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Polly : A New-Fashioned Girl: Large Print

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The house was nearly covered with creepers, and had a trellis porch, sheltering and protecting its open hall-door.

Pigeons were cooing near, and several dogs were lying flat out in the shade which the wide eaves of the house afforded.

There was a flower garden in front, and a wide gravel sweep, and a tennis court and croquet lawn, and a rose arbor, and even a great, wide, cool-looking tent.

But as far as human life was concerned the whole place looked absolutely deserted.

The pigeons cooed languidly, and the dogs yapped and yawned, and made ferocious snaps at audacious and troublesome flies.

But no one handled the tennis bats, nor took up the croquet mallets; no one stopped to admire the roses, and no one entered the cool, inviting tent.

The whole place might have been dead, as far as human life was concerned; and although the smoke did ascend straight up from the kitchen chimney, a vagrant or a tramp might have been tempted to enter the house by the open hall door, were it not protected by the lazy dogs.Up, however, by the hedge, at the other side of the kitchen garden, could be heard just then the crackle of a bough, the rustle of a dress, and a short, smothered, impatient exclamation. And had anyone peered very close they would have seen lying flat in the long grasses a tall, slender, half-grown girl, with dark eyes and rosy cheeks, and tangled curly rebellious locks.

She had one arm raised, and was drawing herself deliberately an inch at a time along the smooth grass.

Several birds had taken refuge in this fragrant hedge of hawthorn and wild roses.

They were talking to one another, keeping up a perpetual chatter; but whenever the girl stirred a twig, or disturbed a branch, they stopped, looking around them in alarm, but none of them as yet seeing the prone, slim figure, which was, indeed, almost covered by the grasses.

Perfect stillness once more-the birds resumed their conversation, and the girl made another slight movement forward.

This time she disturbed no twig, and interrupted none of the bird gossip.

She was near, very near, a tempting green bough, and on the bough sat two full-grown lovely thrushes; they were not singing, but were holding a very gentle and affectionate conversation, sitting close together, and looking at one another out of their bright eyes, and now and then kissing each other with that loving little peck which means a great deal in bird life.The girl felt her heart beating with excitement-the birds were within a few inches of her-she could see their breasts heaving as they talked.

Her own eyes were as bright as theirs with excitement; she got quite under them, made a sudden upward, dexterous movement, and laid a warm, detaining hand on each thrush.

The deed was done-the little prisoners were secured.

She gave a low laugh of ecstasy, and sitting upright in the long grass, began gently to fondle her prey, cooing as she talked to them, and trying to coax the terrified little prisoners to accept some kisses from her dainty red lips.

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Product Details
Independently Published
864039489Y / 9798640394894
Paperback / softback
01/05/2020
614 pages
152 x 229 mm, 807 grams
General (US: Trade) Learn More