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Title: The Boy Broker; Or, Among the Kings of Wall Street

Author: Frank Andrew Munsey

Release date: May 20, 2009 [eBook #28887]

Language: English

Credits: Produced by David Edwards, Anne Storer and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY BROKER; OR, AMONG THE KINGS OF WALL STREET ***

Transcriber’s Note:
Table of Contents added.



herbert randolph emerges from the cellar in which he has been kept a prisoner.

THE BOY BROKER;

or,

AMONG THE KINGS OF WALL STREET.

by

FRANK A. MUNSEY.


NEW YORK:
FRANK A. MUNSEY & CO., Publishers, 81 Warren Street.
1888.


Copyright, 1888, by
FRANK A. MUNSEY.

[All rights reserved.]

 

 

Press of Ferris Brothers.
420 Pearl Street, N. Y.


TO MY DEAR FATHER,
whose rigid new england discipline seemed to me as a boy severe and
unnecessary, this volume is affectionately dedicated with the
grateful acknowledgment that he was right and that
i was wrong. for this training and for all else
i owe him i can pay the debt best by
living the life that will
please him most.


PREFACE.

The best story for boys is the one that will help them most and give them the greatest pleasure—the story that will make them more manly, more self reliant, more generous, more noble and sweeter in disposition. Such a story I have aimed to make The Boy Broker. The moral or lesson it contains could be put into a very short lecture, but as a lecture I am confident that it would prove valueless. Boys are benefited little by advice. They seldom listen to it and less frequently make any practical application of it. Imitative by nature, they are easily influenced by those with whom they associate, and no associate, in my opinion, has so strong a grasp upon them as the hero of some much prized book. He becomes a real being to their young, healthy imagination—their ideal of manliness, bravery, generosity, and nobility. He enters into their lives, their sports, their adventures, their kind acts, a companion, a model so much idealized and admired that unconsciously they grow to be like him in so far as their surroundings will permit. In a good story plot and action are but the setting to the gem—the means of conveying a lesson in disguise in such a way that the reader will not suspect he is being taught. Let it once occur to him that he is reading a lecture and the book will at once be quietly but most effectually packed away. Many authors, it seems to me, fail in their purpose by devoting too much time to the gem and too little to the setting. Others go too far the other way and write stories that give young readers a wrong idea of life—stories whose heroes do improbable and unnatural acts. While my purpose has been to make The Boy Broker interesting I have aimed to give a true idea of life in a great city. So much nonsense of a misleading character has been written about benevolent old gentlemen who help poor boys from the country that I have sought to turn the light of fact on the subject and picture a little real life—about such life as a boy may expect to find if he comes to New York friendless and alone. He might find it much worse; he could not wisely hope to find it better.

Frank A. Munsey.
New York, September, 1888.


CONTENTS

page
I An Introduction to the Great City 11
II An Effort to Obtain Employment 20
III An Evening with Bob Hunter 26
IV At Mr. Goldwin’s Office 34
V The Contest Between Herbert and Felix 41
VI A Ray of Sunshine 50
VII Bob Hunter Thoroughly Aroused 57
VIII Felix Mortimer at the Bank 65
IX Bob Assumes a Disguise 75
X Something About Herbert Randolph 83
XI Imprisoned at the Fence 87
XII Bob’s Brilliant Move 94
XIII A Terrible Fear 102
XIV Bob Outwits the Old Fence 108
XV Bob and Herbert Meet 113
XVI The Old Fence in a Trap 120
XVII Bob Goes for an Officer 126
XVIII Tom Flannery is Hungry 133
XIX The Rivals at the Bank 138
XX Felix Mortimer Discomfited 142
XXI Two Young Capitalists 154
XXII The Great Banquet 161
XXIII Bob Hunter’s Ambition 178
XXIV A Visit to the Banker’s House 182
XXV Tom Flannery’s Sickness 191
XXVI A Crash in Wall Street 196
XXVII Dark Days 201
XXVIII In Business for Himself 210
XXIX Tom Flannery’s Funeral 218
XXX In a New Home 224
XXXI The Boy Broker 228
XXXII The Conspirators’ Fate 233
XXXIII A Glimpse at the Future 236

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

Herbert Randolph emerges from the cellar in which he
has been kept a prisoner
,
Frontispiece.
The Great City, 10
“You evidently know all about propriety, so here is my
hand,” said Herbert
,
13
Herbert Randolph in the Post Office, 17
Memories of country life—The greeting by the way, 23
The benevolent old gentleman presses money on the
country boy
,
27
The country boy finds a well filled pocket book, 29
The country boy to the rescue, 31
At the Boss Tweed Restaurant, 33
A Glimpse of Wall Street, 35
Herbert Randolph finds himself among a mob of
rival applicants
,
37
Gunwagner and Felix agree upon a plan, 48
Young Randolph handed Ray into the carriage with
just enough embarrassment in his manner to interest her
,
51
Bob Hunter, alone in his room, wonders what has
become of his new friend
,
59
Tom Flannery, 64
Bob Hunter speaks up for Herbert, 71
Bob Hunter plays the detective, 77
A surprise for Felix Mortimer, 85
Young Randolph at last falls asleep exhausted, 92
Suddenly realizing his horrible situation, Herbert sprang
upon the bench with a pitiful cry of terror
,
105
Gunwagner pursuing the boys, 111
Gunwagner bursts into the room in a furious mood, 121
Gunwagner in the hands of the police, 130
Young Randolph and Bob Hunter confront Felix Mortimer
and charge him with his villainy
,
147
“Tom,” said Bob, “here’s a five for you.” 155
The great banquet, 163
Bob and Tom coming out of the bank, 179
Herbert’s first visit to the banker’s house, 185
“You embarrass me,” said Herbert, blushing, 187
Tom Flannery in delirium, 194
Young Randolph again in the ranks of the unemployed, 200
Herbert Randolph shoveling snow, 203
Herbert Randolph working on the hoist, 206
Tom Flannery’s deathbed, 216
Tom Flannery’s funeral, 221
Ray reading to Mrs. Flannery, 222
Mrs. Flannery and the two boys in their new home, 225
Gunwagner in prison, 234
Bob Hunter, the student and young business man, 239

The Great City

THE BOY BROKER.


CHAPTER I.

AN INTRODUCTION TO THE GREAT CITY.