<h2><SPAN name="png.081" id="png.081"></SPAN><b>III</b><br/>ACCIDENTAL MAGIC; OR DON’T TELL <span class="nw">ALL YOU KNOW</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Quentin de Ward</span> was rather a nice little boy,
but he had never been with other little boys,
and that made him in some ways a little different
from other little boys. His father was in India,
and he and his mother lived in a little house in
the New Forest. The house—it was a cottage
really, but even a cottage is a house, isn’t it?—was
very pretty and thatched and had a porch
covered with honeysuckle and ivy and white
roses, and straight red hollyhocks were trained
to stand up in a row against the south wall of
it. The two lived quite alone, and as they had
no one else to talk to they talked to each other
a good deal. Mrs. de Ward read a great many
books, and she used to tell Quentin about them
afterwards. They were usually books about
out of the way things, for Mrs. de Ward was
interested in all the things that people are not
quite sure about—the things that are hidden
<SPAN name="png.084" id="png.084"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>and secret, wonderful and mysterious—the
things people make discoveries about. So that
when the two were having their tea on the little
brick terrace in front of the hollyhocks, with
the white cloth flapping in the breeze, and the
wasps hovering round the jam-pot, it was no
uncommon thing for Quentin to say thickly
through his bread and jam:—</p>
<p>‘I say, mother, tell me some more about
Atlantis.’ Or, ‘Mother, tell me some more
about ancient Egypt and the little toy-boats
they made for their little boys.’ Or, ‘Mother,
tell me about the people who think Lord Bacon
wrote Shakespeare.’</p>
<p>And his mother always told him as much
as she thought he could understand, and he
always understood quite half of what she told
him.</p>
<p>They always talked the things out thoroughly,
and thus he learned to be fond of arguing, and
to enjoy using his brains, just as you enjoy
using your muscles in the football field or the
gymnasium.</p>
<p>Also he came to know quite a lot of odd,
out of the way things, and to have opinions of
his own concerning the lost Kingdom of
Atlantis, and the Man with the Iron Mask,
the building of Stonehenge, the Pre-dynastic
Egyptians, cuneiform writings and Assyrian
<SPAN name="png.085" id="png.085"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>sculptures, the Mexican pyramids and the
shipping activities of Tyre and Sidon.</p>
<p>Quentin did no regular lessons, such as most
boys have, but he read all sorts of books and
made notes from them, in a large and straggling
handwriting.</p>
<p>You will already have supposed that Quentin
was a prig. But he wasn’t, and you would
have owned this if you had seen him scampering
through the greenwood on his quiet New
Forest pony, or setting snares for the rabbits
that <em>would</em> get into the garden and eat the
precious lettuces and parsley. Also he fished
in the little streams that run through that lovely
land, and shot with a bow and arrows. And
he was a very good shot too.</p>
<p>Besides this he collected stamps and birds’
eggs and picture post-cards, and kept guinea-pigs
and bantams, and climbed trees and tore his
clothes in twenty different ways. And once he
fought the grocer’s boy and got licked and didn’t
cry, and made friends with the grocer’s boy
afterwards, and got him to show him all he
knew about fighting, so you see he was really not
a mug. He was ten years old and he had
enjoyed every moment of his ten years, even
the sleeping ones, because he always dreamed
jolly dreams, though he could not always
remember what they were.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.086" id="png.086"></SPAN>I tell you all this so that you may understand
why he said what he did when his
mother broke the news to him.</p>
<p>He was sitting by the stream that ran along
the end of the garden, making bricks of the
clay that the stream’s banks were made of. He
dried them in the sun, and then baked them
under the kitchen stove. (It is quite a good
way to make bricks—you might try it sometimes.)
His mother came out, looking just as
usual, in her pink cotton gown and her pink
sunbonnet; and she had a letter in her hand.</p>
<p>‘Hullo, boy of my heart,’ she said, ‘very
busy?’</p>
<p>‘Yes,’ said Quentin importantly, not looking
up, and going on with his work. ‘I’m making
stones to build Stonehenge with. You’ll show
me how to build it, won’t you, mother.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, dear,’ she said absently. ‘Yes, if I
can.’</p>
<p>‘Of course you can,’ he said, ‘you can do
everything.’</p>
<p>She sat down on a tuft of grass near him.</p>
<p>‘Quentin dear,’ she said, and something in
her voice made him look up suddenly.</p>
<p>‘Oh, mother, what is it?’ he asked.</p>
<p>‘Daddy’s been wounded,’ she said; ‘he’s all
right now, dear—don’t be frightened. Only
I’ve got to go out to him. I shall meet him in
<SPAN name="png.087" id="png.087"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>Egypt. And you must go to school in Salisbury,
a very nice school, dear, till I come back.’</p>
<p>‘Can’t I come too?’ he asked.</p>
<p>And when he understood that he could not
he went on with the bricks in silence, with his
mouth shut very tight.</p>
<p>After a moment he said, ‘Salisbury? Then
I shall see Stonehenge?’</p>
<p>‘Yes,’ said his mother, pleased that he took
the news so calmly, ‘you will be sure to see
Stonehenge some time.’</p>
<p>He stood still, looking down at the little
mould of clay in his hand—so still that his
mother got up and came close to him.</p>
<p>‘Quentin,’ she said, ‘darling, what is it?’</p>
<p>He leaned his head against her.</p>
<p>‘I won’t make a fuss,’ he said, ‘but you can’t
begin to be brave the very first minute. Or, if
you do, you can’t go on being.’</p>
<p>And with that he began to cry, though he
had not cried after the affair of the grocer’s boy.</p>
<div class="blockq fivestar">* * * * *</div>
<p>The thought of school was not so terrible to
Quentin as Mrs. de Ward had thought it
would be. In fact, he rather liked it, with half
his mind; but the other half didn’t like it,
because it meant parting from his mother who,
so far, had been his only friend. But it was
exciting to be taken to Southampton, and have
<SPAN name="png.088" id="png.088"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>all sorts of new clothes bought for you, and a
school trunk, and a little polished box that
locked up, to keep your money in and your
gold sleeve links, and your watch and chain
when you were not wearing them.</p>
<p>Also the journey to Salisbury was made in
a motor, which was very exciting of course, and
rather took Quentin’s mind off the parting with
his mother, as she meant it should. And there
was a very grand lunch at The White Hart
Hotel at Salisbury, and then, very suddenly
indeed, it was good-bye, good-bye, and the
motor snorted, and hooted, and throbbed, and
rushed away, and mother was gone, and Quentin
was at school.</p>
<p>I believe it was quite a nice school. It was
in a very nice house with a large quiet garden,
and there were only about twenty boys. And
the masters were kind, and the boys no worse
than other boys of their age. But Quentin hated
it from the very beginning. For when his
mother had gone the Headmaster said:
‘School will be out in half-an-hour; take a
book, <ins class="TN" title="Transcriber's note:
original reads 'De Ward'">de Ward</ins>,’ and gave him <cite>Little Eric and
his Friends</cite>, a mere baby book. It was too
silly. He could not read it. He saw on a
shelf near him, <cite>Smith’s Antiquities</cite>, a very old
friend of his, so he said: ‘I’d rather have this,
please.’</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.089" id="png.089"></SPAN>‘You should say “sir” when you speak to a
master,’ the Head said to him. ‘Take the
book by all means.’ To himself the Head
said, ‘I wish you joy of it, you little prig.’</p>
<p>When school was over, one of the boys was
told to show Quentin his bed and his locker.
The matron had already unpacked his box and
his pile of books was waiting for him to carry
it over.</p>
<p>‘Golly, what a lot of books,’ said Smithson
minor. ‘What’s this? <cite>Atlantis</cite>? Is it a jolly
story?’</p>
<p>‘It isn’t a story,’ said Quentin. And just
then the classical master came by. ‘What’s
that about <cite>Atlantis</cite>?’ he said.</p>
<p>‘It’s a book the new chap’s got,’ said
Smithson.</p>
<p>The classical master glanced at the book.</p>
<p>‘And how much do you understand of this?’
he asked, fluttering the leaves.</p>
<p>‘Nearly all, I think,’ said Quentin.</p>
<p>‘You should say “sir” when you speak to a
master,’ said the classical one; and to himself
he added, ‘little prig.’ Then he said to
Quentin: ‘I am afraid you will find yourself
rather out of your element among ordinary
boys.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t think so,’ said Quentin calmly,
adding as an afterthought ‘sir.’</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.090" id="png.090"></SPAN>‘I’m glad you’re so confident,’ said the
classical master and went.</p>
<p>‘My word,’ said Smithson minor in a rather
awed voice, ‘you did answer him back.’</p>
<p>‘Of course I did,’ said Quentin. ‘Don’t
<em>you</em> answer when you’re spoken to?’</p>
<p>Smithson minor informed the interested
school that the new chap was a prig, but he
had a cool cheek, and that some sport might be
expected.</p>
<p>After supper the boys had half an hour’s
recreation. Quentin, who was tired, picked up
a book which a big boy had just put down.
It was the <cite>Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite>.</p>
<p>‘Hi, you kid,’ said the big boy, ‘don’t
pretend you read Shakespeare for fun. That’s
simple swank, you know.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t know what swank is,’ said Quentin,
‘but I like the <cite>Midsummer</cite> whoever wrote it.’</p>
<p>‘Whoever <em>what</em>?’</p>
<p>‘Well,’ said Quentin, ‘there’s a good deal
to be said for its being Bacon who wrote the
plays.’</p>
<p>Of course that settled it. From that moment,
he was called not <ins class="TN" title="Transcriber's note:
original reads 'De Ward'">de Ward</ins>, which was strange
enough, but Bacon. He rather liked that.
But the next day it was Pork, and the day after
Pig, and that was unbearable.</p>
<p>He was at the bottom of his class, for he
<SPAN name="png.091" id="png.091"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>knew no Latin as it is taught in schools, only
odd words that English words come from, and
some Latin words that are used in science.
And I cannot pretend that his arithmetic was
anything but contemptible.</p>
<p>The book called <cite>Atlantis</cite> had been looked
at by most of the school, and Smithson major,
not nearly such an agreeable boy as his brother,
hit on a new nickname.</p>
<p>‘Atlantic Pork’s a good name for a swanker,’
he said. ‘You know the rotten meat they
have in Chicago.’</p>
<p>This was in the playground before dinner.
Quentin, who had to keep his mouth shut very
tight these days, because, of course, a boy of ten
cannot cry before other chaps, shut the book
he was reading and looked up.</p>
<p>‘I won’t be called that,’ he said quietly.</p>
<p>‘Who said you wouldn’t?’ said Smithson
major, who, after all, was only twelve. ‘I say
you will.’</p>
<p>‘If you call me that I shall hit you,’ said
Quentin, ‘as hard as I can.’</p>
<p>A roar of laughter went up, and cries of,
‘Poor old Smithson’—‘Apologise, Smithie, and
leave the omnibus.’</p>
<p>‘And what should I <ins class="TN" title="Transciber's note:
original reads 'being'">be</ins> doing while you
were hitting me?’ asked Smithson contemptuously.</p>
<div class="illus">
<p><SPAN name="png.093" id="png.093"></SPAN><span class="ns">[</span><span class="pgmark">opp p67</span><ANTIMG class="framed" src="images/illus-093.png"
width="650" height="478" alt="" title="" /><br/>It landed on the point of the chin of Smithson major.</p>
</div>
<p><SPAN name="png.094" id="png.094"></SPAN>‘I don’t know and I don’t care,’ said
Quentin.</p>
<p>Smithson looked round. No master was in
sight. It seemed an excellent opportunity to
teach young <ins class="TN" title="Transcriber's note:
original reads 'De Ward'">de Ward</ins> his place.</p>
<p>‘Atlantic pig-swine,’ he said very deliberately.
And Quentin sprang at him, and
instantly it was a fight.</p>
<p>Now Quentin had only once fought—really
fought—before. Then it was the grocer’s boy
and he had been beaten. But he had learned
something since. And the chief conclusion he
now drew from his memories of that fight was
that he had not hit half hard enough, an opinion
almost universal among those who have fought
and not won.</p>
<p>As the fist of Smithson major described a
half circle and hurt his ear very much, Quentin
suddenly screwed himself up and hit out with
his right hand, straight, and with his whole
weight behind the blow as the grocer’s boy had
shown him. All his grief for his wounded
father, his sorrow at the parting from his mother,
all his hatred of his school, and his contempt for
his schoolfellows went into that blow. It landed
on the point of the chin of Smithson major who
fell together like a heap of rags.</p>
<p>‘Oh,’ said Quentin, gazing with interest
at his hand—it hurt a good deal but he
<SPAN name="png.095" id="png.095"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>looked at it with respect—‘I’m afraid I’ve hurt
him.’</p>
<p>He had forgotten for a moment that he was
in an enemies’ country, and so, apparently, had
his enemies.</p>
<p>‘Well done, Piggy! Bravo, young ’un!
Well hit, by Jove!’</p>
<p>Friendly hands thumped him on the back.
Smithson major was no popular hero.</p>
<p>Quentin felt—as his schoolfellows would
have put it—bucked. It is one thing to be
called Pig in enmity and derision. Another to
be called Piggy—an affectionate diminutive,
after all—to the chorus of admiring smacks.</p>
<p>‘Get up, Smithie,’ cried the ring. ‘Want
any more?’</p>
<p>It appeared that Smithie did not want any
more. He lay, not moving at all, and very
white.</p>
<p>‘I say,’ the crowd’s temper veered, ‘you’ve
killed him, I expect. I wouldn’t like to be
you, Bacon.’</p>
<p>Pig, you notice, for aggravation—Piggy in
enthusiastic applause. In the moment of possible
tragedy the more formal Bacon.</p>
<p>‘I haven’t,’ said Quentin, very white himself,
‘but if I have he began—by calling
names.’</p>
<p>Smithson moved and grunted. A sigh of
<SPAN name="png.096" id="png.096"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>relief swept the ring as a breeze sweeps a
cornfield.</p>
<p>‘He’s all right. A fair knock out. Piggy’s
got the use of ’em. Do Smithie good.’ The
voices hushed suddenly. A master was on the
scene—the classical master.</p>
<p>‘Fighting?’ he said. ‘The new boy? Who
began it?’</p>
<p>‘I did,’ said Quentin, ‘but he began with
calling names.’</p>
<p>‘Sneak!’ murmured the entire school, and
Quentin, who had seen no reason for not
speaking the truth, perceived that one should
not tell all one knows, and that once more he
stood alone in the world.</p>
<p>‘You will go to your room, <ins class="TN" title="Transcriber's note:
original reads 'De Ward'">de Ward</ins>,’ said
the classical master, bending over Smithson,
who having been ‘knocked silly’ still remained
in that condition, ‘and the headmaster will consider
your case to-morrow. You will probably
be expelled.’</p>
<p>Quentin went to his room and thought over
his position. It seemed to be desperate. How
was he to know that the classical master was
even then saying to the Head:</p>
<p>‘He’s got something in him, prig or no
prig, sir.’</p>
<p>‘You were quite right to send him to his
room,’ said the Head, ‘discipline must be
<SPAN name="png.097" id="png.097"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>maintained, as Mr. Ducket says. But it will
do Smithson major a world of good. A boy
who reads Shakespeare for fun, and has views
about Atlantis, and can knock out a bully as
well…. He’ll be a power in the school.
But we mustn’t let him know it.’</p>
<p>That was rather a pity. Because Quentin,
furious at the injustice of the whole thing—Smithson,
the aggressor, consoled with; himself
punished; expulsion threatened—was
maturing plans.</p>
<p>‘If mother had known what it was like,’ he
said to himself, ‘she would never have left me
here. I’ve got the two pounds she gave me.
I shall go to the White Hart at Salisbury
… no, they’d find me then. I’ll go to Lyndhurst;
and write to her. It’s better to run
away than to be expelled. Quentin Durward
would never have waited to be expelled from
anywhere.’</p>
<p>Of course Quentin Durward was my hero’s
hero. It could not be otherwise since his own
name was so like that of the Scottish guardsman.</p>
<p>Now the school in Salisbury was a little
school for little boys—boys who were used to
schools and took the rough with the smooth.
But Quentin was not used to schools, and he
had taken the rough very much to heart. So
<SPAN name="png.098" id="png.098"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>much that he did not mean to take any more
of it.</p>
<p>His dinner was brought up on a tray—bread
and water. He put the bread in his pocket.
Then when he knew that every one was at
dinner in the long dining-room at the back of
the house, he just walked very quietly down
the stairs, opened the side door and marched
out, down the garden path and out at the tradesmen’s
gate. He knew better than to shut
either gate or door.</p>
<p>He went quickly down the street, turned
the first corner he came to so as to get out of
sight of the school. He turned another corner,
went through an archway, and found himself
in an inn-yard—very quiet indeed. Only a
liver-coloured lurcher dog wagged a sleepy tail
on the hot flag-stones.</p>
<p>Quentin was just turning to go back through
the arch, for there was no other way out of the
yard, when he saw a big covered cart, whose
horse wore a nose-bag and looked as if there
was no hurry. The cart bore the name, ‘Miles,
Carrier, Lyndhurst.’</p>
<p>Quentin knew all about lifts. He had often
begged them and got them. Now there was
no one to ask. But he felt he could very well
explain later that he had wanted a lift, much
better than now, in fact, when he might be
<SPAN name="png.099" id="png.099"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>caught at any moment by some one from the
school.</p>
<p>He climbed up by the shaft. There were
boxes and packages of all sorts in the cart, and
at the back an empty crate with sacking over
it. He got into the crate, pulled the sacking
over himself, and settled down to eat his bread.</p>
<p>Presently the carrier came out, and there
was talk, slow, long-drawn talk. After a long
while the cart shook to the carrier’s heavy
climb into it, the harness rattled, the cart
lurched, and the wheels were loud and bumpy
over the cobble stones of the yard.</p>
<p>Quentin felt safe. The glow of anger was
still hot in him, and he was glad to think how
they would look for him all over the town, in
vain. He lifted the sacking at one corner so
that he could look out between the canvas of
the cart’s back and side, and hoped to see the
classical master distractedly looking for him.
But the streets were very sleepy. Every one
in Salisbury was having dinner—or in the case
of the affluent, lunch.</p>
<p>The black horse seemed as sleepy as the
streets, and went very slowly. Also it stopped
very often, and wherever there were parcels to
leave there was slow, long talkings to be exchanged.
I think, perhaps, Quentin dozed a
good deal under his sacks. At any rate it was
<SPAN name="png.100" id="png.100"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>with a shock of surprise that he suddenly heard
the carrier’s voice saying, as the horse stopped
with a jerk:</p>
<p>‘There’s a crate for you, Mrs. Baddock,
returned empty,’ and knew that that crate was
not empty, but full—full of boy.</p>
<p>‘I’ll go and call Joe,’ said a voice—Mrs.
Baddock’s, Quentin supposed, and slow feet
stumped away over stones. Mr. Miles leisurely
untied the tail of the cart, ready to let the crate
be taken out.</p>
<p>Quentin spent a paralytic moment. What
could he do?</p>
<p>And then, luckily or unluckily, a reckless
motor tore past, and the black horse plunged
and Mr. Miles had to go to its head and ‘talk
pretty’ to it for a minute. And in that minute
Quentin lifted the sacking, and looked out. It
was low sunset, and the street was deserted.
He stepped out of the crate, dropped to the
ground, and slipped behind a stout and friendly
water-butt that seemed to offer protective
shelter.</p>
<p>Joe came, and the crate was taken down.</p>
<p>‘You haven’t seen nothing of that there
runaway boy by chance?’ said a new voice—Joe’s
no doubt.</p>
<p>‘What boy?’ said Mr. Miles.</p>
<p>‘Run away from school, Salisbury,’ said
<SPAN name="png.101" id="png.101"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>Joe. ‘Telegrams far and near, so they be.
Little varmint.’</p>
<p>‘I ain’t seen no boys, not more’n ordinary,’
said Mr. Miles. ‘Thick as flies they be, here,
there, and everywhere, drat ’em. Sixpence—Correct.
So long, Joe.’</p>
<p>The cart rattled away. Joe and the crate
blundered out of hearing, and Quentin looked
cautiously round the water-butt.</p>
<p>This was an adventure. But he was cooler
now than he had been at starting—his hot
anger had died down. He would have been
contented, he could not help feeling, with a less
adventurous adventure.</p>
<p>But he was in for it now. He felt, as I
suppose people feel when they jump off cliffs
with parachutes, that return was impossible.</p>
<p>Hastily turning his school cap inside out—the
only disguise he could think of, he emerged
from the water-butt seclusion and into the
street, trying to look as if there was no reason
why he should not be there. He did not know
the village. It was not Lyndhurst. And of
course asking the way was not to be thought of.</p>
<p>There was a piece of sacking lying on the
road; it must have dropped from the carrier’s
cart. He picked it up and put it over his
shoulders.</p>
<p>‘A deeper disguise,’ he said, and walked on.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.102" id="png.102"></SPAN>He walked steadily for a long, long way as
it seemed, and the world got darker and
darker. But he kept on. Surely he must
presently come to some village, or some
signpost.</p>
<p>Anyhow, whatever happened, he could not
go back. That was the one certain thing.
The broad stretches of country to right and
left held no shapes of houses, no glimmer of
warm candle-light; they were bare and bleak,
only broken by circles of trees that stood out
like black islands in the misty grey of the
twilight.</p>
<p>‘I shall have to sleep behind a hedge,’ he
said bravely enough; but there did not seem
to be any hedges. And then, quite suddenly,
he came upon it.</p>
<p>A scattered building, half transparent as it
seemed, showing black against the last faint
pink and primrose of the sunset. He stopped,
took a few steps off the road on short, crisp
turf that rose in a gentle slope. And at the
end of a dozen paces he knew it. Stonehenge!
Stonehenge he had always wanted so
desperately to see. Well, he saw it now, more
or less.</p>
<p>He stopped to think. He knew that Stonehenge
stands all alone on Salisbury Plain. He
was very tired. His mother had told him
<SPAN name="png.103" id="png.103"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>about a girl in a book who slept all night on the
altar stone at Stonehenge. So it was a thing
that people did—to sleep there. He was not
afraid, as you or I might have been—of that
lonely desolate ruin of a temple of long ago.
He was used to the forest, and, compared with
the forest, any building is homelike.</p>
<p>There was just enough light left amid the
stones of the wonderful broken circle to guide
him to its centre. As he went his hand brushed
a plant; he caught at it, and a little group of
flowers came away in his hand.</p>
<p>‘St. John’s wort,’ he said, ‘that’s the magic
flower.’ And he remembered that it is only
magic when you pluck it on Midsummer Eve.</p>
<p>‘And this <em>is</em> Midsummer Eve,’ he told
himself, and put it in his buttonhole.</p>
<p>‘I don’t know where the altar stone is,’ he
said, ‘but that looks a cosy little crack between
those two big stones.’</p>
<p>He crept into it, and lay down on a flat
stone that stretched between and under two
fallen pillars.</p>
<p>The night was soft and warm; it was Midsummer
Eve.</p>
<p>‘Mother isn’t going till the twenty-sixth,’ he
told himself. ‘I sha’n’t bother about hotels. I
shall send her a telegram in the morning, and
get a carriage at the nearest stables and go
<SPAN name="png.104" id="png.104"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>straight back to her. No, she won’t be angry
when she hears all about it. I’ll ask her to let
me go to sea instead of to school. It’s much
more manly. Much more manly … much
much more, much.’</p>
<p>He was asleep. And the wild west wind
that swept across the plain spared the little
corner where he lay asleep, curled up in his
sacking with the inside-out school cap, doubled
twice, for pillow.</p>
<p>He fell asleep on the smooth, solid, steady
stone.</p>
<p>He awoke on the stone in a world that
rocked as sea-boats rock on a choppy sea.</p>
<p>He went to sleep between fallen moveless
pillars of a ruin older than any world that
history knows.</p>
<p>He awoke in the shade of a purple awning
through which strong sunlight filtered, and
purple curtains that flapped and strained in the
wind; and there was a smell, a sweet familiar
smell, of tarred ropes and the sea.</p>
<p>‘I say,’ said Quentin to himself, ‘here’s a
rum go.’</p>
<p>He had learned that expression in a school
in Salisbury, a long time ago as it seemed.</p>
<p>The stone on which he lay dipped and rose
to a rhythm which he knew well enough. He
had felt it when he and his mother went in a
<SPAN name="png.105" id="png.105"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>little boat from Keyhaven to Alum Bay in the
Isle of Wight. There was no doubt in his
mind. He was on a ship. But how, but
why? Who could have carried him all that
way without waking him? Was it magic?
Accidental magic? The St. John’s wort
perhaps? And the stone—it was not the
same. It was new, clean cut, and, where
the wind displaced a corner of the curtain,
dazzlingly white in the sunlight.</p>
<p>There was the pat pat of bare feet on the
deck, a dull sort of shuffling as though people
were arranging themselves. And then people
outside the awning began to sing. It was a
strange song, not at all like any music you or I
have ever heard. It had no tune, no more tune
than a drum has, or a trumpet, but it had a
sort of wild rough glorious exciting splendour
about it, and gave you the sort of intense all-alive
feeling that drums and trumpets give.</p>
<p>Quentin lifted a corner of the purple curtain
and looked out.</p>
<p>Instantly the song stopped, drowned in the
deepest silence Quentin had ever imagined.
It was only broken by the flip-flapping of the
sheets against the masts of the ship. For it
was a ship, Quentin saw that as the bulwark
dipped to show him an unending waste of sea,
broken by bigger waves than he had ever
<SPAN name="png.108" id="png.108"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>dreamed of. He saw also a crowd of men,
dressed in white and blue and purple and gold.
Their right arms were raised towards the sun,
half of whose face showed across the sea—but
they seemed to be, as my old nurse used to
say, ‘struck so,’ for their eyes were not fixed on
the sun, but on Quentin. And not in anger,
he noticed curiously, but with surprise and
… could it be that they were afraid of him?</p>
<div class="illus">
<p><SPAN name="png.107" id="png.107"></SPAN><span class="ns">[</span><span class="pgmark">opp p79</span><ANTIMG class="framed" src="images/illus-107.png"
width="536" height="700" alt="" title="" /><br/>‘Who are you?’ he said. ‘Answer, I adjure you by the sacred Tau!’</p>
</div>
<p>Quentin was shivering with the surprise and
newness of it all. He had read about magic,
but he had not wholly believed in it, and yet,
now, if this was not magic, what was it? You
go to sleep on an old stone in a ruin. You
wake on the same stone, quite new, on a ship.
Magic, magic, if ever there was magic in this
wonderful, mysterious world!</p>
<p>The silence became awkward. Some one
had to say something.</p>
<p>‘Good-morning,’ said Quentin, feeling that
he ought perhaps to be the one.</p>
<p>Instantly every one in sight fell on his face
on the deck.</p>
<p>Only one, a tall man with a black beard and
a blue mantle, stood up and looked Quentin in
the eyes.</p>
<p>‘Who are you?’ he said. ‘Answer, I
adjure you by the Sacred Tau!’ Now this
was very odd, and Quentin could never understand
<SPAN name="png.109" id="png.109"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>it, but when this man spoke Quentin
understood <em>him</em> perfectly, and yet at the same
time he knew that the man was speaking a
foreign language. So that his thought was
not, ‘Hullo, you speak English!’ but ‘Hullo,
I can understand your language.’</p>
<p>‘I am Quentin <ins class="TN" title="Transcriber's note:
original reads 'De Ward'">de Ward</ins>,’ he said.</p>
<p>‘A name from other stars! How came you
here?’ asked the blue-mantled man.</p>
<p>‘<em>I</em> don’t know,’ said Quentin.</p>
<p>‘He does not know. He did not sail with
us. It is by magic that he is here,’ said Blue
Mantle. ‘Rise, all, and greet the Chosen of
the Gods.’</p>
<p>They rose from the deck, and Quentin saw
that they were all bearded men, with bright,
earnest eyes, dressed in strange dress of something
like jersey and tunic and heavy golden
ornaments.</p>
<p>‘Hail! Chosen of the Gods,’ cried Blue
Mantle, who seemed to be the leader.</p>
<p>‘Hail, Chosen of the Gods!’ echoed the rest.</p>
<p>‘Thank you very much, I’m sure,’ said
Quentin.</p>
<p>‘And what is this stone?’ asked Blue
Mantle, pointing to the stone on which Quentin
sat.</p>
<p>And Quentin, anxious to show off his
knowledge, said:</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.110" id="png.110"></SPAN>‘I’m not quite sure, but I <em>think</em> it’s the altar
stone of Stonehenge.’</p>
<p>‘It is proved,’ said Blue Mantle. ‘Thou
art the Chosen of the Gods. Is there anything
my Lord needs?’ he added humbly.</p>
<p>‘I … I’m rather hungry,’ said Quentin;
‘it’s a long time since dinner, you know.’</p>
<p>They brought him bread and bananas, and
oranges.</p>
<p>‘Take,’ said Blue Mantle, ‘of the fruits of
the earth, and specially of this, which gives
drink and meat and ointment to man,’ suddenly
offering a large cocoa-nut.</p>
<p>Quentin took, with appropriate ‘Thank
you’s’ and ‘You’re very kind’s.’</p>
<p>‘Nothing,’ said Blue Mantle, ‘is too good
for the Chosen of the Gods. All that we have
is yours, to the very last day of your life you
have only to command, and we obey. You
will like to eat in seclusion. And afterwards
you will let us behold the whole person of the
Chosen of the Gods.’</p>
<p>Quentin retired into the purple tent, with
the fruits and the cocoa-nut. As you know, a
cocoa-nut is not handy to get at the inside of,
at the best of times, so Quentin set that aside,
meaning to ask Blue Mantle later on for a
gimlet and a hammer.</p>
<p>When he had had enough to eat he peeped
<SPAN name="png.111" id="png.111"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>out again. Blue Mantle was on the watch and
came quickly forward.</p>
<p>‘Now,’ said he, very crossly indeed, ‘tell
me how you got here. This Chosen of the
Gods business is all very well for the vulgar.
But you and I know that there is no such
thing as magic.’</p>
<p>‘Speak for yourself,’ said Quentin. ‘If I’m
not here by magic I’m not here at all.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, you are,’ said Blue Mantle.</p>
<p>‘I know I am,’ said Quentin, ‘but if I’m
not here by magic what am I here by?’</p>
<p>‘Stowawayishness,’ said Blue Mantle.</p>
<p>‘If you think that why don’t you treat me
as a stowaway?’</p>
<p>‘Because of public opinion,’ said Blue
Mantle, rubbing his nose in an angry sort of
perplexedness.</p>
<p>‘Very well,’ said Quentin, who was feeling
so surprised and bewildered that it was a real
relief to him to bully somebody. ‘Now look
here. I came here by magic, accidental
magic. I belong to quite a different world
from yours. But perhaps you are right about
my being the Chosen of the Gods. And I
sha’n’t tell you anything about my world. But
I command you, by the Sacred Tau’ (he had
been quick enough to catch and remember
the word), ‘to tell me who you are, and
<SPAN name="png.112" id="png.112"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>where you come from, and where you are
going.’</p>
<p>Blue Mantle shrugged his shoulders. ‘Oh,
well,’ he said, ‘if you invoke the sacred names
of Power…. But I don’t call it fair play.
Especially as you know perfectly well, and just
want to browbeat me into telling lies. I shall
not tell lies. I shall tell you the truth.’</p>
<p>‘I hoped you would,’ said Quentin gently.</p>
<p>‘Well then,’ said Blue Mantle, ‘I am a
Priest of Poseidon, and I come from the great
and immortal kingdom of Atlantis.’</p>
<p>‘From the temple where the gold statue is,
with the twelve sea-horses in gold?’ Quentin
asked eagerly.</p>
<p>‘Ah, I knew you knew all about it,’ said
Blue Mantle, ‘so I don’t need to tell you that
I am taking the sacred stone, on which you
are sitting (profanely if you are a mere stowaway,
and not the Chosen of the Gods) to
complete the splendid structure of a temple
built on a great plain in the second of the
islands which are our colonies in the North
East.’</p>
<p>‘Tell me all about Atlantis,’ said Quentin.
And the priest, protesting that Quentin knew
as much about it as he did, told.</p>
<p>And all the time the ship was ploughing
through the waves, sometimes sailing, sometimes
<SPAN name="png.113" id="png.113"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>rowed by hidden rowers with long oars.
And Quentin was served in all things as though
he had been a king. If he had insisted that
he was not the Chosen of the Gods everything
might have been different. But he did not.
And he was very anxious to show how much
he knew about Atlantis. And sometimes he
was wrong, the Priest said, but much more
often he was right.</p>
<p>‘We are less than three days’ journey now
from the Eastern Isles,’ Blue Mantle said one
day, ‘and I warn you that if you are a mere
stowaway you had better own it. Because
if you persist in calling yourself the Chosen
of the Gods you will be expected to act as
such—to the very end.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t call myself anything,’ said Quentin,
‘though I am not a stowaway, anyhow, and
I don’t know how I came here—so of course
it was magic. It’s simply silly your being so
cross. <em>I</em> can’t help being here. Let’s be
friends.’</p>
<p>‘Well,’ said Blue Mantle, much less crossly,
‘I never believed in magic, though I <em>am</em> a
priest, but if it is, it is. We may as well be
friends, as you call it. It isn’t for very long,
anyway,’ he added mysteriously.</p>
<div class="illus">
<p><SPAN name="png.115" id="png.115"></SPAN><span class="ns">[</span><span class="pgmark">opp p85</span><ANTIMG class="framed" src="images/illus-115.png"
width="650" height="649" alt="" title="" /><br/>The cart was drawn by an enormous creature, more like an elephant than
anything else.</p>
</div>
<p>And then to show his friendliness he took
Quentin all over the ship, and explained it all to
<SPAN name="png.116" id="png.116"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>him. And Quentin enjoyed himself thoroughly,
though every now and then he had to pinch
himself to make sure that he was awake. And
he was fed well all the time, and all the time
made much of, so that when the ship reached
land he was quite sorry. The ship anchored
by a stone quay, most solid and serviceable,
and every one was very busy.</p>
<p>Quentin kept out of sight behind the purple
curtains. The sailors and the priests and the
priests’ attendants and everybody on the boat
had asked him so many questions, and been
so curious about his clothes, that he was not
anxious to hear any more questions asked, or
to have to invent answers to them.</p>
<p>And after a very great deal of talk—almost
as much as Mr. Miles’s carrying had needed—the
altar stone was lifted, Quentin, curtains,
awning and all, and carried along a gangway
to the shore, and there it was put on a sort of
cart, more like what people in Manchester call
a lurry than anything else I can think of. The
wheels were made of solid circles of wood
bound round with copper. And the cart <!-- Transcriber's note: original has duplicate "was" -->
was drawn by—not horses or donkeys or oxen
or even dogs—but by an enormous creature
more like an elephant than anything else, only
it had long hair rather like the hair worn by
goats.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.117" id="png.117"></SPAN>You, perhaps, would not have known what
this vast creature was, but Quentin, who had
all sorts of out-of-the-way information packed
in his head, knew at once that it was a
mammoth.</p>
<p>And by that he knew, too, that he had
slipped back many thousands of years, because,
of course, it is a very long time indeed since
there were any mammoths alive, and able to
draw lurries. And the car and the priest and
the priest’s retinue and the stone and Quentin
and the mammoth journeyed slowly away from
the coast, passing through great green forests
and among strange gray mountains.</p>
<p>Where were they journeying?</p>
<p>Quentin asked the same question you may
be sure, and Blue Mantle told him—</p>
<p>‘To Stonehenge.’ And Quentin understood
him perfectly, though Stonehenge was not the
word Blue Mantle used, or anything like it.</p>
<p>‘The great temple is now complete,’ he
said, ‘all but the altar stone. It will be the
most wonderful temple ever built in any of the
colonies of Atlantis. And it will be consecrated
on the longest day of the year.’</p>
<p>‘Midsummer Day,’ said Quentin thoughtlessly—and,
as usual, anxious to tell all he
knew. ‘I know. The sun strikes through
the arch on to the altar stone at sunrise.
<SPAN name="png.118" id="png.118"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>Hundreds of people go to see it: the ruins are
quite crowded sometimes, I believe.’</p>
<p>‘Ruins?’ said the priest in a terrible voice.
‘Crowded? Ruins?’</p>
<p>‘I mean,’ said Quentin hastily, ‘the sun
will still shine the same way even when the
temple is in ruins, won’t it?’</p>
<p>‘The temple,’ said the priest, ‘is built to
defy time. It will never be in ruins.’</p>
<p>‘That’s all <em>you</em> know,’ said Quentin, not
very politely.</p>
<p>‘It is not by any means all I know,’ said
the priest. ‘I do not tell all I know. Nor
do you.’</p>
<p>‘I used to,’ said Quentin, ‘but I sha’n’t any
more. It only leads to trouble—I see that
now.’</p>
<p>Now, though Quentin had been intensely
interested in everything he had seen in the
ship and on the journey, you may be sure he
had not lost sight of the need there was to get
back out of this time of Atlantis into his own
time. He knew that he must have got into
these Atlantean times by some very simple
accidental magic, and he felt no doubt that he
should get back in the same way. He felt
almost sure that the reverse-action, so to speak,
of the magic would begin when the stone got
back to the place where it had lain for so many
<SPAN name="png.119" id="png.119"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>thousand years before he happened to go to
sleep on it, and to start—perhaps by the St.
John’s wort—the accidental magic. If only,
when he got back there he could think of the
compelling, the magic word!</p>
<p>And now the slow procession wound over
the downs, and far away across the plain, which
was almost just the same then as it is now,
Quentin saw what he knew must be Stonehenge.
But it was no longer the grey pile of
ruins that you have perhaps seen—or have, at
any rate, seen pictures of.</p>
<p>From afar one could see the gleam of yellow
gold and red copper; the flutter of purple
curtains, the glitter and dazzle of shimmering
silver.</p>
<p>As they drew near to the spot Quentin
perceived that the great stones he remembered
were overlaid with ornamental work, with vivid,
bright-coloured paintings. The whole thing
was a great circular building, every stone in its
place. At a mile or two distant lay a town.
And in that town, with every possible luxury,
served with every circumstance of servile
homage, Quentin ate and slept.</p>
<p>I wish I had time to tell you what that town
was like where he slept and ate, but I have
not. You can read for yourself, some day,
what Atlantis was like. Plato tells us a good
<SPAN name="png.120" id="png.120"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>deal, and the Colonies of Atlantis must have
had at least a reasonable second-rate copy of
the cities of that fair and lovely land.</p>
<p>That night, for the first time since he had
first gone to sleep on the altar stone, Quentin
slept apart from it. He lay on a wooden
couch strewn with soft bear-skins, and a
woollen coverlet was laid over him. And he
slept soundly.</p>
<p>In the middle of the night, as it seemed,
Blue Mantle woke him.</p>
<p>‘Come,’ he said, ‘Chosen of the Gods—since
you <em>will</em> be that, and no stowaway—the
hour draws nigh.’</p>
<p>The mammoth was waiting. Quentin and
Blue Mantle rode on its back to the outer
porch of the new temple of Stonehenge.
Rows of priests and attendants, robed in white
and blue and purple, formed a sort of avenue
up which Blue Mantle led the Chosen of the
Gods, who was Quentin. They took off his
jacket and put a white dress on him, rather like
a night-shirt without sleeves. And they put a
thick wreath of London Pride on his head and
another, larger and longer, round his neck.</p>
<p>‘If only the chaps at school could see me
now!’ he said to himself proudly.</p>
<p>And by this time it was gray dawn.</p>
<p>‘Lie down now,’ said Blue Mantle, ‘lie
<SPAN name="png.121" id="png.121"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>down, O Beloved of the Gods, upon the altar
stone, for the last time.’</p>
<p>‘I shall be able to go, then?’ Quentin
asked. This accidental magic was, he perceived,
a tricky thing, and he wanted to be sure.</p>
<p>‘You will not be able to stay,’ said the
priest. ‘If going is what you desire, the
desire of the Chosen of the Gods is fully
granted.’</p>
<p>The grass on the plain far and near rustled
with the tread of many feet; the cold air of
dawn thrilled to the awed murmured of many
voices.</p>
<p>Quentin lay down, with his pink wreaths
and his white robe, and watched the quickening
pinkiness of the East. And slowly the great
circle of the temple filled with white-robed folk,
all carrying in their hands the faint pinkiness of
the flowers which we nowadays call London
Pride.</p>
<p>And all eyes were fixed on the arch through
which, at sunrise on Midsummer Day, the sun’s
first beam should fall upon the white, new, clean
altar stone. The stone is still there, after all
these thousands of years, and at sunrise on
Midsummer Day the sun’s first ray still falls
on it.</p>
<div class="illus">
<p><SPAN name="png.123" id="png.123"></SPAN><span class="ns">[</span><span class="pgmark">opp p91</span><ANTIMG class="framed" src="images/illus-123.png"
width="504" height="700" alt="" title="" /><br/>‘Silence,’ cried the priest. ‘Chosen of the Immortals, close your eyes!’</p>
</div>
<p>The sky grew lighter and lighter, and at
last the sun peered redly over the down, and
<SPAN name="png.124" id="png.124"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>the first ray of the morning sunlight fell full on
the altar stone and on the face of Quentin.</p>
<p>And, as it did so, a very tall, white-robed
priest with a deer-skin apron and a curious
winged head-dress stepped forward. He
carried a great bronze knife, and he waved it
ten times in the shaft of sunlight that shot
through the arch and on to the altar stone.</p>
<p>‘Thus,’ he cried, ‘thus do I bathe the
sacred blade in the pure fountain of all light,
all wisdom, all splendour. In the name of the
ten kings, the ten virtues, the ten hopes, the
ten fears I make my weapon clean! May this
temple of our love and our desire endure for
ever, so long as the glory of our Lord the Sun
is shed upon this earth. May the sacrifice I
now humbly and proudly offer be acceptable to
the gods by whom it has been so miraculously
provided. Chosen of the Gods! return to the
gods who sent thee!’</p>
<p>A roar of voices rang through the temple.
The bronze knife was raised over Quentin.
He could not believe that this, this horror, was
the end of all these wonderful happenings.</p>
<p>‘No—no,’ he cried, ‘it’s not true. I’m
not the Chosen of the Gods! I’m only a little
boy that’s got here by accidental magic!’</p>
<p>‘Silence,’ cried the priest, ‘Chosen of the
Immortals, close your eyes! It will not hurt.
<SPAN name="png.125" id="png.125"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>This life is only a dream; the other life is the
real life. Be strong, be brave!’</p>
<p>Quentin was not brave. But he shut his
eyes. He could not help it. The glitter of
the bronze knife in the sunlight was too strong
for him.</p>
<p>He could not believe that this could really
have happened to him. Every one had been so
kind—so friendly to him. And it was all for this!</p>
<p>Suddenly a sharp touch at his side told him
that for this, indeed, it had all been. He felt
the point of the knife.</p>
<p>‘Mother!’ he cried. And opened his eyes
again.</p>
<p>He always felt quite sure afterwards that
‘Mother’ was the master-word, the spell of
spells. For when he opened his eyes there
was no priest, no white-robed worshippers, no
splendour of colour and metal, no Chosen of
the Gods, no knife—only a little boy with a
piece of sacking over him, damp with the night
dews, lying on a stone amid the grey ruins of
Stonehenge, and, all about him, a crowd of
tourists who had come to see the sun’s first
shaft strike the age-old altar of Stonehenge on
Midsummer Day in the morning. And instead
of a knife point at his side there was only the
ferrule of the umbrella of an elderly and retired
tea merchant in a mackintosh and an Alpine
<SPAN name="png.126" id="png.126"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>hat,—a ferrule which had prodded the sleeping
boy so unexpectedly surprised on the very
altar stone where the sun’s ray now lingered.</p>
<p>And then, in a moment, he knew that he
had not uttered the spell in vain, the word of
compelling, the word of power: for his mother
was there kneeling beside him. I am sorry to
say that he cried as he clung to her. <em>We</em>
cannot all of us be brave, always.</p>
<p>The tourists were very kind and interested,
and the tea merchant insisted on giving Quentin
something out of a flask, which was so nasty
that Quentin only pretended to drink, out of
politeness. His mother had a carriage waiting,
and they escaped to it while the tourists were
saying, ‘How romantic!’ and asking each
other whatever in the world had happened.</p>
<div class="blockq fivestar">* * * * *</div>
<p>‘But how <em>did</em> you come to be there,
darling?’ said his mother with warm hands
comfortingly round him. ‘I’ve been looking
for you all night. I went to say good-bye to
you yesterday—Oh, Quentin—and I found
you’d run away. How <em>could</em> you?’</p>
<p>‘I’m sorry,’ said Quentin, ‘if it worried you,
I’m sorry. Very, very. I was going to
telegraph to-day.’</p>
<p>‘But where have you been? What have you
been doing all night?’ she asked, caressing him.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.127" id="png.127"></SPAN>‘Is it only one night?’ said Quentin. ‘I
don’t know exactly what’s happened. It was
accidental magic, I think, mother. I’m glad
I thought of the right word to get back,
though.’ And then he told her all about it.
She held him very tightly and let him talk.</p>
<p>Perhaps she thought that a little boy to
whom accidental magic happened all in a minute,
like that, was not exactly the right little boy
for that excellent school in Salisbury. Anyhow
she took him to Egypt with her to meet his
father, and, on the way, they happened to see
a doctor in London who said: ‘Nerves’ which
is a poor name for accidental magic, and
Quentin does not believe it means the same
thing at all.</p>
<p>Quentin’s father is well now, and he has
left the army, and father and mother and
Quentin live in a jolly, little, old house in
Salisbury, and Quentin is a ‘day boy’ at that
very same school. He and Smithson minor
are the greatest of friends. But he has never
told Smithson minor about the accidental
magic. He has learned now, and learned very
thoroughly, that it is not always wise to tell
all you know. If he had not owned that he
knew that it was the Stonehenge altar
stone!</p>
<div class="blockq fivestar">* * * * *</div>
<p class="pgbrk"><SPAN name="png.128" id="png.128"></SPAN>You may think that the accidental magic
was all a dream, and that Quentin dreamed it
because his mother had told him so much about
Atlantis. But then, how do you account for
his dreaming so much that his mother had
never told him? You think that that part
wasn’t true, well, it may have been true for
anything I know. And I am sure you don’t
know more about it than I do.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />