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241
'
Gracious
me
!
'
cried
a
brass
manufacturer
,
'
there
's
no
handle
on
the
door
,
'
and
he
put
one
on
.
242
An
ironmonger
added
a
scraper
,
and
an
old
lady
ran
up
with
a
door-mat
.
Carpenters
arrived
with
a
water-butt
,
and
the
painters
insisted
on
painting
it
.
243
Finished
at
last
!
Отключить рекламу
244
'
Finished
!
How
can
it
be
finished
,
'
the
plumber
demanded
scornfully
,
'
before
hot
and
cold
are
put
in
,
'
and
he
put
in
hot
and
cold
.
245
Then
an
army
of
gardeners
arrived
with
fairy
carts
and
spades
and
seeds
and
bulbs
and
forcing-houses
,
and
soon
they
had
a
flower-garden
to
the
right
of
the
verandah
,
and
a
vegetable
garden
to
the
left
,
and
roses
and
clematis
on
the
walls
of
the
house
,
and
in
less
time
than
five
minutes
all
these
dear
things
were
in
full
bloom
.
246
Oh
,
how
beautiful
the
little
house
was
now
!
But
it
was
at
last
finished
true
as
true
,
and
they
had
to
leave
it
and
return
to
the
dance
.
They
all
kissed
their
hands
to
it
as
they
went
away
,
and
the
last
to
go
was
Brownie
.
She
stayed
a
moment
behind
the
others
to
drop
a
pleasant
dream
down
the
chimney
.
247
All
through
the
night
the
exquisite
little
house
stood
there
in
the
Figs
taking
care
of
Maimie
,
and
she
never
knew
.
She
slept
until
the
dream
was
quite
finished
,
and
woke
feeling
deliciously
cosy
just
as
morning
was
breaking
from
its
egg
,
and
then
she
almost
fell
asleep
again
,
and
then
she
called
out
,
'
Tony
,
'
for
she
thought
she
was
at
home
in
the
nursery
.
As
Tony
made
no
answer
she
sat
up
,
whereupon
her
head
hit
the
roof
,
and
it
opened
like
the
lid
of
a
box
,
and
to
her
bewilderment
she
saw
all
around
her
the
Kensington
Gardens
lying
deep
in
snow
.
As
she
was
not
in
the
nursery
she
wondered
whether
this
was
really
herself
,
so
she
pinched
her
cheeks
,
and
then
she
knew
it
was
herself
,
and
this
reminded
her
that
she
was
in
the
middle
of
a
great
adventure
.
She
remembered
now
everything
that
had
happened
to
her
from
the
closing
of
the
gates
up
to
her
running
away
from
the
fairies
,
but
however
,
she
asked
herself
,
had
she
got
into
this
funny
place
?
She
stepped
out
by
the
roof
,
right
over
the
garden
,
and
then
she
saw
the
dear
house
in
which
she
had
passed
the
night
.
It
so
entranced
her
that
she
could
think
of
nothing
else
.
Отключить рекламу
248
'
O
you
darling
!
O
you
sweet
!
O
you
love
!
'
she
cried
.
249
Perhaps
a
human
voice
frightened
the
little
house
,
or
maybe
it
now
knew
that
its
work
was
done
,
for
no
sooner
had
Maimie
spoken
than
it
began
to
grow
smaller
;
it
shrank
so
slowly
that
she
could
scarce
believe
it
was
shrinking
,
yet
she
soon
knew
that
it
could
not
contain
her
now
.
It
always
remained
as
complete
as
ever
,
but
it
became
smaller
and
smaller
,
and
the
garden
dwindled
at
the
same
time
,
and
the
snow
crept
closer
,
lapping
house
and
garden
up
.
Now
the
house
was
the
size
of
a
little
dog
's
kennel
,
and
now
of
a
Noah
's
Ark
,
but
still
you
could
see
the
smoke
and
the
door-handle
and
the
roses
on
the
wall
,
every
one
complete
.
The
glow-worm
light
was
waning
too
,
but
it
was
still
there
.
'D
arling
,
loveliest
,
do
n't
go
!
'
Maimie
cried
,
falling
on
her
knees
,
for
the
little
house
was
now
the
size
of
a
reel
of
thread
,
but
still
quite
complete
.
But
as
she
stretched
out
her
arms
imploringly
the
snow
crept
up
on
all
sides
until
it
met
itself
,
and
where
the
little
house
had
been
was
now
one
unbroken
expanse
of
snow
.
250
Maimie
stamped
her
foot
naughtily
,
and
was
putting
her
fingers
to
her
eyes
,
when
she
heard
a
kind
voice
say
,
'D
o
n't
cry
,
pretty
human
,
do
n't
cry
,
'
and
then
she
turned
round
and
saw
a
beautiful
little
naked
boy
regarding
her
wistfully
.
She
knew
at
once
that
he
must
be
Peter
Pan
.