The Zankiwank and The Bletherwitch: An Original Fantastic Fairy Extravaganza. Fitz-Gerald Shafto Justin Adair

The Zankiwank and The Bletherwitch: An Original Fantastic Fairy Extravaganza - Fitz-Gerald Shafto Justin Adair


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itz-Gerald

      The Zankiwank and The Bletherwitch: An Original Fantastic Fairy Extravaganza

      Part I

      A Trip to Fable Land

      By the Queen-Moon's mystic light,

      By the hush of holy night,

      By the woodland deep and green,

      By the starlight's silver sheen,

      By the zephyr's whispered spell,

      Brooding Powers Invisible,

      Faerie Court and Elfin Throng,

      Unto whom the groves belong,

      And by Laws of ancient date,

      Found in Scrolls of Faerie Fate,

      Stream and fount are dedicate.

      Whereso'er your feet to-day

      Far from haunts of men may stray,

      We adjure you stay no more

      Exiles on an alien shore,

      But with spells of magic birth

      Once again make glad the earth.

Philip Dayre.

      "Well," said the Zankiwank as he swallowed another jam tart, "I think we had better start on our travels at once."

      They were all standing under the clock at Charing Cross Station when the station was closed and everybody else had departed, except the train which the Zankiwank had himself chartered. It was all so odd and strange, and the gathering was so very motley, that if it had been to-morrow morning instead of last night, Willie and Maude would certainly have said they had both been dreaming. But, of course, they were not dreaming because they were wide-awake and dressed. Besides, they remembered Charing Cross Station quite well, having started therefrom with their father and mother only last summer when they went to the sea-side for their holidays – and what jolly times they had on the sands! So Maude said promptly, "It is not Night-mare or Dreams or Anything. We don't know what it is, but we must not go to sleep, Willie, in case anything should happen."

      Willie replied that he did not want to go to sleep any more. "I believe it's a show," he added, "and somebody's run away with us. How lovely! I'm glad we are lost. Let us go and ask that tall gentleman, who looks like the parlour-tongs in a bathing-suit, to give us some more buns." For, being a boy, he could always eat buns, or an abundance of them, only I hope you won't tell the nursery governess I told you.

      It was the Zankiwank, who was doing some conjuring tricks for the benefit of the Jackarandajam and Mr Swinglebinks, to whom Willie referred. The Zankiwank was certainly a very curious person to look at. He had very long legs, very long arms, and a very small body, a long neck and a head like a peacock. He was not wearing a bathing suit as Willie imagined, because there were tails to his jacket, hanging down almost to his heels. He wore a sash round his waist, and his clothes were all speckled as though he had been peppered with the colours out of a very large kaleidoscope. The Jackarandajam was also rather tall and thin, but dressed in the very height of fashion, with a flower in his coat and a cigarette in his mouth, which he never smoked because he never lit it. He was believed by all the others – you shall know who all the others were presently – to know more things than the Man-in-the-Moon, because he nearly always said something that nobody else ever thought of. And the Man-in-the-Moon knows more things than the Old Woman of Mars. You have naturally heard all about Mars – at least, if you have not heard all about her, you all have heard about her, which is just the same thing, only reversed.

      There was an Old Woman of Mars

      Who'd constantly say "Bless my stars,

      There's the Sun and the Moon

      And the Earth in a swoon,

      All dying for par-tic-u-lars-u-lars!

      Of this planet of mine called Mars!"

      Mr Swinglebinks, unlike his two companions, was short, stout, and dreadfully important. In Fable Land, where we are going as soon as we start for that happy place, he kept a grocer's shop once upon a time. As nobody cared a fig for his sugar and currants, however, he retired from business and took to dates and the making of new almanacks, and was now travelling about for the benefit of his figures. He was very strong on arithmetic, and could read, write, and arith-metise before he went to school, so he never went at all.

      While the Zankiwank was talking to his friends an unseen porter rang an unseen bell, and called out in an unknown tongue: —

      "Take your seats for Fableland,

      Which stands upon a Tableland,

      And don't distress the guard.

      And when you pass the Cableland

      Say nothing to the Gableland

      Because it hurts the guard."

      "We must put that porter back in the bottle," said the Jackarandajam, "we shall want some bottled porter to drink on the road."

      "Well," said Maude, "what a ridiculous thing to say. We don't bottle railway porters, I am sure."

      "I wish the Bletherwitch would come," exclaimed the Zankiwank, "we shall miss the next train. She is most provoking. She promised to be here three weeks ago, and we have been waiting ever since."

      This astounding statement quite disturbed Willie, who almost swallowed a bun in his excitement. Had he and Maude been waiting there three weeks as well? What would they think at home? You see Maude and Willie, who were brother and sister, had been on a visit to their grandmama; and on their way home they had fallen asleep in the carriage, after having repeated to each other all the wonderful fairy tales their grandmama had related to them. How long they had slept they could not guess, but when they woke up, instead of finding themselves at home in St George's Square, they discovered that they were at Charing Cross Station. Mary, their nurse, had disappeared, so had John the coachman, and it was the Zankiwank who had opened the door and assisted them to alight, saying at the same time most politely —

      "I assist you to alight, because it is so dark."

      Then he gave them buns and chocolates, icecreams, apples, pears, shrimps and cranberry tarts. So it stands to reason that after such a mixture they were rather perplexed. However, they did not seem very much distressed, and as they were both fond of adventures, especially in books, they were quite content to accept the Zankiwank's offer to take them for a ride in the midnight-express to Fable Land, over which, as everybody knows, King Æsop reigns. Maudie was nine and a half and Willie was eight and a quarter. Very nice ages indeed, unless you happen to be younger or older, and then your own age is nicer still.

      "I think," said the Zankiwank, "that we will start without the Bletherwitch. She knows the way and can take a balloon."

      "If she takes a balloon she will lose it. You had better let the balloon take her," exclaimed the Jackarandajam severely.

      "Take your places! Take your places!" cried the unseen porter. So everybody made a rush for the train, and they all entered a Pullman Car and sat down on the seats.

      "Dear me! How very incorrectly that porter speaks. He means, of course, that the seats should take, or receive us."

      The Zankiwank only smiled, while Mr Swinglebinks commenced counting up to a hundred, but as he lost one, he could only count up to ninety-nine – so, to keep his arithmetic going, he subtracted a time-piece from his neighbour's pocket, multiplied his foot-warmers, and divided his attention between the Wimble and the Wamble, who were both of the party, being left-handed and deaf.

      Maudie and Willie took their places in the car with all the other passengers amid a perfect babel of chattering and laughing and crying, and then, as the train began to slowly move out of the station, the Zankiwank solemnly sang the following serious song: —

      Off to Fable Land

      The midnight train departs at three,

      To Fable


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