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John Dolittle now became dreadfully, awfully busy. He found hundreds and thousands of monkeys sick-gorillas, orangoutangs, chimpanzees, dog-faced baboons, marmosettes, gray monkeys, red ones-all kinds. And many had died. Voice Reading
The first thing he did was to separate the sick ones from the well ones. Then he got Chee-Chee and his cousin to build him a little house of grass. The next thing: he made all the monkeys who were still well come and be vaccinated. Voice Reading
And for three days and three nights the monkeys kept coming from the jungles and the valleys and the hills to the little house of grass, where the Doctor sat all day and all night, vaccinating and vaccinating. Voice Reading
Then he had another house made-a big one, with a lot of beds in it; and he put all the sick ones in this house. Voice Reading
But so many were sick, there were not enough well ones to do the nursing. So he sent messages to the other animals, like the lions and the leopards and the antelopes, to come and help with the nursing. Voice Reading
But the Leader of the Lions was a very proud creature. And when he came to the Doctor's big house full of beds he seemed angry and scornful. Voice Reading
"Do you dare to ask me, Sir?" he said, glaring at the Doctor. "Do you dare to ask me-ME, the King of Beasts, to wait on a lot of dirty monkeys? Why, I wouldn't even eat them between meals!" Voice Reading
Although the lion looked very terrible, the Doctor tried hard not to seem afraid of him. Voice Reading
"I didn't ask you to eat them," he said quietly. Voice Reading
"And besides, they're not dirty. Voice Reading
They've all had a bath this morning. Voice Reading
Your coat looks as though it needed brushing-badly. Voice Reading
Now listen, and I'll tell you something: the day may come when the lions get sick. Voice Reading
And if you don't help the other animals now, the lions may find themselves left all alone when they are in trouble. Voice Reading
That often happens to proud people." Voice Reading
"The lions are never in trouble-they only make trouble," said the Leader, turning up his nose. And he stalked away into the jungle, feeling he had been rather smart and clever. Voice Reading
Then the leopards got proud too and said they wouldn't help. And then of course the antelopes-although they were too shy and timid to be rude to the Doctor like the lion-they pawed the ground, and smiled foolishly, and said they had never been nurses before. Voice Reading
And now the poor Doctor was worried frantic, wondering where he could get help enough to take care of all these thousands of monkeys in bed. Voice Reading
But the Leader of the Lions, when he got back to his den, saw his wife, the Queen Lioness, come running out to meet him with her hair untidy. Voice Reading
"One of the cubs won't eat," she said. "I don't know what to do with him. He hasn't taken a thing since last night." Voice Reading
And she began to cry and shake with nervousness-for she was a good mother, even though she was a lioness. Voice Reading
So the Leader went into his den and looked at his children-two very cunning little cubs, lying on the floor. And one of them seemed quite poorly. Voice Reading
Then the lion told his wife, quite proudly, just what he had said to the Doctor. Voice Reading
And she got so angry she nearly drove him out of the den. Voice Reading

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