Held fast for England - G a Henty - Books - Createspace Independent Publishing Platf - 9781523339433 - January 13, 2016
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Held fast for England

G a Henty

Held fast for England

Had Mr. Tulloch, the headmaster and proprietor of a large school at Putney, been asked which was the most troublesome boy in his school, he would probably have replied, without hesitation, "Bob Repton." But, being a just and fair-minded man, he would have hastened to qualify this remark, by adding: "Most troublesome, but by no means the worst boy. You must understand that. He is always in scrapes, always in mischief. In all my experience I have never before come across a boy who had such an aptitude for getting into trouble; but I have nothing else to say against him. He is straightforward and manly. I have never known him to tell a lie, to screen himself. He is an example to many others in that way. I like the boy, in spite of the endless trouble he gives, and yet there is scarcely a day passes that I am not obliged to cane him; and even that does him no good, as far as I can see, for he seems to forget it, five minutes after it is over. I wonder, sometimes, if he has really got hardened, and doesn't feel it. "He is sharp, and does his lessons well. I have no difficulty with him, on that score; but he is a perfect imp of mischief." With such characteristics, it need hardly be said that Bob Repton was one of the most popular boys at Tulloch's school. School life was, in those days--for it was in August, 1778, that Bob was at Tulloch's--a very different thing to what it is, at present. Learning was thrashed into boys. It was supposed that it could only be instilled in this manner; and although some masters were, of course, more tyrannical and brutal than others, the cane was everywhere in use, and that frequently. Lads, then, had far less liberty and fewer sports than at present; but as boys' spirits cannot be altogether suppressed, even by the use of the cane, they found vent in other ways, and there was much more mischief, and more breaking out of bounds, than now take place. Boys were less trusted, and more harshly treated; in consequence of which there was a kind of warfare between the masters and the boys, in which the masters, in spite of their canes, did not always get the best of it.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released January 13, 2016
ISBN13 9781523339433
Publishers Createspace Independent Publishing Platf
Pages 340
Dimensions 152 × 229 × 18 mm   ·   453 g
Language English  

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