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The Play-day Book: New Stories for Little Folks cover

The Play-day Book: New Stories for Little Folks

Chapter 44: SOLILOQUY OF OVERGROWN FIFTEEN.
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About This Book

A lively collection of short stories and sketches for young readers that blends everyday domestic scenes, playful adventures, holiday outings, and animal tales. Pieces move between gentle humor and mild instruction, portraying children’s curiosity, small misfortunes, imaginative play, and simple acts of kindness. Several items offer plain moral reflections and temperance-minded messages without heavy didacticism. Varied lengths and illustrated vignettes make the volume suited to read-aloud play-days or early independent reading.

SOLILOQUY OF OVERGROWN FIFTEEN.

I sprang up, like Jonah’s gourd, in a night; I am as tall as a bean-stalk and as green; I am thick where I ought to be thin, and thin where I should be thick; I am too big to drive hoop, and not old enough to wear one; too tall to let my hair loose on my shoulders, and not old enough to fix it up with a comb; I am too large to wear an apron, and I can’t keep my dress clean without one; I have out-grown tucks, and am not allowed to wear flounces; I have to pay full price in the omnibuses, and yet gentlemen, because of my baby-face never pull the strap for me; I have lost my relish for “Mother Goose,” and am not allowed to read love-stories; old men have done giving me sugarplums, and young men have not begun to give me “kisses;” I have done with gingerbread hearts and nobody offers me the other sort; I have given up playing with “doll-babies,” and am forbidden to think of a husband; if I ask my mother for a “dress-hat,” she says “Pshaw! you are nothing but a child;” if I run or jump in the street, she says, “My dear, you should remember that you are a young lady now.” I say it’s real mean; so there, now, and I don’t care.