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Chapter 6 No?Let's Princess
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SHE happened quite accidentally. We were not looking for a Princess at all just then; but No?l had said he was going to find a Princess all by himself; and marry her—and he really did. Which was rather odd, because when people say things are going to befall, very often they don’t. It was different, of course, with the prophets of old.

We did not get any treasure by it, except twelve chocolate drops; but we might have done, and it was an adventure, anyhow.

Greenwich Park is a jolly good place to play in, especially the parts that aren’t near Greenwich. The parts near the Heath are first‐rate. I often wish the Park was nearer our house; but I suppose a Park is a difficult thing to move.

Sometimes we get Eliza to put lunch in a page: 80 basket, and we go up to the Park. She likes that—it saves cooking dinner for us; and sometimes she says of her own accord, “I’ve made some pasties for you, and you might as well go into the Park as not. It’s a lovely day.”

She always tells us to rinse1 out the cup at the drinking‐fountain, and the girls do; but I always put my head under the tap and drink. Then you are an intrepid2 hunter at a mountain stream—and besides, you’re sure it’s clean. Dicky does the same, and so does H.O. But No?l always drinks out of the cup. He says it is a golden goblet3 wrought4 by enchanted5 gnomes6.

The day the Princess happened was a fine, hot day, last October, and we were quite tired with the walk up to the Park.

We always go in by the little gate at the top of Croom’s Hill. It is the postern gate that things always happen at in stories. It was dusty walking, but when we got in the Park it was ripping, so we rested a bit, and lay on our backs, and looked up at the trees, and wished we could play monkeys. I have done it before now, but the Park‐keeper makes a row if he catches you.
page: 81

When we’d rested a little, Alice said—

“It was a long way to the enchanted wood, but it is very nice now we are there. I wonder what we shall find in it?”

“We shall find deer,” said Dicky, “if we go to look; but they go on the other side of the Park because of the people with buns.”

Saying buns made us think of lunch, so we had it; and when we had done we scratched a hole under a tree and buried the papers, because we know it spoils pretty places to leave beastly, greasy7 papers lying about. I remember Mother teaching me and Dora that, when we were quite little. I wish everybody’s parents would teach them this useful lesson, and the same about orange‐peel.

When we’d eaten everything there was, Alice whispered—

“I see the white witch bear yonder among the trees! Let’s track it and slay8 it in its lair9.”

“I am the bear,” said No?l; so he crept away, and we followed him among the trees. Often the witch bear was out of sight, and then you didn’t know where it would jump out from; but sometimes we saw it, and just followed.

“When we catch it there’ll be a great page: 82 fight,” said Oswald; “and I shall be Count Folko of Mont Faucon.”

“I’ll be Gabrielle,” said Dora. She is the only one of us who likes doing girl’s parts.

“I’ll be Sintram,” said Alice; “and H.O. can be the Little Master.”

“What about Dicky?”

“Oh, I can be the Pilgrim with the bones.”

“Hist!” whispered Alice. “See his white fairy fur gleaming amid yonder covert10!”

And I saw a bit of white too. It was No?l’s collar, and it had come undone11 at the back.

We hunted the bear in and out of the trees, and then we lost him altogether; and suddenly we found the wall of the Park—in a place where I’m sure there wasn’t a wall before. No?l wasn’t anywhere about, and there was a door in the wall. And it was open; so we went through.

“The bear has hidden himself in these mountain fastnesses,” Oswald said. “I will draw my good sword and after him.”

So I drew the umbrella, which Dora always will bring in case it rains, because No?l gets a cold on the chest at the least thing—and we went on.

The other side of the wall it was a stable yard, all cobble stones. There was nobody page: 83 about—but we could hear a man rubbing down a horse and hissing12 in the stable; so we crept very quietly past, and Alice whispered—

“”Tis the lair of the Monster Serpent; I hear his deadly hiss13! Beware! Courage and despatch14!”

We went over the stones on tiptoe, and we found another wall with another door in it on the other side. We went through that too, on tiptoe. It really was an adventure. And there we were in a shrubbery, and we saw something white through the trees. Dora said it was the white bear. That is so like Dora. She always begins to take part in a play just when the rest of us are getting tired of it. I don’t mean this unkindly, because I am very fond of Dora. I cannot forget how kind she was when I had bronchitis; and ingratitude15 is a dreadful vice16. But it is quite true.

“It is not a bear,” said Oswald; and we all went on, still on tiptoe, round a twisty path and on to a lawn, and there was No?l. His collar had come undone, as I said, and he had an inky mark on his face that he made just before we left the house, and he wouldn’t let Dora wash it off, and one of his boot‐laces page: 84 was coming down. He was standing17 looking at a little girl; she was the funniest little girl you ever saw.

She was like a china doll—the sixpenny kind; she had a white face, and long yellow hair, done up very tight in two pigtails; her forehead was very big and lumpy, and her cheeks came high up, like little shelves under her eyes. Her eyes were small and blue. She had on a funny black frock, with curly braid on it, and button boots that went almost up to her knees. Her legs were very thin. She was sitting in a hammock chair nursing a blue kitten—not a sky‐blue one, of course, but the colour of a new slate18 pencil. As we came up we heard her say to No?l—

“Who are you?”

No?l had forgotten about the bear, and he was taking his favourite part, so he said—

“I’m Prince Camaralzaman.”

The funny little girl looked pleased—

“I thought at first you were a common boy,” she said. Then she saw the rest of us and said—

“Are you all Princesses and Princes too?”

Of course we said “Yes,” and she said—

“I am a Princess also.” She said it very well too, exactly as if it were true. We were page: 85 very glad, because it is so seldom you meet any children who can begin to play right off without having everything explained to them. And even then they will say they are going to “pretend to be” a lion, or a witch, or a king. Now this little girl just said “I am a Princess.” Then she looked at Oswald and said, “I fancy I’ve seen you at Baden.”

Of course Oswald said, “Very likely.”

The little girl had a funny voice, and all her words were quite plain, each word by itself; she didn’t talk at all like we do.

H.O. asked her what the cat’s name was, and she said “Katinka.” Then Dicky said—

“Let’s get away from the windows; if you play near windows some one inside generally knocks at them and says ‘Don’t’.”

The Princess put down the cat very carefully and said—

“I am forbidden to walk off the grass.”

“That’s a pity,” said Dora.

“But I will if you like,” said the Princess.

“You mustn’t do things you are forbidden to do,” Dora said; but Dicky showed us that there was some more grass beyond the shrubs19 with only a gravel20 path between. So I lifted the Princess over the gravel, so that she should be able to say she hadn’t walked off page: 86 the grass. When we got to the other grass we all sat down, and the Princess asked us if we liked “dragées” (I know that’s how you spell it, for I asked Albert‐next‐door’s uncle).

We said we thought not, but she pulled a real silver box out of her pocket and showed us; they were just flat, round chocolates. We had two each. Then we asked her her name, and she began, and when she began she went on, and on, and on, till I thought she was never going to stop. H.O. said she had fifty names, but Dicky is very good at figures, and he says there were only eighteen. The first were Pauline, Alexandra, Alice, and Mary was one, and Victoria, for we all heard that, and it ended up with Hildegarde Cunigonde something or other, Princess of something else.

When she’d done, H.O. said, “That’s jolly good! Say it again!” and she did, but even then we couldn’t remember it. We told her our names, but she thought they were too short, so when it was No?l’s turn he said he was Prince No?l Camaralzaman Ivan Constantine Charlemagne James John Edward Biggs Maximilian Bastable Prince of Lewisham, but when she asked him to say it again page: 87 of course he could only get the first two names right, because he’d made it up as he went on.

So the Princess said, “You are quite old enough to know your own name.” She was very grave and serious.

She told us that she was the fifth cousin of Queen Victoria. We asked who the other cousins were, but she did not seem to understand. She went on and said she was seven times removed. She couldn’t tell us what that meant either, but Oswald thinks it means that the Queen’s cousins are so fond of her that they will keep coming bothering, so the Queen’s servants have orders to remove them. This little girl must have been very fond of the Queen to try so often to see her, and to have been seven times removed. We could see that it is considered something to be proud of; but we thought it was hard on the Queen that her cousins wouldn’t let her alone.

Presently the little girl asked us where our maids and governesses were.

We told her we hadn’t any just now. And she said—

“How pleasant! And did you come here alone?”
page: 88

“Yes,” said Dora; “we came across the Heath.”

“You are very fortunate,” said the little girl. She sat very upright on the grass, with her fat little hands in her lap. “I should like to go on the Heath. There are donkeys there, with white saddle covers. I should like to ride them, but my governess will not permit.”

“I’m glad we haven’t a governess,” H.O. said. “We ride the donkeys whenever we have any pennies, and once I gave the man another penny to make it gallop21.”

“You are indeed fortunate!” said the Princess again, and when she looked sad the shelves on her cheeks showed more than ever. You could have laid a sixpence on them quite safely if you had had one.

“Never mind,” said No?l; “I’ve got a lot of money. Come out and have a ride now.” But the little girl shook her head and said she was afraid it would not be correct.

Dora said she was quite right; then all of a sudden came one of those uncomfortable times when nobody can think of anything to say, so we sat and looked at each other. But at last Alice said we ought to be going.

“Do not go yet,” the little girl said. “At what time did they order your carriage?”
page: 89

“Our carriage is a fairy one, drawn22 by griffins, and it comes when we wish for it,” said No?l.

The little girl looked at him very queerly, and said, “That is out of a picture‐book.”

Then No?l said he thought it was about time he was married if we were to be home in time for tea. The little girl was rather stupid over it, but she did what we told her, and we married them with Dora’s pocket‐handkerchief for a veil, and the ring off the back of one of the buttons on H.O.’s blouse just went on her little finger.

Then we showed her how to play cross‐touch, and puss in the corner, and tag. It was funny, she didn’t know any games but battledore and shuttlecock and les graces. But she really began to laugh at last and not to look quite so like a doll.

She was Puss and was running after Dicky when suddenly she stopped short and looked as if she was going to cry. And we looked too, and there were two prim23 ladies with little mouths and tight hair. One of them said in quite an awful voice, “Pauline, who are these children?” and her voice was gruff; with very curly R’s.

The little girl said we were Princes and page: 90 Princesses—which was silly, to a grown‐up person that is not a great friend of yours.

The gruff lady gave a short, horrid24 laugh, like a husky bark, and said—

“Princes, indeed! They’re only common children!”

Dora turned very red and began to speak, but the little girl cried out “Common children! Oh, I am so glad! When I am grown up I’ll always play with common children.”

And she ran at us, and began to kiss us one by one, beginning with Alice; she had got to H.O. when the horrid lady said—

“Your Highness—go indoors at once!”

The little girl answered, “I won’t!” Then the prim lady said—

“Wilson, carry her Highness indoors.”

And the little girl was carried away screaming, and kicking with her little thin legs and her buttoned boots, and between her screams she shrieked25: “Common children! I am glad, glad, glad! Common children! Common children!”

The nasty lady then remarked—

“Go at once, or I will send for the police!”

So we went. H.O. made a face at her and page: 91 so did Alice, but Oswald took off his cap and said he was sorry if she was annoyed about anything; for Oswald has always been taught to be polite to ladies, however nasty. Dicky took his off, too, when he saw me do it; he says he did it first, but that is a mistake. If I were really a common boy I should say it was a lie.

Then we all came away, and when we got outside Dora said, “So she was really a Princess. Fancy a Princess living there!”

“Even Princesses have to live somewhere,” said Dicky.

“And I thought it was play. And it was real. I wish I’d known! I should have liked to ask her lots of things,” said Alice.

H.O. said he would have liked to ask her what she had for dinner and whether she had a crown.

I felt, myself, we had lost a chance of finding out a great deal about kings and queens. I might have known such a stupid‐looking little girl would never have been able to pretend, as well as that.

So we all went home across the Heath, and made dripping toast for tea.

When we were eating it No?l said, “I page: 92 wish I could give her some! It is very good.”

He sighed as he said it, and his mouth was very full, so we knew he was thinking of his Princess. He says now that she was as beautiful as the day, but we remember her quite well, and she was nothing of the kind.


点击收听单词发音收听单词发音  

1 rinse BCozs     
v.用清水漂洗,用清水冲洗
参考例句:
  • Give the cup a rinse.冲洗一下杯子。
  • Don't just rinse the bottles. Wash them out carefully.别只涮涮瓶子,要仔细地洗洗里面。
2 intrepid NaYzz     
adj.无畏的,刚毅的
参考例句:
  • He is not really satisfied with his intrepid action.他没有真正满意他的无畏行动。
  • John's intrepid personality made him a good choice for team leader.约翰勇敢的个性适合作领导工作。
3 goblet S66yI     
n.高脚酒杯
参考例句:
  • He poured some wine into the goblet.他向高脚酒杯里倒了一些葡萄酒。
  • He swirled the brandy around in the huge goblet.他摇晃着高脚大玻璃杯使里面的白兰地酒旋动起来。
4 wrought EoZyr     
v.引起;以…原料制作;运转;adj.制造的
参考例句:
  • Events in Paris wrought a change in British opinion towards France and Germany.巴黎发生的事件改变了英国对法国和德国的看法。
  • It's a walking stick with a gold head wrought in the form of a flower.那是一个金质花形包头的拐杖。
5 enchanted enchanted     
adj. 被施魔法的,陶醉的,入迷的 动词enchant的过去式和过去分词
参考例句:
  • She was enchanted by the flowers you sent her. 她非常喜欢你送给她的花。
  • He was enchanted by the idea. 他为这个主意而欣喜若狂。
6 gnomes 4d2c677a8e6ad6ce060d276f3fcfc429     
n.矮子( gnome的名词复数 );侏儒;(尤指金融市场上搞投机的)银行家;守护神
参考例句:
  • I have a wonderful recipe: bring two gnomes, two eggs. 我有一个绝妙的配方:准备两个侏儒,两个鸡蛋。 来自互联网
  • Illusions cast by gnomes from a small village have started becoming real. 53侏儒对一个小村庄施放的幻术开始变为真实。 来自互联网
7 greasy a64yV     
adj. 多脂的,油脂的
参考例句:
  • He bought a heavy-duty cleanser to clean his greasy oven.昨天他买了强力清洁剂来清洗油污的炉子。
  • You loathe the smell of greasy food when you are seasick.当你晕船时,你会厌恶油腻的气味。
8 slay 1EtzI     
v.杀死,宰杀,杀戮
参考例句:
  • He intended to slay his father's murderer.他意图杀死杀父仇人。
  • She has ordered me to slay you.她命令我把你杀了。
9 lair R2jx2     
n.野兽的巢穴;躲藏处
参考例句:
  • How can you catch tiger cubs without entering the tiger's lair?不入虎穴,焉得虎子?
  • I retired to my lair,and wrote some letters.我回到自己的躲藏处,写了几封信。
10 covert voxz0     
adj.隐藏的;暗地里的
参考例句:
  • We should learn to fight with enemy in an overt and covert way.我们应学会同敌人做公开和隐蔽的斗争。
  • The army carried out covert surveillance of the building for several months.军队对这座建筑物进行了数月的秘密监视。
11 undone JfJz6l     
a.未做完的,未完成的
参考例句:
  • He left nothing undone that needed attention.所有需要注意的事他都注意到了。
12 hissing hissing     
n. 发嘶嘶声, 蔑视 动词hiss的现在分词形式
参考例句:
  • The steam escaped with a loud hissing noise. 蒸汽大声地嘶嘶冒了出来。
  • His ears were still hissing with the rustle of the leaves. 他耳朵里还听得萨萨萨的声音和屑索屑索的怪声。 来自汉英文学 - 春蚕
13 hiss 2yJy9     
v.发出嘶嘶声;发嘘声表示不满
参考例句:
  • We can hear the hiss of air escaping from a tire.我们能听到一只轮胎的嘶嘶漏气声。
  • Don't hiss at the speaker.不要嘘演讲人。
14 despatch duyzn1     
n./v.(dispatch)派遣;发送;n.急件;新闻报道
参考例句:
  • The despatch of the task force is purely a contingency measure.派出特遣部队纯粹是应急之举。
  • He rushed the despatch through to headquarters.他把急件赶送到总部。
15 ingratitude O4TyG     
n.忘恩负义
参考例句:
  • Tim's parents were rather hurt by his ingratitude.蒂姆的父母对他的忘恩负义很痛心。
  • His friends were shocked by his ingratitude to his parents.他对父母不孝,令他的朋友们大为吃惊。
16 vice NU0zQ     
n.坏事;恶习;[pl.]台钳,老虎钳;adj.副的
参考例句:
  • He guarded himself against vice.他避免染上坏习惯。
  • They are sunk in the depth of vice.他们堕入了罪恶的深渊。
17 standing 2hCzgo     
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的
参考例句:
  • After the earthquake only a few houses were left standing.地震过后只有几幢房屋还立着。
  • They're standing out against any change in the law.他们坚决反对对法律做任何修改。
18 slate uEfzI     
n.板岩,石板,石片,石板色,候选人名单;adj.暗蓝灰色的,含板岩的;vt.用石板覆盖,痛打,提名,预订
参考例句:
  • The nominating committee laid its slate before the board.提名委员会把候选人名单提交全体委员会讨论。
  • What kind of job uses stained wood and slate? 什么工作会接触木头污浊和石板呢?
19 shrubs b480276f8eea44e011d42320b17c3619     
灌木( shrub的名词复数 )
参考例句:
  • The gardener spent a complete morning in trimming those two shrubs. 园丁花了整个上午的时间修剪那两处灌木林。
  • These shrubs will need more light to produce flowering shoots. 这些灌木需要更多的光照才能抽出开花的新枝。
20 gravel s6hyT     
n.砂跞;砂砾层;结石
参考例句:
  • We bought six bags of gravel for the garden path.我们购买了六袋碎石用来铺花园的小路。
  • More gravel is needed to fill the hollow in the drive.需要更多的砾石来填平车道上的坑洼。
21 gallop MQdzn     
v./n.(马或骑马等)飞奔;飞速发展
参考例句:
  • They are coming at a gallop towards us.他们正朝着我们飞跑过来。
  • The horse slowed to a walk after its long gallop.那匹马跑了一大阵后慢下来缓步而行。
22 drawn MuXzIi     
v.拖,拉,拔出;adj.憔悴的,紧张的
参考例句:
  • All the characters in the story are drawn from life.故事中的所有人物都取材于生活。
  • Her gaze was drawn irresistibly to the scene outside.她的目光禁不住被外面的风景所吸引。
23 prim SSIz3     
adj.拘泥形式的,一本正经的;n.循规蹈矩,整洁;adv.循规蹈矩地,整洁地
参考例句:
  • She's too prim to enjoy rude jokes!她太古板,不喜欢听粗野的笑话!
  • He is prim and precise in manner.他的态度一本正经而严谨
24 horrid arozZj     
adj.可怕的;令人惊恐的;恐怖的;极讨厌的
参考例句:
  • I'm not going to the horrid dinner party.我不打算去参加这次讨厌的宴会。
  • The medicine is horrid and she couldn't get it down.这种药很难吃,她咽不下去。
25 shrieked dc12d0d25b0f5d980f524cd70c1de8fe     
v.尖叫( shriek的过去式和过去分词 )
参考例句:
  • She shrieked in fright. 她吓得尖叫起来。
  • Li Mei-t'ing gave a shout, and Lu Tzu-hsiao shrieked, "Tell what? 李梅亭大声叫,陆子潇尖声叫:“告诉什么? 来自汉英文学 - 围城


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