The ones of us who had started the
Society of the Wouldbegoods began, at about this time,
to bother.
They said we had not done anything
really noble not worth speaking of, that
is for over a week, and that it was high
time to begin again ’with earnest
endeavour’, Daisy said. So then Oswald said
’All right; but there ought
to be an end to everything. Let’s each of
us think of one really noble and unselfish act, and
the others shall help to work it out, like we did
when we were Treasure Seekers. Then when everybody’s
had their go-in we’ll write every single thing
down in the Golden Deed book, and we’ll draw
two lines in red ink at the bottom, like Father does
at the end of an account. And after that, if anyone
wants to be good they can jolly well be good on our
own, if at all.’
The ones who had made the Society
did not welcome this wise idea, but Dicky and Oswald
were firm.
So they had to agree. When Oswald
is really firm, opposingness and obstinacy have to
give way.
Dora said, ’It would be a noble
action to have all the school-children from the village
and give them tea and games in the paddock. They
would think it so nice and good of us.’
But Dicky showed her that this would
not be our good act, but Father’s, because
he would have to pay for the tea, and he had already
stood us the keepsakes for the soldiers, as well as
having to stump up heavily over the coal barge.
And it is in vain being noble and generous when someone
else is paying for it all the time, even if it happens
to be your father. Then three others had ideas
at the same time and began to explain what they were.
We were all in the dining-room, and
perhaps we were making a bit of a row. Anyhow,
Oswald for one, does not blame Albert’s uncle
for opening his door and saying
’I suppose I must not ask for
complete silence. That were too much. But
if you could whistle, or stamp with your feet, or shriek
or howl anything to vary the monotony of
your well-sustained conversation.’
Oswald said kindly, ‘We’re awfully sorry.
Are you busy?’
‘Busy?’ said Albert’s
uncle. ’My heroine is now hesitating on
the verge of an act which, for good or ill, must influence
her whole subsequent career. You wouldn’t
like her to decide in the middle of such a row that
she can’t hear herself think?’
We said, ‘No, we wouldn’t.’
Then he said, ’If any outdoor
amusement should commend itself to you this bright
mid-summer day.’ So we all went out.
Then Daisy whispered to Dora they
always hang together. Daisy is not nearly so
white-micey as she was at first, but she still seems
to fear the deadly ordeal of public speaking.
Dora said
’Daisy’s idea is a game
that’ll take us all day. She thinks keeping
out of the way when he’s making his heroine
decide right would be a noble act, and fit to write
in the Golden Book; and we might as well be playing
something at the same time.’
We all said ‘Yes, but what?’
There was a silent interval.
‘Speak up, Daisy, my child.’
Oswald said; ’fear not to lay bare the utmost
thoughts of that faithful heart.’
Daisy giggled. Our own girls
never giggle they laugh right out or hold
their tongues. Their kind brothers have taught
them this. Then Daisy said
’If we could have a sort of
play to keep us out of the way. I once read a
story about an animal race. Everybody had an animal,
and they had to go how they liked, and the one that
got in first got the prize. There was a tortoise
in it, and a rabbit, and a peacock, and sheep, and
dogs, and a kitten.’
This proposal left us cold, as Albert’s
uncle says, because we knew there could not be any
prize worth bothering about. And though you may
be ever ready and willing to do anything for nothing,
yet if there’s going to be a prize there must
be a prize and there’s an end of it.
Thus the idea was not followed up.
Dicky yawned and said, ’Let’s go into
the barn and make a fort.’
So we did, with straw. It does
not hurt straw to be messed about with like it does
hay.
The downstairs I mean down-ladder part
of the barn was fun too, especially for Pincher.
There was as good ratting there as you could wish
to see. Martha tried it, but she could not help
running kindly beside the rat, as if she was in double
harness with it. This is the noble bull-dog’s
gentle and affectionate nature coming out. We
all enjoyed the ratting that day, but it ended, as
usual, in the girls crying because of the poor rats.
Girls cannot help this; we must not be waxy with them
on account of it, they have their nature, the same
as bull-dogs have, and it is this that makes them
so useful in smoothing the pillows of the sick-bed
and tending wounded heroes.
However, the forts, and Pincher, and
the girls crying, and having to be thumped on the
back, passed the time very agreeably till dinner.
There was roast mutton with onion sauce, and a roly-poly
pudding.
Albert’s uncle said we had certainly
effaced ourselves effectually, which means we hadn’t
bothered.
So we determined to do the same during
the afternoon, for he told us his heroine was by no
means out of the wood yet.
And at first it was easy. Jam
roly gives you a peaceful feeling and you do not at
first care if you never play any runabout game ever
any more. But after a while the torpor begins
to pass away. Oswald was the first to recover
from his.
He had been lying on his front part
in the orchard, but now he turned over on his back
and kicked his legs up, and said
‘I say, look here; let’s do something.’
Daisy looked thoughtful. She
was chewing the soft yellow parts of grass, but I
could see she was still thinking about that animal
race. So I explained to her that it would be
very poor fun without a tortoise and a peacock, and
she saw this, though not willingly.
It was H. O. who said
’Doing anything with animals
is prime, if they only will. Let’s have
a circus!’
At the word the last thought of the
pudding faded from Oswald’s memory, and he stretched
himself, sat up, and said
‘Bully for H. O. Let’s!’
The others also threw off the heavy
weight of memory, and sat up and said ‘Let’s!’
too.
Never, never in all our lives had
we had such a gay galaxy of animals at our command.
The rabbits and the guinea-pigs, and even all the bright,
glass-eyed, stuffed denizens of our late-lamented jungle
paled into insignificance before the number of live
things on the farm.
(I hope you do not think that the
words I use are getting too long. I know they
are the right words. And Albert’s uncle
says your style is always altered a bit by what you
read. And I have been reading the Vicomte de
Bragelonne. Nearly all my new words come out of
those.)
‘The worst of a circus is,’
Dora said, ’that you’ve got to teach the
animals things. A circus where the performing
creatures hadn’t learned performing would be
a bit silly. Let’s give up a week to teaching
them and then have the circus.’
Some people have no idea of the value
of time. And Dora is one of those who do not
understand that when you want to do a thing you do
want to, and not to do something else, and perhaps
your own thing, a week later.
Oswald said the first thing was to
collect the performing animals.
‘Then perhaps,’ he said,
’we may find that they have hidden talents hitherto
unsuspected by their harsh masters.’
So Denny took a pencil and wrote a
list of the animals required. This is it:
List of animals
requisite for the
circus we
are going to have
1 Bull for bull-figh Horse for
ditto (if possible). 1 Goat to do Alpine feats of
darin Donkey to play see-sa White pigs one
to be Learned, and the other to play with the clown.
Turkeys, as many as possible, because they can make
a noise that The dogs, for any odd part Large
black pig to be the Elephant in the procession.
Calves (several) to be camels, and to stand on tubs.
Daisy ought to have been captain because
it was partly her idea, but she let Oswald be, because
she is of a retiring character. Oswald said
’The first thing is to get all
the creatures together; the paddock at the side of
the orchard is the very place, because the hedge is
good all round. When we’ve got the performers
all there we’ll make a programme, and then dress
for our parts. It’s a pity there won’t
be any audience but the turkeys.’
We took the animals in their right
order, according to Denny’s list. The bull
was the first. He is black. He does not live
in the cowhouse with the other horned people; he has
a house all to himself two fields away. Oswald
and Alice went to fetch him. They took a halter
to lead the bull by, and a whip, not to hurt the bull
with, but just to make him mind.
The others were to try to get one
of the horses while we were gone.
Oswald as usual was full of bright ideas.
‘I daresay,’ he said,
’the bull will be shy at first, and he’ll
have to be goaded into the arena.’
‘But goads hurt,’ Alice said.
‘They don’t hurt the bull,’
Oswald said; ’his powerful hide is too thick.’
‘Then why does he attend to
it,’ Alice asked, ‘if it doesn’t
hurt?’
‘Properly-brought-up bulls attend
because they know they ought,’ Oswald said.
‘I think I shall ride the bull,’ the brave
boy went on. ’A bull-fight, where an intrepid
rider appears on the bull, sharing its joys and sorrows.
It would be something quite new.’
‘You can’t ride bulls,’
Alice said; ’at least, not if their backs are
sharp like cows.’
But Oswald thought he could.
The bull lives in a house made of wood and prickly
furze bushes, and he has a yard to his house.
You cannot climb on the roof of his house at all comfortably.
When we got there he was half in his
house and half out in his yard, and he was swinging
his tail because of the flies which bothered.
It was a very hot day.
‘You’ll see,’ Alice
said, ’he won’t want a goad. He’ll
be so glad to get out for a walk he’ll drop
his head in my hand like a tame fawn, and follow me
lovingly all the way.’
Oswald called to him. He said,
‘Bull! Bull! Bull! Bull!’
because we did not know the animal’s real name.
The bull took no notice; then Oswald picked up a stone
and threw it at the bull, not angrily, but just to
make it pay attention. But the bull did not pay
a farthing’s worth of it. So then Oswald
leaned over the iron gate of the bull’s yard
and just flicked the bull with the whiplash.
And then the bull did pay attention. He
started when the lash struck him, then suddenly he
faced round, uttering a roar like that of the wounded
King of Beasts, and putting his head down close to
his feet he ran straight at the iron gate where we
were standing.
Alice and Oswald mechanically turned
away; they did not wish to annoy the bull any more,
and they ran as fast as they could across the field
so as not to keep the others waiting.
As they ran across the field Oswald
had a dream-like fancy that perhaps the bull had rooted
up the gate with one paralysing blow, and was now
tearing across the field after him and Alice, with
the broken gate balanced on its horns. We climbed
the stile quickly and looked back; the bull was still
on the right side of the gate.
Oswald said, ’I think we’ll
do without the bull. He did not seem to want
to come. We must be kind to dumb animals.’
Alice said, between laughing and crying
‘Oh, Oswald, how can you!’
But we did do without the bull, and we did not tell
the others how we had hurried to get back. We
just said, ’The bull didn’t seem to care
about coming.’
The others had not been idle.
They had got old Clover, the cart-horse, but she would
do nothing but graze, so we decided not to use her
in the bull-fight, but to let her be the Elephant.
The Elephant’s is a nice quiet part, and she
was quite big enough for a young one. Then the
black pig could be Learned, and the other two could
be something else. They had also got the goat;
he was tethered to a young tree.
The donkey was there. Denny was
leading him in the halter. The dogs were there,
of course they always are.
So now we only had to get the turkeys
for the applause and the calves and pigs.
The calves were easy to get, because
they were in their own house. There were five.
And the pigs were in their houses too. We got
them out after long and patient toil, and persuaded
them that they wanted to go into the paddock, where
the circus was to be. This is done by pretending
to drive them the other way. A pig only knows
two ways the way you want him to go, and
the other. But the turkeys knew thousands of different
ways, and tried them all. They made such an awful
row, we had to drop all ideas of ever hearing applause
from their lips, so we came away and left them.
‘Never mind,’ H. O. said,
’they’ll be sorry enough afterwards, nasty,
unobliging things, because now they won’t see
the circus. I hope the other animals will tell
them about it.’
While the turkeys were engaged in
baffling the rest of us, Dicky had found three sheep
who seemed to wish to join the glad throng, so we let
them.
Then we shut the gate of the paddock,
and left the dumb circus performers to make friends
with each other while we dressed.
Oswald and H. O. were to be clowns.
It is quite easy with Albert’s uncle’s
pyjamas, and flour on your hair and face, and the red
they do the brick-floors with.
Alice had very short pink and white
skirts, and roses in her hair and round her dress.
Her dress was the pink calico and white muslin stuff
off the dressing-table in the girls’ room fastened
with pins and tied round the waist with a small bath
towel. She was to be the Dauntless Equestrienne,
and to give her enhancing act a barebacked daring,
riding either a pig or a sheep, whichever we found
was freshest and most skittish. Dora was dressed
for the Haute école, which means a riding-habit
and a high hat. She took Dick’s topper that
he wears with his Etons, and a skirt of Mrs Pettigrew’s.
Daisy, dressed the same as Alice, taking the muslin
from Mrs Pettigrew’s dressing-table with-out
saying anything beforehand. None of us would have
advised this, and indeed we were thinking of trying
to put it back, when Denny and Noel, who were wishing
to look like highwaymen, with brown-paper top-boots
and slouch hats and Turkish towel cloaks, suddenly
stopped dressing and gazed out of the window.
‘Krikey!’ said Dick, ‘come
on, Oswald!’ and he bounded like an antelope
from the room.
Oswald and the rest followed, casting
a hasty glance through the window. Noel had got
brown-paper boots too, and a Turkish towel cloak.
H. O. had been waiting for Dora to dress him up for
the other clown. He had only his shirt and knickerbockers
and his braces on. He came down as he was as
indeed we all did. And no wonder, for in the paddock,
where the circus was to be, a blood-thrilling thing
had transpired. The dogs were chasing the sheep.
And we had now lived long enough in the country to
know the fell nature of our dogs’ improper conduct.
We all rushed into the paddock, calling
to Pincher, and Martha, and Lady. Pincher came
almost at once. He is a well-brought-up dog Oswald
trained him. Martha did not seem to hear.
She is awfully deaf, but she did not matter so much,
because the sheep could walk away from her easily.
She has no pace and no wind. But Lady is a deer-hound.
She is used to pursuing that fleet and antlered pride
of the forest the stag and she
can go like billyo. She was now far away in a
distant region of the paddock, with a fat sheep just
before her in full flight. I am sure if ever
anybody’s eyes did start out of their heads with
horror, like in narratives of adventure, ours did then.
There was a moment’s pause of
speechless horror. We expected to see Lady pull
down her quarry, and we know what a lot of money a
sheep costs, to say nothing of its own personal feelings.
Then we started to run for all we
were worth. It is hard to run swiftly as the
arrow from the bow when you happen to be wearing pyjamas
belonging to a grown-up person as I was but
even so I beat Dicky. He said afterwards it was
because his brown-paper boots came undone and tripped
him up. Alice came in third. She held on
the dressing-table muslin and ran jolly well.
But ere we reached the fatal spot all was very nearly
up with the sheep. We heard a plop; Lady stopped
and looked round. She must have heard us bellowing
to her as we ran. Then she came towards us, prancing
with happiness, but we said ‘Down!’ and
‘Bad dog!’ and ran sternly on.
When we came to the brook which forms
the northern boundary of the paddock we saw the sheep
struggling in the water. It is not very deep,
and I believe the sheep could have stood up, and been
well in its depth, if it had liked, but it would not
try.
It was a steepish bank. Alice
and I got down and stuck our legs into the water,
and then Dicky came down, and the three of us hauled
that sheep up by its shoulders till it could rest
on Alice and me as we sat on the bank. It kicked
all the time we were hauling. It gave one extra
kick at last, that raised it up, and I tell you that
sopping wet, heavy, panting, silly donkey of a sheep
sat there on our laps like a pet dog; and Dicky got
his shoulder under it at the back and heaved constantly
to keep it from flumping off into the water again,
while the others fetched the shepherd.
When the shepherd came he called us
every name you can think of, and then he said
‘Good thing master didn’t
come along. He would ha’ called you some
tidy names.’
He got the sheep out, and took it
and the others away. And the calves too.
He did not seem to care about the other performing
animals.
Alice, Oswald and Dick had had almost
enough circus for just then, so we sat in the sun
and dried ourselves and wrote the programme of the
circus. This was it:
Programme
1. Startling leap from the lofty
precipice by the performing sheep. Real water,
and real precipice. The gallant rescue. O.
A. and D. Bastable. (We thought we might as well
put that in though it was over and had happened accidentally.)
2. Graceful bare-backed equestrienne
act on the trained pig, Eliza. A. Bastabl.
Amusing clown interlude, introducing trained dog, Pincher,
and the other white pig. H. O. and O. Bastable.
4. The See-Saw. Trained
donkeys. (H. O. said we had only one donkey, so
Dicky said H. O. could be the other. When peace
was restored we went on to 5.)
5. Elegant equestrian act by
D. Bastable. Haute école, on Clover,
the incomparative trained elephant from the plains
of Venezuela.
6. Alpine feat of daring.
The climbing of the Andes, by Billy, the well-known
acrobatic goat. (We thought we could make the Andes
out of hurdles and things, and so we could have but
for what always happens. (This is the unexpected.
(This is a saying Father told me but I see
I am three deep in brackets so I will close them before
I get into any more).).).
7. The Black but Learned Pig.
(’I daresay he knows something,’ Alice
said, ‘if we can only find out what.’
We did find out all too soon.)
We could not think of anything else,
and our things were nearly dry all except
Dick’s brown-paper top-boots, which were mingled
with the gurgling waters of the brook.
We went back to the seat of action which
was the iron trough where the sheep have their salt
put and began to dress up the creatures.
We had just tied the Union Jack we
made out of Daisy’s flannel petticoat and cetera,
when we gave the soldiers the baccy, round the waist
of the Black and Learned Pig, when we heard screams
from the back part of the house, and suddenly we saw
that Billy, the acrobatic goat, had got loose from
the tree we had tied him to. (He had eaten all the
parts of its bark that he could get at, but we did
not notice it until next day, when led to the spot
by a grown-up.)
The gate of the paddock was open.
The gate leading to the bridge that goes over the
moat to the back door was open too. We hastily
proceeded in the direction of the screams, and, guided
by the sound, threaded our way into the kitchen.
As we went, Noel, ever fertile in melancholy ideas,
said he wondered whether Mrs Pettigrew was being robbed,
or only murdered.
In the kitchen we saw that Noel was
wrong as usual. It was neither. Mrs Pettigrew,
screaming like a steam-siren and waving a broom, occupied
the foreground. In the distance the maid was shrieking
in a hoarse and monotonous way, and trying to shut
herself up inside a clothes-horse on which washing
was being aired.
On the dresser which he
had ascended by a chair was Billy, the
acrobatic goat, doing his Alpine daring act. He
had found out his Andes for himself, and even as we
gazed he turned and tossed his head in a way that
showed us some mysterious purpose was hidden beneath
his calm exterior. The next moment he put his
off-horn neatly behind the end plate of the next to
the bottom row, and ran it along against the wall.
The plates fell crashing on to the soup tureen and
vegetable dishes which adorned the lower range of
the Andes.
Mrs Pettigrew’s screams were
almost drowned in the discarding crash and crackle
of the falling avalanche of crockery.
Oswald, though stricken with horror
and polite regret, preserved the most dauntless coolness.
Disregarding the mop which Mrs Pettigrew
kept on poking at the goat in a timid yet cross way,
he sprang forward, crying out to his trusty followers,
‘Stand by to catch him!’
But Dick had thought of the same thing,
and ere Oswald could carry out his long-cherished
and general-like design, Dicky had caught the goat’s
legs and tripped it up. The goat fell against
another row of plates, righted itself hastily in the
gloomy ruins of the soup tureen and the sauce-boats,
and then fell again, this time towards Dicky.
The two fell heavily on the ground together.
The trusty followers had been so struck by the daring
of Dicky and his lion-hearted brother, that they had
not stood by to catch anything.
The goat was not hurt, but Dicky had
a sprained thumb and a lump on his head like a black
marble door-knob. He had to go to bed.
I will draw a veil and asterisks over
what Mrs Pettigrew said. Also Albert’s
uncle, who was brought to the scene of ruin by her
screams. Few words escaped our lips. There
are times when it is not wise to argue; however, little
what has occurred is really our fault.
When they had said what they deemed
enough and we were let go, we all went out. Then
Alice said distractedly, in a voice which she vainly
strove to render firm
’Let’s give up the circus.
Let’s put the toys back in the boxes no,
I don’t mean that the creatures in
their places and drop the whole thing.
I want to go and read to Dicky.’
Oswald has a spirit that no reverses
can depreciate. He hates to be beaten. But
he gave in to Alice, as the others said so too, and
we went out to collect the performing troop and sort
it out into its proper places.
Alas! we came too late. In the
interest we had felt about whether Mrs Pettigrew was
the abject victim of burglars or not, we had left both
gates open again. The old horse I mean
the trained elephant from Venezuela was
there all right enough. The dogs we had beaten
and tied up after the first act, when the intrepid
sheep bounded, as it says in the programme. The
two white pigs were there, but the donkey was gone.
We heard his hoofs down the road, growing fainter and
fainter, in the direction of the ‘Rose and Crown’.
And just round the gatepost we saw a flash of red
and white and blue and black that told us, with dumb
signification, that the pig was off in exactly the
opposite direction. Why couldn’t they have
gone the same way? But no, one was a pig and the
other was a donkey, as Denny said afterwards.
Daisy and H. O. started after the
donkey; the rest of us, with one accord, pursued the
pig I don’t know why. It trotted
quietly down the road; it looked very black against
the white road, and the ends on the top, where the
Union Jack was tied, bobbed brightly as it trotted.
At first we thought it would be easy to catch up to
it. This was an error.
When we ran faster it ran faster;
when we stopped it stopped and looked round at us,
and nodded. (I daresay you won’t swallow this,
but you may safely. It’s as true as true,
and so’s all that about the goat. I give
you my sacred word of honour.) I tell you the pig nodded
as much as to say
‘Oh, yes. You think you
will, but you won’t!’ and then as soon
as we moved again off it went. That pig led us
on and on, o’er miles and miles of strange country.
One thing, it did keep to the roads. When we met
people, which wasn’t often, we called out to
them to help us, but they only waved their arms and
roared with laughter. One chap on a bicycle almost
tumbled off his machine, and then he got off it and
propped it against a gate and sat down in the hedge
to laugh properly. You remember Alice was still
dressed up as the gay equestrienne in the dressing-table
pink and white, with rosy garlands, now very droopy,
and she had no stockings on, only white sand-shoes,
because she thought they would be easier than boots
for balancing on the pig in the graceful bare-backed
act.
Oswald was attired in red paint and
flour and pyjamas, for a clown. It is really
impossible to run speedfully in another man’s
pyjamas, so Oswald had taken them off, and wore his
own brown knickerbockers belonging to his Norfolks.
He had tied the pyjamas round his neck, to carry them
easily. He was afraid to leave them in a ditch,
as Alice suggested, because he did not know the roads,
and for aught he recked they might have been infested
with footpads. If it had been his own pyjamas
it would have been different. (I’m going to ask
for pyjamas next winter, they are so useful in many
ways.)
Noel was a highwayman in brown-paper
gaiters and bath towels and a cocked hat of newspaper.
I don’t know how he kept it on. And the
pig was encircled by the dauntless banner of our country.
All the same, I think if I had seen a band of youthful
travellers in bitter distress about a pig I should
have tried to lend a helping hand and not sat roaring
in the hedge, no matter how the travellers and the
pig might have been dressed.
It was hotter than anyone would believe
who has never had occasion to hunt the pig when dressed
for quite another part. The flour got out of
Oswald’s hair into his eyes and his mouth.
His brow was wet with what the village blacksmith’s
was wet with, and not his fair brow alone. It
ran down his face and washed the red off in streaks,
and when he rubbed his eyes he only made it worse.
Alice had to run holding the equestrienne skirts on
with both hands, and I think the brown-paper boots
bothered Noel from the first. Dora had her skirt
over her arm and carried the topper in her hand.
It was no use to tell ourselves it was a wild boar
hunt we were long past that.
At last we met a man who took pity
on us. He was a kind-hearted man. I think,
perhaps, he had a pig of his own or, perhaps,
children. Honour to his name!
He stood in the middle of the road
and waved his arms. The pig right-wheeled through
a gate into a private garden and cantered up the drive.
We followed. What else were we to do, I should
like to know?
The Learned Black Pig seemed to know
its way. It turned first to the right and then
to the left, and emerged on a lawn.
‘Now, all together!’ cried
Oswald, mustering his failing voice to give the word
of command. ‘Surround him! cut
off his retreat!’
We almost surrounded him. He edged off towards
the house.
‘Now we’ve got him!’
cried the crafty Oswald, as the pig got on to a bed
of yellow pansies close against the red house wall.
All would even then have been well,
but Denny, at the last, shrank from meeting the pig
face to face in a manly way. He let the pig pass
him, and the next moment, with a squeak that said
‘There now!’ as plain as words, the pig
bolted into a French window. The pursuers halted
not. This was no time for trivial ceremony.
In another moment the pig was a captive. Alice
and Oswald had their arms round him under the ruins
of a table that had had teacups on it, and around
the hunters and their prey stood the startled members
of a parish society for making clothes for the poor
heathen, that that pig had led us into the very midst
of. They were reading a missionary report or
something when we ran our quarry to earth under their
table. Even as he crossed the threshold I heard
something about ‘black brothers being already
white to the harvest’. All the ladies had
been sewing flannel things for the poor blacks while
the curate read aloud to them. You think they
screamed when they saw the Pig and Us? You are
right.
On the whole, I cannot say that the
missionary people behaved badly. Oswald explained
that it was entirely the pig’s doing, and asked
pardon quite properly for any alarm the ladies had
felt; and Alice said how sorry we were but really
it was not our fault this time. The curate
looked a bit nasty, but the presence of ladies made
him keep his hot blood to himself.
When we had explained, we said, ‘Might
we go?’ The curate said, ’The sooner the
better.’ But the Lady of the House asked
for our names and addresses, and said she should write
to our Father. (She did, and we heard of it too.)
They did not do anything to us, as Oswald at one time
believed to be the curate’s idea. They let
us go.
And we went, after we had asked for
a piece of rope to lead the pig by.
‘In case it should come back
into your nice room,’ Alice said. ’And
that would be such a pity, wouldn’t it?’
A little girl in a starched pinafore
was sent for the rope. And as soon as the pig
had agreed to let us tie it round his neck we came
away. The scene in the drawing-room had not been
long. The pig went slowly,
‘Like the meandering brook,’
Denny said. Just by the gate
the shrubs rustled and opened, and the little girl
came out. Her pinafore was full of cake.
‘Here,’ she said.
’You must be hungry if you’ve come all
that way.
I think they might have given you
some tea after all the trouble you’ve had.’
We took the cake with correct thanks.
‘I wish I could play at circuses,’
she said. ‘Tell me about it.’
We told her while we ate the cake;
and when we had done she said perhaps it was better
to hear about than do, especially the goat’s
part and Dicky’s.
‘But I do wish auntie had given you tea,’
she said.
We told her not to be too hard on
her aunt, because you have to make allowances for
grown-up people. When we parted she said she would
never forget us, and Oswald gave her his pocket button-hook
and corkscrew combined for a keepsake.
Dicky’s act with the goat (which
is true, and no kid) was the only thing out of that
day that was put in the Golden Deed book, and he put
that in himself while we were hunting the pig.
Alice and me capturing the pig was
never put in. We would scorn to write our own
good actions, but I suppose Dicky was dull with us
all away; and you must pity the dull, and not blame
them.
I will not seek to unfold to you how
we got the pig home, or how the donkey was caught
(that was poor sport compared to the pig). Nor
will I tell you a word of all that was said and done
to the intrepid hunters of the Black and Learned.
I have told you all the interesting part. Seek
not to know the rest. It is better buried in obliquity.