Dorothy Dainty's Gay Times eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 118 pages of information about Dorothy Dainty's Gay Times.

Dorothy Dainty's Gay Times eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 118 pages of information about Dorothy Dainty's Gay Times.

The little girls busied themselves with their books, but Reginald kept his blue eyes fixed upon Arabella, as if he could think of nothing else.

At first she seemed not to notice him, but after a time she moved restlessly on her seat, and wriggled about in a way that delighted the small boy.

Arabella was not used to being stared at.  She always stared boldly at other people, but here was some one who looked at her without so much as blinking.  She glanced at the clock, and then, as if just remembering something, took a small bottle from her pocket, shook some pills into her hand, swallowed them, and turned to see if Reginald were looking.  He was, and Arabella was provoked.

“What you staring at?” she whispered rudely.

“You!” he whispered, not a bit abashed.

“Well, you just needn’t,” said Arabella.

“I know I needn’t,” replied the small boy, “but I like to.”

“Why?” she asked.

“’Cause you’re funny,” Reginald said.  It was not strange that Arabella was angry.  Would any girl be pleased to have a small boy watching her, and declaring that she was “funny?”

And now Aunt Charlotte was calling the youngest class in reading, and Reginald hastily snatched his book, and began to hunt for the lesson.

“The third page, Reginald,” said Aunt Charlotte; “you may read the first paragraph.”

He found the place, and read the lines without a mistake.  It was his first term at school, but his mother had found pleasure in teaching him, and he read quite as well as some of the younger pupils.

“Read the next paragraph, Reginald,” said Aunt Charlotte.

“’When the king rode over the highway, the sun glistened upon his,—­on his,—­’”

It was a word which Reginald had never seen, and he frowned until an odd little pucker appeared on his forehead.

“’When the king rode over the highway, the sun glistened upon his,’”—­again he paused.  The word looked no easier this time than when he had first read the lines.

“I can’t pronounce that word,” he said.

“Read the lines again, and when you come to the word that puzzles you, pronounce it as you think it should be,” said Aunt Charlotte.

The other pupils were interested, but when Reginald glanced toward Arabella, he saw that she was smiling in evident delight at his discomfiture.  He resolved to rush through the reading in a way that would tell her that he could read anything.  He drew a long breath, and then, as fast as possible, he read: 

“’When the king rode over the highway, the sun glistened upon his carrot wheels!’”

Even Aunt Charlotte smiled at the droll error, but Arabella laughed long and loud.

“Order, order!” said Aunt Charlotte.

“The word is chariot,” she said.

The others read in turn, until they had finished the charming story, and each of the girls wondered why Arabella was not reproved for rudeness.  The arithmetic lesson completed the morning’s work, and as they walked home, they talked of the new pupil.

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Project Gutenberg
Dorothy Dainty's Gay Times from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.