The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Master of the Shell, by Talbot Baines Reed
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Title: The Master of the Shell
Author: Talbot Baines Reed
Release Date: April 12, 2007 [EBook #21050]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MASTER OF THE SHELL ***
Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
The Master of the Shell
By Talbot Baines Reed
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I did find the start of this book to be rather annoying, for it can
never have been realistic that a school would advertise for a
form-master and house-master. Even in those days it would have been
absolutely normal that a house-master would undergo a long period as a
junior master before even being asked to take a house at some time in
the future. This would be something like five years on the staff, and
then a further ten years before actually taking charge of a house. As
for being Master of the Shell, again, there would be a period of
probation while a young man was learning the ropes about teaching,
before he would become head of a Block, such as Shell. In my school
there was a Shell, but it was rather a side alley, rather than the broad
avenue leading to the Sixth Form. It was usual for the Head of a Block
to be a man who had done his fifteen years as a house master, and who
had therefore been on the staff for thirty years or more.
One last point about appointing a young master to a school: he would be
expected to play a full part in sport or other outdoor activities. Our
hero had indeed been an Oxford Blue, and he could have got a job on the
basis of this and his academic record. But he would never have been
accepted if he mentioned that he was planning soon to marry, for the
school needed him heart and soul as a bachelor for at least five years.
On the other hand it was quite desirable that he should marry before
becoming a house master, though on the whole the most excellent house
masters are the unmarried ones.
It takes quite a few chapters to get past the welter of nineteenth
century school-boy slang before we get to any decisive fresh action.
There was another hous
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