The Brownies and Other Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 184 pages of information about The Brownies and Other Tales.

The Brownies and Other Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 184 pages of information about The Brownies and Other Tales.

“The thrush’s new home was not in the narrow streets.  It was in a small cottage in a small garden at the back of the town.  The canary’s old cage was comparatively roomy, and food, water, and fresh turf were regularly supplied to him.  He could see green leaves too.  There was an apple-tree in the garden, and two geraniums, a fuchsia, and a tea-rose in the window.  Near the tea-rose an old woman sat in the sunshine.  She was the sailor’s mother, and looked very like a tidily-kept window-plant herself.  She had a little money of her own, which gave her a certain dignity, and her son was very good to her; and so she dwelt in considerable comfort, dividing her time chiefly between reading in the big Bible, knitting socks for Jack, and raising cuttings in bottles of water.  She had heard of hothouses and forcing-frames, but she did not think much of them.  She believed a bottle of water to be the most natural, because it was the oldest method she knew of, and she thought no good came of new-fangled ways, and trying to outdo Nature.

“‘Slow and sure is best,’ she said, and stuck to her own system.

“‘What’s that, my dear?’ she asked, when the sailor came in and held up the handkerchief.  He told her.

“‘You’re always a-laying out your money on something or other,’ said the old lady, who took the privilege of her years to be a little testy.  ‘What did you give for that?’

“‘A shilling, ma’am.’

“‘Tst! tst! tst!’ said the old lady, disapprovingly.

“‘Now, Mother, don’t shake that cap of yours off your head,’ said the sailor.  ’What’s a shilling?  If I hadn’t spent it, I should have changed it; and once change a shilling, and it all dribbles away in coppers, and you get nothing for it.  But spend it in the lump, and you get something you want.  That’s what I say.’

“‘I want no more pets,’ said the old lady, stiffly.

“‘Well, you won’t be troubled with this one long,’ said her son; ’it’ll go with me, and that’s soon enough.’

“Any allusion to his departure always melted the old lady, as Jack well knew.  She became tearful, and begged him to leave the thrush with her.

“’You know, my dear, I’ve always looked to your live things as if they were Christians; and loved them too (unless it was that monkey that I never could do with!).  Leave it with me, my dear.  I’d never bother myself with a bird on board ship, if I was you.’

“‘That’s because you’ve got a handsome son of your own, old lady,’ chuckled the sailor; ’I’ve neither chick nor child, ma’am, remember, and a man must have something to look to.  The bird’ll go with me.’

“And so it came to pass that just when the thrush was becoming domesticated, and almost happy at the cottage, one morning the sailor brought him fresh turf and groundsel, besides his meal-cake, and took the cage down.  And the old woman kissed the wires, and bade the bird good-bye, and blessed her son, and prayed Heaven to bring him safe home again; and they went their way.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Brownies and Other Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.