
Transcriber's note: Unusual and inconsistent spelling is as printed.
MR. DOTTIN SHOOK HIS FIST AT HIS LATE VISITORS, - AND SHUT THE DOOR UPON THEM.
In a sleepy provincial town, the spring garden behind a modest semi‑detached villa becomes a playground for two siblings who love to dig, sow, and dream of a flower show. Ten‑year‑old Kitty, bright‑eyed and obedient, follows her older brother Bob’s lead as they tend their little plots, sharing the occasional laugh and the company of their lively terrier, Snip. Their routine is gently disrupted when a mysterious boy appears at the neighboring house, peering over the garden wall from a ladder and watching their every move.
The newcomer, a red‑haired, freckled lad staying with his reclusive uncle, is eager to make friends but finds himself an awkward observer, unsure how to bridge the gap. As Kitty and Bob debate whether to acknowledge his curious stare, the garden setting hints at budding possibilities—both in the soil they tend and in the tentative connections forming just beyond the wall. This early‑chapter charm invites listeners to wonder how youthful curiosity and a shared love of nature might turn strangers into companions.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (152K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
London: S. W. Partridge & Co., 1911.
Release date
2023-09-09
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
A prolific English writer of children's fiction, she filled her stories with family life, moral choices, and the everyday adventures of young people. Her books were widely circulated in the late Victorian and early 20th-century years, and many remain readable today through public-domain editions.
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