
CHAPTER I Glenwood Darrow, looking only at the eyes, overlooks the chin, and a rarely beautiful Persian rug is overshadowed by golden oak.
CHAPTER II Mrs. Darrow seeks further for gentility, and her daughter has her hair pulled and doesn’t mind it.
CHAPTER III Miss Ada Tenafee is faithful to ancestor worship, while the Darrows weave a golden legend about a golden lad.
CHAPTER IV Granny Mander’s curse is potent: the hawk comes down to feed in the barnyard.
CHAPTER V Dr. Darrow damns the first families with his last breath, and little Miss Nancy Carey meets the young mountaineer.
CHAPTER VI Mr. ’Gene Carey finds a right-hand man for the Altonia, and Glen Darrow joins the noble army of labor.
CHAPTER VII Luke Manders agrees with her entirely, and Southern Europe contributes some of its culls to the mill, notably one Black Orlo, whose vitriolic utterances the doctor’s daughter finds nourishing.
CHAPTER VIII Miss Ada Tenafee rejoices to have her protégée receive two callers in one afternoon, and Miss Nancy Carey sees Luke Manders again.
CHAPTER IX Glen Darrow dines for the first time in her life and tells her hostesses her opinion of Peter Parker of Pasadena; later confides to her sleepless pillow that she doesn’t like being touched.
CHAPTER X Glen trusts to time to correct her peculiarities, and occupies herself with transforming her house to harmonize with her Wishing Carpet.
Glenwood Darrow grows up with a vivid curiosity, haunting the corners of her modest home while a lone Persian rug glints like a secret promise. As a child she questions whether the tapestry is a “Wishing Carpet,” and her mother’s wistful answer plants a quiet yearning that shapes her outlook. The delicate interplay of hope and resignation threads through Glenwood’s early years, hinting at a personality that both embraces and resists longing.
When her father, a pragmatic doctor, moves the family from a prairie town to bustling Chicago, the world expands with a swirl of gaudy décor and unfamiliar customs. Glenwood discovers a rare refuge in the same rug, now set against a backdrop of magenta roses and mismatched wallpaper, and she clings to the familiar texture as a compass in the new city. The contrast between the opulent surroundings and her inner need for something genuine fuels her subtle rebellion against expectations.
The novel follows Glenwood as she navigates marriage, professional ambition, and the lingering echo of that first wish. Through richly observed scenes and quietly sharp dialogue, the story explores how ordinary objects can hold extraordinary meaning, and how a single thread of yearning can stitch together a life’s unspoken desires.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (321K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United States: D. Appleton and Company, 1926.
Credits
D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by University of California libraries)
Release date
2023-07-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1882–1954
A vivid California writer with a flair for drama, social conscience, and wit, she moved easily between poetry, plays, novels, and public life. Her work is often remembered for its humane spirit and for the energy she brought to both literature and civic causes.
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