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Bessie's Fortune - A Novel by Mary Jane Holmes
page 39 of 598 (06%)
presence. It was far too quiet there to suit her, and Lucy lived too
much the life of a recluse. No little breakfasts, no lunches, no evening
parties at which she could display her elegant Paris costumes; nothing
except now and then a stupid dinner party, to which the rector and his
wife were invited, and that detestable Miss McPherson, who said such
rude things, and told her her complexion was not what it used to be, and
that she looked older than her sister Lucy. Miss McPherson was an
abomination, and going to the country was a bore, but still Geraldine
felt obliged to visit Allington occasionally, and especially on
Thanksgiving day, when it is expected that the sons and daughters of New
England will return to the old home, and grow young again under the
roof which sheltered their childhood.

And so, on the morning when our story properly opens, Mr. and Mrs.
Burton Jerrold and their son Grey, a well grown lad of fourteen, left
their home on Beacon street, and with crowds of other city people took
the train for the country, to keep the festal day.




CHAPTER IV.

THANKSGIVING DAY AT GREY'S PARK.


The season had been unusually warm and pleasant for New England, and
until the morning of Thanksgiving Day the grass upon the lawn at Grey's
Park had been almost as fresh and green as in the May days of spring,
for only the autumnal rains had fallen upon it, and the November wind
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