Adventures of a Sixpence in Guernsey by A Native
ADVENTURES OF A SIXPENCE IN GUERNSEY. BY A NATIVE. SEELEY, JACKSON, AND HALLIDAY, FLEET STREET; AND B. SEELEY, HANOVER STREET. LONDON. MDCCCLVII. Printed by G. BARCLAY, Castle St. Leicester Sq. [Illustration: Frontispiece] ADVENTURES OF A SIXPENCE IN GUERNSEY.
Everything was so delightful and the autumn air so full of promise!
Jane could not find a true reason for the haunting fear that seemed
to follow her in the person of that crude country girl, who somehow
had won the Alien scholarship.
It was in free time late the next afternoon that this fear took
definite shape. Jane and her contingent were leaving the study hall
when Shirley Duncan brushed up through their arm linked line.
She was garbed in a baronet satin skirt of daring hue with an
overblouse of variegated georgette. This as a school frock! At first
glance Jane almost recoiled, then the possibility of delayed baggage
suggested itself and softened her frown.
"Don't notice her," whispered faithful Judith.
Jane's glance just answered when the unpopular freshman broke
through the line, grasped Jane's hand and deliberately forced a
folded slip of paper into it. Then, with a mocking smile that ran
into an audible sneer, she turned and sped away. Her awkward gait
and frank romping so close to Wellington Hall brought questioning
glances from the line of juniors.
"What's that, Jane Allen?" asked Janet Clarke good-naturedly. "I
hope you are not doing uplift for anything like that this year?"
ADVENTURES OF A SIXPENCE IN GUERNSEY. BY A NATIVE. SEELEY, JACKSON, AND HALLIDAY, FLEET STREET; AND B. SEELEY, HANOVER STREET. LONDON. MDCCCLVII. Printed by G. BARCLAY, Castle St. Leicester Sq. [Illustration: Frontispiece] ADVENTURES OF A SIXPENCE IN GUERNSEY.