登陆注册
15455600000050

第50章 CHAPTER 16(3)

So the Uncle coughed and stood up and made a speech. He said -'Ladies and gentlemen, we are met together to discuss an important subject which has for some weeks engrossed the attention of the honourable member opposite and myself.'

I said, 'Hear, hear,' and Alice whispered, 'What happened to the guinea-pig?' Of course you know the answer to that.

The Uncle went on -'I am going to live in this house, and as it's rather big for me, your Father has agreed that he and you shall come and live with me.

And so, if you're agreeable, we're all going to live here together, and, please God, it'll be a happy home for us all. Eh! - what?'

He blew his nose and kissed us all round. As it was Christmas I did not mind, though I am much too old for it on other dates. Then he said, 'Thank you all very much for your presents; but I've got a present here I value more than anything else I have.'

I thought it was not quite polite of him to say so, till I saw that what he valued so much was a threepenny-bit on his watch-chain, and, of course, I saw it must be the one we had given him.

He said, 'You children gave me that when you thought I was the poor Indian, and I'll keep it as long as I live. And I've asked some friends to help us to be jolly, for this is our house-warming. Eh!

- what?'

Then he shook Father by the hand, and they blew their noses; and then Father said, 'Your Uncle has been most kind - most -'

But Uncle interrupted by saying, 'Now, Dick, no nonsense!'

Then H. O. said, 'Then you're not poor at all?' as if he were very disappointed.

The Uncle replied, 'I have enough for my simple wants, thank you, H. O.; and your Father's business will provide him with enough for yours. Eh! - what?'

Then we all went down and looked at the fox thoroughly, and made the Uncle take the glass off so that we could see it all round and then the Uncle took us all over the house, which is the most comfortable one I have ever been in. There is a beautiful portrait of Mother in Father's sitting-room. The Uncle must be very rich indeed. This ending is like what happens in Dickens's books; but I think it was much jollier to happen like a book, and it shows what a nice man the Uncle is, the way he did it all.

Think how flat it would have been if the Uncle had said, when we first offered him the one and threepence farthing, 'Oh, I don't want your dirty one and three-pence! I'm very rich indeed.'

Instead of which he saved up the news of his wealth till Christmas, and then told us all in one glorious burst. Besides, I can't help it if it is like Dickens, because it happens this way. Real life is often something like books.

Presently, when we had seen the house, we were taken into the drawing-room, and there was Mrs Leslie, who gave us the shillings and wished us good hunting, and Lord Tottenham, and Albert-next-door's Uncle - and Albert-next-door, and his Mother (I'm not very fond of her), and best of all our own Robber and his two kids, and our Robber had a new suit on. The Uncle told us he had asked the people who had been kind to us, and Noel said, 'Where is my noble editor that I wrote the poetry to?'

The Uncle said he had not had the courage to ask a strange editor to dinner; but Lord Tottenham was an old friend of Uncle's, and he had introduced Uncle to Mrs Leslie, and that was how he had the pride and pleasure of welcoming her to our house-warming. And he made her a bow like you see on a Christmas card.

Then Alice asked, 'What about Mr Rosenbaum? He was kind; it would have been a pleasant surprise for him.'

But everybody laughed, and Uncle said -'Your father has paid him the sovereign he lent you. I don't think he could have borne another pleasant surprise.'

And I said there was the butcher, and he was really kind; but they only laughed, and Father said you could not ask all your business friends to a private dinner.

Then it was dinner-time, and we thought of Uncle's talk about cold mutton and rice. But it was a beautiful dinner, and I never saw such a dessert! We had ours on plates to take away into another sitting-room, which was much jollier than sitting round the table with the grown-ups. But the Robber's kids stayed with their Father. They were very shy and frightened, and said hardly anything, but looked all about with very bright eyes. H. O. thought they were like white mice; but afterwards we got to know them very well, and in the end they were not so mousy. And there is a good deal of interesting stuff to tell about them; but I shall put all that in another book, for there is no room for it in this one. We played desert islands all the afternoon and drank Uncle's health in ginger wine. It was H. O. that upset his over Alice's green silk dress, and she never even rowed him. Brothers ought not to have favourites, and Oswald would never be so mean as to have a favourite sister, or, if he had, wild horses should not make him tell who it was.

And now we are to go on living in the big house on the Heath, and it is very jolly.

Mrs Leslie often comes to see us, and our own Robber and Albert-next-door's uncle. The Indian Uncle likes him because he has been in India too and is brown; but our Uncle does not like Albert-next-door. He says he is a muff. And I am to go to Rugby, and so are Noel and H. O., and perhaps to Balliol afterwards.

Balliol is my Father's college. It has two separate coats of arms, which many other colleges are not allowed. Noel is going to be a poet and Dicky wants to go into Father's business.

The Uncle is a real good old sort; and just think, we should never have found him if we hadn't made up our minds to be Treasure Seekers! Noel made a poem about it -Lo! the poor Indian from lands afar, Comes where the treasure seekers are;

We looked for treasure, but we find The best treasure of all is the Uncle good and kind.

I thought it was rather rot, but Alice would show it to the Uncle, and he liked it very much. He kissed Alice and he smacked Noel on the back, and he said, 'I don't think I've done so badly either, if you come to that, though I was never a regular professional treasure seeker. Eh! - what?'

同类推荐
  • 群书治要六韬

    群书治要六韬

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说大乘戒经

    佛说大乘戒经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 上清黄书过度仪

    上清黄书过度仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Northanger Abbey

    Northanger Abbey

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 兵要望江南

    兵要望江南

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 难岁篇

    难岁篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 帝女叶璇

    帝女叶璇

    “千年之前,你的父亲将整个皇朝羽化成仙,……现在,给我十年寿命,我便助你一统诸天,君临天下。”谋士以区区凡人之身,却逆乱乾坤,谋算诸天仙佛,可叹,可叹……临死之前:“我这一生只为你征战天下,杀伐诸天……”
  • 折天

    折天

    他来到了世上.因为没有名字,所以给自己取了个随便的名字.稚景零.因为没有目标,所以给自己定了个俗气的目标.睡觉睡到自然醒,数钱数到手抽筋.后来她问,天塌了,怎么办?那我只有想办法折了她,他说.
  • 饮血邪录

    饮血邪录

    操天道,化两仪,转阴阳五行,握生死卦象。北方紫微星,罩我承接皇龙之气,作创世诀!挥手际,饮尽神州血!公元五百一十年,屹立在神州大陆的一方豪强,玉仙慕家惨遭灭门,原因不详,凶手不详,此事传于神州各处,一时间人心惶惶。玉仙慕家的实力之强,宛若扎根在神州的一可不可撼动的参天巨树,可这巨树,竟被一夜之间连根拔起,究竟是谁能有这般力量,目的又是为何?又有传闻称,玉仙慕家并未被全灭,族长慕青天的两个儿子逃脱了,但至今为止,下落不明,生死未卜。
  • 星迷

    星迷

    千百年来,人类仰望星空、渴望走出生命故土地球,然而,冰冷的宇宙并不是人类理想的家园……深邃的地质层,遥远的年代,圆形的造物,带有智慧生物加工的痕迹,静静的躺在那里。不知道过了多少年,发生了什么事,造物已经深深地埋入地质层之中。这一天,一种直立行走的物种,无意中接近。PS:宇航灾难文,求认同
  • 做生意从做朋友开始

    做生意从做朋友开始

    本书将告诉你:怎么去结识那些对你事业有帮助的朋友;怎样发挥朋友的力量来帮你做生意;怎样处理与朋友间的各种关系;怎样与朋友维系长久的友谊;怎样做好生意场上的应酬交际;怎样在生意场上进行感情投资;怎样顺利地谈成生意和缔结合约等。如果你的生意正处于萧条阶段,那么本书将成为你事业的转折点;如果你生意兴隆,那么本书将成为你事业更上一层楼的台阶。
  • 网游之时空法师

    网游之时空法师

    20年前叛军的舰队攻打地球,战争降临到这颗蓝色星球,战争的恐怖降临大地,无数军人与平民死亡。最终,地球联盟惨胜,保住了他们满是废墟的土地和虚弱不堪的人民。于是,全民皆兵成为了地球联盟的政策,让G20团体共同签下《世界公约》,即所有原来的游戏公司全部整合到一起,共同开发一款全息仿真游戏,可以让全地球人共同进入,所有玩家在游戏中进行仿真战斗。每十年大更新一次游戏,会修改的有规则,地形,环境,游戏中的国家等等。---一切都是世界的错!且看我们中二男主进入游戏蜕变成一位令同伴可以信任,令国人得以崇拜,令敌人闻风丧胆的时空法师。
  • 阴阳捉鬼道长

    阴阳捉鬼道长

    我天生就有了阴阳眼,能看到那些不不干净的东西,自己终生是冤鬼缠身,无奈拜入茅山派,习得茅山道术,改变自身命运…………也就从此我踏上捉鬼之路……纵横阴阳界,阴阳斗法,驱邪缚魅,斩鬼,斗凶灵,一桩桩的诡异灵异事件都展现出来………
  • 我想活得更明白

    我想活得更明白

    人生最痛苦的不是一无所有,而是曾经拥有。她本来拥有一切,一篇名校大学生被QJ长达四个多小时的文章让她坠入深渊,不但要承受失去,还要为她以前的光环买单,是就此沉沦还是另寻出路。苏盈告诉你,手上是一副好牌,她能成赢家,手上是副烂牌,她照样能成赢家。苏盈说,你有没有看过一句话,所有的顺从是为了最后的爆发。刘佳说,所以你现在宇宙大爆发。不,既不是顺从,也不是爆发那是什么?是驾驭
  • 英雄联盟之乱我为王

    英雄联盟之乱我为王

    一个气候突变的十一月,一间熟悉的网咖,一道熟悉的声影,然而却是一次又一次通往最强王者之路的defeat。如同舞王又一次倒在了S系列赛上,吴皓阳再一次倒在了晋级之路上。不甘,愤怒,绝望......充斥着他的心田,他摔坏了鼠标,敲掉了键盘,砸坏了屏幕,如同一只丧家之犬逃窜向了雨夜。这一逃,却是逃出了一条不一样的道路,一条不亚于最强王者的主宰之路。