you. And so shall all proper Dogs do after me.'

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Ah!" said the Woman, listening, "this

is a very clever Cat, but he is not so clever as the Dog."

Cat counted the Dog's teeth (and they looked very pointed) and he said: "I will be kind to the Baby while I am in the Cave, as long as he does not pull my tail too hard, for always and always and always. But still I am the Cat that walks by himself, and all places are alike to me."

Not when I am near," said the Dog. "If you had not said that last, I would have shut my mouth for always and always and always; but now I am going to hunt you up a tree whenever I meet you. And so shall all proper Dogs do after me."

Then the Man threw his two boots and his little stone axe (that makes three) at the Cat, and the Cat ran out of the Cave and the Dog chased him up a tree; and from that day to this, Best Beloved, three proper Men out of five will always throw things at a Cat whenever they meet him, and all proper Dogs will chase him up a tree. But the Cat keeps his part of the bargain, too. He will kill mice; and he will be kind to Babies when he is in the house, just as long as Babies do not pull his tail too hard. But when he has done that, and between times, and when the moon gets up and night comes, he is the Cat that walks by himself, and all places are alike to him. Then he goes to the wet Wild Woods or the wet Wild Trees or on the wet Wild Roofs, waving his wild tail and walking by his wild lone.

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