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- The Story of the Treasure Seekers
-
- by E. Nesbit
-
- January, 1997 [Etext #770]
-
-
- Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Story of the Treasure Seekers
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-
-
-
- The Story of the Treasure Seekers
-
- by E. Nesbit
-
- Being the adventures of the Bastable children in search of a
- fortune
-
-
-
-
- TO OSWALD BARRON
- Without whom this book could never have been written
-
- The Treasure Seekers is dedicated in memory of childhoods
- identical but for the accidents of time and space
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- 1. The Council of Ways and Means
- 2. Digging for Treasure
- 3. Being Detectives
- 4. Good Hunting
- 5. The Poet and the Editor
- 6. Noel's Princess
- 7. Being Bandits
- 8. Being Editors
- 9. The G. B.
- 10. Lord Tottenham
- 11. Castilian Amoroso
- 12. The Nobleness of Oswald
- 13. The Robber and the Burglar
- 14. The Divining-rod
- 15. 'Lo, the Poor Indian!'
- 16. The End of the Treasure-seeking
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 1
- THE COUNCIL OF WAYS AND MEANS
-
- This is the story of the different ways we looked for treasure,
- and I think when you have read it you will see that we were not
- lazy about the looking.
-
- There are some things I must tell before I begin to tell about
- the treasure-seeking, because I have read books myself, and I
- know how beastly it is when a story begins, "'Alas!" said
- Hildegarde with a deep sigh, "we must look our last on this
- ancestral home"'--and then some one else says something--and you
- don't know for pages and pages where the home is, or who
- Hildegarde is, or anything about it. Our ancestral home is in
- the Lewisham Road. It is semi-detached and has a garden, not a
- large one. We are the Bastables. There are six of us besides
- Father. Our Mother is dead, and if you think we don't care
- because I don't tell you much about her you only show that you do
- not understand people at all. Dora is the eldest. Then
- Oswald--and then Dicky. Oswald won the Latin prize at his
- preparatory school--and Dicky is good at sums. Alice and Noel
- are twins: they are ten, and Horace Octavius is my youngest
- brother. It is one of us that tells this story--but I shall not
- tell you which: only at the very end perhaps I will. While the
- story is going on you may be trying to guess, only I bet you
- don't. It was Oswald who first thought of looking for treasure.
- Oswald often thinks of very interesting things. And directly he
- thought of it he did not keep it to himself, as some boys would
- have done, but he told the others, and said--
-
- 'I'll tell you what, we must go and seek for treasure: it is
- always what you do to restore the fallen fortunes of your House.'
-
- Dora said it was all very well. She often says that. She was
- trying to mend a large hole in one of Noel's stockings. He tore
- it on a nail when we were playing shipwrecked mariners on top of
- the chicken-house the day H. O. fell off and cut his chin: he
- has the scar still. Dora is the only one of us who ever tries to
- mend anything. Alice tries to make things sometimes. Once she
- knitted a red scarf for Noel because his chest is delicate, but
- it was much wider at one end than the other, and he wouldn't wear
- it. So we used it as a pennon, and it did very well, because
- most of our things are black or grey since Mother died; and
- scarlet was a nice change. Father does not like you to ask for
- new things. That was one way we had of knowing that the fortunes
- of the ancient House of Bastable were really fallen. Another way
- was that there was no more pocket-money--except a penny now and
- then to the little ones, and people did not come to dinner any
- more, like they used to, with pretty dresses, driving up in
- cabs--and the carpets got holes in them--and when the legs came
- off things they were not sent to be mended, and we gave UP having
- the gardener except for the front garden, and not that very
- often. And the silver in the big oak plate-chest that is lined
- with green baize all went away to the shop to have the dents and
- scratches taken out of it, and it never came back. We think
- Father hadn't enough money to pay the silver man for taking out
- the dents and scratches. The new spoons and forks were
- yellowy-white, and not so heavy as the old ones, and they never
- shone after the first day or two.
-
- Father was very ill after Mother died; and while he was ill his
- business-partner went to Spain--and there was never much money
- afterwards. I don't know why. Then the servants left and there
- was only one, a General. A great deal of your comfort and
- happiness depends on having a good General. The last but one was
- nice: she used to make jolly good currant puddings for us, and
- let us have the dish on the floor and pretend it was a wild boar
- we were killing with our forks. But the General we have now
- nearly always makes sago puddings, and they are the watery kind,
- and you cannot pretend anything with them, not even islands, like
- you do with porridge.
-
- Then we left off going to school, and Father said we should go to
- a good school as soon as he could manage it. He said a holiday
- would do us all good. We thought he was right, but we wished he
- had told us he couldn't afford it. For of course we knew.
-
- Then a great many people used to come to the door with envelopes
- with no stamps on them, and sometimes they got very angry, and
- said they were calling for the last time before putting it in
- other hands. I asked Eliza what that meant, and she kindly
- explained to me, and I was so sorry for Father.
-
- And once a long, blue paper came; a policeman brought it, and we
- were so frightened. But Father said it was all right, only when
- he went up to kiss the girls after they were in bed they said he
- had been crying, though I'm sure that's not true. Because only
- cowards and snivellers cry, and my Father is the bravest man in
- the world.
-
- So you see it was time we looked for treasure and Oswald said so,
- and Dora said it was all very well. But the others agreed with
- Oswald. So we held a council. Dora was in the chair--the big
- dining-room chair, that we let the fireworks off from, the Fifth
- of November when we had the measles and couldn't do it in the
- garden. The hole has never been mended, so now we have that
- chair in the nursery, and I think it was cheap at the blowing-up
- we boys got when the hole was burnt.
-
- 'We must do something,' said Alice, 'because the exchequer is
- empty.' She rattled the money-box as she spoke, and it really
- did rattle because we always keep the bad sixpence in it for
- luck.
-
- 'Yes--but what shall we do?' said Dicky. 'It's so jolly easy to
- say let's do SOMETHING.' Dicky always wants everything settled
- exactly. Father calls him the Definite Article.
-
- 'Let's read all the books again. We shall get lots of ideas out
- of them.' It was Noel who suggested this, but we made him shut
- up, because we knew well enough he only wanted to get back to his
- old books. Noel is a poet. He sold some of his poetry once--and
- it was printed, but that does not come in this part of the story.
-
- Then Dicky said, 'Look here. We'll be quite quiet for ten
- minutes by the clock--and each think of some way to find
- treasure. And when we've thought we'll try all the ways one
- after the other, beginning with the eldest.'
-
- 'I shan't be able to think in ten minutes, make it half an hour,'
- said H. O. His real name is Horace Octavius, but we call him H.
- O. because of the advertisement, and it's not so very long ago he
- was afraid to pass the hoarding where it says 'Eat H. O.' in big
- letters. He says it was when he was a little boy, but I remember
- last Christmas but one, he woke in the middle of the night crying
- and howling, and they said it was the pudding. But he told me
- afterwards he had been dreaming that they really HAD come to eat
- H. O., and it couldn't have been the pudding, when you come to
- think of it, because it was so very plain.
-
- Well, we made it half an hour--and we all sat quiet, and thought
- and thought. And I made up my mind before two minutes were over,
- and I saw the others had, all but Dora, who is always an awful
- time over everything. I got pins and needles in my leg from
- sitting still so long, and when it was seven minutes H. O. cried
- out--'Oh, it must be more than half an hour!'
-
- H. O. is eight years old, but he cannot tell the clock yet.
- Oswald could tell the clock when he was six.
-
- We all stretched ourselves and began to speak at once, but Dora
- put up her hands to her ears and said--
-
- 'One at a time, please. We aren't playing Babel.' (It is a very
- good game. Did you ever play it?)
-
- So Dora made us all sit in a row on the floor, in ages, and then
- she pointed at us with the finger that had the brass thimble on.
- Her silver one got lost when the last General but two went away.
- We think she must have forgotten it was Dora's and put it in her
- box by mistake. She was a very forgetful girl. She used to
- forget what she had spent money on, so that the change was never
- quite right.
-
- Oswald spoke first. 'I think we might stop people on
- Blackheath--with crape masks and horse-pistols--and say "Your
- money or your life! Resistance is useless, we are armed to the
- teeth"--like Dick Turpin and Claude Duval. It wouldn't matter
- about not having horses, because coaches have gone out too.'
-
- Dora screwed up her nose the way she always does when she is
- going to talk like the good elder sister in books, and said,
- 'That would be very wrong: it's like pickpocketing or taking
- pennies out of Father's great-coat when it's hanging in the
- hall.'
-
- I must say I don't think she need have said that, especially
- before the little ones--for it was when I was only four.
-
- But Oswald was not going to let her see he cared, so he said--
-
- 'Oh, very well. I can think of lots of other ways. We could
- rescue an old gentleman from deadly Highwaymen.'
-
- 'There aren't any,' said Dora.
-
- 'Oh, well, it's all the same--from deadly peril, then. There's
- plenty of that. Then he would turn out to be the Prince of
- Wales, and he would say, "My noble, my cherished preserver! Here
- is a million pounds a year. Rise up, Sir Oswald Bastable."'
-
- But the others did not seem to think so, and it was Alice's turn
- to say.
-
- She said, 'I think we might try the divining-rod. I'm sure I
- could do it. I've often read about it. You hold a stick in your
- hands, and when you come to where there is gold underneath the
- stick kicks about. So you know. And you dig.'
-
- 'Oh,' said Dora suddenly, 'I have an idea. But I'll say last. I
- hope the divining-rod isn't wrong. I believe it's wrong in the
- Bible.'
-
- 'So is eating pork and ducks,' said Dicky. 'You can't go by
- that.'
-
- 'Anyhow, we'll try the other ways first,' said Dora. 'Now, H.
- O.'
-
- 'Let's be Bandits,' said H. O. 'I dare say it's wrong but it
- would be fun pretending.'
-
- 'I'm sure it's wrong,' said Dora.
-
- And Dicky said she thought everything wrong. She said she
- didn't, and Dicky was very disagreeable. So Oswald had to make
- peace, and he said--
-
- 'Dora needn't play if she doesn't want to. Nobody asked her.
- And, Dicky, don't be an idiot: do dry up and let's hear what
- Noel's idea is.'
-
- Dora and Dicky did not look pleased, but I kicked Noel under the
- table to make him hurry up, and then he said he didn't think he
- wanted to play any more. That's the worst of it. The others are
- so jolly ready to quarrel. I told Noel to be a man and not a
- snivelling pig, and at last he said he had not made up his mind
- whether he would print his poetry in a book and sell it, or find
- a princess and marry her.
-
- 'Whichever it is,' he added, 'none of you shall want for
- anything, though Oswald did kick me, and say I was a snivelling
- pig.'
-
- 'I didn't,' said Oswald, 'I told you not to be.' And Alice
- explained to him that that was quite the opposite of what he
- thought. So he agreed to drop it.
-
- Then Dicky spoke.
-
- 'You must all of you have noticed the advertisements in the
- papers, telling you that ladies and gentlemen can easily earn two
- pounds a week in their spare time, and to send two shillings for
- sample and instructions, carefully packed free from observation.
- Now that we don't go to school all our time is spare time. So I
- should think we could easily earn twenty pounds a week each.
- That would do us very well. We'll try some of the other things
- first, and directly we have any money we'll send for the sample
- and instructions. And I have another idea, but I must think
- about it before I say.'
-
- We all said, 'Out with it--what's the other idea?'
-
- But Dicky said, 'No.' That is Dicky all over. He never will
- show you anything he's making till it's quite finished, and the
- same with his inmost thoughts. But he is pleased if you seem to
- want to know, so Oswald said--
-
- 'Keep your silly old secret, then. Now, Dora, drive ahead.
- We've all said except you.'
-
- Then Dora jumped up and dropped the stocking and the thimble (it
- rolled away, and we did not find it for days), and said--
-
- 'Let's try my way NOW. Besides, I'm the eldest, so it's only
- fair. Let's dig for treasure. Not any tiresome
- divining-rod--but just plain digging. People who dig for
- treasure always find it. And then we shall be rich and we
- needn't try your ways at all. Some of them are rather difficult:
- and I'm certain some of them are wrong--and we must always
- remember that wrong things--'
-
- But we told her to shut up and come on, and she did.
-
- I couldn't help wondering as we went down to the garden, why
- Father had never thought of digging there for treasure instead of
- going to his beastly office every day.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 2
- DIGGING FOR TREASURE
-
- I am afraid the last chapter was rather dull. It is always dull
- in books when people talk and talk, and don't do anything, but I
- was obliged to put it in, or else you wouldn't have understood
- all the rest. The best part of books is when things are
- happening. That is the best part of real things too. This is
- why I shall not tell you in this story about all the days when
- nothing happened. You will not catch me saying, 'thus the sad
- days passed slowly by'--or 'the years rolled on their weary
- course'--or 'time went on'--because it is silly; of course time
- goes on--whether you say so or not. So I shall just tell you the
- nice, interesting parts--and in between you will understand that
- we had our meals and got up and went to bed, and dull things like
- that. It would be sickening to write all that down, though of
- course it happens. I said so to Albert-next-door's uncle, who
- writes books, and he said, 'Quite right, that's what we call
- selection, a necessity of true art.' And he is very clever
- indeed. So you see.
-
- I have often thought that if the people who write books for
- children knew a little more it would be better. I shall not tell
- you anything about us except what I should like to know about if
- I was reading the story and you were writing it. Albert's uncle
- says I ought to have put this in the preface, but I never read
- prefaces, and it is not much good writing things just for people
- to skip. I wonder other authors have never thought of this.
-
- Well, when we had agreed to dig for treasure we all went down
- into the cellar and lighted the gas. Oswald would have liked to
- dig there, but it is stone flags. We looked among the old boxes
- and broken chairs and fenders and empty bottles and things, and
- at last we found the spades we had to dig in the sand with when
- we went to the seaside three years ago. They are not silly,
- babyish, wooden spades, that split if you look at them, but good
- iron, with a blue mark across the top of the iron part, and
- yellow wooden handles. We wasted a little time getting them
- dusted, because the girls wouldn't dig with spades that had
- cobwebs on them. Girls would never do for African explorers or
- anything like that, they are too beastly particular.
-
- It was no use doing the thing by halves. We marked out a sort of
- square in the mouldy part of the garden, about three yards
- across, and began to dig. But we found nothing except worms and
- stones--and the ground was very hard.
-
- So we thought we'd try another part of the garden, and we found a
- place in the big round flower bed, where the ground was much
- softer. We thought we'd make a smaller hole to begin with, and
- it was much better. We dug and dug and dug, and it was jolly
- hard work! We got very hot digging, but we found nothing.
-
- Presently Albert-next-door looked over the wall. We do not like
- him very much, but we let him play with us sometimes, because his
- father is dead, and you must not be unkind to orphans, even if
- their mothers are alive. Albert is always very tidy. He wears
- frilly collars and velvet knickerbockers. I can't think how he
- can bear to.
-
- So we said, 'Hallo!'
-
- And he said, 'What are you up to?'
-
- 'We're digging for treasure,' said Alice; 'an ancient parchment
- revealed to us the place of concealment. Come over and help us.
- When we have dug deep enough we shall find a great pot of red
- clay, full of gold and precious jewels.'
-
- Albert-next-door only sniggered and said, 'What silly nonsense!'
- He cannot play properly at all. It is very strange, because he
- has a very nice uncle. You see, Albert-next-door doesn't care
- for reading, and he has not read nearly so many books as we have,
- so he is very foolish and ignorant, but it cannot be helped, and
- you just have to put up with it when you want him to do anything.
- Besides, it is wrong to be angry with people for not being so
- clever as you are yourself. It is not always their faults.
-
- So Oswald said, 'Come and dig! Then you shall share the treasure
- when we've found it.'
-
- But he said, 'I shan't--I don't like digging--and I'm just going
- in to my tea.'
-
- 'Come along and dig, there's a good boy,' Alice said. 'You can
- use my spade. It's much the best--'
-
- So he came along and dug, and when once he was over the wall we
- kept him at it, and we worked as well, of course, and the hole
- got deep. Pincher worked too--he is our dog and he is very good
- at digging. He digs for rats in the dustbin sometimes, and gets
- very dirty. But we love our dog, even when his face wants
- washing.
-
- 'I expect we shall have to make a tunnel,' Oswald said, 'to reach
- the rich treasure.' So he jumped into the hole and began to dig
- at one side. After that we took it in turns to dig at the
- tunnel, and Pincher was most useful in scraping the earth out of
- the tunnel--he does it with his back feet when you say 'Rats!'
- and he digs with his front ones, and burrows with his nose as
- well.
-
- At last the tunnel was nearly a yard long, and big enough to
- creep along to find the treasure, if only it had been a bit
- longer. Now it was Albert's turn to go in and dig, but he funked
- it.
-
- 'Take your turn like a man,' said Oswald--nobody can say that
- Oswald doesn't take his turn like a man. But Albert wouldn't.
- So we had to make him, because it was only fair.
-
- 'It's quite easy,' Alice said. 'You just crawl in and dig with
- your hands. Then when you come out we can scrape out what you've
- done, with the spades. Come--be a man. You won't notice it
- being dark in the tunnel if you shut your eyes tight. We've all
- been in except Dora--and she doesn't like worms.'
-
- 'I don't like worms neither.' Albert-next-door said this; but we
- remembered how he had picked a fat red and black worm up in his
- fingers and thrown it at Dora only the day before. So we put him
- in.
-
- But he would not go in head first, the proper way, and dig with
- his hands as we had done, and though Oswald was angry at the
- time, for he hates snivellers, yet afterwards he owned that
- perhaps it was just as well. You should never be afraid to own
- that perhaps you were mistaken--but it is cowardly to do it
- unless you are quite sure you are in the wrong.
-
- 'Let me go in feet first,' said Albert-next-door. 'I'll dig with
- my boots--I will truly, honour bright.'
-
- So we let him get in feet first--and he did it very slowly and at
- last he was in, and only his head sticking out into the hole; and
- all the rest of him in the tunnel.
-
- 'Now dig with your boots,' said Oswald; 'and, Alice, do catch
- hold of Pincher, he'll be digging again in another minute, and
- perhaps it would be uncomfortable for Albert if Pincher threw the
- mould into his eyes.'
-
- You should always try to think of these little things. Thinking
- of other people's comfort makes them like you. Alice held
- Pincher, and we all shouted, 'Kick! dig with your feet, for all
- you're worth!'
-
- So Albert-next-door began to dig with his feet, and we stood on
- the ground over him, waiting--and all in a minute the ground gave
- way, and we tumbled together in a heap: and when we got up there
- was a little shallow hollow where we had been standing, and
- Albert-next-door was underneath, stuck quite fast, because the
- roof of the tunnel had tumbled in on him. He is a horribly
- unlucky boy to have anything to do with.
-
- It was dreadful the way he cried and screamed, though he had to
- own it didn't hurt, only it was rather heavy and he couldn't move
- his legs. We would have dug him out all right enough, in time,
- but he screamed so we were afraid the police would come, so Dicky
- climbed over the wall, to tell the cook there to tell
- Albert-next-door's uncle he had been buried by mistake, and to
- come and help dig him out.
-
- Dicky was a long time gone. We wondered what had become of him,
- and all the while the screaming went on and on, for we had taken
- the loose earth off Albert's face so that he could scream quite
- easily and comfortably.
-
- Presently Dicky came back and Albert-next-door's uncle came with
- him. He has very long legs, and his hair is light and his face
- is brown. He has been to sea, but now he writes books. I like
- him.
-
- He told his nephew to stow it, so Albert did, and then he asked
- him if he was hurt--and Albert had to say he wasn't, for though
- he is a coward, and very unlucky, he is not a liar like some boys
- are.
-
- 'This promises to be a protracted if agreeable task,' said
- Albert-next-door's uncle, rubbing his hands and looking at the
- hole with Albert's head in it. 'I will get another spade,' so he
- fetched the big spade out of the next-door garden tool-shed, and
- began to dig his nephew out.
-
- 'Mind you keep very still,' he said, 'or I might chunk a bit out
- of you with the spade.' Then after a while he said--
-
- 'I confess that I am not absolutely insensible to the dramatic
- interest of the situation. My curiosity is excited. I own that
- I should like to know how my nephew happened to be buried. But
- don't tell me if you'd rather not. I suppose no force was used?'
-
- 'Only moral force,' said Alice. They used to talk a lot about
- moral force at the High School where she went, and in case you
- don't know what it means I'll tell you that it is making people
- do what they don't want to, just by slanging them, or laughing at
- them, or promising them things if they're good.
-
- 'Only moral force, eh?' said Albert-next-door's uncle. 'Well?'
-
- 'Well,' Dora said, 'I'm very sorry it happened to Albert--I'd
- rather it had been one of us. It would have been my turn to go
- into the tunnel, only I don't like worms, so they let me off.
- You see we were digging for treasure.'
-
- 'Yes,' said Alice, 'and I think we were just coming to the
- underground passage that leads to the secret hoard, when the
- tunnel fell in on Albert. He IS so unlucky,' and she sighed.
-
- Then Albert-next-door began to scream again, and his uncle wiped
- his face--his own face, not Albert's--with his silk handkerchief,
- and then he put it in his trousers pocket. It seems a strange
- place to put a handkerchief, but he had his coat and waistcoat
- off and I suppose he wanted the handkerchief handy. Digging is
- warm work.
-
- He told Albert-next-door to drop it, or he wouldn't proceed
- further in the matter, so Albert stopped screaming, and presently
- his uncle finished digging him out. Albert did look so funny,
- with his hair all dusty and his velvet suit covered with mould
- and his face muddy with earth and crying.
-
- We all said how sorry we were, but he wouldn't say a word back to
- us. He was most awfully sick to think he'd been the one buried,
- when it might just as well have been one of us. I felt myself
- that it was hard lines.
-
- 'So you were digging for treasure,' said Albert-next-door's
- uncle, wiping his face again with his handkerchief. 'Well, I
- fear that your chances of success are small. I have made a
- careful study of the whole subject. What I don't know about
- buried treasure is not worth knowing. And I never knew more than
- one coin buried in any one garden--and that is
- generally--Hullo--what's that?'
-
- He pointed to something shining in the hole he had just dragged
- Albert out of. Oswald picked it up. It was a half-crown. We
- looked at each other, speechless with surprise and delight, like
- in books.
-
- 'Well, that's lucky, at all events,' said Albert-next-door's
- uncle.
-
- 'Let's see, that's fivepence each for you.'
-
- 'It's fourpence--something; I can't do fractions,' said Dicky;
- 'there are seven of us, you see.'
-
- 'Oh, you count Albert as one of yourselves on this occasion, eh?'
-
- 'Of course,' said Alice; 'and I say, he was buried after all.
- Why shouldn't we let him have the odd somethings, and we'll have
- fourpence each.'
-
- We all agreed to do this, and told Albert-next-door we would
- bring his share as soon as we could get the half-crown changed.
- He cheered up a little at that, and his uncle wiped his face
- again--he did look hot--and began to put on his coat and
- waistcoat.
-
- When he had done it he stooped and picked up something. He held
- it up, and you will hardly believe it, but it is quite true--it
- was another half-crown!
-
- 'To think that there should be two!' he said; 'in all my
- experience of buried treasure I never heard of such a thing!'
-
- I wish Albert-next-door's uncle would come treasure-seeking with
- us regularly; he must have very sharp eyes: for Dora says she
- was looking just the minute before at the very place where the
- second half-crown was picked up from, and SHE never saw it.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 3
- BEING DETECTIVES
-
- The next thing that happened to us was very interesting. It was
- as real as the half-crowns--not just pretending. I shall try to
- write it as like a real book as I can. Of course we have read Mr
- Sherlock Holmes, as well as the yellow-covered books with
- pictures outside that are so badly printed; and you get them for
- fourpence-halfpenny at the bookstall when the corners of them are
- beginning to curl up and get dirty, with people looking to see
- how the story ends when they are waiting for trains. I think
- this is most unfair to the boy at the bookstall. The books are
- written by a gentleman named Gaboriau, and Albert's uncle says
- they are the worst translations in the world--and written in vile
- English. Of course they're not like Kipling, but they're jolly
- good stories. And we had just been reading a book by Dick
- Diddlington--that's not his right name, but I know all about
- libel actions, so I shall not say what his name is really,
- because his books are rot. Only they put it into our heads to do
- what I am going to narrate.
-
- It was in September, and we were not to go to the seaside because
- it is so expensive, even if you go to Sheerness, where it is all
- tin cans and old boots and no sand at all. But every one else
- went, even the people next door--not Albert's side, but the
- other. Their servant told Eliza they were all going to
- Scarborough, and next day sure enough all the blinds were down
- and the shutters up, and the milk was not left any more. There
- is a big horse-chestnut tree between their garden and ours, very
- useful for getting conkers out of and for making stuff to rub on
- your chilblains. This prevented our seeing whether the blinds
- were down at the back as well, but Dicky climbed to the top of
- the tree and looked, and they were.
-
- It was jolly hot weather, and very stuffy indoors--we used to
- play a good deal in the garden. We made a tent out of the
- kitchen clothes-horse and some blankets off our beds, and though
- it was quite as hot in the tent as in the house it was a very
- different sort of hotness. Albert's uncle called it the Turkish
- Bath. It is not nice to be kept from the seaside, but we know
- that we have much to be thankful for. We might be poor little
- children living in a crowded alley where even at summer noon
- hardly a ray of sunlight penetrates; clothed in rags and with
- bare feet--though I do not mind holes in my clothes myself, and
- bare feet would not be at all bad in this sort of weather.
- Indeed we do, sometimes, when we are playing at things which
- require it. It was shipwrecked mariners that day, I remember,
- and we were all in the blanket tent. We had just finished eating
- the things we had saved, at the peril of our lives, from the
- st-sinking vessel. They were rather nice things. Two-pennyworth
- of coconut candy--it was got in Greenwich, where it is four
- ounces a penny--three apples, some macaroni--the straight sort
- that is so useful to suck things through--some raw rice, and a
- large piece of cold suet pudding that Alice nicked from the
- larder when she went to get the rice and macaroni. And when we
- had finished some one said--
-
- 'I should like to be a detective.'
-
- I wish to be quite fair, but I cannot remember exactly who said
- it. Oswald thinks he said it, and Dora says it was Dicky, but
- Oswald is too much of a man to quarrel about a little thing like
- that.
-
- 'I should like to be a detective,' said--perhaps it was Dicky,
- but I think not--'and find out strange and hidden crimes.'
-
- 'You have to be much cleverer than you are,' said H. O.
-
- 'Not so very,' Alice said, 'because when you've read the books
- you know what the things mean: the red hair on the handle of the
- knife, or the grains of white powder on the velvet collar of the
- villain's overcoat. I believe we could do it.'
-
- 'I shouldn't like to have anything to do with murders,' said
- Dora; 'somehow it doesn't seem safe--'
-
- 'And it always ends in the poor murderer being hanged,' said
- Alice.
-
- We explained to her why murderers have to be hanged, but she only
- said, 'I don't care. I'm sure no one would ever do murdering
- TWICE. Think of the blood and things, and what you would see
- when you woke up in the night! I shouldn't mind being a
- detective to lie in wait for a gang of coiners, now, and spring
- upon them unawares, and secure them--single-handed, you know, or
- with only my faithful bloodhound.'
-
- She stroked Pincher's ears, but he had gone to sleep because he
- knew well enough that all the suet pudding was finished. He is a
- very sensible dog. 'You always get hold of the wrong end of the
- stick,' Oswald said. 'You can't choose what crimes you'll be a
- detective about. You just have to get a suspicious circumstance,
- and then you look for a clue and follow it up. Whether it turns
- out a murder or a missing will is just a fluke.'
-
- 'That's one way,' Dicky said. 'Another is to get a paper and
- find two advertisements or bits of news that fit. Like this:
- "Young Lady Missing," and then it tells about all the clothes she
- had on, and the gold locket she wore, and the colour of her hair,
- and all that; and then in another piece of the paper you see,
- "Gold locket found," and then it all comes out.'
-
- We sent H. O. for the paper at once, but we could not make any of
- the things fit in. The two best were about how some burglars
- broke into a place in Holloway where they made preserved tongues
- and invalid delicacies, and carried off a lot of them. And on
- another page there was, 'Mysterious deaths in Holloway.'
-
- Oswald thought there was something in it, and so did Albert's
- uncle when we asked him, but the others thought not, so Oswald
- agreed to drop it. Besides, Holloway is a long way off. All the
- time we were talking about the paper Alice seemed to be thinking
- about something else, and when we had done she said--
-
- 'I believe we might be detectives ourselves, but I should not
- like to get anybody into trouble.'
-
- 'Not murderers or robbers?' Dicky asked.
-
- 'It wouldn't be murderers,' she said; 'but I HAVE noticed
- something strange. Only I feel a little frightened. Let's ask
- Albert's uncle first.'
-
- Alice is a jolly sight too fond of asking grown-up people things.
- And we all said it was tommyrot, and she was to tell us.
-
- 'Well, promise you won't do anything without me,' Alice said, and
- we promised. Then she said--
-
- 'This is a dark secret, and any one who thinks it is better not
- to be involved in a career of crime- discovery had better go away
- ere yet it be too late.'
-
- So Dora said she had had enough of tents, and she was going to
- look at the shops. H. O. went with her because he had twopence
- to spend. They thought it was only a game of Alice's but Oswald
- knew by the way she spoke. He can nearly always tell. And when
- people are not telling the truth Oswald generally knows by the
- way they look with their eyes. Oswald is not proud of being able
- to do this. He knows it is through no merit of his own that he
- is much cleverer than some people.
-
- When they had gone, the rest of us got closer together and said--
-
- 'Now then.'
-
- 'Well,' Alice said, 'you know the house next door? The people
- have gone to Scarborough. And the house is shut up. But last
- night _I_ SAW A LIGHT IN THE WINDOWS.'
-
- We asked her how and when, because her room is in the front, and
- she couldn't possibly have seen. And then she said--
-
- 'I'll tell you if you boys will promise not ever to go fishing
- again without me.'
-
- So we had to promise.
-
- Then she said--
-
- 'It was last night. I had forgotten to feed my rabbits and I
- woke up and remembered it. And I was afraid I should find them
- dead in the morning, like Oswald did.'
-
- 'It wasn't my fault,' Oswald said; 'there was something the
- matter with the beasts. I fed them right enough.'
-
- Alice said she didn't mean that, and she went on--
-
- 'I came down into the garden, and I saw a light in the house, and
- dark figures moving about. I thought perhaps it was burglars,
- but Father hadn't come home, and Eliza had gone to bed, so I
- couldn't do anything. Only I thought perhaps I would tell the
- rest of you.'
-
- 'Why didn't you tell us this morning?' Noel asked. And Alice
- explained that she did not want to get any one into trouble, even
- burglars. 'But we might watch to-night,' she said, 'and see if
- we see the light again.'
-
- 'They might have been burglars,' Noel said. He was sucking the
- last bit of his macaroni. 'You know the people next door are
- very grand. They won't know us--and they go out in a real
- private carriage sometimes. And they have an "At Home" day, and
- people come in cabs. I daresay they have piles of plate and
- jewellery and rich brocades, and furs of price and things like
- that. Let us keep watch to-night.'
-
- 'It's no use watching to-night,' Dicky said; 'if it's only
- burglars they won't come again. But there are other things
- besides burglars that are discovered in empty houses where lights
- are seen moving.'
-
- 'You mean coiners,' said Oswald at once. 'I wonder what the
- reward is for setting the police on their track?'
-
- Dicky thought it ought to be something fat, because coiners are
- always a desperate gang; and the machinery they make the coins
- with is so heavy and handy for knocking down detectives.
-
- Then it was tea-time, and we went in; and Dora and H. O. had
- clubbed their money together and bought a melon; quite a big one,
- and only a little bit squashy at one end. It was very good, and
- then we washed the seeds and made things with them and with pins
- and cotton. And nobody said any more about watching the house
- next door.
-
- Only when we went to bed Dicky took off his coat and waistcoat,
- but he stopped at his braces, and said--
-
- 'What about the coiners?'
-
- Oswald had taken off his collar and tie, and he was just going to
- say the same, so he said, 'Of course I meant to watch, only my
- collar's rather tight, so I thought I'd take it off first.'
-
- Dicky said he did not think the girls ought to be in it, because
- there might be danger, but Oswald reminded him that they had
- promised Alice, and that a promise is a sacred thing, even when
- you'd much rather not. So Oswald got Alice alone under pretence
- of showing her a caterpillar--Dora does not like them, and she
- screamed and ran away when Oswald offered to show it her. Then
- Oswald explained, and Alice agreed to come and watch if she
- could. This made us later than we ought to have been, because
- Alice had to wait till Dora was quiet and then creep out very
- slowly, for fear of the boards creaking. The girls sleep with
- their room-door open for fear of burglars. Alice had kept on her
- clothes under her nightgown when Dora wasn't looking, and
- presently we got down, creeping past Father's study, and out at
- the glass door that leads on to the veranda and the iron steps
- into the garden. And we went down very quietly, and got into the
- chestnut-tree; and then I felt that we had only been playing what
- Albert's uncle calls our favourite instrument--I mean the Fool.
- For the house next door was as dark as dark. Then suddenly we
- heard a sound--it came from the gate at the end of the garden.
- All the gardens have gates; they lead into a kind of lane that
- runs behind them. It is a sort of back way, very convenient when
- you don't want to say exactly where you are going. We heard the
- gate at the end of the next garden click, and Dicky nudged Alice
- so that she would have fallen out of the tree if it had not been
- for Oswald's extraordinary presence of mind. Oswald squeezed
- Alice's arm tight, and we all looked; and the others were rather
- frightened because really we had not exactly expected anything to
- happen except perhaps a light. But now a muffled figure,
- shrouded in a dark cloak, came swiftly up the path of the
- next-door garden. And we could see that under its cloak the
- figure carried a mysterious burden. The figure was dressed to
- look like a woman in a sailor hat.
-
- We held our breath as it passed under the tree where we were, and
- then it tapped very gently on the back door and was let in, and
- then a light appeared in the window of the downstairs back
- breakfast-room. But the shutters were up.
-
- Dicky said, 'My eye!' and wouldn't the others be sick to think
- they hadn't been in this! But Alice didn't half like it--and as
- she is a girl I do not blame her. Indeed, I thought myself at
- first that perhaps it would be better to retire for the present,
- and return later with a strongly armed force.
-
- 'It's not burglars,' Alice whispered; 'the mysterious stranger
- was bringing things in, not taking them out. They must be
- coiners--and oh, Oswald!--don't let's! The things they coin with
- must hurt very much. Do let's go to bed!'
-
- But Dicky said he was going to see; if there was a reward for
- finding out things like this he would like to have the reward.
-
- 'They locked the back door,' he whispered, 'I heard it go. And I
- could look in quite well through the holes in the shutters and be
- back over the wall long before they'd got the door open, even if
- they started to do it at once.'
-
- There were holes at the top of the shutters the shape of hearts,
- and the yellow light came out through them as well as through the
- chinks of the shutters.
-
- Oswald said if Dicky went he should, because he was the eldest;
- and Alice said, 'If any one goes it ought to be me, because I
- thought of it.'
-
- So Oswald said, 'Well, go then'; and she said, 'Not for
- anything!' And she begged us not to, and we talked about it in
- the tree till we were all quite hoarse with whispering.
-
- At last we decided on a plan of action.
-
- Alice was to stay in the tree, and scream 'Murder!' if anything
- happened. Dicky and I were to get down into the next garden and
- take it in turns to peep.
-
- So we got down as quietly as we could, but the tree made much
- more noise than it does in the day, and several times we paused,
- fearing that all was discovered. But nothing happened.
-
- There was a pile of red flower-pots under the window and one very
- large one was on the window-ledge. It seemed as if it was the
- hand of Destiny had placed it there, and the geranium in it was
- dead, and there was nothing to stop your standing on it--so
- Oswald did. He went first because he is the eldest, and though
- Dicky tried to stop him because he thought of it first it could
- not be, on account of not being able to say anything.
-
- So Oswald stood on the flower-pot and tried to look through one
- of the holes. He did not really expect to see the coiners at
- their fell work, though he had pretended to when we were talking
- in the tree. But if he had seen them pouring the base molten
- metal into tin moulds the shape of half-crowns he would not have
- been half so astonished as he was at the spectacle now revealed.
-
- At first he could see little, because the hole had unfortunately
- been made a little too high, so that the eye of the detective
- could only see the Prodigal Son in a shiny frame on the opposite
- wall. But Oswald held on to the window-frame and stood on tiptoe
- and then he SAW.
-
- There was no furnace, and no base metal, no bearded men in
- leathern aprons with tongs and things, but just a table with a
- table-cloth on it for supper, and a tin of salmon and a lettuce
- and some bottled beer. And there on a chair was the cloak and
- the hat of the mysterious stranger, and the two people sitting at
- the table were the two youngest grown-up daughters of the lady
- next door, and one of them was saying--
-
- 'So I got the salmon three-halfpence cheaper, and the lettuces
- are only six a penny in the Broadway, just fancy! We must save
- as much as ever we can on our housekeeping money if we want to go
- away decent next year.'
-
- And the other said, 'I wish we could ALL go EVERY year, or
- else--Really, I almost wish--'
-
- And all the time Oswald was looking Dicky was pulling at his
- jacket to make him get down and let Dicky have a squint. And
- just as she said 'I almost,' Dicky pulled too hard and Oswald
- felt himself toppling on the giddy verge of the big flower-pots.
- Putting forth all his strength our hero strove to recover his
- equi-what's-its-name, but it was now lost beyond recall.
-
- 'You've done it this time!' he said, then he fell heavily among
- the flower-pots piled below. He heard them crash and rattle and
- crack, and then his head struck against an iron pillar used for
- holding up the next-door veranda. His eyes closed and he knew no
- more.
-
- Now you will perhaps expect that at this moment Alice would have
- cried 'Murder!' If you think so you little know what girls are.
- Directly she was left alone in that tree she made a bolt to tell
- Albert's uncle all about it and bring him to our rescue in case
- the coiner's gang was a very desperate one. And just when I
- fell, Albert's uncle was getting over the wall. Alice never
- screamed at all when Oswald fell, but Dicky thinks he heard
- Albert's uncle say, 'Confound those kids!' which would not have
- been kind or polite, so I hope he did not say it.
-
- The people next door did not come out to see what the row was.
- Albert's uncle did not wait for them to come out. He picked up
- Oswald and carried the insensible body of the gallant young
- detective to the wall, laid it on the top, and then climbed over
- and bore his lifeless burden into our house and put it on the
- sofa in Father's study. Father was out, so we needn't have CREPT
- so when we were getting into the garden. Then Oswald was
- restored to consciousness, and his head tied up, and sent to bed,
- and next day there was a lump on his young brow as big as a
- turkey's egg, and very uncomfortable.
-
- Albert's uncle came in next day and talked to each of us
- separately. To Oswald he said many unpleasant things about
- ungentlemanly to spy on ladies, and about minding your own
- business; and when I began to tell him what I had heard he told
- me to shut up, and altogether he made me more uncomfortable than
- the bump did.
-
- Oswald did not say anything to any one, but next day, as the
- shadows of eve were falling, he crept away, and wrote on a piece
- of paper, 'I want to speak to you,' and shoved it through the
- hole like a heart in the top of the next-door shutters. And the
- youngest young lady put an eye to the heart-shaped hole, and then
- opened the shutter and said 'Well?' very crossly. Then Oswald
- said--
-
- 'I am very sorry, and I beg your pardon. We wanted to be
- detectives, and we thought a gang of coiners infested your house,
- so we looked through your window last night. I saw the lettuce,
- and I heard what you said about the salmon being three-halfpence
- cheaper, and I know it is very dishonourable to pry into other
- people's secrets, especially ladies', and I never will again if
- you will forgive me this once.'
-
- Then the lady frowned and then she laughed, and then she said--
-
- 'So it was YOU tumbling into the flower-pots last night? We
- thought it was burglars. It frightened us horribly. Why, what a
- bump on your poor head!'
-
- And then she talked to me a bit, and presently she said she and
- her sister had not wished people to know they were at home,
- because--And then she stopped short and grew very red, and I
- said, 'I thought you were all at Scarborough; your servant told
- Eliza so. Why didn't you want people to know you were at home?'
-
- The lady got redder still, and then she laughed and said--
-
- 'Never mind the reason why. I hope your head doesn't hurt much.
- Thank you for your nice, manly little speech. YOU'VE nothing to
- be ashamed of, at any rate.' Then she kissed me, and I did not
- mind. And then she said, 'Run away now, dear. I'm going to--I'm
- going to pull up the blinds and open the shutters, and I want to
- do it at ONCE, before it gets dark, so that every one can see
- we're at home, and not at Scarborough.'
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 4
- GOOD HUNTING
-
- When we had got that four shillings by digging for treasure we
- ought, by rights, to have tried Dicky's idea of answering the
- advertisement about ladies and gentlemen and spare time and two
- pounds a week, but there were several things we rather wanted.
-
- Dora wanted a new pair of scissors, and she said she was going to
- get them with her eight-pence. But Alice said--
-
- 'You ought to get her those, Oswald, because you know you broke
- the points off hers getting the marble out of the brass thimble.'
-
- It was quite true, though I had almost forgotten it, but then it
- was H. O. who jammed the marble into the thimble first of all.
- So I said--
-
- 'It's H. O.'s fault as much as mine, anyhow. Why shouldn't he
- pay?'
-
- Oswald didn't so much mind paying for the beastly scissors, but
- he hates injustice of every kind.
-
- 'He's such a little kid,' said Dicky, and of course H. O. said he
- wasn't a little kid, and it very nearly came to being a row
- between them. But Oswald knows when to be generous; so he said--
-
- 'Look here! I'll pay sixpence of the scissors, and H. O. shall
- pay the rest, to teach him to be careful.'
-
- H. O. agreed: he is not at all a mean kid, but I found out
- afterwards that Alice paid his share out of her own money.
-
- Then we wanted some new paints, and Noel wanted a pencil and a
- halfpenny account-book to write poetry with, and it does seem
- hard never to have any apples. So, somehow or other nearly all
- the money got spent, and we agreed that we must let the
- advertisement run loose a little longer.
-
- 'I only hope,' Alice said, 'that they won't have got all the
- ladies and gentlemen they want before we have got the money to
- write for the sample and instructions.'
-
- And I was a little afraid myself, because it seemed such a
- splendid chance; but we looked in the paper every day, and the
- advertisement was always there, so we thought it was all right.
-
- Then we had the detective try-on--and it proved no go; and then,
- when all the money was gone, except a halfpenny of mine and
- twopence of Noel's and three-pence of Dicky's and a few pennies
- that the girls had left, we held another council.
-
- Dora was sewing the buttons on H. O.'s Sunday things. He got
- himself a knife with his money, and he cut every single one of
- his best buttons off. You've no idea how many buttons there are
- on a suit. Dora counted them. There are twenty-four, counting
- the little ones on the sleeves that don't undo.
-
- Alice was trying to teach Pincher to beg; but he has too much
- sense when he knows you've got nothing in your hands, and the
- rest of us were roasting potatoes under the fire. We had made a
- fire on purpose, though it was rather warm. They are very good
- if you cut away the burnt parts--but you ought to wash them
- first, or you are a dirty boy.
-
- 'Well, what can we do?' said Dicky. 'You are so fond of saying
- "Let's do something!" and never saying what.'
-
- 'We can't try the advertisement yet. Shall we try rescuing some
- one?' said Oswald. It was his own idea, but he didn't insist on
- doing it, though he is next to the eldest, for he knows it is bad
- manners to make people do what you want, when they would rather
- not.
-
- 'What was Noel's plan?' Alice asked.
-
- 'A Princess or a poetry book,' said Noel sleepily. He was lying
- on his back on the sofa, kicking his legs. 'Only I shall look
- for the Princess all by myself. But I'll let you see her when
- we're married.'
-
- 'Have you got enough poetry to make a book?' Dicky asked that,
- and it was rather sensible of him, because when Noel came to look
- there were only seven of his poems that any of us could
- understand. There was the 'Wreck of the Malabar', and the poem
- he wrote when Eliza took us to hear the Reviving Preacher, and
- everybody cried, and Father said it must have been the Preacher's
- Eloquence. So Noel wrote:
-
- O Eloquence and what art thou?
- Ay what art thou? because we cried
- And everybody cried inside
- When they came out their eyes were red--
- And it was your doing Father said.
-
- But Noel told Alice he got the first line and a half from a book
- a boy at school was going to write when he had time. Besides
- this there were the 'Lines on a Dead Black Beetle that was
- poisoned'--
-
- O Beetle how I weep to see
- Thee lying on thy poor back!
- It is so very sad indeed.
- You were so shiny and black.
- I wish you were alive again
- But Eliza says wishing it is nonsense and a shame.
-
- It was very good beetle poison, and there were hundreds of them
- lying dead--but Noel only wrote a piece of poetry for one of
- them. He said he hadn't time to do them all, and the worst of it
- was he didn't know which one he'd written it to--so Alice
- couldn't bury the beetle and put the lines on its grave, though
- she wanted to very much.
-
- Well, it was quite plain that there wasn't enough poetry for a
- book.
-
- 'We might wait a year or two,' said Noel. 'I shall be sure to
- make some more some time. I thought of a piece about a fly this
- morning that knew condensed milk was sticky.'
-
- 'But we want the money NOW,' said Dicky, 'and you can go on
- writing just the same. It will come in some time or other.'
-
- 'There's poetry in newspapers,' said Alice. 'Down, Pincher!
- you'll never be a clever dog, so it's no good trying.'
-
- 'Do they pay for it?' Dicky thought of that; he often thinks of
- things that are really important, even if they are a little dull.
-
- 'I don't know. But I shouldn't think any one would let them
- print their poetry without. I wouldn't I know.' That was Dora;
- but Noel said he wouldn't mind if he didn't get paid, so long as
- he saw his poetry printed and his name at the end.
-
- 'We might try, anyway,' said Oswald. He is always willing to
- give other people's ideas a fair trial.
-
- So we copied out 'The Wreck of the Malabar' and the other six
- poems on drawing-paper--Dora did it, she writes best--and Oswald
- drew a picture of the Malabar going down with all hands. It was
- a full-rigged schooner, and all the ropes and sails were correct;
- because my cousin is in the Navy, and he showed me.
-
- We thought a long time whether we'd write a letter and send it by
- post with the poetry--and Dora thought it would be best. But
- NoEl said he couldn't bear not to know at once if the paper would
- print the poetry, So we decided to take it.
-
- I went with Noel, because I am the eldest, and he is not old
- enough to go to London by himself. Dicky said poetry was
- rot--and he was glad he hadn't got to make a fool of himself.
- that was because there was not enough money for him to go with
- us. H. O. couldn't come either, but he came to the station to
- see us off, and waved his cap and called out 'Good hunting!' as
- the train started.
-
- There was a lady in spectacles in the corner. She was writing
- with a pencil on the edges of long strips of paper that had print
- all down them. When the train started she asked--
-
- 'What was that he said?'
-
- So Oswald answered--
-
- 'It was "Good hunting"--it's out of the Jungle Book!' 'That's
- very pleasant to hear,' the lady said; 'I am very pleased to meet
- people who know their Jungle Book. And where are you off to--the
- Zoological Gardens to look for Bagheera?'
-
- We were pleased, too, to meet some one who knew the Jungle Book.
-
- So Oswald said--
-
- 'We are going to restore the fallen fortunes of the House of
- Bastable--and we have all thought of different ways--and we're
- going to try them all. Noel's way is poetry. I suppose great
- poets get paid?'
-
- The lady laughed--she was awfully jolly--and said she was a sort
- of poet, too, and the long strips of paper were the proofs of her
- new book of stories. Because before a book is made into a real
- book with pages and a cover, they sometimes print it all on
- strips of paper, and the writer make marks on it with a pencil to
- show the printers what idiots they are not to understand what a
- writer means to have printed.
-
- We told her all about digging for treasure, and what we meant to
- do. Then she asked to see Noel's poetry--and he said he didn't
- like--so she said, 'Look here--if you'll show me yours I'll show
- you some of mine.' So he agreed.
-
- The jolly lady read Noel's poetry, and she said she liked it very
- much. And she thought a great deal of the picture of the
- Malabar. And then she said, 'I write serious poetry like yours
- myself; too, but I have a piece here that I think you will like
- because it's about a boy.' She gave it to us--and so I can copy
- it down, and I will, for it shows that some grown-up ladies are
- not so silly as others. I like it better than Noel's poetry,
- though I told him I did not, because he looked as if he was going
- to cry. This was very wrong, for you should always speak the
- truth, however unhappy it makes people. And I generally do. But
- I did not want him crying in the railway carriage. The lady's
- piece of poetry:
-
- Oh when I wake up in my bed
- And see the sun all fat and red,
- I'm glad to have another day
- For all my different kinds of play.
-
- There are so many things to do--
- The things that make a man of you,
- If grown-ups did not get so vexed
- And wonder what you will do next.
-
- I often wonder whether they
- Ever made up our kinds of play--
- If they were always good as gold
- And only did what they were told.
-
- They like you best to play with tops
- And toys in boxes, bought in shops;
- They do not even know the names
- Of really interesting games.
-
- They will not let you play with fire
- Or trip your sister up with wire,
- They grudge the tea-tray for a drum,
- Or booby-traps when callers come.
-
- They don't like fishing, and it's true
- You sometimes soak a suit or two:
- They look on fireworks, though they're dry,
- With quite a disapproving eye.
-
- They do not understand the way
- To get the most out of your day:
- They do not know how hunger feels
- Nor what you need between your meals.
-
- And when you're sent to bed at night,
- They're happy, but they're not polite.
- For through the door you hear them say:
- 'HE'S done HIS mischief for the day!'
-
- She told us a lot of other pieces but I cannot remember them, and
- she talked to us all the way up, and when we got nearly to Cannon
- Street she said--
-
- 'I've got two new shillings here! Do you think they would help
- to smooth the path to Fame?'
-
- Noel said, 'Thank you,' and was going to take the shilling. But
- Oswald, who always remembers what he is told, said--
-
- 'Thank you very much, but Father told us we ought never to take
- anything from strangers.'
-
- 'That's a nasty one,' said the lady--she didn't talk a bit like a
- real lady, but more like a jolly sort of grown-up boy in a dress
- and hat--'a very nasty one! But don't you think as Noel and I
- are both poets I might be considered a sort of relation? You've
- heard of brother poets, haven't you? Don't you think Noel and I
- are aunt and nephew poets, or some relationship of that kind?'
-
- I didn't know what to say, and she went on--
-
- 'It's awfully straight of you to stick to what your Father tells
- you, but look here, you take the shillings, and here's my card.
- When you get home tell your Father all about it, and if he says
- No, you can just bring the shillings back to me.'
-
- So we took the shillings, and she shook hands with us and said,
- 'Good-bye, and good hunting!'
-
- We did tell Father about it, and he said it was all right, and
- when he looked at the card he told us we were highly honoured,
- for the lady wrote better poetry than any other lady alive now.
- We had never heard of her, and she seemed much too jolly for a
- poet. Good old Kipling! We owe him those two shillings, as well
- as the Jungle books!
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 5
- THE POET AND THE EDITOR
-
- It was not bad sport--being in London entirely on our own hook.
- We asked the way to Fleet Street, where Father says all the
- newspaper offices are. They said straight on down Ludgate
- Hill--but it turned out to be quite another way. At least WE
- didn't go straight on.
-
- We got to St Paul's. Noel WOULD go in, and we saw where Gordon
- was buried--at least the monument. It is very flat, considering
- what a man he was.
-
- When we came out we walked a long way, and when we asked a
- policeman he said we'd better go back through Smithfield. So we
- did. They don't burn people any more there now, so it was rather
- dull, besides being a long way, and Noel got very tired. He's a
- peaky little chap; it comes of being a poet, I think. We had a
- bun or two at different shops--out of the shillings--and it was
- quite late in the afternoon when we got to Fleet Street. The gas
- was lighted and the electric lights. There is a jolly Bovril
- sign that comes off and on in different coloured lamps. We went
- to the Daily Recorder office, and asked to see the Editor. It is
- a big office, very bright, with brass and mahogany and electric
- lights.
-
- They told us the Editor wasn't there, but at another office. So
- we went down a dirty street, to a very dull-looking place. There
- was a man there inside, in a glass case, as if he was a museum,
- and he told us to write down our names and our business. So
- Oswald wrote--
-
- OSWALD BASTABLE
- NOEL BASTABLE
- BUSINESS VERY PRIVATE INDEED
-
- Then we waited on the stone stairs; it was very draughty. And
- the man in the glass case looked at us as if we were the museum
- instead of him. We waited a long time, and then a boy came down
- and said--
-
- 'The Editor can't see you. Will you please write your business?'
- And he laughed. I wanted to punch his head.
-
- But Noel said, 'Yes, I'll write it if you'll give me a pen and
- ink, and a sheet of paper and an envelope.'
-
- The boy said he'd better write by post. But Noel is a bit
- pig-headed; it's his worst fault. So he said--'No, I'll write it
- NOW.' So I backed him up by saying--
-
- 'Look at the price penny stamps are since the coal strike!'
-
- So the boy grinned, and the man in the glass case gave us pen and
- paper, and Noel wrote. Oswald writes better than he does; but
- Noel would do it; and it took a very long time, and then it was
- inky.
-
- DEAR MR EDITOR, I want you to print my poetry and pay for it, and
- I am a friend of Mrs Leslie's; she is a poet too.
- Your affectionate friend,
- Noel Bastable.
-
- He licked the envelope a good deal, so that that boy shouldn't
- read it going upstairs; and he wrote 'Very private' outside, and
- gave the letter to the boy. I thought it wasn't any good; but in
- a minute the grinning boy came back, and he was quite respectful,
- and said--'The Editor says, please will you step up?'
-
- We stepped up. There were a lot of stairs and passages, and a
- queer sort of humming, hammering sound and a very funny smell.
- The boy was now very polite, and said it was the ink we smelt,
- and the noise was the printing machines.
-
- After going through a lot of cold passages we came to a door; the
- boy opened it, and let us go in. There was a large room, with a
- big, soft, blue-and-red carpet, and a roaring fire, though it was
- only October; and a large table with drawers, and littered with
- papers, just like the one in Father's study. A gentleman was
- sitting at one side of the table; he had a light moustache and
- light eyes, and he looked very young to be an editor--not nearly
- so old as Father. He looked very tired and sleepy, as if he had
- got up very early in the morning; but he was kind, and we liked
- him. Oswald thought he looked clever. Oswald is considered a
- judge of faces.
-
- 'Well,' said he, 'so you are Mrs Leslie's friends?'
-
- 'I think so,' said Noel; 'at least she gave us each a shilling,
- and she wished us "good hunting!"'
-
- 'Good hunting, eh? Well, what about this poetry of yours? Which
- is the poet?'
-
- I can't think how he could have asked! Oswald is said to be a
- very manly-looking boy for his age. However, I thought it would
- look duffing to be offended, so I said--
-
- 'This is my brother Noel. He is the poet.' Noel had turned
- quite pale. He is disgustingly like a girl in some ways. The
- Editor told us to sit down, and he took the poems from Noel, and
- began to read them. Noel got paler and paler; I really thought
- he was going to faint, like he did when I held his hand under the
- cold-water tap, after I had accidentally cut him with my chisel.
- When the Editor had read the first poem--it was the one about the
- beetle--he got up and stood with his back to us. It was not
- manners; but Noel thinks he did it 'to conceal his emotion,' as
- they do in books. He read all the poems, and then he said--
-
- 'I like your poetry very much, young man. I'll give you--let me
- see; how much shall I give you for it?'
-
- 'As much as ever you can,' said Noel. 'You see I want a good
- deal of money to restore the fallen fortunes of the house of
- Bastable.'
-
- The gentleman put on some eye-glasses and looked hard at us.
- Then he sat down.
-
- 'That's a good idea,' said he. 'Tell me how you came to think of
- it. And, I say, have you had any tea? They've just sent out for
- mine.'
-
- He rang a tingly bell, and the boy brought in a tray with a
- teapot and a thick cup and saucer and things, and he had to fetch
- another tray for us, when he was told to; and we had tea with the
- Editor of the Daily Recorder. I suppose it was a very proud
- moment for Noel, though I did not think of that till afterwards.
- The Editor asked us a lot of questions, and we told him a good
- deal, though of course I did not tell a stranger all our reasons
- for thinking that the family fortunes wanted restoring. We
- stayed about half an hour, and when we were going away he said
- again--
-
- 'I shall print all your poems, my poet; and now what do you think
- they're worth?'
-
- 'I don't know,' Noel said. 'You see I didn't write them to
- sell.'
-
- 'Why did you write them then?' he asked.
-
- Noel said he didn't know; he supposed because he wanted to.
-
- 'Art for Art's sake, eh?' said the Editor, and he seemed quite
- delighted, as though Noel had said something clever.
-
- 'Well, would a guinea meet your views?' he asked.
-
- I have read of people being at a loss for words, and dumb with
- emotion, and I've read of people being turned to stone with
- astonishment, or joy, or something, but I never knew how silly it
- looked till I saw Noel standing staring at the Editor with his
- mouth open. He went red and he went white, and then he got
- crimson, as if you were rubbing more and more crimson lake on a
- palette. But he didn't say a word, so Oswald had to say--
-
- 'I should jolly well think so.'
-
- So the Editor gave Noel a sovereign and a shilling, and he shook
- hands with us both, but he thumped Noel on the back and said--
-
- 'Buck up, old man! It's your first guinea, but it won't be your
- last. Now go along home, and in about ten years you can bring me
- some more poetry. Not before--see? I'm just taking this poetry
- of yours because I like it very much; but we don't put poetry in
- this paper at all. I shall have to put it in another paper I
- know of.'
-
- 'What DO you put in your paper?' I asked, for Father always takes
- the Daily Chronicle, and I didn't know what the Recorder was
- like. We chose it because it has such a glorious office, and a
- clock outside lighted up.
-
- 'Oh, news,' said he, 'and dull articles, and things about
- Celebrities. If you know any Celebrities, now?'
-
- Noel asked him what Celebrities were.
-
- 'Oh, the Queen and the Princes, and people with titles, and
- people who write, or sing, or act--or do something clever or
- wicked.'
-
- 'I don't know anybody wicked,' said Oswald, wishing he had known
- Dick Turpin, or Claude Duval, so as to be able to tell the Editor
- things about them. 'But I know some one with a title--Lord
- Tottenham.'
-
- 'The mad old Protectionist, eh? How did you come to know him?'
-
- 'We don't know him to speak to. But he goes over the Heath every
- day at three, and he strides along like a giant--with a black
- cloak like Lord Tennyson's flying behind him, and he talks to
- himself like one o'clock.'
-
- 'What does he say?' The Editor had sat down again, and he was
- fiddling with a blue pencil.
-
- 'We only heard him once, close enough to understand, and then he
- said, "The curse of the country, sir--ruin and desolation!" And
- then he went striding along again, hitting at the furze-bushes as
- if they were the heads of his enemies.'
-
- 'Excellent descriptive touch,' said the Editor. 'Well, go on.'
-
- 'That's all I know about him, except that he stops in the middle
- of the Heath every day, and he looks all round to see if there's
- any one about, and if there isn't, he takes his collar off.'
-
- The Editor interrupted--which is considered rude--and said--
-
- 'You're not romancing?'
-
- 'I beg your pardon?' said Oswald. 'Drawing the long bow, I mean,'
- said the Editor.
-
- Oswald drew himself up, and said he wasn't a liar.
-
- The Editor only laughed, and said romancing and lying were not at
- all the same; only it was important to know what you were playing
- at. So Oswald accepted his apology, and went on.
-
- 'We were hiding among the furze-bushes one day, and we saw him do
- it. He took off his collar, and he put on a clean one, and he
- threw the other among the furze-bushes. We picked it up
- afterwards, and it was a beastly paper one!'
-
- 'Thank you,' said the Editor, and he got up and put his hand in
- his pocket. 'That's well worth five shillings, and there they
- are. Would you like to see round the printing offices before you
- go home?'
-
- I pocketed my five bob, and thanked him, and I said we should
- like it very much. He called another gentleman and said
- something we couldn't hear. Then he said good-bye again; and all
- this time Noel hadn't said a word. But now he said, 'I've made a
- poem about you. It is called "Lines to a Noble Editor." Shall I
- write it down?'
-
- The Editor gave him the blue pencil, and he sat down at the
- Editor's table and wrote. It was this, he told me afterwards as
- well as he could remember--
-
- May Life's choicest blessings be your lot
- I think you ought to be very blest
- For you are going to print my poems--
- And you may have this one as well as the rest.
-
- 'Thank you,' said the Editor. 'I don't think I ever had a poem
- addressed to me before. I shall treasure it, I assure you.'
-
- Then the other gentleman said something about Maecenas, and we
- went off to see the printing office with at least one pound seven
- in our pockets.
-
- It WAS good hunting, and no mistake!
-
- But he never put Noel's poetry in the Daily Recorder. It was
- quite a long time afterwards we saw a sort of story thing in a
- magazine, on the station bookstall, and that kind, sleepy-looking
- Editor had written it, I suppose. It was not at all amusing. It
- said a lot about Noel and me, describing us all wrong, and saying
- how we had tea with the Editor; and all Noel's poems were in the
- story thing. I think myself the Editor seemed to make game of
- them, but Noel was quite pleased to see them printed--so that's
- all right. It wasn't my poetry anyhow, I am glad to say.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 6
- NOEL'S PRINCESS
-
- She happened quite accidentally. We were not looking for a
- Princess at all just then; but Noel had said he was going to find
- a Princess all by himself; and marry her--and he really did.
- Which was rather odd, because when people say things are going to
- befall, very often they don't. It was different, of course, with
- the prophets of old.
-
- We did not get any treasure by it, except twelve chocolate drops;
- but we might have done, and it was an adventure, anyhow.
-
- Greenwich Park is a jolly good place to play in, especially the
- parts that aren't near Greenwich. The parts near the Heath are
- first-rate. I often wish the Park was nearer our house; but I
- suppose a Park is a difficult thing to move.
-
- Sometimes we get Eliza to put lunch in a basket, and we go up to
- the Park. She likes that--it saves cooking dinner for us; and
- sometimes she says of her own accord, 'I've made some pasties for
- you, and you might as well go into the Park as not. It's a
- lovely day.'
-
- She always tells us to rinse out the cup at the
- drinking-fountain, and the girls do; but I always put my head
- under the tap and drink. Then you are an intrepid hunter at a
- mountain stream--and besides, you're sure it's clean. Dicky does
- the same, and so does H. O. But Noel always drinks out of the
- cup. He says it is a golden goblet wrought by enchanted gnomes.
-
- The day the Princess happened was a fine, hot day, last October,
- and we were quite tired with the walk up to the Park.
-
- We always go in by the little gate at the top of Croom's Hill.
- It is the postern gate that things always happen at in stories.
- It was dusty walking, but when we got in the Park it was ripping,
- so we rested a bit, and lay on our backs, and looked up at the
- trees, and wished we could play monkeys. I have done it before
- now, but the Park-keeper makes a row if he catches you.
-
- When we'd rested a little, Alice said--
-
- 'It was a long way to the enchanted wood, but it is very nice now
- we are there. I wonder what we shall find in it?'
-
- 'We shall find deer,' said Dicky, 'if we go to look; but they go
- on the other side of the Park because of the people with buns.'
-
- Saying buns made us think of lunch, so we had it; and when we had
- done we scratched a hole under a tree and buried the papers,
- because we know it spoils pretty places to leave beastly, greasy
- papers lying about. I remember Mother teaching me and Dora that,
- when we were quite little. I wish everybody's parents would
- teach them this useful lesson, and the same about orange peel.
-
- When we'd eaten everything there was, Alice whispered--
-
- 'I see the white witch bear yonder among the trees! Let's track
- it and slay it in its lair.'
-
- 'I am the bear,' said Noel; so he crept away, and we followed him
- among the trees. Often the witch bear was out of sight, and then
- you didn't know where it would jump out from; but sometimes we
- saw it, and just followed.
-
- 'When we catch it there'll be a great fight,' said Oswald; 'and I
- shall be Count Folko of Mont Faucon.'
-
- 'I'll be Gabrielle,' said Dora. She is the only one of us who
- likes doing girl's parts.
-
- 'I'll be Sintram,' said Alice; 'and H. O. can be the Little
- Master.'
-
- 'What about Dicky?'
-
- 'Oh, I can be the Pilgrim with the bones.'
-
- 'Hist!' whispered Alice. 'See his white fairy fur gleaming amid
- yonder covert!'
-
- And I saw a bit of white too. It was Noel's collar, and it had
- come undone at the back.
-
- We hunted the bear in and out of the trees, and then we lost him
- altogether; and suddenly we found the wall of the Park--in a
- place where I'm sure there wasn't a wall before. Noel wasn't
- anywhere about, and there was a door in the wall. And it was
- open; so we went through.
-
- 'The bear has hidden himself in these mountain fastnesses,'
- Oswald said. 'I will draw my good sword and after him.'
-
- So I drew the umbrella, which Dora always will bring in case it
- rains, because Noel gets a cold on the chest at the least
- thing--and we went on.
-
- The other side of the wall it was a stable yard, all
- cobble-stones.
-
- There was nobody about--but we could hear a man rubbing down a
- horse and hissing in the stable; so we crept very quietly past,
- and Alice whispered--
-
- ''Tis the lair of the Monster Serpent; I hear his deadly hiss!
- Beware! Courage and despatch!'
-
- We went over the stones on tiptoe, and we found another wall with
- another door in it on the other side. We went through that too,
- on tiptoe. It really was an adventure. And there we were in a
- shrubbery, and we saw something white through the trees. Dora
- said it was the white bear. That is so like Dora. She always
- begins to take part in a play just when the rest of us are
- getting tired of it. I don't mean this unkindly, because I am
- very fond of Dora. I cannot forget how kind she was when I had
- bronchitis; and ingratitude is a dreadful vice. But it is quite
- true.
-
- 'It is not a bear,' said Oswald; and we all went on, still on
- tiptoe, round a twisty path and on to a lawn, and there was Noel.
- His collar had come undone, as I said, and he had an inky mark on
- his face that he made just before we left the house, and he
- wouldn't let Dora wash it off, and one of his bootlaces was
- coming down. He was standing looking at a little girl; she was
- the funniest little girl you ever saw.
-
- She was like a china doll--the sixpenny kind; she had a white
- face, and long yellow hair, done up very tight in two pigtails;
- her forehead was very big and lumpy, and her cheeks came high up,
- like little shelves under her eyes. Her eyes were small and
- blue. She had on a funny black frock, with curly braid on it,
- and button boots that went almost up to her knees. Her legs were
- very thin. She was sitting in a hammock chair nursing a blue
- kitten--not a sky-blue one, of course, but the colour of a new
- slate pencil. As we came up we heard her say to Noel--'Who are
- you?'
-
- Noel had forgotten about the bear, and he was taking his
- favourite part, so he said--'I'm Prince Camaralzaman.'
-
- The funny little girl looked pleased--
-
- 'I thought at first you were a common boy,' she said. Then she
- saw the rest of us and said--
-
- 'Are you all Princesses and Princes too?'
-
- Of course we said 'Yes,' and she said--
-
- 'I am a Princess also.' She said it very well too, exactly as if
- it were true. We were very glad, because it is so seldom you
- meet any children who can begin to play right off without having
- everything explained to them. And even then they will say they
- are going to 'pretend to be' a lion, or a witch, or a king. Now
- this little girl just said 'I AM a Princess.' Then she looked at
- Oswald and said, 'I fancy I've seen you at Baden.'
-
- Of course Oswald said, 'Very likely.'
-
- The little girl had a funny voice, and all her words were quite
- plain, each word by itself; she didn't talk at all like we do.
-
- H. O. asked her what the cat's name was, and she said 'Katinka.'
- Then Dicky said--
-
- 'Let's get away from the windows; if you play near windows some
- one inside generally knocks at them and says "Don't".'
-
- The Princess put down the cat very carefully and said--
-
- 'I am forbidden to walk off the grass.'
-
- 'That's a pity,' said Dora.
-
- 'But I will if you like,' said the Princess.
-
- 'You mustn't do things you are forbidden to do,' Dora said; but
- Dicky showed us that there was some more grass beyond the shrubs
- with only a gravel path between. So I lifted the Princess over
- the gravel, so that she should be able to say she hadn't walked
- off the grass. When we got to the other grass we all sat down,
- and the Princess asked us if we liked 'dragees' (I know that's
- how you spell it, for I asked Albert-next-door's uncle).
-
- We said we thought not, but she pulled a real silver box out of
- her pocket and showed us; they were just flat, round chocolates.
- We had two each. Then we asked her her name, and she began, and
- when she began she went on, and on, and on, till I thought she
- was never going to stop. H. O. said she had fifty names, but
- Dicky is very good at figures, and he says there were only
- eighteen. The first were Pauline, Alexandra, Alice, and Mary was
- one, and Victoria, for we all heard that, and it ended up with
- Hildegarde Cunigonde something or other, Princess of something
- else.
-
- When she'd done, H. O. said, 'That's jolly good! Say it again!'
- and she did, but even then we couldn't remember it. We told her
- our names, but she thought they were too short, so when it was
- Noel's turn he said he was Prince Noel Camaralzaman Ivan
- Constantine Charlemagne James John Edward Biggs Maximilian
- Bastable Prince of Lewisham, but when she asked him to say it
- again of course he could only get the first two names right,
- because he'd made it up as he went on.
-
- So the Princess said, 'You are quite old enough to know your own
- name.' She was very grave and serious.
-
- She told us that she was the fifth cousin of Queen Victoria. We
- asked who the other cousins were, but she did not seem to
- understand. She went on and said she was seven times removed.
- She couldn't tell us what that meant either, but Oswald thinks it
- means that the Queen's cousins are so fond of her that they will
- keep coming bothering, so the Queen's servants have orders to
- remove them. This little girl must have been very fond of the
- Queen to try so often to see her, and to have been seven times
- removed. We could see that it is considered something to be
- proud of; but we thought it was hard on the Queen that her
- cousins wouldn't let her alone.
-
- Presently the little girl asked us where our maids and
- governesses were.
-
- We told her we hadn't any just now. And she said--
-
- 'How pleasant! And did you come here alone?'
-
- 'Yes,' said Dora; 'we came across the Heath.'
-
- 'You are very fortunate,' said the little girl. She sat very
- upright on the grass, with her fat little hands in her lap. 'I
- should like to go on the Heath. There are donkeys there, with
- white saddle covers. I should like to ride them, but my
- governess will not permit.'
-
- 'I'm glad we haven't a governess,' H. O. said. 'We ride the
- donkeys whenever we have any pennies, and once I gave the man
- another penny to make it gallop.'
-
- 'You are indeed fortunate!' said the Princess again, and when she
- looked sad the shelves on her cheeks showed more than ever. You
- could have laid a sixpence on them quite safely if you had had
- one.
-
- 'Never mind,' said Noel; 'I've got a lot of money. Come out and
- have a ride now.' But the little girl shook her head and said
- she was afraid it would not be correct.
-
- Dora said she was quite right; then all of a sudden came one of
- those uncomfortable times when nobody can think of anything to
- say, so we sat and looked at each other. But at last Alice said
- we ought to be going.
-
- 'Do not go yet,' the little girl said. 'At what time did they
- order your carriage?'
-
- 'Our carriage is a fairy one, drawn by griffins, and it comes
- when we wish for it,' said Noel.
-
- The little girl looked at him very queerly, and said, 'That is
- out of a picture-book.'
-
- Then Noel said he thought it was about time he was married if we
- were to be home in time for tea. The little girl was rather
- stupid over it, but she did what we told her, and we married them
- with Dora's pocket-handkerchief for a veil, and the ring off the
- back of one of the buttons on H. O.'s blouse just went on her
- little finger.
-
- Then we showed her how to play cross-touch, and puss in the
- corner, and tag. It was funny, she didn't know any games but
- battledore and shuttlecock and les graces. But she really began
- to laugh at last and not to look quite so like a doll.
-
- She was Puss and was running after Dicky when suddenly she
- stopped short and looked as if she was going to cry. And we
- looked too, and there were two prim ladies with little mouths and
- tight hair. One of them said in quite an awful voice, 'Pauline,
- who are these children?' and her voice was gruff; with very curly
- R's.
-
- The little girl said we were Princes and Princesses--which was
- silly, to a grown-up person that is not a great friend of yours.
-
- The gruff lady gave a short, horrid laugh, like a husky bark, and
- said--
-
- 'Princes, indeed! They're only common children!'
-
- Dora turned very red and began to speak, but the little girl
- cried out 'Common children! Oh, I am so glad! When I am grown
- up I'll always play with common children.'
-
- And she ran at us, and began to kiss us one by one, beginning
- with Alice; she had got to H. O. when the horrid lady said--'Your
- Highness--go indoors at once!'
-
- The little girl answered, 'I won't!'
-
- Then the prim lady said--'Wilson, carry her Highness indoors.'
-
- And the little girl was carried away screaming, and kicking with
- her little thin legs and her buttoned boots, and between her
- screams she shrieked:
-
- 'Common children! I am glad, glad, glad! Common children!
- Common children!'
-
- The nasty lady then remarked--'Go at once, or I will send for the
- police!'
-
- So we went. H. O. made a face at her and so did Alice, but
- Oswald took off his cap and said he was sorry if she was annoyed
- about anything; for Oswald has always been taught to be polite to
- ladies, however nasty. Dicky took his off, too, when he saw me
- do it; he says he did it first, but that is a mistake. If I were
- really a common boy I should say it was a lie.
-
- Then we all came away, and when we got outside Dora said, 'So she
- was really a Princess. Fancy a Princess living THERE!'
-
- 'Even Princesses have to live somewhere,' said Dicky.
-
- 'And I thought it was play. And it was real. I wish I'd known!
- I should have liked to ask her lots of things,' said Alice.
-
- H. O. said he would have liked to ask her what she had for dinner
- and whether she had a crown.
-
- I felt, myself, we had lost a chance of finding out a great deal
- about kings and queens. I might have known such a stupid-looking
- little girl would never have been able to pretend, as well as
- that.
-
- So we all went home across the Heath, and made dripping toast for
- tea.
-
- When we were eating it Noel said, 'I wish I could give HER some!
- It is very good.'
-
- He sighed as he said it, and his mouth was very full, so we knew
- he was thinking of his Princess. He says now that she was as
- beautiful as the day, but we remember her quite well, and she was
- nothing of the kind.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 7
- BEING BANDITS
-
- Noel was quite tiresome for ever so long after we found the
- Princess. He would keep on wanting to go to the Park when the
- rest of us didn't, and though we went several times to please
- him, we never found that door open again, and all of us except
- him knew from the first that it would be no go.
-
- So now we thought it was time to do something to rouse him from
- the stupor of despair, which is always done to heroes when
- anything baffling has occurred. Besides, we were getting very
- short of money again--the fortunes of your house cannot be
- restored (not so that they will last, that is), even by the one
- pound eight we got when we had the 'good hunting.' We spent a
- good deal of that on presents for Father's birthday. We got him
- a paper-weight, like a glass bun, with a picture of Lewisham
- Church at the bottom; and a blotting-pad, and a box of preserved
- fruits, and an ivory penholder with a view of Greenwich Park in
- the little hole where you look through at the top. He was most
- awfully pleased and surprised, and when he heard how Noel and
- Oswald had earned the money to buy the things he was more
- surprised still. Nearly all the rest of our money went to get
- fireworks for the Fifth of November. We got six Catherine wheels
- and four rockets; two hand-lights, one red and one green; a
- sixpenny maroon; two Roman-candles--they cost a shilling; some
- Italian streamers, a fairy fountain, and a tourbillon that cost
- eighteen-pence and was very nearly worth it.
-
- But I think crackers and squibs are a mistake. It's true you get
- a lot of them for the money, and they are not bad fun for the
- first two or three dozen, but you get jolly sick of them before
- you've let off your sixpenn'orth. And the only amusing way is
- not allowed: it is putting them in the fire.
-
- It always seems a long time till the evening when you have got
- fireworks in the house, and I think as it was a rather foggy day
- we should have decided to let them off directly after breakfast,
- only Father had said he would help us to let them off at eight
- o'clock after he had had his dinner, and you ought never to
- disappoint your father if you can help it.
-
- You see we had three good reasons for trying H. O.'s idea of
- restoring the fallen fortunes of our house by becoming bandits on
- the Fifth of November. We had a fourth reason as well, and that
- was the best reason of the lot. You remember Dora thought it
- would be wrong to be bandits. And the Fifth of November came
- while Dora was away at Stroud staying with her godmother. Stroud
- is in Gloucestershire. We were determined to do it while she was
- out of the way, because we did not think it wrong, and besides we
- meant to do it anyhow.
-
- We held a Council, of course, and laid our plans very carefully.
- We let H. O. be Captain, because it was his idea. Oswald was
- Lieutenant. Oswald was quite fair, because he let H. O. call
- himself Captain; but Oswald is the eldest next to Dora, after
- all.
-
- Our plan was this. We were all to go up on to the Heath. Our
- house is in the Lewisham Road, but it's quite close to the Heath
- if you cut up the short way opposite the confectioner's, past the
- nursery gardens and the cottage hospital, and turn to the left
- again and afterwards to the right. You come out then at the top
- of the hill, where the big guns are with the iron fence round
- them, and where the bands play on Thursday evenings in the
- summer.
-
- We were to lurk in ambush there, and waylay an unwary traveller.
- We were to call upon him to surrender his arms, and then bring
- him home and put him in the deepest dungeon below the castle
- moat; then we were to load him with chains and send to his
- friends for ransom.
-
- You may think we had no chains, but you are wrong, because we
- used to keep two other dogs once, besides Pincher, before the
- fall of the fortunes of the ancient House of Bastable. And they
- were quite big dogs.
-
- It was latish in the afternoon before we started. We thought we
- could lurk better if it was nearly dark. It was rather foggy,
- and we waited a good while beside the railings, but all the
- belated travellers were either grown up or else they were Board
- School children. We weren't going to get into a row with
- grown-up people--especially strangers--and no true bandit would
- ever stoop to ask a ransom from the relations of the poor and
- needy. So we thought it better to wait.
-
- As I said, it was Guy Fawkes Day, and if it had not been we
- should never have been able to be bandits at all, for the unwary
- traveller we did catch had been forbidden to go out because he
- had a cold in his head. But he would run out to follow a guy,
- without even putting on a coat or a comforter, and it was a very
- damp, foggy afternoon and nearly dark, so you see it was his own
- fault entirely, and served him jolly well right.
-
- We saw him coming over the Heath just as we were deciding to go
- home to tea. He had followed that guy right across to the
- village (we call Blackheath the village; I don't know why), and
- he was coming back dragging his feet and sniffing.
-
- 'Hist, an unwary traveller approaches!' whispered Oswald.
-
- 'Muffle your horses' heads and see to the priming of your
- pistols,' muttered Alice. She always will play boys' parts, and
- she makes Ellis cut her hair short on purpose. Ellis is a very
- obliging hairdresser.
-
- 'Steal softly upon him,' said Noel; 'for lo! 'tis dusk, and no
- human eyes can mark our deeds.'
-
- So we ran out and surrounded the unwary traveller. It turned out
- to be Albert-next-door, and he was very frightened indeed until
- he saw who we were.
-
- 'Surrender!' hissed Oswald, in a desperate-sounding voice, as he
- caught the arm of the Unwary. And Albert-next-door said, 'All
- right! I'm surrendering as hard as I can. You needn't pull my
- arm off.'
-
- We explained to him that resistance was useless, and I think he
- saw that from the first. We held him tight by both arms, and we
- marched him home down the hill in a hollow square of five.
-
- He wanted to tell us about the guy, but we made him see that it
- was not proper for prisoners to talk to the guard, especially
- about guys that the prisoner had been told not to go after
- because of his cold.
-
- When we got to where we live he said, 'All right, I don't want to
- tell you. You'll wish I had afterwards. You never saw such a
- guy.'
-
- 'I can see YOU!' said H. O. It was very rude, and Oswald told him
- so at once, because it is his duty as an elder brother. But H.
- O. is very young and does not know better yet, and besides it
- wasn't bad for H. O.
-
- Albert-next-door said, 'You haven't any manners, and I want to go
- in to my tea. Let go of me!'
-
- But Alice told him, quite kindly, that he was not going in to his
- tea, but coming with us.
-
- 'I'm not,' said Albert-next-door; 'I'm going home. Leave go!
- I've got a bad cold. You're making it worse.' Then he tried to
- cough, which was very silly, because we'd seen him in the
- morning, and he'd told us where the cold was that he wasn't to go
- out with. When he had tried to cough, he said, 'Leave go of me!
- You see my cold's getting worse.'
-
- 'You should have thought of that before,' said Dicky; 'you're
- coming in with us.'
-
- 'Don't be a silly,' said Noel; 'you know we told you at the very
- beginning that resistance was useless. There is no disgrace in
- yielding. We are five to your one.'
-
- By this time Eliza had opened the door, and we thought it best to
- take him in without any more parlaying. To parley with a
- prisoner is not done by bandits.
-
- Directly we got him safe into the nursery, H. O. began to jump
- about and say, 'Now you're a prisoner really and truly!'
-
- And Albert-next-door began to cry. He always does. I wonder he
- didn't begin long before--but Alice fetched him one of the dried
- fruits we gave Father for his birthday. It was a green walnut.
- I have noticed the walnuts and the plums always get left till the
- last in the box; the apricots go first, and then the figs and
- pears; and the cherries, if there are any.
-
- So he ate it and shut up. Then we explained his position to him,
- so that there should be no mistake, and he couldn't say
- afterwards that he had not understood.
-
- 'There will be no violence,' said Oswald--he was now Captain of
- the Bandits, because we all know H. O. likes to be Chaplain when
- we play prisoners--'no violence. But you will be confined in a
- dark, subterranean dungeon where toads and snakes crawl, and but
- little of the light of day filters through the heavily mullioned
- windows. You will be loaded with chains. Now don't begin again,
- Baby, there's nothing to cry about; straw will be your pallet;
- beside you the gaoler will set a ewer--a ewer is only a jug,
- stupid; it won't eat you--a ewer with water; and a mouldering
- crust will be your food.'
-
- But Albert-next-door never enters into the spirit of a thing. He
- mumbled something about tea-time.
-
- Now Oswald, though stern, is always just, and besides we were all
- rather hungry, and tea was ready. So we had it at once,
- Albert-next-door and all--and we gave him what was left of the
- four-pound jar of apricot jam we got with the money Noel got for
- his poetry. And we saved our crusts for the prisoner.
-
- Albert-next-door was very tiresome. Nobody could have had a
- nicer prison than he had. We fenced him into a corner with the
- old wire nursery fender and all the chairs, instead of putting
- him in the coal-cellar as we had first intended. And when he
- said the dog-chains were cold the girls were kind enough to warm
- his fetters thoroughly at the fire before we put them on him.
-
- We got the straw cases of some bottles of wine someone sent
- Father one Christmas--it is some years ago, but the cases are
- quite good. We unpacked them very carefully and pulled them to
- pieces and scattered the straw about. It made a lovely straw
- pallet, and took ever so long to make--but Albert-next-door has
- yet to learn what gratitude really is. We got the bread trencher
- for the wooden platter where the prisoner's crusts were put--they
- were not mouldy, but we could not wait till they got so, and for
- the ewer we got the toilet jug out of the spare-room where nobody
- ever sleeps. And even then Albert-next-door couldn't be happy
- like the rest of us. He howled and cried and tried to get out,
- and he knocked the ewer over and stamped on the mouldering
- crusts. Luckily there was no water in the ewer because we had
- forgotten it, only dust and spiders. So we tied him up with the
- clothes-line from the back kitchen, and we had to hurry up, which
- was a pity for him. We might have had him rescued by a devoted
- page if he hadn't been so tiresome. In fact Noel was actually
- dressing up for the page when Albert-next-door kicked over the
- prison ewer.
-
- We got a sheet of paper out of an old exercise-book, and we made
- H. O. prick his own thumb, because he is our little brother and
- it is our duty to teach him to be brave. We none of us mind
- pricking ourselves; we've done it heaps of times. H. O. didn't
- like it, but he agreed to do it, and I helped him a little
- because he was so slow, and when he saw the red bead of blood
- getting fatter and bigger as I squeezed his thumb he was very
- pleased, just as I had told him he would be.
-
- This is what we wrote with H. O.'s blood, only the blood gave out
- when we got to 'Restored', and we had to write the rest with
- crimson lake, which is not the same colour, though I always use
- it, myself, for painting wounds.
-
- While Oswald was writing it he heard Alice whispering to the
- prisoner that it would soon be over, and it was only play. The
- prisoner left off howling, so I pretended not to hear what she
- said. A Bandit Captain has to overlook things sometimes. This
- was the letter--
-
- 'Albert Morrison is held a prisoner by Bandits. On payment of
- three thousand pounds he will be restored to his sorrowing
- relatives, and all will be forgotten and forgiven.'
-
- I was not sure about the last part, but Dicky was certain he had
- seen it in the paper, so I suppose it must have been all right.
-
- We let H. O. take the letter; it was only fair, as it was his
- blood it was written with, and told him to leave it next door for
- Mrs Morrison.
-
- H. O. came back quite quickly, and Albert-next-door's uncle came
- with him.
-
- 'What is all this, Albert?' he cried. 'Alas, alas, my nephew!
- Do I find you the prisoner of a desperate band of brigands?'
-
- 'Bandits,' said H. O; 'you know it says bandits.'
-
- 'I beg your pardon, gentlemen,' said Albert-next-door's uncle,
- 'bandits it is, of course. This, Albert, is the direct result of
- the pursuit of the guy on an occasion when your doting mother had
- expressly warned you to forgo the pleasures of the chase.'
-
- Albert said it wasn't his fault, and he hadn't wanted to play.
-
- 'So ho!' said his uncle, 'impenitent too! Where's the dungeon?'
-
- We explained the dungeon, and showed him the straw pallet and the
- ewer and the mouldering crusts and other things.
-
- 'Very pretty and complete,' he said. 'Albert, you are more
- highly privileged than ever I was. No one ever made me a nice
- dungeon when I was your age. I think I had better leave you
- where you are.'
-
- Albert began to cry again and said he was sorry, and he would be
- a good boy.
-
- 'And on this old familiar basis you expect me to ransom you, do
- you? Honestly, my nephew, I doubt whether you are worth it.
- Besides, the sum mentioned in this document strikes me as
- excessive: Albert really is NOT worth three thousand pounds.
- Also by a strange and unfortunate chance I haven't the money
- about me. Couldn't you take less?'
-
- We said perhaps we could.
-
- 'Say eightpence,' suggested Albert-next-door's uncle, 'which is
- all the small change I happen to have on my person.'
-
- 'Thank you very much,' said Alice as he held it out; 'but are you
- sure you can spare it? Because really it was only play.'
-
- 'Quite sure. Now, Albert, the game is over. You had better run
- home to your mother and tell her how much you've enjoyed
- yourself.'
-
- When Albert-next-door had gone his uncle sat in the Guy Fawkes
- armchair and took Alice on his knee, and we sat round the fire
- waiting till it would be time to let off our fireworks. We
- roasted the chestnuts he sent Dicky out for, and he told us
- stories till it was nearly seven. His stories are first-rate--he
- does all the parts in different voices. At last he said--
-
- 'Look here, young-uns. I like to see you play and enjoy
- yourselves, and I don't think it hurts Albert to enjoy himself
- too.'
-
- 'I don't think he did much,' said H. O. But I knew what
- Albert-next-door's uncle meant because I am much older than H. O.
- He went on--
-
- 'But what about Albert's mother? Didn't you think how anxious
- she would be at his not coming home? As it happens I saw him
- come in with you, so we knew it was all right. But if I hadn't,
- eh?'
-
- He only talks like that when he is very serious, or even angry.
- Other times he talks like people in books--to us, I mean.
-
- We none of us said anything. But I was thinking. Then Alice
- spoke.
-
- Girls seem not to mind saying things that we don't say. She put
- her arms round Albert-next-door's uncle's neck and said--
-
- 'We're very, very sorry. We didn't think about his mother. You
- see we try very hard not to think about other people's mothers
- because--'
-
- Just then we heard Father's key in the door and
- Albert-next-door's uncle kissed Alice and put her down, and we
- all went down to meet Father. As we went I thought I heard
- Albert-next-door's uncle say something that sounded like 'Poor
- little beggars!'
-
- He couldn't have meant us, when we'd been having such a jolly
- time, and chestnuts, and fireworks to look forward to after
- dinner and everything!
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 8
- BEING EDITORS
-
- It was Albert's uncle who thought of our trying a newspaper. He
- said he thought we should not find the bandit business a paying
- industry, as a permanency, and that journalism might be.
-
- We had sold Noel's poetry and that piece of information about
- Lord Tottenham to the good editor, so we thought it would not be
- a bad idea to have a newspaper of our own. We saw plainly that
- editors must be very rich and powerful, because of the grand
- office and the man in the glass case, like a museum, and the soft
- carpets and big writing-table. Besides our having seen a whole
- handful of money that the editor pulled out quite carelessly from
- his trousers pocket when he gave me my five bob.
-
- Dora wanted to be editor and so did Oswald, but he gave way to
- her because she is a girl, and afterwards he knew that it is true
- what it says in the copy-books about Virtue being its own Reward.
- Because you've no idea what a bother it is. Everybody wanted to
- put in everything just as they liked, no matter how much room
- there was on the page. It was simply awful! Dora put up with it
- as long as she could and then she said if she wasn't let alone
- she wouldn't go on being editor; they could be the paper's
- editors themselves, so there.
-
- Then Oswald said, like a good brother: 'I will help you if you
- like, Dora,' and she said, 'You're more trouble than all the rest
- of them! Come and be editor and see how you like it. I give it
- up to you.' But she didn't, and we did it together. We let
- Albert-next-door be sub-editor, because he had hurt his foot with
- a nail in his boot that gathered.
-
- When it was done Albert-next-door's uncle had it copied for us in
- typewriting, and we sent copies to all our friends, and then of
- course there was no one left that we could ask to buy it. We did
- not think of that until too late. We called the paper the
- Lewisham Recorder; Lewisham because we live there, and Recorder
- in memory of the good editor. I could write a better paper on my
- head, but an editor is not allowed to write all the paper. It is
- very hard, but he is not. You just have to fill up with what you
- can get from other writers. If I ever have time I will write a
- paper all by myself. It won't be patchy. We had no time to make
- it an illustrated paper, but I drew the ship going down with all
- hands for the first copy. But the typewriter can't draw ships,
- so it was left out in the other copies. The time the first paper
- took to write out no one would believe! This was the Newspaper:
-
- THE LEWISHAM RECORDER
-
- EDITORS: DORA AND OSWALD BASTABLE
-
- ------------
- EDITORIAL NOTE
-
- Every paper is written for some reason. Ours is because we want
- to sell it and get money. If what we have written brings
- happiness to any sad heart we shall not have laboured in vain.
- But we want the money too. Many papers are content with the sad
- heart and the happiness, but we are not like that, and it is best
- not to be deceitful. EDITORS.
-
- There will be two serial stories; One by Dicky and one by all of
- us. In a serial story you only put in one chapter at a time.
- But we shall put all our serial story at once, if Dora has time
- to copy it. Dicky's will come later on.
-
- SERIAL STORY
- BY US ALL
-
- CHAPTER I--by Dora
-
- The sun was setting behind a romantic-looking tower when two
- strangers might have been observed descending the crest of the
- hill. The eldest, a man in the prime of life; the other a
- handsome youth who reminded everybody of Quentin Durward. They
- approached the Castle, in which the fair Lady Alicia awaited her
- deliverers. She leaned from the castellated window and waved her
- lily hand as they approached. They returned her signal, and
- retired to seek rest and refreshment at a neighbouring hostelry.
-
- ------------
- CHAPTER II--by Alice
-
- The Princess was very uncomfortable in the tower, because her
- fairy godmother had told her all sorts of horrid things would
- happen if she didn't catch a mouse every day, and she had caught
- so many mice that now there were hardly any left to catch. So
- she sent her carrier pigeon to ask the noble Strangers if they
- could send her a few mice--because she would be of age in a few
- days and then it wouldn't matter. So the fairy godmother--- (I'm
- very sorry, but there's no room to make the chapters any longer.-
- -ED.)
- ------------
- CHAPTER III--by the Sub-Editor
-
- (I can't--I'd much rather not--I don't know how.)
-
-
- ------------
- CHAPTER IV--by Dicky
-
- I must now retrace my steps and tell you something about our
- hero. You must know he had been to an awfully jolly school,
- where they had turkey and goose every day for dinner, and never
- any mutton, and as many helps of pudding as a fellow cared to
- send up his plate for--so of course they had all grown up very
- strong, and before he left school he challenged the Head to have
- it out man to man, and he gave it him, I tell you. That was the
- education that made him able to fight Red Indians, and to be the
- stranger who might have been observed in the first chapter.
-
- ------------
- CHAPTER V--by Noel
-
- I think it's time something happened in this story. So then the
- dragon he came out, blowing fire out of his nose, and he said--
-
- 'Come on, you valiant man and true, I'd like to have a set-to
- along of you!'
-
- (That's bad English.--ED. I don't care; it's what the dragon
- said. Who told you dragons didn't talk bad English?--Noel.)
-
- So the hero, whose name was Noeloninuris, replied--
-
- 'My blade is sharp, my axe is keen,
- You're not nearly as big as a good many
- dragons I've seen.'
-
- (Don't put in so much poetry, Noel. It's not fair, because none
- of the others can do it.--ED.)
-
- And then they went at it, and he beat the dragon, just as he did
- the Head in Dicky's part of the Story, and so he married the
- Princess, and they lived--- (No they didn't--not till the last
- chapter.--ED.)
-
- ------------
- CHAPTER VI--by H. O.
-
- I think it's a very nice Story--but what about the mice? I don't
- want to say any more. Dora can have what's left of my chapter.
-
- ------------
- CHAPTER VII--by the Editors
-
- And so when the dragon was dead there were lots of mice, because
- he used to kill them for his tea but now they rapidly multiplied
- and ravaged the country, so the fair lady Alicia, sometimes
- called the Princess, had to say she would not marry any one
- unless they could rid the country of this plague of mice. Then
- the Prince, whose real name didn't begin with N, but was
- Osrawalddo, waved his magic sword, and the dragon stood before
- them, bowing gracefully. They made him promise to be good, and
- then they forgave him; and when the wedding breakfast came, all
- the bones were saved for him. And so they were married and lived
- happy ever after.
-
- (What became of the other stranger?--NOEL. The dragon ate him
- because he asked too many questions.--EDITORS.)
-
- This is the end of the story.
-
-
- INSTRUCTIVE
-
- It only takes four hours and a quarter now to get from London to
- Manchester; but I should not think any one would if they could
- help it.
-
- A DREADFUL WARNING. A wicked boy told me a very instructive
- thing about ginger. They had opened one of the large jars, and
- he happened to take out quite a lot, and he made it all right by
- dropping marbles in, till there was as much ginger as before.
- But he told me that on the Sunday, when it was coming near the
- part where there is only juice generally, I had no idea what his
- feelings were. I don't see what he could have said when they
- asked him. I should be sorry to act like it.
-
- ------------
- SCIENTIFIC
-
- Experiments should always be made out of doors. And don't use
- benzoline.--DICKY. (That was when he burnt his eyebrows off.--
- ED.)
-
- The earth is 2,400 miles round, and 800 through--at least I think
- so, but perhaps it's the other way.--DICKY. (You ought to have
- been sure before you began.--ED.)
-
- ------------
- SCIENTIFIC COLUMN
-
- In this so-called Nineteenth Century Science is but too little
- considered in the nurseries of the rich and proud. But we are
- not like that.
-
- It is not generally known that if you put bits of camphor in
- luke-warm water it will move about. If you drop sweet oil in,
- the camphor will dart away and then stop moving. But don't drop
- any till you are tired of it, because the camphor won't any more
- afterwards. Much amusement and instruction is lost by not
- knowing things like this.
-
- If you put a sixpence under a shilling in a wine-glass, and blow
- hard down the side of the glass, the sixpence will jump up and
- sit on the top of the shilling. At least I can't do it myself,
- but my cousin can. He is in the Navy.
-
- ------------
- ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS
-
- Noel. You are very poetical, but I am sorry to say it will not
- do.
-
- Alice. Nothing will ever make your hair curl, so it's no use.
- Some people say it's more important to tidy up as you go along.
- I don't mean you in particular, but every one.
-
- H. O. We never said you were tubby, but the Editor does not know
- any cure.
-
- Noel. If there is any of the paper over when this newspaper is
- finished, I will exchange it for your shut-up inkstand, or the
- knife that has the useful thing in it for taking stones out of
- horses' feet, but you can't have it without.
-
- H. O. There are many ways how your steam engine might stop
- working. You might ask Dicky. He knows one of them. I think it
- is the way yours stopped.
-
- Noel. If you think that by filling the garden with sand you can
- make crabs build their nests there you are not at all sensible.
-
- You have altered your poem about the battle of Waterloo so often,
- that we cannot read it except where the Duke waves his sword and
- says some thing we can't read either. Why did you write it on
- blotting-paper with purple chalk?--ED. (Because YOU KNOW WHO
- sneaked my pencil.--NOEL.)
-
- ------------
- POETRY
-
- The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold,
- And the way he came down was awful, I'm told;
- But it's nothing to the way one of the Editors comes down on me,
- If I crumble my bread-and-butter or spill my tea.
- NOEL.
- ------------
- CURIOUS FACTS
-
- If you hold a guinea-pig up by his tail his eyes drop out.
-
- You can't do half the things yourself that children in books do,
- making models or soon. I wonder why?--ALICE.
-
- If you take a date's stone out and put in an almond and eat them
- together, it is prime. I found this out.--SUB-EDITOR.
-
- If you put your wet hand into boiling lead it will not hurt you
- if you draw it out quickly enough. I have never tried this.--
- DORA.
-
- ------------
- THE PURRING CLASS
-
- (Instructive Article)
-
- If I ever keep a school everything shall be quite different.
- Nobody shall learn anything they don't want to. And sometimes
- instead of having masters and mistresses we will have cats, and
- we will dress up in cat skins and learn purring. 'Now, my
- dears,' the old cat will say, one, two, three all purr together,'
- and we shall purr like anything.
-
- She won't teach us to mew, but we shall know how without
- teaching. Children do know some things without being taught.--
- ALICE.
-
- ------------
- POETRY
- (Translated into French by Dora)
-
- Quand j'etais jeune et j'etais fou
- J'achetai un violon pour dix-huit sous
- Et tous les airs que je jouai
- Etait over the hills and far away.
-
- Another piece of it
-
- Mercie jolie vache qui fait
- Bon lait pour mon dejeuner
- Tous les matins tous les soirs
- Mon pain je mange, ton lait je boire.
-
- ------------
- RECREATIONS
-
- It is a mistake to think that cats are playful. I often try to
- get a cat to play with me, and she never seems to care about the
- game, no matter how little it hurts.--H. O.
-
- Making pots and pans with clay is fun, but do not tell the
- grown-ups. It is better to surprise them; and then you must say
- at once how easily it washes off--much easier than ink.--DICKY.
-
- ------------
- SAM REDFERN, OR THE BUSH RANGER'S BURIAL
-
- By Dicky
-
- 'Well, Annie, I have bad news for you,' said Mr Ridgway, as he
- entered the comfortable dining-room of his cabin in the Bush.
- 'Sam Redfern the Bushranger is about this part of the Bush just
- now. I hope he will not attack us with his gang.'
-
- 'I hope not,' responded Annie, a gentle maiden of some sixteen
- summers.
-
- just then came a knock at the door of the hut, and a gruff voice
- asked them to open the door.
-
- 'It is Sam Redfern the Bushranger, father,' said the girl.
-
- 'The same,' responded the voice, and the next moment the hall
- door was smashed in, and Sam Redfern sprang in, followed by his
- gang.
-
- ------------
- CHAPTER II
-
- Annie's Father was at once overpowered, and Annie herself lay
- bound with cords on the drawing-room sofa. Sam Redfern set a
- guard round the lonely hut, and all human aid was despaired of.
- But you never know. Far away in the Bush a different scene was
- being enacted.
-
- 'Must be Injuns,' said a tall man to himself as he pushed his way
- through the brushwood. It was Jim Carlton, the celebrated
- detective. 'I know them,' he added; 'they are Apaches.' just
- then ten Indians in full war-paint appeared. Carlton raised his
- rifle and fired, and slinging their scalps on his arm he hastened
- towards the humble log hut where resided his affianced bride,
- Annie Ridgway, sometimes known as the Flower of the Bush.
-
- ------------
- CHAPTER III
-
- The moon was low on the horizon, and Sam Redfern was seated at a
- drinking bout with some of his boon companions.
-
- They had rifled the cellars of the hut, and the rich wines flowed
- like water in the golden goblets of Mr Ridgway.
-
- But Annie had made friends with one of the gang, a noble,
- good-hearted man who had joined Sam Redfern by mistake, and she
- had told him to go and get the police as quickly as possible.
-
- 'Ha! ha!' cried Redfern, 'now I am enjoying myself!' He little
- knew that his doom was near upon him.
-
- Just then Annie gave a piercing scream, and Sam Redfern got up,
- seizing his revolver. 'Who are you?' he cried, as a man entered.
-
- 'I am Jim Carlton, the celebrated detective,' said the new
- arrival.
-
- Sam Redfern's revolver dropped from his nerveless fingers, but
- the next moment he had sprung upon the detective with the
- well-known activity of the mountain sheep, and Annie shrieked,
- for she had grown to love the rough Bushranger.
-
- (To be continued at the end of the paper if there is room.)
-
- ------------
- SCHOLASTIC
-
- A new slate is horrid till it is washed in milk. I like the
- green spots on them to draw patterns round. I know a good way to
- make a slate-pencil squeak, but I won't put it in because I don't
- want to make it common.--SUB-EDITOR.
-
- Peppermint is a great help with arithmetic. The boy who was
- second in the Oxford Local always did it. He gave me two. The
- examiner said to him, 'Are you eating peppermints?' And he said,
- 'No, Sir.'
-
- He told me afterwards it was quite true, because he was only
- sucking one. I'm glad I wasn't asked. I should never have
- thought of that, and I could have had to say 'Yes.'--OSWALD.
-
- ------------
- THE WRECK OF THE 'MALABAR'
-
- By Noel
-
- (Author of 'A Dream of Ancient Ancestors.') He isn't really--but
- he put it in to make it seem more real.
-
- Hark! what is that noise of rolling
- Waves and thunder in the air?
- 'Tis the death-knell of the sailors
- And officers and passengers of the good ship Malabar.
-
- It was a fair and lovely noon
- When the good ship put out of port
- And people said 'ah little we think
- How soon she will be the elements' sport.'
-
- She was indeed a lovely sight
- Upon the billows with sails spread.
- But the captain folded his gloomy arms,
- Ah--if she had been a life-boat instead!
-
- See the captain stern yet gloomy
- Flings his son upon a rock,
- Hoping that there his darling boy
- May escape the wreck.
-
- Alas in vain the loud winds roared
- And nobody was saved.
- That was the wreck of the Malabar,
- Then let us toll for the brave.
- NOEL.
-
- ------------
- GARDENING NOTES
-
- It is useless to plant cherry-stones in the hope of eating the
- fruit, because they don't!
-
- Alice won't lend her gardening tools again, because the last time
- Noel left them out in the rain, and I don't like it. He said he
- didn't.
-
- ------------
- SEEDS AND BULBS
-
- These are useful to play at shop with, until you are ready. Not
- at dinner-parties, for they will not grow unless uncooked.
- Potatoes are not grown with seed, but with chopped-up potatoes.
- Apple trees are grown from twigs, which is less wasteful.
-
- Oak trees come from acorns. Every one knows this. When Noel
- says he could grow one from a peach stone wrapped up in oak
- leaves, he shows that he knows nothing about gardening but
- marigolds, and when I passed by his garden I thought they seemed
- just like weeds now the flowers have been picked.
-
- A boy once dared me to eat a bulb.
-
- Dogs are very industrious and fond of gardening. Pincher is
- always planting bones, but they never grow up. There couldn't be
- a bone tree. I think this is what makes him bark so unhappily at
- night. He has never tried planting dog-biscuit, but he is fonder
- of bones, and perhaps he wants to be quite sure about them first.
-
- ------------
- SAM REDFERN, OR THE BUSHRANGER'S BURIAL
-
- By Dicky
-
- CHAPTER IV AND LAST
-
- This would have been a jolly good story if they had let me finish
- it at the beginning of the paper as I wanted to. But now I have
- forgotten how I meant it to end, and I have lost my book about
- Red Indians, and all my Boys of England have been sneaked. The
- girls say 'Good riddance!' so I expect they did it. They want me
- just to put in which Annie married, but I shan't, so they will
- never know.
-
- We have now put everything we can think of into the paper. It
- takes a lot of thinking about. I don't know how grown-ups manage
- to write all they do. It must make their heads ache, especially
- lesson books.
-
- Albert-next-door only wrote one chapter of the serial story, but
- he could have done some more if he had wanted to. He could not
- write out any of the things because he cannot spell. He says he
- can, but it takes him such a long time he might just as well not
- be able. There are one or two things more. I am sick of it, but
- Dora says she will write them in.
-
- LEGAL ANSWER WANTED. A quantity of excellent string is offered
- if you know whether there really is a law passed about not buying
- gunpowder under thirteen.--DICKY.
-
- The price of this paper is one shilling each, and sixpence extra
- for the picture of the Malabar going down with all hands. If we
- sell one hundred copies we will write another paper.
-
- * * *
-
- And so we would have done, but we never did. Albert-next-door's
- uncle gave us two shillings, that was all. You can't restore
- fallen fortunes with two shillings!
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 9
- THE G. B.
-
- Being editors is not the best way to wealth. We all feel this
- now, and highwaymen are not respected any more like they used to
- be.
-
- I am sure we had tried our best to restore our fallen fortunes.
- We felt their fall very much, because we knew the Bastables had
- been rich once. Dora and Oswald can remember when Father was
- always bringing nice things home from London, and there used to
- be turkeys and geese and wine and cigars come by the carrier at
- Christmas-time, and boxes of candied fruit and French plums in
- ornamental boxes with silk and velvet and gilding on them. They
- were called prunes, but the prunes you buy at the grocer's are
- quite different. But now there is seldom anything nice brought
- from London, and the turkey and the prune people have forgotten
- Father's address.
-
- 'How CAN we restore those beastly fallen fortunes?' said Oswald.
- 'We've tried digging and writing and princesses and being
- editors.'
-
- 'And being bandits,' said H. O.
-
- 'When did you try that?' asked Dora quickly. 'You know I told
- you it was wrong.'
-
- 'It wasn't wrong the way we did it,' said Alice, quicker still,
- before Oswald could say, 'Who asked you to tell us anything about
- it?' which would have been rude, and he is glad he didn't. 'We
- only caught Albert-next-door.'
-
- 'Oh, Albert-next-door!' said Dora contemptuously, and I felt more
- comfortable; for even after I didn't say, 'Who asked you, and
- cetera,' I was afraid Dora was going to come the good elder
- sister over us. She does that a jolly sight too often.
-
- Dicky looked up from the paper he was reading and said, 'This
- sounds likely,' and he read out--
-
- 'L100 secures partnership in lucrative business for sale of
- useful patent. L10 weekly. No personal attendance necessary.
- Jobbins, 300, Old Street Road.'
-
- 'I wish we could secure that partnership,' said Oswald. He is
- twelve, and a very thoughtful boy for his age.
-
- Alice looked up from her painting. She was trying to paint a
- fairy queen's frock with green bice, and it wouldn't rub. There
- is something funny about green bice. It never will rub off; no
- matter how expensive your paintbox is--and even boiling water is
- very little use.
-
- She said, 'Bother the bice! And, Oswald, it's no use thinking
- about that. Where are we to get a hundred pounds?'
-
- 'Ten pounds a week is five pounds to us,' Oswald went on--he had
- done the sum in his head while Alice was talking--'because
- partnership means halves. It would be A1.'
-
- Noel sat sucking his pencil--he had been writing poetry as usual.
- I saw the first two lines--
-
- I wonder why Green Bice
- Is never very nice.
-
- Suddenly he said, 'I wish a fairy would come down the chimney and
- drop a jewel on the table--a jewel worth just a hundred pounds.'
-
- 'She might as well give you the hundred pounds while she was
- about it,' said Dora.
-
- 'Or while she was about it she might as well give us five pounds
- a week,' said Alice.
-
- 'Or fifty,' said I.
-
- 'Or five hundred,' said Dicky.
-
- I saw H. O. open his mouth, and I knew he was going to say, 'Or
- five thousand,' so I said--
-
- 'Well, she won't give us fivepence, but if you'd only do as I am
- always saying, and rescue a wealthy old gentleman from deadly
- peril he would give us a pot of money, and we could have the
- partnership and five pounds a week. Five pounds a week would buy
- a great many things.'
-
- Then Dicky said, 'Why shouldn't we borrow it?' So we said, 'Who
- from?' and then he read this out of the paper--
-
- MONEY PRIVATELY WITHOUT FEES
- THE BOND STREET BANK
- Manager, Z. Rosenbaum.
-
- Advances cash from L20 to L10,000 on ladies' or gentlemen's note
- of hand alone, without security. No fees. No inquiries.
- Absolute privacy guaranteed.
-
-
- 'What does it all mean?' asked H. O.
-
- 'It means that there is a kind gentleman who has a lot of money,
- and he doesn't know enough poor people to help, so he puts it in
- the paper that he will help them, by lending them his
- money--that's it, isn't it, Dicky?'
-
- Dora explained this and Dicky said, 'Yes.' And H. O. said he was
- a Generous Benefactor, like in Miss Edgeworth. Then Noel wanted
- to know what a note of hand was, and Dicky knew that, because he
- had read it in a book, and it was just a letter saying you will
- pay the money when you can, and signed with your name.
-
- 'No inquiries!' said Alice. 'Oh--Dicky--do you think he would?'
-
- 'Yes, I think so,' said Dicky. 'I wonder Father doesn't go to
- this kind gentleman. I've seen his name before on a circular in
- Father's study.'
-
- 'Perhaps he has.' said Dora.
-
- But the rest of us were sure he hadn't, because, of course, if he
- had, there would have been more money to buy nice things. just
- then Pincher jumped up and knocked over the painting-water. He
- is a very careless dog. I wonder why painting-water is always
- such an ugly colour? Dora ran for a duster to wipe it up, and H.
- O. dropped drops of the water on his hands and said he had got
- the plague. So we played at the plague for a bit, and I was an
- Arab physician with a bath-towel turban, and cured the plague
- with magic acid-drops. After that it was time for dinner, and
- after dinner we talked it all over and settled that we would go
- and see the Generous Benefactor the very next day. But we
- thought perhaps the G. B.--it is short for Generous
- Benefactor--would not like it if there were so many of us. I
- have often noticed that it is the worst of our being six--people
- think six a great many, when it's children. That sentence looks
- wrong somehow. I mean they don't mind six pairs of boots, or six
- pounds of apples, or six oranges, especially in equations, but
- they seem to think you ought not to have five brothers and
- sisters. Of course Dicky was to go, because it was his idea.
- Dora had to go to Blackheath to see an old lady, a friend of
- Father's, so she couldn't go. Alice said SHE ought to go,
- because it said, 'Ladies AND gentlemen,' and perhaps the G. B.
- wouldn't let us have the money unless there were both kinds of
- us.
-
- H. O. said Alice wasn't a lady; and she said HE wasn't going,
- anyway. Then he called her a disagreeable cat, and she began to
- cry.
-
- But Oswald always tries to make up quarrels, so he said--
-
- 'You're little sillies, both of you!'
-
- And Dora said, 'Don't cry, Alice; he only meant you weren't a
- grown-up lady.'
-
- Then H. O. said, 'What else did you think I meant, Disagreeable?'
-
- So Dicky said, 'Don't be disagreeable yourself, H. O. Let her
- alone and say you're sorry, or I'll jolly well make you!'
-
- So H. O. said he was sorry. Then Alice kissed him and said she
- was sorry too; and after that H. O. gave her a hug, and said,
- 'Now I'm REALLY AND TRULY sorry,' So it was all right.
-
- Noel went the last time any of us went to London, so he was out
- of it, and Dora said she would take him to Blackheath if we'd
- take H. O. So as there'd been a little disagreeableness we
- thought it was better to take him, and we did. At first we
- thought we'd tear our oldest things a bit more, and put some
- patches of different colours on them, to show the G. B. how much
- we wanted money. But Dora said that would be a sort of cheating,
- pretending we were poorer than we are. And Dora is right
- sometimes, though she is our elder sister. Then we thought we'd
- better wear our best things, so that the G. B. might see we
- weren't so very poor that he couldn't trust us to pay his money
- back when we had it. But Dora said that would be wrong too. So
- it came to our being quite honest, as Dora said, and going just
- as we were, without even washing our faces and hands; but when I
- looked at H. O. in the train I wished we had not been quite so
- particularly honest.
-
- Every one who reads this knows what it is like to go in the
- train, so I shall not tell about it--though it was rather fun,
- especially the part where the guard came for the tickets at
- Waterloo, and H. O. was under the seat and pretended to be a dog
- without a ticket. We went to Charing Cross, and we just went
- round to Whitehall to see the soldiers and then by St James's for
- the same reason--and when we'd looked in the shops a bit we got
- to Brook Street, Bond Street. It was a brass plate on a door
- next to a shop--a very grand place, where they sold bonnets and
- hats--all very bright and smart, and no tickets on them to tell
- you the price. We rang a bell and a boy opened the door and we
- asked for Mr Rosenbaum. The boy was not polite; he did not ask
- us in. So then Dicky gave him his visiting card; it was one of
- Father's really, but the name is the same, Mr Richard Bastable,
- and we others wrote our names underneath. I happened to have a
- piece of pink chalk in my pocket and we wrote them with that.
-
- Then the boy shut the door in our faces and we waited on the
- step. But presently he came down and asked our business. So
- Dicky said--
-
- 'Money advanced, young shaver! and don't be all day about it!'
-
- And then he made us wait again, till I was quite stiff in my
- legs, but Alice liked it because of looking at the hats and
- bonnets, and at last the door opened, and the boy said--
-
- 'Mr Rosenbaum will see you,' so we wiped our feet on the mat,
- which said so, and we went up stairs with soft carpets and into a
- room. It was a beautiful room. I wished then we had put on our
- best things, or at least washed a little. But it was too late
- now.
-
- The room had velvet curtains and a soft, soft carpet, and it was
- full of the most splendid things. Black and gold cabinets, and
- china, and statues, and pictures. There was a picture of a
- cabbage and a pheasant and a dead hare that was just like life,
- and I would have given worlds to have it for my own. The fur was
- so natural I should never have been tired of looking at it; but
- Alice liked the one of the girl with the broken jug best. Then
- besides the pictures there were clocks and candlesticks and
- vases, and gilt looking-glasses, and boxes of cigars and scent
- and things littered all over the chairs and tables. It was a
- wonderful place, and in the middle of all the splendour was a
- little old gentleman with a very long black coat and a very long
- white beard and a hookey nose--like a falcon. And he put on a
- pair of gold spectacles and looked at us as if he knew exactly
- how much our clothes were worth.
-
- And then, while we elder ones were thinking how to begin, for we
- had all said 'Good morning' as we came in, of course, H. O. began
- before we could stop him. He said:
-
- 'Are you the G. B.?'
-
- 'The WHAT?' said the little old gentleman.
-
- 'The G. B.,' said H. O., and I winked at him to shut up, but he
- didn't see me, and the G. B. did. He waved his hand at ME to
- shut up, so I had to, and H. O. went on--'It stands for Generous
- Benefactor.'
-
- The old gentleman frowned. Then he said, 'Your Father sent you
- here, I suppose?'
-
- 'No he didn't,' said Dicky. 'Why did you think so?'
-
- The old gentleman held out the card, and I explained that we took
- that because Father's name happens to be the same as Dicky's.
-
- 'Doesn't he know you've come?'
-
- 'No,' said Alice, 'we shan't tell him till we've got the
- partnership, because his own business worries him a good deal and
- we don't want to bother him with ours till it's settled, and then
- we shall give him half our share.'
-
- The old gentleman took off his spectacles and rumpled his hair
- with his hands, then he said, 'Then what DID you come for?'
-
- 'We saw your advertisement,' Dicky said, 'and we want a hundred
- pounds on our note of hand, and my sister came so that there
- should be both kinds of us; and we want it to buy a partnership
- with in the lucrative business for sale of useful patent. No
- personal attendance necessary.'
-
- 'I don't think I quite follow you,' said the G. B. 'But one thing
- I should like settled before entering more fully into the matter:
- why did you call me Generous Benefactor?'
-
- 'Well, you see,' said Alice, smiling at him to show she wasn't
- frightened, though I know really she was, awfully, 'we thought it
- was so VERY kind of you to try to find out the poor people who
- want money and to help them and lend them your money.'
-
- 'Hum!' said the G. B. 'Sit down.'
-
- He cleared the clocks and vases and candlesticks off some of the
- chairs, and we sat down. The chairs were velvety, with gilt
- legs. It was like a king's palace.
-
- 'Now,' he said, 'you ought to be at school, instead of thinking
- about money. Why aren't you?'
-
- We told him that we should go to school again when Father could
- manage it, but meantime we wanted to do something to restore the
- fallen fortunes of the House of Bastable. And we said we thought
- the lucrative patent would be a very good thing. He asked a lot
- of questions, and we told him everything we didn't think Father
- would mind our telling, and at last he said--
-
- 'You wish to borrow money. When will you repay it?'
-
- 'As soon as we've got it, of course,' Dicky said.
-
- Then the G. B. said to Oswald, 'You seem the eldest,' but I
- explained to him that it was Dicky's idea, so my being eldest
- didn't matter. Then he said to Dicky--'You are a minor, I
- presume?'
-
- Dicky said he wasn't yet, but he had thought of being a mining
- engineer some day, and going to Klondike.
-
- 'Minor, not miner,' said the G. B. 'I mean you're not of age?'
-
- 'I shall be in ten years, though,' said Dicky. 'Then you might
- repudiate the loan,' said the G. B., and Dicky said 'What?'
-
- Of course he ought to have said 'I beg your pardon. I didn't
- quite catch what you said'--that is what Oswald would have said.
- It is more polite than 'What.'
-
- 'Repudiate the loan,' the G. B repeated. 'I mean you might say
- you would not pay me back the money, and the law could not compel
- you to do so.'
-
- 'Oh, well, if you think we're such sneaks,' said Dicky, and he
- got up off his chair. But the G. B. said, 'Sit down, sit down; I
- was only joking.'
-
- Then he talked some more, and at last he said--'I don't advise
- you to enter into that partnership. It's a swindle. Many
- advertisements are. And I have not a hundred pounds by me to-day
- to lend you. But I will lend you a pound, and you can spend it
- as you like. And when you are twenty-one you shall pay me back.'
-
- 'I shall pay you back long before that,' said Dicky. 'Thanks,
- awfully! And what about the note of hand?'
-
- 'Oh,' said the G. B., 'I'll trust to your honour. Between
- gentlemen, you know--and ladies'--he made a beautiful bow to
- Alice--'a word is as good as a bond.'
-
- Then he took out a sovereign, and held it in his hand while he
- talked to us. He gave us a lot of good advice about not going
- into business too young, and about doing our lessons--just
- swatting a bit, on our own hook, so as not to be put in a low
- form when we went back to school. And all the time he was
- stroking the sovereign and looking at it as if he thought it very
- beautiful. And so it was, for it was a new one. Then at last he
- held it out to Dicky, and when Dicky put out his hand for it the
- G. B. suddenly put the sovereign back in his pocket.
-
- 'No,' he said, 'I won't give you the sovereign. I'll give you
- fifteen shillings, and this nice bottle of scent. It's worth far
- more than the five shillings I'm charging you for it. And, when
- you can, you shall pay me back the pound, and sixty per cent
- interest--sixty per cent, sixty per cent.'
-
- 'What's that?' said H. O.
-
- The G. B. said he'd tell us that when we paid back the sovereign,
- but sixty per cent was nothing to be afraid of. He gave Dicky
- the money. And the boy was made to call a cab, and the G. B. put
- us in and shook hands with us all, and asked Alice to give him a
- kiss, so she did, and H. O. would do it too, though his face was
- dirtier than ever. The G. B. paid the cabman and told him what
- station to go to, and so we went home.
-
- That evening Father had a letter by the seven-o'clock post. And
- when he had read it he came up into the nursery. He did not look
- quite so unhappy as usual, but he looked grave.
-
- 'You've been to Mr Rosenbaum's,' he said.
-
- So we told him all about it. It took a long time, and Father sat
- in the armchair. It was jolly. He doesn't often come and talk
- to us now. He has to spend all his time thinking about his
- business. And when we'd told him all about it he said--
-
- 'You haven't done any harm this time, children; rather good than
- harm, indeed. Mr Rosenbaum has written me a very kind letter.'
-
- 'Is he a friend of yours, Father?' Oswald asked. 'He is an
- acquaintance,' said my father, frowning a little, 'we have done
- some business together. And this letter--' he stopped and then
- said: 'No; you didn't do any harm to-day; but I want you for the
- future not to do anything so serious as to try to buy a
- partnership without consulting me, that's all. I don't want to
- interfere with your plays and pleasures; but you will consult me
- about business matters, won't you?'
-
- Of course we said we should be delighted, but then Alice, who was
- sitting on his knee, said, 'We didn't like to bother you.'
-
- Father said, 'I haven't much time to be with you, for my business
- takes most of my time. It is an anxious business--but I can't
- bear to think of your being left all alone like this.'
-
- He looked so sad we all said we liked being alone. And then he
- looked sadder than ever.
-
- Then Alice said, 'We don't mean that exactly, Father. It is
- rather lonely sometimes, since Mother died.'
-
- Then we were all quiet a little while. Father stayed with us
- till we went to bed, and when he said good night he looked quite
- cheerful. So we told him so, and he said--
-
- 'Well, the fact is, that letter took a weight off my mind.' I
- can't think what he meant--but I am sure the G. B. would be
- pleased if he could know he had taken a weight off somebody's
- mind. He is that sort of man, I think.
-
- We gave the scent to Dora. It is not quite such good scent as we
- thought it would be, but we had fifteen shillings--and they were
- all good, so is the G. B.
-
- And until those fifteen shillings were spent we felt almost as
- jolly as though our fortunes had been properly restored. You do
- not notice your general fortune so much, as long as you have
- money in your pocket. This is why so many children with regular
- pocket-money have never felt it their duty to seek for treasure.
- So, perhaps, our not having pocket-money was a blessing in
- disguise. But the disguise was quite impenetrable, like the
- villains' in the books; and it seemed still more so when the
- fifteen shillings were all spent. Then at last the others agreed
- to let Oswald try his way of seeking for treasure, but they were
- not at all keen about it, and many a boy less firm than Oswald
- would have chucked the whole thing. But Oswald knew that a hero
- must rely on himself alone. So he stuck to it, and presently the
- others saw their duty, and backed him up.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 10
- LORD TOTTENHAM
-
- Oswald is a boy of firm and unswerving character, and he had
- never wavered from his first idea. He felt quite certain that
- the books were right, and that the best way to restore fallen
- fortunes was to rescue an old gentleman in distress. Then he
- brings you up as his own son: but if you preferred to go on
- being your own father's son I expect the old gentleman would make
- it up to you some other way. In the books the least thing does
- it--you put up the railway carriage window--or you pick up his
- purse when he drops it--or you say a hymn when he suddenly asks
- you to, and then your fortune is made.
-
- The others, as I said, were very slack about it, and did not seem
- to care much about trying the rescue. They said there wasn't any
- deadly peril, and we should have to make one before we could
- rescue the old gentleman from it, but Oswald didn't see that that
- mattered. However, he thought he would try some of the easier
- ways first, by himself.
-
- So he waited about the station, pulling up railway carriage
- windows for old gentlemen who looked likely--but nothing
- happened, and at last the porters said he was a nuisance. So
- that was no go. No one ever asked him to say a hymn, though he
- had learned a nice short one, beginning 'New every morning'--and
- when an old gentleman did drop a two-shilling piece just by
- Ellis's the hairdresser's, and Oswald picked it up, and was just
- thinking what he should say when he returned it, the old
- gentleman caught him by the collar and called him a young thief.
- It would have been very unpleasant for Oswald if he hadn't
- happened to be a very brave boy, and knew the policeman on that
- beat very well indeed. So the policeman backed him up, and the
- old gentleman said he was sorry, and offered Oswald sixpence.
- Oswald refused it with polite disdain, and nothing more happened
- at all.
-
- When Oswald had tried by himself and it had not come off, he said
- to the others, 'We're wasting our time, not trying to rescue the
- old gentleman in deadly peril. Come--buck up! Do let's do
- something!'
-
- It was dinner-time, and Pincher was going round getting the bits
- off the plates. There were plenty because it was cold-mutton
- day. And Alice said--
-
- 'It's only fair to try Oswald's way--he has tried all the things
- the others thought of. Why couldn't we rescue Lord Tottenham?'
-
- Lord Tottenham is the old gentleman who walks over the Heath
- every day in a paper collar at three o'clock--and when he gets
- halfway, if there is no one about, he changes his collar and
- throws the dirty one into the furze-bushes.
-
- Dicky said, 'Lord Tottenham's all right--but where's the deadly
- peril?'
-
- And we couldn't think of any. There are no highwaymen on
- Blackheath now, I am sorry to say. And though Oswald said half
- of us could be highwaymen and the other half rescue party, Dora
- kept on saying it would be wrong to be a highwayman--and so we
- had to give that up.
-
- Then Alice said, 'What about Pincher?'
-
- And we all saw at once that it could be done.
-
- Pincher is very well bred, and he does know one or two things,
- though we never could teach him to beg. But if you tell him to
- hold on--he will do it, even if you only say 'Seize him!' in a
- whisper.
-
- So we arranged it all. Dora said she wouldn't play; she said she
- thought it was wrong, and she knew it was silly--so we left her
- out, and she went and sat in the dining-room with a goody-book,
- so as to be able to say she didn't have anything to do with it,
- if we got into a row over it.
-
- Alice and H. O. were to hide in the furze-bushes just by where
- Lord Tottenham changes his collar, and they were to whisper,
- 'Seize him!' to Pincher; and then when Pincher had seized Lord
- Tottenham we were to go and rescue him from his deadly peril.
- And he would say, 'How can I reward you, my noble young
- preservers?' and it would be all right.
-
- So we went up to the Heath. We were afraid of being late.
- Oswald told the others what Procrastination was--so they got to
- the furze-bushes a little after two o'clock, and it was rather
- cold. Alice and H. O. and Pincher hid, but Pincher did not like
- it any more than they did, and as we three walked up and down we
- heard him whining. And Alice kept saying, 'I AM so cold! Isn't
- he coming yet?' And H. O. wanted to come out and jump about to
- warm himself. But we told him he must learn to be a Spartan boy,
- and that he ought to be very thankful he hadn't got a beastly fox
- eating his inside all the time. H. O. is our little brother, and
- we are not going to let it be our fault if he grows up a milksop.
- Besides, it was not really cold. It was his knees--he wears
- socks. So they stayed where they were. And at last, when even
- the other three who were walking about were beginning to feel
- rather chilly, we saw Lord Tottenham's big black cloak coming
- along, flapping in the wind like a great bird. So we said to
- Alice--
-
- 'Hist! he approaches. You'll know when to set Pincher on by
- hearing Lord Tottenham talking to himself--he always does while
- he is taking off his collar.'
-
- Then we three walked slowly away whistling to show we were not
- thinking of anything. Our lips were rather cold, but we managed
- to do it.
-
- Lord Tottenham came striding along, talking to himself. People
- call him the mad Protectionist. I don't know what it means--but
- I don't think people ought to call a Lord such names.
-
- As he passed us he said, 'Ruin of the country, sir! Fatal error,
- fatal error!' And then we looked back and saw he was getting
- quite near where Pincher was, and Alice and H. O. We walked
- on--so that he shouldn't think we were looking--and in a minute
- we heard Pincher's bark, and then nothing for a bit; and then we
- looked round, and sure enough good old Pincher had got Lord
- Tottenham by the trouser leg and was holding on like billy-ho, so
- we started to run.
-
- Lord Tottenham had got his collar half off--it was sticking out
- sideways under his ear--and he was shouting, 'Help, help,
- murder!' exactly as if some one had explained to him beforehand
- what he was to do. Pincher was growling and snarling and holding
- on. When we got to him I stopped and said--
-
- 'Dicky, we must rescue this good old man.'
-
- Lord Tottenham roared in his fury, 'Good old man be--' something
- or othered. 'Call the dog off.'
-
- So Oswald said, 'It is a dangerous task--but who would hesitate
- to do an act of true bravery?'
-
- And all the while Pincher was worrying and snarling, and Lord
- Tottenham shouting to us to get the dog away. He was dancing
- about in the road with Pincher hanging on like grim death; and
- his collar flapping about, where it was undone.
-
- Then Noel said, 'Haste, ere yet it be too late.' So I said to
- Lord Tottenham--
-
- 'Stand still, aged sir, and I will endeavour to alleviate your
- distress.'
-
- He stood still, and I stooped down and caught hold of Pincher and
- whispered, 'Drop it, sir; drop it!'
-
- So then Pincher dropped it, and Lord Tottenham fastened his
- collar again--he never does change it if there's any one
- looking--and he said--
-
- 'I'm much obliged, I'm sure. Nasty vicious brute! Here's
- something to drink my health.'
-
- But Dicky explained that we are teetotallers, and do not drink
- people's healths. So Lord Tottenham said, 'Well, I'm much
- obliged any way. And now I come to look at you--of course,
- you're not young ruffians, but gentlemen's sons, eh? Still, you
- won't be above taking a tip from an old boy--I wasn't when I was
- your age,' and he pulled out half a sovereign.
-
- It was very silly; but now we'd done it I felt it would be
- beastly mean to take the old boy's chink after putting him in
- such a funk. He didn't say anything about bringing us up as his
- own sons--so I didn't know what to do. I let Pincher go, and was
- just going to say he was very welcome, and we'd rather not have
- the money, which seemed the best way out of it, when that beastly
- dog spoiled the whole show. Directly I let him go he began to
- jump about at us and bark for joy, and try to lick our faces. He
- was so proud of what he'd done. Lord Tottenham opened his eyes
- and he just said, 'The dog seems to know you.'
-
- And then Oswald saw it was all up, and he said, 'Good morning,'
- and tried to get away. But Lord Tottenham said--
-
- 'Not so fast!' And he caught Noel by the collar. Noel gave a
- howl, and Alice ran out from the bushes. Noel is her favourite.
- I'm sure I don't know why. Lord Tottenham looked at her, and he
- said--
-
- 'So there are more of you!' And then H. O. came out.
-
- 'Do you complete the party?' Lord Tottenham asked him. And H. O.
- said there were only five of us this time.
-
- Lord Tottenham turned sharp off and began to walk away, holding
- Noel by the collar. We caught up with him, and asked him where
- he was going, and he said, 'To the Police Station.' So then I
- said quite politely, 'Well, don't take Noel; he's not strong, and
- he easily gets upset. Besides, it wasn't his doing. If you want
- to take any one take me--it was my very own idea.'
-
- Dicky behaved very well. He said, 'If you take Oswald I'll go
- too, but don't take Noel; he's such a delicate little chap.'
-
- Lord Tottenham stopped, and he said, 'You should have thought of
- that before.' Noel was howling all the time, and his face was
- very white, and Alice said--
-
- 'Oh, do let Noel go, dear, good, kind Lord Tottenham; he'll faint
- if you don't, I know he will, he does sometimes. Oh, I wish we'd
- never done it! Dora said it was wrong.'
-
- 'Dora displayed considerable common sense,' said Lord Tottenham,
- and he let Noel go. And Alice put her arm round Noel and tried
- to cheer him up, but he was all trembly, and as white as paper.
-
- Then Lord Tottenham said--
-
- 'Will you give me your word of honour not to try to escape?'
-
- So we said we would.
-
- 'Then follow me,' he said, and led the way to a bench. We all
- followed, and Pincher too, with his tail between his legs--he
- knew something was wrong. Then Lord Tottenham sat down, and he
- made Oswald and Dicky and H. O. stand in front of him, but he let
- Alice and Noel sit down. And he said--
-
- 'You set your dog on me, and you tried to make me believe you
- were saving me from it. And you would have taken my
- half-sovereign. Such conduct is most--No--you shall tell me what
- it is, sir, and speak the truth.'
-
- So I had to say it was most ungentlemanly, but I said I hadn't
- been going to take the half-sovereign.
-
- 'Then what did you do it for?' he asked. 'The truth, mind.'
-
- So I said, 'I see now it was very silly, and Dora said it was
- wrong, but it didn't seem so till we did it. We wanted to
- restore the fallen fortunes of our house, and in the books if you
- rescue an old gentleman from deadly peril, he brings you up as
- his own son--or if you prefer to be your father's son, he starts
- you in business, so that you end in wealthy affluence; and there
- wasn't any deadly peril, so we made Pincher into one--and so--' I
- was so ashamed I couldn't go on, for it did seem an awfully mean
- thing. Lord Tottenham said--
-
- 'A very nice way to make your fortune--by deceit and trickery. I
- have a horror of dogs. If I'd been a weak man the shock might
- have killed me. What do you think of yourselves, eh?'
-
- We were all crying except Oswald, and the others say he was; and
- Lord Tottenham went on--'Well, well, I see you're sorry. Let
- this be a lesson to you; and we'll say no more about it. I'm an
- old man now, but I was young once.'
-
- Then Alice slid along the bench close to him, and put her hand on
- his arm: her fingers were pink through the holes in her woolly
- gloves, and said, 'I think you're very good to forgive us, and we
- are really very, very sorry. But we wanted to be like the
- children in the books--only we never have the chances they have.
- Everything they do turns out all right. But we ARE sorry, very,
- very. And I know Oswald wasn't going to take the half-sovereign.
- Directly you said that about a tip from an old boy I began to
- feel bad inside, and I whispered to H. O. that I wished we
- hadn't.'
-
- Then Lord Tottenham stood up, and he looked like the Death of
- Nelson, for he is clean shaved and it is a good face, and he
- said--
-
- 'Always remember never to do a dishonourable thing, for money or
- for anything else in the world.'
-
- And we promised we would remember. Then he took off his hat, and
- we took off ours, and he went away, and we went home. I never
- felt so cheap in all my life! Dora said, 'I told you so,' but we
- didn't mind even that so much, though it was indeed hard to bear.
- It was what Lord Tottenham had said about ungentlemanly. We
- didn't go on to the Heath for a week after that; but at last we
- all went, and we waited for him by the bench. When he came along
- Alice said, 'Please, Lord Tottenham, we have not been on the
- Heath for a week, to be a punishment because you let us off. And
- we have brought you a present each if you will take them to show
- you are willing to make it up.'
-
- He sat down on the bench, and we gave him our presents. Oswald
- gave him a sixpenny compass--he bought it with my own money on
- purpose to give him. Oswald always buys useful presents. The
- needle would not move after I'd had it a day or two, but Lord
- Tottenham used to be an admiral, so he will be able to make that
- go all right. Alice had made him a shaving-case, with a rose
- worked on it. And H. O. gave him his knife--the same one he once
- cut all the buttons off his best suit with. Dicky gave him his
- prize, Naval Heroes, because it was the best thing he had, and
- Noel gave him a piece of poetry he had made himself--
-
- When sin and shame bow down the brow
- Then people feel just like we do now.
- We are so sorry with grief and pain
- We never will be so ungentlemanly again.
-
- Lord Tottenham seemed very pleased. He thanked us, and talked to
- us for a bit, and when he said good-bye he said--
-
- 'All's fair weather now, mates,' and shook hands.
-
- And whenever we meet him he nods to us, and if the girls are with
- us he takes off his hat, so he can't really be going on thinking
- us ungentlemanly now.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 11
- CASTILIAN AMOROSO
-
- One day when we suddenly found that we had half a crown we
- decided that we really ought to try Dicky's way of restoring our
- fallen fortunes while yet the deed was in our power. Because it
- might easily have happened to us never to have half a crown
- again. So we decided to dally no longer with being journalists
- and bandits and things like them, but to send for sample and
- instructions how to earn two pounds a week each in our spare
- time. We had seen the advertisement in the paper, and we had
- always wanted to do it, but we had never had the money to spare
- before, somehow. The advertisement says: 'Any lady or gentleman
- can easily earn two pounds a week in their spare time. Sample
- and instructions, two shillings. Packed free from observation.'
- A good deal of the half-crown was Dora's. It came from her
- godmother; but she said she would not mind letting Dicky have it
- if he would pay her back before Christmas, and if we were sure it
- was right to try to make our fortune that way. Of course that
- was quite easy, because out of two pounds a week in your spare
- time you can easily pay all your debts, and have almost as much
- left as you began with; and as to the right we told her to dry
- up.
-
- Dicky had always thought that this was really the best way to
- restore our fallen fortunes, and we were glad that now he had a
- chance of trying because of course we wanted the two pounds a
- week each, and besides, we were rather tired of Dicky's always
- saying, when our ways didn't turn out well, 'Why don't you try
- the sample and instructions about our spare time?'
-
- When we found out about our half-crown we got the paper. Noel
- was playing admirals in it, but he had made the cocked hat
- without tearing the paper, and we found the advertisement, and it
- said just the same as ever. So we got a two-shilling postal
- order and a stamp, and what was left of the money it was agreed
- we would spend in ginger-beer to drink success to trade.
-
- We got some nice paper out of Father's study, and Dicky wrote the
- letter, and we put in the money and put on the stamp, and made H.
- O. post it. Then we drank the ginger-beer, and then we waited
- for the sample and instructions. It seemed a long time coming,
- and the postman got quite tired of us running out and stopping
- him in the street to ask if it had come.
-
- But on the third morning it came. It was quite a large parcel,
- and it was packed, as the advertisement said it would be, 'free
- from observation.' That means it was in a box; and inside the
- box was some stiff browny cardboard, crinkled like the galvanized
- iron on the tops of chicken-houses, and inside that was a lot of
- paper, some of it printed and some scrappy, and in the very
- middle of it all a bottle, not very large, and black, and sealed
- on the top of the cork with yellow sealing-wax.
-
- We looked at it as it lay on the nursery table, and while all the
- others grabbed at the papers to see what the printing said,
- Oswald went to look for the corkscrew, so as to see what was
- inside the bottle. He found the corkscrew in the dresser
- drawer--it always gets there, though it is supposed to be in the
- sideboard drawer in the dining-room--and when he got back the
- others had read most of the printed papers.
-
- 'I don't think it's much good, and I don't think it's quite nice
- to sell wine,' Dora said 'and besides, it's not easy to suddenly
- begin to sell things when you aren't used to it.'
-
- 'I don't know,' said Alice; 'I believe I could.' They all looked
- rather down in the mouth, though, and Oswald asked how you were
- to make your two pounds a week.
-
- 'Why, you've got to get people to taste that stuff in the bottle.
- It's sherry--Castilian Amoroso its name is--and then you get them
- to buy it, and then you write to the people and tell them the
- other people want the wine, and then for every dozen you sell you
- get two shillings from the wine people, so if you sell twenty
- dozen a week you get your two pounds. I don't think we shall
- sell as much as that,' said Dicky.
-
- 'We might not the first week,' Alice said, 'but when people found
- out how nice it was, they would want more and more. And if we
- only got ten shillings a week it would be something to begin
- with, wouldn't it?'
-
- Oswald said he should jolly well think it would, and then Dicky
- took the cork out with the corkscrew. The cork broke a good
- deal, and some of the bits went into the bottle. Dora got the
- medicine glass that has the teaspoons and tablespoons marked on
- it, and we agreed to have a teaspoonful each, to see what it was
- like.
-
- 'No one must have more than that,' Dora said, 'however nice it
- is.'
-
- Dora behaved rather as if it were her bottle. I suppose it was,
- because she had lent the money for it.
-
- Then she measured out the teaspoonful, and she had first go,
- because of being the eldest. We asked at once what it was like,
- but Dora could not speak just then.
-
- Then she said, 'It's like the tonic Noel had in the spring; but
- perhaps sherry ought to be like that.'
-
- Then it was Oswald's turn. He thought it was very burny; but he
- said nothing. He wanted to see first what the others would say.
-
- Dicky said his was simply beastly, and Alice said Noel could
- taste next if he liked.
-
- Noel said it was the golden wine of the gods, but he had to put
- his handkerchief up to his mouth all the same, and I saw the face
- he made.
-
- Then H. O. had his, and he spat it out in the fire, which was
- very rude and nasty, and we told him so.
-
- Then it was Alice's turn. She said, 'Only half a teaspoonful for
- me, Dora. We mustn't use it all up.' And she tasted it and said
- nothing.
-
- Then Dicky said: 'Look here, I chuck this. I'm not going to
- hawk round such beastly stuff. Any one who likes can have the
- bottle. Quis?'
-
- And Alice got out 'Ego' before the rest of us. Then she said, 'I
- know what's the matter with it. It wants sugar.'
-
- And at once we all saw that that was all there was the matter
- with the stuff. So we got two lumps of sugar and crushed it on
- the floor with one of the big wooden bricks till it was powdery,
- and mixed it with some of the wine up to the tablespoon mark, and
- it was quite different, and not nearly so nasty.
-
- 'You see it's all right when you get used to it,' Dicky said. I
- think he was sorry he had said 'Quis?' in such a hurry.
-
- 'Of course,' Alice said, 'it's rather dusty. We must crush the
- sugar carefully in clean paper before we put it in the bottle.'
-
- Dora said she was afraid it would be cheating to make one bottle
- nicer than what people would get when they ordered a dozen
- bottles, but Alice said Dora always made a fuss about everything,
- and really it would be quite honest.
-
- 'You see,' she said, 'I shall just tell them, quite truthfully,
- what we have done to it, and when their dozens come they can do
- it for themselves.'
-
- So then we crushed eight more lumps, very cleanly and carefully
- between newspapers, and shook it up well in the bottle, and
- corked it up with a screw of paper, brown and not news, for fear
- of the poisonous printing ink getting wet and dripping down into
- the wine and killing people. We made Pincher have a taste, and
- he sneezed for ever so long, and after that he used to go under
- the sofa whenever we showed him the bottle.
-
- Then we asked Alice who she would try and sell it to. She said:
- 'I shall ask everybody who comes to the house. And while we are
- doing that, we can be thinking of outside people to take it to.
- We must be careful: there's not much more than half of it left,
- even counting the sugar.'
-
- We did not wish to tell Eliza--I don't know why. And she opened
- the door very quickly that day, so that the Taxes and a man who
- came to our house by mistake for next door got away before Alice
- had a chance to try them with the Castilian Amoroso. But about
- five Eliza slipped out for half an hour to see a friend who was
- making her a hat for Sunday, and while she was gone there was a
- knock. Alice went, and we looked over the banisters. When she
- opened the door, she said at once, 'Will you walk in, please?'
- The person at the door said, 'I called to see your Pa, miss. Is
- he at home?'
-
- Alice said again, 'Will you walk in, please?'
-
- Then the person--it sounded like a man--said, 'He is in, then?'
-
- But Alice only kept on saying, 'Will you walk in, please?' so at
- last the man did, rubbing his boots very loudly on the mat.
-
- Then Alice shut the front door, and we saw that it was the
- butcher, with an envelope in his hand. He was not dressed in
- blue, like when he is cutting up the sheep and things in the
- shop, and he wore knickerbockers. Alice says he came on a
- bicycle. She led the way into the dining-room, where the
- Castilian Amoroso bottle and the medicine glass were standing on
- the table all ready.
-
- The others stayed on the stairs, but Oswald crept down and looked
- through the door-crack.
-
- 'Please sit down,' said Alice quite calmly, though she told me
- afterwards I had no idea how silly she felt. And the butcher sat
- down. Then Alice stood quite still and said nothing, but she
- fiddled with the medicine glass and put the screw of brown paper
- straight in the Castilian bottle.
-
- 'Will you tell your Pa I'd like a word with him?' the butcher
- said, when he got tired of saying nothing.
-
- 'He'll be in very soon, I think,' Alice said.
-
- And then she stood still again and said nothing. It was
- beginning to look very idiotic of her, and H. O. laughed. I went
- back and cuffed him for it quite quietly, and I don't think the
- butcher heard.
-
- But Alice did, and it roused her from her stupor. She spoke
- suddenly, very fast indeed--so fast that I knew she had made up
- what she was going to say before. She had got most of it out of
- the circular.
-
- She said, 'I want to call your attention to a sample of sherry
- wine I have here. It is called Castilian something or other, and
- at the price it is unequalled for flavour and bouquet.'
-
- The butcher said, 'Well--I never!'
-
- And Alice went on, 'Would you like to taste it?'
-
- 'Thank you very much, I'm sure, miss,' said the butcher.
-
- Alice poured some out.
-
- The butcher tasted a very little. He licked his lips, and we
- thought he was going to say how good it was. But he did not. He
- put down the medicine glass with nearly all the stuff left in it
- (we put it back in the bottle afterwards to save waste) and said,
- 'Excuse me, miss, but isn't it a little sweet?--for sherry I
- mean?'
-
- 'The REAL isn't,' said Alice. 'If you order a dozen it will come
- quite different to that--we like it best with sugar. I wish you
- WOULD order some.' The butcher asked why.
-
- Alice did not speak for a minute, and then she said--
-
- 'I don't mind telling YOU: you are in business yourself, aren't
- you? We are trying to get people to buy it, because we shall
- have two shillings for every dozen we can make any one buy. It's
- called a purr something.'
-
- 'A percentage. Yes, I see,' said the butcher, looking at the
- hole in the carpet.
-
- 'You see there are reasons,' Alice went on, 'why we want to make
- our fortunes as quickly as we can.'
-
- 'Quite so,' said the butcher, and he looked at the place where
- the paper is coming off the wall.
-
- 'And this seems a good way,' Alice went on. 'We paid two
- shillings for the sample and instructions, and it says you can
- make two pounds a week easily in your leisure time.'
-
- 'I'm sure I hope you may, miss,' said the butcher. And Alice
- said again would he buy some?
-
- 'Sherry is my favourite wine,' he said. Alice asked him to have
- some more to drink.
-
- 'No, thank you, miss,' he said; 'it's my favourite wine, but it
- doesn't agree with me; not the least bit. But I've an uncle
- drinks it. Suppose I ordered him half a dozen for a Christmas
- present? Well, miss, here's the shilling commission, anyway,' and
- he pulled out a handful of money and gave her the shilling.
-
- 'But I thought the wine people paid that,' Alice said.
-
- But the butcher said not on half-dozens they didn't. Then he
- said he didn't think he'd wait any longer for Father--but would
- Alice ask Father to write him?
-
- Alice offered him the sherry again, but he said something about
- 'Not for worlds!'--and then she let him out and came back to us
- with the shilling, and said, 'How's that?'
-
- And we said 'A1.'
-
- And all the evening we talked of our fortune that we had begun to
- make.
-
- Nobody came next day, but the day after a lady came to ask for
- money to build an orphanage for the children of dead sailors.
- And we saw her. I went in with Alice. And when we had explained
- to her that we had only a shilling and we wanted it for something
- else, Alice suddenly said, 'Would you like some wine?'
-
- And the lady said, 'Thank you very much,' but she looked
- surprised.
-
- She was not a young lady, and she had a mantle with beads, and
- the beads had come off in places--leaving a browny braid showing,
- and she had printed papers about the dead sailors in a sealskin
- bag, and the seal had come off in places, leaving the skin bare.
- We gave her a tablespoonful of the wine in a proper wine-glass
- out of the sideboard, because she was a lady. And when she had
- tasted it she got up in a very great hurry, and shook out her
- dress and snapped her bag shut, and said, 'You naughty, wicked
- children! What do you mean by playing a trick like this? You
- ought to be ashamed of yourselves! I shall write to your Mamma
- about it. You dreadful little girl!--you might have poisoned me.
- But your Mamma...'
-
- Then Alice said, 'I'm very sorry; the butcher liked it, only he
- said it was sweet. And please don't write to Mother. It makes
- Father so unhappy when letters come for her!'--and Alice was very
- near crying.
-
- 'What do you mean, you silly child?' said the lady, looking quite
- bright and interested. 'Why doesn't your Father like your Mother
- to have letters--eh?'
-
- And Alice said, 'OH, you ...!'and began to cry, and bolted out of
- the room.
-
- Then I said, 'Our Mother is dead, and will you please go away
- now?'
-
- The lady looked at me a minute, and then she looked quite
- different, and she said, 'I'm very sorry. I didn't know. Never
- mind about the wine. I daresay your little sister meant it
- kindly.' And she looked round the room just like the butcher had
- done. Then she said again, 'I didn't know--I'm very sorry ...'
-
- So I said, 'Don't mention it,' and shook hands with her, and let
- her out. Of course we couldn't have asked her to buy the wine
- after what she'd said. But I think she was not a bad sort of
- person. I do like a person to say they're sorry when they ought
- to be--especially a grown-up. They do it so seldom. I suppose
- that's why we think so much of it.
-
- But Alice and I didn't feel jolly for ever so long afterwards.
- And when I went back into the dining-room I saw how different it
- was from when Mother was here, and we are different, and Father
- is different, and nothing is like it was. I am glad I am not
- made to think about it every day.
-
- I went and found Alice, and told her what the lady had said, and
- when she had finished crying we put away the bottle and said we
- would not try to sell any more to people who came. And we did
- not tell the others--we only said the lady did not buy any--but
- we went up on the Heath, and some soldiers went by and there was
- a Punch-and-judy show, and when we came back we were better.
-
- The bottle got quite dusty where we had put it, and perhaps the
- dust of ages would have laid thick and heavy on it, only a
- clergyman called when we were all out. He was not our own
- clergyman--Mr Bristow is our own clergyman, and we all love him,
- and we would not try to sell sherry to people we like, and make
- two pounds a week out of them in our spare time. It was another
- clergyman, just a stray one; and he asked Eliza if the dear
- children would not like to come to his little Sunday school. We
- always spend Sunday afternoons with Father. But as he had left
- the name of his vicarage with Eliza, and asked her to tell us to
- come, we thought we would go and call on him, just to explain
- about Sunday afternoons, and we thought we might as well take the
- sherry with us.
-
- 'I won't go unless you all go too,' Alice said, 'and I won't do
- the talking.'
-
- Dora said she thought we had much better not go; but we said
- 'Rot!' and it ended in her coming with us, and I am glad she did.
-
- Oswald said he would do the talking if the others liked, and he
- learned up what to say from the printed papers.
-
- We went to the Vicarage early on Saturday afternoon, and rang at
- the bell. It is a new red house with no trees in the garden,
- only very yellow mould and gravel. It was all very neat and dry.
- Just before we rang the bell we heard some one inside call 'Jane!
- Jane!' and we thought we would not be Jane for anything. It was
- the sound of the voice that called that made us sorry for her.
-
- The door was opened by a very neat servant in black, with a white
- apron; we saw her tying the strings as she came along the hall,
- through the different-coloured glass in the door. Her face was
- red, and I think she was Jane.
-
- We asked if we could see Mr Mallow.
-
- The servant said Mr Mallow was very busy with his sermon just
- then, but she would see.
-
- But Oswald said, 'It's all right. He asked us to come.'
-
- So she let us all in and shut the front door, and showed us into
- a very tidy room with a bookcase full of a lot of books covered
- in black cotton with white labels, and some dull pictures, and a
- harmonium. And Mr Mallow was writing at a desk with drawers,
- copying something out of a book. He was stout and short, and
- wore spectacles.
-
- He covered his writing up when we went in--I didn't know why. He
- looked rather cross, and we heard Jane or somebody being scolded
- outside by the voice. I hope it wasn't for letting us in, but I
- have had doubts.
-
- 'Well,' said the clergyman, 'what is all this about?'
-
- 'You asked us to call,' Dora said, 'about your little Sunday
- school. We are the Bastables of Lewisham Road.'
-
- 'Oh--ah, yes,' he said; 'and shall I expect you all to-morrow?'
-
- He took up his pen and fiddled with it, and he did not ask us to
- sit down. But some of us did.
-
- 'We always spend Sunday afternoon with Father,' said Dora; 'but
- we wished to thank you for being so kind as to ask us.'
-
- 'And we wished to ask you something else!' said Oswald; and he
- made a sign to Alice to get the sherry ready in the glass. She
- did--behind Oswald's back while he was speaking.
-
- 'My time is limited,' said Mr Mallow, looking at his watch; 'but
- still--' Then he muttered something about the fold, and went on:
- 'Tell me what is troubling you, my little man, and I will try to
- give you any help in my power. What is it you want?'
-
- Then Oswald quickly took the glass from Alice, and held it out to
- him, and said, 'I want your opinion on that.'
-
- 'On THAT,' he said. 'What is it?'
-
- 'It is a shipment,' Oswald said; 'but it's quite enough for you
- to taste.' Alice had filled the glass half-full; I suppose she
- was too excited to measure properly.
-
- 'A shipment?' said the clergyman, taking the glass in his hand.
-
- 'Yes,' Oswald went On; 'an exceptional opportunity. Full-bodied
- and nutty.'
-
- 'It really does taste rather like one kind of Brazil-nut.' Alice
- put her oar in as usual.
-
- The Vicar looked from Alice to Oswald, and back again, and Oswald
- went on with what he had learned from the printing. The
- clergyman held the glass at half-arm's-length, stiffly, as if he
- had caught cold.
-
- 'It is of a quality never before offered at the price. Old
- Delicate Amoro--what's its name--'
-
- 'Amorolio,' said H. O.
-
- 'Amoroso,' said Oswald. 'H. O., you just shut up--Castilian
- Amoroso--it's a true after-dinner wine, stimulating and yet ...'
-
- 'WINE?' said Mr Mallow, holding the glass further off. 'Do you
- KNOW,' he went on, making his voice very thick and strong (I
- expect he does it like that in church), 'have you never been
- TAUGHT that it is the drinking of WINE and SPIRITS--yes, and
- BEER, which makes half the homes in England full of WRETCHED
- little children, and DEGRADED, MISERABLE parents?'
-
- 'Not if you put sugar in it,' said Alice firmly; 'eight lumps and
- shake the bottle. We have each had more than a teaspoonful of
- it, and we were not ill at all. It was something else that upset
- H. O. Most likely all those acorns he got out of the Park.'
-
- The clergyman seemed to be speechless with conflicting emotions,
- and just then the door opened and a lady came in. She had a
- white cap with lace, and an ugly violet flower in it, and she was
- tall, and looked very strong, though thin. And I do believe she
- had been listening at the door.
-
- 'But why,' the Vicar was saying, 'why did you bring this dreadful
- fluid, this curse of our country, to ME to taste?'
-
- 'Because we thought you might buy some,' said Dora, who never
- sees when a game is up. 'In books the parson loves his bottle of
- old port; and new sherry is just as good--with sugar--for people
- who like sherry. And if you would order a dozen of the wine,
- then we should get two shillings.'
-
- The lady said (and it WAS the voice), 'Good gracious! Nasty,
- sordid little things! Haven't they any one to teach them
- better?'
-
- And Dora got up and said, 'No, we are not those things you say;
- but we are sorry we came here to be called names. We want to
- make our fortune just as much as Mr Mallow does--only no one
- would listen to us if we preached, so it's no use our copying out
- sermons like him.'
-
- And I think that was smart of Dora, even if it was rather rude.
-
- Then I said perhaps we had better go, and the lady said, 'I
- should think so!'
-
- But when we were going to wrap up the bottle and glass the
- clergyman said, 'No; you can leave that,' and we were so upset we
- did, though it wasn't his after all.
-
- We walked home very fast and not saying much, and the girls went
- up to their rooms. When I went to tell them tea was ready, and
- there was a teacake, Dora was crying like anything and Alice
- hugging her. I am afraid there is a great deal of crying in this
- chapter, but I can't help it. Girls will sometimes; I suppose it
- is their nature, and we ought to be sorry for their affliction.
-
- 'It's no good,' Dora was saying, 'you all hate me, and you think
- I'm a prig and a busybody, but I do try to do right--oh, I do!
- Oswald, go away; don't come here making fun of me!'
-
- So I said, 'I'm not making fun, Sissy; don't cry, old girl.'
-
- Mother taught me to call her Sissy when we were very little and
- before the others came, but I don't often somehow, now we are
- old. I patted her on the back, and she put her head against my
- sleeve, holding on to Alice all the time, and she went on. She
- was in that laughy-cryey state when people say things they
- wouldn't say at other times.
-
- 'Oh dear, oh dear--I do try, I do. And when Mother died she
- said, "Dora, take care of the others, and teach them to be good,
- and keep them out of trouble and make them happy." She said,
- "Take care of them for me, Dora dear." And I have tried, and all
- of you hate me for it; and to-day I let you do this, though I
- knew all the time it was silly.'
-
- I hope you will not think I was a muff but I kissed Dora for some
- time. Because girls like it. And I will never say again that
- she comes the good elder sister too much. And I have put all
- this in though I do hate telling about it, because I own I have
- been hard on Dora, but I never will be again. She is a good old
- sort; of course we never knew before about what Mother told her,
- or we wouldn't have ragged her as we did. We did not tell the
- little ones, but I got Alice to speak to Dicky, and we three can
- sit on the others if requisite.
-
- This made us forget all about the sherry; but about eight o'clock
- there was a knock, and Eliza went, and we saw it was poor Jane,
- if her name was Jane, from the Vicarage. She handed in a
- brown-paper parcel and a letter. And three minutes later Father
- called us into his study.
-
- On the table was the brown-paper parcel, open, with our bottle
- and glass on it, and Father had a letter in his hand. He Pointed
- to the bottle and sighed, and said, 'What have you been doing
- now?' The letter in his hand was covered with little black
- writing, all over the four large pages.
-
- So Dicky spoke up, and he told Father the whole thing, as far as
- he knew it, for Alice and I had not told about the dead sailors'
- lady.
-
- And when he had done, Alice said, 'Has Mr Mallow written to you
- to say he will buy a dozen of the sherry after all? It is really
- not half bad with sugar in it.'
-
- Father said no, he didn't think clergymen could afford such
- expensive wine; and he said HE would like to taste it. So we
- gave him what there was left, for we had decided coming home that
- we would give up trying for the two pounds a week in our spare
- time.
-
- Father tasted it, and then he acted just as H. O. had done when
- he had his teaspoonful, but of course we did not say anything.
- Then he laughed till I thought he would never stop.
-
- I think it was the sherry, because I am sure I have read
- somewhere about 'wine that maketh glad the heart of man'. He had
- only a very little, which shows that it was a good after-dinner
- wine, stimulating, and yet ... I forget the rest.
-
- But when he had done laughing he said, 'It's all right, kids.
- Only don't do it again. The wine trade is overcrowded; and
- besides, I thought you promised to consult me before going into
- business?'
-
- 'Before buying one I thought you meant,' said Dicky. 'This was
- only on commission.' And Father laughed again. I am glad we got
- the Castilian Amoroso, because it did really cheer Father up, and
- you cannot always do that, however hard you try, even if you make
- jokes, or give him a comic paper.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 12
- THE NOBLENESS OF OSWALD
-
- The part about his nobleness only comes at the end, but you would
- not understand it unless you knew how it began. It began, like
- nearly everything about that time, with treasure-seeking.
-
- Of course as soon as we had promised to consult my Father about
- business matters we all gave up wanting to go into business. I
- don't know how it is, but having to consult about a thing with
- grown-up people, even the bravest and the best, seems to make the
- thing not worth doing afterwards.
-
- We don't mind Albert's uncle chipping in sometimes when the
- thing's going on, but we are glad he never asked us to promise to
- consult him about anything. Yet Oswald saw that my Father was
- quite right; and I daresay if we had had that hundred pounds we
- should have spent it on the share in that lucrative business for
- the sale of useful patent, and then found out afterwards that we
- should have done better to spend the money in some other way. My
- Father says so, and he ought to know. We had several ideas about
- that time, but having so little chink always stood in the way.
-
- This was the case with H. O.'s idea of setting up a coconut-shy
- on this side of the Heath, where there are none generally. We
- had no sticks or wooden balls, and the greengrocer said he could
- not book so many as twelve dozen coconuts without Mr Bastable's
- written order. And as we did not wish to consult my Father it
- was decided to drop it. And when Alice dressed up Pincher in
- some of the dolls' clothes and we made up our minds to take him
- round with an organ as soon as we had taught him to dance, we
- were stopped at once by Dicky's remembering how he had once heard
- that an organ cost seven hundred pounds. Of course this was the
- big church kind, but even the ones on three legs can't be got for
- one-and-sevenpence, which was all we had when we first thought of
- it. So we gave that up too.
-
- It was a wet day, I remember, and mutton hash for dinner--very
- tough with pale gravy with lumps in it. I think the others would
- have left a good deal on the sides of their plates, although they
- know better, only Oswald said it was a savoury stew made of the
- red deer that Edward shot. So then we were the Children of the
- New Forest, and the mutton tasted much better. No one in the New
- Forest minds venison being tough and the gravy pale.
-
- Then after dinner we let the girls have a dolls' tea-party, on
- condition they didn't expect us boys to wash up; and it was when
- we were drinking the last of the liquorice water out of the
- little cups that Dicky said--
-
- 'This reminds me.'
-
- So we said, 'What of?'
-
- Dicky answered us at once, though his mouth was full of bread
- with liquorice stuck in it to look like cake. You should not
- speak with your mouth full, even to your own relations, and you
- shouldn't wipe your mouth on the back of your hand, but on your
- handkerchief, if you have one. Dicky did not do this. He said--
-
- 'Why, you remember when we first began about treasure-seeking, I
- said I had thought of something, only I could not tell you
- because I hadn't finished thinking about it.'
-
- We said 'Yes.'
-
- 'Well, this liquorice water--'
-
- 'Tea,' said Alice softly.
-
- 'Well, tea then--made me think.' He was going on to say what it
- made him think, but Noel interrupted and cried out, 'I say; let's
- finish off this old tea-party and have a council of war.'
-
- So we got out the flags and the wooden sword and the drum, and
- Oswald beat it while the girls washed up, till Eliza came up to
- say she had the jumping toothache, and the noise went through her
- like a knife. So of course Oswald left off at once. When you
- are polite to Oswald he never refuses to grant your requests.
-
- When we were all dressed up we sat down round the camp fire, and
- Dicky began again.
-
- 'Every one in the world wants money. Some people get it. The
- people who get it are the ones who see things. I have seen one
- thing.'
-
- Dicky stopped and smoked the pipe of peace. It is the pipe we
- did bubbles with in the summer, and somehow it has not got broken
- yet. We put tea-leaves in it for the pipe of peace, but the
- girls are not allowed to have any. It is not right to let girls
- smoke. They get to think too much of themselves if you let them
- do everything the same as men. Oswald said, 'Out with it.'
-
- 'I see that glass bottles only cost a penny. H. O., if you dare
- to snigger I'll send you round selling old bottles, and you
- shan't have any sweets except out of the money you get for them.
- And the same with you, Noel.'
-
- 'Noel wasn't sniggering,' said Alice in a hurry; 'it is only his
- taking so much interest in what you were saying makes him look
- like that. Be quiet, H. O., and don't you make faces, either.
- Do go on, Dicky dear.'
-
- So Dicky went on.
-
- 'There must be hundreds of millions of bottles of medicines sold
- every year. Because all the different medicines say, "Thousands
- of cures daily," and if you only take that as two thousand, which
- it must be, at least, it mounts up. And the people who sell them
- must make a great deal of money by them because they are nearly
- always two-and- ninepence the bottle, and three-and-six for one
- nearly double the size. Now the bottles, as I was saying, don't
- cost anything like that.'
-
- 'It's the medicine costs the money,' said Dora; 'look how
- expensive jujubes are at the chemist's, and peppermints too.'
-
- 'That's only because they're nice,' Dicky explained; 'nasty
- things are not so dear. Look what a lot of brimstone you get for
- a penny, and the same with alum. We would not put the nice kinds
- of chemist's things in our medicine.'
-
- Then he went on to tell us that when we had invented our medicine
- we would write and tell the editor about it, and he would put it
- in the paper, and then people would send their two-and-ninepence
- and three-and-six for the bottle nearly double the size, and then
- when the medicine had cured them they would write to the paper
- and their letters would be printed, saying how they had been
- suffering for years, and never thought to get about again, but
- thanks to the blessing of our ointment--'
-
- Dora interrupted and said, 'Not ointment--it's so messy.' And
- Alice thought so too. And Dicky said he did not mean it, he was
- quite decided to let it be in bottles. So now it was all
- settled, and we did not see at the time that this would be a sort
- of going into business, but afterwards when Albert's uncle showed
- us we saw it, and we were sorry. We only had to invent the
- medicine. You might think that was easy, because of the number
- of them you see every day in the paper, but it is much harder
- than you think. First we had to decide what sort of illness we
- should like to cure, and a 'heated discussion ensued', like in
- Parliament.
-
- Dora wanted it to be something to make the complexion of dazzling
- fairness, but we remembered how her face came all red and rough
- when she used the Rosabella soap that was advertised to make the
- darkest complexion fair as the lily, and she agreed that perhaps
- it was better not. Noel wanted to make the medicine first and
- then find out what it would cure, but Dicky thought not, because
- there are so many more medicines than there are things the matter
- with us, so it would be easier to choose the disease first.
- Oswald would have liked wounds. I still think it was a good
- idea, but Dicky said, 'Who has wounds, especially now there
- aren't any wars? We shouldn't sell a bottle a day!' So Oswald
- gave in because he knows what manners are, and it was Dicky's
- idea. H. O. wanted a cure for the uncomfortable feeling that
- they give you powders for, but we explained to him that grown-up
- people do not have this feeling, however much they eat, and he
- agreed. Dicky said he did not care a straw what the loathsome
- disease was, as long as we hurried up and settled on something.
- Then Alice said--
-
- 'It ought to be something very common, and only one thing. Not
- the pains in the back and all the hundreds of things the people
- have in somebody's syrup. What's the commonest thing of all?'
-
- And at once we said, 'Colds.'
-
- So that was settled.
-
- Then we wrote a label to go on the bottle. When it was written
- it would not go on the vinegar bottle that we had got, but we
- knew it would go small when it was printed. It was like this:
-
- BASTABLE'S
- CERTAIN CURE FOR COLDS
- Coughs, Asthma, Shortness of Breath, and all infections of the
- Chest
-
- One dose gives immediate relief
- It will cure your cold in one bottle
- Especially the larger size at 3s. 6d.
- Order at once of the Makers
- To prevent disappointment
-
- Makers:
-
- D., O., R., A., N., and H. O. BASTABLE
- 150, Lewisham Road, S.E.
-
- (A halfpenny for all bottles returned)
-
- ------------
-
- Of course the next thing was for one of us to catch a cold and
- try what cured it; we all wanted to be the one, but it was
- Dicky's idea, and he said he was not going to be done out of it,
- so we let him. It was only fair. He left off his undershirt
- that very day, and next morning he stood in a draught in his
- nightgown for quite a long time. And we damped his day-shirt
- with the nail-brush before he put it on. But all was vain. They
- always tell you that these things will give you cold, but we
- found it was not so.
-
- So then we all went over to the Park, and Dicky went right into
- the water with his boots on, and stood there as long as he could
- bear it, for it was rather cold, and we stood and cheered him on.
- He walked home in his wet clothes, which they say is a sure
- thing, but it was no go, though his boots were quite spoiled.
- And three days after Noel began to cough and sneeze.
-
- So then Dicky said it was not fair.
-
- 'I can't help it,' Noel said. 'You should have caught it
- yourself, then it wouldn't have come to me.
-
- And Alice said she had known all along Noel oughtn't to have
- stood about on the bank cheering in the cold.
-
- Noel had to go to bed, and then we began to make the medicines;
- we were sorry he was out of it, but he had the fun of taking the
- things.
-
- We made a great many medicines. Alice made herb tea. She got
- sage and thyme and savory and marjoram and boiled them all up
- together with salt and water, but she WOULD put parsley in too.
- Oswald is sure parsley is not a herb. It is only put on the cold
- meat and you are not supposed to eat it. It kills parrots to eat
- parsley, I believe. I expect it was the parsley that disagreed
- so with Noel. The medicine did not seem to do the cough any
- good.
-
- Oswald got a pennyworth of alum, because it is so cheap, and some
- turpentine which every one knows is good for colds, and a little
- sugar and an aniseed ball. These were mixed in a bottle with
- water, but Eliza threw it away and said it was nasty rubbish, and
- I hadn't any money to get more things with.
-
- Dora made him some gruel, and he said it did his chest good; but
- of course that was no use, because you cannot put gruel in
- bottles and say it is medicine. It would not be honest, and
- besides nobody would believe you.
-
- Dick mixed up lemon-juice and sugar and a little of the juice of
- the red flannel that Noel's throat was done up in. It comes out
- beautifully in hot water. Noel took this and he liked it.
- Noel's own idea was liquorice-water, and we let him have it, but
- it is too plain and black to sell in bottles at the proper price.
-
- Noel liked H. O.'s medicine the best, which was silly of him,
- because it was only peppermints melted in hot water, and a little
- cobalt to make it look blue. It was all right, because H. O.'s
- paint-box is the French kind, with Couleurs non Veneneuses on it.
- This means you may suck your brushes if you want to, or even your
- paints if you are a very little boy.
-
- It was rather jolly while Noel had that cold. He had a fire in
- his bedroom which opens out of Dicky's and Oswald's, and the
- girls used to read aloud to Noel all day; they will not read
- aloud to you when you are well. Father was away at Liverpool on
- business, and Albert's uncle was at Hastings. We were rather
- glad of this, because we wished to give all the medicines a fair
- trial, and grown-ups are but too fond of interfering. As if we
- should have given him anything poisonous!
-
- His cold went on--it was bad in his head, but it was not one of
- the kind when he has to have poultices and can't sit up in bed.
- But when it had been in his head nearly a week, Oswald happened
- to tumble over Alice on the stairs. When we got up she was
- crying.
-
- 'Don't cry silly!' said Oswald; 'you know I didn't hurt you.' I
- was very sorry if I had hurt her, but you ought not to sit on the
- stairs in the dark and let other people tumble over you. You
- ought to remember how beastly it is for them if they do hurt you.
-
- 'Oh, it's not that, Oswald,' Alice said. 'Don't be a pig! I am
- so miserable. Do be kind to me.'
-
- So Oswald thumped her on the back and told her to shut up.
-
- 'It's about Noel,' she said. 'I'm sure he's very ill; and
- playing about with medicines is all very well, but I know he's
- ill, and Eliza won't send for the doctor: she says it's only a
- cold. And I know the doctor's bills are awful. I heard Father
- telling Aunt Emily so in the summer. But he IS ill, and perhaps
- he'll die or something.'
-
- Then she began to cry again. Oswald thumped her again, because
- he knows how a good brother ought to behave, and said, 'Cheer
- up.' If we had been in a book Oswald would have embraced his
- little sister tenderly, and mingled his tears with hers.
-
- Then Oswald said, 'Why not write to Father?'
-
- And she cried more and said, 'I've lost the paper with the
- address. H. O. had it to draw on the back of, and I can't find
- it now; I've looked everywhere. I'll tell you what I'm going to
- do. No I won't. But I'm going out. Don't tell the others. And
- I say, Oswald, do pretend I'm in if Eliza asks. Promise.'
-
- 'Tell me what you're going to do,' I said. But she said 'No';
- and there was a good reason why not. So I said I wouldn't
- promise if it came to that. Of course I meant to all right. But
- it did seem mean of her not to tell me.
-
- So Alice went out by the side door while Eliza was setting tea,
- and she was a long time gone; she was not in to tea. When Eliza
- asked Oswald where she was he said he did not know, but perhaps
- she was tidying her corner drawer. Girls often do this, and it
- takes a long time. Noel coughed a good bit after tea, and asked
- for Alice. Oswald told him she was doing something and it was a
- secret. Oswald did not tell any lies even to save his sister.
- When Alice came back she was very quiet, but she whispered to
- Oswald that it was all right. When it was rather late Eliza said
- she was going out to post a letter. This always takes her an
- hour, because she WILL go to the post-office across the Heath
- instead of the pillar-box, because once a boy dropped fusees in
- our pillar-box and burnt the letters. It was not any of us;
- Eliza told us about it. And when there was a knock at the door a
- long time after we thought it was Eliza come back, and that she
- had forgotten the back-door key. We made H. O. go down to open
- the door, because it is his place to run about: his legs are
- younger than ours. And we heard boots on the stairs besides H.
- O.'s, and we listened spellbound till the door opened, and it was
- Albert's uncle. He looked very tired.
-
- 'I am glad you've come,' Oswald said. 'Alice began to think
- Noel--'
-
- Alice stopped me, and her face was very red, her nose was shiny
- too, with having cried so much before tea.
-
- She said, 'I only said I thought Noel ought to have the doctor.
- Don't you think he ought?' She got hold of Albert's uncle and
- held on to him.
-
- 'Let's have a look at you, young man,' said Albert's uncle, and
- he sat down on the edge of the bed. It is a rather shaky bed,
- the bar that keeps it steady underneath got broken when we were
- playing burglars last winter. It was our crowbar. He began to
- feel Noel's pulse, and went on talking.
-
- 'It was revealed to the Arab physician as he made merry in his
- tents on the wild plains of Hastings that the Presence had a cold
- in its head. So he immediately seated himself on the magic
- carpet, and bade it bear him hither, only pausing in the flight
- to purchase a few sweetmeats in the bazaar.'
-
- He pulled out a jolly lot of chocolate and some butterscotch, and
- grapes for Noel. When we had all said thank you, he went on.
-
- 'The physician's are the words of wisdom: it's high time this
- kid was asleep. I have spoken. Ye have my leave to depart.'
-
- So we bunked, and Dora and Albert's uncle made Noel comfortable
- for the night.
-
- Then they came to the nursery which we had gone down to, and he
- sat down in the Guy Fawkes chair and said, 'Now then.'
-
- Alice said, 'You may tell them what I did. I daresay they'll all
- be in a wax, but I don't care.'
-
- 'I think you were very wise,' said Albert's uncle, pulling her
- close to him to sit on his knee. 'I am very glad you
- telegraphed.'
-
- So then Oswald understood what Alice's secret was. She had gone
- out and sent a telegram to Albert's uncle at Hastings. But
- Oswald thought she might have told him. Afterwards she told me
- what she had put in the telegram. It was, 'Come home. We have
- given Noel a cold, and I think we are killing him.' With the
- address it came to tenpence-halfpenny.
-
- Then Albert's uncle began to ask questions, and it all came out,
- how Dicky had tried to catch the cold, but the cold had gone to
- Noel instead, and about the medicines and all. Albert's uncle
- looked very serious.
-
- 'Look here,' he said, 'You're old enough not to play the fool
- like this. Health is the best thing you've got; you ought to
- know better than to risk it. You might have killed your little
- brother with your precious medicines. You've had a lucky escape,
- certainly. But poor Noel!'
-
- 'Oh, do you think he's going to die?' Alice asked that, and she
- was crying again.
-
- 'No, no,' said Albert's uncle; 'but look here. Do you see how
- silly you've been? And I thought you promised your Father--' And
- then he gave us a long talking-to. He can make you feel most
- awfully small. At last he stopped, and we said we were very
- sorry, and he said, 'You know I promised to take you all to the
- pantomime?'
-
- So we said, 'Yes,' and knew but too well that now he wasn't going
- to. Then he went on--
-
- 'Well, I will take you if you like, or I will take Noel to the
- sea for a week to cure his cold. Which is it to be?'
-
- Of course he knew we should say, 'Take Noel' and we did; but
- Dicky told me afterwards he thought it was hard on H. O.
-
- Albert's uncle stayed till Eliza came in, and then he said good
- night in a way that showed us that all was forgiven and
- forgotten.
-
- And we went to bed. It must have been the middle of the night
- when Oswald woke up suddenly, and there was Alice with her teeth
- chattering, shaking him to wake him.
-
- 'Oh, Oswald!' she said, 'I am so unhappy. Suppose I should die
- in the night!'
-
- Oswald told her to go to bed and not gas. But she said, 'I must
- tell you; I wish I'd told Albert's uncle. I'm a thief, and if I
- die to-night I know where thieves go to.' So Oswald saw it was
- no good and he sat up in bed and said--'Go ahead.' So Alice
- stood shivering and said--'I hadn't enough money for the
- telegram, so I took the bad sixpence out of the exchequer. And I
- paid for it with that and the fivepence I had. And I wouldn't
- tell you, because if you'd stopped me doing it I couldn't have
- borne it; and if you'd helped me you'd have been a thief too.
- Oh, what shall I do?'
-
- Oswald thought a minute, and then he said--
-
- 'You'd better have told me. But I think it will be all right if
- we pay it back. Go to bed. Cross with you? No, stupid! Only
- another time you'd better not keep secrets.'
-
- So she kissed Oswald, and he let her, and she went back to bed.
-
- The next day Albert's uncle took Noel away, before Oswald had
- time to persuade Alice that we ought to tell him about the
- sixpence. Alice was very unhappy, but not so much as in the
- night: you can be very miserable in the night if you have done
- anything wrong and you happen to be awake. I know this for a
- fact.
-
- None of us had any money except Eliza, and she wouldn't give us
- any unless we said what for; and of course we could not do that
- because of the honour of the family. And Oswald was anxious to
- get the sixpence to give to the telegraph people because he
- feared that the badness of that sixpence might have been found
- out, and that the police might come for Alice at any moment. I
- don't think I ever had such an unhappy day. Of course we could
- have written to Albert's uncle, but it would have taken a long
- time, and every moment of delay added to Alice's danger. We
- thought and thought, but we couldn't think of any way to get that
- sixpence. It seems a small sum, but you see Alice's liberty
- depended on it. It was quite late in the afternoon when I met
- Mrs Leslie on the Parade. She had a brown fur coat and a lot of
- yellow flowers in her hands. She stopped to speak to me, and
- asked me how the Poet was. I told her he had a cold, and I
- wondered whether she would lend me sixpence if I asked her, but I
- could not make up my mind how to begin to say it. It is a hard
- thing to say--much harder than you would think. She talked to me
- for a bit, and then she suddenly got into a cab, and said--
-
- 'I'd no idea it was so late,' and told the man where to go. And
- just as she started she shoved the yellow flowers through the
- window and said, 'For the sick poet, with my love,' and was
- driven off.
-
- Gentle reader, I will not conceal from you what Oswald did. He
- knew all about not disgracing the family, and he did not like
- doing what I am going to say: and they were really Noel's
- flowers, only he could not have sent them to Hastings, and Oswald
- knew he would say 'Yes' if Oswald asked him. Oswald sacrificed
- his family pride because of his little sister's danger. I do not
- say he was a noble boy--I just tell you what he did, and you can
- decide for yourself about the nobleness.
-
- He put on his oldest clothes--they're much older than any you
- would think he had if you saw him when he was tidy--and he took
- those yellow chrysanthemums and he walked with them to Greenwich
- Station and waited for the trains bringing people from London.
- He sold those flowers in penny bunches and got tenpence. Then he
- went to the telegraph office at Lewisham, and said to the lady
- there:
-
- 'A little girl gave you a bad sixpence yesterday. Here are six
- good pennies.'
-
- The lady said she had not noticed it, and never mind, but Oswald
- knew that 'Honesty is the best Policy', and he refused to take
- back the pennies. So at last she said she should put them in the
- plate on Sunday. She is a very nice lady. I like the way she
- does her hair.
-
- Then Oswald went home to Alice and told her, and she hugged him,
- and said he was a dear, good, kind boy, and he said 'Oh, it's all
- right.'
-
- We bought peppermint bullseyes with the fourpence I had over, and
- the others wanted to know where we got the money, but we would
- not tell.
-
- Only afterwards when Noel came home we told him, because they
- were his flowers, and he said it was quite right. He made some
- poetry about it. I only remember one bit of it.
-
- The noble youth of high degree
- Consents to play a menial part,
- All for his sister Alice's sake,
- Who was so dear to his faithful heart.
-
- But Oswald himself has never bragged about it. We got no
- treasure out of this, unless you count the peppermint bullseyes.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 13
- THE ROBBER AND THE BURGLAR
-
- A day or two after Noel came back from Hastings there was snow;
- it was jolly. And we cleared it off the path. A man to do it is
- sixpence at least, and you should always save when you can. A
- penny saved is a penny earned. And then we thought it would be
- nice to clear it off the top of the portico, where it lies so
- thick, and the edges as if they had been cut with a knife. And
- just as we had got out of the landing-window on to the portico,
- the Water Rates came up the path with his book that he tears the
- thing out of that says how much you have got to pay, and the
- little ink-bottle hung on to his buttonhole in case you should
- pay him. Father says the Water Rates is a sensible man, and
- knows it is always well to be prepared for whatever happens,
- however unlikely. Alice said afterwards that she rather liked
- the Water Rates, really, and Noel said he had a face like a good
- vizier, or the man who rewards the honest boy for restoring the
- purse, but we did not think about these things at the time, and
- as the Water Rates came up the steps, we shovelled down a great
- square slab of snow like an avalanche--and it fell right on his
- head . Two of us thought of it at the same moment, so it was
- quite a large avalanche. And when the Water Rates had shaken
- himself he rang the bell. It was Saturday, and Father was at
- home. We know now that it is very wrong and ungentlemanly to
- shovel snow off porticoes on to the Water Rates, or any other
- person, and we hope he did not catch a cold, and we are very
- sorry. We apologized to the Water Rates when Father told us to.
- We were all sent to bed for it.
-
- We all deserved the punishment, because the others would have
- shovelled down snow just as we did if they'd thought of it--only
- they are not so quick at thinking of things as we are. And even
- quite wrong things sometimes lead to adventures; as every one
- knows who has ever read about pirates or highwaymen.
-
- Eliza hates us to be sent to bed early, because it means her
- having to bring meals up, and it means lighting the fire in
- Noel's room ever so much earlier than usual. He had to have a
- fire because he still had a bit of a cold. But this particular
- day we got Eliza into a good temper by giving her a horrid brooch
- with pretending amethysts in it, that an aunt once gave to Alice,
- so Eliza brought up an extra scuttle of coals, and when the
- greengrocer came with the potatoes (he is always late on
- Saturdays) she got some chestnuts from him. So that when we
- heard Father go out after his dinner, there was a jolly fire in
- Noel's room, and we were able to go in and be Red Indians in
- blankets most comfortably. Eliza had gone out; she says she gets
- things cheaper on Saturday nights. She has a great friend, who
- sells fish at a shop, and he is very generous, and lets her have
- herrings for less than half the natural price.
-
- So we were all alone in the house; Pincher was out with Eliza,
- and we talked about robbers. And Dora thought it would be a
- dreadful trade, but Dicky said--
-
- 'I think it would be very interesting. And you would only rob
- rich people, and be very generous to the poor and needy, like
- Claude Duval.' Dora said, 'It is wrong to be a robber.'
-
- 'Yes,' said Alice, 'you would never know a happy hour. Think of
- trying to sleep with the stolen jewels under your bed, and
- remembering all the quantities of policemen and detectives that
- there are in the world!'
-
- 'There are ways of being robbers that are not wrong,' said Noel;
- 'if you can rob a robber it is a right act.'
-
- 'But you can't,' said Dora; 'he is too clever, and besides, it's
- wrong anyway.'
-
- 'Yes you can, and it isn't; and murdering him with boiling oil is
- a right act, too, so there!' said Noel. 'What about Ali Baba?
- Now then!' And we felt it was a score for Noel.
-
- 'What would you do if there WAS a robber?' said Alice.
-
- H. O. said he would kill him with boiling oil; but Alice
- explained that she meant a real robber--now--this minute--in the
- house.
-
- Oswald and Dicky did not say; but Noel said he thought it would
- only be fair to ask the robber quite politely and quietly to go
- away, and then if he didn't you could deal with him.
-
- Now what I am going to tell you is a very strange and wonderful
- thing, and I hope you will be able to believe it. I should not,
- if a boy told me, unless I knew him to be a man of honour, and
- perhaps not then unless he gave his sacred word. But it is true,
- all the same, and it only shows that the days of romance and
- daring deeds are not yet at an end.
-
- Alice was just asking Noel HOW he would deal with the robber who
- wouldn't go if he was asked politely and quietly, when we heard a
- noise downstairs--quite a plain noise, not the kind of noise you
- fancy you hear. It was like somebody moving a chair. We held
- our breath and listened and then came another noise, like some
- one poking a fire. Now, you remember there was no one TO poke a
- fire or move a chair downstairs, because Eliza and Father were
- both out. They could not have come in without our hearing them,
- because the front door is as hard to shut as the back one, and
- whichever you go in by you have to give a slam that you can hear
- all down the street.
-
- H. O. and Alice and Dora caught hold of each other's blankets and
- looked at Dicky and Oswald, and every one was quite pale. And
- Noel whispered--
-
- 'It's ghosts, I know it is'--and then we listened again, but
- there was no more noise. Presently Dora said in a whisper--
-
- 'Whatever shall we do? Oh, whatever shall we do--what SHALL we
- do?' And she kept on saying it till we had to tell her to shut
- up.
-
- O reader, have you ever been playing Red Indians in blankets
- round a bedroom fire in a house where you thought there was no
- one but you--and then suddenly heard a noise like a chair, and a
- fire being poked, downstairs? Unless you have you will not be
- able to imagine at all what it feels like. It was not like in
- books; our hair did not stand on end at all, and we never said
- 'Hist!' once, but our feet got very cold, though we were in
- blankets by the fire, and the insides of Oswald's hands got warm
- and wet, and his nose was cold like a dog's, and his ears were
- burning hot.
-
- The girls said afterwards that they shivered with terror, and
- their teeth chattered, but we did not see or hear this at the
- time.
-
- 'Shall we open the window and call police?' said Dora; and then
- Oswald suddenly thought of something, and he breathed more freely
- and he said--
-
- 'I KNOW it's not ghosts, and I don't believe it's robbers. I
- expect it's a stray cat got in when the coals came this morning,
- and she's been hiding in the cellar, and now she's moving about.
- Let's go down and see.'
-
- The girls wouldn't, of course; but I could see that they breathed
- more freely too. But Dicky said, 'All right; I will if you
- will.'
-
- H. O. said, 'Do you think it's REALLY a cat?' So we said he had
- better stay with the girls. And of course after that we had to
- let him and Alice both come. Dora said if we took Noel down with
- his cold, she would scream 'Fire!' and 'Murder!' and she didn't
- mind if the whole street heard.
-
- So Noel agreed to be getting his clothes on, and the rest of us
- said we would go down and look for the cat.
-
- Now Oswald SAID that about the cat, and it made it easier to go
- down, but in his inside he did not feel at all sure that it might
- not be robbers after all. Of course, we had often talked about
- robbers before, but it is very different when you sit in a room
- and listen and listen and listen; and Oswald felt somehow that it
- would be easier to go down and see what it was, than to wait, and
- listen, and wait, and wait, and listen, and wait, and then
- perhaps to hear IT, whatever it was, come creeping slowly up the
- stairs as softly as IT could with ITS boots off, and the stairs
- creaking, towards the room where we were with the door open in
- case of Eliza coming back suddenly, and all dark on the landings.
- And then it would have been just as bad, and it would have lasted
- longer, and you would have known you were a coward besides.
- Dicky says he felt all these same things. Many people would say
- we were young heroes to go down as we did; so I have tried to
- explain, because no young hero wishes to have more credit than he
- deserves.
-
- The landing gas was turned down low--just a blue bead--and we
- four went out very softly, wrapped in our blankets, and we stood
- on the top of the stairs a good long time before we began to go
- down. And we listened and listened till our ears buzzed.
-
- And Oswald whispered to Dicky, and Dicky went into our room and
- fetched the large toy pistol that is a foot long, and that has
- the trigger broken, and I took it because I am the eldest; and I
- don't think either of us thought it was the cat now. But Alice
- and H. O. did. Dicky got the poker out of Noel's room, and told
- Dora it was to settle the cat with when we caught her.
-
- Then Oswald whispered, 'Let's play at burglars; Dicky and I are
- armed to the teeth, we will go first. You keep a flight behind
- us, and be a reinforcement if we are attacked. Or you can
- retreat and defend the women and children in the fortress, if
- you'd rather.'
-
- But they said they would be a reinforcement.
-
- Oswald's teeth chattered a little when he spoke. It was not with
- anything else except cold.
-
- So Dicky and Oswald crept down, and when we got to the bottom of
- the stairs, we saw Father's study door just ajar, and the crack
- of light. And Oswald was so pleased to see the light, knowing
- that burglars prefer the dark, or at any rate the dark lantern,
- that he felt really sure it WAS the cat after all, and then he
- thought it would be fun to make the others upstairs think it was
- really a robber. So he cocked the pistol--you can cock it, but
- it doesn't go off--and he said, 'Come on, Dick!' and he rushed at
- the study door and burst into the room, crying, 'Surrender! you
- are discovered! Surrender, or I fire! Throw up your hands!'
-
- And, as he finished saying it, he saw before him, standing on the
- study hearthrug, a Real Robber. There was no mistake about it.
- Oswald was sure it was a robber, because it had a screwdriver in
- its hands, and was standing near the cupboard door that H. O.
- broke the lock off; and there were gimlets and screws and things
- on the floor. There is nothing in that cupboard but old ledgers
- and magazines and the tool chest, but of course, a robber could
- not know that beforehand.
-
- When Oswald saw that there really was a robber, and that he was
- so heavily armed with the screwdriver, he did not feel
- comfortable. But he kept the pistol pointed at the robber,
- and--you will hardly believe it, but it is true--the robber threw
- down the screwdriver clattering on the other tools, and he DID
- throw up his hands, and said--
-
- 'I surrender; don't shoot me! How many of you are there?'
-
- So Dicky said, 'You are outnumbered. Are you armed?'
-
- And the robber said, 'No, not in the least.'
-
- And Oswald said, still pointing the pistol, and feeling very
- strong and brave and as if he was in a book, 'Turn out your
- pockets.'
-
- The robber did: and while he turned them out, we looked at him.
- He was of the middle height, and clad in a black frock-coat and
- grey trousers. His boots were a little gone at the sides, and
- his shirt-cuffs were a bit frayed, but otherwise he was of
- gentlemanly demeanour. He had a thin, wrinkled face, with big,
- light eyes that sparkled, and then looked soft very queerly, and
- a short beard. In his youth it must have been of a fair golden
- colour, but now it was tinged with grey. Oswald was sorry for
- him, especially when he saw that one of his pockets had a large
- hole in it, and that he had nothing in his pockets but letters
- and string and three boxes of matches, and a pipe and a
- handkerchief and a thin tobacco pouch and two pennies. We made
- him put all the things on the table, and then he said--
-
- 'Well, you've caught me; what are you going to do with me?
- Police?'
-
- Alice and H. O. had come down to be reinforcements, when they
- heard a shout, and when Alice saw that it was a Real Robber, and
- that he had surrendered, she clapped her hands and said, 'Bravo,
- boys!' and so did H. O. And now she said, 'If he gives his word
- of honour not to escape, I shouldn't call the police: it seems a
- pity. Wait till Father comes home.'
-
- The robber agreed to this, and gave his word of honour, and asked
- if he might put on a pipe, and we said 'Yes,' and he sat in
- Father's armchair and warmed his boots, which steamed, and I sent
- H. O. and Alice to put on some clothes and tell the others, and
- bring down Dicky's and my knickerbockers, and the rest of the
- chestnuts.
-
- And they all came, and we sat round the fire, and it was jolly.
- The robber was very friendly, and talked to us a great deal.
-
- 'I wasn't always in this low way of business,' he said, when Noel
- said something about the things he had turned out of his pockets.
- 'It's a great come-down to a man like me. But, if I must be
- caught, it's something to be caught by brave young heroes like
- you. My stars! How you did bolt into the room,--"Surrender, and
- up with your hands!" You might have been born and bred to the
- thief-catching.'
-
- Oswald is sorry if it was mean, but he could not own up just then
- that he did not think there was any one in the study when he did
- that brave if rash act. He has told since.
-
- 'And what made you think there was any one in the house?' the
- robber asked, when he had thrown his head back, and laughed for
- quite half a minute. So we told him. And he applauded our
- valour, and Alice and H. O. explained that they would have said
- 'Surrender,' too, only they were reinforcements. The robber ate
- some of the chestnuts--and we sat and wondered when Father would
- come home, and what he would say to us for our intrepid conduct.
- And the robber told us of all the things he had done before he
- began to break into houses. Dicky picked up the tools from the
- floor, and suddenly he said--
-
- 'Why, this is Father's screwdriver and his gimlets, and all!
- Well, I do call it jolly cheek to pick a man's locks with his own
- tools!'
-
- 'True, true,' said the robber. 'It is cheek, of the jolliest!
- But you see I've come down in the world. I was a highway robber
- once, but horses are so expensive to hire--five shillings an
- hour, you know--and I couldn't afford to keep them. The
- highwayman business isn't what it was.'
-
- 'What about a bike?' said H. O.
-
- But the robber thought cycles were low--and besides you couldn't
- go across country with them when occasion arose, as you could
- with a trusty steed. And he talked of highwaymen as if he knew
- just how we liked hearing it.
-
- Then he told us how he had been a pirate captain--and how he had
- sailed over waves mountains high, and gained rich prizes--and how
- he DID begin to think that here he had found a profession to his
- mind.
-
- 'I don't say there are no ups and downs in it,' he said,
- 'especially in stormy weather. But what a trade! And a sword at
- your side, and the Jolly Roger flying at the peak, and a prize in
- sight. And all the black mouths of your guns pointed at the
- laden trader--and the wind in your favour, and your trusty crew
- ready to live and die for you! Oh--but it's a grand life!'
-
- I did feel so sorry for him. He used such nice words, and he had
- a gentleman's voice.
-
- 'I'm sure you weren't brought up to be a pirate,' said Dora. She
- had dressed even to her collar--and made Noel do it too--but the
- rest of us were in blankets with just a few odd things put on
- anyhow underneath.
-
- The robber frowned and sighed.
-
- 'No,' he said, 'I was brought up to the law. I was at Balliol,
- bless your hearts, and that's true anyway.' He sighed again, and
- looked hard at the fire.
-
- 'That was my Father's college,' H. O. was beginning, but Dicky
- said--'Why did you leave off being a pirate?'
-
- 'A pirate?' he said, as if he had not been thinking of such
- things.
-
- 'Oh, yes; why I gave it up because--because I could not get over
- the dreadful sea-sickness.'
-
- 'Nelson was sea-sick,' said Oswald.
-
- 'Ah,' said the robber; 'but I hadn't his luck or his pluck, or
- something. He stuck to it and won Trafalgar, didn't he? "Kiss
- me, Hardy"--and all that, eh? _I_ couldn't stick to it--I had to
- resign. And nobody kissed ME.'
-
- I saw by his understanding about Nelson that he was really a man
- who had been to a good school as well as to Balliol.
-
- Then we asked him, 'And what did you do then?'
-
- And Alice asked if he was ever a coiner, and we told him how we
- had thought we'd caught the desperate gang next door, and he was
- very much interested and said he was glad he had never taken to
- coining.
-
- 'Besides, the coins are so ugly nowadays,' he said, 'no one could
- really find any pleasure in making them. And it's a
- hole-and-corner business at the best, isn't it?--and it must be a
- very thirsty one--with the hot metal and furnaces and things.'
-
- And again he looked at the fire.
-
- Oswald forgot for a minute that the interesting stranger was a
- robber, and asked him if he wouldn't have a drink. Oswald has
- heard Father do this to his friends, so he knows it is the right
- thing. The robber said he didn't mind if he did. And that is
- right, too.
-
- And Dora went and got a bottle of Father's ale--the Light
- Sparkling Family--and a glass, and we gave it to the robber.
- Dora said she would be responsible.
-
- Then when he had had a drink he told us about bandits, but he
- said it was so bad in wet weather. Bandits' caves were hardly
- ever properly weathertight. And bush-ranging was the same.
-
- 'As a matter of fact,' he said, 'I was bush-ranging this
- afternoon, among the furze-bushes on the Heath, but I had no
- luck. I stopped the Lord Mayor in his gilt coach, with all his
- footmen in plush and gold lace, smart as cockatoos. But it was
- no go. The Lord Mayor hadn't a stiver in his pockets. One of
- the footmen had six new pennies: the Lord Mayor always pays his
- servants' wages in new pennies. I spent fourpence of that in
- bread and cheese, that on the table's the tuppence. Ah, it's a
- poor trade!' And then he filled his pipe again.
-
- We had turned out the gas, so that Father should have a jolly
- good surprise when he did come home, and we sat and talked as
- pleasant as could be. I never liked a new man better than I
- liked that robber. And I felt so sorry for him. He told us he
- had been a war-correspondent and an editor, in happier days, as
- well as a horse-stealer and a colonel of dragoons.
-
- And quite suddenly, just as we were telling him about Lord
- Tottenham and our being highwaymen ourselves, he put up his hand
- and said 'Shish!' and we were quiet and listened.
-
- There was a scrape, scrape, scraping noise; it came from
- downstairs.
-
- 'They're filing something,' whispered the robber, 'here--shut up,
- give me that pistol, and the poker. There is a burglar now, and
- no mistake.'
-
- 'It's only a toy one and it won't go off,' I said, 'but you can
- cock it.'
-
- Then we heard a snap. 'There goes the window bar,' said the
- robber softly. 'Jove! what an adventure! You kids stay here,
- I'll tackle it.'
-
- But Dicky and I said we should come. So he let us go as far as
- the bottom of the kitchen stairs, and we took the tongs and
- shovel with us. There was a light in the kitchen; a very little
- light. It is curious we never thought, any of us, that this
- might be a plant of our robber's to get away. We never thought
- of doubting his word of honour. And we were right.
-
- That noble robber dashed the kitchen door open, and rushed in
- with the big toy pistol in one hand and the poker in the other,
- shouting out just like Oswald had done--
-
- 'Surrender! You are discovered! Surrender, or I'll fire! Throw
- up your hands!' And Dicky and I rattled the tongs and shovel so
- that he might know there were more of us, all bristling with
- weapons.
-
- And we heard a husky voice in the kitchen saying--
-
- 'All right, governor! Stow that scent sprinkler. I'll give in.
- Blowed if I ain't pretty well sick of the job, anyway.'
-
- Then we went in. Our robber was standing in the grandest manner
- with his legs very wide apart, and the pistol pointing at the
- cowering burglar. The burglar was a large man who did not mean
- to have a beard, I think, but he had got some of one, and a red
- comforter, and a fur cap, and his face was red and his voice was
- thick. How different from our own robber! The burglar had a
- dark lantern, and he was standing by the plate-basket. When we
- had lit the gas we all thought he was very like what a burglar
- ought to be.
-
- He did not look as if he could ever have been a pirate or a
- highwayman, or anything really dashing or noble, and he scowled
- and shuffled his feet and said: 'Well, go on: why don't yer
- fetch the pleece?'
-
- 'Upon my word, I don't know,' said our robber, rubbing his chin.
- 'Oswald, why don't we fetch the police?'
-
- It is not every robber that I would stand Christian names from, I
- can tell you but just then I didn't think of that. I just
- said--'Do you mean I'm to fetch one?'
-
- Our robber looked at the burglar and said nothing.
-
- Then the burglar began to speak very fast, and to look different
- ways with his hard, shiny little eyes.
-
- 'Lookee 'ere, governor,' he said, 'I was stony broke, so help me,
- I was. And blessed if I've nicked a haporth of your little lot.
- You know yourself there ain't much to tempt a bloke,' he shook
- the plate-basket as if he was angry with it, and the yellowy
- spoons and forks rattled. 'I was just a-looking through this
- 'ere Bank-ollerday show, when you come. Let me off, sir. Come
- now, I've got kids of my own at home, strike me if I ain't--same
- as yours--I've got a nipper just about 'is size, and what'll come
- of them if I'm lagged? I ain't been in it long, sir, and I ain't
- 'andy at it.'
-
- 'No,' said our robber; 'you certainly are not.' Alice and the
- others had come down by now to see what was happening. Alice
- told me afterwards they thought it really was the cat this time.
-
- 'No, I ain't 'andy, as you say, sir, and if you let me off this
- once I'll chuck the whole blooming bizz; rake my civvy, I will.
- Don't be hard on a cove, mister; think of the missis and the
- kids. I've got one just the cut of little missy there bless 'er
- pretty 'eart.'
-
- 'Your family certainly fits your circumstances very nicely,' said
- our robber. Then Alice said--
-
- 'Oh, do let him go! If he's got a little girl like me, whatever
- will she do? Suppose it was Father!'
-
- 'I don't think he's got a little girl like you, my dear,' said
- our robber, 'and I think he'll be safer under lock and key.'
-
- 'You ask yer Father to let me go, miss,' said the burglar; "e
- won't 'ave the 'art to refuse you.'
-
- 'If I do,' said Alice, 'will you promise never to come back?'
-
- 'Not me, miss,' the burglar said very earnestly, and he looked at
- the plate-basket again, as if that alone would be enough to keep
- him away, our robber said afterwards.
-
- 'And will you be good and not rob any more?' said Alice.
-
- 'I'll turn over a noo leaf, miss, so help me.'
-
- Then Alice said--'Oh, do let him go! I'm sure he'll be good.'
-
- But our robber said no, it wouldn't be right; we must wait till
- Father came home. Then H. O. said, very suddenly and plainly:
-
- 'I don't think it's at all fair, when you're a robber yourself.'
-
- The minute he'd said it the burglar said, 'Kidded, by gum!'--and
- then our robber made a step towards him to catch hold of him, and
- before you had time to think 'Hullo!' the burglar knocked the
- pistol up with one hand and knocked our robber down with the
- other, and was off out of the window like a shot, though Oswald
- and Dicky did try to stop him by holding on to his legs.
-
- And that burglar had the cheek to put his head in at the window
- and say, 'I'll give yer love to the kids and the missis'--and he
- was off like winking, and there were Alice and Dora trying to
- pick up our robber, and asking him whether he was hurt, and
- where. He wasn't hurt at all, except a lump at the back of his
- head. And he got up, and we dusted the kitchen floor off him.
- Eliza is a dirty girl.
-
- Then he said, 'Let's put up the shutters. It never rains but it
- pours. Now you've had two burglars I daresay you'll have
- twenty.' So we put up the shutters, which Eliza has strict
- orders to do before she goes out, only she never does, and we
- went back to Father's study, and the robber said, 'What a night
- we are having!' and put his boots back in the fender to go on
- steaming, and then we all talked at once. It was the most
- wonderful adventure we ever had, though it wasn't
- treasure-seeking--at least not ours. I suppose it was the
- burglar's treasure-seeking, but he didn't get much--and our
- robber said he didn't believe a word about those kids that were
- so like Alice and me.
-
- And then there was the click of the gate, and we said, 'Here's
- Father,' and the robber said, 'And now for the police.'
-
- Then we all jumped up. We did like him so much, and it seemed so
- unfair that he should be sent to prison, and the horrid, lumping
- big burglar not.
-
- And Alice said, 'Oh, NO--run! Dicky will let you out at the back
- door. Oh, do go, go NOW.'
-
- And we all said, 'Yes, GO,' and pulled him towards the door, and
- gave him his hat and stick and the things out of his pockets.
-
- But Father's latchkey was in the door, and it was too late.
-
- Father came in quickly, purring with the cold, and began to say,
- 'It's all right, Foulkes, I've got--' And then he stopped short
- and stared at us. Then he said, in the voice we all hate,
- 'Children, what is the meaning of all this?' And for a minute
- nobody spoke.
-
- Then my Father said, 'Foulkes, I must really apologize for these
- very naughty--' And then our robber rubbed his hands and laughed,
- and cried out:
-
- 'You're mistaken, my dear sir, I'm not Foulkes; I'm a robber,
- captured by these young people in the most gallant manner.
- "Hands up, surrender, or I fire," and all the rest of it. My
- word, Bastable, but you've got some kids worth having! I wish my
- Denny had their pluck.'
-
- Then we began to understand, and it was like being knocked down,
- it was so sudden. And our robber told us he wasn't a robber
- after all. He was only an old college friend of my Father's, and
- he had come after dinner, when Father was just trying to mend the
- lock H. O. had broken, to ask Father to get him a letter to a
- doctor about his little boy Denny, who was ill. And Father had
- gone over the Heath to Vanbrugh Park to see some rich people he
- knows and get the letter. And he had left Mr Foulkes to wait
- till he came back, because it was important to know at once
- whether Father could get the letter, and if he couldn't Mr
- Foulkes would have had to try some one else directly.
-
- We were dumb with amazement.
-
- Our robber told my Father about the other burglar, and said he
- was sorry he'd let him escape, but my Father said, 'Oh, it's all
- right: poor beggar; if he really had kids at home: you never
- can tell--forgive us our debts, don't you know; but tell me about
- the first business. It must have been moderately entertaining.'
-
- Then our robber told my Father how I had rushed into the room
- with a pistol, crying out ... but you know all about that. And
- he laid it on so thick and fat about plucky young-uns, and chips
- of old blocks, and things like that, that I felt I was purple
- with shame, even under the blanket. So I swallowed that thing
- that tries to prevent you speaking when you ought to, and I said,
- 'Look here, Father, I didn't really think there was any one in
- the study. We thought it was a cat at first, and then I thought
- there was no one there, and I was just larking. And when I said
- surrender and all that, it was just the game, don't you know?'
-
- Then our robber said, 'Yes, old chap; but when you found there
- really WAS someone there, you dropped the pistol and bunked,
- didn't you, eh?'
-
- And I said, 'No; I thought, "Hullo! here's a robber! Well, it's
- all up, I suppose, but I may as well hold on and see what
- happens."'
-
- And I was glad I'd owned up, for Father slapped me on the back,
- and said I was a young brick, and our robber said I was no funk
- anyway, and though I got very hot under the blanket I liked it,
- and I explained that the others would have done the same if they
- had thought of it.
-
- Then Father got up some more beer, and laughed about Dora's
- responsibility, and he got out a box of figs he had bought for
- us, only he hadn't given it to us because of the Water Rates, and
- Eliza came in and brought up the bread and cheese, and what there
- was left of the neck of mutton--cold wreck of mutton, Father
- called it--and we had a feast--like a picnic--all sitting
- anywhere, and eating with our fingers. It was prime. We sat up
- till past twelve o'clock, and I never felt so pleased to think I
- was not born a girl. It was hard on the others; they would have
- done just the same if they'd thought of it. But it does make you
- feel jolly when your pater says you're a young brick!
-
- When Mr Foulkes was going, he said to Alice, 'Good-bye, Hardy.'
-
- And Alice understood, of course, and kissed him as hard as she
- could.
-
- And she said, 'I wanted to, when you said no one kissed you when
- you left off being a pirate.' And he said, 'I know you did, my
- dear.' And Dora kissed him too, and said, 'I suppose none of
- these tales were true?'
-
- And our robber just said, 'I tried to play the part properly, my
- dear.'
-
- And he jolly well did play it, and no mistake. We have often
- seen him since, and his boy Denny, and his girl Daisy, but that
- comes in another story.
-
- And if any of you kids who read this ever had two such adventures
- in one night you can just write and tell me. That's all.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 14
- THE DIVINING-ROD
-
- You have no idea how uncomfortable the house was on the day when
- we sought for gold with the divining-rod. It was like a
- spring-cleaning in the winter-time. All the carpets were up,
- because Father had told Eliza to make the place decent as there
- was a gentleman coming to dinner the next day. So she got in a
- charwoman, and they slopped water about, and left brooms and
- brushes on the stairs for people to tumble over. H. O. got a big
- bump on his head in that way, and when he said it was too bad,
- Eliza said he should keep in the nursery then, and not be where
- he'd no business. We bandaged his head with a towel, and then he
- stopped crying and played at being England's wounded hero dying
- in the cockpit, while every man was doing his duty, as the hero
- had told them to, and Alice was Hardy, and I was the doctor, and
- the others were the crew. Playing at Hardy made us think of our
- own dear robber, and we wished he was there, and wondered if we
- should ever see him any more.
-
- We were rather astonished at Father's having anyone to dinner,
- because now he never seems to think of anything but business.
- Before Mother died people often came to dinner, and Father's
- business did not take up so much of his time and was not the
- bother it is now. And we used to see who could go furthest down
- in our nightgowns and get nice things to eat, without being seen,
- out of the dishes as they came out of the dining-room. Eliza
- can't cook very nice things. She told Father she was a good
- plain cook, but he says it was a fancy portrait. We stayed in
- the nursery till the charwoman came in and told us to be off--she
- was going to make one job of it, and have our carpet up as well
- as all the others, now the man was here to beat them. It came
- up, and it was very dusty--and under it we found my
- threepenny-bit that I lost ages ago, which shows what Eliza is.
- H. O. had got tired of being the wounded hero, and Dicky was so
- tired of doing nothing that Dora said she knew he'd begin to
- tease Noel in a minute; then of course Dicky said he wasn't going
- to tease anybody--he was going out to the Heath. He said he'd
- heard that nagging women drove a man from his home, and now he
- found it was quite true. Oswald always tries to be a peacemaker,
- so he told Dicky to shut up and not make an ass of himself. And
- Alice said, 'Well, Dora began'--And Dora tossed her chin up and
- said it wasn't any business of Oswald's any way, and no one asked
- Alice's opinion. So we all felt very uncomfortable till Noel
- said, 'Don't let's quarrel about nothing. You know let dogs
- delight--and I made up another piece while you were talking--
-
- Quarrelling is an evil thing,
- It fills with gall life's cup;
- For when once you begin
- It takes such a long time to make it up.'
-
- We all laughed then and stopped jawing at each other. Noel is
- very funny with his poetry. But that piece happened to come out
- quite true. You begin to quarrel and then you can't stop; often,
- long before the others are ready to cry and make it up, I see how
- silly it is, and I want to laugh; but it doesn't do to say
- so--for it only makes the others crosser than they were before.
- I wonder why that is?
-
- Alice said Noel ought to be poet laureate, and she actually went
- out in the cold and got some laurel leaves--the spotted kind--out
- of the garden, and Dora made a crown and we put it on him. He
- was quite pleased; but the leaves made a mess, and Eliza said,
- 'Don't.' I believe that's a word grown-ups use more than any
- other. Then suddenly Alice thought of that old idea of hers for
- finding treasure, and she said--'Do let's try the divining-rod.'
-
- So Oswald said, 'Fair priestess, we do greatly desire to find
- gold beneath our land, therefore we pray thee practise with the
- divining-rod, and tell us where we can find it.'
-
- 'Do ye desire to fashion of it helms and hauberks?' said Alice.
-
- 'Yes,' said Noel; 'and chains and ouches.'
-
- 'I bet you don't know what an "ouch" is,' said Dicky.
-
- 'Yes I do, so there!' said Noel. 'It's a carcanet. I looked it
- out in the dicker, now then!' We asked him what a carcanet was,
- but he wouldn't say.
-
- 'And we want to make fair goblets of the gold,' said Oswald.
-
- 'Yes, to drink coconut milk out of,' said H. O.
-
- 'And we desire to build fair palaces of it,' said Dicky.
-
- 'And to buy things,' said Dora; 'a great many things. New Sunday
- frocks and hats and kid gloves and--'
-
- She would have gone on for ever so long only we reminded her that
- we hadn't found the gold yet.
-
- By this Alice had put on the nursery tablecloth, which is green,
- and tied the old blue and yellow antimacassar over her head, and
- she said--
-
- 'If your intentions are correct, fear nothing and follow me.'
-
- And she went down into the hall. We all followed chanting
- 'Heroes.' It is a gloomy thing the girls learnt at the High
- School, and we always use it when we want a priestly chant.
-
- Alice stopped short by the hat-stand, and held up her hands as
- well as she could for the tablecloth, and said--
-
- 'Now, great altar of the golden idol, yield me the divining-rod
- that I may use it for the good of the suffering people.'
-
- The umbrella-stand was the altar of the golden idol, and it
- yielded her the old school umbrella. She carried it between her
- palms.
-
- 'Now,' she said, 'I shall sing the magic chant. You mustn't say
- anything, but just follow wherever I go--like follow my leader,
- you know--and when there is gold underneath the magic rod will
- twist in the hand of the priestess like a live thing that seeks
- to be free. Then you will dig, and the golden treasure will be
- revealed. H. O., if you make that clatter with your boots
- they'll come and tell us not to. Now come on all of you.'
-
- So she went upstairs and down and into every room. We followed
- her on tiptoe, and Alice sang as she went. What she sang is not
- out of a book--Noel made it up while she was dressing up for the
- priestess.
-
- Ashen rod cold
- That here I hold,
- Teach me where to find the gold.
-
- When we came to where Eliza was, she said, 'Get along with you';
- but Dora said it was only a game, and we wouldn't touch anything,
- and our boots were quite clean, and Eliza might as well let us.
- So she did.
-
- It was all right for the priestess, but it was a little dull for
- the rest of us, because she wouldn't let us sing, too; so we said
- we'd had enough of it, and if she couldn't find the gold we'd
- leave off and play something else. The priestess said, 'All
- right, wait a minute,' and went on singing. Then we all followed
- her back into the nursery, where the carpet was up and the boards
- smelt of soft soap. Then she said, 'It moves, it moves! Once
- more the choral hymn!' So we sang 'Heroes' again, and in the
- middle the umbrella dropped from her hands.
-
- 'The magic rod has spoken,' said Alice; 'dig here, and that with
- courage and despatch.' We didn't quite see how to dig, but we
- all began to scratch on the floor with our hands, but the
- priestess said, 'Don't be so silly! It's the place where they
- come to do the gas. The board's loose. Dig an you value your
- lives, for ere sundown the dragon who guards this spoil will
- return in his fiery fury and make you his unresisting prey.'
-
- So we dug--that is, we got the loose board up. And Alice threw
- up her arms and cried--
-
- 'See the rich treasure--the gold in thick layers, with silver and
- diamonds stuck in it!'
-
- 'Like currants in cake,' said H. O.
-
- 'It's a lovely treasure,' said Dicky yawning. 'Let's come back
- and carry it away another day.'
-
- But Alice was kneeling by the hole.
-
- 'Let me feast my eyes on the golden splendour,' she said, 'hidden
- these long centuries from the human eye. Behold how the magic
- rod has led us to treasures more--Oswald, don't push so!--more
- bright than ever monarch--I say, there IS something down there,
- really. I saw it shine!'
-
- We thought she was kidding, but when she began to try to get into
- the hole, which was much too small, we saw she meant it, so I
- said, 'Let's have a squint,' and I looked, but I couldn't see
- anything, even when I lay down on my stomach. The others lay
- down on their stomachs too and tried to see, all but Noel, who
- stood and looked at us and said we were the great serpents come
- down to drink at the magic pool. He wanted to be the knight and
- slay the great serpents with his good sword--he even drew the
- umbrella ready--but Alice said, 'All right, we will in a minute.
- But now--I'm sure I saw it; do get a match, Noel, there's a
- dear.'
-
- 'What did you see?' asked Noel, beginning to go for the matches
- very slowly.
-
- 'Something bright, away in the corner under the board against the
- beam.'
-
- 'Perhaps it was a rat's eye,' Noel said, 'or a snake's,' and we
- did not put our heads quite so close to the hole till he came
- back with the matches.
-
- Then I struck a match, and Alice cried, 'There it is!' And there
- it was, and it was a half-sovereign, partly dusty and partly
- bright. We think perhaps a mouse, disturbed by the carpets being
- taken up, may have brushed the dust of years from part of the
- half-sovereign with his tail. We can't imagine how it came
- there, only Dora thinks she remembers once when H. O. was very
- little Mother gave him some money to hold, and he dropped it, and
- it rolled all over the floor. So we think perhaps this was part
- of it. We were very glad. H. O. wanted to go out at once and
- buy a mask he had seen for fourpence. It had been a shilling
- mask, but now it was going very cheap because Guy Fawkes' Day was
- over, and it was a little cracked at the top. but Dora said, 'I
- don't know that it's our money. Let's wait and ask Father.'
-
- But H. O. did not care about waiting, and I felt for him. Dora
- is rather like grown-ups in that way; she does not seem to
- understand that when you want a thing you do want it, and that
- you don't wish to wait, even a minute.
-
- So we went and asked Albert-next-door's uncle. He was pegging
- away at one of the rotten novels he has to write to make his
- living, but he said we weren't interrupting him at all.
-
- 'My hero's folly has involved him in a difficulty,' he said. 'It
- is his own fault. I will leave him to meditate on the incredible
- fatuity--the hare-brained recklessness--which have brought him to
- this pass. It will be a lesson to him. I, meantime, will give
- myself unreservedly to the pleasures of your conversation.'
-
- That's one thing I like Albert's uncle for. He always talks like
- a book, and yet you can always understand what he means. I think
- he is more like us, inside of his mind, than most grown-up people
- are. He can pretend beautifully. I never met anyone else so
- good at it, except our robber, and we began it, with him. But it
- was Albert's uncle who first taught us how to make people talk
- like books when you're playing things, and he made us learn to
- tell a story straight from the beginning, not starting in the
- middle like most people do. So now Oswald remembered what he had
- been told, as he generally does, and began at the beginning, but
- when he came to where Alice said she was the priestess, Albert's
- uncle said--
-
- 'Let the priestess herself set forth the tale in fitting speech.'
-
- So Alice said, 'O high priest of the great idol, the humblest of
- thy slaves took the school umbrella for a divining-rod, and sang
- the song of inver--what's-it's-name?'
-
- 'Invocation perhaps?' said Albert's uncle. 'Yes; and then I went
- about and about and the others got tired, so the divining-rod
- fell on a certain spot, and I said, "Dig", and we dug--it was
- where the loose board is for the gas men--and then there really
- and truly was a half-sovereign lying under the boards, and here
- it is.'
-
- Albert's uncle took it and looked at it.
-
- 'The great high priest will bite it to see if it's good,' he
- said, and he did. 'I congratulate you,' he went on; 'you are
- indeed among those favoured by the Immortals. First you find
- half-crowns in the garden, and now this. The high priest advises
- you to tell your Father, and ask if you may keep it. My hero has
- become penitent, but impatient. I must pull him out of this
- scrape. Ye have my leave to depart.'
-
- Of course we know from Kipling that that means, 'You'd better
- bunk, and be sharp about it,' so we came away. I do like
- Albert's uncle.
-
- I shall be like that when I'm a man. He gave us our Jungle
- books, and he is awfully clever, though he does have to write
- grown-up tales.
-
- We told Father about it that night. He was very kind. He said
- we might certainly have the half-sovereign, and he hoped we
- should enjoy ourselves with our treasure-trove.
-
- Then he said, 'Your dear Mother's Indian Uncle is coming to
- dinner here to-morrow night. So will you not drag the furniture
- about overhead, please, more than you're absolutely obliged; and
- H. O. might wear slippers or something. I can always distinguish
- the note of H. O.'s boots.'
-
- We said we would be very quiet, and Father went on--
-
- 'This Indian Uncle is not used to children, and he is coming to
- talk business with me. It is really important that he should be
- quiet. Do you think, Dora, that perhaps bed at six for H. O. and
- Noel--'
-
- But H. O. said, 'Father, I really and truly won't make a noise.
- I'll stand on my head all the evening sooner than disturb the
- Indian Uncle with my boots.'
-
- And Alice said Noel never made a row anyhow. So Father laughed
- and said, 'All right.' And he said we might do as we liked with
- the half-sovereign. 'Only for goodness' sake don't try to go in
- for business with it,' he said. 'It's always a mistake to go
- into business with an insufficient capital.'
-
- We talked it over all that evening, and we decided that as we
- were not to go into business with our half-sovereign it was no
- use not spending it at once, and so we might as well have a right
- royal feast. The next day we went out and bought the things. We
- got figs, and almonds and raisins, and a real raw rabbit, and
- Eliza promised to cook it for us if we would wait till tomorrow,
- because of the Indian Uncle coming to dinner. She was very busy
- cooking nice things for him to eat. We got the rabbit because we
- are so tired of beef and mutton, and Father hasn't a bill at the
- poultry shop. And we got some flowers to go on the dinner-table
- for Father's party. And we got hardbake and raspberry noyau and
- peppermint rock and oranges and a coconut, with other nice
- things. We put it all in the top long drawer. It is H. O.'s
- play drawer, and we made him turn his things out and put them in
- Father's old portmanteau. H. O. is getting old enough now to
- learn to be unselfish, and besides, his drawer wanted tidying
- very badly. Then we all vowed by the honour of the ancient House
- of Bastable that we would not touch any of the feast till Dora
- gave the word next day. And we gave H. O. some of the hardbake,
- to make it easier for him to keep his vow. The next day was the
- most rememorable day in all our lives, but we didn't know that
- then. But that is another story. I think that is such a useful
- way to know when you can't think how to end up a chapter. I
- learnt it from another writer named Kipling. I've mentioned him
- before, I believe, but he deserves it!
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 15
- 'LO, THE POOR INDIAN!'
-
- It was all very well for Father to ask us not to make a row
- because the Indian Uncle was coming to talk business, but my
- young brother's boots are not the only things that make a noise.
- We took his boots away and made him wear Dora's bath slippers,
- which are soft and woolly, and hardly any soles to them; and of
- course we wanted to see the Uncle, so we looked over the
- banisters when he came, and we were as quiet as mice--but when
- Eliza had let him in she went straight down to the kitchen and
- made the most awful row you ever heard, it sounded like the Day
- of judgement, or all the saucepans and crockery in the house
- being kicked about the floor, but she told me afterwards it was
- only the tea-tray and one or two cups and saucers, that she had
- knocked over in her flurry. We heard the Uncle say, 'God bless
- my soul!' and then he went into Father's study and the door was
- shut--we didn't see him properly at all that time.
-
- I don't believe the dinner was very nice. Something got burned
- I'm sure--for we smelt it. It was an extra smell, besides the
- mutton.
-
- I know that got burned. Eliza wouldn't have any of us in the
- kitchen except Dora--till dinner was over. Then we got what was
- left of the dessert, and had it on the stairs--just round the
- corner where they can't see you from the hall, unless the first
- landing gas is lighted. Suddenly the study door opened and the
- Uncle came out and went and felt in his greatcoat pocket. It was
- his cigar-case he wanted. We saw that afterwards. We got a much
- better view of him then. He didn't look like an Indian but just
- like a kind of brown, big Englishman, and of course he didn't see
- us, but we heard him mutter to himself--
-
- 'Shocking bad dinner! Eh!--what?'
-
- When he went back to the study he didn't shut the door properly.
- That door has always been a little tiresome since the day we took
- the lock off to get out the pencil sharpener H. O. had shoved
- into the keyhole. We didn't listen--really and truly--but the
- Indian Uncle has a very big voice, and Father was not going to be
- beaten by a poor Indian in talking or anything else--so he spoke
- up too, like a man, and I heard him say it was a very good
- business, and only wanted a little capital--and he said it as if
- it was an imposition he had learned, and he hated having to say
- it. The Uncle said, 'Pooh, pooh!' to that, and then he said he
- was afraid that what that same business wanted was not capital
- but management. Then I heard my Father say, 'It is not a
- pleasant subject: I am sorry I introduced it. Suppose we change
- it, sir. Let me fill your glass.' Then the poor Indian said
- something about vintage--and that a poor, broken- down man like
- he was couldn't be too careful. And then Father said, 'Well,
- whisky then,' and afterwards they talked about Native Races and
- Imperial something or other and it got very dull.
-
- So then Oswald remembered that you must not hear what people do
- not intend you to hear--even if you are not listening and he
- said, 'We ought not to stay here any longer. Perhaps they would
- not like us to hear--'
-
- Alice said, 'Oh, do you think it could possibly matter?' and went
- and shut the study door softly but quite tight. So it was no use
- staying there any longer, and we went to the nursery.
-
- Then Noel said, 'Now I understand. Of course my Father is making
- a banquet for the Indian, because he is a poor, broken-down man.
- We might have known that from "Lo, the poor Indian!" you know.'
-
- We all agreed with him, and we were glad to have the thing
- explained, because we had not understood before what Father
- wanted to have people to dinner for--and not let us come in.
-
- 'Poor people are very proud,' said Alice, 'and I expect Father
- thought the Indian would be ashamed, if all of us children knew
- how poor he was.'
-
- Then Dora said, 'Poverty is no disgrace. We should honour honest
- Poverty.'
-
- And we all agreed that that was so.
-
- 'I wish his dinner had not been so nasty,' Dora said, while
- Oswald put lumps of coal on the fire with his fingers, so as not
- to make a noise. He is a very thoughtful boy, and he did not
- wipe his fingers on his trouser leg as perhaps Noel or H. O.
- would have done, but he just rubbed them on Dora's handkerchief
- while she was talking.
-
- 'I am afraid the dinner was horrid.' Dora went on. 'The table
- looked very nice with the flowers we got. I set it myself, and
- Eliza made me borrow the silver spoons and forks from
- Albert-next-door's Mother.'
-
- 'I hope the poor Indian is honest,' said Dicky gloomily, 'when
- you are a poor, broken-down man silver spoons must be a great
- temptation.'
-
- Oswald told him not to talk such tommy-rot because the Indian was
- a relation, so of course he couldn't do anything dishonourable.
- And Dora said it was all right any way, because she had washed up
- the spoons and forks herself and counted them, and they were all
- there, and she had put them into their wash-leather bag, and
- taken them back to Albert-next-door's Mother.
-
- 'And the brussels sprouts were all wet and swimmy,' she went on,
- 'and the potatoes looked grey--and there were bits of black in
- the gravy--and the mutton was bluey-red and soft in the middle.
- I saw it when it came out. The apple-pie looked very nice--but
- it wasn't quite done in the apply part. The other thing that was
- burnt--you must have smelt it, was the soup.'
-
- 'It is a pity,' said Oswald; 'I don't suppose he gets a good
- dinner every day.'
-
- 'No more do we,' said H. O., 'but we shall to-morrow.'
-
- I thought of all the things we had bought with our
- half-sovereign--the rabbit and the sweets and the almonds and
- raisins and figs and the coconut: and I thought of the nasty
- mutton and things, and while I was thinking about it all Alice
- said--
-
- 'Let's ask the poor Indian to come to dinner with US to-morrow.'
- I should have said it myself if she had given me time.
-
- We got the little ones to go to bed by promising to put a note on
- their dressing-table saying what had happened, so that they might
- know the first thing in the morning, or in the middle of the
- night if they happened to wake up, and then we elders arranged
- everything.
-
- I waited by the back door, and when the Uncle was beginning to go
- Dicky was to drop a marble down between the banisters for a
- signal, so that I could run round and meet the Uncle as he came
- out.
-
- This seems like deceit, but if you are a thoughtful and
- considerate boy you will understand that we could not go down and
- say to the Uncle in the hall under Father's eye, 'Father has
- given you a beastly, nasty dinner, but if you will come to dinner
- with us tomorrow, we will show you our idea of good things to
- eat.' You will see, if you think it over, that this would not
- have been at all polite to Father.
-
- So when the Uncle left, Father saw him to the door and let him
- out, and then went back to the study, looking very sad, Dora
- says.
-
- As the poor Indian came down our steps he saw me there at the
- gate.
-
- I did not mind his being poor, and I said, 'Good evening, Uncle,'
- just as politely as though he had been about to ascend into one
- of the gilded chariots of the rich and affluent, instead of
- having to walk to the station a quarter of a mile in the mud,
- unless he had the money for a tram fare.
-
- 'Good evening, Uncle.' I said it again, for he stood staring at
- me. I don't suppose he was used to politeness from boys--some
- boys are anything but--especially to the Aged Poor.
-
- So I said, 'Good evening, Uncle,' yet once again. Then he said--
-
- 'Time you were in bed, young man. Eh!--what?'
-
- Then I saw I must speak plainly with him, man to man. So I did.
- I said--
-
- 'You've been dining with my Father, and we couldn't help hearing
- you say the dinner was shocking. So we thought as you're an
- Indian, perhaps you're very poor'--I didn't like to tell him we
- had heard the dreadful truth from his own lips, so I went on,
- 'because of "Lo, the poor Indian"--you know--and you can't get a
- good dinner every day. And we are very sorry if you're poor; and
- won't you come and have dinner with us to-morrow--with us
- children, I mean? It's a very, very good dinner--rabbit, and
- hardbake, and coconut--and you needn't mind us knowing you're
- poor, because we know honourable poverty is no disgrace, and--' I
- could have gone on much longer, but he interrupted me to
- say--'Upon my word! And what's your name, eh?'
-
- 'Oswald Bastable,' I said; and I do hope you people who are
- reading this story have not guessed before that I was Oswald all
- the time.
-
- 'Oswald Bastable, eh? Bless my soul!' said the poor Indian.
- 'Yes, I'll dine with you, Mr Oswald Bastable, with all the
- pleasure in life. Very kind and cordial invitation, I'm sure.
- Good night, sir. At one o'clock, I presume?'
-
- 'Yes, at one,' I said. 'Good night, sir.'
-
- Then I went in and told the others, and we wrote a paper and put
- it on the boy's dressing-table, and it said--
-
- 'The poor Indian is coming at one. He seemed very grateful to me
- for my kindness.'
-
- We did not tell Father that the Uncle was coming to dinner with
- us, for the polite reason that I have explained before. But we
- had to tell Eliza; so we said a friend was coming to dinner and
- we wanted everything very nice. I think she thought it was
- Albert-next-door, but she was in a good temper that day, and she
- agreed to cook the rabbit and to make a pudding with currants in
- it. And when one o'clock came the Indian Uncle came too. I let
- him in and helped him off with his greatcoat, which was all furry
- inside, and took him straight to the nursery. We were to have
- dinner there as usual, for we had decided from the first that he
- would enjoy himself more if he was not made a stranger of. We
- agreed to treat him as one of ourselves, because if we were too
- polite, he might think it was our pride because he was poor.
-
- He shook hands with us all and asked our ages, and what schools
- we went to, and shook his head when we said we were having a
- holiday just now. I felt rather uncomfortable--I always do when
- they talk about schools--and I couldn't think of anything to say
- to show him we meant to treat him as one of ourselves. I did ask
- if he played cricket. He said he had not played lately. And
- then no one said anything till dinner came in. We had all washed
- our faces and hands and brushed our hair before he came in, and
- we all looked very nice, especially Oswald, who had had his hair
- cut that very morning. When Eliza had brought in the rabbit and
- gone out again, we looked at each other in silent despair, like
- in books. It seemed as if it were going to be just a dull dinner
- like the one the poor Indian had had the night before; only, of
- course, the things to eat would be nicer. Dicky kicked Oswald
- under the table to make him say something--and he had his new
- boots on, too!--but Oswald did not kick back; then the Uncle
- asked--
-
- 'Do you carve, sir, or shall I?'
-
- Suddenly Alice said--
-
- 'Would you like grown-up dinner, Uncle, or play-dinner?'
-
- He did not hesitate a moment, but said, 'Play-dinner, by all
- means. Eh!--what?' and then we knew it was all right.
-
- So we at once showed the Uncle how to be a dauntless hunter. The
- rabbit was the deer we had slain in the green forest with our
- trusty yew bows, and we toasted the joints of it, when the Uncle
- had carved it, on bits of firewood sharpened to a point. The
- Uncle's piece got a little burnt, but he said it was delicious,
- and he said game was always nicer when you had killed it
- yourself. When Eliza had taken away the rabbit bones and brought
- in the pudding, we waited till she had gone out and shut the
- door, and then we put the dish down on the floor and slew the
- pudding in the dish in the good old-fashioned way. It was a wild
- boar at bay, and very hard indeed to kill, even with forks. The
- Uncle was very fierce indeed with the pudding, and jumped and
- howled when he speared it, but when it came to his turn to be
- helped, he said, 'No, thank you; think of my liver. Eh!--what?'
-
- But he had some almonds and raisins--when we had climbed to the
- top of the chest of drawers to pluck them from the boughs of the
- great trees; and he had a fig from the cargo that the rich
- merchants brought in their ship--the long drawer was the
- ship--and the rest of us had the sweets and the coconut. It was
- a very glorious and beautiful feast, and when it was over we said
- we hoped it was better than the dinner last night. And he said:
-
- 'I never enjoyed a dinner more.' He was too polite to say what
- he really thought about Father's dinner. And we saw that though
- he might be poor, he was a true gentleman.
-
- He smoked a cigar while we finished up what there was left to
- eat, and told us about tiger shooting and about elephants. We
- asked him about wigwams, and wampum, and mocassins, and beavers,
- but he did not seem to know, or else he was shy about talking of
- the wonders of his native land.
-
- We liked him very much indeed, and when he was going at last,
- Alice nudged me, and I said--'There's one and threepence farthing
- left out of our half-sovereign. Will you take it, please,
- because we do like you very much indeed, and we don't want it,
- really; and we would rather you had it.' And I put the money
- into his hand.
-
- 'I'll take the threepenny-bit,' he said, turning the money over
- and looking at it, 'but I couldn't rob you of the rest. By the
- way, where did you get the money for this most royal spread--half
- a sovereign you said--eh, what?'
-
- We told him all about the different ways we had looked for
- treasure, and when we had been telling some time he sat down, to
- listen better and at last we told him how Alice had played at
- divining-rod, and how it really had found a half-sovereign.
-
- Then he said he would like to see her do it again. But we
- explained that the rod would only show gold and silver, and that
- we were quite sure there was no more gold in the house, because
- we happened to have looked very carefully.
-
- 'Well, silver, then,' said he; 'let's hide the plate-basket, and
- little Alice shall make the divining-rod find it. Eh!--what?'
-
- 'There isn't any silver in the plate-basket now,' Dora said.
- 'Eliza asked me to borrow the silver spoons and forks for your
- dinner last night from Albert-next-door's Mother. Father never
- notices, but she thought it would be nicer for you. Our own
- silver went to have the dents taken out; and I don't think Father
- could afford to pay the man for doing it, for the silver hasn't
- come back.'
-
- 'Bless my soul!' said the Uncle again, looking at the hole in the
- big chair that we burnt when we had Guy Fawkes' Day indoors.
- 'And how much pocket-money do you get? Eh!--what?'
-
- 'We don't have any now,' said Alice; 'but indeed we don't want
- the other shilling. We'd much rather you had it, wouldn't we?'
-
- And the rest of us said, 'Yes.' The Uncle wouldn't take it, but
- he asked a lot of questions, and at last he went away. And when
- he went he said--
-
- 'Well, youngsters, I've enjoyed myself very much. I shan't
- forget your kind hospitality. Perhaps the poor Indian may be in
- a position to ask you all to dinner some day.'
-
- Oswald said if he ever could we should like to come very much,
- but he was not to trouble to get such a nice dinner as ours,
- because we could do very well with cold mutton and rice pudding.
- We do not like these things, but Oswald knows how to behave.
- Then the poor Indian went away.
-
- We had not got any treasure by this party, but we had had a very
- good time, and I am sure the Uncle enjoyed himself.
-
- We were so sorry he was gone that we could none of us eat much
- tea; but we did not mind, because we had pleased the poor Indian
- and enjoyed ourselves too. Besides, as Dora said, 'A contented
- mind is a continual feast,' so it did not matter about not
- wanting tea.
-
- Only H. O. did not seem to think a continual feast was a
- contented mind, and Eliza gave him a powder in what was left of
- the red-currant jelly Father had for the nasty dinner.
-
- But the rest of us were quite well, and I think it must have been
- the coconut with H. O. We hoped nothing had disagreed with the
- Uncle, but we never knew.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 16
- THE END OF THE TREASURE-SEEKING
-
- Now it is coming near the end of our treasure-seeking, and the
- end was so wonderful that now nothing is like it used to be. It
- is like as if our fortunes had been in an earthquake, and after
- those, you know, everything comes out wrong-way up.
-
- The day after the Uncle speared the pudding with us opened in
- gloom and sadness. But you never know. It was destined to be a
- day when things happened. Yet no sign of this appeared in the
- early morning. Then all was misery and upsetness. None of us
- felt quite well; I don't know why: and Father had one of his
- awful colds, so Dora persuaded him not to go to London, but to
- stay cosy and warm in the study, and she made him some gruel.
- She makes it better than Eliza does; Eliza's gruel is all little
- lumps, and when you suck them it is dry oatmeal inside.
-
- We kept as quiet as we could, and I made H. O. do some lessons,
- like the G. B. had advised us to. But it was very dull. There
- are some days when you seem to have got to the end of all the
- things that could ever possibly happen to you, and you feel you
- will spend all the rest of your life doing dull things just the
- same way. Days like this are generally wet days. But, as I
- said, you never know.
-
- Then Dicky said if things went on like this he should run away to
- sea, and Alice said she thought it would be rather nice to go
- into a convent. H. O. was a little disagreeable because of the
- powder Eliza had given him, so he tried to read two books at
- once, one with each eye, just because Noel wanted one of the
- books, which was very selfish of him, so it only made his
- headache worse. H. O. is getting old enough to learn by
- experience that it is wrong to be selfish, and when he complained
- about his head Oswald told him whose fault it was, because I am
- older than he is, and it is my duty to show him where he is
- wrong. But he began to cry, and then Oswald had to cheer him up
- because of Father wanting to be quiet. So Oswald said--
-
- 'They'll eat H. O. if you don't look out!' And Dora said Oswald
- was too bad.
-
- Of course Oswald was not going to interfere again, so he went to
- look out of the window and see the trams go by, and by and by H.
- O. came and looked out too, and Oswald, who knows when to be
- generous and forgiving, gave him a piece of blue pencil and two
- nibs, as good as new, to keep.
-
- As they were looking out at the rain splashing on the stones in
- the street they saw a four-wheeled cab come lumbering up from the
- way the station is. Oswald called out--
-
- 'Here comes the coach of the Fairy Godmother. It'll stop here,
- you see if it doesn't!'
-
- So they all came to the window to look. Oswald had only said
- that about stopping and he was stricken with wonder and amaze
- when the cab really did stop. It had boxes on the top and knobby
- parcels sticking out of the window, and it was something like
- going away to the seaside and something like the gentleman who
- takes things about in a carriage with the wooden shutters up, to
- sell to the drapers' shops. The cabman got down, and some one
- inside handed out ever so many parcels of different shapes and
- sizes, and the cabman stood holding them in his arms and grinning
- over them.
-
- Dora said, 'It is a pity some one doesn't tell him this isn't the
- house.' And then from inside the cab some one put out a foot
- feeling for the step, like a tortoise's foot coming out from
- under his shell when you are holding him off the ground, and then
- a leg came and more parcels, and then Noel cried--
-
- 'It's the poor Indian!'
-
- And it was.
-
- Eliza opened the door, and we were all leaning over the
- banisters. Father heard the noise of parcels and boxes in the
- hall, and he came out without remembering how bad his cold was.
- If you do that yourself when you have a cold they call you
- careless and naughty. Then we heard the poor Indian say to
- Father--
-
- 'I say, Dick, I dined with your kids yesterday--as I daresay
- they've told you. Jolliest little cubs I ever saw! Why didn't
- you let me see them the other night? The eldest is the image of
- poor Janey--and as to young Oswald, he's a man! If he's not a
- man, I'm a nigger! Eh!--what? And Dick, I say, I shouldn't
- wonder if I could find a friend to put a bit into that business
- of yours--eh?'
-
- Then he and Father went into the study and the door was shut--and
- we went down and looked at the parcels. Some were done up in
- old, dirty newspapers, and tied with bits of rag, and some were
- in brown paper and string from the shops, and there were boxes.
- We wondered if the Uncle had come to stay and this was his
- luggage, or whether it was to sell. Some of it smelt of spices,
- like merchandise--and one bundle Alice felt certain was a bale.
- We heard a hand on the knob of the study door after a bit, and
- Alice said--
-
- 'Fly!' and we all got away but H. O., and the Uncle caught him by
- the leg as he was trying to get upstairs after us.
-
- 'Peeping at the baggage, eh?' said the Uncle, and the rest of us
- came down because it would have been dishonourable to leave H. O.
- alone in a scrape, and we wanted to see what was in the parcels.
-
- 'I didn't touch,' said H. O. 'Are you coming to stay? I hope you
- are.'
-
- 'No harm done if you did touch,' said the good, kind, Indian man
- to all of us. 'For all these parcels are FOR YOU.'
-
- I have several times told you about our being dumb with amazement
- and terror and joy, and things like that, but I never remember us
- being dumber than we were when he said this.
-
- The Indian Uncle went on: 'I told an old friend of mine what a
- pleasant dinner I had with you, and about the threepenny-bit, and
- the divining-rod, and all that, and he sent all these odds and
- ends as presents for you. Some of the things came from India.'
-
- 'Have you come from India, Uncle?' Noel asked; and when he said
- 'Yes' we were all very much surprised, for we never thought of
- his being that sort of Indian. We thought he was the Red kind,
- and of course his not being accounted for his ignorance of
- beavers and things.
-
- He got Eliza to help, and we took all the parcels into the
- nursery and he undid them and undid them and undid them, till the
- papers lay thick on the floor. Father came too and sat in the
- Guy Fawkes chair. I cannot begin to tell you all the things that
- kind friend of Uncle's had sent us. He must be a very agreeable
- person.
-
- There were toys for the kids and model engines for Dick and me,
- and a lot of books, and Japanese china tea-sets for the girls,
- red and white and gold--there were sweets by the pound and by the
- box--and long yards and yards of soft silk from India, to make
- frocks for the girls--and a real Indian sword for Oswald and a
- book of Japanese pictures for Noel, and some ivory chess men for
- Dicky: the castles of the chessmen are elephant-and-castles.
- There is a railway station called that; I never knew what it
- meant before. The brown paper and string parcels had boxes of
- games in them--and big cases of preserved fruits and things. And
- the shabby old newspaper parcels and the boxes had the Indian
- things in. I never saw so many beautiful things before. There
- were carved fans and silver bangles and strings of amber beads,
- and necklaces of uncut gems--turquoises and garnets, the Uncle
- said they were--and shawls and scarves of silk, and cabinets of
- brown and gold, and ivory boxes and silver trays, and brass
- things. The Uncle kept saying, 'This is for you, young man,' or
- 'Little Alice will like this fan,'or 'Miss Dora would look well
- in this green silk, I think. Eh!--what?'
-
- And Father looked on as if it was a dream, till the Uncle
- suddenly gave him an ivory paper-knife and a box of cigars, and
- said, 'My old friend sent you these, Dick; he's an old friend of
- yours too, he says.' And he winked at my Father, for H. O. and I
- saw him. And my Father winked back, though he has always told us
- not to.
-
- That was a wonderful day. It was a treasure, and no mistake! I
- never saw such heaps and heaps of presents, like things out of a
- fairy-tale--and even Eliza had a shawl. Perhaps she deserved it,
- for she did cook the rabbit and the pudding; and Oswald says it
- is not her fault if her nose turns up and she does not brush her
- hair. I do not think Eliza likes brushing things. It is the
- same with the carpets. But Oswald tries to make allowances even
- for people who do not wash their ears.
-
- The Indian Uncle came to see us often after that, and his friend
- always sent us something. Once he tipped us a sovereign
- each--the Uncle brought it; and once he sent us money to go to
- the Crystal Palace, and the Uncle took us; and another time to a
- circus; and when Christmas was near the Uncle said--
-
- 'You remember when I dined with you, some time ago, you promised
- to dine with me some day, if I could ever afford to give a
- dinner-party. Well, I'm going to have one--a Christmas party.
- Not on Christmas Day, because every one goes home then--but on
- the day after. Cold mutton and rice pudding. You'll come?
- Eh!--what?'
-
- We said we should be delighted, if Father had no objection,
- because that is the proper thing to say, and the poor Indian, I
- mean the Uncle, said, 'No, your Father won't object--he's coming
- too, bless your soul!'
-
- We all got Christmas presents for the Uncle. The girls made him
- a handkerchief case and a comb bag, out of some of the pieces of
- silk he had given them. I got him a knife with three blades; H.
- O. got a siren whistle, a very strong one, and Dicky joined with
- me in the knife, and Noel would give the Indian ivory box that
- Uncle's friend had sent on the wonderful Fairy Cab day. He said
- it was the very nicest thing he had, and he was sure Uncle
- wouldn't mind his not having bought it with his own money.
-
- I think Father's business must have got better--perhaps Uncle's
- friend put money in it and that did it good, like feeding the
- starving. Anyway we all had new suits, and the girls had the
- green silk from India made into frocks, and on Boxing Day we went
- in two cabs--Father and the girls in one, and us boys in the
- other.
-
- We wondered very much where the Indian Uncle lived, because we
- had not been told. And we thought when the cab began to go up
- the hill towards the Heath that perhaps the Uncle lived in one of
- the poky little houses up at the top of Greenwich. But the cab
- went right over the Heath and in at some big gates, and through a
- shrubbery all white with frost like a fairy forest, because it
- was Christmas time. And at last we stopped before one of those
- jolly, big, ugly red houses with a lot of windows, that are so
- comfortable inside, and on the steps was the Indian Uncle,
- looking very big and grand, in a blue cloth coat and yellow
- sealskin waistcoat, with a bunch of seals hanging from it.
-
- 'I wonder whether he has taken a place as butler here?' said
- Dicky.
-
- 'A poor, broken-down man--'
-
- Noel thought it was very likely, because he knew that in these
- big houses there were always thousands of stately butlers.
-
- The Uncle came down the steps and opened the cab door himself,
- which I don't think butlers would expect to have to do. And he
- took us in. It was a lovely hall, with bear and tiger skins on
- the floor, and a big clock with the faces of the sun and moon
- dodging out when it was day or night, and Father Time with a
- scythe coming out at the hours, and the name on it was 'Flint.
- Ashford. 1776'; and there was a fox eating a stuffed duck in a
- glass case, and horns of stags and other animals over the doors.
-
- 'We'll just come into my study first,' said the Uncle, 'and wish
- each other a Merry Christmas.' So then we knew he wasn't the
- butler, but it must be his own house, for only the master of the
- house has a study.
-
- His study was not much like Father's. It had hardly any books,
- but swords and guns and newspapers and a great many boots, and
- boxes half unpacked, with more Indian things bulging out of them.
-
- We gave him our presents and he was awfully pleased. Then he
- gave us his Christmas presents. You must be tired of hearing
- about presents, but I must remark that all the Uncle's presents
- were watches; there was a watch for each of us, with our names
- engraved inside, all silver except H. O.'s, and that was a
- Waterbury, 'To match his boots,' the Uncle said. I don't know
- what he meant.
-
- Then the Uncle looked at Father, and Father said, 'You tell them,
- sir.'
-
- So the Uncle coughed and stood up and made a speech. He said--
-
- 'Ladies and gentlemen, we are met together to discuss an
- important subject which has for some weeks engrossed the
- attention of the honourable member opposite and myself.'
-
- I said, 'Hear, hear,' and Alice whispered, 'What happened to the
- guinea-pig?' Of course you know the answer to that.
-
- The Uncle went on--
-
- 'I am going to live in this house, and as it's rather big for me,
- your Father has agreed that he and you shall come and live with
- me. And so, if you're agreeable, we're all going to live here
- together, and, please God, it'll be a happy home for us all.
- Eh!--what?'
-
- He blew his nose and kissed us all round. As it was Christmas I
- did not mind, though I am much too old for it on other dates.
- Then he said, 'Thank you all very much for your presents; but
- I've got a present here I value more than anything else I have.'
-
- I thought it was not quite polite of him to say so, till I saw
- that what he valued so much was a threepenny-bit on his
- watch-chain, and, of course, I saw it must be the one we had
- given him.
-
- He said, 'You children gave me that when you thought I was the
- poor Indian, and I'll keep it as long as I live. And I've asked
- some friends to help us to be jolly, for this is our
- house-warming. Eh!--what?'
-
- Then he shook Father by the hand, and they blew their noses; and
- then Father said, 'Your Uncle has been most kind--most--'
-
- But Uncle interrupted by saying, 'Now, Dick, no nonsense!' Then
- H. O. said, 'Then you're not poor at all?' as if he were very
- disappointed. The Uncle replied, 'I have enough for my simple
- wants, thank you, H. O.; and your Father's business will provide
- him with enough for yours. Eh!--what?'
-
- Then we all went down and looked at the fox thoroughly, and made
- the Uncle take the glass off so that we could see it all round
- and then the Uncle took us all over the house, which is the most
- comfortable one I have ever been in. There is a beautiful
- portrait of Mother in Father's sitting-room. The Uncle must be
- very rich indeed. This ending is like what happens in Dickens's
- books; but I think it was much jollier to happen like a book, and
- it shows what a nice man the Uncle is, the way he did it all.
-
- Think how flat it would have been if the Uncle had said, when we
- first offered him the one and threepence farthing, 'Oh, I don't
- want your dirty one and three-pence! I'm very rich indeed.'
- Instead of which he saved up the news of his wealth till
- Christmas, and then told us all in one glorious burst. Besides,
- I can't help it if it is like Dickens, because it happens this
- way. Real life is often something like books.
-
- Presently, when we had seen the house, we were taken into the
- drawing-room, and there was Mrs Leslie, who gave us the shillings
- and wished us good hunting, and Lord Tottenham, and
- Albert-next-door's Uncle--and Albert-next-door, and his Mother
- (I'm not very fond of her), and best of all our own Robber and
- his two kids, and our Robber had a new suit on. The Uncle told
- us he had asked the people who had been kind to us, and Noel
- said, 'Where is my noble editor that I wrote the poetry to?'
-
- The Uncle said he had not had the courage to ask a strange editor
- to dinner; but Lord Tottenham was an old friend of Uncle's, and
- he had introduced Uncle to Mrs Leslie, and that was how he had
- the pride and pleasure of welcoming her to our house-warming.
- And he made her a bow like you see on a Christmas card.
-
- Then Alice asked, 'What about Mr Rosenbaum? He was kind; it
- would have been a pleasant surprise for him.'
-
- But everybody laughed, and Uncle said--
-
- 'Your father has paid him the sovereign he lent you. I don't
- think he could have borne another pleasant surprise.'
-
- And I said there was the butcher, and he was really kind; but
- they only laughed, and Father said you could not ask all your
- business friends to a private dinner.
-
- Then it was dinner-time, and we thought of Uncle's talk about
- cold mutton and rice. But it was a beautiful dinner, and I never
- saw such a dessert! We had ours on plates to take away into
- another sitting-room, which was much jollier than sitting round
- the table with the grown-ups. But the Robber's kids stayed with
- their Father. They were very shy and frightened, and said hardly
- anything, but looked all about with very bright eyes. H. O.
- thought they were like white mice; but afterwards we got to know
- them very well, and in the end they were not so mousy. And there
- is a good deal of interesting stuff to tell about them; but I
- shall put all that in another book, for there is no room for it
- in this one. We played desert islands all the afternoon and
- drank Uncle's health in ginger wine. It was H. O. that upset his
- over Alice's green silk dress, and she never even rowed him.
- Brothers ought not to have favourites, and Oswald would never be
- so mean as to have a favourite sister, or, if he had, wild horses
- should not make him tell who it was.
-
- And now we are to go on living in the big house on the Heath, and
- it is very jolly.
-
- Mrs Leslie often comes to see us, and our own Robber and
- Albert-next-door's uncle. The Indian Uncle likes him because he
- has been in India too and is brown; but our Uncle does not like
- Albert-next-door. He says he is a muff. And I am to go to
- Rugby, and so are Noel and H. O., and perhaps to Balliol
- afterwards. Balliol is my Father's college. It has two separate
- coats of arms, which many other colleges are not allowed. Noel
- is going to be a poet and Dicky wants to go into Father's
- business.
-
- The Uncle is a real good old sort; and just think, we should
- never have found him if we hadn't made up our minds to be
- Treasure Seekers! Noel made a poem about it--
-
- Lo! the poor Indian from lands afar,
- Comes where the treasure seekers are;
- We looked for treasure, but we find
- The best treasure of all is the Uncle good and kind.
-
- I thought it was rather rot, but Alice would show it to the
- Uncle, and he liked it very much. He kissed Alice and he smacked
- Noel on the back, and he said, 'I don't think I've done so badly
- either, if you come to that, though I was never a regular
- professional treasure seeker. Eh!--what?'
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- End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Story of the Treasure Seekers
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