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- Title: Peter Pan
- Peter Pan and Wendy
- Author: James M. Barrie
- Posting Date: June 25, 2008 [EBook #16]
- Release Date: July, 1991
- Last Updated: March 10, 2018
- Language: English
- Character set encoding: UTF-8
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PETER PAN ***
- PETER PAN
- [PETER AND WENDY]
- By J. M. Barrie [James Matthew Barrie]
- A Millennium Fulcrum Edition (c)1991 by Duncan Research
- Contents:
- Chapter 1 PETER BREAKS THROUGH
- Chapter 2 THE SHADOW
- Chapter 3 COME AWAY, COME AWAY!
- Chapter 4 THE FLIGHT
- Chapter 5 THE ISLAND COME TRUE
- Chapter 6 THE LITTLE HOUSE
- Chapter 7 THE HOME UNDER THE GROUND
- Chapter 8 THE MERMAID'S LAGOON
- Chapter 9 THE NEVER BIRD
- Chapter 10 THE HAPPY HOME
- Chapter 11 WENDY'S STORY
- Chapter 12 THE CHILDREN ARE CARRIED OFF
- Chapter 13 DO YOU BELIEVE IN FAIRIES?
- Chapter 14 THE PIRATE SHIP
- Chapter 15 “HOOK OR ME THIS TIME”
- Chapter 16 THE RETURN HOME
- Chapter 17 WHEN WENDY GREW UP
- Chapter 1 PETER BREAKS THROUGH
- All children, except one, grow up. They soon know that they will grow
- up, and the way Wendy knew was this. One day when she was two years old
- she was playing in a garden, and she plucked another flower and ran with
- it to her mother. I suppose she must have looked rather delightful, for
- Mrs. Darling put her hand to her heart and cried, “Oh, why can't you
- remain like this for ever!” This was all that passed between them on
- the subject, but henceforth Wendy knew that she must grow up. You always
- know after you are two. Two is the beginning of the end.
- Of course they lived at 14 [their house number on their street], and
- until Wendy came her mother was the chief one. She was a lovely lady,
- with a romantic mind and such a sweet mocking mouth. Her romantic
- mind was like the tiny boxes, one within the other, that come from the
- puzzling East, however many you discover there is always one more; and
- her sweet mocking mouth had one kiss on it that Wendy could never get,
- though there it was, perfectly conspicuous in the right-hand corner.
- The way Mr. Darling won her was this: the many gentlemen who had been
- boys when she was a girl discovered simultaneously that they loved her,
- and they all ran to her house to propose to her except Mr. Darling, who
- took a cab and nipped in first, and so he got her. He got all of her,
- except the innermost box and the kiss. He never knew about the box, and
- in time he gave up trying for the kiss. Wendy thought Napoleon could
- have got it, but I can picture him trying, and then going off in a
- passion, slamming the door.
- Mr. Darling used to boast to Wendy that her mother not only loved him
- but respected him. He was one of those deep ones who know about stocks
- and shares. Of course no one really knows, but he quite seemed to know,
- and he often said stocks were up and shares were down in a way that
- would have made any woman respect him.
- Mrs. Darling was married in white, and at first she kept the books
- perfectly, almost gleefully, as if it were a game, not so much as a
- Brussels sprout was missing; but by and by whole cauliflowers dropped
- out, and instead of them there were pictures of babies without faces.
- She drew them when she should have been totting up. They were Mrs.
- Darling's guesses.
- Wendy came first, then John, then Michael.
- For a week or two after Wendy came it was doubtful whether they would
- be able to keep her, as she was another mouth to feed. Mr. Darling was
- frightfully proud of her, but he was very honourable, and he sat on the
- edge of Mrs. Darling's bed, holding her hand and calculating expenses,
- while she looked at him imploringly. She wanted to risk it, come what
- might, but that was not his way; his way was with a pencil and a piece
- of paper, and if she confused him with suggestions he had to begin at
- the beginning again.
- “Now don't interrupt,” he would beg of her.
- “I have one pound seventeen here, and two and six at the office; I can
- cut off my coffee at the office, say ten shillings, making two nine
- and six, with your eighteen and three makes three nine seven, with five
- naught naught in my cheque-book makes eight nine seven--who is that
- moving?--eight nine seven, dot and carry seven--don't speak, my own--and
- the pound you lent to that man who came to the door--quiet, child--dot
- and carry child--there, you've done it!--did I say nine nine seven? yes,
- I said nine nine seven; the question is, can we try it for a year on
- nine nine seven?”
- “Of course we can, George,” she cried. But she was prejudiced in Wendy's
- favour, and he was really the grander character of the two.
- “Remember mumps,” he warned her almost threateningly, and off he went
- again. “Mumps one pound, that is what I have put down, but I daresay
- it will be more like thirty shillings--don't speak--measles one five,
- German measles half a guinea, makes two fifteen six--don't waggle your
- finger--whooping-cough, say fifteen shillings”--and so on it went, and
- it added up differently each time; but at last Wendy just got through,
- with mumps reduced to twelve six, and the two kinds of measles treated
- as one.
- There was the same excitement over John, and Michael had even a narrower
- squeak; but both were kept, and soon, you might have seen the three of
- them going in a row to Miss Fulsom's Kindergarten school, accompanied by
- their nurse.
- Mrs. Darling loved to have everything just so, and Mr. Darling had a
- passion for being exactly like his neighbours; so, of course, they had
- a nurse. As they were poor, owing to the amount of milk the children
- drank, this nurse was a prim Newfoundland dog, called Nana, who had
- belonged to no one in particular until the Darlings engaged her. She had
- always thought children important, however, and the Darlings had become
- acquainted with her in Kensington Gardens, where she spent most of her
- spare time peeping into perambulators, and was much hated by careless
- nursemaids, whom she followed to their homes and complained of to their
- mistresses. She proved to be quite a treasure of a nurse. How thorough
- she was at bath-time, and up at any moment of the night if one of her
- charges made the slightest cry. Of course her kennel was in the nursery.
- She had a genius for knowing when a cough is a thing to have no patience
- with and when it needs stocking around your throat. She believed to her
- last day in old-fashioned remedies like rhubarb leaf, and made sounds of
- contempt over all this new-fangled talk about germs, and so on. It was a
- lesson in propriety to see her escorting the children to school, walking
- sedately by their side when they were well behaved, and butting them
- back into line if they strayed. On John's footer [in England soccer
- was called football, “footer” for short] days she never once forgot his
- sweater, and she usually carried an umbrella in her mouth in case of
- rain. There is a room in the basement of Miss Fulsom's school where the
- nurses wait. They sat on forms, while Nana lay on the floor, but that
- was the only difference. They affected to ignore her as of an inferior
- social status to themselves, and she despised their light talk. She
- resented visits to the nursery from Mrs. Darling's friends, but if they
- did come she first whipped off Michael's pinafore and put him into the
- one with blue braiding, and smoothed out Wendy and made a dash at John's
- hair.
- No nursery could possibly have been conducted more correctly, and
- Mr. Darling knew it, yet he sometimes wondered uneasily whether the
- neighbours talked.
- He had his position in the city to consider.
- Nana also troubled him in another way. He had sometimes a feeling that
- she did not admire him. “I know she admires you tremendously, George,”
- Mrs. Darling would assure him, and then she would sign to the children
- to be specially nice to father. Lovely dances followed, in which the
- only other servant, Liza, was sometimes allowed to join. Such a midget
- she looked in her long skirt and maid's cap, though she had sworn, when
- engaged, that she would never see ten again. The gaiety of those romps!
- And gayest of all was Mrs. Darling, who would pirouette so wildly that
- all you could see of her was the kiss, and then if you had dashed at her
- you might have got it. There never was a simpler happier family until
- the coming of Peter Pan.
- Mrs. Darling first heard of Peter when she was tidying up her children's
- minds. It is the nightly custom of every good mother after her children
- are asleep to rummage in their minds and put things straight for next
- morning, repacking into their proper places the many articles that have
- wandered during the day. If you could keep awake (but of course you
- can't) you would see your own mother doing this, and you would find it
- very interesting to watch her. It is quite like tidying up drawers. You
- would see her on her knees, I expect, lingering humorously over some of
- your contents, wondering where on earth you had picked this thing up,
- making discoveries sweet and not so sweet, pressing this to her cheek as
- if it were as nice as a kitten, and hurriedly stowing that out of sight.
- When you wake in the morning, the naughtiness and evil passions with
- which you went to bed have been folded up small and placed at the bottom
- of your mind and on the top, beautifully aired, are spread out your
- prettier thoughts, ready for you to put on.
- I don't know whether you have ever seen a map of a person's mind.
- Doctors sometimes draw maps of other parts of you, and your own map can
- become intensely interesting, but catch them trying to draw a map of a
- child's mind, which is not only confused, but keeps going round all
- the time. There are zigzag lines on it, just like your temperature on a
- card, and these are probably roads in the island, for the Neverland is
- always more or less an island, with astonishing splashes of colour here
- and there, and coral reefs and rakish-looking craft in the offing, and
- savages and lonely lairs, and gnomes who are mostly tailors, and caves
- through which a river runs, and princes with six elder brothers, and a
- hut fast going to decay, and one very small old lady with a hooked nose.
- It would be an easy map if that were all, but there is also first day
- at school, religion, fathers, the round pond, needle-work, murders,
- hangings, verbs that take the dative, chocolate pudding day, getting
- into braces, say ninety-nine, three-pence for pulling out your tooth
- yourself, and so on, and either these are part of the island or they are
- another map showing through, and it is all rather confusing, especially
- as nothing will stand still.
- Of course the Neverlands vary a good deal. John's, for instance, had a
- lagoon with flamingoes flying over it at which John was shooting, while
- Michael, who was very small, had a flamingo with lagoons flying over
- it. John lived in a boat turned upside down on the sands, Michael in
- a wigwam, Wendy in a house of leaves deftly sewn together. John had no
- friends, Michael had friends at night, Wendy had a pet wolf forsaken by
- its parents, but on the whole the Neverlands have a family resemblance,
- and if they stood still in a row you could say of them that they have
- each other's nose, and so forth. On these magic shores children at play
- are for ever beaching their coracles [simple boat]. We too have been
- there; we can still hear the sound of the surf, though we shall land no
- more.
- Of all delectable islands the Neverland is the snuggest and most
- compact, not large and sprawly, you know, with tedious distances between
- one adventure and another, but nicely crammed. When you play at it by
- day with the chairs and table-cloth, it is not in the least alarming,
- but in the two minutes before you go to sleep it becomes very real. That
- is why there are night-lights.
- Occasionally in her travels through her children's minds Mrs. Darling
- found things she could not understand, and of these quite the most
- perplexing was the word Peter. She knew of no Peter, and yet he was
- here and there in John and Michael's minds, while Wendy's began to be
- scrawled all over with him. The name stood out in bolder letters than
- any of the other words, and as Mrs. Darling gazed she felt that it had
- an oddly cocky appearance.
- “Yes, he is rather cocky,” Wendy admitted with regret. Her mother had
- been questioning her.
- “But who is he, my pet?”
- “He is Peter Pan, you know, mother.”
- At first Mrs. Darling did not know, but after thinking back into her
- childhood she just remembered a Peter Pan who was said to live with the
- fairies. There were odd stories about him, as that when children died he
- went part of the way with them, so that they should not be frightened.
- She had believed in him at the time, but now that she was married and
- full of sense she quite doubted whether there was any such person.
- “Besides,” she said to Wendy, “he would be grown up by this time.”
- “Oh no, he isn't grown up,” Wendy assured her confidently, “and he is
- just my size.” She meant that he was her size in both mind and body; she
- didn't know how she knew, she just knew it.
- Mrs. Darling consulted Mr. Darling, but he smiled pooh-pooh. “Mark my
- words,” he said, “it is some nonsense Nana has been putting into their
- heads; just the sort of idea a dog would have. Leave it alone, and it
- will blow over.”
- But it would not blow over and soon the troublesome boy gave Mrs.
- Darling quite a shock.
- Children have the strangest adventures without being troubled by them.
- For instance, they may remember to mention, a week after the event
- happened, that when they were in the wood they had met their dead
- father and had a game with him. It was in this casual way that Wendy one
- morning made a disquieting revelation. Some leaves of a tree had been
- found on the nursery floor, which certainly were not there when the
- children went to bed, and Mrs. Darling was puzzling over them when Wendy
- said with a tolerant smile:
- “I do believe it is that Peter again!”
- “Whatever do you mean, Wendy?”
- “It is so naughty of him not to wipe his feet,” Wendy said, sighing. She
- was a tidy child.
- She explained in quite a matter-of-fact way that she thought Peter
- sometimes came to the nursery in the night and sat on the foot of her
- bed and played on his pipes to her. Unfortunately she never woke, so she
- didn't know how she knew, she just knew.
- “What nonsense you talk, precious. No one can get into the house without
- knocking.”
- “I think he comes in by the window,” she said.
- “My love, it is three floors up.”
- “Were not the leaves at the foot of the window, mother?”
- It was quite true; the leaves had been found very near the window.
- Mrs. Darling did not know what to think, for it all seemed so natural to
- Wendy that you could not dismiss it by saying she had been dreaming.
- “My child,” the mother cried, “why did you not tell me of this before?”
- “I forgot,” said Wendy lightly. She was in a hurry to get her breakfast.
- Oh, surely she must have been dreaming.
- But, on the other hand, there were the leaves. Mrs. Darling examined
- them very carefully; they were skeleton leaves, but she was sure they
- did not come from any tree that grew in England. She crawled about the
- floor, peering at it with a candle for marks of a strange foot. She
- rattled the poker up the chimney and tapped the walls. She let down a
- tape from the window to the pavement, and it was a sheer drop of thirty
- feet, without so much as a spout to climb up by.
- Certainly Wendy had been dreaming.
- But Wendy had not been dreaming, as the very next night showed, the
- night on which the extraordinary adventures of these children may be
- said to have begun.
- On the night we speak of all the children were once more in bed. It
- happened to be Nana's evening off, and Mrs. Darling had bathed them and
- sung to them till one by one they had let go her hand and slid away into
- the land of sleep.
- All were looking so safe and cosy that she smiled at her fears now and
- sat down tranquilly by the fire to sew.
- It was something for Michael, who on his birthday was getting into
- shirts. The fire was warm, however, and the nursery dimly lit by three
- night-lights, and presently the sewing lay on Mrs. Darling's lap. Then
- her head nodded, oh, so gracefully. She was asleep. Look at the four of
- them, Wendy and Michael over there, John here, and Mrs. Darling by the
- fire. There should have been a fourth night-light.
- While she slept she had a dream. She dreamt that the Neverland had come
- too near and that a strange boy had broken through from it. He did not
- alarm her, for she thought she had seen him before in the faces of many
- women who have no children. Perhaps he is to be found in the faces of
- some mothers also. But in her dream he had rent the film that obscures
- the Neverland, and she saw Wendy and John and Michael peeping through
- the gap.
- The dream by itself would have been a trifle, but while she was dreaming
- the window of the nursery blew open, and a boy did drop on the floor.
- He was accompanied by a strange light, no bigger than your fist, which
- darted about the room like a living thing and I think it must have been
- this light that wakened Mrs. Darling.
- She started up with a cry, and saw the boy, and somehow she knew at once
- that he was Peter Pan. If you or I or Wendy had been there we should
- have seen that he was very like Mrs. Darling's kiss. He was a lovely
- boy, clad in skeleton leaves and the juices that ooze out of trees but
- the most entrancing thing about him was that he had all his first teeth.
- When he saw she was a grown-up, he gnashed the little pearls at her.
- Chapter 2 THE SHADOW
- Mrs. Darling screamed, and, as if in answer to a bell, the door opened,
- and Nana entered, returned from her evening out. She growled and sprang
- at the boy, who leapt lightly through the window. Again Mrs. Darling
- screamed, this time in distress for him, for she thought he was killed,
- and she ran down into the street to look for his little body, but it
- was not there; and she looked up, and in the black night she could see
- nothing but what she thought was a shooting star.
- She returned to the nursery, and found Nana with something in her mouth,
- which proved to be the boy's shadow. As he leapt at the window Nana had
- closed it quickly, too late to catch him, but his shadow had not had
- time to get out; slam went the window and snapped it off.
- You may be sure Mrs. Darling examined the shadow carefully, but it was
- quite the ordinary kind.
- Nana had no doubt of what was the best thing to do with this shadow. She
- hung it out at the window, meaning “He is sure to come back for it; let
- us put it where he can get it easily without disturbing the children.”
- But unfortunately Mrs. Darling could not leave it hanging out at the
- window, it looked so like the washing and lowered the whole tone of the
- house. She thought of showing it to Mr. Darling, but he was totting up
- winter great-coats for John and Michael, with a wet towel around his
- head to keep his brain clear, and it seemed a shame to trouble him;
- besides, she knew exactly what he would say: “It all comes of having a
- dog for a nurse.”
- She decided to roll the shadow up and put it away carefully in a drawer,
- until a fitting opportunity came for telling her husband. Ah me!
- The opportunity came a week later, on that never-to-be-forgotten Friday.
- Of course it was a Friday.
- “I ought to have been specially careful on a Friday,” she used to say
- afterwards to her husband, while perhaps Nana was on the other side of
- her, holding her hand.
- “No, no,” Mr. Darling always said, “I am responsible for it all. I,
- George Darling, did it. MEA CULPA, MEA CULPA.” He had had a classical
- education.
- They sat thus night after night recalling that fatal Friday, till every
- detail of it was stamped on their brains and came through on the other
- side like the faces on a bad coinage.
- “If only I had not accepted that invitation to dine at 27,” Mrs. Darling
- said.
- “If only I had not poured my medicine into Nana's bowl,” said Mr.
- Darling.
- “If only I had pretended to like the medicine,” was what Nana's wet eyes
- said.
- “My liking for parties, George.”
- “My fatal gift of humour, dearest.”
- “My touchiness about trifles, dear master and mistress.”
- Then one or more of them would break down altogether; Nana at the
- thought, “It's true, it's true, they ought not to have had a dog for
- a nurse.” Many a time it was Mr. Darling who put the handkerchief to
- Nana's eyes.
- “That fiend!” Mr. Darling would cry, and Nana's bark was the echo of
- it, but Mrs. Darling never upbraided Peter; there was something in the
- right-hand corner of her mouth that wanted her not to call Peter names.
- They would sit there in the empty nursery, recalling fondly every
- smallest detail of that dreadful evening. It had begun so uneventfully,
- so precisely like a hundred other evenings, with Nana putting on the
- water for Michael's bath and carrying him to it on her back.
- “I won't go to bed,” he had shouted, like one who still believed that he
- had the last word on the subject, “I won't, I won't. Nana, it isn't six
- o'clock yet. Oh dear, oh dear, I shan't love you any more, Nana. I tell
- you I won't be bathed, I won't, I won't!”
- Then Mrs. Darling had come in, wearing her white evening-gown. She had
- dressed early because Wendy so loved to see her in her evening-gown,
- with the necklace George had given her. She was wearing Wendy's bracelet
- on her arm; she had asked for the loan of it. Wendy loved to lend her
- bracelet to her mother.
- She had found her two older children playing at being herself and father
- on the occasion of Wendy's birth, and John was saying:
- “I am happy to inform you, Mrs. Darling, that you are now a mother,”
- in just such a tone as Mr. Darling himself may have used on the real
- occasion.
- Wendy had danced with joy, just as the real Mrs. Darling must have done.
- Then John was born, with the extra pomp that he conceived due to the
- birth of a male, and Michael came from his bath to ask to be born also,
- but John said brutally that they did not want any more.
- Michael had nearly cried. “Nobody wants me,” he said, and of course the
- lady in the evening-dress could not stand that.
- “I do,” she said, “I so want a third child.”
- “Boy or girl?” asked Michael, not too hopefully.
- “Boy.”
- Then he had leapt into her arms. Such a little thing for Mr. and Mrs.
- Darling and Nana to recall now, but not so little if that was to be
- Michael's last night in the nursery.
- They go on with their recollections.
- “It was then that I rushed in like a tornado, wasn't it?” Mr. Darling
- would say, scorning himself; and indeed he had been like a tornado.
- Perhaps there was some excuse for him. He, too, had been dressing for
- the party, and all had gone well with him until he came to his tie. It
- is an astounding thing to have to tell, but this man, though he knew
- about stocks and shares, had no real mastery of his tie. Sometimes the
- thing yielded to him without a contest, but there were occasions when it
- would have been better for the house if he had swallowed his pride and
- used a made-up tie.
- This was such an occasion. He came rushing into the nursery with the
- crumpled little brute of a tie in his hand.
- “Why, what is the matter, father dear?”
- “Matter!” he yelled; he really yelled. “This tie, it will not tie.” He
- became dangerously sarcastic. “Not round my neck! Round the bed-post!
- Oh yes, twenty times have I made it up round the bed-post, but round my
- neck, no! Oh dear no! begs to be excused!”
- He thought Mrs. Darling was not sufficiently impressed, and he went on
- sternly, “I warn you of this, mother, that unless this tie is round my
- neck we don't go out to dinner to-night, and if I don't go out to dinner
- to-night, I never go to the office again, and if I don't go to the
- office again, you and I starve, and our children will be flung into the
- streets.”
- Even then Mrs. Darling was placid. “Let me try, dear,” she said, and
- indeed that was what he had come to ask her to do, and with her nice
- cool hands she tied his tie for him, while the children stood around to
- see their fate decided. Some men would have resented her being able to
- do it so easily, but Mr. Darling had far too fine a nature for that; he
- thanked her carelessly, at once forgot his rage, and in another moment
- was dancing round the room with Michael on his back.
- “How wildly we romped!” says Mrs. Darling now, recalling it.
- “Our last romp!” Mr. Darling groaned.
- “O George, do you remember Michael suddenly said to me, 'How did you get
- to know me, mother?'”
- “I remember!”
- “They were rather sweet, don't you think, George?”
- “And they were ours, ours! and now they are gone.”
- The romp had ended with the appearance of Nana, and most unluckily Mr.
- Darling collided against her, covering his trousers with hairs. They
- were not only new trousers, but they were the first he had ever had
- with braid on them, and he had had to bite his lip to prevent the tears
- coming. Of course Mrs. Darling brushed him, but he began to talk again
- about its being a mistake to have a dog for a nurse.
- “George, Nana is a treasure.”
- “No doubt, but I have an uneasy feeling at times that she looks upon the
- children as puppies.”
- “Oh no, dear one, I feel sure she knows they have souls.”
- “I wonder,” Mr. Darling said thoughtfully, “I wonder.” It was an
- opportunity, his wife felt, for telling him about the boy. At first he
- pooh-poohed the story, but he became thoughtful when she showed him the
- shadow.
- “It is nobody I know,” he said, examining it carefully, “but it does
- look a scoundrel.”
- “We were still discussing it, you remember,” says Mr. Darling, “when
- Nana came in with Michael's medicine. You will never carry the bottle in
- your mouth again, Nana, and it is all my fault.”
- Strong man though he was, there is no doubt that he had behaved rather
- foolishly over the medicine. If he had a weakness, it was for thinking
- that all his life he had taken medicine boldly, and so now, when Michael
- dodged the spoon in Nana's mouth, he had said reprovingly, “Be a man,
- Michael.”
- “Won't; won't!” Michael cried naughtily. Mrs. Darling left the room to
- get a chocolate for him, and Mr. Darling thought this showed want of
- firmness.
- “Mother, don't pamper him,” he called after her. “Michael, when I was
- your age I took medicine without a murmur. I said, 'Thank you, kind
- parents, for giving me bottles to make me well.'”
- He really thought this was true, and Wendy, who was now in her
- night-gown, believed it also, and she said, to encourage Michael, “That
- medicine you sometimes take, father, is much nastier, isn't it?”
- “Ever so much nastier,” Mr. Darling said bravely, “and I would take it
- now as an example to you, Michael, if I hadn't lost the bottle.”
- He had not exactly lost it; he had climbed in the dead of night to the
- top of the wardrobe and hidden it there. What he did not know was that
- the faithful Liza had found it, and put it back on his wash-stand.
- “I know where it is, father,” Wendy cried, always glad to be of service.
- “I'll bring it,” and she was off before he could stop her. Immediately
- his spirits sank in the strangest way.
- “John,” he said, shuddering, “it's most beastly stuff. It's that nasty,
- sticky, sweet kind.”
- “It will soon be over, father,” John said cheerily, and then in rushed
- Wendy with the medicine in a glass.
- “I have been as quick as I could,” she panted.
- “You have been wonderfully quick,” her father retorted, with a
- vindictive politeness that was quite thrown away upon her. “Michael
- first,” he said doggedly.
- “Father first,” said Michael, who was of a suspicious nature.
- “I shall be sick, you know,” Mr. Darling said threateningly.
- “Come on, father,” said John.
- “Hold your tongue, John,” his father rapped out.
- Wendy was quite puzzled. “I thought you took it quite easily, father.”
- “That is not the point,” he retorted. “The point is, that there is
- more in my glass than in Michael's spoon.” His proud heart was nearly
- bursting. “And it isn't fair: I would say it though it were with my last
- breath; it isn't fair.”
- “Father, I am waiting,” said Michael coldly.
- “It's all very well to say you are waiting; so am I waiting.”
- “Father's a cowardly custard.”
- “So are you a cowardly custard.”
- “I'm not frightened.”
- “Neither am I frightened.”
- “Well, then, take it.”
- “Well, then, you take it.”
- Wendy had a splendid idea. “Why not both take it at the same time?”
- “Certainly,” said Mr. Darling. “Are you ready, Michael?”
- Wendy gave the words, one, two, three, and Michael took his medicine,
- but Mr. Darling slipped his behind his back.
- There was a yell of rage from Michael, and “O father!” Wendy exclaimed.
- “What do you mean by 'O father'?” Mr. Darling demanded. “Stop that row,
- Michael. I meant to take mine, but I--I missed it.”
- It was dreadful the way all the three were looking at him, just as if
- they did not admire him. “Look here, all of you,” he said entreatingly,
- as soon as Nana had gone into the bathroom. “I have just thought of a
- splendid joke. I shall pour my medicine into Nana's bowl, and she will
- drink it, thinking it is milk!”
- It was the colour of milk; but the children did not have their father's
- sense of humour, and they looked at him reproachfully as he poured the
- medicine into Nana's bowl. “What fun!” he said doubtfully, and they did
- not dare expose him when Mrs. Darling and Nana returned.
- “Nana, good dog,” he said, patting her, “I have put a little milk into
- your bowl, Nana.”
- Nana wagged her tail, ran to the medicine, and began lapping it. Then
- she gave Mr. Darling such a look, not an angry look: she showed him the
- great red tear that makes us so sorry for noble dogs, and crept into her
- kennel.
- Mr. Darling was frightfully ashamed of himself, but he would not give
- in. In a horrid silence Mrs. Darling smelt the bowl. “O George,” she
- said, “it's your medicine!”
- “It was only a joke,” he roared, while she comforted her boys, and Wendy
- hugged Nana. “Much good,” he said bitterly, “my wearing myself to the
- bone trying to be funny in this house.”
- And still Wendy hugged Nana. “That's right,” he shouted. “Coddle her!
- Nobody coddles me. Oh dear no! I am only the breadwinner, why should I
- be coddled--why, why, why!”
- “George,” Mrs. Darling entreated him, “not so loud; the servants
- will hear you.” Somehow they had got into the way of calling Liza the
- servants.
- “Let them!” he answered recklessly. “Bring in the whole world. But I
- refuse to allow that dog to lord it in my nursery for an hour longer.”
- The children wept, and Nana ran to him beseechingly, but he waved her
- back. He felt he was a strong man again. “In vain, in vain,” he cried;
- “the proper place for you is the yard, and there you go to be tied up
- this instant.”
- “George, George,” Mrs. Darling whispered, “remember what I told you
- about that boy.”
- Alas, he would not listen. He was determined to show who was master in
- that house, and when commands would not draw Nana from the kennel, he
- lured her out of it with honeyed words, and seizing her roughly, dragged
- her from the nursery. He was ashamed of himself, and yet he did it.
- It was all owing to his too affectionate nature, which craved for
- admiration. When he had tied her up in the back-yard, the wretched
- father went and sat in the passage, with his knuckles to his eyes.
- In the meantime Mrs. Darling had put the children to bed in unwonted
- silence and lit their night-lights. They could hear Nana barking, and
- John whimpered, “It is because he is chaining her up in the yard,” but
- Wendy was wiser.
- “That is not Nana's unhappy bark,” she said, little guessing what was
- about to happen; “that is her bark when she smells danger.”
- Danger!
- “Are you sure, Wendy?”
- “Oh, yes.”
- Mrs. Darling quivered and went to the window. It was securely fastened.
- She looked out, and the night was peppered with stars. They were
- crowding round the house, as if curious to see what was to take place
- there, but she did not notice this, nor that one or two of the smaller
- ones winked at her. Yet a nameless fear clutched at her heart and made
- her cry, “Oh, how I wish that I wasn't going to a party to-night!”
- Even Michael, already half asleep, knew that she was perturbed, and he
- asked, “Can anything harm us, mother, after the night-lights are lit?”
- “Nothing, precious,” she said; “they are the eyes a mother leaves behind
- her to guard her children.”
- She went from bed to bed singing enchantments over them, and little
- Michael flung his arms round her. “Mother,” he cried, “I'm glad of you.”
- They were the last words she was to hear from him for a long time.
- No. 27 was only a few yards distant, but there had been a slight fall of
- snow, and Father and Mother Darling picked their way over it deftly not
- to soil their shoes. They were already the only persons in the street,
- and all the stars were watching them. Stars are beautiful, but they may
- not take an active part in anything, they must just look on for ever. It
- is a punishment put on them for something they did so long ago that no
- star now knows what it was. So the older ones have become glassy-eyed
- and seldom speak (winking is the star language), but the little
- ones still wonder. They are not really friendly to Peter, who had a
- mischievous way of stealing up behind them and trying to blow them out;
- but they are so fond of fun that they were on his side to-night, and
- anxious to get the grown-ups out of the way. So as soon as the door
- of 27 closed on Mr. and Mrs. Darling there was a commotion in the
- firmament, and the smallest of all the stars in the Milky Way screamed
- out:
- “Now, Peter!”
- Chapter 3 COME AWAY, COME AWAY!
- For a moment after Mr. and Mrs. Darling left the house the night-lights
- by the beds of the three children continued to burn clearly. They were
- awfully nice little night-lights, and one cannot help wishing that they
- could have kept awake to see Peter; but Wendy's light blinked and gave
- such a yawn that the other two yawned also, and before they could close
- their mouths all the three went out.
- There was another light in the room now, a thousand times brighter than
- the night-lights, and in the time we have taken to say this, it had been
- in all the drawers in the nursery, looking for Peter's shadow, rummaged
- the wardrobe and turned every pocket inside out. It was not really a
- light; it made this light by flashing about so quickly, but when it came
- to rest for a second you saw it was a fairy, no longer than your hand,
- but still growing. It was a girl called Tinker Bell exquisitely gowned
- in a skeleton leaf, cut low and square, through which her figure could
- be seen to the best advantage. She was slightly inclined to EMBONPOINT.
- [plump hourglass figure]
- A moment after the fairy's entrance the window was blown open by the
- breathing of the little stars, and Peter dropped in. He had carried
- Tinker Bell part of the way, and his hand was still messy with the fairy
- dust.
- “Tinker Bell,” he called softly, after making sure that the children
- were asleep, “Tink, where are you?” She was in a jug for the moment, and
- liking it extremely; she had never been in a jug before.
- “Oh, do come out of that jug, and tell me, do you know where they put my
- shadow?”
- The loveliest tinkle as of golden bells answered him. It is the fairy
- language. You ordinary children can never hear it, but if you were to
- hear it you would know that you had heard it once before.
- Tink said that the shadow was in the big box. She meant the chest of
- drawers, and Peter jumped at the drawers, scattering their contents to
- the floor with both hands, as kings toss ha'pence to the crowd. In a
- moment he had recovered his shadow, and in his delight he forgot that he
- had shut Tinker Bell up in the drawer.
- If he thought at all, but I don't believe he ever thought, it was that
- he and his shadow, when brought near each other, would join like drops
- of water, and when they did not he was appalled. He tried to stick it
- on with soap from the bathroom, but that also failed. A shudder passed
- through Peter, and he sat on the floor and cried.
- His sobs woke Wendy, and she sat up in bed. She was not alarmed to see
- a stranger crying on the nursery floor; she was only pleasantly
- interested.
- “Boy,” she said courteously, “why are you crying?”
- Peter could be exceeding polite also, having learned the grand manner at
- fairy ceremonies, and he rose and bowed to her beautifully. She was much
- pleased, and bowed beautifully to him from the bed.
- “What's your name?” he asked.
- “Wendy Moira Angela Darling,” she replied with some satisfaction. “What
- is your name?”
- “Peter Pan.”
- She was already sure that he must be Peter, but it did seem a
- comparatively short name.
- “Is that all?”
- “Yes,” he said rather sharply. He felt for the first time that it was a
- shortish name.
- “I'm so sorry,” said Wendy Moira Angela.
- “It doesn't matter,” Peter gulped.
- She asked where he lived.
- “Second to the right,” said Peter, “and then straight on till morning.”
- “What a funny address!”
- Peter had a sinking. For the first time he felt that perhaps it was a
- funny address.
- “No, it isn't,” he said.
- “I mean,” Wendy said nicely, remembering that she was hostess, “is that
- what they put on the letters?”
- He wished she had not mentioned letters.
- “Don't get any letters,” he said contemptuously.
- “But your mother gets letters?”
- “Don't have a mother,” he said. Not only had he no mother, but he had
- not the slightest desire to have one. He thought them very over-rated
- persons. Wendy, however, felt at once that she was in the presence of a
- tragedy.
- “O Peter, no wonder you were crying,” she said, and got out of bed and
- ran to him.
- “I wasn't crying about mothers,” he said rather indignantly. “I was
- crying because I can't get my shadow to stick on. Besides, I wasn't
- crying.”
- “It has come off?”
- “Yes.”
- Then Wendy saw the shadow on the floor, looking so draggled, and she was
- frightfully sorry for Peter. “How awful!” she said, but she could not
- help smiling when she saw that he had been trying to stick it on with
- soap. How exactly like a boy!
- Fortunately she knew at once what to do. “It must be sewn on,” she said,
- just a little patronisingly.
- “What's sewn?” he asked.
- “You're dreadfully ignorant.”
- “No, I'm not.”
- But she was exulting in his ignorance. “I shall sew it on for you, my
- little man,” she said, though he was tall as herself, and she got out
- her housewife [sewing bag], and sewed the shadow on to Peter's foot.
- “I daresay it will hurt a little,” she warned him.
- “Oh, I shan't cry,” said Peter, who was already of the opinion that he
- had never cried in his life. And he clenched his teeth and did not
- cry, and soon his shadow was behaving properly, though still a little
- creased.
- “Perhaps I should have ironed it,” Wendy said thoughtfully, but Peter,
- boylike, was indifferent to appearances, and he was now jumping about in
- the wildest glee. Alas, he had already forgotten that he owed his bliss
- to Wendy. He thought he had attached the shadow himself. “How clever I
- am!” he crowed rapturously, “oh, the cleverness of me!”
- It is humiliating to have to confess that this conceit of Peter was
- one of his most fascinating qualities. To put it with brutal frankness,
- there never was a cockier boy.
- But for the moment Wendy was shocked. “You conceit [braggart],” she
- exclaimed, with frightful sarcasm; “of course I did nothing!”
- “You did a little,” Peter said carelessly, and continued to dance.
- “A little!” she replied with hauteur [pride]; “if I am no use I can at
- least withdraw,” and she sprang in the most dignified way into bed and
- covered her face with the blankets.
- To induce her to look up he pretended to be going away, and when this
- failed he sat on the end of the bed and tapped her gently with his foot.
- “Wendy,” he said, “don't withdraw. I can't help crowing, Wendy, when
- I'm pleased with myself.” Still she would not look up, though she was
- listening eagerly. “Wendy,” he continued, in a voice that no woman has
- ever yet been able to resist, “Wendy, one girl is more use than twenty
- boys.”
- Now Wendy was every inch a woman, though there were not very many
- inches, and she peeped out of the bed-clothes.
- “Do you really think so, Peter?”
- “Yes, I do.”
- “I think it's perfectly sweet of you,” she declared, “and I'll get up
- again,” and she sat with him on the side of the bed. She also said
- she would give him a kiss if he liked, but Peter did not know what she
- meant, and he held out his hand expectantly.
- “Surely you know what a kiss is?” she asked, aghast.
- “I shall know when you give it to me,” he replied stiffly, and not to
- hurt his feeling she gave him a thimble.
- “Now,” said he, “shall I give you a kiss?” and she replied with a slight
- primness, “If you please.” She made herself rather cheap by inclining
- her face toward him, but he merely dropped an acorn button into her
- hand, so she slowly returned her face to where it had been before, and
- said nicely that she would wear his kiss on the chain around her neck.
- It was lucky that she did put it on that chain, for it was afterwards to
- save her life.
- When people in our set are introduced, it is customary for them to
- ask each other's age, and so Wendy, who always liked to do the correct
- thing, asked Peter how old he was. It was not really a happy question to
- ask him; it was like an examination paper that asks grammar, when what
- you want to be asked is Kings of England.
- “I don't know,” he replied uneasily, “but I am quite young.” He really
- knew nothing about it, he had merely suspicions, but he said at a
- venture, “Wendy, I ran away the day I was born.”
- Wendy was quite surprised, but interested; and she indicated in the
- charming drawing-room manner, by a touch on her night-gown, that he
- could sit nearer her.
- “It was because I heard father and mother,” he explained in a low
- voice, “talking about what I was to be when I became a man.” He was
- extraordinarily agitated now. “I don't want ever to be a man,” he said
- with passion. “I want always to be a little boy and to have fun. So
- I ran away to Kensington Gardens and lived a long long time among the
- fairies.”
- She gave him a look of the most intense admiration, and he thought it
- was because he had run away, but it was really because he knew fairies.
- Wendy had lived such a home life that to know fairies struck her as
- quite delightful. She poured out questions about them, to his surprise,
- for they were rather a nuisance to him, getting in his way and so on,
- and indeed he sometimes had to give them a hiding [spanking]. Still, he
- liked them on the whole, and he told her about the beginning of fairies.
- “You see, Wendy, when the first baby laughed for the first time, its
- laugh broke into a thousand pieces, and they all went skipping about,
- and that was the beginning of fairies.”
- Tedious talk this, but being a stay-at-home she liked it.
- “And so,” he went on good-naturedly, “there ought to be one fairy for
- every boy and girl.”
- “Ought to be? Isn't there?”
- “No. You see children know such a lot now, they soon don't believe in
- fairies, and every time a child says, 'I don't believe in fairies,'
- there is a fairy somewhere that falls down dead.”
- Really, he thought they had now talked enough about fairies, and it
- struck him that Tinker Bell was keeping very quiet. “I can't think where
- she has gone to,” he said, rising, and he called Tink by name. Wendy's
- heart went flutter with a sudden thrill.
- “Peter,” she cried, clutching him, “you don't mean to tell me that there
- is a fairy in this room!”
- “She was here just now,” he said a little impatiently. “You don't hear
- her, do you?” and they both listened.
- “The only sound I hear,” said Wendy, “is like a tinkle of bells.”
- “Well, that's Tink, that's the fairy language. I think I hear her too.”
- The sound came from the chest of drawers, and Peter made a merry face.
- No one could ever look quite so merry as Peter, and the loveliest of
- gurgles was his laugh. He had his first laugh still.
- “Wendy,” he whispered gleefully, “I do believe I shut her up in the
- drawer!”
- He let poor Tink out of the drawer, and she flew about the nursery
- screaming with fury. “You shouldn't say such things,” Peter retorted.
- “Of course I'm very sorry, but how could I know you were in the drawer?”
- Wendy was not listening to him. “O Peter,” she cried, “if she would only
- stand still and let me see her!”
- “They hardly ever stand still,” he said, but for one moment Wendy saw
- the romantic figure come to rest on the cuckoo clock. “O the lovely!”
- she cried, though Tink's face was still distorted with passion.
- “Tink,” said Peter amiably, “this lady says she wishes you were her
- fairy.”
- Tinker Bell answered insolently.
- “What does she say, Peter?”
- He had to translate. “She is not very polite. She says you are a great
- [huge] ugly girl, and that she is my fairy.”
- He tried to argue with Tink. “You know you can't be my fairy, Tink,
- because I am an gentleman and you are a lady.”
- To this Tink replied in these words, “You silly ass,” and disappeared
- into the bathroom. “She is quite a common fairy,” Peter explained
- apologetically, “she is called Tinker Bell because she mends the pots
- and kettles [tinker = tin worker].” [Similar to “cinder” plus “elle” to
- get Cinderella]
- They were together in the armchair by this time, and Wendy plied him
- with more questions.
- “If you don't live in Kensington Gardens now--”
- “Sometimes I do still.”
- “But where do you live mostly now?”
- “With the lost boys.”
- “Who are they?”
- “They are the children who fall out of their perambulators when the
- nurse is looking the other way. If they are not claimed in seven
- days they are sent far away to the Neverland to defray expenses. I'm
- captain.”
- “What fun it must be!”
- “Yes,” said cunning Peter, “but we are rather lonely. You see we have no
- female companionship.”
- “Are none of the others girls?”
- “Oh, no; girls, you know, are much too clever to fall out of their
- prams.”
- This flattered Wendy immensely. “I think,” she said, “it is perfectly
- lovely the way you talk about girls; John there just despises us.”
- For reply Peter rose and kicked John out of bed, blankets and all; one
- kick. This seemed to Wendy rather forward for a first meeting, and she
- told him with spirit that he was not captain in her house. However,
- John continued to sleep so placidly on the floor that she allowed him
- to remain there. “And I know you meant to be kind,” she said, relenting,
- “so you may give me a kiss.”
- For the moment she had forgotten his ignorance about kisses. “I thought
- you would want it back,” he said a little bitterly, and offered to
- return her the thimble.
- “Oh dear,” said the nice Wendy, “I don't mean a kiss, I mean a thimble.”
- “What's that?”
- “It's like this.” She kissed him.
- “Funny!” said Peter gravely. “Now shall I give you a thimble?”
- “If you wish to,” said Wendy, keeping her head erect this time.
- Peter thimbled her, and almost immediately she screeched. “What is it,
- Wendy?”
- “It was exactly as if someone were pulling my hair.”
- “That must have been Tink. I never knew her so naughty before.”
- And indeed Tink was darting about again, using offensive language.
- “She says she will do that to you, Wendy, every time I give you a
- thimble.”
- “But why?”
- “Why, Tink?”
- Again Tink replied, “You silly ass.” Peter could not understand why,
- but Wendy understood, and she was just slightly disappointed when he
- admitted that he came to the nursery window not to see her but to listen
- to stories.
- “You see, I don't know any stories. None of the lost boys knows any
- stories.”
- “How perfectly awful,” Wendy said.
- “Do you know,” Peter asked “why swallows build in the eaves of houses?
- It is to listen to the stories. O Wendy, your mother was telling you
- such a lovely story.”
- “Which story was it?”
- “About the prince who couldn't find the lady who wore the glass
- slipper.”
- “Peter,” said Wendy excitedly, “that was Cinderella, and he found her,
- and they lived happily ever after.”
- Peter was so glad that he rose from the floor, where they had been
- sitting, and hurried to the window.
- “Where are you going?” she cried with misgiving.
- “To tell the other boys.”
- “Don't go Peter,” she entreated, “I know such lots of stories.”
- Those were her precise words, so there can be no denying that it was she
- who first tempted him.
- He came back, and there was a greedy look in his eyes now which ought to
- have alarmed her, but did not.
- “Oh, the stories I could tell to the boys!” she cried, and then Peter
- gripped her and began to draw her toward the window.
- “Let me go!” she ordered him.
- “Wendy, do come with me and tell the other boys.”
- Of course she was very pleased to be asked, but she said, “Oh dear, I
- can't. Think of mummy! Besides, I can't fly.”
- “I'll teach you.”
- “Oh, how lovely to fly.”
- “I'll teach you how to jump on the wind's back, and then away we go.”
- “Oo!” she exclaimed rapturously.
- “Wendy, Wendy, when you are sleeping in your silly bed you might be
- flying about with me saying funny things to the stars.”
- “Oo!”
- “And, Wendy, there are mermaids.”
- “Mermaids! With tails?”
- “Such long tails.”
- “Oh,” cried Wendy, “to see a mermaid!”
- He had become frightfully cunning. “Wendy,” he said, “how we should all
- respect you.”
- She was wriggling her body in distress. It was quite as if she were
- trying to remain on the nursery floor.
- But he had no pity for her.
- “Wendy,” he said, the sly one, “you could tuck us in at night.”
- “Oo!”
- “None of us has ever been tucked in at night.”
- “Oo,” and her arms went out to him.
- “And you could darn our clothes, and make pockets for us. None of us has
- any pockets.”
- How could she resist. “Of course it's awfully fascinating!” she cried.
- “Peter, would you teach John and Michael to fly too?”
- “If you like,” he said indifferently, and she ran to John and Michael
- and shook them. “Wake up,” she cried, “Peter Pan has come and he is to
- teach us to fly.”
- John rubbed his eyes. “Then I shall get up,” he said. Of course he was
- on the floor already. “Hallo,” he said, “I am up!”
- Michael was up by this time also, looking as sharp as a knife with six
- blades and a saw, but Peter suddenly signed silence. Their faces assumed
- the awful craftiness of children listening for sounds from the grown-up
- world. All was as still as salt. Then everything was right. No, stop!
- Everything was wrong. Nana, who had been barking distressfully all the
- evening, was quiet now. It was her silence they had heard.
- “Out with the light! Hide! Quick!” cried John, taking command for the
- only time throughout the whole adventure. And thus when Liza entered,
- holding Nana, the nursery seemed quite its old self, very dark, and
- you would have sworn you heard its three wicked inmates breathing
- angelically as they slept. They were really doing it artfully from
- behind the window curtains.
- Liza was in a bad temper, for she was mixing the Christmas puddings in
- the kitchen, and had been drawn from them, with a raisin still on her
- cheek, by Nana's absurd suspicions. She thought the best way of getting
- a little quiet was to take Nana to the nursery for a moment, but in
- custody of course.
- “There, you suspicious brute,” she said, not sorry that Nana was in
- disgrace. “They are perfectly safe, aren't they? Every one of the little
- angels sound asleep in bed. Listen to their gentle breathing.”
- Here Michael, encouraged by his success, breathed so loudly that they
- were nearly detected. Nana knew that kind of breathing, and she tried to
- drag herself out of Liza's clutches.
- But Liza was dense. “No more of it, Nana,” she said sternly, pulling
- her out of the room. “I warn you if you bark again I shall go straight
- for master and missus and bring them home from the party, and then, oh,
- won't master whip you, just.”
- She tied the unhappy dog up again, but do you think Nana ceased to bark?
- Bring master and missus home from the party! Why, that was just what she
- wanted. Do you think she cared whether she was whipped so long as her
- charges were safe? Unfortunately Liza returned to her puddings, and
- Nana, seeing that no help would come from her, strained and strained at
- the chain until at last she broke it. In another moment she had burst
- into the dining-room of 27 and flung up her paws to heaven, her most
- expressive way of making a communication. Mr. and Mrs. Darling knew at
- once that something terrible was happening in their nursery, and without
- a good-bye to their hostess they rushed into the street.
- But it was now ten minutes since three scoundrels had been breathing
- behind the curtains, and Peter Pan can do a great deal in ten minutes.
- We now return to the nursery.
- “It's all right,” John announced, emerging from his hiding-place. “I
- say, Peter, can you really fly?”
- Instead of troubling to answer him Peter flew around the room, taking
- the mantelpiece on the way.
- “How topping!” said John and Michael.
- “How sweet!” cried Wendy.
- “Yes, I'm sweet, oh, I am sweet!” said Peter, forgetting his manners
- again.
- It looked delightfully easy, and they tried it first from the floor and
- then from the beds, but they always went down instead of up.
- “I say, how do you do it?” asked John, rubbing his knee. He was quite a
- practical boy.
- “You just think lovely wonderful thoughts,” Peter explained, “and they
- lift you up in the air.”
- He showed them again.
- “You're so nippy at it,” John said, “couldn't you do it very slowly
- once?”
- Peter did it both slowly and quickly. “I've got it now, Wendy!” cried
- John, but soon he found he had not. Not one of them could fly an inch,
- though even Michael was in words of two syllables, and Peter did not
- know A from Z.
- Of course Peter had been trifling with them, for no one can fly unless
- the fairy dust has been blown on him. Fortunately, as we have mentioned,
- one of his hands was messy with it, and he blew some on each of them,
- with the most superb results.
- “Now just wiggle your shoulders this way,” he said, “and let go.”
- They were all on their beds, and gallant Michael let go first. He did
- not quite mean to let go, but he did it, and immediately he was borne
- across the room.
- “I flewed!” he screamed while still in mid-air.
- John let go and met Wendy near the bathroom.
- “Oh, lovely!”
- “Oh, ripping!”
- “Look at me!”
- “Look at me!”
- “Look at me!”
- They were not nearly so elegant as Peter, they could not help kicking a
- little, but their heads were bobbing against the ceiling, and there is
- almost nothing so delicious as that. Peter gave Wendy a hand at first,
- but had to desist, Tink was so indignant.
- Up and down they went, and round and round. Heavenly was Wendy's word.
- “I say,” cried John, “why shouldn't we all go out?”
- Of course it was to this that Peter had been luring them.
- Michael was ready: he wanted to see how long it took him to do a billion
- miles. But Wendy hesitated.
- “Mermaids!” said Peter again.
- “Oo!”
- “And there are pirates.”
- “Pirates,” cried John, seizing his Sunday hat, “let us go at once.”
- It was just at this moment that Mr. and Mrs. Darling hurried with Nana
- out of 27. They ran into the middle of the street to look up at the
- nursery window; and, yes, it was still shut, but the room was ablaze
- with light, and most heart-gripping sight of all, they could see in
- shadow on the curtain three little figures in night attire circling
- round and round, not on the floor but in the air.
- Not three figures, four!
- In a tremble they opened the street door. Mr. Darling would have rushed
- upstairs, but Mrs. Darling signed him to go softly. She even tried to
- make her heart go softly.
- Will they reach the nursery in time? If so, how delightful for them, and
- we shall all breathe a sigh of relief, but there will be no story. On
- the other hand, if they are not in time, I solemnly promise that it will
- all come right in the end.
- They would have reached the nursery in time had it not been that the
- little stars were watching them. Once again the stars blew the window
- open, and that smallest star of all called out:
- “Cave, Peter!”
- Then Peter knew that there was not a moment to lose. “Come,” he cried
- imperiously, and soared out at once into the night, followed by John and
- Michael and Wendy.
- Mr. and Mrs. Darling and Nana rushed into the nursery too late. The
- birds were flown.
- Chapter 4 THE FLIGHT
- “Second to the right, and straight on till morning.”
- That, Peter had told Wendy, was the way to the Neverland; but even
- birds, carrying maps and consulting them at windy corners, could not
- have sighted it with these instructions. Peter, you see, just said
- anything that came into his head.
- At first his companions trusted him implicitly, and so great were the
- delights of flying that they wasted time circling round church spires or
- any other tall objects on the way that took their fancy.
- John and Michael raced, Michael getting a start.
- They recalled with contempt that not so long ago they had thought
- themselves fine fellows for being able to fly round a room.
- Not long ago. But how long ago? They were flying over the sea before
- this thought began to disturb Wendy seriously. John thought it was their
- second sea and their third night.
- Sometimes it was dark and sometimes light, and now they were very cold
- and again too warm. Did they really feel hungry at times, or were they
- merely pretending, because Peter had such a jolly new way of feeding
- them? His way was to pursue birds who had food in their mouths suitable
- for humans and snatch it from them; then the birds would follow and
- snatch it back; and they would all go chasing each other gaily for
- miles, parting at last with mutual expressions of good-will. But Wendy
- noticed with gentle concern that Peter did not seem to know that this
- was rather an odd way of getting your bread and butter, nor even that
- there are other ways.
- Certainly they did not pretend to be sleepy, they were sleepy; and that
- was a danger, for the moment they popped off, down they fell. The awful
- thing was that Peter thought this funny.
- “There he goes again!” he would cry gleefully, as Michael suddenly
- dropped like a stone.
- “Save him, save him!” cried Wendy, looking with horror at the cruel
- sea far below. Eventually Peter would dive through the air, and catch
- Michael just before he could strike the sea, and it was lovely the way
- he did it; but he always waited till the last moment, and you felt it
- was his cleverness that interested him and not the saving of human life.
- Also he was fond of variety, and the sport that engrossed him one moment
- would suddenly cease to engage him, so there was always the possibility
- that the next time you fell he would let you go.
- He could sleep in the air without falling, by merely lying on his back
- and floating, but this was, partly at least, because he was so light
- that if you got behind him and blew he went faster.
- “Do be more polite to him,” Wendy whispered to John, when they were
- playing “Follow my Leader.”
- “Then tell him to stop showing off,” said John.
- When playing Follow my Leader, Peter would fly close to the water and
- touch each shark's tail in passing, just as in the street you may run
- your finger along an iron railing. They could not follow him in this
- with much success, so perhaps it was rather like showing off, especially
- as he kept looking behind to see how many tails they missed.
- “You must be nice to him,” Wendy impressed on her brothers. “What could
- we do if he were to leave us!”
- “We could go back,” Michael said.
- “How could we ever find our way back without him?”
- “Well, then, we could go on,” said John.
- “That is the awful thing, John. We should have to go on, for we don't
- know how to stop.”
- This was true, Peter had forgotten to show them how to stop.
- John said that if the worst came to the worst, all they had to do was to
- go straight on, for the world was round, and so in time they must come
- back to their own window.
- “And who is to get food for us, John?”
- “I nipped a bit out of that eagle's mouth pretty neatly, Wendy.”
- “After the twentieth try,” Wendy reminded him. “And even though we
- became good at picking up food, see how we bump against clouds and things
- if he is not near to give us a hand.”
- Indeed they were constantly bumping. They could now fly strongly, though
- they still kicked far too much; but if they saw a cloud in front of
- them, the more they tried to avoid it, the more certainly did they bump
- into it. If Nana had been with them, she would have had a bandage round
- Michael's forehead by this time.
- Peter was not with them for the moment, and they felt rather lonely up
- there by themselves. He could go so much faster than they that he would
- suddenly shoot out of sight, to have some adventure in which they had no
- share. He would come down laughing over something fearfully funny he had
- been saying to a star, but he had already forgotten what it was, or he
- would come up with mermaid scales still sticking to him, and yet not be
- able to say for certain what had been happening. It was really rather
- irritating to children who had never seen a mermaid.
- “And if he forgets them so quickly,” Wendy argued, “how can we expect
- that he will go on remembering us?”
- Indeed, sometimes when he returned he did not remember them, at least
- not well. Wendy was sure of it. She saw recognition come into his eyes
- as he was about to pass them the time of day and go on; once even she
- had to call him by name.
- “I'm Wendy,” she said agitatedly.
- He was very sorry. “I say, Wendy,” he whispered to her, “always if you
- see me forgetting you, just keep on saying 'I'm Wendy,' and then I'll
- remember.”
- Of course this was rather unsatisfactory. However, to make amends he
- showed them how to lie out flat on a strong wind that was going their
- way, and this was such a pleasant change that they tried it several
- times and found that they could sleep thus with security. Indeed they
- would have slept longer, but Peter tired quickly of sleeping, and soon
- he would cry in his captain voice, “We get off here.” So with occasional
- tiffs, but on the whole rollicking, they drew near the Neverland; for
- after many moons they did reach it, and, what is more, they had been
- going pretty straight all the time, not perhaps so much owing to the
- guidance of Peter or Tink as because the island was looking for them. It
- is only thus that any one may sight those magic shores.
- “There it is,” said Peter calmly.
- “Where, where?”
- “Where all the arrows are pointing.”
- Indeed a million golden arrows were pointing it out to the children, all
- directed by their friend the sun, who wanted them to be sure of their
- way before leaving them for the night.
- Wendy and John and Michael stood on tip-toe in the air to get their
- first sight of the island. Strange to say, they all recognized it at
- once, and until fear fell upon them they hailed it, not as something
- long dreamt of and seen at last, but as a familiar friend to whom they
- were returning home for the holidays.
- “John, there's the lagoon.”
- “Wendy, look at the turtles burying their eggs in the sand.”
- “I say, John, I see your flamingo with the broken leg!”
- “Look, Michael, there's your cave!”
- “John, what's that in the brushwood?”
- “It's a wolf with her whelps. Wendy, I do believe that's your little
- whelp!”
- “There's my boat, John, with her sides stove in!”
- “No, it isn't. Why, we burned your boat.”
- “That's her, at any rate. I say, John, I see the smoke of the redskin
- camp!”
- “Where? Show me, and I'll tell you by the way smoke curls whether they
- are on the war-path.”
- “There, just across the Mysterious River.”
- “I see now. Yes, they are on the war-path right enough.”
- Peter was a little annoyed with them for knowing so much, but if he
- wanted to lord it over them his triumph was at hand, for have I not told
- you that anon fear fell upon them?
- It came as the arrows went, leaving the island in gloom.
- In the old days at home the Neverland had always begun to look a little
- dark and threatening by bedtime. Then unexplored patches arose in it
- and spread, black shadows moved about in them, the roar of the beasts of
- prey was quite different now, and above all, you lost the certainty that
- you would win. You were quite glad that the night-lights were on. You
- even liked Nana to say that this was just the mantelpiece over here, and
- that the Neverland was all make-believe.
- Of course the Neverland had been make-believe in those days, but it
- was real now, and there were no night-lights, and it was getting darker
- every moment, and where was Nana?
- They had been flying apart, but they huddled close to Peter now. His
- careless manner had gone at last, his eyes were sparkling, and a tingle
- went through them every time they touched his body. They were now over
- the fearsome island, flying so low that sometimes a tree grazed their
- feet. Nothing horrid was visible in the air, yet their progress had
- become slow and laboured, exactly as if they were pushing their way
- through hostile forces. Sometimes they hung in the air until Peter had
- beaten on it with his fists.
- “They don't want us to land,” he explained.
- “Who are they?” Wendy whispered, shuddering.
- But he could not or would not say. Tinker Bell had been asleep on his
- shoulder, but now he wakened her and sent her on in front.
- Sometimes he poised himself in the air, listening intently, with his
- hand to his ear, and again he would stare down with eyes so bright that
- they seemed to bore two holes to earth. Having done these things, he
- went on again.
- His courage was almost appalling. “Would you like an adventure now,” he
- said casually to John, “or would you like to have your tea first?”
- Wendy said “tea first” quickly, and Michael pressed her hand in
- gratitude, but the braver John hesitated.
- “What kind of adventure?” he asked cautiously.
- “There's a pirate asleep in the pampas just beneath us,” Peter told him.
- “If you like, we'll go down and kill him.”
- “I don't see him,” John said after a long pause.
- “I do.”
- “Suppose,” John said, a little huskily, “he were to wake up.”
- Peter spoke indignantly. “You don't think I would kill him while he was
- sleeping! I would wake him first, and then kill him. That's the way I
- always do.”
- “I say! Do you kill many?”
- “Tons.”
- John said “How ripping,” but decided to have tea first. He asked if
- there were many pirates on the island just now, and Peter said he had
- never known so many.
- “Who is captain now?”
- “Hook,” answered Peter, and his face became very stern as he said that
- hated word.
- “Jas. Hook?”
- “Ay.”
- Then indeed Michael began to cry, and even John could speak in gulps
- only, for they knew Hook's reputation.
- “He was Blackbeard's bo'sun,” John whispered huskily. “He is the worst
- of them all. He is the only man of whom Barbecue was afraid.”
- “That's him,” said Peter.
- “What is he like? Is he big?”
- “He is not so big as he was.”
- “How do you mean?”
- “I cut off a bit of him.”
- “You!”
- “Yes, me,” said Peter sharply.
- “I wasn't meaning to be disrespectful.”
- “Oh, all right.”
- “But, I say, what bit?”
- “His right hand.”
- “Then he can't fight now?”
- “Oh, can't he just!”
- “Left-hander?”
- “He has an iron hook instead of a right hand, and he claws with it.”
- “Claws!”
- “I say, John,” said Peter.
- “Yes.”
- “Say, 'Ay, ay, sir.'”
- “Ay, ay, sir.”
- “There is one thing,” Peter continued, “that every boy who serves under
- me has to promise, and so must you.”
- John paled.
- “It is this, if we meet Hook in open fight, you must leave him to me.”
- “I promise,” John said loyally.
- For the moment they were feeling less eerie, because Tink was flying
- with them, and in her light they could distinguish each other.
- Unfortunately she could not fly so slowly as they, and so she had to go
- round and round them in a circle in which they moved as in a halo. Wendy
- quite liked it, until Peter pointed out the drawbacks.
- “She tells me,” he said, “that the pirates sighted us before the
- darkness came, and got Long Tom out.”
- “The big gun?”
- “Yes. And of course they must see her light, and if they guess we are
- near it they are sure to let fly.”
- “Wendy!”
- “John!”
- “Michael!”
- “Tell her to go away at once, Peter,” the three cried simultaneously,
- but he refused.
- “She thinks we have lost the way,” he replied stiffly, “and she is
- rather frightened. You don't think I would send her away all by herself
- when she is frightened!”
- For a moment the circle of light was broken, and something gave Peter a
- loving little pinch.
- “Then tell her,” Wendy begged, “to put out her light.”
- “She can't put it out. That is about the only thing fairies can't do. It
- just goes out of itself when she falls asleep, same as the stars.”
- “Then tell her to sleep at once,” John almost ordered.
- “She can't sleep except when she's sleepy. It is the only other thing
- fairies can't do.”
- “Seems to me,” growled John, “these are the only two things worth
- doing.”
- Here he got a pinch, but not a loving one.
- “If only one of us had a pocket,” Peter said, “we could carry her in
- it.” However, they had set off in such a hurry that there was not a
- pocket between the four of them.
- He had a happy idea. John's hat!
- Tink agreed to travel by hat if it was carried in the hand. John carried
- it, though she had hoped to be carried by Peter. Presently Wendy took
- the hat, because John said it struck against his knee as he flew; and
- this, as we shall see, led to mischief, for Tinker Bell hated to be
- under an obligation to Wendy.
- In the black topper the light was completely hidden, and they flew on in
- silence. It was the stillest silence they had ever known, broken once by
- a distant lapping, which Peter explained was the wild beasts drinking at
- the ford, and again by a rasping sound that might have been the branches
- of trees rubbing together, but he said it was the redskins sharpening
- their knives.
- Even these noises ceased. To Michael the loneliness was dreadful. “If
- only something would make a sound!” he cried.
- As if in answer to his request, the air was rent by the most tremendous
- crash he had ever heard. The pirates had fired Long Tom at them.
- The roar of it echoed through the mountains, and the echoes seemed to
- cry savagely, “Where are they, where are they, where are they?”
- Thus sharply did the terrified three learn the difference between an
- island of make-believe and the same island come true.
- When at last the heavens were steady again, John and Michael
- found themselves alone in the darkness. John was treading the air
- mechanically, and Michael without knowing how to float was floating.
- “Are you shot?” John whispered tremulously.
- “I haven't tried [myself out] yet,” Michael whispered back.
- We know now that no one had been hit. Peter, however, had been carried
- by the wind of the shot far out to sea, while Wendy was blown upwards
- with no companion but Tinker Bell.
- It would have been well for Wendy if at that moment she had dropped the
- hat.
- I don't know whether the idea came suddenly to Tink, or whether she had
- planned it on the way, but she at once popped out of the hat and began
- to lure Wendy to her destruction.
- Tink was not all bad; or, rather, she was all bad just now, but, on the
- other hand, sometimes she was all good. Fairies have to be one thing or
- the other, because being so small they unfortunately have room for one
- feeling only at a time. They are, however, allowed to change, only it
- must be a complete change. At present she was full of jealousy of Wendy.
- What she said in her lovely tinkle Wendy could not of course understand,
- and I believe some of it was bad words, but it sounded kind, and she
- flew back and forward, plainly meaning “Follow me, and all will be
- well.”
- What else could poor Wendy do? She called to Peter and John and Michael,
- and got only mocking echoes in reply. She did not yet know that Tink
- hated her with the fierce hatred of a very woman. And so, bewildered,
- and now staggering in her flight, she followed Tink to her doom.
- Chapter 5 THE ISLAND COME TRUE
- Feeling that Peter was on his way back, the Neverland had again woke
- into life. We ought to use the pluperfect and say wakened, but woke is
- better and was always used by Peter.
- In his absence things are usually quiet on the island. The fairies take
- an hour longer in the morning, the beasts attend to their young, the
- redskins feed heavily for six days and nights, and when pirates and
- lost boys meet they merely bite their thumbs at each other. But with the
- coming of Peter, who hates lethargy, they are under way again: if you
- put your ear to the ground now, you would hear the whole island seething
- with life.
- On this evening the chief forces of the island were disposed as follows.
- The lost boys were out looking for Peter, the pirates were out looking
- for the lost boys, the redskins were out looking for the pirates, and
- the beasts were out looking for the redskins. They were going round and
- round the island, but they did not meet because all were going at the
- same rate.
- All wanted blood except the boys, who liked it as a rule, but to-night
- were out to greet their captain. The boys on the island vary, of course,
- in numbers, according as they get killed and so on; and when they seem
- to be growing up, which is against the rules, Peter thins them out; but
- at this time there were six of them, counting the twins as two. Let us
- pretend to lie here among the sugar-cane and watch them as they steal by
- in single file, each with his hand on his dagger.
- They are forbidden by Peter to look in the least like him, and they wear
- the skins of the bears slain by themselves, in which they are so round
- and furry that when they fall they roll. They have therefore become very
- sure-footed.
- The first to pass is Tootles, not the least brave but the most
- unfortunate of all that gallant band. He had been in fewer adventures
- than any of them, because the big things constantly happened just when
- he had stepped round the corner; all would be quiet, he would take the
- opportunity of going off to gather a few sticks for firewood, and
- then when he returned the others would be sweeping up the blood. This
- ill-luck had given a gentle melancholy to his countenance, but instead
- of souring his nature had sweetened it, so that he was quite the
- humblest of the boys. Poor kind Tootles, there is danger in the air for
- you to-night. Take care lest an adventure is now offered you, which, if
- accepted, will plunge you in deepest woe. Tootles, the fairy Tink, who
- is bent on mischief this night is looking for a tool [for doing her
- mischief], and she thinks you are the most easily tricked of the boys.
- 'Ware Tinker Bell.
- Would that he could hear us, but we are not really on the island, and he
- passes by, biting his knuckles.
- Next comes Nibs, the gay and debonair, followed by Slightly, who cuts
- whistles out of the trees and dances ecstatically to his own tunes.
- Slightly is the most conceited of the boys. He thinks he remembers the
- days before he was lost, with their manners and customs, and this has
- given his nose an offensive tilt. Curly is fourth; he is a pickle, [a
- person who gets in pickles-predicaments] and so often has he had to
- deliver up his person when Peter said sternly, “Stand forth the one who
- did this thing,” that now at the command he stands forth automatically
- whether he has done it or not. Last come the Twins, who cannot be
- described because we should be sure to be describing the wrong one.
- Peter never quite knew what twins were, and his band were not allowed
- to know anything he did not know, so these two were always vague about
- themselves, and did their best to give satisfaction by keeping close
- together in an apologetic sort of way.
- The boys vanish in the gloom, and after a pause, but not a long pause,
- for things go briskly on the island, come the pirates on their track. We
- hear them before they are seen, and it is always the same dreadful song:
- “Avast belay, yo ho, heave to,
- A-pirating we go,
- And if we're parted by a shot
- We're sure to meet below!”
- A more villainous-looking lot never hung in a row on Execution dock.
- Here, a little in advance, ever and again with his head to the
- ground listening, his great arms bare, pieces of eight in his ears as
- ornaments, is the handsome Italian Cecco, who cut his name in letters
- of blood on the back of the governor of the prison at Gao. That gigantic
- black behind him has had many names since he dropped the one with
- which dusky mothers still terrify their children on the banks of the
- Guadjo-mo. Here is Bill Jukes, every inch of him tattooed, the same Bill
- Jukes who got six dozen on the WALRUS from Flint before he would drop
- the bag of moidores [Portuguese gold pieces]; and Cookson, said to
- be Black Murphy's brother (but this was never proved), and Gentleman
- Starkey, once an usher in a public school and still dainty in his ways
- of killing; and Skylights (Morgan's Skylights); and the Irish bo'sun
- Smee, an oddly genial man who stabbed, so to speak, without offence,
- and was the only Non-conformist in Hook's crew; and Noodler, whose
- hands were fixed on backwards; and Robt. Mullins and Alf Mason and many
- another ruffian long known and feared on the Spanish Main.
- In the midst of them, the blackest and largest in that dark setting,
- reclined James Hook, or as he wrote himself, Jas. Hook, of whom it is
- said he was the only man that the Sea-Cook feared. He lay at his ease in
- a rough chariot drawn and propelled by his men, and instead of a right
- hand he had the iron hook with which ever and anon he encouraged them
- to increase their pace. As dogs this terrible man treated and addressed
- them, and as dogs they obeyed him. In person he was cadaverous [dead
- looking] and blackavized [dark faced], and his hair was dressed in long
- curls, which at a little distance looked like black candles, and gave a
- singularly threatening expression to his handsome countenance. His eyes
- were of the blue of the forget-me-not, and of a profound melancholy,
- save when he was plunging his hook into you, at which time two red spots
- appeared in them and lit them up horribly. In manner, something of the
- grand seigneur still clung to him, so that he even ripped you up with
- an air, and I have been told that he was a RACONTEUR [storyteller] of
- repute. He was never more sinister than when he was most polite,
- which is probably the truest test of breeding; and the elegance of his
- diction, even when he was swearing, no less than the distinction of his
- demeanour, showed him one of a different cast from his crew. A man of
- indomitable courage, it was said that the only thing he shied at was
- the sight of his own blood, which was thick and of an unusual colour.
- In dress he somewhat aped the attire associated with the name of Charles
- II, having heard it said in some earlier period of his career that he
- bore a strange resemblance to the ill-fated Stuarts; and in his mouth
- he had a holder of his own contrivance which enabled him to smoke two
- cigars at once. But undoubtedly the grimmest part of him was his iron
- claw.
- Let us now kill a pirate, to show Hook's method. Skylights will do. As
- they pass, Skylights lurches clumsily against him, ruffling his lace
- collar; the hook shoots forth, there is a tearing sound and one screech,
- then the body is kicked aside, and the pirates pass on. He has not even
- taken the cigars from his mouth.
- Such is the terrible man against whom Peter Pan is pitted. Which will
- win?
- On the trail of the pirates, stealing noiselessly down the war-path,
- which is not visible to inexperienced eyes, come the redskins, every one
- of them with his eyes peeled. They carry tomahawks and knives, and their
- naked bodies gleam with paint and oil. Strung around them are scalps, of
- boys as well as of pirates, for these are the Piccaninny tribe, and not
- to be confused with the softer-hearted Delawares or the Hurons. In
- the van, on all fours, is Great Big Little Panther, a brave of so many
- scalps that in his present position they somewhat impede his progress.
- Bringing up the rear, the place of greatest danger, comes Tiger Lily,
- proudly erect, a princess in her own right. She is the most beautiful
- of dusky Dianas [Diana = goddess of the woods] and the belle of the
- Piccaninnies, coquettish [flirting], cold and amorous [loving] by turns;
- there is not a brave who would not have the wayward thing to wife, but
- she staves off the altar with a hatchet. Observe how they pass over
- fallen twigs without making the slightest noise. The only sound to be
- heard is their somewhat heavy breathing. The fact is that they are all a
- little fat just now after the heavy gorging, but in time they will work
- this off. For the moment, however, it constitutes their chief danger.
- The redskins disappear as they have come like shadows, and soon their
- place is taken by the beasts, a great and motley procession: lions,
- tigers, bears, and the innumerable smaller savage things that flee
- from them, for every kind of beast, and, more particularly, all the
- man-eaters, live cheek by jowl on the favoured island. Their tongues are
- hanging out, they are hungry to-night.
- When they have passed, comes the last figure of all, a gigantic
- crocodile. We shall see for whom she is looking presently.
- The crocodile passes, but soon the boys appear again, for the procession
- must continue indefinitely until one of the parties stops or changes its
- pace. Then quickly they will be on top of each other.
- All are keeping a sharp look-out in front, but none suspects that the
- danger may be creeping up from behind. This shows how real the island
- was.
- The first to fall out of the moving circle was the boys. They flung
- themselves down on the sward [turf], close to their underground home.
- “I do wish Peter would come back,” every one of them said nervously,
- though in height and still more in breadth they were all larger than
- their captain.
- “I am the only one who is not afraid of the pirates,” Slightly said, in
- the tone that prevented his being a general favourite; but perhaps some
- distant sound disturbed him, for he added hastily, “but I wish he
- would come back, and tell us whether he has heard anything more about
- Cinderella.”
- They talked of Cinderella, and Tootles was confident that his mother
- must have been very like her.
- It was only in Peter's absence that they could speak of mothers, the
- subject being forbidden by him as silly.
- “All I remember about my mother,” Nibs told them, “is that she often
- said to my father, 'Oh, how I wish I had a cheque-book of my own!' I
- don't know what a cheque-book is, but I should just love to give my
- mother one.”
- While they talked they heard a distant sound. You or I, not being wild
- things of the woods, would have heard nothing, but they heard it, and it
- was the grim song:
- “Yo ho, yo ho, the pirate life,
- The flag o' skull and bones,
- A merry hour, a hempen rope,
- And hey for Davy Jones.”
- At once the lost boys--but where are they? They are no longer there.
- Rabbits could not have disappeared more quickly.
- I will tell you where they are. With the exception of Nibs, who has
- darted away to reconnoitre [look around], they are already in their home
- under the ground, a very delightful residence of which we shall see
- a good deal presently. But how have they reached it? for there is no
- entrance to be seen, not so much as a large stone, which if rolled away,
- would disclose the mouth of a cave. Look closely, however, and you may
- note that there are here seven large trees, each with a hole in its
- hollow trunk as large as a boy. These are the seven entrances to the
- home under the ground, for which Hook has been searching in vain these
- many moons. Will he find it tonight?
- As the pirates advanced, the quick eye of Starkey sighted Nibs
- disappearing through the wood, and at once his pistol flashed out. But
- an iron claw gripped his shoulder.
- “Captain, let go!” he cried, writhing.
- Now for the first time we hear the voice of Hook. It was a black voice.
- “Put back that pistol first,” it said threateningly.
- “It was one of those boys you hate. I could have shot him dead.”
- “Ay, and the sound would have brought Tiger Lily's redskins upon us. Do
- you want to lose your scalp?”
- “Shall I after him, Captain,” asked pathetic Smee, “and tickle him
- with Johnny Corkscrew?” Smee had pleasant names for everything, and his
- cutlass was Johnny Corkscrew, because he wiggled it in the wound. One
- could mention many lovable traits in Smee. For instance, after killing,
- it was his spectacles he wiped instead of his weapon.
- “Johnny's a silent fellow,” he reminded Hook.
- “Not now, Smee,” Hook said darkly. “He is only one, and I want to
- mischief all the seven. Scatter and look for them.”
- The pirates disappeared among the trees, and in a moment their Captain
- and Smee were alone. Hook heaved a heavy sigh, and I know not why it
- was, perhaps it was because of the soft beauty of the evening, but there
- came over him a desire to confide to his faithful bo'sun the story of
- his life. He spoke long and earnestly, but what it was all about Smee,
- who was rather stupid, did not know in the least.
- Anon [later] he caught the word Peter.
- “Most of all,” Hook was saying passionately, “I want their captain,
- Peter Pan. 'Twas he cut off my arm.” He brandished the hook
- threateningly. “I've waited long to shake his hand with this. Oh, I'll
- tear him!”
- “And yet,” said Smee, “I have often heard you say that hook was worth a
- score of hands, for combing the hair and other homely uses.”
- “Ay,” the captain answered, “if I was a mother I would pray to have my
- children born with this instead of that,” and he cast a look of pride
- upon his iron hand and one of scorn upon the other. Then again he
- frowned.
- “Peter flung my arm,” he said, wincing, “to a crocodile that happened to
- be passing by.”
- “I have often,” said Smee, “noticed your strange dread of crocodiles.”
- “Not of crocodiles,” Hook corrected him, “but of that one crocodile.” He
- lowered his voice. “It liked my arm so much, Smee, that it has followed
- me ever since, from sea to sea and from land to land, licking its lips
- for the rest of me.”
- “In a way,” said Smee, “it's sort of a compliment.”
- “I want no such compliments,” Hook barked petulantly. “I want Peter Pan,
- who first gave the brute its taste for me.”
- He sat down on a large mushroom, and now there was a quiver in his
- voice. “Smee,” he said huskily, “that crocodile would have had me before
- this, but by a lucky chance it swallowed a clock which goes tick tick
- inside it, and so before it can reach me I hear the tick and bolt.” He
- laughed, but in a hollow way.
- “Some day,” said Smee, “the clock will run down, and then he'll get
- you.”
- Hook wetted his dry lips. “Ay,” he said, “that's the fear that haunts
- me.”
- Since sitting down he had felt curiously warm. “Smee,” he said, “this
- seat is hot.” He jumped up. “Odds bobs, hammer and tongs I'm burning.”
- They examined the mushroom, which was of a size and solidity unknown
- on the mainland; they tried to pull it up, and it came away at once in
- their hands, for it had no root. Stranger still, smoke began at once
- to ascend. The pirates looked at each other. “A chimney!” they both
- exclaimed.
- They had indeed discovered the chimney of the home under the ground. It
- was the custom of the boys to stop it with a mushroom when enemies were
- in the neighbourhood.
- Not only smoke came out of it. There came also children's voices, for
- so safe did the boys feel in their hiding-place that they were gaily
- chattering. The pirates listened grimly, and then replaced the mushroom.
- They looked around them and noted the holes in the seven trees.
- “Did you hear them say Peter Pan's from home?” Smee whispered, fidgeting
- with Johnny Corkscrew.
- Hook nodded. He stood for a long time lost in thought, and at last a
- curdling smile lit up his swarthy face. Smee had been waiting for it.
- “Unrip your plan, captain,” he cried eagerly.
- “To return to the ship,” Hook replied slowly through his teeth, “and
- cook a large rich cake of a jolly thickness with green sugar on it.
- There can be but one room below, for there is but one chimney. The silly
- moles had not the sense to see that they did not need a door apiece.
- That shows they have no mother. We will leave the cake on the shore
- of the Mermaids' Lagoon. These boys are always swimming about there,
- playing with the mermaids. They will find the cake and they will gobble
- it up, because, having no mother, they don't know how dangerous 'tis to
- eat rich damp cake.” He burst into laughter, not hollow laughter now,
- but honest laughter. “Aha, they will die.”
- Smee had listened with growing admiration.
- “It's the wickedest, prettiest policy ever I heard of!” he cried, and in
- their exultation they danced and sang:
- “Avast, belay, when I appear,
- By fear they're overtook;
- Nought's left upon your bones when you
- Have shaken claws with Hook.”
- They began the verse, but they never finished it, for another sound
- broke in and stilled them. There was at first such a tiny sound that a
- leaf might have fallen on it and smothered it, but as it came nearer it
- was more distinct.
- Tick tick tick tick!
- Hook stood shuddering, one foot in the air.
- “The crocodile!” he gasped, and bounded away, followed by his bo'sun.
- It was indeed the crocodile. It had passed the redskins, who were now on
- the trail of the other pirates. It oozed on after Hook.
- Once more the boys emerged into the open; but the dangers of the night
- were not yet over, for presently Nibs rushed breathless into their
- midst, pursued by a pack of wolves. The tongues of the pursuers were
- hanging out; the baying of them was horrible.
- “Save me, save me!” cried Nibs, falling on the ground.
- “But what can we do, what can we do?”
- It was a high compliment to Peter that at that dire moment their
- thoughts turned to him.
- “What would Peter do?” they cried simultaneously.
- Almost in the same breath they cried, “Peter would look at them through
- his legs.”
- And then, “Let us do what Peter would do.”
- It is quite the most successful way of defying wolves, and as one boy
- they bent and looked through their legs. The next moment is the long
- one, but victory came quickly, for as the boys advanced upon them in the
- terrible attitude, the wolves dropped their tails and fled.
- Now Nibs rose from the ground, and the others thought that his staring
- eyes still saw the wolves. But it was not wolves he saw.
- “I have seen a wonderfuller thing,” he cried, as they gathered round him
- eagerly. “A great white bird. It is flying this way.”
- “What kind of a bird, do you think?”
- “I don't know,” Nibs said, awestruck, “but it looks so weary, and as it
- flies it moans, 'Poor Wendy.'”
- “Poor Wendy?”
- “I remember,” said Slightly instantly, “there are birds called Wendies.”
- “See, it comes!” cried Curly, pointing to Wendy in the heavens.
- Wendy was now almost overhead, and they could hear her plaintive cry.
- But more distinct came the shrill voice of Tinker Bell. The jealous
- fairy had now cast off all disguise of friendship, and was darting
- at her victim from every direction, pinching savagely each time she
- touched.
- “Hullo, Tink,” cried the wondering boys.
- Tink's reply rang out: “Peter wants you to shoot the Wendy.”
- It was not in their nature to question when Peter ordered. “Let us do
- what Peter wishes!” cried the simple boys. “Quick, bows and arrows!”
- All but Tootles popped down their trees. He had a bow and arrow with
- him, and Tink noted it, and rubbed her little hands.
- “Quick, Tootles, quick,” she screamed. “Peter will be so pleased.”
- Tootles excitedly fitted the arrow to his bow. “Out of the way, Tink,”
- he shouted, and then he fired, and Wendy fluttered to the ground with an
- arrow in her breast.
- Chapter 6 THE LITTLE HOUSE
- Foolish Tootles was standing like a conqueror over Wendy's body when the
- other boys sprang, armed, from their trees.
- “You are too late,” he cried proudly, “I have shot the Wendy. Peter will
- be so pleased with me.”
- Overhead Tinker Bell shouted “Silly ass!” and darted into hiding. The
- others did not hear her. They had crowded round Wendy, and as they
- looked a terrible silence fell upon the wood. If Wendy's heart had been
- beating they would all have heard it.
- Slightly was the first to speak. “This is no bird,” he said in a scared
- voice. “I think this must be a lady.”
- “A lady?” said Tootles, and fell a-trembling.
- “And we have killed her,” Nibs said hoarsely.
- They all whipped off their caps.
- “Now I see,” Curly said: “Peter was bringing her to us.” He threw
- himself sorrowfully on the ground.
- “A lady to take care of us at last,” said one of the twins, “and you
- have killed her!”
- They were sorry for him, but sorrier for themselves, and when he took a
- step nearer them they turned from him.
- Tootles' face was very white, but there was a dignity about him now that
- had never been there before.
- “I did it,” he said, reflecting. “When ladies used to come to me in
- dreams, I said, 'Pretty mother, pretty mother.' But when at last she
- really came, I shot her.”
- He moved slowly away.
- “Don't go,” they called in pity.
- “I must,” he answered, shaking; “I am so afraid of Peter.”
- It was at this tragic moment that they heard a sound which made the
- heart of every one of them rise to his mouth. They heard Peter crow.
- “Peter!” they cried, for it was always thus that he signalled his
- return.
- “Hide her,” they whispered, and gathered hastily around Wendy. But
- Tootles stood aloof.
- Again came that ringing crow, and Peter dropped in front of them.
- “Greetings, boys,” he cried, and mechanically they saluted, and then
- again was silence.
- He frowned.
- “I am back,” he said hotly, “why do you not cheer?”
- They opened their mouths, but the cheers would not come. He overlooked
- it in his haste to tell the glorious tidings.
- “Great news, boys,” he cried, “I have brought at last a mother for you
- all.”
- Still no sound, except a little thud from Tootles as he dropped on his
- knees.
- “Have you not seen her?” asked Peter, becoming troubled. “She flew this
- way.”
- “Ah me!” one voice said, and another said, “Oh, mournful day.”
- Tootles rose. “Peter,” he said quietly, “I will show her to you,” and
- when the others would still have hidden her he said, “Back, twins, let
- Peter see.”
- So they all stood back, and let him see, and after he had looked for a
- little time he did not know what to do next.
- “She is dead,” he said uncomfortably. “Perhaps she is frightened at
- being dead.”
- He thought of hopping off in a comic sort of way till he was out of
- sight of her, and then never going near the spot any more. They would
- all have been glad to follow if he had done this.
- But there was the arrow. He took it from her heart and faced his band.
- “Whose arrow?” he demanded sternly.
- “Mine, Peter,” said Tootles on his knees.
- “Oh, dastard hand,” Peter said, and he raised the arrow to use it as a
- dagger.
- Tootles did not flinch. He bared his breast. “Strike, Peter,” he said
- firmly, “strike true.”
- Twice did Peter raise the arrow, and twice did his hand fall. “I cannot
- strike,” he said with awe, “there is something stays my hand.”
- All looked at him in wonder, save Nibs, who fortunately looked at Wendy.
- “It is she,” he cried, “the Wendy lady, see, her arm!”
- Wonderful to relate [tell], Wendy had raised her arm. Nibs bent over
- her and listened reverently. “I think she said, 'Poor Tootles,'” he
- whispered.
- “She lives,” Peter said briefly.
- Slightly cried instantly, “The Wendy lady lives.”
- Then Peter knelt beside her and found his button. You remember she had
- put it on a chain that she wore round her neck.
- “See,” he said, “the arrow struck against this. It is the kiss I gave
- her. It has saved her life.”
- “I remember kisses,” Slightly interposed quickly, “let me see it. Ay,
- that's a kiss.”
- Peter did not hear him. He was begging Wendy to get better quickly, so
- that he could show her the mermaids. Of course she could not answer yet,
- being still in a frightful faint; but from overhead came a wailing note.
- “Listen to Tink,” said Curly, “she is crying because the Wendy lives.”
- Then they had to tell Peter of Tink's crime, and almost never had they
- seen him look so stern.
- “Listen, Tinker Bell,” he cried, “I am your friend no more. Begone from
- me for ever.”
- She flew on to his shoulder and pleaded, but he brushed her off. Not
- until Wendy again raised her arm did he relent sufficiently to say,
- “Well, not for ever, but for a whole week.”
- Do you think Tinker Bell was grateful to Wendy for raising her arm? Oh
- dear no, never wanted to pinch her so much. Fairies indeed are strange,
- and Peter, who understood them best, often cuffed [slapped] them.
- But what to do with Wendy in her present delicate state of health?
- “Let us carry her down into the house,” Curly suggested.
- “Ay,” said Slightly, “that is what one does with ladies.”
- “No, no,” Peter said, “you must not touch her. It would not be
- sufficiently respectful.”
- “That,” said Slightly, “is what I was thinking.”
- “But if she lies there,” Tootles said, “she will die.”
- “Ay, she will die,” Slightly admitted, “but there is no way out.”
- “Yes, there is,” cried Peter. “Let us build a little house round her.”
- They were all delighted. “Quick,” he ordered them, “bring me each of you
- the best of what we have. Gut our house. Be sharp.”
- In a moment they were as busy as tailors the night before a wedding.
- They skurried this way and that, down for bedding, up for firewood, and
- while they were at it, who should appear but John and Michael. As they
- dragged along the ground they fell asleep standing, stopped, woke up,
- moved another step and slept again.
- “John, John,” Michael would cry, “wake up! Where is Nana, John, and
- mother?”
- And then John would rub his eyes and mutter, “It is true, we did fly.”
- You may be sure they were very relieved to find Peter.
- “Hullo, Peter,” they said.
- “Hullo,” replied Peter amicably, though he had quite forgotten them.
- He was very busy at the moment measuring Wendy with his feet to see
- how large a house she would need. Of course he meant to leave room for
- chairs and a table. John and Michael watched him.
- “Is Wendy asleep?” they asked.
- “Yes.”
- “John,” Michael proposed, “let us wake her and get her to make supper
- for us,” but as he said it some of the other boys rushed on carrying
- branches for the building of the house. “Look at them!” he cried.
- “Curly,” said Peter in his most captainy voice, “see that these boys
- help in the building of the house.”
- “Ay, ay, sir.”
- “Build a house?” exclaimed John.
- “For the Wendy,” said Curly.
- “For Wendy?” John said, aghast. “Why, she is only a girl!”
- “That,” explained Curly, “is why we are her servants.”
- “You? Wendy's servants!”
- “Yes,” said Peter, “and you also. Away with them.”
- The astounded brothers were dragged away to hack and hew and carry.
- “Chairs and a fender [fireplace] first,” Peter ordered. “Then we shall
- build a house round them.”
- “Ay,” said Slightly, “that is how a house is built; it all comes back to
- me.”
- Peter thought of everything. “Slightly,” he cried, “fetch a doctor.”
- “Ay, ay,” said Slightly at once, and disappeared, scratching his head.
- But he knew Peter must be obeyed, and he returned in a moment, wearing
- John's hat and looking solemn.
- “Please, sir,” said Peter, going to him, “are you a doctor?”
- The difference between him and the other boys at such a time was that
- they knew it was make-believe, while to him make-believe and true were
- exactly the same thing. This sometimes troubled them, as when they had
- to make-believe that they had had their dinners.
- If they broke down in their make-believe he rapped them on the knuckles.
- “Yes, my little man,” Slightly anxiously replied, who had chapped
- knuckles.
- “Please, sir,” Peter explained, “a lady lies very ill.”
- She was lying at their feet, but Slightly had the sense not to see her.
- “Tut, tut, tut,” he said, “where does she lie?”
- “In yonder glade.”
- “I will put a glass thing in her mouth,” said Slightly, and he
- made-believe to do it, while Peter waited. It was an anxious moment when
- the glass thing was withdrawn.
- “How is she?” inquired Peter.
- “Tut, tut, tut,” said Slightly, “this has cured her.”
- “I am glad!” Peter cried.
- “I will call again in the evening,” Slightly said; “give her beef tea
- out of a cup with a spout to it;” but after he had returned the hat
- to John he blew big breaths, which was his habit on escaping from a
- difficulty.
- In the meantime the wood had been alive with the sound of axes; almost
- everything needed for a cosy dwelling already lay at Wendy's feet.
- “If only we knew,” said one, “the kind of house she likes best.”
- “Peter,” shouted another, “she is moving in her sleep.”
- “Her mouth opens,” cried a third, looking respectfully into it. “Oh,
- lovely!”
- “Perhaps she is going to sing in her sleep,” said Peter. “Wendy, sing
- the kind of house you would like to have.”
- Immediately, without opening her eyes, Wendy began to sing:
- “I wish I had a pretty house,
- The littlest ever seen,
- With funny little red walls
- And roof of mossy green.”
- They gurgled with joy at this, for by the greatest good luck the
- branches they had brought were sticky with red sap, and all the ground
- was carpeted with moss. As they rattled up the little house they broke
- into song themselves:
- “We've built the little walls and roof
- And made a lovely door,
- So tell us, mother Wendy,
- What are you wanting more?”
- To this she answered greedily:
- “Oh, really next I think I'll have
- Gay windows all about,
- With roses peeping in, you know,
- And babies peeping out.”
- With a blow of their fists they made windows, and large yellow leaves
- were the blinds. But roses--?
- “Roses,” cried Peter sternly.
- Quickly they made-believe to grow the loveliest roses up the walls.
- Babies?
- To prevent Peter ordering babies they hurried into song again:
- “We've made the roses peeping out,
- The babes are at the door,
- We cannot make ourselves, you know,
- 'cos we've been made before.”
- Peter, seeing this to be a good idea, at once pretended that it was his
- own. The house was quite beautiful, and no doubt Wendy was very cosy
- within, though, of course, they could no longer see her. Peter strode
- up and down, ordering finishing touches. Nothing escaped his eagle eyes.
- Just when it seemed absolutely finished:
- “There's no knocker on the door,” he said.
- They were very ashamed, but Tootles gave the sole of his shoe, and it
- made an excellent knocker.
- Absolutely finished now, they thought.
- Not of bit of it. “There's no chimney,” Peter said; “we must have a
- chimney.”
- “It certainly does need a chimney,” said John importantly. This gave
- Peter an idea. He snatched the hat off John's head, knocked out the
- bottom [top], and put the hat on the roof. The little house was so
- pleased to have such a capital chimney that, as if to say thank you,
- smoke immediately began to come out of the hat.
- Now really and truly it was finished. Nothing remained to do but to
- knock.
- “All look your best,” Peter warned them; “first impressions are awfully
- important.”
- He was glad no one asked him what first impressions are; they were all
- too busy looking their best.
- He knocked politely, and now the wood was as still as the children, not
- a sound to be heard except from Tinker Bell, who was watching from a
- branch and openly sneering.
- What the boys were wondering was, would any one answer the knock? If a
- lady, what would she be like?
- The door opened and a lady came out. It was Wendy. They all whipped off
- their hats.
- She looked properly surprised, and this was just how they had hoped she
- would look.
- “Where am I?” she said.
- Of course Slightly was the first to get his word in. “Wendy lady,” he
- said rapidly, “for you we built this house.”
- “Oh, say you're pleased,” cried Nibs.
- “Lovely, darling house,” Wendy said, and they were the very words they
- had hoped she would say.
- “And we are your children,” cried the twins.
- Then all went on their knees, and holding out their arms cried, “O Wendy
- lady, be our mother.”
- “Ought I?” Wendy said, all shining. “Of course it's frightfully
- fascinating, but you see I am only a little girl. I have no real
- experience.”
- “That doesn't matter,” said Peter, as if he were the only person present
- who knew all about it, though he was really the one who knew least.
- “What we need is just a nice motherly person.”
- “Oh dear!” Wendy said, “you see, I feel that is exactly what I am.”
- “It is, it is,” they all cried; “we saw it at once.”
- “Very well,” she said, “I will do my best. Come inside at once, you
- naughty children; I am sure your feet are damp. And before I put you to
- bed I have just time to finish the story of Cinderella.”
- In they went; I don't know how there was room for them, but you can
- squeeze very tight in the Neverland. And that was the first of the many
- joyous evenings they had with Wendy. By and by she tucked them up in the
- great bed in the home under the trees, but she herself slept that night
- in the little house, and Peter kept watch outside with drawn sword, for
- the pirates could be heard carousing far away and the wolves were on the
- prowl. The little house looked so cosy and safe in the darkness, with
- a bright light showing through its blinds, and the chimney smoking
- beautifully, and Peter standing on guard. After a time he fell asleep,
- and some unsteady fairies had to climb over him on their way home from
- an orgy. Any of the other boys obstructing the fairy path at night they
- would have mischiefed, but they just tweaked Peter's nose and passed on.
- Chapter 7 THE HOME UNDER THE GROUND
- One of the first things Peter did next day was to measure Wendy and John
- and Michael for hollow trees. Hook, you remember, had sneered at the
- boys for thinking they needed a tree apiece, but this was ignorance, for
- unless your tree fitted you it was difficult to go up and down, and no
- two of the boys were quite the same size. Once you fitted, you drew in
- [let out] your breath at the top, and down you went at exactly the
- right speed, while to ascend you drew in and let out alternately, and so
- wriggled up. Of course, when you have mastered the action you are able
- to do these things without thinking of them, and nothing can be more
- graceful.
- But you simply must fit, and Peter measures you for your tree as
- carefully as for a suit of clothes: the only difference being that the
- clothes are made to fit you, while you have to be made to fit the tree.
- Usually it is done quite easily, as by your wearing too many garments
- or too few, but if you are bumpy in awkward places or the only available
- tree is an odd shape, Peter does some things to you, and after that you
- fit. Once you fit, great care must be taken to go on fitting, and this,
- as Wendy was to discover to her delight, keeps a whole family in perfect
- condition.
- Wendy and Michael fitted their trees at the first try, but John had to
- be altered a little.
- After a few days' practice they could go up and down as gaily as buckets
- in a well. And how ardently they grew to love their home under the
- ground; especially Wendy. It consisted of one large room, as all houses
- should do, with a floor in which you could dig [for worms] if you wanted
- to go fishing, and in this floor grew stout mushrooms of a charming
- colour, which were used as stools. A Never tree tried hard to grow in
- the centre of the room, but every morning they sawed the trunk through,
- level with the floor. By tea-time it was always about two feet high, and
- then they put a door on top of it, the whole thus becoming a table;
- as soon as they cleared away, they sawed off the trunk again, and thus
- there was more room to play. There was an enormous fireplace which was
- in almost any part of the room where you cared to light it, and across
- this Wendy stretched strings, made of fibre, from which she suspended
- her washing. The bed was tilted against the wall by day, and let down at
- 6:30, when it filled nearly half the room; and all the boys slept in it,
- except Michael, lying like sardines in a tin. There was a strict rule
- against turning round until one gave the signal, when all turned at
- once. Michael should have used it also, but Wendy would have [desired]
- a baby, and he was the littlest, and you know what women are, and the
- short and long of it is that he was hung up in a basket.
- It was rough and simple, and not unlike what baby bears would have made
- of an underground house in the same circumstances. But there was one
- recess in the wall, no larger than a bird-cage, which was the private
- apartment of Tinker Bell. It could be shut off from the rest of
- the house by a tiny curtain, which Tink, who was most fastidious
- [particular], always kept drawn when dressing or undressing. No woman,
- however large, could have had a more exquisite boudoir [dressing room]
- and bed-chamber combined. The couch, as she always called it, was
- a genuine Queen Mab, with club legs; and she varied the bedspreads
- according to what fruit-blossom was in season. Her mirror was a
- Puss-in-Boots, of which there are now only three, unchipped, known to
- fairy dealers; the washstand was Pie-crust and reversible, the chest
- of drawers an authentic Charming the Sixth, and the carpet and rugs the
- best (the early) period of Margery and Robin. There was a chandelier
- from Tiddlywinks for the look of the thing, but of course she lit the
- residence herself. Tink was very contemptuous of the rest of the house,
- as indeed was perhaps inevitable, and her chamber, though beautiful,
- looked rather conceited, having the appearance of a nose permanently
- turned up.
- I suppose it was all especially entrancing to Wendy, because those
- rampagious boys of hers gave her so much to do. Really there were whole
- weeks when, except perhaps with a stocking in the evening, she was never
- above ground. The cooking, I can tell you, kept her nose to the pot, and
- even if there was nothing in it, even if there was no pot, she had to
- keep watching that it came aboil just the same. You never exactly
- knew whether there would be a real meal or just a make-believe, it all
- depended upon Peter's whim: he could eat, really eat, if it was part of
- a game, but he could not stodge [cram down the food] just to feel
- stodgy [stuffed with food], which is what most children like better than
- anything else; the next best thing being to talk about it. Make-believe
- was so real to him that during a meal of it you could see him getting
- rounder. Of course it was trying, but you simply had to follow his lead,
- and if you could prove to him that you were getting loose for your tree
- he let you stodge.
- Wendy's favourite time for sewing and darning was after they had all
- gone to bed. Then, as she expressed it, she had a breathing time for
- herself; and she occupied it in making new things for them, and putting
- double pieces on the knees, for they were all most frightfully hard on
- their knees.
- When she sat down to a basketful of their stockings, every heel with a
- hole in it, she would fling up her arms and exclaim, “Oh dear, I am sure
- I sometimes think spinsters are to be envied!”
- Her face beamed when she exclaimed this.
- You remember about her pet wolf. Well, it very soon discovered that she
- had come to the island and it found her out, and they just ran into each
- other's arms. After that it followed her about everywhere.
- As time wore on did she think much about the beloved parents she had
- left behind her? This is a difficult question, because it is quite
- impossible to say how time does wear on in the Neverland, where it is
- calculated by moons and suns, and there are ever so many more of them
- than on the mainland. But I am afraid that Wendy did not really worry
- about her father and mother; she was absolutely confident that they
- would always keep the window open for her to fly back by, and this gave
- her complete ease of mind. What did disturb her at times was that John
- remembered his parents vaguely only, as people he had once known, while
- Michael was quite willing to believe that she was really his mother.
- These things scared her a little, and nobly anxious to do her duty, she
- tried to fix the old life in their minds by setting them examination
- papers on it, as like as possible to the ones she used to do at school.
- The other boys thought this awfully interesting, and insisted on
- joining, and they made slates for themselves, and sat round the table,
- writing and thinking hard about the questions she had written on another
- slate and passed round. They were the most ordinary questions--“What
- was the colour of Mother's eyes? Which was taller, Father or Mother? Was
- Mother blonde or brunette? Answer all three questions if possible.”
- “(A) Write an essay of not less than 40 words on How I spent my last
- Holidays, or The Characters of Father and Mother compared. Only one of
- these to be attempted.” Or “(1) Describe Mother's laugh; (2) Describe
- Father's laugh; (3) Describe Mother's Party Dress; (4) Describe the
- Kennel and its Inmate.”
- They were just everyday questions like these, and when you could not
- answer them you were told to make a cross; and it was really dreadful
- what a number of crosses even John made. Of course the only boy who
- replied to every question was Slightly, and no one could have been more
- hopeful of coming out first, but his answers were perfectly ridiculous,
- and he really came out last: a melancholy thing.
- Peter did not compete. For one thing he despised all mothers except
- Wendy, and for another he was the only boy on the island who could
- neither write nor spell; not the smallest word. He was above all that
- sort of thing.
- By the way, the questions were all written in the past tense. What
- was the colour of Mother's eyes, and so on. Wendy, you see, had been
- forgetting, too.
- Adventures, of course, as we shall see, were of daily occurrence; but
- about this time Peter invented, with Wendy's help, a new game that
- fascinated him enormously, until he suddenly had no more interest in it,
- which, as you have been told, was what always happened with his games.
- It consisted in pretending not to have adventures, in doing the sort of
- thing John and Michael had been doing all their lives, sitting on stools
- flinging balls in the air, pushing each other, going out for walks and
- coming back without having killed so much as a grizzly. To see Peter
- doing nothing on a stool was a great sight; he could not help looking
- solemn at such times, to sit still seemed to him such a comic thing to
- do. He boasted that he had gone walking for the good of his health. For
- several suns these were the most novel of all adventures to him; and
- John and Michael had to pretend to be delighted also; otherwise he would
- have treated them severely.
- He often went out alone, and when he came back you were never absolutely
- certain whether he had had an adventure or not. He might have forgotten
- it so completely that he said nothing about it; and then when you went
- out you found the body; and, on the other hand, he might say a great
- deal about it, and yet you could not find the body. Sometimes he came
- home with his head bandaged, and then Wendy cooed over him and bathed
- it in lukewarm water, while he told a dazzling tale. But she was never
- quite sure, you know. There were, however, many adventures which she
- knew to be true because she was in them herself, and there were still
- more that were at least partly true, for the other boys were in them and
- said they were wholly true. To describe them all would require a book as
- large as an English-Latin, Latin-English Dictionary, and the most we can
- do is to give one as a specimen of an average hour on the island. The
- difficulty is which one to choose. Should we take the brush with the
- redskins at Slightly Gulch? It was a sanguinary affair, and
- especially interesting as showing one of Peter's peculiarities, which
- was that in the middle of a fight he would suddenly change sides. At the
- Gulch, when victory was still in the balance, sometimes leaning this way
- and sometimes that, he called out, “I'm redskin to-day; what are you,
- Tootles?” And Tootles answered, “Redskin; what are you, Nibs?” and
- Nibs said, “Redskin; what are you Twin?” and so on; and they were all
- redskins; and of course this would have ended the fight had not the real
- redskins fascinated by Peter's methods, agreed to be lost boys for that
- once, and so at it they all went again, more fiercely than ever.
- The extraordinary upshot of this adventure was--but we have not decided
- yet that this is the adventure we are to narrate. Perhaps a better one
- would be the night attack by the redskins on the house under the ground,
- when several of them stuck in the hollow trees and had to be pulled out
- like corks. Or we might tell how Peter saved Tiger Lily's life in the
- Mermaids' Lagoon, and so made her his ally.
- Or we could tell of that cake the pirates cooked so that the boys might
- eat it and perish; and how they placed it in one cunning spot after
- another; but always Wendy snatched it from the hands of her children, so
- that in time it lost its succulence, and became as hard as a stone, and
- was used as a missile, and Hook fell over it in the dark.
- Or suppose we tell of the birds that were Peter's friends, particularly
- of the Never bird that built in a tree overhanging the lagoon, and how
- the nest fell into the water, and still the bird sat on her eggs, and
- Peter gave orders that she was not to be disturbed. That is a pretty
- story, and the end shows how grateful a bird can be; but if we tell
- it we must also tell the whole adventure of the lagoon, which would
- of course be telling two adventures rather than just one. A shorter
- adventure, and quite as exciting, was Tinker Bell's attempt, with the
- help of some street fairies, to have the sleeping Wendy conveyed on a
- great floating leaf to the mainland. Fortunately the leaf gave way and
- Wendy woke, thinking it was bath-time, and swam back. Or again, we might
- choose Peter's defiance of the lions, when he drew a circle round him
- on the ground with an arrow and dared them to cross it; and though he
- waited for hours, with the other boys and Wendy looking on breathlessly
- from trees, not one of them dared to accept his challenge.
- Which of these adventures shall we choose? The best way will be to toss
- for it.
- I have tossed, and the lagoon has won. This almost makes one wish that
- the gulch or the cake or Tink's leaf had won. Of course I could do it
- again, and make it best out of three; however, perhaps fairest to stick
- to the lagoon.
- Chapter 8 THE MERMAIDS' LAGOON
- If you shut your eyes and are a lucky one, you may see at times a
- shapeless pool of lovely pale colours suspended in the darkness; then
- if you squeeze your eyes tighter, the pool begins to take shape, and the
- colours become so vivid that with another squeeze they must go on fire.
- But just before they go on fire you see the lagoon. This is the nearest
- you ever get to it on the mainland, just one heavenly moment; if there
- could be two moments you might see the surf and hear the mermaids
- singing.
- The children often spent long summer days on this lagoon, swimming or
- floating most of the time, playing the mermaid games in the water,
- and so forth. You must not think from this that the mermaids were on
- friendly terms with them: on the contrary, it was among Wendy's lasting
- regrets that all the time she was on the island she never had a civil
- word from one of them. When she stole softly to the edge of the lagoon
- she might see them by the score, especially on Marooners' Rock, where
- they loved to bask, combing out their hair in a lazy way that quite
- irritated her; or she might even swim, on tiptoe as it were, to within
- a yard of them, but then they saw her and dived, probably splashing her
- with their tails, not by accident, but intentionally.
- They treated all the boys in the same way, except of course Peter, who
- chatted with them on Marooners' Rock by the hour, and sat on their tails
- when they got cheeky. He gave Wendy one of their combs.
- The most haunting time at which to see them is at the turn of the moon,
- when they utter strange wailing cries; but the lagoon is dangerous for
- mortals then, and until the evening of which we have now to tell, Wendy
- had never seen the lagoon by moonlight, less from fear, for of course
- Peter would have accompanied her, than because she had strict rules
- about every one being in bed by seven. She was often at the lagoon,
- however, on sunny days after rain, when the mermaids come up in
- extraordinary numbers to play with their bubbles. The bubbles of many
- colours made in rainbow water they treat as balls, hitting them gaily
- from one to another with their tails, and trying to keep them in the
- rainbow till they burst. The goals are at each end of the rainbow, and
- the keepers only are allowed to use their hands. Sometimes a dozen of
- these games will be going on in the lagoon at a time, and it is quite a
- pretty sight.
- But the moment the children tried to join in they had to play by
- themselves, for the mermaids immediately disappeared. Nevertheless we
- have proof that they secretly watched the interlopers, and were not
- above taking an idea from them; for John introduced a new way of hitting
- the bubble, with the head instead of the hand, and the mermaids adopted
- it. This is the one mark that John has left on the Neverland.
- It must also have been rather pretty to see the children resting on a
- rock for half an hour after their mid-day meal. Wendy insisted on
- their doing this, and it had to be a real rest even though the meal was
- make-believe. So they lay there in the sun, and their bodies glistened
- in it, while she sat beside them and looked important.
- It was one such day, and they were all on Marooners' Rock. The rock was
- not much larger than their great bed, but of course they all knew how
- not to take up much room, and they were dozing, or at least lying with
- their eyes shut, and pinching occasionally when they thought Wendy was
- not looking. She was very busy, stitching.
- While she stitched a change came to the lagoon. Little shivers ran over
- it, and the sun went away and shadows stole across the water, turning
- it cold. Wendy could no longer see to thread her needle, and when she
- looked up, the lagoon that had always hitherto been such a laughing
- place seemed formidable and unfriendly.
- It was not, she knew, that night had come, but something as dark as
- night had come. No, worse than that. It had not come, but it had sent
- that shiver through the sea to say that it was coming. What was it?
- There crowded upon her all the stories she had been told of Marooners'
- Rock, so called because evil captains put sailors on it and leave
- them there to drown. They drown when the tide rises, for then it is
- submerged.
- Of course she should have roused the children at once; not merely
- because of the unknown that was stalking toward them, but because it was
- no longer good for them to sleep on a rock grown chilly. But she was
- a young mother and she did not know this; she thought you simply must
- stick to your rule about half an hour after the mid-day meal. So, though
- fear was upon her, and she longed to hear male voices, she would not
- waken them. Even when she heard the sound of muffled oars, though her
- heart was in her mouth, she did not waken them. She stood over them to
- let them have their sleep out. Was it not brave of Wendy?
- It was well for those boys then that there was one among them who could
- sniff danger even in his sleep. Peter sprang erect, as wide awake at
- once as a dog, and with one warning cry he roused the others.
- He stood motionless, one hand to his ear.
- “Pirates!” he cried. The others came closer to him. A strange smile was
- playing about his face, and Wendy saw it and shuddered. While that smile
- was on his face no one dared address him; all they could do was to stand
- ready to obey. The order came sharp and incisive.
- “Dive!”
- There was a gleam of legs, and instantly the lagoon seemed deserted.
- Marooners' Rock stood alone in the forbidding waters as if it were
- itself marooned.
- The boat drew nearer. It was the pirate dinghy, with three figures in
- her, Smee and Starkey, and the third a captive, no other than Tiger
- Lily. Her hands and ankles were tied, and she knew what was to be her
- fate. She was to be left on the rock to perish, an end to one of her
- race more terrible than death by fire or torture, for is it not written
- in the book of the tribe that there is no path through water to the
- happy hunting-ground? Yet her face was impassive; she was the daughter
- of a chief, she must die as a chief's daughter, it is enough.
- They had caught her boarding the pirate ship with a knife in her mouth.
- No watch was kept on the ship, it being Hook's boast that the wind of
- his name guarded the ship for a mile around. Now her fate would help to
- guard it also. One more wail would go the round in that wind by night.
- In the gloom that they brought with them the two pirates did not see the
- rock till they crashed into it.
- “Luff, you lubber,” cried an Irish voice that was Smee's; “here's the
- rock. Now, then, what we have to do is to hoist the redskin on to it and
- leave her here to drown.”
- It was the work of one brutal moment to land the beautiful girl on the
- rock; she was too proud to offer a vain resistance.
- Quite near the rock, but out of sight, two heads were bobbing up and
- down, Peter's and Wendy's. Wendy was crying, for it was the first
- tragedy she had seen. Peter had seen many tragedies, but he had
- forgotten them all. He was less sorry than Wendy for Tiger Lily: it was
- two against one that angered him, and he meant to save her. An easy way
- would have been to wait until the pirates had gone, but he was never one
- to choose the easy way.
- There was almost nothing he could not do, and he now imitated the voice
- of Hook.
- “Ahoy there, you lubbers!” he called. It was a marvellous imitation.
- “The captain!” said the pirates, staring at each other in surprise.
- “He must be swimming out to us,” Starkey said, when they had looked for
- him in vain.
- “We are putting the redskin on the rock,” Smee called out.
- “Set her free,” came the astonishing answer.
- “Free!”
- “Yes, cut her bonds and let her go.”
- “But, captain--”
- “At once, d'ye hear,” cried Peter, “or I'll plunge my hook in you.”
- “This is queer!” Smee gasped.
- “Better do what the captain orders,” said Starkey nervously.
- “Ay, ay,” Smee said, and he cut Tiger Lily's cords. At once like an eel
- she slid between Starkey's legs into the water.
- Of course Wendy was very elated over Peter's cleverness; but she knew
- that he would be elated also and very likely crow and thus betray
- himself, so at once her hand went out to cover his mouth. But it was
- stayed even in the act, for “Boat ahoy!” rang over the lagoon in Hook's
- voice, and this time it was not Peter who had spoken.
- Peter may have been about to crow, but his face puckered in a whistle of
- surprise instead.
- “Boat ahoy!” again came the voice.
- Now Wendy understood. The real Hook was also in the water.
- He was swimming to the boat, and as his men showed a light to guide him
- he had soon reached them. In the light of the lantern Wendy saw his hook
- grip the boat's side; she saw his evil swarthy face as he rose dripping
- from the water, and, quaking, she would have liked to swim away, but
- Peter would not budge. He was tingling with life and also top-heavy with
- conceit. “Am I not a wonder, oh, I am a wonder!” he whispered to her,
- and though she thought so also, she was really glad for the sake of his
- reputation that no one heard him except herself.
- He signed to her to listen.
- The two pirates were very curious to know what had brought their captain
- to them, but he sat with his head on his hook in a position of profound
- melancholy.
- “Captain, is all well?” they asked timidly, but he answered with a
- hollow moan.
- “He sighs,” said Smee.
- “He sighs again,” said Starkey.
- “And yet a third time he sighs,” said Smee.
- Then at last he spoke passionately.
- “The game's up,” he cried, “those boys have found a mother.”
- Affrighted though she was, Wendy swelled with pride.
- “O evil day!” cried Starkey.
- “What's a mother?” asked the ignorant Smee.
- Wendy was so shocked that she exclaimed. “He doesn't know!” and always
- after this she felt that if you could have a pet pirate Smee would be
- her one.
- Peter pulled her beneath the water, for Hook had started up, crying,
- “What was that?”
- “I heard nothing,” said Starkey, raising the lantern over the waters,
- and as the pirates looked they saw a strange sight. It was the nest I
- have told you of, floating on the lagoon, and the Never bird was sitting
- on it.
- “See,” said Hook in answer to Smee's question, “that is a mother. What
- a lesson! The nest must have fallen into the water, but would the mother
- desert her eggs? No.”
- There was a break in his voice, as if for a moment he recalled innocent
- days when--but he brushed away this weakness with his hook.
- Smee, much impressed, gazed at the bird as the nest was borne past, but
- the more suspicious Starkey said, “If she is a mother, perhaps she is
- hanging about here to help Peter.”
- Hook winced. “Ay,” he said, “that is the fear that haunts me.”
- He was roused from this dejection by Smee's eager voice.
- “Captain,” said Smee, “could we not kidnap these boys' mother and make
- her our mother?”
- “It is a princely scheme,” cried Hook, and at once it took practical
- shape in his great brain. “We will seize the children and carry them to
- the boat: the boys we will make walk the plank, and Wendy shall be our
- mother.”
- Again Wendy forgot herself.
- “Never!” she cried, and bobbed.
- “What was that?”
- But they could see nothing. They thought it must have been a leaf in the
- wind. “Do you agree, my bullies?” asked Hook.
- “There is my hand on it,” they both said.
- “And there is my hook. Swear.”
- They all swore. By this time they were on the rock, and suddenly Hook
- remembered Tiger Lily.
- “Where is the redskin?” he demanded abruptly.
- He had a playful humour at moments, and they thought this was one of the
- moments.
- “That is all right, captain,” Smee answered complacently; “we let her
- go.”
- “Let her go!” cried Hook.
- “'Twas your own orders,” the bo'sun faltered.
- “You called over the water to us to let her go,” said Starkey.
- “Brimstone and gall,” thundered Hook, “what cozening [cheating] is
- going on here!” His face had gone black with rage, but he saw that they
- believed their words, and he was startled. “Lads,” he said, shaking a
- little, “I gave no such order.”
- “It is passing queer,” Smee said, and they all fidgeted uncomfortably.
- Hook raised his voice, but there was a quiver in it.
- “Spirit that haunts this dark lagoon to-night,” he cried, “dost hear
- me?”
- Of course Peter should have kept quiet, but of course he did not. He
- immediately answered in Hook's voice:
- “Odds, bobs, hammer and tongs, I hear you.”
- In that supreme moment Hook did not blanch, even at the gills, but Smee
- and Starkey clung to each other in terror.
- “Who are you, stranger? Speak!” Hook demanded.
- “I am James Hook,” replied the voice, “captain of the JOLLY ROGER.”
- “You are not; you are not,” Hook cried hoarsely.
- “Brimstone and gall,” the voice retorted, “say that again, and I'll cast
- anchor in you.”
- Hook tried a more ingratiating manner. “If you are Hook,” he said almost
- humbly, “come tell me, who am I?”
- “A codfish,” replied the voice, “only a codfish.”
- “A codfish!” Hook echoed blankly, and it was then, but not till then,
- that his proud spirit broke. He saw his men draw back from him.
- “Have we been captained all this time by a codfish!” they muttered. “It
- is lowering to our pride.”
- They were his dogs snapping at him, but, tragic figure though he had
- become, he scarcely heeded them. Against such fearful evidence it was
- not their belief in him that he needed, it was his own. He felt his ego
- slipping from him. “Don't desert me, bully,” he whispered hoarsely to
- it.
- In his dark nature there was a touch of the feminine, as in all the
- great pirates, and it sometimes gave him intuitions. Suddenly he tried
- the guessing game.
- “Hook,” he called, “have you another voice?”
- Now Peter could never resist a game, and he answered blithely in his own
- voice, “I have.”
- “And another name?”
- “Ay, ay.”
- “Vegetable?” asked Hook.
- “No.”
- “Mineral?”
- “No.”
- “Animal?”
- “Yes.”
- “Man?”
- “No!” This answer rang out scornfully.
- “Boy?”
- “Yes.”
- “Ordinary boy?”
- “No!”
- “Wonderful boy?”
- To Wendy's pain the answer that rang out this time was “Yes.”
- “Are you in England?”
- “No.”
- “Are you here?”
- “Yes.”
- Hook was completely puzzled. “You ask him some questions,” he said to
- the others, wiping his damp brow.
- Smee reflected. “I can't think of a thing,” he said regretfully.
- “Can't guess, can't guess!” crowed Peter. “Do you give it up?”
- Of course in his pride he was carrying the game too far, and the
- miscreants [villains] saw their chance.
- “Yes, yes,” they answered eagerly.
- “Well, then,” he cried, “I am Peter Pan.”
- Pan!
- In a moment Hook was himself again, and Smee and Starkey were his
- faithful henchmen.
- “Now we have him,” Hook shouted. “Into the water, Smee. Starkey, mind
- the boat. Take him dead or alive!”
- He leaped as he spoke, and simultaneously came the gay voice of Peter.
- “Are you ready, boys?”
- “Ay, ay,” from various parts of the lagoon.
- “Then lam into the pirates.”
- The fight was short and sharp. First to draw blood was John, who
- gallantly climbed into the boat and held Starkey. There was fierce
- struggle, in which the cutlass was torn from the pirate's grasp. He
- wriggled overboard and John leapt after him. The dinghy drifted away.
- Here and there a head bobbed up in the water, and there was a flash
- of steel followed by a cry or a whoop. In the confusion some struck at
- their own side. The corkscrew of Smee got Tootles in the fourth rib, but
- he was himself pinked [nicked] in turn by Curly. Farther from the rock
- Starkey was pressing Slightly and the twins hard.
- Where all this time was Peter? He was seeking bigger game.
- The others were all brave boys, and they must not be blamed for backing
- from the pirate captain. His iron claw made a circle of dead water round
- him, from which they fled like affrighted fishes.
- But there was one who did not fear him: there was one prepared to enter
- that circle.
- Strangely, it was not in the water that they met. Hook rose to the rock
- to breathe, and at the same moment Peter scaled it on the opposite
- side. The rock was slippery as a ball, and they had to crawl rather than
- climb. Neither knew that the other was coming. Each feeling for a grip
- met the other's arm: in surprise they raised their heads; their faces
- were almost touching; so they met.
- Some of the greatest heroes have confessed that just before they fell to
- [began combat] they had a sinking [feeling in the stomach]. Had it been
- so with Peter at that moment I would admit it. After all, he was the
- only man that the Sea-Cook had feared. But Peter had no sinking, he had
- one feeling only, gladness; and he gnashed his pretty teeth with joy.
- Quick as thought he snatched a knife from Hook's belt and was about to
- drive it home, when he saw that he was higher up the rock than his foe.
- It would not have been fighting fair. He gave the pirate a hand to help
- him up.
- It was then that Hook bit him.
- Not the pain of this but its unfairness was what dazed Peter. It made
- him quite helpless. He could only stare, horrified. Every child is
- affected thus the first time he is treated unfairly. All he thinks he
- has a right to when he comes to you to be yours is fairness. After
- you have been unfair to him he will love you again, but will never
- afterwards be quite the same boy. No one ever gets over the first
- unfairness; no one except Peter. He often met it, but he always forgot
- it. I suppose that was the real difference between him and all the rest.
- So when he met it now it was like the first time; and he could just
- stare, helpless. Twice the iron hand clawed him.
- A few moments afterwards the other boys saw Hook in the water striking
- wildly for the ship; no elation on the pestilent face now, only white
- fear, for the crocodile was in dogged pursuit of him. On ordinary
- occasions the boys would have swum alongside cheering; but now they were
- uneasy, for they had lost both Peter and Wendy, and were scouring the
- lagoon for them, calling them by name. They found the dinghy and went
- home in it, shouting “Peter, Wendy” as they went, but no answer came
- save mocking laughter from the mermaids. “They must be swimming back or
- flying,” the boys concluded. They were not very anxious, because they
- had such faith in Peter. They chuckled, boylike, because they would be
- late for bed; and it was all mother Wendy's fault!
- When their voices died away there came cold silence over the lagoon, and
- then a feeble cry.
- “Help, help!”
- Two small figures were beating against the rock; the girl had fainted
- and lay on the boy's arm. With a last effort Peter pulled her up the
- rock and then lay down beside her. Even as he also fainted he saw that
- the water was rising. He knew that they would soon be drowned, but he
- could do no more.
- As they lay side by side a mermaid caught Wendy by the feet, and began
- pulling her softly into the water. Peter, feeling her slip from him,
- woke with a start, and was just in time to draw her back. But he had to
- tell her the truth.
- “We are on the rock, Wendy,” he said, “but it is growing smaller. Soon
- the water will be over it.”
- She did not understand even now.
- “We must go,” she said, almost brightly.
- “Yes,” he answered faintly.
- “Shall we swim or fly, Peter?”
- He had to tell her.
- “Do you think you could swim or fly as far as the island, Wendy, without
- my help?”
- She had to admit that she was too tired.
- He moaned.
- “What is it?” she asked, anxious about him at once.
- “I can't help you, Wendy. Hook wounded me. I can neither fly nor swim.”
- “Do you mean we shall both be drowned?”
- “Look how the water is rising.”
- They put their hands over their eyes to shut out the sight. They thought
- they would soon be no more. As they sat thus something brushed against
- Peter as light as a kiss, and stayed there, as if saying timidly, “Can I
- be of any use?”
- It was the tail of a kite, which Michael had made some days before. It
- had torn itself out of his hand and floated away.
- “Michael's kite,” Peter said without interest, but next moment he had
- seized the tail, and was pulling the kite toward him.
- “It lifted Michael off the ground,” he cried; “why should it not carry
- you?”
- “Both of us!”
- “It can't lift two; Michael and Curly tried.”
- “Let us draw lots,” Wendy said bravely.
- “And you a lady; never.” Already he had tied the tail round her. She
- clung to him; she refused to go without him; but with a “Good-bye,
- Wendy,” he pushed her from the rock; and in a few minutes she was borne
- out of his sight. Peter was alone on the lagoon.
- The rock was very small now; soon it would be submerged. Pale rays of
- light tiptoed across the waters; and by and by there was to be heard a
- sound at once the most musical and the most melancholy in the world: the
- mermaids calling to the moon.
- Peter was not quite like other boys; but he was afraid at last. A
- tremour ran through him, like a shudder passing over the sea; but on
- the sea one shudder follows another till there are hundreds of them, and
- Peter felt just the one. Next moment he was standing erect on the rock
- again, with that smile on his face and a drum beating within him. It was
- saying, “To die will be an awfully big adventure.”
- Chapter 9 THE NEVER BIRD
- The last sound Peter heard before he was quite alone were the mermaids
- retiring one by one to their bedchambers under the sea. He was too far
- away to hear their doors shut; but every door in the coral caves where
- they live rings a tiny bell when it opens or closes (as in all the
- nicest houses on the mainland), and he heard the bells.
- Steadily the waters rose till they were nibbling at his feet; and to
- pass the time until they made their final gulp, he watched the only
- thing on the lagoon. He thought it was a piece of floating paper,
- perhaps part of the kite, and wondered idly how long it would take to
- drift ashore.
- Presently he noticed as an odd thing that it was undoubtedly out upon
- the lagoon with some definite purpose, for it was fighting the tide,
- and sometimes winning; and when it won, Peter, always sympathetic to
- the weaker side, could not help clapping; it was such a gallant piece of
- paper.
- It was not really a piece of paper; it was the Never bird, making
- desperate efforts to reach Peter on the nest. By working her wings, in a
- way she had learned since the nest fell into the water, she was able to
- some extent to guide her strange craft, but by the time Peter recognised
- her she was very exhausted. She had come to save him, to give him her
- nest, though there were eggs in it. I rather wonder at the bird, for
- though he had been nice to her, he had also sometimes tormented her. I
- can suppose only that, like Mrs. Darling and the rest of them, she was
- melted because he had all his first teeth.
- She called out to him what she had come for, and he called out to her
- what she was doing there; but of course neither of them understood
- the other's language. In fanciful stories people can talk to the birds
- freely, and I wish for the moment I could pretend that this were such a
- story, and say that Peter replied intelligently to the Never bird; but
- truth is best, and I want to tell you only what really happened. Well,
- not only could they not understand each other, but they forgot their
- manners.
- “I--want--you--to--get--into--the--nest,” the bird called, speaking as
- slowly and distinctly as possible, “and--then--you--can--drift--ashore,
- but--I--am--too--tired--to--bring--it--any--nearer--so--you--must--try
- to--swim--to--it.”
- “What are you quacking about?” Peter answered. “Why don't you let the
- nest drift as usual?”
- “I--want--you--” the bird said, and repeated it all over.
- Then Peter tried slow and distinct.
- “What--are--you--quacking--about?” and so on.
- The Never bird became irritated; they have very short tempers.
- “You dunderheaded little jay!” she screamed, “Why don't you do as I tell
- you?”
- Peter felt that she was calling him names, and at a venture he retorted
- hotly:
- “So are you!”
- Then rather curiously they both snapped out the same remark:
- “Shut up!”
- “Shut up!”
- Nevertheless the bird was determined to save him if she could, and by
- one last mighty effort she propelled the nest against the rock. Then up
- she flew; deserting her eggs, so as to make her meaning clear.
- Then at last he understood, and clutched the nest and waved his thanks
- to the bird as she fluttered overhead. It was not to receive his thanks,
- however, that she hung there in the sky; it was not even to watch him
- get into the nest; it was to see what he did with her eggs.
- There were two large white eggs, and Peter lifted them up and reflected.
- The bird covered her face with her wings, so as not to see the last of
- them; but she could not help peeping between the feathers.
- I forget whether I have told you that there was a stave on the rock,
- driven into it by some buccaneers of long ago to mark the site of buried
- treasure. The children had discovered the glittering hoard, and when in
- a mischievous mood used to fling showers of moidores, diamonds, pearls
- and pieces of eight to the gulls, who pounced upon them for food, and
- then flew away, raging at the scurvy trick that had been played upon
- them. The stave was still there, and on it Starkey had hung his hat, a
- deep tarpaulin, watertight, with a broad brim. Peter put the eggs into
- this hat and set it on the lagoon. It floated beautifully.
- The Never bird saw at once what he was up to, and screamed her
- admiration of him; and, alas, Peter crowed his agreement with her. Then
- he got into the nest, reared the stave in it as a mast, and hung up his
- shirt for a sail. At the same moment the bird fluttered down upon the
- hat and once more sat snugly on her eggs. She drifted in one direction,
- and he was borne off in another, both cheering.
- Of course when Peter landed he beached his barque [small ship, actually
- the Never Bird's nest in this particular case in point] in a place where
- the bird would easily find it; but the hat was such a great success that
- she abandoned the nest. It drifted about till it went to pieces, and
- often Starkey came to the shore of the lagoon, and with many bitter
- feelings watched the bird sitting on his hat. As we shall not see her
- again, it may be worth mentioning here that all Never birds now build
- in that shape of nest, with a broad brim on which the youngsters take an
- airing.
- Great were the rejoicings when Peter reached the home under the ground
- almost as soon as Wendy, who had been carried hither and thither by
- the kite. Every boy had adventures to tell; but perhaps the biggest
- adventure of all was that they were several hours late for bed. This so
- inflated them that they did various dodgy things to get staying up still
- longer, such as demanding bandages; but Wendy, though glorying in having
- them all home again safe and sound, was scandalised by the lateness of
- the hour, and cried, “To bed, to bed,” in a voice that had to be obeyed.
- Next day, however, she was awfully tender, and gave out bandages to
- every one, and they played till bed-time at limping about and carrying
- their arms in slings.
- Chapter 10 THE HAPPY HOME
- One important result of the brush [with the pirates] on the lagoon was
- that it made the redskins their friends. Peter had saved Tiger Lily from
- a dreadful fate, and now there was nothing she and her braves would not
- do for him. All night they sat above, keeping watch over the home under
- the ground and awaiting the big attack by the pirates which obviously
- could not be much longer delayed. Even by day they hung about, smoking
- the pipe of peace, and looking almost as if they wanted tit-bits to eat.
- They called Peter the Great White Father, prostrating themselves [lying
- down] before him; and he liked this tremendously, so that it was not
- really good for him.
- “The great white father,” he would say to them in a very lordly manner,
- as they grovelled at his feet, “is glad to see the Piccaninny warriors
- protecting his wigwam from the pirates.”
- “Me Tiger Lily,” that lovely creature would reply. “Peter Pan save me,
- me his velly nice friend. Me no let pirates hurt him.”
- She was far too pretty to cringe in this way, but Peter thought it his
- due, and he would answer condescendingly, “It is good. Peter Pan has
- spoken.”
- Always when he said, “Peter Pan has spoken,” it meant that they must now
- shut up, and they accepted it humbly in that spirit; but they were by
- no means so respectful to the other boys, whom they looked upon as just
- ordinary braves. They said “How-do?” to them, and things like that; and
- what annoyed the boys was that Peter seemed to think this all right.
- Secretly Wendy sympathised with them a little, but she was far too loyal
- a housewife to listen to any complaints against father. “Father knows
- best,” she always said, whatever her private opinion must be. Her
- private opinion was that the redskins should not call her a squaw.
- We have now reached the evening that was to be known among them as the
- Night of Nights, because of its adventures and their upshot. The day, as
- if quietly gathering its forces, had been almost uneventful, and now the
- redskins in their blankets were at their posts above, while, below, the
- children were having their evening meal; all except Peter, who had gone
- out to get the time. The way you got the time on the island was to find
- the crocodile, and then stay near him till the clock struck.
- The meal happened to be a make-believe tea, and they sat around the
- board, guzzling in their greed; and really, what with their chatter and
- recriminations, the noise, as Wendy said, was positively deafening.
- To be sure, she did not mind noise, but she simply would not have them
- grabbing things, and then excusing themselves by saying that Tootles had
- pushed their elbow. There was a fixed rule that they must never hit back
- at meals, but should refer the matter of dispute to Wendy by raising
- the right arm politely and saying, “I complain of so-and-so;” but what
- usually happened was that they forgot to do this or did it too much.
- “Silence,” cried Wendy when for the twentieth time she had told them
- that they were not all to speak at once. “Is your mug empty, Slightly
- darling?”
- “Not quite empty, mummy,” Slightly said, after looking into an imaginary
- mug.
- “He hasn't even begun to drink his milk,” Nibs interposed.
- This was telling, and Slightly seized his chance.
- “I complain of Nibs,” he cried promptly.
- John, however, had held up his hand first.
- “Well, John?”
- “May I sit in Peter's chair, as he is not here?”
- “Sit in father's chair, John!” Wendy was scandalised. “Certainly not.”
- “He is not really our father,” John answered. “He didn't even know how a
- father does till I showed him.”
- This was grumbling. “We complain of John,” cried the twins.
- Tootles held up his hand. He was so much the humblest of them, indeed he
- was the only humble one, that Wendy was specially gentle with him.
- “I don't suppose,” Tootles said diffidently [bashfully or timidly],
- “that I could be father.”
- “No, Tootles.”
- Once Tootles began, which was not very often, he had a silly way of
- going on.
- “As I can't be father,” he said heavily, “I don't suppose, Michael, you
- would let me be baby?”
- “No, I won't,” Michael rapped out. He was already in his basket.
- “As I can't be baby,” Tootles said, getting heavier and heavier and
- heavier, “do you think I could be a twin?”
- “No, indeed,” replied the twins; “it's awfully difficult to be a twin.”
- “As I can't be anything important,” said Tootles, “would any of you like
- to see me do a trick?”
- “No,” they all replied.
- Then at last he stopped. “I hadn't really any hope,” he said.
- The hateful telling broke out again.
- “Slightly is coughing on the table.”
- “The twins began with cheese-cakes.”
- “Curly is taking both butter and honey.”
- “Nibs is speaking with his mouth full.”
- “I complain of the twins.”
- “I complain of Curly.”
- “I complain of Nibs.”
- “Oh dear, oh dear,” cried Wendy, “I'm sure I sometimes think that
- spinsters are to be envied.”
- She told them to clear away, and sat down to her work-basket, a heavy
- load of stockings and every knee with a hole in it as usual.
- “Wendy,” remonstrated [scolded] Michael, “I'm too big for a cradle.”
- “I must have somebody in a cradle,” she said almost tartly, “and you
- are the littlest. A cradle is such a nice homely thing to have about a
- house.”
- While she sewed they played around her; such a group of happy faces
- and dancing limbs lit up by that romantic fire. It had become a very
- familiar scene, this, in the home under the ground, but we are looking
- on it for the last time.
- There was a step above, and Wendy, you may be sure, was the first to
- recognize it.
- “Children, I hear your father's step. He likes you to meet him at the
- door.”
- Above, the redskins crouched before Peter.
- “Watch well, braves. I have spoken.”
- And then, as so often before, the gay children dragged him from his
- tree. As so often before, but never again.
- He had brought nuts for the boys as well as the correct time for Wendy.
- “Peter, you just spoil them, you know,” Wendy simpered [exaggerated a
- smile].
- “Ah, old lady,” said Peter, hanging up his gun.
- “It was me told him mothers are called old lady,” Michael whispered to
- Curly.
- “I complain of Michael,” said Curly instantly.
- The first twin came to Peter. “Father, we want to dance.”
- “Dance away, my little man,” said Peter, who was in high good humour.
- “But we want you to dance.”
- Peter was really the best dancer among them, but he pretended to be
- scandalised.
- “Me! My old bones would rattle!”
- “And mummy too.”
- “What,” cried Wendy, “the mother of such an armful, dance!”
- “But on a Saturday night,” Slightly insinuated.
- It was not really Saturday night, at least it may have been, for
- they had long lost count of the days; but always if they wanted to do
- anything special they said this was Saturday night, and then they did
- it.
- “Of course it is Saturday night, Peter,” Wendy said, relenting.
- “People of our figure, Wendy!”
- “But it is only among our own progeny [children].”
- “True, true.”
- So they were told they could dance, but they must put on their nighties
- first.
- “Ah, old lady,” Peter said aside to Wendy, warming himself by the fire
- and looking down at her as she sat turning a heel, “there is nothing
- more pleasant of an evening for you and me when the day's toil is over
- than to rest by the fire with the little ones near by.”
- “It is sweet, Peter, isn't it?” Wendy said, frightfully gratified.
- “Peter, I think Curly has your nose.”
- “Michael takes after you.”
- She went to him and put her hand on his shoulder.
- “Dear Peter,” she said, “with such a large family, of course, I have now
- passed my best, but you don't want to [ex]change me, do you?”
- “No, Wendy.”
- Certainly he did not want a change, but he looked at her uncomfortably,
- blinking, you know, like one not sure whether he was awake or asleep.
- “Peter, what is it?”
- “I was just thinking,” he said, a little scared. “It is only
- make-believe, isn't it, that I am their father?”
- “Oh yes,” Wendy said primly [formally and properly].
- “You see,” he continued apologetically, “it would make me seem so old to
- be their real father.”
- “But they are ours, Peter, yours and mine.”
- “But not really, Wendy?” he asked anxiously.
- “Not if you don't wish it,” she replied; and she distinctly heard his
- sigh of relief. “Peter,” she asked, trying to speak firmly, “what are
- your exact feelings to [about] me?”
- “Those of a devoted son, Wendy.”
- “I thought so,” she said, and went and sat by herself at the extreme end
- of the room.
- “You are so queer,” he said, frankly puzzled, “and Tiger Lily is just
- the same. There is something she wants to be to me, but she says it is
- not my mother.”
- “No, indeed, it is not,” Wendy replied with frightful emphasis. Now we
- know why she was prejudiced against the redskins.
- “Then what is it?”
- “It isn't for a lady to tell.”
- “Oh, very well,” Peter said, a little nettled. “Perhaps Tinker Bell will
- tell me.”
- “Oh yes, Tinker Bell will tell you,” Wendy retorted scornfully. “She is
- an abandoned little creature.”
- Here Tink, who was in her bedroom, eavesdropping, squeaked out something
- impudent.
- “She says she glories in being abandoned,” Peter interpreted.
- He had a sudden idea. “Perhaps Tink wants to be my mother?”
- “You silly ass!” cried Tinker Bell in a passion.
- She had said it so often that Wendy needed no translation.
- “I almost agree with her,” Wendy snapped. Fancy Wendy snapping! But she
- had been much tried, and she little knew what was to happen before the
- night was out. If she had known she would not have snapped.
- None of them knew. Perhaps it was best not to know. Their ignorance
- gave them one more glad hour; and as it was to be their last hour on the
- island, let us rejoice that there were sixty glad minutes in it. They
- sang and danced in their night-gowns. Such a deliciously creepy song
- it was, in which they pretended to be frightened at their own shadows,
- little witting that so soon shadows would close in upon them, from whom
- they would shrink in real fear. So uproariously gay was the dance, and
- how they buffeted each other on the bed and out of it! It was a pillow
- fight rather than a dance, and when it was finished, the pillows
- insisted on one bout more, like partners who know that they may never
- meet again. The stories they told, before it was time for Wendy's
- good-night story! Even Slightly tried to tell a story that night, but
- the beginning was so fearfully dull that it appalled not only the others
- but himself, and he said gloomily:
- “Yes, it is a dull beginning. I say, let us pretend that it is the end.”
- And then at last they all got into bed for Wendy's story, the story they
- loved best, the story Peter hated. Usually when she began to tell this
- story he left the room or put his hands over his ears; and possibly if
- he had done either of those things this time they might all still be on
- the island. But to-night he remained on his stool; and we shall see what
- happened.
- Chapter 11 WENDY'S STORY
- “Listen, then,” said Wendy, settling down to her story, with Michael at
- her feet and seven boys in the bed. “There was once a gentleman--”
- “I had rather he had been a lady,” Curly said.
- “I wish he had been a white rat,” said Nibs.
- “Quiet,” their mother admonished [cautioned] them. “There was a lady
- also, and--”
- “Oh, mummy,” cried the first twin, “you mean that there is a lady also,
- don't you? She is not dead, is she?”
- “Oh, no.”
- “I am awfully glad she isn't dead,” said Tootles. “Are you glad, John?”
- “Of course I am.”
- “Are you glad, Nibs?”
- “Rather.”
- “Are you glad, Twins?”
- “We are glad.”
- “Oh dear,” sighed Wendy.
- “Little less noise there,” Peter called out, determined that she should
- have fair play, however beastly a story it might be in his opinion.
- “The gentleman's name,” Wendy continued, “was Mr. Darling, and her name
- was Mrs. Darling.”
- “I knew them,” John said, to annoy the others.
- “I think I knew them,” said Michael rather doubtfully.
- “They were married, you know,” explained Wendy, “and what do you think
- they had?”
- “White rats,” cried Nibs, inspired.
- “No.”
- “It's awfully puzzling,” said Tootles, who knew the story by heart.
- “Quiet, Tootles. They had three descendants.”
- “What is descendants?”
- “Well, you are one, Twin.”
- “Did you hear that, John? I am a descendant.”
- “Descendants are only children,” said John.
- “Oh dear, oh dear,” sighed Wendy. “Now these three children had a
- faithful nurse called Nana; but Mr. Darling was angry with her and
- chained her up in the yard, and so all the children flew away.”
- “It's an awfully good story,” said Nibs.
- “They flew away,” Wendy continued, “to the Neverland, where the lost
- children are.”
- “I just thought they did,” Curly broke in excitedly. “I don't know how
- it is, but I just thought they did!”
- “O Wendy,” cried Tootles, “was one of the lost children called Tootles?”
- “Yes, he was.”
- “I am in a story. Hurrah, I am in a story, Nibs.”
- “Hush. Now I want you to consider the feelings of the unhappy parents
- with all their children flown away.”
- “Oo!” they all moaned, though they were not really considering the
- feelings of the unhappy parents one jot.
- “Think of the empty beds!”
- “Oo!”
- “It's awfully sad,” the first twin said cheerfully.
- “I don't see how it can have a happy ending,” said the second twin. “Do
- you, Nibs?”
- “I'm frightfully anxious.”
- “If you knew how great is a mother's love,” Wendy told them
- triumphantly, “you would have no fear.” She had now come to the part
- that Peter hated.
- “I do like a mother's love,” said Tootles, hitting Nibs with a pillow.
- “Do you like a mother's love, Nibs?”
- “I do just,” said Nibs, hitting back.
- “You see,” Wendy said complacently, “our heroine knew that the mother
- would always leave the window open for her children to fly back by; so
- they stayed away for years and had a lovely time.”
- “Did they ever go back?”
- “Let us now,” said Wendy, bracing herself up for her finest effort,
- “take a peep into the future;” and they all gave themselves the twist
- that makes peeps into the future easier. “Years have rolled by, and who
- is this elegant lady of uncertain age alighting at London Station?”
- “O Wendy, who is she?” cried Nibs, every bit as excited as if he didn't
- know.
- “Can it be--yes--no--it is--the fair Wendy!”
- “Oh!”
- “And who are the two noble portly figures accompanying her, now grown to
- man's estate? Can they be John and Michael? They are!”
- “Oh!”
- “'See, dear brothers,' says Wendy pointing upwards, 'there is the window
- still standing open. Ah, now we are rewarded for our sublime faith in a
- mother's love.' So up they flew to their mummy and daddy, and pen cannot
- describe the happy scene, over which we draw a veil.”
- That was the story, and they were as pleased with it as the fair
- narrator herself. Everything just as it should be, you see. Off we skip
- like the most heartless things in the world, which is what children are,
- but so attractive; and we have an entirely selfish time, and then when
- we have need of special attention we nobly return for it, confident that
- we shall be rewarded instead of smacked.
- So great indeed was their faith in a mother's love that they felt they
- could afford to be callous for a bit longer.
- But there was one there who knew better, and when Wendy finished he
- uttered a hollow groan.
- “What is it, Peter?” she cried, running to him, thinking he was ill. She
- felt him solicitously, lower down than his chest. “Where is it, Peter?”
- “It isn't that kind of pain,” Peter replied darkly.
- “Then what kind is it?”
- “Wendy, you are wrong about mothers.”
- They all gathered round him in affright, so alarming was his agitation;
- and with a fine candour he told them what he had hitherto concealed.
- “Long ago,” he said, “I thought like you that my mother would always
- keep the window open for me, so I stayed away for moons and moons and
- moons, and then flew back; but the window was barred, for mother had
- forgotten all about me, and there was another little boy sleeping in my
- bed.”
- I am not sure that this was true, but Peter thought it was true; and it
- scared them.
- “Are you sure mothers are like that?”
- “Yes.”
- So this was the truth about mothers. The toads!
- Still it is best to be careful; and no one knows so quickly as a child
- when he should give in. “Wendy, let us [let's] go home,” cried John and
- Michael together.
- “Yes,” she said, clutching them.
- “Not to-night?” asked the lost boys bewildered. They knew in what they
- called their hearts that one can get on quite well without a mother, and
- that it is only the mothers who think you can't.
- “At once,” Wendy replied resolutely, for the horrible thought had come
- to her: “Perhaps mother is in half mourning by this time.”
- This dread made her forgetful of what must be Peter's feelings, and
- she said to him rather sharply, “Peter, will you make the necessary
- arrangements?”
- “If you wish it,” he replied, as coolly as if she had asked him to pass
- the nuts.
- Not so much as a sorry-to-lose-you between them! If she did not mind the
- parting, he was going to show her, was Peter, that neither did he.
- But of course he cared very much; and he was so full of wrath against
- grown-ups, who, as usual, were spoiling everything, that as soon as he
- got inside his tree he breathed intentionally quick short breaths at the
- rate of about five to a second. He did this because there is a saying in
- the Neverland that, every time you breathe, a grown-up dies; and Peter
- was killing them off vindictively as fast as possible.
- Then having given the necessary instructions to the redskins he returned
- to the home, where an unworthy scene had been enacted in his absence.
- Panic-stricken at the thought of losing Wendy the lost boys had advanced
- upon her threateningly.
- “It will be worse than before she came,” they cried.
- “We shan't let her go.”
- “Let's keep her prisoner.”
- “Ay, chain her up.”
- In her extremity an instinct told her to which of them to turn.
- “Tootles,” she cried, “I appeal to you.”
- Was it not strange? She appealed to Tootles, quite the silliest one.
- Grandly, however, did Tootles respond. For that one moment he dropped
- his silliness and spoke with dignity.
- “I am just Tootles,” he said, “and nobody minds me. But the first who
- does not behave to Wendy like an English gentleman I will blood him
- severely.”
- He drew back his hanger; and for that instant his sun was at noon. The
- others held back uneasily. Then Peter returned, and they saw at once
- that they would get no support from him. He would keep no girl in the
- Neverland against her will.
- “Wendy,” he said, striding up and down, “I have asked the redskins to
- guide you through the wood, as flying tires you so.”
- “Thank you, Peter.”
- “Then,” he continued, in the short sharp voice of one accustomed to be
- obeyed, “Tinker Bell will take you across the sea. Wake her, Nibs.”
- Nibs had to knock twice before he got an answer, though Tink had really
- been sitting up in bed listening for some time.
- “Who are you? How dare you? Go away,” she cried.
- “You are to get up, Tink,” Nibs called, “and take Wendy on a journey.”
- Of course Tink had been delighted to hear that Wendy was going; but
- she was jolly well determined not to be her courier, and she said so in
- still more offensive language. Then she pretended to be asleep again.
- “She says she won't!” Nibs exclaimed, aghast at such insubordination,
- whereupon Peter went sternly toward the young lady's chamber.
- “Tink,” he rapped out, “if you don't get up and dress at once I will
- open the curtains, and then we shall all see you in your negligee
- [nightgown].”
- This made her leap to the floor. “Who said I wasn't getting up?” she
- cried.
- In the meantime the boys were gazing very forlornly at Wendy, now
- equipped with John and Michael for the journey. By this time they were
- dejected, not merely because they were about to lose her, but also
- because they felt that she was going off to something nice to which they
- had not been invited. Novelty was beckoning to them as usual.
- Crediting them with a nobler feeling Wendy melted.
- “Dear ones,” she said, “if you will all come with me I feel almost sure
- I can get my father and mother to adopt you.”
- The invitation was meant specially for Peter, but each of the boys was
- thinking exclusively of himself, and at once they jumped with joy.
- “But won't they think us rather a handful?” Nibs asked in the middle of
- his jump.
- “Oh no,” said Wendy, rapidly thinking it out, “it will only mean having
- a few beds in the drawing-room; they can be hidden behind the screens on
- first Thursdays.”
- “Peter, can we go?” they all cried imploringly. They took it for granted
- that if they went he would go also, but really they scarcely cared. Thus
- children are ever ready, when novelty knocks, to desert their dearest
- ones.
- “All right,” Peter replied with a bitter smile, and immediately they
- rushed to get their things.
- “And now, Peter,” Wendy said, thinking she had put everything right,
- “I am going to give you your medicine before you go.” She loved to give
- them medicine, and undoubtedly gave them too much. Of course it was only
- water, but it was out of a bottle, and she always shook the bottle and
- counted the drops, which gave it a certain medicinal quality. On this
- occasion, however, she did not give Peter his draught [portion], for
- just as she had prepared it, she saw a look on his face that made her
- heart sink.
- “Get your things, Peter,” she cried, shaking.
- “No,” he answered, pretending indifference, “I am not going with you,
- Wendy.”
- “Yes, Peter.”
- “No.”
- To show that her departure would leave him unmoved, he skipped up and
- down the room, playing gaily on his heartless pipes. She had to run
- about after him, though it was rather undignified.
- “To find your mother,” she coaxed.
- Now, if Peter had ever quite had a mother, he no longer missed her. He
- could do very well without one. He had thought them out, and remembered
- only their bad points.
- “No, no,” he told Wendy decisively; “perhaps she would say I was old,
- and I just want always to be a little boy and to have fun.”
- “But, Peter--”
- “No.”
- And so the others had to be told.
- “Peter isn't coming.”
- Peter not coming! They gazed blankly at him, their sticks over their
- backs, and on each stick a bundle. Their first thought was that if Peter
- was not going he had probably changed his mind about letting them go.
- But he was far too proud for that. “If you find your mothers,” he said
- darkly, “I hope you will like them.”
- The awful cynicism of this made an uncomfortable impression, and most
- of them began to look rather doubtful. After all, their faces said, were
- they not noodles to want to go?
- “Now then,” cried Peter, “no fuss, no blubbering; good-bye, Wendy;” and
- he held out his hand cheerily, quite as if they must really go now, for
- he had something important to do.
- She had to take his hand, and there was no indication that he would
- prefer a thimble.
- “You will remember about changing your flannels, Peter?” she said,
- lingering over him. She was always so particular about their flannels.
- “Yes.”
- “And you will take your medicine?”
- “Yes.”
- That seemed to be everything, and an awkward pause followed. Peter,
- however, was not the kind that breaks down before other people. “Are you
- ready, Tinker Bell?” he called out.
- “Ay, ay.”
- “Then lead the way.”
- Tink darted up the nearest tree; but no one followed her, for it was
- at this moment that the pirates made their dreadful attack upon the
- redskins. Above, where all had been so still, the air was rent with
- shrieks and the clash of steel. Below, there was dead silence. Mouths
- opened and remained open. Wendy fell on her knees, but her arms were
- extended toward Peter. All arms were extended to him, as if suddenly
- blown in his direction; they were beseeching him mutely not to desert
- them. As for Peter, he seized his sword, the same he thought he had
- slain Barbecue with, and the lust of battle was in his eye.
- Chapter 12 THE CHILDREN ARE CARRIED OFF
- The pirate attack had been a complete surprise: a sure proof that the
- unscrupulous Hook had conducted it improperly, for to surprise redskins
- fairly is beyond the wit of the white man.
- By all the unwritten laws of savage warfare it is always the redskin who
- attacks, and with the wiliness of his race he does it just before the
- dawn, at which time he knows the courage of the whites to be at its
- lowest ebb. The white men have in the meantime made a rude stockade on
- the summit of yonder undulating ground, at the foot of which a stream
- runs, for it is destruction to be too far from water. There they await
- the onslaught, the inexperienced ones clutching their revolvers and
- treading on twigs, but the old hands sleeping tranquilly until just
- before the dawn. Through the long black night the savage scouts wriggle,
- snake-like, among the grass without stirring a blade. The brushwood
- closes behind them, as silently as sand into which a mole has dived.
- Not a sound is to be heard, save when they give vent to a wonderful
- imitation of the lonely call of the coyote. The cry is answered by other
- braves; and some of them do it even better than the coyotes, who are not
- very good at it. So the chill hours wear on, and the long suspense is
- horribly trying to the paleface who has to live through it for the first
- time; but to the trained hand those ghastly calls and still ghastlier
- silences are but an intimation of how the night is marching.
- That this was the usual procedure was so well known to Hook that in
- disregarding it he cannot be excused on the plea of ignorance.
- The Piccaninnies, on their part, trusted implicitly to his honour, and
- their whole action of the night stands out in marked contrast to his.
- They left nothing undone that was consistent with the reputation of
- their tribe. With that alertness of the senses which is at once the
- marvel and despair of civilised peoples, they knew that the pirates were
- on the island from the moment one of them trod on a dry stick; and in
- an incredibly short space of time the coyote cries began. Every foot of
- ground between the spot where Hook had landed his forces and the
- home under the trees was stealthily examined by braves wearing their
- mocassins with the heels in front. They found only one hillock with a
- stream at its base, so that Hook had no choice; here he must establish
- himself and wait for just before the dawn. Everything being thus mapped
- out with almost diabolical cunning, the main body of the redskins folded
- their blankets around them, and in the phlegmatic manner that is to
- them, the pearl of manhood squatted above the children's home, awaiting
- the cold moment when they should deal pale death.
- Here dreaming, though wide-awake, of the exquisite tortures to which
- they were to put him at break of day, those confiding savages were found
- by the treacherous Hook. From the accounts afterwards supplied by such
- of the scouts as escaped the carnage, he does not seem even to have
- paused at the rising ground, though it is certain that in that grey
- light he must have seen it: no thought of waiting to be attacked appears
- from first to last to have visited his subtle mind; he would not even
- hold off till the night was nearly spent; on he pounded with no policy
- but to fall to [get into combat]. What could the bewildered scouts do,
- masters as they were of every war-like artifice save this one, but trot
- helplessly after him, exposing themselves fatally to view, while they
- gave pathetic utterance to the coyote cry.
- Around the brave Tiger Lily were a dozen of her stoutest warriors, and
- they suddenly saw the perfidious pirates bearing down upon them. Fell
- from their eyes then the film through which they had looked at
- victory. No more would they torture at the stake. For them the happy
- hunting-grounds was now. They knew it; but as their father's sons they
- acquitted themselves. Even then they had time to gather in a phalanx
- [dense formation] that would have been hard to break had they risen
- quickly, but this they were forbidden to do by the traditions of their
- race. It is written that the noble savage must never express surprise in
- the presence of the white. Thus terrible as the sudden appearance of the
- pirates must have been to them, they remained stationary for a moment,
- not a muscle moving; as if the foe had come by invitation. Then, indeed,
- the tradition gallantly upheld, they seized their weapons, and the air
- was torn with the war-cry; but it was now too late.
- It is no part of ours to describe what was a massacre rather than a
- fight. Thus perished many of the flower of the Piccaninny tribe. Not all
- unavenged did they die, for with Lean Wolf fell Alf Mason, to disturb
- the Spanish Main no more, and among others who bit the dust were Geo.
- Scourie, Chas. Turley, and the Alsatian Foggerty. Turley fell to the
- tomahawk of the terrible Panther, who ultimately cut a way through the
- pirates with Tiger Lily and a small remnant of the tribe.
- To what extent Hook is to blame for his tactics on this occasion is for
- the historian to decide. Had he waited on the rising ground till the
- proper hour he and his men would probably have been butchered; and in
- judging him it is only fair to take this into account. What he should
- perhaps have done was to acquaint his opponents that he proposed to
- follow a new method. On the other hand, this, as destroying the element
- of surprise, would have made his strategy of no avail, so that the whole
- question is beset with difficulties. One cannot at least withhold a
- reluctant admiration for the wit that had conceived so bold a scheme,
- and the fell [deadly] genius with which it was carried out.
- What were his own feelings about himself at that triumphant moment?
- Fain [gladly] would his dogs have known, as breathing heavily and wiping
- their cutlasses, they gathered at a discreet distance from his hook, and
- squinted through their ferret eyes at this extraordinary man. Elation
- must have been in his heart, but his face did not reflect it: ever a
- dark and solitary enigma, he stood aloof from his followers in spirit as
- in substance.
- The night's work was not yet over, for it was not the redskins he had
- come out to destroy; they were but the bees to be smoked, so that he
- should get at the honey. It was Pan he wanted, Pan and Wendy and their
- band, but chiefly Pan.
- Peter was such a small boy that one tends to wonder at the man's hatred
- of him. True he had flung Hook's arm to the crocodile, but even this
- and the increased insecurity of life to which it led, owing to
- the crocodile's pertinacity [persistance], hardly account for a
- vindictiveness so relentless and malignant. The truth is that there was
- a something about Peter which goaded the pirate captain to frenzy. It
- was not his courage, it was not his engaging appearance, it was not--.
- There is no beating about the bush, for we know quite well what it was,
- and have got to tell. It was Peter's cockiness.
- This had got on Hook's nerves; it made his iron claw twitch, and at
- night it disturbed him like an insect. While Peter lived, the tortured
- man felt that he was a lion in a cage into which a sparrow had come.
- The question now was how to get down the trees, or how to get his dogs
- down? He ran his greedy eyes over them, searching for the thinnest
- ones. They wriggled uncomfortably, for they knew he would not scruple
- [hesitate] to ram them down with poles.
- In the meantime, what of the boys? We have seen them at the first clang
- of the weapons, turned as it were into stone figures, open-mouthed,
- all appealing with outstretched arms to Peter; and we return to them as
- their mouths close, and their arms fall to their sides. The pandemonium
- above has ceased almost as suddenly as it arose, passed like a fierce
- gust of wind; but they know that in the passing it has determined their
- fate.
- Which side had won?
- The pirates, listening avidly at the mouths of the trees, heard the
- question put by every boy, and alas, they also heard Peter's answer.
- “If the redskins have won,” he said, “they will beat the tom-tom; it is
- always their sign of victory.”
- Now Smee had found the tom-tom, and was at that moment sitting on it.
- “You will never hear the tom-tom again,” he muttered, but inaudibly of
- course, for strict silence had been enjoined [urged]. To his amazement
- Hook signed him to beat the tom-tom, and slowly there came to Smee an
- understanding of the dreadful wickedness of the order. Never, probably,
- had this simple man admired Hook so much.
- Twice Smee beat upon the instrument, and then stopped to listen
- gleefully.
- “The tom-tom,” the miscreants heard Peter cry; “an Indian victory!”
- The doomed children answered with a cheer that was music to the black
- hearts above, and almost immediately they repeated their good-byes
- to Peter. This puzzled the pirates, but all their other feelings were
- swallowed by a base delight that the enemy were about to come up the
- trees. They smirked at each other and rubbed their hands. Rapidly and
- silently Hook gave his orders: one man to each tree, and the others to
- arrange themselves in a line two yards apart.
- Chapter 13 DO YOU BELIEVE IN FAIRIES?
- The more quickly this horror is disposed of the better. The first to
- emerge from his tree was Curly. He rose out of it into the arms of
- Cecco, who flung him to Smee, who flung him to Starkey, who flung him to
- Bill Jukes, who flung him to Noodler, and so he was tossed from one to
- another till he fell at the feet of the black pirate. All the boys were
- plucked from their trees in this ruthless manner; and several of them
- were in the air at a time, like bales of goods flung from hand to hand.
- A different treatment was accorded to Wendy, who came last. With
- ironical politeness Hook raised his hat to her, and, offering her his
- arm, escorted her to the spot where the others were being gagged. He
- did it with such an air, he was so frightfully DISTINGUE [imposingly
- distinguished], that she was too fascinated to cry out. She was only a
- little girl.
- Perhaps it is tell-tale to divulge that for a moment Hook entranced her,
- and we tell on her only because her slip led to strange results. Had she
- haughtily unhanded him (and we should have loved to write it of her),
- she would have been hurled through the air like the others, and then
- Hook would probably not have been present at the tying of the children;
- and had he not been at the tying he would not have discovered Slightly's
- secret, and without the secret he could not presently have made his foul
- attempt on Peter's life.
- They were tied to prevent their flying away, doubled up with their knees
- close to their ears; and for the trussing of them the black pirate had
- cut a rope into nine equal pieces. All went well until Slightly's turn
- came, when he was found to be like those irritating parcels that use up
- all the string in going round and leave no tags [ends] with which to
- tie a knot. The pirates kicked him in their rage, just as you kick the
- parcel (though in fairness you should kick the string); and strange
- to say it was Hook who told them to belay their violence. His lip was
- curled with malicious triumph. While his dogs were merely sweating
- because every time they tried to pack the unhappy lad tight in one
- part he bulged out in another, Hook's master mind had gone far beneath
- Slightly's surface, probing not for effects but for causes; and his
- exultation showed that he had found them. Slightly, white to the gills,
- knew that Hook had surprised [discovered] his secret, which was this,
- that no boy so blown out could use a tree wherein an average man need
- stick. Poor Slightly, most wretched of all the children now, for he
- was in a panic about Peter, bitterly regretted what he had done. Madly
- addicted to the drinking of water when he was hot, he had swelled in
- consequence to his present girth, and instead of reducing himself to fit
- his tree he had, unknown to the others, whittled his tree to make it fit
- him.
- Sufficient of this Hook guessed to persuade him that Peter at last lay
- at his mercy, but no word of the dark design that now formed in the
- subterranean caverns of his mind crossed his lips; he merely signed
- that the captives were to be conveyed to the ship, and that he would be
- alone.
- How to convey them? Hunched up in their ropes they might indeed be
- rolled down hill like barrels, but most of the way lay through a morass.
- Again Hook's genius surmounted difficulties. He indicated that the
- little house must be used as a conveyance. The children were flung into
- it, four stout pirates raised it on their shoulders, the others fell in
- behind, and singing the hateful pirate chorus the strange procession
- set off through the wood. I don't know whether any of the children were
- crying; if so, the singing drowned the sound; but as the little house
- disappeared in the forest, a brave though tiny jet of smoke issued from
- its chimney as if defying Hook.
- Hook saw it, and it did Peter a bad service. It dried up any trickle of
- pity for him that may have remained in the pirate's infuriated breast.
- The first thing he did on finding himself alone in the fast falling
- night was to tiptoe to Slightly's tree, and make sure that it provided
- him with a passage. Then for long he remained brooding; his hat of ill
- omen on the sward, so that any gentle breeze which had arisen might play
- refreshingly through his hair. Dark as were his thoughts his blue eyes
- were as soft as the periwinkle. Intently he listened for any sound from
- the nether world, but all was as silent below as above; the house under
- the ground seemed to be but one more empty tenement in the void. Was
- that boy asleep, or did he stand waiting at the foot of Slightly's tree,
- with his dagger in his hand?
- There was no way of knowing, save by going down. Hook let his cloak slip
- softly to the ground, and then biting his lips till a lewd blood stood
- on them, he stepped into the tree. He was a brave man, but for a moment
- he had to stop there and wipe his brow, which was dripping like a
- candle. Then, silently, he let himself go into the unknown.
- He arrived unmolested at the foot of the shaft, and stood still again,
- biting at his breath, which had almost left him. As his eyes became
- accustomed to the dim light various objects in the home under the trees
- took shape; but the only one on which his greedy gaze rested, long
- sought for and found at last, was the great bed. On the bed lay Peter
- fast asleep.
- Unaware of the tragedy being enacted above, Peter had continued, for
- a little time after the children left, to play gaily on his pipes: no
- doubt rather a forlorn attempt to prove to himself that he did not care.
- Then he decided not to take his medicine, so as to grieve Wendy. Then he
- lay down on the bed outside the coverlet, to vex her still more; for she
- had always tucked them inside it, because you never know that you may
- not grow chilly at the turn of the night. Then he nearly cried; but
- it struck him how indignant she would be if he laughed instead; so he
- laughed a haughty laugh and fell asleep in the middle of it.
- Sometimes, though not often, he had dreams, and they were more painful
- than the dreams of other boys. For hours he could not be separated from
- these dreams, though he wailed piteously in them. They had to do, I
- think, with the riddle of his existence. At such times it had been
- Wendy's custom to take him out of bed and sit with him on her lap,
- soothing him in dear ways of her own invention, and when he grew calmer
- to put him back to bed before he quite woke up, so that he should
- not know of the indignity to which she had subjected him. But on this
- occasion he had fallen at once into a dreamless sleep. One arm dropped
- over the edge of the bed, one leg was arched, and the unfinished part of
- his laugh was stranded on his mouth, which was open, showing the little
- pearls.
- Thus defenceless Hook found him. He stood silent at the foot of the tree
- looking across the chamber at his enemy. Did no feeling of compassion
- disturb his sombre breast? The man was not wholly evil; he loved flowers
- (I have been told) and sweet music (he was himself no mean performer on
- the harpsichord); and, let it be frankly admitted, the idyllic nature of
- the scene stirred him profoundly. Mastered by his better self he would
- have returned reluctantly up the tree, but for one thing.
- What stayed him was Peter's impertinent appearance as he slept. The
- open mouth, the drooping arm, the arched knee: they were such a
- personification of cockiness as, taken together, will never again, one
- may hope, be presented to eyes so sensitive to their offensiveness. They
- steeled Hook's heart. If his rage had broken him into a hundred pieces
- every one of them would have disregarded the incident, and leapt at the
- sleeper.
- Though a light from the one lamp shone dimly on the bed, Hook stood in
- darkness himself, and at the first stealthy step forward he discovered
- an obstacle, the door of Slightly's tree. It did not entirely fill the
- aperture, and he had been looking over it. Feeling for the catch,
- he found to his fury that it was low down, beyond his reach. To his
- disordered brain it seemed then that the irritating quality in Peter's
- face and figure visibly increased, and he rattled the door and flung
- himself against it. Was his enemy to escape him after all?
- But what was that? The red in his eye had caught sight of Peter's
- medicine standing on a ledge within easy reach. He fathomed what it was
- straightaway, and immediately knew that the sleeper was in his power.
- Lest he should be taken alive, Hook always carried about his person a
- dreadful drug, blended by himself of all the death-dealing rings that
- had come into his possession. These he had boiled down into a yellow
- liquid quite unknown to science, which was probably the most virulent
- poison in existence.
- Five drops of this he now added to Peter's cup. His hand shook, but it
- was in exultation rather than in shame. As he did it he avoided glancing
- at the sleeper, but not lest pity should unnerve him; merely to avoid
- spilling. Then one long gloating look he cast upon his victim, and
- turning, wormed his way with difficulty up the tree. As he emerged
- at the top he looked the very spirit of evil breaking from its hole.
- Donning his hat at its most rakish angle, he wound his cloak around him,
- holding one end in front as if to conceal his person from the night,
- of which it was the blackest part, and muttering strangely to himself,
- stole away through the trees.
- Peter slept on. The light guttered [burned to edges] and went out,
- leaving the tenement in darkness; but still he slept. It must have been
- not less than ten o'clock by the crocodile, when he suddenly sat up in
- his bed, wakened by he knew not what. It was a soft cautious tapping on
- the door of his tree.
- Soft and cautious, but in that stillness it was sinister. Peter felt for
- his dagger till his hand gripped it. Then he spoke.
- “Who is that?”
- For long there was no answer: then again the knock.
- “Who are you?”
- No answer.
- He was thrilled, and he loved being thrilled. In two strides he reached
- the door. Unlike Slightly's door, it filled the aperture [opening], so
- that he could not see beyond it, nor could the one knocking see him.
- “I won't open unless you speak,” Peter cried.
- Then at last the visitor spoke, in a lovely bell-like voice.
- “Let me in, Peter.”
- It was Tink, and quickly he unbarred to her. She flew in excitedly, her
- face flushed and her dress stained with mud.
- “What is it?”
- “Oh, you could never guess!” she cried, and offered him three guesses.
- “Out with it!” he shouted, and in one ungrammatical sentence, as long as
- the ribbons that conjurers [magicians] pull from their mouths, she told
- of the capture of Wendy and the boys.
- Peter's heart bobbed up and down as he listened. Wendy bound, and on the
- pirate ship; she who loved everything to be just so!
- “I'll rescue her!” he cried, leaping at his weapons. As he leapt he
- thought of something he could do to please her. He could take his
- medicine.
- His hand closed on the fatal draught.
- “No!” shrieked Tinker Bell, who had heard Hook mutter about his deed as
- he sped through the forest.
- “Why not?”
- “It is poisoned.”
- “Poisoned? Who could have poisoned it?”
- “Hook.”
- “Don't be silly. How could Hook have got down here?”
- Alas, Tinker Bell could not explain this, for even she did not know the
- dark secret of Slightly's tree. Nevertheless Hook's words had left no
- room for doubt. The cup was poisoned.
- “Besides,” said Peter, quite believing himself, “I never fell asleep.”
- He raised the cup. No time for words now; time for deeds; and with one
- of her lightning movements Tink got between his lips and the draught,
- and drained it to the dregs.
- “Why, Tink, how dare you drink my medicine?”
- But she did not answer. Already she was reeling in the air.
- “What is the matter with you?” cried Peter, suddenly afraid.
- “It was poisoned, Peter,” she told him softly; “and now I am going to be
- dead.”
- “O Tink, did you drink it to save me?”
- “Yes.”
- “But why, Tink?”
- Her wings would scarcely carry her now, but in reply she alighted on his
- shoulder and gave his nose a loving bite. She whispered in his ear “You
- silly ass,” and then, tottering to her chamber, lay down on the bed.
- His head almost filled the fourth wall of her little room as he knelt
- near her in distress. Every moment her light was growing fainter; and
- he knew that if it went out she would be no more. She liked his tears so
- much that she put out her beautiful finger and let them run over it.
- Her voice was so low that at first he could not make out what she said.
- Then he made it out. She was saying that she thought she could get well
- again if children believed in fairies.
- Peter flung out his arms. There were no children there, and it was night
- time; but he addressed all who might be dreaming of the Neverland, and
- who were therefore nearer to him than you think: boys and girls in their
- nighties, and naked papooses in their baskets hung from trees.
- “Do you believe?” he cried.
- Tink sat up in bed almost briskly to listen to her fate.
- She fancied she heard answers in the affirmative, and then again she
- wasn't sure.
- “What do you think?” she asked Peter.
- “If you believe,” he shouted to them, “clap your hands; don't let Tink
- die.”
- Many clapped.
- Some didn't.
- A few beasts hissed.
- The clapping stopped suddenly; as if countless mothers had rushed to
- their nurseries to see what on earth was happening; but already Tink was
- saved. First her voice grew strong, then she popped out of bed, then
- she was flashing through the room more merry and impudent than ever. She
- never thought of thanking those who believed, but she would have liked to
- get at the ones who had hissed.
- “And now to rescue Wendy!”
- The moon was riding in a cloudy heaven when Peter rose from his tree,
- begirt [belted] with weapons and wearing little else, to set out upon
- his perilous quest. It was not such a night as he would have chosen.
- He had hoped to fly, keeping not far from the ground so that nothing
- unwonted should escape his eyes; but in that fitful light to have
- flown low would have meant trailing his shadow through the trees, thus
- disturbing birds and acquainting a watchful foe that he was astir.
- He regretted now that he had given the birds of the island such strange
- names that they are very wild and difficult of approach.
- There was no other course but to press forward in redskin fashion, at
- which happily he was an adept [expert]. But in what direction, for he
- could not be sure that the children had been taken to the ship? A
- light fall of snow had obliterated all footmarks; and a deathly silence
- pervaded the island, as if for a space Nature stood still in horror of
- the recent carnage. He had taught the children something of the forest
- lore that he had himself learned from Tiger Lily and Tinker Bell,
- and knew that in their dire hour they were not likely to forget it.
- Slightly, if he had an opportunity, would blaze [cut a mark in] the
- trees, for instance, Curly would drop seeds, and Wendy would leave her
- handkerchief at some important place. The morning was needed to search
- for such guidance, and he could not wait. The upper world had called
- him, but would give no help.
- The crocodile passed him, but not another living thing, not a sound, not
- a movement; and yet he knew well that sudden death might be at the next
- tree, or stalking him from behind.
- He swore this terrible oath: “Hook or me this time.”
- Now he crawled forward like a snake, and again erect, he darted across
- a space on which the moonlight played, one finger on his lip and his
- dagger at the ready. He was frightfully happy.
- Chapter 14 THE PIRATE SHIP
- One green light squinting over Kidd's Creek, which is near the mouth of
- the pirate river, marked where the brig, the JOLLY ROGER, lay, low in
- the water; a rakish-looking [speedy-looking] craft foul to the hull,
- every beam in her detestable, like ground strewn with mangled feathers.
- She was the cannibal of the seas, and scarce needed that watchful eye,
- for she floated immune in the horror of her name.
- She was wrapped in the blanket of night, through which no sound from her
- could have reached the shore. There was little sound, and none agreeable
- save the whir of the ship's sewing machine at which Smee sat, ever
- industrious and obliging, the essence of the commonplace, pathetic Smee.
- I know not why he was so infinitely pathetic, unless it were because
- he was so pathetically unaware of it; but even strong men had to turn
- hastily from looking at him, and more than once on summer evenings he
- had touched the fount of Hook's tears and made it flow. Of this, as of
- almost everything else, Smee was quite unconscious.
- A few of the pirates leant over the bulwarks, drinking in the miasma
- [putrid mist] of the night; others sprawled by barrels over games of
- dice and cards; and the exhausted four who had carried the little house
- lay prone on the deck, where even in their sleep they rolled skillfully
- to this side or that out of Hook's reach, lest he should claw them
- mechanically in passing.
- Hook trod the deck in thought. O man unfathomable. It was his hour of
- triumph. Peter had been removed for ever from his path, and all the
- other boys were in the brig, about to walk the plank. It was his
- grimmest deed since the days when he had brought Barbecue to heel; and
- knowing as we do how vain a tabernacle is man, could we be surprised
- had he now paced the deck unsteadily, bellied out by the winds of his
- success?
- But there was no elation in his gait, which kept pace with the action of
- his sombre mind. Hook was profoundly dejected.
- He was often thus when communing with himself on board ship in the
- quietude of the night. It was because he was so terribly alone. This
- inscrutable man never felt more alone than when surrounded by his dogs.
- They were socially inferior to him.
- Hook was not his true name. To reveal who he really was would even at
- this date set the country in a blaze; but as those who read between the
- lines must already have guessed, he had been at a famous public school;
- and its traditions still clung to him like garments, with which indeed
- they are largely concerned. Thus it was offensive to him even now to
- board a ship in the same dress in which he grappled [attacked] her, and
- he still adhered in his walk to the school's distinguished slouch. But
- above all he retained the passion for good form.
- Good form! However much he may have degenerated, he still knew that this
- is all that really matters.
- From far within him he heard a creaking as of rusty portals, and through
- them came a stern tap-tap-tap, like hammering in the night when one
- cannot sleep. “Have you been good form to-day?” was their eternal
- question.
- “Fame, fame, that glittering bauble, it is mine,” he cried.
- “Is it quite good form to be distinguished at anything?” the tap-tap
- from his school replied.
- “I am the only man whom Barbecue feared,” he urged, “and Flint feared
- Barbecue.”
- “Barbecue, Flint--what house?” came the cutting retort.
- Most disquieting reflection of all, was it not bad form to think about
- good form?
- His vitals were tortured by this problem. It was a claw within him
- sharper than the iron one; and as it tore him, the perspiration dripped
- down his tallow [waxy] countenance and streaked his doublet. Ofttimes he
- drew his sleeve across his face, but there was no damming that trickle.
- Ah, envy not Hook.
- There came to him a presentiment of his early dissolution [death]. It
- was as if Peter's terrible oath had boarded the ship. Hook felt a gloomy
- desire to make his dying speech, lest presently there should be no time
- for it.
- “Better for Hook,” he cried, “if he had had less ambition!” It was in
- his darkest hours only that he referred to himself in the third person.
- “No little children to love me!”
- Strange that he should think of this, which had never troubled him
- before; perhaps the sewing machine brought it to his mind. For long he
- muttered to himself, staring at Smee, who was hemming placidly, under
- the conviction that all children feared him.
- Feared him! Feared Smee! There was not a child on board the brig that
- night who did not already love him. He had said horrid things to them
- and hit them with the palm of his hand, because he could not hit with
- his fist, but they had only clung to him the more. Michael had tried on
- his spectacles.
- To tell poor Smee that they thought him lovable! Hook itched to do it,
- but it seemed too brutal. Instead, he revolved this mystery in his
- mind: why do they find Smee lovable? He pursued the problem like the
- sleuth-hound that he was. If Smee was lovable, what was it that made him
- so? A terrible answer suddenly presented itself--“Good form?”
- Had the bo'sun good form without knowing it, which is the best form of
- all?
- He remembered that you have to prove you don't know you have it before
- you are eligible for Pop [an elite social club at Eton].
- With a cry of rage he raised his iron hand over Smee's head; but he did
- not tear. What arrested him was this reflection:
- “To claw a man because he is good form, what would that be?”
- “Bad form!”
- The unhappy Hook was as impotent [powerless] as he was damp, and he fell
- forward like a cut flower.
- His dogs thinking him out of the way for a time, discipline instantly
- relaxed; and they broke into a bacchanalian [drunken] dance, which
- brought him to his feet at once, all traces of human weakness gone, as
- if a bucket of water had passed over him.
- “Quiet, you scugs,” he cried, “or I'll cast anchor in you;” and at once
- the din was hushed. “Are all the children chained, so that they cannot
- fly away?”
- “Ay, ay.”
- “Then hoist them up.”
- The wretched prisoners were dragged from the hold, all except Wendy,
- and ranged in line in front of him. For a time he seemed unconscious
- of their presence. He lolled at his ease, humming, not unmelodiously,
- snatches of a rude song, and fingering a pack of cards. Ever and anon
- the light from his cigar gave a touch of colour to his face.
- “Now then, bullies,” he said briskly, “six of you walk the plank
- to-night, but I have room for two cabin boys. Which of you is it to be?”
- “Don't irritate him unnecessarily,” had been Wendy's instructions in
- the hold; so Tootles stepped forward politely. Tootles hated the idea
- of signing under such a man, but an instinct told him that it would
- be prudent to lay the responsibility on an absent person; and though a
- somewhat silly boy, he knew that mothers alone are always willing to be
- the buffer. All children know this about mothers, and despise them for
- it, but make constant use of it.
- So Tootles explained prudently, “You see, sir, I don't think my mother
- would like me to be a pirate. Would your mother like you to be a pirate,
- Slightly?”
- He winked at Slightly, who said mournfully, “I don't think so,” as if
- he wished things had been otherwise. “Would your mother like you to be a
- pirate, Twin?”
- “I don't think so,” said the first twin, as clever as the others. “Nibs,
- would--”
- “Stow this gab,” roared Hook, and the spokesmen were dragged back. “You,
- boy,” he said, addressing John, “you look as if you had a little pluck
- in you. Didst never want to be a pirate, my hearty?”
- Now John had sometimes experienced this hankering at maths. prep.; and
- he was struck by Hook's picking him out.
- “I once thought of calling myself Red-handed Jack,” he said diffidently.
- “And a good name too. We'll call you that here, bully, if you join.”
- “What do you think, Michael?” asked John.
- “What would you call me if I join?” Michael demanded.
- “Blackbeard Joe.”
- Michael was naturally impressed. “What do you think, John?” He wanted
- John to decide, and John wanted him to decide.
- “Shall we still be respectful subjects of the King?” John inquired.
- Through Hook's teeth came the answer: “You would have to swear, 'Down
- with the King.'”
- Perhaps John had not behaved very well so far, but he shone out now.
- “Then I refuse,” he cried, banging the barrel in front of Hook.
- “And I refuse,” cried Michael.
- “Rule Britannia!” squeaked Curly.
- The infuriated pirates buffeted them in the mouth; and Hook roared out,
- “That seals your doom. Bring up their mother. Get the plank ready.”
- They were only boys, and they went white as they saw Jukes and Cecco
- preparing the fatal plank. But they tried to look brave when Wendy was
- brought up.
- No words of mine can tell you how Wendy despised those pirates. To the
- boys there was at least some glamour in the pirate calling; but all that
- she saw was that the ship had not been tidied for years. There was not
- a porthole on the grimy glass of which you might not have written with
- your finger “Dirty pig”; and she had already written it on several. But
- as the boys gathered round her she had no thought, of course, save for
- them.
- “So, my beauty,” said Hook, as if he spoke in syrup, “you are to see
- your children walk the plank.”
- Fine gentlemen though he was, the intensity of his communings had soiled
- his ruff, and suddenly he knew that she was gazing at it. With a hasty
- gesture he tried to hide it, but he was too late.
- “Are they to die?” asked Wendy, with a look of such frightful contempt
- that he nearly fainted.
- “They are,” he snarled. “Silence all,” he called gloatingly, “for a
- mother's last words to her children.”
- At this moment Wendy was grand. “These are my last words, dear boys,”
- she said firmly. “I feel that I have a message to you from your real
- mothers, and it is this: 'We hope our sons will die like English
- gentlemen.'”
- Even the pirates were awed, and Tootles cried out hysterically, “I am
- going to do what my mother hopes. What are you to do, Nibs?”
- “What my mother hopes. What are you to do, Twin?”
- “What my mother hopes. John, what are--”
- But Hook had found his voice again.
- “Tie her up!” he shouted.
- It was Smee who tied her to the mast. “See here, honey,” he whispered,
- “I'll save you if you promise to be my mother.”
- But not even for Smee would she make such a promise. “I would almost
- rather have no children at all,” she said disdainfully [scornfully].
- It is sad to know that not a boy was looking at her as Smee tied her to
- the mast; the eyes of all were on the plank: that last little walk they
- were about to take. They were no longer able to hope that they would
- walk it manfully, for the capacity to think had gone from them; they
- could stare and shiver only.
- Hook smiled on them with his teeth closed, and took a step toward Wendy.
- His intention was to turn her face so that she should see the boys
- walking the plank one by one. But he never reached her, he never heard
- the cry of anguish he hoped to wring from her. He heard something else
- instead.
- It was the terrible tick-tick of the crocodile.
- They all heard it--pirates, boys, Wendy; and immediately every head was
- blown in one direction; not to the water whence the sound proceeded, but
- toward Hook. All knew that what was about to happen concerned him alone,
- and that from being actors they were suddenly become spectators.
- Very frightful was it to see the change that came over him. It was as if
- he had been clipped at every joint. He fell in a little heap.
- The sound came steadily nearer; and in advance of it came this ghastly
- thought, “The crocodile is about to board the ship!”
- Even the iron claw hung inactive; as if knowing that it was no intrinsic
- part of what the attacking force wanted. Left so fearfully alone, any
- other man would have lain with his eyes shut where he fell: but the
- gigantic brain of Hook was still working, and under its guidance he
- crawled on the knees along the deck as far from the sound as he could
- go. The pirates respectfully cleared a passage for him, and it was only
- when he brought up against the bulwarks that he spoke.
- “Hide me!” he cried hoarsely.
- They gathered round him, all eyes averted from the thing that was coming
- aboard. They had no thought of fighting it. It was Fate.
- Only when Hook was hidden from them did curiosity loosen the limbs of
- the boys so that they could rush to the ship's side to see the crocodile
- climbing it. Then they got the strangest surprise of the Night of
- Nights; for it was no crocodile that was coming to their aid. It was
- Peter.
- He signed to them not to give vent to any cry of admiration that might
- rouse suspicion. Then he went on ticking.
- Chapter 15 “HOOK OR ME THIS TIME”
- Odd things happen to all of us on our way through life without our
- noticing for a time that they have happened. Thus, to take an instance,
- we suddenly discover that we have been deaf in one ear for we don't know
- how long, but, say, half an hour. Now such an experience had come that
- night to Peter. When last we saw him he was stealing across the island
- with one finger to his lips and his dagger at the ready. He had seen the
- crocodile pass by without noticing anything peculiar about it, but by
- and by he remembered that it had not been ticking. At first he thought
- this eerie, but soon concluded rightly that the clock had run down.
- Without giving a thought to what might be the feelings of a
- fellow-creature thus abruptly deprived of its closest companion, Peter
- began to consider how he could turn the catastrophe to his own use;
- and he decided to tick, so that wild beasts should believe he was the
- crocodile and let him pass unmolested. He ticked superbly, but with one
- unforeseen result. The crocodile was among those who heard the sound,
- and it followed him, though whether with the purpose of regaining what
- it had lost, or merely as a friend under the belief that it was again
- ticking itself, will never be certainly known, for, like slaves to a
- fixed idea, it was a stupid beast.
- Peter reached the shore without mishap, and went straight on, his legs
- encountering the water as if quite unaware that they had entered a new
- element. Thus many animals pass from land to water, but no other human
- of whom I know. As he swam he had but one thought: “Hook or me this
- time.” He had ticked so long that he now went on ticking without knowing
- that he was doing it. Had he known he would have stopped, for to board
- the brig by help of the tick, though an ingenious idea, had not occurred
- to him.
- On the contrary, he thought he had scaled her side as noiseless as a
- mouse; and he was amazed to see the pirates cowering from him, with Hook
- in their midst as abject as if he had heard the crocodile.
- The crocodile! No sooner did Peter remember it than he heard the
- ticking. At first he thought the sound did come from the crocodile,
- and he looked behind him swiftly. Then he realised that he was doing it
- himself, and in a flash he understood the situation. “How clever of me!”
- he thought at once, and signed to the boys not to burst into applause.
- It was at this moment that Ed Teynte the quartermaster emerged from the
- forecastle and came along the deck. Now, reader, time what happened by
- your watch. Peter struck true and deep. John clapped his hands on the
- ill-fated pirate's mouth to stifle the dying groan. He fell forward.
- Four boys caught him to prevent the thud. Peter gave the signal, and the
- carrion was cast overboard. There was a splash, and then silence. How
- long has it taken?
- “One!” (Slightly had begun to count.)
- None too soon, Peter, every inch of him on tiptoe, vanished into the
- cabin; for more than one pirate was screwing up his courage to look
- round. They could hear each other's distressed breathing now, which
- showed them that the more terrible sound had passed.
- “It's gone, captain,” Smee said, wiping off his spectacles. “All's still
- again.”
- Slowly Hook let his head emerge from his ruff, and listened so intently
- that he could have caught the echo of the tick. There was not a sound,
- and he drew himself up firmly to his full height.
- “Then here's to Johnny Plank!” he cried brazenly, hating the boys more
- than ever because they had seen him unbend. He broke into the villainous
- ditty:
- “Yo ho, yo ho, the frisky plank,
- You walks along it so,
- Till it goes down and you goes down
- To Davy Jones below!”
- To terrorize the prisoners the more, though with a certain loss of
- dignity, he danced along an imaginary plank, grimacing at them as he
- sang; and when he finished he cried, “Do you want a touch of the cat [o'
- nine tails] before you walk the plank?”
- At that they fell on their knees. “No, no!” they cried so piteously that
- every pirate smiled.
- “Fetch the cat, Jukes,” said Hook; “it's in the cabin.”
- The cabin! Peter was in the cabin! The children gazed at each other.
- “Ay, ay,” said Jukes blithely, and he strode into the cabin. They
- followed him with their eyes; they scarce knew that Hook had resumed his
- song, his dogs joining in with him:
- “Yo ho, yo ho, the scratching cat,
- Its tails are nine, you know,
- And when they're writ upon your back--”
- What was the last line will never be known, for of a sudden the song was
- stayed by a dreadful screech from the cabin. It wailed through the ship,
- and died away. Then was heard a crowing sound which was well understood
- by the boys, but to the pirates was almost more eerie than the screech.
- “What was that?” cried Hook.
- “Two,” said Slightly solemnly.
- The Italian Cecco hesitated for a moment and then swung into the cabin.
- He tottered out, haggard.
- “What's the matter with Bill Jukes, you dog?” hissed Hook, towering over
- him.
- “The matter wi' him is he's dead, stabbed,” replied Cecco in a hollow
- voice.
- “Bill Jukes dead!” cried the startled pirates.
- “The cabin's as black as a pit,” Cecco said, almost gibbering, “but
- there is something terrible in there: the thing you heard crowing.”
- The exultation of the boys, the lowering looks of the pirates, both were
- seen by Hook.
- “Cecco,” he said in his most steely voice, “go back and fetch me out
- that doodle-doo.”
- Cecco, bravest of the brave, cowered before his captain, crying “No,
- no”; but Hook was purring to his claw.
- “Did you say you would go, Cecco?” he said musingly.
- Cecco went, first flinging his arms despairingly. There was no more
- singing, all listened now; and again came a death-screech and again a
- crow.
- No one spoke except Slightly. “Three,” he said.
- Hook rallied his dogs with a gesture. “'S'death and odds fish,” he
- thundered, “who is to bring me that doodle-doo?”
- “Wait till Cecco comes out,” growled Starkey, and the others took up the
- cry.
- “I think I heard you volunteer, Starkey,” said Hook, purring again.
- “No, by thunder!” Starkey cried.
- “My hook thinks you did,” said Hook, crossing to him. “I wonder if it
- would not be advisable, Starkey, to humour the hook?”
- “I'll swing before I go in there,” replied Starkey doggedly, and again
- he had the support of the crew.
- “Is this mutiny?” asked Hook more pleasantly than ever. “Starkey's
- ringleader!”
- “Captain, mercy!” Starkey whimpered, all of a tremble now.
- “Shake hands, Starkey,” said Hook, proffering his claw.
- Starkey looked round for help, but all deserted him. As he backed up
- Hook advanced, and now the red spark was in his eye. With a despairing
- scream the pirate leapt upon Long Tom and precipitated himself into the
- sea.
- “Four,” said Slightly.
- “And now,” Hook said courteously, “did any other gentlemen say mutiny?”
- Seizing a lantern and raising his claw with a menacing gesture, “I'll
- bring out that doodle-doo myself,” he said, and sped into the cabin.
- “Five.” How Slightly longed to say it. He wetted his lips to be ready,
- but Hook came staggering out, without his lantern.
- “Something blew out the light,” he said a little unsteadily.
- “Something!” echoed Mullins.
- “What of Cecco?” demanded Noodler.
- “He's as dead as Jukes,” said Hook shortly.
- His reluctance to return to the cabin impressed them all unfavourably,
- and the mutinous sounds again broke forth. All pirates are
- superstitious, and Cookson cried, “They do say the surest sign a ship's
- accurst is when there's one on board more than can be accounted for.”
- “I've heard,” muttered Mullins, “he always boards the pirate craft last.
- Had he a tail, captain?”
- “They say,” said another, looking viciously at Hook, “that when he comes
- it's in the likeness of the wickedest man aboard.”
- “Had he a hook, captain?” asked Cookson insolently; and one after
- another took up the cry, “The ship's doomed!” At this the children could
- not resist raising a cheer. Hook had well-nigh forgotten his prisoners,
- but as he swung round on them now his face lit up again.
- “Lads,” he cried to his crew, “now here's a notion. Open the cabin door
- and drive them in. Let them fight the doodle-doo for their lives. If
- they kill him, we're so much the better; if he kills them, we're none
- the worse.”
- For the last time his dogs admired Hook, and devotedly they did his
- bidding. The boys, pretending to struggle, were pushed into the cabin
- and the door was closed on them.
- “Now, listen!” cried Hook, and all listened. But not one dared to face
- the door. Yes, one, Wendy, who all this time had been bound to the mast.
- It was for neither a scream nor a crow that she was watching, it was for
- the reappearance of Peter.
- She had not long to wait. In the cabin he had found the thing for which
- he had gone in search: the key that would free the children of their
- manacles, and now they all stole forth, armed with such weapons as they
- could find. First signing them to hide, Peter cut Wendy's bonds,
- and then nothing could have been easier than for them all to fly off
- together; but one thing barred the way, an oath, “Hook or me this time.”
- So when he had freed Wendy, he whispered for her to conceal herself with
- the others, and himself took her place by the mast, her cloak around him
- so that he should pass for her. Then he took a great breath and crowed.
- To the pirates it was a voice crying that all the boys lay slain in the
- cabin; and they were panic-stricken. Hook tried to hearten them; but
- like the dogs he had made them they showed him their fangs, and he knew
- that if he took his eyes off them now they would leap at him.
- “Lads,” he said, ready to cajole or strike as need be, but never
- quailing for an instant, “I've thought it out. There's a Jonah aboard.”
- “Ay,” they snarled, “a man wi' a hook.”
- “No, lads, no, it's the girl. Never was luck on a pirate ship wi' a
- woman on board. We'll right the ship when she's gone.”
- Some of them remembered that this had been a saying of Flint's. “It's
- worth trying,” they said doubtfully.
- “Fling the girl overboard,” cried Hook; and they made a rush at the
- figure in the cloak.
- “There's none can save you now, missy,” Mullins hissed jeeringly.
- “There's one,” replied the figure.
- “Who's that?”
- “Peter Pan the avenger!” came the terrible answer; and as he spoke Peter
- flung off his cloak. Then they all knew who 'twas that had been undoing
- them in the cabin, and twice Hook essayed to speak and twice he failed.
- In that frightful moment I think his fierce heart broke.
- At last he cried, “Cleave him to the brisket!” but without conviction.
- “Down, boys, and at them!” Peter's voice rang out; and in another moment
- the clash of arms was resounding through the ship. Had the pirates kept
- together it is certain that they would have won; but the onset came
- when they were still unstrung, and they ran hither and thither, striking
- wildly, each thinking himself the last survivor of the crew. Man to man
- they were the stronger; but they fought on the defensive only, which
- enabled the boys to hunt in pairs and choose their quarry. Some of the
- miscreants leapt into the sea; others hid in dark recesses, where they
- were found by Slightly, who did not fight, but ran about with a lantern
- which he flashed in their faces, so that they were half blinded and
- fell as an easy prey to the reeking swords of the other boys. There was
- little sound to be heard but the clang of weapons, an occasional
- screech or splash, and Slightly monotonously counting--five--six--seven
- eight--nine--ten--eleven.
- I think all were gone when a group of savage boys surrounded Hook, who
- seemed to have a charmed life, as he kept them at bay in that circle
- of fire. They had done for his dogs, but this man alone seemed to be a
- match for them all. Again and again they closed upon him, and again and
- again he hewed a clear space. He had lifted up one boy with his hook,
- and was using him as a buckler [shield], when another, who had just
- passed his sword through Mullins, sprang into the fray.
- “Put up your swords, boys,” cried the newcomer, “this man is mine.”
- Thus suddenly Hook found himself face to face with Peter. The others
- drew back and formed a ring around them.
- For long the two enemies looked at one another, Hook shuddering
- slightly, and Peter with the strange smile upon his face.
- “So, Pan,” said Hook at last, “this is all your doing.”
- “Ay, James Hook,” came the stern answer, “it is all my doing.”
- “Proud and insolent youth,” said Hook, “prepare to meet thy doom.”
- “Dark and sinister man,” Peter answered, “have at thee.”
- Without more words they fell to, and for a space there was no advantage
- to either blade. Peter was a superb swordsman, and parried with dazzling
- rapidity; ever and anon he followed up a feint with a lunge that got
- past his foe's defence, but his shorter reach stood him in ill stead,
- and he could not drive the steel home. Hook, scarcely his inferior in
- brilliancy, but not quite so nimble in wrist play, forced him back by
- the weight of his onset, hoping suddenly to end all with a favourite
- thrust, taught him long ago by Barbecue at Rio; but to his astonishment
- he found this thrust turned aside again and again. Then he sought to
- close and give the quietus with his iron hook, which all this time had
- been pawing the air; but Peter doubled under it and, lunging fiercely,
- pierced him in the ribs. At the sight of his own blood, whose peculiar
- colour, you remember, was offensive to him, the sword fell from Hook's
- hand, and he was at Peter's mercy.
- “Now!” cried all the boys, but with a magnificent gesture Peter invited
- his opponent to pick up his sword. Hook did so instantly, but with a
- tragic feeling that Peter was showing good form.
- Hitherto he had thought it was some fiend fighting him, but darker
- suspicions assailed him now.
- “Pan, who and what art thou?” he cried huskily.
- “I'm youth, I'm joy,” Peter answered at a venture, “I'm a little bird
- that has broken out of the egg.”
- This, of course, was nonsense; but it was proof to the unhappy Hook that
- Peter did not know in the least who or what he was, which is the very
- pinnacle of good form.
- “To't again,” he cried despairingly.
- He fought now like a human flail, and every sweep of that terrible sword
- would have severed in twain any man or boy who obstructed it; but Peter
- fluttered round him as if the very wind it made blew him out of the
- danger zone. And again and again he darted in and pricked.
- Hook was fighting now without hope. That passionate breast no longer
- asked for life; but for one boon it craved: to see Peter show bad form
- before it was cold forever.
- Abandoning the fight he rushed into the powder magazine and fired it.
- “In two minutes,” he cried, “the ship will be blown to pieces.”
- Now, now, he thought, true form will show.
- But Peter issued from the powder magazine with the shell in his hands,
- and calmly flung it overboard.
- What sort of form was Hook himself showing? Misguided man though he was,
- we may be glad, without sympathising with him, that in the end he was
- true to the traditions of his race. The other boys were flying around
- him now, flouting, scornful; and he staggered about the deck striking up
- at them impotently, his mind was no longer with them; it was slouching
- in the playing fields of long ago, or being sent up [to the headmaster]
- for good, or watching the wall-game from a famous wall. And his shoes
- were right, and his waistcoat was right, and his tie was right, and his
- socks were right.
- James Hook, thou not wholly unheroic figure, farewell.
- For we have come to his last moment.
- Seeing Peter slowly advancing upon him through the air with dagger
- poised, he sprang upon the bulwarks to cast himself into the sea. He
- did not know that the crocodile was waiting for him; for we purposely
- stopped the clock that this knowledge might be spared him: a little mark
- of respect from us at the end.
- He had one last triumph, which I think we need not grudge him. As he
- stood on the bulwark looking over his shoulder at Peter gliding through
- the air, he invited him with a gesture to use his foot. It made Peter
- kick instead of stab.
- At last Hook had got the boon for which he craved.
- “Bad form,” he cried jeeringly, and went content to the crocodile.
- Thus perished James Hook.
- “Seventeen,” Slightly sang out; but he was not quite correct in his
- figures. Fifteen paid the penalty for their crimes that night; but two
- reached the shore: Starkey to be captured by the redskins, who made him
- nurse for all their papooses, a melancholy come-down for a pirate; and
- Smee, who henceforth wandered about the world in his spectacles, making
- a precarious living by saying he was the only man that Jas. Hook had
- feared.
- Wendy, of course, had stood by taking no part in the fight, though
- watching Peter with glistening eyes; but now that all was over she
- became prominent again. She praised them equally, and shuddered
- delightfully when Michael showed her the place where he had killed one;
- and then she took them into Hook's cabin and pointed to his watch which
- was hanging on a nail. It said “half-past one!”
- The lateness of the hour was almost the biggest thing of all. She got
- them to bed in the pirates' bunks pretty quickly, you may be sure; all
- but Peter, who strutted up and down on the deck, until at last he fell
- asleep by the side of Long Tom. He had one of his dreams that night, and
- cried in his sleep for a long time, and Wendy held him tightly.
- Chapter 16 THE RETURN HOME
- By three bells that morning they were all stirring their stumps [legs];
- for there was a big sea running; and Tootles, the bo'sun, was among
- them, with a rope's end in his hand and chewing tobacco. They all donned
- pirate clothes cut off at the knee, shaved smartly, and tumbled up, with
- the true nautical roll and hitching their trousers.
- It need not be said who was the captain. Nibs and John were first and
- second mate. There was a woman aboard. The rest were tars [sailors]
- before the mast, and lived in the fo'c'sle. Peter had already lashed
- himself to the wheel; but he piped all hands and delivered a short
- address to them; said he hoped they would do their duty like gallant
- hearties, but that he knew they were the scum of Rio and the Gold Coast,
- and if they snapped at him he would tear them. The bluff strident words
- struck the note sailors understood, and they cheered him lustily. Then
- a few sharp orders were given, and they turned the ship round, and nosed
- her for the mainland.
- Captain Pan calculated, after consulting the ship's chart, that if this
- weather lasted they should strike the Azores about the 21st of June,
- after which it would save time to fly.
- Some of them wanted it to be an honest ship and others were in favour
- of keeping it a pirate; but the captain treated them as dogs, and they
- dared not express their wishes to him even in a round robin [one person
- after another, as they had to Cpt. Hook]. Instant obedience was the only
- safe thing. Slightly got a dozen for looking perplexed when told to take
- soundings. The general feeling was that Peter was honest just now to
- lull Wendy's suspicions, but that there might be a change when the new
- suit was ready, which, against her will, she was making for him out of
- some of Hook's wickedest garments. It was afterwards whispered among
- them that on the first night he wore this suit he sat long in the cabin
- with Hook's cigar-holder in his mouth and one hand clenched, all but for
- the forefinger, which he bent and held threateningly aloft like a hook.
- Instead of watching the ship, however, we must now return to that
- desolate home from which three of our characters had taken heartless
- flight so long ago. It seems a shame to have neglected No. 14 all this
- time; and yet we may be sure that Mrs. Darling does not blame us. If we
- had returned sooner to look with sorrowful sympathy at her, she would
- probably have cried, “Don't be silly; what do I matter? Do go back and
- keep an eye on the children.” So long as mothers are like this their
- children will take advantage of them; and they may lay to [bet on] that.
- Even now we venture into that familiar nursery only because its lawful
- occupants are on their way home; we are merely hurrying on in advance
- of them to see that their beds are properly aired and that Mr. and Mrs.
- Darling do not go out for the evening. We are no more than servants. Why
- on earth should their beds be properly aired, seeing that they left them
- in such a thankless hurry? Would it not serve them jolly well right if
- they came back and found that their parents were spending the week-end
- in the country? It would be the moral lesson they have been in need
- of ever since we met them; but if we contrived things in this way Mrs.
- Darling would never forgive us.
- One thing I should like to do immensely, and that is to tell her, in the
- way authors have, that the children are coming back, that indeed they
- will be here on Thursday week. This would spoil so completely the
- surprise to which Wendy and John and Michael are looking forward. They
- have been planning it out on the ship: mother's rapture, father's shout
- of joy, Nana's leap through the air to embrace them first, when what
- they ought to be prepared for is a good hiding. How delicious to spoil
- it all by breaking the news in advance; so that when they enter grandly
- Mrs. Darling may not even offer Wendy her mouth, and Mr. Darling may
- exclaim pettishly, “Dash it all, here are those boys again.” However,
- we should get no thanks even for this. We are beginning to know Mrs.
- Darling by this time, and may be sure that she would upbraid us for
- depriving the children of their little pleasure.
- “But, my dear madam, it is ten days till Thursday week; so that by
- telling you what's what, we can save you ten days of unhappiness.”
- “Yes, but at what a cost! By depriving the children of ten minutes of
- delight.”
- “Oh, if you look at it in that way!”
- “What other way is there in which to look at it?”
- You see, the woman had no proper spirit. I had meant to say
- extraordinarily nice things about her; but I despise her, and not one of
- them will I say now. She does not really need to be told to have things
- ready, for they are ready. All the beds are aired, and she never leaves
- the house, and observe, the window is open. For all the use we are to
- her, we might well go back to the ship. However, as we are here we may
- as well stay and look on. That is all we are, lookers-on. Nobody really
- wants us. So let us watch and say jaggy things, in the hope that some of
- them will hurt.
- The only change to be seen in the night-nursery is that between nine
- and six the kennel is no longer there. When the children flew away, Mr.
- Darling felt in his bones that all the blame was his for having chained
- Nana up, and that from first to last she had been wiser than he. Of
- course, as we have seen, he was quite a simple man; indeed he might have
- passed for a boy again if he had been able to take his baldness off;
- but he had also a noble sense of justice and a lion's courage to do what
- seemed right to him; and having thought the matter out with anxious care
- after the flight of the children, he went down on all fours and crawled
- into the kennel. To all Mrs. Darling's dear invitations to him to come
- out he replied sadly but firmly:
- “No, my own one, this is the place for me.”
- In the bitterness of his remorse he swore that he would never leave
- the kennel until his children came back. Of course this was a pity; but
- whatever Mr. Darling did he had to do in excess, otherwise he soon gave
- up doing it. And there never was a more humble man than the once proud
- George Darling, as he sat in the kennel of an evening talking with his
- wife of their children and all their pretty ways.
- Very touching was his deference to Nana. He would not let her come into
- the kennel, but on all other matters he followed her wishes implicitly.
- Every morning the kennel was carried with Mr. Darling in it to a cab,
- which conveyed him to his office, and he returned home in the same way
- at six. Something of the strength of character of the man will be seen
- if we remember how sensitive he was to the opinion of neighbours: this
- man whose every movement now attracted surprised attention. Inwardly he
- must have suffered torture; but he preserved a calm exterior even when
- the young criticised his little home, and he always lifted his hat
- courteously to any lady who looked inside.
- It may have been Quixotic, but it was magnificent. Soon the inward
- meaning of it leaked out, and the great heart of the public was touched.
- Crowds followed the cab, cheering it lustily; charming girls scaled it
- to get his autograph; interviews appeared in the better class of papers,
- and society invited him to dinner and added, “Do come in the kennel.”
- On that eventful Thursday week, Mrs. Darling was in the night-nursery
- awaiting George's return home; a very sad-eyed woman. Now that we look
- at her closely and remember the gaiety of her in the old days, all gone
- now just because she has lost her babes, I find I won't be able to say
- nasty things about her after all. If she was too fond of her rubbishy
- children, she couldn't help it. Look at her in her chair, where she has
- fallen asleep. The corner of her mouth, where one looks first, is almost
- withered up. Her hand moves restlessly on her breast as if she had a
- pain there. Some like Peter best, and some like Wendy best, but I like
- her best. Suppose, to make her happy, we whisper to her in her sleep
- that the brats are coming back. They are really within two miles of the
- window now, and flying strong, but all we need whisper is that they are
- on the way. Let's.
- It is a pity we did it, for she has started up, calling their names; and
- there is no one in the room but Nana.
- “O Nana, I dreamt my dear ones had come back.”
- Nana had filmy eyes, but all she could do was put her paw gently on her
- mistress's lap; and they were sitting together thus when the kennel was
- brought back. As Mr. Darling puts his head out to kiss his wife, we see
- that his face is more worn than of yore, but has a softer expression.
- He gave his hat to Liza, who took it scornfully; for she had no
- imagination, and was quite incapable of understanding the motives of
- such a man. Outside, the crowd who had accompanied the cab home were
- still cheering, and he was naturally not unmoved.
- “Listen to them,” he said; “it is very gratifying.”
- “Lots of little boys,” sneered Liza.
- “There were several adults to-day,” he assured her with a faint flush;
- but when she tossed her head he had not a word of reproof for her.
- Social success had not spoilt him; it had made him sweeter. For some
- time he sat with his head out of the kennel, talking with Mrs. Darling
- of this success, and pressing her hand reassuringly when she said she
- hoped his head would not be turned by it.
- “But if I had been a weak man,” he said. “Good heavens, if I had been a
- weak man!”
- “And, George,” she said timidly, “you are as full of remorse as ever,
- aren't you?”
- “Full of remorse as ever, dearest! See my punishment: living in a
- kennel.”
- “But it is punishment, isn't it, George? You are sure you are not
- enjoying it?”
- “My love!”
- You may be sure she begged his pardon; and then, feeling drowsy, he
- curled round in the kennel.
- “Won't you play me to sleep,” he asked, “on the nursery piano?” and as
- she was crossing to the day-nursery he added thoughtlessly, “And shut
- that window. I feel a draught.”
- “O George, never ask me to do that. The window must always be left open
- for them, always, always.”
- Now it was his turn to beg her pardon; and she went into the day-nursery
- and played, and soon he was asleep; and while he slept, Wendy and John
- and Michael flew into the room.
- Oh no. We have written it so, because that was the charming arrangement
- planned by them before we left the ship; but something must have
- happened since then, for it is not they who have flown in, it is Peter
- and Tinker Bell.
- Peter's first words tell all.
- “Quick Tink,” he whispered, “close the window; bar it! That's right. Now
- you and I must get away by the door; and when Wendy comes she will think
- her mother has barred her out; and she will have to go back with me.”
- Now I understand what had hitherto puzzled me, why when Peter had
- exterminated the pirates he did not return to the island and leave Tink
- to escort the children to the mainland. This trick had been in his head
- all the time.
- Instead of feeling that he was behaving badly he danced with glee; then
- he peeped into the day-nursery to see who was playing. He whispered to
- Tink, “It's Wendy's mother! She is a pretty lady, but not so pretty as
- my mother. Her mouth is full of thimbles, but not so full as my mother's
- was.”
- Of course he knew nothing whatever about his mother; but he sometimes
- bragged about her.
- He did not know the tune, which was “Home, Sweet Home,” but he knew it
- was saying, “Come back, Wendy, Wendy, Wendy”; and he cried exultantly,
- “You will never see Wendy again, lady, for the window is barred!”
- He peeped in again to see why the music had stopped, and now he saw
- that Mrs. Darling had laid her head on the box, and that two tears were
- sitting on her eyes.
- “She wants me to unbar the window,” thought Peter, “but I won't, not I!”
- He peeped again, and the tears were still there, or another two had
- taken their place.
- “She's awfully fond of Wendy,” he said to himself. He was angry with her
- now for not seeing why she could not have Wendy.
- The reason was so simple: “I'm fond of her too. We can't both have her,
- lady.”
- But the lady would not make the best of it, and he was unhappy. He
- ceased to look at her, but even then she would not let go of him. He
- skipped about and made funny faces, but when he stopped it was just as
- if she were inside him, knocking.
- “Oh, all right,” he said at last, and gulped. Then he unbarred the
- window. “Come on, Tink,” he cried, with a frightful sneer at the laws of
- nature; “we don't want any silly mothers;” and he flew away.
- Thus Wendy and John and Michael found the window open for them after
- all, which of course was more than they deserved. They alighted on the
- floor, quite unashamed of themselves, and the youngest one had already
- forgotten his home.
- “John,” he said, looking around him doubtfully, “I think I have been
- here before.”
- “Of course you have, you silly. There is your old bed.”
- “So it is,” Michael said, but not with much conviction.
- “I say,” cried John, “the kennel!” and he dashed across to look into it.
- “Perhaps Nana is inside it,” Wendy said.
- But John whistled. “Hullo,” he said, “there's a man inside it.”
- “It's father!” exclaimed Wendy.
- “Let me see father,” Michael begged eagerly, and he took a good look.
- “He is not so big as the pirate I killed,” he said with such frank
- disappointment that I am glad Mr. Darling was asleep; it would have been
- sad if those had been the first words he heard his little Michael say.
- Wendy and John had been taken aback somewhat at finding their father in
- the kennel.
- “Surely,” said John, like one who had lost faith in his memory, “he used
- not to sleep in the kennel?”
- “John,” Wendy said falteringly, “perhaps we don't remember the old life
- as well as we thought we did.”
- A chill fell upon them; and serve them right.
- “It is very careless of mother,” said that young scoundrel John, “not to
- be here when we come back.”
- It was then that Mrs. Darling began playing again.
- “It's mother!” cried Wendy, peeping.
- “So it is!” said John.
- “Then are you not really our mother, Wendy?” asked Michael, who was
- surely sleepy.
- “Oh dear!” exclaimed Wendy, with her first real twinge of remorse [for
- having gone], “it was quite time we came back.”
- “Let us creep in,” John suggested, “and put our hands over her eyes.”
- But Wendy, who saw that they must break the joyous news more gently, had
- a better plan.
- “Let us all slip into our beds, and be there when she comes in, just as
- if we had never been away.”
- And so when Mrs. Darling went back to the night-nursery to see if her
- husband was asleep, all the beds were occupied. The children waited
- for her cry of joy, but it did not come. She saw them, but she did not
- believe they were there. You see, she saw them in their beds so often in
- her dreams that she thought this was just the dream hanging around her
- still.
- She sat down in the chair by the fire, where in the old days she had
- nursed them.
- They could not understand this, and a cold fear fell upon all the three
- of them.
- “Mother!” Wendy cried.
- “That's Wendy,” she said, but still she was sure it was the dream.
- “Mother!”
- “That's John,” she said.
- “Mother!” cried Michael. He knew her now.
- “That's Michael,” she said, and she stretched out her arms for the three
- little selfish children they would never envelop again. Yes, they did,
- they went round Wendy and John and Michael, who had slipped out of bed
- and run to her.
- “George, George!” she cried when she could speak; and Mr. Darling woke
- to share her bliss, and Nana came rushing in. There could not have been
- a lovelier sight; but there was none to see it except a little boy who
- was staring in at the window. He had had ecstasies innumerable that
- other children can never know; but he was looking through the window at
- the one joy from which he must be for ever barred.
- Chapter 17 WHEN WENDY GREW UP
- I hope you want to know what became of the other boys. They were waiting
- below to give Wendy time to explain about them; and when they had
- counted five hundred they went up. They went up by the stair, because
- they thought this would make a better impression. They stood in a row
- in front of Mrs. Darling, with their hats off, and wishing they were not
- wearing their pirate clothes. They said nothing, but their eyes asked
- her to have them. They ought to have looked at Mr. Darling also, but
- they forgot about him.
- Of course Mrs. Darling said at once that she would have them; but Mr.
- Darling was curiously depressed, and they saw that he considered six a
- rather large number.
- “I must say,” he said to Wendy, “that you don't do things by halves,” a
- grudging remark which the twins thought was pointed at them.
- The first twin was the proud one, and he asked, flushing, “Do you think
- we should be too much of a handful, sir? Because, if so, we can go
- away.”
- “Father!” Wendy cried, shocked; but still the cloud was on him. He knew
- he was behaving unworthily, but he could not help it.
- “We could lie doubled up,” said Nibs.
- “I always cut their hair myself,” said Wendy.
- “George!” Mrs. Darling exclaimed, pained to see her dear one showing
- himself in such an unfavourable light.
- Then he burst into tears, and the truth came out. He was as glad to
- have them as she was, he said, but he thought they should have asked his
- consent as well as hers, instead of treating him as a cypher [zero] in
- his own house.
- “I don't think he is a cypher,” Tootles cried instantly. “Do you think
- he is a cypher, Curly?”
- “No, I don't. Do you think he is a cypher, Slightly?”
- “Rather not. Twin, what do you think?”
- It turned out that not one of them thought him a cypher; and he was
- absurdly gratified, and said he would find space for them all in the
- drawing-room if they fitted in.
- “We'll fit in, sir,” they assured him.
- “Then follow the leader,” he cried gaily. “Mind you, I am not sure that
- we have a drawing-room, but we pretend we have, and it's all the same.
- Hoop la!”
- He went off dancing through the house, and they all cried “Hoop la!” and
- danced after him, searching for the drawing-room; and I forget whether
- they found it, but at any rate they found corners, and they all fitted
- in.
- As for Peter, he saw Wendy once again before he flew away. He did not
- exactly come to the window, but he brushed against it in passing so that
- she could open it if she liked and call to him. That is what she did.
- “Hullo, Wendy, good-bye,” he said.
- “Oh dear, are you going away?”
- “Yes.”
- “You don't feel, Peter,” she said falteringly, “that you would like to
- say anything to my parents about a very sweet subject?”
- “No.”
- “About me, Peter?”
- “No.”
- Mrs. Darling came to the window, for at present she was keeping a sharp
- eye on Wendy. She told Peter that she had adopted all the other boys,
- and would like to adopt him also.
- “Would you send me to school?” he inquired craftily.
- “Yes.”
- “And then to an office?”
- “I suppose so.”
- “Soon I would be a man?”
- “Very soon.”
- “I don't want to go to school and learn solemn things,” he told her
- passionately. “I don't want to be a man. O Wendy's mother, if I was to
- wake up and feel there was a beard!”
- “Peter,” said Wendy the comforter, “I should love you in a beard;” and
- Mrs. Darling stretched out her arms to him, but he repulsed her.
- “Keep back, lady, no one is going to catch me and make me a man.”
- “But where are you going to live?”
- “With Tink in the house we built for Wendy. The fairies are to put it
- high up among the tree tops where they sleep at nights.”
- “How lovely,” cried Wendy so longingly that Mrs. Darling tightened her
- grip.
- “I thought all the fairies were dead,” Mrs. Darling said.
- “There are always a lot of young ones,” explained Wendy, who was now
- quite an authority, “because you see when a new baby laughs for the
- first time a new fairy is born, and as there are always new babies there
- are always new fairies. They live in nests on the tops of trees; and the
- mauve ones are boys and the white ones are girls, and the blue ones are
- just little sillies who are not sure what they are.”
- “I shall have such fun,” said Peter, with eye on Wendy.
- “It will be rather lonely in the evening,” she said, “sitting by the
- fire.”
- “I shall have Tink.”
- “Tink can't go a twentieth part of the way round,” she reminded him a
- little tartly.
- “Sneaky tell-tale!” Tink called out from somewhere round the corner.
- “It doesn't matter,” Peter said.
- “O Peter, you know it matters.”
- “Well, then, come with me to the little house.”
- “May I, mummy?”
- “Certainly not. I have got you home again, and I mean to keep you.”
- “But he does so need a mother.”
- “So do you, my love.”
- “Oh, all right,” Peter said, as if he had asked her from politeness
- merely; but Mrs. Darling saw his mouth twitch, and she made this
- handsome offer: to let Wendy go to him for a week every year to do
- his spring cleaning. Wendy would have preferred a more permanent
- arrangement; and it seemed to her that spring would be long in coming;
- but this promise sent Peter away quite gay again. He had no sense of
- time, and was so full of adventures that all I have told you about him
- is only a halfpenny-worth of them. I suppose it was because Wendy knew
- this that her last words to him were these rather plaintive ones:
- “You won't forget me, Peter, will you, before spring cleaning time
- comes?”
- Of course Peter promised; and then he flew away. He took Mrs. Darling's
- kiss with him. The kiss that had been for no one else, Peter took quite
- easily. Funny. But she seemed satisfied.
- Of course all the boys went to school; and most of them got into Class
- III, but Slightly was put first into Class IV and then into Class V.
- Class I is the top class. Before they had attended school a week they
- saw what goats they had been not to remain on the island; but it was too
- late now, and soon they settled down to being as ordinary as you or me
- or Jenkins minor [the younger Jenkins]. It is sad to have to say that
- the power to fly gradually left them. At first Nana tied their feet to
- the bed-posts so that they should not fly away in the night; and one of
- their diversions by day was to pretend to fall off buses [the English
- double-deckers]; but by and by they ceased to tug at their bonds in bed,
- and found that they hurt themselves when they let go of the bus. In time
- they could not even fly after their hats. Want of practice, they called
- it; but what it really meant was that they no longer believed.
- Michael believed longer than the other boys, though they jeered at him;
- so he was with Wendy when Peter came for her at the end of the first
- year. She flew away with Peter in the frock she had woven from leaves
- and berries in the Neverland, and her one fear was that he might notice
- how short it had become; but he never noticed, he had so much to say
- about himself.
- She had looked forward to thrilling talks with him about old times, but
- new adventures had crowded the old ones from his mind.
- “Who is Captain Hook?” he asked with interest when she spoke of the arch
- enemy.
- “Don't you remember,” she asked, amazed, “how you killed him and saved
- all our lives?”
- “I forget them after I kill them,” he replied carelessly.
- When she expressed a doubtful hope that Tinker Bell would be glad to see
- her he said, “Who is Tinker Bell?”
- “O Peter,” she said, shocked; but even when she explained he could not
- remember.
- “There are such a lot of them,” he said. “I expect she is no more.”
- I expect he was right, for fairies don't live long, but they are so
- little that a short time seems a good while to them.
- Wendy was pained too to find that the past year was but as yesterday
- to Peter; it had seemed such a long year of waiting to her. But he was
- exactly as fascinating as ever, and they had a lovely spring cleaning in
- the little house on the tree tops.
- Next year he did not come for her. She waited in a new frock because the
- old one simply would not meet; but he never came.
- “Perhaps he is ill,” Michael said.
- “You know he is never ill.”
- Michael came close to her and whispered, with a shiver, “Perhaps there
- is no such person, Wendy!” and then Wendy would have cried if Michael
- had not been crying.
- Peter came next spring cleaning; and the strange thing was that he never
- knew he had missed a year.
- That was the last time the girl Wendy ever saw him. For a little longer
- she tried for his sake not to have growing pains; and she felt she was
- untrue to him when she got a prize for general knowledge. But the years
- came and went without bringing the careless boy; and when they met again
- Wendy was a married woman, and Peter was no more to her than a little
- dust in the box in which she had kept her toys. Wendy was grown up. You
- need not be sorry for her. She was one of the kind that likes to grow
- up. In the end she grew up of her own free will a day quicker than other
- girls.
- All the boys were grown up and done for by this time; so it is scarcely
- worth while saying anything more about them. You may see the twins and
- Nibs and Curly any day going to an office, each carrying a little bag
- and an umbrella. Michael is an engine-driver [train engineer]. Slightly
- married a lady of title, and so he became a lord. You see that judge in
- a wig coming out at the iron door? That used to be Tootles. The bearded
- man who doesn't know any story to tell his children was once John.
- Wendy was married in white with a pink sash. It is strange to think
- that Peter did not alight in the church and forbid the banns [formal
- announcement of a marriage].
- Years rolled on again, and Wendy had a daughter. This ought not to be
- written in ink but in a golden splash.
- She was called Jane, and always had an odd inquiring look, as if from
- the moment she arrived on the mainland she wanted to ask questions. When
- she was old enough to ask them they were mostly about Peter Pan. She
- loved to hear of Peter, and Wendy told her all she could remember in the
- very nursery from which the famous flight had taken place. It was
- Jane's nursery now, for her father had bought it at the three per cents
- [mortgage rate] from Wendy's father, who was no longer fond of stairs.
- Mrs. Darling was now dead and forgotten.
- There were only two beds in the nursery now, Jane's and her nurse's; and
- there was no kennel, for Nana also had passed away. She died of old age,
- and at the end she had been rather difficult to get on with; being very
- firmly convinced that no one knew how to look after children except
- herself.
- Once a week Jane's nurse had her evening off; and then it was Wendy's
- part to put Jane to bed. That was the time for stories. It was Jane's
- invention to raise the sheet over her mother's head and her own, thus
- making a tent, and in the awful darkness to whisper:
- “What do we see now?”
- “I don't think I see anything to-night,” says Wendy, with a feeling that
- if Nana were here she would object to further conversation.
- “Yes, you do,” says Jane, “you see when you were a little girl.”
- “That is a long time ago, sweetheart,” says Wendy. “Ah me, how time
- flies!”
- “Does it fly,” asks the artful child, “the way you flew when you were a
- little girl?”
- “The way I flew? Do you know, Jane, I sometimes wonder whether I ever
- did really fly.”
- “Yes, you did.”
- “The dear old days when I could fly!”
- “Why can't you fly now, mother?”
- “Because I am grown up, dearest. When people grow up they forget the
- way.”
- “Why do they forget the way?”
- “Because they are no longer gay and innocent and heartless. It is only
- the gay and innocent and heartless who can fly.”
- “What is gay and innocent and heartless? I do wish I were gay and
- innocent and heartless.”
- Or perhaps Wendy admits she does see something.
- “I do believe,” she says, “that it is this nursery.”
- “I do believe it is,” says Jane. “Go on.”
- They are now embarked on the great adventure of the night when Peter
- flew in looking for his shadow.
- “The foolish fellow,” says Wendy, “tried to stick it on with soap, and
- when he could not he cried, and that woke me, and I sewed it on for
- him.”
- “You have missed a bit,” interrupts Jane, who now knows the story better
- than her mother. “When you saw him sitting on the floor crying, what did
- you say?”
- “I sat up in bed and I said, 'Boy, why are you crying?'”
- “Yes, that was it,” says Jane, with a big breath.
- “And then he flew us all away to the Neverland and the fairies and the
- pirates and the redskins and the mermaids' lagoon, and the home under
- the ground, and the little house.”
- “Yes! which did you like best of all?”
- “I think I liked the home under the ground best of all.”
- “Yes, so do I. What was the last thing Peter ever said to you?”
- “The last thing he ever said to me was, 'Just always be waiting for me,
- and then some night you will hear me crowing.'”
- “Yes.”
- “But, alas, he forgot all about me,” Wendy said it with a smile. She was
- as grown up as that.
- “What did his crow sound like?” Jane asked one evening.
- “It was like this,” Wendy said, trying to imitate Peter's crow.
- “No, it wasn't,” Jane said gravely, “it was like this;” and she did it
- ever so much better than her mother.
- Wendy was a little startled. “My darling, how can you know?”
- “I often hear it when I am sleeping,” Jane said.
- “Ah yes, many girls hear it when they are sleeping, but I was the only
- one who heard it awake.”
- “Lucky you,” said Jane.
- And then one night came the tragedy. It was the spring of the year, and
- the story had been told for the night, and Jane was now asleep in her
- bed. Wendy was sitting on the floor, very close to the fire, so as to
- see to darn, for there was no other light in the nursery; and while she
- sat darning she heard a crow. Then the window blew open as of old, and
- Peter dropped in on the floor.
- He was exactly the same as ever, and Wendy saw at once that he still had
- all his first teeth.
- He was a little boy, and she was grown up. She huddled by the fire not
- daring to move, helpless and guilty, a big woman.
- “Hullo, Wendy,” he said, not noticing any difference, for he was
- thinking chiefly of himself; and in the dim light her white dress might
- have been the nightgown in which he had seen her first.
- “Hullo, Peter,” she replied faintly, squeezing herself as small as
- possible. Something inside her was crying “Woman, Woman, let go of me.”
- “Hullo, where is John?” he asked, suddenly missing the third bed.
- “John is not here now,” she gasped.
- “Is Michael asleep?” he asked, with a careless glance at Jane.
- “Yes,” she answered; and now she felt that she was untrue to Jane as
- well as to Peter.
- “That is not Michael,” she said quickly, lest a judgment should fall on
- her.
- Peter looked. “Hullo, is it a new one?”
- “Yes.”
- “Boy or girl?”
- “Girl.”
- Now surely he would understand; but not a bit of it.
- “Peter,” she said, faltering, “are you expecting me to fly away with
- you?”
- “Of course; that is why I have come.” He added a little sternly, “Have
- you forgotten that this is spring cleaning time?”
- She knew it was useless to say that he had let many spring cleaning
- times pass.
- “I can't come,” she said apologetically, “I have forgotten how to fly.”
- “I'll soon teach you again.”
- “O Peter, don't waste the fairy dust on me.”
- She had risen; and now at last a fear assailed him. “What is it?” he
- cried, shrinking.
- “I will turn up the light,” she said, “and then you can see for
- yourself.”
- For almost the only time in his life that I know of, Peter was afraid.
- “Don't turn up the light,” he cried.
- She let her hands play in the hair of the tragic boy. She was not a
- little girl heart-broken about him; she was a grown woman smiling at it
- all, but they were wet-eyed smiles.
- Then she turned up the light, and Peter saw. He gave a cry of pain; and
- when the tall beautiful creature stooped to lift him in her arms he drew
- back sharply.
- “What is it?” he cried again.
- She had to tell him.
- “I am old, Peter. I am ever so much more than twenty. I grew up long
- ago.”
- “You promised not to!”
- “I couldn't help it. I am a married woman, Peter.”
- “No, you're not.”
- “Yes, and the little girl in the bed is my baby.”
- “No, she's not.”
- But he supposed she was; and he took a step towards the sleeping child
- with his dagger upraised. Of course he did not strike. He sat down on
- the floor instead and sobbed; and Wendy did not know how to comfort him,
- though she could have done it so easily once. She was only a woman now,
- and she ran out of the room to try to think.
- Peter continued to cry, and soon his sobs woke Jane. She sat up in bed,
- and was interested at once.
- “Boy,” she said, “why are you crying?”
- Peter rose and bowed to her, and she bowed to him from the bed.
- “Hullo,” he said.
- “Hullo,” said Jane.
- “My name is Peter Pan,” he told her.
- “Yes, I know.”
- “I came back for my mother,” he explained, “to take her to the
- Neverland.”
- “Yes, I know,” Jane said, “I have been waiting for you.”
- When Wendy returned diffidently she found Peter sitting on the bed-post
- crowing gloriously, while Jane in her nighty was flying round the room
- in solemn ecstasy.
- “She is my mother,” Peter explained; and Jane descended and stood by his
- side, with the look in her face that he liked to see on ladies when they
- gazed at him.
- “He does so need a mother,” Jane said.
- “Yes, I know,” Wendy admitted rather forlornly; “no one knows it so well
- as I.”
- “Good-bye,” said Peter to Wendy; and he rose in the air, and the
- shameless Jane rose with him; it was already her easiest way of moving
- about.
- Wendy rushed to the window.
- “No, no,” she cried.
- “It is just for spring cleaning time,” Jane said, “he wants me always to
- do his spring cleaning.”
- “If only I could go with you,” Wendy sighed.
- “You see you can't fly,” said Jane.
- Of course in the end Wendy let them fly away together. Our last glimpse
- of her shows her at the window, watching them receding into the sky
- until they were as small as stars.
- As you look at Wendy, you may see her hair becoming white, and her
- figure little again, for all this happened long ago. Jane is now a
- common grown-up, with a daughter called Margaret; and every spring
- cleaning time, except when he forgets, Peter comes for Margaret and
- takes her to the Neverland, where she tells him stories about himself,
- to which he listens eagerly. When Margaret grows up she will have a
- daughter, who is to be Peter's mother in turn; and thus it will go on,
- so long as children are gay and innocent and heartless.
- THE END
- End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Peter Pan, by James M. Barrie
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