The Secret Island part 2: Planning to run away


Last time I wrote an entire post about how awful Aunt Harriet and Uncle Henry are. But now on to happier things!


Deciding to run away

As is often the case in real life a careless, throwaway remark turns into a serious decision (for example joking about naming your child after Chief Brody from Jaws).

On page 4 (actually page 14, but the story starts on page 11) Jack says If only we could all run away together but Mike remarks that they would surely be caught and returned in the same way other children had been. If there was a place that they wouldn’t be found, though, that would be a different matter.

To their surprise – and probably the reader’s (if it’s their first reading and not their tenth or twentieth, of course) – Jack says he knows somewhere.

“Now listen to me. If I tell you a very great secret will you promise never to say a word about it to anyone?… I know a place where nobody could find us—if we ran away!

This is slightly curious as Jack, being the great friend to the children that he is, has never told them of this place, nor of his boat. Clearly they have never talked of running away before, either, else surely it would have come up? But of course this is all necessary for the story, and means we are not bogged down with explanations of how he has only recently got a boat and so on.

Anyway, Jack doesn’t tell them anything other than to meet him at the lakeside that evening, leaving everyone wondering what the secret will be, for at least a few pages.

The children are so excited about Jack’s secret that they are careless at their chores that afternoon. But come eight o’clock they are at the lakeside (being sent to bed hasn’t stopped them as they just snuck out anyway) eager to know where they might run away to.

Jack tells them it is an island, and leads them around the lake until they find a place where they can see it. In some of her most poetic writing Blyton paints the view for us.

The little island seemed to float on the dark lake-waters. Trees grew on it, and a little hill rose in the middle of it. It was a mysterious island, lonely and beautiful. All the children
stood and gazed at it, loving it and longing to go to it. It looked so secret—almost magic.

And just like that, by the end of chapter one they have decided they’ll run away.


The planning

The decision to run away is made so quickly that you’d be forgiven for expecting the children to be off the next morning. But, being really rather sensible, they take a few days to make their plans and gather everything they think that they will need.

I always enjoy a good planning-to-run-away chapter, be it the Five raiding Aunt Fanny’s tin cupboard or Peter Frost making sure he takes his little clock. Somehow it’s more fun than just packing for a holiday, as it’s all done in secret.

First they do sit down and have a talk, to make sure they are all certain they want to live on the island. Irritatingly Mike takes on the role of the most responsible – despite being a year younger than Peggy.

Mike scratched his curly black head. He felt old and worried. He wanted to go very badly—but would the two girls really be able to stand a wild life like that? No proper beds to sleep in—perhaps no proper food to eat—and suppose one of them was ill?

I hardly feel that he is any more qualified for rough-sleeping and forging than his sisters!

Anyway, they decide to visit the island on Sunday – their only time off – to check it out. It’s a very quick visit, but we get a glimpse of all the places which will become important later in the story. The little beach, the spring, the caves, the hill, and so on. The children love it, and settle with their meal to make a list of all the things that they will need.

I never tried to run away as a child so I have no stories of having packed a strange assortment of items into a bag. We did sometimes play at running away, however (when we weren’t acting out Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, with our very limited cast of two). The bottom bunk would be a train carriage, the top a boat. I remember playing at fleeing Russia, a princess and her nanny/maid probably inspired by the 90s movie Anastasia. I don’t remember what we packed but it was quite difficult to pack a realistic case with what you could find in a bedroom – I don’t think my mum would have let us take the pots and pans from the kitchen!

Their initial list is quite short. Jack suggests that they won’t need all that much as they can make beds out of heather and bracken. Blyton’s runaways/campers often make beds out of heather and I can’t see it being very comfortable! Certainly not as a long-term arrangement.

Enamel mugs, plates and knives
An axe and a sharp woodman’s knife
Matches
Fishing-line
Frying-pan, saucepan and a kettle

Definitely all essential but definitely not enough to sustain them – there’s no food for one!


The preparations

With their running-away-date set as the following Sunday the children begin secreting things in the handy hollow tree near the lake.

They are so excited about their plan that they cannot be upset, not even by the slappings and scoldings that would normally bring them to tears.

By the day they are to leave the tree contains:

All the clothes they possessed
Enamel mugs, plates and dishes
Saucepan, an axe, sharp knife
Small knives and forks and spoons
Empty tins to store things in
Matches
Magnifying glass
Peggy’s work-basket
A box of mixed nails and an old hammer
Snap cards, ludo and our dominoes
Some books
Plank of wood
Half a sack of potatoes
Old and ragged rug
Long iron cooking spoon
Packet of candles
Old lantern

This is probably not an exhaustive list as you’ll note that there is no food! Jack does say that he plans to buy some things like sugar, which is to go in the empty tins.

On their final morning they take:

Basket of peas
As many ripe broad beans as they could find
Bunch of young carrots
Some radishes
Six new-laid eggs
Some tea
Tin of cocoa
Packet of currants
Tin of rice
New loaf
A few cakes from the cake tin

It looks like they won’t starve, at least, though it doesn’t seem as if there’s enough food to last long. Jack’s plan to buy things must include food.

Having been told they must stay home as punishment – Aunt Harriet has noticed the missing cakes (but nothing else apparently!) – there is a tense few paragraphs as the children arrange to sneak off instead of going off for their usual picnic. They manage to grab some last-minute things, however, in a manner that reminds me of myself as I leave for a holiday and grab anything I spot that I suddenly think I might need.

For the girls those last-minute grabs are

Bar of soap
Slab of margarine

While Jack has also grabbed

Rope
An old mackintosh
Two books
Some newspapers
And some other things

Once on the island cheese is part of their first meal, so there must have been other food packed that isn’t mentioned. I am not a light packer by any means, so to me, that list seems rather short – but they probably didn’t have much else to bring! I’d definitely want more toiletries but the children probably only had soap! If I could I’d have been taking as much bedlinen, blankets and towels as I could manage, and some cleaning supplies. Very grown-up of me.


We will see how well the children did in their preparations once they settle into island life next time.

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1 Response to The Secret Island part 2: Planning to run away

  1. chrissie777's avatar chrissie777 says:

    Very nice article, Fiona!

    Like

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