Pollyanna Grows Up by Eleanor H. Porter (best ereader for epub txt) đ
Description
In Pollyanna Grows Up we follow the titular character as she âgrows upâ through a story told in two connected parts. The first part takes place in Boston when she is age 13, having just been rehabilitated from severe injuries sustained in an automobile accident. As she leaves the hospital, she is sent to stay with a nearby dowager, who has long withdrawn into grief, pining for her lost nephew. Pollyanna is to be her âcure.â After leaving Boston, Pollyanna leaves the country with her Aunt Polly and doesnât return to Vermont until she is 20 years old.
While in Boston, Pollyanna observes her hostâs isolation and depression, which sits in stark contrast with the opulence of her home and her material wealth. Meanwhile, naive, relentlessly positive, literal-minded Pollyanna, often oblivious to the structure of society around her, slowly comes to understand the dire, grinding poverty, isolation, and alienation that turn-of-the-century Boston was also home to. Human connection is a central theme of the book and Pollyanna begins to engage with broader cultural and moral questions of her society before departing the country.
In the second half of the book, Pollyanna acts as host to the friends she made in Boston. As such, she reconnects with them and puts them in touch with her friends and family in Vermont. As a part of growing up, Pollyanna must now address questions of how these relationships might change as her age and social status change. She must reconcile the sense of obligation she feels with her desires, and with the wants and needs of those around her. Old relationships are expanded, and new relationships are formed (or revealed) with each, in the end, more connected to all.
Read free book «Pollyanna Grows Up by Eleanor H. Porter (best ereader for epub txt) đ» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Eleanor H. Porter
Read book online «Pollyanna Grows Up by Eleanor H. Porter (best ereader for epub txt) đ». Author - Eleanor H. Porter
âWhy, Carew,â stammered Pendleton, aghast, âhas anythingâ âerâ âhappened?â
âHappened! Happened!â ejaculated the lame youth, flinging out both his hands, in each of which, as Pendleton now saw, was an open letter. âEverything has happened! Wouldnât you think it had if all your life youâd been in prison, and suddenly you saw the gates flung wide open? Wouldnât you think it had if all in a minute you could ask the girl you loved to be your wife? Wouldnât you think it had ifâ âBut, listen! You think Iâm crazy, but Iâm not. Though maybe I am, after all, crazy with joy. Iâd like to tell you. May I? Iâve got to tell somebody!â
Pendleton lifted his head. It was as if, unconsciously, he was bracing himself for a blow. He had grown a little white; but his voice was quite steady when he answered.
âSure you may, old fellow. Iâd beâ âglad to hear it.â
Carew, however, had scarcely waited for assent. He was rushing on, still a bit incoherently.
âItâs not much to you, of course. You have two feet and your freedom. You have your ambitions and your bridges. But Iâ âto me itâs everything. Itâs a chance to live a manâs life and do a manâs work, perhapsâ âeven if it isnât dams and bridges. Itâs something!â âand itâs something Iâve proved now I can do! Listen. In that letter there is the announcement that a little story of mine has won the first prizeâ â$3,000, in a contest. In that other letter there, a big publishing house accepts with flattering enthusiasm my first book manuscript for publication. And they both came todayâ âthis morning. Do you wonder I am crazy glad?â
âNo! No, indeed! I congratulate you, Carew, with all my heart,â cried Jimmy, warmly.
âThank youâ âand you may congratulate me. Think what it means to me. Think what it means if, by and by, I can be independent, like a man. Think what it means if I can, some day, make Mrs. Carew proud and glad that she gave the crippled lad a place in her home and heart. Think what it means for me to be able to tell the girl I love that I do love her.â
âYesâ âyes, indeed, old boy!â Jimmy spoke firmly, though he had grown very white now.
âOf course, maybe I ought not to do that last, even now,â resumed Jamie, a swift cloud shadowing the shining brightness of his countenance. âIâm still tied toâ âthese.â He tapped the crutches by his side. âI canât forget, of course, that day in the woods last summer, when I saw Pollyannaâ âI realize that always Iâll have to run the chance of seeing the girl I love in danger, and not being able to rescue her.â
âOh, but Carewâ ââ began the other huskily.
Carew lifted a peremptory hand.
âI know what youâd say. But donât say it. You canât understand. you arenât tied to two sticks. You did the rescuing, not I. It came to me then how it would be, always, with me andâ âSadie. Iâd have to stand aside and see othersâ ââ
âSadie!â cut in Jimmy, sharply.
âYes; Sadie Dean. You act surprised. Didnât you know? Havenât you suspectedâ âhow I felt toward Sadie?â cried Jamie. âHave I kept it so well to myself, then? I tried to, butâ ââ He finished with a faint smile and a half-despairing gesture.
âWell, you certainly kept it all right, old fellowâ âfrom me, anyhow,â cried Jimmy, gayly. The color had come back to Jimmyâs face in a rich flood, and his eyes had grown suddenly very bright indeed. âSo itâs Sadie Dean. Good! I congratulate you again, I do, I do, as Nancy says.â Jimmy was quite babbling with joy and excitement now, so great and wonderful had been the reaction within him at the discovery that it was Sadie, not Pollyanna, whom Jamie loved. Jamie flushed and shook his head a bit sadly.
âNo congratulationsâ âyet. You see, I havenât spoken toâ âher. But I think she must know. I supposed everybody knew. Pray, whom did you think it was, if notâ âSadie?â
Jimmy hesitated. Then, a little precipitately, he let it out.
âWhy, Iâd thought ofâ âPollyanna.â
Jamie smiled and pursed his lips.
âPollyannaâs a charming girl, and I love herâ âbut not that way, any more than she does me. Besides, I fancy somebody else would have something to say about that; eh?â
Jimmy colored like a happy, conscious boy.
âDo you?â he challenged, trying to make his voice properly impersonal.
âOf course! John Pendleton.â
âJohn Pendleton!â Jimmy wheeled sharply.
âWhat about John Pendleton?â queried a new voice; and Mrs. Carew came forward with a smile.
Jimmy, around whose ears for the second time within five minutes the world had crashed into fragments, barely collected himself enough for a low word of greeting. But Jamie, unabashed, turned with a triumphant air of assurance.
âNothing; only I just said that I believed John Pendleton would have something to say about Pollyannaâs loving anybodyâ âbut him.â
âPollyanna! John Pendleton!â Mrs. Carew sat down suddenly in the chair nearest her. If the two men before her had not been so deeply absorbed in their own affairs they might have noticed that the smile had vanished from Mrs. Carewâs lips, and that an odd look as of almost fear had come to her eyes.
âCertainly,â maintained Jamie. âWere you both blind last summer? Wasnât he with her a lot?â
âWhy, I thought he was withâ âall of us,â murmured Mrs. Carew, a little faintly.
âNot as he was with Pollyanna,â insisted Jamie. âBesides, have you forgotten that day when we were talking about John Pendletonâs marrying, and Pollyanna blushed and stammered and said finally that he had thought of marryingâ âonce. Well, I wondered then if there wasnât something between them. Donât you remember?â
âY-yes, I think I doâ ânow that you speak of it,â murmured Mrs. Carew again. âBut I hadâ âforgotten it.â
âOh, but I can explain that,â cut in Jimmy, wetting his dry lips. âJohn Pendleton did have a love affair once, but it was with Pollyannaâs mother.â
âPollyannaâs mother!â exclaimed two voices in surprise.
âYes.
Comments (0)