Frank Fairlegh, by Frank E. 
Smedley 
 
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Title: Frank Fairlegh Scenes From The Life Of A Private Pupil 
Author: Frank E. Smedley 
Illustrator: George Cruikshank 
Release Date: December 10, 2006 [EBook #20075] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FRANK 
FAIRLEGH *** 
 
Produced by David Widger 
 
FRANK FAIRLEGH 
SCENES FROM THE LIFE OF A PRIVATE PUPIL
BY 
FRANK E. SMEDLEY 
"How now! good lack! what present have we here? A Book that goes in 
peril of the press; But now it's past those pikes, and doth appear To 
keep the lookers-on from heaviness. What stuff contains it?" 
Davies of Hereford 
WITH TWENTY-EIGHT ILLUSTRATIONS BY GEORGE 
CRUIKSHANK 
A NEW EDITION 
METHUEN & CO. LONDON 
1904 
THIS Issue is founded on the First Edition, published by A. Hall, 
Virtue, & Co., in the year 1850. 
 
I. All Right! Off We Go! 1 
II. Loss and Gain 12 
III. Cold-water Cure for the Heartache 21 
IV. Wherein is Commenced the Adventure of the Macintosh and Other 
Matters 28 
V. Mad Bess 39 
VI. Lawless Gets Thoroughly Pot Oot 46 
VII. The Board of Green Cloth 59 
VIII. Good Resolutions 71
IX. A Denouement 81 
X. The Boating Party 93 
XI. Breakers Ahead! 100 
XII. Death and Change 106 
XIII. Catching a Shrimp 114 
XIV. The Ball 122 
XV. Ringing the Curfew 129 
XVI. The Roman Father 136 
XVII. The Invisible Girl 145 
XVIII. The Game in Barstone Park 150 
XIX. Turning the Tables 155 
XX. Alma Mater 160 
XXI. The Wine Party 163 
XXII. Taming a Shrew 173 
XXIII. What Harry and I Found When We Lost Our Way 182 
XXIV. How Oaklands Broke His Horsewhip 190 
XXV. The Challenge 198 
XXVI. Coming Events Cast Their Shadows Before 205 
XXVII. The Duel 212 
XXVIII. The Substance of the Shadow 220
XXIX. The Struggle in Chesterton Meadow 229 
XXX. Mr. Frampton's Introduction to a Tiger 234 
XXXI. How I Rise a Degree, and Mr. Frampton Gets Elevated in More 
Ways Than One 242 
XXXII. Catching Sight of an Old Flame 250 
XXXIII. Woman's a Riddle 257 
XXXIV. The Riddle Baffles Me! 264 
XXXV. A Mysterious Letter 272 
XXXVI. The Riddle Solved 280 
XXXVII. The Forlorn Hope 288 
XXXVIII. Facing the Enemy 296 
XXXIX. The Council of War 304 
XL. Lawless's Matinée Musicale 313 
XLI. How Lawless Became a Lady's Man 322 
XLII. The Meet at Eversley Gorse 331 
XLIII. A Charade--Not All Acting 340 
XLIV. Confessions 350 
XLV. Helping a Lame Dog Over a Stile 360 
XLVI. Tears and Smiles 369 
XLVII. A Cure for the Heartache 378 
XLVHI. Paying Off Old Scores 389
XLIX. Mr. Frampton Makes a Discovery 399 
L. A Ray of Sunshine 408 
LI. Freddy Coleman Falls into Difficulties 417 
LII. Lawless Astonishes Mr. Coleman 425 
LIII. A Comedy of Errors 432 
LIV. Mr. Vernor Meets His Match 440 
LV. The Pursuit 447 
LVI. Retribution 454 
LVII. Woo'd and Married 463 
 
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 
Frank Fairlegh Caught in the Trap 27 
Lawless Ornamenting Frank's Writing-desk 29 
Mad Bess 44 
Lawless Finds his Level 56 
The Doctor Makes a Discovery 79 
The Doctor Expels a Pupil 90 
Frank Rescues Coleman 104 
The Fall op the Candelabrum 124 
Freddy Coleman mystifies the Beadle 133
Lawless Eloping with the Fire-engine 135 
The Wine Party 167 
The Roused Lion 190 
The Results ok giving Satisfaction 216 
Fairlegh to the Rescue 231 
Hurra! Hurra! Room for the Governor 246 
The Shy Young Gentleman Favours the Company with a Song 249 
A Mysterious Bonnet 253 
An Unexpected Reverse 266 
The Discovery 281 
The Lover's Leap 338 
A Charade--Not all Acting 345 
A New Cure for the Heartache 382 
A Striking Position 398 
The Reconciliation 418 
Mammon Worship 430 
A Messenger of Evil 447 
The Retribution 457 
The Rescue 459
FRANK FAIRLEGH 
OR 
SCENES FROM THE LIFE OF A PRIVATE PUPIL 
CHAPTER I 
-- ALL RIGHT! OFF WE GO! 
~1~~ 
"Yet here... you are stayed for ... There; my blessing with you, And 
these few precepts in thy memory See thou character-----" 
"Home-keeping youth have ever homely wits. I rather would entreat 
thy company To see the wonders of the world abroad, Than living dully, 
sluggardis'd at home, Wear out thy youth with shapeless idleness." 
"Where unbruised youth, with unstuff'd brain, Doth couch his limbs, 
there golden sleep doth reign." Shakspeare 
"NEVER forget, under any circumstances, to think and act like a 
gentleman, and don't exceed your allowance," said my father. 
"Mind you read your Bible, and remember    
    
		
	
	
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