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・ These Foolish Things (disambiguation)
・ These Foolish Things (film)
・ These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)
・ These Four Walls
・ These Four Walls (Shawn Colvin album)
・ These Four Walls (We Were Promised Jetpacks album)
・ These Friends of Mine
・ These Friends of Mine (album)
・ These Girls
・ These Girls Are Missing
・ These Glamour Girls
・ These Green Mountains
・ These Guys Are from England and Who Gives a Shit
・ These Hands (EP)
・ These Hands of Mine
These Happy Golden Years
・ These Hard Times
・ These Hearts
・ These Here Are Crazy Times
・ These Hopeful Machines
・ These Humble Machines
・ These Immortal Souls
・ These Iron Bones
・ These Kids
・ These Kids Wear Crowns
・ These Lips Don't Know How to Say Goodbye
・ These Living Arms
・ These New Puritans
・ These Old Broads
・ These Old Charms


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These Happy Golden Years : ウィキペディア英語版
These Happy Golden Years

These Happy Golden Years is an autobiographical children's novel written by Laura Ingalls Wilder and published in 1943, the eight of nine books in her Little House series – although it originally ended the series.〔 The story is based on Laura's later adolescence near De Smet, South Dakota, featuring her short time as a teacher, beginning at age 15, and her courtship with Almanzo Wilder. It spans the time period from 1882 to 1885, when Laura and Almanzo marry.
''Golden Years'' was one runner-up for the Newbery Medal in 1944, as the previous four Little House books had been from 1938. In retrospect the five novels are called Newbery Honor Books.〔
==Plot summary==

As the story begins, Pa is taking Laura 12 miles from home in the dead of winter to her first teaching assignment at Brewster settlement. Laura, only 15 and a schoolgirl herself, is apprehensive as this is both the first time she has left home and the first school she has taught, but is determined to complete her assignment and earn $40 to help her sister Mary, who is at a college for the blind in Iowa.
The winter passes slowly. The weather is bitterly cold, though not so badly as the Hard Winter, and neither the claim shanty or the school house can be heated adequately. Some of the children Laura is teaching are older than Laura herself, and she has difficulty motivating them. With advice from Ma (a former schoolteacher herself), Laura is able to adapt and become more self-assured, and successfully completes the two-month assignment. Pa brings her the $40, and she gives it back to him to use for Mary's college education.
Though Laura believed she would not see Almanzo again after school ended, she happily accepts an invitation to go on a sleigh ride with him the next weekend, and so their relationship continues. Sleigh rides give way to buggy rides in the spring, and Laura impresses Almanzo with her willingness to help break his new and often temperamental horses.
Nellie's chatter and flirtatious behavior towards Almanzo annoys Laura, who flatly refuses to ride with Almanzo if he continues seeing Nellie. Shortly thereafter, Nellie moves back to New York after her family loses their homestead.
In between, Laura's Uncle Tom (Ma's brother) visits the family and tells of his failed venture with a covered wagon brigade seeking gold in the Black Hills, in which they built a stockade but were driven out of it by U.S. soldiers. Laura moves with seamstress Mrs. McKee to the McKees' claim when Mrs. McKee moves there to fulfill the residency requirements necessary to hold the claim. When Mary returns home for summer vacation, Mrs. McKee tells Laura she can go home.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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