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Mark the Match Boy; or, Richard Hunter's Ward cover

Mark the Match Boy; or, Richard Hunter's Ward

Chapter 32: J. T. TROWBRIDGE.
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About This Book

The narrative follows Richard Hunter, a young man who rises from street poverty to a respectable position through industry and prudence. He encounters a forlorn match seller and assumes responsibility for the boy, navigating moral challenges, financial obstacles, and the urban social networks that shape their prospects. Episodes trace attempts to recover a long-owed debt, scenes of daily street life, and interventions by sympathetic citizens. The work emphasizes themes of self-improvement, charity, and the potential for steady effort and goodwill to transform the lives of disadvantaged children.

J. T. TROWBRIDGE.

Neither as a writer does he stand apart from the great currents of life and select some exceptional phase or odd combination of circumstances. He stands on the common level and appeals to the universal heart, and all that he suggests or achieves is on the plane and in the line of march of the great body of humanity.

The Jack Hazard series of stories, published in the late Our Young Folks, and continued in the first volume of St. Nicholas, under the title of "Fast Friends," is no doubt destined to hold a high place in this class of literature. The delight of the boys in them (and of their seniors, too) is well founded. They go to the right spot every time. Trowbridge knows the heart of a boy like a book, and the heart of a man, too, and he has laid them both open in these books in a most successful manner. Apart from the qualities that render the series so attractive to all young readers, they have great value on account of their portraitures of American country life and character. The drawing is wonderfully accurate, and as spirited as it is true. The constable, Sellick, is an original character, and as minor figures where will we find anything better than Miss Wansey, and Mr. P. Pipkin, Esq. The picture of Mr. Dink's school, too, is capital, and where else in fiction is there a better nick-name than that the boys gave to poor little Stephen Treadwell, "Step Hen," as he himself pronounced his name in an unfortunate moment when he saw it in print for the first time in his lesson in school.

On the whole, these books are very satisfactory, and afford the critical reader the rare pleasure of the works that are just adequate, that easily fulfill themselves and accomplish all they set out to do.—Scribner's Monthly.

JACK HAZARD SERIES.
6 vols.     By J. T. Trowbridge.     $7.25
Jack Hazard and His Fortunes.
The Young Surveyor.
Fast Friends.
Doing His Best.
A Chance for Himself.
Lawrence's Adventures.