Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Abbreviations and Short Titles
- Introduction
- Something of Myself (1937)
- I A Very Young Person
- II The School before its Time
- III Seven Years' Hard
- IV The Interregnum
- V The Committee of Ways and Means
- VI South Africa
- VII The Very-Own House
- VIII Working-Tools
- “BAA BAA, BLACK SHEEP” (1888)
- “MY FIRST BOOK” (1892)
- “AN ENGLISH SCHOOL” (1893)
- RUDYARD KIPLING'S DIARY, 1885
- Glossary of Anglo-Indian Words and Phrases
- Notes
- Index
II - The School before its Time
from Something of Myself (1937)
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Abbreviations and Short Titles
- Introduction
- Something of Myself (1937)
- I A Very Young Person
- II The School before its Time
- III Seven Years' Hard
- IV The Interregnum
- V The Committee of Ways and Means
- VI South Africa
- VII The Very-Own House
- VIII Working-Tools
- “BAA BAA, BLACK SHEEP” (1888)
- “MY FIRST BOOK” (1892)
- “AN ENGLISH SCHOOL” (1893)
- RUDYARD KIPLING'S DIARY, 1885
- Glossary of Anglo-Indian Words and Phrases
- Notes
- Index
Summary
Then came school at the far end of England. The Head of it was a lean, slow-spoken, bearded Arab-complexioned man whom till then I had known as one of my Deputy-Uncles at The Grange—Cormell Price, otherwise ‘Uncle Crom.’ My Mother, on her return to India, confided my sister and me to the care of three dear ladies who lived off the far end of Kensington High Street over against Addison Road, in a house filled with books, peace, kindliness, patience and what to-day would be called ‘culture.’ But it was natural atmosphere.
One of the ladies wrote novels on her knee, by the fireside, sitting just outside the edge of conversation, beneath two clay pipes tied with black ribbon, which once Carlyle had smoked. All the people one was taken to see either wrote or painted pictures or, as in the case of a Mr. and Miss de Morgan, ornamented tiles. They let me play with their queer, sticky paints. Somewhere in the background were people called Jean Ingelow and Christina Rossetti, but I was never lucky enough to see those good spirits. And there was a choice in the walls of bookshelves of anything one liked from Firmilian to The Moonstone and The Woman in White and, somehow, all Wellington's Indian Despatches, which fascinated me.
These treasures were realised by me in the course of the next few years.
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- Something of Myself and Other Autobiographical Writings , pp. 15 - 24Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013