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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60475 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60475)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Peggy's Giant, by M. D. Hillyard
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Peggy's Giant
-
-Author: M. D. Hillyard
-
-Illustrator: Peggy
-
-Release Date: October 12, 2019 [EBook #60475]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEGGY'S GIANT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Juliet Sutherland, David E. Brown, and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: This is Peggy’s own drawing of what happened in the
-first Adventure of the Ring. Everyone is very frightened in it. Nurse
-has just sat down on seeing the Giant, and has dropped Peggy’s brown
-holland frock behind her.
-
-Peggy drew the frock very carefully, spreading it out flat on the floor
-to get it exactly right. Mother helped her with the Giant’s knee, and
-with the table. All the rest she did herself. She knows Nurse is too
-small, but she was too busy getting her surprised enough to remember to
-make her bigger. Peggy is behind the Giant wondering what to say. The
-little round things near the Giant’s foot are the broken bits of the
-cup and saucer, and the black dots are the currants in the cake. The
-curls in the Giant’s beard were the most fun to do.]
-
-
-
-
- PEGGY’S GIANT
-
- BY
- M. D. HILLYARD
-
- WITH SEVEN FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS IN COLOUR
- DRAWN BY PEGGY
-
- [Illustration]
-
- A. & C. BLACK, LTD.
- 4, 5 & 6 SOHO SQUARE, LONDON, W.1
- 1920
-
-
-
-
- TO
- PEGGY
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE
-
- I. WHAT PEGGY FOUND 5
-
- II. DISAPPEARING 9
-
- III. A DAISY FIELD 15
-
- IV. THE SLEEPY GIANT 19
-
- V. SWEETS AND FAIRIES 22
-
- VI. FE-FO-FUM! 28
-
- VII. PEGGY DRIVES A CAR 35
-
- VIII. THE MAYOR’S OUTING 39
-
- IX. DOWN! 43
-
- X. PIXIE GAMES 49
-
- XI. THE LAST ADVENTURE 54
-
- XII. THE NICEST WISH OF ALL 60
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS IN COLOUR
-
-BY PEGGY
-
-
- WHAT HAPPENED IN THE FIRST ADVENTURE OF THE RING _Frontispiece_
-
- THE SECOND ADVENTURE _Facing page_ 20
-
- WHAT THE DRAGON LOOKED LIKE WHEN NURSE SAID “YOU
- WOULDN’T DARE!” ” 32
-
- PEGGY JUST TELLING THE MAYOR THAT THEY’VE STUCK ” 40
-
- PEGGY AND THE GIANT GOING DOWN ” 46
-
- THE GIANT AND PEGGY AMONG THE PIXIES ” 50
-
- RIDING THROUGH THE VILLAGE IN THE SIXTH ADVENTURE ” 60
-
-
-
-
-PEGGY’S GIANT
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-WHAT PEGGY FOUND
-
-
-“It rattles!” said Peggy, shaking the last cracker, and looking up at
-Nurse.
-
-“Well, pull it now, there’s a dear,” said Nurse, “and let me clear up
-this litter.”
-
-Peggy had just finished her birthday tea up in the nursery alone with
-Nurse, as Mother was away. Of course it hadn’t been nearly so exciting
-as her last birthday tea--the only one she could remember--which had
-been downstairs with lots of other little girls and boys, who had all
-come to see Peggy. They hadn’t talked to her or to each other much,
-but had eaten lots of birthday cake, and Peggy had been taken up to
-bed before the last of them left, because she had had such a long and
-exciting birthday.
-
-This year the only children who could come had suddenly started
-whooping-cough, and so there was no party at all. Still it was better
-than the usual dull nursery tea, for Mother had left a lot of crackers
-with Nurse for Peggy; and Cook had remembered to put six new candles
-on the new sponge cake, and they had all been lighted, and were doing
-their very best to look brighter than the sunshine pouring in through
-the nursery windows.
-
-“Do guess what’s inside first, Nannie,” said Peggy, shaking the cracker
-again. “_I_ guess it’s a little tiny cup and saucer for my doll’s
-house. Now, _you_ guess.”
-
-“Oh, _I_ don’t know--a whistle,” said Nannie, beginning to clear up
-the pieces of brightly-coloured paper that covered the table-cloth and
-floor, and that really looked a great deal too pretty to burn. “That’s
-generally what it is. But what’s the good of guessing when you’ll know
-in a minute? Come along and pull, I’m waiting.”
-
-Peggy shut her eyes, and putting one hand over her ear--she was always
-uncomfortably startled by the bang--pulled hard with the other.
-
-The thing inside immediately flew through the air, and rolled away
-under the toy cupboard. And Peggy followed as far as she could, lying
-flat on the floor and peering under. Then--“O Nannie, it sparkles!” she
-cried excitedly. “I do believe it’s a _beautiful_ ring! I can see it
-quite plainly. Yes, it _is_. It’s a gold ring with a great big green
-stone in it! There, I’ve got it! O Nannie, look how it sparkles!”
-
-“A bit of tin and glass,” said Nurse examining it and dropping it on
-the table. “What they want to put such rubbish in for passes _my_
-understanding! You can’t play with it, and it’ll only get left about.
-Now come and look at the paper blazing,” and she swept all the ends of
-the crackers into the fire.
-
-Peggy was terrified that her ring would follow too, and she began in a
-great hurry to put it on all her fingers in turn to see which it would
-fit.
-
-“It won’t fit any of them except my fum,” she remarked. “But just look
-how _well_ it fits my fum!” and she waved her left hand to and fro
-proudly.
-
-“You can’t wear a ring at _your_ age,” said Nurse decidedly, “and no
-one ever wears them on their thumbs, as you very well know. Oh dear,
-your hair ribbon’s coming right off, as usual! Come here whilst I tie
-it on again.”
-
-“Just look how it sparkles!” repeated Peggy, stroking the green stone
-admiringly. And it certainly did. A bright green light spread from it
-all over that part of the nursery, just like the light in a beech wood
-in spring, when the sun is shining through the leaves; and it coloured
-and played over Nurse’s face and the cupboard and the roses on the
-wall-paper. “_Do_ look, Nannie,” cried the child, “now the fireplace is
-green!”
-
-“Very pretty,” said Nurse absentmindedly, not looking up as she brushed
-Peggy’s curls. “What a tangle your hair’s in, to be sure! Now I think
-I’ll take off this clean frock and put on your brown holland so that
-you can have a good game with all your toys out at once, as it’s your
-birthday.”
-
-“Aren’t you going to play with me, too?” asked Peggy rather wistfully.
-
-“I can’t,” said Nurse. “I’ve some letters to write, and post goes in
-half an hour--when it’ll be your bedtime. Grown-ups can’t spend _all_
-their time playing with little girls, you know. Here, slip your frock
-off and stay by the fire, whilst I fetch in your other,” and she
-bustled off into the night-nursery.
-
-“I wish I was grown up,” said Peggy, twirling the ring round and round
-her thumb and staring into the fire. “Then I should drink strong tea,
-and eat birthday cake downstairs every day if I liked, and wear grand
-hats with fevvers in them!”
-
-“I’m ready whenever you are,” said a voice behind her.
-
-Peggy turned round quickly, and then nearly jumped out of her skin with
-astonishment.
-
-For behind her, on the other side of the table, stood a Giant!
-
-Peggy knew in a moment that he _was_ a real Giant, because he was the
-living image of the one on page 375 of the Blue Fairy Book, but instead
-of looking cross like that one does, he had a nice wide smile, and the
-kindest round twinkly blue eyes Peggy had ever seen. He was dressed all
-in brown, with bright scarlet stockings, his hair was thick and long,
-and so was his beard, and the nursery was so much too low for him that
-he had to bend nearly double, his great shoulders sending a cloud of
-plaster off the ceiling every time he moved. In one huge hand he held a
-cup of very black-looking tea, and in the other a bit of birthday cake
-with sugar on it and almond paste and little silver beads.
-
-“You _are_ a tall kind!” gasped Peggy, staring up at him. “I--I don’t
-think Nannie will be at all pleased!” and she glanced fearfully through
-the half-open door into the night-nursery.
-
-“I know, that’s why I spoke,” said the Giant, sitting down on the
-floor and stretching himself--one foot went right out of the window
-in the process, and the other up the chimney, but he looked much more
-comfortable. The cup of tea and the cake he put carefully down by his
-side. “You rubbed the ring and wished, you know. How do you like your
-dress?”
-
-Peggy looked down at herself and discovered she was wearing a striped
-white and yellow silk gown falling in heavy folds to the ground, and
-very high-waisted. On her arm was hanging, by its ribbon, a large white
-poke-bonnet, wreathed entirely around with a curling yellow feather.
-
-“What _are_ these things?” she asked in bewilderment.
-
-“Why, you wished to be grown up, didn’t you?” said the Giant. “And you
-_are_. Or, at least, that’s the best I can do for you. But I’m a bit
-out of practice I know,” and he gazed with a rather disheartened air at
-the bonnet.
-
-“I don’t know what Nannie will say,” said Peggy uneasily. (She hadn’t
-the heart to tell the Giant that he hadn’t made her in the least the
-kind of grown-up she wanted to be.) “She _never_ likes me dressing up!”
-
-“Well then, wish about it,” said the Giant. “Say, ‘I wish Nurse to stay
-away half an hour.’ Hurry up, she’s coming.”
-
-“I wish Nurse to stay away half an hour,” said Peggy obediently. “But
-what’s the good of that?” she added. “Here she is,” and so she was.
-
-She came through the door hurriedly, with the frock in her hand, and
-when she saw the Giant she jumped right up high into the air, and then
-she sat down on the floor with a flop.
-
-“_Who_ is this, Miss Peggy?” she asked in an awful voice.
-
-“Dear me!” said the Giant, struggling to his feet and knocking over
-the Rocking-Horse and three chairs in his hurry. “What _can_ have gone
-wrong? The spells don’t work as they used to!” He looked at Nurse
-nervously; then--“You must stick to me,” he whispered hoarsely to
-Peggy, stepping back on the cup and saucer and grinding them to powder
-with his heel.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-DISAPPEARING
-
-
-“He’s--he’s a friend of mine!” said Peggy bravely. She suddenly felt
-very sorry for the Giant, for though he was so extremely big he seemed
-somehow now just like a helpless baby. “He’s come to tea, Nannie,
-because it’s my birfday.” (Peggy still talked baby language when she
-got excited.) “And he’s brought a lovely bit of cake like you said
-people had before the War,” she went on, pressing the ring tightly, and
-wondering when Nurse _would_ speak. But the unfortunate woman continued
-to sit on the floor, glaring wildly at the Giant, and opening and
-shutting her mouth without a sound coming out of it.
-
-“Oh dear, _I wish_ something would happen,” at last came from Peggy
-desperately.
-
-No sooner were the words out of her mouth than she felt the Giant tuck
-her under his arm and walk straight out of the window with her!
-
-They went right over the garden and fields, the Giant striding along
-through the air with the greatest ease, and at such a pace that often
-the birds they met had no time to fly out of their way, and flew full
-tilt against them.
-
-“Phew! that _was_ a narrow shave!” said the Giant, stepping down at
-last into the middle of a great wood. He put Peggy down on some soft
-green moss, and leant against an oak tree, panting. “And after all, we
-left the tea and cake behind!” he added.
-
-Peggy looked up at him. His head was right up above the branches, but
-she could see his long brown beard among the twigs.
-
-“You squashed them both with your foot,” she said plaintively. “And I
-don’t understand _anyfing_! Why did you come at all? Though I like you
-very much,” she continued quickly. And indeed she had, from the very
-first moment. For he had such a kind face--though it was not what you
-would call a clever one exactly--and he was so different from every one
-else, and looked as though he would play games nicely.
-
-“I came because you wished,” said the Giant. “That’s a Fairy Ring,
-that is. But it’s not once in a hundred years any children find it--or,
-when they do, think of putting it on their thumb and wishing. By the
-way, where was it this time?”
-
-“In a cracker,” said Peggy.
-
-“Ah, I know those crackers,” said the Giant. “One Fairy one to ten
-million common ones is the average. Let me congratulate you! You’ll be
-allowed six visits from me, and six wishes each time, before the Ring
-disappears again. Very liberal, I call it.”
-
-“Do you mean you can let me have everything I wish for, like what
-happens in the Fairy stories?” asked Peggy in a state of great
-excitement, and she began to jump about in a very un-grown-up way. “Oh,
-I wish--I wish this tree was made of chocolate!” she screamed. (You
-must remember she was rather over-excited, as it was her birthday.)
-
-The Giant immediately handed her down a chocolate cream from one of the
-boughs; and Peggy noticed a bright shade of brown creeping all over the
-trunk and branches.
-
-“Wish number three gone,” said the Giant with a sigh of relief. “Thank
-goodness, _that_ wasn’t difficult. But I’m sorry to tell you I’ve
-grown rusty, very rusty indeed! It’s so many years since I’ve had
-anything of this sort to do, that I’ve forgotten how to manage the
-simplest things.” He sighed deeply till the branches clashed together
-over Peggy’s head. “I can see by your eye,” he went on gloomily, “that
-there’s something not quite up to date enough about your dress. And
-you must have noticed in the nursery that I’d quite forgotten how to
-disappear quickly. I shall lose my nerve at this rate, I know I shall!”
-and a large tear dropped at Peggy’s feet.
-
-“Oh, no, you won’t!” said Peggy, putting her arms as far round one of
-his ankles as they would go, and hugging it. (The chocolate cream had
-been delicious, and she was in very good spirits.) “I’d have hated you
-to disappear without me just now! Nannie would have been angry _anyhow_
-at my dress--and you managed beautifully after! But you shall practise
-disappearing now if you want to. We’ve lots of time, haven’t we? Go on.
-Try.”
-
-So the Giant tried and tried--and then he rested--and then he tried and
-tried again, but it wasn’t the slightest good; he remained just as big
-and brown and _there_ as ever. At last, with a stupendous effort, he
-almost succeeded, though he still showed a bit where the sun shone down
-against the trunk, whilst one of his huge boots remained quite visible,
-standing forlornly on the grass beside Peggy.
-
-“It’s no good,” he remarked, reappearing again with startling
-suddenness. “_There_, I’m back again, you see, and I didn’t mean to be.
-_Do_ use one of your wishes on it! Perhaps if I’d only disappeared once
-in the proper way, I should get into the hang of it all again. You’d
-better turn the Ring besides wishing, to make it more certain.”
-
-Peggy did so, giving the Ring an extra turn in her zeal, and the Giant
-rolled completely up, and disappeared in a twinkling, to her great
-satisfaction. “That was _splendid_!” she cried. “You see it was quite
-easy! Now come back and do it again by yourself”--but the Giant didn’t
-answer at all.
-
-A little cold wind blew right through the wood and rustled all the
-chocolate oak leaves above Peggy’s head, and a squirrel up in the
-branches threw a chocolate cream down on her, and then another, and
-they both squashed on her striped silk dress. Peggy was not easily
-frightened, but it all felt very lonely and queer, particularly as she
-didn’t know in the least where she was. She jumped to her feet and
-began running about the wood, shouting for the Giant as loudly as she
-could.
-
-It was only when she had been doing this for quite a long time, and
-getting no answer at all, that she remembered that she had not wished
-or turned the Ring. She at once did both, and, “_Don’t_ tread on me for
-goodness’ sake!” said a squeaky voice near her foot.
-
-Peggy looked down, and there amongst the leaves stood a tiny little
-figure reaching no higher than her instep. It was only when she had
-picked him up and peered closely into his face that she recognised the
-features of the Giant, distorted with rage.
-
-“Oh dear,” she cried, “what _has_ happened?”
-
-“You should learn to manage your Ring better, before you treat me like
-this!” said the tiny Giant in an exceedingly cross voice. “Put me on
-a blade of grass at once, please,--thank you. I don’t like being held
-round the middle like that. Why did you turn the Ring more than once?
-I’ve never disappeared so uncomfortably fast before. And now look at
-the size I am! This is all I can manage after such a shock!”
-
-“Well, it’s not my fault,” said Peggy with some spirit. “You ought to
-know the Ring better than I do. I only did what you told me!”
-
-“I have got a broad outline of how the thing should be run,” said the
-Giant. “But I can’t fill in the details. You will have to learn by
-experience, I suppose.”
-
-“What grand words you use,” said Peggy respectfully, but the Giant
-didn’t look mollified at all.
-
-“Now we’ve used up the five wishes (not counting the failure) so you’d
-better wish yourself back in the nursery,” he said. “I don’t see that
-you’ve had much fun, and I know I haven’t. Goodness knows how I shall
-get back to _my_ house!”
-
-“Oh, but I want to do lots more,” said Peggy. “I haven’t played at
-being grown up at all yet, and I haven’t had any more chocolates!”
-
-“Never mind, there’s no time left--wish yourself home,” said the Giant.
-“Quick, now!”
-
-He sounded so like Nurse at her crossest that Peggy hurriedly
-obeyed,--and the next instant she found herself standing alone in the
-nursery in her petticoat, and in the act of putting her ring into the
-toy cupboard.
-
-“You must be cold!” said Nurse, coming in. “I thought I’d never
-find your old frock, and leaning over the drawer made me feel quite
-faint-like! There! now have a nice game with your dolls,” and she
-bustled over to draw the curtain.
-
-“All the same I wish he hadn’t seemed so cross,” said Peggy to her
-Golliwog. “The only really nice part was the chocolate cream.”
-
-“What _are_ you grumbling about?” asked Nurse. “A chocolate cream,
-indeed, at this time of night! I think, if you ask me, that it’s time
-all little girls were in bed!” (She was _that_ sort of Nurse.)
-
-“All right,” said Peggy, jumping up at once. She even began to unbutton
-her frock and pull off her hair ribbon to Nurse’s great surprise; who,
-of course, couldn’t know that all Peggy wanted was for the next day to
-come quickly, so that she could see the Giant again.
-
-“We’ll really find out the right way to manage the wishing to-morrow,”
-she thought as she cuddled down into bed. “It isn’t the dear old
-Giant’s fault if he’s forgotten things a little bit. It was really
-very clever of him to think of that dress at all! It’s the sort
-great-great-grandmother is wearing in the picture in the hall. Perhaps
-she was one of the little girls he played with. Fancy him remembering
-all that time ago, clever old thing!” She turned her head and stared
-up at the ceiling, all golden with the firelight, and crossed with
-black crinkly bars from the reflection of the guard. “All the same I
-wish he hadn’t looked so cross,” she murmured, as she fell asleep.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-A DAISY FIELD
-
-
-Peggy sat curled up on the big window seat in the nursery reading
-_Mary’s Meadow_. At least, you couldn’t call it exactly reading, but
-mother had read out bits to her so often that she could remember most
-of them by heart.
-
-Nurse was down in the kitchen talking to Cook; and the rain was pelting
-against the window-panes and the wind was blowing the trees all
-sideways and flattening down the plants in the garden, and screaming
-round and round the house trying to get in and blow Peggy about too.
-
-Her little fat fingers moved along below the words as she read to
-herself in a slow whisper:
-
-“We went there for flow-ers; we went there for mush-rooms and
-puff-balls; we went there to hear the night-in-gale.”
-
-Peggy stopped, and looked out at the driving rain with a little sigh.
-“I wish _I_ had a meadow of my very own!” she thought. And then she
-suddenly saw a bright green light coming from the cupboard in front
-of her, and at the same moment the Ring flew right through the wooden
-door, and straight on to her thumb!
-
-Peggy gave a little shout of delight.
-
-“I wish I was in my meadow with my Giant,” she cried as fast as she
-could, for she heard Nurse’s step on the stairs. “And picking daisies,
-please,” she added, turning the Ring round, and rubbing it too, so as
-to make quite certain lots would happen.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“I’m perfectly delighted with this effect. My powers are returning, it
-seems!” said the Giant, speaking in his grandest though tiniest voice.
-
-Peggy rubbed her eyes and tried to open them wide, but the sunshine was
-so dazzling that for a few seconds she was quite blinded by it.
-
-Then she saw that she was in a great big green field, edged all round
-with a tall green hedge; and growing amongst the grass in the field
-were flowers, shaped like daisies of every kind and colour, big ones,
-little ones, tall ones, short ones, white, blue, pink, red, yellow,
-and purple ones, and even some of colours Peggy had only thought about
-sometimes but knew no name for. And the most lovely scent--a sort of
-mixture of honey and roses and pansies--came up from the whole field.
-
-Peggy sat down amongst the flowers, clapping her hands. This was
-something like a wish! But where was the Giant?
-
-“May I _really_ pick a bunch?” she asked, looking towards the place
-where she thought his voice had come from.
-
-“Yes, only be very careful of me!” said the Giant, and Peggy felt
-something tickling her hand.
-
-She looked down and saw the Giant.
-
-He was still very tiny, and was balancing on the yellow centre of
-a scarlet daisy, and reaching up to prick her hand with a bit of
-tasselled grass. He had a most roguish and good-tempered expression on
-his little fat face, and the sun shone down on his curly beard till it
-made it look quite golden.
-
-“Oh, what fun it must be to be small like that!” said Peggy, clasping
-her hands (she was so pleased to find the Giant wasn’t cross any
-longer). “I wish _I_ could balance on a daisy too!”
-
-She at once found herself standing amongst some thick bristling yellow
-stalks, like corn, whilst all around her spread up curving blue walls,
-stretching, it seemed, right up to the blue sky.
-
-“What’s happened? Where am I?” she asked in a rather surprised voice.
-
-“Balancing on a blue daisy,” said the Giant, jumping into the yellow
-stalks by her side. And Peggy noticed that they were now both exactly
-the same height. “Look out! Hold on!” he added excitedly, catching her
-hand. “There’s a breeze passing over the flowers. We’re going swinging!”
-
-A great rustling sounded in the distance, which suddenly burst into
-a roar as a great wind swept by--and down they were flung on to the
-huge silky walls as the daisy bowed its head. Then with a tremendous
-jerk the flower righted itself, and sent them spinning off on to
-another daisy. This one shook its head and slid them on to another,
-and so on and on, half across the field, until at last, when they had
-learnt to balance, and were swinging dizzily to and fro on a large
-violet-coloured petal, the whole thing tilted more suddenly than usual,
-and shot them down on to the ground below.
-
-“Oh, wasn’t it _lovely_!” cried Peggy, looking up through the dim light
-at the gigantic heads, still swaying to and fro amongst the great
-blades of grass which looked as tall as trees. “What fun it is to be
-tiny like this!”
-
-“I’m getting a bit tired of it,” said the Giant ruefully. He had
-knocked his knee on a little stone, and was sitting on the ground
-rubbing it. “You left me this size yesterday, you know--and I couldn’t
-remember the way to get back to my proper height! I think you’ll have
-to use up a wish on me now. After all, you’ve got four left still.”
-
-“All right,” said Peggy obediently. (Anything to keep the Giant in such
-a good temper.) “I wish you were as tall as you were before.”
-
-The Giant immediately shot up right through the grass and flowers, and
-apparently disappeared, for Peggy found herself left by an enormous
-black rock which barred the way, and quite shut out all the light there
-was in that dark place. She at once began trying to climb it, so as to
-find her way back to the Giant, but she had no sooner scrambled up the
-first ledge, than a voice that filled the air like several claps of
-thunder all sounding at once, bawled out:
-
-“Get off my boot! I daren’t _move_. You can’t possibly stay as small as
-that!”
-
-“Oh dear, it’s you I’m on, is it?” exclaimed Peggy. “I quite forgot
-that I was left so tiny! Now I must use up another wish, I suppose.
-What dreadful waste!” And of course there was nothing for it but to do
-so, as you can’t possibly have any fun with someone a million times
-taller than yourself.
-
-The next moment she was sitting among the flowers, once more her proper
-size, with the Giant, once more _his_ proper size too, standing by her.
-
-“And _now_, may I begin to pick a bunch for Mummie?” she asked.
-
-“Certainly,” said the Giant. “There’s no one to stop you; they’re all
-your own.” He sat down on a hedge near by, which immediately sank with
-his weight, the trees that grew on it toppling down in all directions.
-“There, now I’m comfortable,” said he, “and I think I’ll have a nap. I
-never slept a wink last night.” And he lay down across what was left of
-the hedge, closed his eyes, and started snoring at once.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE SLEEPY GIANT
-
-
-“Poor Giant,” said little Peggy, climbing up the hedge to look down at
-his round, good-tempered face, and wide-open mouth. “Sometimes he talks
-so grandly, but he’s not a bit grand really. I’ll let him stay asleep
-for a nice long time whilst I pick a huge, big bunch to send Mummie,”
-and she jumped down into the field again.
-
-“I’ve only two wishes left now,” she thought to herself, as she ran
-in and out amongst the daisies. “Or really only one that’s any good,
-for I suppose I must use the last to get me home. I really think,” she
-went on, as she sat down to tie a bit of grass round a bunch of scarlet
-daisies, “that the Giant ought to get me home himself without making me
-waste a wish on it! I’m sure that’s always done in books. I’ll speak to
-him about it when he wakes.”
-
-The running about in the hot sun had made Peggy quite thirsty, and
-after some searching she found a dear little stream running right
-through the field, at which a lot of butterflies were drinking. It was
-a beautiful golden colour, and when she tasted it she found it was the
-most delicious lemonade, and it had crystallised rose leaves floating
-here and there upon it. The butterflies flew round her in hundreds and
-allowed her to stroke their soft red and blue and yellow wings, and
-when she suggested a game of hide-and-seek they were all delighted, and
-fluttered round in such quantities that she could scarcely breathe.
-
-It turned out a failure in the end, as not one butterfly could be
-induced to remain hidden long enough for the others to find him, but
-was always flitting in and out of his hiding-place, which, as everyone
-knows, completely spoils hide-and-seek.
-
-However, they had a lovely romp, and it was quite a pretty sight to see
-several hundreds of them chasing Peggy back to “Home” (which was the
-Giant’s boot) after she had hidden.
-
-“Oh, do let’s wake the Giant!” said Peggy, as they stopped for breath,
-“and make him play too! I know he’d love it!”
-
-They all gathered round the sleeping Giant, who was lying just as
-Peggy had left him, snoring loudly, with his head comfortably pillowed
-amongst the spreading roots of a fallen tree.
-
-But do you think they could wake him? Not they!
-
-Peggy climbed the hedge and tickled his face with a branch. Then she
-tried to shake his arm, but of course couldn’t move it at all. Then
-she begged the butterflies to help, and they all flew round him with a
-great swishing of wings, making as much noise as they possibly could;
-but still the Giant lay there snoring, for he was not used to being up
-a whole night long, and was very, very tired.
-
-A large blue and gold butterfly suggested pouring lemonade on to his
-face, and they fetched a good deal between them all, but that wasn’t
-the least good, and only slid on to his beard and made it very wet and
-sticky.
-
-[Illustration: This is the picture Peggy drew of the Second Adventure.
-It was a very difficult one to do. The Butterflies are just coming up
-in hundreds and hundreds to try and wake the Giant. Mother showed Peggy
-how to draw the butterflies, but she did nearly all the rest quite by
-herself. The Giant sometimes wore that red hat, and sometimes a green
-pointed one. The Butterflies and Daisies were the most fun to paint. I
-hope you see the Ring.]
-
-“Oh, what _am_ I to do?” cried Peggy. “It’s not fair! I never heard of
-such a thing happening in any Fairy Book! Nannie always lifts me out of
-bed when I won’t wake up. I only wish she was here to do it to him!”
-
-And then she could have bitten her tongue out, for the butterflies
-suddenly wheeled round and flew away in a great cloud, and “He _is_ a
-heavy weight, Miss Peggy,” said Nurse, appearing on the other side of
-the hedge, her face very red and hot. “But I’ll manage it in a moment.
-Now then, up with you! _There_ he is, great heavy thing! He ought to be
-ashamed of himself, the big baby!”
-
-Peggy felt dreadfully disappointed, and also rather angry, for though
-she didn’t mind getting annoyed with the Giant herself, it was a
-different thing hearing Nurse call him names. And now she’d wasted
-another wish entirely by accident, and must use her last up as quick
-as lightning, for Nurse was already beginning to look very puzzled and
-suspicious.
-
-“I wish we were back in the nursery,” she whispered to the Giant, who
-was sitting up on the hedge, rubbing his eyes and staring at Nurse....
-“And I’m very, very angry with you!” she added, as she found herself on
-the nursery window-seat again. But she was only answered by a rattle of
-raindrops on the panes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“You’ve dropped your nice book on the floor,” said Nurse, coming in
-with a pile of aired linen in her arms and a deep frown on her face.
-“You’ll have to go back to rag-books again if you serve _Mary’s Meadow_
-like that!”
-
-“Oh dear, I _quite_ forgot the bunch of daisies!” said Peggy, aghast.
-
-“Now _what_ daisies, Miss Peggy?” asked Nurse. “I can’t have you
-talking nonsense instead of attending to what I say. Pick that book
-up immediately. And you’ve got that Ring on your thumb again, I do
-declare! Mother wouldn’t like it at all, nasty common thing.”
-
-“Oh, mayn’t I wear it _sometimes_, Nannie?” Peggy pleaded. “I _know_
-Mummie wouldn’t mind. She always lets me wear the bead necklaces I
-make.”
-
-“No arguing!” said Nurse. “I’m going to put it in this cup on the
-bookshelf, and you can ask your mother when she comes back. Time enough
-to wear it then if she’ll let you.”
-
-She _did_ seem cross. No wonder, for, though she didn’t know it, she
-had just travelled very many million miles in about three seconds, and
-that’s very upsetting to the temper if you’re not used to it.
-
-And Peggy looked sadly at the cup, for it was far out of her reach even
-if she stood on a chair.
-
-“If I’d only had time to explain to the Giant!” she thought. “_He_
-couldn’t help sleeping so soundly, poor thing. Now perhaps I shall
-never see him again.” And she was very subdued indeed for the rest of
-the day.
-
-But she needn’t have worried. You see she kept on forgetting it was a
-_Fairy_ Ring.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-SWEETS AND FAIRIES
-
-
-“And if you don’t get muddy, but pick your way nicely, we’ll go to the
-village shop and buy a pennyworth of sweets,” said Nurse the next day,
-when they started out for their walk.
-
-“May I pick some primroses if I see them?” asked Peggy, dancing along.
-
-There never were any on the high road, where Nurse generally chose to
-walk, but still there was always the chance there _might_ be one day,
-and it was well to get permission beforehand.
-
-“Yes, if you like,” said Nurse absentmindedly. She was very busy trying
-to see into a cab that had just passed, and didn’t really hear. Not
-that it mattered. There never were any primroses.
-
-“There’s one--at least I _fink_ there is!” said Peggy suddenly, when
-they had nearly reached the village. She stood on the edge of the ditch
-and peered up into the hedge. “Or is it a Fairy, perhaps? _Do_ look,
-Nannie, it’s all white and shiny!”
-
-“A Fairy indeed!” said Nurse, looking up too. “It’s an old bit of paper
-blown up there. Be careful, or you’ll be in the ditch!”
-
-But she was too late, for Peggy lost her balance--or the side of the
-ditch gave way--and the next moment the two little gaitered legs were
-half hidden in dark brown muddy water!
-
-“_Very_ good!” said Nurse in a terrible voice. Then she dragged Peggy
-out, and walked her back along the road towards home, saying nothing in
-her most alarming manner.
-
-Peggy really felt quite frightened.
-
-“Nannie, you’re hurting my arm!” she said at last, trying to drag
-her hand away. She hated the dry feel of Nurse’s black cotton gloves
-pinched around her cold fingers. “Aren’t we going to buy any sweets
-after all?” she went on.
-
-There was no answer.
-
-“Do you hear?” shouted Peggy desperately, and pulling harder.
-
-“You should learn to do as you’re told,” said Nurse, taking a firmer
-grip, and walking faster still.
-
-Peggy pulled harder still. She was beginning to feel really naughty.
-Besides, she knew it had been a Fairy, and who could think of stupid
-old ditches then? Nurse _never_ understood.
-
-“What _have_ you got on your thumb?” asked Nurse, suddenly stopping,
-and dropping Peggy’s hand very quickly.
-
-Peggy looked down, and there was the Fairy Ring sending out great
-sparkles of green light all over the muddy road! She could scarcely
-believe her eyes, and Nurse looked rather frightened.
-
-Peggy felt there was not a second to lose.
-
-“O Giant, I wish you’d take me away somewhere--and make Nurse nicer!”
-she whispered in a great hurry.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“You _are_ a oner, you are!” said the Giant admiringly. “You nearly
-always ask for two things in one wish--but it never seems to
-matter--you get ’em! Now come along, we’ve got to hurry.”
-
-Peggy and the Giant were walking along a wide silver road. The hedges,
-the gates, the trees, the flowers, even the birds that flew over their
-heads, were silver, all sparkling and gleaming in the light of a big
-silver moon in a blue sky. Peggy had never seen anything so beautiful,
-and she looked up at the Giant with very happy eyes as she danced along
-the road by his side.
-
-“I shall always leave you to think of lovely places,” she said. “I
-should never have thought of coming here!”
-
-“It’s the Ring as well,” said the Giant modestly. “But we aren’t there
-yet. Sit on my hand; we shall get there quicker that way.”
-
-“Why, where are we going?” asked Peggy, jumping up and holding on to
-his thumb.
-
-“To Fairy-land,” said the Giant, stepping out briskly, “or at least to
-one little bit of it. It’s only as a great treat, because you couldn’t
-find a primrose, and never got your sweets. By the way, that _was_ a
-Fairy in the hedge,” he added.
-
-“I _knew_ it was,” said Peggy. “But Nannie _won’t_ see things
-sometimes. Oh, look! what _is_ this coming?”
-
-They had turned a corner, and saw far away above the hills something
-that appeared to be a great blue cloud edged with gold, advancing
-with a humming sound. As it came nearer Peggy discovered to her great
-excitement that it was really a multitude of Fairies all dressed in
-the palest blue dresses, their golden hair flowing out around them,
-and on their heads silver crowns studded with bright blue stones; and
-the humming sound was the rustle of their great blue wings which were
-bearing them along at a tremendous rate.
-
-They made straight for Peggy, led by a tall, beautiful Fairy, whose
-blue dress was simply covered with sparkling stones. And there was
-something in her pretty smiling face which reminded Peggy of someone,
-but she couldn’t remember who. The next moment the Fairy was just above
-the Giant’s head; then she dropped suddenly, and catching Peggy up by
-the hand she and all the rest of the Fairies rose high in the air again
-and flew off by the way they had come.
-
-Peggy clutched the Fairy’s hand very tightly for some time, for they
-were all going so fast that the rush of air made her feel quite
-breathless. But when she was rather more used to it, she turned her
-head to look at the Fairies following, and suddenly saw that she had
-grown a magnificent pair of blue wings too!
-
-She at once tried to flap them, and found she could do so quite well,
-though rather jerkily at first, and the Giant--who was striding along
-in the air just below her--looked up with a wide grin on his round face.
-
-“Capital, capital!” he called out. “Well, how do you like flying?”
-
-“It’s _lovely_!” shouted back Peggy. “You _do_ think of splendid
-things! And so do you!” she added, looking up gratefully into the
-Fairy’s face.
-
-And then she gave a great start, for, of course, she saw now who the
-Fairy was. She was Nurse!
-
-Peggy gasped, and very nearly dropped right down. It was certainly
-Nurse, but Nurse looking happy, Nurse looking pleased with Peggy, Nurse
-seeming as though for once she was actually enjoying herself! It really
-seemed too good to be true, and Peggy darted another glance of great
-thankfulness down at the Giant.
-
-“I’m glad you think it fun,” said Nurse, in a sweet, clear voice. “But
-you needn’t flap quite so hard. Look, give long, steady sweeps like
-this,” and she sprang forward even quicker into the air, and then
-showed Peggy exactly how it was done, till she had learnt perfectly.
-
-The land was changing below them, or they were much higher up. It was
-sometimes bright and coloured like a rainbow, sometimes as red as fire,
-and sometimes so dark that they could see nothing below them. Once a
-terrible smell of smoke rose up, and Nurse called to everyone to mount
-higher.
-
-“What a dreadful place that was,” said Peggy, when they once more saw
-the pretty rainbow land below them again. “Who lives there?”
-
-“Ogres,” said Nurse, “heaps of them. I hate passing their way, but it’s
-a short cut. That red country we passed just now was where the Dragons
-live. They’re even worse, nasty ill-bred creatures! However, we’ve
-passed them all now, and here we come down.”
-
-They were right above a cleared space in a big black wood, and at a
-signal from Nurse, all the Fairies paused, and, half folding their
-wings, floated down amongst the trees. Peggy did so too, and balanced
-on a large branch, closing her wings up neatly as she saw the others
-doing.
-
-“Now, each take a tree and begin,” called Nurse, who was flying about
-looking happier than ever, “and after that we’ll have some games!”
-
-Then Peggy noticed what extraordinary trees they were all perched upon.
-For from every twig were hanging by silver strings the most fascinating
-little tiny sugar animals and birds of every colour and kind--blue
-elephants, mauve dogs, scarlet mice, yellow nightingales, and
-everything else you can think of. And all through the wood she could
-hear the Fairies calling and laughing to each other as they fluttered
-up and down the trees and ate the pretty things.
-
-“May I?” asked Peggy, her fingers closing round a purple sparrow, and
-looking at Nurse who she hardly dared believe would be so changed as to
-allow her to eat as many sweets as she liked!
-
-“Of course,” said Nurse smiling--and Peggy had never realised before
-how very nicely Nurse could smile. She also longed to tell her how
-pretty she looked with her golden hair all flying loose in the air. But
-she didn’t dare. “I advise you to try that pink cow just behind you,”
-went on Nurse. “No, not that one, the very big one by the trunk. That’s
-it. Now, _isn’t_ that good?”
-
-It was certainly too lovely for words. It had the delicious taste that
-a strawberry ice has before you’ve eaten too many at a party, and it
-was also rather like pineapples and pear-drops and Tangerine oranges,
-and yet it was far better than any of them.
-
-Peggy soon got quite good at half fluttering, half balancing along the
-branches like the others were doing, and trying each different sweet by
-turn.
-
-(I’m afraid this sounds rather a greedy adventure of Peggy’s, but it
-wasn’t really, as it happened in Fairy-land, and there were enough
-sweets for everyone, and no one felt sick when they’d eaten too many.)
-
-She had just bitten a pink sugar rabbit in half, and found it tasted
-just like meringues, when she remembered the Giant.
-
-“Oh dear,” she cried, “where is the Giant? I’d quite forgotten him!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-FE-FO-FUM!
-
-
-Nurse looked very worried indeed.
-
-“So had I,” she said. “We must have gone too fast for him!” And she
-flew up on to the top of a tree and gazed away across the hills. “He
-never _will_ let us lend him wings,” she went on, “so he always gets
-left behind. He says his seven-leagued boots will last _him_ out all
-right, and it’s no good arguing with him. Now, I expect he’s stuck
-somewhere, or has stumbled upon the Ogres and had a fight.”
-
-“What!” cried Peggy in great horror. “My Giant fighting? Oh, he’d
-_sure_ to be beaten. What shall I do?” and she fluttered to and fro in
-great distress.
-
-“Why, wish he were here, of course,” said Nurse. “You’ve five wishes
-left still, haven’t you?”
-
-Peggy wished at once, and the Giant came crashing through the wood,
-upsetting the sugar trees in all directions.
-
-“Oh, look!” said Nurse. “_How_ careless you are!” (But she didn’t say
-it a bit in her old cross way.) “Plant those trees again before you do
-anything else!”
-
-The Giant looked terribly knocked about and woebegone, and his coat was
-all in tatters, but he did as he was told at once, balancing the trees
-up again, and stamping in their roots well, like Peggy had seen the
-gardener do with his plants. Then he sat down on the ground and wiped
-his hot face with his pocket-handkerchief, and the Fairies all stopped
-eating sweets to hear what he had to say.
-
-“Phew!” he gasped, “I’ve had an awful time! Whatever possessed you all
-to go at such a pace?”
-
-“Well, I like that!” said Nurse. “When it was you who asked us to get
-to the sugar-wood before dark!”
-
-“I wish I hadn’t now,” said the Giant. “Trying to catch you up I
-stumbled right into the middle of the Ogres, and I’d no sooner got away
-from them--after having my coat torn half off my back--than I stepped
-plump on to the Red Dragon, and you know what _that_ means!”
-
-“Dear, dear!” said Nurse. “Was he very vexed?”
-
-“Vexed!” said the Giant. “He was in such a hideous passion that he
-made after me as fast as he could waddle--and then he started gliding.
-I was up in the air in a moment, I can tell you, striding along for all
-I was worth, and when he saw he couldn’t catch me from the ground he
-took to his wings and flew! And when a Dragon uses his wings--well--you
-know what you’ve got to expect! He’s after me now--and the Ogres are,
-too!” he added resignedly.
-
-“Oh, they’ll never find you here!” said Nurse. “The Ring brought you
-along faster than any Ogre or Dragon could travel.”
-
-“I thought an Ogre was almost the same as a Giant?” Peggy whispered to
-Nurse.
-
-“Good gracious, no!” said she. “Don’t let the Giant hear you say
-that! They’re a set of vagabonds and ruffians who haunt the edge of
-Fairy-land. The kind with one eye in their foreheads, and the sort who
-say ‘Fe-Fo-Fum.’ You _must_ have read about them? They can’t harm us
-Fairies, but any Giant, especially a really nice good one like yours,
-makes them simply _mad_!”
-
-Peggy slid off her branch and flew to the Giant, perching on his
-shoulder and stroking his hair.
-
-“I’ll take care of you,” she said, “if they _do_ come. Don’t you be
-afraid! He’ll be all right, won’t he?” she added, turning to the
-Fairies.
-
-But they were not listening.
-
-They had all flown to the tops of their trees and were balancing on the
-topmost branches, bending forward and listening intently. For there was
-a soft humming, grumbling, hissing, bleating, gurgling sound coming
-from somewhere very far away!
-
-“That’s the Ogres,” said Nurse, looking very grave--and the sound got a
-tiny bit louder.
-
-Then a little cold, tinkling, rippling, singing, shivering, clinking
-sound began as well--so faint that it was just like a funny little
-whisper, and “That’s the Dragon and he’ll be here first!” cried all
-the Fairies together, looking graver still, and they began to flutter
-round Peggy and the Giant, staring at the Ring, which was winking and
-flashing long green darts of light over everything and everybody.
-
-“What shall I wish?” asked Peggy, glancing at the Giant, who was
-obviously too tired out to move another step. (The sounds were every
-second getting louder and louder.) “I--I should rather like to see
-them,” she added shyly, “if I can make the dear Giant _quite_ safe.”
-
-“Wish me to be invisible,” said the Giant wearily. “Then I shan’t have
-to get up. I’ve been practising it, so you won’t have any difficulty.”
-
-“Yes, that’ll do nicely,” said Nurse. The noise had suddenly become so
-loud that Peggy could hardly hear her. “And you get as much behind the
-trunk as you can,” she went on to Peggy at the top of her voice, “and
-I’ll sit on a branch in front of you and hide you. If they _do_ see
-you, you’ve only got to wish yourself invisible too.”
-
-The noise had now changed to the rattling kind that a million luggage
-trains would make if they were all driven along in a row at once, and
-Peggy could hear tree after tree crashing to the ground. She had only
-just time to wish, and see the Giant disappear completely, when a great
-red creature plunged down through the branches above into the open
-space in front of the Fairies, and fell on his side, quite close to
-Peggy’s tree, lashing his tail and panting like a dog.
-
-Tongues of red and blue fire flashed and darted up and down his scaly
-back, and his scarlet wings spreading across the grass withered it up
-at once. Peggy did feel glad she hadn’t missed the sight! But she took
-the precaution to wish that he should not crush the Giant, in case
-invisible Giants _could_ be crushed.
-
-In a few seconds the Dragon rolled on to his little short stubbly feet
-and waddled up to Nurse.
-
-“Where’s the Giant?” he lisped in a high and very soft voice. “I
-_know_ he’s somewhere here, and I’ll flatten down every one of your
-sugar trees if you don’t tell me this minute!”
-
-There was really something very frightening in his little polite voice!
-
-“You wouldn’t dare!” said Nurse, laughing scornfully. “Run along and
-look about for him! He must be somewhere, as you rightly remark,” and
-she turned her back on him and began to nibble at a sugar bird.
-
-The Dragon raised his eyebrows ironically, but finding Nurse was not
-looking at him any longer, he began to trot and glide about the wood,
-sticking his long red tongue under the fallen trees to lift them up,
-and hissing to himself more and more when he couldn’t find the Giant
-anywhere.
-
-(And all the time the sound of the Ogres coming got louder and louder
-and louder!)
-
-“There’s some magic going on!” said the Dragon at last, angrily,
-raising himself up on to the very tip of his tail and glaring over the
-tree-tops. “Ha, ha!” he added, “here come the others at last,” and he
-stretched out two welcoming paws to the two enormous Ogres who at that
-moment crashed into the wood.
-
-Peggy nearly tumbled out of the tree in her excitement, for this was
-worth seeing indeed! One of the Ogres had only one eye in the middle of
-his forehead, just as she’d thought he would, and he did nothing but
-say “Fe-Fo-Fum!” over and over again, and stamp and growl and snarl.
-
-The other one had three heads which all looked different ways, and he
-kept gnashing his three lots of teeth and snorting at the Dragon, who
-_would_ go on smiling at him.
-
-Then both Ogres advanced upon Nurse, brandishing their clubs.
-
-[Illustration: Peggy drew this to show what the Dragon looked like
-when Nurse said, “You wouldn’t dare!” Nurse is on the left and is just
-going to eat her sugar bird. Peggy is up above peeping from behind the
-tree. She wanted to draw the Ogres too, but there wasn’t any room.
-Mother only helped her with some of the branches, everything else she
-did by herself, and the Fairies took ages to do. They are sitting on
-the boughs eating the sugar animals and birds. It made the Dragon
-=furious= to see they weren’t afraid of him a bit. Those long
-things on the ground are the trees he knocked down, and the bits of red
-are the fires he started with his red-hot paws. The Giant is invisible
-sitting on the grass, just behind the Dragon’s tongue.]
-
-“We went miles out of our way!” they roared. “Where’s he gone to now?”
-
-Nurse looked them over calmly from head to toe.
-
-“Take your caps off this moment,” she said severely. “I _think_ you
-forget who you’re speaking to!”
-
-They looked rather cowed for the moment, and took their caps off
-sheepishly without saying a word, though the Dragon’s chuckle was
-enough to infuriate anybody. (The Ogre with the three heads had of
-course to take off three caps.)
-
-“That’s better!” said Nurse. “Now, what _do_ you want?”
-
-“The Giant, of course,” growled the Ogre with one eye. “Fe-Fo-Fum!
-Fe-Fo-Fum!” and he trampled up and down restlessly.
-
-It was more than Peggy could stand.
-
-“Oh, _do_ go on with the verse!” she called out imploringly, leaning
-forward right out of the tree. “You’ve said that line over and over
-again, and it’s not _nearly_ all! You _must_ remember how it goes on:
-
- ‘Fe-Fo-Fum!
- I smell the blood of an Englishman!
- Be he alive----’”
-
-but she got no further, for with a scream of triumph the Dragon flung
-himself forward and seized her tree right up by the roots, and the
-nearest Ogre at the same moment plucked her out of it by his finger and
-thumb.
-
-“Quick, Miss Peggy!” screamed Nurse, and Peggy did wish quick, ... and
-found herself back on the old muddy high road again, being dragged
-along it by Nurse. “For if you don’t hurry a bit more,” she went on,
-“you’ll catch your death of cold in those wet socks.”
-
-Peggy burst into tears. Nurse was no longer a bit like a nice Fairy,
-and it was all such a dreadfully sudden change, and everything felt so
-very flat. Even the stone in her Ring looked small, and as dull as a
-pebble.
-
-“Oh dear, oh dear!” she sobbed. “And we never got to the games at all!
-And I’ve still got one wish left that I never used. Now it will be
-wasted!” and the tears poured fast down her cheeks.
-
-Nurse looked down at her in astonishment, for Peggy never cried.
-
-“What’s come over you all of a sudden?” she asked.
-
-“I _wish_ you were always nice like just now,” sobbed Peggy, quite
-forgetting Nurse never remembered anything about the adventures. “We
-were having such a _lovely_ time! And then you went and made me leave
-at the most exciting bit.”
-
-“I don’t think it’s very exciting to stand in a muddy ditch!” said
-Nurse, but her voice had all at once become very soft and gentle. “But
-never mind, Miss Peggy dear. I’ll tell you the story of the Three Bears
-now if you like, then we shall soon get home. And perhaps there’ll be a
-letter from Mother; I shouldn’t wonder!”
-
-Peggy could scarcely believe her ears, for except in Fairy-land Nurse
-never really talked like that. Her tears were forgotten very quickly,
-for Nurse went on being like it all the rest of the day, laughing and
-playing and romping with Peggy right up till bedtime, and even a little
-while after!
-
-Peggy _couldn’t_ make it out.
-
-You see she never noticed that she _had_ used up her sixth wish after
-all.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-PEGGY DRIVES A CAR
-
-
-“What’s that whizzing, Nurse?” asked Peggy, as she was picking a bunch
-of double snowdrops in the garden the next afternoon.
-
-“A motor, I expect,” said Nurse, who was talking to the gardener--and
-she ran to peep down the drive through the bushes. “Callers, I’ll be
-bound. Yes, here it comes, a big red car. There’s a fat lady in behind,
-and a girl chauffeur driving it.”
-
-“Let’s see,” said Peggy, pressing into the bushes too.
-
-Nurse was not quite like she had been the evening before, because,
-of course, Peggy’s wishes never lasted on to the next day, but still
-she wasn’t _nearly_ as cross as usual, and she had been playing
-hide-and-seek with Peggy quite half the afternoon, until the gardener
-came up to talk.
-
-“Now they’ve heard your Mother’s not here, and are going away again,”
-Nurse went on. “There, look! They’ve stuck at the difficult turn, and
-the engine’s stopped! My, doesn’t that girl look cross? Get back, Miss
-Peggy, they’ll see us! Now you can hide once more if you like before
-tea. I’ll just finish giving John the message about the vegetables.”
-
-“I wish I knew how to drive a motor,” thought Peggy longingly, as she
-trotted off to hide behind some laurels. “I’d go like the wind, and
-wouldn’t stop at any corners----Why--what’s happened?”
-
-For she was driving the big red car as fast as lightning down the
-drive!
-
-“You never noticed you had the Ring on!” chuckled the Giant. “Well
-turned! Never mind the gate-post.”
-
-He was sitting at the back, but with his legs sticking right out in
-front beyond the bonnet; and his elbows kept knocking great pieces out
-of the hedges as they whizzed along.
-
-“What’s--what’s happened to the fat lady and the chauffeur?” gasped
-Peggy, clutching the steering-wheel for dear life, her cheeks scarlet,
-her hair streaming out behind her.
-
-“I put them out in the drive,” said the Giant. “I expect they’ll follow
-us if they want to.”
-
-“Weren’t they angry?” asked Peggy, bumping over a sheep because she
-didn’t know how to stop the car. “Oh dear, did I hurt him?”
-
-“He’s all right, he’s up again,” said the Giant, turning round. “The
-Ring won’t let you hurt anything or anybody however much you knock
-into them. Angry? Oh, I really hadn’t time to stop and see. It’s all
-forgotten afterwards, you see. Look out for this corner. Oh well, never
-mind, we may as well be out of the road as in it!” For the car, not
-having been turned quick enough, had neatly leapt the hedge, and was
-now speeding across a ploughed field.
-
-“Let her out, let her out!” said the Giant. “You said you wanted to go
-fast, I thought. Go on, let her out!”
-
-Peggy didn’t know exactly what he meant, or what to do, but she
-whispered a wish that they might go still quicker, and the car rose in
-the air and raced along just a little above the level of the hedges.
-
-“I think this is lovelier than anything we’ve done at all!” she shouted
-back to the Giant. “Oh, look! we’re coming to a town, I do believe! I
-wish I could drive through it just as though I was a real chauffeur. It
-would be so _grand_!”
-
-“Steady, steady! Wishes don’t grow on blackberry bushes,” cried the
-Giant warningly, but at once the car slowed down, and dropped into the
-high road, and Peggy found herself dressed exactly like the girl she
-had seen, and driving slowly along at the rate of about fifteen miles
-an hour. At first she tried to steer the car herself, but when she
-found that it guided itself when left alone, and that the horn sounded
-and the gear changed much better by themselves, she leant back and
-amused herself by staring at the people, and then at the shops, as they
-reached the principal streets of the town.
-
-Suddenly she noticed that all the people they passed were beginning
-to behave in the most extraordinary manner, some of them racing away
-down side streets, screaming, others beginning to chase the car
-and shout at the top of their voices. Once they came on a line of
-policemen all standing in a row across the road with notebooks in their
-hands, but the car made very short work of them, scattering them in
-all directions, and though Peggy turned round and saw them picking
-themselves up at once and evidently not hurt in the very least, such a
-roar went up from the crowds in the streets that she asked the Giant in
-great perplexity why they were all so angry. Hadn’t they ever seen a
-lady chauffeur before?
-
-“I expect it’s partly because of me,” said the Giant comfortably. “I
-knocked a piece right off the General Post Office just now with my
-elbow. You’d better rise again, I think.”
-
-Peggy wished--but to her horror nothing happened, except that the car
-began to slow down, and crowds and crowds of people from all directions
-at once pressed around it, shouting and shaking their fists at the
-Giant.
-
-“Goodness me!” said the Giant, who had no sooner pushed away one lot
-than another came up. “The Magic’s gone wrong again! Turn the Ring
-quickly!”
-
-Peggy did so, and the car rose with an awful jerk into the air and
-began to twist in and out amongst the chimney pots in an aimless sort
-of way till the Giant nearly toppled out, and Peggy felt quite giddy.
-At last she seized the wheel and tried to steer, and really felt they
-were making a little headway, when suddenly, without any warning,
-the car made a dart upwards, and then dropped on to the top of an
-ornamental steeple crowning the new Town Hall, where it stuck, the
-wheels turning madly.
-
-“Now we _are_ in a fix!” said the Giant uneasily. “I thought I’d
-remembered all about the wishing by now, but I’ve made a hash of it
-this time, and no mistake. You’d better wish we were safely home again.
-I can always manage _that_.”
-
-“No, thank you!” said Peggy. “I did that yesterday before I’d used up
-all my wishes. I’m not going to do it again. I don’t mind it up here at
-all; I think it’s rather fun!”
-
-“_That’s_ not much fun!” said the Giant, looking down out of the car.
-
-Peggy looked too--and could not help giving a little jump. Packed in
-the Square below them was the first crowd she had ever seen, and it was
-really rather frightening. Everybody was looking up and shouting and
-waving, and there was no doubt at all that they were very angry indeed.
-Still, in spite of the muddles the Giant so often made, Peggy always
-felt perfectly safe with him.
-
-“I _can’t_ hear what they say,” she said, “all talking at once like
-that! Do call down and ask them to speak clearer. They’ll hear _you_.”
-
-But the Giant was shaking with fright, and trying to hide himself under
-the seat, which, considering he was many sizes too big for the car,
-looked a hopeless task.
-
-“Better leave them alone,” he muttered. “They’ll only get angrier still
-if we answer them.”
-
-At that moment Peggy noticed a little fat man in a long red gown making
-his way through the crowd. Behind him came two men carrying a long
-ladder. This they put against the Town Hall, and the little fat man
-climbed to the top, and then off on to the roof just below the car. He
-was purple in the face with breathlessness and rage.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-THE MAYOR’S OUTING
-
-
-“That’s the Mayor, that is,” said the Giant in a terrified whisper, and
-he practically stood on his head in his efforts to wriggle part of his
-face under the seat. “If there is one thing that frightens me more than
-another it is a Mayor! I remember in 1615, or thereabouts--but that
-will keep till another time. Do you think he can see me? Can’t we go on
-_now_?”
-
-“Certainly not!” said Peggy. “I want to hear what he’s going to say. He
-can’t _do_ anything to us, you know. Really, I think this is the best
-adventure of all!”
-
-“Hi!” called the Mayor. “Go on this moment, or we’ll make you!”
-
-“We can’t!” shouted Peggy. “We’re stuck! A bit of the spire’s come
-right through the car!”
-
-“Nonsense!” shouted the Mayor, “you can get off perfectly well if you
-choose. The spire wasn’t built for the likes of you to go trapesing
-about on. Get off it!”
-
-“We _cant_, I tell you!” cried Peggy, losing all patience. “Come up and
-look for yourself! Come on, climb on to the Giant’s boot!” For by this
-time the Giant had given up trying to hide himself, and was sitting on
-the car with his legs dangling into space, and looking the picture of
-misery.
-
-“Stretch your foot down a little more,” said Peggy to him. “There,” as
-it dangled just above the Mayor’s head, “now jump this instant!”
-
-“I won’t!” said the Mayor, ducking his head as the great boot hovered
-above it. “I never heard of such proceedings in my life!” He leant over
-the edge of the roof. “They _won’t_ go on!” he shouted to the crowd
-below.
-
-“Make ’em!” came in a perfect roar from the Square.
-
-“Come along,” said Peggy coaxingly. (It would be something, she felt,
-to tell Nurse when she got back that she had had a real live Mayor in
-her car. Besides, it would be fun for him. But she wasn’t going to use
-up a wish on it. Peggy had grown very wary by this time.)
-
-The Mayor stood looking very undecided, but when he saw the crowd
-beginning to shake their fists at him as well, he gave a jump, caught
-the Giant’s boot, and raised himself into a sitting position on the toe
-of it.
-
-“Will you promise to do your best to get off if I come up and have a
-look?” he asked in a shaking voice.
-
-“Of course we will,” said Peggy soothingly.--“Don’t look such a big
-frightened baby!” she added reprovingly to the Giant.--“Draw your boot
-up gently. There, that’s right”--as the Mayor was sidled carefully off
-into the front seat; “_now_ I wish we could go on!”
-
-[Illustration: This is a painting of the Fourth Adventure. Peggy is
-just telling the Mayor that they’ve stuck. She’s rather afraid the
-Giant will fall out in a minute, that’s why she’s holding on to his
-back. You can see by her face she isn’t a bit frightened of the Mayor.
-This was Mother’s favourite picture. The Mayor was very difficult to
-draw, but he looked =just= like that Peggy said. None of the crowd
-had on red jackets really, but Peggy thought they looked pretty in a
-picture. You see the Ring, don’t you? Peggy quite forgot about the
-Giant’s red stockings till the picture was finished!]
-
-The car shook itself all over, then leapt upwards, and once more set
-off at breakneck speed, but this time straight upwards into the sky!
-Something at the same moment fell out with a heavy flop. Peggy turned
-her head hastily, just in time to see the Giant falling through the air
-behind them. But the car was rising upwards at such a pace that the
-next moment he and the whole town disappeared from view!
-
-“_Stop!_” said a frightened voice at her side, and she turned and saw
-the Mayor, whom for the moment she had _quite_ forgotten. His face was
-no longer purple, but as white as a sheet.
-
-“I can’t!” said Peggy. “I’ve only one wish left, and that’s got to take
-me home. You asked me to get off the spire, you know, and I _have_! The
-Giant’s wearing his seven-leagued boots, so he’ll soon catch us up when
-he gets balanced again.” She skirted the edge of a pink sunset cloud
-as she spoke, and drove right up through a lemon-coloured one. “Oh,
-how lovely!” she went on delightedly. “I got a great chunk of it in my
-mouth, and it tasted just like pineapple. Did you?”
-
-“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said the Mayor. “We’ve just
-been through an awful fog, and I insist on you stopping the car at
-once. If you can’t--and I see you don’t understand the first rudiments
-of driving--I can!”
-
-He leant across her and seized the steering-wheel, but it at once came
-off in his hand, rolled down his arm, and jumped out of the car.
-
-“_There!_” said Peggy triumphantly, to the now speechless Mayor. “See
-what comes of meddling!” (She felt quite like Nurse when she spoke
-like that.) “Never mind, my car goes just as well without _that_ bit!”
-and she leant back in her seat and crossed her arms grandly. “The only
-thing I’m worrying about,” she went on, “is, if the Giant will ever
-find us! You don’t see him coming, do you? Look down through the hole
-in the car.”
-
-“Unless you stop, I shall jump out,” said the Mayor in a desperate
-voice. And he stood up and really looked as though he meant to!
-
-“Oh, _do_ sit down,” said Peggy. “You spoil everything. Just look,
-we’re going right on to this rainbow, I do believe! Yes, we’re on the
-purple part. Isn’t it a lovely smooth road? There, now, we’re off it
-and on the pink bit! Oh, why _don’t_ you sit still and love it all as I
-do?”
-
-“Because I’m going to get out,” said the Mayor, stepping over the door
-and lowering himself slowly till only his hand holding the step, and
-his very reproachful face showed themselves. “Now then,” he added,
-“you’ve only got till I count five; I shall let go then--perhaps”--he
-added in a whisper, being a truthful Mayor, but very softly so that she
-shouldn’t hear.
-
-“Oh dear, it _is_ mean of you to make me use up my last wish so
-soon!” said Peggy in a very vexed voice. “And I managed this drive
-especially for you, to make up for our having spoilt the Post Office
-and things.--Oh, very well,” she added crossly, as the Mayor reached
-four, and let go one hand, “I wish you were home and I was too, because
-you simply spoil everything when you won’t play properly!”...
-
-“If I do, it’s not for you to say so, Miss Peggy,” was the reply, and
-Peggy found herself back in the garden again facing a rather red-faced
-and angry Nurse. “Just because I stop to speak to John for one moment,
-is no reason for you to think yourself neglected! I’m sure I never
-heard you call you were ready, so how was I to know? Then you come
-bouncing down on me like that!”
-
-“Why, Nannie, did I bounce?” asked Peggy, very much interested. She had
-wondered before what her return looked like when the wishes were over.
-
-“Don’t repeat my words,” said Nurse crossly. “I was meaning the way you
-spoke, of course. How could you bounce down from behind the laurels?
-Now, come along into tea at once.”
-
-“O Nannie, I’ve had such fun!” said Peggy, dancing along the path. “I
-went _up_, and _up_, and _up_----”
-
-“There!” exclaimed Nurse. “One moment it’s grumble, grumble, the
-next all the other way! I won’t have you climbing trees either in
-hide-and-seek. You can’t expect to be found if you act like that.
-Now--not another word----”
-
-“I’m afraid the Giant’s dreadfully lost this time!” thought Peggy, as
-she washed her hands for tea. “I don’t fink I was very kind to him! I
-do wonder if the fat lady minded the big hole in the car, and the wheel
-being lost. Oh, but I suppose that all comes right again, just as she
-forgets that the Giant sat her down in the drive! It would be lovely to
-tell Nannie that I’d driven a Mayor up a rainbow in a real motor car!
-But it’s no good _trying_ to, she doesn’t understand the sensiblest
-things.”
-
-And she ran into the day nursery to see which jam cook had sent up for
-tea.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-DOWN!
-
-
-“See me dance the polka!” went the old tune--and then again and
-again--and Peggy lay in bed listening to it and staring at the fire.
-
-The children next door were having a party in their hall, and every
-time the front door opened the sound of the music came crashing out,
-and jumped in through Peggy’s open window. Of course, she ought to have
-been at the party too, but, for one thing, she had had a cold all day,
-and for another, Nurse didn’t think the children next door had properly
-got over measles, so she was afraid to let Peggy go.
-
-Peggy hadn’t much minded until now. Nurse had petted her all day and
-given her little bits of buttered toast at tea with apricot jam on
-them, and then had let the housemaid come up and play dominoes with
-her until bedtime, and now she had tucked her up warmly in bed with
-a hot-water bottle and told her to go to sleep quickly, so that she
-should be quite well before Mother came home the next day.
-
-But go to sleep was just what Peggy couldn’t do. For one thing,
-thinking of Mother coming back was enough to make her keep wanting to
-jump out of bed and dance all over the room. And then the music too had
-begun to make her rather long to run into the house next door and play
-musical chairs with all the other children.
-
-It was then that she suddenly felt the Ring pressing on her thumb, and
-realised that she had quite forgotten to wish at all that day!
-
-“Oh dear, suppose it hadn’t come, I might have forgotten altogether,”
-she thought in dismay. “And now I’m rather frightened of seeing the
-Giant, in case he’s angry about the Mayor. I wonder what I’d better
-wish?”
-
-She lay in bed thinking about it for quite a long time, until suddenly
-hearing some carriages driving off and the music stopping, she realised
-she was too late to wish to join the children’s party next door anyway.
-
-“Oh, I wish the Giant was here,” she said at last. “He can always think
-of lovely things to do.”
-
-“Your window’s uncommonly small,” said the Giant, climbing in through
-it, and bringing with him big bits of the wall on each shoulder.
-“Gracious me, what a mess I’m in!” He shook himself and lay down on the
-floor with his face close to the fire. “I’ve been looking in at the
-party next door,” he went on. “Great fun--but they’re gone now. I saw
-’em into their cabs. Why weren’t you there?”
-
-“Because I’ve a cold,” said Peggy, sneezing three times. (The Giant
-seemed to have brought in all the cold night air with him.) “Nannie
-thinks I caught it hiding behind the laurels so long yesterday, but _I_
-know it was going through that lovely wet yellow cloud!”
-
-The Giant’s face clouded over. “Least said soonest mended about that,”
-he said shortly. “I particularly told you of my aversion to Mayors, and
-you at once take one for a drive and leave me behind! That was not in
-the least what I meant. However, I will say no more. This is your last
-day but one with me, so we won’t waste it with quarrelling. What’s your
-wish? Be quick now, for this lovely hot fire makes me very sleepy.”
-
-Peggy jumped out of bed, caught hold of the Giant’s little finger and
-hugged it.
-
-“I’m _so_ sorry,” she said coaxingly. “I like you better than any Mayor
-that ever was born, Giant darling. And I didn’t _mean_ to leave you
-behind. Did you have an awful time?”
-
-“Well, I went wandering about the sky for the rest of the night looking
-for you,” said the Giant. “I heard you’d been on the rainbow, but
-after that I lost all trace of you. Still, never mind; as you’re sorry,
-I don’t mind any more. Go on, wish away.”
-
-“It’s no good, I’ve tried to,” said Peggy. “We seem to have done
-everything exciting. We’ve been up----”
-
-“How about going down for a change?” asked the Giant.
-
-“Down?” said Peggy. “But we _are_ down!”
-
-“Do you call _this_ down?” said the Giant laughing. “Come along, get on
-my hand and wish,” and he laid his hand palm upwards on the hearthrug.
-
-“Wish what?” asked Peggy, putting on her blue dressing-gown and
-slippers.
-
-“To go down, of course,” said the Giant impatiently. “Has your cold
-made you deaf?”
-
-“Oh, all right, I wish to go down,” said Peggy, clambering up on to the
-Giant’s hand. “But it sounds very dull--_Gracious!_ Hold me tight!” for
-they both at once went right through the nursery floor and into the
-dining-room below.
-
-“Oh, look!” said Peggy. “What a mess we’ve made of the ceiling. The
-table’s all covered with bits of it! Oughtn’t we to clear it up?”
-
-“Don’t waste time,” said the Giant. “Come on,” and down through the
-carpet they went and right into the kitchen.
-
-The servants were all at supper, but Peggy had only just time to catch
-sight of their terrified faces and to hear their chairs crashing to the
-floor as they all jumped up, before the Giant went right through that
-floor too!
-
-After that they went down so fast that her curls flew up in a waving
-cone above her head, and the Giant’s beard flapped across her face and
-hid everything. She shut her eyes at last, until--“Open them, we’re
-down!” said the Giant, and they both flopped on to some long brown
-grass.
-
-[Illustration: This is a picture of the fifth Adventure. The mark on
-the ceiling is the awful hole the Giant and Peggy made coming through.
-The Giant is waving his hand to Cook as they go down. The footman has
-only just seen the hole, and is showing it to everybody. The housemaid
-who played dominoes with Peggy is screaming out “Stop them, Cook!” and
-the scullery maid has sat down on the floor with her hands over her
-face. Cook is fainting by the table. She had just put a pudding on it
-for the servants supper. Peggy couldn’t put Nurse into the picture
-because she wasn’t sure if she was in the kitchen then or not. You
-=do= see the Ring, don’t you?]
-
-Peggy stared round in astonishment. They were sitting in the middle of
-a great brown plain, edged all ground with little pointed brown hills
-rising up to a golden sky. And, “Oh, what ducky little houses!” cried
-Peggy, for nestling up the sides of every hill were hundreds of tiny
-brown thatched cottages, each with a dear little garden in front of it,
-full of vegetables and brightly coloured berries.
-
-“Where on earth are we?” she asked.
-
-“Nowhere,” said the Giant. “We’re _in_ it. This is the Pixies’ country.
-Look, they’re coming out of their houses. Do you see them? They’ve
-heard us coming.”
-
-A great opening of doors sounded from all around, and out poured the
-Pixies, and raced across the plain to Peggy and the Giant. Little fat
-brown fellows they were, dressed in dark shades of green and red, with
-round wrinkled faces and pointed caps. When they were quite near, they
-all stood in a crowd whispering and giggling, till two of them, holding
-a huge curled-up yellow leaf between them, were pushed forward towards
-Peggy.
-
-“What have they got?” she whispered to the Giant.
-
-“An invitation, I expect,” he whispered back, “for the party to-night.”
-
-“What party?” asked Peggy, but “Hush, don’t, whisper, they’ll think
-you’re making personal remarks,” answered the Giant. “They’re very
-sensitive.” And certainly the Pixies carrying the leaf came to a dead
-stop, and, apparently overcome with shyness, dropped it on the ground,
-and raced back to their companions, where they stood sniggering and
-covering their faces with their hands, and peeping through their
-fingers at Peggy.
-
-“How funny they are!” said Peggy in amazement. “Why _do_ they do that?”
-
-“_I_ don’t know,” said the Giant. “I think it’s because they have so
-few holidays and see so few people. But they’re a queer lot, and I
-don’t profess to understand them! You’d better read your invitation.”
-
-Peggy picked the leaf up, and, unrolling it, read as follows: “We
-invite Peggy and the Giant to a Ball in the Distant Purple Caves in
-half an hour. Skating, Eating, Flitting, Mazing, Wending and other
-Amusements.”
-
-“Oh dear, _how_ exciting! Can I go?” asked Peggy, beginning to dance
-about all over the plain.
-
-The Giant took the invitation and read it slowly.
-
-“My goodness me, it _is_ going to be a smart affair!” said he. “Yes, I
-think we can manage it all right. Only we shall have to dress up for
-it, I’m afraid. It wouldn’t do to look dowdy.”
-
-“But what do Flitting, Mazing, and Wending mean?” asked Peggy, looking
-at the invitation again.
-
-“Well, Flitting is flying round one after the other at the very top
-of the caves and copying everything the front Pixie does,” said the
-Giant, “and the one who goes on longest gets a prize. It’s tiring, but
-exciting; a sort of Follow-my-Leader, only a better game. And Wending
-is dancing up and down the Unexplored Passages and seeing who can pick
-up most diamonds first. They only have it at the very grandest parties.
-And Mazing is--now, what _is_ Mazing? I’ve quite forgotten! However, I
-shall probably remember it in a minute or two.”
-
-“Do you accept?” asked a tiny, shy voice at Peggy’s elbow, and she
-looked down to see a Pixie standing by her.
-
-“Yes, we’d _love_ to come, and it’s very kind of you to ask us,” said
-Peggy very politely. “I hope you’ll excuse my writing,” she added,
-having sometimes heard her mother say this.
-
-“They’d _love_ to come!” shouted the Pixie to the others, and “They’d
-_love_ to come!” shouted the rest, till the hills echoed with the
-sound, and then they all turned and raced back to their cottages,
-stopping now and then to giggle and snigger and look over their
-shoulders at Peggy and the Giant, before the little doors slammed again
-behind them.
-
-“Very over-excited indeed,” remarked the Giant. “Now they’ll take the
-rest of the time dressing up. And, by the way, we ought to be getting
-ready too.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-PIXIE GAMES
-
-
-“What did you think of wearing?” asked the Giant.
-
-“Let me see,” said Peggy. “Yes--I think I wish to go as a Fairy, in
-pink. What would _you_ like to be?”
-
-“The wishes do work well now!” said the Giant in a gratified voice, for
-Peggy stood before him glittering in a rosy spangled frock and gleaming
-silver wings, with a star on her forehead and a wand in her hand all
-complete. “Well, if you’ll really be so kind as to use up another wish
-on me, I think I’d rather like to go as Little Boy Blue.”
-
-“Certainly!” said Peggy, and the next instant the Giant, a good deal
-smaller than usual, and dressed all in blue, with a golden horn in his
-hand, stood on the plain. Unfortunately, however, his seven-leagued
-boots still remained their usual size, and his beard was as long and
-curly as ever, which gave him rather a strange appearance.
-
-“_Not_ quite so successful,” he remarked, glancing down at himself.
-“However, I shall pass in a crowd, I daresay. And now we _must_ start.
-The Pixies will go under the hills, which takes a quarter of the time,
-but I daren’t take you that way for fear of spoiling our clothes. Come
-along--fly on to my shoulder. That’s right! Shut your eyes and it won’t
-seem so far.” And off he walked at a great pace over the hills.
-
-“_Do_ try to remember as we go what ‘Mazing’ means,” said Peggy. “I
-wish I knew. It’s such a funny word!”
-
-“I can’t talk or think of anything at present,” said the Giant. “I’ve
-got to try and find my way, and it’s no easy matter, I can assure you.”
-And a long silence ensued.
-
-“Aren’t we there _yet_?” asked Peggy at last, after they had been
-travelling for over a quarter of an hour. She opened her eyes as she
-spoke, and then nearly fell off the Giant’s shoulder with astonishment.
-
-For the brown hills had quite disappeared, and in their place
-a dazzling white country spread around. And a country filled
-with--_could_ it be? Peggy rubbed her eyes, and stared again. Yes.
-Filled with _snowmen_! Snowmen towering up in all directions, one
-behind the other, hundreds and hundreds of them, and all exactly like
-the one Mother and Peggy had made in the garden last winter, with coals
-for eyes, and pipes in their mouths!
-
-“Yes, I thought you’d be surprised!” said the Giant, stopping wearily.
-“I was. We’ve missed our way somehow, I believe, and it would really
-have been better if we _had_ gone under the hills after all. This white
-country gets on my nerves. I _must_ have a rest!”
-
-He propped himself up against one of the snowmen as he spoke, and
-mopped his face with his red pocket-handkerchief. “Do fly up fairly
-high and see if there’s any way out of this,” he implored in an
-exhausted voice. “I’ve been walking in and out between the wretched
-things for _ages_. There seems no end to them!”
-
-[Illustration: Peggy didn’t mean to do another picture of the fifth
-Adventure, but Mother particularly wanted one of the Pixies, so she
-had to do this, as the Ball-room one was too difficult to do. The
-Pixies are just shouting out, “This is Mazing, this is!” and Peggy is
-trying to catch two of them. You can see how tired and giddy the Giant
-must have got with wandering about amongst so many Snowmen. He is
-just wiping his face with his red handkerchief. Peggy made herself so
-=very= ugly by mistake, and didn’t know how to change it.]
-
-Peggy fluttered up and looked North, South, East and West, but alas,
-there was nothing but hosts and hosts of snowmen in all directions.
-
-“I believe it’s a trick of those nasty Pixies!” said the Giant angrily
-when she returned. “There--look! Wasn’t that one of them?” and he
-pointed behind her.
-
-Peggy wheeled round, just in time to see a mischievous Pixie face
-peeping from behind a snowman.
-
-“Catch him!” cried the Giant, making a grab and missing. “Oh, now
-he’s over there!” as another face peeped at them from quite another
-direction.
-
-“This is Mazing, this is,” said a tiny, chuckling voice, and a third
-Pixie appeared round another snowman, and disappeared again just as
-Peggy thought she had really got him.
-
-“Oh dear!” said the Giant, stopping in dismay. “Don’t you remember you
-said you wished you knew what Mazing was? I never took in that it was a
-wish till this moment!”
-
-“Why, so I did!” said Peggy. “Gracious me, what a silly game! and that
-makes four wishes gone, too. There, _now_ I’ve got him!” and she made a
-wild dash to the right, but only succeeded in catching a pointed cap,
-and falling full length in the wet snow.
-
-“This is Mazing, this is!” cried out about twenty giggling voices at
-once, and heads poked out from behind the snowmen in all directions.
-
-“Oh, I can’t stand this any longer,” said Peggy. “I wish we were at
-that party! _Any_ of the other amusements would be better than this
-one!”
-
-At once the snowmen all toppled over and melted in a trice, and Peggy
-and the Giant found themselves standing in a great Purple Cave full of
-rosy light.
-
-All around them danced a multitude of Gnomes, Brownies, Sprites, and
-every other kind of unusual creature; and a large company of Pixies in
-fancy dress, who had been playing leap-frog in a corner, came pushing
-their way through the crowd.
-
-“Oh, you _are_ late!” they cried. “You’ve been Mazing, haven’t you?”
-and they all burst into a great roar of laughter.
-
-“You’re not being a bit funny,” said the Giant, turning his back on
-them, and “Here come the Naiads!” he whispered to Peggy. “They only
-attend the _best_ parties,” and he pointed towards some beautiful tall
-ladies in green and blue with water lilies in their hair, who were
-walking up the cave towards them, followed by a crowd of handsome
-Dryads in brown and yellow.
-
-“Come and play at Flitting,” said one of them, taking Peggy’s and the
-Giant’s hands. “Those bad-mannered creatures will improve if you take
-no notice of them. We’ll show you how to play,” and up to the ceiling
-they all went, and everyone else after them.
-
-Peggy never forgot that wonderful night. When she was tired with
-darting round the cavern walls, or hunting for diamonds in the dark,
-she skated with a company of very polite Trolls in a beautiful inner
-cavern, whose walls were a gleaming mass of rubies. And then the
-Pixies, who by this time had remembered their manners, crowned her
-Queen of the Revels with great pomp, and led her off to partake of
-light refreshments.
-
-These were set out in a great black and yellow cavern which was
-entirely lighted by glow-worms, cleverly concealed in full-blown yellow
-roses hung from the roof. Peggy was put at the head of the table with
-the Giant by her side, and big sugar sweets of every shape and kind
-were piled upon their plates.
-
-But no sooner had they finished half their helpings than a sudden shout
-of “Back to work!” “Back to work!” sounded from all sides.
-
-The Naiads and Dryads immediately disappeared in a pale green mist,
-the Sprites changed into blue smoke, and the next instant Peggy found
-herself, with hundreds of silent, hardworking Pixies, digging with
-pickaxes in the sides of a cold dark rock, by the light of a solitary
-glow-worm!
-
-The Giant, with his blue sleeves rolled up, was working diligently by
-her side.
-
-“Oh, what _are_ we doing? Where’s the party gone?” cried Peggy in great
-distress.
-
-“Over,” said the Giant without stopping; and at every blow of his axe
-great pieces of gold fell out of the rock. “_Now_ we’ve got to work!”
-
-“Oh, but this _is_ dull,” said Peggy. “And I know Nannie wouldn’t like
-me to get hot with my bad cold,” she went on primly, quite forgetting
-that she had not thought of that at all, during the games just now.
-Then seeing the Giant was busily knocking some emeralds out of the rock
-without taking any notice of what she said, “Oh, I hate the horrid
-place; I wish I was back in bed!” she went on crossly, just to see
-whether he’d answer that or not, and throwing her pickaxe down with a
-crash....
-
-“But you _are_, Miss Peggy,” said Nurse’s voice soothingly, and Peggy
-found herself once more in the nursery, with the blankets and sheets
-all tumbling off in a most uncomfortable way. “There, that’s better!
-Now you must try and go to sleep again. The hot-water bottle’s just
-tumbled out. I expect that’s what woke you.”
-
-“Why, Nannie, I didn’t _really_ mean to come back so soon!” said Peggy.
-“I never thanked them for my nice time, or anything!”
-
-“You’ve been dreaming you were at the party next door,” said Nurse.
-“That’s because you heard the music, I expect. Now you mustn’t talk any
-longer. To-morrow night Mother will be home!”
-
-“Why, so she will! Good-night, Giant dear,” said Peggy, and turning
-over fell sound asleep at once.
-
-“She must be feverish, I’m afraid, yet she _looks_ quite well,” said
-Nurse rather uneasily, stealing softly from the room.
-
-And all night long on Peggy’s thumb the green stone winked and twinkled
-at the fire.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE LAST ADVENTURE
-
-
-“I wish it wasn’t such a wet day,” said Peggy, lying full length in the
-loft amongst the hay, and looking through the cobwebby little window at
-the driving rain.
-
-“Why, what does the rain matter?” asked the Giant, coming through the
-roof, and lying down in the hay, too, with both legs dangling out of
-the trap-door. And the sunshine poured through the hole he had made,
-and a big patch of blue sky gleamed above it.
-
-“Oh dear!” said Peggy, “I never noticed I had the Ring on! What waste
-of a wish! The garden boy said it was going to clear in half an hour
-anyway. Nannie thinks I’m in the garden,” she went on, “but I ran up
-here out of the rain. Hadn’t we better go out again now it’s stopped?”
-
-“Oh, _do_ let’s stop here for a bit,” said the Giant. “I’m so stiff
-from yesterday’s digging. I stayed on and did a lot after you’d gone.
-Look here,” and he pulled handfuls of glittering red and green stones
-out of his pocket.
-
-“I didn’t mean to go off suddenly like that,” said Peggy rather
-shamefacedly. “I hope you thanked the Pixies for us both?”
-
-“Oh yes, that was all right,” said the Giant, scooping together all
-the hay within reach and making it into a pillow for his head. “By the
-way,” he went on lazily, staring up at the dusty beams, “do you realise
-this is our last adventure?”
-
-“Why, so it is!” said Peggy with a gasp. “Oh, how _awful_! I can’t bear
-to think I shan’t see you again,” and she caught hold of the Giant’s
-little finger and hugged it hard. “What _shall_ I do without you?”
-
-“Well, you must think of something very exciting indeed for our last
-day,” said the Giant. “And don’t go wasting wishes like you’ve been
-doing lately. It spoils all the fun.”
-
-“The thing that puzzles me,” said Peggy, looking at her Ring as it
-gleamed and sparkled in that dark place, “is how much the Ring does,
-and how much you do? And why sometimes it doesn’t work till it’s
-turned, and why you can’t always bring me back without my having to use
-up a wish, and where you live when you’re not here, and----”
-
-“Well, of all the inquisitive children you absolutely take the cake!”
-said the Giant. “I don’t think I’ve been asked so many questions for
-the last five hundred years at least. I haven’t the slightest intention
-of answering one of them. Instead of being grateful for having so many
-wishes at a time, you begin grumbling----”
-
-“O Giant, darling, I didn’t _mean_ to grumble!” cried Peggy. “I was
-only _wondering_. But I won’t ask any more questions, I promise you,
-if you’ll only think of some lovely exciting adventure for to-day. You
-think of such _beautiful_ things always,” she added.
-
-“Oh, that’s all very well!” said the Giant, but his voice sounded
-rather pleased. “Well now, let me see. This takes some thinking. What
-_was_ it that that child and I did in 1350 or thereabouts? Oh yes, I
-remember. She wished all her toys to come alive. How would you like
-that?”
-
-“_Perhaps_ it would be rather fun,” said Peggy--and she wished it, but
-in rather a doubtful voice. “You’re sure it will be really exciting?”
-she asked....
-
-“Listen to all that trampling,” said the Giant in reply, nibbling at a
-straw and blinking at the rafters.
-
-Peggy raced to the loft door and looked down into the yard below, where
-an extraordinary sight met her eyes. For the whole place had suddenly
-become packed from end to end with every kind of animal, bird and
-insect, all rushing to and fro in the greatest state of excitement.
-
-“Oh, _do_ look down!” Peggy implored the Giant. “Where _can_ they all
-have come from? There’s a camel, I’m sure. Oh, and there’s a lion going
-right off into the rose bed! What _will_ John say? And there’s a funny
-old man in a long coat running about amongst them all! Who _can_ he be?”
-
-“Noah,” answered the Giant, “and it’s all the animals from your Noah’s
-Ark, of course. My word, you’ll have a lively time getting ’em in
-again! You’d better go down, I think.”
-
-Peggy ran down the steps, and Noah at once bustled up to her in a great
-state of mind.
-
-“This coat of mine hampers me dreadfully,” he panted. “Do you think you
-could restore any kind of order? The tigers have got into the kitchen
-garden, and a dromedary and one, if not _both_, the leopards, have gone
-down the high road towards the village!”
-
-“Giant, Giant, come and help!” shouted Peggy, and the next moment the
-Giant was standing by her side, shaking pieces of hay off himself,
-which the few remaining animals immediately ate.
-
-“He wants us to drive them up into the nursery again,” said Peggy. “You
-go that way,” and she pointed through the open gate into the kitchen
-garden, “and I’ll go round the house and get them out of the flower
-beds. And you,” to Noah, “run down the road after them!”
-
-“Chuck, chuck, chuck,” she went on to a pair of red storks strutting
-to and fro in the perennial border, but they simply flew on to the top
-of the house and stared down at her; whilst an elephant, standing in
-the asparagus bed on the other side of the garden wall, chose at that
-moment to trumpet loudly, and nearly startled Peggy out of her wits.
-
-“I don’t know how we’re to manage it!” she said at last to Noah, who
-reappeared driving a bright blue pig and a dromedary up the road. “It’s
-_no_ fun, is it? I only wish we could all go for a ride or something
-exciting! How about that animal there?” and she pointed at a Giraffe
-engaged at the moment in licking a red creeper off one side of the
-house....
-
-“Hold me tight!” said Noah very nervously, as they all three found
-themselves on the Giraffe’s back and going at a brisk trot down the
-back drive. “_Do_ hold me tight! I haven’t ridden for years.”
-
-“How lovely this is!” said Peggy, taking a firmer grip of Noah, who sat
-in front, and looking back at the Giant. “Are you all right?” she asked.
-
-“At present I am,” he answered carefully, “though I really ought to
-have been in front for the weight, I suppose. Hulloa! What’s he doing
-now?”
-
-For the Giraffe had no sooner turned into the high road than he began
-to proceed in a series of jumps, all four feet pressed close together,
-and rising a good deal higher than the hedges at each effort.
-
-“Tell him to _stop_, Noah!” gasped Peggy. “You’re in front. Hurry up!
-I’m shaken to bits.”
-
-“It’s no good,” moaned Noah. “I have, and he won’t listen. Oh, if we
-only had some reins!”
-
-“You must _wish_ him to go slower,” said the Giant to Peggy in a faint
-voice. “I shall die if this goes on! It’s all your fault for saying
-‘or something exciting’ after your wish. I forgot to tell you how very
-risky that was. Ah, thank you! That’s better,” for Peggy had wished,
-and the Giraffe at once quieted down into a walk--in fact into such a
-slow walk that it almost might have been called standing still.
-
-“Get on!” said Peggy, digging her heels into the Giraffe’s back--but he
-went slower and slower still.
-
-“Oh dear, you’ll have to get off and push, I’m afraid,” she said to the
-Giant. “We shall never get anywhere at all if you don’t. I’m not going
-to waste another wish on the horrid old thing!”
-
-“All right,” said the Giant, getting off--but the more he pushed the
-slower the Giraffe went.
-
-“Why, here we are at the village!” cried Peggy, as after half an
-hour’s steady pushing they turned a corner and saw a row of cottages
-stretching down the road on either side. “Now get on again,” she said
-to the hot and tired Giant, “and we’ll ride grandly down to the shop
-and buy a pennyworth of sweets!”
-
-“Who’s to buy them?” asked the Giant, wearily settling himself on the
-Giraffe’s back again (it was quite easy to get on and off because the
-creature really went so very slowly). “_I_ can’t. I only frighten
-people.”
-
-“Noah will--won’t you, Noah?” asked Peggy coaxingly. “_I_ can’t,
-because I’ve no pennies left at all!”
-
-“But I haven’t a farthing on me either,” said Noah uncomfortably.
-
-“Oh, never mind, have it entered!” said Peggy, pushing him off the
-Giraffe’s back. “Run along; we shan’t move far from here before you
-come back--and get acid drops if you can,” she added.
-
-Noah obediently crossed the road and walked into the shop; and about
-one minute afterwards he reappeared, bearing two enormous bottles of
-pear-drops under each arm.
-
-“Gracious me!” cried Peggy, jumping off the Giraffe, and followed by
-the Giant. “How quick you’ve been! And that’s not a pennyworth!”
-
-“I know it isn’t,” said Noah. “But the woman _made_ me take them. I
-asked her quite politely for a pennyworth, but instead of weighing
-them out like anyone else would, she fell down behind the counter and
-screamed, ‘Take anything you like, only go away!’ So I did. I chose
-_all_ pear-drops because they’re my favourite sweets,” he added simply,
-putting two into his mouth at once.
-
-“Oh you greedy!” cried Peggy. “Give us some at once! I’m very glad
-nobody sees us,” she added, looking anxiously up and down the village
-street; “they’d never believe the woman really _gave_ them to you.”
-
-And at that moment a perfect shout of delight rose up in the road
-behind them, and Peggy, turning hastily round, saw a troup of Toys
-rushing towards them!
-
-There were all the dolls she had ever had, all the people in every
-Fairybook she had ever looked at, and all her wooden carts and horses.
-There were all her Golliwogs and Teddy-bears, all the Ark animals
-again, all the rest of Noah’s family (who had been lost for years),
-all the dolls’ tea-sets, and even the big dolls’ house, and the
-rocking-horse, and all the balls and tops, and ninepins, and whips, and
-whistles, in fact every single thing that had ever lived in the Toy
-Cupboard in the Nursery.
-
-“Found at last!” they screamed, dancing and leaping round Peggy. “Now
-let’s play a game. _You_ choose!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-THE NICEST WISH OF ALL
-
-
-As the Toys crowded round, filling the village street from end to
-end, Peggy could tell in a moment that they were ready for any fun or
-mischief she could possibly wish for; and her spirits rose higher and
-higher. She threw all the pear-drops amongst them, and whilst they were
-scrambling about picking them up--“I know!” she cried, as a lovely
-thought struck her. “I wish that the village was our very own, and that
-the Giant and I were King and Queen, with the shop for our palace!”
-
-“Hurrah!” shouted all the Toys. “Let’s turn the people out now!” and
-the Dolls and Golliwogs leading the way, they rushed up to the doors of
-the cottages, and banged on them with all their might.
-
-[Illustration: This is the way they rode through the Village in the
-Sixth Adventure, and Peggy was very sorry there were not more people
-looking out to see them. She is just asking Noah to get down and buy
-a pennyworth of sweets. The girl with the fat face in the bedroom
-window was the shopwoman’s daughter. She ran down the stairs and out
-of the back door as fast as she could tear. You can see how slowly the
-Giraffe was walking. Afterwards he played about just like all the other
-Animals. The Giant was making that funny face because he felt shy. This
-was the best Adventure.]
-
-“You mustn’t be rude to the people, remember!” cried Peggy. “Just ask
-them to lend us the village for a little while, and we promise not to
-hurt it. I expect they’ll understand.”
-
-Whether they did or not Peggy never found out, for after one glance out
-of their windows, the people snatched up their babies, and, screaming
-to the rest of their children to follow, they rushed out of the back
-doors and down the fields and away over the hills as fast as their legs
-could carry them. Peggy tried shouting to them that it was all right,
-and that no one would hurt them, and the lions and tigers were very
-anxious to run after them, and _make_ them see how silly they were; but
-everyone else thought it better to begin playing at once, before the
-men came back from work.
-
-Peggy and the Giant--who suddenly noticed that they were wearing
-beautiful scarlet robes, and had heavy gold crowns on their heads--went
-behind the counter in the little shop, and sold sweets to every Toy who
-came to buy. And it was all more fun than words can say, especially
-when the dolls, who wanted to play at housekeeping, came crowding in
-asking for flour and sugar and rice and all sorts of things.
-
-The Giant, quite doubled up in such a small space, handed down the jars
-and tins to Peggy, and she measured out all the things very carefully,
-and put them into paper bags; whilst Noah and his family busied
-themselves with getting tea ready in the back room.
-
-Outside, the Golliwogs and Teddy-bears, shouting and hallooing, led the
-Ark animals to the pond to drink, or shut them up in the fields, or
-harnessed them to the carts they found, and drove them to market--and
-of course the animals simply _loved_ it.
-
-The rocking-horse got off his rockers, and was put in a real stable,
-and given real hay to eat; and the dolls’ house was put alongside a
-real house and had a creeper trained up it, and instead of the whole
-of the front wall having to be undone before people could get in, the
-little brown door opened and shut just like one in a real house does.
-
-As for the tops and ninepins, dominoes and other small fry, they just
-spun and hopped up and down the road and in and out of the houses, not
-really playing at anything, but enjoying it all as much as anyone. And
-the pictures in the story-books took no notice of anybody, but went
-for long walks in the woods, with their arms round each other’s necks,
-gossiping.
-
-It really was the best adventure of the lot, Peggy and the Giant
-agreed, as they sat by their door that afternoon, the Giant smoking and
-reading a newspaper, and Peggy looking down the busy village street.
-None of the villagers came back at all, and it really felt as if the
-whole place was their very own.
-
-“Even that pump looks exciting, because it’s _ours_,” said Peggy, “and
-if only Mother was home again everything would be _perfect_, wouldn’t
-it?”
-
-“Well, why don’t you _wish_ she was coming?” said the Giant. “You’ve
-got one more wish left still, and she’ll see you get home without any
-help from me or the Ring either!”
-
-Peggy jumped to her feet and ran down the road. Why _hadn’t_ she
-thought of it before? Round the corner she tore, away from everyone’s
-sight, even the Giant’s, her heart beating fast. Then--“I wish Mummie
-was coming now!” she said--and at once a little tiny speck appeared
-far, far away on the white road....
-
-And of course the speck turned into a motor, and of course Mother was
-inside it.--And directly _that_ happened, the Ring flew right off
-Peggy’s thumb and completely disappeared--goodness knows where.
-
-“And did you come to meet me!” said Mother, jumping out of the motor
-and kissing Peggy dozens and dozens of times. “You _are_ a nice Pegtop!
-Weren’t you frightened all by yourself on the road?”
-
-“O Mummie, this is _much_ the nicest wish of all,” gasped Peggy, as
-Mother jumped in again with her in her arms, and they whizzed along
-down the road. “Why!” as they passed through the village, “the Toys are
-all gone and so is the Giant!”
-
-“You’ve not answered my question yet, my Peggums,” said Mother,
-pressing her closer.
-
-“Of course I wasn’t frightened, Mummie!” said Peggy, burying her nose
-in the bunch of violets pinned to Mother’s coat. “You see, I had my
-Giant with me.”
-
-“Oh, had you?” said Mother, not looking at all surprised. “Then
-_that’s_ all right! Good old Giant!” she added softly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“It’s all perfectly _lovely_,” said Mother, that evening after tea,
-when Peggy had finished telling her all the adventures from beginning
-to end. “And I’m going to write them down for a book. It would be a
-thousand pities if the Ring went to another little girl and she didn’t
-know about putting it on her thumb. Think of the waste!”
-
-“Yes, and it’s so bad for the Giant, too,” said Peggy thoughtfully.
-“I mean, him not being _used_ oftener. You see what mistakes he made
-sometimes, darling old thing! I do think the book is a _splendid_ plan,
-Mummie,” and she began to dance round and round the room.
-
-“And you shall do the pictures for it!” said Mother, dancing round the
-room too. (She was _that_ sort of Mother.)
-
-“Oh, _do_ you think I could?” asked Peggy, stopping short.
-
-“Of course you could,” said Mother. “Why, you were there, and know
-exactly what everything looked like. And I’ll help a little when you
-want me. Let’s do a bit every day after tea till it’s done,” and she
-rolled Peggy on the floor and hugged her.
-
-And so they did.
-
-
-_Printed in Great Britain by M‘Farlane & Erskine, Edinburgh_
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-
- Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
- Underlined text is surrounded by equals signs: =underline=.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Peggy's Giant, by M. D. Hillyard
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-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Peggy's Giant, by M. D. Hillyard
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Peggy's Giant
-
-Author: M. D. Hillyard
-
-Illustrator: Peggy
-
-Release Date: October 12, 2019 [EBook #60475]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEGGY'S GIANT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Juliet Sutherland, David E. Brown, and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_0" id="Page_0"></a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus001.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-
-<p class="caption">This is Peggy&#8217;s own drawing of what happened in the first
-Adventure of the Ring. Everyone is very frightened in it.
-Nurse has just sat down on seeing the Giant, and has
-dropped Peggy&#8217;s brown holland frock behind her.<br />
-
-Peggy drew the frock very carefully, spreading it out
-flat on the floor to get it exactly right. Mother helped her
-with the Giant&#8217;s knee, and with the table. All the rest she
-did herself. She knows Nurse is too small, but she was too
-busy getting her surprised enough to remember to make
-her bigger. Peggy is behind the Giant wondering what
-to say. The little round things near the Giant&#8217;s foot are
-the broken bits of the cup and saucer, and the black
-dots are the currants in the cake. The curls in the Giant&#8217;s
-beard were the most fun to do.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<h1><span class="smcap">Peggy&#8217;s Giant</span></h1>
-
-<p><small>BY</small><br />
-<span class="xlarge">M. D. HILLYARD</span></p>
-
-<p><small>WITH SEVEN FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS IN COLOUR<br />
-DRAWN BY PEGGY</small></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus002.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p><span class="large">A. &amp; C. BLACK, LTD.</span><br />
-4, 5 &amp; 6 SOHO SQUARE, LONDON, W.1<br />
-1920</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="center">TO<br />
-<span class="large">PEGGY</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2></div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-
-
-<tr><td class="tdr"><small>CHAP.</small></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">I.</td><td><span class="smcap">What Peggy Found</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">II.</td><td><span class="smcap">Disappearing</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_9">9</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">III.</td><td><span class="smcap">A Daisy Field</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_15">15</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IV.</td><td><span class="smcap">The Sleepy Giant</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_19">19</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">V.</td><td><span class="smcap">Sweets and Fairies</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_22">22</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VI.</td><td><span class="smcap">Fe-Fo-Fum!</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_28">28</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VII.</td><td><span class="smcap">Peggy Drives a Car</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_35">35</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VIII.</td><td><span class="smcap">The Mayor&#8217;s Outing</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IX.</td><td><span class="smcap">Down!</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">X.</td><td><span class="smcap">Pixie Games</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XI.</td><td><span class="smcap">The Last Adventure</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_54">54</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XII.</td><td><span class="smcap">The Nicest Wish of All</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_60">60</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS<br />
-IN COLOUR</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><b>BY PEGGY</b></p>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">What happened in the First Adventure of the Ring</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_0"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Second Adventure</span></td><td class="tdr"><i>Facing page</i> <a href="#Page_20">20</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">What the Dragon looked like when Nurse said &#8220;You wouldn&#8217;t dare!&#8221;</span></td><td class="tdr"><span class="gap">&#8221;</span> <a href="#Page_32"> 32</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Peggy just telling the Mayor that they&#8217;ve stuck</span></td><td class="tdr"><span class="gap">&#8221;</span><a href="#Page_40"> 40</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Peggy and the Giant going down</span></td><td class="tdr"><span class="gap">&#8221;</span><a href="#Page_46"> 46</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Giant and Peggy among the Pixies</span></td><td class="tdr"><span class="gap">&#8221;</span><a href="#Page_50"> 50</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Riding through the Village in the Sixth Adventure</span></td><td class="tdr"><span class="gap">&#8221;</span><a href="#Page_60"> 60</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="ph1">PEGGY&#8217;S GIANT</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-<small>WHAT PEGGY FOUND</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">&#8220;It</span> rattles!&#8221; said Peggy, shaking the last cracker, and
-looking up at Nurse.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, pull it now, there&#8217;s a dear,&#8221; said Nurse, &#8220;and let
-me clear up this litter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy had just finished her birthday tea up in the
-nursery alone with Nurse, as Mother was away. Of course
-it hadn&#8217;t been nearly so exciting as her last birthday tea&mdash;the
-only one she could remember&mdash;which had been downstairs
-with lots of other little girls and boys, who had all come to
-see Peggy. They hadn&#8217;t talked to her or to each other
-much, but had eaten lots of birthday cake, and Peggy had
-been taken up to bed before the last of them left, because
-she had had such a long and exciting birthday.</p>
-
-<p>This year the only children who could come had
-suddenly started whooping-cough, and so there was no party
-at all. Still it was better than the usual dull nursery tea,
-for Mother had left a lot of crackers with Nurse for Peggy;
-and Cook had remembered to put six new candles on the
-new sponge cake, and they had all been lighted, and were
-doing their very best to look brighter than the sunshine
-pouring in through the nursery windows.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do guess what&#8217;s inside first, Nannie,&#8221; said Peggy,
-shaking the cracker again. &#8220;<i>I</i> guess it&#8217;s a little tiny cup
-and saucer for my doll&#8217;s house. Now, <i>you</i> guess.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>&#8220;Oh, <i>I</i> don&#8217;t know&mdash;a whistle,&#8221; said Nannie, beginning
-to clear up the pieces of brightly-coloured paper that covered
-the table-cloth and floor, and that really looked a great deal
-too pretty to burn. &#8220;That&#8217;s generally what it is. But
-what&#8217;s the good of guessing when you&#8217;ll know in a minute?
-Come along and pull, I&#8217;m waiting.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy shut her eyes, and putting one hand over her ear&mdash;she
-was always uncomfortably startled by the bang&mdash;pulled
-hard with the other.</p>
-
-<p>The thing inside immediately flew through the air, and
-rolled away under the toy cupboard. And Peggy followed
-as far as she could, lying flat on the floor and peering
-under. Then&mdash;&#8220;O Nannie, it sparkles!&#8221; she cried
-excitedly. &#8220;I do believe it&#8217;s a <i>beautiful</i> ring! I can see
-it quite plainly. Yes, it <i>is</i>. It&#8217;s a gold ring with a great
-big green stone in it! There, I&#8217;ve got it! O Nannie,
-look how it sparkles!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A bit of tin and glass,&#8221; said Nurse examining it and
-dropping it on the table. &#8220;What they want to put such
-rubbish in for passes <i>my</i> understanding! You can&#8217;t play
-with it, and it&#8217;ll only get left about. Now come and look at
-the paper blazing,&#8221; and she swept all the ends of the crackers
-into the fire.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy was terrified that her ring would follow too, and
-she began in a great hurry to put it on all her fingers in turn
-to see which it would fit.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It won&#8217;t fit any of them except my fum,&#8221; she remarked.
-&#8220;But just look how <i>well</i> it fits my fum!&#8221; and she waved her
-left hand to and fro proudly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can&#8217;t wear a ring at <i>your</i> age,&#8221; said Nurse
-decidedly, &#8220;and no one ever wears them on their thumbs,
-as you very well know. Oh dear, your hair ribbon&#8217;s coming
-right off, as usual! Come here whilst I tie it on again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>&#8220;Just look how it sparkles!&#8221; repeated Peggy, stroking
-the green stone admiringly. And it certainly did. A bright
-green light spread from it all over that part of the nursery,
-just like the light in a beech wood in spring, when the sun
-is shining through the leaves; and it coloured and played
-over Nurse&#8217;s face and the cupboard and the roses on the
-wall-paper. &#8220;<i>Do</i> look, Nannie,&#8221; cried the child, &#8220;now the
-fireplace is green!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very pretty,&#8221; said Nurse absentmindedly, not looking
-up as she brushed Peggy&#8217;s curls. &#8220;What a tangle your
-hair&#8217;s in, to be sure! Now I think I&#8217;ll take off this clean
-frock and put on your brown holland so that you can have a
-good game with all your toys out at once, as it&#8217;s your
-birthday.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Aren&#8217;t you going to play with me, too?&#8221; asked Peggy
-rather wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t,&#8221; said Nurse. &#8220;I&#8217;ve some letters to write, and
-post goes in half an hour&mdash;when it&#8217;ll be your bedtime.
-Grown-ups can&#8217;t spend <i>all</i> their time playing with little girls,
-you know. Here, slip your frock off and stay by the
-fire, whilst I fetch in your other,&#8221; and she bustled off into
-the night-nursery.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish I was grown up,&#8221; said Peggy, twirling the ring
-round and round her thumb and staring into the fire.
-&#8220;Then I should drink strong tea, and eat birthday cake
-downstairs every day if I liked, and wear grand hats with
-fevvers in them!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m ready whenever you are,&#8221; said a voice behind her.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy turned round quickly, and then nearly jumped
-out of her skin with astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>For behind her, on the other side of the table, stood a
-Giant!</p>
-
-<p>Peggy knew in a moment that he <i>was</i> a real Giant,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-because he was the living image of the one on page 375 of the
-Blue Fairy Book, but instead of looking cross like that one
-does, he had a nice wide smile, and the kindest round
-twinkly blue eyes Peggy had ever seen. He was dressed all in
-brown, with bright scarlet stockings, his hair was thick and
-long, and so was his beard, and the nursery was so much too
-low for him that he had to bend nearly double, his great
-shoulders sending a cloud of plaster off the ceiling every
-time he moved. In one huge hand he held a cup of very
-black-looking tea, and in the other a bit of birthday cake
-with sugar on it and almond paste and little silver beads.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You <i>are</i> a tall kind!&#8221; gasped Peggy, staring up at him.
-&#8220;I&mdash;I don&#8217;t think Nannie will be at all pleased!&#8221; and she
-glanced fearfully through the half-open door into the night-nursery.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know, that&#8217;s why I spoke,&#8221; said the Giant, sitting
-down on the floor and stretching himself&mdash;one foot went
-right out of the window in the process, and the other up the
-chimney, but he looked much more comfortable. The cup of
-tea and the cake he put carefully down by his side. &#8220;You
-rubbed the ring and wished, you know. How do you like
-your dress?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy looked down at herself and discovered she was
-wearing a striped white and yellow silk gown falling in
-heavy folds to the ground, and very high-waisted. On her
-arm was hanging, by its ribbon, a large white poke-bonnet,
-wreathed entirely around with a curling yellow feather.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What <i>are</i> these things?&#8221; she asked in bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, you wished to be grown up, didn&#8217;t you?&#8221; said the
-Giant. &#8220;And you <i>are</i>. Or, at least, that&#8217;s the best I can do
-for you. But I&#8217;m a bit out of practice I know,&#8221; and he
-gazed with a rather disheartened air at the bonnet.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know what Nannie will say,&#8221; said Peggy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-uneasily. (She hadn&#8217;t the heart to tell the Giant that
-he hadn&#8217;t made her in the least the kind of grown-up she
-wanted to be.) &#8220;She <i>never</i> likes me dressing up!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well then, wish about it,&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;Say, &#8216;I
-wish Nurse to stay away half an hour.&#8217; Hurry up, she&#8217;s
-coming.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish Nurse to stay away half an hour,&#8221; said Peggy
-obediently. &#8220;But what&#8217;s the good of that?&#8221; she added.
-&#8220;Here she is,&#8221; and so she was.</p>
-
-<p>She came through the door hurriedly, with the frock in
-her hand, and when she saw the Giant she jumped right up
-high into the air, and then she sat down on the floor with a
-flop.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Who</i> is this, Miss Peggy?&#8221; she asked in an awful voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dear me!&#8221; said the Giant, struggling to his feet and
-knocking over the Rocking-Horse and three chairs in his
-hurry. &#8220;What <i>can</i> have gone wrong? The spells don&#8217;t
-work as they used to!&#8221; He looked at Nurse nervously;
-then&mdash;&#8220;You must stick to me,&#8221; he whispered hoarsely to
-Peggy, stepping back on the cup and saucer and grinding
-them to powder with his heel.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<small>DISAPPEARING</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">&#8220;He&#8217;s</span>&mdash;he&#8217;s a friend of mine!&#8221; said Peggy bravely. She
-suddenly felt very sorry for the Giant, for though he was so
-extremely big he seemed somehow now just like a helpless
-baby. &#8220;He&#8217;s come to tea, Nannie, because it&#8217;s my birfday.&#8221;
-(Peggy still talked baby language when she got excited.)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-&#8220;And he&#8217;s brought a lovely bit of cake like you said people
-had before the War,&#8221; she went on, pressing the ring tightly,
-and wondering when Nurse <i>would</i> speak. But the
-unfortunate woman continued to sit on the floor, glaring
-wildly at the Giant, and opening and shutting her mouth
-without a sound coming out of it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear, <i>I wish</i> something would happen,&#8221; at last came
-from Peggy desperately.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner were the words out of her mouth than she
-felt the Giant tuck her under his arm and walk straight out
-of the window with her!</p>
-
-<p>They went right over the garden and fields, the Giant
-striding along through the air with the greatest ease, and
-at such a pace that often the birds they met had no time to
-fly out of their way, and flew full tilt against them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Phew! that <i>was</i> a narrow shave!&#8221; said the Giant,
-stepping down at last into the middle of a great wood. He
-put Peggy down on some soft green moss, and leant against
-an oak tree, panting. &#8220;And after all, we left the tea and cake
-behind!&#8221; he added.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy looked up at him. His head was right up above
-the branches, but she could see his long brown beard among
-the twigs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You squashed them both with your foot,&#8221; she said
-plaintively. &#8220;And I don&#8217;t understand <i>anyfing</i>! Why did
-you come at all? Though I like you very much,&#8221; she continued
-quickly. And indeed she had, from the very first moment.
-For he had such a kind face&mdash;though it was not what you
-would call a clever one exactly&mdash;and he was so different
-from every one else, and looked as though he would play
-games nicely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I came because you wished,&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;That&#8217;s
-a Fairy Ring, that is. But it&#8217;s not once in a hundred years<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-any children find it&mdash;or, when they do, think of putting it on
-their thumb and wishing. By the way, where was it this
-time?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In a cracker,&#8221; said Peggy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah, I know those crackers,&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;One
-Fairy one to ten million common ones is the average. Let
-me congratulate you! You&#8217;ll be allowed six visits from me,
-and six wishes each time, before the Ring disappears again.
-Very liberal, I call it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you mean you can let me have everything I wish
-for, like what happens in the Fairy stories?&#8221; asked Peggy
-in a state of great excitement, and she began to jump about in
-a very un-grown-up way. &#8220;Oh, I wish&mdash;I wish this tree was
-made of chocolate!&#8221; she screamed. (You must remember
-she was rather over-excited, as it was her birthday.)</p>
-
-<p>The Giant immediately handed her down a chocolate
-cream from one of the boughs; and Peggy noticed a bright
-shade of brown creeping all over the trunk and branches.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wish number three gone,&#8221; said the Giant with a sigh
-of relief. &#8220;Thank goodness, <i>that</i> wasn&#8217;t difficult. But I&#8217;m
-sorry to tell you I&#8217;ve grown rusty, very rusty indeed! It&#8217;s
-so many years since I&#8217;ve had anything of this sort to do, that
-I&#8217;ve forgotten how to manage the simplest things.&#8221; He sighed
-deeply till the branches clashed together over Peggy&#8217;s head.
-&#8220;I can see by your eye,&#8221; he went on gloomily, &#8220;that there&#8217;s
-something not quite up to date enough about your dress.
-And you must have noticed in the nursery that I&#8217;d quite
-forgotten how to disappear quickly. I shall lose my nerve
-at this rate, I know I shall!&#8221; and a large tear dropped
-at Peggy&#8217;s feet.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no, you won&#8217;t!&#8221; said Peggy, putting her arms as far
-round one of his ankles as they would go, and hugging it.
-(The chocolate cream had been delicious, and she was in very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-good spirits.) &#8220;I&#8217;d have hated you to disappear without me
-just now! Nannie would have been angry <i>anyhow</i> at my
-dress&mdash;and you managed beautifully after! But you shall
-practise disappearing now if you want to. We&#8217;ve lots of
-time, haven&#8217;t we? Go on. Try.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>So the Giant tried and tried&mdash;and then he rested&mdash;and
-then he tried and tried again, but it wasn&#8217;t the slightest
-good; he remained just as big and brown and <i>there</i> as ever.
-At last, with a stupendous effort, he almost succeeded, though
-he still showed a bit where the sun shone down against the
-trunk, whilst one of his huge boots remained quite visible,
-standing forlornly on the grass beside Peggy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s no good,&#8221; he remarked, reappearing again with
-startling suddenness. &#8220;<i>There</i>, I&#8217;m back again, you see, and I
-didn&#8217;t mean to be. <i>Do</i> use one of your wishes on it! Perhaps
-if I&#8217;d only disappeared once in the proper way, I should
-get into the hang of it all again. You&#8217;d better turn the
-Ring besides wishing, to make it more certain.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy did so, giving the Ring an extra turn in her
-zeal, and the Giant rolled completely up, and disappeared
-in a twinkling, to her great satisfaction. &#8220;That was
-<i>splendid</i>!&#8221; she cried. &#8220;You see it was quite easy! Now
-come back and do it again by yourself&#8221;&mdash;but the Giant
-didn&#8217;t answer at all.</p>
-
-<p>A little cold wind blew right through the wood and
-rustled all the chocolate oak leaves above Peggy&#8217;s head,
-and a squirrel up in the branches threw a chocolate cream
-down on her, and then another, and they both squashed on
-her striped silk dress. Peggy was not easily frightened,
-but it all felt very lonely and queer, particularly as she
-didn&#8217;t know in the least where she was. She jumped to
-her feet and began running about the wood, shouting for
-the Giant as loudly as she could.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>It was only when she had been doing this for quite
-a long time, and getting no answer at all, that she
-remembered that she had not wished or turned the Ring.
-She at once did both, and, &#8220;<i>Don&#8217;t</i> tread on me for goodness&#8217;
-sake!&#8221; said a squeaky voice near her foot.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy looked down, and there amongst the leaves
-stood a tiny little figure reaching no higher than her instep.
-It was only when she had picked him up and peered closely
-into his face that she recognised the features of the Giant,
-distorted with rage.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear,&#8221; she cried, &#8220;what <i>has</i> happened?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You should learn to manage your Ring better, before
-you treat me like this!&#8221; said the tiny Giant in an
-exceedingly cross voice. &#8220;Put me on a blade of grass at
-once, please,&mdash;thank you. I don&#8217;t like being held round
-the middle like that. Why did you turn the Ring more than
-once? I&#8217;ve never disappeared so uncomfortably fast before.
-And now look at the size I am! This is all I can manage
-after such a shock!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, it&#8217;s not my fault,&#8221; said Peggy with some spirit.
-&#8220;You ought to know the Ring better than I do. I only did
-what you told me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have got a broad outline of how the thing should be
-run,&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;But I can&#8217;t fill in the details. You
-will have to learn by experience, I suppose.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What grand words you use,&#8221; said Peggy respectfully,
-but the Giant didn&#8217;t look mollified at all.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now we&#8217;ve used up the five wishes (not counting the
-failure) so you&#8217;d better wish yourself back in the nursery,&#8221;
-he said. &#8220;I don&#8217;t see that you&#8217;ve had much fun, and I
-know I haven&#8217;t. Goodness knows how I shall get back to <i>my</i>
-house!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, but I want to do lots more,&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-haven&#8217;t played at being grown up at all yet, and I haven&#8217;t
-had any more chocolates!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never mind, there&#8217;s no time left&mdash;wish yourself home,&#8221;
-said the Giant. &#8220;Quick, now!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He sounded so like Nurse at her crossest that Peggy
-hurriedly obeyed,&mdash;and the next instant she found herself
-standing alone in the nursery in her petticoat, and in the
-act of putting her ring into the toy cupboard.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must be cold!&#8221; said Nurse, coming in. &#8220;I thought
-I&#8217;d never find your old frock, and leaning over the drawer
-made me feel quite faint-like! There! now have a nice
-game with your dolls,&#8221; and she bustled over to draw the
-curtain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All the same I wish he hadn&#8217;t seemed so cross,&#8221; said
-Peggy to her Golliwog. &#8220;The only really nice part was the
-chocolate cream.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What <i>are</i> you grumbling about?&#8221; asked Nurse. &#8220;A
-chocolate cream, indeed, at this time of night! I think, if
-you ask me, that it&#8217;s time all little girls were in bed!&#8221; (She
-was <i>that</i> sort of Nurse.)</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; said Peggy, jumping up at once. She even
-began to unbutton her frock and pull off her hair ribbon to
-Nurse&#8217;s great surprise; who, of course, couldn&#8217;t know that
-all Peggy wanted was for the next day to come quickly, so
-that she could see the Giant again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll really find out the right way to manage the
-wishing to-morrow,&#8221; she thought as she cuddled down into
-bed. &#8220;It isn&#8217;t the dear old Giant&#8217;s fault if he&#8217;s forgotten
-things a little bit. It was really very clever of him to think
-of that dress at all! It&#8217;s the sort great-great-grandmother
-is wearing in the picture in the hall. Perhaps she was one
-of the little girls he played with. Fancy him remembering
-all that time ago, clever old thing!&#8221; She turned her head<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-and stared up at the ceiling, all golden with the firelight,
-and crossed with black crinkly bars from the reflection of
-the guard. &#8220;All the same I wish he hadn&#8217;t looked so cross,&#8221;
-she murmured, as she fell asleep.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<small>A DAISY FIELD</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Peggy</span> sat curled up on the big window seat in the nursery
-reading <i>Mary&#8217;s Meadow</i>. At least, you couldn&#8217;t call it
-exactly reading, but mother had read out bits to her so often
-that she could remember most of them by heart.</p>
-
-<p>Nurse was down in the kitchen talking to Cook; and
-the rain was pelting against the window-panes and the
-wind was blowing the trees all sideways and flattening
-down the plants in the garden, and screaming round and
-round the house trying to get in and blow Peggy about too.</p>
-
-<p>Her little fat fingers moved along below the words as
-she read to herself in a slow whisper:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We went there for flow-ers; we went there for
-mush-rooms and puff-balls; we went there to hear the
-night-in-gale.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy stopped, and looked out at the driving rain with
-a little sigh. &#8220;I wish <i>I</i> had a meadow of my very own!&#8221;
-she thought. And then she suddenly saw a bright green
-light coming from the cupboard in front of her, and at
-the same moment the Ring flew right through the wooden
-door, and straight on to her thumb!</p>
-
-<p>Peggy gave a little shout of delight.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish I was in my meadow with my Giant,&#8221; she cried<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-as fast as she could, for she heard Nurse&#8217;s step on the stairs.
-&#8220;And picking daisies, please,&#8221; she added, turning the Ring
-round, and rubbing it too, so as to make quite certain lots
-would happen.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m perfectly delighted with this effect. My powers
-are returning, it seems!&#8221; said the Giant, speaking in his
-grandest though tiniest voice.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy rubbed her eyes and tried to open them wide,
-but the sunshine was so dazzling that for a few seconds
-she was quite blinded by it.</p>
-
-<p>Then she saw that she was in a great big green field,
-edged all round with a tall green hedge; and growing
-amongst the grass in the field were flowers, shaped like
-daisies of every kind and colour, big ones, little ones, tall
-ones, short ones, white, blue, pink, red, yellow, and purple
-ones, and even some of colours Peggy had only thought
-about sometimes but knew no name for. And the most
-lovely scent&mdash;a sort of mixture of honey and roses and
-pansies&mdash;came up from the whole field.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy sat down amongst the flowers, clapping her
-hands. This was something like a wish! But where was
-the Giant?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;May I <i>really</i> pick a bunch?&#8221; she asked, looking
-towards the place where she thought his voice had come
-from.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, only be very careful of me!&#8221; said the Giant, and
-Peggy felt something tickling her hand.</p>
-
-<p>She looked down and saw the Giant.</p>
-
-<p>He was still very tiny, and was balancing on the yellow
-centre of a scarlet daisy, and reaching up to prick her hand
-with a bit of tasselled grass. He had a most roguish and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-good-tempered expression on his little fat face, and the sun
-shone down on his curly beard till it made it look quite
-golden.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, what fun it must be to be small like that!&#8221; said
-Peggy, clasping her hands (she was so pleased to find the
-Giant wasn&#8217;t cross any longer). &#8220;I wish <i>I</i> could balance
-on a daisy too!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She at once found herself standing amongst some thick
-bristling yellow stalks, like corn, whilst all around her
-spread up curving blue walls, stretching, it seemed, right
-up to the blue sky.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s happened? Where am I?&#8221; she asked in a
-rather surprised voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Balancing on a blue daisy,&#8221; said the Giant, jumping
-into the yellow stalks by her side. And Peggy noticed
-that they were now both exactly the same height. &#8220;Look
-out! Hold on!&#8221; he added excitedly, catching her hand.
-&#8220;There&#8217;s a breeze passing over the flowers. We&#8217;re going
-swinging!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A great rustling sounded in the distance, which
-suddenly burst into a roar as a great wind swept
-by&mdash;and down they were flung on to the huge silky
-walls as the daisy bowed its head. Then with a
-tremendous jerk the flower righted itself, and sent them
-spinning off on to another daisy. This one shook its
-head and slid them on to another, and so on and on,
-half across the field, until at last, when they had learnt
-to balance, and were swinging dizzily to and fro on a
-large violet-coloured petal, the whole thing tilted more
-suddenly than usual, and shot them down on to the
-ground below.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, wasn&#8217;t it <i>lovely</i>!&#8221; cried Peggy, looking up through
-the dim light at the gigantic heads, still swaying to and fro<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-amongst the great blades of grass which looked as tall as
-trees. &#8220;What fun it is to be tiny like this!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m getting a bit tired of it,&#8221; said the Giant ruefully.
-He had knocked his knee on a little stone, and was sitting
-on the ground rubbing it. &#8220;You left me this size yesterday,
-you know&mdash;and I couldn&#8217;t remember the way to get back to
-my proper height! I think you&#8217;ll have to use up a wish on
-me now. After all, you&#8217;ve got four left still.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; said Peggy obediently. (Anything to keep
-the Giant in such a good temper.) &#8220;I wish you were as tall
-as you were before.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Giant immediately shot up right through the grass
-and flowers, and apparently disappeared, for Peggy found
-herself left by an enormous black rock which barred the
-way, and quite shut out all the light there was in that dark
-place. She at once began trying to climb it, so as to find her
-way back to the Giant, but she had no sooner scrambled up
-the first ledge, than a voice that filled the air like several
-claps of thunder all sounding at once, bawled out:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Get off my boot! I daren&#8217;t <i>move</i>. You can&#8217;t possibly
-stay as small as that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear, it&#8217;s you I&#8217;m on, is it?&#8221; exclaimed Peggy. &#8220;I
-quite forgot that I was left so tiny! Now I must use up
-another wish, I suppose. What dreadful waste!&#8221; And of
-course there was nothing for it but to do so, as you can&#8217;t
-possibly have any fun with someone a million times taller
-than yourself.</p>
-
-<p>The next moment she was sitting among the flowers,
-once more her proper size, with the Giant, once more <i>his</i>
-proper size too, standing by her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And <i>now</i>, may I begin to pick a bunch for Mummie?&#8221;
-she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly,&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;There&#8217;s no one to stop<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-you; they&#8217;re all your own.&#8221; He sat down on a hedge near
-by, which immediately sank with his weight, the trees that
-grew on it toppling down in all directions. &#8220;There, now
-I&#8217;m comfortable,&#8221; said he, &#8220;and I think I&#8217;ll have a nap. I
-never slept a wink last night.&#8221; And he lay down across
-what was left of the hedge, closed his eyes, and started
-snoring at once.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-<small>THE SLEEPY GIANT</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">&#8220;Poor</span> Giant,&#8221; said little Peggy, climbing up the hedge
-to look down at his round, good-tempered face, and wide-open
-mouth. &#8220;Sometimes he talks so grandly, but he&#8217;s not
-a bit grand really. I&#8217;ll let him stay asleep for a nice long
-time whilst I pick a huge, big bunch to send Mummie,&#8221; and
-she jumped down into the field again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve only two wishes left now,&#8221; she thought to herself,
-as she ran in and out amongst the daisies. &#8220;Or really only
-one that&#8217;s any good, for I suppose I must use the last to get
-me home. I really think,&#8221; she went on, as she sat down to
-tie a bit of grass round a bunch of scarlet daisies, &#8220;that the
-Giant ought to get me home himself without making me
-waste a wish on it! I&#8217;m sure that&#8217;s always done in books.
-I&#8217;ll speak to him about it when he wakes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The running about in the hot sun had made Peggy quite
-thirsty, and after some searching she found a dear little
-stream running right through the field, at which a lot of
-butterflies were drinking. It was a beautiful golden colour,
-and when she tasted it she found it was the most delicious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-lemonade, and it had crystallised rose leaves floating here and
-there upon it. The butterflies flew round her in hundreds
-and allowed her to stroke their soft red and blue and yellow
-wings, and when she suggested a game of hide-and-seek they
-were all delighted, and fluttered round in such quantities
-that she could scarcely breathe.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus022.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">This is the picture Peggy drew of the Second Adventure.
-It was a very difficult one to do. The Butterflies are just
-coming up in hundreds and hundreds to try and wake
-the Giant. Mother showed Peggy how to draw the butterflies,
-but she did nearly all the rest quite by herself. The
-Giant sometimes wore that red hat, and sometimes a green
-pointed one. The Butterflies and Daisies were the most fun
-to paint. I hope you see the Ring.</p>
-
-<p>It turned out a failure in the end, as not one butterfly
-could be induced to remain hidden long enough for the
-others to find him, but was always flitting in and out of
-his hiding-place, which, as everyone knows, completely
-spoils hide-and-seek.</p>
-
-<p>However, they had a lovely romp, and it was quite a
-pretty sight to see several hundreds of them chasing Peggy
-back to &#8220;Home&#8221; (which was the Giant&#8217;s boot) after she had
-hidden.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, do let&#8217;s wake the Giant!&#8221; said Peggy, as they
-stopped for breath, &#8220;and make him play too! I know he&#8217;d
-love it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They all gathered round the sleeping Giant, who
-was lying just as Peggy had left him, snoring loudly, with
-his head comfortably pillowed amongst the spreading roots
-of a fallen tree.</p>
-
-<p>But do you think they could wake him? Not they!</p>
-
-<p>Peggy climbed the hedge and tickled his face with a
-branch. Then she tried to shake his arm, but of course
-couldn&#8217;t move it at all. Then she begged the butterflies to
-help, and they all flew round him with a great swishing of
-wings, making as much noise as they possibly could;
-but still the Giant lay there snoring, for he was not
-used to being up a whole night long, and was very,
-very tired.</p>
-
-<p>A large blue and gold butterfly suggested pouring
-lemonade on to his face, and they fetched a good deal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-between them all, but that wasn&#8217;t the least good, and only
-slid on to his beard and made it very wet and sticky.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, what <i>am</i> I to do?&#8221; cried Peggy. &#8220;It&#8217;s not fair! I
-never heard of such a thing happening in any Fairy Book!
-Nannie always lifts me out of bed when I won&#8217;t wake up. I
-only wish she was here to do it to him!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And then she could have bitten her tongue out, for the
-butterflies suddenly wheeled round and flew away in a great
-cloud, and &#8220;He <i>is</i> a heavy weight, Miss Peggy,&#8221; said Nurse,
-appearing on the other side of the hedge, her face very red
-and hot. &#8220;But I&#8217;ll manage it in a moment. Now then, up
-with you! <i>There</i> he is, great heavy thing! He ought to
-be ashamed of himself, the big baby!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy felt dreadfully disappointed, and also rather
-angry, for though she didn&#8217;t mind getting annoyed with the
-Giant herself, it was a different thing hearing Nurse call
-him names. And now she&#8217;d wasted another wish entirely by
-accident, and must use her last up as quick as lightning, for
-Nurse was already beginning to look very puzzled and
-suspicious.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish we were back in the nursery,&#8221; she whispered
-to the Giant, who was sitting up on the hedge, rubbing his
-eyes and staring at Nurse.... &#8220;And I&#8217;m very, very angry
-with you!&#8221; she added, as she found herself on the nursery
-window-seat again. But she was only answered by a rattle
-of raindrops on the panes.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve dropped your nice book on the floor,&#8221; said
-Nurse, coming in with a pile of aired linen in her arms and
-a deep frown on her face. &#8220;You&#8217;ll have to go back to rag-books
-again if you serve <i>Mary&#8217;s Meadow</i> like that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear, I <i>quite</i> forgot the bunch of daisies!&#8221; said
-Peggy, aghast.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>&#8220;Now <i>what</i> daisies, Miss Peggy?&#8221; asked Nurse. &#8220;I can&#8217;t
-have you talking nonsense instead of attending to what I
-say. Pick that book up immediately. And you&#8217;ve got that
-Ring on your thumb again, I do declare! Mother wouldn&#8217;t
-like it at all, nasty common thing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, mayn&#8217;t I wear it <i>sometimes</i>, Nannie?&#8221; Peggy pleaded.
-&#8220;I <i>know</i> Mummie wouldn&#8217;t mind. She always lets me wear
-the bead necklaces I make.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No arguing!&#8221; said Nurse. &#8220;I&#8217;m going to put it in this
-cup on the bookshelf, and you can ask your mother when she
-comes back. Time enough to wear it then if she&#8217;ll let you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She <i>did</i> seem cross. No wonder, for, though she didn&#8217;t
-know it, she had just travelled very many million miles in
-about three seconds, and that&#8217;s very upsetting to the temper
-if you&#8217;re not used to it.</p>
-
-<p>And Peggy looked sadly at the cup, for it was far out
-of her reach even if she stood on a chair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I&#8217;d only had time to explain to the Giant!&#8221; she
-thought. &#8220;<i>He</i> couldn&#8217;t help sleeping so soundly, poor
-thing. Now perhaps I shall never see him again.&#8221; And
-she was very subdued indeed for the rest of the day.</p>
-
-<p>But she needn&#8217;t have worried. You see she kept on
-forgetting it was a <i>Fairy</i> Ring.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-<small>SWEETS AND FAIRIES</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">&#8220;And</span> if you don&#8217;t get muddy, but pick your way nicely,
-we&#8217;ll go to the village shop and buy a pennyworth of sweets,&#8221;
-said Nurse the next day, when they started out for their
-walk.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>&#8220;May I pick some primroses if I see them?&#8221; asked
-Peggy, dancing along.</p>
-
-<p>There never were any on the high road, where Nurse
-generally chose to walk, but still there was always the
-chance there <i>might</i> be one day, and it was well to get
-permission beforehand.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, if you like,&#8221; said Nurse absentmindedly. She
-was very busy trying to see into a cab that had just passed,
-and didn&#8217;t really hear. Not that it mattered. There never
-were any primroses.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s one&mdash;at least I <i>fink</i> there is!&#8221; said Peggy
-suddenly, when they had nearly reached the village. She
-stood on the edge of the ditch and peered up into the hedge.
-&#8220;Or is it a Fairy, perhaps? <i>Do</i> look, Nannie, it&#8217;s all white
-and shiny!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A Fairy indeed!&#8221; said Nurse, looking up too. &#8220;It&#8217;s
-an old bit of paper blown up there. Be careful, or you&#8217;ll be
-in the ditch!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But she was too late, for Peggy lost her balance&mdash;or the
-side of the ditch gave way&mdash;and the next moment the two
-little gaitered legs were half hidden in dark brown muddy
-water!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Very</i> good!&#8221; said Nurse in a terrible voice. Then
-she dragged Peggy out, and walked her back along the
-road towards home, saying nothing in her most alarming
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy really felt quite frightened.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nannie, you&#8217;re hurting my arm!&#8221; she said at last,
-trying to drag her hand away. She hated the dry feel
-of Nurse&#8217;s black cotton gloves pinched around her cold
-fingers. &#8220;Aren&#8217;t we going to buy any sweets after all?&#8221;
-she went on.</p>
-
-<p>There was no answer.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>&#8220;Do you hear?&#8221; shouted Peggy desperately, and pulling
-harder.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You should learn to do as you&#8217;re told,&#8221; said Nurse,
-taking a firmer grip, and walking faster still.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy pulled harder still. She was beginning to feel
-really naughty. Besides, she knew it had been a Fairy,
-and who could think of stupid old ditches then? Nurse
-<i>never</i> understood.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What <i>have</i> you got on your thumb?&#8221; asked Nurse,
-suddenly stopping, and dropping Peggy&#8217;s hand very quickly.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy looked down, and there was the Fairy Ring
-sending out great sparkles of green light all over the muddy
-road! She could scarcely believe her eyes, and Nurse looked
-rather frightened.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy felt there was not a second to lose.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;O Giant, I wish you&#8217;d take me away somewhere&mdash;and
-make Nurse nicer!&#8221; she whispered in a great hurry.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>&#8220;You <i>are</i> a oner, you are!&#8221; said the Giant admiringly.
-&#8220;You nearly always ask for two things in one wish&mdash;but it
-never seems to matter&mdash;you get &#8217;em! Now come along,
-we&#8217;ve got to hurry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy and the Giant were walking along a wide silver
-road. The hedges, the gates, the trees, the flowers, even the
-birds that flew over their heads, were silver, all sparkling
-and gleaming in the light of a big silver moon in a blue sky.
-Peggy had never seen anything so beautiful, and she looked
-up at the Giant with very happy eyes as she danced along
-the road by his side.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shall always leave you to think of lovely places,&#8221; she
-said. &#8220;I should never have thought of coming here!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s the Ring as well,&#8221; said the Giant modestly. &#8220;But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-we aren&#8217;t there yet. Sit on my hand; we shall get there
-quicker that way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, where are we going?&#8221; asked Peggy, jumping
-up and holding on to his thumb.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To Fairy-land,&#8221; said the Giant, stepping out briskly,
-&#8220;or at least to one little bit of it. It&#8217;s only as a great treat,
-because you couldn&#8217;t find a primrose, and never got your
-sweets. By the way, that <i>was</i> a Fairy in the hedge,&#8221; he
-added.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I <i>knew</i> it was,&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;But Nannie <i>won&#8217;t</i> see
-things sometimes. Oh, look! what <i>is</i> this coming?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They had turned a corner, and saw far away above the
-hills something that appeared to be a great blue cloud edged
-with gold, advancing with a humming sound. As it came
-nearer Peggy discovered to her great excitement that it was
-really a multitude of Fairies all dressed in the palest blue
-dresses, their golden hair flowing out around them, and on
-their heads silver crowns studded with bright blue stones;
-and the humming sound was the rustle of their great blue
-wings which were bearing them along at a tremendous rate.</p>
-
-<p>They made straight for Peggy, led by a tall, beautiful
-Fairy, whose blue dress was simply covered with sparkling
-stones. And there was something in her pretty smiling
-face which reminded Peggy of someone, but she couldn&#8217;t
-remember who. The next moment the Fairy was just above
-the Giant&#8217;s head; then she dropped suddenly, and catching
-Peggy up by the hand she and all the rest of the Fairies
-rose high in the air again and flew off by the way they had
-come.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy clutched the Fairy&#8217;s hand very tightly for some
-time, for they were all going so fast that the rush of air
-made her feel quite breathless. But when she was rather
-more used to it, she turned her head to look at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-Fairies following, and suddenly saw that she had grown a
-magnificent pair of blue wings too!</p>
-
-<p>She at once tried to flap them, and found she could do
-so quite well, though rather jerkily at first, and the Giant&mdash;who
-was striding along in the air just below her&mdash;looked
-up with a wide grin on his round face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Capital, capital!&#8221; he called out. &#8220;Well, how do you
-like flying?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s <i>lovely</i>!&#8221; shouted back Peggy. &#8220;You <i>do</i> think of
-splendid things! And so do you!&#8221; she added, looking up
-gratefully into the Fairy&#8217;s face.</p>
-
-<p>And then she gave a great start, for, of course, she saw
-now who the Fairy was. She was Nurse!</p>
-
-<p>Peggy gasped, and very nearly dropped right down. It
-was certainly Nurse, but Nurse looking happy, Nurse looking
-pleased with Peggy, Nurse seeming as though for once she
-was actually enjoying herself! It really seemed too good
-to be true, and Peggy darted another glance of great
-thankfulness down at the Giant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad you think it fun,&#8221; said Nurse, in a sweet, clear
-voice. &#8220;But you needn&#8217;t flap quite so hard. Look, give
-long, steady sweeps like this,&#8221; and she sprang forward even
-quicker into the air, and then showed Peggy exactly how it
-was done, till she had learnt perfectly.</p>
-
-<p>The land was changing below them, or they were much
-higher up. It was sometimes bright and coloured like a
-rainbow, sometimes as red as fire, and sometimes so dark
-that they could see nothing below them. Once a terrible
-smell of smoke rose up, and Nurse called to everyone to
-mount higher.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What a dreadful place that was,&#8221; said Peggy, when
-they once more saw the pretty rainbow land below them
-again. &#8220;Who lives there?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>&#8220;Ogres,&#8221; said Nurse, &#8220;heaps of them. I hate passing
-their way, but it&#8217;s a short cut. That red country we passed
-just now was where the Dragons live. They&#8217;re even worse,
-nasty ill-bred creatures! However, we&#8217;ve passed them all
-now, and here we come down.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They were right above a cleared space in a big black
-wood, and at a signal from Nurse, all the Fairies paused,
-and, half folding their wings, floated down amongst the
-trees. Peggy did so too, and balanced on a large branch,
-closing her wings up neatly as she saw the others doing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now, each take a tree and begin,&#8221; called Nurse, who
-was flying about looking happier than ever, &#8220;and after that
-we&#8217;ll have some games!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then Peggy noticed what extraordinary trees they were
-all perched upon. For from every twig were hanging by
-silver strings the most fascinating little tiny sugar animals
-and birds of every colour and kind&mdash;blue elephants, mauve
-dogs, scarlet mice, yellow nightingales, and everything else
-you can think of. And all through the wood she could
-hear the Fairies calling and laughing to each other as they
-fluttered up and down the trees and ate the pretty things.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;May I?&#8221; asked Peggy, her fingers closing round a
-purple sparrow, and looking at Nurse who she hardly dared
-believe would be so changed as to allow her to eat as many
-sweets as she liked!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; said Nurse smiling&mdash;and Peggy had never
-realised before how very nicely Nurse could smile. She also
-longed to tell her how pretty she looked with her golden hair
-all flying loose in the air. But she didn&#8217;t dare. &#8220;I advise
-you to try that pink cow just behind you,&#8221; went on Nurse.
-&#8220;No, not that one, the very big one by the trunk. That&#8217;s it.
-Now, <i>isn&#8217;t</i> that good?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was certainly too lovely for words. It had the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-delicious taste that a strawberry ice has before you&#8217;ve eaten
-too many at a party, and it was also rather like pineapples
-and pear-drops and Tangerine oranges, and yet it was far
-better than any of them.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy soon got quite good at half fluttering, half
-balancing along the branches like the others were doing,
-and trying each different sweet by turn.</p>
-
-<p>(I&#8217;m afraid this sounds rather a greedy adventure of
-Peggy&#8217;s, but it wasn&#8217;t really, as it happened in Fairy-land,
-and there were enough sweets for everyone, and no one
-felt sick when they&#8217;d eaten too many.)</p>
-
-<p>She had just bitten a pink sugar rabbit in half, and
-found it tasted just like meringues, when she remembered
-the Giant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear,&#8221; she cried, &#8220;where is the Giant? I&#8217;d quite
-forgotten him!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-<small>FE-FO-FUM!</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nurse</span> looked very worried indeed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So had I,&#8221; she said. &#8220;We must have gone too fast for
-him!&#8221; And she flew up on to the top of a tree and gazed
-away across the hills. &#8220;He never <i>will</i> let us lend him
-wings,&#8221; she went on, &#8220;so he always gets left behind. He
-says his seven-leagued boots will last <i>him</i> out all right,
-and it&#8217;s no good arguing with him. Now, I expect he&#8217;s
-stuck somewhere, or has stumbled upon the Ogres and
-had a fight.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What!&#8221; cried Peggy in great horror. &#8220;My Giant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-fighting? Oh, he&#8217;d <i>sure</i> to be beaten. What shall I do?&#8221;
-and she fluttered to and fro in great distress.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, wish he were here, of course,&#8221; said Nurse.
-&#8220;You&#8217;ve five wishes left still, haven&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy wished at once, and the Giant came crashing
-through the wood, upsetting the sugar trees in all directions.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, look!&#8221; said Nurse. &#8220;<i>How</i> careless you are!&#8221;
-(But she didn&#8217;t say it a bit in her old cross way.) &#8220;Plant
-those trees again before you do anything else!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Giant looked terribly knocked about and woebegone,
-and his coat was all in tatters, but he did as he
-was told at once, balancing the trees up again, and stamping
-in their roots well, like Peggy had seen the gardener do with
-his plants. Then he sat down on the ground and wiped his
-hot face with his pocket-handkerchief, and the Fairies all
-stopped eating sweets to hear what he had to say.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Phew!&#8221; he gasped, &#8220;I&#8217;ve had an awful time! Whatever
-possessed you all to go at such a pace?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I like that!&#8221; said Nurse. &#8220;When it was you
-who asked us to get to the sugar-wood before dark!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish I hadn&#8217;t now,&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;Trying to catch
-you up I stumbled right into the middle of the Ogres, and
-I&#8217;d no sooner got away from them&mdash;after having my coat
-torn half off my back&mdash;than I stepped plump on to the Red
-Dragon, and you know what <i>that</i> means!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dear, dear!&#8221; said Nurse. &#8220;Was he very vexed?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Vexed!&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;He was in such a hideous
-passion that he made after me as fast as he could waddle&mdash;and
-then he started gliding. I was up in the air in a
-moment, I can tell you, striding along for all I was worth,
-and when he saw he couldn&#8217;t catch me from the ground
-he took to his wings and flew! And when a Dragon uses
-his wings&mdash;well&mdash;you know what you&#8217;ve got to expect!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-He&#8217;s after me now&mdash;and the Ogres are, too!&#8221; he added
-resignedly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, they&#8217;ll never find you here!&#8221; said Nurse. &#8220;The
-Ring brought you along faster than any Ogre or Dragon
-could travel.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought an Ogre was almost the same as a Giant?&#8221;
-Peggy whispered to Nurse.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good gracious, no!&#8221; said she. &#8220;Don&#8217;t let the Giant
-hear you say that! They&#8217;re a set of vagabonds and ruffians
-who haunt the edge of Fairy-land. The kind with one eye
-in their foreheads, and the sort who say &#8216;Fe-Fo-Fum.&#8217;
-You <i>must</i> have read about them? They can&#8217;t harm us
-Fairies, but any Giant, especially a really nice good one
-like yours, makes them simply <i>mad</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy slid off her branch and flew to the Giant, perching
-on his shoulder and stroking his hair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll take care of you,&#8221; she said, &#8220;if they <i>do</i> come. Don&#8217;t
-you be afraid! He&#8217;ll be all right, won&#8217;t he?&#8221; she added,
-turning to the Fairies.</p>
-
-<p>But they were not listening.</p>
-
-<p>They had all flown to the tops of their trees and were
-balancing on the topmost branches, bending forward and
-listening intently. For there was a soft humming,
-grumbling, hissing, bleating, gurgling sound coming from
-somewhere very far away!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the Ogres,&#8221; said Nurse, looking very grave&mdash;and
-the sound got a tiny bit louder.</p>
-
-<p>Then a little cold, tinkling, rippling, singing, shivering,
-clinking sound began as well&mdash;so faint that it was just like
-a funny little whisper, and &#8220;That&#8217;s the Dragon and he&#8217;ll
-be here first!&#8221; cried all the Fairies together, looking
-graver still, and they began to flutter round Peggy and
-the Giant, staring at the Ring, which was winking and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-flashing long green darts of light over everything and
-everybody.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What shall I wish?&#8221; asked Peggy, glancing at the
-Giant, who was obviously too tired out to move another step.
-(The sounds were every second getting louder and louder.)
-&#8220;I&mdash;I should rather like to see them,&#8221; she added shyly,
-&#8220;if I can make the dear Giant <i>quite</i> safe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wish me to be invisible,&#8221; said the Giant wearily.
-&#8220;Then I shan&#8217;t have to get up. I&#8217;ve been practising it,
-so you won&#8217;t have any difficulty.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, that&#8217;ll do nicely,&#8221; said Nurse. The noise had
-suddenly become so loud that Peggy could hardly hear her.
-&#8220;And you get as much behind the trunk as you can,&#8221; she
-went on to Peggy at the top of her voice, &#8220;and I&#8217;ll sit on a
-branch in front of you and hide you. If they <i>do</i> see you,
-you&#8217;ve only got to wish yourself invisible too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The noise had now changed to the rattling kind that a
-million luggage trains would make if they were all driven
-along in a row at once, and Peggy could hear tree after tree
-crashing to the ground. She had only just time to wish, and
-see the Giant disappear completely, when a great red
-creature plunged down through the branches above into the
-open space in front of the Fairies, and fell on his side, quite
-close to Peggy&#8217;s tree, lashing his tail and panting like a dog.</p>
-
-<p>Tongues of red and blue fire flashed and darted up and
-down his scaly back, and his scarlet wings spreading across
-the grass withered it up at once. Peggy did feel glad she
-hadn&#8217;t missed the sight! But she took the precaution
-to wish that he should not crush the Giant, in case invisible
-Giants <i>could</i> be crushed.</p>
-
-<p>In a few seconds the Dragon rolled on to his little short
-stubbly feet and waddled up to Nurse.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where&#8217;s the Giant?&#8221; he lisped in a high and very soft<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-voice. &#8220;I <i>know</i> he&#8217;s somewhere here, and I&#8217;ll flatten down
-every one of your sugar trees if you don&#8217;t tell me this
-minute!&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus036.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">Peggy drew this to show what the Dragon looked like when Nurse
-said, &#8220;You wouldn&#8217;t dare!&#8221; Nurse is on the left and is just going
-to eat her sugar bird. Peggy is up above peeping from behind
-the tree. She wanted to draw the Ogres too, but there wasn&#8217;t any
-room. Mother only helped her with some of the branches, everything
-else she did by herself, and the Fairies took ages to do.
-They are sitting on the boughs eating the sugar animals and
-birds. It made the Dragon <span class="u">furious</span> to see they weren&#8217;t afraid of
-him a bit. Those long things on the ground are the trees he
-knocked down, and the bits of red are the fires he started
-with his red-hot paws. The Giant is invisible sitting on the
-grass, just behind the Dragon&#8217;s tongue.</p>
-
-<p>There was really something very frightening in his little
-polite voice!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You wouldn&#8217;t dare!&#8221; said Nurse, laughing scornfully.
-&#8220;Run along and look about for him! He must be somewhere,
-as you rightly remark,&#8221; and she turned her back on him and
-began to nibble at a sugar bird.</p>
-
-<p>The Dragon raised his eyebrows ironically, but finding
-Nurse was not looking at him any longer, he began to
-trot and glide about the wood, sticking his long red tongue
-under the fallen trees to lift them up, and hissing to
-himself more and more when he couldn&#8217;t find the Giant
-anywhere.</p>
-
-<p>(And all the time the sound of the Ogres coming got
-louder and louder and louder!)</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s some magic going on!&#8221; said the Dragon at last,
-angrily, raising himself up on to the very tip of his tail and
-glaring over the tree-tops. &#8220;Ha, ha!&#8221; he added, &#8220;here
-come the others at last,&#8221; and he stretched out two welcoming
-paws to the two enormous Ogres who at that moment
-crashed into the wood.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy nearly tumbled out of the tree in her excitement,
-for this was worth seeing indeed! One of the Ogres had
-only one eye in the middle of his forehead, just as she&#8217;d
-thought he would, and he did nothing but say &#8220;Fe-Fo-Fum!&#8221;
-over and over again, and stamp and growl and snarl.</p>
-
-<p>The other one had three heads which all looked different
-ways, and he kept gnashing his three lots of teeth and snorting
-at the Dragon, who <i>would</i> go on smiling at him.</p>
-
-<p>Then both Ogres advanced upon Nurse, brandishing
-their clubs.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>&#8220;We went miles out of our way!&#8221; they roared.
-&#8220;Where&#8217;s he gone to now?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Nurse looked them over calmly from head to toe.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Take your caps off this moment,&#8221; she said severely.
-&#8220;I <i>think</i> you forget who you&#8217;re speaking to!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They looked rather cowed for the moment, and took
-their caps off sheepishly without saying a word, though the
-Dragon&#8217;s chuckle was enough to infuriate anybody. (The
-Ogre with the three heads had of course to take off three
-caps.)</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s better!&#8221; said Nurse. &#8220;Now, what <i>do</i> you want?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Giant, of course,&#8221; growled the Ogre with one eye.
-&#8220;Fe-Fo-Fum! Fe-Fo-Fum!&#8221; and he trampled up and
-down restlessly.</p>
-
-<p>It was more than Peggy could stand.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, <i>do</i> go on with the verse!&#8221; she called out imploringly,
-leaning forward right out of the tree. &#8220;You&#8217;ve said that line
-over and over again, and it&#8217;s not <i>nearly</i> all! You <i>must</i>
-remember how it goes on:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">&#8216;Fe-Fo-Fum!</div>
-<div class="verse">I smell the blood of an Englishman!</div>
-<div class="verse">Be he alive&mdash;&mdash;&#8217;&#8221;</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>but she got no further, for with a scream of triumph the
-Dragon flung himself forward and seized her tree right up by
-the roots, and the nearest Ogre at the same moment plucked
-her out of it by his finger and thumb.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Quick, Miss Peggy!&#8221; screamed Nurse, and Peggy did
-wish quick, ... and found herself back on the old
-muddy high road again, being dragged along it by Nurse.
-&#8220;For if you don&#8217;t hurry a bit more,&#8221; she went on, &#8220;you&#8217;ll
-catch your death of cold in those wet socks.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy burst into tears. Nurse was no longer a bit like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-a nice Fairy, and it was all such a dreadfully sudden change,
-and everything felt so very flat. Even the stone in her
-Ring looked small, and as dull as a pebble.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear, oh dear!&#8221; she sobbed. &#8220;And we never got to
-the games at all! And I&#8217;ve still got one wish left that I
-never used. Now it will be wasted!&#8221; and the tears poured
-fast down her cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>Nurse looked down at her in astonishment, for Peggy
-never cried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s come over you all of a sudden?&#8221; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I <i>wish</i> you were always nice like just now,&#8221; sobbed
-Peggy, quite forgetting Nurse never remembered anything
-about the adventures. &#8220;We were having such a <i>lovely</i> time!
-And then you went and made me leave at the most exciting
-bit.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s very exciting to stand in a muddy
-ditch!&#8221; said Nurse, but her voice had all at once become
-very soft and gentle. &#8220;But never mind, Miss Peggy dear.
-I&#8217;ll tell you the story of the Three Bears now if you like,
-then we shall soon get home. And perhaps there&#8217;ll be a
-letter from Mother; I shouldn&#8217;t wonder!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy could scarcely believe her ears, for except in
-Fairy-land Nurse never really talked like that. Her tears
-were forgotten very quickly, for Nurse went on being like it
-all the rest of the day, laughing and playing and romping
-with Peggy right up till bedtime, and even a little while
-after!</p>
-
-<p>Peggy <i>couldn&#8217;t</i> make it out.</p>
-
-<p>You see she never noticed that she <i>had</i> used up her
-sixth wish after all.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-<small>PEGGY DRIVES A CAR</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">&#8220;What&#8217;s</span> that whizzing, Nurse?&#8221; asked Peggy, as she
-was picking a bunch of double snowdrops in the garden
-the next afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A motor, I expect,&#8221; said Nurse, who was talking to the
-gardener&mdash;and she ran to peep down the drive through the
-bushes. &#8220;Callers, I&#8217;ll be bound. Yes, here it comes, a big
-red car. There&#8217;s a fat lady in behind, and a girl chauffeur
-driving it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s see,&#8221; said Peggy, pressing into the bushes too.</p>
-
-<p>Nurse was not quite like she had been the evening
-before, because, of course, Peggy&#8217;s wishes never lasted on to
-the next day, but still she wasn&#8217;t <i>nearly</i> as cross as usual, and
-she had been playing hide-and-seek with Peggy quite half
-the afternoon, until the gardener came up to talk.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now they&#8217;ve heard your Mother&#8217;s not here, and are
-going away again,&#8221; Nurse went on. &#8220;There, look! They&#8217;ve
-stuck at the difficult turn, and the engine&#8217;s stopped! My,
-doesn&#8217;t that girl look cross? Get back, Miss Peggy, they&#8217;ll
-see us! Now you can hide once more if you like before tea.
-I&#8217;ll just finish giving John the message about the
-vegetables.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish I knew how to drive a motor,&#8221; thought Peggy
-longingly, as she trotted off to hide behind some laurels.
-&#8220;I&#8217;d go like the wind, and wouldn&#8217;t stop at any corners&mdash;&mdash;Why&mdash;what&#8217;s
-happened?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For she was driving the big red car as fast as lightning
-down the drive!</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>&#8220;You never noticed you had the Ring on!&#8221; chuckled
-the Giant. &#8220;Well turned! Never mind the gate-post.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was sitting at the back, but with his legs sticking right
-out in front beyond the bonnet; and his elbows kept knocking
-great pieces out of the hedges as they whizzed along.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s&mdash;what&#8217;s happened to the fat lady and the
-chauffeur?&#8221; gasped Peggy, clutching the steering-wheel for
-dear life, her cheeks scarlet, her hair streaming out
-behind her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I put them out in the drive,&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;I
-expect they&#8217;ll follow us if they want to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Weren&#8217;t they angry?&#8221; asked Peggy, bumping over a
-sheep because she didn&#8217;t know how to stop the car. &#8220;Oh
-dear, did I hurt him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s all right, he&#8217;s up again,&#8221; said the Giant, turning
-round. &#8220;The Ring won&#8217;t let you hurt anything or anybody
-however much you knock into them. Angry? Oh, I really
-hadn&#8217;t time to stop and see. It&#8217;s all forgotten afterwards,
-you see. Look out for this corner. Oh well, never mind, we
-may as well be out of the road as in it!&#8221; For the car, not
-having been turned quick enough, had neatly leapt the
-hedge, and was now speeding across a ploughed field.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let her out, let her out!&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;You said
-you wanted to go fast, I thought. Go on, let her out!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy didn&#8217;t know exactly what he meant, or what to
-do, but she whispered a wish that they might go still quicker,
-and the car rose in the air and raced along just a little above
-the level of the hedges.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think this is lovelier than anything we&#8217;ve done at
-all!&#8221; she shouted back to the Giant. &#8220;Oh, look! we&#8217;re
-coming to a town, I do believe! I wish I could drive
-through it just as though I was a real chauffeur. It would
-be so <i>grand</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>&#8220;Steady, steady! Wishes don&#8217;t grow on blackberry
-bushes,&#8221; cried the Giant warningly, but at once the car
-slowed down, and dropped into the high road, and Peggy
-found herself dressed exactly like the girl she had seen,
-and driving slowly along at the rate of about fifteen miles
-an hour. At first she tried to steer the car herself, but when
-she found that it guided itself when left alone, and that the
-horn sounded and the gear changed much better by themselves,
-she leant back and amused herself by staring at the
-people, and then at the shops, as they reached the principal
-streets of the town.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly she noticed that all the people they passed
-were beginning to behave in the most extraordinary manner,
-some of them racing away down side streets, screaming,
-others beginning to chase the car and shout at the top of
-their voices. Once they came on a line of policemen all
-standing in a row across the road with notebooks in their
-hands, but the car made very short work of them, scattering
-them in all directions, and though Peggy turned round and
-saw them picking themselves up at once and evidently not
-hurt in the very least, such a roar went up from the crowds
-in the streets that she asked the Giant in great perplexity
-why they were all so angry. Hadn&#8217;t they ever seen a lady
-chauffeur before?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I expect it&#8217;s partly because of me,&#8221; said the Giant
-comfortably. &#8220;I knocked a piece right off the General
-Post Office just now with my elbow. You&#8217;d better rise
-again, I think.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy wished&mdash;but to her horror nothing happened,
-except that the car began to slow down, and crowds and
-crowds of people from all directions at once pressed around
-it, shouting and shaking their fists at the Giant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Goodness me!&#8221; said the Giant, who had no sooner<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-pushed away one lot than another came up. &#8220;The Magic&#8217;s
-gone wrong again! Turn the Ring quickly!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy did so, and the car rose with an awful jerk into
-the air and began to twist in and out amongst the chimney
-pots in an aimless sort of way till the Giant nearly toppled
-out, and Peggy felt quite giddy. At last she seized the
-wheel and tried to steer, and really felt they were making
-a little headway, when suddenly, without any warning, the
-car made a dart upwards, and then dropped on to the top
-of an ornamental steeple crowning the new Town Hall,
-where it stuck, the wheels turning madly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now we <i>are</i> in a fix!&#8221; said the Giant uneasily. &#8220;I
-thought I&#8217;d remembered all about the wishing by now,
-but I&#8217;ve made a hash of it this time, and no mistake.
-You&#8217;d better wish we were safely home again. I can
-always manage <i>that</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, thank you!&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;I did that yesterday
-before I&#8217;d used up all my wishes. I&#8217;m not going to do it
-again. I don&#8217;t mind it up here at all; I think it&#8217;s rather
-fun!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>That&#8217;s</i> not much fun!&#8221; said the Giant, looking down
-out of the car.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy looked too&mdash;and could not help giving a little
-jump. Packed in the Square below them was the first
-crowd she had ever seen, and it was really rather
-frightening. Everybody was looking up and shouting and
-waving, and there was no doubt at all that they were
-very angry indeed. Still, in spite of the muddles the
-Giant so often made, Peggy always felt perfectly safe
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I <i>can&#8217;t</i> hear what they say,&#8221; she said, &#8220;all talking at
-once like that! Do call down and ask them to speak clearer.
-They&#8217;ll hear <i>you</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>But the Giant was shaking with fright, and trying to
-hide himself under the seat, which, considering he was many
-sizes too big for the car, looked a hopeless task.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Better leave them alone,&#8221; he muttered. &#8220;They&#8217;ll only
-get angrier still if we answer them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At that moment Peggy noticed a little fat man in a long
-red gown making his way through the crowd. Behind him
-came two men carrying a long ladder. This they put
-against the Town Hall, and the little fat man climbed to the
-top, and then off on to the roof just below the car. He was
-purple in the face with breathlessness and rage.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-<small>THE MAYOR&#8217;S OUTING</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">&#8220;That&#8217;s</span> the Mayor, that is,&#8221; said the Giant in a terrified
-whisper, and he practically stood on his head in his efforts
-to wriggle part of his face under the seat. &#8220;If there is one
-thing that frightens me more than another it is a Mayor!
-I remember in 1615, or thereabouts&mdash;but that will keep till
-another time. Do you think he can see me? Can&#8217;t we go
-on <i>now</i>?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly not!&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;I want to hear what
-he&#8217;s going to say. He can&#8217;t <i>do</i> anything to us, you know.
-Really, I think this is the best adventure of all!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hi!&#8221; called the Mayor. &#8220;Go on this moment, or we&#8217;ll
-make you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We can&#8217;t!&#8221; shouted Peggy. &#8220;We&#8217;re stuck! A bit of
-the spire&#8217;s come right through the car!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nonsense!&#8221; shouted the Mayor, &#8220;you can get off<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-perfectly well if you choose. The spire wasn&#8217;t built for the
-likes of you to go trapesing about on. Get off it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus046.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">This is a painting of the Fourth Adventure. Peggy is just telling
-the Mayor that they&#8217;ve stuck. She&#8217;s rather afraid the Giant will
-fall out in a minute, that&#8217;s why she&#8217;s holding on to his back. You
-can see by her face she isn&#8217;t a bit frightened of the Mayor. This
-was Mother&#8217;s favourite picture. The Mayor was very difficult
-to draw, but he looked <span class="u">just</span> like that Peggy said. None of the
-crowd had on red jackets really, but Peggy thought they looked
-pretty in a picture. You see the Ring, don&#8217;t you? Peggy quite
-forgot about the Giant&#8217;s red stockings till the picture was finished!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We <i>cant</i>, I tell you!&#8221; cried Peggy, losing all patience.
-&#8220;Come up and look for yourself! Come on, climb on to the
-Giant&#8217;s boot!&#8221; For by this time the Giant had given up
-trying to hide himself, and was sitting on the car with his
-legs dangling into space, and looking the picture of misery.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Stretch your foot down a little more,&#8221; said Peggy to
-him. &#8220;There,&#8221; as it dangled just above the Mayor&#8217;s head,
-&#8220;now jump this instant!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I won&#8217;t!&#8221; said the Mayor, ducking his head as the
-great boot hovered above it. &#8220;I never heard of such
-proceedings in my life!&#8221; He leant over the edge of the
-roof. &#8220;They <i>won&#8217;t</i> go on!&#8221; he shouted to the crowd below.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Make &#8217;em!&#8221; came in a perfect roar from the Square.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come along,&#8221; said Peggy coaxingly. (It would be
-something, she felt, to tell Nurse when she got back that she
-had had a real live Mayor in her car. Besides, it would be fun
-for him. But she wasn&#8217;t going to use up a wish on it.
-Peggy had grown very wary by this time.)</p>
-
-<p>The Mayor stood looking very undecided, but when he
-saw the crowd beginning to shake their fists at him as well,
-he gave a jump, caught the Giant&#8217;s boot, and raised himself
-into a sitting position on the toe of it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Will you promise to do your best to get off if I come
-up and have a look?&#8221; he asked in a shaking voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course we will,&#8221; said Peggy soothingly.&mdash;&#8220;Don&#8217;t
-look such a big frightened baby!&#8221; she added reprovingly to
-the Giant.&mdash;&#8220;Draw your boot up gently. There, that&#8217;s
-right&#8221;&mdash;as the Mayor was sidled carefully off into the front
-seat; &#8220;<i>now</i> I wish we could go on!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<p>The car shook itself all over, then leapt upwards, and
-once more set off at breakneck speed, but this time straight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-upwards into the sky! Something at the same moment fell
-out with a heavy flop. Peggy turned her head hastily, just
-in time to see the Giant falling through the air behind them.
-But the car was rising upwards at such a pace that the next
-moment he and the whole town disappeared from view!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Stop!</i>&#8221; said a frightened voice at her side, and she
-turned and saw the Mayor, whom for the moment she had
-<i>quite</i> forgotten. His face was no longer purple, but as white
-as a sheet.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t!&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;I&#8217;ve only one wish left, and
-that&#8217;s got to take me home. You asked me to get off the
-spire, you know, and I <i>have</i>! The Giant&#8217;s wearing his seven-leagued
-boots, so he&#8217;ll soon catch us up when he gets balanced
-again.&#8221; She skirted the edge of a pink sunset cloud as she
-spoke, and drove right up through a lemon-coloured one.
-&#8220;Oh, how lovely!&#8221; she went on delightedly. &#8220;I got a great
-chunk of it in my mouth, and it tasted just like pineapple.
-Did you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know what you&#8217;re talking about,&#8221; said the
-Mayor. &#8220;We&#8217;ve just been through an awful fog, and I insist
-on you stopping the car at once. If you can&#8217;t&mdash;and I see you
-don&#8217;t understand the first rudiments of driving&mdash;I can!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He leant across her and seized the steering-wheel, but
-it at once came off in his hand, rolled down his arm, and
-jumped out of the car.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>There!</i>&#8221; said Peggy triumphantly, to the now speechless
-Mayor. &#8220;See what comes of meddling!&#8221; (She felt
-quite like Nurse when she spoke like that.) &#8220;Never mind,
-my car goes just as well without <i>that</i> bit!&#8221; and she leant
-back in her seat and crossed her arms grandly. &#8220;The only
-thing I&#8217;m worrying about,&#8221; she went on, &#8220;is, if the Giant
-will ever find us! You don&#8217;t see him coming, do you?
-Look down through the hole in the car.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>&#8220;Unless you stop, I shall jump out,&#8221; said the Mayor in
-a desperate voice. And he stood up and really looked as
-though he meant to!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, <i>do</i> sit down,&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;You spoil everything.
-Just look, we&#8217;re going right on to this rainbow, I do believe!
-Yes, we&#8217;re on the purple part. Isn&#8217;t it a lovely smooth road?
-There, now, we&#8217;re off it and on the pink bit! Oh, why <i>don&#8217;t</i>
-you sit still and love it all as I do?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because I&#8217;m going to get out,&#8221; said the Mayor, stepping
-over the door and lowering himself slowly till only his hand
-holding the step, and his very reproachful face showed themselves.
-&#8220;Now then,&#8221; he added, &#8220;you&#8217;ve only got till I count
-five; I shall let go then&mdash;perhaps&#8221;&mdash;he added in a whisper,
-being a truthful Mayor, but very softly so that she shouldn&#8217;t
-hear.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear, it <i>is</i> mean of you to make me use up my last
-wish so soon!&#8221; said Peggy in a very vexed voice. &#8220;And I
-managed this drive especially for you, to make up for our
-having spoilt the Post Office and things.&mdash;Oh, very well,&#8221;
-she added crossly, as the Mayor reached four, and let go
-one hand, &#8220;I wish you were home and I was too, because
-you simply spoil everything when you won&#8217;t play
-properly!&#8221;...</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If I do, it&#8217;s not for you to say so, Miss Peggy,&#8221; was
-the reply, and Peggy found herself back in the garden
-again facing a rather red-faced and angry Nurse. &#8220;Just
-because I stop to speak to John for one moment, is no
-reason for you to think yourself neglected! I&#8217;m sure I
-never heard you call you were ready, so how was I to
-know? Then you come bouncing down on me like that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, Nannie, did I bounce?&#8221; asked Peggy, very much
-interested. She had wondered before what her return looked
-like when the wishes were over.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>&#8220;Don&#8217;t repeat my words,&#8221; said Nurse crossly. &#8220;I was
-meaning the way you spoke, of course. How could you
-bounce down from behind the laurels? Now, come along
-into tea at once.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;O Nannie, I&#8217;ve had such fun!&#8221; said Peggy, dancing
-along the path. &#8220;I went <i>up</i>, and <i>up</i>, and <i>up</i>&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There!&#8221; exclaimed Nurse. &#8220;One moment it&#8217;s grumble,
-grumble, the next all the other way! I won&#8217;t have you
-climbing trees either in hide-and-seek. You can&#8217;t expect
-to be found if you act like that. Now&mdash;not another
-word&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid the Giant&#8217;s dreadfully lost this time!&#8221;
-thought Peggy, as she washed her hands for tea. &#8220;I don&#8217;t
-fink I was very kind to him! I do wonder if the fat lady
-minded the big hole in the car, and the wheel being lost.
-Oh, but I suppose that all comes right again, just as she
-forgets that the Giant sat her down in the drive! It would
-be lovely to tell Nannie that I&#8217;d driven a Mayor up a rainbow
-in a real motor car! But it&#8217;s no good <i>trying</i> to, she
-doesn&#8217;t understand the sensiblest things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And she ran into the day nursery to see which jam cook
-had sent up for tea.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-<small>DOWN!</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">&#8220;See</span> me dance the polka!&#8221; went the old tune&mdash;and then
-again and again&mdash;and Peggy lay in bed listening to it and
-staring at the fire.</p>
-
-<p>The children next door were having a party in their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-hall, and every time the front door opened the sound of the
-music came crashing out, and jumped in through Peggy&#8217;s
-open window. Of course, she ought to have been at the
-party too, but, for one thing, she had had a cold all day,
-and for another, Nurse didn&#8217;t think the children next door
-had properly got over measles, so she was afraid to let
-Peggy go.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy hadn&#8217;t much minded until now. Nurse had
-petted her all day and given her little bits of buttered
-toast at tea with apricot jam on them, and then had let
-the housemaid come up and play dominoes with her until
-bedtime, and now she had tucked her up warmly in bed
-with a hot-water bottle and told her to go to sleep quickly,
-so that she should be quite well before Mother came home
-the next day.</p>
-
-<p>But go to sleep was just what Peggy couldn&#8217;t do. For
-one thing, thinking of Mother coming back was enough to
-make her keep wanting to jump out of bed and dance all
-over the room. And then the music too had begun to
-make her rather long to run into the house next door and
-play musical chairs with all the other children.</p>
-
-<p>It was then that she suddenly felt the Ring pressing on
-her thumb, and realised that she had quite forgotten to
-wish at all that day!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear, suppose it hadn&#8217;t come, I might have
-forgotten altogether,&#8221; she thought in dismay. &#8220;And
-now I&#8217;m rather frightened of seeing the Giant, in case
-he&#8217;s angry about the Mayor. I wonder what I&#8217;d better
-wish?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She lay in bed thinking about it for quite a long time,
-until suddenly hearing some carriages driving off and the
-music stopping, she realised she was too late to wish to join
-the children&#8217;s party next door anyway.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>&#8220;Oh, I wish the Giant was here,&#8221; she said at last.
-&#8220;He can always think of lovely things to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your window&#8217;s uncommonly small,&#8221; said the Giant,
-climbing in through it, and bringing with him big bits of the
-wall on each shoulder. &#8220;Gracious me, what a mess I&#8217;m in!&#8221;
-He shook himself and lay down on the floor with his face
-close to the fire. &#8220;I&#8217;ve been looking in at the party next
-door,&#8221; he went on. &#8220;Great fun&mdash;but they&#8217;re gone now. I
-saw &#8217;em into their cabs. Why weren&#8217;t you there?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because I&#8217;ve a cold,&#8221; said Peggy, sneezing three times.
-(The Giant seemed to have brought in all the cold night air
-with him.) &#8220;Nannie thinks I caught it hiding behind the
-laurels so long yesterday, but <i>I</i> know it was going through
-that lovely wet yellow cloud!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Giant&#8217;s face clouded over. &#8220;Least said soonest
-mended about that,&#8221; he said shortly. &#8220;I particularly told
-you of my aversion to Mayors, and you at once take one for
-a drive and leave me behind! That was not in the least
-what I meant. However, I will say no more. This is
-your last day but one with me, so we won&#8217;t waste it
-with quarrelling. What&#8217;s your wish? Be quick now, for
-this lovely hot fire makes me very sleepy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy jumped out of bed, caught hold of the Giant&#8217;s
-little finger and hugged it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m <i>so</i> sorry,&#8221; she said coaxingly. &#8220;I like you better
-than any Mayor that ever was born, Giant darling. And I
-didn&#8217;t <i>mean</i> to leave you behind. Did you have an awful
-time?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I went wandering about the sky for the rest of
-the night looking for you,&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;I heard you&#8217;d
-been on the rainbow, but after that I lost all trace of you.
-Still, never mind; as you&#8217;re sorry, I don&#8217;t mind any more.
-Go on, wish away.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>&#8220;It&#8217;s no good, I&#8217;ve tried to,&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;We seem to
-have done everything exciting. We&#8217;ve been up&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How about going down for a change?&#8221; asked the
-Giant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Down?&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;But we <i>are</i> down!&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus054.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">This is a picture of the fifth Adventure. The mark on the ceiling is
-the awful hole the Giant and Peggy made coming through. The
-Giant is waving his hand to Cook as they go down. The footman
-has only just seen the hole, and is showing it to everybody.
-The housemaid who played dominoes with Peggy is screaming
-out &#8220;Stop them, Cook!&#8221; and the scullery maid has sat down on the
-floor with her hands over her face. Cook is fainting by the table.
-She had just put a pudding on it for the servants supper. Peggy
-couldn&#8217;t put Nurse into the picture because she wasn&#8217;t sure if she
-was in the kitchen then or not. You <span class="u">do</span> see the Ring, don&#8217;t you?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you call <i>this</i> down?&#8221; said the Giant laughing.
-&#8220;Come along, get on my hand and wish,&#8221; and he laid his
-hand palm upwards on the hearthrug.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wish what?&#8221; asked Peggy, putting on her blue
-dressing-gown and slippers.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To go down, of course,&#8221; said the Giant impatiently.
-&#8220;Has your cold made you deaf?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, all right, I wish to go down,&#8221; said Peggy, clambering
-up on to the Giant&#8217;s hand. &#8220;But it sounds very dull&mdash;<i>Gracious!</i>
-Hold me tight!&#8221; for they both at once went
-right through the nursery floor and into the dining-room
-below.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, look!&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;What a mess we&#8217;ve made
-of the ceiling. The table&#8217;s all covered with bits of it!
-Oughtn&#8217;t we to clear it up?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t waste time,&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;Come on,&#8221; and
-down through the carpet they went and right into the
-kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>The servants were all at supper, but Peggy had only
-just time to catch sight of their terrified faces and to hear
-their chairs crashing to the floor as they all jumped up,
-before the Giant went right through that floor too!</p>
-
-<p>After that they went down so fast that her curls flew
-up in a waving cone above her head, and the Giant&#8217;s beard
-flapped across her face and hid everything. She shut her
-eyes at last, until&mdash;&#8220;Open them, we&#8217;re down!&#8221; said the Giant,
-and they both flopped on to some long brown grass.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Peggy stared round in astonishment. They were sitting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-in the middle of a great brown plain, edged all ground with
-little pointed brown hills rising up to a golden sky. And,
-&#8220;Oh, what ducky little houses!&#8221; cried Peggy, for nestling
-up the sides of every hill were hundreds of tiny brown
-thatched cottages, each with a dear little garden in front
-of it, full of vegetables and brightly coloured berries.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where on earth are we?&#8221; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nowhere,&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;We&#8217;re <i>in</i> it. This is the
-Pixies&#8217; country. Look, they&#8217;re coming out of their houses.
-Do you see them? They&#8217;ve heard us coming.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A great opening of doors sounded from all around, and
-out poured the Pixies, and raced across the plain to Peggy
-and the Giant. Little fat brown fellows they were, dressed
-in dark shades of green and red, with round wrinkled faces
-and pointed caps. When they were quite near, they all
-stood in a crowd whispering and giggling, till two of them,
-holding a huge curled-up yellow leaf between them, were
-pushed forward towards Peggy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What have they got?&#8221; she whispered to the Giant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;An invitation, I expect,&#8221; he whispered back, &#8220;for the
-party to-night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What party?&#8221; asked Peggy, but &#8220;Hush, don&#8217;t,
-whisper, they&#8217;ll think you&#8217;re making personal remarks,&#8221;
-answered the Giant. &#8220;They&#8217;re very sensitive.&#8221; And
-certainly the Pixies carrying the leaf came to a dead stop,
-and, apparently overcome with shyness, dropped it on the
-ground, and raced back to their companions, where they
-stood sniggering and covering their faces with their hands,
-and peeping through their fingers at Peggy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How funny they are!&#8221; said Peggy in amazement.
-&#8220;Why <i>do</i> they do that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>I</i> don&#8217;t know,&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;I think it&#8217;s because
-they have so few holidays and see so few people. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-they&#8217;re a queer lot, and I don&#8217;t profess to understand them!
-You&#8217;d better read your invitation.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy picked the leaf up, and, unrolling it, read as
-follows: &#8220;We invite Peggy and the Giant to a Ball in the
-Distant Purple Caves in half an hour. Skating, Eating,
-Flitting, Mazing, Wending and other Amusements.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear, <i>how</i> exciting! Can I go?&#8221; asked Peggy,
-beginning to dance about all over the plain.</p>
-
-<p>The Giant took the invitation and read it slowly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My goodness me, it <i>is</i> going to be a smart affair!&#8221;
-said he. &#8220;Yes, I think we can manage it all right. Only
-we shall have to dress up for it, I&#8217;m afraid. It wouldn&#8217;t do
-to look dowdy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But what do Flitting, Mazing, and Wending mean?&#8221;
-asked Peggy, looking at the invitation again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, Flitting is flying round one after the other at
-the very top of the caves and copying everything the front
-Pixie does,&#8221; said the Giant, &#8220;and the one who goes on
-longest gets a prize. It&#8217;s tiring, but exciting; a sort of
-Follow-my-Leader, only a better game. And Wending is
-dancing up and down the Unexplored Passages and seeing
-who can pick up most diamonds first. They only have it at
-the very grandest parties. And Mazing is&mdash;now, what <i>is</i>
-Mazing? I&#8217;ve quite forgotten! However, I shall probably
-remember it in a minute or two.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you accept?&#8221; asked a tiny, shy voice at Peggy&#8217;s
-elbow, and she looked down to see a Pixie standing by her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, we&#8217;d <i>love</i> to come, and it&#8217;s very kind of you to
-ask us,&#8221; said Peggy very politely. &#8220;I hope you&#8217;ll excuse
-my writing,&#8221; she added, having sometimes heard her mother
-say this.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They&#8217;d <i>love</i> to come!&#8221; shouted the Pixie to the others,
-and &#8220;They&#8217;d <i>love</i> to come!&#8221; shouted the rest, till the hills<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-echoed with the sound, and then they all turned and raced
-back to their cottages, stopping now and then to giggle and
-snigger and look over their shoulders at Peggy and the
-Giant, before the little doors slammed again behind them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very over-excited indeed,&#8221; remarked the Giant.
-&#8220;Now they&#8217;ll take the rest of the time dressing up. And, by
-the way, we ought to be getting ready too.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X<br />
-
-<small>PIXIE GAMES</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">&#8220;What</span> did you think of wearing?&#8221; asked the Giant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let me see,&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;Yes&mdash;I think I wish to go
-as a Fairy, in pink. What would <i>you</i> like to be?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The wishes do work well now!&#8221; said the Giant in a
-gratified voice, for Peggy stood before him glittering in a
-rosy spangled frock and gleaming silver wings, with a star
-on her forehead and a wand in her hand all complete.
-&#8220;Well, if you&#8217;ll really be so kind as to use up another wish
-on me, I think I&#8217;d rather like to go as Little Boy Blue.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly!&#8221; said Peggy, and the next instant the
-Giant, a good deal smaller than usual, and dressed all in
-blue, with a golden horn in his hand, stood on the plain.
-Unfortunately, however, his seven-leagued boots still
-remained their usual size, and his beard was as long and
-curly as ever, which gave him rather a strange appearance.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Not</i> quite so successful,&#8221; he remarked, glancing down
-at himself. &#8220;However, I shall pass in a crowd, I daresay.
-And now we <i>must</i> start. The Pixies will go under the hills,
-which takes a quarter of the time, but I daren&#8217;t take you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-that way for fear of spoiling our clothes. Come along&mdash;fly
-on to my shoulder. That&#8217;s right! Shut your eyes and it
-won&#8217;t seem so far.&#8221; And off he walked at a great pace over
-the hills.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus060.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">Peggy didn&#8217;t mean to do another picture of the fifth
-Adventure, but Mother particularly wanted one of the
-Pixies, so she had to do this, as the Ball-room one was
-too difficult to do. The Pixies are just shouting out, &#8220;This
-is Mazing, this is!&#8221; and Peggy is trying to catch two of them.
-You can see how tired and giddy the Giant must have
-got with wandering about amongst so many Snowmen.
-He is just wiping his face with his red handkerchief.
-Peggy made herself so <span class="u">very</span> ugly by mistake, and didn&#8217;t
-know how to change it.</p>
-
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Do</i> try to remember as we go what &#8216;Mazing&#8217; means,&#8221;
-said Peggy. &#8220;I wish I knew. It&#8217;s such a funny word!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t talk or think of anything at present,&#8221; said the
-Giant. &#8220;I&#8217;ve got to try and find my way, and it&#8217;s no easy
-matter, I can assure you.&#8221; And a long silence ensued.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Aren&#8217;t we there <i>yet</i>?&#8221; asked Peggy at last, after they
-had been travelling for over a quarter of an hour. She
-opened her eyes as she spoke, and then nearly fell off the
-Giant&#8217;s shoulder with astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>For the brown hills had quite disappeared, and in their
-place a dazzling white country spread around. And a
-country filled with&mdash;<i>could</i> it be? Peggy rubbed her eyes,
-and stared again. Yes. Filled with <i>snowmen</i>! Snowmen
-towering up in all directions, one behind the other, hundreds
-and hundreds of them, and all exactly like the one Mother
-and Peggy had made in the garden last winter, with coals
-for eyes, and pipes in their mouths!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, I thought you&#8217;d be surprised!&#8221; said the Giant,
-stopping wearily. &#8220;I was. We&#8217;ve missed our way somehow,
-I believe, and it would really have been better if we <i>had</i>
-gone under the hills after all. This white country gets
-on my nerves. I <i>must</i> have a rest!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He propped himself up against one of the snowmen as
-he spoke, and mopped his face with his red pocket-handkerchief.
-&#8220;Do fly up fairly high and see if there&#8217;s any way
-out of this,&#8221; he implored in an exhausted voice. &#8220;I&#8217;ve been
-walking in and out between the wretched things for <i>ages</i>.
-There seems no end to them!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<p>Peggy fluttered up and looked North, South, East and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-West, but alas, there was nothing but hosts and hosts of
-snowmen in all directions.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I believe it&#8217;s a trick of those nasty Pixies!&#8221; said the
-Giant angrily when she returned. &#8220;There&mdash;look! Wasn&#8217;t
-that one of them?&#8221; and he pointed behind her.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy wheeled round, just in time to see a mischievous
-Pixie face peeping from behind a snowman.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Catch him!&#8221; cried the Giant, making a grab and
-missing. &#8220;Oh, now he&#8217;s over there!&#8221; as another face
-peeped at them from quite another direction.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is Mazing, this is,&#8221; said a tiny, chuckling voice,
-and a third Pixie appeared round another snowman, and
-disappeared again just as Peggy thought she had really got
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear!&#8221; said the Giant, stopping in dismay.
-&#8220;Don&#8217;t you remember you said you wished you knew what
-Mazing was? I never took in that it was a wish till this
-moment!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, so I did!&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;Gracious me, what a
-silly game! and that makes four wishes gone, too. There,
-<i>now</i> I&#8217;ve got him!&#8221; and she made a wild dash to the right,
-but only succeeded in catching a pointed cap, and falling
-full length in the wet snow.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is Mazing, this is!&#8221; cried out about twenty
-giggling voices at once, and heads poked out from behind
-the snowmen in all directions.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I can&#8217;t stand this any longer,&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;I
-wish we were at that party! <i>Any</i> of the other amusements
-would be better than this one!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At once the snowmen all toppled over and melted in a
-trice, and Peggy and the Giant found themselves standing
-in a great Purple Cave full of rosy light.</p>
-
-<p>All around them danced a multitude of Gnomes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-Brownies, Sprites, and every other kind of unusual creature;
-and a large company of Pixies in fancy dress, who had been
-playing leap-frog in a corner, came pushing their way
-through the crowd.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you <i>are</i> late!&#8221; they cried. &#8220;You&#8217;ve been Mazing,
-haven&#8217;t you?&#8221; and they all burst into a great roar of
-laughter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re not being a bit funny,&#8221; said the Giant, turning
-his back on them, and &#8220;Here come the Naiads!&#8221; he
-whispered to Peggy. &#8220;They only attend the <i>best</i> parties,&#8221;
-and he pointed towards some beautiful tall ladies in green
-and blue with water lilies in their hair, who were walking
-up the cave towards them, followed by a crowd of handsome
-Dryads in brown and yellow.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come and play at Flitting,&#8221; said one of them, taking
-Peggy&#8217;s and the Giant&#8217;s hands. &#8220;Those bad-mannered
-creatures will improve if you take no notice of them. We&#8217;ll
-show you how to play,&#8221; and up to the ceiling they all went,
-and everyone else after them.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy never forgot that wonderful night. When she
-was tired with darting round the cavern walls, or hunting
-for diamonds in the dark, she skated with a company of
-very polite Trolls in a beautiful inner cavern, whose walls
-were a gleaming mass of rubies. And then the Pixies, who
-by this time had remembered their manners, crowned her
-Queen of the Revels with great pomp, and led her off to
-partake of light refreshments.</p>
-
-<p>These were set out in a great black and yellow cavern
-which was entirely lighted by glow-worms, cleverly concealed
-in full-blown yellow roses hung from the roof. Peggy was
-put at the head of the table with the Giant by her side, and
-big sugar sweets of every shape and kind were piled upon
-their plates.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>But no sooner had they finished half their helpings
-than a sudden shout of &#8220;Back to work!&#8221; &#8220;Back to work!&#8221;
-sounded from all sides.</p>
-
-<p>The Naiads and Dryads immediately disappeared in a
-pale green mist, the Sprites changed into blue smoke, and
-the next instant Peggy found herself, with hundreds of
-silent, hardworking Pixies, digging with pickaxes in the
-sides of a cold dark rock, by the light of a solitary glow-worm!</p>
-
-<p>The Giant, with his blue sleeves rolled up, was working
-diligently by her side.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, what <i>are</i> we doing? Where&#8217;s the party gone?&#8221;
-cried Peggy in great distress.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Over,&#8221; said the Giant without stopping; and at every
-blow of his axe great pieces of gold fell out of the rock.
-&#8220;<i>Now</i> we&#8217;ve got to work!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, but this <i>is</i> dull,&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;And I know
-Nannie wouldn&#8217;t like me to get hot with my bad cold,&#8221; she
-went on primly, quite forgetting that she had not thought
-of that at all, during the games just now. Then seeing the
-Giant was busily knocking some emeralds out of the rock
-without taking any notice of what she said, &#8220;Oh, I hate
-the horrid place; I wish I was back in bed!&#8221; she went on
-crossly, just to see whether he&#8217;d answer that or not, and
-throwing her pickaxe down with a crash....</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you <i>are</i>, Miss Peggy,&#8221; said Nurse&#8217;s voice
-soothingly, and Peggy found herself once more in the
-nursery, with the blankets and sheets all tumbling off
-in a most uncomfortable way. &#8220;There, that&#8217;s better!
-Now you must try and go to sleep again. The hot-water
-bottle&#8217;s just tumbled out. I expect that&#8217;s what
-woke you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, Nannie, I didn&#8217;t <i>really</i> mean to come back so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-soon!&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;I never thanked them for my nice
-time, or anything!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve been dreaming you were at the party next
-door,&#8221; said Nurse. &#8220;That&#8217;s because you heard the music,
-I expect. Now you mustn&#8217;t talk any longer. To-morrow
-night Mother will be home!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, so she will! Good-night, Giant dear,&#8221; said
-Peggy, and turning over fell sound asleep at once.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She must be feverish, I&#8217;m afraid, yet she <i>looks</i> quite
-well,&#8221; said Nurse rather uneasily, stealing softly from the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>And all night long on Peggy&#8217;s thumb the green stone
-winked and twinkled at the fire.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-<small>THE LAST ADVENTURE</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">&#8220;I wish</span> it wasn&#8217;t such a wet day,&#8221; said Peggy, lying full
-length in the loft amongst the hay, and looking through the
-cobwebby little window at the driving rain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, what does the rain matter?&#8221; asked the Giant,
-coming through the roof, and lying down in the hay, too,
-with both legs dangling out of the trap-door. And the
-sunshine poured through the hole he had made, and a big
-patch of blue sky gleamed above it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear!&#8221; said Peggy, &#8220;I never noticed I had the
-Ring on! What waste of a wish! The garden boy said
-it was going to clear in half an hour anyway. Nannie
-thinks I&#8217;m in the garden,&#8221; she went on, &#8220;but I ran up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-here out of the rain. Hadn&#8217;t we better go out again
-now it&#8217;s stopped?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, <i>do</i> let&#8217;s stop here for a bit,&#8221; said the Giant.
-&#8220;I&#8217;m so stiff from yesterday&#8217;s digging. I stayed on and
-did a lot after you&#8217;d gone. Look here,&#8221; and he pulled
-handfuls of glittering red and green stones out of his
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t mean to go off suddenly like that,&#8221; said
-Peggy rather shamefacedly. &#8220;I hope you thanked the
-Pixies for us both?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh yes, that was all right,&#8221; said the Giant, scooping
-together all the hay within reach and making it into a
-pillow for his head. &#8220;By the way,&#8221; he went on lazily,
-staring up at the dusty beams, &#8220;do you realise this is
-our last adventure?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, so it is!&#8221; said Peggy with a gasp. &#8220;Oh, how
-<i>awful</i>! I can&#8217;t bear to think I shan&#8217;t see you again,&#8221;
-and she caught hold of the Giant&#8217;s little finger and hugged
-it hard. &#8220;What <i>shall</i> I do without you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you must think of something very exciting
-indeed for our last day,&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;And don&#8217;t
-go wasting wishes like you&#8217;ve been doing lately. It
-spoils all the fun.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The thing that puzzles me,&#8221; said Peggy, looking at
-her Ring as it gleamed and sparkled in that dark place,
-&#8220;is how much the Ring does, and how much you do?
-And why sometimes it doesn&#8217;t work till it&#8217;s turned, and
-why you can&#8217;t always bring me back without my having
-to use up a wish, and where you live when you&#8217;re not
-here, and&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, of all the inquisitive children you absolutely take
-the cake!&#8221; said the Giant. &#8220;I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;ve been asked
-so many questions for the last five hundred years at least.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-I haven&#8217;t the slightest intention of answering one of them.
-Instead of being grateful for having so many wishes at a
-time, you begin grumbling&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;O Giant, darling, I didn&#8217;t <i>mean</i> to grumble!&#8221; cried
-Peggy. &#8220;I was only <i>wondering</i>. But I won&#8217;t ask any
-more questions, I promise you, if you&#8217;ll only think of some
-lovely exciting adventure for to-day. You think of such
-<i>beautiful</i> things always,&#8221; she added.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, that&#8217;s all very well!&#8221; said the Giant, but his voice
-sounded rather pleased. &#8220;Well now, let me see. This
-takes some thinking. What <i>was</i> it that that child and I did
-in 1350 or thereabouts? Oh yes, I remember. She wished
-all her toys to come alive. How would you like that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Perhaps</i> it would be rather fun,&#8221; said Peggy&mdash;and
-she wished it, but in rather a doubtful voice. &#8220;You&#8217;re sure
-it will be really exciting?&#8221; she asked....</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Listen to all that trampling,&#8221; said the Giant in reply,
-nibbling at a straw and blinking at the rafters.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy raced to the loft door and looked down into the
-yard below, where an extraordinary sight met her eyes.
-For the whole place had suddenly become packed from end
-to end with every kind of animal, bird and insect, all rushing
-to and fro in the greatest state of excitement.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, <i>do</i> look down!&#8221; Peggy implored the Giant.
-&#8220;Where <i>can</i> they all have come from? There&#8217;s a camel,
-I&#8217;m sure. Oh, and there&#8217;s a lion going right off into the
-rose bed! What <i>will</i> John say? And there&#8217;s a funny old
-man in a long coat running about amongst them all!
-Who <i>can</i> he be?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Noah,&#8221; answered the Giant, &#8220;and it&#8217;s all the animals
-from your Noah&#8217;s Ark, of course. My word, you&#8217;ll have a
-lively time getting &#8217;em in again! You&#8217;d better go down,
-I think.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>Peggy ran down the steps, and Noah at once bustled
-up to her in a great state of mind.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This coat of mine hampers me dreadfully,&#8221; he panted.
-&#8220;Do you think you could restore any kind of order? The
-tigers have got into the kitchen garden, and a dromedary
-and one, if not <i>both</i>, the leopards, have gone down the high
-road towards the village!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Giant, Giant, come and help!&#8221; shouted Peggy,
-and the next moment the Giant was standing by
-her side, shaking pieces of hay off himself, which the few
-remaining animals immediately ate.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He wants us to drive them up into the nursery
-again,&#8221; said Peggy. &#8220;You go that way,&#8221; and she pointed
-through the open gate into the kitchen garden, &#8220;and I&#8217;ll
-go round the house and get them out of the flower beds.
-And you,&#8221; to Noah, &#8220;run down the road after them!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Chuck, chuck, chuck,&#8221; she went on to a pair of red
-storks strutting to and fro in the perennial border, but they
-simply flew on to the top of the house and stared down at
-her; whilst an elephant, standing in the asparagus bed on
-the other side of the garden wall, chose at that moment to
-trumpet loudly, and nearly startled Peggy out of her wits.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know how we&#8217;re to manage it!&#8221; she said at
-last to Noah, who reappeared driving a bright blue pig and
-a dromedary up the road. &#8220;It&#8217;s <i>no</i> fun, is it? I only wish
-we could all go for a ride or something exciting! How
-about that animal there?&#8221; and she pointed at a Giraffe
-engaged at the moment in licking a red creeper off one
-side of the house....</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hold me tight!&#8221; said Noah very nervously, as they
-all three found themselves on the Giraffe&#8217;s back and going
-at a brisk trot down the back drive. &#8220;<i>Do</i> hold me tight!
-I haven&#8217;t ridden for years.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>&#8220;How lovely this is!&#8221; said Peggy, taking a firmer grip
-of Noah, who sat in front, and looking back at the Giant.
-&#8220;Are you all right?&#8221; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At present I am,&#8221; he answered carefully, &#8220;though I
-really ought to have been in front for the weight, I suppose.
-Hulloa! What&#8217;s he doing now?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For the Giraffe had no sooner turned into the high road
-than he began to proceed in a series of jumps, all four feet
-pressed close together, and rising a good deal higher than
-the hedges at each effort.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell him to <i>stop</i>, Noah!&#8221; gasped Peggy. &#8220;You&#8217;re in
-front. Hurry up! I&#8217;m shaken to bits.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s no good,&#8221; moaned Noah. &#8220;I have, and he won&#8217;t
-listen. Oh, if we only had some reins!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must <i>wish</i> him to go slower,&#8221; said the Giant to
-Peggy in a faint voice. &#8220;I shall die if this goes on! It&#8217;s
-all your fault for saying &#8216;or something exciting&#8217; after your
-wish. I forgot to tell you how very risky that was. Ah,
-thank you! That&#8217;s better,&#8221; for Peggy had wished, and the
-Giraffe at once quieted down into a walk&mdash;in fact into
-such a slow walk that it almost might have been called
-standing still.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Get on!&#8221; said Peggy, digging her heels into the Giraffe&#8217;s
-back&mdash;but he went slower and slower still.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh dear, you&#8217;ll have to get off and push, I&#8217;m afraid,&#8221;
-she said to the Giant. &#8220;We shall never get anywhere at all
-if you don&#8217;t. I&#8217;m not going to waste another wish on the
-horrid old thing!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; said the Giant, getting off&mdash;but the more he
-pushed the slower the Giraffe went.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, here we are at the village!&#8221; cried Peggy, as after
-half an hour&#8217;s steady pushing they turned a corner and saw a
-row of cottages stretching down the road on either side.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-&#8220;Now get on again,&#8221; she said to the hot and tired Giant, &#8220;and
-we&#8217;ll ride grandly down to the shop and buy a pennyworth
-of sweets!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who&#8217;s to buy them?&#8221; asked the Giant, wearily settling
-himself on the Giraffe&#8217;s back again (it was quite easy to get on
-and off because the creature really went so very slowly). &#8220;<i>I</i>
-can&#8217;t. I only frighten people.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Noah will&mdash;won&#8217;t you, Noah?&#8221; asked Peggy coaxingly.
-&#8220;<i>I</i> can&#8217;t, because I&#8217;ve no pennies left at all!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I haven&#8217;t a farthing on me either,&#8221; said Noah
-uncomfortably.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, never mind, have it entered!&#8221; said Peggy, pushing
-him off the Giraffe&#8217;s back. &#8220;Run along; we shan&#8217;t move far
-from here before you come back&mdash;and get acid drops if
-you can,&#8221; she added.</p>
-
-<p>Noah obediently crossed the road and walked into the
-shop; and about one minute afterwards he reappeared,
-bearing two enormous bottles of pear-drops under each arm.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gracious me!&#8221; cried Peggy, jumping off the Giraffe,
-and followed by the Giant. &#8220;How quick you&#8217;ve been! And
-that&#8217;s not a pennyworth!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know it isn&#8217;t,&#8221; said Noah. &#8220;But the woman <i>made</i>
-me take them. I asked her quite politely for a pennyworth,
-but instead of weighing them out like anyone else would, she
-fell down behind the counter and screamed, &#8216;Take anything
-you like, only go away!&#8217; So I did. I chose <i>all</i> pear-drops
-because they&#8217;re my favourite sweets,&#8221; he added simply,
-putting two into his mouth at once.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh you greedy!&#8221; cried Peggy. &#8220;Give us some at
-once! I&#8217;m very glad nobody sees us,&#8221; she added, looking
-anxiously up and down the village street; &#8220;they&#8217;d never
-believe the woman really <i>gave</i> them to you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And at that moment a perfect shout of delight rose up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-in the road behind them, and Peggy, turning hastily round,
-saw a troup of Toys rushing towards them!</p>
-
-<p>There were all the dolls she had ever had, all the people
-in every Fairybook she had ever looked at, and all her
-wooden carts and horses. There were all her Golliwogs and
-Teddy-bears, all the Ark animals again, all the rest of Noah&#8217;s
-family (who had been lost for years), all the dolls&#8217; tea-sets,
-and even the big dolls&#8217; house, and the rocking-horse, and all
-the balls and tops, and ninepins, and whips, and whistles, in
-fact every single thing that had ever lived in the Toy
-Cupboard in the Nursery.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Found at last!&#8221; they screamed, dancing and leaping
-round Peggy. &#8220;Now let&#8217;s play a game. <i>You</i> choose!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-<small>THE NICEST WISH OF ALL</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">As</span> the Toys crowded round, filling the village street
-from end to end, Peggy could tell in a moment that they
-were ready for any fun or mischief she could possibly wish
-for; and her spirits rose higher and higher. She threw all the
-pear-drops amongst them, and whilst they were scrambling
-about picking them up&mdash;&#8220;I know!&#8221; she cried, as a lovely
-thought struck her. &#8220;I wish that the village was our very
-own, and that the Giant and I were King and Queen, with
-the shop for our palace!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hurrah!&#8221; shouted all the Toys. &#8220;Let&#8217;s turn the
-people out now!&#8221; and the Dolls and Golliwogs leading the
-way, they rushed up to the doors of the cottages, and banged
-on them with all their might.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus072.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">This is the way they rode through the Village in the Sixth
-Adventure, and Peggy was very sorry there were not more
-people looking out to see them. She is just asking Noah to
-get down and buy a pennyworth of sweets. The girl with
-the fat face in the bedroom window was the shopwoman&#8217;s
-daughter. She ran down the stairs and out of the back
-door as fast as she could tear. You can see how slowly
-the Giraffe was walking. Afterwards he played about just like
-all the other Animals. The Giant was making that funny face
-because he felt shy. This was the best Adventure.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>&#8220;You mustn&#8217;t be rude to the people, remember!&#8221; cried
-Peggy. &#8220;Just ask them to lend us the village for a little
-while, and we promise not to hurt it. I expect they&#8217;ll
-understand.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Whether they did or not Peggy never found out, for
-after one glance out of their windows, the people snatched up
-their babies, and, screaming to the rest of their children to
-follow, they rushed out of the back doors and down the fields
-and away over the hills as fast as their legs could carry them.
-Peggy tried shouting to them that it was all right, and that
-no one would hurt them, and the lions and tigers were very
-anxious to run after them, and <i>make</i> them see how silly they
-were; but everyone else thought it better to begin playing
-at once, before the men came back from work.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy and the Giant&mdash;who suddenly noticed that they
-were wearing beautiful scarlet robes, and had heavy gold
-crowns on their heads&mdash;went behind the counter in the little
-shop, and sold sweets to every Toy who came to buy.
-And it was all more fun than words can say, especially when
-the dolls, who wanted to play at housekeeping, came crowding
-in asking for flour and sugar and rice and all sorts of things.</p>
-
-<p>The Giant, quite doubled up in such a small space,
-handed down the jars and tins to Peggy, and she measured
-out all the things very carefully, and put them into paper
-bags; whilst Noah and his family busied themselves with
-getting tea ready in the back room.</p>
-
-<p>Outside, the Golliwogs and Teddy-bears, shouting and
-hallooing, led the Ark animals to the pond to drink, or shut
-them up in the fields, or harnessed them to the carts they
-found, and drove them to market&mdash;and of course the
-animals simply <i>loved</i> it.</p>
-
-<p>The rocking-horse got off his rockers, and was put in a
-real stable, and given real hay to eat; and the dolls&#8217; house<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-was put alongside a real house and had a creeper trained up
-it, and instead of the whole of the front wall having to be
-undone before people could get in, the little brown door
-opened and shut just like one in a real house does.</p>
-
-<p>As for the tops and ninepins, dominoes and other small
-fry, they just spun and hopped up and down the road and in
-and out of the houses, not really playing at anything, but
-enjoying it all as much as anyone. And the pictures in the
-story-books took no notice of anybody, but went for long
-walks in the woods, with their arms round each other&#8217;s
-necks, gossiping.</p>
-
-<p>It really was the best adventure of the lot, Peggy and
-the Giant agreed, as they sat by their door that afternoon,
-the Giant smoking and reading a newspaper, and Peggy
-looking down the busy village street. None of the villagers
-came back at all, and it really felt as if the whole place was
-their very own.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Even that pump looks exciting, because it&#8217;s <i>ours</i>,&#8221; said
-Peggy, &#8220;and if only Mother was home again everything would
-be <i>perfect</i>, wouldn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, why don&#8217;t you <i>wish</i> she was coming?&#8221; said the
-Giant. &#8220;You&#8217;ve got one more wish left still, and she&#8217;ll see you
-get home without any help from me or the Ring either!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Peggy jumped to her feet and ran down the road. Why
-<i>hadn&#8217;t</i> she thought of it before? Round the corner she tore,
-away from everyone&#8217;s sight, even the Giant&#8217;s, her heart
-beating fast. Then&mdash;&#8220;I wish Mummie was coming now!&#8221;
-she said&mdash;and at once a little tiny speck appeared far, far
-away on the white road....</p>
-
-<p>And of course the speck turned into a motor, and of
-course Mother was inside it.&mdash;And directly <i>that</i> happened,
-the Ring flew right off Peggy&#8217;s thumb and completely disappeared&mdash;goodness
-knows where.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>&#8220;And did you come to meet me!&#8221; said Mother, jumping
-out of the motor and kissing Peggy dozens and dozens of
-times. &#8220;You <i>are</i> a nice Pegtop! Weren&#8217;t you frightened
-all by yourself on the road?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;O Mummie, this is <i>much</i> the nicest wish of all,&#8221; gasped
-Peggy, as Mother jumped in again with her in her arms, and
-they whizzed along down the road. &#8220;Why!&#8221; as they passed
-through the village, &#8220;the Toys are all gone and so is the
-Giant!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve not answered my question yet, my Peggums,&#8221;
-said Mother, pressing her closer.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course I wasn&#8217;t frightened, Mummie!&#8221; said Peggy,
-burying her nose in the bunch of violets pinned to Mother&#8217;s
-coat. &#8220;You see, I had my Giant with me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, had you?&#8221; said Mother, not looking at all
-surprised. &#8220;Then <i>that&#8217;s</i> all right! Good old Giant!&#8221; she
-added softly.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s all perfectly <i>lovely</i>,&#8221; said Mother, that evening
-after tea, when Peggy had finished telling her all the
-adventures from beginning to end. &#8220;And I&#8217;m going
-to write them down for a book. It would be a thousand
-pities if the Ring went to another little girl and she
-didn&#8217;t know about putting it on her thumb. Think of
-the waste!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, and it&#8217;s so bad for the Giant, too,&#8221; said Peggy
-thoughtfully. &#8220;I mean, him not being <i>used</i> oftener. You
-see what mistakes he made sometimes, darling old thing!
-I do think the book is a <i>splendid</i> plan, Mummie,&#8221; and she
-began to dance round and round the room.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you shall do the pictures for it!&#8221; said Mother,
-dancing round the room too. (She was <i>that</i> sort of Mother.)</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>&#8220;Oh, <i>do</i> you think I could?&#8221; asked Peggy, stopping
-short.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course you could,&#8221; said Mother. &#8220;Why, you were
-there, and know exactly what everything looked like. And
-I&#8217;ll help a little when you want me. Let&#8217;s do a bit every day
-after tea till it&#8217;s done,&#8221; and she rolled Peggy on the floor and
-hugged her.</p>
-
-<p>And so they did.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p class="center"><i>Printed in Great Britain by M&#8216;Farlane &amp; Erskine, Edinburgh</i></p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph2">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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