Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Dorothy's Travels
But they were not. Another second they had bounded down the stairs from the saloon to the lower deck, a workman had obligingly caught Monty by his coat collar and laughingly flung him over the plank to the dock beyond, while Jim's long legs strode after and made their last leap across a little chasm of water.
"Good by, good by, good by!"
Handkerchiefs waved, kisses were tossed across the widening water, the bell rang, the whistle tooted, and Dorothy's travels had begun. Then as the group of schoolmates watching this departure from the shore grew more indistinct she turned upon her old mountain friend with the astonished question:
"But Alfaretta! Whatever made you do this? What will become of you, alone in that great city of New York?"
"I didn't say anything about Ne' York, did I? Should think you'd be glad to have me go along with you a little bit o' way. Course, I shall get off the boat when it stops to Cornwall landing. And I thought - I thought - Seems if I couldn't have you go so far away, Dolly. It's terrible lonesome up-mounting now-a-days. And I - I don't see why some folks has everything and some hasn't nothin'!"
There was more grief than grammar in this speech and a few tears sprang to the girl's eyes.
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