Only an Irish Boy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 199 pages of information about Only an Irish Boy.

Only an Irish Boy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 199 pages of information about Only an Irish Boy.

“By whom?” demanded the teacher, sharply.

Godfrey would like to have said, “By you,” but he saw the teacher’s keen eye fixed upon him, and he didn’t dare to do it.  He hesitated.

“By whom?” repeated Mr. Stone.

“By Andrew Burke.”

“That is no good reason for your leaving school, or would not be, if it were true, but it is not.  He has only meted out to you the same punishment you undertook to inflict upon a smaller boy.  Take your seat.”

“My father will take me away from school,” said Godfrey, angrily.

“We shall none of us mourn for your absence.  Take your seat.”

This last remark of the teacher still further incensed Godfrey, and led him temporarily to forget himself.  Though he had been bidden to take his seat, he resolved to leave the schoolroom, and made a rush for the door.  But Mr. Stone was there before him.  He seized Godfrey by the collar and dragged him, shaking him as he proceeded, to his seat, on which he placed him with some emphasis.

“That is the way I treat rebels,” he said.  “You forget yourself, Preston.  The next time you make up your mind to resist my commands, count in advance on a much severer lesson.”

Godfrey was pale with passion, and his hands twitched convulsively.  He only wished he had Mr. Stone in his power for five minutes.  He would treat him worse than he did Alfred Parker.  But a boy in a passion is not a very pleasant spectacle.  It is enough to say that Godfrey was compelled to stay in school for the remainder of the forenoon.  As soon as he could get away, he ran home, determined to enlist his mother in his cause.

CHAPTER XIV MR. STONE IS CALLED TO ACCOUNT

At home Godfrey gave a highly colored narrative of the outrageous manner in which he had been abused, for so he chose to represent it.  He gave this account to his mother, for his father was not at home.  Indeed, he was absent for a day or two in a distant city.

Mrs. Preston was indignant.

“It is an outrage, Godfrey,” she said, compressing her thin lips.  “How did Mr. Stone dare to treat you in this way?”

“I was surprised, myself,” said Godfrey.

“Had he no more respect for your father’s prominent position?”

“It looks as if he didn’t.”

“He is evidently unfit to keep the school.  I shall try to persuade your father to have him turned away.”

“I wish he might be,” said Godfrey.  “It would teach him to treat me with proper respect.  Anybody would think that Irish boy was the son of the most important man in town.”

Both Godfrey and his mother appeared to take it for granted that a teacher should treat his pupils according to their social position.  This is certainly very far from proper, as all my youthful readers will, I hope, agree.

“I don’t want to go back to school this afternoon, mother,” said Godfrey.

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Only an Irish Boy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.