P. Travers L.

Mary Poppins Comes Back


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for ages! Shaving-Water too hot, Breakfast Coffee too cold. And now – this!”

      He snatched his hat from Mrs Banks and caught up his bag.

      “I am going!” he said. “And I don’t know that I shall ever come back. I shall probably take a long sea-voyage.”

      Then he clapped the hat on his head, banged the front door behind him and went through the gate so quickly that he knocked over the Ice Cream Man, who had been listening to the conversation with interest.

      “It’s your own fault!” said Mr Banks crossly. “You’d no right to be there!” And he went striding off towards the City, his polished hat shining like a jewel in the sun.

      The Ice Cream Man got up carefully, and, finding there were no bones broken, he sat down on the kerb and made it up to himself by eating a large Ice Cream …

      *

      “Oh, dear!” said Mrs Banks as she heard the gate slam. “It is quite true. Nothing does go right nowadays. First one thing and then another. Ever since Mary Poppins left without a Word of Warning everything has gone wrong.”

      She sat down at the foot of the stairs, and took out her handkerchief and cried into it.

      And, as she cried, she thought of all that had happened since that day when Mary Poppins had so suddenly and so strangely disappeared.

      “Here one night and gone the next – most upsetting!” said Mrs Banks, gulping.

      Nurse Green had arrived soon after and had left at the end of the week because Michael had spat at her. She was followed by Nurse Brown, who went out for a walk one day and never came back. And it was not until later that they discovered that all the silver spoons had gone with her.

      And after Nurse Brown came Miss Quigley, the Governess, who had to be asked to leave because she played scales for three hours every morning before breakfast, and Mr Banks did not care for music.

      “And then,” sobbed Mrs Banks to her handkerchief, “there was Jane’s attack of measles, and the bathroom geyser bursting, and the Cherry Trees ruined by frost and …”

      “If you please, m’m!” Mrs Banks looked up to find Mrs Brill, the cook, at her side.

      “The kitchen flue’s on fire!” said Mrs Brill gloomily.

      “Oh, dear. What next?” cried Mrs Banks. “You must tell Robertson Ay to put it out. Where is he?”

      “Asleep, ma’am, in the broom cupboard. And when that boy’s asleep, nothing’ll wake him – not if it’s an Earthquake or a regiment of Tom-toms!” said Mrs Brill, as she followed Mrs Banks down the kitchen stairs.

      Between them they managed to put out the fire, but that was not the end of Mrs Banks’ troubles.

      She had no sooner finished Luncheon than a crash, followed by a loud thud, was heard from upstairs.

      “What is it now?” Mrs Banks rushed out to see what had happened.

      “Oh, my leg, my leg!” cried Ellen, the housemaid.

      She sat on the stairs, surrounded by a ring of broken china, groaning loudly.

      “What is the matter with it?” said Mrs Banks sharply.

      “Broken!” said Ellen dismally, leaning against the banisters.

      “Nonsense, Ellen! You’ve sprained your ankle, that’s all!”

      But Ellen only groaned again.

      “My leg is broken! What shall I do?” she wailed, over and over again.

      At that moment the shrill cries of the Twins sounded from the Nursery. They were fighting for the possession of a blue celluloid Duck. Their screams rose thinly above the voices of Jane and Michael, who were painting pictures on the wall and arguing as to whether a green horse should have a purple or a red tail. And through this uproar there sounded, like the steady beat of a drum, the groans of Ellen, the housemaid. “My leg is broken! What shall I do?”

      “This,” said Mrs Banks, rushing upstairs, “is the Last Straw!”

      She helped Ellen to bed, and put a cold water bandage round her ankle. Then she went up to the Nursery.

      Jane and Michael rushed at her.

      “It should have a red tail, shouldn’t it?” demanded Michael.

      “Oh, Mother, don’t let him be so stupid! No horse has a red tail, has it?”

      “Well, what horse has a purple tail? Tell me that!” he screamed.

      “My Duck!” shrieked John, snatching the Duck from Barbara.

      “Mine, mine, mine!” cried Barbara, snatching it back again.

      “Children! Children!” Mrs Banks was wringing her hands in despair. “Be quiet or I shall Go Mad!”

      There was silence for a moment as they stared at her with interest. Would she really, they wondered? And what would she be like, if she did?

      “Now,” said Mrs Banks, “I will not have this behaviour. Poor Ellen has hurt her ankle, so there is nobody to look after you. You must all go into the Park and play there till Tea-time. Jane and Michael, you must look after the little ones. John, let Barbara have the Duck now and you can have it when you go to bed. Michael, you may take your new Kite. Now, get your hats, all of you!”

      “But I want to finish my horse—” began Michael crossly.

      “Why must we go to the Park?” complained Jane. “There’s nothing to do there!”

      “Because,” said Mrs Banks, “I must have peace. And if you will go quietly and be good children there will be Coconut Cakes for tea.”

      And before they had time to break out again, she had put on their hats and was hurrying them down the stairs.

      “Look both ways!” she called as they went through the gate, Jane pushing the Twins in the perambulator and Michael carrying his Kite.

      They looked to the right. There was nothing coming.

      They looked to the left. There was nobody there but the Ice Cream Man, who was jingling his bell at the end of the Lane.

      Jane hurried across. Michael trailed after her.

      “I hate this life!” he said miserably to his Kite. “Everything always goes wrong always.”

      Jane pushed the perambulator as far as the Lake.

      “Now,” she said, “give me the Duck!”

      The Twins shrieked and clutched it at either end. Jane uncurled their fingers.

      “Look!” she said, throwing the Duck into the Lake. “Look, darlings, it’s going to India!”

      The Duck drifted off across the water. The Twins stared at it and sobbed.

      Jane ran round the Lake and caught it and sent it off again.

      “Now,” she said brightly, “it’s off to Southampton!”

      The Twins did not appear to be amused.

      “Now to New York!” They wept harder than ever.

      Jane flung out her hands. “Michael, what are we to do with them? If we give the Duck to them they’ll fight over it, and if we don’t they’ll go on crying.”

      “I’ll fly the Kite for them,” said Michael. “Look, children, look!”

      He held up the beautiful green-and-yellow Kite and began to unwind the string. The Twins eyed it tearfully and without interest. He lifted the Kite above his head and ran a little way. It flapped along the air for a moment and then collapsed hollowly on