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Part 1 Chapter 4 Studies of a grown Gentleman

Word Count: 3050    |    Released on: 11/11/2017

t inducement for the separation being over, was earnest to take home again the disinherited Camilla. Sir Hugh, whose pleasure in her sight was now

.Dr. Orkborne expressed his gratitude for the kindness of Mr. Tyrold, and promised to make it his first study to merit the high consideration with which he had been called from his retirement.A scholastic education was all that had been given to Dr. Orkborne by his friends; and though in that their hopes were answered, no prosperity followed. His labours had been seconded by industry, but not enforced by talents; and they soon found how wide the difference between acquiring stores, and bringing them into use. Application, operating upon a retentive memory, had enabled him to lay by the most ample hoards of erudition; but these, though they rendered him respectable amongst the learned, proved nearly nugatory in his progress through the world, from a total want of skill and penetration to know how or where they might turn to any account. Nevertheless, his character was unexceptionable, his manners were quiet, and his fortune was ruined. These were the motives which induced rather the benevolence than the selection of Mr. Tyrold to name him to his brother, in the hope that, while an asylum at Cleves would exonerate him from all pecuniary hardships, his very deficiency in brilliancy of parts, and knowledge of mankind, which though differently modified, was equal to that of Sir Hugh himself, would obviate regret of more cultivated society, and facilitate their reciprocal satisfaction.The introduction over, Mr. Tyrold sought by general topics to forward their acquaintance, before any allusion should be made to the professed plan of Sir Hugh; but Sir Hugh was too well pleased with its ingenuity to be ashamed of its avowal; he began, therefore, immediately to descant upon the indolence of his early years, and to impeach the want of timely severity in his instructors: ‘For there is an old saying,’ he cried, ‘but remarkably true, That learning is better than house or land; which I am an instance of myself, for I have house and land plenty, yet don’t know what to do with them properly, nor with myself neither, for want of a little notion of things to guide me by.’ His brother, he added, had been too partial in thinking him already fitted for such a master as Dr. Orkborne; though he promised, notwithstanding his time of life, to become the most docile of pupils, and he hoped before long to do no discredit to the Doctor as his tutor.Mr. Tyrold, whose own benign countenance could scarce refrain from a smile at this unqualified opening, endeavoured to divert to some other subject the grave astonishment of Dr. Orkborne, who, previously aware of the age and ill health of the baronet, naturally concluded himself called upon to solace the privacy of his life by reading or discourse, but suggested not the most distant surmise he could be summoned as a preceptor.Sir Hugh, however, far from palliating any design, disguised not even a feeling; he plunged deeper and deeper in the acknowledgment of his ignorance, and soon set wholly apart the delicate circumspection of his brother, by demanding of Dr. Orkborne what book he thought he had best buy for a beginning?Receiving from the wondering Doctor no answer, he good humouredly added, ‘Come, don’t be ashamed to name the easiest, for this reason; you must know my plan is one of my own, which it is right to tell you. As fast as I get on, I intend, for the sake of remembering my lesson, to send for one of my nephews, and teach it all over again to him myself; which will be doing service to us all at once.’Mr. Tyrold now, though for a few moments he looked down, thought it best to leave the matter to its own course, and Dr. Orkborne to his own observations; fully persuaded, that the smiles Sir Hugh might excite would be transient, and that no serious or lasting ridicule could be attached to his character, in the mind of a worthy man, to whom time and opportunity would be allowed for an acquaintance with its habitual beneficence. He excused himself, therefore, from staying any longer, somewhat to the distress of Dr. Orkborne, but hardly with the notice of the baronet, whose eagerness in his new pursuit completely engrossed him.His late adventure, and his new heiress, now tormented him no more; Indiana was forgotten, Camilla but little thought of, and his whole mind became exclusively occupied by this fruitful expedient for retrieving his lost time.Dr. Orkborne, whose life had been spent in any study rather than that of human nature, was so little able to enter into the character of Sir Hugh, that nothing less than the respect he knew to be due to Mr. Tyrold, could have saved him, upon his first reception, from a suspicion that he had been summoned in mere mockery. The situation, however, was peculiarly desirable to him and the experiment, in the beginning, corresponded with the hopes of Mr. Tyrold. Placed suddenly in ease and affluence, Dr. Orkborne, with the most profound desire to please, sought to sustain so convenient a post, by obliging the patron, whom he soon saw it would be vain to attempt improving; while Sir Hugh in return, professed himself the most fortunate of men, that he had now met with a scholar who had the good nature not to despise him.Relief from care thus combining with opportunity, Dr. Orkborne was scarce settled, ere he determined upon the execution of a long, critical, and difficult work in philology, which he had often had in contemplation, but never found leisure to undertake. By this means he had a constant resource for himself; and the baronet, observing that time never hung heavy upon his hands, conceived a yet higher admiration of learning, and felt his spirits propo

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Contents

To The Queen Part 1 Chapter 1 A Family Scene Part 1 Chapter 2 Comic Gambols Part 1 Chapter 3 Consequences Part 1 Chapter 4 Studies of a grown Gentleman Part 1 Chapter 5 Schooling of a young Gentleman Part 1 Chapter 6 Tuition of a young Lady Part 1 Chapter 7 Lost Labour Part 2 Chapter 1 New Projects Part 2 Chapter 2 New Characters Part 2 Chapter 3 A Family Breakfast
Part 2 Chapter 4 A Public Breakfast
Part 2 Chapter 5 A Raffle
Part 2 Chapter 6 A Barn
Part 2 Chapter 7 A Declaration
Part 2 Chapter 8 An Answer
Part 2 Chapter 9 An Explication
Part 2 Chapter 10 A Panic
Par 2 Chapter 11 Two Lovers
Part 2 Chapter 12 Two Doctors
Part 2 Chapter 13 Two Ways of looking at the same Thing
Part 2 Chapter 14 Two Retreats
Part 2 Chapter 15 Two Sides of a Question
Part 3 Chapter 1 A few kind Offices
Part 3 Chapter 2 A Pro and a Con
Part 3 Chapter 3 An Author's Notion of Travelling
Part 3 Chapter 4 An Internal Detection
Part 3 Chapter 5 An Author's Opinion of Visiting
Part 3 Chapter 6 An Author's Idea of Order
Part 3 Chapter 7 A Maternal Eye
Part 3 Chapter 8 Modern Ideas of Duty
Part 3 Chapter 9 A Few Embarrassments
Part 3 Chapter 10 Modern Ideas of Life
Part 3 Chapter 11 Modern Notions of Penitence
Part 3 Chapter 12 Airs and Graces
Part 3 Chapter 13 Attic Adventures
Part 4 Chapter 1 A Few Explanations
Part 4 Chapter 2 Specimens of Taste
Part 4 Chapter 3 A Few Compliments
Part 4 Chapter 4 The Danger of Disguise
Part 4 Chapter 5 Strictures on Deformity
Part 4 Chapter 6 Strictures on Beauty
Part 4 Chapter 7 The Pleadings of Pity
Part 4 Chapter 8 The Disastrous Buskins
Part 4 Chapter 9 Three Golden Maxims
Part 5 Chapter 1 A Pursuer
Part 5 Chapter 2 An Adviser
Part 5 Chapter 3 Various Confabulations
Part 5 Chapter 4 A Dodging
Part 5 Chapter 5 A Sermon
Part 5 Chapter 6 A Chat
Part 5 Chapter 7 A Recall
Part 5 Chapter 8 A Youth of the Times
Part 6 Chapter 1 A Walk by Moonlight
Part 6 Chapter 2 The Pantiles
Part 6 Chapter 3 Mount Ephraim
Part 6 Chapter 4 Knowle
Part 6 Chapter 5 Mount Pleasant
Part 6 Chapter 6 The Accomplished Monkies
Part 6 Chapter 7 The Rooms
Part 6 Chapter 8 Ways to the Heart
Part 6 Chapter 9 Counsels for Conquest
Part 6 Chapter 10 Strictures upon the Ton
Part 6 Chapter 11 Traits of Character
Part 6 Chapter 12 Traits of Eccentricity
Part 6 Chapter 13 Traits of Instruction
Part 6 Chapter 14 A Demander
Part 6 Chapter 15 An Accorder
Part 6 Chapter 16 An Helper
Part 7 Chapter 1 The right Style of Arguing
Part 7 Chapter 2 A Council
Part 7 Chapter 3 A Proposal of Marriage
Part 7 Chapter 4 A Bull-Dog
Part 7 Chapter 5 An Oak Tree
Part 7 Chapter 6 A Call of the House
Part 7 Chapter 7 The Triumph of Pride
Part 7 Chapter 8 A Summons to Happiness
Part 7 Chapter 9 Offs and Ons
Part 7 Chapter 10 Resolutions
Part 7 Chapter 11 Ease and Freedom
Part 7 Chapter 12 Dilemmas
Part 7 Chapter 13 Live and Learn
Part 8 Chapter 1 A Way to make Friends
Part 8 Chapter 2 A Rage of Obliging
Part 8 Chapter 3 A Pleasant Adventure
Part 8 Chapter 4 An Author's Time-keeper
Part 8 Chapter 5 An Agreeable Hearing
Part 8 Chapter 6 Ideas upon Marriage
Part 8 Chapter 7 How to treat a Defamer
Part 8 Chapter 8 The Power of Prepossession
Part 8 Chapter 9 A Scuffle
Part 8 Chapter 10 A Youthful Effusion
Part 8 Chapter 11 The Computations of Self-Love
Part 8 Chapter 12 Juvenile Calculations
Part 9 Chapter 1 A Water Party
Part 9 Chapter 2 Touches of Wit and Humour
Part 9 Chapter 3 An Adieu
Part 9 Chapter 4 A Modest Request
Part 9 Chapter 5 A Self-dissection
Part 9 Chapter 6 A Reckoning
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