You read in books about the pleasures
of London, and about how people who live in the country
long for the gay whirl of fashion in town because
the country is so dull. I do not agree with this
at all. In London, or at any rate Lewisham, nothing
happens unless you make it happen; or if it happens
it doesn’t happen to you, and you don’t
know the people it does happen to. But in the
country the most interesting events occur quite freely,
and they seem to happen to you as much as to anyone
else. Very often quite without your doing anything
to help.
The natural and right ways of earning
your living in the country are much jollier than town
ones, too; sowing and reaping, and doing things with
animals, are much better sport than fishmongering or
bakering or oil-shopping, and those sort of things,
except, of course, a plumber’s and gasfitter’s,
and he is the same in town or country most
interesting and like an engineer.
I remember what a nice man it was
that came to cut the gas off once at our old house
in Lewisham, when my father’s business was feeling
so poorly. He was a true gentleman, and gave Oswald
and Dicky over two yards and a quarter of good lead
piping, and a brass tap that only wanted a washer,
and a whole handful of screws to do what we liked with.
We screwed the back door up with the screws, I remember,
one night when Eliza was out without leave. There
was an awful row. We did not mean to get her
into trouble. We only thought it would be amusing
for her to find the door screwed up when she came
down to take in the milk in the morning. But
I must not say any more about the Lewisham house.
It is only the pleasures of memory, and nothing to
do with being beavers, or any sort of exploring.
I think Dora and Daisy are the kind
of girls who will grow up very good, and perhaps marry
missionaries. I am glad Oswald’s destiny
looks at present as if it might be different.
We made two expeditions to discover
the source of the Nile (or the North Pole), and owing
to their habit of sticking together and doing dull
and praiseable things, like sewing, and helping with
the cooking, and taking invalid delicacies to the
poor and indignant, Daisy and Dora were wholly out
of it both times, though Dora’s foot was now
quite well enough to have gone to the North Pole or
the Equator either. They said they did not mind
the first time, because they like to keep themselves
clean; it is another of their queer ways. And
they said they had had a better time than us. (It
was only a clergyman and his wife who called, and hot
cakes for tea.) The second time they said they were
lucky not to have been in it. And perhaps they
were right. But let me to my narrating. I
hope you will like it. I am going to try to write
it a different way, like the books they give you for
a prize at a girls’ school I mean
a ’young ladies’ school’, of course not
a high school. High schools are not nearly so
silly as some other kinds. Here goes:
’"Ah, me!” sighed a slender
maiden of twelve summers, removing her elegant hat
and passing her tapery fingers lightly through her
fair tresses, “how sad it is is it
not? to see able-bodied youths and young
ladies wasting the precious summer hours in idleness
and luxury.”
’The maiden frowned reproachingly,
but yet with earnest gentleness, at the group of youths
and maidens who sat beneath an umbragipeaous beech
tree and ate black currants.
’"Dear brothers and sisters,”
the blushing girl went on, “could we not, even
now, at the eleventh hour, turn to account these wasted
lives of ours, and seek some occupation at once improving
and agreeable?”
’"I do not quite follow your
meaning, dear sister,” replied the cleverest
of her brothers, on whose brow ’
It’s no use. I can’t
write like these books. I wonder how the books’
authors can keep it up.
What really happened was that we were
all eating black currants in the orchard, out of a
cabbage leaf, and Alice said
’I say, look here, let’s
do something. It’s simply silly to waste
a day like this. It’s just on eleven.
Come on!’
And Oswald said, ‘Where to?’
This was the beginning of it.
The moat that is all round our house
is fed by streams. One of them is a sort of open
overflow pipe from a good-sized stream that flows at
the other side of the orchard.
It was this stream that Alice meant when she said
‘Why not go and discover the source of the Nile?’
Of course Oswald knows quite well
that the source of the real live Egyptian Nile is
no longer buried in that mysteriousness where it lurked
undisturbed for such a long time. But he was not
going to say so. It is a great thing to know
when not to say things.
‘Why not have it an Arctic expedition?’
said Dicky; ’then we could take an ice-axe,
and live on blubber and things. Besides, it sounds
cooler.’
‘Vote! vote!’ cried Oswald.
So we did. Oswald, Alice, Noel, and Denny voted
for the river of the ibis and the crocodile. Dicky,
H. O., and the other girls for the region of perennial
winter and rich blubber.
So Alice said, ‘We can decide
as we go. Let’s start anyway.’
The question of supplies had now to
be gone into. Everybody wanted to take something
different, and nobody thought the other people’s
things would be the slightest use. It is sometimes
thus even with grown-up expeditions. So then
Oswald, who is equal to the hardest emergency that
ever emerged yet, said
’Let’s each get what we
like. The secret storehouse can be the shed in
the corner of the stableyard where we got the door
for the raft. Then the captain can decide who’s
to take what.’
This was done. You may think
it but the work of a moment to fit out an expedition,
but this is not so, especially when you know not whether
your exploring party is speeding to Central Africa
or merely to the world of icebergs and the Polar bear.
Dicky wished to take the wood-axe,
the coal hammer, a blanket, and a mackintosh.
H. O. brought a large faggot in case
we had to light fires, and a pair of old skates he
had happened to notice in the box-room, in case the
expedition turned out icy.
Noel had nicked a dozen boxes of matches,
a spade, and a trowel, and had also obtained I
know not by what means a jar of pickled
onions.
Denny had a walking-stick we
can’t break him of walking with it a
book to read in case he got tired of being a discoverer,
a butterfly net and a box with a cork in it, a tennis
ball, if we happened to want to play rounders in the
pauses of exploring, two towels and an umbrella in
the event of camping or if the river got big enough
to bathe in or to be fallen into.
Alice had a comforter for Noel in
case we got late, a pair of scissors and needle and
cotton, two whole candles in case of caves.
And she had thoughtfully brought the
tablecloth off the small table in the dining-room,
so that we could make all the things up into one bundle
and take it in turns to carry it.
Oswald had fastened his master mind
entirely on grub. Nor had the others neglected
this.
All the stores for the expedition
were put down on the tablecloth and the corners tied
up. Then it was more than even Oswald’s
muscley arms could raise from the ground, so we decided
not to take it, but only the best-selected grub.
The rest we hid in the straw loft, for there are many
ups and downs in life, and grub is grub at any time,
and so are stores of all kinds. The pickled onions
we had to leave, but not for ever.
Then Dora and Daisy came along with
their arms round each other’s necks as usual,
like a picture on a grocer’s almanac, and said
they weren’t coming.
It was, as I have said, a blazing
hot day, and there were differences of opinion among
the explorers about what eatables we ought to have
taken, and H. O. had lost one of his garters and wouldn’t
let Alice tie it up with her handkerchief, which the
gentle sister was quite willing to do. So it
was a rather gloomy expedition that set off that bright
sunny day to seek the source of the river where Cleopatra
sailed in Shakespeare (or the frozen plains Mr Nansen
wrote that big book about).
But the balmy calm of peaceful Nature
soon made the others less cross Oswald
had not been cross exactly but only disinclined to
do anything the others wanted and by the
time we had followed the stream a little way, and
had seen a water-rat and shied a stone or two at him,
harmony was restored. We did not hit the rat.
You will understand that we were not
the sort of people to have lived so long near a stream
without plumbing its depths. Indeed it was the
same stream the sheep took its daring jump into the
day we had the circus. And of course we had often
paddled in it in the shallower parts.
But now our hearts were set on exploring. At
least they ought to have been, but when we got to
the place where the stream goes under a wooden sheep-bridge,
Dicky cried, ‘A camp! a camp!’ and we were
all glad to sit down at once. Not at all like
real explorers, who know no rest, day or night, till
they have got there (whether it’s the North Pole,
or the central point of the part marked ‘Desert
of Sahara’ on old-fashioned maps).
The food supplies obtained by various
members were good and plenty of it. Cake, hard
eggs, sausage-rolls, currants, lemon cheese-cakes,
raisins, and cold apple dumplings. It was all
very decent, but Oswald could not help feeling that
the source of the Nile (or North Pole) was a long
way off, and perhaps nothing much when you got there.
So he was not wholly displeased when
Denny said, as he lay kicking into the bank when the
things to eat were all gone
’I believe this is clay:
did you ever make huge platters and bowls out of clay
and dry them in the sun? Some people did in a
book called Foul Play, and I believe they baked turtles,
or oysters, or something, at the same time.’
He took up a bit of clay and began
to mess it about, like you do putty when you get hold
of a bit. And at once the heavy gloom that had
hung over the explorers became expelled, and we all
got under the shadow of the bridge and messed about
with clay.
‘It will be jolly!’ Alice
said, ’and we can give the huge platters to
poor cottagers who are short of the usual sorts of
crockery. That would really be a very golden
deed.’
It is harder than you would think
when you read about it, to make huge platters with
clay. It flops about as soon as you get it any
size, unless you keep it much too thick, and then
when you turn up the edges they crack. Yet we
did not mind the trouble. And we had all got our
shoes and stockings off. It is impossible to go
on being cross when your feet are in cold water; and
there is something in the smooth messiness of clay,
and not minding how dirty you get, that would soothe
the savagest breast that ever beat.
After a bit, though, we gave up the
idea of the huge platter and tried little things.
We made some platters they were like flower-pot
saucers; and Alice made a bowl by doubling up her
fists and getting Noel to slab the clay on outside.
Then they smoothed the thing inside and out with wet
fingers, and it was a bowl at least they
said it was. When we’d made a lot of things
we set them in the sun to dry, and then it seemed
a pity not to do the thing thoroughly. So we made
a bonfire, and when it had burnt down we put our pots
on the soft, white, hot ashes among the little red
sparks, and kicked the ashes over them and heaped more
fuel over the top. It was a fine fire.
Then tea-time seemed as if it ought
to be near, and we decided to come back next day and
get our pots.
As we went home across the fields
Dicky looked back and said
‘The bonfire’s going pretty strong.’
We looked. It was. Great
flames were rising to heaven against the evening sky.
And we had left it,a smouldering flat heap.
‘The clay must have caught alight,’
H. O. said. ’Perhaps it’s the kind
that burns. I know I’ve heard of fireclay.
And there’s another sort you can eat.’
‘Oh, shut up!’ Dicky said with anxious
scorn.
With one accord we turned back.
We all felt the feeling the one that
means something fatal being up and it being your fault.
’Perhaps, Alice said, ’a
beautiful young lady in a muslin dress was passing
by, and a spark flew on to her, and now she is rolling
in agony enveloped in flames.’
We could not see the fire now, because
of the corner of the wood, but we hoped Alice was
mistaken.
But when we got in sight of the scene
of our pottering industry we saw it was as bad nearly
as Alice’s wild dream. For the wooden fence
leading up to the bridge had caught fire, and it was
burning like billy oh.
Oswald started to run; so did the
others. As he ran he said to himself, ‘This
is no time to think about your clothes. Oswald,
be bold!’
And he was.
Arrived at the site of the conflagration,
he saw that caps or straw hats full of water, however
quickly and perseveringly given, would never put the
bridge out, and his eventful past life made him know
exactly the sort of wigging you get for an accident
like this.
So he said, ’Dicky, soak your
jacket and mine in the stream and chuck them along.
Alice, stand clear, or your silly girl’s clothes’ll
catch as sure as fate.’
Dicky and Oswald tore off their jackets,
so did Denny, but we would not let him and H. O. wet
theirs. Then the brave Oswald advanced warily
to the end of the burning rails and put his wet jacket
over the end bit, like a linseed poultice on the throat
of a suffering invalid who has got bronchitis.
The burning wood hissed and smouldered, and Oswald
fell back, almost choked with the smoke. But
at once he caught up the other wet jacket and put
it on another place, and of course it did the trick
as he had known it would do. But it was a long
job, and the smoke in his eyes made the young hero
obliged to let Dicky and Denny take a turn as they
had bothered to do from the first. At last all
was safe; the devouring element was conquered.
We covered up the beastly bonfire with clay to keep
it from getting into mischief again, and then Alice
said
‘Now we must go and tell.’
‘Of course,’ Oswald said shortly.
He had meant to tell all the time.
So we went to the farmer who has the
Moat House Farm, and we went at once, because if you
have any news like that to tell it only makes it worse
if you wait about. When we had told him he said
‘You little –.’
I shall not say what he said besides that, because
I am sure he must have been sorry for it next Sunday
when he went to church, if not before.
We did not take any notice of what
he said, but just kept on saying how sorry we were;
and he did not take our apology like a man, but only
said he daresayed, just like a woman does. Then
he went to look at his bridge, and we went in to our
tea. The jackets were never quite the same again.
Really great explorers would never
be discouraged by the daresaying of a farmer, still
less by his calling them names he ought not to.
Albert’s uncle was away so we got no double
slating; and next day we started again to discover
the source of the river of cataracts (or the region
of mountain-like icebergs).
We set out, heavily provisioned with
a large cake Daisy and Dora had made themselves, and
six bottles of ginger-beer. I think real explorers
most likely have their ginger-beer in something lighter
to carry than stone bottles. Perhaps they have
it by the cask, which would come cheaper; and you
could make the girls carry it on their back, like in
pictures of the daughters of regiments.
We passed the scene of the devouring
conflagration, and the thought of the fire made us
so thirsty we decided to drink the ginger-beer and
leave the bottles in a place of concealment. Then
we went on, determined to reach our destination, Tropic
or Polar, that day.
Denny and H. O. wanted to stop and
try to make a fashionable watering-place at that part
where the stream spreads out like a small-sized sea,
but Noel said, ‘No.’ We did not like
fashionableness.
‘You ought to, at any rate,’
Denny said. ’A Mr Collins wrote an Ode to
the Fashions, and he was a great poet.’
‘The poet Milton wrote a long
book about Satan,’ Noel said, ’but I’m
not bound to like him.’ I think it
was smart of Noel.
’People aren’t obliged
to like everything they write about even, let alone
read,’ Alice said. ’Look at “Ruin
seize thee, ruthless king!” and all the pieces
of poetry about war, and tyrants, and slaughtered
saints and the one you made yourself about
the black beetle, Noel.’
By this time we had got by the pondy
place and the danger of delay was past; but the others
went on talking about poetry for quite a field and
a half, as we walked along by the banks of the stream.
The stream was broad and shallow at this part, and
you could see the stones and gravel at the bottom,
and millions of baby fishes, and a sort of skating-spiders
walking about on the top of the water. Denny said
the water must be ice for them to be able to walk
on it, and this showed we were getting near the North
Pole. But Oswald had seen a kingfisher by the
wood, and he said it was an ibis, so this was even.
When Oswald had had as much poetry
as he could bear he said, ’Let’s be beavers
and make a dam.’ And everybody was so hot
they agreed joyously, and soon our clothes were tucked
up as far as they could go and our legs looked green
through the water, though they were pink out of it.
Making a dam is jolly good fun, though
laborious, as books about beavers take care to let
you know.
Dicky said it must be Canada if we
were beavers, and so it was on the way to the Polar
system, but Oswald pointed to his heated brow, and
Dicky owned it was warm for Polar regions. He
had brought the ice-axe (it is called the wood chopper
sometimes), and Oswald, ever ready and able to command,
set him and Denny to cut turfs from the bank while
we heaped stones across the stream. It was clayey
here, or of course dam making would have been vain,
even for the best-trained beaver.
When we had made a ridge of stones
we laid turfs against them nearly
across the stream, leaving about two feet for the water
to go through then more stones, and then
lumps of clay stamped down as hard as we could.
The industrious beavers spent hours over it, with only
one easy to eat cake in. And at last the dam
rose to the level of the bank. Then the beavers
collected a great heap of clay, and four of them lifted
it and dumped it down in the opening where the water
was running. It did splash a little, but a true-hearted
beaver knows better than to mind a bit of a wetting,
as Oswald told Alice at the time. Then with more
clay the work was completed. We must have used
tons of clay; there was quite a big long hole in the
bank above the dam where we had taken it out.
When our beaver task was performed
we went on, and Dicky was so hot he had to take his
jacket off and shut up about icebergs.
I cannot tell you about all the windings
of the stream; it went through fields and woods and
meadows, and at last the banks got steeper and higher,
and the trees overhead darkly arched their mysterious
branches, and we felt like the princes in a fairy
tale who go out to seek their fortunes.
And then we saw a thing that was well
worth coming all that way for; the stream suddenly
disappeared under a dark stone archway, and however
much you stood in the water and stuck your head down
between your knees you could not see any light at
the other end.
The stream was much smaller than where
we had been beavers.
Gentle reader, you will guess in a
moment who it was that said
‘Alice, you’ve got a candle.
Let’s explore.’ This gallant proposal
met but a cold response. The others said they
didn’t care much about it, and what about tea?
I often think the way people try to
hide their cowardliness behind their teas is simply
beastly.
Oswald took no notice. He just
said, with that dignified manner, not at all like
sulking, which he knows so well how to put on
’All right. I’m
going. If you funk it you’d better cut along
home and ask your nurses to put you to bed.’
So then, of course, they agreed to go. Oswald
went first with the candle. It was not comfortable;
the architect of that dark subterranean passage had
not imagined anyone would ever be brave enough to
lead a band of beavers into its inky recesses, or
he would have built it high enough to stand upright
in. As it was, we were bent almost at a right
angle, and this is very awkward if for long.
But the leader pressed dauntlessly
on, and paid no attention to the groans of his faithful
followers, nor to what they said about their backs.
It really was a very long tunnel,
though, and even Oswald was not sorry to say, ‘I
see daylight.’ The followers cheered as
well as they could as they splashed after him.
The floor was stone as well as the roof, so it was
easy to walk on. I think the followers would have
turned back if it had been sharp stones or gravel.
And now the spot of daylight at the
end of the tunnel grew larger and larger, and presently
the intrepid leader found himself blinking in the
full sun, and the candle he carried looked simply silly.
He emerged, and the others too, and they stretched
their backs and the word ‘krikey’ fell
from more than one lip. It had indeed been a cramping
adventure. Bushes grew close to the mouth of
the tunnel, so we could not see much landscape, and
when we had stretched our backs we went on upstream
and nobody said they’d had jolly well enough
of it, though in more than one young heart this was
thought.
It was jolly to be in the sunshine
again. I never knew before how cold it was underground.
The stream was getting smaller and smaller.
Dicky said, ’This can’t
be the way. I expect there was a turning to the
North Pole inside the tunnel, only we missed it.
It was cold enough there.’
But here a twist in the stream brought
us out from the bushes, and Oswald said
’Here is strange, wild, tropical
vegetation in the richest profusion. Such blossoms
as these never opened in a frigid what’s-its-name.’
It was indeed true. We had come
out into a sort of marshy, swampy place like I think,
a jungle is, that the stream ran through, and it was
simply crammed with queer plants, and flowers we never
saw before or since. And the stream was quite
thin. It was torridly hot, and softish to walk
on. There were rushes and reeds and small willows,
and it was all tangled over with different sorts of
grasses and pools here and there.
We saw no wild beasts, but there were more different
kinds of wild flies and beetles than you could believe
anybody could bear, and dragon-flies and gnats.
The girls picked a lot of flowers. I know the
names of some of them, but I will not tell you them
because this is not meant to be instructing.
So I will only name meadow-sweet, yarrow, loose-strife,
lady’s bed-straw and willow herb both
the larger and the lesser.
Everyone now wished to go home.
It was much hotter there than in natural fields.
It made you want to tear all your clothes off and play
at savages, instead of keeping respectable in your
boots.
But we had to bear the boots because it was so brambly.
It was Oswald who showed the others
how flat it would be to go home the same way we came;
and he pointed out the telegraph wires in the distance
and said
‘There must be a road there,
let’s make for it,’ which was quite a
simple and ordinary thing to say, and he does not ask
for any credit for it. So we sloshed along, scratching
our legs with the brambles, and the water squelched
in our boots, and Alice’s blue muslin frock was
torn all over in those crisscross tears which are
considered so hard to darn.
We did not follow the stream any more.
It was only a trickle now, so we knew we had tracked
it to its source. And we got hotter and hotter
and hotter, and the dews of agony stood in beads on
our brows and rolled down our noses and off our chins.
And the flies buzzed, and the gnats stung, and Oswald
bravely sought to keep up Dicky’s courage, when
he tripped on a snag and came down on a bramble bush,
by saying
’You see it is the source
of the Nile we’ve discovered. What price
North Poles now?’
Alice said, ’Ah, but think of
ices! I expect Oswald wishes it had been
the Pole, anyway.’
Oswald is naturally the leader, especially
when following up what is his own idea, but he knows
that leaders have other duties besides just leading.
One is to assist weak or wounded members of the expedition,
whether Polar or Equatorish.
So the others had got a bit ahead
through Oswald lending the tottering Denny a hand
over the rough places. Denny’s feet hurt
him, because when he was a beaver his stockings had
dropped out of his pocket, and boots without stockings
are not a bed of luxuriousness. And he is often
unlucky with his feet.
Presently we came to a pond, and Denny said
‘Let’s paddle.’
Oswald likes Denny to have ideas;
he knows it is healthy for the boy, and generally
he backs him up, but just now it was getting late and
the others were ahead, so he said
‘Oh, rot! come on.’
Generally the Dentist would have;
but even worms will turn if they are hot enough, and
if their feet are hurting them. ‘I don’t
care, I shall!’ he said.
Oswald overlooked the mutiny and did
not say who was leader. He just said
‘Well don’t be all day
about it,’ for he is a kind-hearted boy and can
make allowances. So Denny took off his boots and
went into the pool. ‘Oh, it’s ripping!’
he said. ‘You ought to come in.’
‘It looks beastly muddy,’ said his tolerating
leader.
‘It is a bit,’ Denny said,
’but the mud’s just as cool as the water,
and so soft, it squeezes between your toes quite different
to boots.’
And so he splashed about, and kept
asking Oswald to come along in.
But some unseen influence prevented
Oswald doing this; or it may have been because both
his bootlaces were in hard knots.
Oswald had cause to bless the unseen
influence, or the bootlaces, or whatever it was.
Denny had got to the middle of the
pool, and he was splashing about, and getting his
clothes very wet indeed, and altogether you would have
thought his was a most envious and happy state.
But alas! the brightest cloud had a waterproof lining.
He was just saying
‘You are a silly, Oswald.
You’d much better ’ when he
gave a blood-piercing scream, and began to kick about.
‘What’s up?’ cried
the ready Oswald; he feared the worst from the way
Denny screamed, but he knew it could not be an old
meat tin in this quiet and jungular spot, like it
was in the moat when the shark bit Dora.
’I don’t know, it’s
biting me. Oh, it’s biting me all over my
legs! Oh, what shall I do? Oh, it does hurt!
Oh! oh! oh!’ remarked Denny, among his screams,
and he splashed towards the bank. Oswald went
into the water and caught hold of him and helped him
out. It is true that Oswald had his boots on,
but I trust he would not have funked the unknown terrors
of the deep, even without his boots, I am almost sure
he would not have.
When Denny had scrambled and been
hauled ashore, we saw with horror and amaze that his
legs were stuck all over with large black, slug-looking
things. Denny turned green in the face and
even Oswald felt a bit queer, for he knew in a moment
what the black dreadfulnesses were. He had read
about them in a book called Magnet Stories, where there
was a girl called Theodosia, and she could play brilliant
trebles on the piano in duets, but the other girl
knew all about leeches which is much more useful and
golden deedy. Oswald tried to pull the leeches
off, but they wouldn’t, and Denny howled so
he had to stop trying. He remembered from the
Magnet Stories how to make the leeches begin biting the
girl did it with cream but he could not
remember how to stop them, and they had not wanted
any showing how to begin.
‘Oh, what shall I do? What
shall I do? Oh, it does hurt! Oh, oh!’
Denny observed, and Oswald said
’Be a man! Buck up!
If you won’t let me take them off you’ll
just have to walk home in them.’
At this thought the unfortunate youth’s
tears fell fast. But Oswald gave him an arm,
and carried his boots for him, and he consented to
buck up, and the two struggled on towards the others,
who were coming back, attracted by Denny’s yells.
He did not stop howling for a moment, except to breathe.
No one ought to blame him till they have had eleven
leeches on their right leg and six on their left,
making seventeen in all, as Dicky said, at once.
It was lucky he did yell, as it turned
out, because a man on the road where the
telegraph wires were was interested by his
howls, and came across the marsh to us as hard as
he could. When he saw Denny’s legs he said
‘Blest if I didn’t think
so,’ and he picked Denny up and carried him
under one arm, where Denny went on saying ‘Oh!’
and ‘It does hurt’ as hard as ever.
Our rescuer, who proved to be a fine
big young man in the bloom of youth, and a farm-labourer
by trade, in corduroys, carried the wretched sufferer
to the cottage where he lived with his aged mother;
and then Oswald found that what he had forgotten about
the leeches was salt. The young man in the
bloom of youth’s mother put salt on the leeches,
and they squirmed off, and fell with sickening, slug-like
flops on the brick floor.
Then the young man in corduroys and
the bloom, etc., carried Denny home on his back,
after his legs had been bandaged up, so that he looked
like ‘wounded warriors returning’.
It was not far by the road, though
such a long distance by the way the young explorers
had come.
He was a good young man, and though,
of course, acts of goodness are their own reward,
still I was glad he had the two half-crowns Albert’s
uncle gave him, as well as his own good act. But
I am not sure Alice ought to have put him in the Golden
Deed book which was supposed to be reserved for Us.
Perhaps you will think this was the
end of the source of the Nile (or North Pole).
If you do, it only shows how mistaken the gentlest
reader may be.
The wounded explorer was lying with
his wounds and bandages on the sofa, and we were all
having our tea, with raspberries and white currants,
which we richly needed after our torrid adventures,
when Mrs Pettigrew, the housekeeper, put her head
in at the door and said
‘Please could I speak to you
half a moment, sir?’ to Albert’s uncle.
And her voice was the kind that makes you look at each
other when the grown-up has gone out, and you are
silent, with your bread-and-butter halfway to the
next bite, or your teacup in mid flight to your lips.
It was as we suppose. Albert’s
uncle did not come back for a long while. We
did not keep the bread-and-butter on the wing all that
time, of course, and we thought we might as well finish
the raspberries and white currants. We kept some
for Albert’s uncle, of course, and they were
the best ones too but when he came back he did not
notice our thoughtful unselfishness.
He came in, and his face wore the
look that means bed, and very likely no supper.
He spoke, and it was the calmness
of white-hot iron, which is something like the calmness
of despair. He said
‘You have done it again.
What on earth possessed you to make a dam?’
‘We were being beavers,’
said H. O., in proud tones. He did not see as
we did where Albert’s uncle’s tone pointed
to.
‘No doubt,’ said Albert’s
uncle, rubbing his hands through his hair. ’No
doubt! no doubt! Well, my beavers, you may go
and build dams with your bolsters. Your dam stopped
the stream; the clay you took for it left a channel
through which it has run down and ruined about seven
pounds’ worth of freshly-reaped barley.
Luckily the farmer found it out in time or you might
have spoiled seventy pounds’ worth. And
you burned a bridge yesterday.’
We said we were sorry. There
was nothing else to say, only Alice added, ‘We
didn’t mean to be naughty.’
‘Of course not,’ said
Albert’s uncle, ’you never do. Oh,
yes, I’ll kiss you but it’s
bed and it’s two hundred lines to-morrow, and
the line is “Beware of Being Beavers
and Burning Bridges. Dread Dams.” It
will be a capital exercise in capital B’s and
D’s.’
We knew by that that, though annoyed,
he was not furious; we went to bed.
I got jolly sick of capital B’s
and D’s before sunset on the morrow. That
night, just as the others were falling asleep, Oswald
said
‘I say.’
‘Well,’ retorted his brother.
‘There is one thing about it,’
Oswald went on, ’it does show it was a rattling
good dam anyhow.’
And filled with this agreeable thought, the weary
beavers (or explorers,
Polar or otherwise) fell asleep.