Friendship Village is not known to me, nor are any of its people, savein the comradeship which I offer here. But I commend for occupancy asweeter place. For us here the long Caledonia hills, the four rhythmicspans of the bridge, the nearer river, the island where the first birdsbuild—these teach our windows the quiet and the opportunity of the"home town," among the "home people." To those who have such a bond tocherish I commend the little real home towns, their kindly, broodingcompanionship, their doors to an efficiency as intimate as that of fairyfingers. If there were shrines to these things, we would seek them. Theurgency is to recognize shrines.
Certain of the following chapters have appeared in The Outlook, TheBroadway Magazine, The Delineator, Everybody's, and Harper's MonthlyMagazine. Thanks are due to the editors for their courteous permissionto reprint these chapters.
I. The Side Door
II. The Début
III. Nobody Sick, Nobody Poor
IV. Covers for Seven
V. The Shadow of Good Things to Come
VI. Stock
VII. The Big Wind
VIII. The Grandma Ladies
IX. Not as the World Giveth
X. Lonesome—I
XI. Lonesome—II
XII. Of the Sky and Some Rosemary
XIII. Top Floor Back
XIV. An Epilogue
XV. The Tea Party
XVI. What is BU KİTABI OKUMAK İÇİN ÜYE OLUN VEYA GİRİŞ YAPIN!
Sitemize Üyelik ÜCRETSİZDİR!