登陆注册
14728500000046

第46章

This over, the party once more prepared for skating. They were thirteen miles from The Hague and not as fresh as when they had left Broek early on the previous day, but they were in good spirits and the ice was excellent.

The Palace in the WoodAs the boys skated onward, they saw a number of fine country seats, all decorated and surrounded according to the Dutchest of Dutch taste, but impressive to look upon, with their great, formal houses, elaborate gardens, square hedges, and wide ditches--some crossed by a bridge, having a gate in the middle to be carefully locked at night. These ditches, everywhere traversing the landscape, had long ago lost their summer film and now shone under the sunlight like trailing ribbons of glass.

The boys traveled bravely, all the while performing the surprising feat of producing gingerbread from their pockets and causing it to vanish instantly.

Twelve miles were passed. A few more long strokes would take them to The Hague, when Van Mounen proposed that they should vary their course by walking into the city through the Bosch.

"Agreed!" cried one and all--and their skates were off in a twinkling.

The Bosch is a grand park or wood, nearly two miles long, containing the celebrated House in the Wood--Huis in't Bosch--sometimes used as a royal residence.

The building, though plain outside for a palace, is elegantly furnished within and finely frescoed--that is, the walls and ceiling are covered with groups and designs painted directly upon them while the plaster was fresh. Some of the rooms are tapestried with Chinese silks, beautifully embroidered. One contains a number of family portraits, among them a group of royal children who in time were orphaned by a certain ax, which figures very frequently in European history. These children were painted many times by the Dutch artist Van Dyck, who was court painter to their father, Charles the First of England. Beautiful children they were. What a deal of trouble the English nation would have been spared had they been as perfect in heart and soul as they were in form!

The park surrounding the palace is charming, especially in summer, for flowers and birds make it bright as fairyland. Long rows of magnificent oaks rear their proud heads, conscious that no profaning hand will ever bring them low. In fact, the Wood has for ages been held as an almost sacred spot. Children are never allowed to meddle with its smallest twig. The ax of the woodman has never resounded there. Even war and riot have passed it reverently, pausing for a moment in their devastating way.

Philip of Spain, while he ordered Dutchmen to be mowed down by hundreds, issued a mandate that not a bough of the beautiful Wood should be touched. And once, when in a time of great necessity the State was about to sacrifice it to assist in filling a nearly exhausted treasury, the people rushed to the rescue, and nobly contributed the required amount rather than that the Bosch should fall.

What wonder, then, that the oaks have a grand, fearless air?

Birds from all Holland have told them how, elsewhere, trees are cropped and bobbed into shape--but THEY are untouched. Year after year they expand in unclipped luxuriance and beauty; their wide-spreading foliage, alive with song, casts a cool shade over lawn and pathway or bows to its image in the sunny ponds.

Meanwhile, as if to reward the citizens for allowing her to have her way for once, Nature departs from the invariable level, wearing gracefully the ornaments that have been reverently bestowed upon her. So the lawn slopes in a velvety green; the paths wind in and out; flower beds glow and send forth perfume;and ponds and sky look at each other in mutual admiration.

Even on that winter day the Bosch was beautiful. Its trees were bare, but beneath them still lay the ponds, every ripple smoothed into glass. The blue sky was bright overhead, and as it looked down through the thicket of boughs, it saw another blue sky, not nearly so bright, looking up from the dim thicket under the ice.

Never had the sunset appeared more beautiful to Peter than when he saw it exchanging farewell glances with the windows and shining roofs of the city before him. Never had The Hague itself seemed more inviting. He was no longer Peter van Holp, going to visit a great city, nor a fine young gentleman bent on sight-seeing; he was a knight, an adventurer, travel-soiled and weary, a Hop-o'-my-Thumb grown large, a Fortunatas approaching the enchanted castle where luxury and ease awaited him, for his own sister's house was not half a mile away.

"At last, boys," he cried in high glee, "we may hope for a royal resting place--good beds, warm rooms, and something fit to eat.

I never realized before what a luxury such things are. Our lodgings at the Red Lion have made us appreciate our own homes."The Merchant Prince and the Sister-PrincessWell might Peter feel that his sister's house was like an enchanted castle. Large and elegant as it was, a spell of quiet hung over it. The very lion crouching at its gate seemed to have been turned into stone through magic. Within, it was guarded by genii, in the shape of red-faced servants, who sprang silently forth at the summons of bell or knocker. There was a cat also, who appeared as knowing as any Puss-in-Boots, and a brass gnome in the hall whose business it was to stand with outstretched arms ready to receive sticks and umbrellas. Safe within the walls bloomed a Garden of Delight, where the flowers firmly believed it was summer, and a sparkling fountain was laughing merrily to itself because Jack Frost could not find it. There was a Sleeping Beauty, too, just at the time of the boys' arrival, but when Peter, like a true prince, flew lightly up the stairs and kissed her eyelids, the enchantment was broken. The princess became his own good sister, and the fairy castle just one of the finest, most comfortable houses of The Hague.

同类推荐
  • 古方汇精

    古方汇精

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Poor Miss Finch

    Poor Miss Finch

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 妇女双名记

    妇女双名记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Bureaucracy

    Bureaucracy

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 十二游经

    十二游经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 是爱啊

    是爱啊

    什么是爱?难道爱情只存在于男女之间吗?我觉得不然,下面就请看一下潘子安和林乐梵的爱情故事吧
  • 二十一度

    二十一度

    她喜欢他死去活来,他讨厌她从十八岁到二十八,三年的等待,只换来他在床上的一句贱女人。等他发现她在生命里不可替代时,她已经手放开。不把当年作笑谈,只取你如锦年华来换。
  • 青梅太悍,竹马太猛

    青梅太悍,竹马太猛

    这是一个女流氓耍流氓最后反被流氓的故事。当年,六岁的宋芷心仗着自己城墙般厚的脸皮,作死地去调戏看似小白实则大灰狼的夏意,极致蹂躏了夏少爷精致的脸蛋之后,本着拍拍屁股走人的不负责态度,继续她的流氓事业,熟料那厮就是个阴毒的变态,她调戏一人,他就加倍调戏回她。这可怎么得了,想她宋芷心在江湖上横行霸道多年,从来没吃过亏,当然,这主要依赖她那个极为对她极宠并护短的爷爷,没人敢戏弄她,如今竟然屡屡受挫,不行,她要远离这个死变态,继续她的宏图伟业,但,事实证明,理想很丰满,现实很骨感。于是,在某个夜黑风高的夜晚,夏大少对她流氓时,宋小妞悲苦望天:“我靠,一失足成千古恨啊”。
  • 青渊主宰

    青渊主宰

    无穷无尽地劫难,演化着生生不息地传奇,在浩瀚的青渊之中,苍穹用劫难推演生机,普渡着世人不知的苦难。在外五年的罗青,终于回到族中,等待他的却不是往昔的荣耀,而是不能修炼的躯体和抛弃。不甘落寞的罗青,重新踏上征程,开始了他渡劫的道路。誓死要逆天改命,青渊之下,罗青以世世代代的诅咒为誓,要以苍穹为躯,以万灵为魂,以青渊为戈,以杀伐开启主宰之路。
  • 神血少年

    神血少年

    古老的羊皮卷,封印着远古时期的战争事迹,神与魔谱写的史诗,毁灭还是创造?
  • 创世之刃之十二神器

    创世之刃之十二神器

    堕落的创世神him被封印千年后打破封印,只有集齐传说中的十二神器才能将其彻底消灭。天生灵魂和火元素力量就十分强大的少年史蒂夫为了击败him,在先知府的坑蒙拐骗下,不惧艰难险阻,踏上了领悟元素境界和收集十二把神器的征程。
  • 千年镇魂歌

    千年镇魂歌

    从零开始的鬼魂小道士,无意中扇动了几下蝴蝶的翅膀,却掀起了毁灭整个日本的血色风暴,奏响了响彻千年的镇魂之歌。跨越重洋的封印,无法脱离的灵魂,莫名消失的尸体,黑暗将至的东京,隐藏幕后的黑手,传承断绝的师门,沉睡千年的猫妖,天地凋零的秘辛,一切尽在千年镇魂歌!(注:作者只喜欢日漫,对其政权深恶痛绝!)
  • 欢喜冤家:我的失忆男佣

    欢喜冤家:我的失忆男佣

    天生乐观开朗的康以柔在27岁“高龄”被相爱6年的初恋男友抛弃,她只得落荒而逃。一年后,她走出情伤回国,却在某个月黑风高雨里“捡”回来一个帅得惊天动地的男人,她无数遍认为自己捡了个麻烦,理所当然的命令他为她做这做那,没料到这男人居然是自己公司的老板。而他为了揪出谋害家族企业的幕后黑手,上演精彩绝伦的“失忆”独角戏,强忍着被她压迫,甘愿賴在她家当男佣。渐渐地....康以柔的“厚脸皮”引起了冷酷老板的爱慕之意,他们争吵着、和好、然后继续争吵.....直到真相大白,她讨厌被欺骗的感觉,他却怎么也不肯放手,不顾一切在众目睽睽之下吻了她,并对她说“我们结婚吧”
  • 隐世毒王

    隐世毒王

    所谓一物降一物,这个世间没有绝对的强者,但我知道,他是最强的毒王,没有之一。
  • 不正常穿越

    不正常穿越

    “你知道人族吗?”知道,那是诸天万族中最强大的种族。顺者昌,逆者亡。“你知道帝都吗?”知道,那是人族最顶尖的学院,从学院中毕业的学生,都是真正的天之骄子。“那你见过帝都的学生吗?”见过,那是一群疯子,为了任务不顾一切的疯子!