The Lamplighter. Maria S. Cummins

The Lamplighter - Maria S. Cummins


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       CHAPTER XXIX.

       HAUTEUR.

       CHAPTER XXX.

       VANITY.

       CHAPTER XXXI.

       THE REJECTED.

       CHAPTER XXXII.

       ENVY, HATRED, AND MALICE.

       CHAPTER XXXIII.

       TRAVEL AND A MYSTERY.

       CHAPTER XXXIV.

       A NEW ACQUAINTANCE.

       CHAPTER XXXV.

       THE ROCK OF AGES.

       CHAPTER XXXVI.

       THE INVISIBLE CHARM.

       CHAPTER XXXVII.

       A SURPRISE.

       CHAPTER XXXVIII.

       THE STRICKEN DEER.

       CHAPTER XXXIX.

       A TALE OF SORROW.

       CHAPTER XL.

       THE HOUR OF PERIL.

       CHAPTER XLI.

       SUSPENSE.

       CHAPTER XLII.

       TIES—NOT OF EARTH.

       CHAPTER XLIII.

       THE EXAMINATION.

       CHAPTER XLIV.

       THE LONG LOOKED-FOR RETURNED.

       CHAPTER XLV.

       THE FATHER'S STORY.

       CHAPTER XLVI.

       THE REUNION.

       CHAPTER XLVII.

       THE RECOMPENSE.

       CHAPTER XLVIII.

       ANCHORS FOR WORLD-TRIED SOULS.

       THE END.

       BURT'S HOME LIBRARY

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      "Good God! to think upon a child

       That has no childish days,

       No careless play, no frolics wild,

       No words of prayer and praise."

       —Landon.

      It was growing dark in the city. Out in the open country it would be light for half-an-hour or more; but in the streets it was already dusk. Upon the wooden door-step of a low-roofed, dark, and unwholesome-looking house, sat a little girl, earnestly gazing up the street. The house-door behind her was close to the side-walk; and the step on which she sat was so low that her little unshod feet rested on the cold bricks. It was a chilly evening in November, and a light fall of snow had made the narrow streets and dark lanes dirtier and more cheerless than ever.

      Many people were passing, but no one noticed the little girl, for no one in the world cared for her. She was clad in the poorest of garments; her hair was long, thick, and uncombed, and her complexion was sallow, and her whole appearance was unhealthy. She had fine dark eyes; but so large did they seem, in contrast to her thin, puny face that they increased its peculiarity without increasing its beauty. Had she had a mother (which, alas! she had not), those friendly eyes would have found something in her to praise. But the poor little thing was told, a dozen times a-day, that she was the worst-looking child in the world, and the worst-behaved. No one loved her, and she loved no one; no one tried to make her happy, or cared whether she was so. She was but eight years old, and alone in the world.

      She loved to watch for the coming of the old man who lit the street-lamp in front of the house where she lived; to see his bright torch flicker in the wind; and then when he so quickly ran up his ladder, lit the lamp, and made the place cheerful, a gleam of joy was shed on a little desolate heart, to which gladness was a stranger; and though he had never seemed to see, and had never spoken to her, she felt, as she watched for the old lamplighter, as if he were a friend.

      "Gerty," exclaimed a harsh voice within, "have you been for the milk?"


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