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The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Jamesons, by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org Title: The Jamesons Author: Mary E. Wilkins Freeman Release Date: February 19, 2006 [EBook #17792] Language: English Character set encoding: ASCII *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE JAMESONS *** Produced by Jeff Kaylin and Andrew Sly The Jamesons by Mary E. Wilkins Author of "A Humble Romance," "A New England Nun," "Pembroke," "The People of Our Neighborhood," etc. with pictures New York Doubleday & McClure Company Philadelphia Curtis Publishing Company 1899 I THEY ARRIVE Until that summer nobody in our village had ever taken boarders. There had been no real necessity for it, and we had always been rather proud of the fact. While we were certainly not rich--there was not one positively rich family among us--we were comfortably provided with all the necessities of life. We did not need to open our houses, and our closets, and our bureau drawers, and give the freedom of our domestic hearths, and, as it were, our household gods for playthings, to strangers and their children. Many of us had to work for our daily bread, but, we were thankful to say, not in that way. We prided ourselves because there was no summer hotel with a demoralizing bowling-alley, and one of those dangerous chutes, in our village. We felt forbiddingly calm and superior when now and then some strange city people from Grover, the large summer resort six miles from us, travelled up and down our main street seeking board in vain. We plumed ourselves upon our reputation of not taking boarders for love or money. Nobody had dreamed that there was to be a break at last in our long-established custom, and nobody dreamed that the break was to be made in such a quarter. One of the most well-to-do, if not the most well-to-do, of us all, took the first boarders ever taken in Linnville. When Amelia Powers heard of it she said, "Them that has, gits." On the afternoon of the first day of June, six years ago, I was sewing at my sitting-room window. I was making a white muslin dress for little Alice, my niece, to wear to the Seventeenth-of-June pic
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