Making His Way eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 170 pages of information about Making His Way.

Making His Way eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 170 pages of information about Making His Way.

Mr. Manning certainly did look like a righteous man when he said this, and he beamed upon his stepson with a glance that was actually affectionate.

“Go back to school,” ho said, “and when you return I shall be able to give you a definite answer.”

Indeed, nothing could have suited Mr. Manning’s plans better.  He would get rid of the care and nearly the whole expense of his obnoxious stepson, while with his son Mark he would be spending the revenues of the estate which belonged to Frank.

During the coming week he arranged his plans for a prolonged absence from the Cedars.  He wrote to New York to engage passage on a steamer bound for Liverpool, and quietly waited for the end of Frank’s school term to release him from a care which had grown burdensome.

Frank returned to the Bridgeville Academy without Mark.  As may be supported, however, he did not feel the loss of his society.

He at once communicated to his chosen friend, Herbert Grant, his probable departure from school.

“I am sorry to hear it, Frank,” said Herbert, soberly.  “Do you think you are acting wisely?”

“I am not acting as I would have done had my mother lived,” answered Frank; “but you must remember that my position in life has very much changed.  I am a poor boy.”

“Hardly that, when there is so much property in the family.”

“I know Mr. Manning too well to believe that I shall derive much benefit from it.  No, Herbert, I have my own living to make, and I want to make it in my own way.”

“It is a sad change for you, Frank.”

“No, I can’t say that.  I don’t know how it is, Herbert, but I am rather glad to have all this thrown upon me.  I enjoy feeling that I have got to work.”

“I have a chance of enjoying the same feelings,” said Herbert, with a smile.

“I wish we could start together, Herbert.  Couldn’t you go with me?”

Herbert shook his head.

“Father has a plan for me,” he said.  “I am to learn his trade, and shall commence next week.  I don’t particularly like it, but it is well to have a trade to fall back upon.”

“Mr. Manning wanted me to learn a trade.”

“There is no occasion for your doing so.”

“I don’t know about that.  If I had a particular fancy for any, I wouldn’t mind choosing it, but I am better suited for something else.”

“What is your plan?  What will you do first?”

“My father has a cousin in the city of Newark, New Jersey, only a few miles from New York.  Four years ago, he and his family made us a visit, and he was urgent then that we should return the visit.  I will, first of all, go to him, and ask his advice.  He is a business man, and he may be able to put me in the way of obtaining a position.”

“I think you will succeed, Frank, but it will be harder than you think for.  You don’t know what poverty is yet.  I have never known anything else.”

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Making His Way from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.