登陆注册
15283400000042

第42章 "THE PRINCESS AND THE PAUPER"(1)

It was in the early twilight that Mr.Jack told the story.He,Jill,and David were on the veranda,as usual watching the towers of Sunnycrest turn from gold to silver as the sun dropped behind the hills.It was Jill who had asked for the story.

"About fairies and princesses,you know,"she had ordered.

"But how will David like that?"Mr.Jack had demurred."Maybe he doesn't care for fairies and princesses.""I read one once about a prince--'t was 'The Prince and the Pauper,'and I liked that,"averred David stoutly.

Mr.Jack smiled;then his brows drew together in a frown.His eyes were moodily fixed on the towers.

"Hm-m;well,"he said,"I might,I suppose,tell you a story about a PRINCESS and--a Pauper.I--know one well enough.""Good!--then tell it,"cried both Jill and David.And Mr.Jack began his story.

"She was not always a Princess,and he was not always a Pauper,--and that's where the story came in,I suppose,"sighed the man."She was just a girl,once,and he was a boy;and they played together and--liked each other.He lived in a little house on a hill.""Like this?"demanded Jill.

"Eh?Oh--er--yes,SOMETHING like this,"returned Mr.Jack,with an odd half-smile."And she lived in another bit of a house in a town far away from the boy.""Then how could they play together?"questioned David.

"They couldn't,ALWAYS.It was only summers when she came to visit in the boy's town.She was very near him then,for the old aunt whom she visited lived in a big stone house with towers,on another hill,in plain sight from the boy's home.""Towers like those--where the Lady of the Roses lives?"asked David.

"Eh?What?Oh--er--yes,"murmured Mr.Jack."We'll say the towers were something like those over there."He paused,then went on musingly:"The girl used to signal,sometimes,from one of the tower windows.One wave of the handkerchief meant,'I'm coming,over';two waves,with a little pause between,meant,'You are to come over here.'So the boy used to wait always,after that first wave to see if another followed;so that he might know whether he were to be host or guest that day.The waves always came at eight o'clock in the morning,and very eagerly the boy used to watch for them all through the summer when the girl was there.""Did they always come,every morning?"Asked Jill.

"No;sometimes the girl had other things to do.Her aunt would want her to go somewhere with her,or other cousins were expected whom the girl must entertain;and she knew the boy did not like other guests to be there when he was,so she never asked him to come over at such times.On such occasions she did sometimes run up to the tower at eight o'clock and wave three times,and that meant,'Dead Day.'So the boy,after all,never drew a real breath of relief until he made sure that no dreaded third wave was to follow the one or the two.""Seems to me,"observed David,"that all this was sort of one-sided.Didn't the boy say anything?""Oh,yes,"smiled Mr.Jack."But the boy did not have any tower to wave from,you must remember.He had only the little piazza on his tiny bit of a house.But he rigged up a pole,and he asked his mother to make him two little flags,a red and a blue one.

The red meant 'All right';and the blue meant 'Got to work';and these he used to run up on his pole in answer to her waving 'I'm coming over,'or 'You are to come over here.'So,you see,occasionally it was the boy who had to bring the 'Dead Day,'as there were times when he had to work.And,by the way,perhaps you would be interested to know that after a while he thought up a third flag to answer her three waves.He found an old black silk handkerchief of his father's,and he made that into a flag.

He told the girl it meant 'I'm heartbroken,'and he said it was a sign of the deepest mourning.The girl laughed and tipped her head saucily to one side,and said,'Pooh!as if you really cared!'But the boy stoutly maintained his position,and it was that,perhaps,which made her play the little joke one day.

"The boy was fourteen that summer,and the girl thirteen.They had begun their signals years before,but they had not had the black one so long.On this day that I tell you of,the girl waved three waves,which meant,'Dead Day,'you remember,and watched until the boy had hoisted his black flag which said,'I'm heart-broken,'in response.Then,as fast as her mischievous little feet could carry her,she raced down one hill and across to the other.Very stealthily she advanced till she found the boy bent over a puzzle on the back stoop,and--and he was whistling merrily.

"How she teased him then!How she taunted him with 'Heart-broken,indeed--and whistling like that!'In vain he blushed and stammered,and protested that his whistling was only to keep up his spirits.The girl only laughed and tossed her yellow curls;then she hunted till she found some little jingling bells,and these she tied to the black badge of mourning and pulled it high up on the flagpole.The next instant she was off with a run and a skip,and a saucy wave of her hand;and the boy was left all alone with an hour's work ahead of him to untie the knots from his desecrated badge of mourning.

"And yet they were wonderfully good friends--this boy and girl.

From the very first,when they were seven and eight,they had said that they would marry each other when they grew up,and always they spoke of it as the expected thing,and laid many happy plans for the time when it should come.To be sure,as they grew older,it was not mentioned quite so often,perhaps;but the boy at least thought--if he thought of it all--that that was only because it was already so well understood.""What did the girl think?"It was Jill who asked the question.

"Eh?The girl?Oh,"answered Mr.Jack,a little bitterly,"I'm afraid I don't know exactly what the girl did think,but--it was n't that,anyhow--that is,judging from what followed.""What did follow?"

同类推荐
  • New Thought Pastels

    New Thought Pastels

    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。
  • The Arrow of Gold

    The Arrow of Gold

    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。
  • 笺纸谱

    笺纸谱

    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。
  • 韩非解老

    韩非解老

    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。
  • 天台八教大意

    天台八教大意

    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
  • 左边的幸福

    左边的幸福

    一个是冷漠的美丽少女,为了忘掉她心目中的完美男子而离开家到另一个城市开始新的生活;一个是众多MM心目的白马王子,他一直封闭自己的感情,从来没有为别人打开心扉过,当她遇到他,她的心会被他所融化吗?他会为她打开自己一直封闭的情感大门吗?
  • 雷震虚空

    雷震虚空

    以雷电歼灭敌人,将经过的地方都切成碎片的魔剑,深受人们畏惧的不朽霸主传说。
  • 爱在秦朝之夏未眠

    爱在秦朝之夏未眠

    这是关于一个少女穿越到秦朝的爱情经历。单纯的少女在未知的古代世界遇到许些奇事,身份互换后的她能否寻回记忆?在重重迷雾中,她能否找回真爱?敬请期待!————小梦
  • 校草的秘密恋人

    校草的秘密恋人

    美丽的蝶恋花,蝶儿恋花美,花却随春去春回;蝶儿为花醉,花心亦盼随蝶舞。
  • 创梦如虚

    创梦如虚

    你有梦想吗?对于你现实还是虚幻?如果给你一个绝对实现梦想的机会,你会实现什么梦想?如果你是一个可以实现所有人梦想的人,你是否,会感受所有人的梦想?只有你想不到的,却没有他做不到的,可这一切,真的只是这么梦幻吗……
  • 查理九世之晶雨流年

    查理九世之晶雨流年

    命运让她不堪,也让她意外穿越重生。过去,现在,未来都同样的不堪。可怜之人必有可恨之处也许就是针对我的吧!人在屋檐下,不得不低头………或许穿越对我来说也许是一个新的开始,呵呵—
  • 异世五行路

    异世五行路

    西方血族因何来到了东方玄幻大陆?一名坐吃等死的中国宅男被一名神秘人物送到这个血族肆虐的陆地到底有何目的?看我们毫无属性灵根的男主如何在这五行属性遍地的五行大陆生存,打破血族阴谋,回归地球。
  • 妙手小神农

    妙手小神农

    山沟里的穷小子,偶然间获得神农传承,从此桃运连连。村花要反扑,姑娘要改嫁,镇上麻辣女老板,更要给他生一堆的猴子!
  • 夫人很忙:将军偏爱重生妻

    夫人很忙:将军偏爱重生妻

    “他永远不会爱你。”她是天之骄女,却受尽折磨惨死荒郊。重活一世,杀机四伏。斗祖母,破迷局,她一次次死里逃生。一场又一场的混乱里,她和他紧紧绑在一起。带着凤凰命格,成为权谋焦点,她走得步步惊心。当事实真相被解开,她才知道前世今生两人错过的有多远。在四伏的危机里,季昀强势而来,还她一场两世深情。
  • 重生之仙隐都市

    重生之仙隐都市

    一千年前,他,意外穿越修真界。一千年后,因为渡劫失败,重生在了少年时期。且看他,重新踏上巅峰,证得无上仙道。