When Paul Gray’s term of imprisonment expired he and Paul went away together, and no one was so unmannerly as to ask them where they were going. Some of the people of the town talked of taking up a subscription for the unfortunate man, but Mr. Morton said it would not be necessary, as Gray’s old friends had arranged to start him in business. All of the boys were as sorry to part with Paul as if the boy had been going to his grave, particularly because Canning Forbes had reminded them that it would not do to ask him to write to them, because his father would prefer that no one who had known his old history should know where he began his new life.
But every one begged Paul’s picture, which pleased Paul greatly; and after a supper given expressly in Paul’s honor by Joe Appleby, Canning Forbes arose and presented Paul an album containing the portraits of all the members of the old class. The pictures were not remarkably good, having been done by a carpenter who sometimes took “tin-types” merely to oblige people, he said, but the album was handsome, having been ordered from New York, regardless of expense, by Sam Wardwell’s father, and on the cover was the inscription, in gold letters, “Don’t forget us, for we can’t forget you.”
THE END.
Transcriber's notes
Obvious typographical errors have been corrected without mentioning.
Spelling inconsistencies have been maintained.