"Macknight, if you please, Dr. Steele."
"O, Macknight. Will you be so kind as to let him have the use of it in my name?"
"If you will go with Mr. Rubens, sir," said the librarian, "he will show you the book."
"Thank you, sir," replied Mr. Jacobs, to whom the words were addressed; and he followed the assistant among the alcoves in a timid, tiptoe progress, for, to him, the very air he breathed seemed redolent of learning, and the dust beneath his feet consecrated to science.
Dr. Steele remained behind, conversing with the librarian.
"My friend has something of the ancient apostolic simplicity hanging about him still. He looks with as much awe at Harvard College library as I did myself forty-five years ago, when I came down from Steuben to join the freshman class."
"So you came from Steuben! Did not old John Morton come from the same place?"
"To be sure he did. He was the glory of the town. He pulled down the old clapboard meeting house that his father used to preach in, and built a new one for him: besides giving a start in business to half the young men of the village."
"Do you see that undergraduate at the end of the hall, standing by the last alcove, reading?"
"Yes; what about him? He seems a hardy, good-looking young fellow enough."