Now don't you think that after all the
simplest plan would be just to fight it out, according to the
rules, and let the best man win? They're betting on you, I may tell
you, down in the village, but I don't mind that!"
"Oh, yes, do, dragon," said the Boy, delightedly; "it'll save
such a lot of bother!
"My young friend, you shut up," said the dragon severely.
"Believe me, St. George," he went on, "there's nobody in the world
I'd sooner oblige than you and this young gentleman here. But the
whole thing's nonsense, and conventionality, and popular
thick-headedness. There's absolutely nothing to fight about, from
beginning to end. And anyhow I'm not going to, so that settles
it!"
"But supposing I make you?" said St. George, rather nettled.
"You can't," said the dragon, triumphantly. "I should only go
into my cave and retire for a time down the hole I came up. You'd
soon get heartily sick of sitting outside and waiting for me to
come out and fight you. And as soon as you'd really gone away, why,
I'd come up again gaily, for I tell you frankly, I like this place,
and I'm going to stay here!"
St. George gazed for a while on the fair landscape around them.
"But this would be a beautiful place for a fight," he began again
persuasively. "These great bare rolling Downs for the arena,—and me
in my golden armour showing up against your big blue scaly coils!
Think what a picture it would make!"
"Now you're trying to get at me through my artistic
sensibilities," said the dragon. "But it won't work. Not but what
it would make a very pretty picture, as you say," he added,
wavering a little.
"We seem to be getting rather nearer to business," put in the
Boy. "You must see, dragon, that there 's got to be a fight of some
sort, 'cos you can't want to have to go down that dirty old hole
again and stop there till goodness knows when."
"It might be arranged," said St. George, thoughtfully. "I must
spear you somewhere, of course, but I'm not bound to hurt you very
much. There's such a lot of you that there must be a few spare
places somewhere. Here, for instance, just behind your foreleg. It
couldn't hurt you much, just here!"
"Now you 're tickling, George," said the dragon, coyly. "No,
that place won't do at all. Even if it didn't hurt,—and I'm sure it
would, awfully,—it would make me laugh, and that would spoil
everything."
"Let's try somewhere else, then," said St. George, patiently.
"Under your neck, for instance,—all these folds of thick skin,—if I
speared you here you 'd never even know I 'd done it!"
"Yes, but are you sure you can hit off the right place?" asked
the dragon, anxiously.
"Of course I am," said St. George, with confidence. "You leave
that to me!"
"It's just because I've got to leave it to you that I'm asking,"
replied the dragon, rather testily. "No doubt you would deeply
regret any error you might make in the hurry of the moment; but you
wouldn't regret it half as much as I should! However, I suppose
we've got to trust somebody, as we go through life, and your plan
seems, on the whole, as good a one as any."
"Look here, dragon," interrupted the Boy, a little jealous on
behalf of his friend, who seemed to be getting all the worst of the
bargain: "I don't quite see where you come in! There's to be a
fight, apparently, and you're to be licked; and what I want to know
is, what are you going to get out of it?"
"St. George," said the dragon, "Just tell him, please,—what will
happen after I'm vanquished in the deadly combat?"
"Well, according to the rules I suppose I shall lead you in
triumph down to the market-place or whatever answers to it," said
St. George.
"Precisely," said the dragon. "And then—"
"And then there'll be shoutings and speeches and things,"
continued St. George. "And I shall explain that you're converted,
and see the error of your ways, and so on."
"Quite so," said the dragon.
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