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Miss Grantley's Girls, and the Stories She Told Them cover

Miss Grantley's Girls, and the Stories She Told Them

Chapter 20: Transcriber's Notes:
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About This Book

A perceptive governess at a girls' school tells a sequence of stories to her pupils, with the book alternating between vivid sketches of school life and the tales she recounts. Each chapter presents a self-contained narrative that ranges from intimate domestic recollections to incidents of mystery, loss, and moral reckoning, while interactions among the girls reveal manners, curiosity, and social detail. The collection functions as a linked anthology of quiet observation and occasional melodrama, examining affection, regret, and the everyday consequences of personal choices.

Your affectionate brother,
Tom Grantley.
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Even though it is now a year or two ago that we parted with Miss Grantley, and Mrs. Parmigan took over the school at the request of the parents of the junior pupils, and was joined by a lady from London with famed certificates, none of us can speak without emotion of the happy time when we sat at work in the pretty old parlour or sat under the trees in the pleasant orchard. We are not all at Barton now, for Annie Bowers is studying art abroad, and Sarah Jorring, who is "engaged," is living with her friends at Barton; but those of us who are still in the Vale go and drink tea with Mrs. Parmigan sometimes, and none of us are likely to forget our governess and the stories that she used to tell.

 


Transcriber's Notes:

Obvious punctuation errors have been corrected.

The remaining corrections made are indicated by dotted lines under the corrections. Scroll the mouse over the word and the original text will appear.