Liebe Literaturfreunde und Fans der Hörbücher von „Lesekunst“,
wir freuen uns sehr, heute gemeinsam Kapitel 2 aufzuschlagen. Nachdem wir bereits die ersten drei Bände von Lucy Maud Montgomerys zeitlosem Klassiker – Anne auf Green Gables, Anne in Avonlea und Anne von der Insel – genießen durften, begleiten wir unsere liebgewonnene Heldin nun in einen neuen Lebensabschnitt.
In diesem Video liest Petra für Sie das zweite Kapitel aus dem vierten Band: „Anne von den windigen Pappeln“.
Was Sie in diesem Video erwartet:
Pure Emotion: Petra nimmt Sie mit ihrer herzlichen und aufrichtigen Art direkt mit nach Summerside. Erleben Sie die Geschichte nicht nur als Text, sondern als fühlbares Erlebnis.
Klassischer Genuss: Eine hochwertige Lesung, die zum Entspannen, Träumen und Erinnern einlädt – ideal für eine gemütliche Tasse Tee am Nachmittag.
Literarische Nostalgie: Die Fortsetzung der wunderbaren Reise einer jungen Frau, die mit ihrer Fantasie und Wärme seit Generationen die Herzen (besonders von uns Frauen) berührt.
Über das Buch: In „Anne von den windigen Pappeln“ tritt Anne ihre Stelle als Schulleiterin in Summerside an. In Form von Briefen an ihren geliebten Gilbert erfahren wir von ihren ersten Eindrücken, neuen Freundschaften und natürlich den kleinen Herausforderungen des Lebens.
Sie haben die ersten Teile verpasst? Schauen Sie gerne in unsere Playlist auf dem Kanal „Lesekunst“, dort finden Sie alle bisherigen Kapitel der „Anne“-Reihe sowie weitere Hörbuch-Schätze.
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Buch 1: Anne auf Green Gables (Originaltitel: Anne of Green Gables)
Buch 2: Anne in Avonlea
Buch 3: Anne von der Insel
Buch 4: Anne bei den windigen Pappeln
Wir freuen uns über Ihren Kommentar: Wie hat Ihnen der Einstieg in den vierten Band gefallen?
Viel Freude beim Zuhören und Träumen! Ihr Team von Lesekunst
#AnneAufGreenGables #Hörbuch #Lesekunst #LucyMaudMontgomery #KlassischeLiteratur #Vorlesen #Entspannung #AnneVonDenWindigenPappeln
wir freuen uns sehr, heute gemeinsam Kapitel 2 aufzuschlagen. Nachdem wir bereits die ersten drei Bände von Lucy Maud Montgomerys zeitlosem Klassiker – Anne auf Green Gables, Anne in Avonlea und Anne von der Insel – genießen durften, begleiten wir unsere liebgewonnene Heldin nun in einen neuen Lebensabschnitt.
In diesem Video liest Petra für Sie das zweite Kapitel aus dem vierten Band: „Anne von den windigen Pappeln“.
Was Sie in diesem Video erwartet:
Pure Emotion: Petra nimmt Sie mit ihrer herzlichen und aufrichtigen Art direkt mit nach Summerside. Erleben Sie die Geschichte nicht nur als Text, sondern als fühlbares Erlebnis.
Klassischer Genuss: Eine hochwertige Lesung, die zum Entspannen, Träumen und Erinnern einlädt – ideal für eine gemütliche Tasse Tee am Nachmittag.
Literarische Nostalgie: Die Fortsetzung der wunderbaren Reise einer jungen Frau, die mit ihrer Fantasie und Wärme seit Generationen die Herzen (besonders von uns Frauen) berührt.
Über das Buch: In „Anne von den windigen Pappeln“ tritt Anne ihre Stelle als Schulleiterin in Summerside an. In Form von Briefen an ihren geliebten Gilbert erfahren wir von ihren ersten Eindrücken, neuen Freundschaften und natürlich den kleinen Herausforderungen des Lebens.
Sie haben die ersten Teile verpasst? Schauen Sie gerne in unsere Playlist auf dem Kanal „Lesekunst“, dort finden Sie alle bisherigen Kapitel der „Anne“-Reihe sowie weitere Hörbuch-Schätze.
Abonnieren Sie uns, um kein weiteres Kapitel von Petra und ihren besonderen Lesungen zu verpassen.
Buch 1: Anne auf Green Gables (Originaltitel: Anne of Green Gables)
Buch 2: Anne in Avonlea
Buch 3: Anne von der Insel
Buch 4: Anne bei den windigen Pappeln
Wir freuen uns über Ihren Kommentar: Wie hat Ihnen der Einstieg in den vierten Band gefallen?
Viel Freude beim Zuhören und Träumen! Ihr Team von Lesekunst
#AnneAufGreenGables #Hörbuch #Lesekunst #LucyMaudMontgomery #KlassischeLiteratur #Vorlesen #Entspannung #AnneVonDenWindigenPappeln
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SpaßTranskript
00:01Chapter 2 Excerpts from various letters, from the same person to the same person
00:12September 26
00:15Do you know where I read your letters?
00:19On the other side of the street, in the small wood.
00:22There is a small hollow there where the sun shines on the flag.
00:27A stream meanders through it.
00:30There is a twisted, moss-covered tree trunk on which I am sitting, and a row of delightful young birch trees.
00:39If I have a specific dream afterwards, a golden-green, crimson dream, a dream of dreams,
00:47I will indulge my imagination and believe that he came from my secret birch clearing.
00:54and arose from a mystical union between the slimmest, airiest of the sisters and the babbling brook.
01:05I love sitting there and listening to the silence of the little wood.
01:09Have you ever noticed how many different kinds of silence there are, Gilbert?
01:15The silence of the forest, the shore, the meadows, the night, the summer afternoon.
01:22They are all different because the undertones that run through them are different.
01:30I am sure that if I were completely blind and insensitive to heat and cold,
01:37I could easily tell where I am based on the nature of the silence around me.
01:45School has been running for two weeks now and I've organized everything pretty well.
01:51But Mrs. Braddock was right.
01:54Pringles are my problem.
01:56And despite my lucky clover leaves, I still don't know exactly how to solve it.
02:03As Mrs. Braddock says, they are as smooth as cream and just as slippery.
02:09The Pringles are a kind of clan whose members keep an eye on each other.
02:15and often argue amongst themselves, but present a united front to outsiders.
02:22I've come to the conclusion that there are only two types of people in Summerside.
02:28Those who belong to Pringles and those who don't.
02:35My room is full of Pringles, and many students who go by other names have Pringles blood in them.
02:44The leader appears to be Jen Pringel, a green-eyed girl,
02:50It looks like what Becky Sharp must have looked like at 14.
02:55I believe she is deliberately organizing a subtle campaign of insubordination and disrespect.
03:03which I find very difficult to cope with.
03:06She has a knack for making irresistibly funny faces,
03:11and when I hear suppressed giggles behind my back across the room,
03:16I know exactly what caused it.
03:20But so far I haven't managed to catch them doing it.
03:26She is also intelligent.
03:29This little rascal can write essays that are almost literature.
03:35and is quite brilliant at mathematics.
03:38Woe is me!
03:40Everything she says or does has a certain luster.
03:43and she has a sense of humor that would connect us,
03:48if she hadn't hated me from the very beginning.
03:53It looks like it will probably take a long time.
03:57until Jen and I can laugh about something together.
04:02Mayra Pringel, Jens' cousin, is the beauty of the school and apparently stupid.
04:09She makes some amusing slip-ups,
04:12For example, today in history class, when she said,
04:16that the Indians considered Champlain and his men to be gods or something inhuman.
04:23In social terms, Pringles are the
04:27which Rebecca Doe called the E-light of Somerside.
04:34I have already been invited to dinner with two Pringle families,
04:40because it is proper to invite a new teacher to dinner,
04:45and the Pringles wouldn't miss it,
04:48to perform the necessary gestures of courtesy.
04:53Last night I was at James Pringle's,
04:57the father of the aforementioned Jen.
04:59He looks like a college professor,
05:02But in reality, he is stupid and ignorant.
05:05He talked a lot about discipline,
05:08typed with a finger whose fingernail was not flawless,
05:12on the tablecloth and occasionally made terrible grammatical errors.
05:18Somerside High School had always demanded a firm hand,
05:23an experienced teacher, preferably a man.
05:26He was worried I was a little too young.
05:31"A mistake that time will correct all too quickly," he said sadly.
05:37I said nothing, because if I had said something,
05:42Perhaps I said too much.
05:44So I was as smooth and creamy as any Pringle you make
05:48and contented myself with looking at him clearly and saying to myself,
05:54You quarrelsome, prejudiced old creature.
05:59Jen must have gotten her brains from her mother, whom I kind of liked.
06:03Jen was a model of good manners in the presence of her parents.
06:07But although her words were polite, her tone was rude.
06:13Every time she said Miss Shirley, it sounded like an insult.
06:19And every time she looked at my hair, I felt
06:23that it was simply carrot red.
06:26I'm sure no Pringle would ever admit that.
06:31that it is chestnut brown.
06:35I much preferred Morten Pringles,
06:39although Morten Pringel never really listens to what you say.
06:43He says something to you and while you're answering,
06:47He is already busy thinking about his next remark.
06:53Mrs. Steven Pringel, the Widow Pringel,
06:56Summerside is rich in widows, one wrote me a letter yesterday.
07:01A nice, polite, poisonous letter.
07:05Millie has too much homework.
07:08Millie is a sensitive child and must not be overexerted.
07:13Mr. Bell never gave her homework.
07:16She is a sensitive child who needs understanding.
07:20Mr. Bell understood her so well.
07:23Mrs. Steven is sure that I can do that too,
07:26If I just try.
07:30I have no doubt that Mrs. Steven believes
07:33I would have given Adam Pringle a nosebleed in class today.
07:37which is why he had to go home.
07:40And I woke up last night and couldn't fall back asleep.
07:45because I thought of an I,
07:48that in a question I had written on the board,
07:52had not marked it with a period.
07:54I'm sure Jen Pringle would notice that.
07:59and it would be openly whispered about.
08:03Rebecca Du says that all the Pringles will invite me to dinner,
08:08except for the old ladies in Maplehurst,
08:11and ignore me forever after that.
08:14Since they are the I-Light, that could mean
08:19that I will be socially ostracized in Summerside.
08:22Well, we'll see.
08:25The battle has begun, but nothing has been won or lost yet.
08:29Nevertheless, I'm quite unhappy about the whole thing.
08:34You can't argue rationally with prejudices.
08:37I'm still the same as I was in my childhood.
08:40I can't stand it when people don't like me.
08:45It's not a pleasant feeling,
08:48that the families of half my students hate me.
08:51And that was through no fault of my own.
08:53It is the injustice that hurts me.
08:58There they are again, the italic characters.
09:02But a little italics really helps,
09:06to relieve his feelings.
09:11Apart from the Pringles, I like my students very much.
09:14There are some clever, ambitious, and hardworking students,
09:18who are genuinely interested in an apprenticeship.
09:21Louis Allen earns his living by doing housework in a boarding house.
09:27and is not the least bit ashamed of it.
09:30And Sophie Sinclair rides six miles there every day.
09:34and six miles back on the back of her father's old, grey mare.
09:40That's what I call courage.
09:42If I can help such a girl,
09:45Should I be bothered by the Pringles family then?
09:48The only problem is if I can't win over the Pringles family,
09:54I have hardly any chance of helping anyone.
09:59But I love the windy poplars.
10:03It's not a guesthouse, it's a home.
10:07And they like me, even Miller likes me.
10:11although he sometimes disapproves of me and shows it,
10:15by deliberately sitting with his back to me
10:18and occasionally casts a golden eye over his shoulder at me,
10:23to see how I react to it.
10:27I don't pet him often when Rebecca Thore is around.
10:31because it really irritates them.
10:34During the day, he is a homely, cozy, thoughtful animal,
10:39But at night he is definitely a strange creature.
10:43Rebecca says that's because...
10:47that he is never allowed to stay outside after nightfall.
10:51She hates standing in the backyard and calling him.
10:55She says the neighbors all laugh at her.
10:59She calls out with such intense, loud sounds,
11:02that on a quiet night you can really hear them all over the city,
11:07as she calls tomcat, tomcat, tomcat.
11:11The widows would have a fit,
11:14If Miller weren't there when they go to bed...
11:19Nobody knows what I went through because of that cat.
11:24"No one," Rebecca assured me.
11:27The widows will do well.
11:30I like her more every day.
11:32Aunt Kate doesn't think much of reading novels,
11:36But she tells me that she does not intend to
11:38to censor my reading.
11:40Aunt Chetty loves novels.
11:43She has a hiding place where she keeps them.
11:45She smuggles them in from the city library,
11:48together with a solitaire card game
11:51and everything else that Aunt Kate shouldn't see.
11:56It is located in a chair seat,
11:59which nobody except Aunt Chetty knows about,
12:02that it is more than just a chair seat.
12:05She revealed the secret to me,
12:07because, I strongly suspect,
12:10I want me to help her with the aforementioned smuggling.
12:14and provide assistance.
12:17Actually, it should be under the windy poplar trees.
12:20There is no need for hiding places,
12:22because I have never owned a house
12:24I've seen so many mysterious cabinets.
12:28However, Rebecca Do
12:30not so that they remain mysterious.
12:33She always cleans them thoroughly.
12:37A house cannot keep itself clean,
12:40she says sadly when one of the widows protests.
12:44I'm sure it's a novel
12:46or would immediately throw away a deck of cards.
12:50if she could find them.
12:52Both are an abomination to her orthodox soul.
12:57Rebecca Do says,
12:59Maps are the devil's books.
13:01and novels are even worse.
13:03The only thing Rebecca ever reads,
13:06apart from their Bible,
13:08These are the society columns of the Montreal Guardian.
13:11She loves to look out over the houses,
13:14To inform about furniture and activities of millionaires.
13:20Imagine,
13:21to lie in a golden bathtub,
13:24"Miss Shirley," she said longingly.
13:27But she really is an old hag.
13:31She has a comfortable old wingback chair somewhere.
13:34pulled from faded brocade,
13:37which perfectly suits my quirks and says,
13:40This is your chair.
13:43We'll keep it for you.
13:46And she makes sure that the kites don't sleep out of it,
13:49so that I don't get hair on my school skirt
13:52and give Pringles no reason to applaud.
13:56All three are very interested in my pearl necklace.
14:00and what it means.
14:02Aunt Kate showed me her engagement ring.
14:05She can no longer wear it,
14:07because it had become too small for her,
14:09which is covered in turquoise.
14:12But poor Aunt Chetty confessed to me through tears,
14:16that she had never had an engagement ring.
14:19Her husband considered it an unnecessary expense.
14:23She was just in my room
14:25and washes her face with buttermilk.
14:27She does this every evening.
14:29to care for their skin
14:31and she has sworn me to secrecy,
14:34because she doesn't want to
14:35that Aunt Kate finds out about it.
14:38She would consider that ridiculous vanity.
14:41to stay with a woman my age
14:43and I am sure,
14:44Rebecca Drew believes
14:46that no Christian woman should attempt
14:49to be beautiful.
14:51I always sneaked into the kitchen,
14:54to do that,
14:55after Kate had fallen asleep,
14:57but I was always afraid
14:59that Rebecca Drew might come down.
15:02She has ears like a cat,
15:04even when she's asleep.
15:06If only I could do it every evening
15:08could sneak in here and do it.
15:11Oh, thank you, my love.
15:14I found out a little bit about our neighboring island, Evergreens.
15:19Mrs. Campbell,
15:20which was a Pringle
15:22is eighty.
15:24I haven't seen them yet.
15:25But, as far as I know,
15:27She is a very strict, old lady.
15:30She has a housekeeper,
15:32Martha Monkmann,
15:34which is almost as old and strict
15:36as herself
15:37and is commonly referred to as Mrs. Campbell's wife.
15:42And she has her great-granddaughter,
15:44little Elizabeth Grayson,
15:47who lives with her.
15:49Elizabeth,
15:50which I, despite my two-week stay
15:52I have never seen before
15:54is eight years old
15:55and goes to the public school via the back road.
15:58A shortcut through the backyards,
16:01so that I neither on the way-
16:04I might even meet someone on the way back.
16:06Your mother,
16:08who has passed away
16:09was a granddaughter of Mrs. Campbell,
16:12who also raised her.
16:14Her parents have passed away.
16:17She married a certain
16:19Pierce Grayson,
16:21a Yankee,
16:22as Mrs. Rachel Lindt would say.
16:25She died giving birth to Elizabeth.
16:28And there Pierce Grayson
16:29had to leave America immediately
16:32to manage a branch
16:34to take over his company in Paris
16:36The baby was sent to old Mrs. Campbell.
16:40The story goes,
16:42that he could not bear the sight of her,
16:45because she had taken her mother's life
16:49and that he never paid attention to her.
16:52That may of course be pure talk,
16:55because neither Mrs. Campbell nor the woman herself
16:57ever talk about him.
17:01Rebecca Doe says,
17:02that they are far too strict with little Elizabeth
17:05and that she doesn't have it easy with them.
17:08She is not like other children.
17:11She is far too old for eight years old,
17:14what she sometimes says.
17:17Rebecca,
17:18and one day she said to me,
17:20imagine,
17:21You were just about to go to bed.
17:23and suddenly you would
17:25feel a bite on your ankle.
17:28No wonder,
17:29that she is afraid
17:30Going to bed in the dark.
17:32And they force them to do it.
17:35Mrs. Campbell said,
17:36There are no cowards in her house.
17:38They watch them like two cats watching a mouse
17:42and boss them around,
17:44until she almost falls over.
17:46If she makes even the slightest sound,
17:49They almost faint.
17:51It is constantly said,
17:53Shhh, shhh.
17:55I'm telling you,
17:56This child will be terrified to death.
17:59And what should be done about it?
18:02What indeed?
18:04I would like to see them.
18:06She seems a little bit like me
18:08pitiable.
18:11Aunt Kate says,
18:12that she is well cared for physically.
18:15What Aunt Kate really said
18:17was
18:17She is well fed and clothed.
18:20But a child cannot live on bread alone.
18:23I will never forget,
18:25what my life was like,
18:26before I came to Queen Gables.
18:30Next Friday evening I'm going home,
18:32to spend two lovely days in Avonlea.
18:36The only downside is,
18:38that everyone I meet,
18:39will ask
18:40how I like teaching in Summerside.
18:44But now think of Queen Gables, Gilbert,
18:48the lake with the glittering water
18:50and the blue mist above it
18:52the maple trees by the stream,
18:54that slowly turn red
18:56the golden-brown flag in Haunted Wood
18:59and the shadows of the setting sun
19:02in Lovers Lane,
19:03this lovely place.
19:06I wished with all my heart,
19:08I would be there now with, with,
19:12Guess who.
19:13You know, Gilbert,
19:15Sometimes I have a strong feeling,
19:18that I love you.
19:20Windy poplars,
19:23Haunted alley
19:24Summerside,
19:25October 10th,
19:28Reverend and honored sir.
19:31Thus began a love letter from Aunt Chatti's grandmother,
19:35Isn't that adorable?
19:37What a feeling of superiority!
19:39Must that have been for the grandfather?
19:43Wouldn't you do that too?
19:45Gilbert, my dear,
19:47or prefer something else?
19:49But overall I'm glad
19:51that you are not the grandfather
19:53or a grandfather.
19:56It is wonderful,
19:57that we are young
19:58and have our whole lives ahead of us.
20:01Together,
20:02not true?
20:04Several pages omitted,
20:06remove the pin
20:07was obvious
20:08neither pointed,
20:09still dull,
20:10still hostile.
20:12I'm sitting in the window seat in the tower.
20:15and look out at the trees,
20:17blowing against an amber sky,
20:20and furthermore, to the port.
20:24Last night
20:25I had such a wonderful walk
20:27I made it myself.
20:29I just had to go somewhere,
20:32because it was by the windy poplar
20:34Just a little bleak.
20:37Aunt Chetty was crying in the living room,
20:39because her feelings had been hurt,
20:42and Aunt Kate cried in her bedroom,
20:45because it was the anniversary of Captain Amasa's death.
20:49And Rebecca Duh cried in the kitchen,
20:52without any apparent reason.
20:54I've never seen,
20:56that Rebecca Duh cried.
20:58But when I cautiously tried,
21:00to find out
21:01what was going on
21:03she wanted to know grumpily,
21:04Isn't it okay to just cry?
21:07when you feel like it.
21:10So I dismantled my camp
21:12and I crept away
21:14and left them to their own devices.
21:18I went outside
21:20and down Hafenstrasse.
21:22There was such a pleasant place,
21:24A frosty October scent in the air,
21:27mixed with the wonderful scent
21:29freshly plowed fields.
21:31I went on and on,
21:33until dusk
21:34transitioned into a moonlit autumn night.
21:38I was alone,
21:39but not lonely.
21:41I conducted a series
21:43imaginary conversations
21:44with imaginary comrades
21:46and I thought up so many epigrams,
21:49that I about myself
21:51was pleasantly surprised.
21:54I couldn't help it,
21:55when, despite my worries
21:57to amuse.
21:59The spirit moved me to
22:02A few howlers over the Püngels
22:04to give from me.
22:05I hate to admit it,
22:08but at Summerside High
22:09It's not going very well.
22:11There is no doubt,
22:12that a cabal
22:14was formed against me.
22:17Firstly, the housework
22:19from none of the Püngels
22:21or half-measures.
22:23And it makes no sense,
22:24to contact the parents.
22:26They are charming,
22:28polite, evasive.
22:30I know all the students,
22:32who, like me, are not Püngels.
22:34But the punk virus of ignorance
22:37undermines morality
22:38of the entire room.
22:41One morning I found
22:43my desk
22:43turned upside down
22:45and vice versa.
22:47Of course, nobody knew,
22:49who had done that.
22:50And nobody could
22:52or rather, I wanted to say
22:53who on another day
22:55who left the box lying around
22:56from which an artificial snake
22:58jumped when I opened it.
23:00But every little thing in the school
23:02screamed with laughter
23:03over my face.
23:04I suppose so.
23:06I looked really scared.
23:09Jen Püngel is coming
23:11half the time
23:12too late for school
23:13always with a
23:14an absolutely watertight excuse,
23:17presented politely
23:18and an outrageous game
23:21around the mouth.
23:22She gives the lesson
23:24News
23:24It continued right under my nose.
23:27Today I found
23:28a peeled onion
23:29in the pocket of my coat,
23:31when I put it on.
23:33I would like this girl
23:35with pleasure
23:36on bread and water
23:37lock up,
23:38until she learns
23:39to behave.
23:42The worst so far
23:43was the caricature
23:44from myself
23:46which I one morning
23:47found on the board,
23:49in white chalk
23:50with scarlet hair.
23:54Everyone denied it
23:55to have made them
23:57also Jen,
23:58but I knew
23:59that Jen is the only
24:00There was a student in the room,
24:01who could draw so well.
24:03It was really well done.
24:07My nose,
24:08You know,
24:10it has always been
24:11my pride and joy
24:12and my joy,
24:14was hunchbacked
24:15and my mouth
24:16was the mouth
24:16a sour,
24:17old young priest
24:18which have been going on for 30 years
24:20a school
24:20taught full of Pringles.
24:22But it was me.
24:24I woke up at three
24:26and at night
24:27and turned to me
24:27before remembering it.
24:29Isn't it strange,
24:31that things,
24:33about which we
24:34Winds at night,
24:35rarely are bad things
24:37but simply
24:38Shameful?
24:41All
24:42Possible things were said.
24:44I am accused of
24:46Hattie Pringles
24:47Examination papers
24:48to be killed
24:49just because they
24:50a Pringle.
24:51It is said,
24:52I would laugh
24:53when the children
24:54Making mistakes.
24:55So,
24:56I laughed,
24:57as fat Pringle
24:58a centurion as a man,
25:00the 100-year-old
25:02has become
25:03defined,
25:04I could simply
25:05no different.
25:07James Pringel says,
25:08at school
25:09there is no discipline,
25:11No discipline whatsoever.
25:13And the rumor will spread.
25:15spread,
25:15that I was a foundling.
25:18I am now beginning,
25:19the opposition
25:20Pringles
25:20also in other places
25:22to find out.
25:23Both socially
25:24as well as school-related
25:26Somerside seems
25:27under the influence
25:28to stand by Pringles.
25:30No wonder,
25:32that they
25:32royal family
25:33be called.
25:35I was last Friday
25:36not to Alice Pringles
25:37Walking party
25:39invited.
25:40And as Mrs. Frank Pringle
25:42a tea
25:43to support
25:43a church project
25:45organized
25:46Rebecca Du informed
25:48me,
25:48that the ladies
25:49the new
25:50wanted to build a church tower
25:52Was I the only one?
25:53Girls in the
25:54Presbyterian Church,
25:56that was not requested
25:58to take over a table.
26:00I heard
26:01that the pastor's wife,
26:03who is new to Somerside,
26:05has proposed
26:06to let me sing in the choir.
26:08And she was told,
26:10that all Pringles
26:11would resign
26:12if she did that.
26:14That would make such a thing
26:15resulting in a shortage
26:17that the choir
26:18I simply couldn't continue.
26:21Of course I am not
26:23the only teacher,
26:24the difficulties with
26:25has students.
26:26If the other teachers
26:28send them to me
26:29to become disciplined,
26:31How I hate that word,
26:33half of them
26:35Pringles.
26:36But about them
26:38never a complaint
26:39made.
26:41Two evenings ago
26:43I met Jen after school
26:45held back
26:46so that they can do some work
26:47completed,
26:48that they intentionally
26:49had not done.
26:51Ten minutes later
26:52the carriage withstood
26:53Maplehurst in front of the schoolhouse
26:55and Miss Ellen
26:56was at the door.
26:58A beautifully dressed,
27:00smiling old lady
27:02with elegant,
27:04black,
27:04pointed gloves
27:05and a fine one,
27:08hairy nose
27:09which looked
27:10as if she were just
27:11from a band box
27:12increased since 1840.
27:15She felt so sorry,
27:17but she could
27:18but Jen has.
27:19She wanted friends
27:21Visit in Low Whale
27:22and had promised
27:24to take Jen with me.
27:26Jen walked away triumphantly
27:28and I realized
27:29anew
27:29who are against me
27:31deployed forces.
27:34In my pessimistic
27:36At the moment I think,
27:37Pringles are a
27:39A mixture of Sloans
27:40and pies.
27:42But I know
27:43that they are not.
27:44I feel
27:45that I might like her
27:48if they
27:48my enemies would be.
27:50They are, by and large,
27:52an open,
27:53cheerful,
27:54loyal society.
27:55I could even
27:57Like Miss Ellen.
27:58Miss Sarah
27:59I've never seen that before.
28:01Miss Sarah has
28:02Maplehurst
28:03for ten years
28:04do not leave.
28:06Too delicate
28:07or she believes
28:08it was her
28:09Rebecca says you
28:10with a cold.
28:12But in their pride
28:14There is nothing to complain about.
28:16All Pringles
28:17are proud
28:18but these two
28:19old girls
28:20surpass everything.
28:21You should
28:22hear talking
28:23about their ancestors.
28:25So,
28:26her old father,
28:27Captain Abraham Pringel,
28:29was a fine
28:29old man.
28:30His brother
28:31Myron
28:32was not quite so fine,
28:34but
28:34You can hear the Pringles.
28:35hardly talk about him.
28:37But I have
28:38real fear
28:39that you with them
28:40alone a hard
28:41You will have time.
28:43If they
28:44about something
28:45or someone
28:46a verdict
28:47have formed
28:48is known
28:49never anything
28:50to change that.
28:51But
28:52Chin up!
28:53Miss Shirley.
28:54Chin up.
28:56I wished,
28:58I could
28:58Mrs. Allans
28:59Recipe for
29:00a poundcake
29:01receive,
29:02sighed Aunt Chetty.
29:03She told me
29:04repeatedly promised
29:06but it's coming
29:06never.
29:07It is a
29:08old
29:09English
29:09Family recipe.
29:11They are
29:12so exclusive
29:13what their
29:13Recipes are concerned.
29:16In wild,
29:17fantastic
29:18Dream
29:18I see
29:19myself
29:20Miss Ellen
29:20force,
29:21the recipe
29:22in front of Aunt Chetty
29:23on kneeling
29:25Ways to release
29:26and Jen
29:27to cause
29:28her manners
29:29to be noted.
29:30The crazy thing
29:31that is
29:32that I Jen
29:33easily yourself
29:34to bring
29:35could,
29:36if I
29:36their whole plan
29:37she in her
29:38mischief
29:39would support.
29:42Two sides
29:43omitted.
29:45Her obedient
29:46servant
29:47Anne Shirley
29:48PS,
29:50so aunt
29:51Chetty's grandmother
29:52their love letters
29:54The shortfall was not reached.
29:5615.
29:57October 15
29:58We have
29:59We have today
30:00heard,
30:00that it was last
30:01Night
30:01a burglary
30:02on the other
30:03End of the city
30:04has been given.
30:05They urged
30:06into a house
30:07one and
30:07stole something
30:08money and
30:08a dozen
30:09silver spoon.
30:11So is
30:12Rebecca
30:12Drew
30:13to Mr.
30:13Hamilton
30:14gone to
30:15to see
30:16whether they
30:17a dog
30:18lend
30:18could.
30:19she will
30:20him on
30:21rear
30:21veranda
30:22leash
30:23and advises
30:23me,
30:24mean
30:24Engagement ring
30:25to include.
30:27By the way,
30:28I found out
30:30Why
30:30Rebecca
30:31Drew
30:31cried.
30:32It seems,
30:33as if it had
30:34a domestic
30:35A fight was given.
30:37Dusty Miller
30:38had
30:39bad again
30:40dazed and
30:41Rebecca Drew
30:41said
30:42Aunt Kate,
30:43that they
30:44really something
30:45against these
30:45Cat
30:46company
30:46would have to.
30:47He wore them
30:48at a
30:49Violin side.
30:51It was the
30:52third time
30:53within a
30:54year and they
30:54knew
30:55that he
30:56on purpose
30:57did and
30:58Aunt Kate
30:58said
30:59when Rebecca
31:00Drew die
31:01Cat always
31:01would release
31:02If you
31:03meowed,
31:04would be no
31:04Danger,
31:05that they
31:05bad
31:06behaves.
31:07So,
31:09that is
31:09the drop
31:10the
31:11Barrel to
31:11Overflow
31:12brings
31:13says
31:13Rebecca
31:14Drew.
31:15Consequently
31:16Tears.
31:18The
31:18Pringle situation
31:19is from
31:20week
31:20something this week
31:21acute.
31:22Yesterday
31:23Was something
31:24very
31:25Outrageous
31:26on one
31:27my books
31:27written and
31:29Homer Pringle
31:29made at
31:30Leaving the
31:30School in
31:31even a gang
31:32Handstands.
31:34Besides that
31:34I have
31:35recently
31:35a
31:36anonymous
31:36letter
31:37full
31:37nasty
31:38allusions
31:38receive.
31:39Somehow
31:40I give
31:41Jen
31:41neither
31:42the book
31:42still
31:42the
31:43letter
31:43to,
31:44so cheeky
31:45you too
31:45be.
31:46There are
31:47Things,
31:48to whom
31:48they
31:49not
31:49lower
31:50would.
31:51Rebecca
31:51Drew is
31:52angry and
31:53I shudder
31:54in which
31:54Thoughts,
31:55what they
31:55the
31:55Pringles
31:55do
31:56would,
31:57If you
31:57they under
31:58their
31:58Power
31:58would have.
32:00Nero's
32:00Wish
32:01is, on the other hand
32:01nothing.
32:02I can
32:03they really
32:04do not agree
32:04responsible
32:05make,
32:06because it
32:06there are moments
32:07in which I
32:08even that
32:08Feeling
32:09have,
32:09that
32:10I
32:10each
32:11individual
32:12Pringle
32:12cheerful
32:13poisoned
32:14brew
32:15hand over
32:16could.
32:17I believe,
32:18I have for you
32:19not much
32:20about the
32:20others
32:20Teacher
32:21told.
32:21There are
32:22two,
32:23Do you know,
32:23the deputy
32:25Director,
32:26Catherine
32:26Burke
32:27from the
32:27Junior room
32:28and George
32:29McKay
32:30from the
32:30Prep.
32:31Over
32:32George
32:32I have
32:33few
32:33to
32:34say.
32:35He is
32:36a
32:36shy
32:37good-natured
32:38Boy
32:39of 20
32:39years
32:40with a
32:41light and delicious
32:42Highland accent,
32:43the low
32:44Huts and
32:45foggy
32:45islands
32:46remembers.
32:47Be
32:47grandfather
32:48was
32:49Isle
32:50of
32:50Sky
32:51and he
32:52comes with
32:52the
32:52Preparation groups
32:53very good
32:54Rightly so.
32:55So far
32:56I him
32:56know
32:57I like
32:57him,
32:58but I
32:59I'm afraid
32:59i will
32:59difficulties
33:00have,
33:01Caswin
33:01Burke
33:02to like.
33:03Caswin
33:04is a
33:04Girl
33:05from,
33:06I believe,
33:07approximately
33:0728,
33:09although they
33:10like 35
33:10looks like.
33:12I was given
33:12said,
33:13that they
33:14Hope
33:14on the
33:15Promotion
33:15to
33:16School administration
33:16nurtured
33:17and I
33:18I suspect
33:19She annoys
33:20itself,
33:20that me
33:21she
33:21receive
33:21have,
33:22particularly,
33:23since I
33:24her clearly
33:24subordinate
33:25am.
33:26She is
33:27one
33:27good
33:27Teacher,
33:28a
33:29a little
33:29one
33:30Pedantic,
33:31but they
33:31is at
33:32no one
33:32popular.
33:33And they
33:34takes care of
33:34That's not why.
33:35She seems
33:36no
33:36friends or
33:37Relatives
33:38to have
33:38and lives
33:39in a
33:40grim
33:40looking
33:41House
33:41in the
33:42shabby
33:43small
33:43Temple
33:43Street.
33:45She
33:45clothes
33:46very
33:46stuffy,
33:47never works
33:48socially
33:49out of
33:49and should
33:50stingy
33:51be.
33:51She is
33:52very
33:52sarcastic
33:53and their
33:53Pupils
33:54fear
33:54her
33:54sharpen
33:55Remarks.
33:56Man
33:57says
33:57me,
33:58that their
33:58Art,
33:59her
33:59dense
33:59black
34:00eyebrows
34:01to lift
34:02the students
34:03to porridge
34:04expire
34:04leaves.
34:05I
34:06wished
34:06I could
34:07that at
34:08the
34:08Pingels
34:09apply,
34:09but I
34:10want
34:11really
34:11not
34:11through
34:11Fear
34:12govern,
34:13like her
34:13it does.
34:14I
34:14want,
34:15that
34:15mine
34:16Pupils
34:16me
34:17love.
34:17Although they
34:18apparently
34:19none
34:19has problems
34:20they to
34:21Order
34:21bring to,
34:23She sends
34:23constantly
34:24some of
34:25them,
34:25particularly
34:26the
34:26Pingels.
34:27I
34:28white,
34:28that they
34:28the
34:29intentionally
34:29does and
34:30I
34:30I have that
34:31miserable
34:31Feeling,
34:32that they
34:33to my
34:33difficulties
34:34Joy
34:34has and
34:35I like it
34:36would see
34:36if I
34:37fail.
34:39Rebecca
34:40You
34:40says,
34:40that
34:40no one
34:41with the
34:41friendship
34:42close
34:42can.
34:43The
34:43widows
34:44have they
34:44several times
34:45for the
34:45Sunday dinner
34:46invited.
34:47The
34:47love
34:48souls
34:48do
34:48the
34:48always
34:49for
34:49lonely
34:49People
34:50and
34:50have
34:51always
34:51the
34:51most delicious
34:52Chicken salad
34:53for them
34:53but they
34:54is never
34:55came.
34:56So
34:56have they
34:57it gave up
34:58because,
34:58like aunt
34:59Kate
34:59says,
35:00there are
35:01Borders.
35:03It
35:03gives
35:03Rumors,
35:04that they
35:04very
35:05smart
35:05is and
35:05sing
35:06and
35:06recite
35:07can,
35:08but
35:09she
35:09does
35:09none
35:10from
35:10both.
35:11aunt
35:12Chetty
35:12has she
35:13once
35:13requested
35:14at
35:14a
35:15Church meal
35:16to
35:16recite.
35:18We
35:19found
35:19she
35:20has
35:20very
35:20ungrateful
35:21Way
35:22rejected,
35:23said
35:23aunt
35:23Kate.
35:24She
35:25has
35:25only
35:25growled
35:26said
35:27Rebecca
35:27You.
35:28Kerstin
35:28has a
35:29depth,
35:30throaty
35:30Agree,
35:31almost a
35:32Male voice
35:33and it
35:34sounds
35:34really like
35:35a
35:35Growl,
35:36If you
35:36not good
35:36mood
35:37is.
35:38She
35:38is
35:39not
35:39pretty,
35:40but they
35:41could
35:41more from
35:42itself
35:42make.
35:42She
35:43is
35:43dark
35:44and
35:44tanned,
35:45with
35:45magnificent
35:46black
35:46Hair,
35:47the
35:47always from
35:48their
35:48high forehead
35:49withdrawn
35:50and at
35:51Neck
35:51a
35:51clumsy
35:52node
35:53turned up
35:54is.
35:55Her
35:55Eyes
35:56fit
35:56not to
35:57their
35:57Hair,
35:58they are
35:59a
35:59clear,
36:00bright
36:00amber
36:01under
36:01your
36:01black
36:02brown.
36:03She
36:03has
36:03ears,
36:04the
36:04she
36:04not
36:04hide
36:05would
36:05and
36:06the
36:06most beautiful
36:07Hands
36:08the
36:08I
36:08each
36:08seen
36:08have.
36:09Besides that
36:10has
36:10she
36:10a
36:11well-formed
36:12Mouth.
36:13But
36:13she
36:14clothes
36:14itself
36:14terrible,
36:15appears
36:16a
36:16a proper
36:17talent
36:17for that
36:18to
36:18have,
36:19the
36:19Colors
36:19and
36:19forms
36:20to
36:20choose,
36:20the
36:21she
36:21not
36:21carry
36:22should.
36:23Dull
36:24Dark green
36:25and dreary
36:25Gray,
36:26although they
36:27for
36:27green
36:28and
36:28gray
36:28to
36:28pale
36:29is and
36:30Stripes
36:32slim
36:33figure
36:33still
36:33higher
36:34and
36:34slimmer
36:35appear
36:35let.
36:36And
36:37her
36:37Dresses
36:38see
36:38always
36:38so
36:38out of,
36:39as
36:40would have
36:40she
36:40in it
36:41slept.
36:43Her
36:43Behave
36:44is very
36:44dismissive.
36:46How
36:46Rebecca
36:47Doe
36:47say
36:47would,
36:48has
36:48she
36:48always
36:49a
36:49Resentment
36:49on
36:50the
36:50Shoulder.
36:51Each
36:51Just,
36:52if
36:52I
36:52her
36:52on
36:53the
36:53Stairs
36:53encounter,
36:54have
36:54I
36:54the
36:54Feeling,
36:55that
36:55she
36:56terrible
36:56Things
36:57above
36:57me
36:57thinks.
36:59Each
36:59Just,
37:00if
37:00I
37:02something
37:03False
37:04said
37:04have.
37:05And
37:06but
37:06does
37:06she
37:06me
37:07very
37:07sorrow,
37:08although
37:08I
37:09white,
37:09that
37:09she
37:09my
37:09Pity
37:10violent
37:10reject
37:11would.
37:12And
37:12I
37:13can
37:13her
37:13not
37:13help,
37:14because
37:14she
37:14no
37:15Help
37:15assume
37:16will.
37:16She
37:17is
37:17me
37:18opposite
37:18really
37:19hateful.
37:20One
37:21Days,
37:22as
37:22we
37:22three
37:22female teachers
37:23all
37:24in the
37:24Teachers' room
37:25were,
37:26did
37:26I
37:26something,
37:27the
37:27apparently
37:28one
37:28the
37:29unwritten
37:30laws
37:30the
37:30School
37:31injured
37:31and
37:32Catherine
37:32said
37:33sharp,
37:34perhaps
37:35believe
37:35She,
37:35She
37:35would be
37:36above
37:36the
37:37Regulate
37:37with
37:37Shirley.
37:39A
37:39other
37:40Just,
37:40as
37:41I
37:41some
37:42Changes
37:43suggested
37:43the
37:44my
37:44Opinion
37:44after
37:44for the
37:45Well-being
37:45the
37:45School
37:45would be
37:46said
37:47she
37:47with
37:47a
37:47mocking
37:48Smile,
37:49I
37:49I am interested
37:50me
37:50not
37:51for
37:51Fairy tale.
37:53Once,
37:54as
37:54I
37:55some
37:55nice
37:55Things
37:56above
37:56her
37:56Work
37:57and
37:57Methods
37:57said
37:58answered
37:59she,
37:59and
38:00What
38:00should
38:00in
38:01all
38:01this
38:01Honey
38:02the
38:02bitter
38:02pill
38:03be?
38:05But
38:05the,
38:06What
38:06me
38:06annoying
38:08but
38:08the,
38:09What
38:09me
38:10at
38:10most
38:10annoyed
38:12so,
38:13one
38:13Days,
38:14as
38:14I
38:14randomly
38:15a
38:15Book
38:16from
38:16her
38:16in the
38:16Teachers' room
38:17lifted
38:18and
38:18a
38:18View
38:19on the
38:19front endpaper
38:20threw
38:21said
38:21I,
38:22I
38:22am happy
38:23me,
38:23that
38:23you
38:24your
38:24names
38:24with
38:25a
38:25K
38:25spell it,
38:27Catherine
38:27is so much
38:28tempting
38:29as
38:29Catherine
38:30K
38:31is a
38:32more beautiful
38:32letter
38:33as the
38:33complacent
38:34C
38:35She
38:36reacted
38:37not,
38:37but the
38:38next
38:38Note,
38:39that they
38:39sent up,
38:40was
38:40signed
38:41with
38:42C
38:42Catherine
38:43Book
38:44I
38:45sneezed
38:46the
38:46entire
38:46way home
38:47I
38:48would
38:48really
38:49stop
38:49to
38:49attempt,
38:50with
38:50her
38:50friends
38:51to
38:51be,
38:52if
38:53I
38:53not
38:53such a
38:53strange
38:55inexplicable
38:56Feeling
38:56had,
38:57that they
38:57under
38:58all of their
38:58Abruptness
38:59and
38:59Detachment
39:00actually
39:01after
39:02Company
39:02is starving.
39:03Everything
39:04in
39:04everything,
39:05What
39:05Catherine's
39:06antagonism
39:07and the
39:08Pringle attitude
39:08as far as we're concerned
39:10I know
39:10not,
39:10what I
39:11would do
39:12if it
39:12not the
39:13love
39:13Rebecca
39:14and yours
39:15Letters
39:15would
39:16and the
39:17small
39:17Elizabeth.
39:18Because
39:19I the
39:19small
39:20Elizabeth
39:20met
39:21have
39:21and they
39:22is
39:23a
39:23Treasure.
39:25Before
39:26three
39:26nights
39:27brought
39:27I
39:28the
39:28Glass
39:28Milk
39:29to
39:29door
39:29to
39:29the
39:29Wall
39:30and the
39:31small
39:31Elizabeth
39:31himself
39:32was
39:32there
39:33to
39:33instead of
39:34the
39:34Woman
39:34to
39:35take.
39:35Her
39:36Head
39:36emerged
39:37straight
39:37on the
39:38firm
39:38part of the
39:39door
39:39on,
39:40so that
39:40her
39:40Face
39:41from
39:41ivy
39:42framed
39:42became.
39:43She
39:43is
39:43small,
39:44pale,
39:45golden
39:46and
39:46longingly.
39:47Her
39:47Eyes,
39:48the
39:48me
39:49through the
39:49autumnal
39:50dusk
39:50looked at
39:51are
39:51large and
39:52Gold-hazelnut colored.
39:55Her
39:56silver-golden hair
39:57was in the middle
39:58parted,
39:59smooth over the
40:00head laid and
40:01with a
40:02round comb style
40:03and fell in
40:04Waves on
40:05her shoulder.
40:06She
40:07wore a
40:07light blue
40:08Gingham dress
40:09and the
40:10Expression
40:10one
40:11princess
40:11from the
40:12Elfland.
40:13She
40:14had,
40:14What
40:15Rebecca
40:15one
40:16delicate
40:16Radiance
40:17calls
40:17and he
40:18woke
40:18with me
40:19the
40:19Impression
40:20one
40:20child's
40:21the
40:21more or
40:22fewer
40:22malnourished
40:23was.
40:24Not
40:25physically,
40:25rather
40:26in the
40:26Soul.
40:27More
40:28as a
40:28Moonbeam
40:29as a
40:30Sunbeam
40:32And
40:33you
40:33are
40:33Elisabeth,
40:34said
40:35I.
40:36Today
40:37Evening
40:37not,
40:38answered
40:39she
40:39serious.
40:40Today
40:41Evening
40:41am
40:41I
40:41Betty,
40:42because I
40:43today
40:43Evening
40:43everything
40:44on the
40:44World
40:44love.
40:45Last
40:46Night
40:46was I
40:47Elisabeth
40:47and
40:48morning
40:48Evening
40:49become
40:49I
40:49probably
40:50Better
40:50be.
40:52It
40:52depends
40:52everything
40:53of that
40:53away,
40:53how I
40:54me
40:54feel.
40:56There
40:56was
40:57contact
40:57the
40:58Relatives
40:58The mind
40:59for
40:59me.
41:00I
41:00was
41:00immediately
41:01enthusiastic.
41:02How
41:03nice,
41:04a
41:04names
41:04to
41:04have,
41:05the
41:05man
41:05so
41:05simply
41:06change
41:06can
41:07and
41:07despite it
41:08the
41:08Feeling
41:08has,
41:09that
41:09it
41:09the
41:10own
41:10is.
41:11The
41:12small
41:12Elisabeth
41:13nodded.
41:13I
41:15can
41:15me
41:15so
41:15many
41:16names
41:16from this
41:17make.
41:18Elsie
41:19and
41:19Betty
41:20and
41:20Better
41:21and
41:21Elisa
41:21and
41:22Lisbeth
41:23and
41:23Better
41:23but
41:24not
41:25Lizzie.
41:25I
41:26can
41:26me
41:26never
41:26How
41:27Lizzie
41:27feel.
41:29Who
41:29could
41:30the,
41:30have
41:31I
41:31said.
41:32Hold
41:33she
41:33for
41:33dumb
41:34from
41:34me,
41:34Miss
41:34Shirley?
41:35grandmother
41:36and
41:36the
41:36Woman
41:37already.
41:38At all
41:39not
41:39silly,
41:40very
41:40way
41:40and
41:41very
41:41delightful,
41:42said
41:42I.
41:43The
41:43small
41:43Elisabeth
41:44made
41:44about me
41:45the edge
41:45their
41:46glasses
41:46a
41:47and
41:48did
41:48cup-sized
41:49Eyes.
41:50I
41:50felt
41:51that me
41:52in a
41:52secret
41:53spiritual
41:54balance
41:54was weighed
41:55and soon
41:56recognized
41:57I am grateful
41:58that me
41:58not for
41:59inadequate
41:59found
42:00had been.
42:01Because the
42:02small
42:03Elisabeth
42:03bat
42:04me
42:04a
42:05Fallen.
42:05And the
42:06small
42:07Elisabeth
42:07asked
42:08no one
42:09a favor,
42:10that they
42:10dislikes.
42:12Would you
42:13the kitten
42:13lift
42:14and me
42:15stroke him
42:16let?
42:16she asked
42:17shy.
42:19Dustin
42:19Miller
42:20rubbed
42:20on my
42:21Leg.
42:21I lifted
42:22him up
42:23and the
42:23small
42:24Elisabeth
42:24stretched
42:25a tiny
42:25Hand out
42:26and stroke
42:27enthusiastic
42:28about his
42:28Head.
42:29I like
42:31kitten
42:31rather than
42:32Babies,
42:32she said
42:33and saw
42:34me with
42:34a strange
42:35small
42:36Expression
42:36of defiance
42:37to,
42:38as if he knew
42:38she,
42:39that me
42:39shocked
42:40would be
42:41but the
42:41Truth
42:42would say
42:42They still did.
42:44I take
42:44to,
42:45you had
42:45not yet
42:46much with
42:46babies
42:46to do,
42:47so
42:47Do you know
42:48not,
42:49how sweet
42:49they are,
42:50I said
42:50smiling.
42:51Do you have
42:52one's own
42:53Kitten?
42:54Elisabeth
42:55shook
42:55the head.
42:56Oh
42:56no,
42:58grandmother
42:58likes no
42:59cats
42:59and the
43:00Woman
43:01hates
43:01she.
43:02The
43:02Woman
43:02is
43:03tonight
43:03not there,
43:04therefore could
43:05I for
43:06the milk
43:06come.
43:07I
43:07love
43:08it,
43:08for the
43:08Milk
43:09to
43:09come,
43:09because
43:09Rebecca
43:10You
43:10so
43:11one
43:11pleasant
43:12person
43:13is.
43:14Are
43:14you
43:14sad,
43:15that they
43:16tonight
43:16not
43:17came
43:17is?
43:18I
43:19laughed.
43:20The
43:20small
43:20Elisabeth
43:21shook
43:21the head.
43:22No,
43:23you are
43:24also
43:24very
43:24pleasant.
43:25I
43:26I wanted to
43:26long
43:26with you
43:27known
43:27become,
43:27but I
43:28had
43:28Fear,
43:29that it
43:30before the
43:30Morning
43:30not
43:31succeed
43:31could.
43:32We
43:33stood
43:33there and
43:34entertained
43:35us,
43:35while
43:36Elisabeth
43:36your
43:37Milk
43:37swallow
43:37dainty
43:38drank
43:38and they
43:39told
43:40me
43:40everything
43:40above
43:41Morning.
43:43The
43:43Woman
43:44had her
43:44said,
43:45that it
43:45morning
43:46never
43:46comes,
43:47but
43:48Elisabeth
43:48knows
43:49better.
43:50It
43:50becomes
43:51sometime
43:51come.
43:52To
43:53a
43:53beautiful
43:53Morning
43:54will she
43:54simply
43:55wake up
43:55and find out,
43:56that it
43:57morning
43:57is.
43:58Not
43:59today,
44:00rather
44:00morning.
44:01And
44:01then
44:02become
44:02Things
44:02happen,
44:03wonderful
44:04Things.
44:05Perhaps
44:05will she
44:06even
44:06one day
44:07have,
44:08at the
44:08she
44:08just as
44:09everything
44:09make
44:10can,
44:10like her
44:10it
44:11will
44:11without
44:12that
44:12someone
44:12she
44:13observed.
44:14Although
44:15I think,
44:15Elisabeth
44:16means
44:17that is
44:18even
44:18in the
44:18Morning
44:19still
44:19to
44:19nice,
44:20to
44:20true
44:20to
44:20be.
44:21Or
44:22she
44:22becomes
44:22find out,
44:23What
44:24at
44:24End
44:24the
44:25Harbor Road
44:26lies.
44:26This
44:27wandering
44:28winding
44:28Away
44:29How
44:29one
44:29beautiful
44:29redness
44:30Snake,
44:30the,
44:31so
44:31thinks
44:32Elisabeth,
44:33to
44:33End
44:34the
44:34World
44:34leads.
44:35Perhaps
44:36is
44:36there
44:36the
44:36Island
44:37the
44:37Luck.
44:38Elisabeth
44:39is
44:39itself
44:39secure,
44:40that
44:40it
44:40somewhere
44:41one
44:42Island
44:42the
44:42Luck
44:43gives,
44:43where
44:44all
44:44the
44:44ships
44:45anchor,
44:45the
44:45never
44:46return.
44:47And
44:47she
44:47becomes
44:47she
44:48find,
44:49if
44:49the
44:49Morning
44:49comes.
44:51And
44:51if
44:52morning
44:52comes,
44:53said
44:53Elisabeth,
44:54become
44:54I
44:54one
44:55million
44:57and 40
44:58cats
44:58have.
44:59I
44:59have
45:00the
45:00grandmother
45:00told,
45:01that
45:01she
45:01me
45:01no
45:02kitten
45:02allow
45:03wanted,
45:04Miss
45:04Shirley,
45:04and
45:05she
45:05was
45:05annoyed
45:06and
45:06said
45:06I
45:07am
45:07it
45:07not
45:07used,
45:08so
45:08addressed
45:09to
45:09become,
45:10miss
45:10Outrageous!
45:11I
45:12became
45:12without
45:12Dinner
45:13into the
45:13Bed
45:14sent,
45:15but
45:15I
45:15wanted
45:16not
45:16cheeky
45:17be,
45:17and
45:18I
45:18could
45:18not
45:18sleep,
45:19Miss
45:19Shirley,
45:20because
45:20the
45:20Woman
45:21me
45:21said
45:22that
45:22she
45:22once
45:23a
45:23child
45:23knew
45:24the
45:24in the
45:24Sleep
45:24died
45:25is,
45:26after
45:27it
45:27naughty
45:28was.
45:28As
45:29Elisabeth
45:30her
45:30Milk
45:30drank
45:31had,
45:31knocked
45:32it
45:32sharp
45:32to
45:33a
45:33invisible
45:34Window
45:34behind
45:35the
45:35Spruce trees.
45:36I
45:36believe,
45:37we
45:37became
45:38the
45:38whole
45:38Time
45:38observed.
45:40My
45:40Elf girl
45:41ran,
45:42her
45:42golden
45:43Head
45:43glittered
45:44along
45:44the
45:44dark
45:45Fichtenweg
45:46until they
45:46disappeared.
45:47She
45:48is
45:48a
45:48strange
45:49small
45:50Creature,
45:50said
45:51Rebecca
45:51Drew,
45:52when I
45:52her
45:52from
45:53my
45:53adventure
45:54told.
45:56He
45:56had
45:56really
45:57somehow
45:57the
45:57Quality
45:58one
45:58Adventures,
45:59Gilbert.
46:00One
46:01Day
46:01said
46:01she
46:02to
46:02me,
46:03have
46:03you
46:03Fear
46:04before
46:04Lions?
46:05Rebecca
46:05Drew,
46:06I
46:07have
46:07still
46:07no
46:07met,
46:08so
46:08can
46:08I
46:09it
46:09you
46:09not
46:09say,
46:10answered
46:11I.
46:12Morning
46:12becomes
46:13it
46:13every
46:13Crowd
46:14Lions
46:14give,
46:15said
46:15she,
46:15but it
46:16become
46:16nice,
46:17friendly
46:18Lions
46:18be.
46:19Child,
46:20you will
46:21Eyes
46:21receive,
46:22if you
46:22so
46:22look
46:23said
46:23I.
46:24She
46:25saw
46:25me
46:25through
46:26on
46:26something
46:27to,
46:28the
46:28she
46:28in
46:28this
46:28Morning
46:29before
46:30her
46:30saw.
46:31I
46:31think
46:32profound
46:33Thoughts,
46:34Rebecca
46:34Drew,
46:34said
46:35she.
46:36The
46:36problem
46:36with
46:36this
46:37child
46:37is,
46:38that
46:38she
46:38not
46:38enough
46:39laughs.
46:41I
46:41remembered
46:42me,
46:43that
46:43Elisabeth
46:43while
46:44our
46:44conversation
46:45no
46:45only
46:46Just
46:46laughter
46:47had.
46:48I
46:48have
46:48the
46:49Feeling,
46:49that
46:49she
46:49still
46:50not
46:50learned
46:50has,
46:51How
46:51man
46:51laughs.
46:52The
46:53size
46:53House
46:54it's so
46:54still
46:55and
46:55lonely
46:56and
46:56without
46:57Laugh.
46:58It
46:58works
46:59now
46:59even
46:59murky
47:00and
47:00grim,
47:01where
47:01the
47:01World
47:01a
47:02A riot of colors
47:02the
47:03Autumn
47:03is.
47:04The
47:05small
47:05Elisabeth
47:06hears
47:06to
47:06much
47:06on
47:07forgotten
47:07Whispers.
47:09I
47:09think,
47:10one
47:11my
47:11Tasks
47:12in
47:12Summerside
47:12is it
47:13be,
47:13her
47:14to teach
47:15How
47:16man
47:16laughs.
47:17Your
47:18most tender,
47:19regrets
47:20Girlfriend
47:21Anne Shirley
47:21PS
47:23More
47:24from
47:24aunt
47:25Chettis
47:25grandmother
47:33aunt
47:34aunt
47:34aunt
47:34aunt
47:34aunt
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