The load of chips by Madeline Leslie

"The load of chips" by Madeline Leslie is a didactic children's tale written in the late 19th century. It follows the virtuous orphan Arthur Thompson—encouraged by a compassionate benefactress and a kindly elderly couple—as he learns industry, honesty, and faith, contrasted with his idle, deceitful companion Joseph Hickie. The likely focus is moral formation through work, charity, and truthfulness in a bustling shipyard town. The opening of The load of chips shows Mrs. Irvington offering work to a street boy; Joseph shirks and lies, while Arthur works earnestly and truthfully seeks help for his ailing mother, whom the lady aids until her death. Arthur keeps the chip-yard job, attends Sunday school, and becomes a steady, grateful worker, eventually placed in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Olmstead, where the warmhearted Hepsah cherishes him. After Mr. Olmstead breaks his leg, Arthur is briefly jailed when Joseph uses him to pass a counterfeit bill, but Hepsah secures his release, and the Olmsteads adopt him. As a young clerk, Arthur resists the worldly Munger, who secretly leads Willie Irvington into theaters, gambling, and deception. A street robbery by Joseph steals a $10,000 deposit from Arthur, suspicion flickers, and Munger suddenly flees; Arthur’s humble letter helps draw out Willie’s confession. Joseph is later caught trying to change one of the marked bills, and these early chapters firmly set the book’s moral arc of diligence and truth rewarded, and idleness and deceit exposed. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

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About this eBook

Author Leslie, Madeline, 1815-1893
Title The load of chips
Original Publication Boston: Andrew F. Graves, 1870.
Series Title The sun-shine series, 3
Language English
LoC Class PZ: Language and Literatures: Juvenile belles lettres
Subject Christian life -- Juvenile fiction
Subject Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction
Category Text
eBook-No. 78578
Release Date
Copyright Public domain in the USA.
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