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will; which appeared; from its utter
unintelligibility; to have been drawn on the strictest
legal principles。 So far as I could discover; however;
it exactly bore out what my friend had told me on the
night of his death。 So it was true after all。 I must
take the boy。 Suddenly I remembered the letter which
he had left with the chest。 I fetched it and opened
it。 It only contained such directions as he had
already given to me as to opening the chest on Leo's
twenty…fifth birthday; and laid down the outlines of
the boy's education; which was to include Greek; the
higher mathematics; and Arabic。 At the bottom there
was a postscript to the effect that if the boy died
under the age of twenty…five; which; however; he did
not believe would be the case; I was to open the
chest; and act on the information I obtained if I saw
fit。 If I did not see fit; I was to destroy all the
contents。 On no account pass them on to a stranger。
As this letter added nothing material to my knowledge;
and certainly raised no further objection in my mind
to undertaking the task I had promised my dead friend
to undertake; there was only one course open to me
namely; to write to Messrs。 Geoffrey & Jordan; and
express my readiness to enter on the trust; stating
that I should be willing to commence my guardianship
of Leo in ten days' time。 This done I proceeded to the
authorities of my college; and; having told them as
much of the story as I considered desirable; which was
not very much; after considerable difficulty succeeded
in persuading them to stretch a point; and; in the
event of my having obtained a fellowship; which I was
pretty certain I had done; allow me to have the child
to live with me。 Their consent; however; was only
granted on the condition that I vacated my rooms in
college and took lodgings。 This I did; and with some
difficulty succeeded in obtaining very good apartments
quite close to the college gates。 The next thing was
to find a nurse。 And on this point I came to a
determination。 I would have no woman to lord it over
me about the child; and steal his affections from me。
The boy was old enough to do without female
assistance; so I set to work to hunt up a suitable
male attendant。 With some difficulty I succeeded in
hiring a most respectable round…faced young man; who
had been a helper in a hunting…stable; but who said
that he was one of a family of seventeen and well
accustomed to the ways of children; and professed
himself quite willing to undertake the charge of
Master Leo when he arrived。 Then; having taken the
iron box to town; and with my own hands deposited it
at my banker's; I bought some books upon the health
and management of children; and read them; first to
myself; and then aloud to Jobthat was the young
man's nameand waited。
At length the child arrived in the charge of an
elderly person; who wept bitterly at parting with him;
and a beautiful boy he was。 Indeed; I do not think
that I ever saw such a perfect child before or since。
His eyes were gray; his forehead broad; and his face;
even at that early age; clean cut as a cameo; without
being pinched or thin。 But perhaps his most attractive
point was his hair; which was pure gold in color and
tightly curled over his shapely head。 He cried a
little when his nurse finally tore herself away and
left him with us。 Never shall I forget the scene。
There he stood; with the sunlight from the window
playing upon his golden curls; his fist screwed in one
eye; while he took us in with the other。 I was seated
in a chair; and stretched out my hand to him to induce
him to come to me; while Job; in the corner; was
making a sort of clucking noise; which; arguing from
his previous experience; or from the analogy of the
hen; he judged would have a soothing effect; and
inspire confidence in the youthful mind; and running a
wooden horse of peculiar hideousness backward and
forward in a way that was little short of inane。 This
went on for some minutes; and then all of a sudden the
lad stretched out both his little arms and ran to me。
〃I like you;〃 he said; 〃you is ugly; but you is good。〃
Ten minutes afterwards he was eating large slices of
bread…and…butter; with every sign of satisfaction; Job
wanted to put jam on to them; but I sternly reminded
him of the excellent works we had read; and forbade
it。
In a very little while (for; as I expected; I got my
fellowship) the boy became the favorite of the whole
collegewhere; all orders and regulations to the
contrary notwithstanding; he was continually in and
outa sort of chartered libertine; in whose favor all
rules were relaxed。 The offerings made at his shrine
were simply without number; and I had a serious
difference of opinion with one old resident Fellow;
now long dead; who was usually supposed to be the
crustiest man in the university; and to abhor the
sight of a child。 And yet I discovered; when a
frequently recurring fit of sickness had forced Job to
keep a strict lookout; that this unprincipled old man
was in the habit of enticing the boy to his rooms and
there feeding him upon unlimited quantities of brandy…
balls; and making him promise to say nothing about it。
Job told him that he ought to be ashamed of himself;
〃at his age; too; when he might have been a
grandfather if he had done what was right;〃 by which
Job understood had got married; and thence arose the
row。
But I have no space to dwell upon those delightful
years; around which memory still fondly hovers。 One by
one they went by; and as they passed we two grew
dearer and yet more dear to each other。 Few sons have
been loved as I love Leo; and few fathers know the
deep and continuous affection that Leo bears to me。
The child grew into the boy; and the boy into the
young man; as one by one the remorseless years flew
by; and as he grew and increased; so did his beauty
and the beauty of his mind grow with him。 When he was
about fifteen they used to call him Beauty about the
college; and me they nicknamed the Beast。 Beauty and
the Beast was what they called us when we went out
walking together; as we used to do every day。 Once Leo
attacked a great strapping butcher's man; twice his
size; because he sang it out after us; and thrashed
him; toothrashed him fairly。 I walked on and
pretended not to see; till the combat got too
exciting; when I turned round and cheered him on to
victory。 It was the chaff of the college at the time;
but I could not help it。 Then when he was a little
older the undergraduates got fresh names for us。 They
called me Charon and Leo the Greek god! I will pass
over my own appellation with the humble remark that I
was never handsome; and did not grow more so as I grew
older。 As for his; there was no doubt about its
fitness。 Leo at twenty…one might have stood for a
statue of the youthful Apollo。 I never saw anybody to
touch him in looks; or anybody so absolutely
unconscious of them。 As for his mind; he was brilliant
and keen witted; but not a scholar。 He had not the
dullness necessary for that result。 We follow