A Little Girl in Old Salem
E-text prepared by Marilynda Fraser-Cunliffe, J. P. W. Fraser, Emmy, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/c/)
Copyright, 1908 By Dodd, Mead and Company Published, September, 1908
The Leveretts were at their breakfast in the large sunny room in Derby Street. It had an outlook on the garden, and beyond the garden was a lane, well used and to be a street itself in the future. Then, at quite a distance, a strip of woods on a rise of ground, that still further enhanced the prospect. The sun slanted in at the windows on one side, there was nothing to shut it out. It would go all round the house now, and seem to end where it began, in the garden.
Chilian was very fond of it. He always brought his book to the table; he liked to eat slowly, to gaze out and digest one or two thoughts at his leisure, as well as the delightful breakfast set before him. He was a man of delicate tastes and much refinement, for with all the New England sturdiness, hardness one might say, there was in many families a strain of what we might term high breeding. His face, with its clear-cut features, indicated this. His hair was rather light, fine, with a few waves in it that gave it a slightly tumbled look—far from any touch of disorder. His eyes were a deep, clear blue, his complexion fair enough for a woman.
His father and grandfather had lived and died in this house. He had bought out his sister's share when she married, and she had gone to Providence. He had asked the two relatives of his father—termed cousins by courtesy—to continue housekeeping. They were the last of their family and in rather straitened circumstances. Miss Elizabeth was nearing sixty, tall, straight, fair, and rather austere-looking. Eunice was two years younger, shorter, a trifle stouter, with a rounder face, and a mouth that wore a certain sweetness when it did not actually smile.
Chilian was past thirty. He was a Harvard graduate, and now went in two days each week for teaching classes. His father had left some business interests in Salem, rather distasteful to him, but he was a strictly conscientious person and attended to them, if with a sort of mental protest. For the rest, he was a bookworm and revelled in intellectual pursuits.
Amanda M. Douglas
---
THE "LITTLE GIRL" SERIES
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
TWO LETTERS
CHAPTER II
THE LITTLE GIRL
CHAPTER III
A STRANGER, YET AT HOME
CHAPTER IV
UNWELCOME
CHAPTER V
MAKING FRIENDS WITH THE LITTLE GIRL
CHAPTER VI
GOING TO SCHOOL
CHAPTER VII
CHANGEFUL LIGHTS OF CHILDHOOD
CHAPTER VIII
SORROW'S CROWN OF SORROW
CHAPTER IX
LESSONS OF LIFE
CHAPTER X
A NEW DEPARTURE
CHAPTER XI
THE VOICE OF A ROSE
CHAPTER XII
CHANGES IN THE OLD HOUSE
CHAPTER XIII
A TASTE OF PLEASURE
CHAPTER XIV
IN GAY OLD SALEM
CHAPTER XV
LOVERS AND LOVERS
CHAPTER XVI
PERILOUS PATHS
CHAPTER XVII
THE FLOWERING OF THE SOUL
CHAPTER XVIII
THE PASSING OF OLD SALEM
Transcriber's Notes