Polly of the Hospital Staff
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Polly of the Hospital Staff, by Emma C.
Dowd, Illustrated by Irma Deremeaux
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Title: Polly of the Hospital Staff
Author: Emma C. Dowd
Release Date: June 3, 2005 [eBook #15971]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POLLY OF
THE HOSPITAL STAFF***
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POLLY OF THE HOSPITAL STAFF
by
EMMA C. DOWD
Boston and New York Houghton Mifflin Company The Riverside Press
Cambridge
1912
To 'The Mother of Polly'
Contents
I. The Cherry-Pudding Story II. The Election of Polly III. Popover IV.
David V. With the Assistance of Lone Star VI. Elsie's Birthday VII.
The Little Sad Lady VIII. A Warning From Aunt Jane IX. A Night of
Song X. The Ward's Anniversary XI. Polly Plays the part of Eva XII.
The Kidnapping of Polly XIII. The Return XIV. Polly's "Anne Sisters"
XV. A Bid for Polly XVI. A secret XVII. The Wedding
Illustrations
The Story of the Wonderful White Flower "Once Upon a Time," she
began Forgetting all but the music she loved This Document Makes
You Legally our own Daughter
From drawings by Irma Deremeaux
POLLY OF THE HOSPITAL STAFF
Chapter I
The Cherry-Pudding Story
The June breeze hurried up from the harbor to the big house on the hill,
and fluttered playfully past the window vines into the children's
convalescent ward. It was a common saying at the hospital that the tidal
breeze always reached the children's ward first. Sometimes the little
people were waiting for it, ready with their welcome; but to-day there
were none to laugh a greeting. The room was very quiet. The occupants
of the little white cots had slept unusually long, and the few that had
awakened from their afternoon naps were still too drowsy to be astir.
Besides, Polly was not there, and the ward was never the same without
Polly.
As the young nurse in charge passed noiselessly between the rows of
beds, a small hand pulled at her apron.
"Ain't it 'most time for Polly to come?"
"Yes, I think she will be back pretty soon now." Miss Lucy smiled
down into the wistful little face.
"I want Polly to tell me a story," Elsie went on, with a bit of a whine:
"my hip aches so bad."
"Does it feel worse to-day?" asked the nurse sympathetically.
"No; I guess not," answered the little girl, glad of a listener. "It aches
all the time, 'cept when I'm asleep or Polly's tellin' stories."
"I know," and Miss Lucy's face grew grave. "We shall miss Polly."
"When's she goin' home?" The blue eyes went suddenly anxious.
"Oh, not until next week!" was the cheerful response. "There'll be time
for plenty of stories before then."
"A-h-h!" wailed little French Aimee, from the opposite cot. "Pollee
go?"
"Why, yes," smiled Miss Lucy, with a quick turn. "Polly is almost well,
and well little girls don't stay at the hospital, you know. Pretty soon you
will go home, too."
The nurse passed on, but Aimee's face remained clouded. Next
week--no Pollee!
Other ears besides Aimee's had overheard the news about Polly.
Maggie O'Donnell and Otto Kriloff stared at each other in dismay. Why,
Polly had been there long before they came! It had never occurred to
them that Polly could leave.
When Miss Lucy reached Maggie's bed, the little girl was softly crying.
"I--don't--want--Polly to go!" she sobbed.
"Dear me! Dear me!" exclaimed the nurse, "this will never do!" Then,
listening, she whispered, "Hark! Who is that skipping along the hall?"
At the instant, the door opened, and a little girl, her brown eyes shining
with pleasure, her cheeks pink as the poppies on the front lawn, and her
yellow curls all tossed and tumbled by the wind, whirled into the ward.
"Oh, Polly!" passed, a breath of joy, from lip to lip.
"I've had a lovelicious time!" she began.
"We went 'way down to Rockmoor!--Did you ever ride in an auto, Miss
Lucy?"
The nurse nodded happily. It was good to have Polly back.
"Seems's if you'd never come!" broke out Elsie Meyer. "I've been
waitin' an' waitin' for a story."
"I'll have my things off in a minute," responded Polly, "and you'll say
my story is worth waiting for."
"A new one?"
"Brand-new!"
"Where'd you get it?"
"A lady told me--a
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