The Rectory Children
London MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 1897
TO MY NIECE AND GOD-DAUGHTER Helen Louisa Delves Walthall
85 Lexham Gardens Shrove Tuesday , 1889.
The blinds had been drawn down for some time in the back parlour behind Mr. Fairchild's shop in Pier Street, the principal street in the little town of Seacove. And the gas was lighted, though it was not turned up very high. It was a great thing to have gas; it had not been known at Seacove till recently. For the time of which I am writing is now a good many years ago, thirty or forty at least.
Seacove, though a small place, was not so out-of- the-way in some respects as many actually larger towns, for it was a seaport, though not a very important one. Ships came in from all parts of the globe, and sailed away again in due course to the far north, and still farther off south; to the great other world of America, too, no doubt, and to the ancient eastern lands. But it was the vessels going to or coming from the strange mysterious north—the land of everlasting snow, where the reindeer and, farther north still, the white bear have their home, and where the winter is one long, long night—it was somehow the thought of the north that had the most fascination for the little girl who was sitting alone in the dull parlour behind the shop this late November evening. And among the queer outlandish-looking sailors who from time to time were to be seen on the wharf or about the Seacove streets, now and then looking in to buy a sheet of paper and an envelope in her father's shop, it was the English ones belonging to the whalers or to the herring smacks bound for the north who interested Celestina by far the most.
This evening she was not thinking of sailors or ships or anything like that; her mind was full of her own small affairs. She had got two new dolls, quite tiny ones—Celestina did not care for big dolls—and long as the daylight lasted she had been perfectly happy dressing them. But the daylight was gone now—it was always rather in a hurry to say good-night to the back parlour—and the gas was too dim for her to see clearly by, even if she had had anything else to do, which she had not, till mother could give her a scrap or two for the second dolly's frock. It was mother she was longing for. She wanted to show her the hats and cloaks she had made out of some tiny bits for both the dollies—the cloaks, that is to say, for the hats were crochet-work, crocheted in pink cotton. Celestina's little fingers were very clever at crochet.
Mrs. Molesworth
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THE RECTORY CHILDREN
CONTENTS
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
THE RECTORY CHILDREN
CHAPTER I
THE PARLOUR BEHIND THE SHOP
CHAPTER II
THOSE YOUNG LADIES
CHAPTER III
A TRYING CHILD
CHAPTER IV
BIDDY HAS SOME NEW THOUGHTS
CHAPTER V
CELESTINA
CHAPTER VI
THE WINDOW IN THE WALL
CHAPTER VII
ON THE SEASHORE
CHAPTER VIII
A NICE PLAN
CHAPTER IX
A SECRET
CHAPTER X
BIDDY'S ESCAPADE
CHAPTER XI
AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
CHAPTER XII
ANOTHER BIRTHDAY
THE END
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