About This Book
The narrative portrays a crowded household where washing day amplifies a caretaker's habitual grumbling and leaves the children restless and eager to be useful. Bella repeatedly tries to help and recalls her mother's cheerful view that work can be taken in the right spirit, while younger siblings dream of small gardens. The children band together to plant a herb-bed and tiny flower and fruit plots, drawing quiet satisfaction from their labors, and their father, discovering the new beds by moonlight, is moved to prepare a surprise for the youngest. The tale emphasizes everyday kindness, cooperative effort, and the restorative pleasures of simple outdoor tasks.
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