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قراءة كتاب The Lost Kitty

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The Lost Kitty

The Lost Kitty

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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Aunt Hattie's Library

The Lost Kitty.

BY AUNT HATTIE,

AUTHOR OF “BROOKSIDE SERIES,” ETC.

“In everything give thanks.”—Paul.

Decorative rule

BOSTON:
HENRY A. YOUNG & CO.,
24 Cornhill.

Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1867, by

REV. A. R. BAKER.

In the Clerk’s Office of the District Court for the District of Massachusetts.

To

NELLIE, ROLAND COTTON, ANNIE, AND FULLER APPLETON,

CHILDREN OF MY BELOVED NEPHEW,

The Rev. JOHN COTTON SMITH, D.D.,

THESE SMALL VOLUMES ARE AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED,

WITH THE EARNEST PRAYER

THAT THEIR LIVES MAY PROVE THEM TO BE LAMBS IN THE FOLD

OF THE GREAT AND GOOD

Shepherd of Israel.


CONTENTS.

  Page
CHAPTER I.
The Maltese Kitty, 11
CHAPTER II.
No Thanks, 22
CHAPTER III.
The Sabbath School, 32
CHAPTER IV.
The Drunkard, 44
CHAPTER V.
The Ungrateful Son, 57
CHAPTER VI.
The Strange Visitor, 68
CHAPTER VII.
Finding a Place, 79
CHAPTER VIII.
The Grateful Dog, 90

THE LOST KITTY.

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CHAPTER I.

THE MALTESE KITTY.

O Hatty! see that pretty kitty! I wonder where she came from.”

Fred Carleton walked softly toward the puss, his hand outstretched, calling, “Kitty, pretty kitty,” until he had her in his arms.

His sister Hatty took her hands from the dish-water, wiped them on the roller, and came toward him.

“Why Fred!” she exclaimed, “that’s Ned Perry’s kitty. Clara says it’s a real Maltese. They’ll feel dreadfully when they know it’s lost.”

“I wish they wouldn’t mind,” said Fred, caressing the puss; “see how she loves me! I’d like to keep her so much.”

“But would you have Ned, who is a roguish boy, catch one of your bantams and keep it? You’d call that stealing.”

Fred sighed. “But I didn’t go to catch her, Hatty; she came right into the door. I think that’s different.”

“Perhaps she is hungry.”

“O Hatty! may I try her with some milk?”

“Yes,” she answered, laughing at his eagerness. “Pour some into a saucer from the pitcher in the closet, and see whether she will drink it.”

He was rewarded by the sight of pussy lapping up the milk.

“I do believe kitty is thanking me,” he said, laughing and clapping his hands. “See how she keeps looking up! I never saw a kitty do so before.”

Puss did, indeed, seem to be grateful. She lapped away at the milk with great eagerness, and then she would look in the face of her benefactor, and utter a soft little mew.

Hatty and Frederick watch the cat drinking the milk

Pussy Lapping the Milk. Page 14.

“Frederick,” called out Mrs. Carleton from the head of the stairs, “isn’t it time for you to go to school?”

“It’s Saturday, ma; I don’t go to-day.”

“Oh, I forgot,” she said; “well, come up here a minute.”

Fred obeyed, carrying kitty in his arms.

“What a pretty puss!” his mother exclaimed; “where did you find her?”

Fred, standing very erect and firm, told all the circumstances relating to his new friend, and then asked,—

“What shall I do with her?”

“Carry her to Mrs. Perry, to be sure.”

“But it’s a long walk, and it’s awful muddy, ma. Couldn’t I let her stay here, and tell Ned at Sabbath school?”

“Is that the way you would like Ned to do, if the kitty were yours? Perhaps he is looking everywhere for her now, and mourning because his pet is lost.”

Frederick sat for a moment stroking the cat’s soft fur; then he started up, exclaiming, “I’ll go right off. I don’t care if it is muddy. I know Ned will be so glad.”

It was indeed quite a task for a child of only eight years to carry a half-grown

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