<h2><SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN>CHAPTER X.<br/> THE LITTLE BLACK GIRL AND JULIUS CAESAR</h2>
<p>A great city swept away by the sea, a beautiful country devastated by an active
volcano—these are not the sort of things you see every day of the week.
And when you do see them, no matter how many other wonders you may have seen in
your time, such sights are rather apt to take your breath away. Atlantis had
certainly this effect on the breaths of Cyril, Robert, Anthea, and Jane.</p>
<p>They remained in a breathless state for some days. The learned gentleman seemed
as breathless as anyone; he spent a good deal of what little breath he had in
telling Anthea about a wonderful dream he had. “You would hardly
believe,” he said, “that anyone <i>could</i> have such a detailed
vision.”</p>
<p>But Anthea could believe it, she said, quite easily.</p>
<p>He had ceased to talk about thought-transference. He had now seen too many
wonders to believe that.</p>
<p>In consequence of their breathless condition none of the children suggested any
new excursions through the Amulet. Robert voiced the mood of the others when he
said that they were “fed up” with Amulet for a bit. They
undoubtedly were.</p>
<p>As for the Psammead, it went to sand and stayed there, worn out by the terror
of the flood and the violent exercise it had had to take in obedience to the
inconsiderate wishes of the learned gentleman and the Babylonian queen.</p>
<p>The children let it sleep. The danger of taking it about among strange people
who might at any moment utter undesirable wishes was becoming more and more
plain.</p>
<p>And there are pleasant things to be done in London without any aid from Amulets
or Psammeads. You can, for instance visit the Tower of London, the Houses of
Parliament, the National Gallery, the Zoological Gardens, the various Parks,
the Museums at South Kensington, Madame Tussaud’s Exhibition of Waxworks,
or the Botanical Gardens at Kew. You can go to Kew by river steamer—and
this is the way that the children would have gone if they had gone at all. Only
they never did, because it was when they were discussing the arrangements for
the journey, and what they should take with them to eat and how much of it, and
what the whole thing would cost, that the adventure of the Little Black Girl
began to happen.</p>
<p>The children were sitting on a seat in St James’s Park. They had been
watching the pelican repulsing with careful dignity the advances of the
seagulls who are always so anxious to play games with it. The pelican thinks,
very properly, that it hasn’t the figure for games, so it spends most of
its time pretending that that is not the reason why it won’t play.</p>
<p>The breathlessness caused by Atlantis was wearing off a little. Cyril, who
always wanted to understand all about everything, was turning things over in
his mind.</p>
<p>“I’m not; I’m only thinking,” he answered when Robert
asked him what he was so grumpy about. “I’ll tell you when
I’ve thought it all out.”</p>
<p>“If it’s about the Amulet I don’t want to hear it,”
said Jane.</p>
<p>“Nobody asked you to,” retorted Cyril mildly, “and I
haven’t finished my inside thinking about it yet. Let’s go to Kew
in the meantime.”</p>
<p>“I’d rather go in a steamer,” said Robert; and the girls
laughed.</p>
<p>“That’s right,” said Cyril, “<i>be</i> funny. I
would.”</p>
<p>“Well, he was, rather,” said Anthea.</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t think, Squirrel, if it hurts you so,” said Robert
kindly.</p>
<p>“Oh, shut up,” said Cyril, “or else talk about Kew.”</p>
<p>“I want to see the palms there,” said Anthea hastily, “to see
if they’re anything like the ones on the island where we united the Cook
and the Burglar by the Reverend Half-Curate.”</p>
<p>All disagreeableness was swept away in a pleasant tide of recollections, and
“Do you remember...?” they said. “Have you
forgotten...?”</p>
<p>“My hat!” remarked Cyril pensively, as the flood of reminiscence
ebbed a little; “we have had some times.”</p>
<p>“We have that,” said Robert.</p>
<p>“Don’t let’s have any more,” said Jane anxiously.</p>
<p>“That’s what I was thinking about,” Cyril replied; and just
then they heard the Little Black Girl sniff. She was quite close to them.</p>
<p>She was not really a little black girl. She was shabby and not very clean, and
she had been crying so much that you could hardly see, through the narrow chink
between her swollen lids, how very blue her eyes were. It was her dress that
was black, and it was too big and too long for her, and she wore a speckled
black-ribboned sailor hat that would have fitted a much bigger head than her
little flaxen one. And she stood looking at the children and sniffing.</p>
<p>“Oh, dear!” said Anthea, jumping up. “Whatever is the
matter?”</p>
<p>She put her hand on the little girl’s arm. It was rudely shaken off.</p>
<p>“You leave me be,” said the little girl. “I ain’t doing
nothing to you.”</p>
<p>“But what is it?” Anthea asked. “Has someone been hurting
you?”</p>
<p>“What’s that to you?” said the little girl fiercely.
“<i>You’re</i> all right.”</p>
<p>“Come away,” said Robert, pulling at Anthea’s sleeve.
“She’s a nasty, rude little kid.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no,” said Anthea. “She’s only dreadfully unhappy.
What is it?” she asked again.</p>
<p>“Oh, <i>you’re</i> all right,” the child repeated;
“<i>you</i> ain’t agoin’ to the Union.”</p>
<p>“Can’t we take you home?” said Anthea; and Jane added,
“Where does your mother live?”</p>
<p>“She don’t live nowheres—she’s dead—so
now!” said the little girl fiercely, in tones of miserable triumph. Then
she opened her swollen eyes widely, stamped her foot in fury, and ran away. She
ran no further than to the next bench, flung herself down there and began to
cry without even trying not to.</p>
<p>Anthea, quite at once, went to the little girl and put her arms as tight as she
could round the hunched-up black figure.</p>
<p>“Oh, don’t cry so, dear, don’t, don’t!” she
whispered under the brim of the large sailor hat, now very crooked indeed.
“Tell Anthea all about it; Anthea’lll help you. There, there, dear,
don’t cry.”</p>
<p>The others stood at a distance. One or two passers-by stared curiously.</p>
<p>The child was now only crying part of the time; the rest of the time she seemed
to be talking to Anthea.</p>
<p>Presently Anthea beckoned Cyril.</p>
<p>“It’s horrible!” she said in a furious whisper, “her
father was a carpenter and he was a steady man, and never touched a drop except
on a Saturday, and he came up to London for work, and there wasn’t any,
and then he died; and her name is Imogen, and she’s nine come next
November. And now her mother’s dead, and she’s to stay tonight with
Mrs Shrobsall—that’s a landlady that’s been kind—and
tomorrow the Relieving Officer is coming for her, and she’s going into
the Union; that means the Workhouse. It’s too terrible. What can we
do?”</p>
<p>“Let’s ask the learned gentleman,” said Jane brightly.</p>
<p>And as no one else could think of anything better the whole party walked back
to Fitzroy Street as fast as it could, the little girl holding tight to
Anthea’s hand and now not crying any more, only sniffing gently.</p>
<p>The learned gentleman looked up from his writing with the smile that had grown
much easier to him than it used to be. They were quite at home in his room now;
it really seemed to welcome them. Even the mummy-case appeared to smile as if
in its distant superior ancient Egyptian way it were rather pleased to see them
than not.</p>
<p>Anthea sat on the stairs with Imogen, who was nine come next November, while
the others went in and explained the difficulty.</p>
<p>The learned gentleman listened with grave attention.</p>
<p>“It really does seem rather rough luck,” Cyril concluded,
“because I’ve often heard about rich people who wanted children
most awfully—though I know <i>I</i> never should—but they do. There
must be somebody who’d be glad to have her.”</p>
<p>“Gipsies are awfully fond of children,” Robert hopefully said.
“They’re always stealing them. Perhaps they’d have
her.”</p>
<p>“She’s quite a nice little girl really,” Jane added;
“she was only rude at first because we looked jolly and happy, and she
wasn’t. You understand that, don’t you?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said he, absently fingering a little blue image from Egypt.
“I understand that very well. As you say, there must be some home where
she would be welcome.” He scowled thoughtfully at the little blue image.</p>
<p>Anthea outside thought the explanation was taking a very long time. She was so
busy trying to cheer and comfort the little black girl that she never noticed
the Psammead who, roused from sleep by her voice, had shaken itself free of
sand, and was coming crookedly up the stairs. It was close to her before she
saw it. She picked it up and settled it in her lap.</p>
<p>“What is it?” asked the black child. “Is it a cat or a
organ-monkey, or what?”</p>
<p>And then Anthea heard the learned gentleman say—</p>
<p>“Yes, I wish we could find a home where they would be glad to have
her,” and instantly she felt the Psammead begin to blow itself out as it
sat on her lap.</p>
<p>She jumped up lifting the Psammead in her skirt, and holding Imogen by the
hand, rushed into the learned gentleman’s room.</p>
<p>“At least let’s keep together,” she cried. “All hold
hands—quick!”</p>
<p>The circle was like that formed for the Mulberry Bush or Ring-o’-Roses.
And Anthea was only able to take part in it by holding in her teeth the hem of
her frock which, thus supported, formed a bag to hold the Psammead.</p>
<p>“Is it a game?” asked the learned gentleman feebly. No one
answered.</p>
<p>There was a moment of suspense; then came that curious upside-down, inside-out
sensation which one almost always feels when transported from one place to
another by magic. Also there was that dizzy dimness of sight which comes on
these occasions.</p>
<p>The mist cleared, the upside-down, inside-out sensation subsided, and there
stood the six in a ring, as before, only their twelve feet, instead of standing
on the carpet of the learned gentleman’s room, stood on green grass.
Above them, instead of the dusky ceiling of the Fitzroy Street floor, was a
pale blue sky. And where the walls had been and the painted mummy-case, were
tall dark green trees, oaks and ashes, and in between the trees and under them
tangled bushes and creeping ivy. There were beech-trees too, but there was
nothing under them but their own dead red drifted leaves, and here and there a
delicate green fern-frond.</p>
<p>And there they stood in a circle still holding hands, as though they were
playing Ring-o’-Roses or the Mulberry Bush. Just six people hand in hand
in a wood. That sounds simple, but then you must remember that they did not
know <i>where</i> the wood was, and what’s more, they didn’t know
<i>when</i> then wood was. There was a curious sort of feeling that made the
learned gentleman say—</p>
<p>“Another dream, dear me!” and made the children almost certain that
they were in a time a very long while ago. As for little Imogen, she said,
“Oh, my!” and kept her mouth very much open indeed.</p>
<p>“Where are we?” Cyril asked the Psammead.</p>
<p>“In Britain,” said the Psammead.</p>
<p>“But when?” asked Anthea anxiously.</p>
<p>“About the year fifty-five before the year you reckon time from,”
said the Psammead crossly. “Is there anything else you want to
know?” it added, sticking its head out of the bag formed by
Anthea’s blue linen frock, and turning its snail’s eyes to right
and left. “I’ve been here before—it’s very little
changed.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but why here?” asked Anthea.</p>
<p>“Your inconsiderate friend,” the Psammead replied, “wished to
find some home where they would be glad to have that unattractive and immature
female human being whom you have picked up—gracious knows how. In
Megatherium days properly brought-up children didn’t talk to shabby
strangers in parks. Your thoughtless friend wanted a place where someone would
be glad to have this undesirable stranger. And now here you are!”</p>
<p>“I see we are,” said Anthea patiently, looking round on the tall
gloom of the forest. “But why <i>here?</i> Why <i>now?</i>”</p>
<p>“You don’t suppose anyone would want a child like that in
<i>your</i> times—in <i>your</i> towns?” said the Psammead in
irritated tones. “You’ve got your country into such a mess that
there’s no room for half your children—and no one to want
them.”</p>
<p>“That’s not our doing, you know,” said Anthea gently.</p>
<p>“And bringing me here without any waterproof or anything,” said the
Psammead still more crossly, “when everyone knows how damp and foggy
Ancient Britain was.”</p>
<p>“Here, take my coat,” said Robert, taking it off. Anthea spread the
coat on the ground and, putting the Psammead on it, folded it round so that
only the eyes and furry ears showed.</p>
<p>“There,” she said comfortingly. “Now if it does begin to look
like rain, I can cover you up in a minute. Now what are we to do?”</p>
<p>The others who had stopped holding hands crowded round to hear the answer to
this question. Imogen whispered in an awed tone—</p>
<p>“Can’t the organ monkey talk neither! I thought it was only
parrots!”</p>
<p>“Do?” replied the Psammead. “I don’t care what you
do!” And it drew head and ears into the tweed covering of Robert’s
coat.</p>
<p>The others looked at each other.</p>
<p>“It’s only a dream,” said the learned gentleman hopefully;
“something is sure to happen if we can prevent ourselves from waking
up.”</p>
<p>And sure enough, something did.</p>
<p>The brooding silence of the dark forest was broken by the laughter of children
and the sound of voices.</p>
<p>“Let’s go and see,” said Cyril.</p>
<p>“It’s only a dream,” said the learned gentleman to Jane, who
hung back; “if you don’t go with the tide of a dream—if you
resist—you wake up, you know.”</p>
<p>There was a sort of break in the undergrowth that was like a silly
person’s idea of a path. They went along this in Indian file, the learned
gentleman leading.</p>
<p>Quite soon they came to a large clearing in the forest. There were a number of
houses—huts perhaps you would have called them—with a sort of mud
and wood fence.</p>
<p>“It’s like the old Egyptian town,” whispered Anthea.</p>
<p>And it was, rather.</p>
<p>Some children, with no clothes on at all, were playing what looked like
Ring-o’-Roses or Mulberry Bush. That is to say, they were dancing round
in a ring, holding hands. On a grassy bank several women, dressed in blue and
white robes and tunics of beast-skins sat watching the playing children.</p>
<p>The children from Fitzroy Street stood on the fringe of the forest looking at
the games. One woman with long, fair braided hair sat a little apart from the
others, and there was a look in her eyes as she followed the play of the
children that made Anthea feel sad and sorry.</p>
<p>“None of those little girls is her own little girl,” thought
Anthea.</p>
<p>The little black-clad London child pulled at Anthea’s sleeve.</p>
<p>“Look,” she said, “that one there—she’s precious
like mother; mother’s “air was somethink lovely, when she “ad
time to comb it out. Mother wouldn’t never a-beat me if she’d lived
’ere—I don’t suppose there’s e’er a public nearer
than Epping, do you, Miss?”</p>
<p>In her eagerness the child had stepped out of the shelter of the forest. The
sad-eyed woman saw her. She stood up, her thin face lighted up with a radiance
like sunrise, her long, lean arms stretched towards the London child.</p>
<p>“Imogen!” she cried—at least the word was more like that than
any other word—“Imogen!”</p>
<p>There was a moment of great silence; the naked children paused in their play,
the women on the bank stared anxiously.</p>
<p>“Oh, it <i>is</i> mother—it <i>is!</i>” cried
Imogen-from-London, and rushed across the cleared space. She and her mother
clung together—so closely, so strongly that they stood an instant like a
statue carved in stone.</p>
<p>Then the women crowded round.</p>
<p>“It <i>is</i> my Imogen!” cried the woman.</p>
<p>“Oh it is! And she wasn’t eaten by wolves. She’s come back to
me. Tell me, my darling, how did you escape? Where have you been? Who has fed
and clothed you?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know nothink,” said Imogen.</p>
<p>“Poor child!” whispered the women who crowded round, “the
terror of the wolves has turned her brain.”</p>
<p>“But you know <i>me?</i>” said the fair-haired woman.</p>
<p>And Imogen, clinging with black-clothed arms to the bare neck, answered—</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, mother, I know <i>you</i> right ’nough.”</p>
<p>“What is it? What do they say?” the learned gentleman asked
anxiously.</p>
<p>“You wished to come where someone wanted the child,” said the
Psammead. “The child says this is her mother.”</p>
<p>“And the mother?”</p>
<p>“You can see,” said the Psammead.</p>
<p>“But is she really? Her child, I mean?”</p>
<p>“Who knows?” said the Psammead; “but each one fills the empty
place in the other’s heart. It is enough.”</p>
<p>“Oh,” said the learned gentleman, “this is a good dream. I
wish the child might stay in the dream.”</p>
<p>The Psammead blew itself out and granted the wish. So Imogen’s future was
assured. She had found someone to want her.</p>
<p>“If only all the children that no one wants,” began the learned
gentleman—but the woman interrupted. She came towards them.</p>
<p>“Welcome, all!” she cried. “I am the Queen, and my child
tells me that you have befriended her; and this I well believe, looking on your
faces. Your garb is strange, but faces I can read. The child is bewitched, I
see that well, but in this she speaks truth. Is it not so?”</p>
<p>The children said it wasn’t worth mentioning.</p>
<p>I wish you could have seen all the honours and kindnesses lavished on the
children and the learned gentleman by those ancient Britons. You would have
thought, to see them, that a child was something to make a fuss about, not a
bit of rubbish to be hustled about the streets and hidden away in the
Workhouse. It wasn’t as grand as the entertainment at Babylon, but
somehow it was more satisfying.</p>
<p>“I think you children have some wonderful influence on me,” said
the learned gentleman. “I never dreamed such dreams before I knew
you.”</p>
<p>It was when they were alone that night under the stars where the Britons had
spread a heap Of dried fern for them to sleep on, that Cyril spoke.</p>
<p>“Well,” he said, “we’ve made it all right for Imogen,
and had a jolly good time. I vote we get home again before the fighting
begins.”</p>
<p>“What fighting?” asked Jane sleepily.</p>
<p>“Why, Julius Caesar, you little goat,” replied her kind brother.
“Don’t you see that if this is the year fifty-five, Julius Caesar
may happen at any moment.”</p>
<p>“I thought you liked Caesar,” said Robert.</p>
<p>“So I do—in the history. But that’s different from being
killed by his soldiers.”</p>
<p>“If we saw Caesar we might persuade him not to,” said Anthea.</p>
<p>“<i>You</i> persuade <i>Caesar</i>,” Robert laughed.</p>
<p>The learned gentleman, before anyone could stop him, said, “I only wish
we could see Caesar some time.”</p>
<p>And, of course, in just the little time the Psammead took to blow itself out
for wish-giving, the five, or six counting the Psammead, found themselves in
Caesar’s camp, just outside Caesar’s tent. And they saw Caesar. The
Psammead must have taken advantage of the loose wording of the learned
gentleman’s wish, for it was not the same time of day as that on which
the wish had been uttered among the dried ferns. It was sunset, and the great
man sat on a chair outside his tent gazing over the sea towards
Britain—everyone knew without being told that it was towards Britain. Two
golden eagles on the top of posts stood on each side of the tent, and on the
flaps of the tent which was very gorgeous to look at were the letters S.P.Q.R.</p>
<p>The great man turned unchanged on the newcomers the august glance that he had
turned on the violet waters of the Channel. Though they had suddenly appeared
out of nothing, Caesar never showed by the faintest movement of an eyelid, by
the least tightening of that firm mouth, that they were not some long expected
embassy. He waved a calm hand towards the sentinels, who sprang weapons in hand
towards the newcomers.</p>
<p>“Back!” he said in a voice that thrilled like music. “Since
when has Caesar feared children and students?”</p>
<p>To the children he seemed to speak in the only language they knew; but the
learned gentleman heard—in rather a strange accent, but quite
intelligibly—the lips of Caesar speaking in the Latin tongue, and in that
tongue, a little stiffly, he answered—</p>
<p>“It is a dream, O Caesar.”</p>
<p>“A dream?” repeated Caesar. “What is a dream?”</p>
<p>“This,” said the learned gentleman.</p>
<p>“Not it,” said Cyril, “it’s a sort of magic. We come
out of another time and another place.”</p>
<p>“And we want to ask you not to trouble about conquering Britain,”
said Anthea; “it’s a poor little place, not worth bothering
about.”</p>
<p>“Are you from Britain?” the General asked. “Your clothes are
uncouth, but well woven, and your hair is short as the hair of Roman citizens,
not long like the hair of barbarians, yet such I deem you to be.”</p>
<p>“We’re not,” said Jane with angry eagerness;
“we’re not barbarians at all. We come from the country where the
sun never sets, and we’ve read about you in books; and our
country’s full of fine things—St Paul’s, and the Tower of
London, and Madame Tussaud’s Exhibition, and—”</p>
<p>Then the others stopped her.</p>
<p>“Don’t talk nonsense,” said Robert in a bitter undertone.</p>
<p>Caesar looked at the children a moment in silence. Then he called a soldier and
spoke with him apart. Then he said aloud—</p>
<p>“You three elder children may go where you will within the camp. Few
children are privileged to see the camp of Caesar. The student and the smaller
girl-child will remain here with me.”</p>
<p>Nobody liked this; but when Caesar said a thing that thing was so, and there
was an end to it. So the three went.</p>
<p>Left alone with Jane and the learned gentleman, the great Roman found it easy
enough to turn them inside out. But it was not easy, even for him, to make head
or tail of the insides of their minds when he had got at them.</p>
<p>The learned gentleman insisted that the whole thing was a dream, and refused to
talk much, on the ground that if he did he would wake up.</p>
<p>Jane, closely questioned, was full of information about railways, electric
lights, balloons, men-of-war, cannons, and dynamite.</p>
<p>“And do they fight with swords?” asked the General.</p>
<p>“Yes, swords and guns and cannons.”</p>
<p>Caesar wanted to know what guns were.</p>
<p>“You fire them,” said Jane, “and they go bang, and people
fall down dead.”</p>
<p>“But what are guns like?”</p>
<p>Jane found them hard to describe.</p>
<p>“But Robert has a toy one in his pocket,” she said. So the others
were recalled.</p>
<p>The boys explained the pistol to Caesar very fully, and he looked at it with
the greatest interest. It was a two-shilling pistol, the one that had done such
good service in the old Egyptian village.</p>
<p>“I shall cause guns to be made,” said Caesar, “and you will
be detained till I know whether you have spoken the truth. I had just decided
that Britain was not worth the bother of invading. But what you tell me decides
me that it is very much worth while.”</p>
<p>“But it’s all nonsense,” said Anthea. “Britain is just
a savage sort of island—all fogs and trees and big rivers. But the people
are kind. We know a little girl there named Imogen. And it’s no use your
making guns because you can’t fire them without gunpowder, and that
won’t be invented for hundreds of years, and we don’t know how to
make it, and we can’t tell you. Do go straight home, dear Caesar, and let
poor little Britain alone.”</p>
<p>“But this other girl-child says—” said Caesar.</p>
<p>“All Jane’s been telling you is what it’s going to be,”
Anthea interrupted, “hundreds and hundreds of years from now.”</p>
<p>“The little one is a prophetess, eh?” said Caesar, with a whimsical
look. “Rather young for the business, isn’t she?”</p>
<p>“You can call her a prophetess if you like,” said Cyril, “but
what Anthea says is true.”</p>
<p>“Anthea?” said Caesar. “That’s a Greek name.”</p>
<p>“Very likely,” said Cyril, worriedly. “I say, I do wish
you’d give up this idea of conquering Britain. It’s not worth
while, really it isn’t!”</p>
<p>“On the contrary,” said Caesar, “what you’ve told me
has decided me to go, if it’s only to find out what Britain is really
like. Guards, detain these children.”</p>
<p>“Quick,” said Robert, “before the guards begin detaining. We
had enough of that in Babylon.”</p>
<p>Jane held up the Amulet away from the sunset, and said the word. The learned
gentleman was pushed through and the others more quickly than ever before
passed through the arch back into their own times and the quiet dusty
sitting-room of the learned gentleman.</p>
<p class="p2">
It is a curious fact that when Caesar was encamped on the coast of
Gaul—somewhere near Boulogne it was, I believe—he was sitting
before his tent in the glow of the sunset, looking out over the violet waters
of the English Channel. Suddenly he started, rubbed his eyes, and called his
secretary. The young man came quickly from within the tent.</p>
<p>“Marcus,” said Caesar. “I have dreamed a very wonderful
dream. Some of it I forget, but I remember enough to decide what was not before
determined. Tomorrow the ships that have been brought round from the Ligeris
shall be provisioned. We shall sail for this three-cornered island. First, we
will take but two legions.</p>
<p>This, if what we have heard be true, should suffice. But if my dream be true,
then a hundred legions will not suffice. For the dream I dreamed was the most
wonderful that ever tormented the brain even of Caesar. And Caesar has dreamed
some strange things in his time.”</p>
<p class="p2">
“And if you hadn’t told Caesar all that about how things are now,
he’d never have invaded Britain,” said Robert to Jane as they sat
down to tea.</p>
<p>“Oh, nonsense,” said Anthea, pouring out; “it was all settled
hundreds of years ago.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” said Cyril. “Jam, please. This about
time being only a thingummy of thought is very confusing. If everything happens
at the same time—”</p>
<p>“It <i>can’t!</i>” said Anthea stoutly, “the
present’s the present and the past’s the past.”</p>
<p>“Not always,” said Cyril.</p>
<p>“When we were in the Past the present was the future. Now then!” he
added triumphantly.</p>
<p>And Anthea could not deny it.</p>
<p>“I should have liked to see more of the camp,” said Robert.</p>
<p>“Yes, we didn’t get much for our money—but Imogen is happy,
that’s one thing,” said Anthea. “We left her happy in the
Past. I’ve often seen about people being happy in the Past, in poetry
books. I see what it means now.”</p>
<p>“It’s not a bad idea,” said the Psammead sleepily, putting
its head out of its bag and taking it in again suddenly, “being left in
the Past.”</p>
<p>Everyone remembered this afterwards, when—</p>
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