Prologue

All that I have written so far about Doctor Dolittle I heard long after it happened from those who had known him – indeed a great deal of it took place before I was born. But I now come to set down that part of the great man’s life which I myself saw and took part in.

Many years ago the Doctor gave me permission to do this. But we were both of us so busy then voyaging around the world, having adventures and filling note-books full of natural history that I never seemed to get time to sit down and write of our doings.

Now of course, when I am quite an old man, my memory isn’t so good any more. But whenever I am in doubt and have to hesitate and think, I always ask Polynesia, the parrot.

That wonderful bird (she is now nearly two hundred and fifty years old) sits on the top of my desk, usually humming sailor songs to herself, while I write this book. And, as every one who ever met her knows, Polynesia’s memory is the most marvellous memory in the world. If there is any happening I am not quite sure of, she is always able to put me right, to tell me exactly how it took place, who was there and everything about it. In fact sometimes I almost think I ought to say that this book was written by Polynesia instead of me.

Very well then, I will begin. And first of all I must tell you something about myself and how I came to meet the Doctor.

About this eBook

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The Voyages of Doctor Dolittle

Told and Illustrated by
Hugh Lofting
(1886 – 1947)


Tommy Stubbins, John Dolittle’s nine-year-old assistant, accompanies the good doctor and his crew of animal companions on an exciting, hazardous voyage to find Long Arrow, a native American who is reputed to be the world’s greatest living naturalist. Their travels range from the Mediterranean to South America to the bottom of the sea; and with the help of his animal friends, the Doctor brings solutions to every crisis.

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British author Hugh John Lofting (14 January 1886 – 26 September 1947) created the character of Doctor Dolittle, one of the classics of children’s literature. The Doctor first appeared in Lofting’s illustrated letters to his children, written from the trenches while he was serving in the British Army during World War I. The stories (a series of twelve books, the final two completed, edited, and published posthumously) are set in early Victorian England. The second in the series, The Voyages of Doctor Dolittle (1922), won Lofting the prestigious Newbery Medal.

Despite the author’s obviously benign posture, the books became a target of controversy in the 1960’s amid accusations of racism and attitudes of colonialism, and went out of print for some time. Later editions in the 1980’s were bowdlerized to remove offending content and illustrations. The Doctor and the tales of his adventures are better known today through movie and television adaptations.




Illustrations

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Vintage Cover
Endpaper
Frontispiece
The Popsipetel Picture-History of King Jong Thinkalot
(PART 6, CHAPTER 1.)
Frontispiece 2
We came upon the shadowy shapes of dead ships
(PART 6, CHAPTER 7.)
I would sit on the river-wall
“I’m very sorry,” I said
In her right foot she carried a lighted candle!
“Where did I put those sausages?”
He sat up and started to chatter
“Being a good noticer is terribly important.”
Swearing at the blackbird down below
A traveller arrives
Of course I got there first to let him in
We found the door open, swinging in the wind
On the bed sat the Hermit
A small dark man with wicked little watery eyes
A proud and beautiful creature
Scowling down upon the amazed and gaping jury
“What else can I think?”
In a moment I had scrambled up the bookcase
I tripped over Dab-Dab
“Boy, where’s the skipper?”
Swearing softly to herself because she couldn’t read the figures
The Doctor started chatting in Spanish to the bedmaker
He did acrobatics on the beast’s horns
“He talks English!”
He is an enormous saltwater snail
He kept getting out his sextant
I was alone in the ocean!
“Are you awake?”
He took off his hat to use as a net
The Jabizri's mysterious picture letter
He was the swiftest cross-country runner I ever saw
I saw the top coming very slowly away from the mountainside
It was a great moment
A large cluster of huts and totem poles by the edge of the sea
The Terrible Three
Working away with their noses against the end of the island
The Whispering Rocks
He carried in his hands a wooden crown
He had to chase his butterflies with a crown upon his head
It moved very little
His eyes just sparkled with delight
“I’m sick of these beastly tropics”
“Tiptoe incognito,” whispered Bumpo
He laid the Sacred Crown on the sands
Tailpiece

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