1. The Hayloft

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I have been asked to tell you about the back of the North Wind. An old Greek writer mentions a people who lived there and where so comfortable that they could not bear it any longer and drowned themselves. My story is not the same as his. I do not think Herodotus had got the right account of the place. I am going to tell you how it fared with a boy who went there.
   
     He lived in a low room over a coach house; and that was not by any means at the back of the north wind, as his mother very well knew. For one side of the room was built only of boards, and the boards were so old that you might run a penknife through into the north wind. And then let them settle between them who was the sharper! I know that when you pulled it out again, the wind would be after it like a cat after a mouse, and you would know soon enough that you were not at the back of the north wind. Still, this room was not very cold, except when the north wind blew stronger than usual; the room I have to do with now was always cold except in summer, when the sun took the matter into his own hands. Indeed, I am not sure whether I ought to call it a room at all; for it was just a loft where they kept hay and straw and oats for the horses. And when little Diamond---But stop: I must tell you that his father, who was a coachman, had named him after a favorite horse, and his mother had had no objection. When little Diamond then lay there in bed, he could hear the horses under him munching away in the dark or moving sleepily in their dreams. For Diamond's father had built him a bed in the loft with boards all round it, because they had so little room in their own end over the coach house; and Diamond's father put old Diamond in the stall under the bed, because he was a quiet horse and did not go to sleep standing, but lay down like a reasonable creature. But although he was a surprisingly reasonable creature, yet, when young Diamond woke in the middle of the night and felt the bed shaking in the blast of the north wind, he could not help wondering whether, if the wind should blow the house down and he were to fall through into the manger, old Diamond mightn't eat him up before he knew him in his nightgown. And although old Diamond was very quiet all night long, yet when he woke, he got up like an earthquake, and then young Diamond knew what o'clock it was or at the very least what was to be done next, which was---to go to sleep again as fast as he could.
    
       There was hay at his feet and hay at his head, piled up in great trusses to the very roof. Indeed it was sometimes only through a little lane with several turnings, which looked as if it had been sawn out for him, that he could reach his bed at all. For the stock of hay was, of course, always in a state either of slow ebb or of sudden flow. Sometimes the whole space of the loft, with the little panes in the roof for stars to look in, would lie open before his open eyes as he lay in bed; sometimes a yellow wall of sweet-smelling fibers closed up his view at the distance of half a yard. Sometimes, when his mother had undressed him in her room and told him to trot away to bed by himself, he would creep into the heart of the hay and lie there thinking how cold it was outside in the wind, and how warm it was inside there in his bed, and how he could go to it when he pleased, only he wouldn't just yet; he would get a little colder first. And ever as he grew colder, his bed would grow warmer, till at last he would scramble out of the hay, shoot like an arrow into his bed, cover himself up, and snuggle down, thinking what a happy boy he was. He had not the least idea that the wind got in at a chink in the wall and blew about him all night. For the back of his bed was only of boards an inch thick, and on the other side of them was the north wind.
 
   Now, as I have already said, these boards were soft and crumbly. To be sure, they were tarred on the outside, yet in many places they were more tinder than timber. Hence it happened that the soft part having worn away from it, little Diamond found one night, after he lay down, that a knot had come out of one of them and that the wind was blowing in upon him in a cold and rather imperious fashion. Now he had no fancy for leaving things wrong that might be set right, so he jumped out of bed again, got a little strike of hay, twisted it up, folded it in the middle, and, having this made it into a cork, stuck it into the hole in the wall. But the wind began to blow loud and angrily, and, as Diamond was falling asleep, out blew his cork and hit him on the nose, just hard enough to wake him up quite and let him hear the wind whistling shrill in the hole. He searched for his hay-cork, found it, stuck it in harder, and was just dropping off once more, when, pop! with an angry whistle behind it, the cork struck him again, this time on the cheek. Up he rose once more, made a fresh stopple of hay, and corked the hole severely. But he was hardly down again before--pop! it came on his forehead. He gave it up, drew the clothes above his head, and was soon fast asleep.
    
     Although the next day was very stormy, Diamond forgot all about the hole for he was busy making a cave by the side of his mother's fire, with a broken chair, a three-legged stool, and a blanket, and then sitting in it. His mother, however, discovered it and pasted a bit of brown paper over it so that, when Diamond had snuggled down the next night, he had no occasion to think of it.

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⏰ Last updated: May 26, 2022 ⏰

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