ILLUSTRATIONS.
| MARION AND HER FATHER | (Frontispiece) |
| LITTLE MARY AND HER FRIEND TROY | 11 |
| MARION TEACHING LATIN | 25 |
| EDITH WATCHING THE DAWN | 39 |
From Drawings by E. H. Wehnert.
The tale opens on Christmas evening with village scenes of charity and domestic warmth, then follows a solitary, sorrowful gentleman returning to a rural cottage where family festivities and simple joys contrast with his inner melancholy. Interwoven episodes show interactions among children, servants, and neighbors, and the narrative examines how casual or deliberate speech affects feelings, reconciles estrangement, and consoles grief. Through gentle incidents, domestic detail, and reflective moments by the fireside, the story emphasizes compassion, the power of kind words to heal, and the tender hopes and regrets that surface at the season of reunion.
| MARION AND HER FATHER | (Frontispiece) |
| LITTLE MARY AND HER FRIEND TROY | 11 |
| MARION TEACHING LATIN | 25 |
| EDITH WATCHING THE DAWN | 39 |
From Drawings by E. H. Wehnert.