CHAPTER EIGHT
Jills room t on tful to o o the Queens old Nurse,
of vietle old bent double of vieess small enougo go about an ordinary room knocking keep on clicking ongue and saying t;O; and quot;t; and quot;No;. S foot-bat er and o it. If you can s bat to rougoo, because t you dont need to dry at all, you just roll about on t of t tle too big for clearly made for giantesses. quot;I suppose if t le comes be used to guests of our size,quot; t Jill.
S s about table and c for an ordinary gro do last. ill bare and it o tread on t carpet. S t. t call dinner, t ea time - turkey, and a steamed pudding, and roast cnuts, and as muc as you could eat.
t t coming in and out, and every time s a gigantic toy t, a drum t looked like a young gasometer, and a ed in very briged t of t on telling t t t;tut-tut-tut-tut. Youll em all rig of a rest, I knoe-!”
t a giant bed but only a big four-poster, like looked in t enormous room. So tumble into it.
quot;Is it still sno; she asked sleepily.
quot;No. Raining no; said tess. quot;Rainll wasy snow.
Precious poppet o go out and play tomorro; And sucked Jill up and said good night.
I knoess. Jill t t es.
teadily all t, das tle, and Jill never but slept deeply, past supper time and past midnight. And
t and notirred but mice in ts. At t o Jill a dream. It seemed to s t s ood at
a toy lion, but a real lion, t as sain beyond t-smelling t trouble in Ji