Anne and Maria are very angry with Mrs. Linda and refuse to come out for dinner in their room. After Matthew persuaded them, he went to apologize with Maria and was forgiven by Mrs. Linda.
Anne and Mrs Linda went to church together. Because picking flowers and decorating hats on the way was delayed, Mrs. Linda left first. When she arrived, Anne's strange clothes caught her attention. Anne answered the teacher's question, but the teacher ignored her question. After returning home, Anne told Maria that Maria criticized her for not paying attention to her clothes in class (only Anne's clothes were not lantern sleeves in class), but she rang with Anne in the priest's prayer.
Maria took Anne to Mrs. Barry's house and met her daughter Diana. Anne and Diana hit it off at first sight and vowed to be good friends forever.
Chapter 13: Annie and Diana played together, lost track of time and came back late. After criticizing her, Maria allowed her to go for an outing.
Anne likes the amethyst pin given to her by Maria's mother. On the day of the outing, Maria found that the pin was lost and thought it had something to do with Anne, but Anne only admitted that she had worn it. Maria was sure it was Anne and warned her not to go out until she told her. Anne had to lie, but Maria, who was furious, refused to let her go. Then Maria found the pin, realized that she had wronged Annie, and quickly "let her go" and let her go for an outing as she wished.
Chapter 15: School begins, and Gielbart, the troublemaker, is back. In class, he tried to attract Annie's attention. Without success, he called her "carrot" in a low voice, hitting Annie where it hurts. Anne was furious and hit him on the head with a slate. Teacher Philip didn't punish Gielbart for admitting his mistake, because he got good grades and the teacher liked him very much. On the contrary, he said Annie had a bad temper. The teacher told everyone to sit quietly, but the children all ran out to play. Anne came back late and came in with the boys. The teacher asked her to sit at the same table with Gielbart! Angry Anne decided not to go to school.
Chapter 16: Maria went out temporarily and told Anne Diana what to entertain when she came. They were very happy after Diana came. Annie invited her to drink strawberry juice. I didn't expect Maria to remember wrong. It's wine! Diana was drunk and Anne was busy drinking, so she survived. Mrs. Barry thinks that Anne deliberately got Diana drunk, forbade them to associate, and refused to listen to Anne's explanation. Annie is very sad.
In order to meet Diana, Anne decided to go to school. At school, Gielbart gave Annie an apple. She ignored it, studied hard and vowed to compete with him. However, Gielbart was very frank and praised Anne, which made her feel very disappointed. Diana's sister Minnie has laryngitis and her parents are not at home. She went to ask Annie for help. Anne solved the problem slowly. Mrs Barry thanked her and allowed Diana to be her friend.
Diana's birthday is coming, and Maria agrees that Anne will go to the concert. Annie was very excited, but she hated Gielbart's recitation and found his gestures disgusting.
Chapter 19: After the birthday party, Anne stayed at Diana's house, and they rushed into the guest room to compete who would jump on the bed first. Unexpectedly, she knocked down Aunt Josephine. Aunt Josephine was very angry and thought Diana was ill-bred and didn't plan to pay for her music lessons for another semester. Anne was very sad and took the initiative to admit her mistake. She touched her aunt with vivid words and got her forgiveness.
Chapter 20: Annie has been in the green room for a year, and this family can no longer live without her. Maria asked her to borrow a design from Mrs. Barry's house. She was afraid because she had to go through the Devil's Forest. Maria thought it was too interesting and forced her to go. Finally Anne flew back and said that she no longer dreamed.
Anne of the Green Gables (TV series translated as Beautiful Woman and cartoon translated as Anne with Red Hair) is a novel by Canadian woman writer Lucy Maud Montgomery. This story was first published in 1908, and its background is in Prince Edward Island, where Montgomery grew up as a child.