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Winning His W": A Story of Freshman Year at College"

Chapter 21 THE EXAMINATION

Word Count: 2332    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

g hours while he was at home, and as the vacation drew near its close he found himself computing the hours and even

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Winning His W": A Story of Freshman Year at College"
Winning His W": A Story of Freshman Year at College"
“A school has been very correctly termed a little world of itself. Within it the temptations and struggles and triumphs are as real as those in the larger world outside. They differ in form, not in character, and become for many a man the foundation upon which later success or failure has been built. It is perhaps wise for me to explain that the boys whose lives in the Weston school have been outlined in this book are "real" boys, and that every fact recorded actually occurred much 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 serve the purpose of a warning word and teach the younger readers what things are to be avoided and how they are to be overcome, the author will certainly feel well repaid for his labor. Unfolding life is ever a marvelous sight, and the interest with which we follow those who are trending now the paths once familiar to us never fails those still young in heart while old in years. The recently developed interest in the work and lives of the younger people, is one of the marvels of this closing century. Greater than any of the discoveries of science, nobler than any of the great movements of the times is that renewed interest in the possibilities of the young life all about us, undeveloped it is true, but filled with the promise of power. So many times our eyes are opened when it is too late to behold the vision. We may preach, and warn, and urge, and exhort, and scold, but nothing will take the place of actual experience. It is natural for each young heart to wish to learn and test life for itself. However, I am not without hope, that the friendship and sympathy for Ward Hill and his friends may not be entirely without their unspoken lessons, and that before my readers there may arise for each one the vision of the man who is yet to be.”
1 Chapter 1 THE OPENING TERM2 Chapter 2 PETER JOHN'S ARRIVAL3 Chapter 3 NEW FRIENDS AND NEW EXPERIENCES4 Chapter 4 A CLOUD OF WITNESSES5 Chapter 5 UNSOUGHT ATTENTIONS6 Chapter 6 A RACE IN THE DARKNESS7 Chapter 7 SPLINTER'S QUESTIONS8 Chapter 8 THE PARADE9 Chapter 9 THE WALK WITH MOTT10 Chapter 10 A VISITOR11 Chapter 11 THE PERPETUAL PROBLEM12 Chapter 12 THE MEET13 Chapter 13 WAGNER'S ADVICE14 Chapter 14 THE ADVICE FOLLOWED15 Chapter 15 A REVERSED DECISION16 Chapter 16 TELEGRAMS17 Chapter 17 PETER JOHN'S DOWNFALL18 Chapter 18 AN ALARMING REPORT19 Chapter 19 A RARE INTERVIEW20 Chapter 20 A CRISIS21 Chapter 21 THE EXAMINATION22 Chapter 22 A FRESH EXCITEMENT23 Chapter 23 THE RUSH TO COVENTRY CENTER24 Chapter 24 THE MYSTERY OF THE CANES25 Chapter 25 ON THE TRAIL26 Chapter 26 ST. PATRICK'S DAY27 Chapter 27 CONCLUSION