How we cite our quotes: (Chapter.Paragraph)
Quote #4
To talk about Dickon meant to talk about the moor and about the cottage and the fourteen people who lived in it on sixteen shillings a week—and the children who got fat on the moor grass like the wild ponies. And about Dickon's mother—and the skipping-rope—and the moor with the sun on it—and about pale green points sticking up out of the black sod. And it was all so alive that Mary talked more than she had ever talked before—and Colin both talked and listened as he had never done either before. And they both began to laugh over nothings as children will when they are happy together. And they laughed so that in the end they were making as much noise as if they had been two ordinary healthy natural ten-year-old creatures—instead of a hard, little, unloving girl and a sickly boy who believed that he was going to die. (14.103)
Again we see signs that the point of this book is not for Mary and Colin to grow up;instead, it's for Mary and Colin to be "ordinary healthy natural ten-year-old" kids. The whole idea that childhood is a special time of life that needs to be cherished as separate from (and maybe better than) adulthood is a specifically Victorian invention, which Frances Hodgson Burnett used to make a ton of cash on books like Little Lord Fauntleroy (1886), A Little Princess (1905), and of course, The Secret Garden.
Quote #5
"Us mustn't seem as if us was watchin' him [the robin] too close," said Dickon. "He'd be out with us for good if he got th' notion us was interferin' now. He'll be a good bit different till all this is over. He's settin' up housekeepin'. He'll be shyer an' readier to take things ill. He's got no time for visitin' an' gossipin'. Us must keep still a bit an' try to look as if us was grass an' trees an' bushes. Then when he's got used to seein' us I'll chirp a bit an' he'll know us'll not be in his way." (15.49)
The robin loves being friends with Dickon and Mary until he starts building a nest and preparing to have a family. Then, once kids are on the horizon, he doesn't want to spend too much time with his old friends, since he's "got no time for visitin' an' gossipin'." Actually, there's some grown-up human truth to this: It's really hard for people to keep up with old friends once they have kids. See how many life lessons this robin has to teach us?
Quote #6
"[The Secret Garden] is just what you thought it would be," he said at last. "It sounds just as if you had really seen it. You know I said that when you told me first."
Mary hesitated about two minutes and then boldly spoke the truth.
"I had seen it—and I had been in," she said. "I found the key and got in weeks ago. But I daren't tell you—I daren't because I was so afraid I couldn't trust you—for sure!" (18.55-58)
Mary really does take a long time to let Colin in on the fact that she has found the Secret Garden. It takes her weeks to decide to let him in on the truth, even though she tells him plenty of supposedly fictional stories about what the Secret Garden might be like. Do you think Colin guesses that Mary is holding out on him? What makes Mary trust Colin with this secret in the end?