23:23

The Golden Road - Part 20

by Angela Stokes

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4.9
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talks
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Meditation
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Everyone
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Please enjoy this reading of "The Golden Road", the charming 1913 sequel to "The Story Girl", by Lucy Maud Montgomery. We continue to follow along with the adventures of the same group of young cousins and friends on Prince Edward Island in Canada, as they grow up... This book is dedicated to Montgomery's Great Aunt Mary Lawson, from whom she heard so many of the tales shared in these delightful books about "The Story Girl" and her friends...!

LiteratureAudiobookHistorical FictionCanadian AuthorRelaxationNostalgiaChildhoodFamilyHumorCommunityFearCreative WritingClassic LiteratureDeep ExhaleComfort And RelaxationNostalgic StorytellingChildhood MemoriesHeritageEditorial ContentFiction Vs NonfictionPoetry InclusionHumorous AnecdotesPersonal ExperiencesCommunity NewsOvercoming Fears

Transcript

Hello there.

Thank you so much for joining me for this ongoing reading of The Golden Road by Canadian author Lucy Maud Montgomery.

This novel is from 1913 and it's the charming sequel to The Story Girl.

Perhaps you've heard the preceding parts of this book.

If you haven't and you'd like to,

You can certainly look for the playlist for The Golden Road and you'll find everything there in order.

But for now,

Let's just take a moment here to have a nice deep exhale.

Letting go of the day.

Letting go of whichever baggage we might be bringing with us into this moment.

For right now,

There's nowhere else we have to go.

Nothing else we have to be doing.

So we can just relax,

Get ourselves comfortable and enjoy the ongoing tale of The Golden Road.

Chapter 20.

Extracts from R magazine.

Editorial.

As will be seen,

There is no honour role in this number.

Even Felicity has thought all the beautiful thoughts that can be thought and cannot think anymore.

Peter has never got drunk,

But under existing circumstances that is not greatly to his credit.

As for our written resolutions,

They have silently disappeared from our chamber walls and the place that once knew them knows them no more forever.

Peter perplexedly,

Seems to me I've heard something like that before.

It is very sad,

But we will all make some new resolutions next year and maybe it will be easier to keep those.

The story of the locket that was baked.

This was a story my Aunt Jane told me about her grandma when she was a little girl.

It's funny to think of baking a locket,

But it wasn't to eat.

She was my great grandma,

But I'll call her grandma for short.

It happened when she was 10 years old.

Of course,

She wasn't anybody's grandma then.

Her father and mother and her were living in a new settlement called Brinsley.

Their nearest neighbour was a mile away.

One day,

Her Aunt Anna from Charlottetown came and wanted her ma to go visiting with her.

At first,

Grandma's ma thought she couldn't go because it was baking day and grandma's pa was away.

But grandma wasn't afraid to stay alone and she knew how to bake the bread.

So she made her go and her Aunt Anna took off the handsome gold locket and chain she was wearing around her neck and hung it on grandma's and told her she could wear it all day.

Grandma was awful pleased for she had never had any jewellery.

She did all the chores and then was kneading the loaves when she looked up and saw a tramp coming in.

And he was an awful villainous looking tramp.

He didn't even pass the time of day but just sat down on a chair.

Poor grandma was awful frightened and she turned her back on him and went on kneading the loaf.

Cold and trembling.

That is grandma was trembling,

Not the loaf.

She was worried about the locket.

She didn't know how she could hide it for to get anywhere she'd have to turn round and pass him.

All of a sudden,

She thought she would hide it in the bread.

She put her hand up and pulled it hard and quick and broke the fastening and kneaded it right into the loaf.

Then she put the loaf in the pan and set it in the oven.

The tramp hadn't seen her do it.

And then he asked for something to eat.

Grandma got him up a meal and when he did it he began prowling about the kitchen looking into everything and opening the cupboard doors.

Then he went into grandma's ma's room and turned the bureau drawers and trunk inside out,

Threw the things in them all about.

All he found was a purse with a dollar in it and he swore about it and took it and went away.

When grandma was sure he was really gone she broke down and cried.

She forgot all about the bread and it burned as black as coal.

When she smelled it burning grandma ran and pulled it out.

She was awful scared.

The locket was spoiled but she sawed open the loaf and it was there safe and sound.

When her aunt Anna came back she said grandma deserved the locket because she had saved it.

So clever.

And she gave it to her and grandma always wore it and was very proud of it.

And grandma used to say that was the only loaf of bread she ever spoiled in her life.

Peter Craig.

Felicity.

Those stories are all very well but they are only true stories.

It's easy enough to write true stories.

I thought Peter was appointed fiction editor but he has never written any fiction since the paper started.

That's not my idea of a fiction editor.

He ought to make up stories out of his own head.

Peter spunkily.

I can do it too and I will next time.

And it ain't easier to write true stories.

It's harder because you have to stick to facts.

Felicity I don't believe you could make up a story.

Peter I'll show you.

My most exciting adventure.

It's my turn to write it but I'm so nervous.

My worst adventure happened two years ago.

It was an awful one.

I had a striped ribbon.

Striped brown and yellow and I lost it.

I was very sorry for it was a handsome ribbon and all the girls in school were jealous of it.

Felicity I wasn't.

I didn't think it one bit pretty.

Cecily hush.

I hunted everywhere but I couldn't find it.

Next day was Sunday and I was running into the house by the front door and I saw something lying on the step and I thought it was my ribbon and I made a grab at it as I passed but oh it was a snake.

Oh I can never describe how I felt when I felt that awful thing wriggling in my hand.

I let it go and screamed and screamed and Ma was cross at me for yelling on Sunday and made me read seven chapters in the Bible but I didn't mind that much after what I had come through.

I would rather die than have such an experience again.

Sarah Ray.

To Felicity on a birthday.

Oh maiden fair with golden hair and brow of purest white.

I'd fight for you.

I'd die for you.

Let me be your faithful knight.

This is your birthday.

Blessed day.

You are 13 years old today.

May you be happy and fair as you are now until your hair is grey.

I gaze into your shining eyes.

They are so blue and bright.

I'd fight for you.

I'd die for you.

Let me be your faithful knight.

A friend.

Dan.

Great snakes.

Who got that up?

I bet it was Peter.

Felicity with dignity.

Well it's more than you could do.

You couldn't write poetry to save your life.

Peter a side to Beverly.

She seems quite pleased.

I'm glad I wrote it but it was awful hard work.

Personals.

Patrick Greyfur Esquire caused his friends great anxiety recently by a prolonged absence from home.

When found he was very thin but is now as fat and conceited as ever.

On Wednesday,

June 20th,

Miss Olivia King was united in the bonds of holy matrimony to Dr.

Robert Seaton of Halifax.

Miss Sarah Stanley was bridesmaid and Mr.

Andrew Seaton attended the groom.

The young couple received many handsome presents.

Reverend Mr.

Marwood tied the nuptial knot.

After the ceremony a substantial repast was served in Mrs.

Alex King's well-known style and the happy couple left for their new home in Nova Scotia.

Their many friends join in wishing them a very happy and prosperous journey through life.

A precious one from us is gone.

A voice we loved is stilled.

A place is vacant in our home that never can be filled.

The story go,

Goodness that sounds as if somebody had died.

I've seen that verse on a tombstone.

Who wrote that notice?

Felicity who wrote it.

I think it is just as appropriate to a wedding as to a funeral.

Our school concert came off on the evening of June 29th and was a great success.

We made $10 for the library.

We regret to chronicle that Miss Sarah Ray met with a misfortune while taking some violent exercise with a wasp's nest recently.

The moral is that it is better not to monkey with a wasp's nest,

New or old.

Mrs.

C.

B.

Hawkins of Baywater is keeping house for Uncle Roger.

She is a very large woman.

Uncle Roger says he has to spend too much time walking round her but otherwise she is an excellent housekeeper.

It is reported that the school is haunted.

A mysterious light was seen there at two o'clock one night recently.

The story girl and I exchange knowing smiles behind the other's backs.

Dan and Felicity had a fight last Tuesday.

Not with fists but with tongues.

Dan came off best as usual.

Felicity laughs sarcastically.

Mr.

Newton Craig of Markdale returned home recently.

After a somewhat prolonged visit in foreign parts,

We are glad to welcome Mr.

Craig back to our midst.

Billy Robinson was hurt last week.

A cow kicked him.

I suppose it is wicked of us to feel glad.

But we all do feel glad because of the way he cheated us with the magic seed last summer.

On April 1st,

Uncle Roger sent Mr.

Peter Craig to the manse to borrow the biography of Adam's grandfather.

Mr.

Marwood told Peter he didn't think Adam had any grandfather and advised him to go home and look at the almanac.

Peter sourly.

Your Uncle Roger thought he was pretty smart.

Felicity severely.

Uncle Roger is smart.

It was so easy to fool you.

A pair of bluebirds have built a nest in a hole in the sides of the well just under the ferns.

We can see the eggs when we look down.

They are so cunning.

Felix sat down on a tack one day in May.

Felix thinks house cleaning is great foolishness.

Adds.

Lost,

Stolen or strayed.

A heart.

Finder will be rewarded by returning same to Cyrus E.

Brisk,

Desk 7,

Carlisle School.

Lost or stolen.

A piece of brown hair.

About three inches long and one inch thick.

Finder will kindly return to Miss Cecily King,

Desk 15,

Carlisle School.

Cecily.

Cyrus keeps my hair in his Bible for a bookmark,

So Flossie tells me.

He says he means to keep it always for a remembrance,

Though he has given up hope.

Dan.

I'll steal it out of his Bible in Sunday School.

Cecily,

Blushing.

Oh,

Let him keep it if it is any comfort to him.

Besides,

It isn't right to steal.

Dan.

He stole it.

Cecily.

But Mr Marwood says two wrongs never make a right.

Household Department.

Aunt Olivia's wedding cake was said to be the best one of its kind ever tasted in Carlisle.

Me and Mother made it.

Anxious Inquirer.

It is not advisable to curl your hair with mucilage if you can get anything else.

Quince juice is better.

Cecily.

Bitterly.

I suppose I'll never hear the last of that mucilage.

Dan.

Ask her who used tooth powder to raise biscuits.

We had rhubarb pies for the first time this spring last week.

They were fine,

But hard on the cream.

Felicity King.

Etiquette Department.

Patient Sufferer.

What will I do when a young man steals a lock of my hair?

Answer.

Grow some more.

No,

F L X.

A little caterpillar is not called a kitten pillar.

Felix,

Enraged.

I never asked that.

Dan just makes that etiquette column up from beginning to end.

Felicity.

I don't see what that kind of a question has to do with etiquette anyhow.

Yes,

P T R.

It is quite proper to treat a lady friend to ice cream twice,

If you can afford it.

No,

F L C T Y.

It is not ladylike to chew tobacco.

Better stick to spruce gum.

Dan King.

Fashion notes.

Frilled muslin aprons will be much worn this summer.

It is no longer fashionable to trim them with knitted lace.

One pocket is considered smart.

Clamshells are fashionable keepsakes.

You write your name and the date inside one and your friend writes hers in the other and you exchange.

Cecily King.

Funny paragraphs.

Mr Perkins.

Peter.

Name the large islands of the world.

Peter.

The island.

The British Isles.

And Australia.

Peter,

Defiantly.

Well,

Mr Perkins said he guessed I was right,

So you needn't laugh.

This is a true joke and really happened.

It's about Mr Samuel Clask again.

He was once leading a prayer meeting and he looked through the window and saw the constable driving up and guessed he was after him because he was always in debt.

So,

In a great hurry,

He called on brother Casey to lead in prayer and while brother Casey was praying with his eyes shut and everybody else had their heads bound,

Mr Clask got out of the window and got away before the constable got in because he didn't like to come in till the prayer was finished.

Uncle Roger says it was a smart trick on Mr Clask's part,

But I don't think there was much religion about it.

Felix King.

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Angela StokesLondon, UK

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© 2026 Angela Stokes. All rights reserved. All copyright in this work remains with the original creator. No part of this material may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.

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