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We and our neighbors, or, The records of an unfashionable street. Stowe, Harriet Beecher, (1811–1896).
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page: Illustration (TitlePage) [View Page Illustration (TitlePage) ]

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NEW NEIGHBORS. "Who can have taken the Ferguses' house, sister?" said a brisk little old lady, peeping through the window blinds.—p.7.

WE AND OUR NEIGHBORS: OR, RECORDS OF AN UNFASHIONABLE STREET.

BY

HARRIET BEECHER STOWE.

Author of "Uncle Tom's Cabin," "Poganuc People," "My Wife and I," etc.With Illustrations.

NEW YORK: FORDS, HOWARD, & HULBERT.

page: iii (Table of Contents) [View Page iii (Table of Contents) ]

COPYRIGHT A.D. 1875.

CONTENTS.

ILLUSTRATIONS.

  • —NEW NEIGHBORS. "'Who can have taken the Ferguses' house, sister?' said a brisk little old lady, peeping through the window blinds." Frontispiece.
  • —THE DOMESTIC ARTIST. "'A spray of ivy that was stretching towards the window had been drawn back and was forced to wreathe itself around a picture." 131
  • —GOING TO THE BAD. "The sweet-faced woman calls the attention of her husband. He frowns, whips up the horse, and is gone. Bitterness possesses Maggie's soul. Why not go to the bad?" 327
  • —A MIDNIGHT CAUCUS. "'There, now he's off,' said Eva, . . then, leaning back, she began taking out hair-pins and shaking down curls and untying ribbons as a preface to a wholly free conversation." 400
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