From Farm Boy to Senator
robably for economical reasons. Judge Webster was a poor man, and though the charges at Exeter at that time were very moderate they were a heavy draft
arges, too, were wonderfully low. For board and instruction he only charged one dollar per week, which leads us to infer either that provisi
the boy came, "do you wis
r, if you a
at you should do so. I intend to place
tation as a teacher, and the p
ot announced the plan
re ascending a hill slowly through deep snows the Judge, who had for some time been silent, said, "Dan, I may as well tell you what plan
ith his straitened means to carry through such a plan as that, and his heart was full. As he h
ung readers-have received a similar announcement
restraint than when he was a pupil at Exeter. Indeed I shall not attempt to conceal the fact that occasionally Dan's love
however, by a compliment to his natural abili
irgil, a long lesson, as many boys would think. Daniel did
ecitation came, Dan recited his l
Dr. Wood, preparin
e a few more lines
have read twenty-five or thirty lines more. But the
n your industry," said his teach
r." "Very remarkable," said the ministe
s, which he appeared to know quite
without a feeling of relief, for it is rather tedious to l
an, "I am not
you read?" asked D
like," said Dan, his eyes twinkling w
I don't think I shall have time to hear them now. Y
. My boy reader may like to read an anecdote of this time, which I will giv
ent and got some horses, and put a side-saddle on one, and we set off. We did not get home till it was pretty late, and I soon went to bed. When my father came home he asked my mother where I was, and what I had been about. She told him. The next morning when I awoke I saw all the clothes I had brought from Dr. Wood's tied up in a small bundle again. When I
or the boy to have remained at his task, and so saved his father the trouble of finishing it. However, it is not my intention to present the b
s set to mowing. He di
atter, Dan?" a
answered Dan, an answer which wi
remedy the difficulty, but when it was
hang it to suit yourself
branch of a tree, and turning to his f
turning home, questioned the boys as to
n doing, Ezekiel?"
r," was the
el, what have
ng Zek
inction he may have had in his mind some faint foreshadowing. This indulgence was increased by Dan's early delicacy of constitution. At any rate, Daniel had in his father his best friend,
translation of Don Quixote, and this seems to have had a powerful fascination for the boy. "I began to read it," he says in his autobiography, "and it is li
supply of preparatory knowledge than now. In the ancient languages he had read the first six books of Virgil's ?neid, Cicero's four Orations against Catiline, a little Greek grammar, and the four Evangelists of the Greek Testament. In mathematics he had some knowledge of arithmetic, but knew nothing of algebra o
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