Children are like jam: all very
well in the proper place, but you can’t stand
them all over the shop eh, what?’
These were the dreadful words of our
Indian uncle. They made us feel very young and
angry; and yet we could not be comforted by calling
him names to ourselves, as you do when nasty grown-ups
say nasty things, because he is not nasty, but quite
the exact opposite when not irritated. And we
could not think it ungentlemanly of him to say we were
like jam, because, as Alice says, jam is very nice
indeed only not on furniture and improper
places like that. My father said, ’Perhaps
they had better go to boarding-school.’
And that was awful, because we know Father disapproves
of boarding-schools. And he looked at us and said,
’I am ashamed of them, sir!’
Your lot is indeed a dark and terrible
one when your father is ashamed of you. And we
all knew this, so that we felt in our chests just as
if we had swallowed a hard-boiled egg whole.
At least, this is what Oswald felt, and Father said
once that Oswald, as the eldest, was the representative
of the family, so, of course, the others felt the same.
And then everybody said nothing for
a short time. At last Father said
‘You may go but remember ’
The words that followed I am not going
to tell you. It is no use telling you what you
know before as they do in schools.
And you must all have had such words said to you many
times. We went away when it was over. The
girls cried, and we boys got out books and began to
read, so that nobody should think we cared. But
we felt it deeply in our interior hearts, especially
Oswald, who is the eldest and the representative of
the family.
We felt it all the more because we
had not really meant to do anything wrong. We
only thought perhaps the grown-ups would not be quite
pleased if they knew, and that is quite different.
Besides, we meant to put all the things back in their
proper places when we had done with them before anyone
found out about it. But I must not anticipate
(that means telling the end of the story before the
beginning. I tell you this because it is so sickening
to have words you don’t know in a story, and
to be told to look it up in the dicker).
We are the Bastables Oswald,
Dora, Dicky, Alice, Noel, and H. O. If you want to
know why we call our youngest brother H. O. you can
jolly well read The Treasure Seekers and find out.
We were the Treasure Seekers, and we sought it high
and low, and quite regularly, because we particularly
wanted to find it. And at last we did not find
it, but we were found by a good, kind Indian uncle,
who helped Father with his business, so that Father
was able to take us all to live in a jolly big red
house on Blackheath, instead of in the Lewisham Road,
where we lived when we were only poor but honest Treasure
Seekers. When we were poor but honest we always
used to think that if only Father had plenty of business,
and we did not have to go short of pocket money and
wear shabby clothes (I don’t mind this myself,
but the girls do), we should be happy and very, very
good.
And when we were taken to the beautiful
big Blackheath house we thought now all would be well,
because it was a house with vineries and pineries,
and gas and water, and shrubberies and stabling, and
replete with every modern convenience, like it says
in Dyer & Hilton’s list of Eligible House Property.
I read all about it, and I have copied the words quite
right.
It is a beautiful house, all the furniture
solid and strong, no casters off the chairs, and the
tables not scratched, and the silver not dented; and
lots of servants, and the most decent meals every day and
lots of pocket-money.
But it is wonderful how soon you get
used to things, even the things you want most.
Our watches, for instance. We wanted them frightfully;
but when I had mine a week or two, after the mainspring
got broken and was repaired at Bennett’s in
the village, I hardly cared to look at the works at
all, and it did not make me feel happy in my heart
any more, though, of course, I should have been very
unhappy if it had been taken away from me. And
the same with new clothes and nice dinners and having
enough of everything. You soon get used to it
all, and it does not make you extra happy, although,
if you had it all taken away, you would be very dejected.
(That is a good word, and one I have never used before.)
You get used to everything, as I said, and then you
want something more. Father says this is what
people mean by the deceitfulness of riches; but Albert’s
uncle says it is the spirit of progress, and Mrs Leslie
said some people called it ‘divine discontent’.
Oswald asked them all what they thought one Sunday
at dinner. Uncle said it was rot, and what we
wanted was bread and water and a licking; but he meant
it for a joke. This was in the Easter holidays.
We went to live at the Red House at
Christmas. After the holidays the girls went
to the Blackheath High School, and we boys went to
the Prop. (that means the Proprietary School).
And we had to swot rather during term; but about Easter
we knew the deceitfulness of riches in the vac., when
there was nothing much on, like pantomimes and things.
Then there was the summer term, and we swotted more
than ever; and it was boiling hot, and masters’
tempers got short and sharp, and the girls used to
wish the exams came in cold weather. I can’t
think why they don’t. But I suppose schools
don’t think of sensible thinks like that.
They teach botany at girls’ schools.
Then the Midsummer holidays came,
and we breathed again but only for a few
days. We began to feel as if we had forgotten
something, and did not know what it was. We wanted
something to happen only we didn’t
exactly know what. So we were very pleased when
Father said
’I’ve asked Mr Foulkes
to send his children here for a week or two. You
know the kids who came at Christmas.
You must be jolly to them, and see that they have
a good time, don’t you know.’
We remembered them right enough they
were little pinky, frightened things, like white mice,
with very bright eyes. They had not been to our
house since Christmas, because Denis, the boy, had
been ill, and they had been with an aunt at Ramsgate.
Alice and Dora would have liked to
get the bedrooms ready for the honoured guests, but
a really good housemaid is sometimes more ready to
say ‘Don’t’ than even a general.
So the girls had to chuck it. Jane only let them
put flowers in the pots on the visitors’ mantelpieces,
and then they had to ask the gardener which kind they
might pick, because nothing worth gathering happened
to be growing in our own gardens just then.
Their train got in at 12.27.
We all went to meet them. Afterwards I thought
that was a mistake, because their aunt was with them,
and she wore black with beady things and a tight bonnet,
and she said, when we took our hats off ’Who
are you?’ quite crossly.
We said, ‘We are the Bastables;
we’ve come to meet Daisy and Denny.’
The aunt is a very rude lady, and
it made us sorry for Daisy and Denny when she said
to them
‘Are these the children?
Do you remember them?’ We weren’t very
tidy, perhaps, because we’d been playing brigands
in the shrubbery; and we knew we should have to wash
for dinner as soon as we got back, anyhow. But
still
Denny said he thought he remembered
us. But Daisy said, ’Of course they are,’
and then looked as if she was going to cry.
So then the aunt called a cab, and
told the man where to drive, and put Daisy and Denny
in, and then she said
’You two little girls may go
too, if you like, but you little boys must walk.’
So the cab went off, and we were left.
The aunt turned to us to say a few last words.
We knew it would have been about brushing your hair
and wearing gloves, so Oswald said, ‘Good-bye’,
and turned haughtily away, before she could begin,
and so did the others. No one but that kind of
black beady tight lady would say ‘little boys’.
She is like Miss Murdstone in David Copperfield.
I should like to tell her so; but she would not understand.
I don’t suppose she has ever read anything but
Markham’s History and Mangnall’s Questions improving
books like that.
When we got home we found all four
of those who had ridden in the cab sitting in our
sitting-room we don’t call it nursery
now looking very thoroughly washed, and
our girls were asking polite questions and the others
were saying ‘Yes’ and ‘No’,
and ‘I don’t know’. We boys
did not say anything. We stood at the window
and looked out till the gong went for our dinner.
We felt it was going to be awful and it
was. The newcomers would never have done for
knight-errants, or to carry the Cardinal’s sealed
message through the heart of France on a horse; they
would never have thought of anything to say to throw
the enemy off the scent when they got into a tight
place.
They said ‘Yes, please’,
and ‘No, thank you’; and they ate very
neatly, and always wiped their mouths before they
drank, as well as after, and never spoke with them
full.
And after dinner it got worse and worse.
We got out all our books and they
said ‘Thank you’, and didn’t look
at them properly. And we got out all our toys,
and they said ’Thank you, it’s very nice’
to everything. And it got less and less pleasant,
and towards teatime it came to nobody saying anything
except Noel and H. O. and they talked to
each other about cricket.
After tea Father came in, and he played
‘Letters’ with them and the girls, and
it was a little better; but while late dinner was going
on I shall never forget it. Oswald
felt like the hero of a book ’almost
at the end of his resources’. I don’t
think I was ever glad of bedtime before, but that
time I was.
When they had gone to bed (Daisy had
to have all her strings and buttons undone for her,
Dora told me, though she is nearly ten, and Denny said
he couldn’t sleep without the gas being left
a little bit on) we held a council in the girls’
room. We all sat on the bed it is a
mahogany fourposter with green curtains very good
for tents, only the housekeeper doesn’t allow
it, and Oswald said
‘This is jolly nice, isn’t it?’
‘They’ll be better to-morrow,’ Alice
said, ‘they’re only shy.’
Dicky said shy was all very well,
but you needn’t behave like a perfect idiot.
‘They’re frightened. You see we’re
all strange to them,’ Dora said.
’We’re not wild beasts
or Indians; we shan’t eat them. What have
they got to be frightened of?’ Dicky said this.
Noel told us he thought they were
an enchanted prince and princess who’d been
turned into white rabbits, and their bodies had got
changed back but not their insides.
But Oswald told him to dry up.
‘It’s no use making things
up about them,’ he said. ’The thing
is: what are we going to do? We can’t
have our holidays spoiled by these snivelling kids.’
‘No,’ Alice said, ’but
they can’t possibly go on snivelling for ever.
Perhaps they’ve got into the habit of it with
that Murdstone aunt. She’s enough to make
anyone snivel.’
‘All the same,’ said Oswald,
’we jolly well aren’t going to have another
day like today. We must do something to rouse
them from their snivelling leth what’s
its name? something sudden and what
is it? decisive.’
‘A booby trap,’ said H.
O., ’the first thing when they get up, and an
apple-pie bed at night.’
But Dora would not hear of it, and I own she was right.
‘Suppose,’ she said, ’we
could get up a good play like we did when
we were Treasure Seekers.’
We said, well what? But she did not say.
‘It ought to be a good long
thing to last all day,’ Dicky said,
’and if they like they can play, and if they
don’t ’
‘If they don’t, I’ll read to them,’
Alice said.
But we all said ’No, you don’t if
you begin that way you’ll have to go on.’
And Dicky added, ’I wasn’t
going to say that at all. I was going to say
if they didn’t like it they could jolly well
do the other thing.’
We all agreed that we must think of
something, but we none of us could, and at last the
council broke up in confusion because Mrs Blake she
is the housekeeper came up and turned off
the gas.
But next morning when we were having
breakfast, and the two strangers were sitting there
so pink and clean, Oswald suddenly said
‘I know; we’ll have a jungle in the garden.’
And the others agreed, and we talked
about it till brek was over. The little strangers
only said ‘I don’t know’ whenever
we said anything to them.
After brekker Oswald beckoned his
brothers and sisters mysteriously apart and said
‘Do you agree to let me be captain
today, because I thought of it?’
And they said they would.
Then he said, ’We’ll play
Jungle Book, and I shall be Mowgli. The rest
of you can be what you like Mowgli’s
father and mother, or any of the beasts.’
‘I don’t suppose they
know the book,’ said Noel. ’They don’t
look as if they read anything, except at lesson times.’
‘Then they can go on being beasts
all the time,’ Oswald said. ’Anyone
can be a beast.’
So it was settled.
And now Oswald Albert’s
uncle has sometimes said he is clever at arranging
things began to lay his plans for the jungle.
The day was indeed well chosen. Our Indian uncle
was away; Father was away; Mrs Blake was going away,
and the housemaid had an afternoon off. Oswald’s
first conscious act was to get rid of the white mice I
mean the little good visitors. He explained to
them that there would be a play in the afternoon,
and they could be what they liked, and gave them the
Jungle Book to read the stories he told them to all
the ones about Mowgli. He led the strangers to
a secluded spot among the sea-kale pots in the kitchen
garden and left them. Then he went back to the
others, and we had a jolly morning under the cedar
talking about what we would do when Blakie was gone.
She went just after our dinner.
When we asked Denny what he would
like to be in the play, it turned out he had not read
the stories Oswald told him at all, but only the ’White
Seal’ and ‘Rikki Tikki’.
We then agreed to make the jungle
first and dress up for our parts afterwards.
Oswald was a little uncomfortable about leaving the
strangers alone all the morning, so he said Denny should
be his aide-de-camp, and he was really quite useful.
He is rather handy with his fingers, and things that
he does up do not come untied. Daisy might have
come too, but she wanted to go on reading, so we let
her, which is the truest manners to a visitor.
Of course the shrubbery was to be the jungle, and
the lawn under the cedar a forest glade, and then we
began to collect the things. The cedar lawn is
just nicely out of the way of the windows. It
was a jolly hot day the kind of day when
the sunshine is white and the shadows are dark grey,
not black like they are in the evening.
We all thought of different things.
Of course first we dressed up pillows in the skins
of beasts and set them about on the grass to look
as natural as we could. And then we got Pincher,
and rubbed him all over with powdered slate-pencil,
to make him the right colour for Grey Brother.
But he shook it all off, and it had taken an awful
time to do. Then Alice said
‘Oh, I know!’ and she
ran off to Father’s dressing-room, and came back
with the tube of crème d’amande pour la
barbe et les mains, and we squeezed it on Pincher
and rubbed it in, and then the slate-pencil stuff
stuck all right, and he rolled in the dust-bin of his
own accord, which made him just the right colour.
He is a very clever dog, but soon after he went off
and we did not find him till quite late in the afternoon.
Denny helped with Pincher, and with the wild-beast
skins, and when Pincher was finished he said
‘Please, may I make some paper
birds to put in the trees? I know how.’
And of course we said ‘Yes’,
and he only had red ink and newspapers, and quickly
he made quite a lot of large paper birds with red tails.
They didn’t look half bad on the edge of the
shrubbery.
While he was doing this he suddenly
said, or rather screamed, ‘Oh?’
And we looked, and it was a creature
with great horns and a fur rug something
like a bull and something like a minotaur and
I don’t wonder Denny was frightened. It
was Alice, and it was first-class.
Up to now all was not yet lost beyond
recall. It was the stuffed fox that did the mischief and
I am sorry to own it was Oswald who thought of it.
He is not ashamed of having thought of it.
That was rather clever of him. But he knows now
that it is better not to take other people’s
foxes and things without asking, even if you live in
the same house with them.
It was Oswald who undid the back of
the glass case in the hall and got out the fox with
the green and grey duck in its mouth, and when the
others saw how awfully like life they looked on the
lawn, they all rushed off to fetch the other stuffed
things. Uncle has a tremendous lot of stuffed
things. He shot most of them himself but
not the fox, of course. There was another fox’s
mask, too, and we hung that in a bush to look as if
the fox was peeping out. And the stuffed birds
we fastened on to the trees with string. The
duck-bill what’s its name? looked
very well sitting on his tail with the otter snarling
at him. Then Dicky had an idea; and though not
nearly so much was said about it afterwards as there
was about the stuffed things, I think myself it was
just as bad, though it was a good idea, too.
He just got the hose and put the end over a branch
of the cedar-tree. Then we got the steps they
clean windows with, and let the hose rest on the top
of the steps and run. It was to be a waterfall,
but it ran between the steps and was only wet and
messy; so we got Father’s mackintosh and uncle’s
and covered the steps with them, so that the water
ran down all right and was glorious, and it ran away
in a stream across the grass where we had dug a little
channel for it and the otter and the duck-bill-thing
were as if in their native haunts. I hope all
this is not very dull to read about. I know it
was jolly good fun to do. Taking one thing with
another, I don’t know that we ever had a better
time while it lasted.
We got all the rabbits out of the
hutches and put pink paper tails on to them, and hunted
them with horns made out of The Times. They got
away somehow, and before they were caught next day
they had eaten a good many lettuces and other things.
Oswald is very sorry for this. He rather likes
the gardener.
Denny wanted to put paper tails on
the guinea-pigs, and it was no use our telling him
there was nothing to tie the paper on to. He thought
we were kidding until we showed him, and then he said,
‘Well, never mind’, and got the girls
to give him bits of the blue stuff left over from
their dressing-gowns.
‘I’ll make them sashes
to tie round their little middles,’ he said.
And he did, and the bows stuck up on the tops of their
backs. One of the guinea-pigs was never seen
again, and the same with the tortoise when we had
done his shell with vermilion paint. He crawled
away and returned no more. Perhaps someone collected
him and thought he was an expensive kind unknown in
these cold latitudes.
The lawn under the cedar was transformed
into a dream of beauty, what with the stuffed creatures
and the paper-tailed things and the waterfall.
And Alice said
‘I wish the tigers did not look
so flat.’ For of course with pillows you
can only pretend it is a sleeping tiger getting ready
to make a spring out at you. It is difficult
to prop up tiger-skins in a life-like manner when
there are no bones inside them, only pillows and sofa
cushions.
‘What about the beer-stands?’
I said. And we got two out of the cellar.
With bolsters and string we fastened insides to the
tigers and they were really fine.
The legs of the beer-stands did for tigers’ legs.
It was indeed the finishing touch.
Then we boys put on just our bathing
drawers and vests so as to be able to play
with the waterfall without hurting our clothes.
I think this was thoughtful. The girls only tucked
up their frocks and took their shoes and stockings
off. H. O. painted his legs and his hands with
Condy’s fluid to make him brown,
so that he might be Mowgli, although Oswald was captain
and had plainly said he was going to be Mowgli himself.
Of course the others weren’t going to stand
that. So Oswald said
’Very well. Nobody asked
you to brown yourself like that. But now you’ve
done it, you’ve simply got to go and be a beaver,
and live in the dam under the waterfall till it washes
off.’
He said he didn’t want to be beavers. And
Noel said
’Don’t make him.
Let him be the bronze statue in the palace gardens
that the fountain plays out of.’
So we let him have the hose and hold
it up over his head. It made a lovely fountain,
only he remained brown. So then Dicky and Oswald
and I did ourselves brown too, and dried H. O. as
well as we could with our handkerchiefs, because he
was just beginning to snivel. The brown did not
come off any of us for days.
Oswald was to be Mowgli, and we were
just beginning to arrange the different parts.
The rest of the hose that was on the ground was Kaa,
the Rock Python, and Pincher was Grey Brother, only
we couldn’t find him. And while most of
us were talking, Dicky and Noel got messing about
with the beer-stand tigers.
And then a really sad event instantly
occurred, which was not really our fault, and we did
not mean to.
That Daisy girl had been mooning indoors
all the afternoon with the Jungle Books, and now she
came suddenly out, just as Dicky and Noel had got
under the tigers and were shoving them along to fright
each other. Of course, this is not in the Mowgli
book at all: but they did look jolly like real
tigers, and I am very far from wishing to blame the
girl, though she little knew what would be the awful
consequence of her rash act. But for her we might
have got out of it all much better than we did.
What happened was truly horrid.
As soon as Daisy saw the tigers she
stopped short, and uttering a shriek like a railway
whistle she fell flat on the ground.
‘Fear not, gentle Indian maid,’
Oswald cried, thinking with surprise that perhaps
after all she did know how to play, ’I myself
will protect thee.’ And he sprang forward
with the native bow and arrows out of uncle’s
study.
The gentle Indian maiden did not move.
‘Come hither,’ Dora said,
’let us take refuge in yonder covert while this
good knight does battle for us.’ Dora might
have remembered that we were savages, but she did
not. And that is Dora all over. And still
the Daisy girl did not move.
Then we were truly frightened.
Dora and Alice lifted her up, and her mouth was a
horrid violet-colour and her eyes half shut. She
looked horrid. Not at all like fair fainting
damsels, who are always of an interesting pallor.
She was green, like a cheap oyster on a stall.
We did what we could, a prey to alarm
as we were. We rubbed her hands and let the hose
play gently but perseveringly on her unconscious brow.
The girls loosened her dress, though it was only the
kind that comes down straight without a waist.
And we were all doing what we could as hard as we
could, when we heard the click of the front gate.
There was no mistake about it.
‘I hope whoever it is will go
straight to the front door,’ said Alice.
But whoever it was did not. There were feet on
the gravel, and there was the uncle’s voice,
saying in his hearty manner
’This way. This way.
On such a day as this we shall find our young barbarians
all at play somewhere about the grounds.’
And then, without further warning,
the uncle, three other gentlemen and two ladies burst
upon the scene.
We had no clothes on to speak of I
mean us boys. We were all wet through. Daisy
was in a faint or a fit, or dead, none of us then knew
which. And all the stuffed animals were there
staring the uncle in the face. Most of them had
got a sprinkling, and the otter and the duck-bill
brute were simply soaked. And three of us were
dark brown. Concealment, as so often happens,
was impossible.
The quick brain of Oswald saw, in
a flash, exactly how it would strike the uncle, and
his brave young blood ran cold in his veins. His
heart stood still.
‘What’s all this eh,
what?’ said the tones of the wronged uncle.
Oswald spoke up and said it was jungles
we were playing, and he didn’t know what was
up with Daisy. He explained as well as anyone
could, but words were now in vain.
The uncle had a Malacca cane in his
hand, and we were but ill prepared to meet the sudden
attack. Oswald and H. O. caught it worst.
The other boys were under the tigers and
of course my uncle would not strike a girl. Denny
was a visitor and so got off.
But it was bread and water for us
for the next three days, and our own rooms. I
will not tell you how we sought to vary the monotonousness
of imprisonment. Oswald thought of taming a mouse,
but he could not find one. The reason of the
wretched captives might have given way but for the
gutter that you can crawl along from our room to the
girls’. But I will not dwell on this because
you might try it yourselves, and it really is dangerous.
When my father came home we got the talking to, and
we said we were sorry and we really were especially
about Daisy, though she had behaved with muffishness,
and then it was settled that we were to go into the
country and stay till we had grown into better children.
Albert’s uncle was writing a
book in the country; we were to go to his house.
We were glad of this Daisy and Denny too.
This we bore nobly. We knew we had deserved it.
We were all very sorry for everything, and we resolved
that for the future we would be good.
I am not sure whether we kept this
resolution or not. Oswald thinks now that perhaps
we made a mistake in trying so very hard to be good
all at once. You should do everything by degrees.
P.S. It turned out Daisy
was not really dead at all. It was only fainting so
like a girl.
N.B. Pincher was found on the drawing-room
sofa.
Appendix. I have not told
you half the things we did for the jungle for
instance, about the elephants’ tusks and the
horse-hair sofa-cushions, and uncle’s fishing-boots.