The Project Gutenberg eBook, Now or Never, by Oliver Optic
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Title: Now or Never
Author: Oliver Optic
Release Date: January 23, 2005 [eBook #14762]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOW OR NEVER***
E-text prepared by Al Haines
NOW OR NEVER
Or, The Adventures of Bobby Bright.
A Story for Young Folks
by
OLIVER OPTIC
Author of _The Boat Club_, _All Aboard_, _In Doors and Out_, etc.
Boston: Lee and Shepard, Publishers.
New York: Lee, Shepard & Dillingham, 49 Greene Street
1872
TO
MY NEPHEW,
CHARLES HENRY POPE.
This Book
IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED.
PREFACE
The story contained in this volume is a record of youthful struggles,
not only in the world without, but in the world within; and the success
of the little hero is not merely a gathering up of wealth and honors,
but a triumph over the temptations that beget the pilgrim on the plain
of life. The attainment of worldly prosperity is not the truest
victory, and the author has endeavored to make the interest of his
story depend more on the hero's devotion to principles than on his
success in business.
Bobby Bright is a smart boy; perhaps the reader will think he is
altogether too smart for one of his years. This is a progressive age,
and any thing which Young America may do need not surprise any person.
That little gentleman is older than his father, knows more than his
mother, can talk politics, smoke cigars, and drive a 2:40 horse. He
orders "one stew" with as much ease as a man of forty, and can even
pronounce correctly the villanous names of sundry French and German
wines and liqueurs. One would suppose, to hear him talk, that he had
been intimate with Socrates and Solon, with Napoleon and Noah Webster;
in short, that whatever he did not know was not worth knowing.
In the face of these manifestations of exuberant genius, it would be
absurd to accuse the author of making his hero do too much. All he has
done is to give this genius a right direction; and for politics,
cigars, 2:40 horses, and "one stew," he has substituted the duties of a
rational and accounta
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