<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER 5. THE TEMPLE </h2>
<p>‘I wish we could find the Phoenix,’ said Jane. ‘It’s much better company
than the carpet.’</p>
<p>‘Beastly ungrateful, little kids are,’ said Cyril.</p>
<p>‘No, I’m not; only the carpet never says anything, and it’s so helpless.
It doesn’t seem able to take care of itself. It gets sold, and taken into
the sea, and things like that. You wouldn’t catch the Phoenix getting
sold.’</p>
<p>It was two days after the bazaar. Every one was a little cross—some
days are like that, usually Mondays, by the way. And this was a Monday.</p>
<p>‘I shouldn’t wonder if your precious Phoenix had gone off for good,’ said
Cyril; ‘and I don’t know that I blame it. Look at the weather!’</p>
<p>‘It’s not worth looking at,’ said Robert. And indeed it wasn’t.</p>
<p>‘The Phoenix hasn’t gone—I’m sure it hasn’t,’ said Anthea. ‘I’ll
have another look for it.’</p>
<p>Anthea looked under tables and chairs, and in boxes and baskets, in
mother’s work-bag and father’s portmanteau, but still the Phoenix showed
not so much as the tip of one shining feather.</p>
<p>Then suddenly Robert remembered how the whole of the Greek invocation song
of seven thousand lines had been condensed by him into one English
hexameter, so he stood on the carpet and chanted—</p>
<p>‘Oh, come along, come along, you good old beautiful Phoenix,’<br/></p>
<p>and almost at once there was a rustle of wings down the kitchen stairs,
and the Phoenix sailed in on wide gold wings.</p>
<p>‘Where on earth HAVE you been?’ asked Anthea. ‘I’ve looked everywhere for
you.’</p>
<p>‘Not EVERYWHERE,’ replied the bird, ‘because you did not look in the place
where I was. Confess that that hallowed spot was overlooked by you.’</p>
<p>‘WHAT hallowed spot?’ asked Cyril, a little impatiently, for time was
hastening on, and the wishing carpet still idle.</p>
<p>‘The spot,’ said the Phoenix, ‘which I hallowed by my golden presence was
the Lutron.’</p>
<p>‘The WHAT?’</p>
<p>‘The bath—the place of washing.’</p>
<p>‘I’m sure you weren’t,’ said Jane. ‘I looked there three times and moved
all the towels.’</p>
<p>‘I was concealed,’ said the Phoenix, ‘on the summit of a metal column—enchanted,
I should judge, for it felt warm to my golden toes, as though the glorious
sun of the desert shone ever upon it.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, you mean the cylinder,’ said Cyril: ‘it HAS rather a comforting feel,
this weather. And now where shall we go?’</p>
<p>And then, of course, the usual discussion broke out as to where they
should go and what they should do. And naturally, every one wanted to do
something that the others did not care about.</p>
<p>‘I am the eldest,’ Cyril remarked, ‘let’s go to the North Pole.’</p>
<p>‘This weather! Likely!’ Robert rejoined. ‘Let’s go to the Equator.’</p>
<p>‘I think the diamond mines of Golconda would be nice,’ said Anthea; ‘don’t
you agree, Jane?’</p>
<p>‘No, I don’t,’ retorted Jane, ‘I don’t agree with you. I don’t agree with
anybody.’</p>
<p>The Phoenix raised a warning claw.</p>
<p>‘If you cannot agree among yourselves, I fear I shall have to leave you,’
it said.</p>
<p>‘Well, where shall we go? You decide!’ said all.</p>
<p>‘If I were you,’ said the bird, thoughtfully, ‘I should give the carpet a
rest. Besides, you’ll lose the use of your legs if you go everywhere by
carpet. Can’t you take me out and explain your ugly city to me?’</p>
<p>‘We will if it clears up,’ said Robert, without enthusiasm. ‘Just look at
the rain. And why should we give the carpet a rest?’</p>
<p>‘Are you greedy and grasping, and heartless and selfish?’ asked the bird,
sharply.</p>
<p>‘NO!’ said Robert, with indignation.</p>
<p>‘Well then!’ said the Phoenix. ‘And as to the rain—well, I am not
fond of rain myself. If the sun knew <i>I</i> was here—he’s very
fond of shining on me because I look so bright and golden. He always says
I repay a little attention. Haven’t you some form of words suitable for
use in wet weather?’</p>
<p>‘There’s “Rain, rain, go away,”’ said Anthea; ‘but it never DOES go.’</p>
<p>‘Perhaps you don’t say the invocation properly,’ said the bird.</p>
<p>‘Rain, rain, go away,<br/>
Come again another day,<br/>
Little baby wants to play,’<br/></p>
<p>said Anthea.</p>
<p>‘That’s quite wrong; and if you say it in that sort of dull way, I can
quite understand the rain not taking any notice. You should open the
window and shout as loud as you can—</p>
<p>‘Rain, rain, go away,<br/>
Come again another day;<br/>
Now we want the sun, and so,<br/>
Pretty rain, be kind and go!<br/></p>
<p>‘You should always speak politely to people when you want them to do
things, and especially when it’s going away that you want them to do. And
to-day you might add—</p>
<p>‘Shine, great sun, the lovely Phoe-<br/>
Nix is here, and wants to be<br/>
Shone on, splendid sun, by thee!’<br/></p>
<p>‘That’s poetry!’ said Cyril, decidedly.</p>
<p>‘It’s like it,’ said the more cautious Robert.</p>
<p>‘I was obliged to put in “lovely”,’ said the Phoenix, modestly, ‘to make
the line long enough.’</p>
<p>‘There are plenty of nasty words just that length,’ said Jane; but every
one else said ‘Hush!’ And then they opened the window and shouted the
seven lines as loud as they could, and the Phoenix said all the words with
them, except ‘lovely’, and when they came to that it looked down and
coughed bashfully.</p>
<p>The rain hesitated a moment and then went away.</p>
<p>‘There’s true politeness,’ said the Phoenix, and the next moment it was
perched on the window-ledge, opening and shutting its radiant wings and
flapping out its golden feathers in such a flood of glorious sunshine as
you sometimes have at sunset in autumn time. People said afterwards that
there had not been such sunshine in December for years and years and
years.</p>
<p>‘And now,’ said the bird, ‘we will go out into the city, and you shall
take me to see one of my temples.’</p>
<p>‘Your temples?’</p>
<p>‘I gather from the carpet that I have many temples in this land.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t see how you CAN find anything out from it,’ said Jane: ‘it never
speaks.’</p>
<p>‘All the same, you can pick up things from a carpet,’ said the bird; ‘I’ve
seen YOU do it. And I have picked up several pieces of information in this
way. That papyrus on which you showed me my picture—I understand
that it bears on it the name of the street of your city in which my finest
temple stands, with my image graved in stone and in metal over against its
portal.’</p>
<p>‘You mean the fire insurance office,’ said Robert. ‘It’s not really a
temple, and they don’t—’</p>
<p>‘Excuse me,’ said the Phoenix, coldly, ‘you are wholly misinformed. It IS
a temple, and they do.’</p>
<p>‘Don’t let’s waste the sunshine,’ said Anthea; ‘we might argue as we go
along, to save time.’</p>
<p>So the Phoenix consented to make itself a nest in the breast of Robert’s
Norfolk jacket, and they all went out into the splendid sunshine. The best
way to the temple of the Phoenix seemed to be to take the tram, and on the
top of it the children talked, while the Phoenix now and then put out a
wary beak, cocked a cautious eye, and contradicted what the children were
saying.</p>
<p>It was a delicious ride, and the children felt how lucky they were to have
had the money to pay for it. They went with the tram as far as it went,
and when it did not go any farther they stopped too, and got off. The tram
stops at the end of the Gray’s Inn Road, and it was Cyril who thought that
one might well find a short cut to the Phoenix Office through the little
streets and courts that lie tightly packed between Fetter Lane and Ludgate
Circus. Of course, he was quite mistaken, as Robert told him at the time,
and afterwards Robert did not forbear to remind his brother how he had
said so. The streets there were small and stuffy and ugly, and crowded
with printers’ boys and binders’ girls coming out from work; and these
stared so hard at the pretty red coats and caps of the sisters that they
wished they had gone some other way. And the printers and binders made
very personal remarks, advising Jane to get her hair cut, and inquiring
where Anthea had bought that hat. Jane and Anthea scorned to reply, and
Cyril and Robert found that they were hardly a match for the rough crowd.
They could think of nothing nasty enough to say. They turned a corner
sharply, and then Anthea pulled Jane into an archway, and then inside a
door; Cyril and Robert quickly followed, and the jeering crowd passed by
without seein them.</p>
<p>Anthea drew a long breath.</p>
<p>‘How awful!’ she said. ‘I didn’t know there were such people, except in
books.’</p>
<p>‘It was a bit thick; but it’s partly you girls’ fault, coming out in those
flashy coats.’</p>
<p>‘We thought we ought to, when we were going out with the Phoenix,’ said
Jane; and the bird said, ‘Quite right, too’—and incautiously put out
his head to give her a wink of encouragement.</p>
<p>And at the same instant a dirty hand reached through the grim balustrade
of the staircase beside them and clutched the Phoenix, and a hoarse voice
said—</p>
<p>‘I say, Urb, blowed if this ain’t our Poll parrot what we lost. Thank you
very much, lidy, for bringin’ ‘im home to roost.’</p>
<p>The four turned swiftly. Two large and ragged boys were crouched amid the
dark shadows of the stairs. They were much larger than Robert and Cyril,
and one of them had snatched the Phoenix away and was holding it high
above their heads.</p>
<p>‘Give me that bird,’ said Cyril, sternly: ‘it’s ours.’</p>
<p>‘Good arternoon, and thankin’ you,’ the boy went on, with maddening
mockery. ‘Sorry I can’t give yer tuppence for yer trouble—but I’ve
‘ad to spend my fortune advertising for my vallyable bird in all the
newspapers. You can call for the reward next year.’</p>
<p>‘Look out, Ike,’ said his friend, a little anxiously; ‘it ‘ave a beak on
it.’</p>
<p>‘It’s other parties as’ll have the Beak on to ‘em presently,’ said Ike,
darkly, ‘if they come a-trying to lay claims on my Poll parrot. You just
shut up, Urb. Now then, you four little gells, get out er this.’</p>
<p>‘Little girls!’ cried Robert. ‘I’ll little girl you!’</p>
<p>He sprang up three stairs and hit out.</p>
<p>There was a squawk—the most bird-like noise any one had ever heard
from the Phoenix—and a fluttering, and a laugh in the darkness, and
Ike said—</p>
<p>‘There now, you’ve been and gone and strook my Poll parrot right in the
fevvers—strook ‘im something crool, you ‘ave.’</p>
<p>Robert stamped with fury. Cyril felt himself growing pale with rage, and
with the effort of screwing up his brain to make it clever enough to think
of some way of being even with those boys. Anthea and Jane were as angry
as the boys, but it made them want to cry. Yet it was Anthea who said—</p>
<p>‘Do, PLEASE, let us have the bird.’</p>
<p>‘Dew, PLEASE, get along and leave us an’ our bird alone.’</p>
<p>‘If you don’t,’ said Anthea, ‘I shall fetch the police.’</p>
<p>‘You better!’ said he who was named Urb. ‘Say, Ike, you twist the bloomin’
pigeon’s neck; he ain’t worth tuppence.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, no,’ cried Jane, ‘don’t hurt it. Oh, don’t; it is such a pet.’</p>
<p>‘I won’t hurt it,’ said Ike; ‘I’m ‘shamed of you, Urb, for to think of
such a thing. Arf a shiner, miss, and the bird is yours for life.’</p>
<p>‘Half a WHAT?’ asked Anthea.</p>
<p>‘Arf a shiner, quid, thick ‘un—half a sov, then.’</p>
<p>‘I haven’t got it—and, besides, it’s OUR bird,’ said Anthea.</p>
<p>‘Oh, don’t talk to him,’ said Cyril and then Jane said suddenly—</p>
<p>‘Phoenix—dear Phoenix, we can’t do anything. YOU must manage it.’</p>
<p>‘With pleasure,’ said the Phoenix—and Ike nearly dropped it in his
amazement.</p>
<p>‘I say, it do talk, suthin’ like,’ said he.</p>
<p>‘Youths,’ said the Phoenix, ‘sons of misfortune, hear my words.’</p>
<p>‘My eyes!’ said Ike.</p>
<p>‘Look out, Ike,’ said Urb, ‘you’ll throttle the joker—and I see at
wunst ‘e was wuth ‘is weight in flimsies.‘00</p>
<p>‘Hearken, O Eikonoclastes, despiser of sacred images—and thou,
Urbanus, dweller in the sordid city. Forbear this adventure lest a worse
thing befall.’</p>
<p>‘Luv’ us!’ said Ike, ‘ain’t it been taught its schoolin’ just!’</p>
<p>‘Restore me to my young acolytes and escape unscathed. Retain me—and—’</p>
<p>‘They must ha’ got all this up, case the Polly got pinched,’ said Ike.
‘Lor’ lumme, the artfulness of them young uns!’</p>
<p>‘I say, slosh ‘em in the geseech and get clear off with the swag’s wot I
say,’ urged Herbert.</p>
<p>‘Right O,’ said Isaac.</p>
<p>‘Forbear,’ repeated the Phoenix, sternly. ‘Who pinched the click off of
the old bloke in Aldermanbury?’ it added, in a changed tone.</p>
<p>‘Who sneaked the nose-rag out of the young gell’s ‘and in Bell Court? Who—’</p>
<p>‘Stow it,’ said Ike. ‘You! ugh! yah!—leave go of me. Bash him off,
Urb; ‘e’ll have my bloomin’ eyes outer my ed.’</p>
<p>There were howls, a scuffle, a flutter; Ike and Urb fled up the stairs,
and the Phoenix swept out through the doorway. The children followed and
the Phoenix settled on Robert, ‘like a butterfly on a rose,’ as Anthea
said afterwards, and wriggled into the breast of his Norfolk jacket, ‘like
an eel into mud,’ as Cyril later said.</p>
<p>‘Why ever didn’t you burn him? You could have, couldn’t you?’ asked
Robert, when the hurried flight through the narrow courts had ended in the
safe wideness of Farringdon Street.</p>
<p>‘I could have, of course,’ said the bird, ‘but I didn’t think it would be
dignified to allow myself to get warm about a little thing like that. The
Fates, after all, have not been illiberal to me. I have a good many
friends among the London sparrows, and I have a beak and claws.’</p>
<p>These happenings had somewhat shaken the adventurous temper of the
children, and the Phoenix had to exert its golden self to hearten them up.</p>
<p>Presently the children came to a great house in Lombard Street, and there,
on each side of the door, was the image of the Phoenix carved in stone,
and set forth on shining brass were the words—</p>
<p>PHOENIX FIRE OFFICE<br/></p>
<p>‘One moment,’ said the bird. ‘Fire? For altars, I suppose?’</p>
<p>‘<i>I</i> don’t know,’ said Robert; he was beginning to feel shy, and that
always made him rather cross.</p>
<p>‘Oh, yes, you do,’ Cyril contradicted. ‘When people’s houses are burnt
down the Phoenix gives them new houses. Father told me; I asked him.’</p>
<p>‘The house, then, like the Phoenix, rises from its ashes? Well have my
priests dealt with the sons of men!’</p>
<p>‘The sons of men pay, you know,’ said Anthea; ‘but it’s only a little
every year.’</p>
<p>‘That is to maintain my priests,’ said the bird, ‘who, in the hour of
affliction, heal sorrows and rebuild houses. Lead on; inquire for the High
Priest. I will not break upon them too suddenly in all my glory. Noble and
honour-deserving are they who make as nought the evil deeds of the
lame-footed and unpleasing Hephaestus.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t know what you’re talking about, and I wish you wouldn’t muddle us
with new names. Fire just happens. Nobody does it—not as a deed, you
know,’ Cyril explained. ‘If they did the Phoenix wouldn’t help them,
because its a crime to set fire to things. Arsenic, or something they call
it, because it’s as bad as poisoning people. The Phoenix wouldn’t help
THEM—father told me it wouldn’t.’</p>
<p>‘My priests do well,’ said the Phoenix. ‘Lead on.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t know what to say,’ said Cyril; and the Others said the same.</p>
<p>‘Ask for the High Priest,’ said the Phoenix. ‘Say that you have a secret
to unfold that concerns my worship, and he will lead you to the innermost
sanctuary.’</p>
<p>So the children went in, all four of them, though they didn’t like it, and
stood in a large and beautiful hall adorned with Doulton tiles, like a
large and beautiful bath with no water in it, and stately pillars
supporting the roof. An unpleasing representation of the Phoenix in brown
pottery disfigured one wall. There were counters and desks of mahogany and
brass, and clerks bent over the desks and walked behind the counters.
There was a great clock over an inner doorway.</p>
<p>‘Inquire for the High Priest,’ whispered the Phoenix.</p>
<p>An attentive clerk in decent black, who controlled his mouth but not his
eyebrows, now came towards them. He leaned forward on the counter, and the
children thought he was going to say, ‘What can I have the pleasure of
showing you?’ like in a draper’s; instead of which the young man said—</p>
<p>‘And what do YOU want?’</p>
<p>‘We want to see the High Priest.’</p>
<p>‘Get along with you,’ said the young man.</p>
<p>An elder man, also decent in black coat, advanced.</p>
<p>‘Perhaps it’s Mr Blank’ (not for worlds would I give the name). ‘He’s a
Masonic High Priest, you know.’</p>
<p>A porter was sent away to look for Mr Asterisk (I cannot give his name),
and the children were left there to look on and be looked on by all the
gentlemen at the mahogany desks. Anthea and Jane thought that they looked
kind. The boys thought they stared, and that it was like their cheek.</p>
<p>The porter returned with the news that Mr Dot Dash Dot (I dare not reveal
his name) was out, but that Mr—</p>
<p>Here a really delightful gentleman appeared. He had a beard and a kind and
merry eye, and each one of the four knew at once that this was a man who
had kiddies of his own and could understand what you were talking about.
Yet it was a difficult thing to explain.</p>
<p>‘What is it?’ he asked. ‘Mr’—he named the name which I will never
reveal—‘is out. Can I do anything?’</p>
<p>‘Inner sanctuary,’ murmured the Phoenix.</p>
<p>‘I beg your pardon,’ said the nice gentleman, who thought it was Robert
who had spoken.</p>
<p>‘We have something to tell you,’ said Cyril, ‘but’—he glanced at the
porter, who was lingering much nearer than he need have done—‘this
is a very public place.’</p>
<p>The nice gentleman laughed.</p>
<p>‘Come upstairs then,’ he said, and led the way up a wide and beautiful
staircase. Anthea says the stairs were of white marble, but I am not sure.
On the corner-post of the stairs, at the top, was a beautiful image of the
Phoenix in dark metal, and on the wall at each side was a flat sort of
image of it.</p>
<p>The nice gentleman led them into a room where the chairs, and even the
tables, were covered with reddish leather. He looked at the children
inquiringly.</p>
<p>‘Don’t be frightened,’ he said; ‘tell me exactly what you want.’</p>
<p>‘May I shut the door?’ asked Cyril.</p>
<p>The gentleman looked surprised, but he shut the door.</p>
<p>‘Now,’ said Cyril, firmly, ‘I know you’ll be awfully surprised, and you’ll
think it’s not true and we are lunatics; but we aren’t, and it is.
Robert’s got something inside his Norfolk—that’s Robert, he’s my
young brother. Now don’t be upset and have a fit or anything sir. Of
course, I know when you called your shop the “Phoenix” you never thought
there was one; but there is—and Robert’s got it buttoned up against
his chest!’</p>
<p>‘If it’s an old curio in the form of a Phoenix, I dare say the Board—’
said the nice gentleman, as Robert began to fumble with his buttons.</p>
<p>‘It’s old enough,’ said Anthea, ‘going by what it says, but—’</p>
<p>‘My goodness gracious!’ said the gentleman, as the Phoenix, with one last
wriggle that melted into a flutter, got out of its nest in the breast of
Robert and stood up on the leather-covered table.</p>
<p>‘What an extraordinarily fine bird!’ he went on. ‘I don’t think I ever saw
one just like it.’</p>
<p>‘I should think not,’ said the Phoenix, with pardonable pride. And the
gentleman jumped.</p>
<p>‘Oh, it’s been taught to speak! Some sort of parrot, perhaps?’</p>
<p>‘I am,’ said the bird, simply, ‘the Head of your House, and I have come to
my temple to receive your homage. I am no parrot’—its beak curved
scornfully—‘I am the one and only Phoenix, and I demand the homage
of my High Priest.’</p>
<p>‘In the absence of our manager,’ the gentleman began, exactly as though he
were addressing a valued customer—‘in the absence of our manager, I
might perhaps be able—What am I saying?’ He turned pale, and passed
his hand across his brow. ‘My dears,’ he said, ‘the weather is unusually
warm for the time of year, and I don’t feel quite myself. Do you know, for
a moment I really thought that that remarkable bird of yours had spoken
and said it was the Phoenix, and, what’s more, that I’d believed it.’</p>
<p>‘So it did, sir,’ said Cyril, ‘and so did you.’</p>
<p>‘It really—Allow me.’</p>
<p>A bell was rung. The porter appeared.</p>
<p>‘Mackenzie,’ said the gentleman, ‘you see that golden bird?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, sir.’</p>
<p>The other breathed a sigh of relief.</p>
<p>‘It IS real, then?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, sir, of course, sir. You take it in your hand, sir,’ said the
porter, sympathetically, and reached out his hand to the Phoenix, who
shrank back on toes curved with agitated indignation.</p>
<p>‘Forbear!’ it cried; ‘how dare you seek to lay hands on me?’</p>
<p>The porter saluted.</p>
<p>‘Beg pardon, sir,’ he said, ‘I thought you was a bird.’</p>
<p>‘I AM a bird—THE bird—the Phoenix.’</p>
<p>‘Of course you are, sir,’ said the porter. ‘I see that the first minute,
directly I got my breath, sir.’</p>
<p>‘That will do,’ said the gentleman. ‘Ask Mr Wilson and Mr Sterry to step
up here for a moment, please.’</p>
<p>Mr Sterry and Mr Wilson were in their turn overcome by amazement—quickly
followed by conviction. To the surprise of the children every one in the
office took the Phoenix at its word, and after the first shock of surprise
it seemed to be perfectly natural to every one that the Phoenix should be
alive, and that, passing through London, it should call at its temple.</p>
<p>‘We ought to have some sort of ceremony,’ said the nicest gentleman,
anxiously. ‘There isn’t time to summon the directors and shareholders—we
might do that tomorrow, perhaps. Yes, the board-room would be best. I
shouldn’t like it to feel we hadn’t done everything in our power to show
our appreciation of its condescension in looking in on us in this friendly
way.’</p>
<p>The children could hardly believe their ears, for they had never thought
that any one but themselves would believe in the Phoenix. And yet every
one did; all the men in the office were brought in by twos and threes, and
the moment the Phoenix opened its beak it convinced the cleverest of them,
as well as those who were not so clever. Cyril wondered how the story
would look in the papers next day. He seemed to see the posters in the
streets:</p>
<p>PHOENIX FIRE OFFICE<br/>
THE PHOENIX AT ITS TEMPLE<br/>
MEETING TO WELCOME IT<br/>
DELIGHT OF THE MANAGER AND EVERYBODY.<br/></p>
<p>‘Excuse our leaving you a moment,’ said the nice gentleman, and he went
away with the others; and through the half-closed door the children could
hear the sound of many boots on stairs, the hum of excited voices
explaining, suggesting, arguing, the thumpy drag of heavy furniture being
moved about.</p>
<p>The Phoenix strutted up and down the leather-covered table, looking over
its shoulder at its pretty back.</p>
<p>‘You see what a convincing manner I have,’ it said proudly.</p>
<p>And now a new gentleman came in and said, bowing low—</p>
<p>‘Everything is prepared—we have done our best at so short a notice;
the meeting—the ceremony—will be in the board-room. Will the
Honourable Phoenix walk—it is only a few steps—or would it
like to be—would it like some sort of conveyance?’</p>
<p>‘My Robert will bear me to the board-room, if that be the unlovely name of
my temple’s inmost court,’ replied the bird.</p>
<p>So they all followed the gentleman. There was a big table in the
board-room, but it had been pushed right up under the long windows at one
side, and chairs were arranged in rows across the room—like those
you have at schools when there is a magic lantern on ‘Our Eastern Empire’,
or on ‘The Way We Do in the Navy’. The doors were of carved wood, very
beautiful, with a carved Phoenix above. Anthea noticed that the chairs in
the front rows were of the kind that her mother so loved to ask the price
of in old furniture shops, and never could buy, because the price was
always nearly twenty pounds each. On the mantelpiece were some heavy
bronze candlesticks and a clock, and on the top of the clock was another
image of the Phoenix.</p>
<p>‘Remove that effigy,’ said the Phoenix to the gentlemen who were there,
and it was hastily taken down. Then the Phoenix fluttered to the middle of
the mantelpiece and stood there, looking more golden than ever. Then every
one in the house and the office came in—from the cashier to the
women who cooked the clerks’ dinners in the beautiful kitchen at the top
of the house. And every one bowed to the Phoenix and then sat down in a
chair.</p>
<p>‘Gentlemen,’ said the nicest gentleman, ‘we have met here today—’</p>
<p>The Phoenix was turning its golden beak from side to side.</p>
<p>‘I don’t notice any incense,’ it said, with an injured sniff. A hurried
consultation ended in plates being fetched from the kitchen. Brown sugar,
sealing-wax, and tobacco were placed on these, and something from a square
bottle was poured over it all. Then a match was applied. It was the only
incense that was handy in the Phoenix office, and it certainly burned very
briskly and smoked a great deal.</p>
<p>‘We have met here today,’ said the gentleman again, ‘on an occasion
unparalleled in the annals of this office. Our respected Phoenix—’</p>
<p>‘Head of the House,’ said the Phoenix, in a hollow voice.</p>
<p>‘I was coming to that. Our respected Phoenix, the Head of this ancient
House, has at length done us the honour to come among us. I think I may
say, gentlemen, that we are not insensible to this honour, and that we
welcome with no uncertain voice one whom we have so long desired to see in
our midst.’</p>
<p>Several of the younger clerks thought of saying ‘Hear, hear,’ but they
feared it might seem disrespectful to the bird.</p>
<p>‘I will not take up your time,’ the speaker went on, ‘by recapitulating
the advantages to be derived from a proper use of our system of fire
insurance. I know, and you know, gentlemen, that our aim has ever been to
be worthy of that eminent bird whose name we bear, and who now adorns our
mantelpiece with his presence. Three cheers, gentlemen, for the winged
Head of the House!’</p>
<p>The cheers rose, deafening. When they had died away the Phoenix was asked
to say a few words.</p>
<p>It expressed in graceful phrases the pleasure it felt in finding itself at
last in its own temple.</p>
<p>‘And,’ it went on, ‘You must not think me wanting in appreciation of your
very hearty and cordial reception when I ask that an ode may be recited or
a choric song sung. It is what I have always been accustomed to.’</p>
<p>The four children, dumb witnesses of this wonderful scene, glanced a
little nervously across the foam of white faces above the sea of black
coats. It seemed to them that the Phoenix was really asking a little too
much.</p>
<p>‘Time presses,’ said the Phoenix, ‘and the original ode of invocation is
long, as well as being Greek; and, besides, it’s no use invoking me when
here I am; but is there not a song in your own tongue for a great day such
as this?’</p>
<p>Absently the manager began to sing, and one by one the rest joined—</p>
<p>‘Absolute security!<br/>
No liability!<br/>
All kinds of property<br/>
insured against fire.<br/>
Terms most favourable,<br/>
Expenses reasonable,<br/>
Moderate rates for annual<br/>
Insurance.’<br/></p>
<p>‘That one is NOT my favourite,’ interrupted the Phoenix, ‘and I think
you’ve forgotten part of it.’</p>
<p>The manager hastily began another—</p>
<p>‘O Golden Phoenix, fairest bird,<br/>
The whole great world has often heard<br/>
Of all the splendid things we do,<br/>
Great Phoenix, just to honour you.’<br/></p>
<p>‘That’s better,’ said the bird. And every one sang—</p>
<p>‘Class one, for private dwelling-house,<br/>
For household goods and shops allows;<br/>
Provided these are built of brick<br/>
Or stone, and tiled and slated thick.’<br/></p>
<p>‘Try another verse,’ said the Phoenix, ‘further on.’</p>
<p>And again arose the voices of all the clerks and employees and managers
and secretaries and cooks—</p>
<p>‘In Scotland our insurance yields<br/>
The price of burnt-up stacks in fields.’<br/></p>
<p>‘Skip that verse,’ said the Phoenix.</p>
<p>‘Thatched dwellings and their whole contents<br/>
We deal with—also with their rents;<br/>
Oh, glorious Phoenix, look and see<br/>
That these are dealt with in class three.<br/>
<br/>
‘The glories of your temple throng<br/>
Too thick to go in any song;<br/>
And we attend, O good and wise,<br/>
To “days of grace” and merchandise.<br/>
<br/>
‘When people’s homes are burned away<br/>
They never have a cent to pay<br/>
If they have done as all should do,<br/>
O Phoenix, and have honoured you.<br/>
<br/>
‘So let us raise our voice and sing<br/>
The praises of the Phoenix King.<br/>
In classes one and two and three,<br/>
Oh, trust to him, for kind is he!’<br/></p>
<p>‘I’m sure YOU’RE very kind,’ said the Phoenix; ‘and now we must be going.
An thank you very much for a very pleasant time. May you all prosper as
you deserve to do, for I am sure a nicer, pleasanter-spoken lot of temple
attendants I have never met, and never wish to meet. I wish you all
good-day!’</p>
<p>It fluttered to the wrist of Robert and drew the four children from the
room. The whole of the office staff followed down the wide stairs and
filed into their accustomed places, and the two most important officials
stood on the steps bowing till Robert had buttoned the golden bird in his
Norfolk bosom, and it and he and the three other children were lost in the
crowd.</p>
<p>The two most important gentlemen looked at each other earnestly and
strangely for a moment, and then retreated to those sacred inner rooms,
where they toil without ceasing for the good of the House.</p>
<p>And the moment they were all in their places—managers, secretaries,
clerks, and porters—they all started, and each looked cautiously
round to see if any one was looking at him. For each thought that he had
fallen asleep for a few minutes, and had dreamed a very odd dream about
the Phoenix and the board-room. And, of course, no one mentioned it to any
one else, because going to sleep at your office is a thing you simply MUST
NOT do.</p>
<p>The extraordinary confusion of the board-room, with the remains of the
incense in the plates, would have shown them at once that the visit of the
Phoenix had been no dream, but a radiant reality, but no one went into the
board-room again that day; and next day, before the office was opened, it
was all cleaned and put nice and tidy by a lady whose business asking
questions was not part of. That is why Cyril read the papers in vain on
the next day and the day after that; because no sensible person thinks his
dreams worth putting in the paper, and no one will ever own that he has
been asleep in the daytime.</p>
<p>The Phoenix was very pleased, but it decided to write an ode for itself.
It thought the ones it had heard at its temple had been too hastily
composed. Its own ode began—</p>
<p>‘For beauty and for modest worth<br/>
The Phoenix has not its equal on earth.’<br/></p>
<p>And when the children went to bed that night it was still trying to cut
down the last line to the proper length without taking out any of what it
wanted to say.</p>
<p>That is what makes poetry so difficult.</p>
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