<h2><SPAN name="5">CHAPTER 5</SPAN></h2>
<h3>SIR HOKUS OF POKES</h3>
<p>It was long past sunup before Dorothy awoke. She rubbed her eyes, yawned
once or twice, and then shook the Cowardly Lion. The gates of the city were
open, and although it looked even grayer in the daytime than it looked at
night, the travelers were too hungry to be particular. A large placard was
posted just inside:</p>
<p class="poetry">
THIS IS POKES!<br/>
DON'T RUN!<br/>
DON'T SING!<br/>
TALK SLOWLY!<br/>
DON'T WHISTLE!<br/>
  <i>Order of the Chief Poker.</i></p>
<p>read Dorothy. "How cheerful! Hah, hoh, hum-mm!"</p>
<p>"Don't!" begged the Cowardly Lion with tears in his eyes. "If I yawn again,
I'll swallow my tail, and if I don't have something to eat soon, I'll do it
anyway. Let's hurry! There's something queer about this place, Dorothy! Ah,
hah, hoh, hum-mm!"</p>
<p>Stifling their yawns, the two started down the long, narrow street. The
houses were of gray stone, tall and stiff with tiny barred windows. It was
absolutely quiet, and not a person was in sight. But when they turned the
corner, they saw a crowd of queer-looking people creeping toward them.
These singular individuals stopped between each step and stood perfectly
still, and Dorothy was so surprised at their unusual appearance that she
laughed right in the middle of a yawn.</p>
<p>In the first place, they never lifted their feet, but pushed them along like
skates. The women were dressed in gray polka-dot dresses with huge poke
bonnets that almost hid their fat, sleepy, wide-mouthed faces. Most of them
had pet snails on strings, and so slowly did they move that it looked as
though the snails were tugging them along.</p>
<p>The men were dressed like a party of congressmen, but instead of high hats
wore large red nightcaps, and they were all as solemn as owls. It seemed
impossible for them to keep both eyes open at the same time, and at first
Dorothy thought they were winking at her. But as the whole company continued
to stare fixedly with one open eye, she burst out laughing. At the unexpected
sound (for no one had ever laughed in Pokes before), the women picked up their
snails in a great fright, and the men clapped their fingers to their ears or
to the places where their ears were under the red nightcaps.</p>
<p>"These must be the Slow Pokes," giggled Dorothy, nudging the Cowardly Lion.
"Let's go to meet them, for they'll never reach us at the rate they are
coming!"</p>
<p>"There's something wrong with my feet," rumbled the Cowardly Lion without
looking up. "Hah, hoh, hum! What's the use of hurrying?" The fact of the
matter was that they couldn't hurry if they tried. Indeed, they could
hardly lift their feet at all.</p>
<p>"I wish the Scarecrow were with us," sighed the Cowardly Lion, shuffling along
unhappily. "He never grows sleepy, and he always knows what to do."</p>
<p>"No use wishing," yawned Dorothy. "I only hope he's not as lost as we are."</p>
<p>By struggling hard, they just managed to keep moving, and by the time they
came up with the Slow Pokes, they were completely worn out. A cross-looking
Poke held up his arm threateningly, and Dorothy and the Cowardly Lion
stopped.</p>
<p>"You—" said the Poke; then closed his mouth and stood staring
vacantly for a whole minute.</p>
<p>"Are—" He brought out the word with a perfectly enormous yawn, and Dorothy
began fanning the Cowardly Lion with her hat, for he showed signs of falling
asleep again.</p>
<p>"What?" she asked crossly.</p>
<p>"Under—" sighed the Poke after a long pause, and Dorothy, seeing that
there was no hurrying him, began counting to herself. Just as she reached
sixty, the Poke pushed back his red nightcap and shouted:</p>
<p>"Arrest!"</p>
<p>"Arrest!" shouted all the other Pokes so loud that the Cowardly Lion roused
himself with a start, and the pet snails stuck out their heads.
"A rest? A rest is not what we want! We want breakfast!" growled the lion
irritably and started to roar, but a yawn spoiled it. (One simply cannot
look fierce by yawning.)</p>
<p>"You—" began the Poke. But Dorothy could not stand hearing the same
slow speech again. Putting her fingers in her ears, she shouted back:</p>
<p>"What for?"</p>
<p>The Pokes regarded her sternly. Some even opened both eyes. Then the one who
had first addressed them, covering a terrific gape with one hand, pointed
with the other to a sign on a large post at the corner of the street.</p>
<p class="poetry">
"Speed limit 1/4 mile an hour" said the sign.</p>
<p>"We're arrested for speeding!" shouted Dorothy in the Cowardly Lion's ear.</p>
<p>"Did you say feeding?" asked the poor lion, waking up with a start. "If I go
to sleep again before I'm fed, I'll starve to death!"</p>
<p>"Then keep awake," yawned Dorothy. By this time, the Pokes had surrounded
them and were waving them imperiously ahead. They looked so threatening
that Dorothy and the Cowardly Lion began to creep in the direction of a
gloomy, gray castle. Of the journey neither of them remembered a thing, for
with the gaping and yawning Pokes it was almost impossible to keep awake.
But they must have walked in their sleep, for the next thing Dorothy knew,
a harsh voice called slowly:</p>
<p>"Poke—him!"</p>
<p>Greatly alarmed, Dorothy opened her eyes. They were in a huge stone hall
hung all over with rusty armor, and seated on a great stone chair, snoring
so loudly that all the steel helmets rattled, was a Knight. The tallest and
crossest of the Pokes rushed at him with a long poker, giving him such a
shove that he sprawled to the floor.</p>
<p>"So—" yawned the Cowardly Lion, awakened by the clatter, "Knight has
fallen!"</p>
<p>"Prisoners—Sir Hokus!" shouted the Chief Poker, lifting the Knight's plume
and speaking into the helmet as if he were telephoning.</p>
<p>The Knight arose with great dignity, and after straightening his armor, let
down his visor, and Dorothy saw a kind, timid face with melancholy blue
eyes—not at all Pokish, as she explained to Ozma later.</p>
<p>"What means this unwonted clamor?" asked Sir Hokus, peering curiously at the
prisoners.</p>
<p>"We're sorry to waken you," said Dorothy politely, "but could you please
give us some breakfast?"</p>
<p>"A lot!" added the Cowardly Lion, licking his chops.</p>
<p align="center"><ANTIMG src="images/77.jpg" alt="Sir Hokus sings"></p>
<p>"It's safer for me to sing," said the Knight mournfully, and throwing back
his head, he roared in a high, hoarse voice:</p>
<p class="poetry">
"Don't yawn! Don't yawn!<br/>
We're out of breath—<br/>
Begone—BEGONE<br/>
Or die the death!"</p>
<p>The Cowardly Lion growled threateningly and began lashing his tail.</p>
<p>"If he weren't in a can, I'd eat him," he rumbled, "but I never could abide
tinned meat."</p>
<p>"He's not in a can, he's in armor," explained Dorothy, too interested to pay
much attention to the Cowardly Lion, for at the first note of the Knight's
song, the Pokes began scowling horribly, and by the time he had finished
they were backing out of the room faster than Dorothy ever imagined they
could go.</p>
<p>"So that's why the sign said don't sing," thought Dorothy to herself. The
air seemed clearer somehow, and she no longer felt sleepy.</p>
<p>When the last Poke had disappeared, the Knight sighed and climbed gravely
back on his stone chair.</p>
<p>"My singing makes them very wroth. In faith, they cannot endure music; it
wakens them," explained Sir Hokus. "But hold, 'twas food you asked of me.
Breakfast, I believe you called it." With an uneasy glance at the Cowardly
Lion, who was sniffing the air hungrily, the Knight banged on his steel armor
with his sword, and a fat, lazy Poke shuffled slowly into the hall.</p>
<p>"Pid, bring the stew," roared Sir Hokus as the Poke stood blinking at them
dully.</p>
<p>"Stew, Pid!" he repeated loudly, and began to hum under his breath,
at which Pid fairly ran out of the room, returning in a few minutes with a
large yellow bowl. This he handed ungraciously to Dorothy. Then he brought
a great copper tub of the stuff for the Cowardly Lion and retired sulkily.</p>
<p>Dorothy thought she had never tasted anything more delicious. The Cowardly
Lion was gulping down his share with closed eyes, and both, I am very sorry
to say, forgot even to thank Sir Hokus.</p>
<p>"Are you perchance a damsel in distress?"</p>
<p>Quite startled, Dorothy looked up from her bowl and saw the Knight regarding
her wistfully.</p>
<p>"She's in Pokes, and that's the same thing," said the Cowardly Lion without
opening his eyes.</p>
<p>"We're lost," began the little girl, "but—"</p>
<p align="center"><ANTIMG src="images/79.jpg" alt="Pid brings the stew"></p>
<p>There was something so quaint and gentle about the Knight, that she soon found
herself talking to him like an old friend. She told him all of their
adventures since leaving the Emerald City and even told about the
disappearance of the Scarecrow.</p>
<p>"Passing strange, yet how refreshing," murmured Sir Hokus. "And if I seem a
little behind times, you must not blame me. For centuries, I have dozed in
this gray castle, and it cometh over me that things have greatly changed.
This beast now, he talks quite manfully, and this Kingdom that you mention,
this Oz? Never heard of it!"</p>
<p>"Never heard of Oz?" gasped the little girl. "Why, you're a subject of Oz,
and Pokes is in Oz, though I don't know just where."</p>
<p>Here Dorothy gave him a short history of the Fairy country, and of the many
adventures she had had since she had come there. Sir Hokus listened with
growing melancholy.</p>
<p>"To think," he sighed mournfully, "that I was prisoner here while all that
was happening!"</p>
<p>"Are <i>you</i> a prisoner?" asked Dorothy in surprise. "I thought you were
King of the Pokes!"</p>
<p>"Uds daggers!" thundered Sir Hokus so suddenly that Dorothy jumped. "I am a
<i>knight!"</i></p>
<p>Seeing her startled expression, he controlled himself. "I was a knight," he
continued brokenly. "Long centuries ago, mounted on my goodly steed, I fared
from my father's castle to offer my sword to a mighty king. His name?" Sir
Hokus tapped his forehead uncertainly. "Go to, I have forgot."</p>
<p>"Could it have been King Arthur?" exclaimed Dorothy, wide-eyed with interest.
"Why, just think of your being still alive!"</p>
<p>"That's just the point," choked the Knight. "I've been alive—still, so
still that I've forgotten everything. Why, I can't even remember how I used
to talk," he confessed miserably.</p>
<p>"But how did you get here?" rumbled the Cowardly Lion, who did not like being
left out of the conversation.</p>
<p>"I had barely left my father's castle before I met a stranger," said Sir
Hokus, sitting up very straight, "who challenged me to battle. I spurred my
horse forward, our lances met, and the stranger was unseated. But by my faith,
'twas no mortal Knight." Sir Hokus sighed deeply and lapsed into silence.</p>
<p>"What happened?" asked Dorothy curiously, for Sir Hokus seemed to have
forgotten them.</p>
<p>"The Knight," said he with another mighty sigh, "struck the ground with his
lance and cried, 'Live Wretch, for centuries in the stupidest country out
of the world,' and disappeared. And here—here I am!" With a despairing
gesture, Sir Hokus arose, big tears splashing down his armor.</p>
<p>"I feel that I am brave, very brave, but how am I to know until I have
encountered danger? Ah, friends, behold in me a Knight who has never had a
real adventure, never killed a dragon, nor championed a Lady, nor gone on a
Quest!"</p>
<p align="center"><ANTIMG src="images/83.jpg" alt="Dropping on his knees"></p>
<p>Dropping on his knees before the little girl, Sir Hokus took her hand. "Let
me go with you on this Quest for the valiant Scarecrow. Let me be your good
Night!" he begged eagerly.</p>
<p>"Good night," coughed the Cowardly Lion, who, to tell the truth, was feeling
a bit jealous. But Dorothy was thrilled, and as Sir Hokus continued to look
at her pleadingly, she took off her hair ribbon and bound it 'round his arm.</p>
<p>"You shall be my own true Knight, and I your Lady Fair!" she announced
solemnly, and exactly as she had read in books.</p>
<p>At this interesting juncture the Cowardly Lion gave a tremendous yawn, and
Sir Hokus with an exclamation of alarm jumped to his feet. The Pokes had
returned to the hall, and Dorothy felt herself falling asleep again.</p>
<p class="poetry">
Up, up, my lieges and away!<br/>
We take the field again—<br/>
For Ladies fair we fight today<br/>
And KING! Up, up, my merry men!</p>
<p>shrilled the Knight as if he were leading an army to battle. The Pokes
opened both eyes, but did not immediately retire. Sir Hokus bravely
swallowed a yawn and hastily clearing his throat shouted another song,
which he evidently made up on the spur of the moment:</p>
<p class="poetry">
Avaunt! Be off! Be gone—Methinks<br/>
We'll be asleep in forty winks!</p>
<p>This time the Pokes left sullenly, but the effect of their presence had thrown
Dorothy, the Cowardly Lion, and the Knight into a violent fit of the gapes.</p>
<p>"If I fall asleep, nothing can save you," said Sir Hokus in an agitated
voice. "Hah, hoh, hum! Hah—!"</p>
<p>The Knight's eyes closed.</p>
<p>"Don't do it, don't do it!" begged Dorothy, shaking him violently. "Can't we
run away?"</p>
<p>"I've been trying for five centuries," wailed the Knight in a discouraged
voice, "but I always fall asleep before I reach the gate, and they bring me
back here. They're rather fond of me in their slow way," he added
apologetically.</p>
<p>"Couldn't you keep singing?" asked the Cowardly Lion anxiously, for the
prospect of a five-century stay in Pokes was more than he could bear.</p>
<p>"Couldn't we <i>all</i> sing?" suggested Dorothy. "Surely all three of us won't
fall asleep at once."</p>
<p>"I'm not much of a singer," groaned the Cowardly Lion, beginning to tremble,
"but I'm willing to do my share!"</p>
<p>"I like you," said Sir Hokus, going over and thumping the Cowardly Lion
approvingly on the back. "You ought to be knighted!"</p>
<p>The lion blinked his eyes, for Sir Hokus' iron fist bruised him severely,
but knowing it was kindly meant, he bore it bravely.</p>
<p>"I am henceforth a beknighted lion," he whispered to Dorothy while Sir Hokus
was straightening his armor. Next the Knight took down an iron poker, which he
handed to Dorothy.</p>
<p>"To wake us up with," he explained. "And now, Lady Dorothy, if you are ready,
we will start on the Quest for the honorable Scarecrow, and remember,
everybody sing—<i>Sing for your life!"</i></p>
<p align="center"><ANTIMG src="images/85.jpg" alt="Sir Hokus"></p>
<br/>
<p align="center"><ANTIMG src="images/87.jpg" alt="Our heroes sing"></p>
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