any kind and that every 
member was required to keep straight himself, and help keep the others 
straight. He would agree to all this, would sign the constitution, and my 
father and the club would soon see that he meant all he said. I confess 
that I felt for him. What he said about keeping company with the 
'Bunkers'--I suppose we must drop that name now--was true. He could 
not be a good fellow with such as they are. Now it won't do any harm 
to try him, and he may be saved from the error of his ways. As it is, he 
has got a hard name, and people will shun him: and, being discouraged, 
he may plunge deeper into vice than ever. This is about all I have to 
say." 
Frank resumed the chair, and several of the members, perceiving the 
force of the president's reasoning, expressed themselves in favor of 
admitting Tim; when Charles Hardy rose and "plumed himself for a 
speech." 
"Mr. President: I confess my surprise at the direction this debate has
taken. There's a destiny that shapes our ends--" 
"A what?" asked Fred Harper, with a roguish smile. 
"I beg the member on the other side will not interrupt me," replied 
Charles, with offended dignity. "I quote the line as John Adams used it, 
in his celebrated speech, 'Sink or swim.'" 
"Who?" 
"John Adams." 
"I beg the member's pardon, but John Adams never made any such 
speech," answered Fred who, it must be confessed, was rather too fond 
of tantalizing the ambitious youth. 
"Really, Mr. President, I am surprised that the member should deny 
what we all know. Why, the piece is in our reading book." 
"Daniel Webster put the speech into the mouth of Adams," added Frank; 
"and the patriot is only supposed to have made it." 
"It amounts to the same thing," continued Charles, with a slight blush. 
"But your quotation was not correct," said Fred. 
"Perhaps the member will give me the correct reading of the passage." 
"With pleasure; the lines are from Shakspeare:-- 
'There's a Divinity that shapes our ends, Roughhew them as we will.' 
I fancy the lines will not suit the member now," continued Fred, as he 
cast a mischievous glance at the discomfited speech-maker. 
"Go on, if you please," said Frank to Charles. 
"As I was saying, Mr. President, 'There's a Divinity that shapes our 
ends'--" 
"You were not saying so," interposed Fred. 
"Order!" said the chairman. "Proceed." 
But Charles Hardy could not proceed. Undoubtedly, when he rose to 
speak, he had an idea in his head; but it had fled, and he could not at 
once recall it. In vain he scratched his head, in vain he thrust his hands 
into his pockets, as if in search of the lost idea; it would not come. 
"You were speaking of Tim Bunker," said Frank, suggestively. 
"I was; and I was about to say that--that--" 
Some of the boys could no longer suppress their mirth, and, in spite of 
the vigorous pounding which the chairman bestowed upon the innocent 
table, in his attempts to preserve order, they had their laugh out. But the 
pleasantry of the members, and a sense of the awkwardness of his 
position, roused Charles to a more vigorous effort, and as he was about
to speak of another topic, the lost idea came like a flood of sunshine. 
"'There's a Divinity that shapes our ends.' Tim Bunker has chosen the 
path he will tread, and does anybody suppose he will ever abandon it? 
He will certainly die in the State Prison or on the gallows--my father 
says so. We all know what his habits are, and it is as easy for an 
Ethiopian to change his _spots_--" 
"Skin," said Fred. 
"To change his skin, as for such a fellow to be like us. He will lie, 
swear,--" 
"The chair thinks the member's remarks are not strictly in order," 
interposed Frank, who was much pained to hear his friend use such 
violent language. 
He saw that Charles was smarting under the effects of the ridicule 
which his companions had cast upon him, and that, in his struggle to 
make a speech, and thus redeem himself from the obloquy of a failure, 
he had permitted his impulses to override his judgment. 
"I forbear, then," continued the speaker. "But I beg the club to consider 
the probable consequences of admitting such a fellow into the 
association. We have thus far enjoyed a good reputation, and we ought 
to be very careful how we tamper with our respectability." 
"Ahem!" said Fred. 
"Order!" 
"A good name is rather to be chosen than--than purple and fine linen." 
"Than what!" exclaimed Fred. 
"Great riches," added Frank, with a smile, and even he was forced to 
admit "that the member was singularly unfortunate in    
    
		
	
	
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