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How
perfectly
lovely
!
sighed
Diana
,
who
belonged
to
Matthew
s
school
of
critics
.
I
don
t
see
how
you
can
make
up
such
thrilling
things
out
of
your
own
head
,
Anne
.
I
wish
my
imagination
was
as
good
as
yours
.
It
would
be
if
you
d
only
cultivate
it
,
said
Anne
cheeringly
.
I
ve
just
thought
of
a
plan
,
Diana
.
Let
you
and
me
have
a
story
club
all
our
own
and
write
stories
for
practice
.
I
ll
help
you
along
until
you
can
do
them
by
yourself
.
You
ought
to
cultivate
your
imagination
,
you
know
.
Miss
Stacy
says
so
.
Only
we
must
take
the
right
way
.
I
told
her
about
the
Haunted
Wood
,
but
she
said
we
went
the
wrong
way
about
it
in
that
.
This
was
how
the
story
club
came
into
existence
.
It
was
limited
to
Diana
and
Anne
at
first
,
but
soon
it
was
extended
to
include
Jane
Andrews
and
Ruby
Gillis
and
one
or
two
others
who
felt
that
their
imaginations
needed
cultivating
.
No
boys
were
allowed
in
it
although
Ruby
Gillis
opined
that
their
admission
would
make
it
more
exciting
and
each
member
had
to
produce
one
story
a
week
.
Отключить рекламу
It
s
extremely
interesting
,
Anne
told
Marilla
.
Each
girl
has
to
read
her
story
out
loud
and
then
we
talk
it
over
.
We
are
going
to
keep
them
all
sacredly
and
have
them
to
read
to
our
descendants
.
We
each
write
under
a
nom
-
de
-
plume
.
Mine
is
Rosamond
Montmorency
.
All
the
girls
do
pretty
well
.
Ruby
Gillis
is
rather
sentimental
.
She
puts
too
much
lovemaking
into
her
stories
and
you
know
too
much
is
worse
than
too
little
.
Jane
never
puts
any
because
she
says
it
makes
her
feel
so
silly
when
she
had
to
read
it
out
loud
.
Jane
s
stories
are
extremely
sensible
.
Then
Diana
puts
too
many
murders
into
hers
.
She
says
most
of
the
time
she
doesn
t
know
what
to
do
with
the
people
so
she
kills
them
off
to
get
rid
of
them
.
I
mostly
always
have
to
tell
them
what
to
write
about
,
but
that
isn
t
hard
for
I
ve
millions
of
ideas
.
I
think
this
story
-
writing
business
is
the
foolishest
yet
,
scoffed
Marilla
.
You
ll
get
a
pack
of
nonsense
into
your
heads
and
waste
time
that
should
be
put
on
your
lessons
.
Reading
stories
is
bad
enough
but
writing
them
is
worse
.
But
we
re
so
careful
to
put
a
moral
into
them
all
,
Marilla
,
explained
Anne
.
I
insist
upon
that
.
All
the
good
people
are
rewarded
and
all
the
bad
ones
are
suitably
punished
.
I
m
sure
that
must
have
a
wholesome
effect
.
The
moral
is
the
great
thing
.
Mr
.
Allan
says
so
.
I
read
one
of
my
stories
to
him
and
Mrs
.
Allan
and
they
both
agreed
that
the
moral
was
excellent
.
Only
they
laughed
in
the
wrong
places
.
I
like
it
better
when
people
cry
.
Jane
and
Ruby
almost
always
cry
when
I
come
to
the
pathetic
parts
.
Diana
wrote
her
Aunt
Josephine
about
our
club
and
her
Aunt
Josephine
wrote
back
that
we
were
to
send
her
some
of
our
stories
.
So
we
copied
out
four
of
our
very
best
and
sent
them
.
Miss
Josephine
Barry
wrote
back
that
she
had
never
read
anything
so
amusing
in
her
life
.
Отключить рекламу
That
kind
of
puzzled
us
because
the
stories
were
all
very
pathetic
and
almost
everybody
died
.
But
I
m
glad
Miss
Barry
liked
them
.
It
shows
our
club
is
doing
some
good
in
the
world
.
Mrs
.
Allan
says
that
ought
to
be
our
object
in
everything
.
I
do
really
try
to
make
it
my
object
but
I
forget
so
often
when
I
m
having
fun
.
I
hope
I
shall
be
a
little
like
Mrs
.
Allan
when
I
grow
up
.
Do
you
think
there
is
any
prospect
of
it
,
Marilla
?
I
shouldn
t
say
there
was
a
great
deal
was
Marilla
s
encouraging
answer
.
I
m
sure
Mrs
.
Allan
was
never
such
a
silly
,
forgetful
little
girl
as
you
are
.
No
;
but
she
wasn
t
always
so
good
as
she
is
now
either
,
said
Anne
seriously
.
She
told
me
so
herself
that
is
,
she
said
she
was
a
dreadful
mischief
when
she
was
a
girl
and
was
always
getting
into
scrapes
.
I
felt
so
encouraged
when
I
heard
that
.
Is
it
very
wicked
of
me
,
Marilla
,
to
feel
encouraged
when
I
hear
that
other
people
have
been
bad
and
mischievous
?
Mrs
.
Lynde
says
it
is
.
Mrs
.
Lynde
says
she
always
feels
shocked
when
she
hears
of
anyone
ever
having
been
naughty
,
no
matter
how
small
they
were
.
Mrs
.
Lynde
says
she
once
heard
a
minister
confess
that
when
he
was
a
boy
he
stole
a
strawberry
tart
out
of
his
aunt
s
pantry
and
she
never
had
any
respect
for
that
minister
again
.
Now
,
I
wouldn
t
have
felt
that
way
.
I
d
have
thought
that
it
was
real
noble
of
him
to
confess
it
,
and
I
d
have
thought
what
an
encouraging
thing
it
would
be
for
small
boys
nowadays
who
do
naughty
things
and
are
sorry
for
them
to
know
that
perhaps
they
may
grow
up
to
be
ministers
in
spite
of
it
.
That
s
how
I
d
feel
,
Marilla