[The Railway Children by E. Nesbit]@TWC D-Link bookThe Railway Children CHAPTER VIII 25/27
No one would have thought that he could be the same man who had held Peter by the ear.
As for Mrs.Bill, she had always been nice, as Bobbie said, and so had the baby, and even Spot, who might have bitten them quite badly if he had liked. "It was simply ripping, Mother," said Peter, when they reached home very happy, very tired, and very dirty, "right over that glorious aqueduct. And locks--you don't know what they're like.
You sink into the ground and then, when you feel you're never going to stop going down, two great black gates open slowly, slowly--you go out, and there you are on the canal just like you were before." "I know," said Mother, "there are locks on the Thames.
Father and I used to go on the river at Marlow before we were married." "And the dear, darling, ducky baby," said Bobbie; "it let me nurse it for ages and ages--and it WAS so good.
Mother, I wish we had a baby to play with." "And everybody was so nice to us," said Phyllis, "everybody we met.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|