Jan of the Windmill

Juliana Horatia Ewing
Jan of the Windmill

The Project Gutenberg EBook of Jan of the Windmill, by Juliana Horatia Ewing (#1 in our series by Juliana Horatia Ewing)
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Title: Jan of the Windmill
Author: Juliana Horatia Ewing
Release Date: May, 2004 [EBook #5601] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on July 18, 2002]
Edition: 10
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, JAN OF THE WINDMILL ***

This etext was produced by Les Bowler, St. Ives, Dorset.

JAN OF THE WINDMILL (A Story of the Plains) by JULIANA HORATIA EWING.

DEDICATED TO MY DEAR SISTER MARGARET.

CONTENTS.

Chapter I.
The windmiller's wife.--Strangers.--Ten shillings a week.--The little Jan.

Chapter II.
The miller's calculations.--His hopes and fears.--The nurse-boy.--Calm.

Chapter III.
The windmiller's words come true.--The red shawl.--In the clouds.--Nursing v. pig-minding.--The round-house.--The miller's thumb.

Chapter IV.
Black as slans.--Vair and voolish.--The miller and his man.

Chapter V.
The pocket-book and the family bible.--Five pounds' reward.

Chapter VI.
George goes courting.--George as an enemy.--George as a friend.--Abel plays schoolmaster.--The love-letter.--Moerdyk.--The miller-moth.--An ancient ditty.

Chapter VII.
Abel goes to school again.--Dame Datchett.--A column of spelling.--Abel plays moocher.--The miller's man cannot make up his mind.

Chapter VIII.
Visitors at the mill.--A windmiller of the third generation.--Cure for whooping-cough.--Miss Amabel Adeline Ammaby.-- Doctors disagree.

Chapter IX.
Gentry born.--Learning lost.--Jan's bedfellow.--Amabel.

Chapter X.
Abel at home.--Jan objects to the miller's man.--The alphabet.--The Cheap Jack.--"Pitchers".

Chapter XI.
Scarecrows and men.--Jan refuses to "make Gearge."-- Uncanny.--"Jan's off."--The moon and the clouds.

Chapter XII.
The white horse.--Comrogues.--Moerdyk.--George confides in the Cheap Jack--with reservation.

Chapter XIII.
George as a moneyed man.--Sal.--The "White Horse."-- The wedding.--The windmiller's wife forgets, and remembers too late.

Chapter XIV.
Sublunary art.--Jan goes to school.--Dame Datchett at home.--Jan's first school scrape.--Jan defends himself.

Chapter XV.
Willum gives Jan some advice.--The clock face.--The hornet and the Dame.--Jan draws pigs.--Jan and his patrons.--Kitty Chuter.--The fight.--Master Chuter's prediction.

Chapter XVI.
The mop.--The shop.--What the Cheap Jack's wife had to tell.--What George withheld.

Chapter XVII.
The miller's man at the mop.--A lively companion.--Sal loses her purse.--The recruiting sergeant.--The pocket-book twice stolen.--George in the King's Arms.--George in the King's service.-- The letter changes hands, but keeps its secret.

Chapter XVIII.
Midsummer holidays.--Child fancies.--Jan and the pig- minder.--Master Salter at home.--Jan hires himself out.

Chapter XIX.
The blue coat.--Pig-minding and tree-studying.--Leaf- paintings.--A stranger.--Master Swift is disappointed.

Chapter XX.
Squire Ammaby and his daughter.--The Cheap Jack does business once more.--The white horse changes masters.

Chapter XXI.
Master Swift at home.--Rufus.--The ex-pig-minder.--Jan and the schoolmaster.

Chapter XXII.
The parish church.--Rembrandt.--The snow scene.-- Master Swift's autobiography.

Chapter XXIII.
The white horse in clover.--Amabel and her guardians.--Amabel in the wood.--Bogy.

Chapter XXIV.
The paint-box.--Master Linseed's shop.--The new sign- board.--Master Swift as Will Scarlet.

Chapter XXV.
Sanitary inspectors.--The pestilence.--The parson.--The doctor.--The squire and the schoolmaster.--Desolation at the windmill.--The second advent.

Chapter XXVI.
The beasts of the village.--Abel sickens.--The good shepherd.--Rufus plays the philanthropist.--Master Swift sees the sun rise.--The death of the righteous.

Chapter XXVII.
Jan has the fever.--Convalescence in Master Swift's cottage.--The squire on demoralization.

Chapter XXVIII.
Mr. Ford's client.--The history of Jan's father.-- Amabel and Bogy the Second.

Chapter XXIX.
Jan fulfils Abel's charge.--Son of the mill.--The large-mouthed woman.

Chapter XXX.
Jan's prospects, and Master Swift's plans.--Tea and Milton.--New parents.--Parting with Rufus.--Jan is kidnapped.

Chapter XXXI.
Screeving.--An old song.--Mr. Ford's client.--The penny gaff.--Jan runs away.

Chapter XXXII.
The baker.--On and on.--The church bell.--A digression.--A familiar hymn.--The Boys' Home.

Chapter XXXIII.
The business man and the painter.--Pictures and pot boilers.--Cimabue and Giotto.--The salmon-colored omnibus.

Chapter XXXIV.
A choice of vocations.--Recreation hour.--The bow- legged boy.--Drawing by heart.--Giotto.

Chapter XXXV.
"Without character?"--The widow.--The bow-legged boy takes service.--Studios and painters.

Chapter XXXVI.
The miller's letter.--A new pot boiler sold.

Chapter XXXVII.
Sunshine after storm.

Chapter XXXVIII.
A painter's education.--Master Chuter's port.--A farewell feast.--The sleep of the just.

Chapter XXXIX.
George again.--The painter's advice.--"Home-brewed" at the Heart of Oak.--Jan changes the painter's mind.

Chapter XL.
D'arcy sees Bogy.--The academy.--The painter's picture.

Chapter XLI.
The detective.--The "Jook".--Jan stands by his mother's grave.--His after history.

Chapter XLII.
Conclusion.

JAN OF THE WINDMILL.

CHAPTER I.
THE WINDMILLER'S WIFE.--STRANGERS.--TEN SHILLINGS A WEEK.--THE LITTLE JAN.
Storm without and within?
So the windmiller might have said, if he had been in the habit of putting his thoughts into an epigrammatic form, as a groan from his wife and a growl of thunder broke simultaneously upon his ear, whilst the rain fell scarcely faster than her tears.
It was far from mending matters that both storms were equally unexpected. For eight full years the miller's wife had been the meekest of women.
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