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قراءة كتاب The Hill: A Romance of Friendship
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THE HILL
A ROMANCE OF FRIENDSHIP
HORACE ANNESLEY VACHELL
LONDON
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET
First Edition | April, 1905 |
Fortieth Impression | Jan., 1950 |
Minor typographical errors have been corrected without note. Greek text appears as originally printed, but with a mouse-hover transliteration, κραιπάλη.
To
GEORGE W. E. RUSSELL
I dedicate this Romance of Friendship to you with the sincerest pleasure and affection. You were the first to suggest that I should write a book about contemporary life at Harrow; you gave me the principal idea; you have furnished me with notes innumerable; you have revised every page of the manuscript; and you are a peculiarly keen Harrovian.
In making this public declaration of my obligations to you, I take the opportunity of stating that the characters in "The Hill," whether masters or boys, are not portraits, although they may be called, truthfully enough, composite photographs; and that the episodes of Drinking and Gambling are founded on isolated incidents, not on habitual practices. Moreover, in attempting to reproduce the curious admixture of "strenuousness and sentiment"—your own phrase—which animates so vitally Harrow life, I have been obliged to select the less common types of Harrovian. Only the elect are capable of such friendship as John Verney entertained for Henry Desmond; and few boys, happily, are possessed of such powers as Scaife is shown to exercise. But that there are such boys as Verney and Scaife, nobody knows better than yourself.
Beechwood,
February 22, 1905
CONTENTS
CHAP. | PAGE | |
I. | The Manor | 1 |
II. | Cæsar | 19 |
III. | Kraipale | 35 |
IV. | Torpids | 58 |
V. | Fellowship | 70 |
VI. | A Revelation | 92 |
VII. | Reform | 107 |
VIII. | Verney Boscobel | 123 |
IX. | Black Spots | 140 |
X. | Decapitation | 158 |
XI. | Self-questioning | 173 |
XII. | "Lord's" | 189 |
XIII. | "If I Perish, I Perish" | 211 |
XIV. | Good Night | 230 |
CHAPTER I
The Manor
Life in front of me—home behind,
I felt like a waif before the wind
Tossed on an ocean of shock and change.
When your heart will thrill
At the thought of the Hill,
And the day that you came so strange and shy."
The train slid slowly out of Harrow station.
Five minutes before, a man and a boy had been walking up and down the long platform. The boy wondered why the man, his uncle, was so strangely silent. Then, suddenly, the elder John Verney had placed his hands upon the shoulders of the younger John, looking down into eyes as grey and as steady as his own.
"You'll find plenty of fellows abusing Harrow," he said quietly; "but take it from me, that the fault lies not in Harrow, but in them. Such boys, as a rule, do not come out of the top drawer. Don't look so solemn. You're about to take a header into a big river. In it are rocks and rapids; but you know how to swim, and after the first plunge you'll enjoy it, as I did, amazingly."
"Ra—ther," said John.
In the New Forest, where John had spent most of his life at his uncle's place of Verney Boscobel, this uncle, his dead father's only brother, was worshipped as a hero. Indeed he filled so large a space in the boy's imagination, that others were cramped for room. John Verney in India, in Burmah, in Africa (he took continents in his stride), moved colossal. And when uncle and nephew met, behold, the great traveller stood not much taller than John himself! That first moment, the instant shattering of a