Racketty-Packetty House was in a corner
of Cynthia’s nursery. And it was not in
the best corner either. It was in the corner behind
the door, and that was not at all a fashionable neighborhood.
Racketty-Packetty House had been pushed there to be
out of the way when Tidy Castle was brought in, on
Cynthia’s birthday. As soon as she saw
Tidy Castle Cynthia did not care for Racketty-Packetty
House and indeed was quite ashamed of it. She
thought the corner behind the door quite good enough
for such a shabby old dolls’ house, when there
was the beautiful big new one built like a castle
and furnished with the most elegant chairs and tables
and carpets and curtains and ornaments and pictures
and beds and baths and lamps and book-cases, and with
a knocker on the front door, and a stable with a pony
cart in it at the back. The minute she saw it
she called out:
“Oh! what a beautiful doll castle!
What shall we do with that untidy old Racketty-Packetty
House now? It is too shabby and old-fashioned
to stand near it.”
In fact, that was the way in which
the old dolls’ house got its name. It had
always been called, “The Dolls’ House,”
before, but after that it was pushed into the unfashionable
neighborhood behind the door and ever afterwards—when
it was spoken of at all—it was just called
Racketty-Packetty House, and nothing else.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture tidyshire_castle.jpg]
Of course Tidy Castle was grand, and
Tidy Castle was new and had all the modern improvements
in it, and Racketty-Packetty House was as old-fashioned
as it could be. It had belonged to Cynthia’s
Grandmamma and had been made in the days when Queen
Victoria was a little girl, and when there were no
electric lights even in Princesses’ dolls’
houses. Cynthia’s Grandmamma had kept it
very neat because she had been a good housekeeper
even when she was seven years old. But Cynthia
was not a good housekeeper and she did not re-cover
the furniture when it got dingy, or re-paper the walls,
or mend the carpets and bedclothes, and she never thought
of such a thing as making new clothes for the doll
family, so that of course their early Victorian frocks
and capes and bonnets grew in time to be too shabby
for words. You see, when Queen Victoria was a
little girl, dolls wore queer frocks and long pantalets
and boy dolls wore funny frilled trousers and coats
which it would almost make you laugh to look at.
But the Racketty-Packetty House family
had known better days. I and my Fairies had known
them when they were quite new and had been a birthday
present just as Tidy Castle was when Cynthia turned
eight years old, and there was as much fuss about
them when their house arrived as Cynthia made when
she saw Tidy Castle.
Cynthia’s Grandmamma had danced
about and clapped her hands with delight, and she
had scrambled down upon her knees and taken the dolls
out one by one and thought their clothes beautiful.
And she had given each one of them a grand name.
“This one shall be Amelia,”
she said. “And this one is Charlotte, and
this is Victoria Leopoldina, and this one Aurelia Matilda,
and this one Leontine, and this one Clotilda, and
these boys shall be Augustus and Rowland and Vincent
and Charles Edward Stuart.”
For a long time they led a very gay
and fashionable life. They had parties and balls
and were presented at Court and went to Royal Christenings
and Weddings and were married themselves and had families
and scarlet fever and whooping cough and funerals and
every luxury. But that was long, long ago, and
now all was changed. Their house had grown shabbier
and shabbier, and their clothes had grown simply awful;
and Aurelia Matilda and Victoria Leopoldina had been
broken to bits and thrown into the dust-bin, and Leontine—who
had really been the beauty of the family—had
been dragged out on the hearth rug one night and had
had nearly all her paint licked off and a leg chewed
up by a Newfoundland puppy, so that she was a sight
to behold. As for the boys; Rowland and Vincent
had quite disappeared, and Charlotte and Amelia always
believed they had run away to seek their fortunes,
because things were in such a state at home.
So the only ones who were left were Clotilda and Amelia
and Charlotte and poor Leontine and Augustus and Charles
Edward Stuart. Even they had their names changed.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture ridiklis.jpg]
After Leontine had had her paint licked
off so that her head had white bald spots on it and
she had scarcely any features, a boy cousin of Cynthia’s
had put a bright red spot on each cheek and painted
her a turned up nose and round saucer blue eyes and
a comical mouth. He and Cynthia had called her,
“Ridiklis” instead of Leontine, and she
had been called that ever since. All the dolls
were jointed Dutch dolls, so it was easy to paint any
kind of features on them and stick out their arms
and legs in any way you liked, and Leontine did look
funny after Cynthia’s cousin had finished.
She certainly was not a beauty but her turned up nose
and her round eyes and funny mouth always seemed to
be laughing so she really was the most good-natured
looking creature you ever saw.
Charlotte and Amelia, Cynthia had
called Meg and Peg, and Clotilda she called Kilmanskeg,
and Augustus she called Gustibus, and Charles Edward
Stuart was nothing but Peter Piper. So that was
the end of their grand names.
The truth was, they went through all
sorts of things, and if they had not been such a jolly
lot of dolls they might have had fits and appendicitis
and died of grief. But not a bit of it. If
you will believe it, they got fun out of everything.
They used to just scream with laughter over the new
names, and they laughed so much over them that they
got quite fond of them. When Meg’s pink
silk flounces were torn she pinned them up and didn’t
mind in the least, and when Peg’s lace mantilla
was played with by a kitten and brought back to her
in rags and tags, she just put a few stitches in it
and put it on again; and when Peter Piper lost almost
the whole leg of one of his trousers he just laughed
and said it made it easier for him to kick about and
turn somersaults and he wished the other leg would
tear off too.
You never saw a family have such fun.
They could make up stories and pretend things and
invent games out of nothing. And my Fairies were
so fond of them that I couldn’t keep them away
from the dolls’ house. They would go and
have fun with Meg and Peg and Kilmanskeg and Gustibus
and Peter Piper, even when I had work for them to do
in Fairyland. But there, I was so fond of that
shabby disrespectable family myself that I never would
scold much about them, and I often went to see them.
That is how I know so much about them. They were
so fond of each other and so good-natured and always
in such spirits that everybody who knew them was fond
of them. And it was really only Cynthia who didn’t
know them and thought them only a lot of old disreputable
looking Dutch dolls—and Dutch dolls were
quite out of fashion. The truth was that Cynthia
was not a particularly nice little girl, and did not
care much for anything unless it was quite new.
But the kitten who had torn the lace mantilla got
to know the family and simply loved them all, and the
Newfoundland puppy was so sorry about Leontine’s
paint and her left leg, that he could never do enough
to make up. He wanted to marry Leontine as soon
as he grew old enough to wear a collar, but Leontine
said she would never desert her family; because now
that she wasn’t the beauty any more she became
the useful one, and did all the kitchen work, and
sat up and made poultices and beef tea when any of
the rest were ill. And the Newfoundland puppy
saw she was right, for the whole family simply adored
Ridiklis and could not possibly have done without
her. Meg and Peg and Kilmanskeg could have married
any minute if they had liked. There were two
cock sparrows and a gentleman mouse, who proposed to
them over and over again. They all three said
they did not want fashionable wives but cheerful dispositions
and a happy, home. But Meg and Peg were like
Ridiklis and could not bear to leave their families—besides
not wanting to live in nests, and hatch eggs—and
Kilmanskeg said she would die of a broken heart if
she could not be with Ridiklis, and Ridiklis did not
like cheese and crumbs and mousy things, so they could
never live together in a mouse hole. But neither
the gentleman mouse nor the sparrows were offended
because the news was broken to them so sweetly and
they went on visiting just as before. Everything
was as shabby and disrespectable and as gay and happy
as it could be until Tidy Castle was brought into
the nursery and then the whole family had rather a
fright.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture mouse.jpg]
It happened in this way:
When the dolls’ house was lifted
by the nurse and carried into the corner behind the
door, of course it was rather an exciting and shaky
thing for Meg and Peg and Kilmanskeg and Gustibus and
Peter Piper (Ridiklis was out shopping). The
furniture tumbled about and everybody had to hold
on to anything they could catch hold of. As it
was, Kilmanskeg slid under a table and Peter Piper
sat down in the coal-box; but notwithstanding all
this, they did not lose their tempers and when the
nurse sat their house down on the floor with a bump,
they all got up and began to laugh. Then they
ran and peeped out of the windows and then they ran
back and laughed again.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture fashionable_wives.jpg]
“Well,” said Peter Piper,
“we have been called Meg and Peg and Kilmanskeg
and Gustibus and Peter Piper instead of our grand names,
and now we live in a place called Racketty-Packetty
House. Who cares! Let’s join hands
and have a dance.”
And they joined hands and danced round
and round and kicked up their heels, and their rags
and tatters flew about and they laughed until they
fell down; one on top of the other.
It was just at this minute that Ridiklis
came back. The nurse had found her under a chair
and stuck her in through a window. She sat on
the drawing-room sofa which had holes in its covering
and the stuffing coming out, and her one whole leg
stuck out straight in front of her, and her bonnet
and shawl were on one side and her basket was on her
left arm full of things she had got cheap at market.
She was out of breath and rather pale through being
lifted up and swished through the air so suddenly,
but her saucer eyes and her funny mouth looked as
cheerful as ever.
“Good gracious, if you knew
what I have just heard!” she said. They
all scrambled up and called out together.
“Hello! What is it?”
“The nurse said the most awful
thing,” she answered them. “When
Cynthia asked what she should do with this old Racketty-Packetty
House, she said, ’Oh! I’ll put it
behind the door for the present and then it shall
be carried down-stairs and burned. It’s
too disgraceful to be kept in any decent nursery.’”
“Oh!” cried out Peter Piper.
“Oh!” said Gustibus.
“Oh! Oh! Oh!”
said Meg and Peg and Kilmanskeg. “Will they
burn our dear old shabby house? Do you think
they will?” And actually tears began to run
down their cheeks.
Peter Piper sat down on the floor
all at once with his hands stuffed in his pockets.
“I don’t care how shabby
it is,” he said. “It’s a jolly
nice old place and it’s the only house we’ve
ever had.”
“I never want to have any other,” said
Meg.
Gustibus leaned against the wall with
his hands stuffed in his pockets.
“I wouldn’t move if I
was made King of England,” he said. “Buckingham
Palace wouldn’t be half as nice.”
“We’ve had such fun here,”
said Peg. And Kilmanskeg shook her head from
side to side and wiped her eyes on her ragged pocket-handkerchief.
There is no knowing what would have happened to them
if Peter Piper hadn’t cheered up as he always
did.
“I say,” he said, “do
you hear that noise?” They all listened and
heard a rumbling. Peter Piper ran to the window
and looked out and then ran back grinning.
“It’s the nurse rolling
up the arm-chair before the house to hide it, so that
it won’t disgrace the castle. Hooray!
Hooray! If they don’t see us they will
forget all about us and we shall not be burned up
at all. Our nice old Racketty-Packetty House will
be left alone and we can enjoy ourselves more than
ever—because we sha’n’t be
bothered with Cynthia—Hello! let’s
all join hands and have a dance.”
So they all joined hands and danced
round in a ring again and they were so relieved that
they laughed and laughed until they all tumbled down
in a heap just as they had done before, and rolled
about giggling and squealing. It certainly seemed
as if they were quite safe for some time at least.
The big easy chair hid them and both the nurse and
Cynthia seemed to forget that there was such a thing
as a Racketty-Packetty House in the neighborhood.
Cynthia was so delighted with Tidy Castle that she
played with nothing else for days and days. And
instead of being jealous of their grand neighbors
the Racketty-Packetty House people began to get all
sorts of fun out of watching them from their own windows.
Several of their windows were broken and some had
rags and paper stuffed into the broken panes, but
Meg and Peg and Peter Piper would go and peep out
of one, and Gustibus and Kilmanskeg would peep out
of another, and Ridiklis could scarcely get her dishes
washed and her potatoes pared because she could see
the Castle kitchen from her scullery window.
It was so exciting!
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture ridiklis_cooking.jpg]
The Castle dolls were grand beyond
words, and they were all lords and ladies. These
were their names. There was Lady Gwendolen Vere
de Vere. She was haughty and had dark eyes and
hair and carried her head thrown back and her nose
in the air. There was Lady Muriel Vere de Vere,
and she was cold and lovely and indifferent and looked
down the bridge of her delicate nose. And there
was Lady Doris, who had fluffy golden hair and laughed
mockingly at everybody. And there was Lord Hubert
and Lord Rupert and Lord Francis, who were all handsome
enough to make you feel as if you could faint.
And there was their mother, the Duchess of Tidyshire;
and of course there were all sorts of maids and footmen
and cooks and scullery maids and even gardeners.
“We never thought of living
to see such grand society,” said Peter Piper
to his brother and sisters. “It’s
quite a kind of blessing.”
“It’s almost like being
grand ourselves, just to be able to watch them,”
said Meg and Peg and Kilmanskeg, squeezing together
and flattening their noses against the attic windows.
They could see bits of the sumptuous
white and gold drawing-room with the Duchess sitting
reading near the fire, her golden glasses upon her
nose, and Lady Gwendolen playing haughtily upon the
harp, and Lady Muriel coldly listening to her.
Lady Doris was having her golden hair dressed by her
maid in her bed-room and Lord Hubert was reading the
newspaper with a high-bred air, while Lord Francis
was writing letters to noblemen of his acquaintance,
and Lord Rupert was—in an aristocratic
manner—glancing over his love letters from
ladies of title.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture duchess.jpg]
Kilmanskeg and Peter Piper just pinched
each other with glee and squealed with delight.
“Isn’t it fun,”
said Peter Piper. “I say; aren’t they
awful swells! But Lord Francis can’t kick
about in his trousers as I can in mine, and neither
can the others. I’ll like to see them try
to do this,”— and he turned three
summersaults in the middle of the room and stood on
his head on the biggest hole in the carpet—and
wiggled his legs and wiggled his toes at them until
they shouted so with laughing that Ridiklis ran in
with a saucepan in her hand and perspiration on her
forehead, because she was cooking turnips, which was
all they had for dinner.
“You mustn’t laugh so
loud,” she cried out. “If we make
so much noise the Tidy Castle people will begin to
complain of this being a low neighborhood and they
might insist on moving away.”
“Oh! scrump!” said Peter
Piper, who sometimes invented doll slang—
though there wasn’t really a bit of harm in him.
“I wouldn’t have them move away for anything.
They are meat and drink to me.”
“They are going to have a dinner
of ten courses,” sighed Ridiklis, “I can
see them cooking it from my scullery window. And
I have nothing but turnips to give you.”
“Who cares!” said Peter
Piper, “Let’s have ten courses of turnips
and pretend each course is exactly like the one they
are having at the Castle.”
“I like turnips almost better
than anything—almost—perhaps
not quite,” said Gustibus. “I can
eat ten courses of turnips like a shot.”
“Let’s go and find out
what their courses are,” said Meg and Peg and
Kilmanskeg, “and then we will write a menu on
a piece of pink tissue paper.”
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture peter_piper.jpg]
And if you’ll believe it, that
was what they did. They divided their turnips
into ten courses and they called the first one—“Hors
d’oeuvres,” and the last one “Ices,”
with a French name, and Peter Piper kept jumping up
from the table and pretending he was a footman and
flourishing about in his flapping rags of trousers
and announcing the names of the dishes in such a grand
way that they laughed till they nearly died, and said
they never had had such a splendid dinner in their
lives, and that they would rather live behind the
door and watch the Tidy Castle people than be the Tidy
Castle people themselves.
And then of course they all joined
hands and danced round and round and kicked up their
heels for joy, because they always did that whenever
there was the least excuse for it—and quite
often when there wasn’t any at all, just because
it was such good exercise and worked off their high
spirits so that they could settle down for a while.
This was the way things went on day
after day. They almost lived at their windows.
They watched the Tidy Castle family get up and be
dressed by their maids and valets in different clothes
almost every day. They saw them drive out in
their carriages, and have parties, and go to balls.
They all nearly had brain fever with delight the day
they watched Lady Gwendolen and Lady Muriel and Lady
Doris, dressed in their Court trains and feathers,
going to be presented at the first Drawing-Room.
After the lovely creatures had gone
the whole family sat down in a circle round the Racketty-Packetty
House library fire, and Ridiklis read aloud to them
about Drawing-Rooms, out of a scrap of the Lady’s
Pictorial she had found, and after that they had a
Court Drawing-Room of their own, and they made tissue-paper
trains and glass bead crowns for diamond tiaras, and
sometimes Gustibus pretended to be the Royal family,
and the others were presented to him and kissed his
hand, and then the others took turns and he was presented.
And suddenly the most delightful thing occurred to
Peter Piper. He thought it would be rather nice
to make them all into lords and ladies and he did
it by touching them on the shoulder with the drawing-room
poker which he straightened because it was so crooked
that it was almost bent double. It is not exactly
the way such things are done at Court, but Peter Piper
thought it would do— and at any rate it
was great fun. So he made them all kneel down
in a row and he touched each on the shoulder with
the poker and said:
“Rise up, Lady Meg and Lady
Peg and Lady Kilmanskeg and Lady Ridiklis of Racketty-Packetty
House-and also the Right Honorable Lord Gustibus Rags!”
And they all jumped up at once and made bows and curtsied
to each other. But they made Peter Piper into
a Duke, and he was called the Duke of Tags. He
knelt down on the big hole in the carpet and each
one of them gave him a little thump on the shoulder
with the poker, because it took more thumps to make
a Duke than a common or garden Lord.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture duke.jpg]
The day after this another much more
exciting thing took place. The nurse was in a
bad temper and when she was tidying the nursery she
pushed the easy chair aside and saw Racketty-Packetty
House.
“Oh!” she said, “there
is that Racketty-Packetty old thing still. I
had forgotten it. It must be carried down-stairs
and burned. I will go and tell one of the footmen
to come for it.”
Meg and Peg and Kilmanskeg were in
their attic and they all rushed out in such a hurry
to get down-stairs that they rolled all the way down
the staircase, and Peter Piper and Gustibus had to
dart out of the drawing-room and pick them up, Ridiklis
came staggering up from the kitchen quite out of breath.
“Oh! our house is going to be
burned! Our house is going to be burned!”
cried Meg and Peg clutching their brothers.
“Let us go and throw ourselves
out of the window!” cried Kilmanskeg.
“I don’t see how they
can have the heart to burn a person’s home!”
said Ridiklis, wiping her eyes with her kitchen duster.
Peter Piper was rather pale, but he
was extremely brave and remembered that he was the
head of the family.
“Now, Lady Meg and Lady Peg
and Lady Kilmanskeg,” he said, “let us
all keep cool.”
“We shan’t keep cool when
they set our house on fire,” said Gustibus.
Peter Piper just snapped his fingers.
“Pooh!” he said.
“We are only made of wood and it won’t
hurt a bit. We shall just snap and crackle and
go off almost like fireworks and then we shall be
ashes and fly away into the air and see all sorts
of things. Perhaps it may be more fun than anything
we have done yet.”
“But our nice old house!
Our nice old Racketty-Packetty House,” said
Ridiklis. “I do so love it. The kitchen
is so convenient—even though the oven won’t
bake any more.”
And things looked most serious because
the nurse really was beginning to push the arm-chair
away. But it would not move and I will tell you
why. One of my Fairies, who had come down the
chimney when they were talking, had called me and
I had come in a second with a whole army of my Workers,
and though the nurse couldn’t see them, they
were all holding the chair tight down on the carpet
so that it would not stir.
And I—Queen Crosspatch—myself—flew
downstairs and made the footman remember that minute
that a box had come for Cynthia and that he must take
it upstairs to her nursery. If I had not been
on the spot he would have forgotten it until it was
too late. But just in the very nick of time up
he came, and Cynthia sprang up as soon as she saw
him.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture footman.jpg]
“Oh!” she cried out, “It
must be the doll who broke her little leg and was
sent to the hospital. It must be Lady Patsy.”
And she opened the box and gave a
little scream of joy for there lay Lady Patsy (her
whole name was Patricia) in a lace-frilled nightgown,
with her lovely leg in bandages and a pair of tiny
crutches and a trained nurse by her side.
That was how I saved them that time.
There was such excitement over Lady Patsy and her
little crutches and her nurse that nothing else was
thought of and my Fairies pushed the arm-chair back
and Racketty-Packetty House was hidden and forgotten
once more.
The whole Racketty-Packetty family
gave a great gasp of joy and sat down in a ring all
at once, on the floor, mopping their foreheads with
anything they could get hold of. Peter Piper used
an antimacassar.
“Oh! we are obliged to you,
Queen B-bell—Patch,” he panted out,
“But these alarms of fire are upsetting.”
“You leave them to me,”
I said, “and I’ll attend to them.
Tip!” I commanded the Fairy nearest me.
“You will have to stay about here and be ready
to give the alarm when anything threatens to happen.”
And I flew away, feeling I had done a good morning’s
work.
Well, that was the beginning of a
great many things, and many of them were connected
with Lady Patsy; and but for me there might have been
unpleasantness.
Of course the Racketty-Packetty dolls
forgot about their fright directly, and began to enjoy
themselves again as usual. That was their way.
They never sat up all night with Trouble, Peter Piper
used to say. And I told him they were quite right.
If you make a fuss over trouble and put it to bed
and nurse it and give it beef tea and gruel, you can
never get rid of it.
Their great delight now was Lady Patsy.
They thought she was prettier than any of the other
Tidy Castle dolls. She neither turned her nose
up, nor looked down the bridge of it, nor laughed
mockingly. She had dimples in the corners of her
mouth and long curly lashes and her nose was saucy
and her eyes were bright and full of laughs.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture house.jpg]
“She’s the clever one
of the family,” said Peter Piper. “I
am sure of that.”
She was treated as an invalid at first,
of course, and kept in her room; but they could see
her sitting up in her frilled nightgown. After
a few days she was carried to a soft chair lay the
window and there she used to sit and look out; and
the Racketty-Packetty House dolls crowded round their
window and adored her.
After a few days, they noticed that
Peter Piper was often missing and one morning Ridiklis
went up into the attic and found him sitting at a
window all by himself and staring and staring.
“Oh! Duke,” she said
(you see they always tried to remember each other’s
titles). “Dear me, Duke, what are you doing
here?”
“I am looking at her,”
he answered. “I’m in love. I
fell in love with her the minute Cynthia took her
out of her box. I am going to marry her.”
“But she’s a lady of high
degree,” said Ridiklis quite alarmed.
“That’s why she’ll
have me,” said Peter Piper in his most cheerful
manner. “Ladies of high degree always marry
the good looking ones in rags and tatters. If
I had a whole suit of clothes on, she wouldn’t
look at me. I’m very good-looking, you know,”
and he turned round and winked at Ridiklis in such
a delightful saucy way that she suddenly felt as if
he was very good-looking, though she had not
thought of it before.
“Hello,” he said all at
once. “I’ve just thought of something
to attract her attention. Where’s the ball
of string?”
Cynthia’s kitten had made them
a present of a ball of string which had been most
useful. Ridiklis ran and got it, and all the others
came running upstairs to see what Peter Piper was going
to do. They all were delighted to hear he had
fallen in love with the lovely, funny Lady Patsy.
They found him standing in the middle of the attic
unrolling the ball of string.
“What are you going to do, Duke?” they
all shouted.
“Just you watch,” he said,
and he began to make the string into a rope ladder—as
fast as lightning. When he had finished it, he
fastened one end of it to a beam and swung the other
end out of the window.
“From her window,” he
said, “she can see Racketty-Packetty House and
I’ll tell you something. She’s always
looking at it. She watches us as much as we watch
her, and I have seen her giggling and giggling when
we were having fun. Yesterday when I chased Lady
Meg and Lady Peg and Lady Kilmanskeg round and round
the front of the house and turned summersaults every
five steps, she laughed until she had to stuff her
handkerchief into her mouth. When we joined hands
and danced and laughed until we fell in heaps I thought
she was going to have a kind of rosy-dimpled, lovely
little fit, she giggled so. If I run down the
side of the house on this rope ladder it will attract
her attention and then I shall begin to do things.”
He ran down the ladder and that very
minute they saw Lady Patsy at her window give a start
and lean forward to look. They all crowded round
their window and chuckled and chuckled as they watched
him.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture chuckled.jpg]
He turned three stately summersaults
and stood on his feet and made a cheerful bow.
The Racketty-Packettys saw Lady Patsy begin to giggle
that minute. Then he took an antimacassar out
of his pocket and fastened it round the edge of his
torn trousers leg, as if it were lace trimming and
began to walk about like a Duke—with his
arms folded on his chest and his ragged old hat cocked
on one side over his ear. Then the Racketty-Packettys
saw Lady Patsy begin to laugh. Then Peter Piper
stood on his head and kissed his hand and Lady Patsy
covered her face and rocked backwards and forwards
in her chair laughing and laughing.
Then he struck an attitude with his
tattered leg put forward gracefully and he pretended
he had a guitar and he sang right up at her window.
“From Racketty-Packetty
House I come,
It stands, dear Lady,
in a slum,
A low, low slum behind
the door
The stout arm-chair
is placed before,
(Just take a look at
it, my Lady).
“The house itself is
a perfect sight,
And everybody’s
dressed like a perfect fright,
But no one cares a single
jot
And each one giggles
over his lot,
(And as for me, I’m
in love with you).
“I can’t make
up another verse,
And if I did it would
be worse,
But I could stand and
sing all day,
If I could think of
things to say,
(But the fact is I just
wanted to make you look at me).”
And then he danced such a lively jig
that his rags and tags flew about him, and then he
made another bow and kissed his hand again and ran
up the ladder like a flash and jumped into the attic.
After that Lady Patsy sat at her window
all the time and would not let the trained nurse put
her to bed at all; and Lady Gwendolen and Lady Muriel
and Lady Doris could not understand it. Once Lady
Gwendolen said haughtily and disdainfully and scornfully
and scathingly:
“If you sit there so much, those
low Racketty-Packetty House people will think you
are looking at them.”
“I am,” said Lady Patsy,
showing all her dimples at once. “They are
such fun.”
And Lady Gwendolen swooned haughtily
away, and the trained nurse could scarcely restore
her.
When the castle dolls drove out or
walked in their garden, the instant they caught sight
of one of the Racketty-Packettys they turned up their
noses and sniffed aloud, and several times the Duchess
said she would remove because the neighborhood was
absolutely low. They all scorned the Racketty-Packettys—they
just scorned them.
One moonlight night Lady Patsy was
sitting at her window and she heard a whistle in the
garden. When she peeped out carefully, there
stood Peter Piper waving his ragged cap at her, and
he had his rope ladder under his arm.
“Hello,” he whispered
as loud as he could. “Could you catch a
bit of rope if I threw it up to you?”
“Yes,” she whispered back.
“Then catch this,” he
whispered again and he threw up the end of a string
and she caught it the first throw. It was fastened
to the rope ladder.
“Now pull,” he said.
She pulled and pulled until the rope
ladder reached her window and then she fastened that
to a hook under the sill and the first thing that
happened—just like lightning—was
that Peter Piper ran up the ladder and leaned over
her window ledge.
“Will you marry me,” he
said. “I haven’t anything to give
you to eat and I am as ragged as a scarecrow, but
will you?”
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture marry.jpg]
She clapped her little hands.
“I eat very little,” she
said. “And I would do without anything at
all, if I could live in your funny old shabby house.”
“It is a ridiculous, tumbled-down
old barn, isn’t it?” he said. “But
every one of us is as nice as we can be. We are
perfect Turkish Delights. It’s laughing
that does it. Would you like to come down the
ladder and see what a jolly, shabby old hole the place
is?”
“Oh! do take me,” said Lady Patsy.
So he helped her down the ladder and
took her under the armchair and into Racketty-Packetty
House and Meg and Peg and Kilmanskeg and Ridiklis
and Gustibus all crowded round her and gave little
screams of joy at the sight of her.
They were afraid to kiss her at first,
even though she was engaged to Peter Piper. She
was so pretty and her frock had so much lace on it
that they were afraid their old rags might spoil her.
But she did not care about her lace and flew at them
and kissed and hugged them every one.
“I have so wanted to come here,”
she said. “It’s so dull at the Castle
I had to break my leg just to get a change. The
Duchess sits reading near the fire with her gold eye-glasses
on her nose and Lady Gwendolen plays haughtily on
the harp and Lady Muriel coldly listens to her, and
Lady Doris is always laughing mockingly, and Lord
Hubert reads the newspaper with a high-bred air, and
Lord Francis writes letters to noblemen of his acquaintance,
and Lord Rupert glances over his love letters from
ladies of title, in an aristocratic manner—until
I could scream. Just to see you dears
dancing about in your rags and tags and laughing and
inventing games as if you didn’t mind anything,
is such a relief.”
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture rupert.jpg]
She nearly laughed her little curly
head off when they all went round the house with her,
and Peter Piper showed her the holes in the carpet
and the stuffing coming out of the sofas, and the
feathers out of the beds, and the legs tumbling off
the chairs. She had never seen anything like
it before.
“At the Castle, nothing is funny
at all,” she said. “And nothing ever
sticks out or hangs down or tumbles off. It is
so plain and new.”
“But I think we ought to tell
her, Duke,” Ridiklis said. “We may
have our house burned over our heads any day.”
She really stopped laughing for a whole minute when
she heard that, but she was rather like Peter Piper
in disposition and she said almost immediately.
“Oh! they’ll never do
it. They’ve forgotten you.” And
Peter Piper said:
“Don’t let’s think
of it. Let’s all join hands and dance round
and round and kick up our heels and laugh as hard
as ever we can.”
And they did—and Lady Patsy
laughed harder than any one else. After that
she was always stealing away from Tidy Castle and coming
in and having fun. Sometimes she stayed all night
and slept with Meg and Peg and everybody invented
new games and stories and they really never went to
bed until daylight. But the Castle dolls grew
more and more scornful every day, and tossed their
heads higher and higher and sniffed louder and louder
until it sounded as if they all had influenza.
They never lost an opportunity of saying disdainful
things and once the Duchess wrote a letter to Cynthia,
saying that she insisted on removing to a decent neighborhood.
She laid the letter in her desk but the gentleman
mouse came in the night and carried it away.
So Cynthia never saw it and I don’t believe
she could have read it if she had seen it because the
Duchess wrote very badly—even for a doll.
And then what do you suppose happened?
One morning Cynthia began to play that all the Tidy
Castle dolls had scarlet fever. She said it had
broken out in the night and she undressed them all
and put them into bed and gave them medicine.
She could not find Lady Patsy, so she escaped
the contagion. The truth was that Lady Patsy
had stayed all night at Racketty-Packetty House, where
they were giving an imitation Court Ball with Peter
Piper in a tin crown, and shavings for supper—because
they had nothing else, and in fact the gentleman mouse
had brought the shavings from his nest as a present.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture gentleman_mouse.jpg]
Cynthia played nearly all day and
the Duchess and Lady Gwendolen and Lady Muriel and
Lady Doris and Lord Hubert and Lord Francis and Lord
Rupert got worse and worse.
By evening they were all raging in
delirium and Lord Francis and Lady Gwendolen had strong
mustard plasters on their chests. And right in
the middle of their agony Cynthia suddenly got up and
went away and left them to their fate—just
as if it didn’t matter in the least. Well
in the middle of the night Meg and Peg and Lady Patsy
wakened all at once.
“Do you hear a noise?”
said Meg, lifting her head from her ragged old pillow.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture noise.jpg]
“Yes, I do,” said Peg,
sitting up and holding her ragged old blanket up to
her chin.
Lady Patsy jumped up with feathers
sticking up all over her hair, because they had come
out of the holes in the ragged old bed. She ran
to the window and listened.
“Oh! Meg and Peg!”
she cried out. “It comes from the Castle.
Cynthia has left them all raving in delirium and they
are all shouting and groaning and screaming.”
Meg and Peg jumped up too.
“Let’s go and call Kilmanskeg
and Ridiklis and Gustibus and Peter Piper,”
they said, and they rushed to the staircase and met
Kilmanskeg and Ridiklis and Gustibus and Peter Piper
coming scrambling up panting because the noise had
wakened them as well.
They were all over at Tidy Castle
in a minute. They just tumbled over each other
to get there—the kind-hearted things.
The servants were every one fast asleep, though the
noise was awful. The loudest groans came from
Lady Gwendolen and Lord Francis because their mustard
plasters were blistering them frightfully.
Ridiklis took charge, because she
was the one who knew most about illness. She
sent Gustibus to waken the servants and then ordered
hot water and cold water, and ice, and brandy, and
poultices, and shook the trained nurse for not attending
to her business—and took off the mustard
plasters and gave gruel and broth and cough syrup
and castor oil and ipecacuanha, and everyone of the
Racketty-Packettys massaged, and soothed, and patted,
and put wet cloths on heads, until the fever was gone
and the Castle dolls all lay back on their pillows
pale and weak, but smiling faintly at every Racketty-Packetty
they saw, instead of turning up their noses and tossing
their heads and sniffing loudly, and just scorning
them.
Lady Gwendolen spoke first and instead
of being haughty and disdainful, she was as humble
as a new-born kitten.
“Oh! you dear, shabby, disrespectable,
darling things!” she said. “Never,
never, will I scorn you again. Never, never!”
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture shabby.jpg]
“That’s right!”
said Peter Piper in his cheerful, rather slangy way.
“You take my tip-never you scorn any one again.
It’s a mistake. Just you watch me stand
on my head. It’ll cheer you up.”
And he turned six summersaults—just
like lightning—and stood on his head and
wiggled his ragged legs at them until suddenly they
heard a snort from one of the beds and it was Lord
Hubert beginning to laugh and then Lord Francis laughed
and then Lord Hubert shouted, and then Lady Doris
squealed, and Lady Muriel screamed, and Lady Gwendolen
and the Duchess rolled over and over in their beds,
laughing as if they would have fits.
“Oh! you delightful, funny,
shabby old loves!” Lady Gwendolen kept saying.
“To think that we scorned you.”
“They’ll be all right
after this,” said Peter Piper. “There’s
nothing cures scarlet fever like cheering up.
Let’s all join hands and dance round and round
once for them before we go back to bed. It’ll
throw them into a nice light perspiration and they’ll
drop off and sleep like tops.” And they
did it, and before they had finished, the whole lot
of them were perspiring gently and snoring as softly
as lambs.
When they went back to Racketty-Packetty
House they talked a good deal about Cynthia and wondered
and wondered why she had left her scarlet fever so
suddenly. And at last Ridiklis made up her mind
to tell them something she had heard.
“The Duchess told me,”
she said, rather slowly because it was bad news—“The
Duchess said that Cynthia went away because her Mama
had sent for her—and her Mama had sent for
her to tell her that a little girl princess is coming
to see her to-morrow. Cynthia’s Mama used
to be a maid of honor to the Queen and that’s
why the little girl Princess is coming. The Duchess
said—” and here Ridiklis spoke very
slowly indeed, “that the nurse was so excited
she said she did not know whether she stood on her
head or her heels, and she must tidy up the nursery
and have that Racketty-Packetty old dolls’ house
carried down stairs and burned, early to-morrow morning.
That’s what the Duchess said—”
Meg and Peg and Kilmanskeg clutched
at their hearts and gasped and Gustibus groaned and
Lady Patsy caught Peter Piper by the arm to keep from
falling. Peter Piper gulped—and then
he had a sudden cheerful thought.
“Perhaps she was raving in delirium,”
he said.
“No, she wasn’t,”
said Ridiklis shaking her head, “I had just given
her hot water and cold, and gruel, and broth, and castor
oil, and ipecacuanha and put ice almost all over her.
She was as sensible as any of us. To-morrow morning
we shall not have a house over our heads,” and
she put her ragged old apron over her face and cried.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture apron.jpg]
“If she wasn’t raving
in delirium,” said Peter Piper, “we shall
not have any heads. You had better go back to
the Castle tonight, Patsy. Racketty-Packetty
House is no place for you.”
Then Lady Patsy drew herself up so
straight that she nearly fell over backwards.
“I—will—never—leave
you!” she said, and Peter Piper couldn’t
make her.
You can just imagine what a doleful
night it was. They went all over the house together
and looked at every hole in the carpet and every piece
of stuffing sticking out of the dear old shabby sofas,
and every broken window and chair leg and table and
ragged blanket— and the tears ran down
their faces for the first time in their lives.
About six o’clock in the morning Peter Piper
made a last effort.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture together.jpg]
“Let’s all join hands
in a circle,” he said quite faintly, “and
dance round and round once more.”
But it was no use. When they
joined hands they could not dance, and when they found
they could not dance they all tumbled down in a heap
and cried instead of laughing and Lady Patsy lay with
her arms round Peter Piper’s neck.
Now here is where I come in again—Queen
Crosspatch—who is telling you this story.
I always come in just at the nick of time when people
like the Racketty-Packettys are in trouble. I
walked in at seven o’clock.
“Get up off the floor,”
I said to them all and they got up and stared at me.
They actually thought I did not know what had happened.
“A little girl Princess is coming
this morning,” said Peter Piper, and our house
is going to be burned over our heads. This is
the end of Racketty-Packetty House.”
“No, it isn’t!”
I said. “You leave this to me. I told
the Princess to come here, though she doesn’t
know it in the least.”
A whole army of my Working Fairies
began to swarm in at the nursery window. The
nurse was working very hard to put things in order
and she had not sense enough to see Fairies at all.
So she did not see mine, though there were hundreds
of them. As soon as she made one corner tidy,
they ran after her and made it untidy. They held
her back by her dress and hung and swung on her apron
until she could scarcely move and kept wondering why
she was so slow. She could not make the nursery
tidy and she was so flurried she forgot all about
Racketty-Packetty House again—especially
as my Working Fairies pushed the arm-chair close up
to it so that it was quite hidden. And there
it was when the little girl Princess came with her
Ladies in Waiting. My fairies had only just allowed
the nurse to finish the nursery.
Meg and Peg and Kilmanskeg and Ridiklis
and Gustibus and Peter Piper and Lady Patsy were huddled
up together looking out of one window. They could
not bear to be parted. I sat on the arm of the
big chair and ordered my Working Fairies to stand ready
to obey me the instant I spoke.
The Princess was a nice child and
was very polite to Cynthia when she showed her all
her dolls, and last but not least, Tidy Castle itself.
She looked at all the rooms and the furniture and said
polite and admiring things about each of them.
But Cynthia realized that she was not so much interested
in it as she had thought she would be. The fact
was that the Princess had so many grand dolls’
houses in her palace that Tidy Castle did not surprise
her at all. It was just when Cynthia was finding
this out that I gave the order to my Working Fairies.
“Push the arm-chair away,”
I commanded; “very slowly, so that no one will
know it is being moved.”
So they moved it away—very,
very slowly and no one saw that it had stirred.
But the next minute the little girl Princess gave a
delightful start.
“Oh! what is that!” she
cried out, hurrying towards the unfashionable neighborhood
behind the door.
Cynthia blushed all over and the nurse
actually turned pale. The Racketty-Packettys
tumbled down in a heap beneath their window and began
to say their prayers very fast.
“It is only a shabby old doll’s
house, your Highness,” Cynthia stammered out.
“It belonged to my Grandmamma, and it ought not
to be in the nursery. I thought you had had it
burned, Nurse!”
“Burned!” the little girl
Princess cried out in the most shocked way. “Why
if it was mine, I wouldn’t have it burned for
worlds! Oh! please push the chair away and let
me look at it. There are no doll’s houses
like it anywhere in these days.” And when
the arm-chair was pushed aside she scrambled down
on to her knees just as if she was not a little girl
Princess at all.
“Oh! Oh! Oh!”
she said. “How funny and dear! What
a darling old doll’s house. It is shabby
and wants mending, of course, but it is almost exactly
like one my Grandmamma had—she kept it among
her treasures and only let me look at it as a great,
great treat.”
Cynthia gave a gasp, for the little
girl Princess’s Grandmamma had been the Queen
and people had knelt down and kissed her hand and
had been obliged to go out of the room backwards before
her.
The little girl Princess was simply
filled with joy. She picked up Meg and Peg and
Kilmanskeg and Gustibus and Peter Piper as if they
had been really a Queen’s dolls.
“Oh! the darling dears,”
she said. “Look at their nice, queer faces
and their funny clothes. Just—just
like Grandmamma’s dollies’ clothes.
Only these poor things do so want new ones. Oh!
how I should like to dress them again just as they
used to be dressed, and have the house all made just
as it used to be when it was new.”
“That old Racketty-Packetty
House,” said Cynthia, losing her breath.
“If it were mine I should make
it just like Grandmamma’s and I should love
it more than any doll’s house I have. I
never—never— never—saw
anything as nice and laughing and good natured as these
dolls’ faces. They look as if they had been
having fun ever since they were born. Oh! if
you were to burn them and their home I—I
could never forgive you!”
“I never—never—will,—your
Highness,” stammered Cynthia, quite overwhelmed.
Suddenly she started forward.
“Why, there is the lost doll!”
she cried out. “There is Lady Patsy.
How did she get into Racketty-Packetty House?”
“Perhaps she went there to see
them because they were so poor and shabby,”
said the little girl Princess. “Perhaps
she likes this one,” and she pointed to Peter
Piper. “Do you know when I picked him up
their arms were about each other. Please let her
stay with him. Oh!” she cried out the next
instant and jumped a little. “I felt as
if the boy one kicked his leg.”
And it was actually true, because
Peter Piper could not help it and he had kicked out
his ragged leg for joy. He had to be very careful
not to kick any more when he heard what happened next.
As the Princess liked Racketty-Packetty
House so much, Cynthia gave it to her for a present—and
the Princess was really happy—and before
she went away she made a little speech to the whole
Racketty-Packetty family, whom she had set all in a
row in the ragged old, dear old, shabby old drawing-room
where they had had so much fun.
“You are going to come and live
with me, funny, good-natured loves,” she said.
“And you shall all be dressed beautifully again
and your house shall be mended and papered and painted
and made as lovely as ever it was. And I am going
to like you better than all my other dolls’
houses—just as Grandmamma said she liked
hers.” And then she was gone.
And every bit of it came true.
Racketty-Packetty House was carried to a splendid
Nursery in a Palace, and Meg and Peg and Kilmanskeg
and Ridiklis and Gustibus and Peter Piper were made
so gorgeous that if they had nest been so nice they
would have grown proud. But they didn’t.
They only grew jollier and jollier and Peter Piper
married Lady Patsy, and Ridiklis’s left leg was
mended and she was painted into a beauty again—but
she always remained the useful one. And the dolls
in the other dolls’ houses used to make deep
curtsies when a Racketty-Packetty House doll passed
them, and Peter Piper could scarcely stand it because
it always made him want to stand on his head and laugh—and
so when they were curtsied at— because
they were related to the Royal Dolls House—they
used to run into their drawing room and fall into
fits of giggles and they could only stop them by all
joining hands together in a ring and dancing round
and round and round and kicking up their heels and
laughing until they tumbled down in a heap.
[Transcriber’s Note: See picture curtsies.jpg]
And what do you think of that for
a story. And doesn’t it prove to you what
a valuable Friend a Fairy is—particularly
a Queen one?