The Story of the Amulet E. Nesbit (the best books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: E. Nesbit
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Robert yawned.
The Psammead went on.
âThe complete Amulet can keep off all the things that make people unhappyâ âjealousy, bad temper, pride, disagreeableness, greediness, selfishness, laziness. Evil spirits, people called them when the Amulet was made. Donât you think it would be nice to have it?â
âVery,â said the children, quite without enthusiasm.
âAnd it can give you strength and courage.â
âThatâs better,â said Cyril.
âAnd virtue.â
âI suppose itâs nice to have that,â said Jane, but not with much interest.
âAnd it can give you your heartâs desire.â
âNow youâre talking,â said Robert.
âOf course I am,â retorted the Psammead tartly, âso thereâs no need for you to.â
âHeartâs desire is good enough for me,â said Cyril.
âYes, but,â Anthea ventured, âall thatâs what the whole charm can do. Thereâs something that the half weâve got can win off its own batâ âisnât there?â She appealed to the Psammead. It nodded.
âYes,â it said; âthe half has the power to take you anywhere you like to look for the other half.â
This seemed a brilliant prospect till Robert askedâ â
âDoes it know where to look?â
The Psammead shook its head and answered, âI donât think itâs likely.â
âDo you?â
âNo.â
âThen,â said Robert, âwe might as well look for a needle in a bottle of hay. Yesâ âit is bottle, and not bundle, Father said so.â
âNot at all,â said the Psammead briskly-, âyou think you know everything, but you are quite mistaken. The first thing is to get the thing to talk.â
âCan it?â Jane questioned. Janeâs question did not mean that she thought it couldnât, for in spite of the parlour furniture the feeling of magic was growing deeper and thicker, and seemed to fill the room like a dream of a scented fog.
âOf course it can. I suppose you can read.â
âOh yes!â Everyone was rather hurt at the question.
âWell, thenâ âall youâve got to do is to read the name thatâs written on the part of the charm that youâve got. And as soon as you say the name out loud the thing will have power to doâ âwell, several things.â
There was a silence. The red charm was passed from hand to hand.
âThereâs no name on it,â said Cyril at last.
âNonsense,â said the Psammead; âwhatâs that?â
âOh, that!â said Cyril, âitâs not reading. It looks like pictures of chickens and snakes and things.â
This was what was on the charm:
âIâve no patience with you,â said the Psammead; âif you canât read you must find someone who can. A priest now?â
âWe donât know any priests,â said Anthea; âwe know a clergymanâ âheâs called a priest in the prayerbook, you knowâ âbut he only knows Greek and Latin and Hebrew, and this isnât any of thoseâ âI know.â
The Psammead stamped a furry foot angrily.
âI wish Iâd never seen you,â it said; âyou arenât any more good than so many stone images. Not so much, if Iâm to tell the truth. Is there no wise man in your Babylon who can pronounce the names of the Great Ones?â
âThereâs a poor learned gentleman upstairs,â said Anthea, âwe might try him. He has a lot of stone images in his room, and iron-looking ones tooâ âwe peeped in once when he was out. Old Nurse says he doesnât eat enough to keep a canary alive. He spends it all on stones and things.â
âTry him,â said the Psammead, âonly be careful. If he knows a greater name than this and uses it against you, your charm will be of no use. Bind him first with the chains of honour and upright dealing. And then ask his aidâ âoh, yes, youâd better all go; you can put me to sand as you go upstairs. I must have a few minutesâ peace and quietness.â
So the four children hastily washed their hands and brushed their hairâ âthis was Antheaâs ideaâ âand went up to knock at the door of the âpoor learned gentleman,â and to âbind him with the chains of honour and upright dealing.â
III The PastThe learned gentleman had let his dinner get quite cold. It was mutton chop, and as it lay on the plate it looked like a brown island in the middle of a frozen pond, because the grease of the gravy had become cold, and consequently white. It looked very nasty, and it was the first thing the children saw when, after knocking three times and receiving no reply, one of them ventured to turn the handle and softly to open the door. The chop was on the end of a long table that ran down one side of the room. The table had images on it and queer-shaped stones, and books. And there were glass cases fixed against the wall behind, with little strange things in them. The cases were rather like the ones you see in jewellersâ shops.
The âpoor learned gentlemanâ was sitting at a table in the window, looking at something very small which he held in a pair of fine pincers. He had a round spyglass sort of thing in one eyeâ âwhich reminded the children of watchmakers, and also of the long snailâs eyes of the Psammead.
The gentleman was very long and thin, and his long, thin boots stuck out under the other side of his table. He did not hear the door open, and the children stood hesitating. At last Robert gave the door a push, and they all started back, for in the middle of the wall that the door had hidden was a mummy-caseâ âvery, very, very bigâ âpainted in red and yellow and green and black, and the face of it seemed to look at them quite angrily.
You know what a mummy-case is like, of course? If you donât you had better go to the British Museum
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