Children's Book Classics - Kate Douglas Wiggin Edition: 11 Novels & 120+ Short Stories for Children. Kate Douglas Wiggin

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Children's Book Classics - Kate Douglas Wiggin Edition: 11 Novels & 120+ Short Stories for Children - Kate Douglas Wiggin

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hidden in beautiful mists; but she leaned her head against the sun-warmed door, and closing her eyes, whispered, just as if she had been a child saying her prayers: “God bless aunt Miranda; God bless the brick house that was; God bless the brick house that is to be!”

      NEW CHRONICLES OF REBECCA

       Table of Contents

       First Chronicle. Jack O’Lantern

       I

       II

       III

       IV

       Second Chronicle. Daughters of Zion

       I

       II

       Third Chronicle. Rebecca’s Thought Book

       I

       II

       Fourth Chronicle. A Tragedy in Millinery

       I

       II

       Fifth Chronicle. The Saving of the Colors

       I

       II

       III

       IV

       Sixth Chronicle. The State O’ Maine Girl

       I

       II

       Seventh Chronicle. The Little Prophet

       I

       II

       III

       IV

       Eighth Chronicle. Abner Simpson’s New Leaf

       Ninth Chronicle. The Green Isle

       Tenth Chronicle. Rebecca’s Reminiscences

       Eleventh Chronicle. Abijah the Brave and the Fair Emmajane

       I

       II

       III

      First Chronicle.

       Jack O’Lantern

       Table of Contents

      I

       Table of Contents

      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. Woodbine transformed the old shed and tool house to things of beauty, and the flower beds themselves were the prettiest and most fragrant in all the countryside. A row of dahlias ran directly around the garden spot,—dahlias scarlet, gold, and variegated. In the very centre was a round plot where the upturned faces of a thousand pansies smiled amid their leaves, and in the four corners were triangular blocks of sweet phlox over which the butterflies fluttered unceasingly. In the spaces between ran a riot of portulaca and nasturtiums, while in the more regular, shell-bordered beds grew spirea and gillyflowers, mignonette, marigolds, and clove pinks.

      Back of the barn and encroaching on the edge of the hay field was a grove of sweet clover whose white feathery tips fairly bent under the assaults of the bees, while banks of aromatic mint and thyme drank in the sunshine and sent it out again into the summer air, warm, and deliciously odorous.

      The hollyhocks were Miss Sawyer’s pride, and they grew in a stately line beneath the four kitchen windows, their tapering tips set thickly with gay satin circlets of pink or lavender or crimson.

      “They grow something like steeples,” thought little Rebecca Randall, who was weeding the bed, “and the flat, round flowers are like rosettes; but steeples wouldn’t be studded with rosettes, so if you were writing about them in a composition you’d have to give up one or the other, and I think I’ll give up the steeples:—

      Gay little hollyhock

      

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