The Adventures of Ann eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 57 pages of information about The Adventures of Ann.

The Adventures of Ann eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 57 pages of information about The Adventures of Ann.

It was so long ago in Ann’s childhood, it did not seem so very dreadful to Mrs. Polly, probably.  But Ann insisted on the indentures remaining in the desk, even after the papers of adoption were made out, and she had become “Ann Wales.”  It seemed to go a little way toward satisfying her conscience.  This adoption meant a good deal to Ann; for besides a legal home, and a mother, it secured to her a right in a comfortable property in the future.  Mrs. Polly Wales was considered very well off.  She was a smart business-woman, and knew how to take care of her property too.  She still hired Phineas Adams to carry on the blacksmith’s business, and kept her farm-work running just as her husband had.  Neither she nor Ann were afraid of work, and Ann Wales used to milk the cows, and escort them to and from pasture, as faithfully as Ann Ginnins.

It was along in spring time when Ann was adopted, and Mrs. Polly fulfilled her part of the contract in the indentures by getting the Sunday suit therein spoken of.

They often rode on horseback to meeting, but they usually walked on the fine Sundays in spring.  Ann had probably never been so happy in her life as she was walking by Mrs. Polly’s side to meeting that first Sunday after her adoption.  Most of the way was through the woods; the tender light green boughs met over their heads; the violets and anemones were springing beside their path.  There were green buds and white blossoms all around; the sky showed blue between the waving branches, and the birds were singing.

Ann in her pretty petticoat of rose-colored stuff, stepping daintily over the young grass and the flowers, looked and felt like a part of it all.  Her dark cheeks had a beautiful red glow on them; her black eyes shone.  She was as straight and graceful and stately as an Indian.

“She’s as handsome as a picture,” thought Mrs. Polly in her secret heart.  A good many people said that Ann resembled Mrs. Polly in her youth, and that may have added force to her admiration.

Her new gown was very fine for those days; but fine as she was, and adopted daughter though she was, Ann did not omit her thrifty ways for once.  This identical morning Mrs. Polly and she carried their best shoes under their arms, and wore their old ones, till within a short distance from the meeting-house.  Then the old shoes were tucked away under a stone wall for safety, and the best ones put on.  Stone walls, very likely, sheltered a good many well-worn little shoes, of a Puritan Sabbath, that their prudent owners might appear in the House of God trimly shod.  Ah! these beautiful, new peaked-toed, high-heeled shoes of Ann’s—­what would she have said to walking in them all the way to meeting!

If that Sunday was an eventful one to Ann Wales, so was the week following.  The next Tuesday, right after dinner, she was up in a little unfinished chamber over the kitchen, where they did such work when the weather permitted, carding wool.  All at once, she heard voices down below.  They had a strange inflection, which gave her warning at once.  She dropped her work and listened:  “What is the matter?” thought she.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Adventures of Ann from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.