Mr. Crewe's Career — Volume 1 by Winston Churchill
page 7 of 200 (03%)
page 7 of 200 (03%)
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catholicity. Hilary Vane was a trustee, and journeyed more than once to
talk the matter over with the president, who had been his classmate there. "I love that boy, Hilary," the president had said at length, when pressed for a frank opinion,--"there isn't a soul in the place, I believe, that doesn't,--undergraduates and faculty,--but he has given me more anxious thought than any scholar I have ever had." "Trouble," corrected Mr. Vane, sententiously. "Well, yes, trouble," answered the president, smiling, "but upon my soul, I think it is all animal spirits." "A euphemism for the devil," said Hilary, grimly; "he is the animal part of us, I have been brought up to believe." The president was a wise man, and took another tack. "He has a really remarkable mind, when he chooses to use it. Every once in a while he takes your breath away--but he has to become interested. A few weeks ago Hays came to me direct from his lecture room to tell me about a discussion of Austen's in constitutional law. Hays, you know, is not easily enthused, but he declares your son has as fine a legal brain as he has come across in his experience. But since then, I am bound to admit," added the president, sadly, "Austen seems not to have looked at a lesson." "'Unstable as water, thou shalt not excel,'" replied Hilary. |
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