[The Wrecker by Robert Louis Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne]@TWC D-Link book
The Wrecker

CHAPTER III
24/27

"My dearest boy," it began, "I send you a cutting which has pleased me very much, from a St.Joseph paper of high standing.

At last you seem to be coming fairly to the front; and I cannot but reflect with delight and gratitude how very few youths of your age occupy nearly two columns of press-matter all to themselves.
I only wish your dear mother had been here to read it over my shoulder; but we will hope she shares my grateful emotion in a better place.

Of course I have sent a copy to your grandfather and uncle in Edinburgh; so you can keep the one I enclose.

This Jim Pinkerton seems a valuable acquaintance; he has certainly great talent; and it is a good general rule to keep in with pressmen." I hope it will be set down to the right side of my account, but I had no sooner read these words, so touchingly silly, than my anger against Pinkerton was swallowed up in gratitude.

Of all the circumstances of my career, my birth, perhaps, excepted, not one had given my poor father so profound a pleasure as this article in the _Sunday Herald_.


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