How To Do It

Edward Everett Hale
끢How To Do It

The Project Gutenberg EBook of How To Do It, by Edward Everett Hale #2 in our series by Edward Everett Hale
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Title: How To Do It
Author: Edward Everett Hale
Release Date: September, 2005 [EBook #8904] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on August 22, 2003]
Edition: 10
Language: English
Character set encoding: UTF-8
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???How To Do It.
By
Edward Everett Hale.

Contents.

Chapter I.
Introductory.--How We Met
Chapter II.
How To Talk
Chapter III.
Talk
Chapter IV.
How To Write
Chapter V.
How To Read. I.
Chapter VI.
How To Read. II.
Chapter VII.
How To Go Into Society
Chapter VIII.
How To Travel
Chapter IX.
Life At School
Chapter X.
Life In Vacation
Chapter XI.
Life Alone
Chapter XII.
Habits In Church
Chapter XIII.
Life With Children
Chapter XIV.
Life With Your Elders
Chapter XV.
Habits Of Reading
Chapter XVI.
Getting Ready

How To Do It.

Chapter I.
Introductory.--How We Met.

The papers which are here collected enter in some detail into the success and failure of a large number of young people of my acquaintance, who are here named as
Alice Faulconbridge, Bob Edmeston, Clara, Clem Waters, Edward Holiday, Ellen Liston, Emma Fortinbras, Enoch Putnam, brother of Horace, Esther, Fanchon, Fanny, cousin to Hatty Fielding Florence, Frank, George Ferguson (Asaph Ferguson's _brother_), Hatty Fielding, Herbert, Horace Putnam, Horace Felltham (_a very different person_), Jane Smith, Jo Gresham, Laura Walter, Maud Ingletree, Oliver Ferguson, brother to Asaph and George, Pauline, Rachel, Robert, Sarah Clavers, Stephen, Sybil, Theodora, Tom Rising, Walter, William Hackmatack, William Withers.
It may be observed that there are thirty-four of them. They make up a very nice set, or would do so if they belonged together. But, in truth, they live in many regions, not to say countries. None of them are too bright or too stupid, only one of them is really selfish, all but one or two are thoroughly sorry for their faults when they commit them, and all of them who are good for anything think of themselves very little. There are a few who are approved members of the Harry Wadsworth Club. That means that they "look up and not down," they "look forward and not back," they "look out and not in," and they "lend a hand." These papers were first published, much as they are now collected, in the magazine "Our Young Folks," and in that admirable weekly paper "The Youth's Companion," which is held in grateful remembrance by a generation now tottering off the stage, and welcomed, as I see, with equal interest by the grandchildren as they totter on. From time to time, therefore, as the different series have gone on, I have received pleasant notes from other young people, whose acquaintance I have thus made with real pleasure, who have asked more explanation as to the points involved. I have thus been told that my friend, Mr. Henry Ward Beecher, is not governed by all my rules for young people's composition, and that Miss Throckmorton, the governess, does not believe Archbishop Whately is infallible. I have once and again been asked how I made the acquaintance of such a nice set of children. And I can well believe that many of my young correspondents would in that matter be glad to be as fortunate as I.
Perhaps, then, I shall do something to make the little book more intelligible, and to connect its parts, if in this introduction I tell of the one occasion when the dramatis personae met each other; and in order to that, if I tell how they all met me.
First of all, then, my dear young friends, I began active life, as soon as I had left college, as I can well wish all of you might do. I began in keeping school. Not that I want to have any of you do this long, unless an evident fitness or "manifest destiny" appear so to order. But you may be sure that, for a year or two of the start of life, there is nothing that will teach you your own ignorance so well as having to teach
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