

An edition of Rebecca Mary (1905)
By Annie Hamilton Donnell
Publish Date
1905
Publisher
Grosset & Dunlap
Language
eng
Pages
128
Description:
From the book:Rebecca Mary took another stitch. Then another. "Ninety-sevvun, ninety-eight," she counted aloud, her little pointed face gravely intent. She waited the briefest possible space before she took ninety-nine. It was getting very close to the Time now. "At the hundred an' oneth," Rebecca Mary whispered. "It's almost it." Her breath came quicker under her tight little dress. Between her thin, light eyebrows a crease deepened anxiously. "Ninety - n-i-n-e," she counted, "one hun-der-ed" - it was so very close now! The next stitch would be the hundred and oneth. Rebecca Mary's face suddenly grew quite white. "I'll wait a m-minute," she decided; "I'm just a little scared. When you've been lookin' head to the hundred and oneth so LONG and you get the very next door to it, it scares you a little. I'll wait until - oh, until Thomas Jefferson crows, before I sew the hundred and oneth."
subjects: Classic Literature, Fiction, Social life and customs, Fiction, short stories (single author), Girls, Juvenile fiction, Conduct of life, Aunts, Roosters
Places: United States
Times: 19th century