The Phoenix and the Carpet E. Nesbit (read more books .TXT) đ
- Author: E. Nesbit
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There was a splendid wedding feast. Can you fancy Jane and Anthea, and Robert and Cyril, dancing merrily in a ring, hand-in-hand with copper-coloured savages, round the happy couple, the queen cook and the burglar consort? There were more flowers gathered and thrown than you have ever even dreamed of, and before the children took carpet for home the now married-and-settled burglar made a speech.
âLadies and gentlemen,â he said, âand savages of both kinds, only I know you canât understand what Iâm a saying of, but weâll let that pass. If this is a dream, Iâm on. If it ainât, Iâm onner than ever. If itâs betwixt and betweenâ âwell, Iâm honest, and I canât say more. I donât want no more âigh London societyâ âIâve got someone to put my arm around of; and Iâve got the whole lot of this âere island for my allotment, and if I donât grow some broccoli asâll open the judgeâs eye at the cottage flower shows, well, strike me pink! All I ask is, as these young gents and ladiesâll bring some parsley seed into the dream, and a pennâorth of radish seed, and threepennâorth of onion, and I wouldnât mind goinâ to fourpence or fippence for mixed kale, only I ainât got a brown, so I donât deceive you. And thereâs one thing more, you might take away the parson. I donât like things what I can see âalf through, so hereâs how!â He drained a coconut-shell of palm wine.
It was now past midnightâ âthough it was teatime on the island.
With all good wishes the children took their leave. They also collected the clergyman and took him back to his study and his presentation clock.
The Phoenix kindly carried the seeds next day to the burglar and his bride, and returned with the most satisfactory news of the happy pair.
âHeâs made a wooden spade and started on his allotment,â it said, âand she is weaving him a shirt and trousers of the most radiant whiteness.â
The police never knew how the burglar got away. In Kentish Town Police Station his escape is still spoken of with bated breath as the Persian mystery.
As for the Reverend Septimus Blenkinsop, he felt that he had had a very insane fit indeed, and he was sure it was due to over-study. So he planned a little dissipation, and took his two maiden aunts to Paris, where they enjoyed a dazzling round of museums and picture galleries, and came back feeling that they had indeed seen life. He never told his aunts or anyone else about the marriage on the islandâ âbecause no one likes it to be generally known if he has had insane fits, however interesting and unusual.
X The Hole in the CarpetHooray! hooray! hooray!
Mother comes home today;
Mother comes home today,
Hooray! hooray! hooray!
Jane sang this simple song directly after breakfast, and the Phoenix shed crystal tears of affectionate sympathy.
âHow beautiful,â it said, âis filial devotion!â
âShe wonât be home till past bedtime, though,â said Robert. âWe might have one more carpet-day.â
He was glad that mother was coming homeâ âquite glad, very glad; but at the same time that gladness was rudely contradicted by a quite strong feeling of sorrow, because now they could not go out all day on the carpet.
âI do wish we could go and get something nice for mother, only sheâd want to know where we got it,â said Anthea. âAnd sheâd never, never believe it, the truth. People never do, somehow, if itâs at all interesting.â
âIâll tell you what,â said Robert. âSuppose we wished the carpet to take us somewhere where we could find a purse with money in itâ âthen we could buy her something.â
âSuppose it took us somewhere foreign, and the purse was covered with strange Eastern devices, embroidered in rich silks, and full of money that wasnât money at all here, only foreign curiosities, then we couldnât spend it, and people would bother about where we got it, and we shouldnât know how on earth to get out of it at all.â
Cyril moved the table off the carpet as he spoke, and its leg caught in one of Antheaâs darns and ripped away most of it, as well as a large slit in the carpet.
âWell, now you have done it,â said Robert.
But Anthea was a really first-class sister. She did not say a word till she had got out the Scotch heather-mixture fingering wool and the darning-needle and the thimble and the scissors, and by that time she had been able to get the better of her natural wish to be thoroughly disagreeable, and was able to say quite kindlyâ â
âNever mind, Squirrel, Iâll soon mend it.â
Cyril thumped her on the back. He understood exactly how she had felt, and he was not an ungrateful brother.
âRespecting the purse containing coins,â the Phoenix said, scratching its invisible ear thoughtfully with its shining claw, âit might be as well, perhaps, to state clearly the amount which you wish to find, as well as the country where you wish to find it, and the nature of the coins which you prefer. It would be indeed a cold moment when you should find a purse containing but three oboloi.â
âHow much is an oboloi?â
âAn obol is about twopence halfpenny,â the Phoenix replied.
âYes,â said Jane, âand if you find a purse I suppose it is only because someone has lost it, and you ought to take it to the policeman.â
âThe situation,â remarked the Phoenix, âdoes indeed bristle with difficulties.â
âWhat about a buried treasure,â said Cyril, âand everyone was dead that it belonged to?â
âMother wouldnât believe that,â said more than one voice.
âSuppose,â said Robertâ ââsuppose we asked to be taken where we could find a purse and give it back to the person it belonged to, and they would give us something for finding it?â
âWe arenât allowed
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