Section 1
The Capture of Father Time explained simply
The Capture of Father Time by L. Frank Baum
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Jim was the son of a cowboy, and lived on the broad plains of Arizona. His father had trained him to lasso a or a young bull with perfect accuracy, and had Jim possessed the strength to back up his skill he would have been as good a cowboy as any in all Arizona. When he...
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Jim was the son of a cowboy, and lived on the broad plains of Arizona.
His father had trained him to lasso a or a young bull with
perfect accuracy, and had Jim possessed the strength to back up his
skill he would have been as good a cowboy as any in all Arizona.
When he was twelve years old he made his first visit to the east, where
Uncle Charles, his father’s brother, lived. Of course Jim took his
lasso with him, for he was proud of his skill in casting it, and wanted
to show his cousins what a cowboy could do.
At first the city boys and girls were much interested in watching Jim
lasso posts and fence pickets, but they soon tired of it, and even Jim
decided it was not the right sort of sport for cities.
But one day the butcher asked Jim to ride one of his horses into the
country, to a pasture that had been engaged, and Jim eagerly consented.
He had been longing for a horseback ride, and to make it seem like old
times he took his lasso with him.
He rode through the streets demurely enough, but on reaching the open
country roads his spirits broke forth into wild jubilation, and, urging
the butcher’s horse to full gallop, he dashed away in true cowboy
fashion.
Then he wanted still more liberty, and letting down the bars that led
into a big field he began riding over the meadow and throwing his lasso
at imaginary cattle, while he yelled and whooped to his heart’s
content.
Suddenly, on making a long cast with his lasso, the loop caught upon
something and rested about three feet from the ground, while the rope
drew taut and nearly pulled Jim from his horse.
This was unexpected. More than that, it was wonderful; for the field
seemed bare of even a stump. Jim’s eyes grew big with amazement, but he
knew he had caught something when a voice cried out:
“Here, let go! Let go, I say! Can’t you see what you’ve done?”
No, Jim couldn’t see, nor did he intend to let go until he found out
what was holding the loop of the lasso. So he resorted to an old trick
his father had taught him and, putting the butcher’s horse to a run,
began riding in a circle around the spot where his lasso had caught.
As he thus drew nearer and nearer his quarry he saw the rope coil up,
yet it looked to be coiling over nothing but air. One end of the lasso
was made fast to a ring in the saddle, and when the rope was almost
wound up and the horse began to pull away and snort with fear, Jim
dismounted. Holding the reins of the bridle in one hand, he followed
the rope, and an instant later saw an old man caught fast in the coils
of the lasso.
His head was bald and uncovered, but long white whiskers grew down to
his waist. About his body was thrown a loose robe of fine white linen.
In one hand he bore a great scythe, and beneath the other arm he
carried an hourglass.
While Jim gazed wonderingly upon him, this venerable old man spoke in
an angry voice:
“Now, then—get that rope off as fast as you can! You’ve brought
everything on earth to a standstill by your foolishness! Well—what are
you staring at? Don’t you know who I am?”
“No,” said Jim, stupidly.
“Well, I’m Time—Father Time! Now, make haste and set me free—if you
want the world to run properly.”
“How did I happen to catch you?” asked Jim, without making a move to
release his captive.
“I don’t know. I’ve never been caught before,” growled Father Time.
“But I suppose it was because you were foolishly throwing your lasso at
nothing.”
“I didn’t see you,” said Jim.
“Of course you didn’t. I’m invisible to the eyes of human beings unless
they get within three feet of me, and I take care to keep more than
that distance away from them. That’s why I was crossing this field,
where I supposed no one would be. And I should have been perfectly safe
had it not been for your beastly lasso. Now, then,” he added, crossly,
“are you going to get that rope off?”
“Why should I?” asked Jim.
“Because everything in the world stopped moving the moment you caught
me. I don’t suppose you want to make an end of all business and
pleasure, and war and love, and misery and ambition and everything
else, do you? Not a watch has ticked since you tied me up here like a
mummy!”
Jim laughed. It really was funny to see the old man wound round and
round with coils of rope from his knees up to his chin.
“It’ll do you good to rest,” said the boy. “From all I’ve heard you
lead a rather busy life.”
“Indeed I do,” replied Father Time, with a sigh. “I’m due in Kamchatka
this very minute. And to think one small boy is upsetting all my
regular habits!”
“Too bad!” said Jim, with a grin. “But since the world has stopped
anyhow, it won’t matter if it takes a little longer recess. As soon as
I let you go Time will fly again. Where are your wings?”
“I haven’t any,” answered the old man. “That is a story cooked up by
some one who never saw me. As a matter of fact, I move rather slowly.”
“I see, you take your time,” remarked the boy. “What do you use that
scythe for?”
“To mow down the people,” said the ancient one. “Every time I swing my
scythe some one dies.”
“Then I ought to win a life-saving medal by keeping you tied up,” said
Jim. “Some folks will live this much longer.”
“But they won’t know it,” said Father Time, with a sad smile; “so it
will do them no good. You may as well untie me at once.”
“No,” said Jim, with a determined air. “I may never capture you again;
so I’ll hold you for awhile and see how the world wags without you.”
Then he swung the old man, bound as he was, upon the back of the
butcher’s horse, and, getting into the saddle himself, started back
toward town, one hand holding his prisoner and the other guiding the
reins.
When he reached the road his eye fell on a strange tableau. A horse and
buggy stood in the middle of the road, the horse in the act of
trotting, with his head held high and two legs in the air, but
perfectly motionless. In the buggy a man and a woman were seated; but
had they been turned into stone they could not have been more still and
stiff.
“There’s no Time for them!” sighed the old man. “Won’t you let me go
now?”
“Not yet,” replied the boy.
He rode on until he reached the city, where all the people stood in
exactly the same positions they were in when Jim lassoed Father Time.
Stopping in front of a big dry goods store, the boy hitched his horse
and went in. The clerks were measuring out goods and showing patterns
to the rows of customers in front of them, but everyone seemed suddenly
to have become a statue.
There was something very unpleasant in this scene, and a cold shiver
began to run up and down Jim’s back; so he hurried out again.
On the edge of the sidewalk sat a poor, crippled beggar, holding out
his hat, and beside him stood a prosperous-looking gentleman who was
about to drop a penny into the beggar’s hat. Jim knew this gentleman to
be very rich but rather stingy, so he ventured to run his hand into the
man’s pocket and take out his purse, in which was a $20 gold piece.
This glittering coin he put in the gentleman’s fingers instead of the
penny and then restored the purse to the rich man’s pocket.
“That donation will surprise him when he comes to life,” thought the
boy.
He mounted the horse again and rode up the street. As he passed the
shop of his friend, the butcher, he noticed several pieces of meat
hanging outside.
“I’m afraid that meat’ll spoil,” he remarked.
“It takes Time to spoil meat,” answered the old man.
This struck Jim as being queer, but true.
“It seems Time meddles with everything,” said he.
“Yes; you’ve made a prisoner of the most important personage in the
world,” groaned the old man; “and you haven’t enough sense to let him
go again.”
Jim did not reply, and soon they came to his uncle’s house, where he
again dismounted. The street was filled with teams and people, but all
were motionless. His two little cousins were just coming out the gate
on their way to school, with their books and slates underneath their
arms; so Jim had to jump over the fence to avoid knocking them down.
In the front room sat his aunt, reading her Bible. She was just turning
a page when Time stopped. In the dining-room was his uncle, finishing
his luncheon. His mouth was open and his fork poised just before it,
while his eyes were fixed upon the newspaper folded beside him. Jim
helped himself to his uncle’s pie, and while he ate it he walked out to
his prisoner.
“There’s one thing I don’t understand,” said he.
“What’s that?” asked Father Time.
“Why is it that I’m able to move around while everyone else is—is—froze
up?”
“That is because I’m your prisoner,” answered the other. “You can do
anything you wish with Time now. But unless you are careful you’ll do
something you will be sorry for.”
Jim threw the crust of his pie at a bird that was suspended in the air,
where it had been flying when Time stopped.
“Anyway,” he laughed, “I’m living longer than anyone else. No one will
ever be able to catch up with me again.”
“Each life has its allotted span,” said the old man. “When you have
lived your proper time my scythe will mow you down.”
“I forgot your scythe,” said Jim, thoughtfully.
Then a spirit of mischief came into the boy’s head, for he happened to
think that the present opportunity to have fun would never occur again.
He tied Father Time to his uncle’s hitching post, that he might not
escape, and then crossed the road to the corner grocery.
The grocer had scolded Jim that very morning for stepping into a basket
of turnips by accident. So the boy went to the back end of the grocery
and turned on the faucet of the molasses barrel.
“That’ll make a nice mess when Time starts the molasses running all
over the floor,” said Jim, with a laugh.
A little further down the street was a barber shop, and sitting in the
barber’s chair Jim saw the man that all the boys declared was the
“meanest man in town.” He certainly did not like the boys and the boys
knew it. The barber was in the act of shampooing this person when Time
was captured. Jim ran to the drug store, and, getting a bottle of
mucilage, he returned and poured it over the ruffled hair of the
unpopular citizen.
“That’ll probably surprise him when he wakes up,” thought Jim.
Near by was the schoolhouse. Jim entered it and found that only a few
of the pupils were assembled. But the teacher sat at his desk, stern
and frowning as usual.
Taking a piece of chalk, Jim marked upon the blackboard in big letters
the following words:
“Every scholar is requested to yell the minute he enters the room. He
will also please throw his books at the teacher’s head. Signed, Prof.
Sharpe.”
“That ought to raise a nice rumpus,” murmured the mischiefmaker, as he
walked away.
On the corner stood Policeman Mulligan, talking with old Miss Scrapple,
the worst gossip in town, who always delighted in saying something
disagreeable about her neighbors. Jim thought this opportunity was too
good to lose. So he took off the policeman’s cap and brass-buttoned
coat and put them on Miss Scrapple, while the lady’s feathered and
ribboned hat he placed jauntily upon the policeman’s head.
The effect was so comical that the boy laughed aloud, and as a good
many people were standing near the corner Jim decided that Miss
Scrapple and Officer Mulligan would create a sensation when Time
started upon his travels.
Then the young cowboy remembered his prisoner, and, walking back to the
hitching post, he came within three feet of it and saw Father Time
still standing patiently within the toils of the lasso. He looked angry
and annoyed, however, and growled out:
“Well, when do you intend to release me?”
“I’ve been thinking about that ugly scythe of yours,” said Jim.
“What about it?” asked Father Time.
“Perhaps if I let you go you’ll swing it at me the first thing, to be
revenged,” replied the boy.
Father Time gave him a severe look, but said:
“I’ve known boys for thousands of years, and of course I know they’re
mischievous and reckless. But I like boys, because they grow up to be
men and people my world. Now, if a man had caught me by accident, as
you did, I could have scared him into letting me go instantly; but boys
are harder to scare. I don’t know as I blame you. I was a boy myself,
long ago, when the world was new. But surely you’ve had enough fun with
me by this time, and now I hope you’ll show the respect that is due to
old age. Let me go, and in return I will promise to forget all about my
capture. The incident won’t do much harm, anyway, for no one will ever
know that Time has halted the last three hours or so.”
“All right,” said Jim, cheerfully, “since you’ve promised not to mow me
down, I’ll let you go.” But he had a notion some people in the town
would suspect Time had stopped when they returned to life.
He carefully unwound the rope from the old man, who, when he was free,
at once shouldered his scythe, rearranged his white robe and nodded
farewell.
The next moment he had disappeared, and with a rustle and rumble and
roar of activity the world came to life again and jogged along as it
always had before.
Jim wound up his lasso, mounted the butcher’s horse and rode slowly
down the street.
Loud screams came from the corner, where a great crowd of people
quickly assembled. From his seat on the horse Jim saw Miss Scrapple,
attired in the policeman’s uniform, angrily shaking her fists in
Mulligan’s face, while the officer was furiously stamping upon the
lady’s hat, which he had torn from his own head amidst the jeers of the
crowd.
As he rode past the schoolhouse he heard a tremendous chorus of yells,
and knew Prof. Sharpe was having a hard time to quell the riot caused
by the sign on the blackboard.
Through the window of the barber shop he saw the “mean man” frantically
belaboring the barber with a hair brush, while his hair stood up stiff
as bayonets in all directions. And the grocer ran out of his door and
yelled “Fire!” while his shoes left a track of molasses wherever he
stepped.
Jim’s heart was filled with joy. He was fairly reveling in the
excitement he had caused when some one caught his leg and pulled him
from the horse.
“What’re ye doin’ hear, ye rascal?” cried the butcher, angrily; “didn’t
ye promise to put that beast inter Plympton’s pasture? An’ now I find
ye ridin’ the poor nag around like a gentleman o’ leisure!”
“That’s a fact,” said Jim, with surprise; “I clean forgot about the
horse!”
This story should teach us the supreme importance of Time and the folly
of trying to stop it. For should you succeed, as Jim did, in bringing
Time to a standstill, the world would soon become a dreary place and
life decidedly unpleasant.
Public-domain original text shown for study context. Underlined terms can be tapped for simple reader notes.
What happens here
The Capture of Father Time follows American fairy-tale invention, practical humor, magic, and a surprising problem to solve.
Why this scene matters
This story matters because it turns American fairy-tale invention, practical humor, magic, and a surprising problem to solve into a short public-domain reading experience that is easier to understand when the plot is explained plainly first.
Characters in this scene
- The curious child or hero: The person who meets the strange magical problem.
- The magical invention: The impossible object or creature that gives the story its comic shape.