One morning as little “Sir”
Bevis [such was his pet name] was digging in the farmhouse
garden, he saw a daisy, and throwing aside his spade,
he sat down on the grass to pick the flower to pieces.
He pulled the pink-tipped petals off one by one, and
as they dropped they were lost. Next he gathered
a bright dandelion, and squeezed the white juice from
the hollow stem, which drying presently, left his fingers
stained with brown spots. Then he drew forth
a bennet from its sheath, and bit and sucked it till
his teeth were green from the sap. Lying at full
length, he drummed the earth with his toes, while
the tall grass blades tickled his cheeks.
Presently, rolling on his back, he
drummed again with his heels. He looked up at
the blue sky, but only for a moment, because the glare
of light was too strong in his eyes. After a
minute, he turned on his side, thrust out one arm,
placed his head on it, and drew up one knee, as if
going to sleep. His little brown wrist, bared
by the sleeve shortening as he extended his arm, bent
down the grass, and his still browner fingers played
with the blades, and every now and then tore one off.
A flutter of wings sounded among the
blossom on an apple-tree close by, and instantly Bevis
sat up, knowing it must be a goldfinch thinking of
building a nest in the branches. If the trunk
of the tree had not been so big, he would have tried
to climb it at once, but he knew he could not do it,
nor could he see the bird for the leaves and bloom.
A puff of wind came and showered the petals down upon
him; they fell like snowflakes on his face and dotted
the grass.
Buzz! A great bumble-bee, with
a band of red gold across his back, flew up, and hovered
near, wavering to and fro in the air as he stayed to
look at a flower.
Buzz! Bevis listened, and knew
very well what he was saying. It was: “This
is a sweet little garden, my darling; a very pleasant
garden; all grass and daisies, and apple-trees, and
narrow patches with flowers and fruit-trees one side,
and a wall and currant-bushes another side, and a
low box-hedge and a haha, where you can see the high
mowing grass quite underneath you; and a round summer-house
in the corner, painted as blue inside as a hedge-sparrow’s
egg is outside; and then another haha with iron railings,
which you are always climbing up, Bevis, on the fourth
side, with stone steps leading down to a meadow, where
the cows are feeding, and where they have left all
the buttercups standing as tall as your waist, sir.
The gate in the iron railings is not fastened, and
besides, there is a gap in the box-hedge, and it is
easy to drop down the haha wall, but that is mowing
grass there. You know very well you could not
come to any harm in the meadow; they said you were
not to go outside the garden, but that’s all
nonsense, and very stupid. I am going outside
the garden, Bevis. Good-morning, dear.”
Buzz! And the great bumble-bee flew slowly between
the iron railings, out among the buttercups, and away
up the field.
Bevis went to the railings, and stood
on the lowest bar; then he opened the gate a little
way, but it squeaked so loud upon its rusty hinges
that he let it shut again. He walked round the
garden along beside the box-hedge to the patch by
the lilac trees; they were single lilacs, which are
much more beautiful than the double, and all bowed
down with a mass of bloom. Some rhubarb grew
there, and to bring it up the faster, they had put
a round wooden box on it, hollowed out from the sawn
butt of an elm, which was rotten within and easily
scooped. The top was covered with an old board,
and every time that Bevis passed he lifted up the
corner of the board and peeped in, to see if the large
red, swelling knobs were yet bursting.
One of these round wooden boxes had
been split and spoilt, and half of it was left lying
with the hollow part downwards. Under this shelter
a toad had his house. Bevis peered in at him,
and touched him with a twig to make him move an inch
or two, for he was so lazy, and sat there all day
long, except when it rained. Sometimes the toad
told him a story, but not very often, for he was a
silent old philosopher, and not very fond of anybody.
He had a nephew, quite a lively young fellow, in the
cucumber frame on the other side of the lilac bushes,
at whom Bevis also peered nearly every day after they
had lifted the frame and propped it up with wedges.
The gooseberries were no bigger than
beads, but he tasted two, and then a thrush began
to sing on an ash-tree in the hedge of the meadow.
“Bevis! Bevis!” said the thrush, and
he turned round to listen: “My dearest
Bevis, have you forgotten the meadow, and the buttercups,
and the sorrel? You know the sorrel, don’t
you, that tastes so pleasant if you nibble the leaf?
And I have a nest in the bushes, not very far up the
hedge, and you may take just one egg; there are only
two yet. But don’t tell any more boys about
it, or we shall not have one left. That is a
very sweet garden, but it is very small. I like
all these fields to fly about in, and the swallows
fly ever so much farther than I can; so far away and
so high, that I cannot tell you how they find their
way home to the chimney. But they will tell you,
if you ask them. Good-morning! I am going
over the brook.”
Bevis went to the iron railings and
got up two bars, and looked over; but he could not
yet make up his mind, so he went inside the summer-house,
which had one small round window. All the lower
part of the blue walls was scribbled and marked with
pencil, where he had written and drawn, and put down
his ideas and notes. The lines were somewhat
intermingled, and crossed each other, and some stretched
out long distances, and came back in sharp angles.
But Bevis knew very well what he meant when he wrote
it all. Taking a stump of cedar pencil from his
pocket, one end of it much gnawn, he added a few scrawls
to the inscriptions, and then stood on the seat to
look out of the round window, which was darkened by
an old cobweb.
Once upon a time there was a very
cunning spider — a very cunning spider indeed.
The old toad by the rhubarb told Bevis there had not
been such a cunning spider for many summers; he knew
almost as much about flies as the old toad, and caught
such a great number, that the toad began to think
there would be none left for him. Now the toad
was extremely fond of flies, and he watched the spider
with envy, and grew more angry about it every day.
As he sat blinking and winking by
the rhubarb in his house all day long, the toad never
left off thinking, thinking, thinking about the spider.
And as he kept thinking, thinking, thinking, so he
told Bevis, he recollected that he knew a great deal
about a good many other things besides flies.
So one day, after several weeks of thinking, he crawled
out of his house in the sunshine, which he did not
like at all, and went across the grass to the iron
railings, where the spider had then got his web.
The spider saw him coming, and being very proud of
his cleverness, began to taunt and tease him.
“Your back is all over warts,
and you are an old toad,” he said. “You
are so old, that I heard the swallows saying their
great-great-great-grandmothers, when they built in
the chimney, did not know when you were born.
And you have got foolish, and past doing anything,
and so stupid that you hardly know when it is going
to rain. Why, the sun is shining bright, you
stupid old toad, and there isn’t a chance of
a single drop falling. You look very ugly down
there in the grass. Now, don’t you wish
that you were me and could catch more flies than you
could eat? Why, I can catch wasps and bees, and
tie them up so tight with my threads that they cannot
sting nor even move their wings, nor so much as wriggle
their bodies. I am the very cleverest and most
cunning spider that ever lived.”
“Indeed, you are,” replied
the toad. “I have been thinking so all the
summer; and so much do I admire you, that I have come
all this way, across in the hot sun, to tell you something.”
“Tell me something!”
said the spider, much offended, “I know
everything.”
“Oh, yes, honoured sir,”
said the toad; “you have such wonderful eyes,
and such a sharp mind, it is true that you know everything
about the sun, and the moon, and the earth, and flies.
But, as you have studied all these great and important
things, you could hardly see all the very little trifles
like a poor old toad.”
“Oh, yes, I can. I know everything — everything!”
“But, sir,” went on the
toad so humbly, “this is such a little — such
a very little — thing, and a spider like
you, in such a high position of life, could not mind
me telling you such a mere nothing.”
“Well, I don’t mind,”
said the spider — “you may go on, and
tell me, if you like.”
“The fact is,” said the
toad, “while I have been sitting in my hole,
I have noticed that such a lot of the flies that come
into this garden presently go into the summer-house
there, and when they are in the summer-house, they
always go to that little round window, which is sometimes
quite black with them; for it is the nature of flies
to buzz over glass.”
“I do not know so much about
that,” said the spider; “for I have never
lived in houses, being an independent insect; but it
is possible you may be right. At any rate, it
is not of much consequence. You had better go
up into the window, old toad.” Now this
was a sneer on the part of the spider.
“But I can’t climb up
into the window,” said the toad; “all I
can do is to crawl about the ground, but you can run
up a wall quickly. How I do wish I was a spider,
like you. Oh, dear!” And then the toad turned
round, after bowing to the clever spider, and went
back to his hole.
Now the spider was secretly very much
mortified and angry with himself, because he had not
noticed this about the flies going to the window in
the summer-house. At first he said to himself
that it was not true; but he could not help looking
that way now and then, and every time he looked, there
was the window crowded with flies. They had all
the garden to buzz about in, and all the fields, but
instead of wandering under the trees, and over the
flowers, they preferred to go into the summer-house
and crawl over the glass of the little window, though
it was very dirty from so many feet. For a long
time, the spider was too proud to go there too; but
one day such a splendid blue-bottle fly got in the
window and made such a tremendous buzzing, that he
could not resist it any more.
So he left his web by the railings,
and climbed up the blue-painted wall, over Bevis’s
writings and marks, and spun such a web in the window
as had never before been seen. It was the largest
and the finest, and the most beautifully-arranged
web that had ever been made, and it caught such a
number of flies that the spider grew fatter every day.
In a week’s time he was so big that he could
no longer hide in the crack he had chosen, he was
quite a giant; and the toad came across the grass one
night and looked at him, but the spider was now so
bloated he would not recognise the toad.
But one morning a robin came to the
iron railings, and perched on the top, and put his
head a little on one side, to show his black eye the
better. Then he flew inside the summer-house,
alighted in the window, and gobbled up the spider
in an instant. The old toad shut his eye and
opened it again, and went on thinking, for that was
just what he knew would happen. Ever so many
times in his very long life he had seen spiders go
up there, but no sooner had they got fat than a robin
or a wren came in and ate them. Some of the clever
spider’s web was there still when Bevis looked
out of the window, all dusty and draggled, with the
skins and wings of some gnats and a dead leaf entangled
in it.
As he looked, a white butterfly came
along the meadow, and instantly he ran out, flung
open the gate, rushed down the steps, and taking no
heed of the squeak the gate made as it shut behind
him, raced after the butterfly.
The tall buttercups brushed his knees,
and bent on either side as if a wind was rushing through
them. A bennet slipped up his knickerbockers
and tickled his leg. His toes only touched the
ground, neither his heels nor the hollow of his foot;
and from so light a pressure the grass, bowed but
not crushed, rose up, leaving no more mark of his passage
than if a grasshopper had gone by.
Daintily fanning himself with his
wings, the butterfly went before Bevis, not yet knowing
that he was chased, but sauntering along just above
the buttercups. He peeped as he flew under the
lids of the flowers’ eyes, to see if any of
them loved him. There was a glossy green leaf
which he thought he should like to feel, it looked
so soft and satin-like. So he alighted on it,
and then saw Bevis coming, his hat on the very back
of his head, and his hand stretched out to catch him.
The butterfly wheeled himself round on the leaf, shut
up his wings, and seemed so innocent, till Bevis fell
on his knee, and then under his fingers there was
nothing but the leaf. His cheek flushed, his eye
lit up, and away he darted again after the butterfly,
which had got several yards ahead before he could
recover himself. He ran now faster than ever.
“Race on,” said the buttercups;
“race on, Bevis; that butterfly disdains us
because we are so many, and all alike.”
“Be quick,” said a great
moon-daisy to him; “catch him, dear. I asked
him to stay and tell me a story, but he would not.”
“Never mind me,” said
the clover; “you may step on me if you like,
love.”
“But just look at me for a moment,
pet, as you go by,” cried the purple vetch by
the hedge.
A colt in the field, seeing Bevis
running so fast, thought he too must join the fun,
so he whisked his tail, stretched his long floundering
legs, and galloped away. Then the mare whinnied
and galloped too, and the ground shook under her heavy
hoofs. The cows lifted their heads from gathering
the grass close round the slender bennets, and wondered
why any one could be so foolish as to rush about,
when there was plenty to eat and no hurry.
The cunning deceitful butterfly, so
soon as Bevis came near, turned aside and went along
a furrow. Bevis, running in the furrow, caught
his foot in the long creepers of the crowfoot, and
fell down bump, and pricked his hand with a thistle.
Up he jumped again, red as a peony, and shouting in
his rage, ran on so quickly that he nearly overtook
the butterfly. But they were now nearer the other
hedge. The butterfly, frightened at the shouting
and Bevis’s resolution, rose over the brambles,
and Bevis stopping short flung his hat at him.
The hat did not hit the butterfly, but the wind it
made puffed him round, and so frightened him, that
he flew up half as high as the elms, and went into
the next field.
When Bevis looked down, there was
his hat, hung on a branch of ash, far beyond his reach.
He could not touch the lowest leaf, jump as much as
he would. His next thought was a stone to throw,
but there were none in the meadow. Then he put
his hand in his jacket pocket for his knife, to cut
a long stick. It was not in that pocket, nor in
the one on the other side, nor in his knickers.
Now the knife was Bevis’s greatest treasure — his
very greatest. He looked all round bewildered,
and the tears rose in his eyes.
Just then Pan, the spaniel, who had
worked his head loose from the collar and followed
him, ran out of the hedge between Bevis’s legs
with such joyful force, that Bevis was almost overthrown,
and burst into a fit of laughter. Pan ran back
into the hedge to hunt, and Bevis, with tears rolling
down his cheeks into the dimples made by his smiles,
dropped on hands and knees and crept in after the dog
under the briars. On the bank there was a dead
grey stick, a branch that had fallen from the elms.
It was heavy, but Bevis heaved it up, and pushed it
through the boughs and thrust his hat off.
Creeping out again, he put it on,
and remembering his knife, walked out into the field
to search for it. When Pan missed him, he followed,
and presently catching scent of a rabbit, the spaniel
rushed down a furrow, which happened to be the very
furrow where Bevis had tumbled. Going after Pan,
Bevis found his knife in the grass, where it had dropped
when shaken from his pocket by the jerk of his fall.
He opened the single blade it contained at once, and
went back to the hedge to cut a stick. As he
walked along the hedge, he thought the briar was too
prickly to cut, and the thorn was too hard, and the
ash was too big, and the willow had no knob, and the
elder smelt so strong, and the sapling oak was across
the ditch, and out of reach, and the maple had such
rough bark. So he wandered along a great way
through that field and the next, and presently saw
a nut-tree stick that promised well, for the sticks
grew straight, and not too big.
He jumped into the ditch, climbed
half up the mound, and began to cut away at one of
the rods, leaning his left arm on the moss-grown stole.
The bark was easily cut through, and he soon made a
notch, but then the wood seemed to grow harder, and
the chips he got out were very small. The harder
the wood, the more determined Bevis became, and he
cut and worked away with such force that his chest
heaved, his brow was set and frowning, and his jacket
all green from rubbing against the hazel. Suddenly
something passed between him and the light. He
looked up, and there was Pan, whom he had forgotten,
in the hedge looking down at him. “Pan!
Pan!” cried Bevis. Pan wagged his tail,
but ran back, and Bevis, forsaking his stick, scrambled
up into the stole, then into the mound, and through
a gap into the next field. Pan was nowhere to
be seen.
There was a large mossy root under
a great oak, and, hot with his cutting, Bevis sat
down upon it. Along came a house martin, the kind
of swallow that has a white band across his back,
flying very low, and only just above the grass.
The swallow flew to and fro not far from Bevis, who
watched it, and presently asked him to come closer.
But the swallow said: “I shall not come
any nearer, Bevis. Don’t you remember what
you did last year, sir? Don’t you remember
Bill, the carter’s boy, put a ladder against
the wall, and you climbed up the ladder, and put your
paw, all brown and dirty, into my nest and took my
eggs? And you tried to string them on a bennet,
but the bennet was too big, so you went indoors for
some thread. And you made my wife and me dreadfully
unhappy, and we said we would never come back any
more to your house, Bevis.”
“But you have come back, swallow.”
“Yes, we have come back — just
once more; but if you do it again we shall go away
for ever.”
“But I won’t do it again;
no, that I won’t! Do come near.”
So the swallow came a little nearer,
only two yards away, and flew backwards and forwards,
and Bevis could hear the snap of his beak as he caught
the flies.
“Just a little bit nearer still,”
said he. “Let me stroke your lovely white
back.”
“Oh, no, I can’t do that.
I don’t think you are quite safe, Bevis.
Why don’t you gather the cowslips?”
Bevis looked up and saw that the field
was full of cowslips — yellow with cowslips.
“I will pick every one,” said he, “and
carry them all back to my mother.”
“You cannot do that,”
said the swallow, laughing, “you will not try
long enough.”
“I hate you!” cried
Bevis in a passion, and flung his knife, which was
in his hand, at the bird. The swallow rose up,
and the knife whizzed by and struck the ground.
“I told you you were not safe,”
said the swallow over his head; “and I am sure
you won’t pick half the cowslips.”
Bevis picked up his knife and put
it in his pocket; then he began to gather the cowslips,
and kept on for a quarter of an hour as fast as ever
he could, till both hands were full. There was
a rustle in the hedge, and looking up he saw Pan come
out, all brown with sand sticking to his coat.
He shook himself, and sent the sand flying from him
in a cloud, just like he did with the water when he
came up out of the pond. Then he looked at Bevis,
wagged his tail, cried “Yowp!” and ran
back into the hedge again.
Bevis rushed to the spot, and saw
that there was a large rabbits’ hole. Into
this hole Pan had worked his way so far that there
was nothing of him visible but his hind legs and tail.
Bevis could hear him panting in the hole, he was working
so hard to get at the rabbit, and tearing with his
teeth at the roots to make the hole bigger. Bevis
clapped his hands, dropping his cowslips, and called
“Loo! Loo!” urging the dog on.
The sand came flying out behind Pan, and he worked
harder and harder, as if he would tear the mound to
pieces.
Bevis sat down on the grass under
the shadow of the oak, by a maple bush, and taking
a cowslip, began to count the spots inside it.
It was always five in all the cowslips — five
brown little spots — that he was sure of,
because he knew he had five fingers on each hand.
He lay down at full length on his back, and looked
up at the sky through the boughs of the oak.
It was very, very blue, and very near down. With
a long ladder he knew he could have got up there easily,
and it looked so sweet. “Sky,” said
Bevis, “I love you like I love my mother.”
He pouted his lips, and kissed at it. Then turning
a little on one side to watch Pan, in an instant he
fell firm asleep.
Pan put his head out of the hole to
breathe two or three times, and looked aside at Bevis,
and seeing that he was still, went back to work again.
Two butterflies came fluttering along together.
The swallow returned, and flew low down along the
grass near Bevis. The wind came now and then,
and shook down a shower of white and pink petals from
a crab-tree in the hedge. By-and-by a squirrel
climbing from tree to tree reached the oak, and stayed
to look at Bevis beneath in the shadow. He knew
exactly how Bevis felt — just like he did
himself when he went to sleep.