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       Jean Webster

      When Patty Went to College

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664641465

       I

       Peters the Susceptible

       II

       An Early Fright

       III

       The Impressionable Mr. Todhunter

       IV

       A Question of Ethics

       V

       The Elusive Kate Ferris

       VI

       A Story with Four Sequels

       VII

       In Pursuit of Old English

       VIII

       The Deceased Robert

       IX

       Patty the Comforter

       X

       "Per l'Italia"

       XI

       "Local Color"

       XII

       The Exigencies of Etiquette

       XIII

       A Crash Without

       XIV

       The Mystery of the Shadowed Sophomore

       XV

       Patty and the Bishop

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

P

       APER-WEIGHTS," observed Patty, sucking an injured thumb, "were evidently not made for driving in tacks. I wish I had a hammer."

      This remark called forth no response, and Patty peered down from the top of the step-ladder at her room-mate, who was sitting on the floor dragging sofa-pillows and curtains from a dry-goods box.

      "Priscilla," she begged, "you aren't doing anything useful. Go down and ask Peters for a hammer."

      Priscilla rose reluctantly. "I dare say fifty girls have already been after a hammer."

      "Oh, he has a private one in his back pocket. Borrow that. And, Pris,"—Patty called after her over the transom—"just tell him to send up a man to take that closet door off its hinges."

      Patty, in the interval, sat down on the top step and surveyed the chaos beneath her. An Oriental rush chair, very much out at the elbows, several miscellaneous chairs, two desks, a divan, a table, and two dry-goods boxes radiated from the center of the room. The floor, as it showed through the interstices, was covered with a grass-green carpet, while the curtains and hangings were of a not very subdued crimson.

      "One would scarcely," Patty remarked to the furniture in general, "call it a symphony in color."

      A knock sounded on the door.

      "Come in," she called.

      A girl in a blue linen sailor-suit reaching to her ankles, and with a braid of hair hanging down her back, appeared in the doorway. Patty examined her in silence. The girl's eyes traveled around the room in some surprise, and finally reached the top of the ladder.

      "I—I'm a freshman," she began.

      "My dear," murmured Patty, in a deprecatory tone, "I should have taken you for a senior; but"—with a wave of her hand toward the nearest dry-goods box—"come in and sit down. I need your advice. Now, there are shades of green," she went on, as if continuing a conversation, "which are not so bad with red; but I ask you frankly if that shade of green would go with anything?"

      The freshman looked at Patty, and looked at the carpet, and smiled dubiously. "No," she admitted; "I don't believe it would."

      "I knew you would say that!" exclaimed Patty, in a tone of relief. "Now what would you advise us to do with the carpet?"

      The freshman looked blank. "I—I don't know, unless you take it up," she stammered.

      "The very thing!" said Patty. "I wonder we hadn't thought of it before."

      Priscilla reappeared at this point with the announcement, "Peters is the most suspicious man I ever knew!" But she stopped uncertainly as she caught sight of the freshman.

      "Priscilla," said Patty, severely, "I hope you didn't divulge the fact that we are hanging the walls with tapestry"—this with a wave of her hand toward the printed

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