Uppingham by the Sea - a Narrative of the Year at Borth by John Huntley Skrine
page 61 of 95 (64%)
page 61 of 95 (64%)
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"THE TEMPEST."
_They said_, "_and why should this thing be_? _What danger lowers by land or sea_? _They ring the tune of Enderby_." JEAN INGELOW. "England, when she goes to war," said a Prime Minister not long ago, "has not to consider whether she will be able to fight a second or a third campaign." We remembered that we were Englishmen; and on January 19th, 1877, went down again with a good courage for our third campaign on the Welsh coast. A furious gale was howling that day among the hills of Cardiganshire, recalling to the memory of some of us the stormy Ides of March, when the pioneers of our little army first set foot in Borth. _Omina principiis inesse solent_. This gale was sounding the key-note of the term's adventures. The cause of our return to Borth for a third term is briefly told. We had gone home at Christmas, uncertain whether we should meet again there or at Uppingham. Dr. Acland, of Oxford, to whose active sympathy with the school in its perplexities we must at least gratefully allude, had undertaken on our behalf to inspect the sanitary condition of Uppingham, and give us his judgment on the expediency of reassembling there. His judgment was submitted to the attention of the Trustees at their meeting, on December 22nd, when it was resolved that, "In the face of Dr. Acland's report, the Trustees deeply regret they cannot at present recall the school to Uppingham." So we went back to the sea. Our numbers this term just missed by one the normal total of three |
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