indeed, no place could be more 
admirably fitted for a first-rate gentleman's school. 
The house was a large Elizabethan building, with a number of 
good-sized airy rooms, and passages, and staircases. The hall served, 
for what it was originally intended, as a dining-hall. 
The Doctor had built a wing, in which was situated our school-room, 
and a lofty, well-ventilated room it was. We had several lecture-rooms 
besides; and then the large old courtyard served as a capital playground 
in wet weather, as well as a racket-court; and in one corner of it we had 
our gymnasium, which was one of the many capital things belonging to 
the school. 
A fine wide glade in the park, which had been thoroughly drained,
served us as a magnificent cricket-ground; and there was, not far from 
it, a good-sized pond, through which ran a stream of clear water, where 
we bathed in the summer. It was kept clean and free from weeds, and 
even in the deepest parts we could, on a sunny day, see the bright 
pebbles shining at the bottom. 
I need not now give a further description of the dear old place. We were 
most of us as fond of it as if it had been our father's property. I do not 
mean to say that it was a perfect paradise. I do not fancy such a place 
exists in the world; and if it did, I must own that schoolboys are not, as 
a rule, much like angels. Still the Doctor did his best to make it a happy 
place, and an abode fit for boys of refined minds and gentlemanly 
habits and ideas. It was generally our own faults if anything went 
wrong. 
When a new boy arrived, the Doctor took him into the school-room, 
and lecture-rooms, and dining-hall, and through the sleeping-rooms, 
and playground, and gardens; indeed, all round the place. 
"Now, my lad," he used to say, "you will remark that everything is well 
arranged, and clean, and neat. I trust to your honour to refrain from 
injuring anything in any way, and to do your best to keep the place in 
the good order in which you see it." 
On no occasion had he ever to speak again on the subject; for we all 
took a pride in the handsome, gentlemanly appearance of the house and 
grounds, and effectually prevented any mischievously inclined boy 
from injuring them. All the other arrangements of the establishment 
were equally good with those I have described. 
The Doctor's wife was a first-rate person; so kind, and gentle, and 
considerate. We were all very fond of her; and so we were of the good 
matron, Mrs Smith, who kept all the people under her in such excellent 
order. 
The ushers, too, were all very good in their way, for the Doctor seldom 
made a mistake in selecting them. They were good scholars and 
gentlemen, and generally entered with zest into most of our sports and
games. But it is time that I should return to that memorable 
half-holiday. 
The Doctor had not long before erected a gymnasium, which was at this 
time all the rage among us. We never grew tired of practising on it. The 
moment we came out of the dining-hall the greater number of us 
assembled round it. 
Some swarmed up the poles; others the ropes which hung from the bars 
above; several performed various exercises on the parallel bars; while 
four seized the ropes which hung from a long perpendicular pole, and 
were soon seen, with giant strides, rotating round it, till they scarcely 
touched the ground with their feet. 
Numbers were likewise hanging on to the horizontal bar; sitting on it, 
swinging by it, circling it, kicking it, hanging to it by the legs or the 
feet, performing, indeed, more movements than I can well describe. 
There were also several wooden horses, or rather logs of wood on legs, 
on which the boys were mounting and dismounting, vaulting on to 
them, leaping along them or over them, kneeling on them, jumping off 
them, and, indeed, going through a variety of movements which might 
give them confidence on horseback. 
Several swings were in full action. Very few boys were sitting on them; 
most of them were standing upright; some were holding on with two 
hands, others only with one; some standing on one foot, and holding on 
by one rope; others leaning with perfect composure against one rope; 
but all were moving rapidly in one way or another; indeed, the effect to 
a person unaccustomed to the scene must have been very curious. 
One of the most active fellows we had at that time was Richard 
Blackall. He was not quite the cock of the school, though, for his size, 
he was very strong; but at all gymnastic feats    
    
		
	
	
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