
At twelve, the narrator has already exhausted the modest lessons of his preparatory school and feels a renewed, vigorous hunger for knowledge. Encouraged by a father who values learning but warns against letting books become a master, he prepares to leave the familiar halls for a place that promises more than rote memorisation. The new prospect is Dr. Herman’s “Philhellenic Institute,” a school that promises to reshape the very way a mind is formed.
Dr. Herman—a former German music‑master turned educational reformer—has built a curriculum that mixes classical languages with chemistry, engineering, natural history and even gymnastics. His disdain for outdated spelling drills and corporal punishment fuels a lively, eclectic classroom where pupils are urged to use their eyes, ears and limbs as tools of learning. The institute’s bustling atmosphere and bold methods promise to broaden the young scholar’s horizons, even as the growing number of students begins to test the limits of Herman’s ideals.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (60K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1803–1873
Best remembered for vivid historical and supernatural fiction, this prolific Victorian writer also left a surprising mark on everyday language with phrases that people still quote today. His stories mix drama, mystery, politics, and the occult in a way that helped shape popular fiction in the 19th century.
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