A Summer in Leslie Goldthwaite's Life. eBook

Adeline Dutton Train Whitney
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 237 pages of information about A Summer in Leslie Goldthwaite's Life..

A Summer in Leslie Goldthwaite's Life. eBook

Adeline Dutton Train Whitney
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 237 pages of information about A Summer in Leslie Goldthwaite's Life..

“Mrs. Linceford, Miss Goldthwaite, Mrs. Linceford, Mrs. Linceford!  Master—­hm!—­Thayne,” and he pocketed a big one like a dispatch.  “Captain Jotham Green.  Where is he?  Here, Captain Green; you and I have got the biggest, if Mrs. Linceford does get the most.  I believe she tells her friends to write in hits, and put one letter into three or four envelopes.  When I was a very little boy, I used to get a dollar changed into a hundred coppers, and feel ever so much richer.”

“That boy’s forwardness is getting insufferable!” exclaimed Mrs. Thoresby, sitting apart, with two or three others who had not joined the group about Dakie Thayne.  “And why Captain Green should give him the bag always, I can’t understand.  It is growing to be a positive nuisance.”

Nobody out of the Thoresby clique thought it so.  They had a merry time together,—­“you and I and the post,” as Dakie said.  But then, between you and me and that confidential personage, Mrs. Thoresby and her daughters hadn’t very many letters.

“That is all,” said Dakie, shaking the bag.  “They’re only for the very good, to-night.”  He was not saucy:  he was only brimming-over glad.  He knew “Noll’s” square handwriting, and his big envelopes.

There was great news to-night at the Cottage.  They were to have a hero, perhaps two or three, among them.  General Ingleside and friends were coming, early in the week, the Captain told them with expansive face.  There are a great many generals and a great many heroes now.  This man had been a hero beside Sheridan, and under Sherman.  Colonel Ingleside he was at Stone River and Chattanooga,—­leading a brave Western regiment in desperate, magnificent charges, whose daring helped to turn that terrible point of the war and made his fame.

But Leslie, though her heart stirred at the thought of a real, great commander fresh from the field, had her own news that half neutralized the excitement of the other:  Cousin Delight was coming, to share her room with her for the last fortnight.

The Josselyns got their letters.  Aunt Lucy was staying on.  Aunt Lucy’s husband had gone away to preach for three Sundays for a parish where he had a prospect of a call.  Mrs. Josselyn could not leave home immediately, therefore, although the girls should return; and their room was the airiest for Aunt Lucy.  There was no reason why they should not prolong their holiday if they chose, and they might hardly ever get away to the mountains again.  More than all, Uncle David was off once more for China and Japan, and had given his sister two more fifties,—­“for what did a sailor want of greenbacks after he got afloat?” It was “a clover summer” for the Josselyns.  Uncle David and his fifties wouldn’t be back among them for two years or more.  They must make the most of it.

Sin Saxon sat up late, writing this letter to her mother:—­

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Project Gutenberg
A Summer in Leslie Goldthwaite's Life. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.