The Spinster a Novel Wherein a Nineteenth Century Girl Finds Her Place in the

Cover The Spinster a Novel Wherein a Nineteenth Century Girl Finds Her Place in the
The Spinster a Novel Wherein a Nineteenth Century Girl Finds Her Place in the
Sarah Norcliffe Cleghorn

Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER III THE TARANTULA, AND OTHER RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCES The fact was that she did look old-maidish, in the square-tabbed brown velveteen jacket, made over from one of Aunt Sallie's, and starched brown chambray skirts standing out, stockade-like, round her stalwart long legs. And yet her clothes were in no wise qu

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aint. They conformed to the juvenile modes of that good year 1894. Her shoes were trim, her calves well rounded and snugly stockinged; her clover-trimmed hat was a pretty, childlike piece of country millinery, bought at the young milliner's in the New Street. It was her old-maidish way of wearing her clothes, and something in her earnest, unhumorous face that suggested spectacles. Saddled with the reverberating epithet " old maid" she went home and crossed into the pasture beyond the schoolhouse, where she knew all the arts of hopping into the safe center of cinquefoil or " prairie-weed" bushes which formed bristling oases between gulfs of bottomless black cow-trampled mud. She was looking for the pale long-horned violets and the wee fairy white violets that grew there. She meant to make a wreath of them for her doll. She was just going to hop on a big flat stone which diversified the prairie-weed, and in the cracks of whichsome sweet little ferns, that would be charming on a doll's hat, were sprouting, when " Oh, my soul and body! " There was an enormous, ominous black spider, undoubtedly a tarantula, such as came in bunches of bananas, and if they bit you, you died within an hour,? there was a tarantula, right on that stone, that would have bitten right through her low yellow ties, without turning a hair, if she had taken the step one stout long leg was raised to take. She froze back into the prairie- weed bush and looked with charmed glazed eyes at ... --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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