[Alec Forbes of Howglen by George MacDonald]@TWC D-Link book
Alec Forbes of Howglen

CHAPTER IX
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There she saw a double row of desks, with a clear space down the middle between the rows.

Each scholar was hurrying to his place at one of the desks, where, as he arrived, he stood.

The master already stood in solemn posture at the nearer end of the room on a platform behind his desk, prepared to commence the extempore prayer, which was printed in a kind of blotted stereotype upon every one of their brains.

Annie had hardly succeeded in reaching a vacant place among the girls when he began.

The boys were as still as death while the master prayed; but a spectator might easily have discovered that the chief good some of them got from the ceremony was a perfect command of the organs of sound; for the restraint was limited to those organs; and projected tongues, deprived of their natural exercise, turned themselves, along with winking eyes, contorted features, and a wild use of hands and arms, into the means of telegraphic despatches to all parts of the room, throughout the ceremony.


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