
Chapter One. - Easney Vicarage.
Chapter Two. - The “Garret.”
Chapter Three. - Goblinet.
Chapter Four. - David’s Pig.
Chapter Five. - Miss Unity.
Chapter Six. - Ethelwyn.
Chapter Seven. - The Chinese Mandarin.
Chapter Eight. - How Dickie went to the Circus.
A quiet village frames the old Easney Vicarage, where a gnarled pear tree clings to ivy and spills yellow fruit onto a gravel path. From the nursery window, the youngest Hawthorn, little Dickie, watches the world beyond—a church tower, a sloping lawn, and meadows that blaze with buttercups in spring. The other siblings—Penelope, Ambrose, Nancy and David—have outgrown the window’s view, their days now filled with lessons from Miss Grey and the bustle of village life.
Penelope, the eldest at eleven, is the family’s storyteller, spinning elaborate tales about past vicars and daring feats of horsemanship that captivate her younger brothers and sister. Her vivid imagination turns the vicarage’s hidden nooks, creaky cupboards, and the distant blacksmith’s forge into a playground of adventure. As the children navigate school, chores, and the rhythms of the countryside, Penelope’s creations promise a world where ordinary days become the seed of extraordinary mischief.
Full title
The Hawthorns A Story about Children A Story about Children
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (170K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
Release date
2007-04-27
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1848–1899
A Victorian writer of children’s stories, remembered for warm, domestic tales like A Pair of Clogs and The Kitchen Cat and Other Stories. Her books often center on everyday family life, small adventures, and the emotional world of children.
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