Hildegarde's Home
Hildegarde and the China Pots.— Frontispiece.
Author of Queen Hildegarde, Hildegarde's Holiday, Captain January, etc. ILLUSTRATED BOSTON ESTES AND LAURIAT PUBLISHERS
Copyright, 1892, By ESTES AND LAURIAT. Typography by J. S. Cushing & Co., Boston.
THE HOME ITSELF.
It was a pleasant place. The house was a large, low, old-fashioned one, with the modern addition of a deep, wide verandah running across its front. Before it was a circular sweep of lawn, fringed with trees; beside it stood a few noble elms, which bent lovingly above the gambrel roof. There were some flower-beds, rather neglected-looking, under the south windows, and there was a kitchen-garden behind the house. This was all that Hildegarde Grahame had seen so far of her new home, for she had only just arrived. She stood now on the verandah, looking about her with keen, inquiring eyes, a tall, graceful girl, very erect, with a certain proud carriage of the head. Her dress of black and white shepherd's plaid was very simple, but it fitted to perfection, and there was a decided air to her little black felt hat.
Hildegarde's father had died about six months before the time our story opens. He had been very wealthy, but many of his investments had shrunk in value, and the failure of a bank whose cashier had proved dishonest entailed heavy losses upon him; so that, after his death, it was found that the sum remaining for his widow and only child, after all debts were paid, was no very large one. They would have enough to live on, and to live comfortably; but the big luxuries, as Hildegarde called them, the horses and carriages, the great New York house with its splendid furniture and troops of servants, must go; and go they did, without loss of time. Perhaps neither Hildegarde nor her mother regretted these things much. Mrs. Grahame had been for years an indefatigable worker, giving most of her time to charities; she knew that she should never rest so long as she lived in New York. Hildegarde had been much in the country during the past two years, had learned to love it greatly, and found city life too cabined, cribbed, confined, to suit her present taste. The dear father had always preferred to live in town; but now that he was gone, they were both glad to go away from the great, bustling, noisy, splendid place. So, when Mrs. Grahame's lawyer told her that an aged relative, who had lately died, had left his country house as a legacy to her, both she and Hildegarde said at once, Let us go and live there!
Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards
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HILDEGARDE'S HOME
HILDEGARDE'S HOME
LAURA E. RICHARDS
CONTENTS.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
HILDEGARDE'S HOME.
CHAPTER I.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX.
CHAPTER X.
CHAPTER XI.
CHAPTER XII.
CHAPTER XIII.
CHAPTER XIV.
CHAPTER XV.
CHAPTER XVI.
Transcriber's Note:
Язык
Английский
Год издания
2010-11-06
Темы
Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction; Friendship -- Juvenile fiction; Country life -- Juvenile fiction; Inheritance and succession -- Juvenile fiction; Youth -- Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction; Charity -- Juvenile fiction; Wealth -- Juvenile fiction; Mothers and daughters -- Juvenile fiction