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قراءة كتاب Dorothy at Skyrie

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‏اللغة: English
Dorothy at Skyrie

Dorothy at Skyrie

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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DOROTHY
AT SKYRIE

BY EVELYN RAYMOND

ILLUSTRATED

New York
THE PLATT & PECK CO.


"HOW MUCH AM I BID FOR THE BEAUTIFUL CALICO PONY?"


CONTENTS

CHAPTER PAGE
I. Early Visitors 9
II. An Unfortunate Affair 22
III. On the Road to South Meadow 41
IV. The Learned Blacksmith 56
V. An Accident and an Apparition 69
VI. More Peculiar Visitors 85
VII. At the Office of a Justice 96
VIII. A Walk and Its Ending 112
IX. A Live Stock Sale 127
X. At Milking-Time 143
XI. Helpers 158
XII. Seth Winters and His Friends 177
XIII. A Beneficent Bee 195
XIV. An Astonishing Question 210
XV. Concerning Several Matters 227
XVI. The Fate of Daisy-Jewel 245
XVII. On the Road to the Circus 259
XVIII. That South Meadow 275
XIX. Dorothy Has Another Secret 293
XX. All's Well That Ends Well 308

DOROTHY AT SKYRIE


CHAPTER I

EARLY VISITORS

"Hello! How-de-do?"

This salutation was so sudden and unexpected that Dorothy Chester jumped, and rising from the grass, where she had been searching for wild strawberries, beheld a row of pink sunbonnets behind the great stone wall.

Within the sunbonnets were three equally rosy faces, of varying sizes, each smiling broadly and each full of a friendly curiosity. It was from the biggest face that the voice had come, and Dorothy responded with a courteous "Good-morning!" then waited for further advances. These came promptly.

"I'm Alfaretta Babcock; this one's Baretta Babcock; and this other one, she's Claretta Babcock. The baby that's to home and can't walk yet—only just creep—she's Diaretta Babcock."

Dorothy laughed. The alphabetical names attached to these several "Babcocks" sounded very funny and she couldn't help her amusement, even if it were rude. However, no rudeness was suspected, and Alfaretta laughed in return, then walked a few steps to the bar-way, with her sisters following. These she hoisted upon the rails, and putting her hands upon the topmost one vaulted over it with an ease that astonished the city-bred Dorothy.

"Why! how well you did that! Like a regular gymnast!" she exclaimed, admiringly, and observing that this was a girl of about her own age though much larger and stronger in build, as the broad back now turned toward her showed.

Alfaretta did not reply, except to bid the children on the other side of the bars to "hop over," and when they were too timid to "hop" without aid she seized their hands and pulled them across, letting them drop on the long grass in a haphazard way that made Dorothy gasp and exclaim:

"Oh! you'll hurt them!"

Alfaretta faced about and keenly scrutinized Dorothy's face, demanding:

"You makin' fun, or not?"

"Fun?

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