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<div class='tnotes covernote'>
<p class='c000'><b>Transcriber’s Note:</b></p>
<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
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<h1 class='c001'>THE FAIRY LATCHKEY</h1></div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c002'>
<div>BY</div>
<div class='c003'><span class='xlarge'>MAGDALENE HORSFALL</span></div>
</div></div>
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<div><span class='large'>R. F. FENNO & COMPANY</span></div>
<div>18 EAST 17th STREET :: :: NEW YORK</div>
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<hr class='pb c003' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 id='CONTENTS' class='c004'>CONTENTS</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-b c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#I'>I</SPAN> WHICH INTRODUCES THE HEROINE, AND OTHERS</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#II'>II</SPAN> WHICH INTRODUCES THE HEROINE’S GODMOTHER</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#III'>III</SPAN> WHICH TELLS OF A KEY-HOLE IN A WALL</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#IV'>IV</SPAN> WHICH INTRODUCES SWEET WILLIAM</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#V'>V</SPAN> IN WHICH THE HEROINE DISTINGUISHES HERSELF</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#VI'>VI</SPAN> IN WHICH THE HEROINE TAKES ADVICE</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#VII'>VII</SPAN> IN WHICH MASTER MUSTARDSEED TELLS HIS STORY</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#VIII'>VIII</SPAN> IN WHICH THE HEROINE MAKES THE FIRST USE OF HER LATCHKEY</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#IX'>IX</SPAN> IN WHICH SWEET WILLIAM TELLS A STORY</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#X'>X</SPAN> IN WHICH THE HEROINE HAS A BIRTHDAY</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#XI'>XI</SPAN> IN WHICH THE HEROINE IS GIVEN A LETTER OF INTRODUCTION</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#XII'>XII</SPAN> IN WHICH THE HEROINE PRESENTS HER LETTER OF INTRODUCTION</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#XIII'>XIII</SPAN> IN WHICH GREAT GOOD FORTUNE BEFALLS THE HEROINE</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#XIV'>XIV</SPAN> IN WHICH THE MERMAN TELLS HIS STORY</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#XV'>XV</SPAN> IN WHICH THE TWIN SISTERS TELL A STORY BETWEEN THEM</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#XVI'>XVI</SPAN> IN WHICH THE HEROINE HEARS SOME STARTLING NEWS</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#XVII'>XVII</SPAN> IN WHICH SWEET WILLIAM TELLS ANOTHER STORY</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#XVIII'>XVIII</SPAN> OF WHICH THE SCENE IS LAID IN A SICK-ROOM</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#XIX'>XIX</SPAN> IN WHICH QUEEN MAB TELLS HER STORY</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#XX'>XX</SPAN> IN WHICH THE HEROINE MAKES FRIENDS WITH A SPIRIT</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#XXI'>XXI</SPAN> IN WHICH THE WHITE LÉTICHE TELLS HER STORY</div>
<div class='line'>CHAPTER <SPAN href='#XXII'>XXII</SPAN> WHICH HERALDS A CHANGE</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='section ph1'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c005'>
<div>THE FAIRY LATCHKEY</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
<h2 id='I' class='c004'>CHAPTER I<br/> <span class='small'>WHICH INTRODUCES THE HEROINE, AND OTHERS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>There was nothing at all remarkable about
her, excepting her name, which was Philomène
Isolde, and the fact that a knot of green ribbon
had been sewn upon her christening dress;
but the dress had long since lain folded in a
drawer, and her father as often as not called
her “Little Miss Muffet,” because she was very
fond of curds and whey, and very much afraid
of spiders. When he did call her “Philomène,”
it meant that he was too busy to have her in
the room with him. Unlike most people, she
was satisfied with her own name, indeed she
was proud of it; for Daddy had told her
that Philomène meant “beloved,” and as
for Isolde, that was Godmother’s own name.
“And Isolde,” said Godmother, “was a real
Princess.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I wish I were a real Princess,” said Philomène,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>and waited for Nurse to add, “If wishes
were horses, Miss, beggars might ride,” which
she forthwith did.</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène was not a pretty child, but neither
was she exactly plain, for she had small hands
and feet, and a trim little figure, hazel eyes and
plenty of soft mouse-coloured hair. And if
there was nothing unusual about her appearance,
there was certainly nothing unusual about
her home, for she lived in a commonplace
suburb of London, in a commonplace villa
called Sideview. The house undoubtedly had
two sides, but scarcely any view, unless the
strip of back-garden counted as such. The
drawing-room and dining-room opened out
of a narrow hall, and both had about them
the chill and mustiness of disuse, for since the
death of Philomène’s mother the drawing-room
had seen no more parties, and her father, who
was a hard-working doctor, as often as not
snatched his hurried meals in the study, rather
than in the dining-room. Philomène’s own
bedroom and schoolroom, on the upper landing,
were large airy rooms for the size of the house.</p>
<p class='c007'>At the foot of her bed stood a screen, upon
which Froggy went a-wooing, and Little Red
Ridinghood carried her covered basket through
<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>the wood, and on the wall opposite hung a
picture of a young shepherdess, clasping her
crook, and kneeling in the shade of a spreading
oak-tree. As there was no flock in sight,
Philomène at first supposed her to be Bo-peep
before her sheep came home, but Godmother
had told her that it was Joan, the Maid of
Orleans, who died for love of France and of the
truth; and from that time forward, on winter
evenings when the salamanders began their
torch-light revels on the hearth, Philomène
would lie in bed and watch the ruddy reflection
brighten and broaden among the branches of
the oak, wrapping the frail young figure in a
winding-sheet of flame, and placing the hard-won
wreath of martyrdom upon her hair.</p>
<p class='c007'>Over the mantelpiece in the schoolroom
next door, hung another picture, one which
had belonged to Philomène’s mother. There
was a road white with dust in the foreground,
disappearing amidst a clump of trees, above
which floated a wreath of blue smoke. Down
to the road there sloped a bank of grass, and
here sat a woman with a child in her lap, while
a bird on the wing paused to peck from an ear
of corn which the baby held in his hand.
Beside the two an old man with kind eyes and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>work-worn hands was unsaddling a small grey
donkey, and a little further down the road
stood a ruined shrine with a broken idol.
Philomène liked the donkey with its long ears
and sad eyes, and felt grateful to the old man
for allowing it to nibble the grass at will.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was in the schoolroom that Philomène
kept her toys. There was the dolls’ house and
the dolls’ kitchen, and the musical box, and
the paint-box with its palettes and saucers
and brushes. Last, but by no means least,
came the book-shelf. It held all Mrs Ewing’s
stories, and all Mrs Molesworth’s, Grimm, and
Hans Andersen, and many more besides.
Philomène used to act all the stories out of
these books, but it is dull work to be both
players and audience yourself, and it needs an
imagination bordering on genius to ride alone
upon a bed, and persuade your heart of hearts
that it is Pegasus, the wonderful winged
horse.</p>
<p class='c007'>“And nothing ever happens to me,” mused
Philomène, “as it happens to people in books.
I do not live in a chateau with a terrace and a
raven, like Jeanne in ‘The Tapestry-Room,’
and when I play with the reels in Nurse’s
work-box they do not behave in the least like
<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>Louisa’s reels in ‘Tell Me a Story.’ I suppose
it is because I am just ordinary.”</p>
<p class='c007'>It was a depressing thought, but facts could
not be shelved. Philomène’s cuckoo clock
certainly acted very differently from Griselda’s.
So far from inviting her to climb up by the two
long dangling chains, and take a seat opposite
to him on a red velvet arm-chair, this disobliging
bird uttered his “cuckoos” in a hasty,
perfunctory manner, and then shut to the door
of his house with a snap, as who should say,
“That’s over till next time.”</p>
<p class='c007'>In the schoolroom window hung a cage with
a canary in it; he was of a bright yellow, all
but his head, which was green, and Philomène
had christened him Master Mustardseed, after
one of the fairy pages in “Midsummer Night’s
Dream.” Now this canary had something of a
history. To begin with, he had had a predecessor,
a canary that had been yellow all
over, and so tame that he would perch upon
Philomène’s needle when she sewed, or upon
her book when she read. Then one day the
old maidservant, Lilian Augusta, had left the
schoolroom window open and the cage-door
ajar, and the canary flew out, never to return,
and there was lamentation at Sideview. But
<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>a few days later a strange thing happened.
Through the open window, into the empty cage,
flew another canary, this time with a little
head as green and velvety as moss; Master
Mustardseed, in short, who had remained with
his new mistress ever since.</p>
<p class='c007'>Besides her canary, Philomène had another
pet, a white cat called Queen Mab, with paws
as soft as pussy-willow and a footfall as light
as any snowflake. Now this was how Queen
Mab had first come to Sideview:—It was
Christmas Eve, and Philomène stood at the
dining-room window, listening to the waits,
who were singing a Christmas carol:</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c008'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>“He lies ’mid the beasts of the stall,</div>
<div class='line'>Who is Maker and Lord of us all.</div>
<div class='line'>The winter wind blows cold and dreary;</div>
<div class='line'>See, he weeps, the world is weary,</div>
<div class='line'>Lord, have pity and mercy on me.</div>
<div class='line'>Come, come, come to the manger,</div>
<div class='line'>Kneel ye now to the newborn King;</div>
<div class='line'>Sing, sing, chorus of angels,</div>
<div class='line'>Stars of the morning, o’er Bethlehem sing!”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>After that they moved on to the next house,
and began the second verse.</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c008'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>“He leaves all his glory behind,</div>
<div class='line'>To be born and to die for mankind;</div>
<div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>’Midst grateful beasts his cradle chooses,</div>
<div class='line'>Thankless man his love refuses.</div>
<div class='line'>Lord, have pity and mercy on me.”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>It was bitterly cold. Philomène closed the
window, and as she did so a mew caught her
attention. In another moment she had the
hall-door open, and a gust of icy air met her,
as though the very wind were trying to force
its way into the house for shelter. Upon the
doorstep sat a white kitten, draggled and
shivering. Philomène picked it up at once,
shut the door, and ran upstairs to the schoolroom,
all in a flutter of pity and excitement.
Nurse looked up from her sewing, and stared
at her aghast.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Well, Miss Philomène,” she exclaimed at
length, “I wonder what you will be up to
next? Put that dirty little cat down this
minute.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène obeyed. “I wanted it to have
some of the milk that was left over from
supper,” she protested timidly.</p>
<p class='c007'>“And so it may,” retorted Nurse, whose
bark was worse than her bite, “so long as
you don’t go on holding it against your
dress.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So Philomène took a saucer, and busied herself
<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>with the kitten on the hearth-rug. This was
a bearskin, and had figured many a time in
solitary games of Beauty and the Beast, for
it had served as the hero’s costume till he
finally became a prince and discarded it, when
Philomène, whose housewifely little soul disliked
waste, had made the princess suggest
that it should be lined with red flannel,
and turned into a useful rug for the throne-room.
The kitten lapped up the milk eagerly,
and settled itself comfortably in front of the
fire.</p>
<p class='c007'>“And now you had better put it back
where it came from, Miss,” said Nurse.</p>
<p class='c007'>“The saucer?” inquired Philomène blankly.</p>
<p class='c007'>“No, child, the cat.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“But it came from the doorstep!” exclaimed
Philomène, and seeing no relenting
in Nurse’s face, she burst into tears. At this
moment her father came into the room.</p>
<p class='c007'>“What? Tears, little maid?” he called
out in surprise.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Oh, Daddy, it’s so cold outside, and it
hasn’t done anybody any harm, and it won’t
have any Christmas, and perhaps it’s one of the
‘grateful beasts’ in the carol,” sobbed
Philomène.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>“It certainly seemed grateful enough for
the milk,” said Nurse, who had not listened to
the waits, and was of a literal turn of mind,
“but I don’t much fancy a stray cat in the
kitchen all the same.”</p>
<p class='c007'>The doctor sat down in the red-cushioned
rocking-chair, and took his child on his knee.
He was a tall, well-made man with dark hair,
keen eyes, and a somewhat abrupt manner,
but he was never anything but gentle with his
little daughter, and Philomène’s sobs subsided
as he stroked her hair and patted her cheek.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Look here, little Miss Muffet,” he said, “I
will tell you what we will do. We will ask
Nurse to let us keep the pussy over-night, and
later on we will advertise in the newspaper, just
as we did for Master Mustardseed, and if it
doesn’t seem to belong to anyone or to come
from anywhere in particular, you shall have
it for your own, and Nurse won’t mind it if it
catches the mice in the scullery, will she?”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène’s face cleared, and she looked
beseechingly at Nurse. “You are master in
this house, sir,” admitted Nurse, “and it
seems useless to fight against this love of dumb
things. Cats especially do seem to run in
families.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>So the white kitten stayed, and grew into
a white cat, glossy and well-liking, that followed
Philomène about the house “like a dog,” said
the people who had never taken the trouble
to befriend a cat.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>
<h2 id='II' class='c004'>CHAPTER II<br/> <span class='small'>WHICH INTRODUCES THE HEROINE’S GODMOTHER</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>If Philomène had not actually a fairy godmother,
she had at least the nearest possible
approach to one. To begin with, Godmother
was beautiful. She had the red hair that
artists love, a wild-rose complexion, and a
gentle, even voice, which never scolded and
never sneered; she had cool white hands with
twinkling rings, and her dresses made a stately
silken frou-frou on the stairs, bringing with them
a faint fragrance of lavender and old-world
pot-pourri.</p>
<p class='c007'>She had a dear little country house called
the Cushats, which stood among pinewoods
where pigeons cooed to each other all day long,
and the sea was not far off. Here the summer
holidays were spent by Philomène, “little
cushat” as Godmother called her at times,
for, as the Danish proverb says, “a dear child
has many names.” She would sit by the hour
<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>in the oak-panelled drawing-room, strumming
on the quaint old spinet, or in the window-seat
reading, while the bees murmured perpetually
in the blossoming lime-tree outside.
The garden was full of what are usually
called old-fashioned flowers, though for my
own part I should be slow to connect anything
quite so tiresome as fashion, with
anything quite so sweet as flowers. There
the snowdrops came at Candlemas, and the
daffodils on Lady Day, and there was a whole
big hedge of the rosemary that Shakespeare
loved.</p>
<p class='c007'>Besides the Cushats, Godmother had a house
in London, where there were broad flights of
stairs with shallow steps, and vistas of reception
rooms with polished floors and beautiful
pictures and cabinets filled with eastern curios.
Godmother’s own boudoir was a remote hushed
corner, where in midwinter forced lilac drugged
the air with subtle sweetness.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was here that Philomène often took tea
with her, and when full justice had been done
to the toast and cakes, Isolde would take her
seat in a low chair before the fire, and Philomène,
curling herself up on the hearth-rug,
much as Queen Mab might have done had she
<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>been invited, would lay her clasped hands
in her godmother’s lap, and begin to “want
to know.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Godmother,” she had said on one of these
occasions, “I want to know if it is cruel to keep
caged birds. Do you remember when you
took me to church with you a few Sundays
ago, and they went round singing the Litany?
Well, just as the choir-men passed me they
were saying, ‘and to show thy pity upon all
prisoners and captives,’ and I thought at once
of Master Mustardseed.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“But Master Mustardseed came to you of
his own accord,” replied Godmother in her
kind, low voice, “and I think a canary might
find it very difficult to fend for himself if you
set him free in England. All the same, when
you are grown up, you need never keep any
caged birds if you do not want to.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Well then, you know the picture in the
schoolroom with the baby in it, and the bird
pecking at the ear of corn,” continued Philomène.
“I had just made up such a nice story
about it all, when Miss Mills told me that it
was a ‘Flight into Egypt,’ and that I ought
not to make a play of it. But how was I to
know? They hadn’t any halos. And, O
<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>Godmother, I had just planned that the ugly
idol had enchanted a prince and princess and
had turned them into the donkey and the bird,
and that the grass and the corn they were
eating would turn them back again. Then I
asked Miss Mills what the idol and the bird
really did mean, but she could not tell me.
She only said she supposed it must be some
silly legend. Whenever Miss Mills does not
know the answer to what I ask her, she says
it must be a silly legend. What do they mean,
Godmother?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“The picture is a modern one,” said Isolde,
“that is why the Holy Family are painted
without halos, and Miss Mills was quite right
about its being a legend. Your mother once
told me all the different things that the painter
had tried to express in his picture. The smoke
above the trees is supposed to come from an
inn, where the inn-keeper and his wife have
just refused to give shelter to the travellers,
and it is said that their children’s children are
the gipsies, who have now no settled home or
shelter of their own. Then there is another
story that when the idols of Egypt recognized
the true God, they fell down and were broken.
The bird with the outspread wings is the human
<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>soul, and the Lord is feeding it with the Bread
of Life.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Still you don’t think the Holy Family will
mind my having made up the other story about
them, do you?” inquired Philomène anxiously.
But Godmother only shook her head and
smiled.</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène certainly asked a great many
questions, but then Isolde was never tired of
answering them. Yet though she loved her
goddaughter dearly, it was not entirely for her
own sake. For she was Rachel’s child.</p>
<p class='c007'>Rachel and Isolde had known each other
almost all their lives. As little children they
strung daisy chains and made cowslip balls
together, as school-girls they helped each other
with their compositions on Simon de Montfort
and the pleasures of a country walk, and when
they had grown to womanhood, Rachel’s
marriage in no way lessened their friendship.
It was while she lay dying that she confided
her baby to the love of her friend. “Be good
to her, beloved, as you have been to me, and
I should like her to be called Isolde Philomène—Isolde.”</p>
<p class='c007'>A portrait of Rachel in her wedding-dress
hung in Isolde’s boudoir, and Philomène had
<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>grown to love the sweet face and the white folds
of the train. On entering the room her first
glance was always for godmother, and the
second for her mother’s portrait.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>
<h2 id='III' class='c004'>CHAPTER III<br/> <span class='small'>WHICH TELLS OF A KEY-HOLE IN A WALL</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Now when Philomène was still quite a little
girl she had had some playfellows whom neither
Nurse nor Miss Mills knew anything about, and
these were her green dwarfs and Mrs Handy.</p>
<p class='c007'>The green dwarfs (there were six of them)
lived in the wall beside her bed; they wore
pointed shoes and peaked hats, and they
waited upon her as pages. She could not
remember ever having deliberately invented
them; she had gradually come to know them.
No sooner had Nurse closed the bedroom door
and sat down to her sewing-machine at the
schoolroom table, than Philomène would knock
upon the wall against which her bed was
placed, and the dwarfs would appear, not all
together, but one by one, peaked hats foremost.
Then they would keep her amused, generally by
story-telling, till she felt herself growing drowsy,
when she would wave her hand right royally,
and back they would disappear into the wall.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>Mrs Handy was her companion in the daytime,
and she was a most useful friend, equally
good at inventing games and at helping with
lessons. Moreover, strange to say, she always
came to live at Sideview when Godmother was
out of town, and as soon as Godmother returned,
Mrs Handy would take a journey to
Troy or the Rocky Mountains, or some such
place of interest, promising to re-visit Sideview
as soon as Godmother left London, and to be
sure and give Philomène an exciting account
of her adventures abroad.</p>
<p class='c007'>But as Philomène grew older, she gradually
realised with sorrow that neither the green
dwarfs nor Mrs Handy were anything more
than a make-believe, and in her grief at having
had to say good-bye to them, she turned for
comfort to the pleasures of story-writing, and
to the thought of the mysterious key-hole in
the garden wall.</p>
<p class='c007'>The garden of Sideview was flanked on three
sides by a wall, and on the fourth by the back
of the house. There was a lawn bordered by a
path, and at the end farthest from the house
there was a large strawberry bed. Flower-beds
were laid out between the path and the
wall, some young fruit-trees that never seemed
<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>to bear any fruit grew near the strawberry
bed, and close to the house an iron staircase,
with a pump at the foot of it, climbed to the
level of a garden door that opened out of the
schoolroom.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I wish a fairy caretaker with a red cloak
lived in our garden wall, and would tell me
stories as she did to Mrs Molesworth’s children,”
thought Philomène regretfully, “but then that
was in the ‘Enchanted Garden,’ and I never
did see a garden in all my life that looked less
enchanted than ours. It is so flat, and there is
no water in it, unless you count the pump, no
pond or fountain, and it isn’t a bit neglected
either, with the man coming twice a week to
mow the grass.”</p>
<p class='c007'>One large flower-bed, about half way down
the garden, was Philomène’s very own. It
was divided in two by a tiny path, on either
side of which grew marigolds and London-pride,
and her initials in mustard and cress.
The box-bordered path ended abruptly where
it ran against the wall, and it was in this wall
that the unaccountable key-hole was to be
seen. Philomène reasoned that where there
was a key-hole there must be a key and a
person to turn it, yet she had watched it by
<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>the hour, as a cat watches a mouse-hole, but
without result, so that at last she gave up hope,
and went back to her story-writing.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was an afternoon early in May, tea was
over, and Philomène sat in the red-cushioned
rocking-chair, scribbling her latest novel. It
was very quiet in the schoolroom; only the
ticking of the cuckoo clock, the click of Nurse’s
knitting-needles, and the scratching of Philomène’s
pen were to be heard.</p>
<p class='c007'>“There had come to the castle,” Philomène
had just written, “an old man who must have
seen the snowdrops herald the Spring some
ninety times, with an aged woman to cook.”
She was not altogether pleased with the sound
of this sentence when it was finished, but after
making several vain attempts to alter it, she
added a foot-note: “Bad grammar, but unavoidable.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Miss Philomène,” said Nurse, “I wish you
would go out into the garden, like a dear good
child. Only look at the fine weather, and it
isn’t as if you were writing anything for Miss
Mills neither.” So Philomène rose reluctantly,
after having first written “To be con” at the
end of the page, for she had not as yet made
up her mind whether the story was “to be
<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>continued” or “concluded in our next.”
Then she fetched her garden hat, and went to
fill her watering-can at the pump.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was still and sunny in the open, and the
hum of insects sounded louder than the hum
of traffic. In the lilac bush a blackbird was
practising his grace-notes, so as to be in good
voice for the many concerts of the on-coming
season, and a warm west wind passed through
the garden in long, happy sighs, as though
the young summer were drawing its first
deep breaths of lazy contentment. Philomène
began watering and weeding her garden, and
from time to time she looked up at the key-hole
in the wall.</p>
<p class='c007'>“If one is just ordinary oneself,” she said
half aloud, “and lives in an ordinary house,
I expect fairy things simply can’t happen.
Some day, though, I must write a book about
them, as if they really had happened; I
suppose that is the next best thing.”</p>
<p class='c007'>At that moment she caught sight of a
dandelion about to seed, growing between her
box borders; she stooped to pick the beautiful
thing, and at once began to blow upon the
“nursery clock,” so that the seeds took wing
in all directions.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>
<h2 id='IV' class='c004'>CHAPTER IV<br/> <span class='small'>WHICH INTRODUCES SWEET WILLIAM</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>“If you could let me have the right time, I
should be obliged to you,” said a voice at her
elbow. Philomène started, so that the now
dishevelled globe of seeds fell from her hand
on to the gravel, and she turned to see who it
was that had spoken to her. By her side stood
a little man in a vivid green suit; in her first
surprise she thought it must be one of the
six dwarfs come back to her again, but in
another moment she noticed that his shoes
had rounded toes, and that his hat, although
pointed, had a red and white cockade in it.</p>
<p class='c007'>“That is not the proper way in which to
treat a watch, child,” said the mannikin crossly,
and stooping to pick up the dandelion, he
blew upon it gently.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Five o’clock,” said he, “just about tea-time.”
And then Philomène’s heart gave a
sudden throb, for out of his waistcoat pocket
he took a key, which he fitted into the key-hole.
A little stone door swung outwards in the
wall, and the mannikin hesitated upon the
threshold.</p>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/illus027.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic003'>
<p>“‘IF YOU COULD LET ME HAVE THE RIGHT TIME I SHOULD BE OBLIGED TO YOU.’”<br/><span class='right'><i>Page <SPAN href='#Page_22'>22</SPAN></i></span><br/><span class='left'><i>The Fairy Latchkey.</i></span></p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>“All things considered,” he remarked
slowly, “and especially the green ribbons, I
think I may do myself the pleasure of asking
you to step in.”</p>
<p class='c007'>He was speaking quite politely this time,
and Philomène entered, her pulse all in a
flutter, like some bird that has flown in by the
window and cannot find its way out again.
The door shut to behind her, and she saw that
she was in a little square room. The ceiling
was of stone, as indeed was only to be expected,
since it was part of the wall, but the
floor was daintily if unevenly paved with
shells of different tints and sizes, while the
walls were tapestried with catkins. In the
middle of the room stood a monster mushroom,
serving as a table, with big toadstools to
match on either side for chairs. The lighting
was supplied by a will-o’-the-wisp, which
hovered about near the ceiling till called for,
when it would settle wherever it was needed.
Philomène accepted the seat offered her on
one of the toadstools, while the little man went
to a hollow, mossgrown tree-stump in a corner
<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>of the room, and began to look for something
inside it.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You must excuse my going to the cupboard
and waiting upon myself,” he remarked.
“I do keep a tom-tit, but the weather was so
fine that I thought it only fair to give him an
afternoon out, so I must lay my own tea.”
He placed one half of a walnut-shell, a few
clover blossoms, and a scrap of honey-comb
upon the mushroom table, and sat down on
the other toadstool, opposite to his guest.</p>
<p class='c007'>“If you have not already had your tea,” he
continued, “I can recommend this dew, which
is of the very finest quality, and kept cool by
means of an icicle. I get my honey from
an excellent firm, Buzz, Bumble and Buzz,
Limited, and the clover was picked this morning.
Plain fare, my dear, for this luxury-loving
age, but thoroughly wholesome, I assure
you. Have some?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I have had my tea already, thank you,”
said Philomène, “but I do like the sweet ends
of clover very much, if you could spare me one
flower.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Certainly, certainly,” said the mannikin,
and he handed her two, one white and one
pink.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>“Would you mind telling me, please,”
began Philomène, “what you meant just now
by speaking about green ribbons? Whose
green ribbons?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Yours, of course,” said the little man. “I
shouldn’t need any. If it hadn’t been for those
green ribbons on your christening robe, my
young friend, you wouldn’t be sitting here now.
It is only the children that have worn green
ribbons at their christening who can see the
fairies at all.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Then you really, really are a fairy?”
cried Philomène.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Should I be living in this house and eating
these things if I weren’t?” retorted her host.
“I am a fairy, and my name is Sweet William.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Am I to call you that?” asked Philomène,
doubtfully.</p>
<p class='c007'>She could not help feeling that the name
sounded very affectionate, and that it might
be forward for her to use it upon so short an
acquaintance.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I don’t know what else you’re to call me,”
said the little man, “it strikes me as a very
good name of its kind. Perhaps I ought to
tell you that I am the fairies’ land- and house-agent
for this garden; I chose it for various
<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>reasons, partly so as to be near you, for it is
the business of the fairies to look after lonely
children.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I suppose I ought to thank him,” thought
Philomène, feeling painfully shy, but Sweet
William rattled on and left her no time.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You have probably no idea how much
work even a small garden like this entails.
I have to attend to the housing of all the live
creatures, for one thing, the bees and snails
and birds and caterpillars and so on. The
flowers are not troublesome, for they stay in
one place for quite a long time, but the spiders,
for instance, are for ever moving house.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“It must be very interesting work,” said
Philomène politely. She had often heard
people make this remark to her father.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Not bad,” said Sweet William, “if one
keeps one’s eyes and ears open. From being
the agent in a big garden, just about a hundred
and fifty years ago, I once pieced together a
whole love-story. It was an old manor-house,
and had a very fine garden.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“That is the sort of place I should love to
live in,” said Philomène, “with oriel windows
and avenues and things.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“It is a modern failing to find fault with one’s
<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>surroundings,” said Sweet William pompously,
“and young people are especially prone to it.
As I was saying when you interrupted me,
it was a fine garden. The family was very
old and very proud, and they kept a peacock
on the terrace. On one side of the lawn ran
a green walk and a clipped yew-hedge, and it
was here that my lovers used to walk, up and
down, up and down, at sunset. The hedge
overheard every word of what they said, for
you see, being a hedge he could not very well
help eavesdropping. Well, one day they had
to say good-bye, and he went away and left
her very sad, and I got to know all about that
part of it from a red rose, which he had picked
that last evening, and the girl had pressed the
rose in a big book, and every day she would
sit and read in the book, and would look at the
page where the red rose lay. ‘My beloved
is mine, and I am his.’ The rose told me that
she had grown desperately tired of having
nothing but this one sentence to read, but the
girl never seemed to tire of it. Then at last
her lover came back for her, and they went
away together to the little harbour near by,
and one of Mother Carey’s chickens told me
that they were married in the church on the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>cliff. After that I heard no more of them for
some time, till one day I chanced to pick up
a sea-shell on the beach near the harbour.
I had had no tidings of the mer-folk for ever
such a long while, so I put the shell to my ear
and let the sea tell me some, and amongst
other things it told me about those two, and
how they had taken ship for the south. The
last news I had of them was from the wind,
for he is such a great traveller that he seldom
loses sight of people, but the worst of him is
that like most travellers he is always in a
hurry, so he could only stop to tell me that
he had seen them last in another garden,
walking up and down an avenue of cypresses
with bits of broken statues on either side;
only he was not holding her hand this time, for
she was carrying a white bundle in her arms.
The wind had not waited to find out its precise
nature, but he had overheard a few of their
remarks as he went by, and would you believe
it, they were just exactly the same as those
which the yew-hedge had repeated to me.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“There is a nice big cypress tree at the
Cushats,” said Philomène, “but I have never
seen a whole avenue of them. I wish I could.
Oh, Sweet William, I do get so bored sometimes
<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>living in a little house with a little
garden, and nothing exciting happening all
day long.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Boredom,” said Sweet William, “is a
modern complaint to which the young are
peculiarly prone.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I wish he would call something an ancient
complaint to which old people were prone,”
thought Philomène. “And I’m sure it’s just
as bad to be always finding fault with the times
in which one lives as with the house.” But
out loud she only said, “And may I come here
sometimes, please, and will you tell me a few
more stories? Godmother tells me beautiful
stories which she makes up as she goes along,
but she has so many people to visit and so
many things to do that I cannot see her very
often, and I know all my books nearly by heart,
and Nurse can only tell stories about the
families she was with before she came to me,
and all those children seem to have been so
dull and good.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“In these days,” replied Sweet William,
“next to nothing can be done without first
passing examinations, so if you are willing
to come here to-morrow afternoon at about
this time by a reliable clock (don’t go by the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>nursery clock, for it is not very well regulated),
I will set you an examination paper all about
fairies and fairyland. If you do well in it,
that is to say if your marks add up to 75 per
cent, you shall have a prize.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“What will the prize be?” asked Philomène,
shyly.</p>
<p class='c007'>“A latchkey just like mine, so that you
can let yourself in, whether I am at home or
not. And now,” said Sweet William rising, “I
really must be off. I have a lot of extra work
in the spring time, with all the swallows coming
home.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène rose also, and the little door
swung open in the wall. She stepped out upon
the path, and the sunlight dazzled her, so that
she had to shade her eyes with her hand. “I
am very glad to have met you, and I will
certainly come again to-morrow,” she was
just beginning to say, when she noticed that
Sweet William was gone. For a minute she
stood and stared at the key-hole, which stared
back at her. A warm west wind went past
her, the blackbird was still singing his heart
out in the lilac bush, and the air was full
of the fragrance of green and growing things.
At her feet lay the dandelion stalk.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>Philomène picked up her watering-can and
ran with it up the iron staircase into the schoolroom,
where she found Nurse asleep in her
favourite basket chair. “Oh, Nurse, do wake
up, dear good old Nurse,” she called out eagerly,
“and tell me who put green ribbons on to my
christening dress!”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Bless the child,” returned Nurse drowsily,
“who ever has been talking that nonsense
to you? It was your godmother, and a heathenish
fancy I thought it too at the time. And
there’s no call for you to be speaking so loud
either that I can see; I wasn’t asleep, I was
only resting my eyes.”</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>
<h2 id='V' class='c004'>CHAPTER V<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH THE HEROINE DISTINGUISHES HERSELF</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>The next day seemed a long time in coming,
but come it did. So did Miss Mills. Miss
Mills was young and pretty, and she thought
herself even prettier than she was. During
the past year or two, she had been giving daily
lessons to Philomène, but she was not fond of
teaching, and her temper was uncertain.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Tell me at once,” she said sharply, as the
lesson dragged itself towards its close, “what
did Edwin and Morcar do?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“They ruled with rods of iron,” responded
Philomène absently.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You are not attending properly, child,”
said Miss Mills, “or you would not repeat
things parrot-fashion out of the book in that
way. Do you suppose that one took the poker
and the other the tongs? And, you know,
you were very careless too about reciting your
psalm this morning, saying that the trees of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>the Lord were full of soup, when you know
perfectly well that they aren’t any such thing.
What has come over you? Take down your
work for to-morrow.”</p>
<p class='c007'>It was no wonder that Philomène found it
difficult to attend to her lessons that day, for
she could think of little else than the coming
examination, and when tea at last appeared
she felt too much excited to eat.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Now don’t begin to be faddy, Miss, like
Master Harold,” said Nurse.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Who was Master Harold?” asked Philomène,
“he wasn’t one of the Ruthven-Smiths,
was he?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“No,” said Nurse, “he was one of their
cousins, and he came to stay with them, and
a mighty long visit he paid too. I never did
like him from the first moment I set eyes on
him; he was all fads and fancies, and one day,
I remember, he made my poor dear little Miss
Maisie cry by telling her that her legs looked
like two snakes that had swallowed oranges,
and they were no fatter than his own in the
middle, for that matter. But if you won’t
get along with your tea, Miss, you had better
say grace, and run into the garden.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Outside the afternoon’s sad yellow sunlight
<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>lay all across the lawn; it awoke diamond
flashes in the wall, and even gilded the handle
of the pump. The metallic notes of the
starlings were heard on every side, and London
was doing its best to forget that it was the
largest pile of brick and mortar in the world.
Philomène ran to her own garden and up its
little pathway. A great fear was at her heart
lest yesterday’s experience should prove to
have been a make-up also, and nothing more,
like Mrs Handy and the rest. Tremblingly she
tapped upon the wall, and prompt to her signal
came the sound of a step inside, and the turning
of the key in the key-hole. Sweet William
stood before her in his green suit, with the red
and white cockade in his hat.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Come in,” said he in his delicate
high-pitched voice, “everything is quite
ready.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène entered, and the catkin tapestries
rustled in the draught of the closing door. The
little room looked cool and friendly. On the
giant mushroom lay a packet of satin-smooth
lily petals, a swan’s quill pen, and two snails’
shells, one filled with red and the other with
violet ink, distilled from red roses and from
violets. There was also a little pad of moss
<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>upon which to dry the pen. Philomène sat
down upon the nearest toadstool.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Well,” said Sweet William pleasantly,
“have you been reading up much for the
examination?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“No, not much,” returned Philomène, “I
really know all that’s in my books already, but
I have been trying to remember everything I
ever heard about the fairies.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“You see,” said Sweet William, “the Good
People do not like letting children into their
secrets who have not first taken the trouble to
find out all they can about us for themselves.
Now we had better begin, and here are the
questions. Number your pages, and pin them
together with this thorn when you have finished
writing. There is a sun-dial in the next garden,
and he has promised to send word when the
time is up.”</p>
<p class='c007'>For the next hour Philomène wrote busily;
she did not even look round when Sweet William
opened a door opposite to that by which she herself
had entered, and spoke to someone outside.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It was a grasshopper,” said Sweet William,
“and he came to say that the hour is over.
Poor fellow, he spends his time trying to reach
the sun by high hops, and his friend the dial
<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>keeps on assuring him that it is of no use, but
the grasshopper will not believe him. He thinks
it is only that the dial has lost heart and got
depressed, from having had “Art is long and
time is fleeting” written across him for so
many years.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène was pinning her papers together.
“I have done my best,” said she, with a
threatening of tears in her voice, “but I am
afraid it won’t be prize-standard.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Well, let us see,” said Sweet William
encouragingly, as he took the neatly written
sheets into his hands, “I will read aloud the
questions and what you have written, correcting
your mistakes as I go along, and then we will
add up the marks. Perhaps you would like
some refreshments after all that hard work;
here are some bee-bread and purest rainwater.”
So saying, Sweet William settled
himself comfortably upon his stool, dipped his
pen into the red ink, and began.</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘<span class='fss'>I.</span> Give the names of the King and Queen
of Fairyland, of the King’s favourite page, and
of the Queen’s four chief attendant elves.’</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘Oberon, Titania, Puck, Master Mustardseed,
Master Peasblossom, Master Cobweb,
Master Moth.’</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>“Perfectly correct. The maximum for that
is six marks; half a mark for the King’s name,
half a mark for the Queen’s, and a whole mark
for each of the five elves. Now then:</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘<span class='fss'>II.</span> What events do you connect with the
following dates; April 30th, June 23rd,
October 31st, and December 24?’</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘April 30th is the Walpurgis Night, when
the witches dance on the top of a mountain
called the Brocken. June 23rd is midsummer
eve, when all the goblins and sprites are abroad,
and you light fires to keep them at a distance;
sometimes also you hang up a hatchet in a
wood, so that they can hew themselves timber
if they will. On December 24th animals and
all lifeless things are able to speak.’</p>
<p class='c007'>“I see you have left out October 31st. Didn’t
you know it? It is the great feast of Samhain,
or of All Fairies.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“It is All Hallows’ Eve with us,” replied
Philomène innocently, and then remembered
with a pang that fairies cannot bear the sound
of church bells, because it reminds them of a
power that is stronger than their strongest
magic. “So I do not suppose they like the
Saints much either,” she reflected ruefully.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Well, it is All Fairies’ with us, at any rate,”
<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>said Sweet William, speaking rather fast,
“which makes three marks out of a maximum
of four for the second question. Now for the
third.</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘<span class='fss'>III.</span> Write all you know, (<span class='fss'>A</span>) about
Leprechauns; (<span class='fss'>B</span>) about Brownies.’</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘(<span class='fss'>A</span>). Leprechauns are little men dressed
all in green, who generally live in Ireland;
at least I have never heard of their living anywhere
else. They are the fairies’ cobblers,
and are kept very busy because the fairies
dance so much that they wear out any number
of shoes. They also know where all the crocks
of gold and other hidden treasures are kept,
and if you find a leprechaun, and don’t take
your eyes off him, he is obliged to give you
anything you want, but he tries to startle you
and make you look away, and then you have
lost your power over him, unless you can catch
him again. The best thing to do is to take
him to running water, for he is very much
afraid of that, and will promise you anything
rather than stay near it.’</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘(<span class='fss'>B</span>) Brownies are little men who come into
houses during the night, or very early in the
morning before anyone is up, and sweep and
dust and lay the fires, and make themselves
<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>very useful. You may put a bowl of bread
and milk for them, or even cream, if you want
to show that you are grateful, but you must
never offer them new suits of clothes. Some
people have caught sight of them, and seen
how ragged their coats were, and have made
new clothes for them, and left these near the
bread and milk, but when the brownies saw
that they went away, and never came back
again. I suppose it offends them.’</p>
<p class='c007'>“Quite right. You have full marks for that
question, five for <span class='fss'>A</span> and five for <span class='fss'>B</span>. That makes
the whole ten for the third question.</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘<span class='fss'>IV.</span> Write short notes on:—fairy ring; fairy-gold;
witch-apples; blackthorn; the rainbow.’</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘A fairy ring is a circle of teeny mushrooms
in the grass, and it marks the place where the
fairies have been dancing over-night. If you
should ever happen to fall from a height down
into the middle of one of these rings, you would
not hurt yourself, not even if you fell from the
clouds.</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘Fairy gold is not very satisfactory, for when
mortals touch it, it all turns into withered
leaves.</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘Witch-apples are very dangerous things,
for if a witch gives you an apple, and you eat
<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>it, it makes you restless ever after, so that you
are never able to settle down to anything again.</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘Blackthorn is the fairies’ tree, and they do
not like its being picked by us, or brought into
our houses. That is why some people say that
it is unlucky to bring home blackthorn after
a country walk, and other people get a little
mixed and think that it is hawthorn which is
unlucky, but it isn’t.’</p>
<p class='c007'>“Ah! I see you have left out the rainbow.
Do you mean to tell me you don’t know what
a rainbow is for?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I don’t think so,” replied Philomène with
some hesitation; Noah was in her mind, but
she fancied that Sweet William might find him
as little acceptable as the Saints. She therefore
determined to run no risks this time.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It is the triumphal arch,” explained Sweet
William, “which is thrown up whenever the
fairy queen is expected to pass that way.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I never heard that before,” said Philomène,
“and I like the idea very much (though I feel
quite sure Nurse wouldn’t),” she added to
herself.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It isn’t an idea,” retorted Sweet William
rather huffily, “it is a custom. Let me see,
that makes four out of five marks for the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>fourth question,” he continued, “and now
for number five.</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘<span class='fss'>V.</span> Copy three bars of music from the
song, either of a mermaid, or of the Lorelei.’</p>
<p class='c007'>“Five marks for that question. But I see
you have left it out altogether?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I have never had a chance of hearing the
Lorelei,” answered Philomène, “for no one
has ever taken me to the Rhine, and I have not
heard any mermaids either, though the Cushats
is near the sea.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Well, perhaps it was not quite a fair
question,” said Sweet William, “but never
mind, you have done very well so far, and you
can well afford to lose five marks at this stage.
Let us see what you have made of number six.</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘<span class='fss'>VI.</span> Complete the following quotations,
and state if possible, in what work of which
author each occurs.</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c008'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>(<span class='fss'>A</span>) All under the sun belongs to men;</div>
</div>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>(<span class='fss'>B</span>) Where the bee sucks, there lurk I.</div>
</div>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>(<span class='fss'>A</span>) And all under the moon to the fairies.</div>
<div class='line in2'>From Mrs Ewing’s “Amelia and the Dwarfs.”</div>
</div>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>(<span class='fss'>B</span>) In a cowslip’s bell I lie;</div>
<div class='line in2'>There I couch when owls do cry.</div>
<div class='line in2'>On the bat’s back I do fly</div>
<div class='line in2'>After summer merrily.</div>
<div class='line in2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>Merrily, merrily shall I live now,</div>
<div class='line'>Under the blossom that hangs on the bough.’</div>
<div class='line in14'>From <span class='sc'>Shakespeare’s</span> ‘Tempest.’</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>“Very good indeed. Two marks for (<span class='fss'>A</span>) and
three for (<span class='fss'>B</span>), which makes five. You have
full marks for that question. You must have
a good memory.</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘<span class='fss'>VII.</span> (<span class='fss'>A</span>). When did toads not turn into
what, and if not, why not, and what did they
turn into?’</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘(<span class='fss'>B</span>). Supposing yourself to be escaping
from an enchanter’s dwelling, what three
articles would be likely to prove of the most
use to you, and why?’</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘(<span class='fss'>A</span>). In the story of “Eliza and the Eleven
Swans,” out of Hans Andersen, the wicked
stepmother throws toads into Eliza’s bath,
wishing to poison her. The toads were so
ugly that they could not turn into roses, which
they would like to have done, and which less
ugly creatures might have been able to do,
but they did manage to turn into poppies,
for Eliza was so good that they could not harm
her. Miss Mills says toads are not really
poisonous.’</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘(<span class='fss'>B</span>). I should take with me’ (it would have
been better to say,—If I were escaping from
<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>an enchanter’s dwelling I should take with
me—always repeat your question in your
answer, it saves the examiner trouble,) ‘I
should take with me a comb, a flower-pot and a
tumbler of water, because when the enchanter
pursues you, you can throw the comb behind
you, and it turns into a ridge of mountains,
and he has to waste time going back and fetching
a ladder so as to be able to climb up them;
later you can throw the flower-pot behind you
which turns into a forest, so that the enchanter
has to turn back again and fetch a hatchet to
cut down the trees; afterwards you can throw
the glass of water behind you, which turns into
a lake, so that he has first to get a boat. By
that time you have generally arrived at your
own kingdom or wherever else you want to go.’</p>
<p class='c007'>“Yes, that is very well answered. You get
full marks for that question also, two and a
half for (<span class='fss'>A</span>), and two and a half for (<span class='fss'>B</span>). Now
there is only number eight left.</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘<span class='fss'>VIII.</span> Write in note form, and as concisely as
possible, any story out of Grimm’s fairy-tales.’</p>
<p class='c007'>“I see you have chosen the story of the
flounder.</p>
<p class='c007'>“‘Fisherman catches flounder. Flounder
owns to being a prince; is let go. Fisherman’s
<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>wife annoyed at wasted opportunity. Fisherman
goes back to beach, finds flounder, states
wish. Fisherman’s hovel vanishes, nice cottage
instead. Fortnight later fisherman’s wife
grumbles. Fisherman returns to flounder,
flounder rather cross. Cottage disappears,
stone castle instead. After few days fisherman’s
wife grumbles again, sends husband
back to flounder. Flounder crosser. Sea
rough. However, castle vanishes, king’s
palace instead. Fisherman goes home to find
wife already discontented because only queen,
not empress. Has to return to beach. Flounder
angry. Sea very rough. King’s palace disappears,
emperor’s palace comes instead. Wife
says she wants to be Pope, sends husband back
to beach. Flounder very angry. Sea stormy.
Emperor’s palace goes, Pope’s palace comes.
Sunrise next morning. Wife sees it, says she
wants to be able to make the sun rise. Fisherman
returns to seashore. Sea running mountains
high. No flounder, voice only. Fisherman
returns to find old hovel back again.’</p>
<p class='c007'>“The maximum there is ten marks,” Sweet
William said, after he had finished reading
the notes aloud, “and you have remembered
the story well, all but the rhyme.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>“I did remember the rhyme though,” said
Philomène eagerly, “and I had meant to add
it, but just then the grasshopper came. The
first time the fisherman says:—</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c008'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>‘Flounder, flounder in the sea,</div>
<div class='line'>Come, I pray, and talk with me,</div>
<div class='line'>For my wife, Dame Isabel,</div>
<div class='line'>Sent me here a tale to tell.’</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c009'>And all the other times he says:—</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c008'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>‘For my wife, Dame Isabel,</div>
<div class='line'>Wishes what I fear to tell.’”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>“Capital!” exclaimed Sweet William with
enthusiasm, “Philomène rightly named, beloved
of the fairies! It is not often we have
the good luck to come across such a child.
Now we will add up the marks. Six for the
first question, three for the second, ten for the
third, four for the fourth, none for the fifth,
five for the sixth, five for the seventh, ten for
the eighth. That makes forty-three out of
fifty, which is eighty-six per cent. I congratulate
you, my dear, and have much pleasure
in presenting you with a latchkey, exactly like
my own.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène’s face lit up, her cheeks glowed
and her eyes sparkled, but “Thank you very
<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>much” was all she said as she took the key
and slipped it into her pocket.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I expect it will be a treat for you to come
out here now and again,” said Sweet William,
watching her closely, “not indeed that there
isn’t plenty to amuse you indoors.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Not indoors at home,” said Philomène,
decidedly, “Daddy is out nearly all day, and
though Nurse and Miss Mills are very kind and
all that, they are neither of them any good at
fairy things, or at plays, or at story-telling.
It seems to me it is often very dull at home.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“The very young,” remarked Sweet William,
gazing into space, “and more particularly the
young of the present day, are apt to condemn
the place in which they live because they are
themselves too stupid to find out its attractions.
Do you follow me?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I can’t very well help following you,” said
Philomène, almost losing her temper, “but
if you lived at Sideview yourself, perhaps you
would not find it so very amusing either. Even
Daddy says it is an uninteresting little house,
though of course I try to be contented so as
to please him, but it is not at all so easy as
you make out. It isn’t a bit like the ‘House
of Surprises’ in the story-book.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>“A good many surprising things go on in it,
notwithstanding,” retorted Sweet William, “as
Master Mustardseed could very well tell you,
if you only had the sense to listen to him a bit
when you are alone together.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I’m afraid I don’t quite understand you
about Master Mustardseed,” said Philomène,
“why should I need to be alone with him
specially?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Because,” replied Sweet William calmly,
“he is every bit as much a fairy as I am.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“A fairy! What fairy?” cried Philomène,
jumping off the stool in her excitement.</p>
<p class='c007'>“What fairy? Why, Master Mustardseed,
of course. Haven’t you been writing about
him only this very afternoon? Just you
listen to a piece of good advice. When next
you are left alone for any length of time, get as
near as ever you can to his cage. And now
good-bye for the present, for I am still up to
my eyes in work.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Goodbye,” said Philomène, and she felt
in her pocket to make sure that the key was
still there.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>
<h2 id='VI' class='c004'>CHAPTER VI<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH THE HEROINE TAKES ADVICE</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Philomène ran down the garden walk, her
mind in a turmoil. Queen Mab was trotting
to meet her along the path, and as soon as she
caught sight of her pet, she knelt down on the
gravel and held out her arms to it. “O
Queen Mab, Queen Mab,” she cried, “I am
so happy! It seems it doesn’t matter being
ordinary, if only the Good People love one.”
The cat had scrambled upon her lap in an
instant, and was rubbing a white velvety head
against her arm, and licking her hand with a
little tongue as rough as it was red. Philomène
carried her pussy into the schoolroom, and set
it down on the bearskin hearth-rug; then she
glanced curiously at the canary in his cage,
but he was pecking at the seeds in his seed-trough,
and took no notice of her.</p>
<p class='c007'>Before nightfall it rained. Nurse said it
was because Lilian Augusta had sung “Summer
suns are glowing” that morning, which, she
<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>declared, invariably brought on wet weather.
The next day it went on raining, but despite
the downpour Miss Mills happened to be in a
good humour, and this was just as well, for it
was the turn of what Philomène called “the
little speckled book,” and it is not easy to give
your attention to little speckled books when
your thoughts are full of fairies. “The World
and All About It” was a very plump little
volume, and the squatness of its figure was only
equalled by the omniscience of its author.
It explained at the beginning who had made the
world and why; it gave the exact date for the
invention of pottery, and described the best
way of handling chopsticks. Philomène had
just been learning all about the chameleon, and
of how by changing its colour it escapes the
notice of its enemies.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Does not this show the care which Providence
takes of all its creatures?” demanded
Miss Mills.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I suppose so,” replied Philomène, thoughtfully.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Don’t say, ‘I suppose so,’” returned Miss
Mills, “the answer in the book is Yes.” But
the rebuke was given gently and with a smile,
and Philomène was gladder than ever of this
<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>easy-going mood when it came to the Scripture
lesson, which was her weekly nightmare. For
when Miss Mills taught the Scriptures she
succeeded in making them as dry as the biscuit
which the Red Queen gave to Alice. “Thirst
quenched, I hope?” said the Red Queen, and
happily did not wait for an answer.</p>
<p class='c007'>Nurse declined to venture out of doors that
day, and an interview with Master Mustardseed
was impossible, so when lessons were over
Philomène went down to the kitchen to help
Lilian Augusta grate the chocolate for a
pudding. She found her singing to herself,
“And now this holy day is drawing to its end.”
“But I don’t see that it is so very holy,”
reflected Philomène, “and it isn’t anywhere
near its end either. Nurse says it is just out
of contrariness that Lilian Augusta likes to
sing, “The day thou gavest, Lord, is ended”
while she is washing up the breakfast things,
and “When morning gilds the skies” over the
tea-things, but then I think Nurse is sometimes
very cross to Lilian Augusta, and perhaps she
doesn’t mean all she sings.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Lilian Augusta and Philomène were good
friends, and had quarrelled only twice, once
when the first canary had been allowed to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>make its escape, and another time on Queen
Mab’s account. Lilian Augusta had no love
for cats, and she was not pleased therefore
when after some fruitless advertising it was
settled that Queen Mab should become a
member of the household. Philomène, bent on
making peace, had carried her new pet into
the kitchen and had placed it on the table.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You know, Lilian Augusta,” she said
coaxingly, “we really couldn’t have put such
a little, little cat out into the street again,
could we? Only see how small it is, and who
would have fed it?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“God, I suppose, Miss,” replied Lilian
Augusta unmoved, as she measured out the
curry-powder. But Philomène would not hear
of this.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Poor Pussy!” she exclaimed resentfully,
“poor, poor Pussy!” And snatching up
Queen Mab she walked straight out of the
kitchen and did not re-visit it that day.
Lilian Augusta, however, had grown first
indifferent to the white cat, and then fond of
it, for Queen Mab had pretty endearing ways,
besides which, devotion to Philomène was at
all times a passport to the faithful servant’s
good opinion.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>For several days the steady rain continued;
gardeners rejoiced, other people grumbled.
Philomène consoled herself with an occasional
peep at her tall silver savings-box, in which
she now treasured her latchkey. This savings-box
of hers was never looked at, for her father
wished her to do as she pleased with her pocket-money,
and she had therefore chosen it as a
hiding-place for the key. On these wet days,
when she could not play in the garden, it was
a comfort merely to look at the key through
the slit in the lid of the box. Towards the end
of the week the rain abated, though it did not
stop altogether. People were beginning to
cheer up all round, excepting, of course, the
gardeners, who said that the soil was sodden,
and that the rain had brought the slugs.</p>
<p class='c007'>Nurse laid aside the pinafore she had been
making, and shut her work-box with a snap.
“I want to get some insertion,” she announced,
“the same as is on your other pinafores. I
must see if I can match it,”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Am I to come too, Nurse?” inquired
Philomène anxiously.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I don’t see the necessity, Miss. You had
your walk this morning. You had better stay
in and meet your father when he comes home,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>I should say. He might be back within the
next hour.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène breathed more freely. “I would
ask Lilian Augusta to do that much shopping
for me,” continued Nurse, “but it’s her time
off to-day, and what’s more she never can
match things, not so much as a bit of binding.
I’m sure it’s very good of the Lord to make me
as patient as I am with Lilian Augusta every
day of my life.”</p>
<p class='c007'>No sooner had the hall-door banged downstairs
than Master Mustardseed burst into song,
so full of joyous trills and turns and crushing-notes,
that someone who knew no better might
have supposed he was merely showing what
difficult music he could contrive to sing if he
gave his mind to it. Philomène cautiously
put two fingers through the bars of his cage,
and at that the canary stopped singing as
abruptly as he had begun, cocked his little
green head on one side, and perched upon her
hand. Then he spoke in a shrill, small voice,</p>
<p class='c007'>“No need to introduce myself, I suppose?”
he said gaily. His manner was good-humoured
and easy, and Philomène thought, rightly
enough, that he would prove far slower to take
offence than her friend the land-agent.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>“No,” she said, “Sweet William has told
me that Master Mustardseed is really your
name; and oh! you cannot think what a
difference it has made to me during lesson
time to feel that there is a real fairy in the
schoolroom. I used to think sometimes, when
it was quiet and getting late, that if I listened
I might hear my toys talking, as they do in
nearly all the story-books, but that never
came to anything. Perhaps I didn’t wait
long enough, or perhaps they knew I was
listening.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“The story-books are not always as accurate
on that point as they ought to be,” replied
the canary, “it is really not at all so easy to
hear toys talk as they make out. To begin
with, the house has to be quite empty; there
must be no daylight in the room, only firelight
or moonlight; and there must be no time
going on.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“How could that be managed?” asked
Philomène, as Master Mustardseed paused to
take breath, for he spoke nearly as fast as he
sang.</p>
<p class='c007'>“The clock must have stopped,” said Master
Mustardseed, “so you see, it is rather a difficult
matter first and last. You have no idea, by
<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>the way, what confusion you caused in the
dolls’ house the other day by making the dolls
play at a wedding.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I am sorry if I upset them,” said Philomène
in distress, “I thought I should like to have
a wedding, because I had read in my history
lesson that morning about King Louis XII. of
France, and how he over-ate himself at his own
wedding-banquet when he married Mary Tudor,
and he died, and she was ever so pleased,
and went quickly and married someone
else.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I daresay,” said Master Mustardseed, laughing,
“but you married two dolls who did
not in the least want to marry each other,
poor things, and what was worse, the mistress
of the house had invited the Gollywog and the
Father Christmas to lunch, and she had to
tell them not to come, as there were not enough
plates to go round. How would you like to
have to do that if you were a hostess? The
dolls’ own lives are constantly being interrupted
and interfered with by those who play with
them, but of course I see that it cannot be
helped, and it isn’t your fault. It is the fault
of whoever made them dolls.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I will look very hard at them next time
<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>I want to play,” said Philomène remorsefully,
“and perhaps I shall see from the expression
on their faces whether they have a funeral or a
party or anything of their own fixed for that
day. Poor dears, I hope they don’t hate me.
But, oh please, will you tell me something
about yourself now, and why you are here?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Well, as you have already heard,” replied
the canary, “I am Master Mustardseed, one
of the fairy queen’s four favourite pages, so
you made a remarkably good shot at my name.
As for why I am here—well, have you never
heard that once every hundred years fairies
have to turn into animals for a year and a day,
and if they are killed during that time, so much
the worse for them, for you see, we haven’t
what you call souls. However, if we survive
that year and that day, we can go back to
Fairyland for another hundred years. Now
my friend and brother page, Master Moth, of
whom I daresay you have heard, had to put
in his time before my turn came, and he lived
with you as your first canary; but when his
year was over he flew away, and knowing that
I had shortly to make up my mind what to
change into myself, he recommended me to
come here, saying that you were a very kind
<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>little mistress, and that I might go farther and
fare worse. That is why I came, and as for
my staying longer than a year and a day, why,
my dear, before I left Fairyland I played a
prank on the Man in the Moon. He had come
to court for the first time, and we pages thought
him something of a country cousin. You see,
he did not know anything at all about court
etiquette, and made absurd mistakes. I
thought out the prank all by myself, for I did
not want Puck or Moth or Cobweb or Peasblossom
to know anything about it; it does
not do to have too many people in a secret.
All would have gone off well enough, had not
the Man in the Moon complained to headquarters.
It appears he cannot take a joke;
and indeed I might have guessed as much, for
I expect you have noticed even at this distance
what a wry face he can make. The king and
queen were so much displeased that they
banished me from court for three years, and
I thought I had much better stay on here.
But if one day I leave you, you must not be
sorry, for I shall only have flown back to
Fairyland.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Do many of the fairies turn into song-birds?”
asked Philomène.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>“Yes, a good many of them,” replied Master
Mustardseed, “and the court musician always
turns into a nightingale. As for the fairies
who dislike the bother of housekeeping, they
become cuckoos, and lay their eggs in other
birds’ nests, which saves them a lot of trouble.
Brownies become bees and ants, for they
cannot bear to be idle, and a court-lady
as often as not turns into a butterfly or
humming-bird for the sake of the fine
clothes.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Have you ever heard the Lorelei sing?”
inquired Philomène, “I had to leave out the
question about her in Sweet William’s examination
paper.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“No,” replied Master Mustardseed decidedly,
“I have always avoided the lady. You know,
I suppose, what it is that she sings for? The
boatmen hear her, and listen and listen, and
watch her combing her shimmering hair, and
forget to steer their boats, so that they are
sucked down into the whirlpools of the Rhine.
The gnomes never did mortals a worse turn
than when they made that golden comb for
her, and when all’s said and done her hair
is no prettier than your own godmother’s.
But don’t let’s talk about her any more; I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>know plenty of stories about much nicer
people. Perhaps you would like to hear one
right away. Stop me if I talk too fast; Moth
says it is a failing of mine.”</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>
<h2 id='VII' class='c004'>CHAPTER VII<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH MASTER MUSTARDSEED TELLS HIS STORY</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>“In a mean, dingy house in the midst of a
great city, there once lived a cobbler and his
apprentice, and together with them in that
same house there also lived a certain evil and
malicious boggart. Now a boggart is just the
opposite of a brownie, for while a brownie
tidies and sweeps and puts things to rights,
a boggart only works mischief and makes
confusion. He would break the crockery, and
mislay the tools in the workshop, and once he
dropped so much salt into the soup that the
cobbler lay awake half the night with thirst.
Now the cobbler, who was a harsh, unreasonable
man, suspected his apprentice of these
pranks, and soon took him roughly to task.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Master,” said the apprentice, “you do me
wrong. It is not I who have done you this
harm, but a mannikin in tattered clothes and a
peaked cap. It must be that we are living
<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>under one roof with a boggart, for more than
once have I seen him at his tricks when twilight
fell.”</p>
<p class='c007'>But the cobbler would not believe a word
of what the apprentice said, for he himself
had never set eyes on the boggart, and though
one day the apprentice pointed him out, not
even then could he catch so much as a glimpse
of him. It is true that the cobbler’s yellow
cat, who lay stretched upon the hearth, could
see the imp plainly enough with her green and
glimmering eyes, but then it was not in her
power to say so, nor to put in a good word for
the apprentice.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You had better stop making game of me,”
said the angry cobbler, each time that a fresh
mishap occurred, “for my temper is but a
short one, and I am growing tired of your fool’s
tricks, and of your fool’s tales too, for that
matter, about boggarts and what not, so mark
my words, and mend your ways.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Now one evening as the cobbler sat stitching
at a neighbour’s shoes, he said to the apprentice,
“I am ready for my supper. Go and get me
the flitch of bacon from the corner cupboard.”
But when the apprentice opened the cupboard
door, the bacon was nowhere to be seen.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>“Master, it is gone!” he cried, “I fear the
boggart has played you another trick, and this
time it is an ill turn indeed!”</p>
<p class='c007'>“The boggart! The boggart! What’s all
this talk of boggarts?” screamed the cobbler,
“so I have been teaching my trade to a thief,
have I? You’re a fine fellow to keep as an
apprentice, eating a poor man out of house and
home! Get you gone from my door, or you
shall have blows from me, and not words
alone.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Again the apprentice tried to defend himself,
but his master would not listen, so he sadly
put together his few belongings in a knapsack,
and set out upon his travels, with none to wish
him well save only his friend the yellow cat,
who came and rubbed herself against his legs
before the house-door closed behind him. All
night he paced the streets disconsolate, and
at dawn when the city gates stood open he
set forth upon the king’s highway.</p>
<p class='c007'>As dusk fell, he entered a wild, bleak hill
country, and he had not gone far upon the
lonely road when he heard a voice singing a
plaintive refrain. Eagerly he hurried onwards,
wondering who the wayfarer might be, but
soon the singing ceased, and a sound of weeping
<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>took its place. Then the apprentice caught
sight of a maiden seated upon the grassy bank
by the roadside. She was beautifully dressed
in silks and jewels, but briers clung to her rich
trailing robes, and the blustering wind had
disordered her golden tresses.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Madam,” said the apprentice, “if my poor
services may assist you, they are at your
command.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I thank you with all my heart,” said she,
“let us travel on together and seek a night’s
lodging. But for you I should have been left
friendless upon this waste hillside.” So together
they took the road again, and journeyed
on into the mountains.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I am a king’s daughter,” said the maiden,
“and my father and mother have accused me
of witchcraft, and have driven me from my
home.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I too have been driven away on an unjust
charge,” said the apprentice, “and now I
know not how I may earn my bread, for my
master the cobbler would not finish teaching
me my trade.” After that they both fell silent,
for they were weary and sad at heart.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now when they had gone some considerable
distance, they overtook a shepherd who was
<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>driving home his flock, and of him they begged
a night’s shelter.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Come with me to my goodwife,” the kindly
shepherd made reply, “and we will do all in
our power to serve you both.” So saying he
guided them to the sheltered hollow where his
cottage stood. His wife came to greet him at
the doorway, and when she saw the strangers
she welcomed them also. In the kitchen a
bright fire was burning, and supper was on the
table, broth, and bread, and a bowl of porridge.
Far back in a shadowy corner of the room sat
an old, old woman, toothless and hairless, bent
and shrunken with her years.</p>
<p class='c007'>“That,” said the shepherd, “is my grandmother,
and she is reputed one of the wisest
women in the countryside, but she is aged
and weak, and speaks but seldom.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Now as soon as supper was ended, the company
drew around the fire, and the shepherd
begged his guests to relate the story of their
wanderings.</p>
<p class='c007'>“My father is a mighty king,” the princess
made answer, “and dwells in a city many
leagues distant. Not long ago a strange series
of misfortunes befell us. One night as I stood
by my window and looked out upon the palace
<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>garden, I saw that a fairy was pillaging the
blossom of the king’s favourite almond-tree,
and I called in haste to my waiting-woman,
and pointed the strange sight out to her, but
she protested that she could see nothing, and
the next morning she went and told my parents
what had taken place. The night following I
stood again by my window, looking out upon
the terrace, and this time I saw a fairy luring
away the queen’s favourite peacock. Again I
called to my waiting-woman, for I was afraid,
but again she declared that she could see
nothing. The next morning the faithless
woman went once more to my parents, and told
them what had befallen, and this time she even
dared assure them that I must be a witch, for
had there indeed been a fairy in the castle<SPAN name='t65'></SPAN> she
would certainly have seen it as well as myself.
At first my parents were unwilling to credit
her charge, for, said the king my father, the
almond-tree had most assuredly been plundered,
though none knew by whom, and, said the
queen my mother, that the peacock was lost
there could be no doubt. Nevertheless, they
were both much disturbed, and bade the woman
watch me narrowly. Now as evening fell I
was sitting in my bower, when all at once I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>heard a sound behind me as of breaking flax,
and turning round I saw a fairy standing in the
middle of my room, breaking the flax that hung
upon my golden spinning-wheel. Then I became
frightened, and pointed her out to my
waiting-woman, but again she said she saw
nothing. The next day when my parents heard
what had happened, they summoned me to
their presence and questioned me, and I could
but affirm that each time I had seen a fairy,
though my waiting-woman had seen none.
Now the king my father lives in great dread
of witches and their charms, and forthwith
he charged me with witchcraft, because I saw
things that were not good to see, and which
were hidden from other folk, and when my
mother pleaded for me he would not listen,
but said that there was a spell upon the palace
and that I must go, or else no one could tell
what might come of it, and he sent me away.
But indeed, good people, I am no witch, yet
the fairies I did most assuredly see, three
several times.”</p>
<p class='c007'>After that the apprentice also told his story,
and how the cobbler had blamed him for the
boggart’s pranks, and had driven him out.
“Yet I am unjustly accused,” said he, “for
<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>I myself saw the boggart at his work, not once
nor twice.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“These are the strangest tales that ever I
heard!” cried the shepherd.</p>
<p class='c007'>“The old grandmother is learned in fairy
lore,” added his wife; “it may be that she can
solve the riddle.” When she heard that, the
princess rose, and went to the dark corner where
the old crone sat, and knelt down beside her.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Tell me, I pray you, good mother,” said
she, “how comes it that this stranger and I
both saw the fairies where others saw none?”
But the old crone only blinked at her with dull
eyes, and made no reply.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It is a king’s daughter who kneels to you,
granddame,” cried the shepherd, “will you
not give her an answer?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“A peaked cap and fernseed,” muttered the
old hag, “the boggart put on his peaked cap,
and the fairies carried fernseed.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“But whoever carries fernseed becomes
invisible,” said the princess, “and in spite
of that I saw them.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Over those who are born on an Ember Day
neither a cap of darkness nor the fairies’ fern
itself has any power,” said the crone; “both
of you must have been born in one of the four
<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>Ember Weeks.” And her voice died away into
indistinct mumblings.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It is a dower that none need envy,” quoth
the apprentice, and the princess sighed in
answer.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now on the following morning the shepherd
and his wife urged the princess to remain with
them, and she joyfully consented. “I will
not be a burden to you,” said she, “for I can
spin, and I will learn to do all manner of things
about the house, and will take care of the old
grandmother.”</p>
<p class='c007'>But the apprentice set out upon his travels
again, and this time he felt even sadder than
on the previous day, for it went to his heart to
part from the princess, whom already he loved
for her fair face and gentle ways. After
journeying for some distance he left the hills
behind him, and at noon he entered a deep
and shady wood. There, in a mossy glade,
seated upon a bank of primroses, he caught
sight of a little man dressed all in green, who
was busily mending shoes. But as the apprentice
drew nearer, the mannikin flung aside
his work, and snatching up a green cap with a
sprig of fern in the brim, he set it upon his head.</p>
<p class='c007'>“That much trouble you might have spared
<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>yourself,” laughed the apprentice, “for I was
born on an Ember Day, they tell me.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Is that so?” said the mannikin, and he
resumed his cobbling.</p>
<p class='c007'>“And who may you be?” asked the apprentice.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I am the fairies’ cobbler,” replied the little
green man.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Then I pray you teach me my trade,” said
the apprentice, “for I am a cobbler’s apprentice,
but I have not served my full time, since my
master has sent me away on a wrongful charge.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Where did your master live?” asked the
mannikin.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Over the hills yonder,” replied the apprentice
pointing, but when he turned round
again the fairies’ cobbler was nowhere to be
seen. On the instant he felt himself pelted by a
shower of acorns from above, and looking up he
saw a squirrel, perched among the oak boughs
overhead.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You are a fine fellow for letting your
opportunities slip,” said the squirrel; “do you
not know that when you meet the fairies’
cobbler you should never take your eyes off
him for a moment? So long as you keep on
looking at him, he is bound to give you whatever
<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>you may ask, though you should demand
of him all the crocks of gold in Fairyland, but
he will try to startle or deceive you, and then
your chance is lost.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I will remember your good advice another
time,” said the apprentice, and he went on into
the wood. At sunset he came to another glade,
and there he once more caught sight of the
fairies’ cobbler, seated upon a tree-stump.</p>
<p class='c007'>“This time you shall not escape me,” he
cried, and fixing his eyes upon the mannikin
he repeated his request, “I pray you, teach
me my trade.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“The cobbler’s craft is not an easy one,”
replied the little man surlily, “the fairies dance
so much and so often that it is all I can do to
keep them in shoes. Only look at this pair
now—it was new at moonrise.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“They are indeed much worn,” said the
apprentice, but even as he spoke he became
aware that the fairies’ cobbler had once more
disappeared. The next moment he heard a
soft chuckle behind him, and looking round he
noticed a large white owl perched upon a bush
hard by.</p>
<p class='c007'>“He had you that time,” said the owl;
“why ever did you look down at the shoes?
<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>The safest way to make sure of the fairies’
cobbler is to steal up from behind and catch
hold of him, and should he seem unwilling to
grant your request you have but to hold him
over running water, and he will give you all
you ask.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I will remember your good advice another
time,” said the apprentice, and he went further
into the wood. Now after a while he heard
the sound of a waterfall, and came upon yet
another glade that lay all silvered in the light
of the moon, and he was just debating within
himself whether this were not a good place in
which to spend the night, when for the third
time he caught sight of the fairies’ cobbler,
seated upon a toadstool. Softly he crept up
behind him, and took hold of the mannikin
firmly by the lappets of his green coat.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You shall not escape me again,” said he.</p>
<p class='c007'>“That is as may be,” quoth the fairies’
cobbler morosely; “pray what reason is there
that I should teach the tricks of my trade to a
mortal?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“We shall see about that,” said the apprentice,
“for if I am not mistaken there is
a waterfall close at hand.” And with the
mannikin under his arm he made his way
<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>among the trees till he came to where the
cascade ran white over the rocks. Then the
fairies’ cobbler began to utter small, shrill
cries of protest.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Come away! Come away!” he cried,
piteously, as the apprentice held him over the
foaming torrent, “only take me back into the
glade, and I will teach you all I know.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Now the apprentice knew that the fairies
are no promise-breakers, so he carried the
little green mannikin back into the glade, and
all that night the fairies’ cobbler taught him
the utmost that may be known about the art
of making and mending shoes. Therefore as
soon as the sun rose, the newly-made cobbler
said to the mannikin, “I am truly grateful
for what you have taught me, and if there be
any favour which a poor craftsman like myself
can do to one of the Good People, I pray you
tell it me.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“There is one favour then which I would
ask of you,” the fairies’ cobbler made reply;
“promise me that you will never break off
any blackthorn or bring it into your house,
for it is our tree, and we are offended when it is
tampered with.” This the cobbler promised
faithfully, and when he had once more thanked
<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>the little green man, he went upon his
way.</p>
<p class='c007'>After some days’ journey he came to a great
city, and here he remained and worked at his
craft. It was not long before he discovered
that it was in this city that the princess’s
parents ruled as king and queen, and he soon
learnt from the talk of the people about him,
that the fairies were still wreaking their
vengeance on the palace. Only the other day,
said the gossips, the king and the queen had
made ready to receive the ambassador of a
foreign prince, but when the court entered the
throne-room in state, all the wreaths and garlands
with which it had been festooned were torn
down, withered, and trampled upon. As soon
as he heard this, the cobbler hastened to the
palace, and begged for an audience from the
king, but the haughty servants to whom he
addressed himself refused admission to so
humble a suitor, and the cobbler had to return
to his cobbling, and bide his time till a better
opportunity should offer.</p>
<p class='c007'>All this while the princess had remained behind
in the shepherd’s cottage. The good man
and his wife treated her as a daughter, and even
the old crone seemed glad of her company,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>and loved to finger with her palsied hands the
princess’s beautiful embroidered cloak and
sparkling gems, and more especially she fancied
a certain jewelled cross that the king’s daughter
wore about her neck. “Keep it, good mother,
since it pleases you,” said the kind-hearted
princess one day, and she laid it in the old
woman’s lap, who after that would sit contented
by the hour, counting the stones and holding
them up to the light.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now among the mountains in the neighbourhood
of the cottage lay a deep and lonely tarn,
where waterfowl made their nests, and bulrushes
grew in profusion, and often the princess would
go and gather these rushes, which she plaited
into mats and baskets and sold in the hamlets
near by. One day when she was thus picking
rushes by the lakeside, she heard a plashing
close at hand, and looking up she saw a beautiful
black horse standing knee-deep in the water,
gazing at her intently. At first she was
frightened, but since the creature seemed
gentle and harmless she soon regained courage,
and when it waded out of the water and came
and stood beside her, she began to fondle it
and to stroke its glossy mane. After that the
beautiful black steed came to greet her every
<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>time that she went to the tarn, but when she
spoke of it to the shepherd, he said that he had
heard tell of no riderless horse in those parts.</p>
<p class='c007'>One evening when autumn was drawing on,
the shepherd and his wife were absent at a
fair in one of the neighbouring villages, but the
princess had remained at home with the old
grandmother and sat spinning in the firelight.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Daughter, what ails you?” asked the crone
from her corner by the hearth, for she had heard
the princess draw a deep, sad sigh.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I am troubled for my parents’ sake,”
replied the king’s daughter; “would that I
knew the cause of ill-will which the fairies have
against them, and how they might be appeased.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Samhain,” muttered the old woman,
“Samhain.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“What is the meaning of Samhain?” asked
the princess, but the crone had fallen silent
again, and nothing more was to be got out of
her. Then the princess went and stood in the
doorway, watching for the return of the
shepherd and his wife, for it was growing late,
and as she stood there the nightwind hurried
past her.</p>
<p class='c007'>“O wind,” said the princess, “you are the
greatest of all travellers, therefore if you know
<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>it, tell a forlorn king’s daughter what is meant
by Samhain.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Samhain is the feast of All Fairies,” said
the wind.</p>
<p class='c007'>“And when do they keep it?” asked the
princess.</p>
<p class='c007'>“On All Hallows’ E’en,” the wind made
answer.</p>
<p class='c007'>“And where do they keep it?” asked the
princess.</p>
<p class='c007'>“In the brown bog country,” said the wind,
“where you may see a myriad pools, and each
pool bathes one star.” And when he had said
that he sped away, for the wind is ever in
haste.</p>
<p class='c007'>Therefore as soon as the shepherd and his
wife returned, the princess told them that she
could remain with them no longer, but must
set out upon her quest, and though they were
loath to part with her, the good people let her
go. So the next morning she bade them
farewell, and as she went along the road that
led to the mountain tarn, the beautiful black
horse came trotting to meet her.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It may be that I shall have far to go,” said
the princess, “and that this gallant horse will
consent to carry me.” So she mounted upon
<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>its back and rode onwards, but when they
reached the tarn the black horse plunged
straightway into the ice-cold water, and began
to swim across, and as soon as it gained the
centre of the lake, it dived under. Then the
princess cried out and struggled, and the black
horse threw her, and in that moment she knew
that it was no real horse at all, but a kelpie,
a wicked water-sprite that assumes at times
the form of a horse.</p>
<p class='c007'>“All the summer through have I loved and
watched you, king’s daughter,” said the kelpie,
as he stood before her in his proper shape,
“and now you must live with me in my palace,
and be my wife.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Pearly white and very fair to see was the
palace of the water-kelpie, with its towers and
minarets, and a great white dome in the midst,
and within, the walls were hung with iridescent
tapestries. Here the princess was held a
prisoner, and day after day she would sit under
the magical milk-white dome, and weep till
she had no more tears to shed. But wed the
water-kelpie she would not. Her happiest
hours were when he left her to roam the hills
under the shape of the black horse, and then
she would pace to and fro in her beautiful
<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>prison-house and call to mind the peaceful
days in the shepherd’s cottage, and the young
apprentice whom in her secret heart she loved,
though because she was a king’s daughter she
was too proud to own it to anybody but herself.</p>
<p class='c007'>Meanwhile the cobbler had won for himself
a great reputation by his skill in shoe-making,
for those who wore his shoes could walk for
leagues or dance for whole nights together
without growing tired, so that before long his
fame reached the ears of the king, who summoned
him to the palace. Now, as soon as the cobbler
found himself in the presence of the king and
queen, he made haste to tell them of his meeting
with the princess, and of what the old crone
had told them.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It may be as you say,” said the king, “and
glad indeed should I be to think that my child
is no witch, but only dowered above other
mortals, for so great is my fear of witchcraft
that I would sooner have my palace pillaged
from end to end than suffer any about me who
have eyes for uncanny sights.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I fear we have done our daughter a great
wrong,” said the queen sorrowfully, “and none
of us knows the cause of the fairies’ displeasure,
nor the remedy for it. We have called in the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>Prime Minister, and the Lord High Chamberlain,
and the Keeper of the Great Seal, and the Lords
and Ladies of the Bedchamber, but they are
all utterly at a loss.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then an idea came to the cobbler. “Madam,”
said he, “was there by chance any blackthorn
brought into the palace last spring?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I do not know,” replied the queen, “but
it shall be inquired into.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So the entire court and household were
assembled, and a strict inquiry was made.
Then it was that the lowest scullery-maid in
the royal kitchen confessed that she had broken
off a spray from a blackthorn hedge in the
foregoing spring, and had placed it in her attic
room. So the king, at the cobbler’s advice,
published a proclamation, forbidding the
breaking of blackthorn throughout the realm,
but to the cobbler himself he said; “Do you
go and fetch my daughter back, for we will
receive her with due honour, and if she be
willing you shall have her hand in marriage.
As for the waiting-woman who accused her to
me, she shall be dismissed the kingdom.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then the cobbler set out and made his way
back to the shepherd’s cottage, but when he
reached it the good man and his wife told him
<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>of how the princess had left them, and that
they had had no tidings of her since. “But
if you are in search of her,” said the shepherd’s
wife, “take with you this jewelled cross and
restore it to her, for she gave it to the old granddame
who is now dead, and it is not ours that
we should keep it.” So the cobbler took the
cross, and continued his journey.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now as he passed by the lonely tarn he heard
a voice singing, and recognised that same
plaintive refrain which the princess had sung
when first he met her on the hillside.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Alas! Alas!” he cried aloud, “my dear
lady is drowned in this desolate pool.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Would that I were, good friend,” the
princess’s voice made answer, “it had been
better than this my sad captivity, for I am in
the power of a wicked water-kelpie who woos
me for his wife.”</p>
<p class='c007'>When he heard these words, the cobbler fell
to thinking how he might deliver his princess
from her sorrowful fate, and soon he bethought
him of the jewelled cross. This he took and
flung it far into the tarn, and as the saving
sign touched the surface the evil, wine-dark
water began to seethe and boil in its depths,
and the stately pearl-white palace of the kelpie
<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>broke up and dissolved upon the instant. So
the princess was released and came forth from
the tarn. Then the cobbler hastened to tell
her of the discovery of the blackthorn, and of
how he had come to bring her home to her
parents.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Tell me first,” said she, “what day it is,
for I have lost all count of time.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“It is All Hallows’ E’en,” replied the cobbler.</p>
<p class='c007'>At that the princess began to lament bitterly,
for she feared lest she might be too late to reach
the bog country where the fairies would keep
their feast.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Do not be sorrowful, princess,” replied the
cobbler, “I promise you we shall both see
Samhain kept to-night, and to-morrow I will
restore you to your home.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“How is that to be?” asked she.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I will make shoes of swiftness,” said the
cobbler, “which will carry us more fleetly
than the swallows.” And immediately he set
to work and made her a pair of fairy shoes,
and next he began making a pair for himself.
But while he was still working at the second
shoe, there came a sound of hoof-beats far
away.</p>
<p class='c007'>“O hasten, hasten!” cried the princess,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>wringing her hands, “for the kelpie is returning.”
Nearer and nearer drew the sound of the
thundering hoofs upon the road, faster and
faster stitched the cobbler.</p>
<p class='c007'>“O make haste, make haste!” cried the
princess; “see, he is in sight!” Fleetly down
the steep hillside the black horse came galloping,
with streaming mane and glaring eyes.</p>
<p class='c007'>“We are lost!” cried the princess, and indeed
the horse was already upon them, and had
caught the fringe of her cloak in its mouth.
But in that same instant the cobbler slipped
on his second shoe, and he and the princess
sped away together like birds upon the wing.
But the embroidered cloak they left behind
between the horse’s teeth.</p>
<p class='c007'>Over land and ocean they went, yet felt no
weariness, and at nightfall they reached the
brown bog country, studded with innumerable
pools, and every pool bathed a star. The
moon was rising, and from all the four winds
the fairies came trooping, elves and gnomes
and pixies, brownies and hobgoblins, with the
fairy queen and her retinue in their midst, and
at a little distance the cobbler and the princess
stood and watched them assemble. At last
one dainty elf came towards them, in dress of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>pearly gossamer, and in her yellow hair a
wreath of starry white flowers, such as you may
see for yourself on the window-pane any frosty
day.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I owe you thanks for many a past kindness,”
said she to the cobbler.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Yet I have never seen you till this moment,
elf lady,” he replied.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Are you so sure of that?” laughed she;
“look well, look well at my eyes.” Then the
cobbler looked long and earnestly, and indeed
they were wondrous eyes, green and glimmering,
nor were they like the eyes of any mortal.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Every hundred years,” said the elf, “we
fairies must take the shape of some beast or
bird or fish for the space of a year and a day,
and if we die during that time we perish, for
we have no souls. Now I was the cobbler’s
yellow cat when my turn came, and you befriended
me in my exile. But follow me, and
I will take you to the fairy queen, that you
may tell her on what errand you are come
to-night.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then she led them through a throng of
fairies, amongst whom the cobbler recognised
his enemy the boggart, and the princess the
three fairies who had filched the almond
<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>blossom, and lured away the peacock, and
broken the flax. Presently they reached the
steps of the elfin throne, and here both knelt
to the fairy queen.</p>
<p class='c007'>“For what purpose have you sought us
out?” asked she.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I come to appease your displeasure, greatest
of all queens,” replied the princess, “for in the
spring time a spray of blackthorn was heedlessly
broken and brought into our palace, and since
that day the fairies have borne us a grudge.
How may we turn away their anger?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Say to the king your father, and to the queen
your mother,” the fairy queen made answer,
“that if at the next full moon they will deliver
up their throne-room to us for an elfin bridal,
we shall bear them ill-will no longer, for my
people love nothing better than to feast and
make merry in a human dwelling.” Then the
queen made them sit down upon the steps of
the throne, and commanded that the revels
should begin.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You have done me credit, Master Apprentice,”
piped a voice at the cobbler’s elbow,
as a train of fairies swept past, and looking
round he caught sight of the little green man,
who nodded and smiled at him. But when
<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>the cobbler and the princess had watched the
dancing till the moon rode high in the heavens,
the fairy queen laid a hand upon both their
heads, and soon a great drowsiness overcame
them. Soundly they slept, and when they
woke it was to find themselves stretched upon
a patch of heather, while all around them the
brown bog country lay very still in the light
of the paling stars. Then they rose and made
haste homewards, and when they reached the
palace there were great rejoicings to welcome
them back; the king and queen received their
daughter with much affection, and besought
her pardon for the wrong they had done her,
and when the cobbler made bold to ask her hand
in marriage, she willingly consented.</p>
<p class='c007'>So the wedding was celebrated with great
pomp and splendour; the city saw nothing
but festivities and illuminations for seven days
and seven nights, and from far and near the
crowds poured in to share in the merry-making.
Amongst these came the shepherd and his wife,
and the cobbler’s former master, and upon all
three the bride and bridegroom showered gifts
and benefits.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now the night after the wedding it was full
moon, so the throne-room was garlanded with
<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>fresh flowers, and left to the fairies till cock-crow.
None saw them come nor go, but in the morning
there was found a little golden casket, wrought
by the dwarf goldsmiths of the elfin court,
and inside the casket was a clump of four-leaved
clover. This was the fairy queen’s
wedding present, and the bridal couple planted
it below their window, and it grew and throve,
and brought them untold happiness and good
fortune.</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène had some difficulty in making out
the last word of the story, for Master Mustardseed
had half turned it into a trill, and began
singing at the top of his voice. The schoolroom
door opened; the doctor had come home.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>
<h2 id='VIII' class='c004'>CHAPTER VIII<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH THE HEROINE MAKES THE FIRST USE OF HER LATCHKEY</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>It was about this time that Philomène first
began to remark a change in her father. He was
not at any time a man of many words, but he
now became unusually silent even for him.
He was not unkind to his little girl, but he saw
less of her, and gave her only half his attention
when she spoke to him. She suffered acutely
from his altered manner, but was far too loyal
to confide her trouble to either of her fairy
friends, let alone to Nurse or Miss Mills. Once
when writing to her godmother, who was abroad
at the time, she put at the end of the letter;
“<i>P.S.</i>—I wish I had a mother.” But she had
no very clear idea as to how a mother would
have mended matters, and Isolde in her answer
did not refer to the postscript.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was in these days, when her father called
her “little Miss Muffet” less often than formerly,
that Philomène grew doubly glad of the key
<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>in the savings-box and of the bird-cage in the
schoolroom. Master Mustardseed was somewhat
of a gossip, and told her many stories
about the children to whom the fairy queen
stands sponsor, for Titania is very fond of
children, though she has none of her own.
Then he would tell her all that he had seen in
the course of his flight through the air astride
of a shooting-star; he would sing to her, till
she knew it by heart, the serenade piped by a
bulrush who was fast fading for love of an ivory
white moth that used to settle on a reed close
by, but never came to him. Master Mustardseed
had been asleep at the time, curled up inside
a yellow waterlily on a pond, having asked a
friendly frog to sway the stalk of the lily gently
to and fro, so as to produce a drowsy rocking
motion. The bulrush’s love-song, however, had
waked him up, and having a good musical
memory he had learnt it then and there.</p>
<p class='c007'>The recent wet weather had altogether prevented
Philomène from going into the garden,
so that May with its lilac was gone, and June
with its roses had come, before she had her
first opportunity of letting herself into Sweet
William’s house by means of her own latchkey.
On entering she saw that the room was empty
<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>but for the tom-tit, who was trying, it must
be confessed without much success, to reduce
it to order. The catkin tapestry had to be
taken down, shaken, beaten, and rehung;
the tree-stump cupboard had been emptied,
and its contents littered the mushroom table,
while the tom-tit complained that the things
had been so closely packed inside it, that it
was far easier to take them out than to
make them fit in again after they had been
dusted.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I wish he would have a sparrow in by the
day,” wailed the tom-tit; “it’s more than I can
manage single-handed.” So Philomène comforted
and helped him as best she could, and
by the time Sweet William returned, the room
was as neat as a new pin, and a great deal
bonnier. It was after the tom-tit had got
leave to fly away, that Philomène asked if
there had been any news of the grasshopper
lately.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Nothing much,” replied Sweet William;
“he is still trying to reach the sun in high hops,
and his friend the dial has given him up as a bad
job. Well, and has Master Mustardseed been
making himself agreeable? Are you any less
bored than you used to be? Is the schoolroom
<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>quite as commonplace as you were pleased
at one time to imagine?”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène blushed. “I am afraid you must
have thought me discontented,” she said,
humbly; “but indeed I am not at all bored
any longer. How should I be, with Master
Mustardseed to tell me stories whenever we
are alone together? And, oh, you can’t think
what lovely stories they are! He began with
one about a poor apprentice who was taught
his trade by the fairies’ own cobbler, and in
the end he married a princess.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Dear me! how enthusiastic we are, to be
sure,” remarked Sweet William, with his head
in the air; “you talk as though there were
nobody who could tell stories but Master
Mustardseed, which is very far from being the
case.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Oh, I know you could tell beautiful stories
too, if you tried,” said Philomène hastily,
“and indeed I wish you would, for there is
nothing I should like better.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Very well,” said Sweet William, “but I’m
afraid my story hasn’t a princess in it, only a
goose-girl who married a troll.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Is it a true story?” asked Philomène.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I daresay it’s true enough as far as it goes,”
<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>replied Sweet William, and Philomène wondered
how far it went.</p>
<p class='c007'>“And where did the troll live?” she asked
again.</p>
<p class='c007'>“He lived at home,” retorted Sweet William;
“and really you must not ask so many questions;
it quite puts me off.”</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>
<h2 id='IX' class='c004'>CHAPTER IX<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH SWEET WILLIAM TELLS A STORY</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>There was once a goose-girl named Kora,
who used to herd her master’s geese in a certain
field. Now at one end of this field there was
a grassy mound, inside which lived a very rich
and wicked troll, who came every day to his
doorway to watch the goose-girl as she sat
in the shadow of a hollow tree, knitting and
singing, and minding her geese. “She is so
cheerful and industrious,” said he to himself,
“that doubtless she would make a very good
wife.”</p>
<p class='c007'>But one day when he stood at his threshold
to look at her, he saw that she had let her knitting
fall into her lap, and that instead of singing,
she was weeping bitterly. Very cautiously
he crept up behind her, and touched her gently
on the arm. Kora started and screamed when
she caught sight of the troll, for he was ugly
and misshapen, and had an uncommonly large
head.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>“Why are you crying, my girl?” he asked.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Because one of my geese has strayed,”
said she, “and I have sought for it till I am
tired out, and I know that my master will be
very angry with me.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“That is soon mended,” replied the troll,
“for in my house I have a magic crystal, which
tells me where I may find all lost and missing
things. Come with me, pretty maid, and I will
see what I can do for you.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So Kora followed him joyfully into the little
house within the knoll, and looked with great
curiosity at the wonderful crystal. She noticed
that it bore the following inscription:—</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c008'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>“In all the world there is but one spot,</div>
<div class='line'>Unknown to men, by fays forgot,</div>
<div class='line'>Wherein my power availeth not.”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c009'>But she did not pay much attention to the
words at the time.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I can see your goose already,” cried the
troll, as he peered into the crystal; “it has
strayed as far as the sand dunes.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Then I must go and seek it immediately,”
replied Kora, “and I thank you most heartily
for your courtesy.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Not so fast, not so fast,” the troll made
<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>answer, catching her by the arm; “you are
pretty and neat-fingered, my girl, and have a
sweet voice. You shall stay and keep house
for me, and be my wife.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Kora protested with tears and cries and
wringing of hands, but it was all to no purpose;
so she pretended to resign herself to her lot,
though in reality she never ceased planning
how she might escape from it. Presently an
idea came to her, and one day, instead of
busying herself about the house as usual, she
remained seated by the hearth, her head in
her hands, the picture of dejection.</p>
<p class='c007'>“What is the matter now?” demanded the
troll.</p>
<p class='c007'>“The matter!” cried Kora, with a great
show of indignation; “when you have never
so much as given me a wedding-ring! When
men take wives in the upper world, they give
them golden wedding-rings in token of their
troth.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Is that all?” said the troll. “Dry your
eyes then, my love, for you shall soon have
rings in plenty.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So saying he went into his own private
closet, a dark little room at the back of the
house, and presently returned laden with sacks
<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>and caskets, all full of gold and silver, jewels and
trinkets. Kora began trying on one ring after
another, but none of them seemed to please her,
and at last she turned away with a gesture of
impatience.</p>
<p class='c007'>“These are not the right sort,” said she
scornfully, “for they are all set with precious
stones, while a real wedding-ring is only a plain
gold circlet. I will not do another stroke of
work about the house till you have brought me
a proper wedding-ring.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I will go to the goldsmith and get you one,
my love,” said her husband, and he set out
that same day.</p>
<p class='c007'>No sooner, however, had Kora watched him
out of sight, than she ran into the wood that
skirted the meadow, and kept on running till
she was so tired and out of breath that she had
to sit down and rest. Then she noticed that
something underground was shovelling up the
earth at her feet, throwing it about in all
directions. She expected to see a mole emerge,
but when the creature did at last appear it
proved to be a little brown gnome, with a sack
flung across his shoulder.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Tell me, good gnome,” cried Kora, “how
I may escape from my husband the troll. He
<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>has a magic crystal by means of which he is
able to find all lost and missing things, so that
I cannot think of a safe enough hiding-place.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“You must take another shape,” replied
the gnome, and he turned her into a crystal
that twinkled on the edge of a jagged rock.</p>
<p class='c007'>When the troll came home and missed his
wife, he was very angry, and went straight to
his magic crystal; and there, sure enough,
he not only saw the sparkle in the rock, but
also recognised his wife under her assumed
shape. Immediately he hurried into the wood,
carrying a hammer, and having broken away
the splinter of rock, he took it home in triumph,
and no sooner had he crossed his own threshold
than his wife stood before him. After that
the troll treated her very hardly, and Kora hated
him more than ever.</p>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/illus103.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic003'>
<p>“PRESENTLY AN ELF CAME PAST HER, RIDING ON A LIZARD.”<br/><span class='right'><i>Page <SPAN href='#Page_96'>96</SPAN></i></span><br/><span class='left'><i>The Fairy Latchkey.</i></span></p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>Now one day the troll was going fishing, and
this time he said to his wife: “You shall play
me no second trick, madam; I will lock you
in till I come back.” So saying he turned the
key upon her, and went his way. But Kora
did not despair. She hurried into her husband’s
private closet, and took the keys of all the
various caskets in which he kept his treasure.
Then with trembling hands she tried them one
by one in the lock of the door, and as good
luck would have it, the last key fitted. The next
thing she did was to try to destroy the magic
crystal. She dashed it on to the floor and
against the wall, but finding that she could not
break it, she went and hid it inside the hollow
tree in the field, beneath which in former days
she had been wont to sit and watch her geese.
Then she fled into the forest, and ran as fast
and as far as she could. Presently an elf came
past her, riding on a lizard.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Tell me, kind elf,” said she, “how I may
escape from the cruel troll, my husband, for
I have hidden his magic crystal which tells
him where to find all lost and missing
things.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I will do the best I can for you,” replied the
elf, and turning Kora into a dockleaf by the
brook, he rode on.</p>
<p class='c007'>When the troll returned home from his fishing,
and found that his wife had escaped a second
time, he was much enraged, and made his way
at once to the place where he kept his crystal.
But when he saw that this had also disappeared,
he was in a greater rage than ever, and began
to hunt for it all over the house. At last he
thought of the hollow tree, and there, inside
<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>the trunk, and smothered in dry leaves and
moss, he found his missing talisman. No
sooner had he looked into it, than he saw the
dockleaf growing by the brook, and once more
recognised his wife. Immediately he went into
the wood, and having picked the dockleaf, he
took it home in triumph, and when he had
crossed his own threshold his wife stood
before him. After that he treated her yet
more hardly, and Kora hated him even more
than before.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now it is customary that trolls should be
the money-lenders of mighty kings, and Kora’s
husband had many a time lent gold and silver
and treasure of all sorts to a certain avaricious
king, who loved wealth above everything, and
oppressed his people with unendurable imposts.
It so happened that just at this time the troll
received an urgent message from this king,
entreating him for a large sum of money. So
he called his wife to him, and said to her,
“I must now go on a journey which will last
several days, and I will take my crystal with me,
so that should you try to escape from me again,
I shall be able to discover your hiding-place
in a trice. Bear this in mind, wife, and let me
have no more of these follies.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>For some time after she was left alone, Kora
made no further attempt at escape. She did
nothing but sit and brood over her troubles,
and say to herself that there was no way out
of them, till she suddenly called to mind the
words of the inscription on the crystal, and
understood that there must be just one
country under the sun where she would be safe
from her husband’s pursuit.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I will try to find it,” said she, “it is the
one chance left me.” And in this forlorn hope
she went for the third time into the wood.
Far, far she went, through forest and field and
heath, till at last she was obliged to sit down
by the roadside and rest. It had begun to
rain, and dusk was falling. Kora was worn out
with her wanderings, and shed many tears.
All at once she felt a hand upon her shoulder.
At first she started and cried out, believing
that it was the troll, but then she saw that it
was only an old crone with bent back and
grizzled hair, leaning upon a stick.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Daughter,” said the old woman, “what is
your trouble?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I am escaping from my husband, the troll,”
said Kora, “and I am afraid lest he should
find me by looking into his magic crystal. I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>am in search of an unknown land where the
crystal has no power.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“You seem tired out,” said the old crone
kindly, “come with me, for I can at least offer
you shelter.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Kora thanked her earnestly, and they walked
on together. Heather and bracken stretched
to either side of them for mile upon mile, the
last curlew had gone to rest, and it was very
still and eerie on the lonely moor. Kora looked
to right and to left, hoping to catch sight of a
shepherd’s cottage, or at least of some hovel
which might prove to be the old woman’s home,
but she could see nothing save certain giant
boulders scattered here and there upon the
heath. What then was her surprise when the
old crone hobbled up to the largest of these,
and struck it with her stick. Immediately
the door was opened by a tabby cat.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You are late, mistress,” said he.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I have brought a guest,” replied the old
woman, “so you must all bestir yourselves.”
Then she led Kora into a snug little room, where
a bright fire of peat blazed invitingly on the
hearth.</p>
<p class='c007'>“First you must eat and sleep,” said she,
“and to-morrow you shall tell me of your
<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>trouble. I am a Wise Woman, and may be
able to help you.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Kora sank down by the fireside, too weary
to make any protest. She stretched out her
cold hands to the ruddy glow, and began to
dry her wet dress and hood. Meanwhile the
Wise Woman’s servants were busy preparing
the evening meal, which was soon ready. A
black cat served the soup and a white cat the
fish, a grey cat the joint and a tortoiseshell
cat the sweets. Then a sandy cat lit a taper
and lighted her to her room, where she soon fell
sound asleep.</p>
<p class='c007'>When the morning came, Kora at once
sought out the Wise Woman, told her her whole
story, and begged for advice.</p>
<p class='c007'>“The unknown country to which no man
has found the way,” replied the Wise Woman,
“is the country whither the cuckoos go in
winter, nor do I myself know the way, but if
you will consent to be turned into a cuckoo,
you will at once be able to find it.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Rather than fall again into her husband’s
hands, Kora willingly agreed, and the Wise
Woman thereupon, with a wave of her stick,
changed her into a cuckoo, which spread its
wings and flew away, far across the pathless sea.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>The troll meanwhile felt so sure that his wife
would not again try to escape, that several
days passed before he thought it necessary
to look into the magic crystal. Great was his
dismay, therefore, when he did at last look
into it, to see nothing but a blank. Never
before had it failed him. He hurried home
with all speed, and finding his house deserted,
he at once resolved to set out in pursuit of
Kora. But since his heart was in his treasure,
he would not start before he had gathered
together as much as he could possibly carry
with him, and had loaded it upon his back.
He travelled a long way, through forest and field
and heath, till at last he came to the shores of a
great ocean. Here he took a boat, and began
paddling himself out to sea, but the sack of
gold proved so heavy that the boat sank, and
the troll was drowned.</p>
<p class='c007'>But Kora reached the unknown land in
safety, and married the king of the cuckoos,
with whom she lived in great happiness and
contentment, and they reigned together over
the most beautiful country in all the world.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>
<h2 id='X' class='c004'>CHAPTER X<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH THE HEROINE HAS A BIRTHDAY</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>As the weather brightened and warmed into
midsummer, most of Philomène’s free time
was spent in the garden, and consequently
with Sweet William.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was on a morning towards the end of June
that she awoke with the delightful sensation
that her birthday had come at last. Had she
not waited a whole year for it? By her plate
at breakfast time lay a big box of wild flowers,
sent by the gardener’s wife at the Cushats.
Godmother had taught her the names of all
sorts of flowers during her last summer holidays,
so that she recognised almost all in the box,
but a certain little white, blue and red pyramid
was quite a stranger to her; she therefore
christened it “N. or M.,” like the person in the
Catechism, and N. or M. it remained to her ever
afterwards, though later she knew it to be a
kind of wild orchid. The doctor gave her a
sketch-book and a whole box full of beautiful
<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>new pencils, and Miss Mills a book called
“Legends from River and Mountain.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I haven’t a notion what it’s about,” she
said, apologetically, “but I thought from the
title that you might take to it, and it was
written by a queen.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“A real queen!” cried Philomène, “as real
as Marie Antoinette, or Mary, Queen of Scots?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Quite as real,” replied Miss Mills, laughing,
“and now you must look at the beautiful
pincushion that Nurse has made for you.
Won’t it look nice on your dressing-table?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Yes, and I will put the date of my birthday
on it in pins,” said Philomène, but Nurse
shook her head.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I wouldn’t put pins into it, Miss, if I were
you,” she said, reproachfully, “that would
spoil it;” and Philomène with her arms about
the old woman promised, “I won’t, Nursie
dear, indeed I never will.”</p>
<p class='c007'>The morning of the birthday was blissfully
spent in the making of toffee, a rather hot
occupation for June, no doubt, but Philomène’s
wishes were law throughout that day. It did
not turn out to be nice toffee when made, but
it was not wasted, for Lilian Augusta used it
to light the kitchen fire, and said it was as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>good as any patent fire-lighter. At dinner
Philomène was allowed to carve the chicken
herself, though her carving proved as unsuccessful
as her cookery. “But as it’s my birthday
I can have the liver!” she announced, triumphantly,
“and I do know where to find that—it
is somewhere under its arms.”</p>
<p class='c007'>All that afternoon Philomène sat sketching
busily or reading in her new story-book, nor
did she forget before putting it away to make
a note both of its title, and of the names of
its author and publisher, in a little red leather
pocket-book kept for that purpose. This
custom had been introduced by Godmother.</p>
<p class='c007'>“If you are at all like me,” Isolde had said,
“you will be very sorry as you grow older to
find that some of the dearest books of your
childhood have been thrown away, or given
away, with or without your knowledge. Your
wise elders will say, ‘She is getting too old
now ever to want to read this or that again,’
and they will forget that just now you may be
neither young enough or old enough for the
book, but that in a few more years you will
begin to grow younger again and want to read
it, and then it will be too late to recover it.
You will remember the exact colour of the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>binding, and how your favourite story in it
began half way down on the right hand page,
but you will not remember who wrote it or
who printed it. Perhaps you will not even
remember the name of the book, and if you
want it back again, you cannot very well write
to a shop and say, ‘Dear Sirs, please send me
a thin green book with a picture of a lizard
as the frontispiece, and the last story but one
is the nicest of all. Yours faithfully—’ So
here is a little pocket-book, and I want you to
make a note of the titles of all the books you
are fond of, with the names of their authors
and publishers, and even if you find it a bother
now and then to remember to write them down,
I think you will be glad of it later on.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Just as Philomène was going to bed, a letter
from Godmother arrived.</p>
<p class='c007'>“My own little cushat,” wrote Isolde, “I
am afraid you will have to wait a little while
before you can have your birthday present,
for it is a trap and a white donkey, and though
you had better leave them at the Cushats as
parlour boarders when you are in London, they
are to be your very own all the same. I want
you to come and stay with me, my little bird,
for July and August and part of September.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>You and I will get on very well together in the
summer, I hope, and take out the new white
Neddie for lots of drives. We shall have a
great deal to tell each other when we meet,
but I have no time for more now. Goodbye,
my bairnie. Love and all good wishes from
Godmother.”</p>
<p class='c007'>It was when Philomène looked out of her
bedroom window on the morning of the day
following her birthday, that she noticed a
large fairy ring on the lawn, and felt very much
flattered, for by it she knew that the fairies
had not forgotten the occasion, but had given
a ball in her honour.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>
<h2 id='XI' class='c004'>CHAPTER XI<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH THE HEROINE IS GIVEN A LETTER OF INTRODUCTION</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>During the remaining days of that gladsome
rose-red June, Philomène went about the house
with a face as glad as any sunbeam and as rosy
as any flower. Nurse thought that the prospect
of riding in a hay-cart and digging in the sand
with a new spade sufficiently accounted for
these radiant looks, but though the haystacks
loomed large, they loomed only in the background—it
was Godmother’s figure which
occupied the foreground.</p>
<p class='c007'>The plan cast only one shadow. Philomène
felt very sorry at having to leave Master
Mustardseed and Sweet William, and when
the day for packing arrived, she had tears in
her eyes as she opened the cage-door, and put
in her hand so that the canary might perch
upon her wrist. Unhappily Nurse was present,
so Philomène could only kiss the canary’s
green head tenderly, and whisper, “It isn’t for
<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>so very long, dear,” before she again closed the
cage-door. As for Queen Mab, she put a soft
padded paw into her mistress’s hand, and
rubbed a soft whiskered face against her
mistress’s arm, as who should say, “Goodbye,
and don’t get too fond of any other pussycats.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then Philomène went into the garden and
let herself into Sweet William’s house. He had
been expecting her visit, and held out a lean
little brown hand with what was for him an
air of unusual condescension.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Sit down,” he said, “you are a good child,
and I shall miss you. But we shall meet again
in September, I understand. By the way, I
have decided to give you a letter of introduction
to the fairy agent at the Cushats. The garden
must have one, though I do not happen to
know him. I don’t expect you will see very
much of him, for you will not be as lonely there
as here, and so much left to yourself. Considering
that she isn’t a proper fairy godmother,
yours seems to do very well by you. Still,
it would be nicer for you to have the chance of
getting to know another fairy if you could.”</p>
<p class='c007'>All this while Sweet William had been
rummaging in his cupboard. He now drew
from it a white Japanese anemone, with its
<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>petals tightly shut up. This he handed to
Philomène. “Is it the envelope?” she asked,
wonderingly.</p>
<p class='c007'>“No, child,” he replied, “it is the letter.
I have written all that is necessary on the
inside of the petals, and the anemone will open
only when you have found the person for whom
it is intended.” Philomène thanked him, and
they took a friendly farewell of each other.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was Lilian Augusta with whom she travelled
to the little country station where Godmother
was to meet her. She sat bolt-upright in her
corner of the carriage, looking at the daisied
fields as they sped by; she watched the miniature
carts and horses as they toiled along the
road below the level of the train, and her spirits
were so high that nothing could chill or damp
them, not even the drink concocted by Nurse
for the journey, a horrible mixture of tea and
milk with far too much sugar in it.</p>
<p class='c007'>The little station of Wyndham-on-Ferry, at
which the travellers presently arrived, was
altogether too sleepy for this bustling age.
The fiery red geraniums in the station-master’s
garden nodded drowsily in the hot sun, the
solitary porter seemed almost as drowsy as
the geraniums, and the only wide-awake
<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>creature about the place was a cock that crowed
from a neighbouring farmyard. Outside the
station Godmother was waiting with the new
trap and the white donkey, and Philomène
had soon scrambled up on to the seat beside
her.</p>
<p class='c007'>“O Godmother,” she cried, “he really is a
dear, with just the same big brown eyes as
the donkey in the picture over the schoolroom
mantelpiece, and the same long ears laid back.”</p>
<p class='c007'>They had not driven far before the breath
of the pinewoods met them, and that sound
which is older than all the world beside, the
primeval cadence of the league-long surf.</p>
<p class='c007'>The gate of the Cushats stood open, white and
friendly. The pigeons were cooing heart to
heart in the woods, and the mingled sweets
of heliotrope, rose, and jasmine, streamed out
in wordless welcome. The lime-tree outside
the bow-window of the drawing-room was casting
a tremulous shadow on the lush-green turf of
the lawn, and the pale gold of early evening
was on the little old gabled house.</p>
<p class='c007'>The furnishing of Philomène’s room was as
innocently white and as hopefully green as
any snowdrop; there was no carpet on the
floor, only some green and white matting in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>places. A copy of one of Watts’ pictures, that
of a knight standing lost in thought beside
his white horse, was hanging where Philomène
could see it as she lay in bed.</p>
<p class='c007'>“The knight’s horse is very beautiful, Godmother,”
she murmured just before dropping
off to sleep, “but I think I like a white donkey
even better.” Her hand was in Isolde’s, and
the shoheen of the night wind in the pinewoods
sounded in her ears as the sound of the sea.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>
<h2 id='XII' class='c004'>CHAPTER XII<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH THE HEROINE PRESENTS HER LETTER OF INTRODUCTION</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Philomène’s first day at the Cushats happened
to be a Sunday, and after breakfast on the
lawn Isolde took her goddaughter to the weekly
children’s service. These services were short
and simple, and the vicar of Wyndham-on-Ferry
was acknowledged by everybody to be
at his best when addressing children. He was
a tall, spare man, with a somewhat stern expression
of face, “and what his servant is about
is more than I can tell,” Nurse had once remarked,
“for he has the look of a person who
lives on nothing but mince and hot water.”</p>
<p class='c007'>In the side-chapel of the village church hung
a copy of an Italian picture, S. Mary Magdalene,
black-haired and crimson-robed, and to Philomène
the pale sad face, framed in its shadowy
tresses, seemed like the face of some sorrowful
mermaid. Neither her father nor her godmother
had ever insisted upon her attending
<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>drearily long services which could have held no
meaning for her, and the result was that she
was very fond of going to church. She loved
the sweet-voiced bells and the vibrating tones
of the organ, the rich colouring of the stained-glass
and the stately rhythm of the prayers.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It just makes me feel like a king’s daughter,”
she had once confided to Isolde, “and do you
know, Godmother, I really think I like it better
than the theatre, because there is no tiresome
clapping to interrupt in the middle, and disturb
one, and make one feel every-dayish again all
of a sudden.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“What would you like to do, little cushat?”
asked Isolde, as the two strolled home together
across the fields. “I have some letters that I
must write, and I am afraid they will take me
till lunch-time.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I will look at your Granny’s big picture
Bible first,” said Philomène, “and then write
to Daddy and play with the pussies, and after
that I will go and have a look at the dove-cot.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“There aren’t any doves, you know,” said
Isolde, “I don’t particularly want to keep any.
There are quite enough in the woods all round.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Oh, that doesn’t matter a bit,” said Philomène,
“one can always pretend.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>So Godmother settled herself to write on the
verandah, and Philomène brought out the
Bible. It was a very bulky book, for it contained
not only the Old and New Testaments,
but the Old and New Testament Apocryphas
as well. Judging from the dog’s-eared pages
thereabouts, it would appear that Godmother’s
Granny had looked oftenest at the picture of
Jacob blessing his twelve sons from a four-poster
bed, and at another of the Last Judgment,
the grouping of which suggested nothing so
much as a prize-giving. But Philomène preferred
Martha, cumbered with a pepper-pot
and a soup-tureen, because she reminded her
of Lilian Augusta, and Pharaoh’s daughter with
the rosettes on her shoes, and best of all she
liked S. Anne by the laurel-bush, complaining
to the sparrow in its nest that she had no child.
Again and again had Philomène peeped over
the edge of that nest to count the eggs, but the
mother bird spread wide its brooding wings,
and baffled her curiosity.</p>
<p class='c007'>As soon as Philomène had had a look at
her favourite pictures, she put away the
book and wrote two whole sheets to her father.
After that she began to play with Don
Whiskerandos, Isolde’s black Persian, who
<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>sat blinking in the sun at his mistress’s feet.
Occasionally he roused himself sufficiently to
wash his front paws, which were like velvet
tassels for softness, but for the rest he was
sleepy and undemonstrative. Philomène had
christened him Dives, because he fared sumptuously
every day and took no notice of his
neighbours, and she soon gave up trying to
play with him, and went in search of Lazarus,
the gingery stable cat. Lazarus was certainly
as plain and as under-bred as it is possible for
a cat to be, but as Philomène always loved
anything which other people did not consider
it worth their while to love, his very gingerliness
and the bullet shape of his head cried out to
her for affection.</p>
<p class='c007'>By the time Lazarus had had his full share
of attention, the bell rang for luncheon on the
verandah, and when lunch was over, Isolde
gave herself up to her godchild. She swung
her untiringly in the swing between the two
horse-chestnut trees, she tucked her up in the
hammock and read to her, they played battledore
and shuttlecock together on the lawn, and at
tea-time retreated to the shadow of a giant
haystack in a field close by, to eat home-made
scones and strawberries and cream.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>It was here that the vicar found them. He
was no stranger to Philomène, for he often
dropped in at the Cushats on a Sunday afternoon,
and she was not shy with him, but as
soon as he and her godmother began talking
politics, she thought it was about time for the
dove-cot. As she left the field and came back
into the garden, it occurred to her that it might
be as well to take with her Sweet William’s
letter of introduction. The tall silver savings-box
stood on the dressing-table in her room,
and inside were the latchkey and the anemone.
With the flower in her hand she hurried towards
the disused dove-cot, and upon reaching
it was very much surprised by a slight flutter
of wings from inside it. She put her hand into
one of the pigeon-holes, and something brushed
past it and flew out into the open. Could it
be a dove after all? she wondered. But then
she saw that the anemone was full blown, and
in another minute she became aware of a little
creature perched upon the dove-cot. It was
a fairy; who but a fairy could have had such
glistering wings, and worn a dress of tussore-coloured
silk from a caterpillar’s cocoon?
The elf rather reminded Philomène of Master
Mustardseed, for she had small, bright eyes
<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>like those of a bird, and her little head was
cocked on one side as she sat and looked at
the intruder.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I am very sorry to have disturbed you,”
began Philomène, “but I had no idea that this
was your house. I think I have a letter for
you,” and so saying she handed the Japanese
anemone to the fairy, who buried her face in
its petals. When she looked up from the letter,
she was smiling kindly.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Did you have any green ribbons——”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Yes,” interrupted Philomène eagerly, “I
did; on my christening robe.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Ah, that accounts for it,” said the elf,
still smiling, “and I shall be very glad to do
anything I can to amuse you while you are here.
I only wish I were not quite so busy, but the
grounds are large, very large for the size of the
house, and my time is not my own. However,
I will do what I can, during the hours when you
and your godmother are not together. I do not
know Sweet William at all, not even by name,
but he has written of you in the most flattering
terms. I was asleep just now when you put
your hand into my bedroom, and I am sure I
ought to feel very grateful to you for waking
me up out of my shockingly long noon-day nap,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>for I have any amount of work before me, so
that I am afraid I cannot be of much service
to you this afternoon.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“What is it that you are going to see to?”
asked Philomène with interest.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I am in great difficulties about housing a
mole,” replied the little agent in a troubled
voice, “I let part of the front lawn to him, but
the gardener interfered. He is a most tiresome
old man.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Godmother says he doesn’t know much
about gardening,” remarked Philomène, “and
I know that whenever I ask him the name of a
flower he just goes on muttering, ‘What’s this
we call it now? What’s this we call it?’
till either I remember it myself, or someone
else comes up and tells me. But Godmother
keeps him on because he has been here a long
time, and I expect the other man and the boy
really do all the work. Besides, I once heard
her say to my Daddy that the one thing he did
understand was grass, and that he makes her
lawns as good as any in the county. She seemed
quite pleased about it.”</p>
<p class='c007'>The elf nodded her head sagely. “That is
just the trouble,” she replied, “I mean from
the point of view of a land- and house-agent.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>He is so careful of the lawns that he won’t
allow any mole to rent them. However, I
must see what I can do for my tenant in some
out of the way corner. And now I must really
say good afternoon, and ask you to put off our
next meeting till to-morrow. Oh, by the way
though, before I go you had better tell me your
name—Sweet William has forgotten to mention
it.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“My name is Philomène, Philomène Isolde,”
said the little girl, “and please, what is yours?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Speedwell,” answered the other, and she
spread her wings, nodded a friendly good-bye,
and flew away. Philomène stood watching her
flight till the glittering wings disappeared behind
the rosemary hedge, after which she made
her way to the wilderness of currant and gooseberry
bushes behind the house. Here stood
a tub, and a see-saw, and a shed, but before
she had made up her mind whether to go to
sea in the tub, or turn the shed into a Red
Indian wigwam, her attention was distracted by
what sounded like the twittering of two birds
at once in a currant bush near by.</p>
<p class='c007'>“And yet it doesn’t sound quite like an
ordinary bird either,” thought Philomène, and
she went close up to the bush. One bird there
<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>certainly was, perched on a leafy twig and
twittering shrilly, but it was Speedwell
who was sitting upon another branch, and
arguing with the bird. As Philomène came
up both stopped talking, seemingly quite out
of breath.</p>
<p class='c007'>“What have you done with the letter?”
asked Philomène smiling, “did you throw it
away when you started house-hunting for the
mole?”</p>
<p class='c007'>The elf cocked her head on one side, and
looked up with small bright eyes; her shimmering
wings were folded, and her little green shoes
peeped from beneath her dress of tussore-coloured
silk. “I do not understand you,”
said she, “I don’t even know who you are.
Oh, yes, I do though, you must be the little
girl who was to arrive yesterday; the stable
cat told me you were expected. But we have
not met till this moment.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“But I was speaking to you only a few
minutes ago at the dove-cot, and I gave you
Sweet William’s letter of introduction!” exclaimed
Philomène in amazement.</p>
<p class='c007'>The elf laughed. “It must have been my
twin sister whom you saw just now,” said she,
“I am Spirea. However, I don’t wonder at
<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>your mistake, for when we were babies and
cradled in the same pod, our own mother did
not know us apart. We will settle about your
lease some other time,” she added, turning to
the bird, who had been preening his feathers
to conceal his annoyance at the interruption,
“and you had better not mention it to the
people at the Rookery till you hear something
more definite from me. Now I am at your
disposal,” she continued to Philomène, “where
shall we go? To the swing? You might sit
in it, and I could talk to you from a mossy
settee between the roots of one of the horse-chestnuts.”</p>
<p class='c007'>The place was soon reached, and the two
remained chatting there very pleasantly, till
Philomène thought it must be getting late,
and that she ought to find out if her godmother
intended to go to evensong; so she said good-night
to Spirea, who promised to see her again
the following day.</p>
<p class='c007'>Isolde was still sitting in the hayfield, and
the vicar stood before her, abusing modern
operas. “What dreadfully dull things they
do talk about,” thought Philomène, “when
they might have been making friends with
twin fairies all this time! But perhaps they
<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>couldn’t, even if they wanted to, not without
the green ribbons.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“You’re fond of music, aren’t you?” asked
the vicar, sitting down and drawing Philomène
towards him into the lengthening shade of the
hayrick. Philomène nodded.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Yes,” she replied, “some music. I don’t
like Lilian Augusta’s hymns much, but I do like
it when Godmother sits by herself at the spinet
and sings:</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c008'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>‘I would I were on yonder hill,</div>
<div class='line'>’Tis there I’d sit and cry my fill,</div>
<div class='line'>Till every tear should turn a mill.’”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>Isolde blushed. “It is only a little Irish
song,” she explained in some confusion, “a
very plaintive little love-song; I believe
Hændel is supposed to have said that he would
rather have written that one air than the whole
of the ‘Messiah.’”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Are you going to church, Godmother?”
asked Philomène, as she lay full length on the
hot grass, looking up at the clouds that were
drifting white, fleecy, and unshepherded, across
their native pastures, and asking herself
whether in the long run she would prefer blue
fields to green.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>“I think so,” said Isolde, and she got up
as she spoke.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Then I will too,” said Philomène, “and of
course you will come anyhow, because you have
to,” she added in her serious, understanding
way to the vicar. He laughed good-humouredly,
and walked by her side, swinging his cane, and
repeating half aloud as he went:</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c008'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>“The sun, above the mountain’s head,</div>
<div class='line in2'>A freshening lustre mellow</div>
<div class='line'>Through all the long green fields has spread,</div>
<div class='line in2'>His first sweet evening yellow.”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c009'>“Capital,” murmured the tall, gaunt vicar,
“the very words for it, the only words for it!
‘His first sweet evening yellow’—what
wouldn’t I give to have written that myself?”</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>
<h2 id='XIII' class='c004'>CHAPTER XIII<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH GREAT GOOD FORTUNE BEFALLS THE HEROINE</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Sweet William had been right when he foretold
that Philomène would not see much of the
fairy agent at the Cushats, for Isolde devoted
herself whole-heartedly to the amusement of
her godchild, and the days chased each other
in their eagerness to turn into to-morrow, with
its fresh succession of walks and talks and
drives and picnics. Yet there were of necessity
times when Philomène was left to amuse herself,
and it was then that Speedwell and Spirea
came skimming towards her through the air,
or peeped up at her out of the flowers, or hopped
down to her from the trees. It was not, however,
till August that anything of importance
befell.</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène was in the stable, feeding the white
donkey with sugar, and begging him to talk
to her if he could. “If Balaam’s donkey
talked to him when he was unkind and stupid
<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>and hit it,” she reasoned persuasively, “I
think the least you can do is to talk to me when
I am giving you all this sugar. Of course if
you really can’t, that is another thing, but I
never feel sure of that these days. Oh, you
there, Spirea?” The last exclamation was
due to the sudden appearance of one of the
twins between the donkey’s glossy ears.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I’m not Spirea, I’m Speedwell,” replied
the fairy, “but it’s of no consequence. Is your
godmother likely to want you within the next
hour or so?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“No,” said Philomène, “she has driven off
to pay a call, and won’t be back till nearly
supper-time.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“That is really very fortunate,” said Speedwell,
“because it would have been a pity for you
to miss this chance. There is an old merman
in a little creek about half a mile from here,
and if you come with me quickly, I will introduce
you to him.”</p>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/illus135.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></div>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>For a moment Philomène’s heart seemed to
stand still with the very joy and marvel of
the thing, but the next she had begun to run,
and the elf half ran, half flew, by her side.
The beach was of yellow sand, hard and smooth,
stretching for mile upon mile along the coast;
the tide was coming in, blue fringed with white
by the shore, but a vague, sad purple farther
out to sea. The little creek was soon reached,
and as the sea ran up into it, smooth and shallow,
Philomène took off her shoes and stockings,
and began to paddle; and there, sure enough
in the shelter of a projecting rock, screened from
the steady August sunshine, and with his tail
in the water, sat the old merman, gazing out
to sea.</p>
<p class='c007'>“This is Philomène,” said Speedwell, and
turning round, she half ran, half flew, back
across the sands, as fast as glistening wings
and little green shoes could carry her.</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène sat down on a low boulder, her
feet dangling in the warm caressing water, her
wide eyes fixed upon the merman. She had
neither the breath nor the courage to start a
conversation. The merman raised his head
and tossed back his sea-green hair from his
sea-green eyes; then passing his fingers through
the matted locks, where tiny shells hung
tangled, he turned upon Philomène a rugged,
weather-beaten face.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I am glad to see you,” he said in a deep,
musical voice, “the fairies seem to be your
very good friends.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>“I should be very much obliged if you would
tell me about the sea,” suggested Philomène
timidly.</p>
<p class='c007'>The merman laughed a deep, musical laugh.
“That would indeed be a long story,” said he,
“it is as if some one were to say to you, ‘Tell
me about the land.’ So you love the sea, do
you?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Yes, I love it,” replied Philomène, looking
away over it towards the horizon, “it is beautiful
in the same sort of way as the deep red of S.
Mary Magdalene’s dress in the chapel, burning
red like cherries with the sun on them, and like
the third chord in ‘Lead, kindly Light,’ and
like the smell of the garden early in the morning,
and they all make one hurt inside in just the
same way, though they are such very different
things.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène was wondering if anything were
making the merman “hurt inside,” he was so
silent and grave, but then she remembered that
the mer-folk are said to have no souls, and must
feel that everything beautiful is but for a very
little while.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I don’t expect he would marry me even if
I asked him to,” she reflected, “and that is
supposed to be the only way of helping a merperson
<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>to a soul. Oh, I do wish I could get
one for him! But perhaps there is another
way after all, though no one has found it out
yet. I must not forget to think of him next
time I go to church.”</p>
<p class='c007'>She was not quite sure what particular
prayer could be made to fit him, but at last
decided that he might very well count as one
of the people in the Litany who “travel by
water.” She had just arrived at this conclusion,
when the merman roused himself from
his reverie, and turned towards her.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I cannot tell you all about the sea in one
conversation,” he said, “but a little is better
than nothing at all, so I will tell you a story.
It is the way of the land-folk to speak of the
sea as treacherous, but this story will show
you that she keeps faith with her own.”</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>
<h2 id='XIV' class='c004'>CHAPTER XIV<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH THE MERMAN TELLS HIS STORY</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>There was once upon a time a poor fisher
couple who lived together in a hut upon a
lonely beach, and while the husband was absent
fishing upon the high seas, the wife earned a
scanty livelihood by spinning.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now one stormy winter’s night a little
daughter was born to them, and because the
mother would have it that the child was ailing,
the fisherman struggled forth into the howling
gale to fetch a priest for the christening. The
path was narrow between the cliffs and the sea,
and the waves were so violent that he feared
lest they might overwhelm him at any moment.
All at once he caught sight of a merman mounted
on one of the crested billows.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Whither away, good neighbour, in the wind
and dark?” quoth he.</p>
<p class='c007'>“My wife lies at home with a newborn child,”
replied the fisherman, “and I go in search of a
priest that he may christen it.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>“I pray you, let me stand sponsor,” said the
merman.</p>
<p class='c007'>“That shall never be,” the fisherman made
answer, “what part or lot have you in any
christening?”</p>
<p class='c007'>At that the merman grew very angry. “You
fool!” he cried, “is the good-will of the sea
nothing to you? Has she no treasures in her
depths for those whom she favours?”</p>
<p class='c007'>Now the fisherman had no mind to set the
sea against him, moreover he was in haste;
he therefore gave his consent, and hurried on.
That same night a priest came to the little hut
on the beach, and christened the baby, and they
called her name Carey, because, like one of
Mother Carey’s chickens, she had made her nest
in the storm. And all the while the sea roared
around the hut, and the fisherman, casting a
furtive glance at the window behind him, saw
that the merman was looking in. From that time
forward things went well with him; his fishing
prospered, and the tempest spared his boat.
Nevertheless he resolved to say no word to
his wife about the merman’s sponsorship.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now when Carey had grown to be a little
maid of some seven years old, she was playing
by herself late one summer’s afternoon upon
<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>the yellow sands that sloped to the water’s
edge. All of a sudden a voice called to her.
“Carey!” it said, and again, “Carey!” Then,
turning her head, she became aware of a merman,
seated under a rock near by, and basking
in the hot afternoon sunshine. He had a
rugged, somewhat world-weary look, and the
hair hung about his face like ribbons of brown
seaweed, while his eyes were brown and gentle
like the eyes of a seal.</p>
<p class='c007'>“So we meet at last, goddaughter,” said he.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Are you my godfather then?” asked Carey,
and she came fearlessly and sat down beside
him on the rippling sand.</p>
<p class='c007'>“That I am indeed,” the merman made
answer, “and here is a belated christening
gift.” And so saying he hung about her neck
a necklace of sea-shells. “Do not despise it,”
he added, “though it looks but a poor thing.
It may be that some day you will learn its worth,
for so long as you wear it the sea will know you
for her own.” Then he told her how it happened
that he had come to be her godfather, after
which little Carey said she must go home, but
she promised to return to that same creek on
the following day, and to say nothing to her
parents of the meeting.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>So the next day she came again, and the day
after, and every day throughout the summer she
ran to the little creek to see her godfather, and
hear from him strange songs and stories of the
sea, to which she loved to listen, for all they
were so sad. And in the winter, when the
rough weather kept her indoors, she would sit
contentedly by the fire while her father was
mending his nets and her mother span, and would
tell over the wondrous tales to herself till she
had them by heart. Nor was it long before the
summer came again, and then another winter.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now one Christmas night Carey lay broad
awake, and listened to the bells from the grey
church on the wind-swept cliff, chiming far
and wide across the sea, and on the following
morning she slipped out unnoticed and ran to
the sheltered creek. This time her godfather
was nowhere to be seen, but nothing doubting
she called to him, standing barefooted where
the waves broke, and at her call he rose straightway
out of the sea.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Last night I heard the church bells, godfather,”
said Carey as she sat beside him under
their favourite rock, “were they not beautiful?”
But the old merman’s face darkened as she
spoke.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>“They are not beautiful to me,” he made
answer, “I know that your race has a love
for the sound, and soon grows homesick for
the want of it, but with my people it is not so.
I will tell you what befell me long ago. There
stood a little chapel on a rocky islet, and one
Christmas night the bells rang out so joyously
and with such a note of welcome in their voices,
that I pressed as close as I might to the window
of many-coloured glass, and within there was
light, and the sound of chanting. But when
the monks came forth, they drove me away
with hard words, and called me an evil spirit.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then Carey put her arms about him, and
kissed him many times, saying, “Never mind,
dear godfather; I know that you are not an
evil spirit, and I will always love you.” And
at that the smile came again to his face. These
were happy years for them both, and they sped
past unheeded, till Carey was no longer a little
maid, but a fair tall maiden with many suitors.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now it happened that one Shrovetide Carey
went to church, and as she followed the straggling
path along the top of the cliffs, a stranger
joined her, clad like a huntsman all in green,
with a horn by his side, and two great hounds at
his heels.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>“Where are you going, fair maid?”
asked he.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I go to church,” she said, “because it is
Shrovetide.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“May I walk by your side?” he asked.</p>
<p class='c007'>“That you may, if it so please you,” said
she. So they walked on together, talking as
they went, but when they reached the little
grey church he stopped short.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Do you go in alone, mistress,” he said, “and
I will wait for you here.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So Carey entered the church alone, but as
soon as she came out the huntsman joined her
again, and they walked homewards together.
Now he was a fair-spoken man, with much to
tell of distant climes and strange adventures,
so that Carey contrasted him in her thoughts
with the uncouth, tongue-tied fisher lads,
her wooers, and was sorry when the moment
came for parting.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Here I must bid you farewell,” said she,
when the pathway was reached that led down
to the shore, “for my home lies yonder.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Will you not first appoint me a trysting-place?”
quoth he.</p>
<p class='c007'>At that Carey’s heart took fright in her
breast, nevertheless she made answer, as though
<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>compelled thereto; “To-morrow I go cockling
down upon the sands.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“And may I seek you there?” asked the
huntsman.</p>
<p class='c007'>“That I did not say,” said she, and she turned
and ran from him down the winding path, her
thoughts all in a turmoil of fear and joy and
wonder. But when she reached home she
found sorrow awaiting her, for her father, whom
she dearly loved, had fallen grievously sick.
All night she nursed him, but on the morrow
her mother took her place, and bade her go
cockling.</p>
<p class='c007'>So Carey took her basket and made her way
along the yellow sands, with joy and grief at
war in her heart, and as she went the waves
cast up a large sea-shell at her feet. Stooping
she picked it up, and put it to her ear, for the
sake of the music that it held. “Turn back,
turn back,” murmured the voice of the sea,
“have nothing to do with this stranger.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“This is surely a message from my godfather,”
said Carey to herself, and for a while
she stood irresolute with the shell in her hand,
but at last she threw it from her, back into the
tumbling foam. “I will go to the trysting-place
all the same,” said she, “for I have
<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>pledged my word.” But it was not the thought
of her promise that moved her, but her fancy
for the stranger, which she mistook for love.
Not many minutes later she saw him coming
towards her, and at first they talked together
as on the previous day, but soon he began to
court her with words and caresses, and besought
her to follow him to his home.</p>
<p class='c007'>“That I cannot do,” said Carey, “for my
father lies dying.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Appoint me at least to-morrow’s trysting-place,”
said he, “and then I will let you go.
Know you the inland woods, and the green
ride in their midst, with a fallen tree-trunk
at the end of it?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I know it well,” replied Carey, “it is where
the early primroses blow.” So saying she
turned away from him, and made haste homewards.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now the next day, when the fisherman lay
at the point of death, he said to his wife;
“Wife, I have something on my mind; it is
a secret I have kept from you these many
years.” And thereupon he told her of Carey’s
godfather, the merman, and of how he had been
present at the christening. “I charge you,”
added the dying man, “not to deal harshly
<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>with our daughter on this account, since it was
none of her doing. Moreover, it has brought
us good fortune.” And having said these
words, the sick man breathed his last.</p>
<p class='c007'>But that very hour the fisherman’s widow
said to Carey; “This is no light matter that
your father has confessed to me. Swear to
me that you have had no intercourse with this
sea-monster.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“That will I not,” said Carey staunchly,
“for I have known him since I was a little
maid, and he is no sea-monster at all, but the
kindest godfather in the world.”</p>
<p class='c007'>At that her mother flew into a frenzy of rage.
“You deceitful hussy!” she screamed, “so
behind my back you have had dealings with a
wicked sprite that is without an immortal soul!
Get you gone this instant!” And so saying
she drove her from the house.</p>
<p class='c007'>Then Carey went sadly along the beach till
she reached the familiar creek, and there she
sought her godfather in his wonted haunts,
and when she could not find him she called to
him many times, but he neither came nor
answered. The sea was running high, and the
weather was dark and lowering.</p>
<p class='c007'>“He is angry with me because I did not heed
<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>his message yesterday,” thought Carey, “he
too has forsaken me. I will go to the wood and
meet the huntsman there, for he alone is left
to love me.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Now it happened that on her way inland
Carey came across a horse-shoe, which she picked
up and took with her for good luck. As soon
as she had reached the green ride in the midst
of the wood, she saw the stranger at the farther
end of it, standing by the fallen tree-trunk,
with a great coal-black steed at his side, and
the two hounds with him. She held up the
horse-shoe in token of welcome, and when she
had drawn nearer she called to him merrily,
“Only see what I have found! It will bring
us good fortune!”</p>
<p class='c007'>But even as she spoke, the horse reared and
pawed the ground, the hounds whined and
cowered at their master’s feet, and the huntsman
himself held out both hands before his face,
as though to avert a danger.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Maid, if you bear me any love,” cried he,
“throw the thing from you! I come of a race
that is at enmity with iron!”</p>
<p class='c007'>So Carey, though she understood him not
at all, tossed the horse-shoe into a thicket hard
by, and approached her lover. But he on a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>sudden sprang upon his horse, and caught her
to him, and set her on the saddle before him.
Then the great black steed rose up into the air,
and the hounds with it, and Carey screamed
aloud in her terror.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You are no other than the Wild Huntsman!”
she cried out, “woe worth the day that I met
you!” Then it was that she remembered how
all evil spirits stand in great fear of iron, and
knew too late that had she but kept firm hold of
the horse-shoe, he could have done her no harm.</p>
<p class='c007'>Over the tree-tops they soared, and on
through the air like a whirlwind, away and away
over forest and field and morass, till they came
to the mountain fastness where the Wild
Huntsman had his home. Bleak and grim
was his castle, and it stood amidst sombre,
impenetrable forests. Here he held Carey a
captive, but whenever he rode forth in the
night he would take her with him, and set her
before him on his mighty, coal-black steed.
Then when the storm blast shrieked overhead,
the forest folk would cower together in their
huts, and say trembling one to the other;
“The Wild Huntsman passes on his way.
Hark to the baying of his hounds!”</p>
<p class='c007'>But on midsummer’s eve Carey saw from
<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>the battlements that there were beacon fires
burning on all the hill tops far and near, and she
rejoiced to think that he could not venture
forth that night, for the fires one and all were
lit to keep evil spirits at a distance.</p>
<p class='c007'>Wearily, wearily, the nights and days wore
away, and Carey soon lost all count of time.
The trees grew leafless and the winds more
blustering, and the Wild Huntsman rode
abroad more often. Only one day as Carey
sat by her casement, she saw a long procession
of gnomes, bent and brown and wrinkled,
filing through a cleft in a rock, and disappearing
one by one. By that she knew that it must be
Martinmas already, when the dwarfs bid farewell
to the bleak upper world, and retreat to
their warm winter quarters in the heart of the
earth.</p>
<p class='c007'>Drearily, drearily, the days and nights wore
on, and when Carey rode forth with the Wild
Huntsman, she could see nothing below her but
pathless wastes of snow, and forest trees groaning
beneath a grievous burden of icicles. Then
she called to mind the cheery winter evenings
in her father’s hut, and she would have wept
save that all her tears seemed frozen, even as
the world.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>At the last came Yuletide. Carey sat alone
in the great hall of the castle, and the Yule log
sputtered on the hearth.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Ah me, how bitter cold it is,” chirruped
a cricket, breaking silence, and Carey, rousing
herself from her sad musings, remembered
an old wife’s tale that birds and beasts and even
stocks and stones gain speech on Christmas
Eve.</p>
<p class='c007'>“If you are cold, friend cricket,” quoth the
Yule log in a crackling voice, “I pray you draw
a little nearer to my blaze.” And he burst
asunder into such a lively flame, that it would
have done any heart good to see it, and warmed
even the sad heart of Carey.</p>
<p class='c007'>“This is no proper house for the keeping
of Yule,” muttered the hearthstone morosely,
“never so much as a sprig of yew or holly,
let alone a goodly show of mistletoe, with
tankards of brown ale and a boar’s head all
a-smoking.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“It is indeed a desolate hearth, my friends,”
said Carey sorrowfully, “and I have greater
reason for complaint than you all.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Take courage, mistress,” said the Yule
log cheerily, “things may take a turn for the
better with you, just as they did with me.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>Look you, I stood a long while in the forest,
perished with cold, snow upon my head and
snow at my feet, but now I am a merry Yule
log, and warm to the inmost heart of me.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Then I too will take courage,” said Carey,
though she sighed as she spoke.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now between Christmas and Twelfth Night
the Wild Huntsman rode abroad every night,
and Carey rode with him. But on Twelfth
Night itself, as she sat before him on horseback,
she caught a glimpse of a far silver streak
upon the horizon, and as the Wild Hunt swept
onward through the frosty air, the streak
broadened and broadened till it grew to a
shining expanse, and Carey knew that at last
she was within sight of the sea. Tremblingly
she put up her hand to her neck, and felt for
the necklace of shells that was still securely
clasped about it.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I will throw myself upon the mercy of the
sea,” said she to herself, “am I not its godchild?
And if I die, death will be better than
my present lot.” Already the waters were
rolling beneath her, ashen grey in the moonlight.
Therefore, on a sudden, she sprang down
from the Wild Huntsman’s horse, and plunged
into the wintry sea. Coldly, darkly, thunderously,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>the waves closed overhead, and her
senses forsook her.</p>
<p class='c007'>When she came to herself she was lying
stretched upon an immense plain, with strange
trees waving above her and strange flowers
round about; strange, many-eyed creatures
slipped past her, gazing curiously, and over
her hung the still waters, green as twilight
skies. Carey got to her feet, all lost in wonder,
and as she stood looking about her, a mighty
shadow purpled the water, and towards her a
monstrous serpent came swimming.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Fear nothing, Carey,” it said, “for we are
all your friends.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Then I pray you take me to my godfather,”
she begged, “I am afraid to linger in this
strange country all alone.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Mount upon my back then,” quoth the sea-serpent,
“and cling to my shaggy mane.”
So together they sped away over mountain and
valley, through forests of branching coral,
past cities and hamlets where the mer-folk
dwelt, and sunken ships in the midst of forgotten
treasures.</p>
<p class='c007'>At last they reached a cave in a hillside, and
here the sea-serpent set her down and left her.
On the instant her godfather came to meet her;
<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>tenderly he kissed away her self-reproaches,
and bidding her rest and refresh herself, he
led her to an inner room, where the roof and
walls were all of amber, while the floor was
strewn with pure white sand. Then he sent
his servants to her, swift and silent fishes, who
waited upon her with the choicest dainties
of the sea, and prepared for her a bed of seamew’s
down, upon which she lay and slept for
many hours.</p>
<p class='c007'>As soon as she was awake again, the noiseless
fishes returned, and deftly robed her in a fair
green dress of feathery seaweed, more delicate
than any lace; also they adorned her with
chains of lustrous pearls, and wound red sea-anemones
in her dark hair, and when she was
ready she went in to her godfather, who greeted
her with all affection.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I have been lonely without you, Carey,”
said the old merman, “have you come to stay
with me now, and to be my little maid as in
the former days?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“If you will have me, godfather,” said Carey,
“I will remain with you here, and be as a
daughter to you.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So for nearly a year these two lived together
in great contentment, but on New Year’s Eve
<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>Carey said to her godfather; “There is a
longing within me to-night that will not be
stayed; I must needs rise to the surface once
again, and hear the midnight chimes from our
little grey church on the cliffs.”</p>
<p class='c007'>At these words the merman grew very sad.
“I knew it would come sooner or later,” said
he, “go, my child, since you must. You are
free.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Thus it was that when midnight drew on,
Carey rose out of the waves hard by the familiar
coast, and sitting down under the rock where
first she had seen her godfather, she held her
breath and listened.</p>
<p class='c007'>All in a moment the bells burst forth, ringing
in the new year; merrily they chimed, yet with
an undertone of sadness for the year that was
past; over sea and land they clashed and pealed,
rushing, swelling, dying, and as Carey heard
them her heart-strings nigh snapped with
homesickness. Nevertheless when the golden
tongued bells had fallen silent once more, she
went back into the breaking seas.</p>
<p class='c007'>At home in his cave the old merman sat and
mused. “It were better to die at once and
dissolve into foam,” said he to himself, “than
to live on through the unnumbered years
<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>without her.” Yet even as he thought it, Carey
entered, whom he had never hoped to see
returning, and put her arms about his neck.</p>
<p class='c007'>“So, Carey, you have come back to me after
all,” he said wonderingly, “back from your own
kind and the free upper air, away from the
memories and the bells?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“There are none left upon the shore to love
me now,” she made answer, “my father is
dead, and my mother has cast me out. I will
remain here with you.”</p>
<p class='c007'>At that the old merman rejoiced greatly,
for he knew that he would now be lonely no
longer. As for Carey, his goddaughter, she left
off from her homesickness, and lived among
the mer-folk as one of themselves.</p>
<p class='c007'>“And is she living there still?” asked
Philomène.</p>
<p class='c007'>But the merman had forgotten her, and was
looking out to sea again. So she rose quietly,
and paddled out of the creek; the tide was all
but in now, and she ran home barefooted along
the yellow sands.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>
<h2 id='XV' class='c004'>CHAPTER XV<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH THE TWIN SISTERS TELL A STORY BETWEEN THEM</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>It was August still, and early evening; an
evening of balmy airs and dappled skies.
Philomène, bedded in bracken, lay nestling
at the foot of a mighty pine-tree on the outskirts
of the woods, separated only by a haha
from the garden of the Cushats, and the twin
fairies were with her. Speedwell was seated
in a swinging hammock of green tendrils, in
among the undergrowth, and was busy making
herself some intricate spider’s web lace, while
Spirea, on a fallen pine-cone, stitched away
industriously at a dainty patchwork coverlet
of sweetpea petals for the bed in the dove-cot.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I do wonder,” Philomène was saying,
“whether my merman knew the merman who
was Carey’s godfather. Perhaps they were
old friends, like Godmother and my mother,
only of course at the bottom of the sea.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“That reminds me,” said Speedwell, “that
<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>neither of us has ever yet told you a story.
We seem always to have had so many other
things to talk about. Would you like one
now?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Why, yes, I should, ever so much,” replied
Philomène, “and I think I should like it to
be about water, and about trees and ferns and
mosses, just like these here, if you don’t mind.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“If it’s a fresh-water story she wants,”
observed Spirea, “you might as well tell her
the one about the pixie’s nursling.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“So I might,” said Speedwell, and she
began:—</p>
<p class='c007'>“In the heart of a certain forest there was
a deep pool, still and green, where waterlilies
rocked in the summer time. Now it happened
that a woodcutter had daily to pass this pool
as he went to and fro from his work, and one
evening as he came by he heard a sweet voice
calling to him from the water, saying; “Good
master woodcutter, I pray you make me a
cradle.” Then, because he was under the spell
of the sweet voice, the woodcutter went home
and sat up all night, making an oaken cradle.</p>
<p class='c007'>“What are you about?” asked his wife,
“why will you not come to bed?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I met a stranger in the forest,” replied her
<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>husband, “and she begged me of my charity
to make her a cradle for her newborn child.”</p>
<p class='c007'>When morning broke, the woodcutter went
back to his work, and as he passed the pool
he set down the cradle upon its mossy bank;
and that same evening when he came by again,
he heard the cradle rocking under water, and
the sweet voice called to him a second time,
and said; “Of what use to me is a cradle
except I know a lullaby also? Good master
woodcutter, I pray you teach me a lullaby.”
So the woodcutter went home and said to his
wife; “Tell me now, wife, what are the words
of the cradle-song which you sing to our little
son?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“They are but an idle jingle,” returned his
wife.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Tell me them notwithstanding,” persisted
her husband, “for the tune runs in my head,
but the words I have forgotten.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“These are the words then,” said she.</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c008'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>“The hermit has tolled his bell,</div>
<div class='line'>And the wizard moon rides high;</div>
<div class='line'>Ah me, the bell and the moon!</div>
<div class='line'>Bye, bye, little sweeting, bye, bye;</div>
<div class='line'>Sing-song; ding-dong;</div>
<div class='line'>And so good-night to the moon.”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>“It is but a meaningless jingle, as you said,”
quoth the woodcutter.</p>
<p class='c007'>But the next day when he went to his work
in the forest, he stood still among the rushes
by the pool, and sang the lullaby aloud; and
that same evening as he came by he heard the
cradle rocking under water, and the sweet
voice singing the cradle-song; but as he drew
nearer it broke off, and called to him the third
time, and said; “Of what use to me are a
cradle and a lullaby, except I have a baby
also? Good master woodcutter, I pray you
bring me a baby.” Then, because he was
bewitched, the woodcutter went home and said
to his wife, “Wife, there is a fair to-morrow
at the town. Would you like to go?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I should like nothing half so well,” said
she, “but I cannot leave the little one.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Give the child to me,” said her husband,
“and I promise you that no harm shall befall
him.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So when it was morning the woodcutter took
his little son, and went and laid him down on a
bed of sorrel by the pool, and hurried on into
the forest; and that same evening as he came
by again, he heard the cradle rocking under
water, and the sweet voice singing the lullaby
<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>and the happy cooing of a baby. But when he
reached home he told his wife that as he had
been hewing timber in one of the forest glades,
a kite had swooped down and carried off the
child. Then the poor mother wept bitterly,
and would not be consoled.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now within the pool there dwelt a beautiful
pixie, fair and white as any swan, with radiant
golden hair, and eyes clearer than crystal.
Yet for all she was so fair, and had her home
in among the white and yellow waterlilies, the
pixie hated her life and was weary of it, for
she had lived already through unnumbered
years.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Did I not know the world when it was
young?” sighed she to herself, “ah, would
that I might grow old along with it.”</p>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/illus163.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic003'>
<p>“KISSED IT SO THAT IT MIGHT BE ABLE TO LIVE UNDER WATER.”<br/><span class='right'><i>Page <SPAN href='#Page_153'>153</SPAN></i></span><br/><span class='left'><i>The Fairy Latchkey.</i></span></p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>Now it had been told her that a draught of
the elixir of death could alone release her,
and that both the elixirs of death and of life
were in the keeping of a mighty wizard, who
lived in a great castle surrounded by a golden
wall. In this wall was a golden gate which
would open only to one who had no love for
gold, while the little glass postern door that
led into the castle would open only to him who
had no love for lies, and across the doorway of
the wizard’s chamber hung a silken curtain
which could be drawn aside only by one who
had never loved a woman. Now the pixie
knew very well that it would be all but impossible
for any man brought up among his kind to
stand these three tests, so she resolved to rear
a human child in the safe, secluded pool, and
send it forth upon her quest. Already she had
had three nurslings, who had grown to manhood
and gone forth into the world, but not one of
them had returned to bring her the elixir.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Three generations have failed me,” said
the pixie to herself, “but I will try yet once
again.” So she cast a spell upon the woodcutter,
and took his child and kissed it, so that
it might be able to live under the water, and
drew it down into the pool; and she gave it
the name of Sorrel because of the bed of wood-sorrel
upon which she had found it. Every
night she sang to him his mother’s lullaby,
and little Sorrel would look up through the
crystal clear water at the mirrored moon, and
would bid it good-night. Then when he grew
older, the pixie taught him to play most sweetly
upon a bulrush pipe, and many a wondrous story
did she tell him of the early days before men
lived upon the earth.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>At last when Sorrel had grown to be a tall,
strong youth, the pixie said to him; “The
time has come, my son, when you should go
forth into the upper world for my sake, and ask
the elixir of death from a great wizard who
lives far from here, for I am weary of my long,
long life.”</p>
<p class='c007'>At first Sorrel was much grieved at her words,
for he loved the pixie dearly, as though she had
been his own mother, but when he saw that it
was indeed her heart’s desire, he promised that
he would not rest till he had found the elixir.
Then he bade her a tender farewell and set out,
and as he walked through the great forest that
was a new, strange world to him, he played a
sweet air upon his bulrush pipe to keep up his
spirits.</p>
<p class='c007'>Beyond the forest lay a populous city which
Sorrel reached at sundown, and as he wandered
through it he gazed curiously at the many
streets and houses, and at the fountains that
played in the great squares. Now it happened
that the king and queen of the country lived
in that city, and as they sat together at one
of the windows of their palace, they caught
the strains of Sorrel’s pipe as he passed in the
street below. So enchanted were they by its
<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>music, that they at once gave orders that he
should be brought before them.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Who taught you to play so melodiously
upon a bulrush pipe?” asked the king.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Sire, it was my mother,” replied Sorrel.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Will you remain with us and be our court
musician?” asked the queen.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Madam, that I cannot,” returned Sorrel,
“for my mother has sent me upon a very
urgent quest. But I will gladly play to you
now, it if so please you.” So Sorrel played to
the king and queen, and after that they led
him into the great banqueting-hall, where there
was much feasting and merry-making.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now it was in this very palace that all the
pixie’s former nurslings had loitered and remained.
The first had soon grown covetous
of money, and became so skilful in the management
of it that he was made Lord High
Treasurer. He was now a very old man, and
his one delight was to handle the gold pieces
in the royal exchequer, which he did every day.
The second had quickly learnt the art of lying,
and soon flattered so adroitly that he was
appointed court chaplain, and in every one of
his sermons he told the king and queen what
an excellent influence they exerted upon the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>court. “My dear,” said each to the other,
“we are indeed fortunate to have secured so
eloquent a preacher and so wise a man.” As
for the third, he had fallen in love with the
king’s daughter, and had married her, and now
lived in the greatest pomp as the king’s son-in-law.
Thus it came about that not one of
the three nurslings had given another thought
to the pixie, who had longed hourly for their
homecoming.</p>
<p class='c007'>But Sorrel took no delight in the splendours
which he saw about him, for it seemed to him
that the yellow gold was not half so pleasant
to look at as the yellow waterlilies at home.
The courtiers paid him well turned compliments
upon his skill in music, but he noticed
that for all their flattery they looked at him
askance as soon as he began to speak about
his mother and his life in the forest pool. As
for the court ladies, so far from falling in love
with any one of them, he thought them all quite
ugly when he compared them with the beautiful
pixie. The very next day he again set out
upon his travels, and would not linger at the
palace, because he had his mother’s quest at
heart.</p>
<p class='c007'>“And now, sister,” said Speedwell, breaking
<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>off suddenly, “I have come to the most difficult
part in all my pattern, where one mistake
would spoil the lace, so you had better tell the
rest.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Willingly,” said Spirea, and she continued:—</p>
<p class='c007'>“Beyond the city lay another great forest
in which Sorrel wandered all day long without
finding a way out. At last night fell, and he was
just wondering whether he would have to seek
shelter under a tree, when he heard the sound
of a bell tolling near by, and soon came upon
a hermitage which stood upon the edge of the
forest, with a bare and lonely heath stretching
away in front of it. Sorrel knocked at the
door of the hut, whereupon an old hermit
at once opened to him, and greeted him
kindly.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Come in,” said he, “all strangers are welcome
here.” And he made Sorrel sit down,
and gave him some rye bread and salt fish for
his supper, with a mug of sour wine to drink.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Have you come from far?” asked the old
man.</p>
<p class='c007'>“My home is in the forest on the other side
of the city,” replied Sorrel.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Are you a forester’s son then?” asked the
hermit.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>“No, good father,” replied Sorrel, and he
began telling the old man all about his beautiful
mother and his home, but no sooner had he
uttered the first word about living under water,
than the hermit started to his feet, and trembled
all over with rage.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You must be the son of a witch!” he
screamed, “get out of my house!” And he
took Sorrel by the shoulders and thrust him out
into the night.</p>
<p class='c007'>“These men are a strange race,” thought
Sorrel, greatly bewildered, “I was happier
under the water.” And feeling somewhat disconsolate,
he went out upon the waste heath
and stood looking about him. Just then the
moon broke through a cloud.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Good-night,” said the moon.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Good-night,” said Sorrel.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It is not everyone who bids me good-night
as regularly as you did when you were a child,”
said the moon, “is there anything I can do
for you?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“You can light me across this heath if you
will,” replied Sorrel.</p>
<p class='c007'>“With all my heart,” the moon made answer.</p>
<p class='c007'>So Sorrel set out across the wide expanse
of heath, and all the while the moon went on
<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>before him and showed him the way, till at last
they came to a deep ravine, at the bottom of
which stood the wizard’s splendid castle, while
on either hand there rose steep walls of rock,
as sheer as the side of any house, so that Sorrel
looked down into the chasm with dismay.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Catch!” cried the moon, and flung him a
ladder of moonbeams, by the help of which
he descended the precipice in safety.</p>
<p class='c007'>No sooner had he reached the golden gate
of the castle than it opened of itself, and crossing
the great courtyard, he saw that the little
glass postern door stood open already. Then
Sorrel mounted flight upon flight of marble
steps, till he came upon an arched doorway.
He drew aside the silken curtain that hung
across it, and with a bold step entered the room
where the mighty wizard sat, among his phials
and talismans and all manner of magical
appliances.</p>
<p class='c007'>“What is your errand?” asked the wizard
in a harsh voice.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I seek the elixir of death,” replied Sorrel
fearlessly.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Many desire the elixir of life,” said the
wizard, “the other is sought but seldom.
Here they are, both together. Choose.” So
<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>saying he handed Sorrel two tall crystal vases,
each filled with a clear colourless fluid.</p>
<p class='c007'>Then Sorrel dipped his bulrush pipe into one
of the vases, and it blossomed, but when he
dipped it into the other it withered and died.
So he took the elixir of death with him, and left
the castle, and scaled the steep cliff by the help
of the ladder. His friend the moon was still
high in the heavens, and lighted him back
across the trackless heath.</p>
<p class='c007'>With all possible speed Sorrel hastened onwards,
but when he reached the forest in which
his home lay, he became very thirsty, and
wandered to and fro among the thickets seeking
for a brook or a spring. At last, faint and
weary with his fruitless search, he lay down
under a spreading tree, but the crystal vase
he placed beyond his reach, lest in his great
thirst he should be tempted to drink the
deadly elixir. Soon there came by a fair
young pixie, gathering mosses and ferns for
her grotto, and Sorrel begged her for some
water.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Water is close at hand,” said she, “for we
pixies may not stray far from our springs,”
and she went and fetched some water in a shell
and gave it to him.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>“But tell me now,” she said, “is there not
water in yonder vase?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“That is the elixir of death,” replied Sorrel,
and he told her of his quest, and as they sat
together under the tree, they loved one another
and plighted their troth.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Only first I must go back to my mother,”
said Sorrel, “and after that I will return to
you.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So she brought him to a mossgrown path
which led him at last to the pool, and when
the pixie saw him she rejoiced. “O Sorrel,
you were rightly named,” said she, “for does
not wood-sorrel betoken mother’s joy?”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then she drank the elixir of death and
straightway dissolved into a brook which gushed
forth out of the pool, and flowed babbling
through the forest. But Sorrel sat down by the
brookside and lamented. Now it happened
that the woodcutter’s wife was passing that
way, and she stopped to ask him the cause
of his sorrow.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I am mourning for my mother,” he replied.</p>
<p class='c007'>“As for me, I have mourned a son these
twenty years,” said the woodcutter’s wife.</p>
<p class='c007'>But Sorrel was not attending to what she
said, for his thoughts were full of his own grief.
Yet because he was young, he soon called to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>mind the starry eyes of his newly betrothed,
and when he had gone back to her he found her
waiting for him by the same spreading tree.
Then they made their way to a bubbling spring
close at hand, and together they went down
into her grotto.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>
<h2 id='XVI' class='c004'>CHAPTER XVI<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH THE HEROINE HEARS SOME STARTLING NEWS</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>It was towards the end of September that
Philomène returned home. Her godmother
was coming up to town also, and they travelled
together, so that on that journey there was
ginger-beer to drink, and not cold tea. She
had not been at home more than an hour or
so before she found an opportunity of taking
her latchkey and running out into the garden,
though the day was wet and windy. Sweet
William was at home, and received her
cordially.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I came as soon as ever I could,” she cried,
holding out both hands to him, “I only waited
till Nurse began unpacking for me next door,
because I was afraid she would say I ought not
to be out in the rain. And now I must tell
you all about the Cushats, and Speedwell and
Spirea, and the merman, and they both said
it was the chance of a life-time, having him all
to myself as I did.” So Philomène told him
<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>all her adventures, and Sweet William listened
very attentively.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Is the Cushats haunted?” he asked
suddenly.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Oh, no,” replied Philomène indignantly,
“certainly not. Lilian Augusta’s sister-in-law
once saw a ghost,” she continued, “and Lilian
Augusta said she was as proud as a cat with
two tails ever after; but I shouldn’t be proud,
only desperately frightened, if I thought a
ghost was anywhere near me.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“That is a pity,” said Sweet William blandly,
“considering that there is a little spirit waiting
to make friends with you in your very own
room.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène started up from her toadstool,
and went quite white. “In my room?” she
exclaimed, and her breath caught, “in my bedroom
here at home?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Sit down, child,” said Sweet William,
“and don’t be theatrical, for pity’s sake.
There’s nothing at all to make a commotion
about; it’s only a White Létiche.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“And what is that, please?” asked
Philomène, sitting down again and trying to
steady her voice, though she was still rather
pale.</p>
<p class='c007'>“A White Létiche,” said Sweet William,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>“is the spirit of a child who was never
christened, and visits, unseen, the rooms of
children.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Is my Létiche a baby, then?” asked
Philomène.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Oh, no,” said Sweet William, “she was
about twelve when she died, and a very sweet
little girl she was too. She won’t even appear
to you unless you want her to, and then only
on the 31st of October.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Only on All Souls’ Eve if I want
her to,” thought Philomène, “oh, well
then, it isn’t nearly as bad as it sounded
at first.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I was meaning to tell you something more
about the people in your house,” Sweet William
continued, “the same house which, if I may
remind you, you at one time considered so
extremely uninteresting, but you seemed so
much upset when I told you it had a White
Létiche, that perhaps you will leave me altogether
when I tell you that there is a white
witch living in it too.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I certainly shouldn’t be rude and ungrateful
enough to leave you,” returned Philomène
stoutly, “and I will try not to get
frightened again, but I am afraid I don’t know
what a white witch is either. Godmother
<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>told me lots about fairies, but I think she
did not want me to know a great deal about
witches, perhaps because she thought it
might make me nervous when I went to
bed.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“And judging from the exhibition you made
of yourself just now,” retorted Sweet William,
“your godmother seems to have proved herself
a woman of sense. Well, you must know
that there are black witches and white witches,
and that black witches often turn into black
cats, and white witches into——”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Queen Mab!” interrupted Philomène
excitedly.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Into white cats,” resumed Sweet William,
“such as Queen Mab. Here again there is
nothing to be alarmed about, for white witches
are a kindly race, and help people by white
magic instead of injuring them by black art.
I thought that as winter was coming on, I had
better tell you that you will have another
comrade in the house besides Master Mustardseed,
for in the cold weather you are not likely
to see much of me. But you still look so disturbed,
that I think I must distract your
thoughts a little by telling you a story, not
about spirits or witches, but about a poor little
foundling whom the Good People befriended.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>I hope this may quiet you down a bit before
you have to go indoors.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I should like to hear about the foundling
very much, thank you,” said Philomène, and
set herself to listen.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>
<h2 id='XVII' class='c004'>CHAPTER XVII<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH SWEET WILLIAM TELLS ANOTHER STORY</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Once upon a time there lived a miller, who
because he was a kind-hearted man and as well
off as anyone needs to be, had taken pity upon
a poor little foundling and had given him a
home in the mill. On a bitter winter’s night
the child had been laid at his door, and the
miller therefore christened him Jack Frost.</p>
<p class='c007'>Some years later the miller took a wife, a
young woman of a shrewish disposition and
over-fond of money. She was not kind to little
Jack Frost, and made him feel that he was a
burden both to her husband and herself. Times
were hard, she said, and he was too slow-witted
to be of any real use about the mill.
In the course of time a son was born to the
miller’s wife, and then things went from bad
to worse with the foundling.</p>
<p class='c007'>Nevertheless Jack Frost felt that he had
good friends near at hand, and these were none
<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>other than the Little People. In a field beyond
the mill-race there was a fairy ring, in the centre
of which grew a thorn-tree, and under this
thorn-tree Jack Frost would sit by the hour,
thinking and dreaming and talking to himself.
More than once it had seemed to him that the
fairy ring had brought him good fortune.</p>
<p class='c007'>The first occasion was on an evening not long
after the birth of the miller’s son, when Jack
Frost had been set to mind the baby, while the
miller’s wife cooked the supper. But being
somewhat feather-headed, he forgot to rock
the cradle, so that the baby woke up and began
to cry. At that its mother grew so angry that
she boxed the ears of Jack Frost and thrust
him out of doors. But the miller felt sorry for
him, and when his wife was not looking he went
up to the table where a savoury dish had been
set for his supper and hers, with a stale crust
and a bowl of skimmed milk for the foundling.
These he took, and stealing out of the mill by
a back door gave them to the child, so that
at least he might not have to go supperless to
bed. Jack Frost thanked him, and went off
to the field with the fairy ring in it, but no
sooner had he sat down under the thorn-tree
to eat his supper, than he discovered that he
no longer held a crust and a bowl of skimmed
<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>milk, but a little new loaf and a bowl of
cream.</p>
<p class='c007'>Again, a few years later, when it was winter-time,
the miller’s wife sent Jack Frost into the
neighbouring town to do some errands for her.
It was very cold, and the skies were overcast.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It is going to snow,” said the miller, as he
stood by the window, “you should not have
sent the boy out so late, my dear.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“A little snow never hurt anybody yet,”
replied his wife, and she drew her shawl closer
round her shoulders and poked the fire.</p>
<p class='c007'>Meanwhile Jack Frost was making his way
home from the town, but before the mill came
in sight it began to snow, and soon it was
snowing so fast that he could not see a yard
ahead of him. Thicker and thicker fell the
flakes, blotting out hedge and stile and milestone.
Jack Frost stumbled on a little farther,
but he was cold and tired, and soon his legs
began to give way under him. Then a great
drowsiness overcame him, and he lay down
to rest. As he fell asleep, it seemed to him
that he was pillowed on a bed of down, and that
a rich green canopy was spread above him,
yet when he awoke in the morning, warm and
well and light at heart, he saw that he had
<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>slept all night upon the snow, and that there
was no canopy overhead save the little stunted
thorn-tree.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now when Jack Frost had grown to be a
youth, a great calamity befell the country.
Not long before, the queen had given birth to a
son, and throughout the land there were great
festivities to do honour to the heir. But on
Roodmas Eve, when the fairies are abroad,
they stole away the little prince, and put a
changeling in his stead, so ugly and malicious
that he soon became the plague and terror
of the whole court. The king at once summoned
all his wisest counsellors, and inquired
of them what should be done in such a case,
and they all with one accord assured him that
there were but two remedies; either the fairy
changeling must be made to laugh, or to refer
in some way to his real age. Unfortunately,
however, the new prince was far too cross-tempered
to laugh under any circumstances,
though the court jester and all the wits of the
land did their utmost to amuse him; and
though every device was tried to make him
say that he had many and many a time seen
the acorn turn to an oak and the oak to a cradle,
the impish creature could not be induced to say
<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>anything of the sort. Then the king issued a
proclamation, promising untold riches as a
reward to anyone who should restore his son,
but it was all to no purpose.</p>
<p class='c007'>At last it came into the mind of the foundling
at the mill to test the good-will which the Little
People had to him. “I will set out in search
of the king’s son,” said he, “who can tell but
that I may persuade the fairies to give him up,
for surely the People of Peace have shown
themselves my friends?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“A likely thing indeed,” sneered the miller’s
wife, “that you should succeed where the wisest
of the land have failed! I suppose it is the
king’s proclamation which has put this nonsense
into your head, but what would you do with all
those riches, even if you had them, I should like
to know? A great stupid loutish fellow like you!”</p>
<p class='c007'>Jack Frost was not to be discouraged, however.
He took a knapsack with him for his
travels, and bidding good-bye to all at the mill,
he set out. But first he thought he would like
to go once more to the field beyond the mill-race,
and take a last look at his thorn-tree;
and no sooner had he stepped into the fairy
ring, than he saw the fairies dancing in a circle
round him.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>“Whither away, Jack Frost?” asked they.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I go in search of the king’s son,” replied
the foundling.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It is the fairy queen herself who has stolen
him away,” said the elves, “for he was very
fair of face.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Then I fear she will be loath to give him
up,” sighed Jack Frost.</p>
<p class='c007'>At that one of the elves stepped forward,
and said; “Listen to me, Jack Frost. You
have just one chance of success. Not so very
long ago our queen was choosing a christening
gift for a poor charcoal-burner’s child to whom
she had promised to stand sponsor; all her
choicest treasures were spread out before her,
when suddenly a magpie swooped down and
carried off a certain magic ring to its nest in a
belfry. Now this ring was one of the queen’s
most priceless gifts, for it conferred on him
who should possess it the good-will of wind
and weather, the friendship of all the dumb
creatures, and the power of making himself
beloved wherever he might love. The queen
is much grieved at its loss, and since no fairy
may enter a belfry, none but a mortal can recover
it. Now if you should find this ring, it
may be that in her gratitude the queen will
<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>consent to grant your request, to take back the
changeling and to restore the king’s son.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“How shall I find the belfry?” asked Jack
Frost.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Go by forest and road and sea, and you
shall find it,” replied the elf, “but first, Jack
Frost, tell me what it is that you see in our
thorn-tree?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I see a nest,” replied Jack Frost, “and in it
are seven speckled eggs.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Take three of them,” said the elf, “and you
will find them useful. A bird does not build
in the fairies’ tree for nothing.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So Jack Frost took the three speckled eggs,
thanked the Little People, and went his way.
He soon came to a dense forest in which he
wandered till nightfall without seeing any
trace of a human dwelling. He was therefore
very glad when at last he caught sight of a
ruddy glint among the trees, and came upon a
smithy in a clearing of the wood. Now this
smithy belonged to a very wicked hobgoblin,
who forged upon his anvil all the weapons that
are wielded in unrighteous wars. Whoever
fights in a wrongful quarrel or in defence of a
bad cause, may be quite sure that his steel was
forged at the hobgoblin’s smithy. But Jack
<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>Frost did not know this, and felt very thankful
at having come across any kind of shelter, so
approaching the smith he asked him for a night’s
lodging.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You shall have supper and a bed,” replied
the hobgoblin, and leading Jack Frost into
his house he gave him some broken victuals,
and motioned him to a bed of straw. The
foundling fell to with a good appetite, and then
lay down upon the straw and fell fast asleep.
In the morning he thanked his host for his
hospitality, and prepared to continue his
journey.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Wait a bit,” said the hobgoblin, “you have
not yet paid me for your supper, nor for your
bed over-night.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Alas,” replied Jack Frost, “I cannot pay
you save in thanks, good sir, for I have no
money.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I have no need of money,” replied the wicked
sprite, “but you must pay me in service.
All who break my bread are bound to serve
me for seven years. Make haste therefore to
sweep my room and cook my breakfast.”</p>
<p class='c007'>And so saying, he went out to his forge.
As soon as Jack Frost was left alone, he took
out the three speckled eggs, and broke them one
<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>after another, hoping to find inside either something
which he might offer to the hobgoblin
in payment of his debt, or at least some means
of escape. But in this he was disappointed.
The first egg contained a pod with three seeds
in it, the second a gossamer lasso, and the
third a tiny packet of eye-salve.</p>
<p class='c007'>“These things are of but little use to me at
present,” reflected the foundling sadly, and he
submitted to his lot with as good a grace as
might be. Seven years long he served the
hobgoblin, who made him a hard master, but
when the time had expired allowed him to go
on his way unmolested.</p>
<p class='c007'>Onwards through the forest went Jack Frost,
sad at heart at the loss of time and the thwarting
of his quest, and after some days’ wanderings
he came upon a path which at last led him out
of the wood and into open country. Soon,
however, he reached a place where four roads
met, and stood still in some perplexity.
Then he bethought him of the pod with the
three seeds, and cast one seed upon each
of the three roads before him. Straightway
three young trees shot up, all bearing
leaves, while the tree on the right bore blossoms
and fruits as well. He therefore took the right
<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>hand road, and walked along it for some considerable
distance, till at length it sloped down
to the sea shore and came to an end. Now
upon the strand Jack Frost caught sight of a
beautiful white horse, with streaming mane,
and riderless, pacing to and fro.</p>
<p class='c007'>“What is your name, fair steed?” asked he,
“and who is your master?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“My name is the wind,” the beautiful
white horse made answer, “and I have no
master.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then Jack Frost bethought him of the
gossamer lasso, and threw it deftly, and caught
the fleet-footed wind.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Carry me across the water,” said he, “for
there is neither boat nor bridge.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Then mount upon my back,” returned the
wind, “and lean your head against my long
mane, and shut your eyes, for should you look
downwards you would surely turn giddy.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So Jack Frost did as the wind bade him, and
together they sped away across the waste
of rolling billows that rocked and foamed far
below them. Upon the opposite shore the wind
set him down safely, and Jack Frost put his
arms about the neck of the beautiful, swift
steed, and kissed it between the eyes, but even
<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>as he did so the wild creature started away
from him, and fled back across the sea.</p>
<p class='c007'>Then Jack Frost turned and went on his way,
glad at heart, for already he had caught a
glimpse of an old ivy-clad belfry among thick-standing
trees. Into the low-browed porch
he went, and up the winding stair, till he
found the magpie’s nest, and in among the
sticks and straw he saw the gleam of the magic
ring.</p>
<p class='c007'>“And now it but remains to find the fairy
queen,” said Jack Frost to himself, as he stood
again in the open, “yet I know not where she
holds her court.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then he bethought him of the tiny packet
inside the third egg, and rubbing some of the
eye-salve upon his eyes, he at once became aware
of the fairy queen and her retinue, assembled
in a grove close at hand. Then Jack Frost
went and knelt to the queen, and offering her
the magic ring, begged for the king’s son in
exchange.</p>
<p class='c007'>“So, young sir, you would rob me of my
bonny page?” said she, with one fair hand
held out for the ring, and the other resting upon
the curls of a beautiful seven-year-old boy at
her side. But she smiled very graciously as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>she spoke, for she was rejoiced at the recovery
of the ring.</p>
<p class='c007'>So the changeling returned whence he came,
and the little prince was restored to his parents.
As for Jack Frost, the foundling, he sat him
down among the fairies in the grove, and having
eaten and drunk in their midst, was seen of
his own kind no more.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>
<h2 id='XVIII' class='c004'>CHAPTER XVIII<br/> <span class='small'>OF WHICH THE SCENE IS LAID IN A SICK-ROOM</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>No sooner had Philomène returned to the
house than Nurse began scolding her for having
gone out into the wet. “As if you couldn’t
have waited till to-morrow to have a look at
your garden,” she said impatiently, “and the
air as raw this afternoon as it might be
November.”</p>
<p class='c007'>The next day Philomène was in bed with a
bad chill, and was very far from well for several
weeks, but she made a good little patient,
swallowed her medicines without a grimace,
and bravely hid her disappointment when
Nurse refused to let her have Master Mustardseed
in the room with her, on the ground that
his loud singing would give her a headache.</p>
<p class='c007'>“If I could only explain to her,” she thought
sadly, “that he doesn’t speak nearly as loud
as he sings.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène therefore had to do the best she
<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>could by herself. She crowned herself queen
of her bed-kingdom to begin with; the sheets
and blankets were her subjects, her Prime
Minister was the quilt, and the pillows made
up her body-guard under the leadership of
their captain the bolster. The eider-down
she raised to the rank of Prince Consort, because
he was arrayed in royal satin, and being wadded
and yielding, was not likely to stand in the way
of any of his wife’s plans.</p>
<p class='c007'>She also had the big globe out of the schoolroom
placed on the chair by her bed, and proceeded
to invent a geographical game worthy
of a student of “The World and All About It.”
“Lady World is the mother,” she said to herself,
“and the continents are the governesses.
I like Miss Europe best, and trust her most,
because I know the most about her. The
countries are head-nurses, and Mrs England is
the headest of them all. Provinces and counties
are under-nurses, and the towns are the children.
Then I think mountains had better be coachmen
and grooms and gardeners, and people
of that sort, and the rivers can be maids,
because they keep things clean, and gradually
grow more important. The Isis only starts
as a scullery-maid, but by the time it has got
<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>to London it is an upper house-maid, and is
called the Thames. I think the Atlantic is to
be the big playground for the children, and the
Indian Ocean is Lady World’s drawing-room,
because it has coral reefs and flying fish and
phosphorus and exciting things in it, like the
curios in Godmother’s cabinets. The little seas
like the Caspian and the White Sea are rather
dull, so they can be used as store-rooms, and
the five great lakes in North America are turned
into sick-rooms when any of the towns get ill.
Let me see, the Pacific had better be the kitchen,
because there are so many islands in it which
will do as cooks. The Arctic ocean is the bathroom,
so that the children may get used to cold
baths, and the Antarctic can be the lumber-room,
because nobody goes there much.”</p>
<p class='c007'>It was on a dark and foggy afternoon that
Philomène lay in bed, watching a goblin
castle in among the coals, with twinkling
battlements that would presently fall ruining,
till drowsiness overcame her, and she
closed her eyes. She had been wandering in
the vasty entrance-hall of the play-house of
sleep, though the spectacle of dreams had not
as yet begun—(as she herself would have
expressed it, the Dusty-Man in the theatre-office
<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>was just going to give her the tickets, so
that she might go in and see the show), when
a strange yet strangely familiar voice purred
into her ear; “Wake up, Philomène, wake
up, beloved of the Little People.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène started up, and looked straight
into the green, affectionate eyes of Queen Mab.
“Oh, Queen Mab, you dear thing,” she stammered,
“Sweet William told me about you,
and I am only a very, very tiny bit afraid of
you.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“There is no reason even for that tiny bit,”
replied the white cat, putting one of her paws
into Philomène’s hand, “have I ever thought
of scratching or biting you, even when you
put me to bed in a doll’s cradle, and tried to
make my ears fit into a doll’s nightcap? Do
you suppose I have forgotten how on that
Christmas Eve when I first came to you, you
as a little, little girl clung to Nurse, and told
her how very little trouble I should be, because
I would eat up the scraps and take in my own
washing? No, Philomène, white witches are
not ungrateful; I would not harm a hair of your
dear little head.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène lay back among the pillows.
“Will you teach me how to work spells?”
<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>she asked, “so that I can spirit away the
little yellow book all about quarts and bushels
and perches which Miss Mills loves, and the
green dress that I can’t bear because it hooks
all up the back, and has such a vulgar broad
stripe in it?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I wouldn’t advise you to meddle with
spells, my dear,” returned Queen Mab, curling
her tail right round her till it met her chin,
“they are rather tricky things, and apt to go
off at the wrong time, like chemicals. But
if you like I will tell you a story which I think
will make clear to you, better than anything
else, the difference between black and white
witches. Is the very, very tiny bit still there?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“No,” said Philomène, “you are my own
dear Pussy, and I am sure you love me, and I
am very glad that I can have you to talk to
me in the winter-time when I sit nursing you by
the fire. And now please begin the story.”</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>
<h2 id='XIX' class='c004'>CHAPTER XIX<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH QUEEN MAB TELLS HER STORY</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>On a bleak and rocky coast there once stood
a little fishing town, and on the high cliffs above
it, looking seaward towards the sunrise, rose the
stately pile of an old Abbey church, which was
the pride of the place, for the folk in the little
red-roofed town were poor and struggling, and
had not much in their midst that was beautiful.</p>
<p class='c007'>Legend said that long ago a certain wicked
king had set his heart upon the Abbey treasures,
and that at his command a ship had left the
harbour laden with the choicest of them, but
a great storm had arisen, so that the ship
foundered, and the treasure went all to the
bottom. Some said it might still be recovered
if men would but dive for it outside the harbour
bar, others declared that at night you could
hear the buried Abbey bells chiming out at sea,
others again did not believe in the story at all,
and had never heard any bell ringing below
water save the bell of the buoy.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>Now just beyond the harbour bar there was
a great rock, and this was said by some to be
the haunt of a very evil black witch, but the
people who said this were the same people
that had heard the Abbey bells by night, and
so got laughed at for their pains.</p>
<p class='c007'>On the outskirts of the fishing town lived a
poor man with one daughter, named Yolande,
who was so beautiful and gracious that the
richest farmer in all that countryside had asked
her hand in marriage, but being very avaricious,
he would not take her, fair as she was, without
a dowry. Yolande herself had no wish to
marry the old man, for all his fat cattle and his
comfortable farmstead, for she loved his goatherd,
a youth as poor as herself.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now it so happened that on midsummer eve
Yolande’s father went fishing, and as he passed
the witch’s rock, that towered above him like
a great black house, he thought he heard the
sound of muttering, but he rowed on quickly,
and paid no heed. He caught no fish that day,
and cursed his bad fortune as he hauled in his
empty nets.</p>
<p class='c007'>“If only Yolande might marry a rich man,”
he said to himself, “I should have no more
need to work for my living,” and he made his
<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>way home with a heavy heart. The night was
hot and still, and the lights of the town winked
at him from the shore like gleaming, sleepless
eyes. He had to pass below the rock outside
the harbour, and as his boat entered its shadow,
he again heard mutterings up above him, only
this time he caught the words: “Amen.
<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Malo a nos libera sed, tentationem in inducas
nos ne.</span>” At this the fisherman grew very
much afraid, for he knew that this could be
no other than the black witch, who was
saying the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Pater Noster</span> backwards, as all black
witches do.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Stop a while, friend,” cried a hoarse voice
from the rock, “I know your trouble, I know
all about your daughter and the rich farmer
who has asked her in marriage. What should
you say to the old Abbey treasure as a dower
for your girl?”</p>
<p class='c007'>The black witch sprang from the rock, dived,
and came up again, and before the fisherman
could so much as cross himself or utter a cry,
she was sitting opposite to him in the boat,
her hands and the lap of her dress full of the
Church’s treasure.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Ha! ha!” she laughed, “you are wondering,
friend, how it is that I can handle these
<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>holy things? Have you forgotten that it is
midsummer eve, when evil spirits are abroad,
and the devil has it all his own way? See,
would not these be a fitting dower for a
princess?” And she held up to him golden
cross and golden crozier, rosaries of amber and
pearl and coral, censers studded thick with
gems; one precious thing after another she
flashed before his eyes, fondling them with her
wicked webbed hands, as though the shining
vessels had never held the oil and wine of the
altar.</p>
<p class='c007'>“What answer do you give me?” cried
the witch, tossing them back into the sea,
“shall your daughter wed or no? Speak
man, and do not stare at me with eyes like a
dead fish! I tell you the treasure shall
work her no harm; I have not strung unanswered
prayers on the rosaries, I cannot
curse what was once blessed, I have but made
you an offer fair and square, and the bargain
is between you and me.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Give me time, give me time,” cried the
fisherman, sorely tempted, yet afraid to yield;
“give me time, and let me pass.”</p>
<p class='c007'>The witch leapt laughing from the boat, and
sat looking at him from the summit of her crag.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>“You shall have nine months,” she called out
to him.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Ten, give me ten,” pleaded the fisherman,
for he knew that he had no right to the treasure,
and that his soul was at stake in this bargain.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Ten, then,” replied the witch with a loud
laugh, “but I promise you they shall slip
through your grasp as quickly as the ten pearls
that lie side by side on a rosary.”</p>
<p class='c007'>On the morning of the day when the fisherman
had to make his decision, it happened that
Yolande rose very early and went into the woods
to gather cowslips. Her father had lain awake
all night, turning the whole matter over and
over in his mind as he had done for months
past. The winter gales had injured his boat,
he was poorer than ever, and the farmer was
growing impatient. Yolande was the fairest
girl in the countryside, said he, but even she
was not worth waiting for more than a year.</p>
<p class='c007'>Yolande herself had slept serenely, and as
she went with her basket deeper and deeper
into the woods, she was glad with the gladness
of the April morning, for her thoughts were
with the poor goatherd, and she sang of love.
In the heart of the forest lay a wide clearing
called the golden meadow, for every spring
<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>it was golden with cowslips, which grew here in
greater sweetness and profusion than in any
other field. Yolande picked and picked till
her basket was full, and then sat down to refresh
herself with the bread and cheese and the flask
of milk she had brought with her.</p>
<p class='c007'>She had no sooner begun eating than a little
field mouse popped up out of its hole, and
watched her with bright fearless eyes. “You
dear little tame thing,” said she, “you shall
have some of my bread, because you are so
venturesome for your size.” The mouse took
a few crumbs of the bread which she scattered
for it, and disappeared down its hole.</p>
<p class='c007'>Not long after, a robin hopped up to where
she was sitting, and preened its red breast
with its beak. “You shall have your share
too,” said Yolande, “because you were moved
with pity on Good Friday, and tried to pluck
away the nails, so that your little breast is now
all stained with red.” And since she had no
more bread left, she threw a morsel of cheese
towards it. The robin pecked at the cheese,
and then flew away, carrying the rest in its
beak.</p>
<p class='c007'>Then Yolande poured out some milk into a
pewter mug, and was about to drink, when
<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>she noticed a white adder coiled at her feet.
She gave a stifled cry and drew back, but the
creature did not stir.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Poor thing,” said Yolande, “I wonder is it
thirsty? I will give it some of my milk,
because it is so ugly, and people hate it, and
never have a good word for it.” The white
adder drank the milk, and then coiled itself
round Yolande’s arm. At first she was afraid
to move, but knowing that she must not be late
for the market where she hoped to sell her
cowslips, she at last got up and went back into
the wood. She had not gone far before she
passed a spreading sycamore, beneath which
stood a small shrine. Here she placed some
of her cowslips, and sprinkled herself with
water out of the holy water stoup. A few
drops lighted upon the adder, and in an instant
it uncoiled itself, slipped to the ground, and
turned into a white witch.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Do not be frightened, Yolande,” said she
in a gentle voice, “I am a white witch, and
practise only white magic, which is helpful
and not hurtful to men. Listen to me; the
black witch who dwells on the great rock
beyond the harbour tempted your father last
midsummer eve to accept at her hands the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>buried Abbey treasure, so that you might have
a rich dowry, and marry the farmer who has
asked you to be his wife. To-day your father
has to make his decision. But I will give you
a better dowry, since you have given me food
and drink, and are a good girl, Yolande, worthy
of my help. Come back with me a few steps
into the wood. Tell me, why do you suppose
that this clearing is called the golden meadow?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Is it not because of the yellow carpeting
of cowslips?” asked the girl.</p>
<p class='c007'>“No,” replied the witch, “there is another
and an older reason.” She made a movement
in the air with her hand, and immediately the
ground of the meadow became transparent,
so that Yolande looked through it as through
glass, and saw below it a mighty treasure rich
in all manner of jewels and trinkets, gold and
silver, jade, ivory and crystal.</p>
<p class='c007'>“This is the dwarf’s treasure,” continued
the white witch, again making the magic sign
so that cowslips covered the ground as before,
“but generations ago, when man first came to
live upon this coast, and built the Abbey and
the town, the dwarfs fled further inland towards
the mountains, to escape from human
dwellings. And since they had more treasure
<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>than they could carry with them, they buried
this great hoard here. I will give it to you as
your dowry, so that your father may do no
hurt to his soul.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Yolande fell at the witch’s feet to thank her,
but when she had spoken her thanks, she confessed
with a blush that it was not the rich
farmer whom she loved, but his poor goatherd.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I know that,” said the white witch smiling,
“but this treasure of the dwarfs is more than
the old farmer’s riches multiplied a thousandfold,
so that your father will not stand in the
way of your marriage with the man you love.
But you must make haste. Go to your father,
and tell him all that I have told you. Then
when the black witch comes to market to hear
his answer, he will be able to say that he will
have nothing to do with her and her treasure.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“How shall I know her?” asked Yolande.</p>
<p class='c007'>“She will come to market,” said the witch,
“riding on a donkey that has no cross upon
its back. Moreover, when she reaches the brook
that flows hard by the market-place, she will
turn and go round by another way, since it is
not lawful for an evil spirit to cross running
water. Take these two straws, and when you
and your father return home together, lay them
<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>on the ground behind you, across and across—so—and
then she will not be able to bewitch
you. If you should need my help again,
call your name to the sevenfold echo on the
beach, and I shall hear it and come to you.”</p>
<p class='c007'>All fell out as the white witch had said, and
great was the joy of the fisherman on hearing
that a rich dowry was to fall to his daughter
without his having to call the black witch to
his help. He was glad of the two straws,
however, for when she rode up to him and heard
his answer, she was so angry that he quailed
before her; but Yolande had seen and spoken
with her lover, and both were so happy at the
thought of their approaching marriage that
they felt no fear.</p>
<p class='c007'>But the black witch lost no time in setting
about her revenge. She came to the goatherd
in the guise of a peddling gipsy, and offered
him for sale the picture of a beautiful maiden.
Now over this picture the black witch had pronounced
a charm, so that the goatherd could
see nothing in it aright, but fancying it as fair
as it seemed, fell so deeply in love with the
beautiful face that he straightway ceased to
love Yolande. The days went by; the goatherd
did not keep his trysts with his betrothed,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>and when he met her he was cold and careless.
Yolande wondered and wept, but could not
solve the mystery.</p>
<p class='c007'>At last she bethought her of the kindly white
witch, so one day she went alone to the beach,
and raising her voice, she called out “Yolande!
Yolande!” in the hope that the white witch
would befriend her a second time. The echo
from the rocks caught up her cry and passed
it on, one echo echoing another, till it reached
the ears of the white witch, who came flying
towards the coast in the form of a gull.
High above the old Abbey she soared, on
strong white wings, and flew to Yolande’s
side.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Tell me your trouble, child,” said she,
assuming her own shape. So Yolande told her
all that had happened.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It is black art,” said the white witch,
“your enemy has bewitched your lover. She
has shown him the picture of a maiden
whom he now loves instead of you. Look,
Yolande, here is a mirror; what do you see
in it?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I see the reflection of a maiden’s face,”
replied Yolande, “and she is very fair, fairer
than I.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>The white witch then turned the other side
of the mirror towards her. “Look again,
Yolande,” said she, “what is it now that you
see?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“A hideous, terrible wolf’s face!” cried
Yolande, shrinking back, “old and grey, with
grinning teeth, and a mouth red and gaping,
and hungry eyes.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“It is the face of a were-wolf,” replied the
white witch, “and we must force the black
witch to remove her spell from your lover.”
She stood and considered for a moment. “Wait
for me here,” she said at last, and took flight
in the shape of a gull. As twilight fell she
returned. “I have found out,” said she,
“that the black witch is brewing a charm for
which she requires many herbs, and none so
much as myrrh. She will therefore go to
church this evening, in the hope of snatching
a little myrrh out of the censer as it swings.
If only pure prayers mount with the incense,
she will be foiled in her attempt; but if a single
vengeful or presumptuous prayer is offered,
the myrrh will be within her power to take.
You must slip into the Abbey after vespers
have begun, and kneel by the north door, taking
with you some dragonwort. Now evil spirits
<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>can only leave, just as they can only enter a
church, on the north side, which is the devil’s
side, and as soon as the church is empty the
black witch will hurry to the north door and
try to get out. But you must stand within a
circle of dragonwort, which will protect you
from her, and not allow her to pass till she has
promised to remove her wicked spells from your
lover, and to molest you and yours no longer.
She will be the more ready to promise anything
you may ask, as to-night is Walpurgis Night,
and she will be in haste to join her sister witches
on the summit of the Brocken.”</p>
<p class='c007'>The lights were low in the Abbey church
when Yolande came to kneel by the north door.
The censer swung to and fro, and the prayers
of the faithful rose heavenward with the
incense. There were many holy prayers, but
one evil prayer rose with the rest. Straightway
a magpie swooped down from the rood-screen,
and, snatching a grain of myrrh as the acolyte
swung the censer to right and to left, flew back
to its perch. When the service was over and
the church empty, the magpie fluttered to the
north door, and with a hoarse cry turned into
the black witch, who stamped and raved,
coaxed and cursed, but Yolande stood firm
<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>within her sheltering circle of dragonwort,
till the witch at last, afraid lest she should
miss the tryst on the Brocken, angrily promised
to molest the young couple no more. Then
Yolande stood aside, and the black witch
hurried out of the church.</p>
<p class='c007'>So Yolande and the goatherd were married,
and at their wedding a snow-white gull hovered
about the porch of the Abbey, waiting till the
bridal procession should pass out, and when
it came, the bird flew on before it to Yolande’s
new home, and perched upon the roof in token
of welcome. And that same night she fancied
she heard the ringing of joy-bells, far out at
sea.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Do you know, Queen Mab,” said Philomène,
“though I was a little bit afraid when I first
heard about you, having thought of you all
these years as just a pussy, I was really
more frightened when I heard about the White
Létiche. Sweet William told me that she
would appear on All Souls’ Eve, if I liked, but
after that I don’t quite know what to do. Will
she speak to me?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“No, certainly not,” replied Queen Mab,
“a spirit never speaks first. You must begin.”</p>
<div class='figcenter id004'>
<ANTIMG src='images/illus211.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic003'>
<p>“THE FAIRIES HAD ALREADY BEGUN TO ASSEMBLE.”<br/><span class='right'><i>Page <SPAN href='#Page_198'>198</SPAN></i></span><br/><span class='left'><i>The Fairy Latchkey.</i></span></p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>“I suppose Sweet William will be keeping
Samhain that evening,” said Philomène, and
her eyes grew wide with longing. “Oh, I do so
wish I could go with him, and yet I don’t want
to miss the White Létiche.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Well, be a good child then,” said Queen
Mab, “and go to sleep, and I will see what I
can do for you in the way of a dream, so that
you may know how All Fairies is kept. White
magic is not much talked about, but it has
its uses.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So Philomène slept, and in her dream she
saw a wide, waste bog land, studded with
numberless little pools, each a round, bright
mirror framed in rushes, large enough to bathe
the reflection of just one star, so that the bog
was called the Bog of Stars. The fairies had
already begun to assemble; elves and goblins,
leprechauns, kobolds and dwarfs. There were
so many little men dressed in green, and so
many elves in cocoon silk, that from a distance
Philomène failed to distinguish the twin sisters
or Sweet William, but she recognised Master
Mustardseed in his bright yellow coat, with a
moss green cap upon his curls, for he, with Moth
and Cobweb and Peasblossom, surrounded the
fairy queen.</p>
<p class='c007'>“How glad I am,” thought Philomène,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>“that they have allowed him to go back to
Fairyland just for to-night. I am sure he
would have hated to spend Samhain all by
himself in his cage.”</p>
<p class='c007'>In her dream he nodded to her, and she nodded
back and smiled. At first the fairies danced,
and mystic, fantastic dances they were; Philomène
tried to follow their mazes till her eyes
ached, so rapidly, so airily, did the groups
dissolve and re-unite and dissolve again. And
all the while sweet joy-peals chimed from unseen
foxglove bells. But when the moon was near
its setting, a herald blew upon a trumpet-daffodil,
and after that there was silence, and
Puck was bidden by the queen to read out the
roll of the names of those who still kept their
faith in the fairies.</p>
<p class='c007'>“The number lessens,” said Oberon, “but
there is still a goodly company left, and we have
many secret believers.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then Puck began to read; name after name,
name after name. Philomène was already
growing confused and wearied when her own
name rang out, clear and unexpected, “Philomène
Isolde.”</p>
<p class='c007'>She sat up in bed, dazed and wondering, but
no one had called her. The firelight was playing
<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>upon Joan of Arc’s picture, and the red glare
brightened and broadened among the branches
of the oak-tree. Queen Mab lay curled up
at the foot of the bed, but she seemed to be
fast asleep, so Philomène turned on her side
and fell fast asleep also, and this time her sleep
was deep and sound, and uncoloured by dreams.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>
<h2 id='XX' class='c004'>CHAPTER XX<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH THE HEROINE MAKES FRIENDS WITH A SPIRIT</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>“Nursie, do you believe in ghosts?” This
question was put by Philomène as she sat at
her dressing-table on the evening of the last
of October, while Nurse brushed out her hair.
She was almost well again now, though not
quite.</p>
<p class='c007'>“There are ghosts and ghosts, you know,
Miss,” replied Nurse decidedly. “I don’t hold
with modern ghosts myself, your pencils and
tumblers and noises made by tables. But in
the house where I first went into service there
was a most undoubted ghost. He was of the
good old-fashioned sort, and pulled your bedclothes
right off you. There was no mistaking
him.”</p>
<p class='c007'>When Nurse had left her, Philomène stood
for a moment irresolute in the middle of the
room. “I will say some prayers first of all,”
she reflected, “and then——”</p>
<div class='figcenter id001'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>
<ANTIMG src='images/illus217.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic003'>
<p>“<span class='fss'>BY HER BEDSIDE THERE STOOD A SMALL FIGURE.</span>”<br/><span class='right'><i>Page <SPAN href='#Page_202'>202</SPAN>.</i></span><br/><span class='left'><i>The Fairy Latchkey.</i></span></p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>The prayers did not take long. From the
tower of a church near by came a rushing
sound of bells, and Philomène went and knelt
on the chair by the window. It was a wild
night, and she was afraid to push up the sash
lest she should catch cold, in spite of her warm
red dressing-gown and slippers, but she pressed
her face close to the glass, and listened with
strained attention. Fitfully upon the gusts
of wind the fragmentary music reached her,
rising and falling with the gale. The beautiful
mellow-throated chimes seemed to be sending
some message through the storm, to be ringing
out some good news across the mighty, toilworn,
unheeding city that lay beneath them.
At one time Philomène fancied that she could
almost make out the words: “O ye spirits
and souls of the righteous, bless ye the Lord,
praise him and magnify him for ever!”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I think if the White Létiche came now,”
she thought, “I should not mind.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Timidly she looked behind her. By her
bedside there stood a small figure, bright-haired
and all in white; it was leaning against the
bed-post, and the little, transparent hand rested
upon the burnished brass knob at the top.
Philomène got down from the chair and approached
it softly. The White Létiche turned,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>and looked at her with eyes as blue as a midsummer
sea; they were not merry eyes, but
there were happy lights in them, as when the
sea mirrors blue heaven.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I hope you noticed that I sang, ‘I’m
sitting on the stile, Mary,’ while I undressed,”
said Philomène, rather shyly, remembering
that Queen Mab had told her to set the conversation
going. “I once read somewhere that
it was the kind thing to do on All Souls’ Eve,
to sing or whistle, so that the souls who are
hurrying to keep their feast need not brush up
against one on their way, which is supposed
to hurt them. I didn’t ask Nurse to do it too,
because she can’t sing, only in church.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“It was good of you to think of it,” said the
White Létiche smiling, “though indeed many
is the time you have brushed past me in this
room without its hurting me.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène was now sitting on the bed, feeling
quite at her ease with her strange little companion.
“And do the unchristened children
really live among the water-babies?” she
asked curiously. “Is it nice where you come
from?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I can’t tell you about where I come from,”
said the White Létiche, “it is against rules.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>But I could tell you other things, things which
I did not know when I slept in this room.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“What sort of things?” asked Philomène;
“stories?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Why, yes, some of them are stories,” said
the White Létiche. “I wonder now would you
care to hear the story of the very strangest
christening that ever befell?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“What made it so strange?” asked Philomène,
eagerly; “and what was the baby’s
name?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Wait a bit,” said the White Létiche.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>
<h2 id='XXI' class='c004'>CHAPTER XXI<br/> <span class='small'>IN WHICH THE WHITE LÉTICHE TELLS HER STORY</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Upon the outskirts of a village there once lived
a weaver, who was very skilful at his loom,
and wove many fine and beautiful stuffs, while
in a wretched cabin out in the fields beyond
the village dwelt a certain poor widow woman,
who had to earn her livelihood by spinning.
It was from her that the weaver bought his
flax, but indeed he often went to the cabin
when there was still a plentiful store of flax
at home, in the hope of seeing the widow’s
only daughter.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now the maiden was not the widow’s own
child, for the poor woman as she came home
one evening through the fields had found a
little baby lying among the stubble, and having
no children of her own, she had brought it
home with her and adopted it. And because
she had found it under the Michaelmas moon, she
had it christened Micheline.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>Micheline was very beautiful, and in the
spring time when the weaver would walk by
her side, and watch her break a sprig of
blackthorn from the hedge to place it in her
hair or in the folds of her ragged green dress,
it seemed to him that all the world could not
hold another maid so fair as she. But she
was indifferent to his suit, and this made him
very sad. Also there was a mystery about
her which he could not solve, for often she
would disappear from home altogether, sometimes
for a few days only, sometimes for months
at a time, and when he questioned her fostermother
she only made excuses and gave
evasive answers.</p>
<p class='c007'>One day the weaver went into the neighbouring
city to offer some of his stuffs for sale
at court, and it happened that just as he
entered the gateway of the palace, a gallant
prince came riding forth, with a plume in his
hat and a sword by his side, mounted upon a
splendidly accoutred horse.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It must be a fine thing to be a prince,”
thought the weaver.</p>
<p class='c007'>Good luck befriended him, for the queen and
her daughter bought all his beautiful woven
stuffs, and he left the palace with his pockets
<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>full of gold. On his way home he again saw the
prince, who was watering his horse at a roadside
trough.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Are you not the poor weaver who trudged
past me under the palace gateway but an hour
ago?” asked the prince.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I was poor enough then,” replied the
weaver, “but I am rich now, for the queen
and the princess her daughter were graciously
pleased to buy my whole store of stuffs.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Then you had better fortune than I,”
returned the prince, “for I have been courting
the princess this year and more, but she will
have none of me. She is so cold and listless
that she cares for no man’s addresses.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Alas, we are then brothers in misfortune,”
quoth the weaver, “for I too love a maid who
does not love me in return.” And with that
they parted, and the weaver went home, only
to find that Micheline had once more disappeared,
he knew not whither. But the prince
mounted his good steed and rode forth into the
world, to seek adventures and forget his sorrow.</p>
<p class='c007'>He soon came to a dense wood, and when
night fell, seeing a great castle before him, he
knocked at the gates and asked for shelter.
Now in this castle lived a mighty magician,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>who received the prince with all hospitality,
and bade him sit down with him to supper.
But as the prince sat at table, he often turned
his head and listened intently, for it seemed
to him that ever and anon he caught a sound
like the ticking of innumerable clocks.</p>
<p class='c007'>“What may that be?” he asked at length.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It is the beating of many hearts,” replied
the magician, “for I have the hearts of all
men in my keeping.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Is the cold, proud heart of my dear princess
amongst them?” asked the prince.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Most certainly,” said the magician, “and
if you would know what is her heart’s desire,
you need only go and see wherein her heart
lies.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I go upon the instant!” cried the prince,
starting to his feet. Then he entered a great
hall adjoining, and there he found the hearts
of all men, each beating in its own chosen
place. Some lay within coffers of gold, some
upon altars, others between the leaves of a
book, others again were half smothered beneath
a pile of fripperies and tinsel. But the
heart of his princess lay within a certain gold
crown of strange workmanship.</p>
<p class='c007'>As soon as he had caught sight of it, the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>prince drew his sword with its jewelled cross-hilt,
and waving it above his head, he cried:
“Though I should first have to conquer all
the kingdoms of the world, I will win that
crown for my lady, no matter whose it be.
And then perhaps her heart will turn to me,
and she will love me.”</p>
<p class='c007'>The next day he set forth upon his quest,
but as he rode out of the castle gates, he remembered
the weaver who was a lover like
himself, and meeting a doe in the forest, he
said to her: “Run swiftly, pretty doe, and
carry a message to my brother the weaver.
Tell him of this castle, that he too may come,
and learn what it is on which his lady has set
her heart.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So the fleet-footed doe ran till she reached
a brook, where she stooped to drink. “O
brook,” said she, “hidden in a thicket I have
a baby fawn, and I dare not leave it long alone.
Bear you the prince’s message to the weaver.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So the brook took the message, and flowed
on through the forest till it became choked with
sedges. “O dragonfly,” it said in a stifled
voice to a dragonfly that hovered among the
flags, “bear you the prince’s message to the
weaver.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>Then the dragonfly flew to the weaver’s
house, and gave him the prince’s message,
and that same day the weaver set out. But
when he had reached the castle, and had sought
for the heart of Micheline among the rest, he
could not find it.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Since that is so, it means that she is not a
mortal,” said the magician, “you must go
seek for her in Fairyland.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I pray you tell me the way,” said the
weaver.</p>
<p class='c007'>“That I cannot do,” the magician made
answer, “each must find the way to Fairyland
for himself.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then the weaver set forth upon his travels,
and sought Micheline at every fairy ring and
haunted pool, by cairn and by waterfall, but
nowhere could he find her. At last one day
as he went along the road feeling much disheartened,
he thought he recognised the rich
trappings of a horse that was cropping the
grass by the roadside, and the next moment
he caught sight of the prince standing near by.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Fortune has again brought us together,
friend,” said the prince, “therefore let us
continue our journey in each other’s company.”</p>
<p class='c007'>And as they went along they told one
<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>another all their adventures. The prince too
had been in many lands, but his quest had led
him into courts and palaces, where he had been
sumptuously feasted; kings and queens had
put on their crowns in his honour, but that
one crown of strange workmanship he had
nowhere found. Presently the two travellers
reached the entrance of a narrow, gloomy
gorge.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Let us press on,” counselled the prince,
“it may be that on the other side we shall
find some shelter for the night, for already
it grows dusk.”</p>
<p class='c007'>But no sooner had they entered the gorge,
with steep hillsides to either hand, than the
prince’s steed took fright, and reared and
threw his rider, and galloped madly back by
the way they had come.</p>
<p class='c007'>“What can have startled the horse?” cried
the prince, as he sprang up unhurt.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Hush,” said the weaver, “listen.” Then,
as they stood and listened, a sound of laughter
and revelry reached them from within the
hillside to their right.</p>
<p class='c007'>“We have found the way into Fairyland,”
cried the weaver, “and I must go and seek
Micheline among her own people.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>“Be wary, friend,” cautioned the prince,
“for if I am not mistaken the hill fairies have
a bad reputation, and have worked harm to
wayfarers before now.”</p>
<p class='c007'>But the weaver would not be dissuaded.
“How shall we enter, prince?” he cried,
on fire with impatience.</p>
<p class='c007'>Then the prince drew his sword, and smote
the hillside, so that it cleft asunder by reason
of the cross-shaped hilt, and together they
entered a hall dim and vasty, where the hill
fairies were holding their revels. The elfin
king the while sat moodily watching the dance,
but upon the entry of the strangers he descended
the steps of his throne and came forward
to greet them. The weaver then saw that his
eyes were treacherous and cruel, but the prince
saw only that upon his head he wore the crown
that was the desire of his lady’s heart. The
king placed them on either side of his throne,
and made them welcome.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Tell me, I beg of you,” said the weaver,
impatient of delay, “is there at your court
a maid of the name of Micheline?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“The maid is indeed at my court,” replied
the king, “though among us she goes by
another name.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>“How came I then to meet her among
mortals?” asked the weaver.</p>
<p class='c007'>Then the king made answer: “The widow
who is now her fostermother found her among
the stubble under the harvest moon, and the
next night she heard a tapping at her window,
and went, and saw a fairy nurse standing by
the sill. ‘Give me back my child,’ said the
fairy nurse, ‘the child whom I laid to sleep
among the stubble.’ ‘That will I not,’
quoth the widow woman, ‘for she is mine now,
and I have had her christened like one of ourselves.’
‘I love her too well to take her
against her will,’ answered the fairy nurse,
‘in years to come she shall choose between us.’
‘I love her too well to keep her against her
will,’ said the widow woman, ‘so it shall be
as you say.’ Thus it happens that the maid
is sometimes with us, and sometimes with her
fostermother.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then the weaver turned and saw a troop of
fairies coming towards him, and Micheline was of
the number, fair as ever in her dress of green,
with a blackthorn wreath in her hair. Forthwith
he sprang to meet her and caught her in
his arms, and at once was whirled away into the
midst of the dance. But all this time the prince
<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>sat silent and thoughtful, pondering by what
means he might obtain possession of the elfin
crown.</p>
<p class='c007'>Louder and louder grew the bursts of song,
madder and madder reeled the dance. The
weaver’s senses swam, his feet seemed to become
leaden, and the sweat stood out upon his
forehead. The fairies pressed hard upon him,
and strange evil faces peered into his, like the
faces of ape and wild cat, bear, and bat and
viper. Now as the rout swayed backwards
and forwards before the steps of the throne,
the prince awoke from his musing, and caught
sight of the weaver, who with blanched face
and dishevelled hair was stretching out his
hands in a prayer for help. Then the prince
started to his feet, and with a cry drew his
sword from its sheath. The fairies fell back
before the cross-shaped hilt, and the elfin king
himself quailed upon his throne. Micheline
alone stood her ground.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Little care I for your holy sign,” quoth she,
“have I not been christened even as you?”
So saying she stepped forward, and touching
the prince and the weaver upon brow and
breast, she turned them both into nightingales.</p>
<p class='c007'>“So shall you remain,” said she, “until I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>die.” And with that she burst out laughing,
knowing that fairies are immortal. Then the
nightingales took wing and flew away out of
the cleft in the hillside by which they had
entered.</p>
<p class='c007'>“It seems we are still to be brothers in misfortune,”
said the prince, “let us therefore
remain together, good friend.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“With all my heart, prince,” replied the
weaver. “Whither shall we go?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Let us go to the palace garden,” said
the prince, “so that I may sing my sweetest
beneath my lady’s window.”</p>
<p class='c007'>So day after day they flew over mountain
and valley, till they reached the city where
the princess lived, and that same night as she
leant forth from her casement, she heard two
nightingales singing, more sweetly and more
sorrowfully than any hitherto. The weaver
sang of his lost love, and the prince made known
to her all the toil and peril he had suffered for
her sake.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Ah me, poor prince, would that I might
disenchant you!” said she.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Your love would disenchant me!”
cried the prince.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Not so,” the princess made answer,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>“remember the fairy’s curse. Alas, it was
just on such a night as this that I stood at my
window and watched the fairies making merry
on the greensward. Then it was that the
desire took hold of me to become queen of
their revels, so that I too might wear the
blackthorn and the fatal green, and till that
desire is laid to rest there is no room in my
thoughts for love. I know no peace of mind
through the longing that I have for the elfin
crown, and it may be that I also am enchanted,
even as you.” So saying she wept bitterly,
and the nightingales hushed their singing for
very sorrow.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now the next night the princess could not
sleep for thought of the crown, so she went
down into the dewy, dusky garden, and
wandered in and out among the flowers. She
was all in white, with a jewelled dagger in her
hair, and as the prince watched her, his heart
nearly broke for love of her beauty.</p>
<p class='c007'>All at once the trumpets of the honeysuckle
blew a blast, and over the greensward
the fairies came trooping, with the elfin king
and his train in their midst. For a while the
princess stood apart, sadly and silently watching
the revelry, but at last she stepped forward
<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>with clasped hands and beseeching eyes, and,
as it chanced, it was to Micheline that she
spoke: “I pray you, sweet fay, teach me to
dance as beautifully as yourself.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“And if I do,” said Micheline, “will you give
me in exchange the precious thing that sparkles
so royally in your hair?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“That will I gladly,” quoth the princess,
and she drew forth the jewelled dagger, and
gave it to the fairy. “Only see that you
handle it carefully,” said she, “for it carries
death at its point, for all it is so bright and
beautiful.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Death!” laughed Micheline, “we fairies
have no fear of death. See, it will do me no
hurt!” And so saying she stabbed herself
in reckless frolic. But as she did so she grew
white to the lips, and sank upon her knees.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Ah, the waters of my baptism!” she cried
out, “they have stolen my immortality from
me!” And she fell lifeless to the ground.</p>
<p class='c007'>At that the spell was broken, and the prince
and the weaver resumed their proper shapes.
Then once more the prince’s sword flashed
from out its sheath.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I have nothing to fear from the rest of
you!” he cried, “therefore now, O fairy king,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>yield up your crown, for my lady will know no
rest till it is hers!”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then the king stepped forward, smiling
strangely, and set his crown upon the brow
of the princess. But even as he did so it turned
all to withered leaves, which lightly kissed
her waving hair and then fluttered to the
ground.</p>
<p class='c007'>“See, my beloved,” said the prince, “this
fairy gold is not for us. At the touch of a
mortal it decays, therefore cease from your
desire.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“It was but an idle dream,” said she, “love
is the better diadem.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then they turned and looked again upon the
greensward, but the king and his court were
gone, and from far away, borne to them fitfully
upon the nightwind, there came a sound which
none had ever heard before, of fairies keening
their dead.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now that same night, when the fields lay
grey in the moonlight, and the shadows were
long between the haycocks, the widow woman
sat in her lonely cabin, and it seemed to her
that she heard a tapping at the window. So
she went and looked, and there stood the fairy
nurse beside the sill.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>“Micheline is dead,” said she, “and will
return no more, neither to you nor to me.
Go back to your spinning and forget her.”
So saying she moved away, and passed in and
out among the haycocks till she was lost to
sight.</p>
<p class='c007'>But the prince and princess were married,
and in the course of time they became king
and queen and reigned long and prosperously.
As for the weaver, he was made court
weaver, and remained the prince’s friend all
his days.</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène drew a deep breath. “Well,
I am sure I like you ever so much better than
Micheline,” said she, “though Micheline was
christened and you weren’t. Oh, I wonder will
you be able to tell me another story next All
Souls’ Eve, you dear little White Létiche?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I wonder,” replied the White Létiche,
thoughtfully.</p>
<p class='c007'>“And I shall not see you till then?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“No, we do not show ourselves. And now
good-night.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Then the White Létiche kissed her frail little
hand to Philomène. “Shut your eyes,” she
said softly, “you did not see me come, and you
must not see me go.” And when Philomène
<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>again opened her eyes she was alone in the
room.</p>
<p class='c007'>The gale rattled at the window, and the
curtains waved in the gust; the night was
stormy, and the bells were silent. Philomène
hurriedly took off her dressing-gown and
slippers, and crept into bed.</p>
<p class='c007'>“After all,” she thought as she dropped
asleep, “I don’t think it can matter such a
lot about being christened; the holy Innocents
couldn’t possibly have been christened, not a
single one of them, and yet I know they have
got a collect all to themselves.”</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>
<h2 id='XXII' class='c004'>CHAPTER XXII<br/> <span class='small'>WHICH HERALDS A CHANGE</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>“Daddy is calling me, Nurse. Do remember
to take the price off the herald angels,
and the cornflower calendar with the ten
commandments on it will go for a halfpenny.
I thought the commandments might make
it over-weight, but they don’t. Coming,
Daddy!” It was the afternoon of Christmas
Eve; Philomène was busy with all sorts of
cards and parcels, and later on she was to go
to her godmother’s for tea and presents and a
Christmas tree.</p>
<p class='c007'>Her father was waiting for her in the study.
He took her on his knee, and stroked her hair
for a little while before speaking. Then he
said tenderly; “I have not been a very
good Daddy to you these last few months,
little maid, and I am sorry, and I want to
explain.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène opened her eyes wide. “You
know, little Miss Muffet,” continued her father
<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>gently, “if one cares very, very much, ever so
much, for someone, and doesn’t know if that
someone cares back, it makes one very unhappy.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“But why don’t you ask and find out,
right away?” said Philomène.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I have asked, and I have found out, but
it took me a long time to make up my mind,
and meanwhile I was so much worried that I’m
afraid I was often cross to my little girl. Has
she forgiven me, I wonder?”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène hid her face. “Oh, Daddy,”
she whispered, “don’t talk so; it doesn’t
sound quite proper, somehow, for you to put
it that way round.”</p>
<p class='c007'>The doctor laughed. “My dear,” he said,
“if it sometimes occurred to parents that their
children might possibly have something to
forgive in them, they would have a good deal
less to forgive in their children.”</p>
<p class='c007'>He gave her a fond kiss, and she flung her
arms round him, declaring that he was the best
Daddy in the world, and got down from his
knee. Not long afterwards he was standing in
Isolde’s boudoir, holding both her hands in his.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I have loved you,” she was saying slowly,
“ever since I first met you.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>“And did Rachel know?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“No, it was the only secret I had from her.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I waited,” said the doctor, “I waited, dear,
because I was a coward. Two things held me
back. Your riches, for I found it hard to take
so much from any woman, and my fear lest
you should think that it was only for the child’s
sake, just because I could not bear to see her
motherless any longer.”</p>
<p class='c007'>She looked at him wistfully, knowing that
what he had given to his first wife he could not
give again, but she knew also that his love for
her was deep and true. She smiled at him, and
was about to answer when Philomène’s voice
was heard outside.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You had better go now,” said Isolde hastily,
“I would rather be alone with her when I tell
her.”</p>
<p class='c007'>In another moment Philomène had entered.
The cold wind had heightened her colour,
and her hazel eyes shone with eager expectation.
“O, Godmother,” she exclaimed, running up
to Isolde, “I have been thinking all to-day how
very, very sorry one ought to feel for the poor
people in the Old Testament who never had
any Christmases. I do so wonder how they
got on without them.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>“I daresay they had a great many more
birthdays than we have, little cushat,” Isolde
replied merrily, “you see, they are supposed
to have lived so very very long. Only think
how many birthdays Methuselah must have
had, and they would more than make up for the
Christmas presents he didn’t get!”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I suppose so,” said Philomène, thoughtfully,
“and of course they had the Passover;
not that they got anything then, except dull
roast lamb and parsley, but at least it must
have been rather fun striking the hyssop on to
the door lintels.”</p>
<p class='c007'>The Christmas tree was standing in the bow-window,
decorated with fir cones and lighted
candles, and below it was a little crèche, with
the Madonna and the Christchild, and the ox
and ass standing by the manger. Beside it
was a table, on which Philomène’s Christmas
presents had been spread, and it was when
these had been looked at and admired, that
Isolde sat down on the floor close to the crèche,
and drew Philomène towards her.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Little cushat,” said she, “on this night,
of all nights in the year, when we are thinking
of the best and dearest mother that ever was
or will be, I want to tell you that Daddy has
<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>asked me to be your mother. Are you a little
bit glad?”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène was very glad, too glad to speak
at first. Then a shadow fell. “Godmother,”
she whispered, “there is just one thing I should
like to say, but I’m afraid it may hurt you.
I was thinking that you would want me to call
you “Mother,” as though I were really your
own little girl, and I wish I were, or at least
I wish I had been to start with, because you
know how I love you, Godmother dear, and I
should have been ever so glad if you had been
my real mother properly from the beginning.
But you aren’t, you see, and it seems to me
it would be better not to call you ‘Mother,’
nor to make-believe, but to go on calling you
Godmother just as I used to do, and to keep
‘Mother’ for when I meet my own mother later
on. Don’t you think she might feel a little
bit sorry and left out if I had used up that
name for someone else, even for you?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“You are right,” said Isolde in a very low
voice, “we will not defraud the dead.”</p>
<p class='c007'>The next day Philomène went to announce
the news to Sweet William. She sat opposite
to him on the toadstool which she had come
to consider her own, with her elbows propped
<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>on the mushroom table between them, as she
had sat many and many a time during the
past year.</p>
<p class='c007'>“I quite see that it cannot be helped,” said
Sweet William, when she had finished speaking,
“but I am sorry.”</p>
<p class='c007'>A startled look came into Philomène’s eyes.
“What do you mean?” she asked uneasily,
“why should you be sorry?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“For one thing, you will not live at Sideview
any longer,” replied Sweet William, gravely.
This had not yet occurred to Philomène, and
now that she realised it she put her head down
on the mushroom, and cried bitterly.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Oh, and I used to think it such a dull
little house,” she sobbed, “and now I shall be
ever so sorry to leave it. I have found a fairy
in the garden, and another indoors, and a
witch and a White Létiche as well, such a dear,
pretty little White Létiche. Are the fairies
going to leave me, Sweet William, all because
Daddy wants to marry again?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“You are not putting the matter quite
fairly,” replied Sweet William, with a momentary
return of his severest manner, “it is not your
father’s marriage in itself which will oblige
us to leave you for the present, or rather, you
<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>to leave us. It is that the Good People are only
the comrades of lonely children, and now you
will not be lonely any more. Your godmother
will make you a good mother, and a good
friend, and you will need us no longer. Remember,
Griselda never went up into the
cuckoo clock again after she had found a
playmate.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“But even if I have to leave you behind me,”
said Philomène, fighting with her tears, “I
shall have Master Mustardseed and Queen
Mab with me still, and Speedwell and Spirea
live at the Cushats.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Sweet William shook his head. “That
makes no difference,” he said, “you will still
have a canary and a cat, but not a fairy and a
white witch. I daresay you may catch a
glimpse of the twins now and then when it is
growing dusk, but it will be of no use trying to
get them to speak to you, unless they make
the first move. Of course I don’t for a moment
say that you and I will never meet again; I
may very possibly turn up years hence in some
other garden. After all, you had the green
ribbons on your christening robe, and that will
always count for something.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Philomène dried her tears, but she was far
<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>from feeling comforted. She looked sadly all
round the little room, and had hard work to
prevent them from flowing afresh as she wished
Sweet William good-bye. She was half way
down the garden path before she remembered
that she had left her latchkey sticking in the
lock. She went back at once, but it was gone.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c003' /></div>
<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span></div>
<div class='section ph2'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c005'>
<div>DADDY TAKES US CAMPING</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c006'>“Oh, Hal!” cried Mabel Blake, as she ran
down the garden walk. “Guess what’s going
to happen.”</p>
<p class='c007'>“I don’t know,” answered Hal, who was
making a kite. “What?”</p>
<p class='c007'>“Daddy is going to take us camping!” went
on Mab.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Oh, joy!” cried Hal.</p>
<p class='c007'>Camping in the woods, living in a tent, and
having many wonderful adventures, are only a
few things Hal, Mab and their father did. You
liked to read the Bedtime Stories, and you will
like these new books by the same author, Howard
R. Garis.</p>
<p class='c007'>Send to your book store, and get the volume
“Daddy Takes Us Camping.” The book tells
of nature, outdoor life and animals in a way
children like.</p>
<p class='c007'>R. F. Fenno & Company, of 18 East 17th
Street, New York City, publish the Daddy
books, of which there are several. They will
mail any volume on receipt of price, if your
store does not have it. The books are prettily
gotten up, with pictures.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c003' /></div>
<div class='tnotes'>
<div class='section ph2'>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c005'>
<div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<ol class='ol_1 c002'>
<li>P. <SPAN href='#t65'>65</SPAN>, changed “fairy in the case” to “fairy in the castle”.
</li>
<li>Table of <SPAN href='#CONTENTS'>Contents</SPAN> added by transcriber.
</li>
<li>Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
</li>
<li>Archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings retained as printed.
</li>
</ol></div>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />