Once upon a time a mother called
her only son into the kitchen, gave him a basket of fine, fresh
eggs, and bade him carry them to his Aunt Jane, who lived a few
miles down the valley. The son, a lively lad about twelve years of
age, obeyed his mother with joy, and clapping his little green hat
on his head, stepped forth into the road. It was a beautiful clear
morning in the spring, and the earth, released from the icy chains
of winter, was rejoicing in her freedom and the return of the sun. A
few birds, just back from the southland, rocked on twigs swollen
with bursting buds, a thousand rills flowing from everywhere and in
every direction sparkled and sang, and the air was sweet with the
odor of ploughed fields.
The boy, whose name was Peter, walked along whistling. Suddenly he
saw a spot on the road shining as dazzlingly as if a bit of the sun
itself had fallen to the earth. "A bit of glass," thought Peter. But
it was not a bit of glass after all, but a fine golden florin which
must have dropped from somebody's purse.
Peter stooped, picked up the gold piece, put it in his pocket, and
walked off whistling louder than ever. In a little while he came to
a place where the road wound down a little hill, and Peter saw,
trudging up this hill, a very strange looking old man. He was a very
old man; his face was puckered up into a thousand wrinkles like the
skin of a shrunken apple, and he had long, snow-white hair and a
white beard which reached almost to his waist. Moreover, he was
strangely dressed in a robe of cherry scarlet, and wore golden
shoes. From a kind of belt hung two horns on silver chains, one an
ordinary cow's horn, the other a beautiful horn carved of the
whitest ivory, and decorated with little figures of men and animals.
"Dreams to sell! Dreams to sell!" called out the old man as soon as
he caught sight of Peter. "Don't you want to buy a dream, young
man?"
"What kind of dreams have you?" asked Peter.
"Good, bad, true, false--all kinds," replied the seller of dreams.
"I have even a few thrilling nightmares. Dreams to sell! Dreams to
sell!"
"How much does a dream cost?" asked Peter.
"A golden florin," answered the merchant.
"I'll have one, please," said Peter; and he handed over the florin
he had found.
The old man took a kind of wonderful sugarplum out of the ivory
horn, and gave it to Peter to eat.
"You will have the dream next time you sleep," said he, and trudged
on.
So Peter continued his journey, stopping every once in a while to
look back at the strange old man, who was slowly climbing the hill.
At length Peter came to a little quiet grove of pines, and there he
sat down on a big stone and ate the luncheon which his mother had
prepared for him. The sun was high in the heavens; it was close on
to high noon. Now, as Peter was contentedly munching his bread and
cheese, he heard, at first far away, then quite near at hand, the
clear notes of a coachman's horn. The notes of the second call died
away in a great pattering of hoofs and tinkling of little bells, and
suddenly, arriving in a great swirl of yellow dust, came a
magnificent coach drawn by twelve white horses. A lady, very richly
dressed and wearing many sparkling diamonds, sat within the coach.
To Peter's astonishment, the lady was his Aunt Jane.
The coach stopped with a great jingling of the twelve harnesses, and
Aunt Jane leaned out of the window, and said to Peter, "What are you
doing here, child?"
"I was on my way to your cottage with a basket of fine fresh eggs,"
answered Peter.
"Well, it's fortunate I found you," said Aunt Jane, "for I have
given up living in the cottage, and have now got a castle of my own.
Jump in, Peter, and don't forget your basket."
So Peter climbed into the coach, closed the door behind him, and was
driven away. The coach went over hill and down dale; it went through
strange forests from whose branches green parrots whooped and
shrieked; it rolled through valleys in strange shining mountains.
Peter stole a look at Aunt Jane and saw that she was wearing a
crown.
"Are you a queen, Aunt Jane?" he asked.
"Indeed, I am," replied his aunt. "You see, Peter, two days ago,
while I was looking for my white cow who had strayed away, I came
upon the magnificent castle to which we are now going. It has four
beautiful towers, and a door set with diamonds.
"'Whose castle is this?' I said to the lodge-keeper.
"'It's nobody's, marm,' said he.
"'What,' said I; 'do you mean to say that nobody owns this fine
castle?'
"'That's just what I mean to say, marm,' answered he; 'the castle
belongs to anyone who wants it.'
"So into the castle I walked, and I did n't go out, you may be sure,
till I had been into every room that I could find. Then I put on
these clothes and these diamonds, which I found in a cupboard, and
went down and told the servants I intended to be queen. You see,
Peter dear, there's nothing that a woman of determination and energy
can't accomplish."
The coach rolled on, and soon Peter caught sight of Aunt Jane's
castle. It was rather large, and had an enormous round tower at each
corner--a thing which brought to Peter's mind the picture of an
elephant lying on its back. Peter and Aunt Jane, accompanied by a
train of servants dressed in blue-and-buff livery, walked into the
castle through the diamond-studded door.
"Do you think you could eat a little more of something?" said Aunt
Jane, taking off her white-kid gloves; "because if you can I'll have
a place set for you at the luncheon table."
And Peter, who like all boys, could eat a little more anywhere and
at any time, readily answered, "Yes."
So Peter and Aunt Jane sat down to a wonderful little table covered
with a snow-white cloth.
"Draw your chair nearer, Peter dear," said Aunt Jane.
"I can't" said Peter, "it's stuck to the floor."
And so it was; the chair was stuck to the floor, and no amount of
pushing or pulling could budge it.
"That's odd," said Aunt Jane; "but never mind, I'll push the table
over to the chair."
But like the chair, the table refused to budge. Peter then tried to
slide his plate of soup closer to him, but the plate, which the
servant had placed on the cloth but an instant before, had evidently
frozen to the table in some extraordinary manner and could not be
moved an inch. The soup in the plate, however, was not fastened to
the dish, nor were the wonderful strawberry-cakes and the delicious
ices with which the dinner closed.
"You don't suppose this castle is enchanted, do you, Aunt Jane?"
asked Peter.
"Not a bit of it," replied Aunt Jane. "And even if it were," she
continued recklessly, "I should n't mind, for there's nothing that a
woman of determination and energy can't accomplish." There was a
pause, and then Aunt Jane added, "I am going to have some guests to
dinner this evening, so run round and amuse yourself as well as you
can. There's ever so much to see in the castle, and in the garden
there's a pond with swans in it."
Attended by her servants, Aunt Jane majestically walked away. Peter
spent the afternoon exploring the castle. He went through room after
room; he scurried through the attics like a mouse, and was even lost
for a while in the cellars. And everywhere he went, he found
everything immovable. The beds, tables, and chairs could neither be
moved about nor lifted up, and even the clocks and vases were
mysteriously fastened to their places on the shelves.
The night came on. Coach after coach rolled up to the diamond door,
which sparkled in the moonlight. When the guests had all arrived, a
silver trumpet sounded, and Aunt Jane, dressed in a wonderful gown
of flowering brocade edged with pearls, came solemnly down the great
stairway of the castle hall. Two little black boys, dressed in
oriental costume and wearing turbans, held up her gorgeous train,
and she looked very grand indeed. Peter, to his great surprise,
found himself dressed in a wonderful suit of plum-colored velvet.
"Welcome, my friends," said Queen Jane, who had opened a wonderful
ostrich-feather fan. "Are we not fortunate in having so beautiful a
night for our dinner?"
And the Queen, giving her arm to a splendid personage in the uniform
of an officer of the King's dragoons, led the way to the
banquet-hall.
The wonderful party, all silks and satins, and gleaming with jewels,
swept like a peacock's tail behind her. Soon dinner was over, and
the guests began to stray by twos and threes to the ballroom. Aunt
Jane and the soldier led off the grand march; then came wonderful,
stately minuets, quadrilles, and sweet old-fashioned waltzes. The
merriment was at its height when somebody ran heavily up the great
stairs leading to the ballroom, and the guests, turning round to see
whence came the clatter, saw standing in the doorway a strange old
man dressed in a robe of cherry scarlet and wearing golden shoes. It
was the seller of dreams. His white hair was disheveled, his robe
was awry, and there was dust on his golden shoes.
"Foolish people!" screamed the old seller of dreams, his voice
rising to a shriek, "Run your lives! This castle lies under a
terrible enchantment; in a few minutes it will turn upside-down.
Have you not seen that everything is fastened to the floor? Run for
your lives!"
Immediately there was a great babble of voices, some shrieks, and
more confusion, and the guests ran pell-mell down the great stairs
and out the castle door. To Peter's dismay, Aunt Jane was not among
them. So into the castle he rushed again, calling at the top of his
voice, "Aunt Jane! Aunt Jane!" He ran through the brilliantly lit
and deserted ballroom; he saw himself running in the great mirrors
of the gallery. "Aunt Jane!" he cried; but no Aunt Jane replied.
Peter rushed up the stairs leading to the castle tower, and emerged
upon the balcony. He saw the black shadow of the castle thrown upon
the grass far below by the full moon; he saw the great forest, so
bright above and so dark and mysterious below, and the long
snow-clad range of the Adamant Mountains. Suddenly a voice, louder
than the voice of any human being, a voice deep, ringing, and solemn
as the sound of a great bell, cried,--
"'T is time!"
Immediately everything became as black as ink, people shrieked, the
enchanted castle rolled like a ship at sea, and leaning far to one
side, began to turn upside-down. Peter felt the floor of the balcony
tip beneath him; he tried to catch hold of something, but could find
nothing; suddenly, with a scream, he fell. He was falling, falling,
falling, falling, falling.
When Peter came to himself, instead of its being night, it was
still noonday, and he was sitting on the same stone in the same
quiet roadside grove from which he had caught sight of his Aunt Jane
in her wonderful coach. A blue jay screamed at him from overhead.
For Aunt Jane, the coach, and the enchanted castle had been only a
dream. Peter, you see, had fallen asleep under the pines, and while
he slept, he had dreamed the dream he purchased from the seller of
dreams.
Very glad to be still alive, Peter rubbed his eyes, took up his
basket of eggs, and went down the road whistling.