A Little Florida Lady eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 179 pages of information about A Little Florida Lady.

A Little Florida Lady eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 179 pages of information about A Little Florida Lady.

ILLUSTRATIONS

The Little Florida Lady . . . . . . Frontispiece

   Beth Thought a Cotton Field a Pretty Sight [missing from book]

   Beth’s New Home [missing from book]

   Maggie, a Typical Old-Time Mammy

   Laura Corner in the Treasured Easter Hat

   Harvey [missing from book]

   “The Cutest Things Yon Ever Saw”

   January with His Perpetual Laugh and Fiddle

   The Darkies’ Quarters

A Little Florida Lady

CHAPTER I

The Journey to Florida.

New York was in the throes of a blizzard.  The wind howled and shrieked, heralding the approach of March, the Wind King’s month of the year.  Mrs. Davenport stood at a second story window of a room of the Gilsey House, and looked down idly on the bleak thoroughfare.  She was a young-looking woman for her thirty-five years, and had an extremely sweet face, denoting kindliness of heart.

The hall door opened, and Elizabeth Davenport entered, carrying in her arms a little ball of fluffy gray.

Elizabeth, or Beth, as she was more commonly called at the age of seven, might have been compared to a good fairy had she not been so plump.  She almost always radiated sunshine, and her face was generally lighted with a smile, the outcome of a warm heart.  Sometimes clouds slightly dimmed the sunshine, but they always proved to be summer clouds that quickly passed.  Her face was now flushed, and her eyes sparkled.

Mrs. Davenport turned, and smiled in greeting, but, at the same time, brushed a tear from her eye.

“Why, mamma, dear, what’s the matter?” cried Beth.

Mrs. Davenport’s eyes filled, but she bravely smiled.  “I’m a little unhappy over leaving all our friends, Beth.  Florida seems very far away.”

“I wouldn’t be unhappy.”

“How would you help it, dearie?”

“Why mamma,” she answered triumphantly after a second’s thought, “there are so many pleasant things to think about that I just never think of the unpleasant ones,” and her face broke into a smile, so cheery that Mrs. Davenport’s heart lightened.

“Mamma,” she continued, “it’s very easy for me to be happy.  Every one is so good to me.  The chambermaid just gave me this dear, dear kitty.  Isn’t it too cute for anything?  I mean to take it to Florida with me.”

“Why, Beth, that would never do.”

Beth was about to demur, when a door into an adjoining room opened, and Mr. Davenport called: 

“Mary, come here a minute, please.”

Mrs. Davenport hastened to answer the call.  She was hardly out of the room before Beth rushed to an open trunk.  Impatiently, she began pulling things out.  She burrowed almost to the very bottom.  Lastly, she took out a skirt of her mother’s, and wrapped something very carefully in it.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A Little Florida Lady from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.