Andrew Henry's
Meadow
Written and illustrated by
Doris Burn
iJImA*^*-''
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2010...
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Andrew Henry's
Meadow
Written and illustrated by
Doris Burn
iJImA*^*-''
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2010
http://www.archive.org/details/andrewhenrysmeadOOburn
Andrew Henry's
Meadow To most
everyone,
Andrew Henry
things was a nuisance.
go-round hitched one day,
Even
Thatcher's enthusiasm for building
the helicopter in the kitchen
sewing machine seemed
to the
Andrew Henry
quietly
and the merry-
to get in the
packed and moved
to a
way. So,
meadow.
who liked birds, turned up. Her father Then George Turner came along with his boats
Before long Alice Burdock, didn't care for birds.
and paddle wheel. interest that
And
soon, six other children, each with a special
nobody seemed
to appreciate.
How Andrew Henry aroused the whole a
happy
solution to his problem,
is
town, and accidentally found
a captivating story.
Almost more
absorbing are the detailed drawings of his ingenious and quite buildable inventions.
Doris Burn's writing
skill
matches her talent
a delicious understanding of childish longings
as
an
and
artist.
Combining
a gift for comical
understatement, she creates a picture book sure to become a dog-eared favorite of both parents
and
children.
Weekly Reader Children's Book Club Presents
Andrew Henry's
Meadow
Written and illustrated by
Doris Burn Coward -McCann New York
Inc.
This boo\
lovingly dedicated to
is
Robin, May\, Cameron and Lisa.
©
1965 by Doris Burn All rights reserved.
This books, or parts thereof,
form without permission
may
not be reproduced in any
in writing
lished simultaneously in the
from the publishers. Pub-
Dominion
of
Canada by Long-
mans Canada Limited, Toronto.
Number: 65-20384 THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Library of Congress Catalog Card
MANUFACTURED
IN
Weekly Reader Children's Book Club
Edition.
Primary Division.
ntil that
spring
Andrew Henry Thatcher
lived with his family in the
town of
Stubbsville.
ru
He had
a father
and mother and two older
named Marian and Martha. The with each other.
He
also
girls
sisters
were always
had two younger brothers
named Robert and Ronald. They were always with each other
Andrew Henry was
He was
in the middle.
always with himself,
yet he didn't mind.
He had
plenty of things to do.
too.
Mrs. Thatcher was usually busy in the kitchen,
when he came home from work.
but Mr. Thatcher was tired
He
liked to read the paper
Marian and Martha liked or try
new ways
to
wear
and have things
to
sew
their hair.
Robert and Ronald liked to play with toy cars and coloring books.
quiet.
But Andrew Henry liked to build things.
Mrs. Thatcher was unhappy
when Andrew Henry
built a helicopter in the kitchen.
The
helicopter had
many
fine features.
Nevertheless, she said to
"Andrew Henry,
You must
I
him
firmly,
have work to do.
take that thing out of the kitchen."
Then Andrew Henry
built an eagle's cage in the living
and Mr. Thatcher was annoyed.
An
eagle
would have
liked
He
it,
It
was
room,
a fine eagle's cage.
but Mr. Thatcher didn't.
told
Andrew Henry
and to take the
to
eagle's cage
go outside with him.
When
Marian and Martha saw the merry-go-round
Andrew Henry had they were upset.
It
hitched up to the sewing machine,
went around
But they told him to unhitch and to do
it
"right now."
it
nicely too.
Robert and Ronald didn't even
Andrew Henry although
it
like the
rigged up in their
could close the door,
system of pulleys
room
^
fetch the crayon box,
and
lift
the table one and a half feet off the floor.
They
cried,
"You're always spoiling our fun, Andrew Henry. Leave us alone."
Andrew Henry thought about
One
fine spring
it
more and more.
morning he made up
his
mind.
Quietly he gathered together his tools.
hammer and
He
packed
his
pocket knife and
his
his saw,
pliers,
a big sack of nails,
some
bolts, nuts,
and even
a
and wire,
few lengths
of stovepipe.
"I'll
build a house for myself," he said to himself.
He went
out the back door and
He knew where
he was going.
down
the path.
No
one saw Andrew Henry leave
except the Thatcher's dog, Sam.
As usual Sam but this time that he
must
Sam was So he
sat
a
started to follow
Andrew Henry stay
Andrew Henry,
told
him
firmly
home.
good dog.
down by
and watched
until
the gate in the shade of the
Andrew Henry was out
lilac
of sight.
bush
7
Andrew Henry walked
kitty-corner through Burdock's pasture
and climbed up over Blackbriar
Hill.
Then he went out
across Worzibsky's
Swamp
and
in
through the deep woods.
mm
Finally he
A
came
to a
meadow.
stream wandered through the meadow,
sparkling in the sunlight.
On
one side was
a tall
fir
tree, straight
and strong.
104
b
VVMJAk*l
misleading.
Jane O'Malley and Margot LaPorte showed up next.
Andrew Henry
built Jane a
house that looked
They dug
like a castle
with
which
up with water from the
The
filled
ditch
when
made
turrets.
a useful
a ditch
around
it
creek.
moat, especially
the drawbridge was up.
fc
'
%&?
y'.V\-;
£«M
Jane had her dress-up clothes with her.
^
She hoped her mother wouldn't miss them too much She explained that they made her like
Lady Jane instead of
feel
just plain Jane.
^>;
Margot's house was but
it
had
a long,
tall in
the middle like a teepee,
low entrance
like
an igloo.
She needed privacy for her music. Visitors
They
had
also
to crawl in
on
their stomachs.
had to give three "toots"
on the horn she had hung beside the door. Sometimes Margot didn't answer because she couldn't always hear the horn
when
If*
she was practicing.
Down
the
hill,
across the
came three more
swamp and
into the
children.
Sarah Lerner had a cookie sheet full of her mother had
Don
woods
made
mud
cakes
her take out of the oven.
Peterson had a dresser drawer full of dandelion seeds
he had been saving to use for parachutes. Stanley Hayes had the his father
wouldn't
let
two racing toads
him keep
in the
basement. 4&
t
%
mm-
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Wl
.
Soon nine houses stood
in the
meadow.
It
looked like a small
village.
"\.-
w-w^:
But
in Stubbsville
the Thatchers were looking for
Andrew Henry,
and the Burdocks were looking for
Alice.
Soon the Turners, the Polaskys, the O'Malleys and LaPortes,
tra ^^ijA
^
the Lerners, the Petersons, and Hayes all
began looking for the missing children.
'
*
,
T
mm-
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