The Wonderful Garden or The Three Cs. Nesbit Edith

The Wonderful Garden or The Three Cs - Nesbit Edith


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was looking out of the bow window of the big room spread with a blue rose-patterned carpet, at the green glory of the park, lying in the sun like another and much more beautiful carpet with a pattern of trees on it.

      Then they went down to tea. Such a house – full of beautiful things! But the children hadn’t time to look at them then, and I haven’t time to tell you about them now.

      I will only say that the dining-room was perfect in its Turkey-carpet-and-mahogany comfort, and that it had red curtains.

      ‘Will you please pour the tea, Miss Caroline?’ said Mrs. Wilmington, and went away.

      ‘I’m glad we haven’t got to have tea with her, anyway,’ said Charles.

      And then Uncle Charles came in. He was not at all what they expected. He could not have been what anybody expected. He was more shadowy than you would think anybody could be. He was more like a lightly printed photograph from an insufficiently exposed and imperfectly developed negative than anything else I can think of. He was as thin and pale as Mrs. Wilmington, but there was nothing hard or bony about him. He was soft as a shadow – his voice, his hand, his eyes.

      ‘And what are your names?’ he said, when he had shaken hands all round.

      Caroline told him, and Charles added:

      ‘How funny of you not to know, uncle, when we’re all named after you!’

      ‘Caroline, Charles, Charlotte,’ he repeated. ‘Yes, I suppose you are. I like my tea very weak, please, with plenty of milk and no sugar.’

      Caroline nervously clattered among the silver and china. She was not used to pouring out real tea for long-estranged uncles.

      ‘I hope you will enjoy yourselves here,’ said Uncle Charles, taking his cup; ‘and excuse me if I do not always join you at meals. I am engaged on a work – I mean I am writing a book,’ he told them.

      ‘What fun!’ said every one but Caroline, who had just burnt herself with the urn; and Charles added:

      ‘What’s it about?’

      ‘Magic,’ said the Uncle, ‘or, rather, a branch of magic. I thought of calling it “A Brief Consideration of the Psychological and Physiological Part played by Suggestion in So-called Magic.”’

      ‘It sounds interesting; at least I know it would if I knew anything about it,’ said Caroline, trying to be both truthful and polite.

      ‘It’s very long,’ said Charles. ‘How would you get all that printed on the book’s back?’

      ‘And don’t say “so-called,”’ said Charlotte. ‘It looks as if you didn’t believe in magic.’

      ‘If people thought I believed in magic they wouldn’t read my books,’ said Uncle Charles. ‘They’d think I was mad, you know.’

      ‘But why?’ Charlotte asked. ‘We aren’t mad, and we believe in it. Do you know any spells, uncle? We want awfully to try a spell. It’s the dream of our life. It is, really.’

      The ghost of a smile moved the oyster-shell-coloured face of Uncle Charles.

      ‘So you take an interest in magic?’ he said. ‘We shall have at least that in common.’

      ‘Of course we do. Every one does, only they’re afraid to say so. Even servants do. They tell fortunes and dreams. Did you ever read about the Amulet, or the Phœnix, or the Words of Power? Bread and butter, please,’ said Charles.

      ‘You have evidently got up the subject,’ said Uncle Charles. ‘Who told you about Words of Power?’

      ‘It’s in The Amulet,’ said Charlotte. ‘I say, uncle, do tell us some spells.’

      ‘Ah!’ Uncle Charles sighed. ‘I am afraid the day of spells has gone by – except, perhaps, for people of your age. She could have told you spells enough – if all the stories of her are true.’

      He pointed to a picture over the mantelpiece – a fair-haired, dark-eyed lady in a ruff.

      ‘She was an ancestress of ours,’ he said; ‘she was wonderfully learned.’

      ‘What became of her?’ Charlotte asked.

      ‘They burned her for a witch. It is sometimes a mistake to know too much,’ said the Uncle.

      This contrasted agreeably with remembered remarks of Uncle Percival and Aunt Emmeline, such as ‘Knowledge is power’ and ‘There is no darkness but ignorance.’

      The children looked at the lady in the white ruff and black velvet dress, and they liked her face.

      ‘What a shame!’ they said.

      ‘Yes,’ said the Uncle. ‘You see she’s resting her hand on two books. There’s a tradition that those books contain her magic secret. I used to look for the books when I was young, but I never found them – I never found them.’ He sighed again.

      ‘We’ll look, uncle,’ said Charlotte eagerly. ‘We may look, mayn’t we? Young heads are better than old shoulders, aren’t they? At least, that sounds rude, but you know I mean two heads are better than yours – No, that’s not it. Too many cooks spoil the – No, that’s not it either. We wouldn’t spoil anything. Too many hands make light work. That’s what I meant.’

      ‘Your meaning was plain from the first,’ said the Uncle, finishing his tea and setting down his cup – a beautiful red and blue and gold one – very different from Aunt Emmeline’s white crockery. ‘Certainly you may look. But you’ll respect the field of your search.’

      ‘Uncle,’ said Caroline, from behind the silver tea-tray, ‘your house is the most lovely, splendid, glorious, beautiful house we’ve ever seen, and – ’

      ‘We wouldn’t hurt a hair of its head,’ said Charles.

      Again the Uncle smiled. ‘Well, well,’ he said, and faded away like a shadow.

      ‘We’ll find those books or perish,’ said Charlotte firmly.

      ‘Ra-ther,’ said Charles.

      ‘We’ll look for them, anyway,’ said Caroline. ‘Now let’s go and pick an ivy leaf and put it in a letter for poor dear Aunt Emmeline. I’ll tell you something.’

      ‘Well?’ said the others.

      ‘This is the sort of house I’ve always dreamed of when it said luxury – in books, you know.’

      ‘Me too,’ said Charlotte.

      ‘And me,’ said Charles.

      CHAPTER III

      THE WONDERFUL GARDEN

      It was very glorious to wake up the next morning in enormous soft beds – four-posted, with many-folded silk hangings, and shiny furniture that reflected the sunlight as dark mirrors might do. And breakfast was nice, with different sorts of things to eat, in silver dishes with spirit-lamps under them, – bacon and sausages and scrambled eggs, and as much toast and marmalade as you wanted; not just porridge and apples, as at Aunt Emmeline’s. There were tea and coffee and hot milk. They all chose hot milk.

      ‘I feel,’ said Caroline, pouring it out of a big silver jug with little bits of ivory between the handle and the jug to keep the handle from getting too hot, ‘I feel that we’re going to enjoy every second of the time we’re here.’

      ‘Rather,’ said Charles, through sausage. ‘Isn’t Uncle Charles a dear,’ he added more distinctly. ‘I dreamed about him last night – that he painted his face out of the paint-box I gave Caro, and then we blew him out with the bellows to make him fatter.’

      ‘And did it?’ Caroline asked.

      ‘He burst,’ said Charles briefly, ‘and turned into showers of dead leaves.’

      There was an interval of contented silence. Then —

      ‘What shall


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