frost,5 he said, c the trees were still white, but it was beginning to thaw. You heard, didn't you? The bells were ringing for half an hour, and it was I who rang them. It's my duty to warn people, with this foot of mine that I broke through its being so slippery.* It was a red-letter day in the house ; the customers heard of it, and the neighbours were talking about how Frans had rung the Damiaatjes because of the slippery streets. He bustled about, rubbing his hands, and his eyes shone. At dinner his brother asked him if he had arranged it with old Simon, and what the verger had said. And Jansje, who was standing near, began to talk of old Simon's infirmities ; his arms were so painful that he had to put his elbows into the loops of the ropes when he was ringing the bells. That day there was a lot more talk than usual; Floris alone did not open his lips. But the day after it was as quiet as ever again in the house. Floris attracted no attention. After breakfast he would ask his Uncle Gerbrand what there was for him to do, a message in the town or a job in the shed. Then he would go off quietly, and no one ever saw when he returned. If he was sitting in his bedroom no sound betrayed it* It was only in the evenings that he would speak, when Werendonk asked him about the text the domine had been expounding to him. This domine held views that Werendonk