When spoiled rich girl, Mary Lennox, is orphaned, she is shipped from India to live in her uncle's enormous manor in faraway England. The lonely girl is forbidden to play in most of the imposing house - struggling to adjust to her new surroundings, she goes out into the grounds every day. Before long, Mary finds a key to a secret garden that has been left untouched for ten years, and a whole new world of enchantment opens up to her. For the first time she learns to make friends - with the talented animal-charmer, Dickon, and her sickly cousin, Colin, who has been hidden away behind closed doors - and between them, the three children truly flourish as the garden reveals its haunting secrets.
First published in 1911, Frances Hodgson Burnett's story is one of the best-loved children's books of the early twentieth century. This beautiful new edition brings together the complete and unabridged text with over seventy evocative illustrations and botanical studies by the award-winning artist Robert Ingpen.
Daugiau informacijos
First published in 1911, Frances Hodgson Burnett's story is one of the best-loved children's books of the early twentieth century. This beautiful new edition brings together the complete and unabridged text with over seventy evocative illustrations and botanical studies by the award-winning artist Robert Ingpen.
Frances |
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6 | (2) |
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Chapter 1 There is No One Left |
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8 | (6) |
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Chapter 2 Mistress Mary, Quite Contrary |
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14 | (7) |
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Chapter 3 Across the Moor |
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21 | (6) |
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27 | (16) |
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Chapter 5 The Cry in the Corridor |
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43 | (6) |
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Chapter 6 "There was someone crying --- there was!" |
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49 | (7) |
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Chapter 7 The Key of the Garden |
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56 | (6) |
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Chapter 8 The Robin Who Showed the Way |
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62 | (10) |
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Chapter 9 The Strangest House Anyone Ever Lived In |
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72 | (8) |
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80 | (12) |
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Chapter 11 The Nest of the Missel Thrush |
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92 | (7) |
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Chapter 12 "Might I have a bit of earth?" |
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99 | (8) |
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107 | (12) |
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119 | (10) |
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129 | (11) |
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Chapter 16 "I won't!" said Mary |
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140 | (7) |
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147 | (6) |
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Chapter 18 "Tha' munnot waste no time" |
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153 | (6) |
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Chapter 19 "It has come!" |
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159 | (10) |
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Chapter 20 "I shall live for ever --- and ever --- and ever!" |
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169 | (7) |
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Chapter 21 Ben Weatherstaff |
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176 | (9) |
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Chapter 22 When the Sun Went Down |
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185 | (5) |
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190 | (11) |
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Chapter 24 "Let them laugh" |
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201 | (10) |
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211 | (6) |
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Chapter 26 "It's Mother!" |
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217 | (9) |
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226 | (14) |
Illustrator's Note |
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240 | |
Frances Hodgson Burnett (1849-1924) was born and lived her early life in Manchester, England before emigrating to the US with her family. The author of more than forty books, her breakthrough novel came with Little Lord Fauntleroy, which became a bestseller. After the death of her eldest son, Lionel, she returned to England in 1890 and rented an estate with several walled gardens - it was in the rose garden, her outdoor studio, that the notion of The Secret Garden was born.
Robert Ingpen was born in 1936 in Geelong, Australia, and still lives and works nearby in Barwon Heads. He studied illustration art and book design at The Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology. In 1986 he was awarded the Hans Christian Andersen Medal for his contribution to children's literature and he has been honoured with Membership of the Order of Australia. A world-renowned artist and author, Ingpen has designed, illustrated and written more than one hundred books, including his highly acclaimed series of illustrated Children's Classics, which have now been published in many editions around the world.