and back from the street by the breadth of a small garden. In the rear were large grounds, fields, and even woods. The place had two entrances, one immediately in front of the house for people on foot, and the other, a quarter of a mile distant, for people driving. This latter, opening from a joyous country lane of blackberry-vines and goldenrod, passed between two prodigious round stones, and S-ed into a dark and stately wood. Trees, standing gladly where God had set them, made a screen, impenetrable to the eye, between the gateway and the house.
Here Peter and Aladdin halted, while Aladdin sent a coin spinning into the air.
"Heads!" called Peter.
Aladdin let the piece fall to the ground, and they bent over it eagerly.
"After you," said Peter, for the coin read, "Tails."
Aladdin picked up the coin, and hurled it far away among the trees.
"That's our joint sacrifice to the gods, Peter," he said.