Curdie’s Clue
Curdie was as watchful as ever, but
was almost getting tired of his ill success.
Every other night or so he followed the goblins about,
as they went on digging and boring, and getting as
near them as he could, watched them from behind stones
and rocks; but as yet he seemed no nearer finding
out what they had in view. As at first, he always
kept hold of the end of his string, while his pickaxe,
left just outside the hole by which he entered the
goblins’ country from the mine, continued to
serve as an anchor and hold fast the other end.
The goblins, hearing no more noise in that quarter,
had ceased to apprehend an immediate invasion, and
kept no watch.
One night, after dodging about and
listening till he was nearly falling asleep with weariness,
he began to roll up his ball, for he had resolved
to go home to bed. It was not long, however,
before he began to feel bewildered. One after
another he passed goblin houses, caves, that is, occupied
by goblin families, and at length was sure they were
many more than he had passed as he came. He had
to use great caution to pass unseen they
lay so close together. Could his string have led
him wrong? He still followed winding it, and
still it led him into more thickly populated quarters,
until he became quite uneasy, and indeed apprehensive;
for although he was not afraid of the cobs, he was
afraid of not finding his way out. But what could
he do? It was of no use to sit down and wait
for the morning the morning made no difference
here. It was dark, and always dark; and if his
string failed him he was helpless. He might
even arrive within a yard of the mine and never know
it. Seeing he could do nothing better he would
at least find where the end of his string was, and,
if possible, how it had come to play him such a trick.
He knew by the size of the ball that he was getting
pretty near the last of it, when he began to feel a
tugging and pulling at it. What could it mean?
Turning a sharp corner, he thought he heard strange
sounds. These grew, as he went on, to a scuffling
and growling and squeaking; and the noise increased,
until, turning a second sharp corner, he found himself
in the midst of it, and the same moment tumbled over
a wallowing mass, which he knew must be a knot of
the cobs’ creatures. Before he could recover
his feet, he had caught some great scratches on his
face and several severe bites on his legs and arms.
But as he scrambled to get up, his hand fell upon
his pickaxe, and before the horrid beasts could do
him any serious harm, he was laying about with it
right and left in the dark. The hideous cries
which followed gave him the satisfaction of knowing
that he had punished some of them pretty smartly for
their rudeness, and by their scampering and their
retreating howls, he perceived that he had routed
them. He stood for a little, weighing his battle-axe
in his hand as if it had been the most precious lump
of metal but indeed no lump of gold itself
could have been so precious at the time as that common
tool then untied the end of the string from
it, put the ball in his pocket, and still stood thinking.
It was clear that the cobs’ creatures had found
his axe, had between them carried it off, and had
so led him he knew not where. But for all his
thinking he could not tell what he ought to do, until
suddenly he became aware of a glimmer of light in
the distance. Without a moment’s hesitation
he set out for it, as fast as the unknown and rugged
way would permit. Yet again turning a corner,
led by the dim light, he spied something quite new
in his experience of the underground regions a
small irregular shape of something shining.
Going up to it, he found it was a piece of mica, or
Muscovy glass, called sheep-silver in Scotland, and
the light flickered as if from a fire behind it.
After trying in vain for some time to discover an
entrance to the place where it was burning, he came
at length to a small chamber in which an opening,
high in the wall, revealed a glow beyond. To
this opening he managed to scramble up, and then he
saw a strange sight.
Below sat a little group of goblins
around a fire, the smoke of which vanished in the
darkness far aloft. The sides of the cave were
full of shining minerals like those of the palace
hall; and the company was evidently of a superior
order, for every one wore stones about head, or arms,
or waist, shining dull gorgeous colours in the light
of the fire. Nor had Curdie looked long before
he recognized the king himself, and found that he
had made his way into the inner apartment of the royal
family. He had never had such a good chance of
hearing something. He crept through the hole
as softly as he could, scrambled a good way down the
wall towards them without attracting attention, and
then sat down and listened. The king, evidently
the queen, and probably the crown prince and the Prime
Minister were talking together. He was sure of
the queen by her shoes, for as she warmed her feet
at the fire, he saw them quite plainly.
‘That will be fun!’ said
the one he took for the crown prince. It was
the first whole sentence he heard.
‘I don’t see why you should
think it such a grand affair!’ said his stepmother,
tossing her head backward.
‘You must remember, my spouse,’
interposed His Majesty, as if making excuse for his
son, ‘he has got the same blood in him.
His mother ’
’Don’t talk to me of his
mother! You positively encourage his unnatural
fancies. Whatever belongs to that mother ought
to be cut out of him.’
‘You forget yourself, my dear!’ said the
king.
‘I don’t,’ said
the queen, ’nor you either. If you expect
me to approve of such coarse tastes, you will find
yourself mistaken. I don’t wear shoes
for nothing.’
‘You must acknowledge, however,’
the king said, with a little groan, ’that this
at least is no whim of Harelip’s, but a matter
of State policy. You are well aware that his
gratification comes purely from the pleasure of sacrificing
himself to the public good.
Does it not, Harelip?’
’Yes, father; of course it does.
Only it will be nice to make her cry. I’ll
have the skin taken off between her toes, and tie them
up till they grow together. Then her feet will
be like other people’s, and there will be no
occasion for her to wear shoes.’
‘Do you mean to insinuate I’ve
got toes, you unnatural wretch?’ cried the queen;
and she moved angrily towards Harelip. The councillor,
however, who was betwixt them, leaned forward so as
to prevent her touching him, but only as if to address
the prince.
‘Your Royal Highness,’
he said, ’possibly requires to be reminded that
you have got three toes yourself one on
one foot, two on the other.’
‘Ha! ha! ha!’ shouted the queen triumphantly.
The councillor, encouraged by this mark of favour,
went on.
’It seems to me, Your Royal
Highness, it would greatly endear you to your future
people, proving to them that you are not the less one
of themselves that you had the misfortune to be born
of a sun-mother, if you were to command upon yourself
the comparatively slight operation which, in a more
extended form, you so wisely meditate with regard to
your future princess.’
‘Ha! ha! ha!’ laughed
the queen louder than before, and the king and the
minister joined in the laugh. Harelip growled,
and for a few moments the others continued to express
their enjoyment of his discomfiture.
The queen was the only one Curdie
could see with any distinctness. She sat sideways
to him, and the light of the fire shone full upon her
face. He could not consider her handsome.
Her nose was certainly broader at the end than its
extreme length, and her eyes, instead of being horizontal,
were set up like two perpendicular eggs, one on the
broad, the other on the small end. Her mouth
was no bigger than a small buttonhole until she laughed,
when it stretched from ear to ear only,
to be sure, her ears were very nearly in the middle
of her cheeks.
Anxious to hear everything they might
say, Curdie ventured to slide down a smooth part of
the rock just under him, to a projection below, upon
which he thought to rest. But whether he was
not careful enough, or the projection gave way, down
he came with a rush on the floor of the cavern, bringing
with him a great rumbling shower of stones.
The goblins jumped from their seats
in more anger than consternation, for they had never
yet seen anything to be afraid of in the palace.
But when they saw Curdie with his pick in his hand
their rage was mingled with fear, for they took him
for the first of an invasion of miners. The
king notwithstanding drew himself up to his full height
of four feet, spread himself to his full breadth of
three and a half, for he was the handsomest and squarest
of all the goblins, and strutting up to Curdie, planted
himself with outspread feet before him, and said with
dignity:
‘Pray what right have you in my palace?’
‘The right of necessity, Your
Majesty,’ answered Curdie. ’I lost
my way and did not know where I was wandering to.’
‘How did you get in?’
‘By a hole in the mountain.’
‘But you are a miner! Look at your pickaxe!’
Curdie did look at it, answering:
’I came upon it lying on the
ground a little way from here. I tumbled over
some wild beasts who were playing with it. Look,
Your Majesty.’ And Curdie showed him how
he was scratched and bitten.
The king was pleased to find him behave
more politely than he had expected from what his people
had told him concerning the miners, for he attributed
it to the power of his own presence; but he did not
therefore feel friendly to the intruder.
‘You will oblige me by walking
out of my dominions at once,’ he said, well
knowing what a mockery lay in the words.
‘With pleasure, if Your Majesty
will give me a guide,’ said Curdie.
‘I will give you a thousand,’
said the king with a scoffing air of magnificent liberality.
‘One will be quite sufficient,’ said Curdie.
But the king uttered a strange shout,
half halloo, half roar, and in rushed goblins till
the cave was swarming. He said something to the
first of them which Curdie could not hear, and it was
passed from one to another till in a moment the farthest
in the crowd had evidently heard and understood it.
They began to gather about him in a way he did not
relish, and he retreated towards the wall. They
pressed upon him.
‘Stand back,’ said Curdie,
grasping his pickaxe tighter by his knee.
They only grinned and pressed closer.
Curdie bethought himself and began to rhyme.
’Ten, twenty, thirty
You’re all so very dirty!
Twenty, thirty, forty
You’re all so thick and snorty!
’Thirty, forty, fifty
You’re all so puff-and-snifty!
Forty, fifty, sixty
Beast and man so mixty!
’Fifty, sixty, seventy
Mixty, maxty, leaventy!
Sixty, seventy, eighty
All your cheeks so slaty!
’Seventy, eighty, ninety,
All your hands so flinty!
Eighty, ninety, hundred,
Altogether dundred!’
The goblins fell back a little when
he began, and made horrible grimaces all through the
rhyme, as if eating something so disagreeable that
it set their teeth on edge and gave them the creeps;
but whether it was that the rhyming words were most
of them no words at all, for, a new rhyme being considered
the more efficacious, Curdie had made it on the spur
of the moment, or whether it was that the presence
of the king and queen gave them courage, I cannot
tell; but the moment the rhyme was over they crowded
on him again, and out shot a hundred long arms, with
a multitude of thick nailless fingers at the ends of
them, to lay hold upon him. Then Curdie heaved
up his axe. But being as gentle as courageous
and not wishing to kill any of them, he turned the
end which was square and blunt like a hammer, and
with that came down a great blow on the head of the
goblin nearest him. Hard as the heads of all
goblins are, he thought he must feel that. And
so he did, no doubt; but he only gave a horrible cry,
and sprung at Curdie’s throat. Curdie,
however, drew back in time, and just at that critical
moment remembered the vulnerable part of the goblin
body. He made a sudden rush at the king and
stamped with all his might on His Majesty’s feet.
The king gave a most unkingly howl and almost fell
into the fire. Curdie then rushed into the crowd,
stamping right and left. The goblins drew back,
howling on every side as he approached, but they were
so crowded that few of those he attacked could escape
his tread; and the shrieking and roaring that filled
the cave would have appalled Curdie but for the good
hope it gave him. They were tumbling over each
other in heaps in their eagerness to rush from the
cave, when a new assailant suddenly faced him the
queen, with flaming eyes and expanded nostrils, her
hair standing half up from her head, rushed at him.
She trusted in her shoes: they were of granite hollowed
like French sabots. Curdie would have endured
much rather than hurt a woman, even if she was a goblin;
but here was an affair of life and death: forgetting
her shoes, he made a great stamp on one of her feet.
But she instantly returned it with very different
effect, causing him frightful pain, and almost disabling
him. His only chance with her would have been
to attack the granite shoes with his pickaxe, but
before he could think of that she had caught him up
in her arms and was rushing with him across the cave.
She dashed him into a hole in the wall, with a force
that almost stunned him. But although he could
not move, he was not too far gone to hear her great
cry, and the rush of multitudes of soft feet, followed
by the sounds of something heaved up against the rock;
after which came a multitudinous patter of stones
falling near him. The last had not ceased when
he grew very faint, for his head had been badly cut,
and at last insensible.
When he came to himself there was
perfect silence about him, and utter darkness, but
for the merest glimmer in one tiny spot. He crawled
to it, and found that they had heaved a slab against
the mouth of the hole, past the edge of which a poor
little gleam found its way from the fire. He
could not move it a hairbreadth, for they had piled
a great heap of stones against it. He crawled
back to where he had been lying, in the faint hope
of finding his pickaxe, But after a vain search he
was at last compelled to acknowledge himself in an
evil plight. He sat down and tried to think,
but soon fell fast asleep.