Anne of Avonlea eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 345 pages of information about Anne of Avonlea.

Anne of Avonlea eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 345 pages of information about Anne of Avonlea.

“"You said we might write about a visit.  I never visited but once.  It was at my Aunt Mary’s last winter.  My Aunt Mary is a very particular woman and a great housekeeper.  The first night I was there we were at tea.  I knocked over a jug and broke it.  Aunt Mary said she had had that jug ever since she was married and nobody had ever broken it before.  When we got up I stepped on her dress and all the gathers tore out of the skirt.  The next morning when I got up I hit the pitcher against the basin and cracked them both and I upset a cup of tea on the tablecloth at breakfast.  When I was helping Aunt Mary with the dinner dishes I dropped a china plate and it smashed.  That evening I fell downstairs and sprained my ankle and had to stay in bed for a week.  I heard Aunt Mary tell Uncle Joseph it was a mercy or I’d have broken everything in the house.  When I got better it was time to go home.  I don’t like visiting very much.  I like going to school better, especially since I came to Avonlea.

“’Yours respectfully,

“"Barbara Shaw.’”

“Willie White’s began,

“"Respected Miss,

“"I want to tell you about my Very Brave Aunt.  She lives in Ontario and one day she went out to the barn and saw a dog in the yard.  The dog had no business there so she got a stick and whacked him hard and drove him into the barn and shut him up.  Pretty soon a man came looking for an inaginary lion’ (Query;—­Did Willie mean a menagerie lion?) ’that had run away from a circus.  And it turned out that the dog was a lion and my Very Brave Aunt had druv him into the barn with a stick.  It was a wonder she was not et up but she was very brave.  Emerson Gillis says if she thought it was a dog she wasn’t any braver than if it really was a dog.  But Emerson is jealous because he hasn’t got a Brave Aunt himself, nothing but uncles.’

“’I have kept the best for the last.  You laugh at me because I think Paul is a genius but I am sure his letter will convince you that he is a very uncommon child.  Paul lives away down near the shore with his grandmother and he has no playmates . . . no real playmates.  You remember our School Management professor told us that we must not have ‘favorites’ among our pupils, but I can’t help loving Paul Irving the best of all mine.  I don’t think it does any harm, though, for everybody loves Paul, even Mrs. Lynde, who says she could never have believed she’d get so fond of a Yankee.  The other boys in school like him too.  There is nothing weak or girlish about him in spite of his dreams and fancies.  He is very manly and can hold his own in all games.  He fought St. Clair Donnell recently because St. Clair said the Union Jack was away ahead of the Stars and Stripes as a flag.  The result was a drawn battle and a mutual agreement to respect each other’s patriotism henceforth.  St. Clair says he can hit the hardest but Paul can hit the OFTENEST.’”

“Paul’s Letter.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Anne of Avonlea from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.