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My Steady Pupil


“Now, Mr. Baker, let us understand each other at once,” Lord Hunsdon had said, leaning back in his official arm-chair, and tapping the massive signet-ring on his fat finger with the official paper-cutter, “I have the great pleasure, as I have said, of intrusting to you the task of my nephew’s education. All I have heard of you and what little I have seen of you induce me to regard you as an excellent travelling tutor. It only remains for me to state my views, as briefly as I can,”—here a glance at the official clock,— “for I have to receive a deputation immediately. Cecil Manvers has a fortune of his own—his mother’s money—and will in all probability succeed me in the title and property. I don’t want the boy to turn out a bookworm, a milksop, or a scamp. Make him a well-informed, honorable English gentleman, with enough knowledge of the world to steer clear of its worst perils, and I shall be more than satisfied. And nothing could conduce better to this than two years on the Continent in such good hands as yours, Mr. Baker. I shall see you again, of course, before you leave England, but just now”—another glance at the clock—“my time is positively not my own.”

And I took the Under-Secretary’s hint, and retired, almost tumbling over the excited deputation as I made my way downstairs. Next week Cecil Manvers and I went abroad.

Our first year of continental travel passed off pleasantly enough. I found my pupil not merely intelligent and quick to learn, but bright, frank, and unassuming, and singularly docile for so spirited a lad. The duties of what is… Read More