ali@127: **************** OPTIONS **************** ali@127: --charset=ISO-8859-1 ali@127: **************** ENCODING **************** ali@127: WINDOWS-1252 ali@127: **************** INPUT **************** ali@127: Where the character set declared is narrower than the character set ali@127: implied by the encoding as in this case (Windows-1252 is a superset ali@127: of the first latin alphabet defined in ECMA 94), then bookloupe should ali@127: warn about characters that are not in the declared character set but ali@127: should still recognise them and otherwise handle them as it would ali@127: normally do. We use the curved apostrophe as a test for this since ali@127: if bookloupe didn't recognise it then it would query the orphaned ali@127: letters from the genitives and abbreviations. ali@127: ali@127: John Hendricks was bear-leading at the time. He had originally studied ali@127: for Holy Orders, but had abandoned the Church later for private reasons ali@127: connected with his faith, and had taken to teaching and tutoring ali@127: instead. He was an honest, upstanding fellow of five-and-thirty, ali@127: incorruptible, intelligent in a simple, straightforward way. He played ali@127: games with his head, more than most Englishmen do, but he went through ali@127: life without much calculation. He had qualities that made boys like ali@127: and respect him; he won their confidence. Poor, proud, ambitious, ali@127: he realised that fate offered him a chance when the Secretary of ali@127: State for Scotland asked him if he would give up his other pupils ali@127: for a year and take his son, Lord Ernie, round the world upon an ali@127: educational trip that might make a man of him. For Lord Ernie was the ali@127: only son, and the Marquess’s influence was naturally great. To have ali@127: deposited a regenerated Lord Ernie at the castle gates might have ali@127: guaranteed Hendricks’ future. After leaving Eton prematurely the lad ali@127: had come under Hendricks’ charge for a time, and with such excellent ali@127: results--‘I’d simply swear by that chap, you know,’ the boy used ali@127: to say--that his father, considerably impressed, and rather as a ali@127: last resort, had made this proposition. And Hendricks, without much ali@127: calculation, had accepted it. He liked ‘Bindy’ for himself. It was ali@127: in his heart to ‘make a man of him,’ if possible. They had now been ali@127: round the world together and had come up from Brindisi to the Italian ali@127: Lakes, and so into Switzerland. It was middle October. With a week or ali@127: two to spare they were making leisurely for the ancestral halls in ali@127: Aberdeenshire. ali@127: **************** EXPECTED **************** ali@127: ali@127: only son, and the Marquess’s influence was naturally great. To have ali@127: Line 22 column 27 - Non-ISO-8859-1 character 8217 ali@127: ali@127: guaranteed Hendricks’ future. After leaving Eton prematurely the lad ali@127: Line 24 column 21 - Non-ISO-8859-1 character 8217 ali@127: ali@127: had come under Hendricks’ charge for a time, and with such excellent ali@127: Line 25 column 25 - Non-ISO-8859-1 character 8217 ali@127: ali@127: results--‘I’d simply swear by that chap, you know,’ the boy used ali@127: Line 26 column 10 - Non-ISO-8859-1 character 8216 ali@127: ali@127: calculation, had accepted it. He liked ‘Bindy’ for himself. It was ali@127: Line 29 column 40 - Non-ISO-8859-1 character 8216 ali@127: ali@127: in his heart to ‘make a man of him,’ if possible. They had now been ali@127: Line 30 column 17 - Non-ISO-8859-1 character 8216