Red Rose and Tiger Lily, by L. T. 
Meade 
 
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Title: Red Rose and Tiger Lily or, In a Wider World 
Author: L. T. Meade 
Release Date: October 13, 2007 [EBook #23022] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RED ROSE 
AND TIGER LILY *** 
 
Produced by D. Alexander and the Online Distributed Proofreading 
Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images 
generously made available by The Internet Archive) 
 
RED ROSE AND TIGER LILY 
Or, In a Wider World
By MRS. L. T. MEADE 
AUTHOR OF 
A BUNCH OF CHERRIES, A RING OF RUBIES, BAD LITTLE 
HANNAH, ETC. 
"Nothing is required but to set the right way to work, but of course the 
really important thing is to succeed." --Story of the Poor Tailor. 
NEW YORK GROSSET & DUNLAP PUBLISHERS 
 
COPYRIGHT, 1894, BY 
THE CASSELL PUBLISHING COMPANY 
All rights reserved 
[Illustration: NAN AND ANNIE ARRIVE. Red Rose and Tiger Lily. 
Frontispiece--(Page 4.)] 
 
CONTENTS. 
CHAPTER PAGE 
I. NAN'S GOLDEN MANE 1 
II. CRUSHED 8 
III. TWO PROVERBS 16 
IV. THE COLTS--ROBIN AND JOE 23 
V. NOT MISSED 32 
VI. FRIAR'S WOOD 42
VII. THE STORY BOOK LADY 53 
VIII. ALONE IN THE WOOD 63 
IX. "I BROKE MY WORD," SAID ANNIE 70 
X. AN AWFULLY FRIVOLOUS GIRL 79 
XI. THE DIAMOND RING 88 
XII. THE LAND OF PERHAPS 97 
XIII. THE FANCY BALL 113 
XIV. POOR MRS. MYRTLE 124 
XV. "THE WAY OF TRANSGRESSORS" 132 
XVI. PERHAPS 143 
XVII. FAIRY AND BROWNIE 152 
XVIII. THE LORRIMERS OF THE TOWERS 161 
XIX. TOPSY-TURVEY 171 
XX. THE NEW OWNERS 179 
XXI. HESTER SPEAKS HER MIND 194 
XXII. ANTONIA'S GIFT 207 
XXIII. TRUTH AND FIDELITY 215 
XXIV. A WET SPONGE 222 
XXV. MOLLY'S SORROW 234 
XXVI. PLOT THICKENS 245
XXVII. NELL IS IN TROUBLE 252 
XXVIII. THE LION AND MOUSE 262 
XXIX. GOD BLESS ANTONIA 274 
 
RED ROSE AND TIGER LILY 
OR 
IN A WIDER WORLD 
CHAPTER I. 
NAN'S GOLDEN MANE. 
It was a perfect summer's evening. The sun had just set, and purple, 
gold, violet, rose colour still filled the sky in the west. There was a 
tender new moon, looking like a silver bow, also to be seen; before 
long the evening star would be visible. 
Hester Thornton stepped out of the drawing-room at the Grange, and, 
walking a little way down the broad gravel sweep, began to listen 
intently. Hester was about seventeen--a slender girl for her age. Her 
eyes were dark, her eyebrows somewhat strongly marked, her abundant 
hair, of a much lighter shade of brown, was coiled in close folds round 
her well-shaped head. Her lips were slightly compressed, her chin 
showed determination. Hester had not been beautiful as a child, and she 
was not beautiful as a girl, but her face was pleasant to look at, very 
bright when animated, very steadfast and sweet when in repose. The air 
was like nectar to her cheeks. She was naturally a pale girl, but a faint 
rose colour was now discernible in her complexion, and the look of 
expectation in her dark eyes made them charming. 
A step was heard on the gravel behind, and she turned quickly. 
"Is that you, father?" she exclaimed.
"Yes. Are not you very imprudent to come out at this hour in your thin 
house shoes, and with nothing on your head? There is a very heavy dew 
falling." 
"Oh, I never take cold," replied Hester with a smile, which showed her 
even and pretty white teeth; "and I certainly shan't to-night," she 
continued, "for I am feeling far too excited." 
Sir John Thornton was considered by most of his acquaintances (he 
could boast of scarcely any friends) as a reserved and almost repellent 
person, but now, as his eyes rested on his young daughter, something 
seemed to soften their expression; he took her slight hand and drew it 
affectionately through his arm. 
"It takes a small thing to excite you, my love," he said; "but you always 
were of a turbulent disposition--just your poor mother over again." 
Hester sighed faintly when Sir John spoke of his wife, then she quickly 
cheered up and said in an eager voice-- 
"You don't call it a little thing, father, to know that in a minute or two I 
shall welcome Nan back from school? Nan comes to-night--Annie 
Forest to-morrow. It would be difficult for any girl to want more to 
make her perfectly happy." 
Sir John raised his brows. 
"I only    
    
		
	
	
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