This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1884 edition. Excerpt: ...stockings by their suspenders and flops them against the wash-bowl to see if there is any Christmas present of dynamite in them, kicks her shoes across the room and awaits the expected explosion. On finding all of her clothes free from nihilistic documents, including the pockets of her dress, which a ...
Read More
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1884 edition. Excerpt: ...stockings by their suspenders and flops them against the wash-bowl to see if there is any Christmas present of dynamite in them, kicks her shoes across the room and awaits the expected explosion. On finding all of her clothes free from nihilistic documents, including the pockets of her dress, which a nihilist couldn't find to 'save him, she puts on her clothes with a feeling of contentment that is only broken when she goes down to breakfast, expecting that the muskmelon contains a giant powder cartridge, the coffee has strychnine in it, and the rolls are loaded for bear. It must be a fearful life of anxiety to be a czarina, and we hope no American queen will ever sigh for a position which will make her hair turn gray in a single night. GENTLEMAN named Kutchin, living in Green Lake county, this State, has had several Indian boys at work for him the past summer on a farm, and they proved so valuable, and so willing to work, and so anxious to leave the roving life of the tribe and engage in civilized pursuits, that he has interceded with the government to educate the young Indians, and they are to be sent to college. This seems to us to be a fatal mistake. If they would send the young Indians to a district school, and teach them the English language, surrounded by the boys of farmers and mechanics, it would be well for the Indians; but to put them into a college will break them all up. The Indian who goes to a college will find it hard, after the life he has led, to adopt the ways of civilized college students, and become hazers, who practice cruelty on boys who are physically weak. The Indian boy who has never been on the war-path would be sick at heart at witnessing a hazing match, where a consumptive freshman is taken from his...
Read Less