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Chapter 8. John Marston

Word Count: 2963    |    Released on: 18/11/2017

s father know. Non–University men sneer at rustication; they can't see any particular punishment in having to absent yourself from your studies for a term or two. But do the

prung under the parents' feet, and their eyes are opened to things they little dreamt of. This, it appears, is not the first offence. The college has been long-suffering, and has pardoned when it should have punished repeatedly. The lad who was thought to be doing so

emptation is strong. It is very unwise to ask too many questions. Home questions are, in some cases, unpardonable. A son can't tell a father, as one man can tell another, to m

at his being in debt. He wasn't much afraid of his father's anger. They two had always been too familiar to be much afraid of one another. He was

t the room into some order, but it was hopeless. Willia

ir; I'd better go for H

nd prepare my horses fur a journey. Ward, you may pack

k, especially William, who

en I see my lord - " here William paused abruptly, and, looki

rdly pleasing in consequence of a certain lowering of the eyebrow's which he indulged in every moment - as often, indeed, as he looked at any one - and also of a slight cyn

so drunk as you. I did all I could for you, more fool I, for things couldn't be worse than they are, an

all my confounded folly, and I shall write to your fat

om Ranford, you know. Yes, I think I'll say yes. William, you can take the horses

g to an end next year. I hope there'll be another Derby. She has cut homoeopathy and taken to vegetable practice. She has deuced near slaughtered her maid with an overdose of Li

the change in Lady Ascot's op

won't stand that. She has pretty much her own way with the old lady, I can tell you, and with every o

t looking very grave. He returned "Welter's salutation, and that gentleman sauntered out of the room after having eng

, "and only two days after our good resolution

N

capitally in the schools and in the world, who is now always either lolling about reading novels, or else flying off in the opposite extreme, and running, or ri

ton; it's all true as

ellow? Try to be captain of the University Eight or the Eleven; get a good degree; anything. Think of last Easter vacation, Charley. Well, then, 1 won't Be sure that pot-house work

ault of the men I'm with. That Easter vacation business was planned by Welter.

ormances. I entertain the strongest personal dislike for him. He leads yo

can

elation? Nonsense. Your br

sn't

owe hi

lose the run of Banford. I must be here. There's a girl there I care ab

ever told me of this," he said; and sh

did you g

at Charles Ravenshoe would have gone o

he last time I left Ranford I asked her - you know - and she laughed in my face, and said we were getting too old for that sort of nonse

arston. "Don't be a fool, Char

you, no; she's a dependa

her. Very likely she has got tired of you. By your own confession you have been making love to her for ten

m going f

Yours is a quiet, staid, wholesome house, not such a bear-garden as

is going down, and he wants you to row f

w after this business. Get a waterman; do, Mar

lows you were with last night, and to see what an effect three such gentlemen and schola

courtesy. He was sorry to hear Ravenshoe was going down - had hoped to have had him in the Eight at Easter; however, it couldn't be helped; hoped to get him at Henley; and so on. The others were very courteous too, and C

with them for a time. And before any man was warm - Iffley. Then across the broad mill-pool, and through the deep crooks, out into the broads, and past the withered beds of reeds which told of coming winter. Bridges, and a rushing lasher - Sandford. No rest here.

ll midnight to see the Eight come in, could not see them, but heard afar off the measured throb and rush of eig

ife. What a splendid stroke Musgrave gives you, so marked, and so long, and ye

ome of the second-rate ones. I have set my brains to learn steering, being a small weak man; but I

today. So he broke out into sudden and furious rebellion, much to Marston's amusement, who treasu

is, take him all in all, the most despicable little wretch I know! If you are very diligent you may raise yourself to Ms level! And, when you have got your precious first, you will find yourself utterly unfit for any trade or profession whatever (except the Church, w

d his hands and said, "hear! hear!

d my rustication, and keeping up appearances. I wish I was a billiard marker; I wish I was a jockey; I wish I was Alick Reed's Novice; I wi

ish she was a cabman?"

tly. "She ished she was a milkmaid, and

try another Easter vacation with Welter. Mrs. Sherrat will get you a suit of cast

as not brilliant in conversation; he did not dress well, though he was always neat; he was not a cricketer, a rower, or a rider; he never spoke at

ave exhausted the means of approach to good University society. First, He had been to Eton as a town boy, and had been popular th

bury, and Marston hoped that he would have done something; but no. Charles took up with riding, rowing, driving, &c. &c, not to mention the giving and receiving of parties, w

ht before he went down Marston came to his rooms, and tried to persuade him to go home, and not to "the training stables," as he irreverently called Banford; b

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Contents

Ravenshoe
Preface
18/11/2017
Ravenshoe
Chapter 1. An Account of the Family of Ravenshoe
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Chapter 2. Supplementary to the Foregoing
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Chapter 3. In which Our Hero's Troubles Begin
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Chapter 4. Father Mackworth
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Chapter 5. Ranford
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Chapter 6. The Warren Hastings
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Chapter 7. In which Charles and Lord Welter Distinguish Themselves at the University
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Chapter 8. John Marston
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Chapter 9. Adelaide
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Chapter 10. Lady Ascot's Little Nap
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Chapter 11
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Chapter 12
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Chapter 13. The Black Hare
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Chapter 14. Lord Saltire's Visit, and Some of His Opinions
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Chapter 15. Charles's "Liddell and Scott."
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Chapter 16. Marston's Arrival
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Chapter 17. In which There is Another Shipwreck
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Chapter 18. Marston's Disappointment
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Chapter 19. Ellen's Flight
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Chapter 20. Ranford Again
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Chapter 21. Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos
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Chapter 22. The Last Glimpse of Oxford
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Chapter 23 The Last Glimpse of the Old World
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Chapter 24. The First Glimpse of the New World
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Chapter 25
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Chapter 26. The Grand Crash
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Chapter 27 The Coup De Grace
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Chapter 28. Flight
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Chapter 29. Charles's Retreat Upon London
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Chapter 30. Mr. Sloane
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Chapter 31. Lieutenant Hornby
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Chapter 32. Some of the Humours of a London Mews
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Chapter 33 A Glimpse of Some Old Friends
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Chapter 34. In which Fresh Mischief is Brewed
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Chapter 35
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Chapter 36. The Derby
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Chapter 37. Lord Welter's Menage
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Chapter 38. The House Full of Ghosts
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Chapter 39 Charles's Explanation with Lord Welter
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Chapter 40. A Dinner Party Among Some Old Friends
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Chapter 41. Charles's Second Expedition to St. John's Wood
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Chapter 42. Ravenshoe Hall, During All this
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Chapter 43. A Meeting
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Chapter 44. Another Meeting
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Chapter 45. Half a Million
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Chapter 46. To Lunch with Lord Ascot
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Chapter 47. Lady Hainault's Blotting-book
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Chapter 48. In which Cuthbert Begins to See Things in a New Light
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Chapter 49
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Chapter 50. Shreds and Patches
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Chapter 51. In which Charles Comes to Life Again
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Chapter 52
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Chapter 53. Captain Archer Turns up
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Chapter 54. Charles Meets Hornby at Last
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Chapter 55. Archer's Proposal
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Chapter 56. Scutari
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Chapter 57. What Charles Did with His Last Eighteen Shillings
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Chapter 58. The North Side of Grosvenor Square
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Chapter 59. Lord Ascot's Crowning Act of Folly
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Chapter 60. The Bridge at Last
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Chapter 61. Saved
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Chapter 62. Mr. Jackson's Big Trout
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Chapter 63. In which Gus Cuts Flora's Doll's Corns
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Chapter 64. The Allied Armies Advance on Ravenshoe
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Chapter 65
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Chapter 66
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