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قراءة كتاب A Bunch of Cherries: A Story of Cherry Court School

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A Bunch of Cherries: A Story of Cherry Court School

A Bunch of Cherries: A Story of Cherry Court School

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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A Bunch of Cherries

A STORY OF CHERRY COURT SCHOOL


BY

Mrs. L. T. MEADE




AUTHOR OF
"A Modern Tomboy," "The School Favorite," "Children's Pilgrimage,"
"Little Mother to the Others," Etc.




CHICAGO:
M. A. DONOHUE & CO.
1898




CONTENTS

CHAPTER  
I.   The School
II.   The Girls
III.   The Telegram
IV.   Sir John's Great Scheme
V.   Florence
VI.   Kitty and Her Father
VII.   Cherry-Colored Ribbons
VIII.   The Letter
IX.   The Little Mummy
X.   Aunt Susan
XI.   "I Always Admired Frankness"
XII.   The Fairy Box
XIII.   An Invitation
XIV.   At the Park
XV.   The Pupil Teacher
XVI.   Temptation
XVII.   The Fall
XVIII.   The Guests Arrive
XIX.   Tit for Tat
XX.   The Hills for Ever
XXI.   The Sting of the Serpent
XXII.   The Voice of God




A BUNCH OF CHERRIES.


CHAPTER I.

THE SCHOOL.

The house was long and low and rambling. In parts at least it must have been quite a hundred years old, and even the modern portion was not built according to the ideas of the present day, for in 1870 people were not so aesthetic as they are now, and the lines of beauty and grace were not considered all essential to happiness.

So even the new part of the house had square rooms destitute of ornament, and the papers were small in pattern and without any artistic designs, and the windows were square and straight, and the ceilings were somewhat low.

The house opened on to a wide lawn, and at the left of the lawn was a paddock and at the right a shrubbery, and the shrubbery led away under its overhanging trees into the most perfect walled-in garden that was ever seen. The garden was two or three hundred years old. The oldest inhabitants of the place had never known the time when Cherry Court garden was not the talk of the country. Visitors came from all parts round to see it. It was celebrated on account of its very high walls built of red brick, its size, for it covered at least three acres of ground, and its magnificent cherries. The cherry trees in the Court garden bore the most splendid fruit which could be obtained in any part of the county. They were in great demand, not only for the girls who lived in the old house and played in the garden, but for the neighbors all over the country. A big price was always paid for these cherries, for they made such splendid jam, as well as being so full of juice and so ripe and good to eat that their like could not be found anywhere else.

The

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