Dickory Dock by L. T. Meade (the giving tree read aloud .TXT) š
- Author: L. T. Meade
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āWell, weāve got sixpence,ā said Flossy, āthatās lots and lots of money; but the night is a long way off, Peter, and Iām so hungry. Iāve eaten up all the crusts that you and Snip-snap left for me, but Iām still as hungry as possible. Mightnāt I spend a halfpenny or so of our sixpence in getting a good dinner for you and me and Snip-snap?ā
Peter put his hand to his brow, and began to reflect.
p. 33āI donāt think so, Floss,ā he said, āfor Iām afraid you donāt understand marketingāitās best for me to go, for Iām quite old, and I know the way mother talks to the bakerās man and the milkman when they come to the door. I must be sharp with them, Floss; thatās what I must be, and I donāt think you could be; so you had better hold the baby while I fetch our dinner. Oh dear, what a good thing it is I have got sixpence!ā
The baby, being very sound asleep, was transferred to Flossyās arms without waking, Snip-snap was left in charge of the two, and Peter, who knew very little more of London and London life than his little sister, started off manfully to the eating-house round the corner. He had gone away with a bright face, but he returned in a very short time with one singularly depressed.
āHereās a bit of stale bread for each of p. 34us,ā he said, āand I had to give two halfpennies for that. I did see such a nice piece of beef and of pudding, and I ordered some for you and me and Snip-snap, but the woman said all that much would cost three sixpences, so then I had to say I wouldnāt have it; and I took the stale bread, and she was very cross. O Floss, I hope Iām right about sixpence; I hope it will buy a bed for baby, and milk and food for us all, for Iām thinking we had much better none of us go back to-night.ā
āOf course, we wonāt go back,ā said Flossie. āThe stale breadās ālicious, and Iām so hungry. O Peter, do look! Dickory is stretching herself, and rubbing her little fat hands into her eyes; and I know sheās going to wake, and Iām afraid sheāll cry.ā
āGive her to me,ā said Peter, with the air of a practised nurse. āIāll hold her, p. 35and you can feed me while Iām doing so, Flossy.ā
But notwithstanding all Peterās efforts, notwithstanding his singing, and even shouting, for the babyās benefit, notwithstanding the admiring cheers of a little street mob that collected round him, the baby cried, not a loud cry, but a weak, broken-hearted wail. The fact was, the indifferent milk Flossy had fed her with had made her ill, and her little frame was already sadly chilled by the damp shawl which she wore about her. Poor Dickory scarcely ever got any air or exercise, and in consequence was very susceptible to cold.
āShe is sneezing,ā said Flossy. āOh the poor, poor darling! Peter, I think weād better see about our nightās lodging soon; it doesnāt agree with Dickory to keep her out so long.ā
āWeāll go at once,ā said Peter, rising p. 36to his feet. āThereās another black cloud coming up, and thereāll be a shower again before long. Weāll get a nice room for us four, and then weāll be as happy as possible.ā
Accordingly the little party again moved forward, and whenever Peter or Flossy saw a card up in a window they stopped and rang the house-bell, and inquired for lodgings for themselves and their baby. Of course, they were repulsed in all kinds of waysāsome people merely laughing, and shutting the door in their faces; some scolding them, and calling them tiresome, impertinent little brats; and some even threatening to tell the police about them; but no one ever hinted at the possibility of taking them in. Presently they left the more respectable streets, and wandered into very poor quarters. Here, doubtless, they could have found accommodation were they p. 37able to pay for it, but everybody laughed at Peterās pennies, and no one dreamt of offering them a shelter. Then the rain which had threatened came down, and baby was again wet through, and now she looked ill, as well as fretful, and refused some fresh milk which Flossy bought for her. She was not the least like the bright little Dickory who used to laugh and show her dimples in the old attic-nursery at home.
āLook here,ā said Peter, āwhat are we to do? āT will be night soon, and we havenāt found no hiding-place for Dickory, and no one will take us in.ā
āBaby is not at all well, either,ā said Flossy; āher head is quite hot, like fire, when I touch it.ā
āWhat are we to do?ā asked Peter. āWe canāt get home, but it seems to me, Floss, that this is worse for poor Dickory than the workhouse.ā
p. 38āIāll tell you what,ā said Flossy suddenly, raising her bright half-humorous face to Peterās, āletās take baby to the lady what cried.ā
āThe lady who cried?ā repeated Peter. āI donāt know nothing about her, Floss.ā
āO Peter, you do know; it was that day our Uncle David took us a long walk, and we went to the cemetery with him, you know, the place with the flowers and the trees, and where they put the pretty little children when they dieāthere was a little baby being put there, and there was a lady crying very, very bitter. I never saw no one cry so dreadful bitter as that lady, and they said she was putting her baby in the ground. Iām sure she must want another baby, and I think perhaps it would be right for us to give her Dickory.ā
Peterās face became very sad. āI donāt know,ā he said; āI donāt want to give p. 39Dickory away. Iām quite dreadfully fond of her; it seems to me she makes a lot of difference in the house, and you know, Floss, it used to be very dull before she came.ā
āYes,ā said Flossy, āI love her more than anything; sheās a dear baby, and I never find the days long when Iām playing with her and talking to her: but you see, Peter, sheās not to be kept at home; sheās to go to the workhouse to-morrow morning, unless we can find a nice hiding-place for her. We canāt find a hiding-place, Peter, for though you are a rich boy and have got a lot of pennies, yet you havenāt enough for us to get a room for ourselves and Dickory, and the night air donāt agree with herāoh, there, sheās sneezing againābless her, the pet! Peter, I hope you always say ābless her!ā when Dickory sneezes. Martha says it isnāt lucky if you donāt. O Peter, I do p. 40think if we must part with the baby it would be better to give her to the lady who cried than to send her to the workhouse.ā
āBut we donāt know where the lady lives,ā said Peter. āWe might do it if we knew where the lady lived; but we canāt, however much we wish to, if we donāt.ā
āBut I do know,ā answered Flossy, āI know quite well, ācause last week I saw the lady. I was out with mother, and mother went to the greengrocerās, and while she was there the lady comed in. She was all in black, and I am sure she had been crying a lot, for she looked so sad; and I knew it was her. Afterwards mother and I walked behind her as she went home, and she turned into a great big house in the square near us. You know the square, Peter, the square that begins with a big B; Bev--- something, I canāt say it all.ā
p. 41āBevington Square,ā said Peter, in a gloomy voice.
āYes, yes, that was it, and 10 was the number of the house. I donāt forget the number ācause I asked mother, and she said it was 10. O Peter, thatās where our lady lives, and I do think it would be better to give her Dickory. There, Peter, bless her! sheās sneezing again. Iām sure we had better take her to the lady.ā
āAll right,ā answered Peter, āIāll be a termagant again when sheās gone; see if I wonāt. Iāll get up an awful racking cough at night, and Iāll worry that nasty Mr Martin much more than Dickory has worried him, see if I donāt; and Iāll sing on the stairs, and Iāll whistle awful loud, and Iāll buy a Jewās-harp with one of my pennies. Iāll turn into a horrid boy! but I suppose you are right about Dickory, Flossy. Here, letās go back as fast as p. 42we can to that house you were so ācute as to take the number of. Iām misārible, and I mean to be misārible, so donāt you expect nothing cheerful from me, Flossy.ā
āVery well, Peter,ā said Flossy meekly.
And then the little party, slowly and painfully, for Flossy was very, very tired, and poor Peterās arms ached fearfully, retraced their steps. The baby had ceased crying and was asleep, and after about two hoursā patient walking and asking their way, the children found themselves in Bevington Square.
āIād better go up first to the door,ā said Flossy, āand ask her if sheād like a baby. You might stand round there, Peter, and you might keep Snip-snap with you.ā
āYou neednāt press her about it,ā said Peter; āif she donāt seem quite delighted we wonāt give up Dickory on no account; and kiss her before you go, Flossy, for p. 43of course the lady will take her; and in a few minutes she wonāt be our Dickory no more.ā
Peter unfastened a corner of the old tartan shawl, and Flossy imprinted a grave kiss on the babyās forehead. Then, with great solemnity, and with the air of one engaged on an important mission, she went up the steps of the great house and rang the bell. Flossy was an attractive little child, her hair was really beautiful, and she had a very wistful and taking manner.
āPlease,ā she said now to the tall, powdered footman, āI know the lady what cried is here; please can I see her? Iāve brought her a little baby, and I want to see her about it.ā
Flossy did not look quite like a common child, and her face wore a very sweet expression when she spoke of the baby; nevertheless the footman only stared p. 44at her, and would have certainly shut the door in her face, had not the lady of the house at that moment come into the hall. Flossy saw her, and quick as thought she darted past the servant and up to the lady.
āPlease, lady,ā she said, āIāve often thought of you, and Iām so very sorry for you. Please, Iāve brought you another little baby instead of the one you put into the ground in the pretty place where the flowers and trees are. Sheās a dear little baby, and when you have her you wonāt cry no more.ā
Flossyās voice was very earnest, and her eyes looking up full into the ladyās face were full of the most intense sympathy. Those pretty eyes of hers were too much for the poor bereaved mother: she put her handkerchief to her own eyes, and there and then burst into fits of fresh weeping.
p. 45āCome away, little girl, at once,ā said the indignant footman; but the lady put out one of her hands and took Flossyās.
āLeave the child with me,ā she said to the man. āIāll be better in a moment, little girl,ā she continued, āand then you shall tell me what you mean; but you have
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