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Freeman, Mary Eleanor Wilkins, 1852-1930

"Young Lucretia and Other Stories"

She wore a nondescript gown, which nearly trailed behind,
and showed in front her little, coarsely-shod feet, which toed-in
helplessly. The gown was of a faded green color; it was scalloped and
bound around the bottom, and had some green ribbon-bows down the front.
It was, in fact, the discarded polonaise of a benevolent woman, who
aided the poor substantially but not tastefully.
Jenny Brown was eight, and small for her age--a strange, gentle,
ignorant little creature, never doubting the truth of what she was told,
which sorely tempted the other children to impose upon her. Standing
there in the school-room that stormy recess, in the midst of that group
of wiser, richer, mostly older girls, and that one handsome, mischievous
boy, she believed every word she heard.
This was her first term at school, and she had never before seen much of
other children. She had lived her eight years all alone at home with her
mother, and she had never been told about Christmas. Her mother had
other things to think about. She was a dull, spiritless, reticent
woman, who had lived through much trouble. She worked, doing washings
and cleanings, like a poor feeble machine that still moves but has no
interest in its motion. Sometimes the Browns had almost enough to eat,
at other times they half starved. It was half-starving time just then;
Jenny had not had enough to eat that day.
There was a pinched look on the little face up-turned towards Earl
Munroe's.


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