Hollyhock

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CONTENTS. I.THE CHILDREN OF THE UPPER GLEN II. AUNT AGNES III. AUNT AGNES'S WAY IV. THE PALACE OF THE KINGS V. THE EARLY BIRD VI. THE HEAD-MISTRESS VII. THE OPENING OF THE GREAT SCHOOL VIII. HOLLYHOCK LEFT IN THE COLD IX. THE WOMAN WHO INTERFERED X. A MISERABLE GIRL XI. SOFT AND LOW XII. UNDER PROTEST XIII. THE SUMMER PARLOUR XIV. THE FIRE THAT WILL NOT LIGHT XV. CREAM XVI. THE GIRL WITH THE WAYWARD HEART XVII. THE GREAT CONSPIRACY XVIII. LEUCHA'S TERROR XIX. JASMINE'S RESOLVE XX. MEG'S CONSCIENCE XXI. THERE IS NO WAY OUT XXII. THE END OF LOVE XXIII. THE GREAT CHARADE XXIV. THE WARM HEART ROUSED AT LAST XXV. THE FIRE SPIRITS XXVI. HOLLYHOCK'S DEED OF VALOUR XXVII. ARDSHIEL TO THE RESCUE XXVIII. WHAT LOVE CAN DO ILLUSTRATIONS Sprang out over the awful chasm...... Frontispiece 'It's here on moonlight nights that the ghost walks.' The Conspiracy The Rescue. ***an excerpt from: CHAPTER I. THE CHILDREN OF THE UPPER GLEN. There was, of course, the Lower Glen, which consisted of boggy places and endless mists in winter, and a small uninteresting village, where the barest necessaries of life could be bought, and where the folks were all of the humbler class, well-meaning, hard-working, but, alas! poor of the poor. When all was said and done, the Lower Glen was a poor place, meant for poor people. Very different was the Upper Glen. It was beyond doubt a most beautiful region, and as Edinburgh and Glasgow were only some fifty miles away, in these days of motor-cars it was easy to drive there for the good things of life. The Glen was sheltered from the worst storms by vast mountains, and was in itself both broad and flat, with a great inrush of fresh air, a mighty river, and three lakes of various sizes. So beautiful was it, so delightful were its soft and yet at times keen breezes, that it might have been called 'The Home of Health.' But no one thought of giving the Glen this title, for the simple reason that no one thought of health in the Glen; every one was enjoying that blessed privilege to the utmost. At the time when this story opens, two families lived in the Upper Glen. There was a widowed lady, Mrs Constable, who resided at a lovely home called The Paddock; and there was her brother, a widower, who lived in a house equally beautiful, named The Garden. The Hon. George Lennox had five young daughters, whom he called not by their baptismal names, but by flower names. Mrs Constable, again, called her five boys after precious stones. The names of the girls were Jasmine, otherwise Lucy; Gentian, otherwise Margaret; Hollyhock, whose baptismal name was Jacqueline; Rose of the Garden, who was really Rose; and Delphinium, whose real name was Dorothy.
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B0083ZREVM

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