In the Days of Poor Richard 
 
The Project Gutenberg eBook, In the Days of Poor Richard, by Irving 
Bacheller 
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Title: In the Days of Poor Richard 
Author: Irving Bacheller 
Release Date: April 12, 2005 [eBook #15608] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE 
DAYS OF POOR RICHARD*** 
E-text prepared by Al Haines 
 
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IN THE DAYS OF POOR RICHARD 
by 
IRVING BACHELLER 
Author of The Light in The Clearing, A Man for the Ages, etc. 
Illustrated by John Wolcott Adams 
Indianapolis The Bobbs-Merrill Company Publishers Press Of 
Braunworth & Co Book Manufacturers Brooklyn, N. Y. 
1922
[Frontispiece: A young John Irons and Margaret Hare in the forest.] 
 
TO MY FRIEND 
ALBERT J. BEVERIDGE 
Discerning Student and Interpreter of the Spirit of the Prophets, the 
Struggle of the Heroes and the Wisdom of the Founders of Democracy, 
I Dedicate This Volume. 
 
FOREWORD 
Much of the color of the love-tale of Jack and Margaret, which is a part 
of the greater love-story of man and liberty, is derived from old letters, 
diaries, and newspaper clippings in the possession of a well-known 
American family. 
 
CONTENTS 
 
CHAPTER 
BOOK ONE 
I The Horse Valley Adventure II Sowing the Dragon's Teeth III The 
Journey to Philadelphia IV The Crossing V Jack Sees London and the 
Great Philosopher VI The Lovers VII The Dawn VIII An Appointment 
and a Challenge IX The Encounter X The Lady of the Hidden Face XI 
The Departure XII The Friend and the Girl He Left Behind Him 
BOOK TWO 
XIII The Ferment XIV Adventures in the Service of the 
Commander-in-Chief XV In Boston Jail XVI Jack and Solomon Meet 
the Great Ally XVII With the Army and in the Bush XVIII How 
Solomon Shifted the Skeer XIX The Voice of a Woman Sobbing XX 
The First Fourth of July XXI The Ambush XXII The Binkussing of 
Colonel Burley XXIII The Greatest Trait of a Great Commander 
BOOK THREE
XXIV In France with Franklin XXV The Pageant XXVI In Which 
Appears the Horse of Destiny and the Judas of Washington's Army 
XXVII Which Contains the Adventures of Solomon in the Timber Sack 
and on the "Hand-made River" XXVIII In Which Arnold and Henry 
Thornhill Arrive in the Highlands XXIX Love and Treason XXX "Who 
Is She that Looketh Forth as the Morning, Fair as the Moon, Clear as 
the Sun, and Terrible as an Army with Banners?" XXXI The Lovers 
and Solomon's Last Fight 
 
BOOK ONE 
 
CHAPTER I 
THE HORSE VALLEY ADVENTURE 
"The first time I saw the boy, Jack Irons, he was about nine years old. I 
was in Sir William Johnson's camp of magnificent Mohawk warriors at 
Albany. Jack was so active and successful in the games, between the 
red boys and the white, that the Indians called him 'Boiling Water.' His 
laugh and tireless spirit reminded me of a mountain brook. There was 
no lad, near his age, who could run so fast, or jump so far, or shoot so 
well with the bow or the rifle. I carried him on my back to his home, he 
urging me on as if I had been a battle horse and when we were come to 
the house, he ran about doing his chores. I helped him, and, our work 
accomplished, we went down to the river for a swim, and to my 
surprise, I found him a well taught fish. We became friends and always 
when I have thought of him, the words Happy Face have come to me. It 
was, I think, a better nickname than 'Boiling Water,' although there was 
much propriety in the latter. I knew that his energy given to labor 
would accomplish much and when I left him, I repeated the words 
which my father had often quoted in my hearing: 
"'Seest thou a man diligent in his calling? He shall stand before kings.'" 
This glimpse of John Irons, Jr.--familiarly known as Jack Irons--is from 
a letter of Benjamin Franklin to his wife.
Nothing further is recorded of his boyhood until, about eight years later, 
what was known as the "Horse Valley Adventure" occurred. A full 
account of it follows with due regard for background and color: 
"It was the season o' the great moon," said old Solomon Binkus, scout 
and interpreter, as he leaned over the camp-fire and flicked a coal out 
of the    
    
		
	
	
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