Contents

Flowers spring to blossom where she walksThe careful ways of duty,Our hard, stiff lines of life with herAre flowing curves of beauty.—WHITTIERContentsCHAPTER I. An Irate NeighborCHAPTER II. Selling in Haste and Repenting at LeisureCHAPTER III. Mr. Harrison at HomeCHAPTER IV. Different OpinionsCHAPTER V. A Full-fledged Schoolma’amCHAPTER VI. All Sorts and Conditions of Men . . . and womenCHAPTER VII. The Pointing of DutyCHAPTER VIII. Marilla Adopts TwinsCHAPTER IX. A Question of ColorCHAPTER X. Davy in Search of a SensationCHAPTER XI. Facts and FanciesCHAPTER XII. A Jonah DayCHAPTER XIII. A Golden PicnicCHAPTER XIV. A Danger AvertedCHAPTER XV. The Beginning of VacationCHAPTER XVI. The Substance of Things Hoped ForCHAPTER XVII. A Chapter of AccidentsCHAPTER XVIII. An Adventure on the Tory RoadCHAPTER XIX. Just a Happy DayCHAPTER XX. The Way It Often HappensCHAPTER XXI. Sweet Miss LavendarCHAPTER XXII. Odds and EndsCHAPTER XXIII. Miss Lavendar’s RomanceCHAPTER XXIV. A Prophet in His Own CountryCHAPTER XXV. An Avonlea ScandalCHAPTER XXVI. Around the BendCHAPTER XXVII. An Afternoon at the Stone HouseCHAPTER XXVIII. The Prince Comes Back to the Enchanted PalaceCHAPTER XXIX. Poetry and ProseCHAPTER XXX. A Wedding at the Stone House

Flowers spring to blossom where she walksThe careful ways of duty,Our hard, stiff lines of life with herAre flowing curves of beauty.—WHITTIER


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