Polly and the Princess
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Title: Polly and the Princess
Author: Emma C. Dowd
Release Date: February 24, 2004 [EBook #11259]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POLLY
AND THE PRINCESS ***
Produced by Al Haines
POLLY AND THE PRINCESS
BY
EMMA C. DOWD
AUTHOR OF
POLLY OF THE HOSPITAL STAFF. POLLY OF LADY GAY
COTTAGE. DOODLES, ETC.
ILLUSTRATED
1917
CONTENTS
I. WAFFLES AND DEWLAPS II. IN MISS MAJOR'S ROOM III.
POLLY ADDRESSES THE BOARD IV. A JUNE HOLIDAY V.
MISS LILY AND DOODLES VI. "BETTER THAN THE
POORHOUSE" VII. ROSES--AND THORNS VIII. WAITING TO BE
THANKED IX. BLANCHE PUDDICOMBE X. "GOOD-BYE,
PUDDING" XI. "SO MYSTERIOUS!" XII. MRS. DICK ESCAPES
XIII. ALONG A BROOK-SIDE ROAD XIV. POLLY PLANS XV.
"LOTS O' JOY" XVI. THE HIKING CLUB XVII. GRANDAUNT
SUSIE AND MISS SNIFFEN XVIII. VICTOR VON DALIN XIX. A
MOONSHINE PARTY XX. THE PARTY ITSELF XXI. TWO OF
THEM XXII. DANCING HIKERS XXIII. "HILLTOP DAYS" XXIV.
"HOPE DEFERRED" XXV. ALICE TWINING, MARTYR XXVI.
MR. PARCELL'S LESSON XXVII. "I LOVE YOU, DAVID!" XXVIII.
A VISIT WITH MRS. TENNEY XXIX. DISAPPOINTMENT XXX.
DOODLES SINGS XXXI. SHUT OUT XXXII. THE TALE IS TOLD
XXXIII. THE PRINCESS AND THE DRAGON XXXIV. A
MIDNIGHT ANNOUNCEMENT XXXV. A NEW WIRE XXXVI.
POLLY DUDLEY TO CHRISTOPHER MORROW XXXVII.
HOLLY AND MISTLETOE
POLLY AND THE PRINCESS
CHAPTER I
WAFFLES AND DEWLAPS
The June Holiday Home was one of those sumptuous stations where
indigent gentlewomen assemble to await the coming of the last train.
Breakfast was always served precisely at seven o'clock, and certain
dishes appeared as regularly as the days. This was waffle morning on
the Home calendar; outside it was known as Thursday.
The eyes of the "new lady" wandered beyond the dining-room and
followed a young girl, all in pink.
"Who is that coming up the walk?"
Fourteen faces turned toward the wide front window.
Miss Castlevaine was quickest. Her answer did not halt the syrup on its
way to her plate.
"That's Polly Dudley."
"Oh! Dr. Dudley's daughter?"
"Yes. She's come over to see Miss Sterling. They're very intimate."
"Miss Sterling?" mused Miss Mullaly, with a sweeping glance round
the table. "I don't believe I've seen her."
"Yes, you have. She was down to tea last night. She had on a light blue
waist, and sat over at the end."
"Oh, I remember now! She's little and sweet-looking. Somebody told
me she had nervous prostration. Too bad! She is so young and pretty!"
A tiny sneer fluttered from face to face, skipping one here and there in
its course. It ended in Miss Castlevaine's "Huh!"
"I think Miss Sterling is real pretty!" Miss Crilly, from the opposite
side, beamed on the "new lady."
"She has faded dreadfully," asserted Mrs. Crump. "They used to call
her handsome years ago, though she never was my style o' beauty. But
now--" She shook her head with hard emphasis.
"She has been through a good deal," observed Mrs. Grace mildly.
"No more'n I have!" was the retort. "If she'd stop thinking about herself
and eat like other folks, she'd be better."
"Nervous prostration patients have to be careful about their diet, don't
they?" ventured Miss Mullaly.
"She hasn't got it!" snapped Mrs. Crump.
"She thinks she has." Miss Castlevaine's thick lips curved in a smile of
scorn.
"If she can't digest things, it won't do her much good to eat them,"
interposed Miss Major positively. "Nobody could digest these
waffles--they're slack this morning."
Miss Castlevaine gave her plate a little push. "I wish I needn't ever see
another waffle," she fretted.
"Oh!" exclaimed the "new lady," "I don't understand how anybody can
get tired of waffles!"
"Nor I!" laughed Miss Mullaly's right-hand neighbor. "I shall have to
tell you about the time I went to Cousin Dorothy's wedding luncheon.
"I never had eaten waffles but once; that was at my aunt's. She had
gone to housekeeping directly after the wedding ceremony, and was
spoken of in the family as 'the bride.' I had been her first guest, and, as
she had treated me to waffles, I thought waffles and brides always went
together. So when I was included in the invitation to Dorothy's wedding
luncheon, my first thought was of waffles. I said something about it to
my brother, and Ralph was just tease enough to lead me on. He told me
that the table would be piled with waffles, great stacks of
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