The Rectory Children by Mrs. Molesworth
page 161 of 169 (95%)
page 161 of 169 (95%)
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'Yes indeed, Biddy, it is,' Alie replied. 'I can scarcely believe it. And fancy, in five years more _you_ will be twenty-one!' 'I hope I shall go on growing till then,' said Biddy, whose great ambition was to be as tall as her sister. 'Some girls do, don't they? And I have grown a good deal this year. I don't look as stumpy as I did, do I?' and Biddy looked up in her sister's face with a pleasant smile--a smile that showed her pretty white teeth and shone out of her nice brown eyes. She was not lovely like Alie, but she had a dear honest face--though she was still rather freckled, and her dark wavy hair gave her a somewhat gipsy look. 'You aren't a bit stumpy--you're just nice,' said Rosalys, 'though I daresay you will grow some more. Just think what a little roundabout you once were, and how you've grown since then.' 'Yes indeed,' laughed Biddy. 'Talking of birthdays, Alie, do you remember my eighth birthday? The one at Seacove, when papa and mamma were away after his being so ill, and when you all gave me the doll-house--the dear old doll-house; do you know I really sometimes play with it still? I often think of Seacove.' 'So do I,' said Alie. 'Of course I didn't like it _as much_ as this, for this garden is so sweet and the country all about here is so beautiful, and then it's so nice to be near grandmamma. But Seacove had a great charm about it too.' 'The sea,' said Biddy--'the sea and the sunsets,' she went on half dreamily; 'I always think when I see a red sunset----' but then she |
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