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When Patty Went to College
Jean Webster
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When Patty Went to College
Jean Webster
Publisher Marketing: Excerpt: ... Don't believe any of the silly stories the sophomores tell," she called back over her shoulder; "they're just trying to frighten you." 147 148 149 X "Per l'Italia" OLLEGE is a more or less selfish place. Everybody is so busy with her own affairs that she has no time to give to her neighbor, unless her neighbor has something to give in return. Olivia Copeland apparently had nothing to give in return. She was quiet and inconspicuous, and it took a second glance to realize that her face was striking and that there was a look in her eyes that other freshmen did not have. By an unfelicitous chance she was placed in the same study with Lady Clara Vere de Vere and Emily Washburn. They thought her foreign and queer, and she thought them crude and boisterous, and after the first week or two of politely trying to get acquainted the effort was dropped on both sides. 150 The year wore on, and nobody knew, or at least no one paid any attention to the fact, that Olivia Copeland was homesick and unhappy. Her room-mates thought that they had done their duty when they occasionally asked her to play golf or go skating with them (an invitation they were very safe in giving, as she knew how to do neither). Her instructors thought that they had done their duty when they called her up to the desk after class and warned her that her work was not as good as it had been, and that if she wished to pass she must improve in it. The English class was the only one in which she was not warned; but she had no means of knowing that her themes were handed about among the different instructors and that she was referred to in the department as "that remarkable Miss Copeland." The department had a theory that if they let a girl know she was doing good work she would immediately stop and rest upon her reputation; and Olivia, in consequence, did not discover that she 151 was remarkable. She merely discovered that she was miserable and out of place, and she continued to drip tears of... Contributor Bio: Webster, Jean Jean Webster is the pseudonym of American writer Alice Jane Chandler Webster (1876-1916), whose best-known works include "Daddy-Long-Legs", "Dear Enemy", and "Just Patty".
Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
Released | July 23, 2013 |
ISBN13 | 9781491064153 |
Publishers | Createspace |
Pages | 96 |
Dimensions | 152 × 229 × 6 mm · 149 g |
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