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Stray Pearls by Charlotte Mary Yonge
Book, page 241 / 334


For we were still at the Hague, Eustace gradually regaining strength,
and the bleedings had almost entirely ceased; but the physician who
attended him, the best I think whom I have even known, and whose
regimen did him more good than any other he had adopted, charged me,
as I valued his life, not to attempt a journey with him till after
the winter should be over, and summer entirely set in. If the
effusion of blood could be prevented he might even yet recover and
live to old age, but if it recurred again Dr. Dirkius would not
answer for his life for an hour; nor must he do aught that would give
him a rheum or renew his cough.

After all, we were very peaceful and happy in those rooms at the
Hague, though Eustace was very anxious about the King, Annora's heart
was at Paris, and I yearned after my son, from whom I had never
thought to be so long parted; but we kept our cares to ourselves, and
were cheerful with one another. We bought or borrowed books, and
read them together, we learned to make Holland lace, studied Dutch
cookery, and Annora, by Eustace's wish, took lessons on the lute and
spinnet, her education in those matters having been untimely cut
short. By the way, she had a real taste for music, and the finding
that her performance and her singing amused and refreshed him gave
her further zeal to continue the study and conquer the difficulties,
though she would otherwise have said she was too old to go to school.

Then the frost set in, and all the canals and sluggish streams were
sheets of ice, to which the market people skated, flying along upon
the ice like birds. We kept my brother's room as warm as it was in
our power to do, and made him lie in bed till the house was
thoroughly heated, and he did not suffer much or become materially
worse in the winter, but he was urgent upon us to go out and see the
curious sights and share the diversions as far as was possible for
us. Most of the Dutch ladies skated beautifully, and the younger
ones performed dances on the ice with their cavaliers, but all was
done more quietly than usual on account of the mourning, the Prince
of Orange being not yet buried, and his child frail and sickly. The
Baptism did not take place till January, and then we were especially
invited to be present. Though of course my brother could not go,
Annora and I did so. The poor child had three sets of States-General
for his godfathers, his godmothers being his grandmother, the elder
Princess of Orange, and his great aunt, Queen Elisabeth of Bohemia.

 
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