The English Orphans 
 
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The English Orphans, by Mary Jane 
Holmes 
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Title: The English Orphans 
Author: Mary Jane Holmes 
Release Date: October 26, 2004 [eBook #13878] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
ENGLISH ORPHANS*** 
E-text prepared by Stephen Schulze and the Project Gutenberg Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team 
 
THE ENGLISH ORPHANS 
Or, A Home in the New World 
by 
MRS. MARY J. HOLMES 
Author of Darkness and Daylight, Marian Grey, Meadow Brook, 
Homestead, Dora Deane, Cousin Maude, Tempest and Sunshine, Lena 
Rivers, etc. 
1877 
 
CONTENTS 
I. The Emigrants 
II. Chicopee 
III. Billy Bender
IV. Ella Campbell 
V. The Poor-House 
VI. Sal Furbush 
VII. The Lincolns 
VIII. At Church 
IX. The New Bonnet 
X. Winter at the Poor-House 
XI. Alice 
XII. A New Friend 
XIII. A New Home in Rice Corner 
XIV. Visitors 
XV. The Three Young Men 
XVI. The Schoolmistress 
XVII. Jealousy 
XVIII. A New Plan 
XIX. Mount Holyoke 
XX. The closing of the year 
XXI. Vacation 
XXII. Education Finished 
XXIII. Life in Boston 
XXIV. A Change of Opinion 
XXV. The Party 
XXVI. Making up his Mind 
XXVII. The Shadows Deepen 
XXVIII. Glenwood 
XXIX. A New Discovery 
XXX. The Crisis 
XXXI. A Question 
XXXII. Going Home 
XXXIII. Conclusion 
 
CHAPTER I. 
THE EMIGRANTS. 
"What makes you keep that big blue sun-bonnet drawn so closely over 
your face? are you afraid of having it seen?"
The person addressed was a pale, sickly-looking child about nine years 
of age, who, on the deck of the vessel Windermere, was gazing intently 
towards the distant shores of old England, which were fast receding 
from view. Near her a fine-looking boy of fourteen was standing, and 
trying in vain to gain a look at the features so securely shaded from 
view by the gingham bonnet. 
At the sound of his voice the little girl started, and without turning her 
head, replied, "Nobody wants to see me, I am so ugly and 
disagreeable." 
"Ugly are you?" repeated the boy, and at the same time lifting her up 
and forcibly holding her hands, he succeeded in looking her fully in the 
face, "Well, you are not very handsome, that's a fact," said he, after 
satisfying his curiosity, "but I wouldn't be sullen about it. Ugly people 
are always smart, and perhaps you are. Any way, I like little girls, so 
just let me sit here and get acquainted." 
Mary Howard, the child thus introduced to our readers, was certainly 
not very handsome. Her features, though tolerably regular, were small 
and thin, her complexion sallow, and her eyes, though bright and 
expressive, seemed too large for her face. She had naturally a fine set of 
teeth, but their beauty was impaired by two larger ones, which, on each 
side of her mouth, grew directly over the others, giving to the lower 
portion of her face a peculiar and rather disagreeable expression. She 
had frequently been told that she was homely, and often when alone 
had wept, and wondered why she, too, was not handsome like her sister 
Ella, on whose cheek the softest rose was blooming, while her rich 
brown hair fell in wavy masses about her white neck and shoulders. 
But if Ella was more beautiful than Mary, there was far less in her 
character to admire. She knew that she was pretty, and this made her 
proud and selfish, expecting attention from all, and growing sullen and 
angry if it was withheld. 
Mrs. Howard, the mother of these children, had incurred the displeasure 
of her father, a wealthy Englishman, by marrying her music teacher, 
whose dark eyes had played the mischief with her heart, while his 
fingers played its accompaniment on the guitar. Humbly at her father's
feet she had knelt and sued for pardon, but the old man was inexorable, 
and turned her from his house, cursing the fate which had now deprived 
him, as it were, of his only remaining daughter. Late in life he had 
married a youthful widow who after the lapse of a few years died, 
leaving three little girls, Sarah, Ella, and Jane, two of them his own, 
and one a step-daughter and a child of his wife's first marriage. 
As a last request Mrs. Temple had asked that her baby Jane should be 
given to the care of her sister, Mrs. Morris who was on the eve of 
embarking for America, and who within four weeks after her sister's 
death sailed with her; young niece for Boston. Sarah, too, was adopted 
by her father's brother;    
    
		
	
	
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