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Mary Poppins in the Park mp-4, Page 2

P. L. Travers


  "But what about wearing a pearly crown? And dancing till dawn with the Sultan's son?"

  "Dancing? Pearls? Oh, my! Oh, my!" A burst of laughter broke from the Tramp, as he took from his sleeve a piece of sausage.

  "Those crowns are as heavy as lead or iron. You'd have a ridge in your head in no time. And a princess's duty — surely you know? — is to dance with her father's old friends first. Then the Lord Chamberlain. Then the Lord Chancellor. And, of course, the Keeper of the Seal. By the time you get round to the Sultan's son, it's late and he's had to go home."

  The Goose-girl pondered the Tramp's words. Could he really be speaking the truth? All the goose-girls in all the stories were princesses in disguise. But, oh, how difficult it sounded! What did one say to Lord Chamberlains? "Come here!" "Go there!" as one would to a goose? Spinning and weaving! Etiquette!

  Perhaps, taking everything into account, it might be better, the Goose-girl thought, simply to be a goose-girl.

  "Well, away to the Palace!" the Tramp advised her. "You're wasting your time sitting here, you know! Don't you agree?" he called to the Swineherd, who was listening from his side of the stream.

  "Agree with what?" said the Swineherd quickly, as though he hadn't heard a word. "I never concern myself with goose-girls," he added untruthfully. "It would not be fitting or suitable. I am a prince in disguise!"

  "You are?" cried the Tramp, admiringly. "Then you're occupying your time, I suppose, in getting up muscle to fight the Dragon."

  The Swineherd's damask cheek grew pale. "What dragon?" he asked in a stifled voice.

  "Oh, any that you chance to meet. All princes, as you yourself must know, have to fight at least one dragon. That is what princes are for."

  "Two-headed?" enquired the Swineherd, gulping.

  "Two?" cried the Tramp. "Seven, you mean! Two-headed dragons are quite out of date."

  The Swineherd felt his heart thump. Suppose, in spite of all the stories, instead of the prince killing the monster, the monster should kill the prince? He was not, you understand, afraid. But he wondered whether, after all, he were not a simple swineherd.

  "A fine lot of porkers you've got there!" The Tramp glanced appreciatively from the swine to his piece of sausage.

  A snort of disgust went up from the herd. A raggedy tramp to be calling them porkers!

  "Perhaps you are not aware," they grunted, "that we are sheep in disguise!"

  "Oh, dear!" said the Tramp, with a doleful air. "I'm sorry for you, my friends!"

  "Why should you be sorry?" demanded the swine, sticking their snouts in the air.

  "Why? Surely you know that the people here are extremely partial to mutton! If they knew there was a flock of sheep — however disguised — in this meadow—" He broke off, shaking his head and sighing. Then he searched among his tattered rags, discovered a piece of plum cake and munched it sombrely.

  The swine, aghast, looked at each other. Mutton — what a frightful word! They had thought of themselves as graceful lambs prancing for ever in fields of flowers — never as legs of mutton. Would it not be wiser, they cogitated, to decide to be merely pigs?

  "Here, goosey-ganders!" chirruped the Tramp. He tossed his crumbs to the Goose-girl's flock.

  The geese, as one bird, raised their heads and let out a snake-like hiss.

  "We're swans!" they cackled in high-pitched chorus. And then, as he did not seem to believe them, they added the word, "Disguised!"

  "Well, if that's the case," the Tramp remarked, "you won't be here very long. All swans, as you know, belong to the King. Dear me, what lucky birds you are! You will swim on the ornamental lake, and courtiers with golden scissors will clip your flying-feathers. Strawberry jam on silver plates will be given you every morning. And not a care in the world will you have — not even the trouble of hatching your eggs, for these His Majesty eats for breakfast."

  "What!" cried the geese. "No grubs? No goslings?"

  "Certainly not! But think of the honour!" The Tramp chuckled and turned away, bumping into a shaggy shape that was standing among the daisies.

  The geese stood rigid in the grass, staring at each other.

  Strawberry jam! Clipped wings! No hatching season! Could they have made a mistake, they wondered? Were they not, after all, just geese?

  From something that once had been a pocket the Tramp extracted an apple.

  "Pardon, friend!" he said to the Ass, as he took a juicy bite. "I'd offer you half — but you don't need it. You've all this buttercup field."

  The Ass surveyed the scene with distaste. "It may be all very well for donkeys, but don't imagine," he remarked, "that I'm such an ass as I look. As you may be interested to know, I'm an Arab steed in disguise!"

  "Indeed?" The Tramp looked very impressed. "How you must long, if that is so, for the country of your birth. Sandstorms! Mirages! Waterless deserts!"

  "Waterless?" The Ass looked anxious.

  "Well, practically. But that's nothing to you. The way you Arab animals can live for weeks on nothing — nothing to eat, nothing to drink, nowhere to sleep — it's wonderful!"

  "But what about all those oases? Surely grass grows there?"

  "Few and far between," said the Tramp. "But what of that, my friend? The less you eat the faster you go! The less you drink the lighter you are! It only takes you half a jiffy to fling yourself down and shelter your master when his enemies attack!"

  "But," cried the Ass, "in that case, I should be shot at first!"

  "Naturally," the Tramp replied. "That's why one admires you so — you noble Arab steeds. You're ready to die at any moment!"

  The Ass rubbed his forehead against his leg. Was he ready to die at any moment? He could not honestly answer Yes. Weeks and weeks with nothing to eat! And here the buttercups and daisies were enough for a dozen asses. He might indeed be an Arab steed — but then again, he mightn't. Up and down went his shaggy head as he pondered the difficult problem.

  "That's for you, old Natterjack!" The Tramp tossed the core of his apple under the steppingstone.

  "Don't call me Natterjack!" snapped the Toad.

  "Puddocky, then, if you prefer it!"

  "Those are the names one gives to toads. I am a frog in disguise."

  "Oh, happy creature!" the Tramp exclaimed. "Sitting on lily-leaves all night, singing a song to the moon."

  "All night? I'd take my death of cold!"

  "Catching spiders and dragonflies for the lady-frog of your choice!"

  "None for myself?" the Toad enquired.

  "A frog that would a-wooing go — and you are certainly such a one! — wouldn't want to catch for himself!"

  The Toad was, however, not so sure. He liked a juicy spider. He was just deciding, after all, that he might as well be a toad, when — plop! — went a pebble right beside him and he hurriedly popped in his head.

  "Who threw that?" said the Tramp quickly.

  "I did," came the answer from the bridge. "Not to hit him! Just to make him jump!"

  "Good boy!" The Tramp looked up with a smile. "A fine, friendly lad like you wouldn't hurt a toad!"

  "Of course I wouldn't. Or anything else. But don't you call me boy or lad. I'm really a—"

  "Wait! Don't tell me! Let me guess! An Indian? No — a pirate!"

  "That's right!" said the Boy, with a curt nod, showing all the gaps in his teeth in a terrible pirate smile. "If you want to know my name," he snarled, "just call me One-eyed Corambo!"

  "Got your cutlass?" the Tramp enquired. "Your skull-and-crossbones? Your black silk mask? Well, I shouldn't hang about here any longer! Landlubbers aren't worth robbing! Set your course away from the North. Make for Tierra del Fuego."

  "Been there," the Boy said loftily.

  "Well, any other place you like — no pirate lingers long on land. Have you been—" the Tramp lowered his voice, "have you been to Dead Man's Drop?"

  The Boy smiled and shook his head.

  "That's the place for me," he cried, reaching for his Monkey. "I'll just g
o and say good-bye to my mother and—"

  "Your mother! Did I hear aright? One-eyed Corambo hopping off to say good-bye to his mother! A pirate captain wasting time by running home — well, really!" The Tramp was overcome with amusement.

  The Boy looked at him doubtfully. Where, he wondered, was Dead Man's Drop? How long would it take him to go and come? His mother would be anxious. And apart from that — as he'd reason to know — she was making pancakes for supper. It might be better, just for today, to be his outer self. Corambo could wait until tomorrow, Corambo was always there.

  "Taking your monkey along as a mascot?" The Tramp looked quizzically at the toy.

  He was answered by an angry squeal. "Don't you call me a monkey!" it jabbered. "I'm a little boy in disguise!"

  "A boy!" cried the Tramp. "And not at school?"

  "School?" said the Monkey nervously. "'Two and two make five,' you mean, and all that sort of thing?"

  "Exactly," said the Tramp gravely. "You'd better hurry along now before they find you're missing. Here!" He scrabbled among his rags, drew two chocolates from under his collar, and offered one to the Monkey.

  But the little creature turned its back. School — he hadn't bargained for that. Better, any day of the week, to be a moth-eaten monkey. He felt a sudden rush of love for his old fur coat and his glass eyes and his wrinkled jungle tail.

  "You take it, Corambo!" The Tramp grinned. "Pirates are always hungry." He handed one chocolate to the Boy and ate the other himself.

  "Well," he said, licking his lips. "Time flies and so must I!" He glanced round at the little group and gave a cheerful nod.

  "So long!" He smiled at them rosily. And thrusting his hands among his rags he brought out a piece of bread and butter and sauntered away across the bridge.

  The Boy gazed after him thoughtfully, with a line across his brow. Then suddenly he threw up his hand.

  "Hey!" he cried.

  The Tramp paused.

  "What is your name? You never told us! Who are you?" said the Boy.

  "Yes, indeed!" came a score of voices. "Who are you?" the Goose-girl asked; and the Swineherd, the geese, the swine and the Ass echoed the eager question. Even the Toad put out his head and demanded: "Who are you?"

  "Me?" cried the Tramp, with an innocent smile. "If you really want to know," he said, "I'm an angel in disguise."

  He bowed to them amid his tatters and waved as he turned away.

  "Ha, ha, ha! A jolly good joke!"

  The Boy burst into a peal of laughter. Jug-jug-jug! in his throat it went. That tattered old thing an angel!

  But suddenly the laugh ceased. The Boy stared, screwed up his eyes, looked again and stared.

  The Tramp was skipping along the road, hopping for joy, it seemed. Each time he skipped his feet went higher and the earth — could it really be true, the Boy wondered? — was falling away beneath him. Now he was skimming the tops of the daisies and presently he was over the hedge, skipping higher and higher. Up, up he went and cleared the woodland, plumbing the depths of the sky. Then he spread himself on the sunny air and stretched his arms and legs.

  And as he did so the tattered rags fluttered along his back. Something, the watchers clearly saw, was pushing them aside.

  Then, feather by feather, from under each shoulder, a broad grey pinion showed. Out and out the big plumes stretched, on either side of the Tramp, until he was only a tattered scrap between his lifting wings. They flapped for a moment above the trees, balancing strongly against the air, then with a sweeping sea-gull movement they bore him up and away.

  Up, up he went, plumbing the depths of the sky

  "Oh, dear! Oh, dear!" the Goose-girl sighed, knitting her brows in a frown. For the Tramp had put her in an awkward predicament. She was almost — if not quite — convinced she was not the daughter of a King, and now — well look at him! All those feathers under his rags! If he was an angel, what was she? A goose-girl — or something grander?

  Her mind was whirling. Which was true? Shaking her head in bewilderment, she glanced across the stream at the Swineherd, and the sight of him made her burst out laughing. Really, she couldn't help it.

  There he sat, gazing up at the sky, with his curls standing on end with surprise, and his eyes as round as soup-plates.

  "Ahem!" She gave a delicate cough. "Perhaps it will not be necessary to fight the Dragon now!"

  He turned to her with a startled look. Then he saw that she was smiling gently and his face suddenly cleared. He laughed and leapt across the stream.

  "You shall have your golden crown," he cried. "I'll make it for you myself!"

  "Gold is too heavy," she said demurely, behind her ferny fan.

  "Not my kind of gold." The Swineherd smiled. He gathered a handful of buttercups, wove them into a little wreath and set it on her head.

  And from that moment the question which was once so grave — were they goose-girl and swineherd, or prince and princess? — seemed to them not to matter. They sat there gazing at each other, forgetting everything else.

  The geese, who were also quite amazed, glanced from the fading speck in the sky to their neighbours in the meadow.

  "Poor pigs!" they murmured mockingly. "Roast mutton with onion sauce!"

  "You'll look pretty foolish," the swine retorted, "on an ornamental lake!"

  But though they spoke harshly to each other, they could not help feeling, privately, that the Tramp had put them in a very tight corner.

  Then an old goose gave a high-pitched giggle.

  "What does it matter?" he cackled gaily. "Whatever we are within ourselves, at least we look like geese!"

  "True!" agreed an elderly pig. "And we have the shape of swine!"

  And at that, as though released from a burden, they all began to laugh. The field rang with their mingled cries and the larks looked down in wonder.

  "What does it matter — cackle, cackle! What does it matter — ker-onk, ker-onk!"

  "Hee-haw!" said the Ass, as he flung up his head and joined in the merry noise.

  "Thinking about your fine oasis?" the Toad enquired sarcastically.

  "Hee-haw! Hee-haw! I am indeed! What an ass I was, not to see it before. I've only just realised, Natterjack, that my oasis is not in the desert. Hee-haw! Hee-haw! It's under my hoof — here in this very field."

  "Then you're not an Arab steed after all?" the Toad enquired, with a jeer.

  "Ah," said the Ass, "I wouldn't say that. Butnow" — he glanced at the flying figure—"I'm content with my disguise!"

  He snatched at a buttercup hungrily as though he had galloped a long distance through a leafless, sandy land.

  The Toad looked up with a wondering eye.

  "Could I be content with my disguise?" He pondered the question gravely. And as he did so a hazel nut fell from a branch above him. It hit his head and bounced off lightly, bobbing away on the stream.

  "That would have stunned a frog," thought the Toad, "but I, in my horny coat, felt nothing." A gratified smile, very large and toothy, split his face in the middle. He thrust out his head and craned it upwards.

  "Come on with your pebbles, boy!" he croaked. "I've got my armour on!"

  But the Boy did not hear the puddocky challenge. He was leaning back against the bridge, watching the Tramp on his broad wings flying into the sunset. Not with surprise — perhaps he was not yet old enough to be surprised at things — but his eyes had a look of lively interest.

  He watched and watched till the sky grew dusky and the first stars twinkled out. And when the little flying speck was no longer even a speck, he drew a long, contented sigh and turned again to the earth.

  That he was Corambo, he did not doubt. He had never doubted it. But now he knew he was other things, as well as a one-eyed pirate. And far above all — he rejoiced at it — he was just a bare-foot boy. And, moreover, a boy who was feeling peckish and ready for his supper.

  "Come on!" he called to the Toy Monkey. He tucked it comfortably under his arm, with its tail around
his wrist. And the two of them kept each other warm as they wandered home together.

  The long day fell away behind him to join his other days. All he could think of now was the night. He could sense already the warmth of the kitchen, the sizzling pancakes on the stove and his mother bending above them. Her face, framed in its ring of curls, would be ruddy and weary — like the sun. For, indeed, as he had many times told her, the sun has a mother's face.

  And presently, there he was on the doorstep and there was she as he had pictured her. He leaned against her checked apron and broke off a piece of pancake.

  "Well, what have you been doing?" she smiled.

  "Nothing," he murmured contentedly.

  For he knew — and perhaps she knew it too — that nothing is a useful word. It can mean exactly what you like — anything — everything….

  * * *

  The end of the story died away.

  Mary Poppins sat still and silent.

  Around her lay the motionless children, making never a sound. Her gaze, coming back from the far horizon, flickered across their quiet faces and over the head of the Park Keeper, as it nodded dreamily.

  "Humph!" she remarked, with a haughty sniff. "I recount a chapter of history and you all fall fast asleep!"

  "I'm not asleep," Jane reassured her. "I'm thinking about the story."

  "I heard every word," said Michael, yawning.

  The Park Keeper rocked, as if in a trance. "A Nexplorer in disguise," he murmured, "sittin' in the midnight sun and climbin' the North Pole!"

  "Ouch!" cried Michael, starting up. "I felt a drop on my nose!"

  "And I felt one on my chin," said Jane.

  They rubbed their eyes and looked about them. The syrupy sun had disappeared and a cloud was creeping over the Park. Plop! Plop! Patter, patter! The big drops drummed on the leaves.

  The Park Keeper opened his eyes and stared.

  "It's rainin'!" he cried in astonishment. "And me with no umbrella!"

  He glanced at the dangling shape on the bough and darted towards the parrot.

  "Oh, no, you don't!" said Mary Poppins. Quick as a needle, she grasped the handle.

  "I've a long way to go and me chest is bad and I oughtn't to wet me feet!" The Park Keeper gave her a pleading glance.