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AT THE BACK OF THE NORTH WIND by GEORGE MAC DONALD
1871
CHAPTER I
THE HAY-LOFT
I HAVE been asked to tell you about the back of the north wind.
An old Greek writer mentions a people who lived there, and were
so comfortable that they could not bear it any longer, and
drowned themselves. My story is not the same as his. I do not
think Herodotus had got the right account of the place. I am
going to tell you how it fared with a boy who went there.
He lived in a low room over a coach-house; and that was not
by any means at the back of the north wind, as his mother very
well knew. For one side of the room was built only of boards,
and the boards were so old that you might run a penknife through
into the north wind. And then let them settle between them which
was the sharper! I know that when you pulled it out again the
wind would be after it like a cat after a mouse, and you would
know soon enough you were not at the back of the north wind.
Still, this room was not very cold, except when the north wind
blew stronger than usual: the room I have to do with now was
always cold, except in summer, when the sun took the matter into
his own hands. Indeed, I am not sure whether I ought to call it
a room at all; for it was just a loft where they kept hay and
straw and oats for the horses.
And when little Diamond -- but stop: I must tell you that his
father, who was a coachman, had named him after a favourite
horse, and his mother had had no objection: -- when little
Diamond, then, lay there in bed, he could hear the horses under
him munching away in the dark, or moving sleepily in their
dreams. For Diamond's father had built him a bed in the loft
with boards all round it, because they had so little room in
their own end over the coach-house; and Diamond's father put old
Diamond in the stall under the bed, because he was a quiet
horse, and did not go to sleep standing, but lay down like a
reasonable creature. But, although he was a surprisingly
reasonable creature, yet, when young Diamond woke in the middle
of the night, and felt the bed shaking in the blasts of the
north wind, he could not help wondering whether, if the wind
should blow the house down, and he were to fall through into the
manger, old Diamond mightn't eat him up before he knew him in
his night-gown. And although old Diamond was very quiet all
night long, yet when he woke he got up like an earthquake, and
then young Diamond knew what o'clock it was, or at least what
was to be done next, which was -- to go to sleep again as fast
as he could.
There was hay at his feet and hay at his head, piled up in
great trusses to the very roof. Indeed it was sometimes only
through a little lane with several turnings, which looked as if
it had been sawn out for him, that he could reach his bed at
all. For the stock of hay was, of course, always in a state
either of slow ebb or of sudden flow. Sometimes the whole space
of the loft, with the little panes in the roof for the stars to
look in, would lie open before his open eyes as he lay in bed;
sometimes a yellow wall of sweet-smelling fibres closed up his
view at the distance of half a yard. Sometimes, when his mother
had undressed him in her room, and told him to trot to bed by
himself, he would creep into the heart of the hay, and lie there
thinking how cold it was outside in the wind, and how warm it
was inside there in his bed, and how he could go to it when he
pleased, only he wouldn't just yet; he would get a little colder
first. And ever as he grew colder, his bed would grow warmer,
till at last he would scramble out of the hay, shoot like an
arrow into his bed, cover himself up, and snuggle down, thinking what
a happy boy he was. He had not the least idea that the wind got
in at a chink in the wall, and blew about him all night. For the
back of his bed was only of boards an inch thick, and on the
other side of them was the north wind.
Now, as I have already said, these boards were soft and
crumbly. To be sure, they were tarred on the outside, yet in
many places they were more like tinder than timber. Hence it
happened that the soft part having worn away from about it,
little Diamond found one night, after he lay down, that a knot
had come out of one of them, and that the wind was blowing in
upon him in a cold and rather imperious fashion. Now he had no
fancy for leaving things wrong that might be set right; so he
jumped out of bed again, got a little strike of hay, twisted it
up, folded it in the middle, and, having thus made it into a
cork, stuck it into the hole in the wall. But the wind began to
blow loud and angrily, and, as Diamond was falling asleep, out
blew his cork and hit him on the nose, just hard enough to wake
him up quite, and let him hear the wind whistling shrill in the
hole. He searched for his hay-cork, found it, stuck it in
harder, and was just dropping off once more, when, pop! with an
angry whistle behind it, the cork struck him again, this time on
the cheek. Up he rose once more, made a fresh stopple of hay,
and corked the hole severely. But he was hardly down again
before -- pop! it came on his forehead. He gave it up, drew the
clothes above his head, and was soon fast asleep.
Although the next day was very stormy, Diamond forgot all
about the hole, for he was busy making a cave by the side of his
mother's fire with a broken chair, a three-legged stool, and a
blanket, and then sitting in it. His mother, however, discovered
it, and pasted a bit of brown paper over it, so that,
when Diamond had snuggled down the next night, he had no
occasion to think of it.
Presently, however, he lifted his head and listened. Who
could that be talking to him? The wind was rising again, and
getting very loud, and full of rushes and whistles. He was sure
some one was talking -- and very near him, too, it was. But he
was not frightened, for he had not yet learned how to be; so he
sat up and hearkened. At last the voice, which, though
quite gentle, sounded a little angry, appeared to come from the
back of the bed. He crept nearer to it, and laid his ear against
the wall. Then he heard nothing but the wind, which sounded very
loud indeed. The moment, however, that he moved his head from
the wall, he heard the voice again, close to his ear. He felt
about with his hand, and came upon the piece of paper his mother
had pasted over the hole. Against this he laid his ear, and then
he heard the voice quite distinctly. There was, in fact, a
little corner of the paper loose, and through that, as from a
mouth in the wall, the voice came.
"What do you mean, little boy -- closing up my window?"
"What window?" asked Diamond.
"You stuffed hay into it three times last night. I had to
blow it out again three times."
"You can't mean this little hole! It isn't a window; it's
a hole in my bed."
"I did not say it was a window: I said it was my window."
"But it can't be a window, because windows are holes to see
out of."
"Well, that's just what I made this window for."
"But you are outside: you can't want a window."
"You are quite mistaken. Windows are to see out of, you
say. Well, I'm in my house, and I want windows to see out of
it."
"But you've made a window into my bed."
"Well, your mother has got three windows into my dancing
room, and you have three into my garret."
"But I heard father say, when my mother wanted him to make
a window through the wall, that it was against the law, for it
would look into Mr. Dyves's garden."
The voice laughed.
"The law would have some trouble to catch me!" it said.
"But if it's not right, you know," said Diamond, "that's no
matter. You shouldn't do it."
"I am so tall I am above that law," said the voice.
"You must have a tall house, then," said Diamond.
"Yes; a tall house: the clouds are inside it."
"Dear me!" said Diamond, and thought a minute. "I think,
then, you can hardly expect me to keep a window in my bed
for you. Why don't you make a window into Mr. Dyves's bed?"
"Nobody makes a window into an ash-pit," said the voice,
rather sadly. "I like to see nice things out of my windows."
"But he must have a nicer bed than I have, though mine is
very nice -- so nice that I couldn't wish a better."
"It's not the bed I care about: it's what is in it. -- But
you just open that window."
"Well, mother says I shouldn't be disobliging; but it's
rather hard. You see the north wind will blow right in my face
if I do."
"I am the North Wind."
"O-o-oh!" said Diamond, thoughtfully. "Then will you
promise not to blow on my face if I open your window?"
"I can't promise that."
"But you'll give me the toothache. Mother's got it
already."
"But what's to become of me without a window?"
"I'm sure I don't know. All I say is, it will be worse for
me than for you."
"No; it will not. You shall not be the worse for it -- I
promise you that. You will be much the better for it. Just you
believe what I say, and do as I tell you."
"Well, I can pull the clothes over my head," said Diamond,
and feeling with his little sharp nails, he got hold of the open
edge of the paper and tore it off at once.
In came a long whistling spear of cold, and struck his
little naked chest. He scrambled and tumbled in under the
bedclothes, and covered himself up: there was no paper now
between him and the voice, and he felt a little -- not
frightened exactly -- I told you he had not learned that yet -- but rather
queer; for what a strange person this North Wind must be that
lived in the great house -- "called Out-of-Doors, I suppose,"
thought Diamond -- and made windows into people's beds! But the
voice began again; and he could hear it quite plainly, even with
his head under the bed-clothes. It was a still more gentle voice
now, although six times as large and loud as it had been, and he
thought it sounded a little like his mother's.
"What is your name, little boy?" it asked.
"Diamond," answered Diamond, under the bed-clothes.
"What a funny name!"
"It's a very nice name," returned its owner.
"I don't know that," said the voice.
"Well, I do," retorted Diamond, a little rudely.
"Do you know to whom you are speaking!"
"No," said Diamond.
And indeed he did not. For to know a person's name is not
always to know the person's self.
"Then I must not be angry with you. -- You had better look
and see, though."
"Diamond is a very pretty name," persisted the boy, vexed
that it should not give satisfaction.
"Diamond is a useless thing rather," said the voice.
"That's not true. Diamond is very nice -- as big as two -- and
so quiet all night! And doesn't he make a jolly row in the
morning, getting upon his four great legs! It's like thunder."
"You don't seem to know what a diamond is."
"Oh, don't I just! Diamond is a great and good horse; and
he sleeps right under me. He is old Diamond, and I am young
Diamond; or, if you like it better, for you're very par-
ticular, Mr. North Wind, he's big Diamond, and I'm little
Diamond; and I don't know which of us my father likes best."
A beautiful laugh, large but very soft and musical, sounded
somewhere beside him, but Diamond kept his head under the
clothes.
"I'm not Mr. North Wind," said the voice.
"You told me that you were the North Wind," insisted
Diamond.
"I did not say Mister North Wind," said the voice.
"Well, then, I do; for mother tells me I ought to be
polite."
"Then let me tell you I don't think it at all polite of you
to say Mister to me."
"Well, I didn't know better. I'm very sorry."
"But you ought to know better."
"I don't know that."
"I do. You can't say it's polite to lie there talking --
with your head under the bed-clothes, and never look up to see
what kind of person you are talking to. -- I want you to come
out with me."
"I want to go to sleep," said Diamond, very nearly crying,
for he did not like to be scolded, even when he deserved it.
"You shall sleep all the better to-morrow night."
"Besides," said Diamond, "you are out in Mr. Dyves's
garden, and I can't get there. I can only get into our own
yard."
"Will you take your head out of the bed-clothes?" said the
voice, just a little angrily.
"No!" answered Diamond, half peevish, half frightened.
The instant he said the word, a tremendous blast of wind
crashed in a board of the wall, and swept the clothes off
Diamond. He started up in terror. Leaning over him was the
large, beautiful, pale face of a woman. Her dark eyes looked a
little angry, for they had just begun to flash; but a quivering
in her sweet upper lip made her look as if she were going to
cry. What was the most strange was that away from her head
streamed out her black hair in every direction, so that the
darkness in the hay-loft looked as if it were made of her, hair
but as Diamond gazed at her in speechless amazement, mingled with confidence
-- for the boy was entranced with her mighty beauty -- her hair
began to gather itself out of the darkness, and fell down all
about her again, till her face looked out of the midst of it
like a moon out of a cloud. From her eyes came all the light by
which Diamond saw her face and her, hair; and that was all he
did see of her yet. The wind was over and gone.
"Will you go with me now, you little Diamond? I am sorry I
was forced to be so rough with you," said the lady.
"I will; yes, I will," answered Diamond, holding out both
his arms. "But," he added, dropping them, "how shall I get my
clothes? They are in mother's room, and the door is locked."
"Oh, never mind your clothes. You will not be cold. I shall
take care of that. Nobody is cold with the north wind."
"I thought everybody was," said Diamond.
"That is a great mistake. Most people make it, however.
They are cold because they are not with the north wind, but
without it."
If Diamond had been a little older, and had supposed
himself a good deal wiser, he would have thought the lady was
joking. But he was not older, and did not fancy himself wiser,
and therefore understood her well enough. Again he stretched out
his arms. The lady's face drew back a little.
"Follow me, Diamond," she said.
"Yes," said Diamond, only a little ruefully.
"You're not afraid?" said the North Wind.
"No, ma'am; but mother never would let me go without shoes:
she never said anything about clothes, so I dare say she
wouldn't mind that."
"I know your mother very well," said the lady. "She is a
good woman. I have visited her often. I was with her when you
were born. I saw her laugh and cry both at once. I love your
mother, Diamond."
"How was it you did not know my name, then, ma'am? Please
am I to say ma'am to you, ma'am?"
"One question at a time, dear boy. I knew your name quite
well, but I wanted to hear what you would say for it. Don't you
remember that day when the man was finding fault with your name
-- how I blew the window in?"
"Yes, yes," answered Diamond, eagerly. "Our window opens
like a door, right over the coach-house door. And the wind --
you, ma'am -- came in, and blew the Bible out of the man's
hands, and the leaves went all flutter, flutter on the floor,
and my mother picked it up and gave it back to him open, and
there ----"
"Was your name in the Bible -- the sixth stone in the high
priest's breastplate."
"Oh! -- a stone, was it?" said Diamond. "I thought it had
been a horse -- I did."
"Never mind. A horse is better than a stone any day. Well,
you see, I know all about you and your mother."
"Yes. I will go with you."
"Now for the next question: you're not to call me ma'am.
You must call me just my own name -- respectfully, you know --
just North Wind."
"Well, please, North Wind, you are so beautiful, I am quite
ready to go with you."
"You must not be ready to go with everything beautiful all
at once, Diamond."
"But what's beautiful can't be bad. You're not bad, North
Wind?"
"No; I'm not bad. But sometimes beautiful things grow bad
by doing bad, and it takes some time for their badness to spoil
their beauty. So little boys may be mistaken if they go after
things because they are beautiful."
"Well, I will go with you because you are beautiful and
good, too."
"Ah, but there's another thing, Diamond: -- What if I
should look ugly without being bad -- look ugly myself because
I am making ugly things beautiful? -- What then?"
"I don't quite understand you, North Wind. You tell me what
then."
"Well, I will tell you. If you see me with my face all
black, don't be frightened. If you see me flapping wings like a
bat's, as big as the whole sky, don't be frightened. If you hear
me raging ten times worse than Mrs. Bill, the blacksmith's wife
-- even if you see me looking in at people's windows like Mrs.
Eve Dropper, the gardener's wife -- you must believe that I am
doing my work. Nay, Diamond, if I change into a serpent or a
tiger, you must not let go your hold of me, for my hand will
never change in yours if you keep a good hold. If you keep a
hold, you will know who I am all the time, even when you look at
me and can't see me the least like the North Wind. I may look
something very awful. Do you understand?"
"Quite well," said little Diamond.
"Come along, then," said North Wind, and disappeared behind
the mountain of hay.
Diamond crept out of bed and followed her
CHAPTER II
THE LAWN
WHEN Diamond got round the corner of the hay, for a moment he
hesitated. The stair by which he would naturally have gone down
to the door was at the other side of the loft, and looked very
black indeed; for it was full of North Wind's hair, as she
descended before him. And just beside him was the ladder going
straight down into the stable, up which his father always came
to fetch the hay for Diamond's dinner. Through the opening in
the floor the faint gleam of the-stable lantern was enticing,
and Diamond thought he would run down that way.
The stair went close past the loose-box in which Diamond
the horse lived. When Diamond the boy was half-way down, he
remembered that it was of no use to go this way, for the
stable-door was locked. But at the same moment there was horse
Diamond's great head poked out of his box on to the ladder, for
he knew boy Diamond although he was in his night-gown, and
wanted him to pull his ears for him. This Diamond did very
gently for a minute or so, and patted and stroked his neck too,
and kissed the big horse, and had begun to take the bits of
straw and hay out of his mane, when all at once he
recollected that the Lady North Wind was waiting for him in the
yard.
"Good night, Diamond," he said, and darted up the ladder,
across the loft, and down the stair to the door. But when he got
out into the yard, there was no lady.
Now it is always a dreadful thing to think there is
somebody and find nobody. Children in particular have not made
up their minds to it; they generally cry at nobody, especially
when they wake up at night. But it was an especial
disappointment to Diamond, for his little heart had been beating with
joy: the face of the North Wind was so grand! To have a lady
like that for a friend -- with such long hair, too! Why, it was
longer than twenty Diamonds' tails! She was gone. And there he
stood, with his bare feet on the stones of the paved yard.
It was a clear night overhead, and the stars were shining.
Orion in particular was making the most of his bright belt and
golden sword. But the moon was only a poor thin crescent. There
was just one great, jagged, black and gray cloud in the sky,
with a steep side to it like a precipice; and the moon was
against this side, and looked as if she had tumbled off the top
of the cloud-hill, and broken herself in rolling down the
precipice. She did not seem comfortable, for she was looking
down into the deep pit waiting for her. At least that was what
Diamond thought as he stood for a moment staring at her. But he
was quite wrong, for the moon was not afraid, and there was no
pit she was going down into, for there were no sides to it, and
a pit without sides to it is not a pit at all. Diamond, however,
had not been out so late before in all his life, and things
looked so strange about him! -- just as if he had got into
Fairyland, of which he knew quite as much as anybody; for his
mother had no money to buy books to set him wrong on the
subject. I have seen this world -- only sometimes, just now and
then, you know -- look as strange as ever I saw Fairyland. But
I confess that I have not yet seen Fairyland at its best. I am
always going to see it so some time. But if you had been out in
the face and not at the back of the North Wind, on a cold rather
frosty night, and in your night-gown, you would have felt it all
quite as strange as Diamond did. He cried a little, just a
little, he was so disappointed to lose the lady: of course, you,
little man, wouldn't have done that! But for my
part, I don't mind people crying so much as I mind what they cry
about, and how they cry -- whether they cry quietly like ladies
and gentlemen, or go shrieking like vulgar emperors, or
ill-natured cooks; for all emperors are not gentlemen, and all
cooks are not ladies -- nor all queens and princesses for that
matter, either.
But it can't be denied that a little gentle crying does one
good. It did Diamond good; for as soon as it was over he was a
brave boy again.
"She shan't say it was my fault, anyhow!" said Diamond. "I
daresay she is hiding somewhere to see what I will do. I will
look for her."
So he went round the end of the stable towards the
kitchen-garden. But the moment he was clear of the shelter of
the stable, sharp as a knife came the wind against his little
chest and his bare legs. Still he would look in the
kitchen-garden, and went on. But when he got round the
weeping-ash that stood in the corner, the wind blew much
stronger, and it grew stronger and stronger till he could hardly
fight against it. And it was so cold! All the flashy spikes of
the stars seemed to have got somehow into the wind. Then he
thought of what the lady had said about people being cold
because they were not with the North Wind. How it was that he
should have guessed what she meant at that very moment I cannot
tell, but I have observed that the most wonderful thing in the
world is how people come to understand anything. He turned his
back to the wind, and trotted again towards the yard; whereupon,
strange to say, it blew so much more gently against his calves
than it had blown against his shins that he began to feel almost
warm by contrast.
You must not think it was cowardly of Diamond to turn his
back to the wind: he did so only because he thought Lady North
Wind had said something like telling him to do so. If she had
said to him that he must hold his face to it, Diamond would have
held his face to it. But the most foolish thing is to fight for
no good, and to please nobody.
Well, it was just as if the wind was pushing Diamond along.
If he turned round, it grew very sharp on his legs especially,
and so he thought the wind might really be Lady North Wind,
though he could not see her, and he had better let her blow him
wherever she pleased. So she blew and blew, and he went and
went, until he found himself standing at a door in a wall, which
door led from the yard into a little belt of shrubbery, flanking
Mr. Coleman's house. Mr. Coleman was his father's master, and
the owner of Diamond. He opened the door, and went through the
shrubbery, and out into the middle of the lawn, still hoping to
find North Wind. The soft grass was very pleasant to his bare
feet, and felt warm after the stones of the yard; but the lady
was nowhere to be seen. Then he began to think that after all he
must have done wrong, and she was offended with him for not
following close after her, but staying to talk to the horse,
which certainly was neither wise nor polite.
There he stood in the middle of the lawn, the wind blowing
his night-gown till it flapped like a loose sail. The stars were
very shiny over his head; but they did not give light enough to
show that the grass was green; and Diamond stood alone in the
strange night, which looked half solid all about him. He began
to wonder whether he was in a dream or not. It was important to
determine this; "for," thought Diamond, "if I am in a dream, I
am safe in my bed, and I needn't cry. But if I'm not in a dream,
I'm out here, and perhaps I had better cry, or, at least, I'm
not sure whether I can help it." He came to the conclusion,
however, that, whether he was in a dream or not, there could be
no harm in not crying for a little while longer: he could begin
whenever he liked.
The back of Mr. Coleman's house was to the lawn, and one of
the drawing-room windows looked out upon it. The ladies had not
gone to bed; for the light was still shining in that window. But
they had no idea that a little boy was standing on
the lawn in his night-gown, or they would have run out in a
moment. And as long as he saw that light, Diamond could not feel
quite lonely. He stood staring, not at the great warrior Orion
in the sky, nor yet at the disconsolate, neglected moon going
down in the west, but at the drawing-room window with the light
shining through its green curtains. He had been in that room
once or twice that he could remember at Christmas times; for the
Colemans were kind people, though they did not care much about
children.
All at once the light went nearly out: he could only see a
glimmer of the shape of the window. Then, indeed, he felt that
he was left alone. It was so dreadful to be out in the night
after everybody was gone to bed! That was more than he could
bear. He burst out crying in good earnest, beginning with a wail
like that of the wind when it is waking up.
Perhaps you think this was very foolish; for could he not
go home to his own bed again when he liked? Yes; but it looked
dreadful to him to creep up that stair again and lie down in his
bed again, and know that North Wind's window was open beside
him, and she gone, and he might never see her again. He would be
just as lonely there as here. Nay, it would be much worse if he
had to think that the window was nothing but a hole in the wall.
At the very moment when he burst out crying, the old nurse
who had grown to be one of the family, for she had not gone away
when Miss Coleman did not want any more nursing, came to the
back door, which was of glass, to close the shutters. She
thought she heard a cry, and, peering out with a hand on each
side of her eyes like Diamond's blinkers, she saw something
white on the lawn. Too old and too wise to be frightened, she
opened the door, and went straight towards the white thing to
see what it was. And when Diamond saw her coming he was not
frightened either, though Mrs. Crump was a little cross
sometimes; for there is a good kind of crossness that is only
disagreeable, and there is a bad kind of crossness that is very
nasty indeed. So she came up with her neck stretched out, and
her head at the end of it, and her eyes foremost of all, like a
snail's, peering into the night to see what it could be that
went on glimmering white before her. When she did see, she made
a great exclamation, and threw up her hands. Then without a
word, for she thought Diamond was walking in his sleep, she
caught hold of him, and led him towards the house. He made no
objection, for he was just in the mood to be grateful for notice
of any sort, and Mrs. Crump led him straight into the
drawing-room.
Now, from the neglect of the new housemaid, the fire in
Miss Coleman's bedroom had gone out, and her mother had told her
to brush her hair by the drawing-room fire -- a disorderly
proceeding which a mother's wish could justify. The young lady
was very lovely, though not nearly so beautiful as North Wind;
and her hair was extremely long, for it came down to her knees
-- though that was nothing at all to North Wind's hair. Yet when
she looked round, with her hair all about her, as Diamond
entered, he thought for one moment that it was North Wind, and,
pulling his hand from Mrs. Crump's, he stretched out his arms
and ran towards Miss Coleman. She was so pleased that she threw
down her brush, and almost knelt on the floor to receive him in
her arms. He saw the next moment that she was not Lady North
Wind, but she looked so like her he could not help running into
her arms and bursting into tears afresh. Mrs.
Crump said the poor child had walked out in his sleep, and
Diamond thought she ought to know, and did not contradict her
for anything he knew, it might be so indeed. He let them talk on
about him, and said nothing; and when, after their astonishment
was over, and Miss Coleman had given him a sponge-cake, it was
decreed that Mrs. Crump should take him to his mother, he was
quite satisfied.
His mother had to get out of bed to open the door when Mrs.
Crump knocked. She was indeed surprised to see her,
boy; and having taken him in her arms and carried him to his
bed, returned and had a long confabulation with Mrs. Crump, for
they were still talking when Diamond fell fast asleep, and could
hear them no longer.
CHAPTER III
OLD DIAMOND
DIAMOND woke very early in the morning, and thought what a
curious dream he had had. But the memory grew brighter and
brighter in his head, until it did not look altogether like a
dream, and he began to doubt whether he had not really been
abroad in the wind last night. He came to the conclusion that,
if he had really been brought home to his mother by Mrs. Crump,
she would say something to him about it, and that would settle
the matter. Then he got up and dressed himself, but, finding
that his father and mother were not yet stirring, he went down
the ladder to the stable. There he found that even old Diamond
was not awake yet, for he, as well as young Diamond, always got
up the moment he woke, and now he was lying as flat as a horse
could lie upon his nice trim bed of straw.
"I'll give old Diamond a surprise," thought the, boy; and
creeping up very softly, before the horse knew, he was astride
of his back. Then it was young Diamond's turn to have more of a
surprise than he had expected; for as with an earthquake, with
a rumbling and a rocking hither and thither, a sprawling of legs
and heaving as of many backs, young Diamond found himself
hoisted up in the air, with both hands twisted in the horse's
mane. The next instant old Diamond lashed out with both his hind
legs, and giving one cry of terror young Diamond found himself
lying on his neck, with his arms as far round it as they would
go. But then the horse stood as still as a stone, except that he
lifted his head gently up to let the boy slip down to his back.
For when he heard young Diamond's cry he knew that there was
nothing to kick about; for young Diamond was a good boy, and old
Diamond was a good horse, and the one was all right on the back
of the other.
As soon as Diamond had got himself comfortable on the
saddle place, the horse began pulling at the hay, and the boy
began thinking. He had never mounted Diamond himself before, and
he had never got off him without being lifted down. So he sat,
while the horse ate, wondering how he was to reach the ground.
But while he meditated, his mother woke, and her first
thought was to see her boy. She had visited him twice during the
night, and found him sleeping quietly. Now his bed was empty,
and she was frightened.
"Diamond! Diamond! Where are you, Diamond?" she called out.
Diamond turned his head where he sat like a knight on his
steed in enchanted stall, and cried aloud, --
"Here, mother!"
"Where, Diamond?" she returned.
"Here, mother, on Diamond's back."
She came running to the ladder, and peeping down, saw him
aloft on the great horse.
"Come down, Diamond," she said.
"I can't," answered Diamond.
"How did you. get up?" asked his mother.
"Quite easily," answered he; "but when I got up, Diamond
would get up too, and so here I am."
His mother thought he had been walking in his sleep again,
and hurried down the ladder. She did not much like going up to
the horse, for she had not been used to horses; but she would
have gone into a lion's den, not to say a horse's stall, to help
her boy. So she went and lifted him off Diamond's back, and felt
braver all her life after. She carried him in her arms
up to her room; but, afraid of frightening him at his own
sleep-walking, as she supposed it, said nothing about last
night. Before the next day was over, Diamond had almost
concluded the whole adventure a dream.
For a week his mother watched him very carefully -- going
into the loft several times a night -- as often, in fact, as she
woke. Every time she found him fast asleep.
All that week it was hard weather. The grass showed white
in the morning with the hoar-frost which clung like tiny comfits
to every blade. And as Diamond's shoes were not good, and his
mother had not quite saved up enough money to get him the new
pair she so much wanted for him, she would not let him run out.
He played all his games over and over indoors, especially that
of driving two chairs harnessed to the baby's cradle; and if
they did not go very fast, they went as fast as could be
expected of the best chairs in the world, although one of them
had only three legs, and the other only half a back.
At length his mother brought home his new shoes, and no
sooner did she find they fitted him than she told him he might
run out in the yard and amuse himself for an hour.
The sun was going down when he flew from the door like a
bird from its cage. All the world was new to him. A great fire
of sunset burned on the top of the gate that led from the
stables to the house; above the fire in the sky lay a large lake
of green light, above that a golden cloud, and over that the
blue of the wintry heavens. And Diamond thought that, next to
his own home, he had never seen any place he would like so much
to live in as that sky. For it is not fine things that make home
a nice place, but your mother and your father.
As he was looking at the lovely colours, the gates were
thrown open, and there was old Diamond and his friend in the
carriage, dancing with impatience to get at their stalls and
their oats. And in they came. Diamond was not in the least
afraid of his father driving over him, but, careful not to spoil
the grand show he made with his fine horses and his
multitudinous cape, with a red edge to every fold, he slipped
out of the way and let him dash right on to the stables. To be
quite safe he had to step into the recess of the door that led
from the yard to the shrubbery.
As he stood there he remembered how the wind had driven him
to this same spot on the night of his dream. And once more he
was almost sure that it was no dream. At all events, he would go
in and see whether things looked at all now as they did then. He
opened the door, and passed through the little belt of
shrubbery. Not a flower was to be seen in the beds on the lawn.
Even the brave old chrysanthemums and Christmas roses had passed
away before the frost. What? Yes! There was one! He ran and
knelt down to look at it.
It was a primrose -- a dwarfish thing, but perfect in shape
-- a baby-wonder. As he stooped his face to see it close, a
little wind began to blow, and two or three long leaves that
stood up behind the flower shook and waved and quivered, but the
primrose lay still in the green hollow, looking up at the sky,
and not seeming to know that the wind was blowing at all. It was
just a one eye that the dull black wintry earth had opened to
look at the sky with. All at once Diamond thought it was saying
its prayers, and he ought not to be staring at it so. He ran to
the stable to see his father make Diamond's bed. Then his father
took him in his arms, carried him up the ladder, and set him
down at the table where they were going to have their tea.
"Miss is very poorly," said Diamond's father. "Mis'ess has
been to the doctor with her to-day, and she looked very glum
when she came out again. I was a-watching of them to see what
doctor had said."
"And didn't Miss look glum too?" asked his mother.
"Not half as glum as Mis'ess," returned the coachman. "You
see --"
But he lowered his voice, and Diamond could not make out
more than a word here and there. For Diamond's father was not
only one of the finest of coachmen to look at, and one of the
best of drivers, but one of the most discreet of servants as
well. Therefore he did not talk about family affairs to any one
but his wife, whom he had proved better than himself long ago,
and was careful that even Diamond should hear nothing he could
repeat again concerning master and his family.
It was bed-time soon, and Diamond went to bed and fell fast
asleep.
He awoke all at once, in the dark.
"Open the window, Diamond," said a voice.
Now Diamond's mother had once more pasted up North Wind's
window.
"Are you North Wind?" said Diamond: "I don't hear you
blowing."
"No; but you hear me talking. Open the window, for I
haven't overmuch time."
"Yes," returned Diamond. "But, please, North Wind, where's
the use? You left me all alone last time."
He had got up on his knees, and was busy with his nails
once more at the paper over the hole in the wall. For now that
North Wind spoke again, he remembered all that had taken place
before as distinctly as if it had happened only last night.
"Yes, but that was your fault," returned North Wind. "I had
work to do; and, besides, a gentleman should never keep a lady
waiting."
"But I'm not a gentleman," said Diamond, scratching away at
the paper.
"I hope you won't say so ten years after this."
"I'm going to be a coachman, and a coachman is not a
gentleman," persisted Diamond.
"We call your father a gentleman in our house," said North
Wind.
"He doesn't call himself one," said Diamond.
"That's of no consequence: every man ought to be a
gentleman, and your father is one."
Diamond was so pleased to hear this that he scratched at
the paper like ten mice, and getting hold of the edge of it,
tore it off. The next instant a young girl glided across the
bed, and stood upon the floor.
"Oh dear!" said Diamond, quite dismayed; "I didn't know --
who are you, please?"
"I'm North Wind."
"Are you really?"
"Yes. Make haste."
"But you're no bigger than me."
"Do you think I care about how big or how little I am?
Didn't you see me this evening? I was less then."
"No. Where was you?"
"Behind the leaves of the primrose. Didn't you see them
blowing?"
"Yes."
"Make haste, then, if you want to go with me."
"But you are not big enough to take care of me. I think you
are only Miss North Wind."
"I am big enough to show you the way, anyhow. But if you
won't come, why, you must stay."
"I must dress myself. I didn't mind with a grown lady, but
I couldn't go with a little girl in my night-gown."
"Very well. I'm not in such a hurry as I was the other
night. Dress as fast as you can, and I'll go and shake the
primrose leaves till you come."
"Don't hurt it," said Diamond.
North Wind broke out in a little laugh like the breaking of
silver bubbles, and was gone in a moment. Diamond saw -- for it
was a starlit night, and the mass of hay was at a low ebb now --
the gleam of something vanishing down the stair, and, springing
out of bed, dressed himself as fast as ever he could. Then he
crept out into the yard, through the door in the wall, and away
to the primrose. Behind it stood North Wind, leaning over it,
and looking at the flower as if she had been its mother.
"Come along," she said, jumping up and holding out her
hand.
Diamond took her hand. It was cold, but so pleasant and
full of life, it was better than warm. She led him across the
garden. With one bound she was on the top of the wall. Diamond
was left at the foot.
"Stop, stop!" he cried. "Please, I can't jump like that."
"You don't try" said North Wind, who from the top looked
down a foot taller than before.
"Give me your hand again, and I will, try" said Diamond.
She reached down, Diamond laid hold of her hand, gave a
great spring, and stood beside her.
"This is nice!" he said.
Another bound, and they stood in the road by the river. It
was full tide, and the stars were shining clear in its depths,
for it lay still, waiting for the turn to run down again to the
sea. They walked along its side. But they had not walked far be-
fore its surface was covered with ripples, and the stars had
vanished from its bosom.
And North Wind was now tall as a full-grown girl. Her hair
was flying about her head, and the wind was blowing a breeze
down the river. But she turned aside and went up a narrow lane,
and as she went her hair fell down around her.
"I have some rather disagreeable work to do to-night," she
said, "before I get out to sea, and I must set about it at once.
The disagreeable work must be looked after first."
So saying, she laid hold of Diamond and began to run,
gliding along faster and faster. Diamond kept up with her as
well as he could. She made many turnings and windings,
apparently because it was not quite easy to get him over walls
and houses. Once they ran through a hall where they found back
and front doors open. At the foot of the stair North Wind stood
still, and Diamond, hearing a great growl, started in terror,
and there, instead of North Wind, was a huge wolf by his side.
He let go his hold in dismay, and the wolf bounded up the stair.
The windows of the house rattled and shook as if guns were
firing, and the sound of a great fall came from above. Diamond
stood with white face staring up at the landing.
"Surely," he thought, "North Wind can't be eating one of
the children!" Coming to himself all at once, he rushed after
her with his little fist clenched. There were ladies in long
trains going up and down the stairs, and gentlemen in white
neckties attending on them, who stared at him, but none of them
were of the people of the house, and they said nothing. Before
he reached the head of the stair, however, North Wind met him,
took him by the hand, and hurried down and out of the house.
"I hope you haven't eaten a baby, North Wind!" said
Diamond, very solemnly.
North Wind laughed merrily, and went tripping on faster.
Her grassy robe swept and swirled about her steps, and wherever
it passed over withered leaves, they went fleeing and whirling
in spirals, and running on their edges like wheels, all about
her feet.
"No," she said at last, "I did not eat a baby. You would
not have had to ask that foolish question if you had not let go
your hold of me. You would have seen how I served a nurse that
was calling a child bad names, and telling her she was wicked.
She had been drinking. I saw an ugly gin bottle in a cupboard."
"And you frightened her?" said Diamond.
"I believe so!" answered North Wind laughing merrily. "I
flew at her throat, and she tumbled over on the floor with such
a crash that they ran in. She'll be turned away to-morrow -- and
quite time, if they knew as much as I do."
"But didn't you frighten the little one?"
"She never saw me. The woman would not have seen me either
if she had not been wicked."
"Oh!" said Diamond, dubiously.
"Why should you see things," returned North Wind, "that you
wouldn't understand or know what to do with? Good people see
good things; bad people, bad things."
"Then are you a bad thing?"
"No. For you see me, Diamond, dear," said the girl, and she
looked down at him, and Diamond saw the loving eyes of the great
lady beaming from the depths of her falling hair.
"I had to make myself look like a bad thing before she
could see me. If I had put on any other shape than a wolf's she
would not have seen me, for that is what is growing to be her
own shape inside of her."
"I don't know what you mean," said Diamond, "but I suppose
it's all right."
They were now climbing the slope of a grassy ascent. It was
Primrose Hill, in fact, although Diamond had never heard of it.
The moment they reached the top, North Wind stood and turned her
face towards London The stars were still shining clear and cold
overhead. There was not a cloud to be seen. The air was sharp,
but Diamond did not find it cold.
"Now," said the lady, "whatever you do, do not let my hand
go. I might have lost you the last time, only I was not in a
hurry then: now I am in a hurry."
Yet she stood still for a moment
CHAPTER IV
NORTH WIND
AND as she stood looking towards London, Diamond saw that she
was trembling.
"Are you cold, North Wind?" he asked.
"No, Diamond," she answered, looking down upon him with a
smile; "I am only getting ready to sweep one of my rooms. Those
careless, greedy, untidy children make it in such a mess."
As she spoke he could have told by her voice, if he had not
seen with his eyes, that she was growing larger and larger. Her
head went up and up towards the stars; and as she grew, still
trembling through all her body, her hair also grew -- longer and
longer, and lifted itself from her head, and went out in black
waves. The next moment, however, it fell back around her, and
she grew less and less till she was only a tall woman. Then she
put her hands behind her head, and gathered some of her hair,
and began weaving and knotting it together. When she had done,
she bent down her beautiful face close to his, and said --
"Diamond, I am afraid you would not keep hold of me, and if
I were to drop you, I don't know what might happen; so I have
been making a place for you in my hair. Come."
Diamond held out his arms, for with that grand face looking
at him, be believed like a baby. She took him in her hands,
threw him over her shoulder, and said, "Get in, Diamond."
And Diamond parted her hair with his hands, crept between,
and feeling about soon found the woven nest. It was just like a
pocket, or like the shawl in which gipsy women carry their
children. North Wind put her hands to her back, felt all about
the nest, and finding it safe, said --
"Are you comfortable, Diamond?"
"Yes, indeed," answered Diamond.
The next moment he was rising in the air. North Wind grew
towering up to the place of the clouds. Her hair went streaming
out from her, till it spread like a mist over the stars. She
flung herself abroad in space.
Diamond held on by two of the twisted ropes which, parted
and interwoven, formed his shelter, for he could not help being
a little afraid. As soon as he had come to himself, he peeped
through the woven meshes, for he did not dare to look over the
top of the nest. The earth was rushing past like a river or a
sea below him. Trees and water and green grass hurried away
beneath. A great roar of wild animals rose as they rushed over
the Zoological Gardens, mixed with a chattering of monkeys and
a screaming of birds; but it died away in a moment behind them.
And now there was nothing but the roofs of houses, sweeping
along like a great torrent of stones and rocks. Chimney-pots
fell, and tiles flew from the roofs; but it looked to him as if
they were left behind by the roofs and the chimneys as they
scudded away. There was a great roaring, for the wind was
dashing against London like a sea; but at North Wind's back
Diamond, of course, felt nothing of it all. He was in a perfect
calm. He could hear the sound of it, that was all.
By and by he raised himself and looked over the edge of his
nest. There were the houses rushing up and shooting away below
him, like a fierce torrent of rocks instead of water. Then he
looked up to the sky, but could see no stars; they were hidden
by the blinding masses of the lady's hair which swept between.
He began to wonder whether she would hear him if he spoke. He
would try.
"Please, North Wind," he said, "what is that noise?"
From high over his head came the voice of North Wind,
answering him, gently --
"The noise of my besom. I am the old woman that sweeps the
cobwebs from the, sky; only I'm busy with the floor now."
"What makes the houses look as if they were running away?"
"I am sweeping so fast over them."
"But, please, North Wind, I knew London was very big, but
I didn't know it was so big as this. It seems as if we should
never get away from it."
"We are going round and round, else we should have left it
long ago."
"Is this the way you sweep, North Wind?"
"Yes; I go round and round with my great besom."
"Please, would you mind going a little slower, for I want
to see the streets?"
"You won't see much now."
"Why?"
"Because I have nearly swept all the people home."
"Oh! I forgot," said Diamond, and was quiet after that, for
he did not want to be troublesome.
But she dropped a little towards the roofs of the houses,
and Diamond could see down into the streets. There were very few
people about, though. The lamps flickered and flared again, but
nobody seemed to want them.
Suddenly Diamond espied a little girl coming along a
street. She was dreadfully blown by the wind, and a broom she
was trailing behind her was very troublesome. It seemed as if
the wind had a spite at her -- it kept worrying her like a wild
beast, and tearing at her rags. She was so lonely there!
"Oh! please, North Wind," he cried, "won't you help that
little girl?"
"No, Diamond; I mustn't leave my work."
"But why shouldn't you be kind to her?"
"I am kind to her. I am sweeping the wicked smells away."
"But you're kinder to me, dear North Wind. Why shouldn't
you be as kind to her as you are to me?"
"There are reasons, Diamond. Everybody can't be done to all
the same. Everybody is not ready for the same thing."
"But I don't see why I should be kinder used than she."
"Do you think nothing's to be done but what you can see,
Diamond, you silly! It's all right. Of course you can help her
if you like. You've got nothing particular to do at this moment;
I have."
"Oh! do let me help her, then. But you won't be able to
wait, perhaps?"
"No, I can't wait; you must do it yourself. And, mind, the
wind will get a hold of you, too."
"Don't you want me to help her, North Wind?"
"Not without having some idea what will happen. If you
break down and cry, that won't be much of a help to her, and it
will make a goose of little Diamond."
"I want to go," said Diamond. "Only there's just one thing
-- how am I to get home?"
"If you're anxious about that, perhaps you had better go
with me. I am bound to take you home again, if you do."
"There!" cried Diamond, who was still looking after the
little girl., 'I'm sure the wind will blow her over, and perhaps
kill her. Do let me go."
They had been sweeping more slowly along the line of the
street. There was a lull in the roaring.
"Well, though I cannot promise to take you home," said
North Wind, as she sank nearer and nearer to the tops of the
houses, "I can promise you it will be all right in the end. You
will get home somehow. Have you made up your mind what to do?"
"Yes; to help the little girl," said Diamond firmly.
The same moment North Wind dropt into the street and stood,
only a tall lady, but with her hair flying up over the
housetops. She put her hands to her back, took Diamond, and set
him down in the street. The same moment he was caught in the
fierce coils of the blast, and all but blown away. North Wind
stepped back a step, and at once towered in stature to the
height of the houses. A chimney-pot clashed at Diamond's feet.
He turned in terror, but it was to look for the little girl, and
when he turned again the lady had vanished, and the wind was
roaring along the street as if it had been the bed of an
invisible torrent. The little girl was scudding before the
blast, her hair flying too, and behind her she dragged her
broom. Her little legs were going as fast as ever they could to
keep her from falling. Diamond crept into the shelter of a
doorway, thinking to stop her; but she passed him like a bird,
crying gently and pitifully.
"Stop! stop! little girl," shouted Diamond, starting in
pursuit.
"I can't," wailed the girl, "the wind won't leave go of
me."
Diamond could run faster than she, and he had no broom. In
a few moments he had caught her by the frock, but it tore in his
hand, and away went the little girl. So he had to run again, and
this time he ran so fast that he got before her, and turning
round caught her in his arms, when down they went both together,
which made the little girl laugh in the midst of her crying.
"Where are you going?" asked Diamond, rubbing the elbow
that had stuck farthest out. The arm it belonged to was twined
round a lamp-post as he stood between the little girl and the
wind.
"Home," she said, gasping for breath.
"Then I will go with you," said Diamond.
And then they were silent for a while, for the wind blew
worse than ever, and they had both to hold on to the lamp-post.
"Where is your crossing?" asked the girl at length.
"I don't sweep," answered Diamond.
"What do you do, then?" asked she. "You ain't big enough
for most things."
"I don't know what I do do," answered he, feeling rather
ashamed. "Nothing, I suppose. My father's Mr. Coleman's
coachman."
"Have you a father?" she said, staring at him as if a boy
with a father was a natural curiosity.
"Yes. Haven't you?" returned Diamond.
"No; nor mother neither. Old Sal's all I've got." And she
began to cry again.
"I wouldn't go to her if she wasn't good to me," said
Diamond.
"But you must go somewheres."
"Move on," said the voice of a policeman behind them.
"I told you so," said the girl. "You must go somewheres.
They're always at it."
"But old Sal doesn't beat you, does she?"
"I wish she would."
"What do you mean?" asked Diamond, quite bewildered.
"She would if she was my mother. But she wouldn't lie abed
a-cuddlin' of her ugly old bones, and laugh to hear me crying at
the door."
"You don't mean she won't let you in to-night?"
"It'll be a good chance if she does."
"Why are you out so late, then?" asked Diamond.
"My crossing's a long way off at the West End, and I had
been indulgin' in door-steps and mewses."
"We'd better have a try anyhow," said Diamond. "Come
along."
As he spoke Diamond thought he caught a glimpse of North
Wind turning a corner in front of them; and when they turned the
corner too, they found it quiet there, but he saw nothing of the
lady.
"Now you lead me," he said, taking her hand, "and I'll take
care of you."
The girl withdrew her hand, but only to dry her eyes with
her frock, for the other had enough to do with her broom. She
put it in his again, and led him, turning after turning, until
they stopped at a cellar-door in a very dirty lane. There she
knocked.
"I shouldn't like to live here," said Diamond.
"Oh, yes, you would, if you had nowhere else to go to,"
answered the girl. "I only wish we may get in."
"I don't want to go in," said Diamond.
"Where do you mean to go, then?"
"Home to my home."
"Where's that?"
"I don't exactly know."
"Then you're worse off than I am."
"Oh no, for North Wind --" began Diamond, and stopped, he
hardly knew why.
"What?" said the girl, as she held her ear to the door
listening.
But Diamond did not reply. Neither did old Sal.
"I told you so," said the girl. "She is wide awake
hearkening. But we don't get in."
"What will you do, then?" asked Diamond.
"Move on," she answered.
"Where?"
"Oh, anywheres. Bless you, I'm used to it."
"Hadn't you better come home with me, then?"
"That's a good joke, when you don't know where it is. Come
on."
"But where?"
"Oh, nowheres in particular. Come on."
Diamond obeyed. The wind had now fallen considerably. They
wandered on and on, turning in this direction and that,
without any reason for one way more than another, until they had
got out of the thick of the houses into a waste kind of place.
By this time they were both very tired. Diamond felt a good deal
inclined to cry, and thought he had been very silly to get down
from the back of North Wind; not that he would have minded it if
he had done the girl any good; but he thought he had been of no
use to her. He was mistaken there, for she was far happier for
having Diamond with her than if she had been wandering about
alone. She did not seem so tired as he was.
"Do let us rest a bit," said Diamond.
"Let's see," she answered. "There's something like a
railway there. Perhaps there's an open arch."
They went towards it and found one, and, better still,
there was an empty barrel lying under the arch.
"Hillo! here we are!" said the girl. "A barrel's the
jolliest bed going -- on the tramp, I mean. We'll have forty
winks, and then go on again."
She crept in, and Diamond crept in beside her. They put
their arms round each other, and when he began to grow warm,
Diamond's courage began to come back.
"This is jolly!" he said. "I'm so glad!"
"I don't think so much of it," said the girl. "I'm used to
it, I suppose. But I can't think how a kid like you comes to be
out all alone this time o' night."
She called him a kid, but she was not really a month older
than he was; only she had had to work for her bread, and that so
soon makes people older.
"But I shouldn't have been out so late if I hadn't got down
to help you," said Diamond. "North Wind is gone home long ago."
"I think you must ha' got out o' one o' them Hidget
Asylms," said the girl. "You said something about the north wind
afore that I couldn't get the rights of."
So now, for the sake of his character, Diamond had to tell
her the whole story.
She did not believe a word of it. She said he wasn't such
a flat as to believe all that bosh. But as she spoke there came
a great blast of wind through the arch, and set the barrel
rolling. So they made haste to get out of it, for they had no notion of
being rolled over and over as if they had been packed tight and
wouldn't hurt, like a barrel of herrings.
"I thought we should have had a sleep," said Diamond; "but
I can't say I'm very sleepy after all. Come, let's go on again."
They wandered on and on, sometimes sitting on a door-step,
but always turning into lanes or fields when they had a chance.
They found themselves at last on a rising ground that
sloped rather steeply on the other side. It was a waste kind of
spot below, bounded by an irregular wall, with a few doors in
it. Outside lay broken things in general, from garden rollers to
flower-pots and wine-bottles. But the moment they reached the
brow of the rising ground, a gust of wind seized them and blew
them down hill as fast as they could run. Nor could Diamond stop
before he went bang against one of the doors in the wall. To his
dismay it burst open. When they came to themselves they peeped
in. It was the back door of a garden.
"Ah, ah!" cried Diamond, after staring for a few moments,
"I thought so! North Wind takes nobody in! Here I am in master's
garden! I tell you what, little girl, you just bore a hole in
old Sal's wall, and put your mouth to it, and say, 'Please,
North Wind, mayn't I go out with you?' and then you'll see
what'll come."
"I daresay I shall. But I'm out in the wind too often
already to want more of it."
"I said with the North Wind, not in it."
"It's all one."
"It's not all one."
"It is all one."
"But I know best."
"And I know better. I'll box your ears," said the girl.
Diamond got very angry. But he remembered that even if she
did box his ears, he musn't box hers again, for she was a girl,
and all that boys must do, if girls are rude, is to go away and
leave them. So he went in at the door.
"Good-bye, mister" said the girl.
This brought Diamond to his senses.
"I'm sorry I was cross," he said. "Come in, and my mother
will give you some breakfast."
"No, thank you. I must be off to my crossing. It's morning
now."
"I'm very sorry for you," said Diamond.
"Well, it is a life to be tired of -- what with old Sal,
and so many holes in my shoes."
"I wonder you're so good. I should kill myself."
"Oh, no, you wouldn't! When I think of it, I always want to
see what's coming next, and so I always wait till next is over.
Well! I suppose there's somebody happy somewheres. But it ain't
in them carriages. Oh my! how they do look sometimes -- fit to
bite your head off! Good-bye!"
She ran up the hill and disappeared behind it. Then Diamond
shut the door as he best could, and ran through the
kitchen-garden to the stable. And wasn't he glad to get into his
own blessed bed again!
CHAPTER V
THE SUMMER-HOUSE
DIAMOND said nothing to his mother about his adventures. He had
half a notion that North Wind was a friend of his mother, and
that, if she did not know all about it, at least she did not
mind his going anywhere with the lady of the wind. At the same
time he doubted whether he might not appear to be telling
stories if he told all, especially as he could hardly believe it
himself when he thought about it in the middle of the day,
although when the twilight was once half-way on to night he had
no doubt about it, at least for the first few days after he had
been with her. The girl that swept the crossing had certainly
refused to believe him. Besides, he felt sure that North Wind
would tell him if he ought to speak.
It was some time before he saw the lady of the wind again.
Indeed nothing remarkable took place in Diamond's history until
the following week. This was what happened then. Diamond the
horse wanted new shoes, and Diamond's father took him out of the
stable, and was just getting on his back to ride him to the
forge, when he saw his little boy standing by the pump, and
looking at him wistfully. Then the coachman took his foot out of
the stirrup, left his hold of the mane and bridle, came across
to his boy, lifted him up, and setting him
on the horse's back, told him to sit up like a man. He then led
away both Diamonds together.
The boy atop felt not a little tremulous as the great
muscles that lifted the legs of the horse knotted and relaxed
against his legs, and he cowered towards the withers, grasping
with his hands the bit of mane worn short by the collar; but
when his father looked back at him, saying once more, "Sit up,
Diamond," he let the mane go and sat up, notwithstanding that
the horse, thinking, I suppose, that his master had said to him,
"Come up, Diamond," stepped out faster. For both the Diamonds were
just grandly obedient. And Diamond soon found that, as he was
obedient to his father, so the horse was obedient to him. For he
had not ridden far before he found courage to reach forward and
catch hold of the bridle, and when his father, whose hand was
upon it, felt the boy pull it towards him, he looked up and
smiled, and, well pleased, let go his hold, and left Diamond to
guide Diamond; and the boy soon found that he could do so
perfectly. It was a grand thing to be able to guide a great
beast like that. And another discovery he made was that, in
order to guide the horse, he had in a measure to obey the horse
first. If he did not yield his body to the motions of the
horse's body, he could not guide him; he must fall off.
The blacksmith lived at some distance, deeper into London.
As they crossed the angle of a square, Diamond, who was now
quite comfortable on his living throne, was glancing this way
and that in a gentle pride, when he saw a girl sweeping a
crossing scuddingly before a lady. The lady was his father's
mistress, Mrs. Coleman, and the little girl was she for whose
sake he had got off North Wind's back. He drew Diamond's bridle
in eager anxiety to see whether her outstretched hand would
gather a penny from Mrs. Coleman. But she had given one at the
last crossing, and the hand returned only to grasp its broom.
Diamond could not bear it. He had a penny in his pocket, a gift
of the same lady the day before, and he tumbled off his horse to
give it to the girl. He tumbled off, I say, for he did tumble
when he reached the ground. But he got up in an instant, and
ran, searching his pocket as he ran. She made him a pretty
courtesy when he offered his treasure, but with a bewildered
stare. She thought first: "Then he was on the
back of the North Wind after all!" but, looking up at the sound
of the horse's feet on the paved crossing, she changed her idea,
saying to herself, "North Wind is his father's horse! That's the
secret of it! Why couldn't he say so?" And she had a mind to
refuse the penny. But his smile put it all right, and she not
only took his penny but put it in her mouth with a "Thank you,
mister. Did they wollop you then?"
"Oh no!" answered Diamond. "They never wollops me."
"Lor!" said the little girl, and was speechless.
Meantime his father, looking up, and seeing the horse's
back bare, suffered a pang of awful dread, but the next moment
catching sight of him, took him up and put him on, saying --
"Don't get off again, Diamond. The horse might have put his
foot on you."
"No, father," answered the boy, and rode on in majestic
safety.
The summer drew near, warm and splendid. Miss Coleman was
a little better in health, and sat a good deal in the garden.
One day she saw Diamond peeping through the shrubbery, and
called him. He talked to her so frankly that she often sent for
him after that, and by degrees it came about that he had leave
to run in the garden as he pleased. He never touched any of the
flowers or blossoms, for he was not like some boys who cannot
enjoy a thing without pulling it to pieces, and so preventing
every one from enjoying it after them.
A week even makes such a long time in a child's life, that
Diamond had begun once more to feel as if North Wind were a
dream of some far-off year.
One hot evening, he had been sitting with the young
mistress, as they called her, in a little summer-house at the bottom
of the lawn -- a wonderful thing for beauty, the boy thought, for
a little window in the side of it was made of coloured glass. It
grew dusky, and the lady began to feel chill, and went in,
leaving the boy in the summer-house. He sat there gazing out
at a bed of tulips, which, although they had closed for the
night, could not go quite asleep for the wind that kept waving
them about. All at once he saw a great humble-bee fly out of one
of the tulips.
"There! that is something done," said a voice -- a gentle,
merry, childish voice, but so tiny. "At last it was. I thought
he would have had to stay there all night, poor fellow! I did."
Diamond could not tell whether the voice was near or far
away, it was so small and yet so clear. He had never seen a
fairy, but he had heard of such, and he began to look all about
for one. And there was the tiniest creature sliding down the
stem of the tulip!
"Are you the fairy that herds the bees?" he asked, going
out of the summer-house, and down on his knees on the green
shore of the tulip-bed.
"I'm not a fairy," answered the little creature.
"How do you know that?"
"It would become you better to ask how you are to know it."
"You've just told me."
"Yes. But what's the use of knowing a thing only because
you're told it?"
"Well, how am I to know you are not a fairy? You do look
very like one."
"In the first place, fairies are much bigger than you see
me."
"Oh!" said Diamond reflectively; "I thought they were very
little."
"But they might be tremendously bigger than I am, and yet
not very big. Why, I could be six times the size I am, and not
be very huge. Besides, a fairy can't grow big and little at
will, though the nursery-tales do say so: they don't know
better. You stupid Diamond! have you never seen me before?"
And, as she spoke, a moan of wind bent the tulips almost to
the ground, and the creature laid her hand on Diamond's
shoulder. In a moment he knew that it was North Wind.
"I am very stupid," he said; "but I never saw you so small
before, not even when you were nursing the primrose."
"Must you see me every size that can be measured before you
know me, Diamond?"
"But how could I think it was you taking care of a great
stupid humble-bee?"
"The more stupid he was the more need he had to be taken
care of. What with sucking honey and trying to open the door, he
was nearly dated; and when it opened in the morning to let the
sun see the tulip's heart, what would the sun have thought to
find such a stupid thing lying there -- with wings too?"
"But how do you have time to look after bees?"
"I don't look after bees. I had this one to look after. It
was hard work, though."
"Hard work! Why, you could blow a chimney down, or -- or a
boy's cap off," said Diamond.
"Both are easier than {to} blow a tulip open. But I
scarcely know the difference between hard and easy. I am always
able for what I have to do. When I see my work, I just rush at
it -- and it is done. But I mustn't chatter. I have got to sink
a ship to-night."
"Sink a ship! What! with men in it?"
"Yes, and women too."
"How dreadful! I wish you wouldn't talk so."
"It is rather dreadful. But it is my work. I must do it."
"I hope you won't ask me to go with you."
"No, I won't ask you. But you must come for all that."
"I won't then."
"Won't you?" And North Wind grew a tall lady, and looked
him in the eyes, and Diamond said --
"Please take me. You cannot be cruel."
"No; I could not be cruel if I would. I can do nothing
cruel, although I often do what looks like cruel to those who do
not know what I really am doing. The people they say I drown, I
only carry away to -- to -- to -- well, the back of the North
Wind -- that is what they used to call it long ago, only I never
saw the place."
"How can you carry them there if you never saw it?"
"I know the way."
"But how is it you never saw it?"
"Because it is behind me."
"But you can look round."
"Not far enough to see my own back. No; I always look
before me. In fact, I grow quite blind and deaf when I try to
see my back. I only mind my work."
"But how does it be your work?"
"Ah, that I can't tell you. I only know it is, because when
I do it I feel all right, and when I don't I feel all wrong.
East Wind says -- only one does not exactly know how much to
believe of what she says, for she is very naughty sometimes --
she says it is all managed by a, baby; but whether she is good
or naughty when she says that, I don't know. I just stick to my
work. It is all one to me to let a bee out of a tulip, or to
sweep the cobwebs from the sky. You would like to go with me
to-night?"
"I don't want to see a ship sunk."
"But suppose I had to take you?"
"Why, then, of course I must go."
"There's a good Diamond. -- I think I had better be growing
a bit. Only you must go to bed first. I can't take you till
you're in bed. That's the law about the children. So I had
better go and do something else first."
"Very well, North Wind," said Diamond. "What are you going
to do first, if you please?"
"I think I may tell you. Jump up on the top of the wall,
there."
"I can't."
"Ah! and I can't help you -- you haven't been to bed yet,
you see. Come out to the road with me, just in front of the
coach-house, and I will show you."
North Wind grew very small indeed, so small that she could
not have blown the dust off a dusty miller, as the Scotch
children call a yellow auricula. Diamond could not even see the
blades of grass move as she flitted along by his foot. They left
the lawn, went out by the wicket in the-coach-house gates, and
then crossed the road to the low wall that separated it from the
river.
"You can get up on this wall, Diamond," said North Wind.
"Yes; but my mother has forbidden me."
"Then don't," said North Wind.
"But I can see over," said Diamond.
"Ah! to be sure. I can't."
So saying, North Wind gave a little bound, and stood on the
top of the wall. She was just about the height a dragon-fly
would be, if it stood on end.
"You darling!" said Diamond, seeing what a lovely little
toy-woman she was.
"Don't be impertinent, Master Diamond," said North Wind.
"If there's one thing makes me more angry than another, it is
the way you humans judge things by their size. I am quite as
respectable now as I shall be six hours after this, when I take
an East Indiaman by the royals, twist her round, and push her
under. You have no right to address me in such a fashion."
But as she spoke, the tiny face wore the smile of a great,
grand woman. She was only having her own beautiful fun out of
Diamond, and true woman's fun never hurts.
"But look there!" she resumed. "Do you see a boat with one
man in it -- a green and white boat?"
"Yes; quite well."
"That's a poet."
"I thought you said it was a bo-at."
"Stupid pet! Don't you know what a poet is?"
"Why, a thing to sail on the water in."
"Well, perhaps you're not so far wrong. Some poets do carry
people over the sea. But I have no business to talk so much. The
man is a poet."
"The boat is a boat," said Diamond.
"Can't you spell?" asked North Wind.
"Not very well."
"So I see. A poet is not a bo-at, as you call it. A poet is
a man who is glad of something, and tries to make other people
glad of it too."
"Ah! now I know. Like the man in the sweety-shop."
"Not very. But I see it is no use. I wasn't sent to tell
you, and so I can't tell you. I must be off. Only first just
look at the man."
"He's not much of a rower" said Diamond -- "paddling first
with one fin and then with the other."
"Now look here!" said North Wind.
And she flashed like a dragon-fly across the water, whose
surface rippled and puckered as she passed. The next moment the
man in the boat glanced about him, and bent to his oars. The
boat flew over the rippling water. Man and boat and river were
awake. The same instant almost, North Wind perched again upon
the river wall.
"How did you do that?" asked Diamond.
"I blew in his face," answered North Wind. "I don't see how
that could do it," said Diamond. "I daresay not. And therefore
you will say you don't believe it could."
"No, no, dear North Wind. I know you too well not to
believe you."
"Well, I blew in his face, and that woke him up."
"But what was the good of it?"
"Why! don't you see? Look at him -- how he is pulling. I
blew the mist out of him."
"How was that?"
"That is just what I cannot tell you."
"But you did it."
"Yes. I have to do ten thousand things without being able
to tell how."
"I don't like that," said Diamond.
He was staring after the boat. Hearing no answer, he looked
down to the wall.
North Wind was gone. Away across the river went a long
ripple -- what sailors call a cat's paw. The man in the boat was
putting up a sail. The moon was coming to herself on the edge of
a great cloud, and the sail began to shine white. Diamond rubbed
his eyes, and wondered what it was all about. Things seemed
going on around him, and all to understand each other. but he
could make nothing of it. So he put his hands in his pockets,
and went in to have his tea. The night was very hot, for the
wind had fallen again.
"You don't seem very well to-night, Diamond," said his
mother.
"I am quite well, mother," returned Diamond, who was only
puzzled.
"I think you had better go to bed," she added.
"Very well, mother," he answered.
He stopped for one moment to look out of the window. Above
the moon the clouds were going different ways. Somehow or other
this troubled him, but, notwithstanding, he was soon fast
asleep.
He woke in the middle of the night and the darkness. A
terrible noise was rumbling overhead, like the rolling beat of
great drums echoing through a brazen vault. The roof of the loft
in which he lay had no ceiling; only the tiles were between him
and the sky. For a while he could not come quite awake, for the
noise kept beating him down, so that his heart was troubled and
fluttered painfully. A second peal of thunder burst over his
head, and almost choked him with fear. Nor did he recover until
the great blast that followed, having torn some tiles off the
roof, sent a spout of wind down into his bed and over his face,
which brought him wide awake, and gave him back his courage. The
same moment he heard a mighty yet musical voice calling him.
"Come up, Diamond," it said. "It's all ready. I'm waiting
for you."
He looked out of the bed, and saw a gigantic, powerful, but
most lovely arm -- with a hand whose fingers were nothing the
less ladylike that they could have strangled a boa-constrictor,
or choked a tigress off its prey -- stretched down through a big
hole in the roof. Without a moment's hesitation he reached out
his tiny one, and laid it in the grand palm before him.
CHAPTER VI
OUT IN THE STORM
THE hand felt its way up his arm, and, grasping it gently and
strongly above the elbow, lifted Diamond from the bed. The
moment he was through the hole in the roof, all the winds of
heaven seemed to lay hold upon him, and buffet him hither and
thither. His hair blew one way, his night-gown another, his legs
threatened to float from under him, and his head to grow dizzy
with the swiftness of the invisible assailant. Cowering, he
clung with the other hand to the huge hand which held his arm,
and fear invaded his heart.
"Oh, North Wind!" he murmured, but the words vanished from
his lips as he had seen the soap-bubbles that burst too soon
vanish from the mouth of his pipe. The wind caught them, and
they were nowhere. They couldn't get out at all, but were torn
away and strangled. And yet North Wind heard them, and in her
answer it seemed to Diamond that just because she was so big and
could not help it, and just because her ear and her mouth must
seem to him so dreadfully far away, she spoke to him more
tenderly and graciously than ever before. Her voice was like the
bass of a deep organ, without the groan in it; like the most
delicate of violin tones without the wail in it; like the most
glorious of trumpet-ejaculations without the defiance in it;
like the sound of falling water without the
clatter and clash in it: it was like all of them and neither of
them -- all of them without their faults, each of them without
its peculiarity: after all, it was more like his mother's voice
than anything else in the world.
"Diamond, dear," she said, "be a man. What is fearful to
you is not the least fearful to me."
"But it can't hurt you," murmured Diamond, "for you're it."
"Then if I'm it, and have you in my arms, how can it hurt
you?"
"Oh yes! I see," whispered Diamond. "But it looks so
dreadful, and it pushes me about so."
"Yes, it does, my dear. That is what it was sent for."
At the same moment, a peal of thunder which shook Diamond's
heart against the sides of his bosom hurtled out of the heavens:
I cannot say out of the sky, for there was no sky Diamond had
not seen the lightning, for he had been intent on finding the
face of North Wind. Every moment the folds of her garment would
sweep across his eyes and blind him, but between, he could just
persuade himself that he saw great glories of woman's eyes
looking down through rifts in the mountainous clouds over his
head.
He trembled so at the thunder, that his knees failed him,
and he sunk down at North Wind's feet, and clasped her round the
column of her ankle. She instantly stooped, lifted him from the
roof -- up -- up into her bosom, and held him there, saying, as
if to an inconsolable child --
"Diamond, dear, this will never do."
"Oh yes, it will," answered Diamond. "I am all right now --
quite comfortable, I assure you, dear North Wind. If you will
only let me stay here, I shall be all right indeed."
"But you will feel the wind here, Diamond."
"I don't mind that a bit, so long as I feel your arms
through it," answered Diamond, nestling closer to her grand
bosom.
"Brave boy!" returned North Wind, pressing him closer.
"No," said Diamond, "I don't see that. It's not courage at
all, so long as I feel you there."
"But hadn't you better get into my hair? Then you would not
feel the wind; you will here."
"Ah, but, dear North Wind, you don't know how nice it is to
feel your arms about me. It is a thousand times better to have
them and the wind together, than to have only your hair and the
back of your neck and no wind at all."
"But it is surely more comfortable there?"
"Well, perhaps; but I begin to think there are better
things than being comfortable."
"Yes, indeed there are. Well, I will keep you in front of
me. You will feel the wind, but not too much. I shall only
want one arm to take care of you; the other will be quite enough
to sink the ship."
"Oh, dear North Wind! how can you talk so?"
"My dear boy, I never talk; I always mean what I say."
"Then you do mean to sink the ship with the other hand?"
"Yes."
"It's not like you."
"How do you know that?"
"Quite easily. Here you are taking care of a poor little
boy with one arm, and there you are sinking a ship with the
other. It can't be like you."
"Ah! but which is me? I can't be two mes, you know."
"No. Nobody can be two mes."
"Well, which me is me?"
"Now I must think. There looks to be two."
"Yes. That's the very point. -- You can't be knowing the
thing you don't know, can you?"
"No."
"Which me do you know?"
"The kindest, goodest, best me in the world," answered
Diamond, clinging to North Wind.
"Why am I good to you?"
"I don't know."
"Have you ever done anything for me?"
"No."
"Then I must be good to you because I choose to be good to
you."
"Yes."
"Why should I choose?"
"Because -- because -- because you like."
"Why should I like to be good to you?"
"I don't know, except it be because it's good to be good to
me."
"That's just it; I am good to you because I like to be
good."
"Then why shouldn't you be good to other people as well as
to me?"
"That's just what I don't know. Why shouldn't I?"
"I don't know either. Then why shouldn't you?"
"Because I am."
"There it is again," said Diamond. "I don't see that you
are. It looks quite the other thing."
"Well, but listen to me, Diamond. You know the one me, you
say, and that is good."
"Yes."
"Do you know the other me as well?"
"No. I can't. I shouldn't like to."
"There it is. You don't know the other me. You are sure of
one of them?"
"Yes."
"And you are sure there can't be two mes?"
"Yes."
"Then the me you don't know must be the same as the me you
do know, -- else there would be two mes?"
"Yes."
"Then the other me you don't know must be as kind as the me
you do know?"
"Yes."
"Besides, I tell you that it is so, only it doesn't look
like it. That I confess freely. Have you anything more to
object?"
"No, no, dear North Wind; I am quite satisfied."
"Then I will tell you something you might object. You might
say that the me you know is like the other me, and that I am
cruel all through."
"I know that can't be, because you are so kind."
"But that kindness might be only a pretence for the sake of
being more cruel afterwards."
Diamond clung to her tighter than ever, crying --
"No, no, dear North Wind; I can't believe that. I don't
believe it. I won't believe it. That would kill me. I love
you, and you must love me, else how did I come to love you? How
could you know how to put on such a beautiful face if you did
not love me and the rest? No. You may sink as many ships as you
like, and I won't say another word. I can't say I shall like to
see it, you know."
"That's quite another thing," said North Wind; and as she
spoke she gave one spring from the roof of the hay-loft, and
rushed up into the clouds, with Diamond on her left arm close to
her heart. And as if the clouds knew she had come, they burst
into a fresh jubilation of thunderous light. For a few moments,
Diamond seemed to be borne up through the depths of an ocean of
dazzling flame; the next, the winds were writhing around him
like a storm of serpents. For they were in the midst of the
clouds and mists, and they of course took the shapes of the
wind, eddying and wreathing and whirling and shooting and
dashing about like grey and black water, So that it was as if
the wind itself had taken shape, and he saw the grey and black
wind tossing and raving most madly all about him. Now it blinded
him by smiting him upon the eyes; now it deafened him by
bellowing in his ears; for even when the thunder came he knew
now that it was the billows of the great ocean of the air
dashing against each other in their haste to fill the hollow
scooped out by the lightning; now it took his breath quite away
by sucking it from his body with the speed of its rush. But he
did not mind it. He only gasped first and then laughed, for the
arm of North Wind was about him, and he was leaning against her
bosom. It is quite impossible for me to describe what he saw.
Did you ever watch a great wave shoot into a winding passage
amongst rocks? If you ever did, you would see that the water rushed
every way at once, some of it even turning back and opposing the
rest; greater confusion you might see nowhere except in a crowd
of frightened people. Well, the wind was like that, except that
it went much faster, and therefore was much wilder, and twisted
and shot and curled and dodged and clashed and raved ten times
more madly than anything else in creation except human passions.
Diamond saw the threads of the lady's hair streaking it all. In
parts indeed he could not tell which was hair and which was
black storm and vapour. It seemed
sometimes that all the great billows of mist-muddy wind were
woven out of the crossing lines of North Wind's infinite hair,
sweeping in endless intertwistings. And Diamond felt as the wind
seized on his hair, which his mother kept rather long, as if he
too was a part of the storm, and some of its life went out from
him. But so sheltered was he by North Wind's arm and bosom that
only at times, in the fiercer onslaught of some curl-billowed
eddy, did he recognise for a moment how wild was the storm in
which he was carried, nestling in its very core and formative
centre.
It seemed to Diamond likewise that they were motionless in
this centre, and that all the confusion and fighting went on
around them. Flash after flash illuminated the fierce chaos,
revealing in varied yellow and blue and grey and dusky red the
vapourous contention; peal after peal of thunder tore the
infinite waste; but it seemed to Diamond that North Wind and he
were motionless, all but the hair. It was not so. They were
sweeping with the speed of the wind itself towards the sea.
CHAPTER VII
THE CATHEDRAL
I MUST not go on describing what cannot be described, for
nothing is more wearisome.
Before they reached the sea, Diamond felt North Wind's hair
just beginning to fall about him.
"Is the storm over, North Wind?" he called out.
"No, Diamond. I am only waiting a moment to set you down.
You would not like to see the ship sunk, and I am going to give
you a place to stop in till I come back for you."
"Oh! thank you," said Diamond. "I shall be sorry to leave
you, North Wind, but I would rather not see the ship go down.
And I'm afraid the poor people will cry, and I should hear them.
Oh, dear!"
"There are a good many passengers on board; and to tell the
truth, Diamond, I don't care about your hearing the cry you
speak of. I am afraid you would not get it out of your little
head again for a long time."
"But how can you bear it then, North Wind? For I am sure
you are kind. I shall never doubt that again."
"I will tell you how I am able to bear it, Diamond: I am
always hearing, through every noise, through all the noise I am
making myself even, the sound of a far-off song. I do not
exactly know where it is, or what it means; and I don't hear
much of it, only the odour of its music, as it were, flitting
across the great billows of the ocean outside this air in which
I make such a storm; but what I do hear is quite enough to make
me able to bear the cry from the drowning ship. So it would you
if you could hear it."
"No, it wouldn't," returned Diamond, stoutly. "For they
wouldn't hear the music of the far-away song; and if they did,
it wouldn't do them any good. You see you and I are not going to
be drowned, and so we might enjoy it."
"But you have never heard the psalm, and you don't know
what it is like. Somehow, I can't say how, it tells me that all
is right; that it is coming to swallow up all cries."
"But that won't do them any good -- the people, I mean,"
persisted Diamond.
"It must. It must," said North Wind, hurriedly. "It
wouldn't be the song it seems to be if it did not swallow up all
their fear and pain too, and set them singing it themselves with
the rest. I am sure it will. And do you know, ever since I knew
I had hair, that is, ever since it began to go out and away,
that song has been coming nearer and nearer. Only I must say it
was some thousand years before I heard it."
"But how can you say it was coming nearer when you did not
hear it?" asked doubting little Diamond.
"Since I began to hear it, I know it is growing louder,
therefore I judge it was coming nearer and nearer until I did
hear it first. I'm not so very old, you know -- a few thousand
years only -- and I was quite a baby when I heard the noise
first, but I knew it must come from the voices of people ever so
much older and wiser than I was. I can't sing at all, except now and
then, and I can never tell what my song is going to be; I only
know what it is after I have sung it. -- But this will never do.
Will you stop here?"
"I can't see anywhere to stop," said Diamond. "Your hair is
all down like a darkness, and I can't see through it if I knock
my eyes into it ever so much."
"Look, then," said North Wind; and, with one sweep of her
great white arm, she swept yards deep of darkness like a great
curtain from before the face of the boy.
And lo! it was a blue night, lit up with stars. Where it
did not shine with stars it shimmered with the milk of the
stars, except where, just opposite to Diamond's face, the grey
towers of a cathedral blotted out each its own shape of sky and
stars.
"Oh! what's that?" cried Diamond, struck with a kind of
terror, for he had never seen a cathedral, and it rose before
him with an awful reality in the midst of the wide spaces,
conquering emptiness with grandeur.
"A very good place for you to wait in," said North Wind.
"But we shall go in, and you shall judge for yourself."
There was an open door in the middle of one of the towers,
leading out upon the roof, and through it they passed. Then
North Wind set Diamond on his feet, and he found himself at the
top of a stone stair, which went twisting away down into the
darkness for only a little light came in at the door. It was
enough, however, to allow Diamond to see that North Wind stood
beside him. He looked up to find her face, and saw that she was
no longer a beautiful giantess, but the tall gracious lady he
liked best to see. She took his hand, and, giving him the broad
part of the spiral stair to walk on, led him down a good way;
then, opening another little door, led him out upon
a narrow gallery that ran all round the central part of the
church, on the ledges of the windows of the clerestory, and
through openings in the parts of the wall that divided the
windows from each other. It was very narrow, and except when
they were passing through the wall, Diamond saw nothing to keep
him from falling into the church. It lay below him like a great
silent gulf hollowed in stone, and he held his breath for fear
as he looked down.
"What are you trembling for, little Diamond?" said the lady,
as she walked gently along, with her hand held out behind her
leading him, for there was not breadth enough for them to walk
side by side.
"I am afraid of falling down there," answered Diamond. "It
is so deep down."
"Yes, rather," answered North Wind; "but you were a hundred
times higher a few minutes ago."
"Ah, yes, but somebody's arm was about me then," said
Diamond, putting his little mouth to the beautiful cold hand
that had a hold of his.
"What a dear little warm mouth you've got!" said North
Wind. "It is a pity you should talk nonsense with it. Don't you
know I have a hold of you?"
"Yes; but I'm walking on my own legs, and they might slip.
I can't trust myself so well as your arms."
"But I have a hold of you, I tell you, foolish child."
"Yes, but somehow I can't feel comfortable."
"If you were to fall, and my hold of you were to give way,
I should be down after you in a less moment than a lady's watch
can tick, and catch you long before you had reached the ground."
"I don't like it though," said Diamond.
"Oh! oh! oh!" he screamed the next moment, bent double with
terror, for North Wind had let go her hold of his hand, and had
vanished, leaving him standing as if rooted to the gallery.
She left the words, "Come after me," sounding in his ears.
But move he dared not. In a moment more he would from very
terror have fallen into the church, but suddenly there came a
gentle breath of cool wind upon his face, and it kept blowing
upon him in little puffs, and at every puff Diamond felt his
faintness going away, and his fear with it. Courage was reviving
in his little heart, and still the cool wafts of the soft wind
breathed upon him, and the soft wind was so mighty and strong
within its gentleness, that in a minute more Diamond was
marching along the narrow ledge as fearless for the time as
North Wind herself.
He walked on and on, with the windows all in a row on one
side of him, and the great empty nave of the church echoing to
every one of his brave strides on the other, until at last he
came to a little open door, from which a broader stair led him down
and down and down, till at last all at once he found himself in
the arms of North Wind, who held him close to her, and kissed
him on the forehead. Diamond nestled to her, and murmured into
her bosom, --
"Why did you leave me, dear North Wind?"
"Because I wanted you to walk alone," she answered.
"But it is so much nicer here!" said Diamond.
"I daresay; but I couldn't hold a little coward to my
heart. It would make me so cold!"
"But I wasn't brave of myself," said Diamond, whom my older
readers will have already discovered to be a true child in this,
that he was given to metaphysics. "It was the wind that blew in
my face that made me brave. Wasn't it now, North Wind?"
"Yes: I know that. You had to be taught what courage was.
And you couldn't know what it was without feeling it: therefore
it was given you. But don't you feel as if you would try to be
brave yourself next time?"
"Yes, I do. But trying is not much."
"Yes, it is -- a very great deal, for it is a beginning.
And a beginning is the greatest thing of all. To try to be brave
is to be brave. The coward who tries to be brave is before the
man who is brave because he is made so, and never had to try."
"How kind you are, North Wind!"
"I am only just. All kindness is but justice. We owe it."
"I don't quite understand that."
"Never mind; you will some day. There is no hurry about
understanding it now."
"Who blew the wind on me that made me brave?"
"I did."
"I didn't see you."
"Therefore you can believe me."
"Yes, yes; of course. But how was it that such a little
breath could be so strong?"
"That I don't know."
"But you made it strong?"
"No: I only blew it. I knew it would make you strong, just
as it did the man in the boat, you remember. But how my breath
has that power I cannot tell. It was put into it when I
was made. That is all I know. But really I must be going about
my work."
"Ah! the poor ship! I wish you would stop here, and let the
poor ship go."
"That I dare not do. Will you stop here till I come back?"
"Yes. You won't be long?"
"Not longer than I can help. Trust me, you shall get home
before the morning."
In a moment North Wind was gone, and the next Diamond heard
a moaning about the church, which grew and grew to a roaring.
The storm was up again, and he knew that North Wind's hair was
flying.
The church was dark. Only a little light came through the
windows, which were almost all of that precious old stained
glass which is so much lovelier than the new. But Diamond could
not see how beautiful they were, for there was not enough of
light in the stars to show the colours of them. He could only
just distinguish them from the walls, He looked up, but could
not see the gallery along which he had passed. He could only
tell where it was far up by the faint glimmer of the windows of
the clerestory, whose sills made part of it. The church grew
very lonely about him, and he began to feel like a child whose
mother has forsaken it. Only he knew that to be left alone is
not always to be forsaken.
He began to feel his way about the place, and for a while
went wandering up and down. His little footsteps waked little
answering echoes in the great house. It wasn't too big to mind
him. It was as if the church knew he was there, and meant to
make itself his house. So it went on giving back an answer to
every step, until at length Diamond thought he should like to
say something out loud, and see what the church would answer.
But he found he was afraid to speak. He could not utter a word
for fear of the loneliness. Perhaps it was as well that he did
not, for the sound of a spoken word would have made him feel the
place yet more deserted and empty. But he thought he could sing.
He was fond of singing, and at home he used to sing, to tunes of
his own, all the nursery rhymes he knew. So he began to try Hey
diddle diddle, but it wouldn't do. Then he tried Little Boy
Blue, but it was no better. Neither would
Sing a Song of Sixpence sing itself at all. Then he tried Poor
old Cockytoo, but he wouldn't do. They all sounded so silly! and
he had never thought them silly before. So he was quiet, and
listened to the echoes that came out of the dark corners in
answer to his footsteps.
At last he gave a great sigh, and said, "I'm so tired." But
he did not hear the gentle echo that answered from far away over
his head, for at the same moment he came against the lowest of
a few steps that stretched across the church, and fell down and
hurt his arm. He cried a little first, and then crawled up the
steps on his hands and knees. At the top he came to a little bit
of carpet, on which he lay down; and there he lay staring at the
dull window that rose nearly a hundred feet above his head.
Now this was the eastern window of the church, and the moon
was at that moment just on the edge of the horizon. The next,
she was peeping over it. And lo! with the moon, St. John and St.
Paul, and the rest of them, began to dawn in the window in their
lovely garments. Diamond did not know that the wonder-working
moon was behind, and he thought all the light was coming out of
the window itself, and that the good old men were appearing to
help him, growing out of the night and the darkness, because he
had hurt his arm, and was very tired and lonely, and North Wind
was so long in coming. So he lay and looked at them backwards
over his head, wondering when they would come down or what they
would do next. They were very dim, for the moonlight was not
strong enough for the colours, and he had enough to do with his
eyes trying to make out their shapes. So his eyes grew tired,
and more and more tired, and his eyelids grew so heavy that they
would keep tumbling down over his eyes. He kept lifting them and
lifting them, but every time they were heavier than the last. It
was no use: they were too much for him. Sometimes before he had
got them half up, down they were again; and at length he gave it
up quite, and the moment he gave it up, he was fast asleep.
CHAPTER VIII
THE EAST WINDOW
THAT Diamond had fallen fast asleep is very evident from the
strange things he now fancied as taking place. For he thought he
heard a sound as of whispering up in the great window. He tried
to open his eyes, but he could not. And the whispering went on
and grew louder and louder, until he could hear every word that
was said. He thought it was the Apostles talking about him. But
he could not open his eyes.
"And how comes he to be lying there, St. Peter?" said one.
"I think I saw him a while ago up in the gallery, under the
Nicodemus window. Perhaps he has fallen down.
What do you think, St. Matthew?"
"I don't think he could have crept here after falling from
such a height. He must have been killed."
"What are we to do with him? We can't leave him lying
there. And we could not make him comfortable up here in the
window: it's rather crowded already. What do you say, St.
Thomas?"
"Let's go down and look at him."
There came a rustling, and a chinking, for some time, and
then there was a silence, and Diamond felt somehow that all
the Apostles were standing round him and looking down on him.
And still he could not open his eyes.
"What is the matter with him, St. Luke?" asked one.
"There's nothing the matter with him," answered St. Luke,
who must have joined the company of the Apostles from the next
window, one would think. "He's in a sound sleep."
"I have it," cried another. "This is one of North Wind's
tricks. She has caught him up and dropped him at our door, like
a withered leaf or a foundling baby. I don't understand that
woman's conduct, I must say. As if we hadn't enough to do with
our money, without going taking care of other people's children!
That's not what our forefathers built cathedrals for."
Now Diamond could not bear to hear such things against
North Wind, who, he knew, never played anybody a trick. She was
far too busy with her own work for that. He struggled hard to
open his eyes, but without success.
"She should consider that a church is not a place for
pranks, not to mention that we live in it," said another.
"It certainly is disrespectful of her. But she always is
disrespectful. What right has she to bang at our windows as she
has been doing the whole of this night? I daresay there is glass
broken somewhere. I know my blue robe is in a dreadful mess with
the rain first and the dust after. It will cost me shillings to
clean it."
Then Diamond knew that they could not be Apostles, talking
like this. They could only be the sextons and vergers and
such-like, who got up at night, and put on the robes of deans
and bishops, and called each other grand names, as the foolish
servants he had heard his father tell of call themselves
lords and ladies, after their masters and mistresses. And he was
so angry at their daring to abuse North Wind, that he jumped up,
crying --
"North Wind knows best what she is about. She has a good
right to blow the cobwebs from your windows, for she was sent to
do it. She sweeps them away from grander places, I can tell you,
for I've been with her at it."
This was what he began to say, but as he spoke his eyes
came wide open, and behold, there were neither Apostles nor
vergers there -- not even a window with the effigies of holy men
in it, but a dark heap of hay all about him, and the little
panes in the roof of his loft glimmering blue in the light of
the morning. Old Diamond was coming awake down below in the
stable. In a moment more he was on his feet, and shaking himself
so that young Diamond's bed trembled under him.
"He's grand at shaking himself," said Diamond. "I wish I
could shake myself like that. But then I can wash myself, and he
can't. What fun it would be to see Old Diamond washing his face
with his hoofs and iron shoes! Wouldn't it be a picture?"
So saying, he got up and dressed himself. Then he went out
into the garden. There must have been a tremendous wind in the
night, for although all was quiet now, there lay the little
summer-house crushed to the ground, and over it the great
elm-tree, which the wind had broken across, being much decayed
in the middle. Diamond almost cried to see the wilderness of
green leaves, which used to be so far up in the blue air,
tossing about in the breeze, and liking it best when the wind
blew it most, now lying so near the ground, and without any hope
of ever getting up into the deep air again.
"I wonder how old the tree is!" thought Diamond. "It must
take a long time to get so near the sky as that poor tree was."
"Yes, indeed," said a voice beside him, for Diamond had
spoken the last words aloud.
Diamond started, and looking around saw a clergyman, a
brother of Mrs. Coleman, who happened to be visiting her. He was
a great scholar, and was in the habit of rising early.
"Who are you, my man?" he added.
"Little Diamond," answered the boy.
"Oh! I have heard of you. How do you come to be up so
early?"
"Because the sham Apostles talked such nonsense, they waked
me up."
The clergyman stared. Diamond saw that he had better have
held his tongue, for he could not explain things.
"You must have been dreaming, my little man," said he.
"Dear! dear!" he went on, looking at the tree, "there has been
terrible work here. This is the north wind's doing. What a pity!
I wish we lived at the back of it, I'm sure."
"Where is that" sir?" asked Diamond.
"Away in the Hyperborean regions," answered the clergyman,
smiling.
"I never heard of the place," returned Diamond.
"I daresay not," answered the clergyman; "but if this tree
had been there now, it would not have been blown down, for there
is no wind there."
"But, please, sir, if it had been there," said Diamond, "we
should not have had to be sorry for it."
"Certainly not."
"Then we shouldn't have had to be glad for it, either."
"You're quite right, my boy," said the clergyman, looking
at him very kindly, as he turned away to the house, with his
eyes bent towards the earth. But Diamond thought within himself,
"I will ask North Wind next time I see her to take me to that
country. I think she did speak about it once before."
CHAPTER IX
HOW DIAMOND GOT TO THE BACK OF THE NORTH WIND
WHEN Diamond went home to breakfast, he found his father and
mother already seated at the table. They were both busy with
their bread and butter, and Diamond sat himself down in his
usual place. His mother looked up at him, and, after watching
him for a moment, said:
"I don't think the boy is looking well, husband."
"Don't you? Well, I don't know. I think he looks pretty
bobbish. How do you feel yourself, Diamond, my boy?"
"Quite well, thank you, father; at least, I think I've got
a little headache."
"There! I told you," said his father and mother both at
once.
"The child's very poorly" added his mother.
"The child's quite well," added his father.
And then they both laughed.
"You see," said his mother, "I've had a letter from my
sister at Sandwich."
"Sleepy old hole!" said his father.
"Don't abuse the place; there's good people in it," said
his mother.
"Right, old lady," returned his father; "only I don't
believe there are more than two pair of carriage-horses in the
whole blessed place."
"Well, people can get to heaven without carriages -- or
coachmen either, husband. Not that I should like to go without
my coachman, you know. But about the boy?"
"What boy?"
"That boy, there, staring at you with his goggle-eyes."
"Have I got goggle-eyes, mother?" asked Diamond, a little
dismayed.
"Not too goggle," said his mother, who was quite proud of
her boy's eyes, only did not want to make him vain.
"Not too goggle; only you need not stare so."
"Well, what about him?" said his father.
"I told you I had got a letter."
"Yes, from your sister; not from Diamond."
"La, husband! you've got out of bed the wrong leg first
this morning, I do believe."
"I always get out with both at once," said his father,
laughing.
"Well, listen then. His aunt wants the boy to go down and
see her."
"And that's why you want to make out that he ain't looking
well."
"No more he is. I think he had better go."
"Well, I don't care, if you can find the money," said his
father.
"I'll manage that," said his mother; and so it was agreed
that Diamond should go to Sandwich.
I will not describe the preparations Diamond made. You
would have thought he had been going on a three months' voyage.
Nor will I describe the journey, for our business is now at the
place. He was met at the station by his aunt, a cheerful
middle-aged woman, and conveyed in safety to the sleepy old
town, as his father called it. And no wonder that it was sleepy,
for it was nearly dead of old age.
Diamond went about staring with his beautiful goggle-eyes,
at the quaint old streets, and the shops, and the houses.
Everything looked very strange, indeed; for here was a town
abandoned by its nurse, the sea, like an old oyster left on the
shore till it gaped for weariness. It used to be one of the five
chief seaports in England, but it began to hold itself too high,
and the consequence was the sea grew less and less intimate with
it, gradually drew back, and kept more to itself, till at length
it left it high and dry: Sandwich was a seaport no more; the sea
went on with its own tide-business a long way off, and forgot
it. Of course it went to sleep, and had no more to do
with ships. That's what comes to cities and nations, and boys
and girls, who say, "I can do without your help. I'm enough for
myself."
Diamond soon made great friends with an old woman who kept
a toyshop, for his mother had given him twopence for
pocket-money before he left, and he had gone into her shop to
spend it, and she got talking to him. She looked very funny,
because she had not got any teeth, but Diamond liked her, and
went often to her shop, although he had nothing to spend there
after the twopence was gone.
One afternoon he had been wandering rather wearily about
the streets for some time. It was a hot day, and he felt tired.
As he passed the toyshop, he stepped in.
"Please may I sit down for a minute on this box?" he said,
thinking the old woman was somewhere in the shop. But he got no
answer, and sat down without one. Around him were a great many
toys of all prices, from a penny up to shillings. All at once he
heard a gentle whirring somewhere amongst them. It made him
start and look behind him. There were the sails of a windmill
going round and round almost close to his ear. He thought at
first it must be one of those toys which are wound up and go
with clockwork; but no, it was a common penny toy, with the
windmill at the end of a whistle, and when the whistle blows the
windmill goes. But the wonder was that there was no one at the
whistle end blowing, and yet the sails were turning round and
round -- now faster, now slower, now faster again.
"What can it mean?" said Diamond, aloud.
"It means me," said the tiniest voice he had ever heard."
"Who are you, please?" asked Diamond.
"Well, really, I begin to be ashamed of you," said the
voice. "I wonder how long it will be before you know me; or how
often I might take you in before you got sharp enough to suspect
me. You are as bad as a baby that doesn't know his mother in a
new bonnet."
"Not quite so bad as that, dear North Wind," said Diamond,
"for I didn't see you at all, and indeed I don't see you yet,
although I recognise your voice. Do grow a little, please."
"Not a hair's-breadth," said the voice, and it was the
smallest voice that ever spoke. "What are you doing here?"
"I am come to see my aunt. But, please, North Wind, why
didn't you come back for me in the church that night?"
"I did. I carried you safe home. All the time you were
dreaming about the glass Apostles, you were lying in my arms."
"I'm so glad," said Diamond. "I thought that must be it,
only I wanted to hear you say so. Did you sink the ship, then?"
"Yes."
"And drown everybody?"
"Not quite. One boat got away with six or seven men in it."
"How could the boat swim when the ship couldn't?"
"Of course I had some trouble with it. I had to contrive a
bit, and manage the waves a little. When they're once thoroughly
waked up, I have a good deal of trouble with them sometimes.
They're apt to get stupid with tumbling over each other's heads.
That's when they're fairly at it. However, the boat got to a
desert island before noon next day."
"And what good will come of that?"
"I don't know. I obeyed orders. Good bye."
"Oh! stay, North Wind, do stay!" cried Diamond, dismayed to
see the windmill get slower and slower.
"What is it, my dear child?" said North Wind, and the
windmill began turning again so swiftly that Diamond could
scarcely see it. "What a big voice you've got! and what a noise
you do make with it? What is it you want? I have little to do,
but that little must be done."
"I want you to take me to the country at the back of the
north wind."
"That's not so easy," said North Wind, and was silent for
so long that Diamond thought she was gone indeed. But after he
had quite given her up, the voice began again.
"I almost wish old Herodotus had held his tongue about it.
Much he knew of it!"
"Why do you wish that, North Wind?"
"Because then that clergyman would never have heard of it,
and set you wanting to go. But we shall see. We shall see. You
must go home now, my dear, for you don't seem very well, and
I'll see what can be done for you. Don't wait for me. I've got
to break a few of old Goody's toys; she's thinking too much of
her new stock. Two or three will do. There! go now."
Diamond rose, quite sorry, and without a word left the
shop, and went home.
It soon appeared that his mother had been right about him,
for that same afternoon his head began to ache very much, and he
had to go to bed.
He awoke in the middle of the night. The lattice window of
his room had blown open, and the curtains of his little bed were
swinging about in the wind.
"If that should be North Wind now!" thought Diamond.
But the next moment he heard some one closing the window,
and his aunt came to his bedside. She put her hand on his face,
and said --
"How's your head, dear?"
"Better, auntie, I think."
"Would you like something to drink?"
"Oh, yes! I should, please."
So his aunt gave him some lemonade, for she had been used
to nursing sick people, and Diamond felt very much refreshed,
and laid his head down again to go very fast asleep, as he
thought. And so he did, but only to come awake again, as a fresh
burst of wind blew the lattice open a second time. The same
moment he found himself in a cloud of North Wind's hair, with
her beautiful face, set in it like a moon, bending over him.
"Quick, Diamond!" she said. "I have found such a chance!"
"But I'm not well," said Diamond.
"I know that, but you will be better for a little fresh
air. You shall have plenty of that."
"You want me to go, then?"
"Yes, I do. It won't hurt you."
"Very well," said Diamond; and getting out of the
bed-clothes, he jumped into North Wind's arms.
"We must make haste before your aunt comes," said she, as
she glided out of the open lattice and left it swinging.
The moment Diamond felt her arms fold around him he began
to feel better. It was a moonless night, and very dark, with
glimpses of stars when the clouds parted.
"I used to dash the waves about here," said North Wind,
"where cows and sheep are feeding now; but we shall soon get to
them. There they are."
And Diamond, looking down, saw the white glimmer of
breaking water far below him.
"You see, Diamond," said North Wind, "it is very difficult
for me to get you to the back of the north wind, for that
country lies in the very north itself, and of course I can't
blow northwards."
"Why not?" asked Diamond.
"You little silly!" said North Wind. "Don't you see that if
I were to blow northwards I should be South Wind, and that is as
much as to say that one person could be two persons?"
"But how can you ever get home at all, then?"
"You are quite right -- that is my home, though I never get
farther than the outer door. I sit on the doorstep, and hear the
voices inside. I am nobody there, Diamond."
"I'm very sorry."
"Why?"
"That you should be nobody."
"Oh, I don't mind it. Dear little man! you will be very
glad some day to be nobody yourself. But you can't understand
that now, and you had better not try; for if you do, you will be
certain to go fancying some egregious nonsense, and making
yourself miserable about it."
"Then I won't," said Diamond.
"There's a good boy. It will all come in good time."
"But you haven't told me how you get to the doorstep, you
know."
"It is easy enough for me. I have only to consent to be
nobody, and there I am. I draw into myself and there I am on the
doorstep. But you can easily see, or you have less sense than I
think, that to drag you, you heavy thing, along with me, would
take centuries, and I could not give the time to it."
"Oh, I'm so sorry!" said Diamond.
"What for now, pet?"
"That I'm so heavy for you. I would be lighter if I could,
but I don't know how."
"You silly darling! Why, I could toss you a hundred miles
from me if I liked. It is only when I am going home that I shall
find you heavy."
"Then you are going home with me?"
"Of course. Did I not come to fetch you just for that?"
"But all this time you must be going southwards."
"Yes. Of course I am."
"How can you be taking me northwards, then?"
"A very sensible question. But you shall see. I will get
rid of a few of these clouds -- only they do come up so fast!
It's like trying to blow a brook dry. There! What do you see
now?"
"I think I see a little boat, away there, down below."
"A little boat, indeed! Well! She's a yacht of two hundred
tons; and the captain of it is a friend of mine; for he is a man
of good sense, and can sail his craft well. I've helped him many
a time when he little thought it. I've heard him grumbling at
me, when I was doing the very best I could for him. Why, I've
carried him eighty miles a day, again and again, right north."
"He must have dodged for that," said Diamond, who had been
watching the vessels, and had seen that they went other ways
than the wind blew.
"Of course he must. But don't you see, it was the best I
could do? I couldn't be South Wind. And besides it gave him a
share in the business. It is not good at all -- mind that,
Diamond -- to do everything for those you love, and not give
them a share in the doing. It's not kind. It's making too much
of yourself, my child. If I had been South Wind, he would only
have smoked his pipe all day, and made himself stupid."
"But how could he be a man of sense and grumble at you when
you were doing your best for him?"
"Oh! you must make allowances," said North Wind, "or you
will never do justice to anybody. -- You do understand, then,
that a captain may sail north ----"
"In spite of a north wind -- yes," supplemented Diamond.
"Now, I do think you must be stupid, my, dear" said North
Wind. "Suppose the north wind did not blow where would he be
then?"
"Why then the south wind would carry him."
"So you think that when the north wind stops the south wind
blows. Nonsense. If I didn't blow, the captain couldn't sail his
eighty miles a day. No doubt South Wind would carry him faster,
but South Wind is sitting on her doorstep then, and if I stopped
there would be a dead calm. So you are all wrong to say he can
sail north in spite of me; he sails north by my help, and my
help alone. You see that, Diamond?"
"Yes, I do, North Wind. I am stupid, but I don't want to be
stupid."
"Good boy! I am going to blow you north in that little
craft, one of the finest that ever sailed the sea. Here we are,
right over it. I shall be blowing against you; you will be
sailing against me; and all will be just as we want it. The
captain won't get on so fast as he would like, but he will get
on, and so shall we. I'm just going to put you on board. Do you
see in front of the tiller -- that thing the man is working, now
to one side, now to the other -- a round thing like the top of
a drum?"
"Yes," said Diamond.
"Below that is where they keep their spare sails, and some
stores of that sort. I am going to blow that cover off. The same
moment I will drop you on deck, and you must tumble in. Don't be
afraid, it is of no depth, and you will fall on sail-cloth. You
will find it nice and warm and dry-only dark; and you will know
I am near you by every roll and pitch of the vessel. Coil
yourself up and go to sleep. The yacht shall be my cradle and
you shall be my baby."
"Thank you, dear North Wind. I am not a bit afraid," said
Diamond.
In a moment they were on a level with the bulwarks, and
North Wind sent the hatch of the after-store rattling away over
the deck to leeward. The next, Diamond found himself in the
dark, for he had tumbled through the hole as North Wind had told
him, and the cover was replaced over his head. Away he went
rolling to leeward, for the wind began all at once to blow hard.
He heard the call of the captain, and the loud trampling of the
men over his head, as they hauled at the main sheet to get the
boom on board that they might take in a reef in the mainsail.
Diamond felt about until he had found what seemed the most
comfortable place, and there he snuggled down and lay.
Hours after hours, a great many of them, went by; and still
Diamond lay there. He never felt in the least tired or
impatient, for a strange pleasure filled his heart. The
straining of the masts, the creaking of the boom, the singing of
the ropes, the banging of the blocks as they put the ve