Bobby Bright is something more than a smart boy. He is a good boy, and makes a true man. His daily life is the moral of the story, and the author hopes that his devotion to principle will make a stronger impression upon the mind of the young reader, than even the most exciting incidents of his eventful career.
WILLIAM T. ADAMS.
CONTENTS
[I. In which Bobby goes a fishing, and catches a Horse]
[II. In which Bobby blushes several Times, and does a Sum in Arithmetic]
[III. In which the Little Black House is bought, but not paid for]
[IV. In which Bobby gets out of one Scrape, and into another]