Read Books Online, for Free |
The Golden Road | Lucy Maud Montgomery | |
The Story Girl Goes |
Page 1 of 2 |
The morning dawned, rosy and clear and frosty. Everybody was up early, for the travellers must leave in time to catch the nine o'clock train. The horse was harnessed and Uncle Alec was waiting by the door. Aunt Janet was crying, but everybody else was making a valiant effort not to. The Awkward Man and Mrs. Dale came to see the last of their favourite. Mrs. Dale had brought her a glorious sheaf of chrysanthemums, and the Awkward Man gave her, quite gracefully, another little, old, limp book from his library. "Read it when you are sad or happy or lonely or discouraged or hopeful," he said gravely. "He has really improved very much since he got married," whispered Felicity to me. Sara Stanley wore a smart new travelling suit and a blue felt hat with a white feather. She looked so horribly grown up in it that we felt as if she were lost to us already. Sara Ray had vowed tearfully the night before that she would be up in the morning to say farewell. But at this juncture Judy Pineau appeared to say that Sara, with her usual luck, had a sore throat, and that her mother consequently would not permit her to come. So Sara had written her parting words in a three-cornered pink note. |
Who's On Your Reading List? Read Classic Books Online for Free at Page by Page Books.TM |
The Golden Road Lucy Maud Montgomery |
Home | More Books | About Us | Copyright 2004