Ward Hill the Senior
ggles and triumphs are as real as those in the larger world outside. They differ in form, not in cha
ch as it has been described. If the results of the struggles and successes shall prove to be a stimulus to other boys who may be facing similar problems, and if the failures shall se
hich we follow those who are trending now the paths once familiar
y. Greater than any of the discoveries of science, nobler than any of the great movements of the times is that renewed in
h, and warn, and urge, and exhort, and scold, but nothing will take the place of actual
nd his friends may not be entirely without their unspoken lessons, and that befo
as well as the measure of his sowing, determines the character and the abundance of the harvest he will reap. We do well, t
has followed the courses of these boys, may in a degree, at least, be shared by his readers, and
beth,
OMLINSON.