The Friendly Five: A Story

audiobook

The Friendly Five: A Story

by Mary C. (Mary Churchill) Hungerford

EN·~4 hours·35 chapters

Chapters

35 total
1

THE FRIENDLY FIVE A STORY

0:33
2

CHAPTER I. MR. BELLAMY’S OFFER.

10:19
3

CHAPTER II. NEXT TERM.

9:47
4

CHAPTER III. IN KATIE’S ROOM.

6:17
5

CHAPTER IV. MRS. ABBOTT’S EXPLANATION.

11:23
6

CHAPTER V. MARY ANN STUBBS.

7:37
7

CHAPTER VI. MARY ANN’S CHARGE.

8:23
8

CHAPTER VII. ELFIE TELLS A STORY.

7:24
9

CHAPTER VIII. A RAINY DAY.

8:17
10

CHAPTER IX. SOME LEAVES FROM A DIARY.

8:53

Description

The final day at Coventry Institute carries a gentle mix of ceremony and whispered excitement. As the girls gather in the large schoolroom, the usual formalities give way to soft conversations, and a modest sofa replaces the principal’s chair, hinting that a visitor is about to arrive. The atmosphere feels both familiar and anticipatory, a perfect backdrop for a small, heartfelt moment to unfold.

When the tall, kindly Mr. Bellamy steps forward, he speaks not of grand speeches but of a personal plea: he hopes the school will welcome his young, motherless granddaughter, Elfie, during his year‑long absence abroad. The pupils, already curious, watch as a delicate child, barely five, appears in his arms, her pink cheeks and shy smile capturing their attention. Their murmurs of admiration set the stage for a tender story of friendship, compassion, and the quiet bonds that form in a school’s closing hours.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (286K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Sue Clark and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2019-01-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

MC

Mary C. (Mary Churchill) Hungerford

Remembered for stories written for young readers, this late-19th-century author focused on friendship, school life, and growing up. Her surviving works have a warm, straightforward style that fits the moral and domestic fiction of the period.

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