A Tangled Tale Lewis Carroll (books for 20 year olds TXT) đ
- Author: Lewis Carroll
Book online «A Tangled Tale Lewis Carroll (books for 20 year olds TXT) đ». Author Lewis Carroll
âHereâs the place,â she said at last, âand here we have yesterdayâs luncheon duly entered. One glass lemonade (Why canât you drink water, like me?) three sandwiches (They never put in half mustard enough. I told the young woman so, to her face; and she tossed her headâ âlike her impudence!) and seven biscuits. Total one-and-twopence. Well, now for todayâs?â
âOne glass of lemonadeâ ââ Clara was beginning to say, when suddenly the cab drew up, and a courteous railway-porter was handing out the bewildered girl before she had had time to finish her sentence.
Her aunt pocketed the tablets instantly. âBusiness first,â she said: âpetty cashâ âwhich is a form of pleasure, whatever you may thinkâ âafterwards.â And she proceeded to pay the driver, and to give voluminous orders about the luggage, quite deaf to the entreaties of her unhappy niece that she would enter the rest of the luncheon account. âMy dear, you really must cultivate a more capacious mind!â was all the consolation she vouchsafed to the poor girl. âAre not the tablets of your memory wide enough to contain the record of one single luncheon?â
âNot wide enough! Not half wide enough!â was the passionate reply.
The words came in aptly enough, but the voice was not that of Clara, and both ladies turned in some surprise to see who it was that had so suddenly struck into their conversation. A fat little old lady was standing at the door of a cab, helping the driver to extricate what seemed an exact duplicate of herself: it would have been no easy task to decide which was the fatter, or which looked the more good-humoured of the two sisters.
âI tell you the cab-door isnât half wide enough!â she repeated, as her sister finally emerged, somewhat after the fashion of a pellet from a popgun, and she turned to appeal to Clara. âIs it, dear?â she said, trying hard to bring a frown into a face that dimpled all over with smiles.
âSome folks is too wide for âem,â growled the cabdriver.
âDonât provoke me, man!â cried the little old lady, in what she meant for a tempest of fury. âSay another word and Iâll put you into the County Court, and sue you for a Habeas Corpus!â The cabman touched his hat, and marched off, grinning.
âNothing like a little Law to cow the ruffians, my dear!â she remarked confidentially to Clara. âYou saw how he quailed when I mentioned the Habeas Corpus? Not that Iâve any idea what it means, but it sounds very grand, doesnât it?â
âItâs very provoking,â Clara replied, a little vaguely.
âVery!â the little old lady eagerly repeated. âAnd weâre very much provoked indeed. Arenât we, sister?â
âI never was so provoked in all my life!â the fatter sister assented, radiantly.
By this time Clara had recognised her picture-gallery acquaintances, and, drawing her aunt aside, she hastily whispered her reminiscences. âI met them first in the Royal Academyâ âand they were very kind to meâ âand they were lunching at the next table to us, just now, you knowâ âand they tried to help me to find the picture I wantedâ âand Iâm sure theyâre dear old things!â
âFriends of yours, are they?â said Mad Mathesis. âWell, I like their looks. You can be civil to them, while I get the tickets. But do try and arrange your ideas a little more chronologically!â
And so it came to pass that the four ladies found themselves seated side by side on the same bench waiting for the train, and chatting as if they had known one another for years.
âNow this I call quite a remarkable coincidence!â exclaimed the smaller and more talkative of the two sistersâ âthe one whose legal knowledge had annihilated the cabdriver. âNot only that we should be waiting for the same train, and at the same stationâ âthat would be curious enoughâ âbut actually on the same day, and the same hour of the day! Thatâs what strikes me so forcibly!â She glanced at the fatter and more silent sister, whose chief function in life seemed to be to support the family opinion, and who meekly respondedâ â
âAnd me too, sister!â
âThose are not independent coincidencesâ ââ Mad Mathesis was just beginning, when Clara ventured to interpose.
âThereâs no jolting here,â she pleaded meekly. âWould you mind writing it down now?â
Out came the ivory tablets once more. âWhat was it, then?â said her aunt.
âOne glass of lemonade, one sandwich, one biscuitâ âOh dear me!â cried poor Clara, the historical tone suddenly changing to a wail of agony.
âToothache?â said her aunt calmly, as she wrote down the items. The two sisters instantly opened their reticules and produced two different remedies for neuralgia, each marked âunequalled.â
âIt isnât that!â said poor Clara. âThank you very much. Itâs only that I canât remember how much I paid!â
âWell, try and make it out, then,â said her aunt. âYouâve got yesterdayâs luncheon to help you, you know. And hereâs the luncheon we had the day beforeâ âthe first day we went to that shopâ âone glass lemonade, four sandwiches, ten biscuits. Total, one-and-fivepence.â She handed the tablets to Clara, who gazed at them with eyes so dim with tears that she did not at first notice that she was holding them upside down.
The two sisters had been listening to all this with the deepest interest, and at this juncture the smaller one softly laid her hand on Claraâs arm.
âDo you know, my dear,â she said coaxingly, âmy sister and I are in the very same predicament! Quite identically the very same predicament! Arenât we, sister?â
âQuite identically and absolutely the veryâ ââ began the fatter sister, but she was constructing her sentence on too large a scale, and the little one would not wait for her to finish it.
âYes, my dear,â she resumed; âwe were lunching at the very same shop as you wereâ âand we had two glasses of lemonade and three sandwiches and five biscuitsâ âand neither of us has the least idea what we paid. Have we, sister?â
âQuite identically
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