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Stories of Kate Douglas Wiggin
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The Village Watch-Tower
It stood on the gentle slope of a hill, the old gray house, with its weather-beaten clapboards and its roof of ragged shingles.
It was in the very lap of the road, so that the stage-driver could almost
knock on the window pane without getting down from his seat, on those rare
occasions when he brought "old Mis' Bascom" a parcel from Saco.
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The Story Of Waitstill Baxter
God watched, and listened, knowing that there would be other prophets, true and false, in the days to come, and other
processions following them; and the river watched and listened
too, as it hurried on towards the sea with its story of the
present that was sometime to be the history of the past.
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New Chronicles of Rebecca
Miss Miranda Sawyer's old-fashioned garden was the pleasantest spot in Riverboro on a sunny July morning. The rich color of the
brick house gleamed and glowed through the shade of the elms and
maples. Luxuriant hop-vines clambered up the lightning rods and
water spouts, hanging their delicate clusters here and there in
graceful profusion
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Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm
There was one passenger in the coach, -- a small dark-haired person in a glossy buff calico dress. She was so slender and so stiffly starched that she slid from space to space on the leather cushions, though she braced herself against the middle seat with her feet and extended her cotton-gloved hands on each side, in order to maintain some sort of balance. Whenever the wheels sank farther than usual into a rut, or jolted suddenly over a stone, she bounded involuntarily into the air, came down again, pushed back her funny little straw hat, and picked up or settled more firmly a small pink sun
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Rose O' the River
The immensity of the sea had always silenced and overawed him, left him cold in feeling. The river wooed him, caressed him, won
his heart. It was just big enough to love. It was full of
charms and changes, of varying moods and sudden surprises.
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Penelope's Postscripts
Salemina and I were in Geneva. If you had ever travelled through
Europe with a charming spinster who never sat down at a Continental
table d'hote without being asked by an American vis-a-vis whether
she were one of the P.'s of Salem, Massachusetts, you would
understand why I call my friend Salemina. She doesn't mind it.
She knows that I am simply jealous because I came from a vulgarly
large tribe that never had any coat-of-arms, and whose ancestors
always sealed their letters with their thumb nails.
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Penelope's Irish Experiences
That any three spinsters should be fellow-travellers is not in itself extraordinary, and so our former journeyings in England and
Scotland could hardly be described as eccentric in any way; but now
that I am a matron and Francesca is shortly to be married, it is
odd, to say the least, to see us cosily ensconced in a private
sitting-room of a Dublin hotel, the table laid for three, and not a
vestige of a man anywhere to be seen.
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Penelope's Experiences in Scotland
Her chagrin was all the keener at losing this last aspirant to her hand in that she had almost persuaded herself that she was as fond
of him as she was likely to be of anybody, and that on the whole she
had better marry him and save his life and reason.
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Penelope's English Experiences
Francesca is short of twenty years old, Salemina short of forty, I short of thirty. Francesca is in love, Salemina never has been in
love, I never shall be in love. Francesca is rich, Salemina is
well-to-do, I am poor. There we are in a nutshell.
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The Old Peabody Pew
Edgewood, like all the other villages along the banks of the Saco, is full of sunny slopes and leafy hollows. There are little,
rounded, green-clad hillocks that might, like their scriptural
sisters, "skip with joy," and there are grand, rocky hills tufted
with gaunt pine trees--these leading the eye to the splendid
heights of a neighbour State, where snow-crowned peaks tower in the
blue distance, sweeping the horizon in a long line of majesty.
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The Diary of a Goose Girl
In alluding to myself as a Goose Girl, I am using only the most modest of my titles; for I am also a poultry-maid, a tender of
Belgian hares and rabbits, and a shepherdess; but I particularly
fancy the role of Goose Girl, because it recalls the German fairy
tales of my early youth, when I always yearned, but never hoped, to
be precisely what I now am.
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The Flag-Raising
Miranda Sawyer had a heart, of course, but she had never used it for any other purpose than the pumping and circulating of blood.
She was just, conscientious, economical, industrious; a regular
attendant at church and Sunday-school, and a member of the State
Missionary and Bible societies, but in the presence of all these
chilly virtues you longed for one warm little fault, or lacking
that, one likable failing, something to make you sure that she
was thoroughly alive.
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A Cathedral Courtship
We are doing the English cathedral towns, aunt Celia and I. Aunt Celia has an intense desire to improve my mind. Papa told her, when
we were leaving Cedarhurst, that he wouldn't for the world have it
too much improved, and aunt Celia remarked that, so far as she could
judge, there was no immediate danger; with which exchange of
hostilities they parted.
Pages Updated On: 1-August- MMIII
Copyright © MMI -- MMIII ArthursClassicNovels.com
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