The Bow of Orange Ribbon eBook

Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 324 pages of information about The Bow of Orange Ribbon.

The Bow of Orange Ribbon eBook

Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 324 pages of information about The Bow of Orange Ribbon.

Through his mother, a beautiful Zealand woman, he was related to the Evertsens, the victorious admirals of Zealand, and also to the great mercantile family of Doversteghe; and he thought the enterprise of the one as honourable as the valour of the other.  Beside the sailor pictures of Cornelius and Jan Evertsen, and the famous “Keesje the Devil,” he hung sundry likenesses of men with grave, calm faces, proud and lofty of aspect, dressed in rich black velvet and large wide collars,—­merchants who were every inch princes of commerce and industry.

These lines of thought, almost tedious to indicate, flashed hotly and vividly through his mind.  The likes and dislikes, the faiths and aspirations, of past centuries, coloured the present moments, as light flung through richly stained glass has its white radiance tinged by it.  The feeling of race—­that strong and mysterious tie which no time nor circumstances can eradicate—­was so living a motive in Joris Van Heemskirk’s heart, that he had been quite conscious of its appeal when Semple spoke of a marriage between Katherine and his own son.  And Semple had understood this, when he so cunningly insinuated a common stock and a common form of faith.  For he had felt, instinctively, that even the long tie of friendship between them was hardly sufficient to bridge over the gulf of different nationalities.

Then, Katherine was Van Heemskirk’s darling, the very apple of his eye.  He felt angry that already there should be plans laid to separate her in any way from him.  His eldest daughters, Cornelia and Anna, had married men of substance in Esopus and Albany:  he knew they had done well for themselves, and had become contented in that knowledge; but he also felt that they were far away from his love and home.  Joanna was already betrothed to Capt.  Batavius de Vries; Bram would doubtless find himself a wife very soon; for a little while, he had certainly hoped to keep Katherine by his own side.  Semple, in speaking of her as already marriageable, had given him a shock.  It seemed such a few years since he had walked her to sleep at nights, cradled in his strong arms, close to his great, loving heart; such a little while ago when she toddled about the garden at his side, her plump white hands holding his big forefinger; only yesterday that she had been going to the school, with her spelling-book and Heidelberg in her hand.  When Lysbet had spoken to him of the English lady staying with Madam Semple, who was teaching Katherine the new crewel-stitch, it had appeared to him quite proper that such a child should be busy learning something in the way of needlework.  “Needlework” had been given as the reason of those visits, which he now remembered had been very frequent; and he was so absolutely truthful, that he never imagined the word to be in any measure a false definition.

[Illustration:  With her spelling-book and Heidelberg]

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The Bow of Orange Ribbon from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.