"breaking away" is the second of the series of stories published in "our boys and girls," and the author had no reason to complain of the reception accorded to it by his young friends, as it appeared in the weekly issues of the magazine; but, on the contrary, he finds renewed occasion cordially to thank them for their continued appreciation of his earnest efforts to please them.
after an experience of more than twenty years as a teacher, the writer did not expect his young friends to sympathize with the schoolmaster of this story, for doubtless many of them have known and despised a similar creature in real life. mr. parasyte is not a myth; but we are grateful that an enlightened public sentiment is every year rendering more and more odious the petty tyrant of the school-room, and we are too happy to give this retreating personage a parting blow as he retires from the scene of his fading glories.
rebellions, either in the school or in the state, are always dangerous and demoralizing; but while we unequivocally condemn[6] the tyrant in our story, we cannot always approve the conduct of his pupils. one evil gives birth to another; but even a righteous end cannot justify immoral means, and we beg to remind our young and enthusiastic readers that ernest thornton and his friends were compelled to acknowledge that they had done wrong in many things, and that "breaking away" was deemed a very doubtful expedient for the redress even of a real wrong.
as it was impossible for ernest to relate the whole of his eventful history in one volume, breaking away will be immediately followed by a sequel,—"seek and find,"—in which the hero will narrate his adventures in seeking and finding his mother, of whose tender care he was deprived from his earliest childhood.
harrison square, mass.,
september 23, 1867.