I began to understand and see and hear again an angry voice was saying: "You clumsy scoundrel! I believe you did it on purpose to injure the

poor boy."

"Not I," growled another voice. "I aren't no spite agen him. Now if it

had been young Shock--"

"Don't stand arguing," cried the first voice, which seemed to be coming

from somewhere out of a mist. "Run up the road and ask the doctor to

come down directly."

"All right, master! I'll go."

"Poor lad! poor boy!" the other voice in the mist seemed to say. "Nice

beginning for him!--nice beginning! Tut--tut--tut!"

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It sounded very indistinct and dreamy. Somehow it seemed to have

something to do with my first attempt to swim, and I thought I was being

pulled out of the water, which kept splashing about and making my face

and hair wet.

I knew I was safe, but my forehead hurt me just as if it had been

scratched by the thorns on one of the hedges close to the water-side.

My head ached too, and I was drowsy. I wanted to go to sleep, but

people kept talking, and the water splashed so about my face and

trickled back with a musical noise into the river, I thought, but really

into a basin.

For all at once I was wide awake again, looking at the geraniums in the

window, as I lay on my back upon the sofa.

I did not understand it for a few minutes; for though my eyes were wide

open, the aching and giddiness in my head troubled me so, that though I

wanted to speak I did not know what to say.

Then, as I turned my eyes from the geraniums in the window and they

rested on the grey hair and florid face of Old Brownsmith, who was

busily bathing my forehead with a sponge and water, the scene in the

yard came back like a flash, and I caught the hand that held the sponge.

"Has it hurt the baskets of flowers?" I cried excitedly.

"Never mind the baskets of flowers," said Old Brownsmith warmly; "has it

hurt you?"

"I don't know; not much," I said quickly. "But won't it be a great deal

of trouble and expense?"

He smiled, and patted my shoulder.

"Never mind that," he said good-humouredly. "All people who keep horses

and carts, and blundering obstinate fellows for servants, have accidents

to contend against. There!--never mind, I say, so long as you have no

bones broken; and I don't think you have. Here, stretch out your arms."

I did so.

"That's right," he said. "Now, kick out your legs as if you were

swimming."

I looked up at him sharply, for it seemed so strange for him to say that

just after I had been thinking of being nearly drowned. I kicked out,

though, as he told me.




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