The Meadow-Brook Girls Under Canvas
THE MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS UNDER CANVAS Or, Fun and Frolic in the Summer Camp by JANET ALDRIDGE Author of _The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country_, _The Meadow-Brook Girls Afloat_, etc. Illustrated Philadelphia Henry Altemus Company 1913
JOHN GABRIEL BORKMAN stands with his hands behind his back, beside
the piano, listening to FRIDA FOLDAL, who is playing the last
bars of the "Danse Macabre."
BORKMAN is of middle height, a well-knit, powerfully-built man,
well on in the sixties. His appearance is distinguished,
his profile finely cut, his eyes piercing, his hair and
beard curly and greyish-white. He is dressed in a slightly
old-fashioned black coat, and wears a white necktie. FRIDA
FOLDAL is a pretty, pale girl of fifteen, with a somewhat
weary and overstrained expression. She is cheaply dressed in
light colours.
BORKMAN.
Can you guess where I first heard tones like these?
FRIDA.
[Looking up at him.] No, Mr. Borkman.
BORKMAN.
It was down in the mines.
FRIDA.
[Not understanding.] Indeed? Down in the mines?
THE MEADOW-BROOK GIRLS UNDER CANVAS Or, Fun and Frolic in the Summer Camp by JANET ALDRIDGE Author of _The Meadow-Brook Girls Across Country_, _The Meadow-Brook Girls Afloat_, etc. Illustrated Philadelphia Henry Altemus Company 1913