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No, Nicodemus does not meet Jonathan Frisby in the book "Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH." Jonathan Frisby is actually deceased before the events of the book, and it is his widow, Mrs. Frisby, who seeks help from the rats of NIMH to save her family.
The rats of NIMH moved Mrs. Frisby's house to a new location by the rosebush in the farmers' field, near their own home. They did this to protect her and her family from the upcoming plowing of the field.
"Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH" is a children's novel written by Robert C. O'Brien. The story follows a widowed mouse named Mrs. Frisby who seeks help from a group of highly intelligent rats in order to save her family. The rats have been secretively enhanced by human experimentation at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH).
a rat
a crow that helps her
Mrs. Frisby and the Rat's of NIMH, or The Secret of NIMH
The white mouse was named Mr. Ages
he didnt
The rose bush
the plow is coming
So she and her family didn't get killed
Timothy is a mouse. He is Mrs. Frisby's son. Timothy is very sick.
NIMH
he does not die in the end the rats oh nimh move their house just in time
No, Nicodemus does not meet Jonathan Frisby in the book "Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH." Jonathan Frisby is actually deceased before the events of the book, and it is his widow, Mrs. Frisby, who seeks help from the rats of NIMH to save her family.
The rats of nimh know Jonathan Frisby because they were held captive at nimh and were being experimented on
the most important invention was the plow