Daddy-Long-Legs eBook

Jean Webster
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 160 pages of information about Daddy-Long-Legs.

Daddy-Long-Legs eBook

Jean Webster
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 160 pages of information about Daddy-Long-Legs.

I can’t write any more; I get rather shaky when I sit up too long. 
Please forgive me for being impertinent and ungrateful.  I was badly
brought up. 
                       Yours with love,
                                         Judy Abbott

Theinfirmary
4th April
Dearest Daddy-Long-Legs,

Yesterday evening just towards dark, when I was sitting up in bed looking out at the rain and feeling awfully bored with life in a great institution, the nurse appeared with a long white box addressed to me, and filled with the loveliest pink rosebuds.  And much nicer still, it contained a card with a very polite message written in a funny little uphill back hand (but one which shows a great deal of character).  Thank you, Daddy, a thousand times.  Your flowers make the first real, true present I ever received in my life.  If you want to know what a baby I am I lay down and cried because I was so happy.

Now that I am sure you read my letters, I’ll make them much more interesting, so they’ll be worth keeping in a safe with red tape around them—­only please take out that dreadful one and burn it up.  I’d hate to think that you ever read it over.

Thank you for making a very sick, cross, miserable Freshman cheerful.  Probably you have lots of loving family and friends, and you don’t know what it feels like to be alone.  But I do.

Goodbye—­I’ll promise never to be horrid again, because now I know you’re a real person; also I’ll promise never to bother you with any more questions.

Do you still hate girls? 
                               Yours for ever,
                                               Judy

8th hour, Monday
Dear Daddy-Long-Legs,

I hope you aren’t the Trustee who sat on the toad?  It went off—­ I was told—­with quite a pop, so probably he was a fatter Trustee.

Do you remember the little dugout places with gratings over them by the laundry windows in the John Grier Home?  Every spring when the hoptoad season opened we used to form a collection of toads and keep them in those window holes; and occasionally they would spill over into the laundry, causing a very pleasurable commotion on wash days.  We were severely punished for our activities in this direction, but in spite of all discouragement the toads would collect.

And one day—­well, I won’t bore you with particulars—­but somehow, one of the fattest, biggest, JUCIEST toads got into one of those big leather arm chairs in the Trustees’ room, and that afternoon at the Trustees’ meeting—­But I dare say you were there and recall the rest?

Looking back dispassionately after a period of time, I will say that punishment was merited, and—­if I remember rightly—­adequate.

I don’t know why I am in such a reminiscent mood except that spring and the reappearance of toads always awakens the old acquisitive instinct.  The only thing that keeps me from starting a collection is the fact that no rule exists against it.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Daddy-Long-Legs from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.