pped his boot, and it went
blundering down the stairs, echoing like thunderbolts, and waking up
Albert's uncle. But when we explained to him that we were going to do
some gardening he let us, and went back to bed.
Everything is very pretty and different in the early morning, before
people are up. I have been told this is because the shadows go a
different way from what they do in the awake part of the day. But I
don't know. Noel says the fairies have just finished tidying up then.
Anyhow it all feels quite otherwise.
We put on our boots in the porch, and we got our gardening tools and we
went down to the white cottage. It is a nice cottage, with a thatched
roof, like in the drawing copies you get at girls' schools, and you
do the thatch--if you can--with a B.B. pencil. If you cannot, you just
leave it. It looks just as well, somehow, when it is mounted and framed.
We looked at the garden. It was very neat. Only one patch was coming up
thick with weeds. I could see groundsel and chickweed, and others that I
did not know. We set to work with a will. We used all our tools--spades,
forks, hoes, and rakes--and Dora worked with the trowel, sitting down,
because her foot was hurt. We cleared the weedy patch beautifully,
scraping off all the nasty weeds and leaving the nice clean brown dirt.
We worked as hard as ever we could. And we were happy, because it was
unselfish toil, and no one thought then of putting it in the Book of
Golden Deeds, where we had agreed to write down our virtuous actions and
the good doings of each other, when we happen to notice them.
We had just done, and we were looking at the beautiful production of
our honest labour, when the cottage door burst open, and the soldier's
widowed mother came out like a wild tornado, and her eyes looked like
upas trees--death to the beholder.
'You wicked, meddlesome, nasty children!' she said, ain't you got enough
of your own good ground to runch up and spoil, but you must come into MY
little lot?'
Some of us were deeply alarmed, but we stood firm.
'We have only been weeding your garden,' Dora said; 'we wanted to do
something to help you.'
'Dratted little busybodies,' she said. It was indeed hard, but everyone
in Kent says 'dratted' when they are cross. 'It's my turnips,' she went
on, 'you've hoed up, and my cabbages. My turnips that my boy sowed
afore he went. There, get along with you do, afore I come at you with my
broom-handle.'
She did come at u
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