Results: 6520 books
Sort By:
NewTrending

Lightning Express : or, The rival academies

Oliver Optic

"Lightning Express; or, The Rival Academies" by Oliver Optic is a juvenile adventure novel written in the late 19th century. It centers on a student-run railroad and an escalating rivalry between the Toppleton Institute and the Wimpleton Academy along Lake Ucayga. The story follows Wolf Penniman, a level-headed young engineer, alongside the imperious Tommy Toppleton and the reckless Waddie Wimpleton, as schoolboy politics, railroading, and military-style drills spark real-world tensions. Themes of leadership, pride, and moral duty frame the spirited contests between the two academies. The opening of the novel unfolds at a noisy stockholders’ meeting of the student-managed Lake Shore Railroad, where Tommy Toppleton’s heavy-handed presidency faces a revolt. After a procedural tussle, the boys adjourn to Grass Springs for an election and a celebratory supper; Tommy is humiliatingly voted out on the first ballot, restored on a second only because his rival, Skotchley, refuses the office. The students then choose the Horse Shoe island for their annual encampment—largely to needle their Wimpleton rivals—and prepare a rapid march. Wolf, urged by Major Toppleton to “keep the peace,” helps expedite transport, but at Grass Springs the Wimpleton flotilla blocks the channel. Tommy rashly orders a steamer to force passage; Wolf and the captain try to avoid harm, yet Waddie leads a bold boarding that seizes the forward deck, locks Company B below, and stops the engine. With the steamer captured and tempers high, Waddie tries to coerce Wolf into running the machinery, setting the stage for a dangerous standoff. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Puck

Marie Ovink-Soer

"Puck" by Marie Ovink-Soer is a children''s novel written in the early 20th century. Set in The Hague, it follows spirited Jootje “Puck” van Vorden and the warm Canneheuvel household as everyday frictions, friendships, and small moral tests shape the children’s character, especially Puck’s pride and temper. The focus is domestic: sibling bonds, the influence of friends, relations with servants, and the gentle guidance of caring adults. The opening of the story shows Puck clashing with the maid Bet, bristling at not being treated as a “young lady,” and being emboldened by her fashionable friends, Ellen and Grace. A treat of poffertjes turns sour when Puck abandons Frits and Lientien to sit with those friends, earning a stern talking‑to; soon after, an April Fools joke on Lientien ends in slaps before their father restores peace with a walk and pastries. The family then confronts a serious worry: the mother’s eyesight, with a professor’s advice leading to a new household arrangement in which Nel takes over many duties and Kee tends Aunt Sjarlotje, while Frits quietly dreams of becoming an eye doctor. Puck, having eavesdropped, panics and alarms Lientien before the truth is calmly set right, and a new helper, the industrious (and insatiably hungry) Geertje from Scheveningen, joins the busy home. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

De erfenis eener moeder

P. J. (Pieter Jacob) Andriessen

De erfenis eener moeder by P. J. Andriessen is a didactic juvenile novel written in the late 19th century. It follows an Amsterdam family that falls from comfort into straitened circumstances, focusing on the steadfast daughter Helène, her cheerful brother Rudolf, and the moral contrast with his principled schoolfriend Ernst; the “inheritance” of the title is less money than the mother’s values of duty, prudence, and kindness. The opening of the novel sets its moral tone with a preface calling it a simple family story for youth. We first see Rudolf at boarding school beside the honorable Ernst, who refuses to borrow for a rowing excursion, while Rudolf enjoys a lively outing and, later, a glittering dance at his uncle’s house where their delicate mother’s frailty is noted. The family’s fortunes abruptly collapse: Mr. Nederhorst loses his wealth, friends fall away, and plans are made—Rudolf remains at school, Leonie goes to an uncle, while Helène stays with her ailing mother to help. Their loyal old servant Trui insists on serving without wages, and the family leaves Amsterdam for modest lodgings in Weesp, where Helène assumes household duties and tends the younger children. In this new setting she meets the kindly widower Dr. Faminga, who offers sympathy and measured support, visits her mother, and quietly marks Helène’s sixteenth birthday with a thoughtful gift—hinting at benevolence and the strengthening of character that will guide the story. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Blank en Bruin

Hilbrandt Boschma

"Blank en Bruin" by Hilbrandt Boschma is a juvenile novel written in the late 19th century. It follows Leo van Dintelburg, a Dutch-Indies boy, and his Javanese guardian Bamboe as they settle in a Dutch town, where schoolyard rivalry, class pride, and racial prejudice test character and faith. Opposite Leo stands Rudolf van Dintelburg, a privileged classmate, and the story frames youth as a choice between two paths, with a clear Christian, didactic bent. The opening of the novel sets out a prefatory promise: a contemporary Dutch tale for boys that avoids chauvinism, stays close to recent history, and urges youth to devote their lives to God by showing the contrast between serving Him and not. The story then introduces Bamboe and Leo arriving with parrots and a monkey, drawing rude curiosity from local boys led by Rudolf; Leo’s quick wit and a policeman end the first confrontation. At school, Mr. Selhof welcomes Leo, explains his mixed Dutch–Javanese background, and the class warm to him, with cultural misunderstandings (like “kool/kolen”) used for gentle humor. Tensions rise when Rudolf challenges Leo over the shared surname, but Dirk Drijver sides with Leo. Winter brings a planned, rule-bound snowball battle; Leo’s side fortifies a “fort,” a fierce fight ends with Rudolf accidentally felled by his own hard snowball, after which Leo and Bamboe tend him and Leo offers friendship—rejected out of class and color prejudice. The scene shifts to skating, where Rudolf spitefully sends a ball toward thin ice; Leo falls through, Bamboe bravely tries to save him and also goes in, and the episode breaks off with Dirk attempting a risky rescue. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Tarutarha

Larin-Kyösti

"Tarutarha by Larin-Kyösti" is a collection of children’s poems written in the early 20th century. The book blends fairy-tale fantasy, Finnish folklore, and everyday rural life, offering lullabies, play-songs, letters in verse, seasonal pieces, and moral fables for young readers. Across short, melodic poems, a small girl resists a witch’s lure and runs home, a boy and his loyal dog brave make-believe dangers, and lively portraits of children—Irja, Liisa, Niilo, and Anni—show games, chores, letters to parents, and earnest prayers. House and sauna spirits (tonttu) fuss over family order and kind behavior; carols and star-processions bring Christmas awe; a street musician’s song hints at loneliness and hope; and a closing fable pits a sly raven against a wary dove to warn against flattery and deceit. Nature, home, and imagination weave through the pieces, gently guiding children toward courage, kindness, and the comfort of family. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

"Us, and our charge"

Amy Le Feuvre

"Us, and our charge" by Amy Le Feuvre is a children''s novel written in the early 20th century. It follows Grisel Marjoribanks and her siblings—Denys, Aylwin, Lynette, and little Puff—newly orphaned rector’s children who move from their English rectory to their stern Scottish grandfather’s seaside home, trying to live by their father’s last words, “Hold fast.” Blending family drama, seaside adventure, and gentle Christian moral purpose, it explores grief, loyalty, and courage as the children test rules, make friends, and find their place in a new household. The opening of the story traces the children’s bereavement and upheaval: after their father dies, a kind lawyer reveals an estranged grandfather who offers them a home at Bantock Hall. Narrator Grisel records their anxious journey north, a chilly first meeting with the gouty Colonel Noble and aloof Aunt Isobel, and a tussle over independence versus being treated like “nursery” children. The coast becomes their refuge: a comic escape with the old cart leads to the daring rescue of lively Pat Douglas using the carriage reins, then a sudden scare when Pat’s empty sailboat is found drifting; that night Denys and Aylwin spot a bonfire on the offshore islands, reach Pat stranded in a cave at high tide, and bring him home injured but alive. Alongside these adventures, Puff wins over “Gruffy” (grandfather), and Grisel frames the family’s resolve around their father’s charge to “hold fast.” (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Jock with Mousie

Agnes Giberne

"Jock with Mousie" by Agnes Giberne is a children''s novel written in the early 20th century. It follows sensitive, spirited Jock Munro, left in England with his grandmother and strict Aunt Judith when his mother sails to India, as he befriends the impulsive Phœbe “Mousie” Moore and learns hard lessons about obedience, truthfulness, and growing up. Set in a village world of curates, great houses, and childhood adventures, it blends warmth with moral guidance. The opening of the story introduces Jock’s close bond with his mother, his eighth birthday, and the blow that she must join his father in India without him, sending Jock to live with Grannie and Aunt Judith. After a kind journey under Mr. Royle’s care, Jock settles into village life, meets the lively Moore family, and becomes fast friends with Mousie. Mousie lures him “out of bounds” to a pond in a private wood; Jock bruises his arm, Artie briefly goes missing, and the children sneak home, keeping the escapade secret. When Aunt Judith questions him, Jock won’t betray Mousie and is accused of lying; he nearly writes a distressing letter to his mother but is steadied by Captain Royle’s counsel to take responsibility. He accepts punishment, is comforted by Grannie, and life moves on toward spring, schoolroom prizes, and a tentative easing of tensions as his new world takes shape. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Four American poets : William Cullen Bryant, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, John Greenleaf Whittier, Oliver Wendell Holmes : A book for young Americans

Sherwin Cody

"Four American poets : William Cullen Bryant, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, John…." by Sherwin Cody is a collection of biographical sketches written in the late 19th century. Aimed at young readers, it presents the lives and signature works of Bryant, Longfellow, Whittier, and Holmes in an uplifting, instructive tone. The focus is on character, industry, patriotism, and a cultivated love of nature and poetry. The opening of the volume frames the series’ purpose for “young Americans,” then devotes a full, readable life of William Cullen Bryant: a primer on loving Nature (with an extended look at his “Inscription for the Entrance to a Wood”), his Puritan New England childhood, early verses and “The Embargo,” the rediscovery and publication of “Thanatopsis,” a reluctant turn to law, and his defining career as editor of the New York Evening Post, including his disciplined habits, public principles, travels, prosperity, and later honors; it closes with practical guidance on how to appreciate his poems. It then turns to Henry W. Longfellow, tracing his Portland ancestry and boyhood, first publications, the local color behind “My Lost Youth,” Bowdoin days alongside Hawthorne, his early professorships, marriage and bereavement, the move to Cambridge and the Craigie House, and the convivial “Five of Clubs,” ending as his Cambridge circle and literary life come into view. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Fighting for fortune : or, Making a place for himself

Roy Franklin

"Fighting for Fortune; or, Making a Place for Himself" by Roy Franklin is a juvenile adventure novel written in the early 20th century. Set around Lake Seneca, it follows determined youth Dean Mercer as he breaks from a law apprenticeship to launch a rival steamboat line with the backing of Judge Oglesby, while facing sabotage and scheming from entrenched interests. Allies like the salty Jack Carboy aid him, as bullies Tim Downey and Rodney Darringford plot theft, fraud, and arson; a parallel thread involves Dean helping Marcus Ellison in the fight to clear Marcus’s father of a wrongful charge. The opening of the story shows Dean quitting the musty law office, rescuing newcomer Marcus from a beating, and accepting two critical errands: safeguarding papers and money to aid Marcus’s father, and carrying an $8,000 check to pay for the new steamer, the Spray. After Tim Downey overhears these plans, he alerts Rodney and Colonel Darringford, the Warrior sails early, and Dean and Jack chase it by stage—surviving a crash—then reboard at Landlock. In Springfield, a con man posing as the builder tricks Dean out of the check, which Rodney later cashes by impersonating him; meanwhile Tim spies through a secret stateroom panel, intercepts Marcus and his wallet, and sets an arson scheme in motion. By morning, the Spray still stands but the money is gone, and Dean, visiting Marcus’s home, learns the boy never returned—leaving the new venture and Marcus’s family in sudden peril. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Another year with Denise and Ned Toodles

Gabrielle E. (Gabrielle Emilie) Jackson

"Another year with Denise and Ned Toodles" by Gabrielle E. Jackson is a children''s novel written in the early 20th century. It follows imaginative Denise Lombard, her bright pony Ned Toodles, and new neighbor Hart Murray through a year of gentle, humorous adventures filled with pets, river outings, and family warmth. The tone is wholesome and lightly didactic, centering on kindness, responsibility, and the joys of animal companionship. The beginning of the novel shows Denise daydreaming on a spring day, mimicking a wood-thrush and chatting to her pony before rescuing a muddy, howling child whose muddled name turns out to be Mabel Lilly Taintit. Denise celebrates her old goat Tan’s “birthday,” then meets Hart Murray, who becomes her fast friend; their play with the pets leads to Ned’s notorious prank of dumping Hart in a cow yard. We see Denise’s “sunset hour” with her wise mother, including a lesson in courtesy about postponing plans, followed by the cheerful christening and launch of Hart’s cedar rowboat, the River Kelpie. Pokey arrives for summer, a circus comes to town, and Ned’s high spirits carry the girls right into the parade before the family sets out together to see the show. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Bases full!

Ralph Henry Barbour

"Bases full!" by Ralph Henry Barbour is a young adult sports novel written in the early 20th century. Set at the prep school of Wyndham, it follows three friends—Clif Bingham, Tom Kemble, and the wheelchair-using Loring Deane—through a season that pivots from a fierce hockey rivalry with Wolcott to the trials of making the baseball team. The focus is on teamwork, perseverance, and school spirit, with coaches, tryouts, and friendships shaping the boys’ fortunes on and off the field. The opening of the novel plunges into a tied hockey finale against Wolcott, where substitute wing Clif is sent in, shadows the star Houston, and scrambles in the winning goal. It then introduces the “Triumvirate”—Clif, brash Tom, and bright, resilient Loring (assisted by his dignified attendant, Wattles)—and shifts to early baseball preparations: Coach Connover and Captain Hurry Leland set standards, a tough schedule looms, and indoor drills give way to chilly outdoor work. A second team forms under the sharp-eyed “Tusks” Wadleigh as Clif and Tom battle for spots, struggle with batting form, and learn fundamentals; a quiet scene with Clif’s visiting father and a glimpse of a Mr. Cooper add texture. Tom later confides his absent-father past, and Loring rallies the trio with a “work and will” pact to will their way onto the team, as the first nine splits its first games and the boys’ baseball quest truly begins. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

On the mountain : or, Lost and found

Lucy Ellen Guernsey

"On the mountain; or, Lost and found" by Lucy Ellen Guernsey is a didactic children''s novel written in the late 19th century. It centers on Fanny Lilly, a spoiled Boston girl sent to her grandmother’s mountain farm, where her pride, dishonesty, and class snobbery are challenged by firm discipline, a steady farm boy named Willy, and a wild neighbor, Sarah Leyman. The tale blends homely incidents with moral testing, emphasizing truthfulness, humility, and Christian faith amid small-town gossip and real peril. At the start of the story, Fanny returns from church full of contempt and is firmly checked by her grandmother, leading to a showdown over dinner that ends in tears, bread-and-milk, and a sketch of Fanny’s pampered past and her exile to the farm. Despite warnings, she falls in with Sarah, who helps steal a pie through the milkroom slats; when the theft is discovered, Fanny lies smoothly while Willy is questioned. Conversations reveal Fanny’s startling ignorance (even about the Holy Land), she overeats, falls ill, and then declares she will be “good,” though mostly in appearance. An errand introduces her to kindly Mrs. Cassell, Annie Mercer, and Mr. Brandon, who lends books, while Sarah confronts Fanny about confession and hypocrisy; soon after, Sarah saves Fanny from a loose bull by sacrificing the girl’s red cloak. Fanny remains fearful and evasive as mountain dangers are noted; when Sarah quietly attends a prayer meeting, Fanny slanders her to keep her and her grandmother apart, prompting Willy to rebuke Fanny’s snobbery and deceit as the opening section closes. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Blonde duinen

Jac. P. (Jacobus Pieter) Thijsse

Blonde duinen by Jac. P. Thijsse is an illustrated popular natural history book written in the early 20th century. It offers guided rambles through the Dutch coastal dunes, using vivid observation and approachable explanations to reveal how plants, animals, and landscapes fit together. Expect seasonal field sketches that blend storytelling with fieldcraft, encouraging readers—especially the young—to notice, collect, and care about the living world. The opening of the work sets out a friendly preface: these “nature albums” are meant to put good color plates and real outdoor experience within easy reach, so that young people learn nature by seeing. It quickly shifts into lively dune vignettes: a teacher’s cheerful “rabbit hunt” with pupils for skulls becomes a lesson in snares, scavengers, and rabbit life (burrows, frosty signs, rampant breeding, evening grazing). A birch-dale chapter follows with bark and fungus, then moths and larvae as masters of disguise (buff-tip, peppered moth, emerald), plus birds such as nightingale, song thrush, willow warbler, and a few deft plant notes (violets’ self-fertilizing flowers, garlic mustard with orange-tip). A June evening piece captures flowers closing and opening, moth- and hawk-moth pollination, and the arrival of bats, toads, hedgehogs, shrews, nightjars, grasshopper warblers, and stone-curlews. A hot June afternoon rounds it out with hedgerow and dune blooms, June beetles in roses, leafcutter bees fashioning brood cells, climbing bryony, showy ragwort and mullein feeders, and small passerines like tree pipit and whinchat—set against the brood-parasitic cuckoo. Overall, these first chapters read as gently didactic rambles that model how to notice, name, and connect dune life. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The movie boys in the jungle : or, Lively times among the wild beasts

Victor Appleton

"The Movie Boys in the Jungle: or, Lively Times Among the Wild Beasts" by Victor Appleton is a juvenile adventure novel written in the early 20th century. It follows moving-picture operators Joe Duncan and Blake Stewart as they head to Africa to rescue Joe’s sister Jessie from a troubled mission station while filming wild animals in their native habitats. Alongside Joe’s father and the gloom-prone comedian C. C. Piper, they balance a rescue mission with a daring contract to capture authentic jungle footage. Expect travel, peril, and resourceful camerawork amid wild beasts and wary tribes. The opening of the story shows Joe and Blake finishing lighthouse scenes on the California coast before learning that Joe’s sister, first thought to be in China, has instead gone to a remote station in Africa. En route east with their theatrical company, their train sideswipes a circus train; the boys film the chaos (including a briefly freed lion), impressing circus manager Harry Stone, who hires them to obtain true jungle animal pictures. They sail via Naples and Suez—where grim news reports say Jessie’s mission has been raided and the missionaries carried into the interior—yet press on with Mr. Duncan and a newly revealed shipmate, C. C. Piper. Reaching Mombasa, they take the Uganda Railway toward Victoria Nyanza, film buffalo and a rhino near the line, hire veteran guide Sergeant Hotchkiss, assemble a safari with native porters led by “Happy One,” and prepare to cross the lake to Entebbe to begin the search in earnest. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Raquel of the ranch country

Alida Malkus

"Raquel of the ranch country" by Alida Malkus is a novel written in the early 20th century. It follows Raquel Daniels, a capable Texas ranch girl sent to a fashionable Hudson River boarding school, where she collides with class snobbery yet finds a true friend in Anne Marvin. As the Great War intrudes, Raquel is called home to manage the Lazy L ranch, shifting from social unease to frontier responsibility. The tale promises an East–West contrast and a coming-of-age story about grit, loyalty, and leadership. The opening of the novel finds Raquel arriving at The Towers, where she is coolly rebuffed by the glamorous Lois Wainwright but rescued by the independent Anne, who becomes her roommate and ally. Raquel struggles with manners and cliques, is slighted over a Red Cross fair, yet shows her poise and skill on horseback and enjoys a transformative Thanksgiving with Anne’s family. A telegram ends her school stay: her father enlists in wartime animal transport and summons her to run the ranch, while Lois leaves to accompany her ill father west. Home again, Raquel is warmly welcomed and hears her father’s sober briefing—ship a thousand head, meet pressing bank notes, avoid dubious commission men, and beware rival cattleman A. B. Meyers. After he departs, she starts taking charge, correcting a reckless hand, finding supplies run down, and facing early signs of missing calves that may mean rustling. The section closes with her bracing for these first tests to keep the Lazy L solvent through a hard season. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The wonders of science : Or, young Humphry Davy (the Cornish apothecary's boy, who taught himself natural philosophy, and eventually became President of the Royal Society)

Henry Mayhew

"The wonders of science : Or, young Humphry Davy (the Cornish apothecary''s boy,…." by Henry Mayhew is a juvenile biography written in the mid-19th century. It traces the early life, character, and self-education of Humphry Davy, presenting his path from poor Cornish boy to aspiring man of science as an example for young readers, blending moral purpose with lively popular science. The opening of this work dedicates the story to Michael Faraday and quotes Faraday’s own account of how Davy first encouraged him, then explains the author’s aim: to inspire boys through a largely faithful, readable life of Davy while avoiding outdated science. The narrative begins with Davy’s father’s debts, Mr. Tonkin’s stern stewardship, and a vivid Penzance scene that contrasts local hardship with rising fashions; it then follows Humphry to the Land’s End, where, in grief, he vows to reform and support his widowed mother and siblings. At home he renews that promise, while his mother recalls his precocity; soon she opens a millinery business, Tonkin urges a practical path, and a sunset walk to St. Michael’s Mount becomes a gentle lesson in natural history, physiology, and humane feeling that awakens Humphry’s intellectual hunger. Apprenticed to a local surgeon-apothecary, he resolves to be useful, and a report of a catastrophic coal-mine explosion—highlighting that firedamp ignites by flame but not by sparks—plants an early seed of the ideas that will shape his future. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Sing-song : A nursery rhyme book

Christina Georgina Rossetti

"Sing-song : A nursery rhyme book by Christina Georgina Rossetti" is a collection of children’s poetry written in the Victorian era. It gathers nursery rhymes and lullabies that celebrate early childhood and family life, with a focus on nature, seasons, animals, and simple moral lessons. The book interweaves cradle songs, play songs, riddles, counting and calendar verses, and color and nature lists. Scenes of mothers, babies, and village life sit beside vivid sketches of flowers, birds, insects, and weather, while gentle counsel—kindness to creatures, patience in work, hope amid hardship—runs throughout. Imaginative pieces personify wind, moon, and stars; playful ones feature cats, dogs, lambs, and mice; and solemn notes touch on poverty, loss, and comfort (a dead thrush, a sleeping child, angels watching). Its brief, musical poems use clear images and refrains to soothe, delight, and quietly teach young listeners. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Letters to the young from the Old World : Notes of travel

Mrs. Miller, D. L.

"Letters to the young from the Old World : Notes of travel" by Mrs. D. L. Miller is a collection of travel letters written in the late 19th century. Aimed at young readers, it recounts journeys across Europe and into the Bible Lands, blending vivid scenes of travel with gentle religious reflection and practical moral counsel. Expect ocean crossings, Scandinavian fjords, bustling markets, and sacred sites, all described in a warm, instructive voice. The opening of the volume includes an editor’s introduction explaining that the author’s popular letters, first written from memory for a youth periodical, were revised and gathered into this book at readers’ request. Chapter I follows a transatlantic voyage on the steamer Aller: tiny staterooms, seasickness, deck life with well- and ill-behaved children, anxious fogs and ice-watch, the drama of taking on a pilot, and the thrill of lights on the European shore. Chapter II moves through Bremen to Denmark and Sweden—clean Copenhagen, ever-present coffee and hymn-singing, a humble farmhouse meal (milk dipping and shared bone spoons), Malmo’s markets, the fishermen of Limhamn, lake-studded forests, courteous children with graceful bows, and a mother carrying her baby in a sling—ending with a brisk account of railway dining. Chapter III records a coastal cruise in Norway on the Kong Halfdan: serene fjords, a captain’s scenic detour to waterfalls and echoes, Tromsø’s eider ducks, encounters with Lapps and reindeer, the pierced peak of Torghatten, a salmon “trap,” Hammerfest’s fishy industries, a polar bear cub from Spitzbergen, a stern temperance lesson after a sailor’s drunken mishap, an Arctic gale, and a safe return after grazing rocks. Chapter IV opens by sketching the early hardships of a poor German boy destined for study (clearly foreshadowing Martin Luther) before the excerpt breaks off. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Hidden seed : or A year in a girl's life

Emma Leslie

"Hidden seed : or A year in a girl''s life" by Emma Leslie is a novel written in the late 19th century. A domestic, didactic coming‑of‑age tale, it follows earnest fifteen-year-old Mabel Randolph as her zeal to be “useful” collides with home duties, self-will, and the allure of status when she goes to live with her wealthier relatives and bonds with her gentle, fragile cousin Isabel. The story probes practical Christian service versus pride and worldliness, asking what true inner growth looks like for a young girl. The opening of Hidden seed traces Mabel’s birthday resolve to be a missionary, her impatience with lessons, and her hasty plunge into parish work that leads to friction at home, including a humiliating outing in a shabby “district” dress and a quarrel with the nurse. Her mother reveals family financial strain just as an uncle invites Mabel to share Isabel’s first-rate schooling; after an ink accident ruins a new dress—forcing her into two brown ones—Mabel arrives at her uncle’s grand house, welcomed warmly by Isabel but coolly by her aunt and sister-cousin Julia. Kept largely to the school-room, Mabel struggles with pride and envy, while Isabel’s quiet kindness steadies her. A visit to an old villager, Mrs. Barker, reframes the parable of the sower as God’s life planted in every heart, warning that weeds of pride and worldliness can choke true growth—an idea that unsettles Mabel. Tensions sharpen around a musical party when Mabel is assigned a difficult sonata that wins little attention, feeding her resentment. Meanwhile, she secretly incurs debt for an evening dress and later uses her spring clothing money to pay it, leaving her in winter browns until her uncle discovers the truth and discreetly helps. The section closes with Mabel chastened but supported, and with hints of Isabel’s delicacy and her tender bond with her father. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

No royal road : or, The thing that lies the nearest. A story for girls.

Florence E. Burch

"No royal road : or, The thing that lies the nearest. A story for girls." by Burch is a moral coming‑of‑age novel written in the late 19th century. The narrative centers on Lilla, an orphan living with her grandmother, and Margie, a sturdy village girl, as both discover that true greatness is found in humble duties, patience, and Christian kindness. With guidance from a kindly clergyman and a gentle governess, the tale contrasts ambition and class with everyday service. It suits readers who enjoy heartfelt Victorian domestic fiction with a clear ethical thread. The opening of the story introduces a picturesque lodge where Lilla is lovingly raised by Mrs. Eden, whose health is beginning to fail, and sets a reflective tone through scenes of spring, home routines, and a fleeting excitement over a runaway pony. A parallel thread presents Margie’s crowded, working‑class home, her Sunday solace in church, and a brief exchange with the clergyman about work, rest, and purpose. A stormy afternoon visit from Mr. Munro gives Lilla the book’s motto—“Do the work that lies the nearest”—spurring her to early rising, practical help, and renewed diligence, even as her grandmother decides to hire a maid. Lilla and Margie meet, grow shyly friendly, and their lives intertwine: Lilla studies intensely under Miss St. Ives while learning patience in twilight hours with her grandmother; Margie’s hopes to “get on” are tested by her brother’s illness and a cousin’s shallow advice. When Margie’s mother falls sick, Lilla quietly takes over the housework so Margie can care for her family and still receive her wages, deepening their bond. By year’s end, with Margie back, the theme sharpens as a sermon on greatness as service echoes the lesson both girls are learning through small, faithful acts. (This is an automatically generated summary.)