The Story Girl
This book has been put on-line as part of the BUILD-A-BOOK Initiative at the Celebration of Women Writers through the combined work of Leslee Suttie and Mary Mark Ockerbloom. http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/ Reformatted by Ben Crowder
“She was a form of life and light That seen, became a part of sight, And rose, where’er I turn’d mine eye, The morning-star of Memory!” —Byron.
CONTENTS
“I do like a road, because you can be always wondering what is at the end of it.”
The Story Girl said that once upon a time. Felix and I, on the May morning when we left Toronto for Prince Edward Island, had not then heard her say it, and, indeed, were but barely aware of the existence of such a person as the Story Girl. We did not know her at all under that name. We knew only that a cousin, Sara Stanley, whose mother, our Aunt Felicity, was dead, was living down on the Island with Uncle Roger and Aunt Olivia King, on a farm adjoining the old King homestead in Carlisle. We supposed we should get acquainted with her when we reached there, and we had an idea, from Aunt Olivia’s letters to father, that she would be quite a jolly creature. Further than that we did not think about her. We were more interested in Felicity and Cecily and Dan, who lived on the homestead and would therefore be our roofmates for a season.
But the spirit of the Story Girl’s yet unuttered remark was thrilling in our hearts that morning, as the train pulled out of Toronto. We were faring forth on a long road; and, though we had some idea what would be at the end of it, there was enough glamour of the unknown about it to lend a wonderful charm to our speculations concerning it.
We were delighted at the thought of seeing father’s old home, and living among the haunts of his boyhood. He had talked so much to us about it, and described its scenes so often and so minutely, that he had inspired us with some of his own deep-seated affection for it—an affection that had never waned in all his years of exile. We had a vague feeling that we, somehow, belonged there, in that cradle of our family, though we had never seen it. We had always looked forward eagerly to the promised day when father would take us “down home,” to the old house with the spruces behind it and the famous “King orchard” before it—when we might ramble in “Uncle Stephen’s Walk,” drink from the deep well with the Chinese roof over it, stand on “the Pulpit Stone,” and eat apples from our “birthday trees.”
L. M. Montgomery
THE STORY GIRL
THE STORY GIRL
CHAPTER I. THE HOME OF OUR FATHERS
CHAPTER II. A QUEEN OF HEARTS
CHAPTER III. LEGENDS OF THE OLD ORCHARD
CHAPTER IV. THE WEDDING VEIL OF THE PROUD PRINCESS
CHAPTER V. PETER GOES TO CHURCH
CHAPTER VI. THE MYSTERY OF GOLDEN MILESTONE
CHAPTER VII. HOW BETTY SHERMAN WON A HUSBAND
CHAPTER VIII. A TRAGEDY OF CHILDHOOD
CHAPTER IX. MAGIC SEED
CHAPTER X. A DAUGHTER OF EVE
CHAPTER XI. THE STORY GIRL DOES PENANCE
CHAPTER XII. THE BLUE CHEST OF RACHEL WARD
CHAPTER XIII. AN OLD PROVERB WITH A NEW MEANING
CHAPTER XIV. FORBIDDEN FRUIT
CHAPTER XV. A DISOBEDIENT BROTHER
CHAPTER XVI. THE GHOSTLY BELL
CHAPTER XVII. THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING
CHAPTER XVIII. HOW KISSING WAS DISCOVERED
CHAPTER XIX. A DREAD PROPHECY
CHAPTER XX. THE JUDGMENT SUNDAY
CHAPTER XXI. DREAMERS OF DREAMS
CHAPTER XXII. THE DREAM BOOKS
CHAPTER XXIII. SUCH STUFF AS DREAMS ARE MADE ON
CHAPTER XXIV. THE BEWITCHMENT OF PAT
CHAPTER XXV. A CUP OF FAILURE
CHAPTER XXVI. PETER MAKES AN IMPRESSION
CHAPTER XXVII. THE ORDEAL OF BITTER APPLES
CHAPTER XXVIII. THE TALE OF THE RAINBOW BRIDGE
CHAPTER XXIX. THE SHADOW FEARED OF MAN
CHAPTER XXX. A COMPOUND LETTER
CHAPTER XXXI. ON THE EDGE OF LIGHT AND DARK
CHAPTER XXXII. THE OPENING OF THE BLUE CHEST