Half a dozen boys
AN EVERY-DAY STORY
ANNA CHAPIN RAY
NEW YORK THOMAS Y. CROWELL & CO. 46 EAST FOURTEENTH STREET (UNION SQUARE)
COPYRIGHT, 1890, BY T. Y. CROWELL & Co.
E. E. J.,
THE ORIGINAL OF MY ROB, IN MEMORY OF MANY PLEASANT HOURS WE HAVE SPENT TOGETHER, THIS LITTLE STORY IS LOVINGLY DEDICATED.
PREFACE.
'An every-day story;' I should think it was! is the exclamation of that much-dreaded being, the critic, as he hastily turns over these simple pages. But that is just what it is meant to be. Most of our boys live every-day lives, with few exciting adventures or narrow escapes. And although they greedily absorb the highly spiced tales of youthful pirates and ruffians that are only too common in these days, by reading them they realize the more keenly the humdrum nature of their own surroundings, and too often are led to wish for the excitement of the other life. But, after all, it is the simple round of school and games, the frolics and scrapes, which seem so unimportant to their elders, that go to make up the sum of a boy's happiness or misery; and if this be so outside of books, why is it not equally true within their covers?
Every New England town can show a Teddy, a Phil, and a Fred, more or less thinly disguised, while Rob and Fuzz, without any disguise at all, are even now important members of one small community.
With this warning as to the commonplace nature of our boys and of their doings, and this slight explanation of its cause, the writer steps aside, and leaves the Half Dozen Boys to tell their own story.
CONTENTS.
Anna Chapin Ray
Язык
Английский
Год издания
2024-01-21
Темы
Dogs -- Juvenile fiction; Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction; Boys -- Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction; Friendship -- Juvenile fiction; Kindness -- Juvenile fiction; Cousins -- Juvenile fiction; Courtship -- Juvenile fiction; Parent and child -- Juvenile fiction; Human-animal relationships -- Juvenile fiction; Pride and vanity -- Juvenile fiction; Blind children -- Juvenile fiction