Poor and Proud, or The Fortunes of Katy Redburn
by Oliver Optic
A STORY FOR YOUNG FOLKS
TO
ALICE MARIE ADAMS,
This Book
IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED
BY HER FATHER.
Poor and Proud.
PREFACE. ----
Bobby Bright and Harry West, whose histories were
contained in
the last two
volumes of the "Library for Young Folks," were both
smart boys. The author, very
grateful for the
genial welcome
extended to these young gentlemen, begs leave to introduce to his
juvenile friends a smart girl,--Miss Katy Redburn,-- whose
fortunes, he hopes, will prove
sufficiently interesting to secure
their attention.
If any of my adult readers are disposed to
accuse me of being a
little
extravagant, I fear I shall have to let the case go by
default; but I shall plead, in extenuation, that I have tried to
be
reasonable, even where a few grains of the
romantic element
were introduced; for Baron Munchausen and Sindbad the Sailor were
standard works on my shelf in
boyhood, and I may possibly have
imbibed some of their
peculiar spirit. But I feel a lively
satisfaction in the
reflection that,
whatever exaggerations the
critic may decide I have perpetrated in this
volume, I have made
the success of Katy Redburn depend upon her good principles, her
politeness, her determined
perseverance, and her overcoming that
foolish pride which is a snare to the feet. In these respects she
is a
worthy exemplar for the young.
Pride and
poverty do not seem to agree with each other; but there
is a pride which is not irreconcilable with the humblest station.
This pride of
character finds an
illustration in the life of my
heroine.
Thanking my young friends again for the pleasant
reception given
to my former books I
submit this
volume in the hope that Katy
Redburn will prove to be a
worthy and
agreeablecompanion for
their
leisure hours. WILLIAM T. ADAMS.
DORCHESTER, Sept. 29, 1858.
CONTENTS. ---- CHAPTER.
I. Katy Redburn and Others Are Introduced
II. The History of the Silver Watch
III. Katy and Master Simon Sneed Visit the Pawnbroker's Shop
IV. Katy Matures a Magnificent Scheme
V. Katy Visits Mrs. Gordon, and Gets Rid of Dr. Flynch
VI. Katy Prepares a Stock of Merchandise
VII. Katy Makes a Large Sale
VIII. Katy Sells Out, and Visits the Mayor
IX. Katy talks with the Mayor, and Recovers the Watch
X. Katy, in Distress, finds a Champion
XI. Katy Meets with Extraordinary Success
XII. Katy Pays Her Debts, and Tommy Goes to Sea
XIII. Katy Employs an Assistant
XIV. Master Simon Sneed Makes a Mistake
XV. Katy Gets a Letter from Liverpool
XVI. Ann Grippen Plays Tricks upon Travelers
XVII. The Sun Sets, and the Night Comes On
XVIII. Katy Struggles Bravely through a Series of Trials
XIX. Katy Resorts to a Loan
XX. Mrs. Gordon Feels Faint, and Katy Enters a New Sphere
XXI. Katy Goes to Church, and Has a Birthday Party
POOR AND PROUD; OR, THE FORTUNES OF KATY REDBURN.
----
CHAPTER I.
KATY REDBURN AND OTHERS ARE INTRODUCED.
"Give me a
flounder, Johnny?" said a little girl of eleven,
dressed in
coarse and
ragged garments, as she stooped down and
looked into the basket of the dirty young
fisherman, who sat with
his legs
hanging over the edge of the pier.
"I'll bet I won't," replied Johnny,
gruffly, as he drew the
basket out of the reach of the supplicant. "You needn't come
round here tryin' to hook my fish."
"You
hooked 'em," said another
juvenile angler who sat on the
capsill of the pier by Johnny's side.
"Who says I
hooked 'em?" blustered Johnny, whose little dirty
paws
involuntarily assumed the form of a pair of fists,
scientifically disposed and ready to be the instruments of the
owner's
vengeance upon the traducer of his
character.
"I say so," added Tommy Howard, who did not seem to be at all
alarmed at the
warlike attitude of his fellow-angler.
"Say it again, and I'll smash your head," continued Johnny,
jumping up from his seat.
"Didn't you hear me? Once is enough."
Tommy
coolly hauled up a large
flounder at that moment, and threw
the fish into his basket. It was rather
refreshing to see how
regardless he was of that pair of menacing fists.
"Jest you say that once more, and see what I'll do," persisted
Johnny.
"I won't do it."
"You dasn't say it again."
"Perhaps I dasn't; at any rate, I shan't."
"Do you mean to say I
hooked them fish?" exclaimed Johnny,
desperately, for it seemed as though he must do something to
vindicate his injured honor.
"That's just what I did say."
But Tommy was so confoundedly cool that his fellow-angler had
some doubts about the expediency of "pitching into him." Probably
a
vision of defeat flashed through his excited brain and
discretion seemed the better part of valor. Yet he was not
disposed to
abandon his position, and
advanced a pace or two
toward his provoking
companion; a
movement which, to an
unpracticed eye, would indicate a purpose to do something.
"Don't fight, Tommy," said the little
ragged girl.
"I don't mean to fight, Katy,"--Johnny, at these words, assumed
an
artistic attitude, ready to strike the first blow,--"only if
Johnny hits me, I shall knock him into the middle of next week."
Johnny did not strike. He was a
prudent young man.
"Don't fight, Johnny,"
repeated the girl, turning to the excited
aspirant for the honors of the ring.
"Do you suppose I'll let him tell me I
hooked them fish?"
blustered Johnny.
"He didn't mean anything."
"Yes, I did," interposed Tommy. "He caught 'em on a hook; so of
course he
hooked em. I
hooked mine too."
"Is that what you meant?" asked Johnny, a broad grin
overspreading his dirty face, and his fists suddenly expanding
into dirty paws again.
"That's just what I meant; and your skull is as thick as a
two-inch plank, or you would have seen what I meant."
"I see now."
Johnny was not disposed to
resent this last insinuation about the
solidity of his cranium. He was
evidently too glad to get out of
the
scrape without a broken head or a
bloody nose. Johnny was a
bully, and he had a bully's
reputation to
maintain; but he never
fought when the odds were against him; and he had a congressman's