FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2815   2816   2817   2818   2819   2820   2821   2822   2823   2824   2825   2826   2827   2828   2829   2830   2831   2832   2833   2834   2835   2836   2837   2838   2839  
2840   2841   2842   2843   2844   2845   2846   2847   2848   2849   2850   2851   2852   2853   2854   2855   2856   2857   2858   2859   2860   2861   2862   2863   2864   >>   >|  
responsible sophomore at Harvard. Owing to the sudden withdrawal from school of little Louise Simpson, the Cincinnati girl who had shared her room during the first term, Honora had a new room-mate after the holidays, Susan Holt. Susan was not beautiful, but she was good. Her nose turned up, her hair Honora described as a negative colour, and she wore it in defiance of all prevailing modes. If you looked very hard at Susan (which few people ever did), you saw that she had remarkable blue eyes: they were the eyes of a saint. She was neither tall nor short, and her complexion was not all that it might have been. In brief, Susan was one of those girls who go through a whole term at boarding--school without any particular notice from the more brilliant Honoras and Ethel Wings. In some respects, Susan was an ideal room-mate. She read the Bible every night and morning, and she wrote many letters home. Her ruling passion, next to religion, was order, and she took it upon herself to arrange Honora's bureau drawers. It is needless to say that Honora accepted these ministrations and that she found Susan's admiration an entirely natural sentiment. Susan was self-effacing, and she enjoyed listening to Honora's views on all topics. Susan, like Peter, was taken for granted. She came from somewhere, and after school was over, she would go somewhere. She lived in New York, Honora knew, and beyond that was not curious. We never know when we are entertaining an angel unawares. One evening, early in May, when she went up to prepare for supper she found Susan sitting in the window reading a letter, and on the floor beside her was a photograph. Honora picked it up. It was the picture of a large country house with many chimneys, taken across a wide green lawn. "Susan, what's this?" Susan looked up. "Oh, it's Silverdale. My brother Joshua took it." "Silverdale?" repeated Honora. "It's our place in the country," Susan replied. "The family moved up last week. You see, the trees are just beginning to bud." Honora was silent a moment, gazing at the picture. "It's very beautiful, isn't it? You never told me about it." "Didn't I?" said Susan. "I think of it very often. It has always seemed much more like home to me than our house in New York, and I love it better than any spot I know." Honora gazed at Susan, who had resumed her reading. "And you are going there when school is over." "Oh, yes," said Susan; "I can hard
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2815   2816   2817   2818   2819   2820   2821   2822   2823   2824   2825   2826   2827   2828   2829   2830   2831   2832   2833   2834   2835   2836   2837   2838   2839  
2840   2841   2842   2843   2844   2845   2846   2847   2848   2849   2850   2851   2852   2853   2854   2855   2856   2857   2858   2859   2860   2861   2862   2863   2864   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
Honora
 

school

 

Silverdale

 

reading

 
picture
 

country

 

beautiful

 

looked

 

entertaining

 
prepare

supper

 
evening
 

unawares

 

granted

 

resumed

 

sitting

 
curious
 
letter
 

replied

 
silent

moment

 

gazing

 

brother

 

Joshua

 
repeated
 

family

 

beginning

 

picked

 

photograph

 

chimneys


window

 

people

 

colour

 

defiance

 

prevailing

 

remarkable

 
complexion
 

negative

 

Louise

 

Simpson


Cincinnati

 

withdrawal

 

sudden

 

responsible

 

sophomore

 
Harvard
 

shared

 
turned
 

holidays

 

bureau