Ishmael Worth could very well afford to practice forbearance towards

these ill-conditioned lads. He was no longer the poor, sickly, and

self-doubting child he had been but a year previous. Though still

delicate as to his physique, it was with an elegant, refined rather than

a feeble and sickly delicacy. He grew very much like his father, who was

one of the handsomest men of his day; but it was from his mother that he

derived his sweet voice and his beautiful peculiarity of smiling only

with his eyes. His school-life had, besides, taught him more than book

learning; it had taught him self-knowledge. He had been forced to

measure himself with others, and find out his relative moral and

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intellectual standing. His success at school, and the appreciation he

received from others, had endowed him with a self-respect and confidence

easily noticeable in the modest dignity and grace of his air and manner.

In these respects also his deportment formed a favorable contrast to the

shame-faced, half-sullen, and half-defiant behavior of the Burghes.

These boys were the only enemies Ishmael possessed in the school; his

sweetness of spirit had, on the contrary, made him many friends. He was

ever ready to do any kindness to anyone; to give up his own pleasure for

the convenience of others; to help forward a backward pupil, or to

enlighten a dull one. This goodness gained him grateful partisans among

the boys; but he had, also, disinterested ones among the girls.

Claudia and Beatrice were his self-constituted little lady-patronesses.

The Burghes did not dare to sneer at Ishmael's humble position in their

presence. For, upon the very first occasion that Alfred had ventured a

sarcasm at the expense of Ishmael in her hearing, Claudia had so shamed

him for insulting a youth to whose bravery he was indebted for his life,

that even Master Alfred had had the grace to blush, and ever afterward

had avoided exposing himself to a similar scorching.

In this little world of the schoolroom there was a little unconscious

drama beginning to be performed.

I said that Claudia and Beatrice had constituted themselves the little

lady-patronesses of the poor boy. But there was a difference in their

manner towards their protégé.

The dark-eyed, dark-haired, imperious young heiress patronized him in a

right royal manner, trotting him out, as it were, for the inspection of

her friends, and calling their attention to his merits--so surprising in

a boy of his station; very much, I say, as she would have exhibited the

accomplishments of her dog, Fido, so wonderful in a brute! very much,

ah! as duchesses patronize promising young poets.

This was at times so humiliating to Ishmael that his self-respect must

have suffered terribly, fatally, but for Beatrice.

The fair-haired, blue-eyed, and gentle Bee had a much finer, more

delicate, sensitive, and susceptible nature than her cousin; she

understood Ishmael better, and sympathized with him more than Claudia

could. She loved and respected him as an elder brother, and indeed more

than she did her elder brothers; for he was much superior to both in

physical, moral, and intellectual beauty. Bee felt all this so deeply

that she honored in Ishmael her ideal of what a boy ought to be, and

what she wished her brothers to become.




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