
Transcriber's note: Unusual and inconsistent spelling is as printed.
Nelly Ryan is a spirited thirteen‑year‑old whose life is marked by poverty and loneliness in a crumbling cottage with her grandmother. She watches, with aching envy, the neatly dressed girls from the local boarding school march past, their bright bonnets and polished shoes a stark contrast to her own ragged clothes and dirty hands. The bitterness of feeling invisible fuels her quiet resignation, until a kind young woman, Miss Powell, appears at the gate with a bouquet of spring flowers and a gentle curiosity about Nelly’s sorrow.
Miss Powell’s unexpected friendship offers Nelly a glimpse of a world beyond her hardship, inviting her to attend Sunday school and promising the chance to learn and grow. As Nelly hesitates, torn between shame and hope, the story begins to explore the value of honesty, hard work, and the quiet strength that can emerge from even the humblest beginnings. This tender opening sets the stage for a heart‑warming journey of self‑discovery and the unexpected gifts that perseverance can bring.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (233K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United States: American Sunday-School Union, 1867.
Release date
2023-07-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1826–1899
A prolific 19th-century American writer, she filled her stories with moral choices, family life, and the everyday struggles of children and young adults. Her books were especially popular with religious and educational publishers, and many remain readable windows into Victorian-era values.
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