The Jester of St. Timothy's by Arthur Stanwood Pier
page 12 of 158 (07%)
page 12 of 158 (07%)
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vacation, in which he could prosecute his law studies and earn
additional money. âSounds good,â said Mr. Upton. âOf course Iâm very glad,â said Mrs. Upton. âBut how we shall miss you boys! Iâve got used to having Irving away,âbut to be without Lawrence, tooââ âYes,â said her husband with a twinkle in his eyes, âwe certainly shall miss Lawrenceâespecially in haying time. Iâm glad you didnât get this news till most of the hay crop was in. No more farming for you this year, Lawrence.â âWhy, but thereâs all the south meadow uncutââ âIâll handle that. As long as there was so much doubt as to whether youâd be able to go to college or not, I felt that you might be making yourself useful first of all and studying only in the odd moments. Now itâs different; youâve got to settle down to hard study and nothing else. And Irving had better devote himself entirely to you, and leave Mr. Beasley to struggle along without any college help.â âI donât believe heâll miss me very much,â Irving admitted. âAnd youâre right, Uncle Bob; I can accomplish a great deal more working with Lawrence this next month. I ought to be able to get him entered in regular standing.â âIf I can do that,â cried Lawrence, âperhaps Iâll be able to earn my way as Irv didâtutoring and so onâand not have to call on you or him for any |
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