The Merrie Tales of Jacques Tournebroche and Child Life in Town and Country and Our Children: Scenes from the Country and the Town The Merrie Tales of Jacques Tournebroche and Child Life in Town and Country and Our Children: Scenes from the Country and the Town

The Merrie Tales of Jacques Tournebroche and Child Life in Town and Country and Our Children: Scenes from the Country and the Town

    • $2.99
    • $2.99

Publisher Description

FANCHON went early one morning, like Little Red Riding-Hood, to see her grandmother, who lives right at the other end of the village. But Fanchon did not stop like little Red Riding-Hood, to gather nuts in the wood. She went straight on her way and she did not meet the wolf. From a long way off she saw her grandmother sitting on the stone step at her cottage door, a smile on her toothless mouth and her arms, as dry and knotty as an old vine-stock, open to welcome her little granddaughter. It rejoices Fanchon's heart to spend a whole day with her grandmother; and her grandmother, whose trials and troubles are all over and who lives as happy as a cricket in the warm chimney-corner, is rejoiced too to see her son's little girl, the picture of her own childhood.

They have many things to tell each other, for one of them is coming back from the journey of life which the other is setting out on.

"You grow a bigger girl every day," says the old grandmother to Fanchon, "and every day I get smaller; I scarcely need now to stoop at all to touch your forehead. What matters my great age when I can see the roses of my girlhood blooming again in your cheeks, my pretty Fanchon?"

But Fanchon asked to be told again—for the hundredth time—all about the glittering paper flowers under the glass shade, the coloured pictures where our Generals in brilliant uniforms are overthrowing their enemies, the gilt cups, some of which have lost their handles, while others have kept theirs, and grandfather's gun that hangs above the chimney-piece from the nail where he put it up himself for the last time, thirty years ago.

But time flies, and the hour is come to get ready the midday dinner. Fanchon's grandmother stirs up the drowsy fire; then she breaks the eggs on the black earthenware platter. Fanchon is deeply interested in the bacon omelette as she watches it browning and sputtering over the fire. There is no one in the world like her grandmother for making omelettes and telling pretty stories. Fanchon sits on the settle, her chin on a level with the table, to eat the steaming omelette and drink the sparkling cider. But her grandmother eats her dinner, from force of habit, standing at the fireside. She holds her knife in her right hand, and in the other a crust of bread with her toothsome morsel on it.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2015
October 24
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
213
Pages
PUBLISHER
Library of Alexandria
SELLER
The Library of Alexandria
SIZE
5
MB

More Books Like This

Our Children: Scenes from the Country and the Town Our Children: Scenes from the Country and the Town
2016
Lulu's Library, Volume 2 (of 3) Lulu's Library, Volume 2 (of 3)
2018
Tales from the Carbooty Tales from the Carbooty
2016
The Girl's Cabinet of Instructive and Moral Stories The Girl's Cabinet of Instructive and Moral Stories
2018
Lilus Kikus inglés Lilus Kikus inglés
2022
Faeries From Trixie Faeries From Trixie
2022

More Books by Anatole France

Famous Modern Ghost Stories Famous Modern Ghost Stories
2012
Bee Bee
2014
Thais Thais
1924
Honey-Bee Honey-Bee
1924
Penguin Island Penguin Island
1924
The Life of Joan of Arc, Vol. 1 and 2 The Life of Joan of Arc, Vol. 1 and 2
1924