Dorothy Dainty's Gay Times
ne could see the fine stone house with its vine-cov
ume in little gusts of sweetness, while across the path
a skipping-rope, and dancing over and under it i
he skipped backward, and forward, around the circular garden, and back again,
f the house, and the sprightly, dark-eyed child who
said. "You know Aunt Charlotte has all her plans ready for opening her privat
that used to be in it, there's to be one new one, and one boy, Katie Dean's
terday we looked over toward her house, and there se
clasping Dorothy's hand, and ru
ody out there behind the house beating a rug; you see they
ater with so much energy. She remembered that Arabella had said that her father always did as Aunt
ic school," said Dorothy; "she doesn't hav
ave to let her. You know Mr. Corryville was in your papa's class at college, and
think of," she said, with a bright smile, "There are nice gir
r rope, Nancy "ran in," and the two skipped around the house togeth
they sat down upon a low seat where the
s are to give a little entertainment each month, when we are to have dialogues, songs, solo dances, pieces to be spok
guess the others will be surprised.
ng myself, but I'm eager t
ow," cried Nancy, and, turning, Dorothy sa
"and we saw you and Nancy just as you ran aro
aid it would if enough pupils were ready to join it," said Mollie, "and we knew Kat
just a little b
says he likes girls ever so much better than boys, so
ls best," said Flossie; "isn
ie said, so drolly t
she is very nice, Jeanette Earl says," and as she spoke Dorot
ome to the new pupil, and she hope
te know?" asked
Nancy, "for the new little girl is
's sister," said Mollie
thing," said Nancy,
sie, "and when I told Uncle Harry he laughed, and aske
hed, and it was Mol
, "and sometimes I can't tell whether he is i
lege, and now was in business, he would urge Aunt Charlotte to let him attend a few sessions of our school, if
me young uncle in the little private school, whi
lda would be a regular file. Papa laughed, but mamma said: 'Harry, Harry, you really mustn't,' and he ran up to the music-room whistling 'O dear, what c
n't you remember, Flossie? Your aunt was on the piazza, and she stooped and pinned a rose in his b
o think about it, and one thing I don't at all understand, he's big, and brave
, "and he never acts as if we were just
s just strolling along the driveway. He walked into the kitchen, took the dirty tramp by the collar an
, and you ought to have seen how tenderly he picked him up, and brush
l on a day when Arabella's aunt would be there! I love to see him when he
have," said Flossie, "and perhaps Arabella will invite her aunt to one
you," called a cheery voice, and Nina Ear
you, Nancy, and Aunt Charlotte said that you were with Dorothy, so I ran acros
tell it, Nina!
through the ope
tone cottage, looking into this thing and peeping into that, till I'd think Aunt Charlotte would be wild. It's Arabella's
eet eyes sud
d keep Aunt Charlotte's house a
cottage was a healthy place for a private school to be in, before she could sa
hool?" queried blunt little Mollie; "she could go
rabella," said Dorothy, "so I th
ur mamma wishes it, but now, before school begins, I'm going t
ould be quite as pleasant if Arabella attended t
e pretty stone cottage stood wide open, as if assuring a welcome to the little pupils who w
ing could make it. His paws were snugly tucked in, and he purred softly to himself as if he knew that it
a schoolroom, sat Aunt Charlotte Grayson, lo
's governess, and now, as mistress of a thriving private school, she was independent and happy. The class was not a large one, but the little pupils belo
ll her "Aunt Charlotte," and now it had become the
ass assemble, and, wondering if the
rstood what she had said, Pompey blinked up at
, Nina and Jeanette Earl ran up the steps and in at the open door. Pompey received his usual number of love-pa
ool that there should never be any has
ay; "let me always have the pleasure of seeing you enter the class-room in as gentle a mann
nts, and as the children took their places they thoug
ompey ran across the floor and sprang up into a space on one window
usin Reginald, now entered, ju
e had opened her Testament, and was commencing to read, so Nina only shook her h
ing to say a pleasant word of an absent friend, or to coax two playmates, who had become estranged, to be fast friends again. Often they had heard her Uncle Harry s
nd in her gentle little heart she determined to be, if possibl
He was a handsome little fellow, with soft flaxen curls, and a smart, sturdy figure, and as he looked
ginald watched Aunt Charlotte, and wondered over the verse which she had read. When t
xplained, and when it had been made cl
your qu
acemakers'?
and Reginald listened, but it was
what the peacemakers ar
eginald, "but I
uestioned Au
ld said, "for she's piecin' a silk patchwork quilt,
e who did not laugh, but the s
seen her makin' pieces out of silk, an' what's th