The Phoenix and The Carpet by Edith Nesbit
Posted: 20 Feb 2013, 23:23
I read this this book an an ebook. The Phoenix and The Carpet is the second book of Psammead Trilogy written by Edith Nesbit. The title caught me first. The first thing I imagine when I first read the title is that it will be taken place around a castle or Egypt. But it's not.
The story begins when the big four of five siblings - Cyril, Anthea, Robert, Jane, and the Lamb - burn a carpet in a nursery by accident. Their parents buy a carpet to replace the burned carpet. The children found a glowing yellow egg when they unroll the last fold of the carpet. The adventure begins when Robert accidentally throws the egg into fire and it hatches into an arrogant Phoenix.
The thoughtful Phoenix is in constant search of self praise, but it also shows that it cares of the children, especially when they meet danger.
"This amiable youth,"it said to the others,"has miraculously been able to put the whole meaning of the seven thousand lines of Greek invocation into one English hexameter-a little misplaced some of the words-but
"Oh, come along, come along, good old beautiful Phoenix!"
This is my favorite part. It is when the Phoenix finally accepts the shorter English version of Greek invocation to wake it up. It is kind of funny.
The adventure with the wise Cyril, the kind-hearted Anthea, the 'big' Robert, the pessimistic Jane, and the lovely little Lamb will later make the Phoenix and the carpet exhausted and force these two magical things to rest again. To feel what kind of adventure they are in, better read the book by yourself.
The story begins when the big four of five siblings - Cyril, Anthea, Robert, Jane, and the Lamb - burn a carpet in a nursery by accident. Their parents buy a carpet to replace the burned carpet. The children found a glowing yellow egg when they unroll the last fold of the carpet. The adventure begins when Robert accidentally throws the egg into fire and it hatches into an arrogant Phoenix.
The thoughtful Phoenix is in constant search of self praise, but it also shows that it cares of the children, especially when they meet danger.
"This amiable youth,"it said to the others,"has miraculously been able to put the whole meaning of the seven thousand lines of Greek invocation into one English hexameter-a little misplaced some of the words-but
"Oh, come along, come along, good old beautiful Phoenix!"
This is my favorite part. It is when the Phoenix finally accepts the shorter English version of Greek invocation to wake it up. It is kind of funny.
The adventure with the wise Cyril, the kind-hearted Anthea, the 'big' Robert, the pessimistic Jane, and the lovely little Lamb will later make the Phoenix and the carpet exhausted and force these two magical things to rest again. To feel what kind of adventure they are in, better read the book by yourself.