The Indian Boy
Originally published in 1865 and taking place in an English boarding school in 1816 or 1817, this is basically a story about bullying amongst youngsters in a different era, but holding all the lessons of a similar story that might take place in the modern era. The title character of The Indian Boy is a dark-complexioned boy from India who comes to Brunswick House as a new student at a school which had never before matriculated such a boy. Many of the other boys tease him, a couple of them outright bully him, and one young man tries to protect him. Intended for teenagers or young adults, this novella-length book paints a vivid picture of the evil which boys can get up to; and then reinforces the intended moral of the story with a rather harsh ultimate penalty for the two main culprits. Preparing old books for digital publication is a labor of love at Travelyn Publishing. We hold our digital versions of public domain books up against any others with no fear of the comparison. Our conversion work is meticulous, utilizing a process designed to eliminate errors, maximize reader enjoyment, and recreate as much as possible the atmosphere of the original book even as we are adding the navigation and formatting necessary for a good digital book. While remaining faithful to a writer's original words, and the spellings and usages of his era, we are not above correcting obvious mistakes. If the printer became distracted after placing an 'a' at the end of a line and then placed another 'a' at the beginning of the next line (they used to do this stuff by hand you know!), what sort of mindless robots would allow that careless error to be preserved for all eternity in the digital version, too? Not us. That's why we have the audacity to claim that our re-publications are often better than the originals.
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The Indian Boy
Originally published in 1865 and taking place in an English boarding school in 1816 or 1817, this is basically a story about bullying amongst youngsters in a different era, but holding all the lessons of a similar story that might take place in the modern era. The title character of The Indian Boy is a dark-complexioned boy from India who comes to Brunswick House as a new student at a school which had never before matriculated such a boy. Many of the other boys tease him, a couple of them outright bully him, and one young man tries to protect him. Intended for teenagers or young adults, this novella-length book paints a vivid picture of the evil which boys can get up to; and then reinforces the intended moral of the story with a rather harsh ultimate penalty for the two main culprits. Preparing old books for digital publication is a labor of love at Travelyn Publishing. We hold our digital versions of public domain books up against any others with no fear of the comparison. Our conversion work is meticulous, utilizing a process designed to eliminate errors, maximize reader enjoyment, and recreate as much as possible the atmosphere of the original book even as we are adding the navigation and formatting necessary for a good digital book. While remaining faithful to a writer's original words, and the spellings and usages of his era, we are not above correcting obvious mistakes. If the printer became distracted after placing an 'a' at the end of a line and then placed another 'a' at the beginning of the next line (they used to do this stuff by hand you know!), what sort of mindless robots would allow that careless error to be preserved for all eternity in the digital version, too? Not us. That's why we have the audacity to claim that our re-publications are often better than the originals.
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The Indian Boy

The Indian Boy

The Indian Boy

The Indian Boy

eBook

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Overview

Originally published in 1865 and taking place in an English boarding school in 1816 or 1817, this is basically a story about bullying amongst youngsters in a different era, but holding all the lessons of a similar story that might take place in the modern era. The title character of The Indian Boy is a dark-complexioned boy from India who comes to Brunswick House as a new student at a school which had never before matriculated such a boy. Many of the other boys tease him, a couple of them outright bully him, and one young man tries to protect him. Intended for teenagers or young adults, this novella-length book paints a vivid picture of the evil which boys can get up to; and then reinforces the intended moral of the story with a rather harsh ultimate penalty for the two main culprits. Preparing old books for digital publication is a labor of love at Travelyn Publishing. We hold our digital versions of public domain books up against any others with no fear of the comparison. Our conversion work is meticulous, utilizing a process designed to eliminate errors, maximize reader enjoyment, and recreate as much as possible the atmosphere of the original book even as we are adding the navigation and formatting necessary for a good digital book. While remaining faithful to a writer's original words, and the spellings and usages of his era, we are not above correcting obvious mistakes. If the printer became distracted after placing an 'a' at the end of a line and then placed another 'a' at the beginning of the next line (they used to do this stuff by hand you know!), what sort of mindless robots would allow that careless error to be preserved for all eternity in the digital version, too? Not us. That's why we have the audacity to claim that our re-publications are often better than the originals.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940162036791
Publisher: Travelyn Publishing
Publication date: 04/29/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Reverend Henry Cadwallader Adams (November 4, 1817–October 17, 1899) was an English cleric, schoolmaster, and writer. The grandson of Simon Adams of Ansty Hall, Warwickshire, and the nephew and namesake of Henry Cadwallader Adams (1779–1842), the mayor of Coventry in 1836 and High Sheriff of Warwickshire in 1837, he was educated at Westminster School, Winchester College, Balliol College (1835) and Magdalen College, Oxford (1836), becoming a fellow of Magdalen in 1843. Primarily known for writing novels geared toward young adults, with stories generally set in Victorian-era public schools or far-flung parts of the British Empire, he also authored a number of religious books, textbooks, at least one book of poetry, and a non-fiction history of Winchester College.
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