Ruth Hall. Fern Fanny

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Ruth Hall - Fern Fanny

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Chapter LI.

       Chapter LII.

       Chapter LIII.

       Chapter LIV.

       Chapter LV.

       Chapter LVI.

       Chapter LVII.

       Chapter LVIII.

       Chapter LIX

       Chapter LX.

       Chapter LXI.

       Chapter LXII.

       Chapter LXIII.

       Chapter LXIV.

       Chapter LXV.

       Chapter LXVI.

       Chapter LXVII.

       Chapter LXVIII.

       Chapter LXIX.

       Chapter LXX.

       Chapter LXXI.

       Chapter LXXII.

       Chapter LXXIII.

       Chapter LXXIV.

       Chapter LXXV.

       Chapter LXXVI.

       Chapter LXXVII.

       Chapter LXXVIII.

       Chapter LXXIX.

       Chapter LXXX.

       Chapter LXXXI.

       Chapter LXXXII.

       Chapter LXXXIII.

       Chapter LXXXIV.

       Chapter LXXXV.

       Chapter LXXXVI.

       Chapter LXXXVII.

       Chapter LXXXVIII.

       Chapter LXXXIX.

       Chapter XC.

      PREFACE.

       Table of Contents

      I present you with my first continuous story. I do not dignify it by the name of “A novel.” I am aware that it is entirely at variance with all set rules for novel-writing. There is no intricate plot; there are no startling developments, no hair-breadth escapes. I have compressed into one volume what I might have expanded into two or three. I have avoided long introductions and descriptions, and have entered unceremoniously and unannounced, into people’s houses, without stopping to ring the bell. Whether you will fancy this primitive mode of calling, whether you will like the company to which it introduces you, or—whether you will like the book at all, I cannot tell. Still, I cherish the hope that, somewhere in the length and breadth of the land, it may fan into a flame, in some tried heart, the fading embers of hope, well-nigh extinguished by wintry fortune and summer friends.

      FANNY FERN.

      CHAPTER I.

       Table of Contents

      The old church clock rang solemnly out on the midnight air. Ruth started. For hours she had sat there, leaning her cheek upon her hand, and gazing through the open space between the rows of brick walls, upon the sparkling waters of the bay, glancing and quivering ’neath the moon-beams. The city’s busy hum had long since died away; myriad restless eyes had closed in peaceful slumber; Ruth could not sleep. This was the last time she would sit at that little window. The morrow would find her in a home of her own. On the morrow Ruth would be a bride.

      Ruth was not sighing because she was about to leave her father’s roof, (for her childhood had been anything but happy,) but she was vainly trying to look into a future, which God has mercifully veiled from curious eyes. Had that craving heart of hers at length found its ark of refuge? Would

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