[Gutenberg 36861] • The Green Casket, and other stories
![[Gutenberg 36861] • The Green Casket, and other stories](/cover/SVIcwjt5-9gCTud8/big/[Gutenberg%2036861]%20%e2%80%a2%20The%20Green%20Casket,%20and%20other%20stories.jpg)
- Authors
- Molesworth
- Tags
- children's stories , conduct of life -- juvenile fiction , children -- conduct of life -- juvenile fiction
- Date
- 2013-07-21T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.81 MB
- Lang
- en
The house stood on rising ground, and the nursery was at the top of the house—except of course for the attics above—so there was a good view from the two large windows. This was a great comfort to the children during the weeks they were busy getting better from a long, very long, illness, or illnesses. For they had been so unwise as to get measles, and scarlet fever, and something else—I am not sure if it was whooping-cough or chicken-pox—all mixed up together! Don't you think they might have been content with one at a time? Their mamma thought so, and the doctor thought so, and most of all, perhaps, nurse thought so.
But when they began to get really better, they themselves weren't so sure about it. Maxie said to Dolly that he really thought it was rather clever to have finished up all the illnesses at once, and Dolly agreed with him, adding that their cousins had been nearly as long "with only measles." But nurse, who heard what they were saying, reminded them that instead of them "finishing up the illnesses," as Master Max said, it might have been the illnesses finishing them up. Which was true enough, and made Max, who was the older of the two, look rather grave.
And then the getting better was very long, especially as it was early spring, and there were lots of damp and chilly days still, and for weeks and weeks there was no talk or thought of their going out, and it was very difficult indeed not to get tired of the toys and games their mother provided for them, and even of her very nicest stories. Besides, a mamma cannot go on telling stories all day, however sorry she is for her little invalids, and however well she understands that when people, little or big, have been ill and are still feeling weak, and "unlike themselves," it is very, very difficult not to be discontented and quarrelsome. So but for the nursery windows I don't quite know what the children would have done sometimes.
CONTENTS
The Thirteen Little Black Pigs
Right Hand and Left
A Shilling of Halfpence
A Friend in Need
Pansy's Pansy
Pet's Half-crown
A Catapult Story
A Very Long Lane; or, Lost in the Mist
THE GREEN CASKET
LEO'S POST-OFFICE
BRAVE LITTLE DENIS