: Frances Hodgson Burnett
: The Lost Prince
: Charles River Editors
: 9781518344763
: 1
: CHF 1.10
:
: Erzählende Literatur
: English
: 415
: DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB
rances Hodgson Burnett was an English author best known for writing some of the greatest children's novels in literature.  Some of Burnett's works have been turned into popular plays.  This edition of The Lost Prince includes a table of contents.

I: THE NEW LODGERS AT NO. 7 PHILIBERT PLACE


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THERE ARE MANY DREARY AND dingy rows of ugly houses in certain parts of London, but there certainly could not be any row more ugly or dingier than Philibert Place. There were stories that it had once been more attractive, but that had been so long ago that no one remembered the time. It stood back in its gloomy, narrow strips of uncared-for, smoky gardens, whose broken iron railings were supposed to protect it from the surging traffic of a road which was always roaring with the rattle of busses, cabs, drays, and vans, and the passing of people who were shabbily dressed and looked as if they were either going to hard work or coming from it, or hurrying to see if they could find some of it to do to keep themselves from going hungry. The brick fronts of the houses were blackened with smoke, their windows were nearly all dirty and hung with dingy curtains, or had no curtains at all; the strips of ground, which had once been intended to grow flowers in, had been trodden down into bare earth in which even weeds had forgotten to grow. One of them was used as a stone-cutter’s yard, and cheap monuments, crosses, and slates were set out for sale, bearing inscriptions beginning with “Sacred to the Memory of.” Another had piles of old lumber in it, another exhibited second-hand furniture, chairs with unsteady legs, sofas with horsehair stuffing bulging out of holes in their covering, mirrors with blotches or cracks in them. The insides of the houses were as gloomy as the outside. They were all exactly al