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قراءة كتاب In Apple-Blossom Time: A Fairy-Tale to Date

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In Apple-Blossom Time: A Fairy-Tale to Date

In Apple-Blossom Time: A Fairy-Tale to Date

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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In Apple-Blossom Time

A Fairy-Tale to Date

By Clara Louise Burnham

With Illustrations

 

 

 

Boston and New York
Houghton Mifflin Company
The Riverside Press Cambridge
COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY CLARA LOUISE BURNHAM
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED


"Lifted the Girl in after it"


CONTENTS

ILLUSTRATIONS

DRAMATIS PERSONÆ

CHAPTER I. The Princess
CHAPTER II. The Ogre
CHAPTER III. The Prince
CHAPTER IV. The Good Fairy
CHAPTER V. The New Help
CHAPTER VI. The Dwarf
CHAPTER VII. A Midnight Message
CHAPTER VIII. The Meadow
CHAPTER IX. The Bird of Prey
CHAPTER X. The Palace
CHAPTER XI. Mother and Son
CHAPTER XII. The Transformation
CHAPTER XIII. The Goddess
CHAPTER XIV. The Mermaid Shop
CHAPTER XV. The Clouds Disperse
CHAPTER XVI. Apple Blossoms

By Clara Louise Burnham


ILLUSTRATIONS

Drawn by B. Morgan Dennis

Lifted the Girl in after it

Tingling with the Increasing Desire to knock down his Host and catch this Girl up in his Arms

"Geraldine Melody belongs to me. Her father gave her to me"


DRAMATIS PERSONÆ

In the Order of their Appearance

The Good Fairy Mehitable Upton
The Princess Geraldine Melody
The Ogre Rufus Carder
The Dwarf Pete
The Slave Mrs. Carder
The Prince Benjamin Barry
The Grouch Charlotte Whipp
The Queen Mrs. Barry

IN APPLE-BLOSSOM TIME


CHAPTER I

The Princess

Miss Mehitable Upton had come to the city to buy a stock of goods for the summer trade. She had a little shop at the fashionable resort of Keefeport as well as one in the village of Keefe, and June was approaching. It would soon be time to move.

Miss Upton's extreme portliness had caused her hours of laborious selection to fatigue her greatly. Her face was scarlet as she entered a popular restaurant to seek rest and refreshment. She trudged with all the celerity possible toward the only empty table, her face expressing wearied eagerness to reach that desirable haven before any one else espied it.

Scarcely had she eased herself down into the complaining chair, however, before a reason for the unpopularity of this table appeared. A steady draught blew across it strong enough to wave the ribbons on her hat.

"This won't do at all," muttered Miss Mehitable. "I'm all of a sweat."

She looked about among the busy hungry horde, and her eye alighted on a table at which a young girl sat alone.

"Bet she'll hate to see me comin', but here goes," she added, slipping the straps of her bag up on her arm and grasping the sides of the table with both hands.

Ben Barry was wont to say: "When Mehit is about to rise and flee, it's a case of Yo heave ho, my hearties. All hands to the ropes." But then it was notorious that Ben's bump of reverence was an intaglio.

Miss Upton got to her feet and started on her trip, her eyes expressing renewed anxiety.

A lantern-faced, round-shouldered man, whose ill-fitting clothes, low collar several sizes too large, and undecided manner suggested that he was a visitor from the rural districts, happened to be starting for the young girl's table at the same moment.

Miss Upton perceived his intention.

"Let him set in the draught," she thought. "He don't look as if he'd ever been het up in his life."

With astonishing swiftness her balloon-like form took on an extra sprint. The man became aware of her object and they arrived at the coveted haven nearly simultaneously.

Miss Mehitable's umbrella decided the victory. She deftly moved it to where

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