When he was let up he remained convinced that "Da" had done a dreadful

thing. Though he did not wish to bear witness against her, he had been

compelled, by fear of repetition, to seek his mother and say: "Mum,

don't let 'Da' hold me down on my back again."

His mother, her hands held up over her head, and in them two plaits of

hair--"couleur de feuille morte," as little Jon had not yet learned

to call it--had looked at him with eyes like little bits of his brown

velvet tunic, and answered:

"No, darling, I won't."

She, being in the nature of a goddess, little Jon was satisfied;

especially when, from under the dining-table at breakfast, where he

happened to be waiting for a mushroom, he had overheard her say to his

father:

"Then, will you tell 'Da,' dear, or shall I? She's so devoted to him";

and his father's answer:

"Well, she mustn't show it that way. I know exactly what it feels like

to be held down on one's back. No Forsyte can stand it for a minute."

Conscious that they did not know him to be under the table, little Jon

was visited by the quite new feeling of embarrassment, and stayed where

he was, ravaged by desire for the mushroom.

Such had been his first dip into the dark abysses of existence. Nothing

much had been revealed to him after that, till one day, having gone down

to the cow-house for his drink of milk fresh from the cow, after Garratt

had finished milking, he had seen Clover's calf, dead. Inconsolable,

and followed by an upset Garratt, he had sought "Da"; but suddenly

aware that she was not the person he wanted, had rushed away to find his

father, and had run into the arms of his mother.

"Clover's calf's dead! Oh! Oh! It looked so soft!"

His mother's clasp, and her:

"Yes, darling, there, there!" had stayed his sobbing. But if Clover's

calf could die, anything could--not only bees, flies, beetles and

chickens--and look soft like that! This was appalling--and soon

forgotten!

The next thing had been to sit on a bumble bee, a poignant experience,

which his mother had understood much better than "Da"; and nothing of

vital importance had happened after that till the year turned; when,

following a day of utter wretchedness, he had enjoyed a disease composed

of little spots, bed, honey in a spoon, and many Tangerine oranges.

It was then that the world had flowered. To "Auntie" June he owed that

flowering, for no sooner was he a little lame duck than she came rushing

down from London, bringing with her the books which had nurtured her

own Berserker spirit, born in the noted year of 1869. Aged, and of many

colours, they were stored with the most formidable happenings. Of

these she read to little Jon, till he was allowed to read to himself;

whereupon she whisked back to London and left them with him in a heap.

Those books cooked his fancy, till he thought and dreamed of nothing but

midshipmen and dhows, pirates, rafts, sandal-wood traders, iron horses,

sharks, battles, Tartars, Red Indians, balloons, North Poles and other

extravagant delights. The moment he was suffered to get up, he rigged

his bed fore and aft, and set out from it in a narrow bath across green

seas of carpet, to a rock, which he climbed by means of its mahogany

drawer knobs, to sweep the horizon with his drinking tumbler screwed to

his eye, in search of rescuing sails. He made a daily raft out of the

towel stand, the tea tray, and his pillows. He saved the juice from his

French plums, bottled it in an empty medicine bottle, and provisioned

the raft with the rum that it became; also with pemmican made out of

little saved-up bits of chicken sat on and dried at the fire; and with

lime juice against scurvy, extracted from the peel of his oranges and a

little economised juice. He made a North Pole one morning from the whole

of his bedclothes except the bolster, and reached it in a birch-bark

canoe (in private life the fender), after a terrible encounter with a

polar bear fashioned from the bolster and four skittles dressed up

in "Da's" nightgown. After that, his father, seeking to steady his

imagination, brought him Ivanboe, Bevis, a book about King Arthur, and

Tom Brown's Schooldays. He read the first, and for three days built,

defended and stormed Front de Boeuf's castle, taking every part in the

piece except those of Rebecca and Rowena; with piercing cries of: "En

avant, de Bracy!" and similar utterances. After reading the book about

King Arthur he became almost exclusively Sir Lamorac de Galis, because,

though there was very little about him, he preferred his name to that of

any other knight; and he rode his old rocking-horse to death, armed

with a long bamboo. Bevis he found tame; besides, it required woods and

animals, of which he had none in his nursery, except his two cats, Fitz

and Puck Forsyte, who permitted no liberties. For Tom Brown he was as

yet too young. There was relief in the house when, after the fourth

week, he was permitted to go down and out.




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