ON THE CARPET
The Princess was just Lucy.
‘It’s too bad,’
said Philip. ‘I do think.’ Then
he stopped short and just looked cross.
‘The Princess and the Champion
will now have their teas,’ said Mr. Noah.
‘Right about face, everybody, please, and quick
march.’
Philip and Lucy found themselves marching
side by side through the night made yellow with continuous
fireworks.
You must picture them marching across
a great plain of grass where many coloured flowers
grew. You see a good many of Philip’s buildings
had been made on the drawing-room carpet at home,
which was green with pink and blue and yellow and
white flowers. And this carpet had turned into
grass and growing flowers, following that strange law
which caused things to change into other things, like
themselves, but larger and really belonging to a living
world.
No one spoke. Philip said nothing
because he was in a bad temper. And if you are
in a bad temper, nothing is a good thing to say.
To circumvent a dragon and then kill it, and to have
such an adventure end in tea with Lucy, was too much.
And he had other reasons for silence too. And
Lucy was silent because she had so much to say that
she didn’t know where to begin; and besides,
she could feel how cross Philip was. The crowd
did not talk because it was not etiquette to talk
when taking part in processions. Mr. Noah did
not talk because it made him out of breath to walk
and talk at the same time, two things neither of which
he had been designed to do.
So that it was quite a silent party
which at last passed through the gateway of the town
and up its streets.
Philip wondered where the tea would
be not in the prison of course. It
was very late for tea, too, quite the middle of the
night it seemed. But all the streets were brilliantly
lighted, and flags and festoons of flowers hung from
all the windows and across all the streets.
It was in the front of a big building
in one of the great squares of the city that an extra
display of coloured lamps disclosed open doors and
red-carpeted steps. Mr. Noah hurried up them,
and turned to receive Philip and Lucy.
‘The City of Polistopolis,’
he said, ’whose unworthy representative I am,
greets in my person the most noble Sir Philip, Knight
and Slayer of the Dragon. Also the Princess whom
he has rescued. Be pleased to enter.’
They went up the red-cloth covered
steps and into a hall, very splendid with silver and
ivory. Mr. Noah stooped to a confidential question.
‘You’d like a wash, perhaps?’
he said, ’and your Princess too. And perhaps
you’d like to dress up a little? Before
the banquet, you know.’
‘Banquet?’ said Philip. ‘I
thought it was tea.’
‘Business before pleasure,’
said Mr. Noah; ’first the banquet, then the
tea. This way to the dressing-rooms.’
There were two doors side by side.
On one door was painted ’Knight’s dressing-room,’
on the other ‘Princess’s dressing-room.’
‘Look out,’ said Mr. Noah;
’the paint is wet. You see there wasn’t
much time.’
Philip found his dressing-room very
interesting. The walls were entirely of looking-glass,
and on tables in the middle of the room lay all sorts
of clothes of beautiful colours and odd shapes.
Shoes, stockings, hats, crowns, armour, swords, cloaks,
breeches, waistcoats, jerkins, trunk hose. An
open door showed a marble bath-room. The bath
was sunk in the floor as the baths of luxurious Roman
Empresses used to be, and as nowadays baths sometimes
are, in model dwellings. (Only I am told that some
people keep their coals in the baths which
is quite useless because coals are always black however
much you wash them.)
Philip undressed and went into the
warm clear water, greenish between the air and the
marble. Why is it so pleasant to have a bath,
and so tiresome to wash your hands and face in a basin?
He put on his shirt and knickerbockers again, and
wandered round the room looking at the clothes laid
out there, and wondering which of the wonderful costumes
would be really suitable for a knight to wear at a
banquet. After considerable hesitation he decided
on a little soft shirt of chain-mail that made just
a double handful of tiny steel links as he held it.
But a difficulty arose.
‘I don’t know how to put
it on,’ said Philip; ’and I expect the
banquet is waiting. How cross it’ll be.’
He stood undecided, holding the chain
mail in his hands, when his eyes fell on a bell handle.
Above it was an ivory plate, and on it in black letters
the word Valet. Philip rang the bell.
Instantly a soft tap at the door heralded
the entrance of a person whom Philip at the first
glance supposed to be a sandwich man. But the
second glance showed that the oblong flat things which
he wore were not sandwich-boards, but dominoes.
The person between them bowed low.
‘Oh!’ said Philip, ‘I rang for the
valet.’
‘I am not the valet,’
said the domino-enclosed person, who seemed to be
in skintight black clothes under his dominoes, ’I
am the Master of the Robes. I only attend on
really distinguished persons. Double-six, at
your service, Sir. Have you chosen your dress?’
‘I’d like to wear the
armour,’ said Philip, holding it out. ’It
seems the right thing for a Knight,’ he added.
‘Quite so, sir. I confirm your opinion.’
He proceeded to dress Philip in a
white tunic and to fasten the coat of mail over this.
‘I’ve had a great deal of experience,’
he said; ’you couldn’t have chosen better.
You see, I’m master of the subject of dress.
I am able to give my whole mind to it; my own dress
being fixed by law and not subject to changes of fashion
leaves me free to think for others. And I think
deeply. But I see that you can think for yourself.’
You have no idea how jolly Philip
looked in the mail coat and mailed hood just
like a Crusader.
At the doorway of the dressing-room
he met Lucy in a short white dress and a coronal of
pearls round her head. ‘I always wanted
to be a fairy,’ she said.
‘Did you have any one to dress you?’ he
asked.
‘Oh no!’ said Lucy calmly. ‘I
always dress myself.’
‘Ladies have the advantage there,’
said Double-six, bowing and walking backwards.
‘The banquet is spread.’
It turned out to be spread on three
tables, one along each side of a great room, and one
across the top of the room, on a dais such
a table as that high one at which dons and distinguished
strangers sit in the Halls of colleges.
Mr. Noah was already in his place
in the middle of the high table, and Lucy and Philip
now took their places at each side of him. The
table was spread with all sorts of nice-looking foods
and plates of a pink-and-white pattern very familiar
to Philip. They were, in fact, as he soon realised,
the painted wooden plates from his sister’s old
dolls’ house. There was no food just in
front of the children, only a great empty bowl of
silver.
Philip fingered his knife and fork;
the pattern of those also was familiar to him.
They were indeed the little leaden ones out of the
dolls’ house knife-basket of green and silver
filagree. He hungrily waited. Servants in
straight yellow dresses and red masks and caps were
beginning to handle the dishes. A dish was handed
to him. A beautiful jelly it looked like.
He took up his spoon and was just about to help himself,
when Mr. Noah whispered ardently, ‘Don’t!’
and as Philip looked at him in astonishment he added,
still in a whisper, ’Pretend, can’t you?
Have you never had a pretending banquet?’ But
before he had caught the whisper, Philip had tried
to press the edge of the leaden spoon into the shape
of jelly. And he felt that the jelly was quite
hard. He went through the form of helping himself,
but it was just nothing that he put on his plate.
And he saw that Mr. Noah and Lucy and all the other
guests did the same. Presently another dish was
handed to him. There was no changing of plates.
‘They needn’t,’ Philip thought
bitterly. This time it was a fat goose, not carved,
and now Philip saw that it was attached to its dish
with glue. Then he understood.
(You know the beautiful but uneatable
feasts which are given you in a white cardboard box
with blue binding and fine shavings to pack the dishes
and keep them from breaking? I myself, when I
was little, had such a banquet in a box. There
were twelve dishes: a ham, brown and shapely;
a pair of roast chickens, also brown and more anatomical
than the ham; a glazed tongue, real tongue-shape,
none of your tinned round mysteries; a dish of sausages;
two handsome fish, a little blue, perhaps; a joint
of beef, ribs I think, very red as to the lean and
very white in the fat parts; a pork pie, delicately
bronzed like a traveller in Central Africa. For
sweets I had shapes, shapes of beauty, a jelly and
a cream; a Swiss roll too, and a plum pudding; asparagus
there was also and a cauliflower, and a dish of the
greenest peas in all this grey world. This was
my banquet outfit. I remember that the woodenness
of it all depressed us wonderfully; the oneness of
dish and food baffled all make-believe. With
the point of nurse’s scissors we prised
the viands from the platters. But their wooden
nature was unconquerable. One could not pretend
to eat a whole chicken any better when it was detached
from its dish, and the sausages were one solid block.
And when you licked the jelly it only tasted of glue
and paint. And when we tried to re-roast the
chickens at the nursery grate, they caught fire, and
then they smelt of gasworks and india-rubber.
But I am wandering. When you remember the things
that happened when you were a child, you could go on
writing about them for ever. I will put all this
in brackets, and then you need not read it if you
don’t want to.)
But those painted wooden foods adhering
firmly to their dishes were the kind of food of which
the banquet now offered to Philip and Lucy was composed.
Only they had more dishes than I had. They had
as well a turkey, eight raspberry jam tarts, a pine-apple,
a melon, a dish of oysters in the shell, a piece of
boiled bacon and a leg of mutton. But all were
equally wooden and uneatable.
Philip and Lucy, growing hungrier
and hungrier, pretended with sinking hearts to eat
and enjoy the wooden feast. Wine was served in
those little goblets which they knew so well, where
the double glasses restrained and contained a red
fluid which looked like wine. They did
not want wine, but they were thirsty as well as hungry.
Philip wondered what the waiters were.
He had plenty of time to wonder while the long banquet
went on. It was not till he saw a group of them
standing stiffly together at the end of the hall that
he knew they must be the matches with which he had
once peopled a city, no other inhabitants being at
hand.
When all the dishes had been handed, speeches happened.
‘Friends and fellow-citizens,’
Mr. Noah began, and went on to say how brave and clever
Sir Philip was, and how likely it was that he would
turn out to be the Deliverer. Philip did not hear
all this speech. He was thinking of things to
eat.
Then every one in the hall stood and
shouted, and Philip found that he was expected to
take his turn at speech-making. He stood up trembling
and wretched.
‘Friends and fellow-citizens,’
he said, ’thank you very much. I want to
be the Deliverer, but I don’t know if I can,’
and sat down again amid roars of applause.
Then there was music, from a grated
gallery. And then I cannot begin to
tell you how glad Lucy and Philip were Mr.
Noah said, once more in a whisper, ‘Cheer up!
the banquet is over. Now we’ll have tea.’
‘Tea’ turned out to be
bread and milk in a very cosy, blue-silk-lined room
opening out of the banqueting-hall. Only Lucy,
Philip and Mr. Noah were present. Bread and milk
is very good even when you have to eat it with the
leaden spoons out of the dolls’-house basket.
When it was much later Mr. Noah suddenly said ‘good-night,’
and in a maze of sleepy repletion (look that up in
the dicker, will you?) the children went to bed.
Philip’s bed was of gold with yellow satin curtains,
and Lucy’s was made of silver, with curtains
of silk that were white. But the metals and colours
made no difference to their deep and dreamless sleep.
And in the morning there was bread
and milk again, and the two of them had it in the
blue room without Mr. Noah.
‘Well,’ said Lucy, looking
up from the bowl of white floating cubes, ’do
you think you’re getting to like me any better?’
‘No,’ said Philip,
brief and stern like the skipper in the song.
‘I wish you would,’ said Lucy.
‘Well, I can’t,’
said Philip; ’but I do want to say one thing.
I’m sorry I bunked and left you. And I
did come back.’
‘I know you did,’ said Lucy.
‘I came back to fetch you,’
said Philip, ’and now we’d better get along
home.’
‘You’ve got to do seven
deeds of power before you can get home,’ said
Lucy.
‘Oh! I remember, Perrin told me,’
said he.
‘Well,’ Lucy went on,
’that’ll take ages. No one can go
out of this place twice unless he’s a
King-Deliverer. You’ve gone out once without
me. Before you can go again you’ve
got to do seven noble deeds.’
‘I killed the dragon,’ said Philip, modestly
proud.
‘That’s only one,’
she said; ‘there are six more.’ And
she ate bread and milk with firmness.
‘Do you like this adventure?’ he asked
abruptly.
‘It’s more interesting
than anything that ever happened to me,’ she
said. ‘If you were nice I should like it
awfully. But as it is ’
‘I’m sorry you don’t think I’m
nice,’ said he.
‘Well, what do you think?’ she
said.
Philip reflected. He did not
want not to be nice. None of us do. Though
you might not think it to see how some of us behave.
True politeness, he remembered having been told, consists
in showing an interest in other people’s affairs.
‘Tell me,’ he said, very
much wishing to be polite and nice. ’Tell
me what happened after I after I after
you didn’t come down the ladder with me.’
‘Alone and deserted,’
Lucy answered promptly, ’my sworn friend having
hooked it and left me, I fell down, and both my hands
were full of gravel, and the fierce soldiery surrounded
me.’
‘I thought you were coming just
behind me,’ said Philip, frowning.
‘Well, I wasn’t.’
‘And then.’
’Well, then
You were silly not to stay. They surrounded
me the soldiers, I mean and
the captain said, “Tell me the truth. Are
you a Destroyer or a Deliverer?” So, of course,
I said I wasn’t a destroyer, whatever I was;
and then they took me to the palace and said I could
be a Princess till the Deliverer King turned up.
They said,’ she giggled gaily, ’that my
hair was the hair of a Deliverer and not of a Destroyer,
and I’ve been most awfully happy ever since.
Have you?’
‘No,’ said Philip, remembering
the miserable feeling of having been a coward and
a sneak that had come upon him when he found that he
had saved his own skin and left Lucy alone in an unknown
and dangerous world; ‘not exactly happy, I shouldn’t
call it.’
‘It’s beautiful being
a Princess,’ said Lucy. ’I wonder
what your next noble deed will be. I wonder whether
I could help you with it?’ She looked wistfully
at him.
’If I’m going to do noble
deeds I’ll do them. I don’t want any
help, thank you, especially from girls,’ he
answered.
‘I wish you did,’ said
Lucy, and finished her bread and milk.
Philip’s bowl also was empty.
He stretched arms and legs and neck.
‘It is rum,’ he said;
’before this began I never thought a thing like
this could begin, did you?’
‘I don’t know,’
she said, ’everything’s very wonderful.
I’ve always been expecting things to be more
wonderful than they ever have been. You get sort
of hints and nudges, you know. Fairy tales yes,
and dreams, you can’t help feeling they must
mean something. And your sister and my
daddy; the two of them being such friends when they
were little, and then parted and then getting friends
again; that’s like a story
in a dream, isn’t it? And your building
the city and me helping. And my daddy being such
a dear darling and your sister being such a darling
dear. It did make me think beautiful things were
sort of likely. Didn’t it you?’
‘No,’ said Philip; ‘I
mean yes,’ he said, and he was in that moment
nearer to liking Lucy than he had ever been before;
’everything’s very wonderful, isn’t
it?’
‘Ahem!’ said a respectful cough behind
them.
They turned to meet the calm gaze of Double-six.
‘If you’ve quite finished
breakfast, Sir Philip,’ he said, ’Mr. Noah
would be pleased to see you in his office.’
‘Me too?’ said Lucy, before Philip could
say, ‘Only me, I suppose?’
‘You may come too, if you wish
it, your Highness,’ said Double-six, bowing
stiffly.
They found Mr. Noah very busy in a
little room littered with papers; he was sitting at
a table writing.
‘Good-morning, Princess,’
he said, ’good-morning, Sir Philip. You
see me very busy. I am trying to arrange for
your next labour.’
‘Do you mean my next deed of valour?’
Philip asked.
‘We have decided that all your
deeds need not be deeds of valour,’ said Mr.
Noah, fiddling with a pen. ’The strange
labours of Hercules, you remember, were some of them
dangerous and some merely difficult. I have decided
that difficult things shall count. There are several
things that really need doing,’ he went
on half to himself. ’There’s the fruit
supply, and the Dwellers by the sea, and
But that must wait. We try to give you as much
variety as possible. Yesterday’s was an
out-door adventure. To-day’s shall be an
indoor amusement. I say to-day’s but I
confess that I think it not unlikely that the task
I am now about to set the candidate for the post of
King-Deliverer, the task, I say, which I am now about
to set you, may, quite possibly, occupy some days,
if not weeks of your valuable time.’
‘But our people at home,’
said Philip. ’It isn’t that I’m
afraid, really and truly it isn’t, but they’ll
go out of their minds, not knowing what’s become
of us. Oh, Mr. Noah! do let us go back.’
‘It’s all right,’
said Mr. Noah. ’However long you stay here
time won’t move with them. I thought I’d
explained that to you.’
‘But you said ’
’I said you’d set our
clocks to the time of your world when you deserted
your little friend. But when you had come back
for her, and rescued her from the dragon, the clocks
went their own time again. There’s only
just that time missing that happened between your coming
here the second time and your killing the dragon.’
‘I see,’ said Philip.
But he didn’t. I only hope you do.
‘You can take your time about
this new job,’ said Mr. Noah, ’and you
may get any help you like. I shan’t consider
you’ve failed till you’ve been at it three
months. After that the Pretenderette would be
entitled to her chance.’
‘If you’re quite sure
that the time here doesn’t count at home,’
said Philip, ‘what is it, please, that we’ve
got to do?’
’The greatest intellects of
our country have for many ages occupied themselves
with the problem which you are now asked to solve,’
said Mr. Noah. ’Your late gaoler, Mr. Bacon-Shakespeare,
has written no less than twenty-seven volumes, all
in cypher, on this very subject. But as he has
forgotten what cypher he used, and no one else ever
knew it, his volumes are of but little use to us.’
‘I see,’ said Philip. And again he
didn’t.
Mr. Noah rose to his full height,
and when he stood up the children looked very small
beside him.
‘Now,’ he said, ’I
will tell you what it is that you must do. I should
like to decree that your second labour should be the
tidying up of this room all these
papers are prophecies relating to the Deliverer but
it is one of our laws that the judge must not use any
public matter for his own personal benefit. So
I have decided that the next labour shall be the disentangling
of the Mazy Carpet. It is in the Pillared Hall
of Public Amusements. I will get my hat and we
will go there at once. I can tell you about it
as we go.’
And as they went down streets and
past houses and palaces all of which Philip could
now dimly remember to have built at some time or other,
Mr. Noah went on:
’It is a very beautiful hall,
but we have never been able to use it for public amusement
or anything else. The giant who originally built
this city placed in this hall a carpet so thick that
it rises to your knees, and so intricately woven that
none can disentangle it. It is far too thick
to pass through any of the doors. It is your task
to remove it.’
‘Why that’s as easy as
easy,’ said Philip. ’I’ll cut
it in bits and bring out a bit at a time.’
‘That would be most unfortunate
for you,’ said Mr. Noah. ’I filed
only this morning a very ancient prophecy:
’He who shall the carpet
sever,
By fire or flint or steel,
Shall be fed on orange pips for ever,
And dressed in orange peel.
You wouldn’t like that, you know.’
‘No,’ said Philip grimly, ‘I certainly
shouldn’t.’
’The carpet must be unravelled,
unwoven, so that not a thread is broken. Here
is the hall.’
They went up steps Philip
sometimes wished he had not been so fond of building
steps and through a dark vestibule to an
arched door. Looking through it they saw a great
hall and at its end a raised space, more steps, and
two enormous pillars of bronze wrought in relief with
figures of flying birds.
‘Father’s Japanese vases,’ Lucy
whispered.
The floor of the room was covered
by the carpet. It was loosely but difficultly
woven of very thick soft rope of a red colour.
When I say difficultly, I mean that it wasn’t
just straight-forward in the weaving, but the threads
went over and under and round about in such a determined
and bewildering way that Philip felt and
said that he would rather untie the string
of a hundred of the most difficult parcels than tackle
this.
‘Well,’ said Mr. Noah,
’I leave you to it. Board and lodging will
be provided at the Provisional Palace where you slept
last night. All citizens are bound to assist
when called upon. Dinner is at one. Good-morning!’
Philip sat down in the dark archway
and gazed helplessly at the twisted strands of the
carpet. After a moment of hesitation Lucy sat
down too, clasped her arms round her knees, and she
also gazed at the carpet. They had all the appearance
of shipwrecked mariners looking out over a great sea
and longing for a sail.
‘Ha ha tee hee!’
said a laugh close behind them. They turned.
And it was the motor-veiled lady, the hateful Pretenderette,
who had crept up close behind them, and was looking
down at them through her veil.
‘What do you want?’ said Philip severely.
‘I want to laugh,’ said
the motor lady. ’I want to laugh at you.
And I’m going to.’
‘Well go and laugh somewhere
else then,’ Philip suggested.
’Ah! but this is where I want
to laugh. You and your carpet! You’ll
never do it. You don’t know how. But
I do.’
‘Come away,’ whispered
Lucy, and they went. The Pretenderette followed
slowly. Outside, a couple of Dutch dolls in check
suits were passing, arm in arm.
‘Help!’ cried Lucy suddenly,
and the Dutch dolls paused and took their hats off.
‘What is it?’ the taller
doll asked, stroking his black painted moustache.
‘Mr. Noah said all citizens
were bound to help us,’ said Lucy a little breathlessly.
‘But of course,’ said
the shorter doll, bowing with stiff courtesy.
‘Then,’ said Lucy, ’will
you please take that motor person away and
put her somewhere where she can’t bother till
we’ve done the carpet?’
‘Delighted,’ exclaimed
the agreeable Dutch strangers, darted up the steps
and next moment emerged with the form of the Pretenderette
between them, struggling indeed, but struggling vainly.
‘You need not have the slightest
further anxiety,’ the taller Dutchman said;
’dismiss the incident from your mind. We
will take her to the hall of justice. Her offence
is bothering people in pursuit of their duty.
The sentence is imprisonment for as long as the botheree
chooses. Good-morning.’
‘Oh, thank you!’ said both the
children together.
When they were alone, Philip said and it
was not easy to say it:
‘That was jolly clever of you, Lucy. I
should never have thought of it.’
‘Oh, that’s nothing,’
said Lucy, looking down. ’I could do more
than that.’
‘What?’ he asked.
‘I could unravel the carpet,’ said Lucy,
with deep solemnity.
‘But it’s me that’s got to do it,’
Philip urged.
‘Every citizen is bound to help,
if called in,’ Lucy reminded him. ’And
I suppose a princess is a citizen.’
‘Perhaps I can do it by myself,’ said
Philip.
‘Try,’ said Lucy, and
sat down on the steps, her fairy skirts spreading
out round her like a white double hollyhock.
He tried. He went back and looked
at the great coarse cables of the carpet. He
could see no end to the cables, no beginning to his
task. And Lucy just went on sitting there like
a white hollyhock. And time went on, and presently
became, rather urgently, dinner-time.
So he went back to Lucy and said:
‘All right, you can show me how to do it, if
you like.’
But Lucy replied:
’Not much! If you want
me to help you with this, you’ll have
to promise to let me help in all the other things.
And you’ll have to ask me to help ask
me politely too.’
‘I shan’t then,’ said Philip.
But in the end he had to politely also.
‘With pleasure,’ said
Lucy, the moment he asked her, and he could see she
had been making up what she should answer, while he
was making up his mind to ask. ’I shall
be delighted to help you in this and all the other
tasks. Say yes.’
‘Yes,’ said Philip, who was very hungry.
‘"In this and all the other tasks” say.’
‘In this and all the other tasks,’ he
said. ‘Go on. How can we do it?’
‘It’s crochet,’
Lucy giggled. ’It’s a little crochet
mat I’d made of red wool; and I put it in the
hall that night. You’ve just got to find
the end and pull, and it all comes undone. You
just want to find the end and pull.’
‘It’s too heavy for us to pull.’
‘Well,’ said Lucy, who
had certainly had time to think everything out, ’you
get one of those twisty round things they pull boats
out of the sea with, and I’ll find the end while
you’re getting it.’
She ran up the steps and Philip looked
round the buildings on the other three sides of the
square, to see if any one of them looked like a capstan
shop, for he understood, as of course you also have
done, that a capstan was what Lucy meant.
On a building almost opposite he read,
’Naval Necessaries Supply Company,’ and
he ran across to it.
‘Rather,’ said the secretary
of the company, a plump sailor-doll, when Philip had
explained his needs. ’I’ll send a
dozen men over at once. Only too proud to help,
Sir Philip. The navy is always keen on helping
valour and beauty.’
‘I want to be brave,’
said Philip, ‘but I’d rather not be beautiful.’
‘Of course not,’ said
the secretary; and added surprisingly, ’I meant
the Lady Lucy.’
‘Oh!’ said Philip.
So twelve bluejackets and a capstan
outside the Hall of Public Amusements were soon the
centre of a cheering crowd. Lucy had found the
end of the rope, and two sailors dragged it out and
attached it to the capstan, and then round
and round with a will and a breathless chanty the
carpet was swiftly unravelled. Dozens of eager
helpers stood on the parts of the carpet which were
not being unravelled, to keep it steady while the
pulling went on.
The news of Philip’s success
spread like wild-fire through the city, and the crowds
gathered thicker and thicker. The great doors
beyond the pillars with the birds on them were thrown
open, and Mr. Noah and the principal citizens stood
there to see the end of the unravelling.
‘Bravo!’ said every one
in tremendous enthusiasm. ‘Bravo! Sir
Philip.’
‘It wasn’t me,’
said Philip difficultly, when the crowd paused for
breath; ‘it was Lucy thought of it.’
‘Bravo! Bravo!’ shouted
the crowd louder than ever. ’Bravo, for
the Lady Lucy! Bravo for Sir Philip, the modest
truth-teller!’
‘Bravo, my dear,’ said
Mr. Noah, waving his hat and thumping Lucy on the
back.
‘I’m awfully glad I thought
of it,’ she said; ’that makes two deeds
Sir Philip’s done, doesn’t it? Two
out of the seven.’
‘Yes, indeed,’ said Mr.
Noah enthusiastically. ’I must make him
a baronet now. His title will grow grander with
each deed. There’s an old prophecy that
the person who finds out how to unravel the carpet
must be the first to dance in the Hall of Public Amusements.
’The clever one, the noble
one,
Who makes the carpet come undone,
Shall be the first to dance a measure
Within the Hall of public pleasure.
I suppose public amusement
was too difficult a rhyme even for these highly-skilled
poets, our astrologers. You, my child, seem to
have been well inspired in your choice of a costume.
Dance, then, my Lady Lucy, and let the prophecy be
fulfilled.’
So, all down the wide clear floor
of the Hall of Public Amusement, Lucy danced.
And the people of the city looked on and applauded,
Philip with the rest.