Monteagle
About This Book
The narrative follows Dilly and a small group of townspeople and children who, during a season in a country community, are brought together by the arrival of a thoughtful young man and by everyday acts of care. Through drives, meetings, lectures, and home scenes a frail girl's slow recovery and the children's lessons become occasions to examine habits, conscience, and how inner dispositions show on outward behavior. Simple demonstrations and sermons trace the corrosive effects of envy, vanity, and selfishness, while steady kindness and responsibility encourage reform. Episodes conclude with reconciliations and a quietly hopeful reordering of duties among neighbors.
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