The Cave Boy of the Age of Stone by Margaret A. McIntyre
page 30 of 83 (36%)
page 30 of 83 (36%)
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Strongarm turned his ax over and looked at it. He rubbed his fingers
along the rough sharp edge. [Illustration: Stone tools] "That is a good ax," he said, and he held it up and looked it all over again. "Grandfather," said Thorn, pressing close to the old man's side, "when I am a man, I shall be an ax maker like you." "Begin now," said his grandfather, with a gruff laugh. "It takes a long time to learn to make a good ax." "Can anybody learn?" asked Pineknot. "No," said Flint. "Some men can chip stone, and others cannot. That is why some men make axes, and other men use them." "Well, I will try," said Thorn. "When you go back to the stone yard, I will go with you." Strongarm turned round where he sat and pulled up a little hickory tree. "We will put handles on these axes," he said. He hacked off a piece of the little tree and split it half way down, and hacked off one split piece. The other split piece he bent around his ax. Then he took wet string made of skin. This he put around and around the ax handle, and pulled it tight. |
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