Bertha by Mary Hazelton Wade
page 43 of 68 (63%)
page 43 of 68 (63%)
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$600,000. It was a large sum, and it is no wonder the boy said he
could hardly imagine so much money. "There are hundreds of halls in the palace," Hans went on. "Some of their walls are painted and others are hung with elegant silk draperies. The floors are polished so they shine like mirrors. Then the pictures and the armour, Bertha! It almost seemed as though I were there while the schoolmaster was describing them." "I never expect to see such lovely things," said his sober little sister. "But perhaps I shall go to Berlin some day, Hans. Then I can see the statue of Frederick the Great, at any rate." "It stands opposite the palace," said her brother, "and cost more than any other bronze statue in the world." "How did you learn that, Hans?" "The schoolmaster told us so. He said, too, that it ought to stir the blood of every true German to look at it. There the great Frederick sits on horseback, wearing the robe in which he was crowned, and looking out from under his cocked hat with his bright, sharp eyes. That statue alone is enough to make the soldiers who march past it ready to give their lives for their country." [Illustration: Statue of Frederick the Great.] "He lived when the different kingdoms were separated from each other, and there was no one ruler over all of them. I know that," said Bertha. |
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