CONTENTS.

[I. ON A MISSION]
[II. I BLOW THE HORN]
[III. THE BEAUX OF WALLENCAMP PERFORM A GRAVE DUTY]
[IV. THE TURKEY MOGUL ARRIVES]
[V. GRANDMA KEELER GETS GRANDPA READY FOR SUNDAY SCHOOL]
[VI. BECKY AND THE CRADLEBOW]
[VII. LUTE CRADLEBOW KISSES THE TEACHER]
[VIII. FESTIVITIES AT THE ARK]
[IX. LOVELL BARLOW "POPS THE QUESTION."]
[X. A LETTER FROM THE FISHERMAN]
[XI. A WALLENCAMP FUNERAL]
[XII. BECKY'S CONFESSION]
[XIII. A MILD WINTER ON THE CAPE]
[XIV. RESCUED BY THE CRADLEBOW]
[XV. DAVID ROLLIN IN THE SCHOOL-ROOM]
[XVI. GEORGE OLVER'S LOVE FOR BECKY]
[XVII. TEACHER HAS THE FEVER.—DEATH OF LITTLE BESSIE]
[XVIII. LUTE CRADLEBOW GIVES THE TEACHER A NEW CHAIR]
[XIX. DEATH OF THE CRADLEBOW]
[XX. GEORGE OLVER'S ORATION]
[XXI. FAREWELL TO WALLENCAMP]

CHAPTER I.

ON A MISSION.

"Lo, on a narrer neck o' land,
'Twixt two unbounded seas, I stand!"

Aunt Sibylla was not sporting, now, in the airy realms of metaphor. Aunt Sibylla stood upon Cape Cod, and her voice rang out with that peculiar sweep and power which the presence of a dread reality alone can give. Something of the precariousness of her situation, too, was expressed in The wild, alarming, though graceful, gesture of her arms.

It was before the long-projected canal separating Cape Cod from the mainland had been put under active process of preparation.

It was at an evening meeting in the Wallencamp school-house. A row of dingy, smoking lanterns had been set against the wall and afforded the only light cast upon the scene. Aunt Sibylla Cradlebow, the speaker, was tall and dark-eyed, with an almost superhuman litheness of body, and a weird, beautiful face.