قراءة كتاب Six to Sixteen A Story for Girls

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Six to Sixteen
A Story for Girls

Six to Sixteen A Story for Girls

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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Transcriber’s Note

Obvious typographical errors have been corrected. A list of the changes is found at the end of the text. Inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been maintained. A list of inconsistently spelled and hyphenated words is found at the end of the text.

A less-common character is used in this version of the book: ŏ (o with breve). If this character does not display correctly, please change your font.


"'I've got a pink silk here,' said I, 'and pink shoes.'" “‘I’ve got a pink silk here,’ said I, ‘and pink shoes.’”

SIX TO SIXTEEN.

A STORY FOR GIRLS.

BY

JULIANA HORATIA EWING.

LONDON:
SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE,
Northumberland Avenue, W.C.
New York: E. & J. B. YOUNG & CO.


[Published under the direction of the General Literature Committee.]


DEDICATION.


TO MISS ELEANOR LLOYD.

My dear Eleanor,

I wish that this little volume were worthier of being dedicated to you.

It is, I fear, fragmentary as a mere tale, and cannot even plead as an excuse for this that it embodies any complete theory on the vexed question of the upbringing of girls. Indeed, I should like to say that it contains no attempt to paint a model girl or a model education, and was originally written as a sketch of domestic life, and not as a vehicle for theories.

That it does touch by the way on a few of the many strong opinions I have on the subject you will readily discover; though it is so long since we held discussions together that I hardly know how far your views will now agree with mine.

If, however, it seems to you to illustrate a belief in the joys and benefits of intellectual hobbies, I do not think that we shall differ on that point; and it may serve, here and there, to recall one, nearly as dear to you as to me, for whom the pleasures of life were at least doubled by such interests, and who found in them no mean resource under a burden heavier than common of life’s pain.

That, whatever labour I may spend on this or any other bit of work—whatever changes or confirmations time and experience may bring to my views of people and things—I cannot now ask her approval of the one, or delight in the play of her strong intellect and bright wit over the other, is an unhealable sorrow with which no one sympathizes more fully than you.

This story was written before her death: it has been revised without her help.

Such as it is, I beg you to accept it in affectionate remembrance of old times and of many common hobbies of our girlhood in my Yorkshire home and in yours.

J. H. E.


CONTENTS.


CHAP. PAGE
Introduction 11
I. My Pretty Mother—Ayah—Company 20
II. The Cholera Season—My Mother Goes Away—My Sixth Birthday 26
III. The Bullers—Matilda takes Me up—We Fall Out—Mr. George 34
IV. Sales—Matters of Principle—Mrs. Minchin Quarrels with the Bride—Mrs. Minchin Quarrels with Everybody—Mrs. Minchin is Reconciled—The Voyage Home—A Death on Board 40
V. A Home Station—What Mrs. Buller thought of it—What Major Buller thought of it 53
VI. Dress and Manner—I Examine Myself—My Great-Grandmother 59
VII. My Great-Grandmother—The Duchess’s Carriage—Mrs. O’Connor is Curious 67
VIII. A Family History

Pages