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قراءة كتاب The Letter of Credit
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The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Letter of Credit, by Susan Warner
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Title: A Letter of Credit
Author: Susan Warner
Release Date: May 18, 2011 [eBook #36159]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LETTER OF CREDIT***
Susan Warner (1819-1885), A letter of credit (1881), 1882 edition
Produced by Daniel FROMONT
Note from the transcriber: a very important text for the study of
Susan Warner's "Queechy".
THE LETTER OF CREDIT.
BY THE AUTHOR OF "WILD, WILD WORLD."
I. THE END OF A COIL. 12mo. $1.75.
"Miss Warner has added another pure and beautiful picture to the gallery that has given so much pleasure to such great numbers. All her pictures are bright and warm with the blessedness of true love and true religion. We do not wonder that they receive so wide a welcome, and we wish sincerely that only such stories were ever written."—N. Y. Observer.
II. MY DESIRE. 12mo. $1.75.
"Miss Warner possesses in a remarkable degree the power of vividly describing New England village life, the power of making her village people walk and talk for the benefit of her readers in all the freshness of their clear-cut originality. She has an ample fund of humor, a keen sense of the ridiculous, and a rare faculty of painting homely truths in homely but singularly felicitous phrases."—Philadelphia Times.
III. THE LETTER OF CREDIT. 12mo. $1.75.
IV. PINE NEEDLES. A Tale. 12mo. $1.50.
V. THE OLD HELMET. A Tale. 12mo. $2.25.
VI. MELBOURNE HOUSE. A Tale. 12mo. $2.00.
VII. THE KING'S PEOPLE. 5 vols. $7.00.
VIII. THE SAY AND DO SERIES. 6 vols. $7.50.
IX. A STORY OF SMALL BEGINNINGS. 4 vols. $5.00.
By Miss Anna Warner.
THE BLUE FLAG AND THE CLOTH OF GOLD $1.25
STORIES OF VINEGAR HILL 3 vols. 3.00
ELLEN MONTGOMERY'S BOOKSHELF 5 vols. 5.00
LITTLE JACK'S FOUR LESSONS 2.50
ROBERT CARTER AND BROTHERS,
NEW YORK.
THE
LETTER OF CREDIT.
BY THE AUTHOR OF
"THE WIDE, WIDE WORLD."
…."The bewildering masquerade of life,
Where strangers walk as friends, and friends as strangers."
LONGFELLOW.
NEW YORK: ROBERT CARTER AND BROTHERS,
530 BROADWAY. 1882.
Copyright, 1881,
BY ROBERT CARTER & BROTHERS.
CAMBRIDGE: PRESS OF JOHN WILSON AND SON.
ST. JOHNLAND STEREOTYPE FOUNDRY, SUFFOLK CO., N. Y.
_NOTE.
The following story, like its predecessors, "The End of a Coil," "My Desire," and "Diana," is a record of facts. For the characters and the coloring, of course, I am responsible; but the turns of the story, even in detail, are almost all utterly true.
S. W.
Martlaer's Rock,
Sept. 12, 1881_.
CONTENTS.
CHAP.
I. THE LETTER
II. MOVING
III. JANE STREET
IV. A VISITER
V. PRIVATE TUITION
VI. A LEGACY
VII. MENTAL PHILOSOPHY
VIII. STATEN ISLAND
IX. FORT WASHINGTON
X. L'HOMME PROPOSE
XI. MRS. BUSBY
XII. MRS. BUSBY'S HOUSE
XIII. NOT DRESSED
XIV. IN SECLUSION
XV. MRS. MOWBRAY
XVI. SCHOOL
XVII. BAGS AND BIBLES
XVIII. FLINT AND STEEL
XIX. A NEW DEPARTURE
XX. STOCKINGS
XXI. EDUCATION
XXII. A CHANGE
XXIII. TANFIELD
XXIV. THE PURCELLS
XXV. ROTHA'S REFUGE
XXVI. ROTHA'S WORK
XXVII. INQUIRIES
XXVIII. DISCOVERIES
XXIX. PERPLEXITIES
XXX. DOWN HILL
XXXI. DISCUSSIONS
XXXII. END OF SCHOOL TERM
THE LETTER OF CREDIT.
CHAPTER I.
THE LETTER.
"Mother, I wonder how people do, when they are going to write a book?"
"Do?" repeated her mother.
"Yes. I wonder how they begin."
"I suppose they have something to tell; and then they tell it," said simple Mrs. Carpenter.
"No, no, but I mean a story."
"What story have you got there?"
The mother was shelling peas; the daughter, a girl of twelve years old perhaps, was sitting on the floor at her feet, with an octavo volume in her lap. The floor was clean enough to sit upon; clean enough almost to eat off; it was the floor of the kitchen of a country farmhouse.
"This is the 'Talisman,'" the girl answered her mother's question. "O mother, when I am old enough, I should like to write stories!"
"Why?"
"I should think it would be so nice. Why, mother, one could imagine oneself