Oscar 
 
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Oscar, by Walter Aimwell 
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Title: Oscar The Boy Who Had His Own Way 
Author: Walter Aimwell 
 
Release Date: April 11, 2006 [eBook #18153] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OSCAR*** 
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The Aimwell Stories 
OSCAR: 
Or The Boy Who Had His Own Way. 
by 
WALTER AIMWELL, 
Author of "Clinton," "Boy's Own Guide," Etc. 
With Illustrations. 
 
[Frontispiece: Winter Scene on Boston Common.] 
[Title-Page: Vignette.] 
 
Boston: Gould and Lincoln, 69 Washington Street. New York: Sheldon 
and Company. Cincinnati: Geo. S. Blanchard. 1861. Entered according 
to Act of Congress, in the year 1854, by Gould and Lincoln, In the 
Clerk's Office of the District Court, of the District of Massachusetts 
 
PREFACE. 
In the story of OSCAR is portrayed the career of a bright but somewhat 
headstrong boy, who was over-indulged by his parents, and who 
usually managed to "have his own way," by hook or by crook. The 
book is designed to exhibit some of the bad consequences of acquiring 
a wayward and lawless spirit, and of falling into indolent, untruthful, 
and disobedient habits. These are its main lessons, intermingled with 
which are a variety of others, of scarcely less importance to the young.
Winchester, Mass. 
 
ADVERTISEMENT. 
"PRECEPTS MAY LEAD BUT EXAMPLES DRAW." 
"THE AIMWELL STORIES" are designed to portray some of the 
leading phases of juvenile character, and to point out their tendencies to 
future good and evil. This they undertake to do by describing the quiet, 
natural scenes and incidents of everyday life, in city and country, at 
home and abroad, at school and upon the play-ground, rather than by 
resorting to romantic adventures and startling effects. While their main 
object is to persuade the young to lay well the foundations of their 
characters, to win them to the ways of virtue, and to incite them to good 
deeds and noble aims, the attempt is also made to mingle amusing, 
curious, and useful information with the moral lessons conveyed. It is 
hoped that the volumes will thus be made attractive and agreeable, as 
well as instructive, to the youthful reader. 
Each volume of the "Aimwell Stories" will be complete and 
independent of itself, although a connecting thread will run through the 
whole series. The order of the volumes, so far as completed, is as 
follows:-- 
I. OSCAR; OR, THE BOY WHO HAD HIS OWN WAY. II. 
CLINTON; OR, BOY-LIFE IN THE COUNTRY. III. ELLA; OR, 
TURNING OVER A NEW LEAF. IV. WHISTLER; OR, THE 
MANLY BOY. V. MARCUS; OR, THE BOY-TAMER. VI. JESSIE; 
OR, TRYING TO BE SOMEBODY. 
 
CONTENTS. 
CHAPTER I. 
A KITCHEN SCENE.
Bridget and her little realm--A troop of rude intruders--An imperious 
demand--A flat refusal--Prying investigations--Biddy's displeasure 
aroused--Why Oscar could not find the pie--Another squabble, and its 
consequences--Studying under difficulties--Shooting peas--Ralph and 
George provoked--A piece of Bridget's mind--Mrs. Preston--George's 
complaint--Oscar rebuked--A tell-tale--Oscar's brothers and sisters--His 
father and mother. 
CHAPTER II. 
OSCAR IN SCHOOL. 
Oscar's school--The divisions and classes--Lively and pleasant 
sights--Playing schoolmaster--Carrying the joke too far to be 
agreeable--Oscar's indolence in school--Gazing at the blackboard--A 
release from study, and an unexpected privilege--Whiling away an 
hour--Doing nothing harder work than studying--A half-learned 
lesson--A habit of Oscar's--A ridiculous blunder--Absurd mistakes of 
the British government about the great lakes--Oscar less pardonable 
than they--Another blunder--Difference between guessing and 
knowing--Oscar detained after school--His recitation--Good 
advice--Remembering the blackboard--Willie Davenport--A pounding 
promised. 
CHAPTER III. 
PAYING OFF A GRUDGE. 
Whistler--Why Ralph liked him--Why Oscar disliked him--A 
caution--A sudden attack--An unexpected rescue--The stranger's 
advice--A brave and manly answer--Whistler refuses to expose Oscar's 
name--The boys separate--George's report of the scene, and Ralph's 
explanation--Oscar's return--His sister's rebuke--His mother's 
inquiries--Misrepresentations--Willie exonerated--Forgiving 
enemies--An unpleasant promise called to mind--Mr. Preston's action 
in the matter--Oscar refuses to punish himself--The chamber--A 
surprise--Falsehood--Exposure--The account settled--Silence--Late
rising and a cold breakfast--What Mrs. Preston said--Its effect upon 
Oscar--Concealed emotion--Mistaken notions of manliness--Good 
impressions made--George's narrow escape. 
CHAPTER IV. 
THE HOTEL. 
Alfred Walton--His home--Hotel acquaintances--Coarse stories and 
jokes--Andy--His peculiarities--Tobacco--A spelling lesson--The 
disappointment--Anger--Bright and her family--Fun and mischief--The 
owner of the pups--A promise--A ride to the depôt--A walk about the 
building--Examining wheels--The tracks--An arrival--A swarm of 
passengers--Two young travellers taken in tow--Their story--Arrival at 
the hotel--A walk--Purchase of deadly weapons--A heavy bill--Gifts to 
Alfred and Oscar--A brave speech for a little fellow--Going home. 
CHAPTER V. 
THE YOUNG TRAVELLERS 
The Sabbath--Uneasiness--Monday morning--A pressing invitation to 
play truant--Hesitation--The decision--Oscar's misgivings--Manners of 
the two travellers--A small    
    
		
	
	
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