Our Family Affairs, 1867-1896. E. F. Benson

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Our Family Affairs, 1867-1896 - E. F. Benson

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       E. F. Benson

      Our Family Affairs, 1867-1896

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066246709

       PORTRAITS

       OUR FAMILY AFFAIRS

       CHAPTER I WELLINGTON AND THE BEGINNING

       CHAPTER II LINCOLN AND EARLY EMOTIONS

       CHAPTER III LINCOLN AND DEMONIACAL POSSESSION

       CHAPTER IV THE NEW HOME AT TRURO

       CHAPTER V PRIVATE SCHOOL AND HOLIDAYS

       CHAPTER VI THE DUNCE’S PROGRESS

       CHAPTER VII THE WIDENING HORIZONS

       CHAPTER VIII LAMBETH AND ADDINGTON

       CHAPTER IX THE FALL OF THE FIRST LEAF

       CHAPTER X CAMBRIDGE

       CHAPTER XI THE CIRCLE IS BROKEN

       CHAPTER XII AN ARCHÆOLOGICAL EXCURSION

       CHAPTER XIII ATHENS AND DODO

       CHAPTER XIV ATHENS AND EGYPT

       INDEX

       Table of Contents

My Father, aet. 50 Frontispiece
PAGE
My Mother, aet. 20 19
Elizabeth Cooper: “Beth”, aet. 78 69
E. F. Benson, aet. 19 119
“His Grace” 169
“Her Grace” 219
E. F. Benson, aet. 22 269
E. F. Benson, aet. 26 287

       Table of Contents

       WELLINGTON AND THE BEGINNING

       Table of Contents

      MY father was headmaster of Wellington College, where and when I was born, but of him there, in spite of his extraordinarily forcible personality, I have no clear memory, though the first precise and definite recollection that I retain at all, heaving out of nothingness, was connected with him, for it certainly was he, who, standing by the table in the window of the dining-room with an open newspaper in his hand, told me never to forget this day on which the Franco-German war came to an end. Otherwise as regards him, somebody swept by in an academic cap and gown, a figure not at all awe-inspiring as he became to me very soon after, but simply a rather distinguished natural phenomenon to be regarded in the same light as rain or wall-paper or sunshine. Cudgel my memory as I may, I can evoke no other figure of him at Wellington, except as something shining and swift; an external object whirling along on an orbit as inconjecturable as those of the stars, and wholly uninteresting. He had a study on the left of the front door into the Master’s Lodge, where there was a big desk with a shiny circular cover. I know that I was taken in there to say good night to him, but the most remarkable thing there was the big desk with large handles, and perhaps a boy standing by it, mountainous in height and looking extremely polite and gentle. There was the same ceremony every evening: my father kissed me, put his hand on my head and said, “God bless you and make you a good boy always.” The most significant detail of that ritual was that my father’s face was rough, not smooth like the face of my mother and of Beth, and that there lingered round him or the room a smell of books and a smell of soap.

      A little later on than that there came a period when for half an hour before bedtime my two sisters and I (for the present the youngest) used to visit him in that same study while he drew entrancing pictures for us, each in turn. One of these I found only the other day: it represents a hill crowned with a castle and a church, in front of which is a small knight waving his sword in the direction of a terrifying dragon, horned and tailed, who is flying across the sky. Below in minute capitals runs a rhyming legend. Or I went to the

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