NOTE: This is a hypertext formatted version of the Project Gutenberg edition. For more information, read the small print or check out the full ascii text. This document is part of a small, but growing collection of html formatted etexts. (Others may be found in either my home page or John Ockerbloom's indexes by author and title.) I am still trying to figure out whether anyone else is interested in these on-line readable documents. If you appreciate this document or would like to see more such, send me mail at "rgs@cs.cmu.edu".
to my former teacher HATTIE GORDON SMITH in grateful remembrance of her sympathy and encouragement Flowers spring to blossom where she walks The careful ways of duty, Our hard, stiff lines of life with her Are flowing curves of beauty. -WHITTIER
I | An Irate Neighbor | 9 |
II | Selling in Haste and Repenting at Leisure | 25 |
III | Mr. Harrison at Home | 35 |
IV | Different Opinions | 47 |
V | A Full-fledged Schoolma'am | 55 |
VI | All Sorts and Conditions of Men. . .and women | 66 |
VII | The Pointing of Duty | 83 |
VIII | Marilla Adopts Twins | 92 |
IX | A Question of Color | 107 |
X | Davy in Search of a Sensation | 117 |
XI | Facts and Fancies | 133 |
XII | A Jonah Day | 148 |
XIII | A Golden Picnic | 160 |
XIV | A Danger Averted | 176 |
XV | The Beginning of Vacation | 194 |
XVI | The Substance of Things Hoped For | 207 |
XVII | A Chapter of Accidents | 218 |
XVIII | An Adventure on the Tory Road | 235 |
XIX | Just a Happy Day | 250 |
XX | The Way It Often Happens | 268 |
XXI | Sweet Miss Lavendar | 280 |
XXII | Odds and Ends | 300 |
XXIII | Miss Lavendar's Romance | 308 |
XXIV | A Prophet in His Own Country | 320 |
XXV | An Avonlea Scandal | 334 |
XXVI | Around the Bend | 353 |
XXVII | An Afternoon at the Stone House | 371 |
XXVIII | The Prince Comes Back to the Enchanted Palace | 390 |
XXIX | Poetry and Prose | 407 |
XXX | A Wedding at the Stone House | 418 |
The correct words were obtained from the L.C. Page & Company, Inc. edition of this book copyright 1909 - Thirteenth Impression, April 1911.
Italic emphases have been CAPITALIZED for emphasis, other italics, such as titles have been `Placed in Single Quotes.' Italic I's are _I_.
(HTML formatting note -- the capitalized italics have been transformed back into italics in this hypertext edition. -rgs@cs.cmu.edu)
Most spellings and combined words have been left as they were in the majority of the editions orginally published. Some spelling errors we presume were not intended have been corrected.
Robert Stockton