<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
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<p class="center pfirst"><span class="xx-large">THE HUMAN BOY AGAIN</span></p>
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<p class="center pfirst"><span class="small">BY</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="large">EDEN PHILLPOTTS</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="small">AUTHOR OF "THE HUMAN BOY"</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="small">"There are those who scoff at the school-boy, calling
<br/>him frivolous and shallow. Yet it was the school-boy
<br/>who said, 'Faith is believing what you know ain't
<br/>so.'"—</span><em class="italics small">Pudd'nhead Wilson's New Calendar</em><span class="small">.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="small">"Man is more childish than woman. In the true
<br/>man there is a child hidden: it wanteth to play."—F. NIETZSCHE.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="medium">LONDON
CHAPMAN AND HALL, LTD.
1908</span></p>
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</div>
<div class="align-None container verso">
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="small">RICHARD CLAY & SONS, LIMITED,
<br/>BREAD STREET HILL, E.C., AND
<br/>BUNGAY, SUFFOLK.</span></p>
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</div>
<div class="align-None container dedication">
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="medium">TO MY DEAR FRIEND,
<br/>MARK TWAIN,
<br/>FATHER OF 'TOM SAWYER' AND
<br/>'HUCKLEBERRY FINN,'
<br/>THESE HUMAN BOYS,
<br/>WITH SINCEREST REGARD.</span></p>
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</div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">CONTENTS</span></p>
<ol class="upperroman simple">
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#peters-detective">PETERS, DETECTIVE</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-doctor-s-parrot">THE DOCTOR'S PARROT</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-bankruptcy-of-bannister">THE BANKRUPTCY OF BANNISTER</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-tiger-s-tail">THE TIGER'S TAIL</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#richmond-minimus-preacher">RICHMOND MINIMUS, PREACHER</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-bolsover-prize">THE 'BOLSOVER' PRIZE</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-case-for-fowle">THE CASE FOR FOWLE</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#cherry-ripe">'CHERRY RIPE'</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-qwarry">THE QWARRY</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#richmond-and-the-major-general">RICHMOND AND THE MAJOR-GENERAL</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-good-conduct-prize">THE GOOD CONDUCT PRIZE</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#tomkins-on-tinned-cow">TOMKINS ON 'TINNED COW'</SPAN></p>
</li>
</ol>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#he-caned-me-for-insolence-combined-with-irreverence">HE CANED ME FOR INSOLENCE, COMBINED WITH
IRREVERENCE</SPAN><span> (</span><em class="italics">see p.</em><span> </span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#id1">66</SPAN><span>)</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#would-you-rather-be-a-greater-fool-than-you-look-or-look-a-greater-fool-than-you-are">"WOULD YOU RATHER BE A GREATER FOOL THAN
YOU LOOK, OR LOOK A GREATER FOOL THAN YOU ARE?"</SPAN></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#most-of-the-actual-work-was-done-by-moonlight">MOST OF THE ACTUAL WORK WAS DONE BY MOONLIGHT</SPAN></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-total-liabilities-are-exactly-two-pounds-said-gideon">"THE TOTAL LIABILITIES ARE EXACTLY TWO POUNDS," SAID GIDEON</SPAN></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#freckles-often-went-to-look-at-it-in-the-doctor-s-study">FRECKLES OFTEN WENT TO LOOK AT IT IN THE DOCTOR'S STUDY</SPAN></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#we-went-out-of-bounds-on-the-railway-embankment">"WE WENT OUT OF BOUNDS ON THE RAILWAY EMBANKMENT"</SPAN></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#at-one-spot-the-descent-was-very-perilous">AT ONE SPOT THE DESCENT WAS VERY PERILOUS</SPAN></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-fighting-was-very-wild-and-unscientific">"THE FIGHTING WAS VERY WILD AND UNSCIENTIFIC"</SPAN></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="peters-detective"><span class="bold x-large">PETERS, DETECTIVE</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">No. I</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">PETERS, DETECTIVE</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">I</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Being from the first the chum and friend of
Peters, I can tell about his curious ways better than
anybody. In fact we shared our pocket-money,
which is always a great sign of friendship; and
it was understood that if ever I got into trouble
when I grew up, and was accused of murder or
forgery, or anything like that, which does often
happen to the most innocent people, Peters would
give up anything he might be doing at the time,
and devote his entire life to proving me not
guilty.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I remember well the day he came. I was in the
big school-room at the fire, roasting chestnuts and
talking to Gideon; and Shortland and Fowle were
also there. The Doctor came in with a new boy
and said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Ah! There are some of the fellows by the fire,
Peters."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he called out to Shortland and me and said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Shortland and Maydew, this is Peters. Make
him welcome, and if there are chestnuts going, as
I suspect, share them with him."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then the Doctor went off to have some final jaw
with the mother of Peters; and Peters came down
the room and said "Good-evening" in a very
civil and quiet tone of voice.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He was thin and dark, and when he warmed his
hands at the fire it was easy to see the light through
them. He also had a pin in his tie in the shape
of a human skull, about as big as a filbert nut,
with imitation ruby eyes.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We asked him who he was, and he said he came
from Surrey, and that his father had been a soldier,
but was unfortunately dead. His name was
Vincent Peters.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then Shortland, who is a silly beast and a
bully, and only in the lower fifth, though quite
old—and, in fact, his voice has broken down—asked
Peters the footling question he always asks
every new boy.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said, "Would you rather be a greater fool
than you look, or look a greater fool than you are?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Of course, whatever you answer, you must be
scored off. But young Peters seemed to know it.
Anyway, instead of answering the question he
asked another. He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Would you rather be uglier than you look,
or look uglier than you are?"</span></p>
<div class="align-center auto-scaled figure margin" style="width: 82%" id="figure-82">
<span id="would-you-rather-be-a-greater-fool-than-you-look-or-look-a-greater-fool-than-you-are"></span><ANTIMG class="align-center block" style="display: block; width: 100%" alt=""WOULD YOU RATHER BE A GREATER FOOL THAN YOU LOOK, OR LOOK A GREATER FOOL THAN YOU ARE?"" src="images/img-004.jpg" />
<div class="caption centerleft figure-caption margin">
<span class="italics">"WOULD YOU RATHER BE A GREATER FOOL THAN YOU LOOK, OR LOOK A GREATER FOOL THAN YOU ARE?"</span></div>
</div>
<p class="pnext"><span>Gideon was interested at this, because it showed
at once Peters must be a cool hand.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What are you going to be?" Gideon asked;
and then came out the startling fact that Peters
hoped to be a detective of crime.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If you go detecting anything here you'll get
your head punched," said Shortland.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I may or I may not," answered Peters. "But
it's rather useful sometimes to have a chap in
a school who has made a study of detecting
things."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You can begin to-night, if you like," I said;
"because Johnson major's bat was found to have
seven tin tacks hammered into it last week, when he
took it out of the case to give it a drop more oil;
and if you find out who did that, I've no doubt that
Johnson major will be a good friend to you—him
being in the sixth and captain of the first at
cricket."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I don't know enough about things yet,"
answered Peters. "Besides, you have to be sure
of your ground. In detecting you may make
friends, or you may not; but you will make enemies
to a dead certainty. In fact, that's the drawback to
detecting. Look at Sherlock Holmes."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"That's only a yarn," said Gideon.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Peters wouldn't allow this. He evidently
felt very deeply about Sherlock Holmes.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"He is founded on fact—in fact, founded on
thousands of solemn facts," said Peters. "The
things he does are all founded on real crimes, and
if anybody is going to be a detective, he can't
do better than try to be like Sherlock Holmes in
every possible way."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The tea-bell rang about this time, and Peters
sat next to me and told me a good deal more.
He said he was very thankful that he was thin,
like Holmes, and wiry, and had a beak-like nose.
He asked me if he had piercing eyes; and I could
honestly say that they were pretty piercing. Then
he brought out a picture of Sherlock Holmes, which
he always carried, and showed me that, with luck,
when he grew up, he ought really to be very much
indeed like the great Holmes.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He was learning to play the violin also—not
because he liked it, but because of the importance of
doing it in moments of terrible difficulty. He said
that it soothes the brain and helps it to do its
work—but not so much while you're learning. He
said that after he had thoroughly mastered a
favourite piece of Holmes's he should be satisfied,
as there would never be any occasion for him to
play more than one piece.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Chaps liked Peters very fairly well. He was a
good 'footer' player, and very good at outside
right. He was fast, and told me that speed often
made all the difference to the success of a criminal
case. Pure sprinting had many a time made all
the difference to Holmes. Peters didn't know
much in the way of learning, but he dearly liked
to get hold of a newspaper and read the crimes.
He didn't find out about Johnson major's bat,
however; but he said it wasn't a fair test, because
he never heard clearly all that went before the
crime. A few small detections he made with great
ease, and found the half-crown that Mathers had
lost in the playground. This he did by
cross-questioning Mathers, and making him bring back to
his mind the smallest details; and then Mathers
remembered turning head over heels while only
touching the ground with one hand, to show how
it could be done. And on the exact spot, in some
long grass at the top of the playground where he
had performed this feat, there was the half-crown.
Mathers offered Peters sixpence on the spot, but
Peters said it was nothing, and wouldn't take any
reward.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He generally knew by the mud on your boots
which of the walks you had been, and he always
could tell which of the masters was taking 'prep'
before he went into the room, by the sounds or
silence. He also had a very curious way of
prophesying by certain signs if the Doctor was in a
good temper or a bad one. He always knew this
long before anybody else, and it was a very useful
thing to know, naturally.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Peters did not really do much till his own
guinea-pig was found dead in its lair about
half-way through his second term at Merivale. He did
not care for animals in a general way, excepting
as helping to throw light on crime; which, it
seems, they are very much in the habit of doing,
though not intentionally. But this particular
guinea-pig was far from a common creature, being
a prize Angora pig, and having been given to
Peters during the Christmas holidays by a friend
of his dead father. It had long hair, and looked
far more like one of those whacking chrysanthemums
you see than a guinea-pig. It was brown and
yellow, and had a round nose like a rabbit, and
seemed so trusting and friendly that everybody
liked it. One other boy—namely, James—had a
guinea-pig also, because these were the days before
we took to keeping lizards and other things in our
desks—which was discovered by a dormouse of
mine coming up through the inkpot hole in my
desk under the Doctor's nose, and so giving itself
away. And though the pig of James was a good
white pig, with a black patch on his right side
and one little dab of yellow fur where his tail would
have been if he had had one, yet, compared to the
guinea-pig of Peters, he was nothing. James,
however, didn't mind the loss of admiration for his
pig, and he offered Peters to let the pigs live
together, which would be better for both of them,
because a guinea-pig is the most sociable thing in
Nature, and are known well to pine, and even die,
if kept in single captivity. But Peters had a secret
fear that the pig of James was not sound in its
health. He told me that he had made a most
searching examination of James's pig, and
discovered a spot of pink skin on its chest. He said
it might be nothing, but, on the other hand, it
might be some infectious disease. Also James's
pig was inclined to go bald; so he thanked James
very much, and said he thought that if the pigs
saw each other through the bars from time to time
it would be all they wanted to brace them up and
cheer them. But he thought, upon the whole, they
had better not meet.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>James didn't like this. He was rather a rum
chap in many ways, but very good at English
grammar and chemistry; and he had invented a
way of cribbing, while a master was actually in the
room, that many copied afterwards. James got
rather rude about the guinea-pig of Peters, and
seemed to think in some way that it was the pig,
and not Peters, that had decided not to live with
his pig.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said one day, when looking at the champion
pig, "I suppose the little beast thinks it's too big
a swell to live with my honest, short-haired pig.
All the same, if they had a fight, I know which
would jolly well win."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"So do I," said Peters. "If a race-horse had
a fight with a cart-horse, the cart-horse would win.
This is not a prize-fighting pig."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>West was there and said the same. He, of
course, understood all about prize-fighting, owing
to his brother being winner of the 'middle-weights'
at the championship of the army; and
he said that if these pigs fought, the superior
weight of James's pig behind the shoulder would
soon settle it. Besides, of course, the other one's
hair streamed all over it like a skye terrier's. You
could see at a glance that it was never born to be
a fighter.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"However, if you want a fight," said Peters,
who was always cool and polite, owing to copying
Sherlock Holmes, "if you want a fight, James,
I can oblige you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>They were both fourteen-and-a-half, and James
was a lot fatter, but not so tall as Peters.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No," said James, "I don't want to fight. I
didn't mean anything of the sort."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I may be able to get you a guinea-pig like
mine next holidays," said Peters; "and if I can, I
will."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I don't want it," said James. "I don't care
about these guinea-pigs that look like penwipers
gone mad. I'd rather have mine."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This, of course, was mean and paltry jealousy,
and we rotted James till we rather got his wool off.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>A week afterwards the champion pig was found
dead on its back, with its paws in the air and its
eyes open, but dim. They had a look of fright in
them; and it was very interesting indeed, this
happening to Peters, because it would be sure to show
if his detective powers were really worth talking
about.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Of course everybody said it must be James; and
James said, and also swore, that it was not.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Peters told me privately that he was trying to
keep a perfectly open mind. He said there were
many difficulties in his way, because in the event
of a human being dying and being found stark
you always have a </span><em class="italics">post-mortem</em><span>, followed by an
inquest; whereas with a mere guinea-pig, belonging
to a boy in a school, there is not enough publicity.
He said that up to a certain point publicity
is good, and beyond that point it is bad. Sherlock
Holmes always set his face against publicity until
he'd found out the secret. Then he liked everybody
to know it, though often not until the last
paragraph of the story. That showed his frightful
cleverness.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said, "I suppose you will ask yourself, 'What
would Holmes do if one evening, while he was
sitting improving Watson, there suddenly appeared
before him a boy with a dead guinea-pig?'"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And Peters said, "No. Because a guinea-pig
in itself would not be enough to set the great brain
of Holmes working. If there were several mysterious
murders about, or if there had been some dark
and deadly thing occur, and Holmes, on taking the
pig into his hand and looking at it through his
magnifying-glass, suddenly discovered on the pig
some astounding clue to another fearful crime,
then he would bring his great brain to work upon
the pig; but merely as a guinea-pig suddenly found
dead, it would not interest him. In my case it's
different. The pig was a good deal to me; and
this death will get round to the man who gave
me the creature, and he'll be sure to think I've
starved it, and very likely turn from me; and being
my godfather, that would be jolly serious. In fact,
there are several reasons why I ought to find out
who has done this, if I can."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said, "It may be Fate. It may have died naturally."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He admitted this. He said, "That's where a
</span><em class="italics">post-mortem</em><span> would come in, if it was a human
being. Of course, Holmes never did </span><em class="italics">post-mortems</em><span>
himself, that not being his work; but I've got to
make one now. It may or may not help me."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He made it, and it didn't help him. My own
opinion is that he didn't much like it and hurried it
a good deal. He said there was no actual sign of
violence on the surface of the guinea-pig, and the
organs all seemed perfectly healthy. But when I
asked him what they would have looked like if they
hadn't been healthy, he avoided answering, and
went on that the pig's inside ought to have been
sent up to Somerset House, for examination by
Government officials, in a hermetically sealed bottle.
Peters declared that the public has a right to
demand this service for the stomachs of their old
friends and relations if foul play is suspected; but
not in the case of a domestic beast like a guinea-pig.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So the pig was buried, and not until then did
Peters really seem to set to work. The actual
horror of the death gradually wore off, and he told
me that he should now seriously tackle the case.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There was a most unusual lack of clues, he said;
and he pointed out that even Sherlock Holmes
could do nothing much until clues began to turn
up. Peters warned me against always taking it for
granted that James had done it. In fact, he said
it was very unlikely to have been James, just
because it looked so likely.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said, "That may be the way Sherlock Holmes
talks; but it seems to me to be rather footle."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said, "No, Maydew; it isn't footle; it is
based on a study of the law of probabilities. If
you read accounts of crime, you will see that, as a
rule, the person who is suspected is innocent; and
the more he is suspected, the more innocent he is."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said, "Anyway, James has changed. He's
gone down four places in his class and lost his
place in the second 'footer' eleven also. There's
something on his mind."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," said Peters, "that's true. Everybody
believes that he killed a valuable guinea-pig, and
treats him accordingly. That is quite enough to
send him down four places in the class; but if he
had killed the guinea-pig he would have brazened
it out and have been prepared for this, and taken
very good care not to show what he felt."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"In fact, you don't think he killed the pig," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And Peters said he didn't think James had; but
he was keeping an open mind.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then came the most extraordinary clue of the
ten-shilling piece. Happening to go to his desk
one day—between schools—for toffee, Peters found
in it a bit of paper lightly screwed up. He opened
it and discovered in it no less than a gold
ten-shilling piece; and on the paper, printed in lead
pencil, were these words—</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span>"FOR ANUTHER GINNEA-PIG."</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>He said nothing to anybody but me; but he
seemed to think that I was a sort of a Dr. Watson
in my way; besides, it simplified the workings of
his mind to talk out loud; so he showed me the
clue and then asked me what I thought. I had
rather picked up his dodge of talking like Sherlock
Holmes, so I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The first question is, of course, to see what
is the date on the half-quid."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I thought this pretty good; but Peters said that
this was not the first question, and didn't matter in
the least.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said, "My dear Maydew, the money is
nothing; the paper in which it is wrapped up is
everything."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So I turned to the paper.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What does it tell you?" he asked.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It tells me that some utter kid did it," I said,
"for he can't spell 'another' and he can't spell
'guinea-pig.'"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Peters smiled and put the points of his
fingers together like Sherlock Holmes.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"My dear Maydew," he said, "might not that
have been done on purpose?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then I scored off him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It is just because it might have been done on
purpose," I said, "that I think it was done
accidentally."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He nodded.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Of course, it may be the work of a kid," he
admitted. "But, on the other hand, it may be a
subterfuge. Besides, no kid would have killed my
guinea-pig. Where's the motive?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The great thing is that you've got half-a-sovereign
and we share pocket-money," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But he attached little importance to this, except
to say that the half-sov. wasn't pocket-money,
though I might have half.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Now, examine the paper," he went on.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I did so. It was a sheet of one of our ordinary,
lined copybooks, used for dictation, composition,
exercises, and such like.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Evidently torn out of one of the copybooks," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Exactly; but which one?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Ask me another," I said. "You'll never find
that out."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He smiled and arranged his hands again like Holmes.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I have," he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Then you know?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"On the contrary, I know nothing."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It wasn't James's book?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It wasn't. The first thing was to find a book
with a sheet torn out. I tried twenty-five books,
and seven had pages torn out. But James's book
had not. Then judge of my surprise, Maydew,
when, coming to my desk for the form of the thing,
and looking at my own exercise-book, I found a
sheet was torn out; and this is it, for the tear
fits!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What frightful cheek!" I cried out.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I don't so much mind that," said Peters; "but
the point is that, splendid though this clue seems
to be on the surface, I can't get any forwarder by
it. In fact, it may be the act of a friend, and not
a foe."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What would Sherlock Holmes do?" I asked;
and Peters gave a sort of mournful sound and
scratched his head.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I wish I knew," he said.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">II</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Gideon was helpful in a way, but nobody could
make much of it. Gideon said that it was
conscience money, and was often known to happen,
especially with the Income Tax; because people,
driven to desperation by it, often pay too little,
and then, when things brighten up with them
afterwards, it begins to weigh on their minds, if they
are fairly decent at heart, and they remember
that they have swindled the King and been
dishonest; and so they send the money secretly, but,
of course, feel too ashamed to say who they are.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I asked James if he had sent the money, and he
swore he hadn't; but he did it in such an excitable
sort of way that I was positive he had. Peters
wouldn't believe or disbelieve. He went quietly
on, keeping an open mind and detecting the crime;
and when the truth came to light, Peters was still
detecting.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But in the meantime happened the mystery of
the pencil-sharpener, and the two great mysteries
were cleared up simultaneously, which Peters says
is a common thing. You couldn't say that one
cleared up the other, but still, it did so happen
that both came out in the same minute.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There was a boy whose name was Pratt, and his
father was on the Stock Exchange of London.
This father used to go out to his lunch, and at
these times he saw many curious things sold by
wandering London men who are too poor to keep
shops, but yet have the wish to sell things. These
men stand by the pavement and display most queer
and uncommon curiosities, such as walking spiders
and such like; and once from one of these men
Pratt's father bought quite a new sort of
pencil-sharpener of the rarest kind. It was shaped like a
stirrup, and cut pencils well without breaking off
the lead.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>After a good week of this pencil-sharpener, Pratt
found it had been stolen out of his desk, and he
told Peters about it, and Peters took up the case.
I asked him if he was hopeful, and he said that
there was always hope; but he also said, rather
bitterly, that it was curious what a frightful lot of
hard cases he had had since coming to Merivale.
He said it was enough to tax anybody's reputation,
and that each case seemed more difficult than
the last.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I reminded him of one or two rather goodish
things he had done in a small way, but he said
that as yet he had not really brought off a brilliant
stroke.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>A week went by, and then Peters came to me in
a state of frightful excitement.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The pencil-sharpener!" he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Have you got a clue?" I asked. But he could
hardly speak for excitement, and forgot to put his
hands like Holmes, or to try and arrange a
'far-away' look on his face, or anything.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Not only a clue," he said, "I know who took it!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"This will be a great score for you when it
comes out," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You swear you won't breathe a word?" he asked.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I swore. Then he whispered the fearful
news into my ear.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The Doctor's taken it!" he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"He never would," I answered. "Pratt is
positive that he left it in his desk."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It is a case of purloining," said Peters; "and
wish it had happened to anybody else but the
Doctor. It's rather terrible in its way; because if
once gets this habit and yields to temptation,
his unlimited power, who is safe?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It's much more a thing Browne would have
done," I said, meaning a particularly hateful
roaster who wore pink ties and elastic-sided
boots.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then Peters explained that when alone in the
Doctor's study, waiting to give a message to
Dr. Dunstan from Mr. Briggs, he chanced to look
about, and saw on the mantelpiece Pratt's
pencil-sharpener and a pencil in course of being
sharpened. The Doctor had evidently put them down
there and been called away and forgotten them.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What did you do?" I inquired of Peters.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, Maydew," he said, "I asked myself
what Sherlock would have done"—in confidential
moments Peters sometimes spoke of the great
Holmes as 'Sherlock'—"and I remembered his
wonderful presence of mind. Me would have struck
while the iron was hot, as the saying is, and taken
the pencil-sharpener there and then."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"By Jove! But you didn't?" I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>For answer Peters brought the pencil-sharpener
out of his waistcoat pocket.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Are you positive it's Pratt's?" I asked.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Absolutely certain," he said. "It has the
words 'Made in Bavaria' upon it; and, of course,
this is a frightfully delicate situation to be in for me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Especially if the Doctor asks for it," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"He won't dare," answered Peters; "but I've
got a sort of strong feeling against letting anybody
know who has done this. On one or two occasions,
I believe, Holmes kept the doer of a dark
deed a secret—to give him a chance to repent. It
seems to me this is a case when I ought to do
the same."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If the Doctor cribs things, I don't see why you
should keep it dark," I said; and Peters treated
me rather rudely—in fact, very much like Holmes
sometimes treats Watson.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"My dear Maydew," he said, "the things you
don't see would fill a museum."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Anyway, you'll have to give Pratt back his
pencil-sharpener," I said; and he admitted that this
was true. The only thing that puzzled him was
how to do it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But, after all, Peters didn't puzzle long. He was
thinking the next morning how to return the
pencil-sharpener to Pratt in a mysterious and Sherlock
Holmes-like way, when, just after prayers, the
Doctor stopped the school and spoke. He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Boys, I have lost something, and though an
article of little intrinsic worth, I cannot suffer it to
go without making an effort to regain it. I say
this for two reasons. The first and least is that
the little contrivance so mysteriously spirited from
my study is of the greatest service to me; while
the second and important reason your own
perspicuity may perhaps suggest. Things do not go
without hands. Somebody has taken from my
study what did not belong to him; and somebody,
therefore, at this moment moves among you with
an aching heart and a wounded conscience. Let
that boy make his peace with God and with me
before he closes his eyes; and that no doubt or
ambiguity may obscure the details of this event, I
will now descend to particulars.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Not long ago, a kindly friend conveyed to me
a new form of pencil-sharpener which he had
chanced to find exhibited in a stationer's shop at
Plymouth, our great naval port. Knowing that
my eyesight is not of the best, he judged this trifle
would assist me in the endless task of sharpening
pencils, which is not the least among my minor
mechanical labours. And he judged correctly.
The implement was distinguished by a great
simplicity of construction. It consisted, indeed, of
one small piece of metal somewhat resembling the
first letter of the alphabet. I last saw it upon the
mantelpiece in the study. I was actually using it
when called away, and on my return forgot the
circumstance. But upon retiring last night, the
incident reverted to memory while divesting
myself of my apparel, and so indispensable had the
pencil-sharpener become to me that I resumed my
habiliments, lighted a candle, and went downstairs
to seek the sharpener. It had disappeared. Now,
yesterday several boys came and went, as usual,
through the precincts of my private apartments.
Furthermore, the Greek Testament class will
recollect that we were engaged together in the evening
from seven until eight o'clock. I need say no
more. The loss is discovered and the loss is
proclaimed. I accuse nobody. Many things may
have happened to the pencil-sharpener, and if any
boy can throw light upon the circumstance let him
speak with me to-night after evening chapel. I
hope it may be possible to find an innocent
solution of my loss; but if one of you has fallen under
sudden temptation, and, attracted by the portability
and obvious advantages of the instrument, has
appropriated it to his own uses, I must warn him
that my duty will be to punish as well as pardon.
The hand of man, however, is light as compared
with the anger of an outraged Deity. If a sinner is
cowering among you at this moment, with my
pencil-sharpener secreted about his person, let that
sinner lose no time, but strengthen his mind to
confess his sin, that he may the sooner turn over
a new leaf and sin no more."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he hooked it to breakfast, and I spoke to
Peters. I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"This is pretty blue for you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But he said, far from it. He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"On the contrary, Maydew. It's blue for the
Doctor; and it shows—what he's always saying to
us himself, for that matter—that if you do a wrong
thing, you've nearly always got to do another, or
perhaps two, to bolster up the first. Sherlock
Holmes often finds out one crime owing to the
criminal doing another, and no doubt this has
happened to the Doctor. He has told a deliberate,
carefully planned lie, and a barefaced lie too;
because he must know that he stole the thing out of
Pratt's desk. Anyhow, my course is clear."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said I was glad to hear that, because it didn't
look at all clear to me. Then Peters said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I, personally, have got nothing to do with the
Doctor's wickedness in the matter. In my opinion
that is Pratt's affair."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But I felt pretty sure Pratt wouldn't bother
about it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Anyway," said Peters, "I now return Pratt
his pencil-sharpener, and there my duty as the
detective of the case ceases. Sherlock Holmes
often did a tremendous deed and only told the way
he'd done it to Watson. And so it is here. It is
not my work to bring the Doctor to justice, and
I'm not going to try to do it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said he was right, because, while he was
bringing the Doctor to justice, he might get expelled,
and that wouldn't be much of a catch for
anybody.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So the first thing after morning school we went
to Pratt, and Peters put on his Holmes manner and
said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, Pratt, no news of the missing pencil-sharpener,
I suppose?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And Pratt said, "Mine or the Doctor's?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And Peters said, "Yours."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, there is," said Pratt; "I found it in my
lexicon two days ago. I'd marked a word with
it and clean forgotten. So that's all right."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Not so right as you might think," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Peters kept his nerve jolly well, and, in
fact, was more like Sherlock Holmes at that terrible
moment than ever I saw him before or after.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'm glad it's turned up," said Peters, "and I
hope the Doctor's will."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he and I went off, and I congratulated him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You've got a nerve of iron," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," he said, "and I shall want it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he told me there was nothing like this in
Sherlock Holmes, and that the whole piece of
detective work was a failure, and rather a painful
failure to him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I don't mind the licking, and so on," he said,
"but it's the inner disgrace."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It was a very natural mistake," I said, to cheer
him up.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," he said; "but detectives of the first class
don't make natural mistakes—nor any other sort
either. It's the disappointment of coming such a
howler over a simple felony that is so hard. At
least, of course, it's not a felony at all."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If it is, you did it," I said; "and now of
course you'll chuck away the pencil-sharpener and
sit tight about it?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But he shook his head.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No, Maydew. Of course I could evade the
consequences with ease, if I liked. But I have
decided to give this back to the Doctor and tell
him the whole story," said Peters.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Sherlock Holmes would never have done that," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No, he wouldn't," admitted Peters. "Because
why? Because he'd never have been such a fool
as to be deluded by a false clue. He knew a true
clue from a false, as well as we know a nice smell
from a nasty one."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well," I said, "if you take my advice for
once, you'll do this: You'll leave that thing on
the Doctor's desk in a prominent place next time
you're in there alone, and you'll bury the rest in
your brain. Holmes buried scores of things in his
brain. What's the sense of going out of your way
to get a licking?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If I told him the truth, I don't believe he would
lick me," said Peters. But I jolly soon showed
him that was rot. In fact, Watson never talked so
straight to Holmes as I did to Peters then.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"My dear chap," I said, "you go to the Doctor
and say, 'Here's your pencil-sharpener, sir; I saw
it on your mantelpiece and thought you'd stolen it
from Pratt, who has one exactly like it. So I took
it to give to Pratt, but his has turned up since.' Well,
what would happen then? Any fool could tell you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>All the same Peters went up next day at the
appointed time, and, curiously enough, James was
in the study waiting for the Doctor too. The
muddle that followed was explained to me by Peters
afterwards.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Me and James began to talk; then James said
to Peters, "I am here, Peters, about a very queer
and sad thing, and it is evidently Providence that
has sent you here now."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And Peters said, "No, it isn't. I am here about
a very queer thing too, and it may also turn out
to be sad—for me."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then James, who was excited to a very great
amount, said these strange words—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I had come to confess that it was me killed your
guinea-pig! I couldn't hide it any more. It's
haunting me—not the pig, but the killing of it. I
hoped, and even prayed in my prayers, that you
might detect me, but you didn't. Then I wrote
home for ten shillings for a debt of honour, and
put it in your desk, and disguised the spelling—but
still I was haunted by it. And now, as you
are here, I confess it openly to you that I killed
your beautiful, kind-hearted pig, and I hope you'll
forgive me for doing a beastly, blackguard thing.
And if you can't forgive it, I'll tell the Doctor
and get flogged rather than go on like this;
because it's haunting me."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Peters said, "How did you do it?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And James said, "With poison from the laboratory
mixed in his bran."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And Peters was so much rejoiced when he heard
this, that he forgave the worm, James, on the spot.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"That is where sending the stomach to Somerset
House would have come in," said Peters; "but
as I was not in a position to do this, I do not
so much feel the slur of not having discovered you
were the criminal."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He forgave James freely. Then he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You may be amused to know that I am also
here about a crime. I thought I'd found one out
and, instead of that, I've jolly well committed a
crime myself. In fact, it's about the queerest
thing, really, that has ever happened in the annals
of crime."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he told the story of the pencil-sharpener to
James, and showed James the pencil-sharpener to
prove it. James actually had the pencil-sharpener
in his hand, when who should come in—not the
Doctor—but the matron, with the extraordinary
news that the mother of Peters was just arrived and
had to see him at once! This was so awfully
surprising to Peters that he went straight away
to the drawing-room and left the pencil-sharpener
with James; and in the drawing-room were the
Doctor and Peters's mother, who, after all, had
merely come to tell him that his uncle was dead.
But far more important things than that happened
in the study, because when Peters arrived to see
his mother, the Doctor, having said something
about bearing the shocks of life with manly fortitude,
went off to his study, and there, of course,
was James waiting for him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And what James did we heard afterwards. First,
on thinking it over, he began to doubt why he
should confess about the guinea-pig to the Doctor,
now that Peters had utterly forgiven him. And he
speedily decided that there was no occasion to do
so. But then, out of gratitude to Peters, he
determined to carry through the delicate task of getting
the pencil-sharpener back to the Doctor. And he
did. He told the Doctor that he had taken the
thing, because he thought it was Pratt's. He said
he felt sure Pratt must have left it in the study by
mistake. But he didn't say anything about thinking
the Doctor had stolen it, and, in fact, was so
jolly cunning altogether that he never got into a
row at all. The Doctor ended up by remarking
that Pratt's having one was a curious coincidence,
and he said to James, "As for you, boy James, you
stand acquitted of everything but too much zeal.
Zeal, however——" and then he talked a lot of
stuff about zeal, which James did not remember.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said privately to Peters afterwards—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"How would Holmes have acted if this had
happened to him?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And Peters said, "For once I can see as clear as
mud what Sherlock would have done. He would
have said, 'I think in this extraordinary case,
Watson, we may safely let well alone.'"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And that's what Peters did.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-doctor-s-parrot"><span class="bold x-large">THE DOCTOR'S PARROT</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">No. II</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">THE DOCTOR'S PARROT</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>When Johnson maximus, young Corkey's cousin,
left Merivale, he went to sea, and a very curious
thing happened. He went into what is called the
mercantile marine, which means liners, and not
battleships or destroyers; still you see a good deal
of the world, and have not got to fight for your
country, but only for yourself. A pension is not
so certain in the mercantile marine as it is in the
Royal Navy; but, Johnson maximus told Corkey,
when he came off a voyage from the East Indies,
that he was hopeful. He had seen a good many
curious things and brought home several, including
a parrot, chiefly grey with a good deal of red
about its tail. But what was far more wonderful
than the parrot was the reason that Johnson
maximus had brought it home.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He had brought it home, and also a very fine
tiger's skin, as gifts to Dr. Dunstan, and when
Corkey reminded him very naturally that he had
always hated Dunstan as much as anybody when
he was at Merivale, and been jolly thankful to leave
and go on to the </span><em class="italics">Worcester</em><span>, training ship for the
mercantile marine, Johnson maximus admitted it,
but confessed that, looking back, he had found it
different, and felt that Dunstan was an awfully
good sort and that he owed him a great deal. But
all the same, Johnson maximus never would come
and see the Doctor in after life. Corkey asked him
why, and he said he wanted to remember the awe
and terror of the Doctor, and thought, if he ever
saw him again it might not be the same; because,
since the Merivale days, Johnson had seen so many
queer places and things, including his own captain
in the mercantile marine, who, Johnson maximus
said, was himself one of the wonders of the deep.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Of course Johnson maximus left Merivale long
before I came there. He was, in fact, nearly
twenty when he sent the parrot by young Corkey;
and it seemed that the Doctor had never had a gift
from an old pupil until that time; and though
Corkey said he thought the Doctor would rather
have had almost anything than a parrot, still it
was so; and he took the parrot and the tiger skin;
and Corkey told me that Johnson maximus got a
letter of four pages from Dr. Dunstan, thanking
him for these things, and telling Johnson many
facts about parrots in general.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The great point about the parrot was not so
much its appearance as the thing that Johnson had
taught it to say. Simply looked at from the parrot
point of view, it was grey with a black tongue,
and curious white lids to its eyes that went up and
down like blinds. It climbed about its cage with
its claws and bill, and had a way of eating nuts,
especially walnuts, which was rather amusing.
We hoped that it might have learnt some sailor
words and would bring them out some day when
least expected: but if it knew them it never spoke
them. It only said three words, and they were
rather cheek; but they were rather romantic in a
way, when you knew what young Corkey knew
and was able to tell me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It was this: that Milly Dunstan and Johnson
maximus were undoubtedly engaged in secret
during his last term at Merivale. She was just an
ordinary little squirt of a girl, with nothing to look
round after but a lot of hair, and eyes that
happened to be uncommonly blue by some accident;
and, naturally, the moment Johnson went into the
mercantile marine, she forgot him and turned her
attention to other chaps, until old Dunstan sent
her to a boarding-school. But she jolly soon made
him let her come back again, and she was back
some terms before the parrot arrived.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then the parrot settled down and suddenly said
(after it had been at Merivale four days), "Dear
Milly Dunstan, dear Milly Dunstan"; and after
that the wretched girl chucked about ten chaps and
blubbed in secret for hours, so Corkey said, and
let it be known to the sixth that she was true to
Johnson maximus, because through many and many
a watch on the trackless main, when he ought to
have been resting from his labours in the
mercantile marine, he had sat hour after hour by the
parrot and repeated, doubtless many millions of
times, the footling words, 'Dear Milly Dunstan.'</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I don't think the Doctor was so pleased about it
as Milly was. Certainly he did not cry, and
Corkey said if the parrot had begun by speaking,
Dr. Dunstan might have considered it cheek on
Johnson's part and sent the parrot back with the
four-page letter; but seeing that he had accepted
it before it said "Dear Milly Dunstan," he
couldn't well return it. Besides, in the meantime,
Johnson maximus had set sail for South America,
and Steggles foretold that he would bring another
parrot back from there which he might train to say
something even stronger. He told Milly so, and
rose her hopes a good deal; but Steggles also
told her that she needn't get excited about it,
because her father would never let her marry a chap
in the mercantile marine, and that sailors have a
wife in every port. This was that same Steggles
who did many things at Merivale in the past, but
he was now exceedingly old, and expected at any
time to be taken away. Many believed he was
nearly eighteen, but he had nothing much to show
it except experience.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The first thing to do was to give the parrot a
name, and Milly told us in triumph that she had
made the Doctor call it 'Joe.' Of course this was
the Christian name of Johnson maximus, though I
believe the Doctor had quite forgotten that.
Anyway, 'Joe' is a very good name for a parrot,
and everybody got very fond of him, and old
Briggs lectured on him and told us that parrots
reach a great age, and have often been known to
live a hundred years and more, owing to their
healthy diet and the number of bites they take to
each mouthful, and their habit of never worrying
whatever happens. Old Briggs himself is
frightfully keen about fruit and nuts and such things,
and I believe, in secret, he hopes he'll live a
hundred years too. But nobody else does. Steggles
discovered a likeness between 'Joe' and old
Briggs. They shut their eyes in the same way
certainly, but 'Joe's' eyes are like grey
diamonds, and old Briggs's, through many years
of looking through microscopes at seeds, and bits
of seaweeds, and stones, and so on, have got a
sort of film over them, and are not up to much
now, even with two pairs of spectacles to help them.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Well, 'Joe' was as good a parrot as ever you
saw, and there is no doubt that he would have
outlived everybody at Merivale and got to be a sort
of heirloom in Dr. Dunstan's family, if he had
been spared; but after he had been there two
years—at the beginning of his seventh term, in
fact—the great and sorrowful death of the parrot took
place; and such was the general feeling about him
that there would certainly have been a public
funeral if the Doctor had allowed it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Mathers went further, and wanted it to be a
military funeral and have the cadet corps out with
reversed muskets; but Mathers, who is merely
Mathers minimus really, though his brothers have
long since left, is a chap who is like a girl in some
ways, being easily made to laugh or cry. To show
you the peculiar sort of ass he is, I may say that
he always writes home letters of dreadful anguish
at the beginning of the term, and then, when the
holidays really do come, seems never to want to go
home at all! Trelawny says this is contrary to
nature, and will end in pure insanity for Mathers;
but Fowle, on the other hand, says that Mathers
is already mad. I heard Browne, the mathematical
master, speak about Mathers too—to Mannering, a
new under-master. They were watching Mathers
in the playground, and he was in one of his most
cheerful moods, and imitating a monkey on a barrel-organ
catching fleas. He certainly did it jolly well,
and even a chap or two from the sixth stopped to
watch. And then, when he saw these chaps
looking on, he got above himself and began playing
the giddy ox, and spoilt the show. Then it was
that Browne gave his opinion of Mathers, and said
that he had 'the artistic temperament,' whatever
that may be. Anyway, it is no catch, for though
boys laugh at you, they despise you, and so do
masters. Masters never seem to have the artistic
temperament much; or, if they have had it, they
get well over it after being masters a few terms.
I suppose it was the artistic temperament that made
Mathers join the cadet corps; which he did do,
chiefly that he might wear the red bags with black
stripes, and drill once a week under the sergeant.
He was rather small, and it took all his strength to
carry the musket round; for the corps had twenty-five
old muskets, and I believe it was a regular
military affair under Government in a sort of vague
way. Anyhow, we had percussion caps for the
muskets, and fired them off at times in the course
of the drill; and the first time that young Mathers
had a musket with caps he turned rather white,
hating explosions and noise of all kinds, and said
out loud in the face of the corps, to the drill sergeant
who stood in front of the brigade, "Is it loaded,
sergeant?" The sergeant, who was old and had
seen battle, and had a grey moustache and medals
and a fierce expression, looked at him and merely
said, "Good God, boy, d'you think I should be
standing here if it was?" Then he spat a scornful
spit and twirled his moustache, and seemed to
think he'd come down a good deal in the world to
have to drill kids like Mathers. So always,
afterwards, if anybody wanted to rot Mathers, and most
people did, they had only to say, "Is it loaded,
sergeant?" and he instantly became depressed and
mournful, or got into a frightful bate—one or other
according to his frame of mind at the time.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I am telling you all these things about Mathers
for two reasons. First, because he is the principal
person, after 'Joe,' in this story, and secondly,
because he was my chum.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>My name is Blount, well known at Dunstan's as
having had diphtheria and two doctors in my first
term, and recovering. What I saw in Mathers I
never could tell, but there was something about the
piffling duffer that I liked. His good nature was
very marked, and he was peculiarly generous of
dried fruits, which drew me to him as much as
anything. His father was a merchant, and traded with
various foreign places especially celebrated for dried
fruits; and in this manner much grand tuck, that
ordinary people have to pay pretty stiffly for, such
as candied melons and crystallized pineapples and
other amazing food, very seldom seen in a general
way, came to Bunny Mathers as a matter of course
from time to time; and he thought no more of
opening a hamper and finding the richest and rarest
things in it than I should of getting a windfall
from our apple-orchard. This provender he gave
to his friends and to those he wanted to be his
friends; and some became his friends in
consequence; but their friendship, as Mathers rather
bitterly pointed out to me, sank to nothing between
the times of the hampers. Whereas I made
Mathers a real chum, and once, when, owing to
some fearful crisis in the sugared violet trade with
France, his father forgot for six weeks to send
Mathers any hamper at all, I remained unchanged.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then the parrot died and naturally the first
question was, "Why?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We had a debate on it. Our public debates are
listened to by the Doctor and the masters, and the
subjects are chosen by them; but sometimes we
have private debates that are not listened to, and
we had one on 'Joe'; and the Government, led by
Macmullen, our champion debater, held that
'Joe' had died a natural death, and the
Opposition, led by Richmond, thought he had died by
treachery. On a division the Government was
defeated by two votes, owing to the magnificent
speech of Richmond, and Steggles said there ought
to be an inquest and a </span><em class="italics">post-mortem</em><span>; and so did
Peters, who was positive the death was a murder.
The mystery was who could have done it, because
'Joe' had not an enemy in the world, unless it
was Mrs. Dunstan's cat, which he mimicked to its
face and then barked suddenly and made the cat
think there was a dog after her.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But this cat could not have done it. The parrot
was found dead in its cage on the morning of a day
in February. It was quite stiff and dignified. No
cat had touched him. Mathers said it cut him to
the heart to think of poor 'Joe' falling off his perch
in the dead of night, and lying helpless there, and
perhaps calling for help. He said if there had been
loving hands to give it a drop of brandy and put
its claws in mustard and water, it might be among
us yet. And he went on in such a harrowing way,
and thought such sad ideas, that at last I had to
smack his head and make him shut up.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There was no inquest and no </span><em class="italics">post-mortem</em><span>, for the
Doctor refused to have 'Joe' examined, much to
our astonishment. In fact we thought it was rather
unsportsmanlike of the Doctor to hustle 'Joe'
into his grave so jolly quickly. The corpse
disappeared, and the Doctor was slightly changed for
several days. He had got very fond of the bird,
and I think he missed hearing it say, "Dear Milly
Dunstan, dear Milly Dunstan," which it did
hundreds of times in the day when it was feeling well
and happy.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then, a week after 'Joe' was buried, came the
marvellous determination of Mathers. For the first
time in his life I felt a sort of pride in Mathers,
and was glad to be his chum. At the same time
the danger was frightful, and I had no idea what
the end might be. Only two people knew it, Milly
and myself. I rather advised him against it; but
she was hot and strong for it: so Mathers went
ahead into a regular sea of danger. Not that he
did it for Milly—far from it: he did it for himself,
and to advance his prosperity with the Doctor. His
prosperity with the Doctor was extremely low, and
he had made one mistake already by offering the
Doctor half-a-box of dates in a rather patronizing
way; and so now it was neck or nothing, and
Mathers well knew the frightful risks he ran in
the thing he was going to do.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said, "I always make a success or an utter
failure—at games, in class and everything. Either
this will make me the Doctor's friend for life, or
make him my bitter enemy for life."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The idea in the strange mind of Bunny Mathers
was to bring 'Joe' back again to Merivale. He
could not raise him from the dead, but he meant
to do the next best thing, and dig him up and
secretly stuff him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Only Mathers could have imagined this, though
there were one or two other chaps equal to doing
the thing if somebody else had thought of it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said to Mathers, "What do you know about
stuffing parrots?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said, "More than you might think."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He had read the article on stuffing beasts in the
</span><em class="italics">Encyclopædia Britannica</em><span>, which Briggs allowed
him to refer to, little knowing the reason; and he
said that stuffing was simpler than embalming, and
that his brother, Mathers minor, had often stuffed
bats and moles and other things in the holidays at
home. He told me that all you want for
bird-stuffing is wire, cotton-wool and pepper; and for
sixpence he could get all these things in great
abundance.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Milly Dunstan knew where 'Joe' was buried,
and the only difficulty, in the opinion of Mathers,
was digging him up. For some reason, though he
did not shrink from the horrors of getting 'Joe'
ready for the stuffing treatment, he hated the
digging up; so I undertook to do this. There was
little danger, as 'Joe' had been buried in a
secluded rockery under a large fern, where nobody
ever went. Milly showed me the spot on a
half-holiday, when I was supposed to be stopping in,
owing to bronchitis or something of that sort; and
I popped out, got a trowel from the gardener's
potting-shed, and dug up 'Joe.' He had been very
nicely buried in a large, empty tobacco tin of
Browne's; and I also made the grave look all right
again and put back the wooden gravestone. Minnie
had stuck this up, and on it Freckles had carved
for her the rather sad words—</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"</span><em class="italics">To the memory of darling 'Joe,' died 7th
February, 1901. Age unknown. Regretted by all.</em><span>"</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Owing to the weather being frosty, and the
ground simply full of splinters of ice, 'Joe' had
fortunately kept perfectly. This comforted Mathers
a good deal, and when I told him the poor old
chap was not even gamey, he was much pleased.
He worked in fearful secrecy at night, and kept
'Joe' in his play-box by day. Most of the
actual work was done at the passage window by
moonlight; and when the moon was no good, which
happened in two days, we used a candle-end. Once
the pepper got up our noses, and we both sneezed
in a way to wake half the dormitory; but nobody
suspected, and the work was gradually done.</span></p>
<div class="align-center auto-scaled figure margin" style="width: 82%" id="figure-83">
<span id="most-of-the-actual-work-was-done-by-moonlight"></span><ANTIMG class="align-center block" style="display: block; width: 100%" alt="MOST OF THE ACTUAL WORK WAS DONE BY MOONLIGHT" src="images/img-045.jpg" />
<div class="caption centerleft figure-caption margin">
<span class="italics">MOST OF THE ACTUAL WORK WAS DONE BY MOONLIGHT</span></div>
</div>
<p class="pnext"><span>I merely held things and advised. The actual
stuffing was entirely the work of Bunny. When
'Joe' was once ready for the cotton-wool, the
stuffing was as simple as possible; and owing to
his toughness we easily sewed up his chest
afterwards; but the thing was to get him to look as if
he was alive. This is evidently the great
difficulty in the stuffer's art, and Mathers had not
mastered it by any means from the </span><em class="italics">Encyclopædia
Britannica</em><span>. I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"For a first attempt it is spiffing; but all the
same, 'Joe' never looked like that in life or death.
He is now, as it were, neither dead or alive."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Mathers admitted this. He said he thought it
was the want of the eyes, and that all would come
right when they were in.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I asked him where he was going to get the eyes,
and he said he was going to write to the great
Rowland Ward for them. This he did do, and they
sent a pair of most lifelike parrot's eyes, and only
charged three bob. The eyes did a great deal for
'Joe,' and certainly made him look alive. But it
was a strange sort of unearthly life, I thought.
They made him look creepy, as if he was a ghost
risen from the tomb to haunt somebody who had
killed him. Also about this time we had to get
some Condy's fluid to steady poor old 'Joe' down
a bit. I thought this was serious, but Mathers said
not. He assured me that Condy's fluid is an
everyday thing in stuffing parrots and suchlike;
and then I had an idea, and got my 'anti-something'
tooth-powder; which also helped, and so
it came to be some use after all, which tooth-powder
seldom is. We varnished the claws, and tried to
stick back a lot of feathers that unfortunately came
out in the process of stuffing. Then I got a bit
of wood and a stick for a perch, and we wired
'Joe' on and put a walnut at his feet; which was
a good thought of Bunny's, because walnuts were
always his favourite food.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then, from being very confident and hopeful
and full Of the Doctor's joy and gladness when
he should see the parrot, Mathers sank suddenly
into a sort of state of despair. He couldn't get the
wings right, and he said the thought of them
tortured him day and night and sent him down
three places in his class. At each attempt more
feathers fell out, and finally I got impatient with
Mathers and told him that if he messed about with
the parrot any more the thing would fall to pieces
and fail utterly. I also reminded him that the
matron, when passing by the play-boxes the day
before, had thought there must be a dead mouse
behind the wainscot. Things were, in fact, coming
to a climax, and I said that as he'd had the pluck
to stuff 'Joe,' I hoped, after all the fearful danger
and swot we'd had, that he would keep on to the
end and give him to the Doctor and trust to luck
that it would come off all right.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he lost all heart about it and said that Milly
should decide; but he was not fair to her, and only
showed her the head. The rest he hid from her in
a bath-towel. Of course the head was the
champion part, owing to the eyes from Rowland Ward.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>She cried first, but in a general way she was
delighted. She praised Mathers; and she also
said that it would be well to present it quickly to
the Doctor, so that he could get some proper
professional staffer to finish it and put a glass case
over it as soon as possible. Of course a glass case
was beyond our power.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Still Mathers hesitated; then, urged by me, he
decided to have a second opinion. He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I don't like Steggles; but he is the oldest and
therefore the wisest boy in the school. I will show
him the work and put myself entirely into his hands."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"There's a fearful risk," I replied, "because
Steggles doesn't care for man or beast, and if he
sees a chance to have some frightful score off you,
he will."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No, he won't," answered Bunny. "I shall
throw myself on his sportsmanlike feeling."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"He hasn't got any," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But he risked it; and for once Steggles behaved
less like a common or garden cad than usual. We
showed him the parrot, after making him take an
oath of secrecy. The oath would have been merely
a matter of form with him generally, for I have
known him to break a blood-oath as if it was
nothing; but somehow the excited state of Mathers
and the extraordinary thing that he had done took
the fancy of Steggles, and he showed a great deal
of interest in the parrot, and gave us some jolly
good advice into the bargain.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Of course he rotted Mathers when he'd got over
the shock of the surprise. He struck an attitude of
horror and fear and terror, and said, "Great
snakes! Is it loaded, sergeant?" Then he
pretended it was a ghost, and finally he held his
nose and fainted. After all this foolery Mathers
asked him for his candid opinion, and Steggles
very kindly gave it. He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If you take my advice you'll instantly bury it
again: for two reasons. Firstly, because if the
Doctor sees it he'll probably expel you; and
secondly, because if you don't, the whole school
will jolly soon be down with a fell disease."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>To show you what Mathers is, after hearing this,
nothing in the world would make him bury the
parrot again. He said that it was a cruel thing,
after all the danger and trouble and expense of
stuffing 'Joe,' that Steggles should advise him
just to bury him again; he also said that the slight
scent was purely medicinal; and that, as for
expelling, if the Doctor could really and truly go
so far as to expel a boy who had done nothing but
try with all his might to give him a moment of
great and sudden happiness, then the sooner he
was expelled and sent to another sort of school the
better.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>In fact, he was so worked up by the idea of
reburying the parrot that he decided he would carry
'Joe' before the Doctor the very next day—either
immediately before or after prayers.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Steggles merely said that Mathers was young and
headstrong, and he hoped that he should be there
to see. Then he went, and Bunny and I had a long
talk as to whether before or after prayers would
be best. I said after prayers on a Litany morning,
because the Litany always leaves the Doctor weak
but in a very kind and gentle state; whereas before
prayers he is sometimes rather short.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Therefore it was so, and after the next Litany
morning Mathers went up, as bold as brass to the
eye, and in his hand he carried 'Joe' hidden
under a clean pocket handkerchief lent by me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor had just shut his big prayer-book,
and he looked down pretty kindly at Bunny.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What have you there, Mathers minimus?" he
asked, little knowing the nature of the thing that
was going to burst upon his gaze.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Please, sir," said Bunny, "it's poor old 'Joe.'"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Doctor Dunstan didn't seem to remember.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Poor old 'Joe'! What do you mean, boy?"
he asked in a changed tone of voice.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The parrot, sir. I thought—I thought it was
a pity he should be lost to you, being a beautiful
object, and I—in fact—here he is, sir—stuffed by
me; and the slight smell is medicinal," said
Mathers.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he drew off the handkerchief and held the
parrot up to the Doctor. Certainly it was a great
effect, and at first the Doctor was evidently far too
astonished to be much obliged to Mathers. He
didn't take the parrot—on the contrary, he fell back
a pace or two, and his astonishment seemed slowly
to change to a sort of wild horror. First he looked
at the parrot, then he looked at Mathers, then he
regularly glared at the parrot again. Seen from
a distance the effect of the parrot was not good.
Evidently we had lost more feathers than we
thought, and its back had got a lump between the
shoulders, more really like a vulture than a parrot.
Still, of course one could recognize it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Mathers held it up; then, getting frightened, he
put it down on a form, and I knew, from the
trembling way he began to handle my handkerchief
that if the Doctor didn't speak pretty soon, Mathers
would blub in public.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>These silences of the Doctor's are well known as
awful. You can hear a pin drop in them; and
during them his eyes roll round and round in the
sockets, like Catherine wheels, but much slower.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>At last he spoke.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Am I to understand, boy Mathers, that unaided
you—you dug up, or disinterred, that unfortunate
fowl and then sought to impart to it this bizarre,
this grotesque, this indelicate semblance of life?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Mathers said he was to understand that. He
added with a shaking voice—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I did it to give you pleasure, sir—on my honour."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor looked at Mathers minimus much puzzled.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It is hard to conceive that even an immature
mind, such as you possess, could suppose that
pleasure would result to any intelligent being from
so pitiful and indecent an achievement," he said.
"The boy who tore this wretched bird from its
last resting-place and set it up to caricature the
entire race of </span><em class="italics">Psittacus erythacus</em><span>—— However,
this is no time to investigate your conduct,
Mathers. You will join me after evening school
in the study."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he looked at the parrot again and cleared
his throat. Mathers slunk away to his seat, and as
he did so, suddenly the Doctor started and seemed
to 'point,' like a sporting dog. I think he had
discovered there was more than met the eye about
the parrot. He called up Macmullen, who
happened to catch his gaze, and told him to take
'Joe' to the gardener.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Direct Smith to place these remains in the spot
I originally selected," he said; "and if anybody
ventures to disturb them again the consequences
will be exceedingly serious. Now go to your
classes."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He waved his hand, and Macmullen took the
parrot, and nobody ever saw it again. But to this
day Mathers swears that Smith never buried him.
He believes that in some secret place in his house
the gardener has 'Joe' in a glass case; because,
very truly, he says that no ordinary gardener would
be likely to resist the temptation of having a rare
and beautiful bird to decorate his house. Besides,
the glass eyes. Also it is well known that
Dr. Dunstan never goes into the gardener's house;
which is really the entrance lodge to Merivale, and
is full of Smith's wife and children. So I dare say
Bunny is right there.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He told me afterwards that Dunstan was very
cold, but not actively angry in the evening.
Mathers said that the Doctor didn't seem to attach
any importance to the fact that he'd stuffed 'Joe'
to give him a great and sudden pleasure. Instead,
he evidently thought that Bunny had done a rather
daring thing to please himself.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"'Unseemly' was the word he used," said
Mathers to me. "He seemed to think it was not a
case for much punishment; but, all the same, he
has told me to write out the article on the stuffer's art
from the </span><em class="italics">Encyclopædia Britannica</em><span>, which is rather
rot, because I shall certainly never want to stuff
anything again in this world. I couldn't tell him all
I'd been through to do it, because he'd got a sort
of beastly idea that I </span><em class="italics">liked</em><span> doing it; though you
know that it was nothing of the sort. On the
whole it has left him against me, and he seems to
take a good deal of credit to himself for not making
a lot more row about it. But whether he's going
to let it rankle in his mind, so that I may suffer
for it more or less till the end of the term, or
whether, when I've done the impot., he'll feel as
usual—just neither for me nor against me—I can't
say yet. He might have tried to look at it from my
point of view."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You could hardly expect him to do that:
masters never do," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It's all the worse for him, anyway," answered
Mathers minimus. "To rebury the parrot was a
slight on me in a way; because whether he liked it
or not he could have seen at a glance the hours
and hours of awful trouble, and the fearful expense
it must have been to me. The eyes alone were
three shillings; and nobody in this world ever threw
away valuable money in such a cruel manner. Besides,
if it had gone off well and he'd taken it as
I meant it, I fully intended other good surprises for
him."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You'd better not surprise him again for a jolly
long time," I said. "He doesn't much like
surprises—people don't when they grow up. They
have a footling way of preferring everything to
drag on in a tame and dull manner. My father
hates telegrams, for instance."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I had fully meant to get Johnson to bring him
another and a better parrot," said Mathers. "Even
a pair of parrots might have been arranged; and
they would have made a nest about April, and laid
eggs, and there would gradually have been parrots
for all his daughters; and he could have taught
them what he liked, even to the extent of Latin; for
it is well known that a parrot will learn anything.
But it's all over now. Never again will I try to
give him pleasure—or anybody else either. Why,
even Milly hasn't pitied me much—just because
it's all a failure; whereas if he'd taken it in a
manly way, and thanked me before the school,
and, perhaps, given us a half-holiday or
something and sent the parrot off at once to be
measured for a glass case—how different it all
would have been! Nobody would have called me
'body-snatcher' then; whereas now I shall be
called that for life."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Which was all true enough in its way, and he
was called 'body-snatcher' for ever more. Whereas,
to show what mistakes happen, I'd done that
part—simply as a friend.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-bankruptcy-of-bannister"><span class="bold x-large">THE BANKRUPTCY OF BANNISTER</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">No. III</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">THE BANKRUPTCY OF BANNISTER</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">I</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>I am Bannister, and what happened to me was a
very gradual thing at first; but it grew and grew
until finally something had to be done, and that
something was called 'bankruptcy.'</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Curiously enough I had heard the word before
at home. In fact, as I told Gideon, who kindly let
me explain my position to him, my father had once
been bankrupted; and when he was a bankrupt
my mother cried a good deal and my father talked
about 'everlasting disgrace' and 'a bloodthirsty
world,' and something in the pound. And then
there came a day when my father told my mother
gladly that he had been discharged, whatever that
was, and my mother seemed much pleased. In
fact, she said, "Thank God, Gerald!" and they
had a bottle of champagne for lunch. It was in
holidays, and I heard it all, and tasted the
champagne, and didn't like it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So, remembering this, when Gideon talked of me
being a bankrupt, I said, "All right, and the
sooner the better."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>As I say, one gets hard up very gradually, and
the debts seem nothing in themselves; but when,
owing to chaps bothering, you go into it all on
paper you may often be much surprised to find
how serious things are taken altogether.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>What I found was that my pocket-money was
absolutely all owed for about three terms in advance,
and that Steggles, who lent me a shilling upon a
thing called a mortgage, the mortgage being my
bat, was not going to give up my bat, which was a
spliced bat and cost eight shillings and sixpence.
He said what with interest and one thing and
another his shilling had gained six shillings more,
and that if he didn't take the bat at once he would
be out of pocket. So he took it, and he played
with it in a match and got a cluck's egg, and I was
jolly glad. Then the tuck-woman, who is allowed
to come up to the playground after school with
fruit and sweets and suchlike, was owed by me
seven shillings and fourpence, and she wouldn't
sell anything more to me, and asked me rather often
to pay the money. I told her that all would be
paid sooner or later, and she seemed inclined not
to believe it. Other debts were one and six owed
to Corkey minimus for a mouse that he said was
going to have young mice, but it didn't, and he
had consented to take ninepence owing to being
mistaken. Tin Lin Chow, the Chinese boy, was
owed four shillings and threepence for a charm.
It was a good enough charm, made of ivory and
carved into a very hideous face. All the same, it
never had done me much good, for here I was
bankrupted six months after buying it, and the
charm itself not even paid for.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There was a lot of other small debts—some
merely a question of pens and caterpillars; but they
all mounted up, and so I felt something must be
done, because being in such a beastly mess kept
me awake a good deal at night thinking what to do.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Therefore I went to Gideon, who is a Jew, and
very rich, and well known to lend money at interest.
He is first in the whole school for arithmetic, and
his father is a diamond merchant and a banker, and
many other things that bring in enormous sums of
money. Gideon has no side, and he is known to
be absolutely fair and kind even to the smallest
kids. So I went to him and I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Please, Gideon, if it won't be troubling you,
I should like to speak to you about my affairs. I
am very hard up, in fact, and fellows are being
rather beastly about money I owe them."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'm afraid I can't finance you, Bannister,"
said Gideon awfully kindly. "My money's all out
at interest just now, and, as a matter of fact, I'm
rather funky about some of it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I don't want you to finance me," I said; "and
that would be jolly poor fun for you anyway,
because I've got nothing, and never shall have in
this world, as far as I can see. I only want you to
advise me. I'm fourteen and three-quarters, and
when I was twelve and a half my father got into
pretty much the same mess that I'm in now; and
he got out again with ease, and even had
champagne afterwards, by the simple plan of being
bankrupt."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It's not always an honourable thing—I warn
you of that," said Gideon.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'm sure it was perfectly honourable in my
father's case," I said, "because he's a frightfully
honourable man. And I am honourable, too, and
want to do what is right and proper as soon as
possible."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Why don't you write to your father?" asked Gideon.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Because he once warned me—when he was
being bankrupted, in fact—that if ever I owed any
man a farthing he would break my neck, and my
mother said at the same time—blubbing into a
handkerchief as she said it—that she would rather see
me in my coffin than in the bankruptcy court. All
the same, they both cheered up like anything after
it was all over, and father said he should not
hesitate to go through it all again if necessary;
but, still, I wouldn't for the world tell them what
I've done. In fact, they think that I have money
in hand and subscribe to the chapel offertories, and
do all sorts of good with my ten bob a term; whereas
the truth is that I have to pay it all away instantly
on the first day of the term, and have had to ever
since two terms after I first came."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What you must do, then, is to go bankrupt,"
said Gideon thoughtfully.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," I said, "that's just the whole thing.
How do you begin?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Generally other people begin," said Gideon.
"Creditors, as a rule, do what they think will pay
them best. Sometimes they will show great
patience, if they think it is worth while, and
sometimes they won't. My father has told me about
these things. He has had to bankrupt a few people
in his time, though he's always very sorry to
do it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"In my case nobody will show patience, because
it's gone on too long," I said. "In fact, the only
one who has got anything out of me for three terms
is Steggles, who has taken my bat."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"He has foreclosed on a mortgage. He was
quite within his rights for once," said Gideon, who
rather hated Steggles, because Steggles always
called him 'Shylock junior.'</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"To begin," continued Gideon, "two things
generally happen, I believe; there is a meeting of
creditors, and soon afterwards the bailiffs come in."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I remember my father mentioning bailiffs
wildly to my mother," I said, "but I don't think
they ever came in; if they did, I never saw them."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Then no doubt the meeting of creditors decided
against it; and a meeting of creditors is what you'd
better have," declared Gideon. "Tell everybody
you owe money to that there is to be a meeting in
the gym. on Thursday evening to go into the
affair. I will be there, if you like, as I understand
these things pretty well."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I thanked Gideon very much indeed and asked
him if he could tell what happened next after the
meeting.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The claims are put in against you," he
explained, "and then you say what you've got to
say, and give a reason why you can't pay; and
then your assets are stated."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What are assets?" I asked.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What you've got to pay with, or what you
hope to have in course of time."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I've got nothing at all," I said, "and never
shall have until I'm old enough to go into an office
and earn money."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Then the assets will be nil," said Gideon.
"But they can't be absolutely nil in your case.
For instance, you have a watch, and you have that
Chinese charm you bought from Tin Lin Chow and
various other things, including the green lizard you
found on the common last Saturday, if it's still
alive."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I can't give up the watch," I said, "it isn't
mine. It's only lent to me by my mother. The
lizard died yesterday, I'm sorry to say, owing to
not liking captivity."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, at any rate, the thing is to declare
something in the pound," Gideon told me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It may be," I said, "but first get your
pound. You can't declare anything in the pound
if you haven't got a pound. At least, I don't see how."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He seemed doubtful about that and changed the subject.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Anyway, I'll be at the meeting of creditors,"
he promised; and I felt sure he would be, because
Gideon was never known to lie.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">II</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>A good deal happened before the meeting of
creditors. Among other things I went down three
places in my form, because my mind was so much
occupied with going bankrupt; and I also got
into a beast of a row with the Doctor, which was
serious, and might have been still more serious
if he had insisted on knowing the truth. It
was at a very favourite lesson of the Doctor's—namely,
the Scripture lesson, and, as a rule,
he simply takes the top of the class and leaves
the bottom pretty much alone, because at the top
are Macmullen and Richmond and Prodgers, all
fliers at Scripture, and their answers give the Doctor
great pleasure; and at the bottom are me and
Willson minor and West and others, and our answers
don't give him any pleasure at all. But sometimes
he pounces down upon us with a sudden question,
to see if we are attending; and he pounced down
upon me, to see if I was attending, and I was
not, because my mind was full of the meeting
of creditors, who were more important to
me for the minute than the people in the Old
Testament.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So when the Doctor suddenly said, "Tell us what
you know of Gideon, Bannister, if you please," I
clean forgot there was more than one Gideon, and
said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Gideon is an awfully decent sort, sir, and he
has advised me to offer something in the pound."</span></p>
<p class="pnext" id="id1"><span>Naturally the Doctor did not like this. In fact,
he liked it so little that he made me go straight
out of the class and wait for him in his study.
Then he caned me for insolence, combined with
irreverence, and made me write out about Gideon
and the dew upon the fleece twenty-four times;
which I did.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I also asked our Gideon if he was by any chance
related to the Bible Gideon, and he said that it was
impossible to prove that he was not, and that it
was also impossible to prove that he was. In any
case, he said, such things did not trouble him,
though a friend of his father's, wanting to prove
that he was related to a man who died in the year
734 A.D., went to a place called the Herald's Office
and gave them immense sums of money, and they
proved it easily. He said also that it was a jolly
good thing the Doctor did not ask for particulars,
because if he had known that I was a
bankrupt and just about to offer something in the
pound, he would probably have expelled me on the spot.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Gideon asked me if I had done anything about
the bankruptcy, and I told him privately that I
had. But I did not tell him what. I had, in fact,
taken a desperate step and written a letter to my
grandmother. I marked it "Private" in three
places, and begged her, on every page, not to tell
my father; because my father was her son, and he
had often told me that if I wrote to her for money
he would punish me in a very terrible manner,
How, he never mentioned, but he meant it, and so
I had to make my grandmother promise not to tell
him. I wrote the letter seven or eight times before
I got it up to the mark, then I borrowed one of
Foster's envelopes, already stamped with pink
stamps for writing home, and sent it off. It was
the best letter I ever wrote, or ever shall write, and
this is how it went—</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"MY DEAR GRANDMOTHER,</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I write this line, though very busy, to hope
that you are exceedingly well and enjoying the fine
weather. I hope your lovely, little clever dog,
'Fido,' is well also. I never see such a clever and
beautiful dog anywhere else. My parents write to
me that they are well. I am quite well. At least,
I am quite well in body, though I have grown
rather thin lately through not being able to eat
enough food. This is not the fault of the food.
It is my </span><em class="italics">mind</em><span>. You will be very sorry to hear,
dear grandmother, that I am a bankrupt. I hope
you may never know what it is to be one, for it is
very terrible, especially if you are honourable and
honest, as I am, owing to the books you always
give me so very kindly at Christmas. To be a
bankrupt is to be called upon at any moment to
have to pay something in the pound, and this is
a dreadful position, but even more dreadful in my
case than in some others. For instance, when dear
father was bankrupted he paid something in the
pound and had plenty over for a bottle of
champagne; but in my case </span><em class="italics">I have not got the pound</em><span>.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I don't mean, of course, my dear grannie, that
I want anybody to </span><em class="italics">give</em><span> me the pound; but the
terrible thing is, I can't be a bankrupt without it,
and so really I don't know what will happen to me
if I don't get it. If by any wonderfully kind and
lucky chance you could </span><em class="italics">lend</em><span> me a pound, my dreadful
situation would, of course, improve at once, and
I should, no doubt, get fatter and cheerfuller in a
few days; but as it is I lie awake and sigh all
night, and even wake chaps with the loudness of
my sighs, which fling things at me for keeping
them awake. But I cannot help it. I don't tell
you these things to worry you, dear grannie, as
very likely you have worries of your own; but it
would not be honest not to tell you how very badly
I want a pound just for the moment. There is to
be a meeting of my creditors in the gymnasium in
a few days, and how I am going to declare
anything in the pound I don't know. It makes me feel
terribly </span><em class="italics">old</em><span>, and I have gone down several places
in my class and been </span><em class="italics">terribly caned</em><span> by Dr. Dunstan.
But nothing matters if I can honourably get that
pound. It would change the whole course of my
life, in fact. My beautiful bat has gone, you will
be sorry to hear, owing to a mortgage, and I hope
you may never know what a mortgage is. I have
to borrow it now when I play cricket. But I am
playing very badly this term, because you cannot
be in good form if the brain is worrying about a
pound. I shall lose my place in the second eleven,
I expect. I have missed several catches lately, and
I fancy my </span><em class="italics">eyes</em><span> are growing </span><em class="italics">dim and old</em><span>, owing
to being awake worrying so much at night about
that pound.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Of course if you can give any sort of idea
where I can get that pound I shall be very
thankful. Unfortunately, in this case, five shillings
would be no good, and even ten would be no good,
strange though it may seem. Only a pound is any
use. I must now conclude, my dear grannie, with
best love and good wishes from your very
affectionate grandson,</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span>"ARTHUR MORTIMER BANNISTER.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"P.S.—Though all this fearful brain worry has
thrown me back a lot in class, still </span><em class="italics">my Scripture
is all right</em><span>, and I shall be able to say the Kings
of Israel, either backwards or forwards, next
holidays, in a way that, I hope, will surprise you.
I have been a good deal interested in Gideon and
the dew upon the fleece lately."</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Well, I sent off this ripping letter, which was
far, far the longest and best I had ever written in
my life; and before sending it I printed at the
top of each page, "Don't tell father," feeling that
to be very important. Then I waited and hoped
that my grandmother would read the letter in the
way I meant her to, and great was my relief when
I found that she had. On the very morning of the
meeting of creditors she wrote a whacking long
letter and sent a postal order for a pound; and the
letter I put away for future reading and the postal
order I took to Mr. Thwaites, who always changes
postal orders into money for boys.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Me seemed surprised at the great size of the
postal order, but gave me a golden pound and told
me to be careful of it. I was so excited that I very
nearly got kept in at morning school, but I escaped;
and when the time came I went to Gideon, and he
walked up to the gym. with me to meet the
creditors.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">III</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Ten chaps were assembled for the bankruptcy,
but I jolly soon cleared out Stopford, because the
sixpence he said I owed him had been paid at the
beginning of the term, and Westcott was able to
prove it. So Stopford went, but reluctantly.
Steggles also went. He wanted me to take back
my mortgaged bat and owe him about six shillings
instead, but, knowing Steggles, I felt sure that
something must have gone wrong with the bat,
and when I examined it, I found that it was so.
In fact, the bat was badly sprung; and Gideon said
it was like Steggles, and a beastly, paltry thing to
try to do. So Steggles also went, and that left
eight fellows. These eight chaps were told to
make their claims, and when they had, Gideon
made me examine them to see they were all right.
Only four claimed too much, and Mathers, who is
an awfully kind-hearted chap, claimed too little.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So I said, "I'm afraid I owe you one and nine,
not one and three, Mathers."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said, "That's all right. I knocked off a
tanner when you won the house match against
Browne's a week ago." Which shows the sort of
chap that Mathers was.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said, "Does anybody else feel inclined to knock
off anything owing to my winning the house match
against Browne's?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But nobody did, and seeing that five of the
creditors actually belonged to Browne's house I
couldn't expect that they would.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"When you've admitted the claims," said
Gideon, "I'll add them up myself."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So I went through the claims and had to admit
them all.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then Gideon added them up and said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The claims lodged against you, Bannister,
amount to exactly one pound twelve shillings and
eightpence; but I think you told me that the
tuck-woman was also a creditor. If so, she ought to be
here."</span></p>
<div class="align-center auto-scaled figure margin" style="width: 81%" id="figure-84">
<span id="the-total-liabilities-are-exactly-two-pounds-said-gideon"></span><ANTIMG class="align-center block" style="display: block; width: 100%" alt=""THE TOTAL LIABILITIES ARE EXACTLY TWO POUNDS," SAID GIDEON." src="images/img-073.jpg" />
<div class="caption centerleft figure-caption margin">
<span class="italics">"THE TOTAL LIABILITIES ARE EXACTLY TWO POUNDS," SAID GIDEON.</span></div>
</div>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I have spoken to her," I said, "and she says
that I owe her seven shillings and fourpence. That
is the figure. I told her that I was going to have
a meeting of creditors, and she said I was
beginning early and that she wished she could let me
off, but that she had an invalid husband and twenty
small children at home—or some such number."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Then the debt ranks good," said Gideon. So
he added the seven and fourpence to the one pound
twelve shillings and eightpence.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The total liabilities are exactly two pounds,"
said Gideon. "Now, Bannister, as the debts are
admitted to be two pounds, the next question is,
what are the assets? I may tell you kids," he
continued, turning to Corkey minimus, and
Fairlawn and Frost, who were the smallest of the
creditors in size and age, "that the word 'assets,'
which you very likely do not know, means what
Bannister has got to pay you with. You have
made him a bankrupt and he owes you two pounds;
so now the simple question is how much can he
pay of that money? Of course he can't pay it
all—else he wouldn't be a bankrupt—but he is
going to pay according to his assets. Now,
Bannister," he concluded, turning to me, "you'd
better tell the meeting what your assets are. Does
everybody understand?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Everybody understood, or said they did, except
Frost, and he kept on saying over and over again,
like a parrot, "Fivepence and a lead pencil, five-pence
and a lead pencil," till Gideon at last had to
tell him to shut up and not interfere with the
meeting.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then I spoke. I said, in finite a quiet sort of
way, as if it was an everyday thing—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I have decided to pay something in the pound,
Gideon."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Gideon was rather impatient.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"We all know that. That's what we're here
for," he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You couldn't all know it," I answered,
"because none of you knew that I'd got a pound.
You can't pay something in the pound unless
you've got one. And I thought it might interest
the creditors at this meeting to know that I have
got one."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>They were frightfully interested, naturally, and
even Gideon was. I put it into his hand and he
looked at it and turned it over and nodded.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The assets are a pound," said Gideon; "I've
no doubt you'll all be glad to hear that."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The chaps evidently felt very different to me
when they heard the assets were a pound, because
most of them, as they told me afterwards, didn't
know there were any assets at all. They got rather
excited, in fact, and Fowle even asked if there
might be any more assets.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But I said, "No. There is only this pound.
When I became bankrupt I determined that I would
pay something in the pound, and I wrote to private
friends and put the position before them, and they
quite agreed with me and sent the pound; and now
I am going to pay something in it. I don't quite
know what that means, but it is an honourable and
proper thing to do; and Gideon does know what it
means, and I shall be very much obliged to him if
he will say what I am to pay in it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It is quite easy," said Gideon. "You have a
debt; you can't pay it all, so you pay so much in
the pound."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"That's what I'm going to do," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The question is, how much you're going to
pay in the pound," said Forrest, who had made
more row than all the rest of the creditors put
together, though I only owed him a penny.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I know that's the question without your telling
me," I answered. "Gideon has the pound, and
he will say what I am to pay in it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Gideon looked rather puzzled.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You don't seem to understand even yet,
Bannister," he said. "You don't pay so much in
the pound of the assets; you pay so much in
the pound of the debts."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I didn't pretend to understand what Gideon
meant by this complicated way of putting it, and
told him so.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"All I want," I said, "is to do the strictly
honourable thing and pay so much in the pound,
which I have handed over to Gideon for that
reason."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Gideon, much to my surprise, seemed to feel
rather annoyed at this.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I wish you'd try and understand the situation,"
he said. "When you speak of so much in the
pound, it's a figure of speech in a sort of way. It
isn't a real, single, solitary pound."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It's real enough," I said; "Thwaites gave it
to me in exchange for a postal order."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"</span><em class="italics">This</em><span> pound is real, but——" Then Gideon
broke off in a helpless sort of way, and then he
began again.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You owe two pounds—d'you see that?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Of course," I said. "That's the whole thing."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And you've got one pound—d'you see that?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He held it up, as if he was going to do a
conjuring trick with it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Of course I said I did see it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Then, if you owe two pounds and can only
find one, how much are you going to pay in the
pound?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Whatever you think would be sportsmanlike,
Gideon," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It isn't a question of being sportsmanlike, it's
a question of simple arithmetic," he said. "You've
got twenty shillings, and you owe forty; you owe
just twice as many as you've got; therefore it
follows that you'll pay ten shillings in the pound;
and that's a good deal more than many people can."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'll pay more than that," I said. "I'll pay
fifteen shillings."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What an ass you are, Bannister!" answered
Gideon. "You </span><em class="italics">can't</em><span> pay fifteen shillings, you
haven't got it to pay."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"My Dear chap," I said, "I've got a pound."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You've got nothing at all," he said. "You
pay ten shillings in each of the two pounds you
owed, and then there's nothing left."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>After that I began to see; and when we went
into it all and got change, and paid each chap
exactly half of what I owed him, it turned out that
Gideon was perfectly right, and there wasn't a
farthing left over. Everybody was fairly well
satisfied except the tuck-woman, but nobody seemed
much obliged to me; and I couldn't help thinking
that though Gideon had been awfully decent about
it, and managed it all frightfully well, nevertheless
a grown man would have managed it even better.
Because, take my father's bankruptcy and look how
jolly different that turned out to mine. I don't
know what he paid in the pound, but I do know
there was enough left over for him to buy a bottle
of champagne, and for my mother to say "Thank
God!" Whereas my bankruptcy appeared to have
left me exactly where I was before, and there was
nothing whatever left over to buy even a bottle of
ginger beer.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I pointed this out to Gideon, and he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Of course I don't know how much your father
paid in the pound."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Presently I said, "I'm awfully obliged to you,
Gideon, and I shall never forget how kind you have
been. And I wonder if you'd mind adding to your
fearful kindness by lending me a penny."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What for?" said Gideon; "ginger beer?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No," I said; "for a stamp to write to my
grandmother. I may tell you privately that she
sent that pound out of her own money, and it was
very sporting of her, and of course I must thank her."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Gideon didn't much like it, I could see; but at
last he brought out the penny and entered it in his
book.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If you can pay it back by the end of the term
I'll charge no interest," he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And just to show what luck Gideon always has,
the very next Sunday, at church, I found a
three-penny piece, doubtless dropped by somebody, so
Gideon had his penny back in three days, and I
went so far as to offer him a halfpenny interest, but
he would not take it from me.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-tiger-s-tail"><span class="bold x-large">THE TIGER'S TAIL</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">No. IV</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">THE TIGER'S TAIL</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">I</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Curiously enough a very curious thing
happened to the other foreign curiosity that Johnson
maximus sent to Dr. Dunstan. You may remember
that Johnson, who is in the merchant service,
brought the Doctor home a parrot and a tiger's
skin, and that strange things overtook the parrot,
especially after death. Well, strange things also
overtook the Bengal tiger's skin, owing to me and
Freckles and Smythe. I am Macmullen, and the
real name of Freckles was Maine, and he came from
Australia and had a great ambition to be a bush-ranger
in course of time, and revive the practice of
bushranging in New South Wales. Among other
things that he had was an important bowie-knife—the
same the Chinese boy, Tin Lin Chow, borrowed
to commit 'harri-kari' with and failed. Well,
with his great feeling for sport, Freckles naturally
felt a good deal of interest in the tiger's skin, and
often went to look at it in the Doctor's study. It
was a good one, no doubt—white and yellow and
black, with a long tail and a very fine head. In
this head were glass eyes, like life, and the mouth
was open and pink, with terrific teeth—worn smooth
where the tiger had chewed his prey.</span></p>
<div class="align-center auto-scaled figure margin" style="width: 90%" id="figure-85">
<span id="freckles-often-went-to-look-at-it-in-the-doctor-s-study"></span><ANTIMG class="align-center block" style="display: block; width: 100%" alt="FRECKLES OFTEN WENT TO LOOK AT IT IN THE DOCTOR'S STUDY." src="images/img-084.jpg" />
<div class="caption centerleft figure-caption margin">
<span class="italics">FRECKLES OFTEN WENT TO LOOK AT IT IN THE DOCTOR'S STUDY.</span></div>
</div>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then there came to Merivale a kid called
Smythe. He was very small, but pretty solid and
rather decent, and keen as mustard, and fiery in
colour too.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It's a rum thing with boys, that some get chums
with the greatest ease and some never do. And
also the boys who often want to make chums never
do, for some reason or other. But this kid soon
made chums, though I couldn't tell you why. Of
course he was nothing to me, because I'm thirteen—in
fact, nearly fourteen—but for a chap just ten
he was all right, and other chaps of his own age
found him interesting. He had a lot of rather
peculiar knowledge, gathered up from his father,
who was a very learned man and wrote books for
libraries. And he believed in heathen charms and
old sayings, and remembered many queer things
that his father had told him. He wanted to be the
caretaker of a museum some day, but said that he
hoped to be allowed to travel round the world first,
like Darwin did, and see dwarfs and giants, and
write books, and shoot a few specimens of different
things not often heard of.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Of course he went through the ordinary
adventures of new boys at Merivale, and it was in
the matter of the 'kid test' that he became so
generally known as a kid out of the common.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There is, just beyond the cricket ground, and
before you come to the wood, a huge clump of
rhododendrons that is covered with purple flowers
in May. It is just the sort of place that a wild
beast would choose for its lair, if there were wild
beasts at Merivale, and it was a regular thing with
kids to tell them that a savage animal did live
there, and only came out at night. This beast was
a test of the pluck of new kids, and the new kid who
would walk past the rhododendrons after dark alone,
was considered to be all right. Of course
something was done to make it seem more terrible, and,
in fact, till he left, John Batson, the gardener's
boy, was always told to hide in the rhododendrons,
and shake the bushes and growl when a test was
being made. This he did very well, having a
chronical sore throat, and a very harsh and
growling voice, like a ferocious beast. But he had to
go, owing to some row with the servants, and the
new gardener's boy could only squeak, and was
useless for the test. Generally, however, somebody
in the fifth could be got, and for some time
Freckles kindly obliged when a test had to be made.
It amused him, and he growled very fairly well,
and could also imitate wolves in a state of hunger,
which he had once heard at a menagerie.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Well, young Smythe was told about the mystery
of the rhododendron bed, and seemed more
interested than frightened.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Hasn't anybody ever seen the thing?" he asked.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No," answered Steggles, who was there. "The
sound it makes is so frightful that chaps generally
run for their lives, and never wait to see it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Smythe was very keen about it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I wish my father would come up and hear it,"
he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The point is," explained Freckles, "that each
kid must go past alone. It only growls for kids,
and doesn't growl for grown-up people. It is a
test of bravery. There are chaps here still who
have never been brave enough to pass after the first
growl. They were chaps who turned out quite
brave in every other way, too."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What have I to do?" asked Smythe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You've got to walk out on an appointed night,
after evening school, and go round the rhododendron
bed twice, no matter what happens. It is a
winter beast, and is never heard in the summer.
So it is a winter test. You've just come in time
for it," explained Fowle, who was also there.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Smythe had been at Merivale about a fortnight
when he was asked to undergo the great kid test.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He thought a bit after this speech from Fowle.
Then he asked a question.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And what do you think the creature is?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Nobody knows," said Fowle. "Of course if
that was really known, something might be done."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It ought to be shot," said Smythe; but Gideon
thought not.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>They all pretended to be serious, and Smythe
quite believed the story, because he was very young.
In fact, only one kid had ever refused to believe it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No," declared Gideon; "it may be the only
beast of its kind in the world, and to shoot it would
be a thousand pities."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Then it ought to be photographed," said Smythe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Impossible, because nobody ever sees it,"
answered Steggles.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"That's no reason," said Smythe; "it might
be done with Rontgen rays."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Which shows what a clever kid he was, though
so ready to believe this rot about the beast.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"One person did see it, however," said Fowle,
"and that was Montgomery, who went into a bank
last term, and it left a great impression upon him."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What did he say it looked like?" asked Smythe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"A sort of thing between a tiger and a donkey,"
answered Fowle very seriously.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Rum," said Smythe. "It might belong to the
zebra family."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Zebras don't growl," said Freckles.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"More they do," admitted Smythe. "They bray."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he went on to tell us some things about
zebras that we didn't know ourselves.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If it could be killed, it would be a good thing,"
said Smythe; "and the chap who did it would
have a very precious charm, because the skin, or
part of the skin of a savage beast is a very
tremendous charm to the man or boy who gets it.
The Boringos, my father said—at least, I think
they were Boringos, or if not, Kinnatoos, or some
other tribe—always wear the skin of a fierce beast
next their own skin, and by so doing get the
fierceness of the beast into themselves, and so nobody
ever interferes with them, and they always have the
most remarkable luck, and live to a great age. So
this fierce beast would be a good chance."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You might have a dash at it," said Freckles,
though he could hardly help laughing. "If you
killed it and skinned it, and wore a bit of the skin,
it would be a fine thing for you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, it would," admitted Smythe. "I'd risk
a good deal; but I've got nothing to kill anything
with except a catapult, and of course that's no good
against a fierce and growling beast."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Everybody laughed, but young Smythe was as
serious as possible.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If anybody would lend me a decent knife, I'd
have a go," he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You'll be frightened when you hear its dreadful
sound," declared Fowle. "I was, and I'm
never ashamed to say so."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Very likely I might be," admitted Smythe.
"But often a jolly good thing has been done by
a man who was in funk at the time; and I'd have a
dash, anyhow; because, think if I succeeded, and
got a charm that would last for a lifetime!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'll lend you my well-known bowie-knife if
you'll be careful of it," said Freckles.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>With that he took it out of his pocket, where it
hangs suspended by a lanyard, so that Freckles can
get it in a moment, in time of need, when he goes
on his hunting expeditions on half-holidays.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Young Smythe thanked him frightfully, and took
the knife.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It's just been sharpened for me by the
gardener," explained Freckles. "It can pretty-well
cut hairs, so you'd better be careful." And
Smythe promised he would be.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then it was decided that the test should take
place that evening before evening prep. It was a
good day to choose, because the Doctor and
Mrs. Dunstan were going out to dinner somewhere, and
we always felt a sort of feeling of more freedom at
such times.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>When the kid had gone I warned Freckles that
he might be doing a dangerous thing; but he
laughed and said not. Then Steggles had one of
his terrific ideas, that nobody gets but Steggles,
and he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What a lark it would be if we could fake up
a fierce beast, and make it come out of the rhodo. bed
just as you let off a frightful yell, Freckles!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Of course Freckles admitted it would.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"With some kids one couldn't dare," he said.
"Such a thing happening to Mathers, for instance,
would certainly make him go dotty for ever; but
this kid doesn't know what fear is. It would be
a lark to see what he'd do."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You'd better be pretty careful, or he'll stab
you," said Gideon. "He's jolly quick, and you'd
look rather a fool if a new kid went and ran you
through with your own bowie-knife."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"So I should," admitted Freckles; "but I'm
not afraid. You forget my great power of seeing
in the dark. I'm jolly near as good as a cat at it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then I suddenly had the most awfully fine idea,
apart from machinery, that ever I did have. Little
did I know what would happen, but still, looking
back, it is only fair to me to admit the awful
fineness of the idea. I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The Doctor being out, couldn't we get the
tiger-rug and stuff it with pillows, and stick it up
on four cricket-stumps just round the corner of the
rhodo. bed? Then, where we are all hidden behind
the pavilion, we see the fun, and after it's over and
the kid has bolted, we can take the skin back."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Freckles whistled, and Steggles asked—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Did you think of that all by yourself, Macmullen?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said, "Certainly I did."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Gideon thought it wouldn't do.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"In his excitement he might actually stab the
skin," he said; "and that would lessen the value
of it a great deal. The Doctor would be frightfully
annoyed."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Not that that matters," said Steggles.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No," admitted Gideon, "not to us; but a
treasure is a treasure, and just for the sake of
swizzling a kid it seems a pity to spoil a valuable
tiger-skin worth three or four pounds at least, and
perhaps more."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>However, we didn't look at it in that light.
Steggles and Freckles were a great deal taken with
the idea, and Fowle, who was something of an artist,
or thought he was, promised to make the tiger-skin
look alive if somebody else got it. Of course he
wouldn't have run the risk of taking it—such an
utter footling coward as him. No more would
Steggles.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I and Freckles both wanted to have the honour
of getting it, and I argued that as the idea was
mine I ought to be allowed to do this; but Freckles
said that as a much more experienced hand at
adventures and dangers than me, he must do it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said, "If it was machinery, Mac., I should
say nothing; but for breaking rules and doing
daring things after dark you are not in it with me."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Which was true. So he got the rug, and was
late for prayers in consequence; but when Briggs
reads prayers instead of the Doctor, many are late,
because Briggs is short-sighted. Besides, the
other masters generally don't come at all when
Briggs reads them, though they never dare to stop
away when the Doctor does.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Anyhow, Freckles got the rug, and Fowle, with
some cricket-pads and Thompson's bicycle, faked
up a most extraordinary and hideous monster
looking out of the rhododendrons. It glared through
its glass eyes and seemed ready to spring, and its
tail was stretched into the path, with the point, as
it were, wagging like a cat wags her tail when
she's in a bate. Even before dusk it looked terrible,
but much more so when it began to get dark.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then the time came, and we hid behind the edge
of the pavilion, and Freckles practised a growl or
two, and got into the rhodo. bed, and Steggles
found young Smythe and told him the time for
the test had come.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Steggles said, "The playground is quite empty
now, and I see the rhododendrons bending in the
middle, so the beast is evidently there. You'd
better be quick, and go and get it over—twice
round, mind."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Smythe was pale, but firm.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"One thing," he said, "the chap called Fowle
has been trying to funk me all the afternoon, and he
says the beast has killed two boys in its time, and
that they were both red-haired boys. Of course,
if that's true, it is rather serious, me being red-haired."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You needn't mind what Fowle says," answered
Steggles; "he never passed the test at all. I
remember when he came as a kid—the nastiest kid
that ever did come, for that matter. He is a
coward to the backbone, and would rather have
paid away his pocket-money for the whole of the
term than go through the test."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"So I was told," said Smythe; "and I told
him he was a coward, and that I didn't care for
him trying to funk me. All the same, if it really
and truly killed two boys with red hair——"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It didn't," replied Steggles. "On my word
of honour, it didn't. It feeds on poultry, I believe,
and nobody can really prove that it ever killed a
boy. You just show what you're made of, and
you'll soon find you've got good friends up in the
fifth form, including me myself. As for Fowle,
since Travers licked him with one hand tied behind
him, and since Johnson found the name of 'Maude'
written thirty-two times in various letterings on his
blotting-paper, nobody has cared to be seen with
him. He can draw angels with wings fairly well,
though nobody wants them when they are drawn;
and that's all he can do but sneak, and tell lies,
and be a cur in general."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So Smythe was comforted, and took out the
bowie-knife lent him by Freckles, and went off, as
he supposed, into the empty playground. But there
were at least twenty chaps hidden there to see what
he would make of the beast that Fowle and
Freckles and I had set up.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">II</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Well, young Smythe came boldly on, and only
stopped when Freckles gave his first growl. Then
the kid stood still, and then he pulled out the
bowie-knife and opened it. He evidently felt that it
would be better to do the deed pretty quick, before
he had time to think about it; so, despite the
sounds and howls of Freckles, he dashed round at
his best pace, and was actually past the beast before
he had grasped the horror of it. But he saw it all
right, and he told me afterwards that the moment
he saw it he began to stream with perspiration
strangely enough, though the night was jolly cold.
He also said that there came a very strange feeling
in the pit of his stomach, but he couldn't be sure
whether he felt frightfully hungry, or merely that
he was going to be sick. He waited a moment
before making the second dash round, and we could
see him dimly panting, and his breath going into
the air like steam. At the same moment the bell
also rang, but nobody went immediately, because
we wanted to see if Smythe would face the beast
again. Freckles now began to imitate wolves in a
state of hunger, and Steggles bet me sixpence that
Smythe wouldn't go round again. But, of course,
nobody but new boys, who don't know him, ever
bets with Steggles, as he has never been known to
pay when he loses. So I took no notice.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then Smythe dashed round again, and we were
just going to come out and rot him about it, and
cheer him for passing the test, when he did a thing
of the most astonishing character. He seemed now
to have got a little accustomed to the horror of the
beast, and he suddenly crept towards it with the
bowie-knife of Freckles ready to strike. He
regularly stalked it, like a hunter stalks his prey,
and Freckles, who was hidden just behind the beast,
growled and roared all he could; but I think he
roared rather nervously, for the kid looked
frightfully keen, and evidently meant to have a dash at
the beast, whatever happened. We were just
going to rush out and stop him, but he didn't give
us time. He suddenly screamed very loudly, partly
to keep up his own courage, and partly to distract
the beast, and then he dashed forward, and stooped
down and cut the creature's tail off at a blow! He
then leapt aside very cunningly—to avoid its
spring, as he told me afterwards; but of course
it didn't spring, but only glared. A moment
later Smythe was flying for his life—with the tail!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>As if this wasn't curious enough, still stranger
things happened afterwards. Because the next
difficulty was what to do about it. In fact, after
young Smythe had hooked it with the tail of the
Doctor's tiger-skin, the rest of us looked rather
fools. Of course, the first thing to do was to get
the skin back into the study, and this Freckles did;
and the next thing to do was to get the tail back
from Smythe, and this Fowle, who was monitor
in Smythe's dormitory, promised to do that night.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Smythe wouldn't give it up. He had most
carefully hidden it, and absolutely refused to give
it to anybody! The next day Freckles, and
Steggles, and I had Smythe before us in the gym.,
and asked for an explanation. We told him all
about the test, and applauded him for his bravery,
but explained that the tail he had cut off belonged
to Dr. Dunstan's tiger-skin, and that its loss
would make an awful row in the school, and very
likely end in his being expelled. Then he said that
Dr. Dunstan couldn't expel him, because he
wouldn't know he had had anything to do with the
tail. Which was true; besides, the Doctor being
so blind, it might be a long time before he
discovered the tail was gone. Then Smythe argued
jolly well for a kid. He said that, for all he knew,
the beast that we had made was a live, and furious,
and dangerous beast; therefore his bravery in
cutting the tail off single-handed with the bowie-knife
was just as great as if it </span><em class="italics">had</em><span> been alive. Freckles
admitted this. He said that the bravery of Smythe
was undoubtedly immense, and that, so far as that
went, he richly deserved to keep the tail. He even
said that if he could have spared it he would have
given Smythe the famous bowie-knife; but of
course he could not do this, for it was his most
important arm in all his own adventures when he
practised to become a bushranger. Then Steggles
asked Smythe what he had done with the tail; and
Smythe made us promise faithfully not to tell, and
we did so. Then he said that he was wearing it
next his skin—round his stomach, in fact—and
always should do so for the rest of his life, if it
worked well.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said, "It's awfully uncomfortable, and
scratches something frightful, but that's a mere
nothing to the advantages. I didn't, of course,
kill the tiger, but in a way I might have; and,
anyhow, I thought it was alive; and I'm going to
give it a fair trial."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I asked him what he expected the tiger's tail
would do for him, and he said, "Make me fierce.
By rights the fierceness of the tiger ought to go
straight into me, and I ought to fear nothing,
in the same way that the tiger when it was alive
feared nothing. But as I didn't actually kill the
tiger, of course it may not work as I hope."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He assured us solemnly that he believed the
beast was alive when he dashed at it and cut its
tail off; and he also assured us that he had never
seen the Doctor's tiger's skin, and did not so much
as know that he had a tiger's skin. And we
believed him, and let him keep the tail.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Steggles, however, warned young Smythe of one
thing. He said, "Be jolly careful that Fowle
doesn't see it when you're getting up or going to
bed, or very likely he'll sneak. He hates you
already for scoring off him, so mind you hide it
from him."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Smythe naturally thanked Steggles a good deal
for this kind advice, and said that he would be
cautious, and that he already hated Fowle a good
deal, and that if he really did become fierce pretty
soon, Fowle would be the first to know it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So there the thing was left, and when the
Doctor found that his tiger's tail was gone—which
he did do, owing to one of his daughters
pointing it out—nobody knew anything at all about it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor made far more fuss than we expected,
and was bitterly hurt over the loss, and seemed to
be inclined to expel everybody, because nobody
would confess. But, of course, from the business
point of view he couldn't do that, because, as
Gideon said, his occupation would have been over,
and it might have taken many years for him to
collect together one hundred and three boys again.
Gideon also said that the competition was fearful
among school-masters, and expelling was quite a
thing of the past, owing to the difficulty of getting
new ones.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then came the tremendous end of the whole
business, and such fierceness as young Smythe had
managed to get, after wearing the tiger's tail for
three days, was as nothing to the fierceness of the
Doctor when he found it out.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It burst upon us on a half-holiday, and the
half-holiday, as such, was ruined by it. After saying
'Grace' at dinner, Dr. Dunstan told the school
to be in chapel—every boy—at half-past two.
Leave was stopped, and only the football team,
which played a match that afternoon, was allowed
to go. Everybody had theories during dinner, but
nobody was right, or anything like right. We
noticed that the Doctor seemed thundery, and that
he looked sometimes very fixedly at the bottom of
the table, where Mr. Mannering, the underest
master of the lot, though a 'blue,' presided over
the dinner of the lower school.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then we went into chapel, and those interested
in the tiger's tail were all there, except Freckles,
who is in the footer eleven.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Boys," began the Doctor, "I have received an
anonymous letter, and if any among you should
be in doubt of the meaning of that word, I may
tell you that it is derived from the Greek </span><em class="italics">a</em><span> and
</span><em class="italics">onoma</em><span>, signifying 'without a name,' or 'nameless.' The
letter is, in fact, unsigned.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Now, in the ordinary course of events, I should
disdain to notice such a communication. As I
remarked during a newspaper controversy in '82
to an agnostic writer who propounded infamous
opinions and hid himself behind the </span><em class="italics">nom de plume</em><span>
of 'Lucretius,' 'the man who fears to proclaim
himself, and lacks the courage of his own views,
</span><em class="italics">ipso facto</em><span>, places himself beneath the notice of any
serious antagonist.' The discussion, which verged
on the acrimonious, and to which two bishops
contributed, was protracted through August and
the earlier part of September. Then, having proved
my points to the satisfaction of all religious men, I
withdrew from the debate. That, however, is not
what you are here to know, and, indeed, happened
many years before any among you was born.
What will more directly interest you is this: that
for once I have decided to give weight to my nameless
correspondent's communication. It is brief, and
printed in capital letters. I shall rehearse it to you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he read out these remarkable words—</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"'</span><em class="italics">Dear Sir,—The tiger's tail is worn by Smythe
next his skin, under his vest.</em><span>'</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"That is all," continued Dr. Dunstan. "There
is no clue—either to the sender or to his object in
conveying this astounding information to me.
Concerning him I shall make researches anon,
when we have proved the truth or falsity of his
statement; but for the present we are concerned
with the name of Smythe. Now, the name of
Smythe may not be familiar to many among you.
I find that Smythe is a newcomer. He has been
at Merivale only since the beginning of this term.
He is very young, and unusually ignorant, but he
is not too young, and not too ignorant to know the
meaning of such simple and straightforward
Anglo-Saxon as I am in the habit of employing when I
address my boys. He is aware that I have a tiger's
skin, and that this interesting relic is dear to me
as the gift of one who distinguished himself within
these walls, and carried the moral lessons, and even
a little of the scholastic erudition of Merivale School
into the larger life beyond, when he went down
to the sea in ships. Huxley Smythe is also
aware that this integument has been mutilated by
some senseless and wicked hand. Then let him
come forward and tell us more, if, indeed, he knows
more than we all know. Let him step before me
and explain the significance of these words from a
nameless source. I hope with all my heart that he
may proclaim them false, and, what is more, prove
them false, for Huxley Smythe's father is a very
distinguished and learned gentleman, and a Fellow
of the Royal Society. It is impossible too highly
to esteem his discoveries and surmises respecting
the customs of the Ancients. Such a man puts
truth before all things; such a man will be cut to
the heart if his offspring should prove other
than honest and upright. Come hither, Huxley Smythe!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So Smythe went, and jolly cheap he looked. His
face turned the colour of gooseberry fool, and his
hair seemed to become many shades redder than
usual as he walked up the chapel. He was
naturally small, and he seemed much smaller than he
was, owing to walking up the chapel all alone.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Speak," said the Doctor, "and address your
remarks to me. Do you, or do you not know
what has become of the caudal appendage of my
tiger-skin?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, I do, sir," replied Smythe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You do, sir! Then why, when I invited
information on this subject, did you deny it to me?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Smythe did not reply to this question. He
merely said, "I cut off the tiger's tail, sir, in a
moment of great excitement, and having once got
it, I thought I'd keep it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well may you have been excited, sir, at the
instant of such an outrage! And what next, sir?"
asked the Doctor.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The whole of the upper part of his body began
to lift in a lump, as it always did when he got
worked into a rage.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Next, sir, I decided to wear it round my waist."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And will you be so good as to enlighten us as
to the reason for this extraordinary decision?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The Boringos do it, sir, or else the Kinnatoos.
My father told me that they——"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Boringos, sir! Kinnatoos, sir! What are
the Boringos to you, wretched youth—or the
Kinnatoos, either? Because certain heathen nations,
as yet far from the light, indulge in gross
superstition for their own benighted ends, and credit
inanimate objects with imaginary virtues and
grotesque qualities which we, who are civilized,
know right well that they do not possess—because
these things are so, is that any reason why a
Christian boy in a Christian school should seek to
emulate their misguided credulity? The question
before us is not why the Boringos do these things,
but why you cut off my tiger's tail, sir, and wore it
round your person?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"To get fierce, sir," said Smythe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor simply heaved in his indignation.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"To get fierce, sir!" he said, repeating Smythe's
words in a tone of helpless despair.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, please, sir. With luck the fierceness of
the tiger ought to go into me," explained Smythe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"This is almost too much," said Dr. Dunstan.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Because I thought that to be as fierce as a
Bengal tiger would be useful, sir," Smythe
ventured to say.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Silence, sir!" roared the Doctor in such a
tremendous tone of voice that Steggles whispered
to me the Doctor himself must have been wearing
about a dozen tigers' tails all his life.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And how </span><em class="italics">dare</em><span> you want to be fierce, sir?"
went on the Doctor. "You come among us a
child from a Christian home—an inexperienced and
ignorant youth. And yet at ten—for that is your
age, Huxley Smythe—you develop a disgraceful
yearning to deteriorate from the state of civilization
to which you are born; you debase your intellect
and your morality by deliberate efforts to become
demoralized; you seek to take a retrograde step,
and recover the ferocity of primitive—or, as we
say, pre-Adamite—humanity. You have striven
to acquire the physical brutality of palæolithic man,
sir, and—worse, far worse—you deliberately
endeavour to impress upon your nature the disgusting
attributes of one of the most pestilential animals
that an inscrutable Providence has created and let
loose upon this planet. He who could seek to
secure the attributes of the tiger, Huxley Smythe,
must already possess the potentialities of the wild
ass! Never in the whole course of my scholastic
experience have I met anything quite so painful
as this depravity in a child of ten. Shed no tears,
sir," went on the Doctor; "the time has not yet
come for tears."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Because Smythe was blubbing a good deal at this
dreadful view the Doctor had taken of him. Of
course he didn't understand a word of it, and that
made it all the worse.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And where is my tiger's tail now, sir?" finally
asked Dr. Dunstan.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"On, sir," answered Smythe humbly.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Then it had better be taken off, sir!" said
Dunstan, and he roared again. "Divest yourself
of your upper attire, wretched boy. Let this lesson
not be lost on the least among us. Take off your
clothes, sir, so that one and all of us shall be
warned what evil instincts may, and do still mar
human nature in the most unexpected quarters. I
mourn for your accomplished father, Smythe; and
still more for your poor mother. It was none too
soon that they sent you into my care, young though
you be. Go and stand beside the fire, sir, that the
ordeal may not physically injure you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The kid went to the chapel fire, which always
burns in winter, and took off his coat and his waistcoat,
his collar and his tie, and his shirt and his vest.
Under the vest, fastened round pretty tight, just
below his ribs, was the tiger's tail. He looked
awfully rum like this, and still cried a bit. A few
chaps, including several of the sixth, laughed out
loud at the appearance of Smythe and the tail;
but the Doctor soon shut them up.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Silence! Silence!" he shouted out. "This
is no laughing matter, Mayne; and you,
Trelawny; and you, Cornwallis major. We ought
to weep rather than laugh. Here is sortilege,
necromancy, black art in our midst! Here we
find a boy permeated with the—with the fetishism,
the thaumaturgy, the demonology of the savage and
the cannibal. And, what is more astounding still,
we find him at Merivale! Take off that tail, sir!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Smythe undid the tail, and took it off. There
was a bright red mark all round his white body,
and I should think the tail must have given him
a pretty good doing. A tiger's hair is undoubtedly
scratchy when applied to a tender part of the human
frame, like the stomach; and perhaps savages know
this, and that is really the reason why they wear
them. Because nobody who kept a tiger's tail
under his clothes for any length of time could help
getting fairly snappy, if not actually fierce.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor ordered me to bring him the tail,
because I happened to be near, and he caught my
eye. This I did, and meantime Smythe got back
into his clothes. Then the Doctor told the school
it could go about its business—all but the culprit;
and he marched away solemnly and slowly with
Smythe and the tail.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The tail was very skilfully sewn back into its
original place, and nobody who did not know the
truth could have guessed at what had happened to
it. And Smythe told us afterwards that Dunstan
talked to him till tea-time, and then, suddenly
reminded of the hour by the bell, flogged him, but
very slightly. It is always a hopeful sign if the
Doctor begins a row with talk; and the longer he
talks, the less painful is the end. But if he begins
with the licking and talks afterwards, it is bad, and
adding insult to injury, as Steggles says.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>One thing may be worth mentioning. The
Doctor never asked for details, so Smythe never
gave him any; and, as old Dunstan never heard
about what Freckles did, or I did, we escaped
intact. This made what Smythe had done seem
far worse than it was. Of course we richly
rewarded the kid for being such a jolly good
plucked one, and gave him many a thing worth
having; and we also made it up pretty thoroughly
to Fowle for writing the anonymous letter to the
Doctor. It proved to be him, because nobody else
in the dormitory ever kept awake after everybody
else was asleep, which was in itself a beastly mean
thing to do; and we made him finally confess that
he had spotted the tail. With the help of a Chinese
torture that Tin Lin Chow had shown us, we
made him confess. It is beautifully simple, and
a kid can do it. And when Fowle confessed at
the first twinge, and said he did it for revenge
because young Smythe had cheeked him in front
of about twenty chaps, we felt that he was beneath
a fine thing like a Chinese torture, and just kicked
the calves of his legs for a little while, and then
arranged, as a punishment, for the whole school
to send him to Coventry for a week. Which was done.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="richmond-minimus-preacher"><span class="bold x-large">RICHMOND MINIMUS, PREACHER</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">No. V</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">RICHMOND MINIMUS, PREACHER</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">I</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Properly speaking he wasn't 'minimus' in
his preaching days; but once there were three
Richmonds in the field, as Dr. Dunstan used to
say, and after Richmond major went to
Sandhurst, young Richmond ought to have become
'minor,' and very much wanted to, but nobody
could get into the way of changing it. Even when
he was left all alone and Richmond minor left to
go into a tea merchant's office, chaps still called
him 'minimus.'</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>His father was a clergyman who had risen into a
rural dean; but Morrison, who lived at Exeter
and understood a frightful deal about religious
people, said that, while a very good thing in its
way, a rural dean was mere dust beside a
cathedral dean. He seemed to think really,
though I don't know whether it is true, that a
minor canon is almost as classy as a rural dean,
if not quite. Anyway, the father of Richmond
minimus was one, and, until Morrison explained
that it was nothing to make a fuss about, we were
all rather interested. No doubt it was through his
father that Richmond got his preaching power.
He was going into the Church himself some day,
and looked forward to being something out of the
common in course of time. He said that he always
felt a great liking for church—even from his earliest
years—and had never been known to object to
going, though his brothers—especially the one now
training to become a tea merchant—had not in
the least cared for it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He was a frightfully good kid, and Mathers
always said he would die young, or else get
consumption, if there was any truth in the stories we
were allowed to read on Sunday afternoons. In
these, which were different to week-day stories,
there were many deaths. And sometimes the bad
boys died and sometimes the good ones; but they
died in a very different way. The good ones died
in the lap of luxury, with their friends crying
round the bed, and grapes and clergymen, and
pretty well everything to make it all right; but
the bad ones were smashed like flies, owing to
setting machinery in motion; or fell over cliffs
birds'-nesting; or got taken up by policemen.
The difference was that the good ones died from
sheer bad health. They had hectic coughs or
something of that kind, and nobody could cure
them—in fact, nobody ever seemed to try to; but
the bad boys were always as hard as nuts and never
had hectic coughs or anything. In fact, they would
all be alive now if they had only gone to church
on Sundays and not always chosen that day for
adventures. In these adventures they invariably
got mucked up, excepting when occasionally they
were saved by good boys coming home from
church, or sometimes even by good girls; which
Stopford said must have been worse than death,
owing to his hatred of girls.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This Stopford ought to have died a hundred
times a Sunday really. He was not merely bad.
That was nothing, because we all were. At any
rate, none of us were good enough to get
consumption. But he was a beast as well—an utter
beast—and nobody liked him but Fowle; and
nobody ever liked Fowle, so in self-defence Fowle
had to like Stopford.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This Stopford was a bully, among other things,
and a great hater of Richmond minimus. I think
really it was the frightful sufferings of Richmond
that made him take to preaching in a way, because,
though Richmond minor was as old as Stopford,
he had no muscles, being merely a piece of string
for strength; so, though Richmond major could
tackle Stopford, and did so till he left, after he had
gone, there was nobody much to care whether
Stopford bullied the kid or didn't bully him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The first time I saw any of the instinct to preaching
in Richmond minimus was after a footer match.
It was the time when Buckland Grammar School
licked us rather badly, owing to Mathers and Bray
having smoked in secret before the match and
being in far too footling a condition to play; and
Richmond said to me afterwards, when we went
back to Dunstan's, smothered by four goals to
none, that often what we did in secret was rewarded
openly.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Hullo! That's like the Doctor on Sunday."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Let us take this defeat in a proper spirit,
Gregson. It may be for our good. As you
know, I suffer a great deal from Stopford. Well,
it will all tell some day. I don't exactly
understand now why Stopford is allowed to twist my
arms and then hit the muscles till they ache for
hours and often keep me awake at night; but
there's a reason."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The reason is that Richmond major has gone,"
I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"There's a better reason than that," he said.
"I may turn Stopford from his beastliness yet.
Once or twice I've staggered him a bit with telling
him what will come of his cruelty to me."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>That was the first time I seemed to see a
screw loose in Richmond minimus; but he didn't
absolutely preach right bang out until we'd had
a missionary at the chapel one Sunday.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Our chapel was also the big school-room, and
at one end were panels of wood on week-days which
very cunningly opened and turned into the Ten
Commandments on Sundays. On each side was
a door, and one was the Doctor's private entrance
into the chapel, and the other was a deep cupboard
wherein were kept blackboards, large maps and
other things. In this chapel the missionary, who
was an old pupil of Dr. Dunstan's, preached to
us about the heathen of some rather good-sounding
place; and Richmond minimus was so excited that
he gave all his pocket-money and borrowed
two-pence of Williamson. In this manner he
subscribed in all fivepence; and if he could have
borrowed more he would have given more. From
that day he decided to be a missionary at least,
if not a martyr.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The missionary was certainly a good preacher,
besides having seen lions wild. It shows the
difference between chaps that the lion part
interested me most and the heathen part bored me,
while Richmond minimus simply hated the lions,
but the heathen part seemed to act on him like
ginger-beer and excite him to a fearful pitch.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Three days afterwards the fit burst out in
Richmond minimus. I came into the big school-room
one night, ten minutes before the tea-bell, and
there he was preaching to about eight chaps, chiefly
kids! But Mayne and Morant were also there
listening, Mayne being high in the sixth. Words
seemed to flow out of Richmond as easily as they
flow out of a master! He was talking about
pocket-money.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What is it but round bits of silver and
copper?" he said. "Yet, my dear friends, there
is a great power in it, and we should not spend it
all on self. There are thousands of people who
never have pocket-money, but they deserve it quite
as much as us; perhaps more. Suppose you have
threepence a week, which I have myself. Will it
hurt you to yield up one halfpenny to the charity
box? Oh, my friends, it won't! Yet that
half-penny, given cheerfully every week through the
term, comes out at twelve halfpennies, which is
sixpence. Do it gladly and your holidays will be
brighter by sixpence well spent than they otherwise
would be."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Here the bell rang, and Mayne seemed in doubt
whether to smack young Richmond's head or rag
him, or merely tell him he wasn't to preach again.
However, he did nothing except say to his chum,
Morant, that it was queer.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It wasn't what Richmond minimus said, but the
way he said it. He was as keen and solemn as if
he'd been preaching to a million people in a
cathedral. The stuff about his wretched pocket-money
might have been the most important thing ever
uttered by a bishop, such was the way he said it.
You couldn't help listening. It was only afterwards,
when you thought about it, that you realized
what tommy rot it was. To cast away a half-penny
into the charity box weekly was a childish
idea, I thought; and Gideon, who understands the
ins and outs of pocket-money in a way nobody else
does, owing to being the son of a diamond
merchant, said that the idea was false political
economy; and I said so too.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>As to Stopford, the charity box was a painful
subject with him ever since the Doctor happened
to see him putting something into it. The Doctor
had found him subscribing rather often, and
knowing the other things that Stopford did, it much
surprised him. So he set a trap and had the box
empty next time Stopford subscribed; and so at
last found out that it was Stopford who put in
brace-buttons—a great problem that had puzzled
everybody the whole term. And they weren't even
his own brace-buttons.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>After preaching three times Richmond minimus
had the nerve to attack Stopford publicly in a
sermon! About twenty chaps were listening to
him, and as soon as he uttered the name, Stopford
prepared to go and scrag him; but two or three
big fellows told him to sit down and not interfere,
and Richmond was so strung up and in such a
frightfully excited state that he sailed right on
and spoke about Stopford in a way that made many
chaps bar Stopford for weeks afterwards.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, my friends," said Richmond—he was standing
up in front of the panels that turn into the
Commandments on Sundays, and we were sitting
down in the body of the chapel—"Oh, my friends,
and there is another peril—a horror that walks in
the noonday—a human leviathan seeking what it
may devour, and its name is Stopford! I who
speak to you know only too well this thorn in the
flesh. I have suffered many things from him, and
shall again. But I suffer gladly. I am chastened
for my own good. Offences must come, but woe
betide Stopford. He will have his portion in the
burning lake, my friends, for he is a son of Belial;
and he will call for a cup of cold water and
probably none will bring it. He is a bully, a coward,
a cribber and a dirty beast who never even washes
his neck if he can help it. But black though his
body may be, his heart is blacker, dear friends——"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It was at this point that Stopford jumped up
with his eyes blazing; but Trelawny rapped him on
the head and told him to sit down again. And
Richmond minimus went on faster and faster.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Let us Christian spirits seek this vile boy and
try and lift him out of the slough. Let us not
shun him as a thing unclean; let us not dispatch
him where the worms they crawl out and the worms
they crawl in, dear friends, but let us rejoice over
this sinner as over a piece of silver which is lost
by a widow and was found again. Oh, my friends,
remember that Stopford is a human creature with
a soul. It is hard to believe this, but I am right.
He is one of ourselves; that is the sad truth. For
our own sakes—for the sake of the school—let us
try and turn him from his evil ways, and teach him
that to twist my arms in the sockets till they ache
all night is doing the devil's work, and that to
kick me till my shins, which are very thin, bleed
and gather, is also the devil's work; and to take
sweets out of desks is also the devil's work; not to
mention many, many other things, such as smashing
young Dobson's birthday present from home
and——"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I didn't take anybody's sweets, you little
beast!" screamed out Stopford; and the big chaps
roared and gave three cheers for Richmond and
three hisses for Stopford.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It was a frightfully exciting sermon, though
never finished, and Richmond minimus seemed
quite dazed and wet with perspiration afterwards.
I talked to him in secret during evening prep., and
told him I was afraid that Stopford would never
forgive him, and have a fearful score off him sooner
or later. I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I remember hearing my father tell a story about
a great clergyman—the champion preacher, I
believe—and being champion he had to preach to
Queen Victoria, which he did do. But instead of
being terrifically careful what he was about, he
lost his head, like you did to-night, and I believe
he gave it to the Queen pretty much like you gave
it to Stopford. Not of course that the Queen was
ever a quarter as bad as Stopford. In fact, it was
high treason to say she was bad at all—such a
magnificent Queen as her—easily the best ever
known in history. And everybody was in a
frightful rage with the champion preacher; and the
Queen didn't like it too well herself; and the result
was that he never became the Archbishop of
Canterbury, though it was a dead snip for him
before."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I know," answered Richmond minimus, "but
when you're preaching, the things come pouring
into your mind. You can't pick and choose. You
have to say what you're told to say, if you
understand me."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said I didn't in the least.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If you wanted to give it to Stopford in a
sermon you ought to have chosen a time when he
wasn't among the audience," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"For safety, yes," admitted Richmond; "but
at these times when I preach, I care for nothing.
I caught his little, hateful, pink-rimmed eyes on
me and my rage against him rose. I felt like those
old prophets when they had to go and give it
straight out from the shoulder to the kings that
did evil."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It was jolly fine," I said. "But what about
Stopford?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If he would meet me publicly and argue it
out——" said Richmond minimus.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I laughed.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"That's not the way of Stopford," I said. "He
won't argue about it; but he'll give you his sort
of sermon when he gets you alone in a corner some
evening after dark. Preachers are often pretty
nearly martyred before they've done with it; and
they die gladly; and very likely Stopford will
martyr you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Very likely he will," said Richmond minimus;
but not as if he looked forward to it.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">II</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Everybody in the lower school expected some
pretty fearful things would happen to Richmond,
but instead a miracle seemed to occur and Stopford
did nothing. Gideon thought that he might have
taken an action for libel against Richmond minimus
if he had been grown up, owing to young Richmond's
saying what he said about stealing sweets.
It was well known to be true, but Gideon said that,
curiously enough in law it didn't matter in the least
if you said the truth. Because the law is often
down on the truth far worse than on a lie. But
Stopford never mentioned the matter again, and
actually behaved kindly to Richmond and gave him
two new kinds of nibs for his nib collection. He
also let him have a picture of a very beautiful girl
out of a box of cigarettes. I asked Richmond
minimus what he thought of it, and he said
Stopford was converted, and that Stopford was his
first triumph. He was so earnest and hopeful
about it that I felt when he became a missionary
and went into those lands near the equator, that he
wouldn't be contented with converting niggers, but
jolly well want to convert lions and everything.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Encouraged by the remarkable success of
Stopford, Richmond minimus preached several times
more, and it got to be a regular lark, and chaps
came from the other houses to hear him. Stopford
always came and took it frightfully seriously; and
then happened the row about Dr. Dunstan's medlar
tree, and Mr. Browne caught Stopford after dark
and reported him, and Mr. Mannering, the 'blue,'
flogged Stopford at the order of the Doctor.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now this Browne was the least but one of all
the masters, and without doubt the utterest squirt
that ever came to Merivale as a master. It is true
that he was a Cambridge man, but there was
nothing more to be said for him. Young Forrest,
however, knew something more, for it happened
by a curious accident that he came from the same
place that Mr. Browne did. What it was that
Forrest knew we couldn't understand; but it
appeared that Browne gave Forrest a great deal of
help with his prep. on condition that he would not
mention it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This man was very ignorant and could only teach
kids, and even them he didn't teach well. It was
well known that he had many cribs in his room,
and often—especially when he had to take the
fourth in algebra—he would creep away from time
to time and look at his crib swiftly, and return,
and do off a sum on the blackboard as if he had no
difficulty at all. He was great at having favourites,
and he always chose sneaks, and often turned
on them afterwards, as he did on Fowle, and also
on Stopford over the medlars; though when caught,
Stopford solemnly swore to Browne that he was
getting the medlars for him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Anyway, nobody liked Browne, and when Stopford
begged Richmond minimus to preach against
Browne, he thought a little and finally said that
he would.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I advised him strongly not to do it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Can't you see the frightful danger? Some
word you may say may get to Browne's ears, and
you may have a flogging at least, if you're not
expelled."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Richmond minimus shook his head.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Not at all. A word in season often does good,
as in the case of Stopford. I want to warn the
fellows against the mean nature of Browne. I
want to show them what Browne is and how a
master may use his power like a beast, as Browne
does."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If it gets back to him, you're cooked," I said.
"And you know how you work yourself up when
you're preaching. I don't think it's at all wise."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I've promised," answered Richmond minimus.
"I'm going to preach to-morrow evening in the
time after tea before prep.; and all Browne's house
is coming to hear me."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Somehow I felt from the first it would be the
undoing of Richmond minimus. The danger was
too frightful. However, of course I went. It was
the biggest congregation Richmond ever had, and
he said that he itched to make a collection as he
looked at the chaps—not for himself but for some
good purpose. A crowd was in the chapel before
I got there, and Browne's were all in a knot
together, eager and longing to hear what young
Richmond had to say about Browne. A lot of
fellows from the sixth had also come in, and of
course all the personal friends of Richmond
minimus were there. Stopford was also there.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Richmond went up to the master's desk at the
top of the room, full of calm cheek, and said a few
things of a general sort; then he caught
Stopford's eye. This reminded him and he began.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Now I want to speak to you of a subject that
will especially interest the boys of Mr. Browne's
house, namely, Mr. Browne. My friends, I wish
I could say something hopeful about him; I wish
I could tell you that he was a bright, shining
example for us all to follow and imitate; but
alas! you know it is not so. Mr. Browne is a very mean
character. Before saying these words about him
I have thought a great deal about him and studied
him very closely, when, I am afraid, dear friends,
I ought to have been studying something else.
But I tell you fearlessly to beware of him. I know
he has favourites; I know he encourages the sneak
and the tale-bearer in our midst; I dare say among
you at this moment may be some wretched chap
who will go to Browne after my sermon and tell
him what I am saying now; but do I care? No,
I do not care. Nobody need care if they are doing
right. Browne has had a good deal of mystery
about him, and I have come to the bottom of it.
One among us who lives where Browne does,
knows the truth. I will not name him; but he had
his head slapped by Browne the day before
yesterday, though it is well known Dr. Dunstan won't
allow our heads to be slapped, owing to the danger
of hurting the brain. At any rate Browne slapped
his, and in a moment of natural anger, my dear
friends, that boy told me the truth. Browne is a
tailor's son! That, of course, is nothing against
him. The shameful and disgusting thing is that
Browne is ashamed of it! He hates to think of
it. Oh, my friends, what a paltry nature is this.
I dare say his father is a better man than he is,
though he </span><em class="italics">does</em><span> make clothes; and I do not
hesitate to tell you, my friends, that Browne's father
makes clothes a long sight better than Browne
teaches Latin; for we have all noticed the scabby
manner in which he continually sneaks out of this
room during class to rush up to his own study
and consult cribs. I say nothing of his
appearance. He cannot help that, though he could help
those pink ties and those horrid boots with pearl
buttons; but what I do say is that with such a
lesson in our midst we must learn firstly, not to be
ashamed of our parents, whoever they are; and
secondly, not to make friends of dirty sneaks; and
thirdly, not to be a hound in general; and fourthly,
not to pretend we know enough Latin and
algebra to teach it, when really we don't know any
worth mentioning; and fifthly, and lastly, my
friends——"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>What Richmond minimus was going to say for
fifthly, and lastly, against the wretched Browne,
we didn't hear, for at this point a frightful
thing happened. The door of the cupboard on
Richmond's right, where the blackboards were
kept, opened violently and out leapt no less a
person than Mr. Browne himself!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>A very strange sound went up from the congregation
of Richmond minimus, but he said nothing.
For a moment Browne stood at bay, glaring out
of his double eye-glasses, like the picture of a
wounded tiger in </span><em class="italics">C. B. Fry's Magazine</em><span>; then the
chaps began to scutter out, and many dived and
proceeded to the door entirely under the desks, hoping
they would not be recognized. In fact, I did this
myself. But Browne was not bothering about us.
His eyes, which squint by nature, had turned in
upon each side of his nose and he was darting a
horrid glance of rage and scorn at Richmond
minimus.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then, with dreadful slowness, he raised his hand
and took Richmond by the right ear and said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Come!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And Richmond merely said, "Yes, sir," and
went, led by Browne, to the Doctor. As for me,
I felt that Richmond minimus need never have
worried about not being a martyr. He was going
to be a martyr all right now.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>After the blow had fallen—about two days after—he
told me exactly what happened. By a curious
chance the Doctor was writing a sermon himself
when Browne appeared before him. The Doctor
always preaches at Merivale on the first Sunday in
the month, and this was the sermon he was writing,
no doubt.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He put down his pen and took off his glasses
and stretched his eyes in a way he has; then he
told Browne to speak. And Browne said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I have to report this boy for insolence and
profanity combined. Never have I known a boy
do such a thing. Before half the school assembled
in the great school-room he stood up and
preached."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Preached!" said the Doctor, looking with
great surprise at Richmond minimus. "What did
he preach about?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"About me!" said Browne furiously. "He
dared to preach about my private affairs—at
least——"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Begin at the beginning," said the Doctor.
"How did particulars of this outrage reach you,
Browne?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Through the boy Stopford," said Browne; and
Richmond minimus fairly gasped to think how
mistaken he had been about converting Stopford.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Stopford," explained Browne, "came to me
and said that he was very much afraid that
liberties were to be taken with my name. I refused to
believe it at first. Then, to satisfy myself, I went
into the great school-room at the time mentioned
by Stopford and stood behind the blackboards in
the cupboard."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Browne then related all that he had heard, and
Richmond minimus said that he trembled with
indignation and spoke so fast that Dr. Dunstan
had to ask him once or twice to repeat the sentence.
But Richmond admitted that Browne's version of
the sermon was very fairly just.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then the Doctor said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Thank you, Browne. I much regret your
natural annoyance. You may leave the sequel to me."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So Browne hooked it and Richmond minimus
was left alone with the Doctor.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor said nothing for some time. Then
he sighed, and looked at his sermon, and rose
and went to the cane corner.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What led you to do this outrageous thing,
impious boy?" he asked.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I felt called to do it, sir," said Richmond
minimus. "I've preached seven times now, and
more fellows come each time."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I am aware that you are probably destined for
the sacred calling," said Dunstan solemnly, "and
your theological papers have always led me to
regard you as a promising recruit, Richmond
minimus; but preaching, or I should say a travestie,
a bizarre burlesque of that difficult branch of the
pastor's calling! And to select one of your masters
for a theme!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"He seemed a good subject to show what we
oughtn't to do, sir. In preaching, of course, you
want——"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor looked his most awful look, and
Richmond minimus dried up.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Probably what I want in preaching is as well
known to me as to you, preposterous youth!" said
the Doctor. "The present question is not what
I want in preaching, but what I want in boys;
and what I expect from boys after they have been
for the space of three years under my personal care
and control. To play the buffoon before your
fellows is in any case degrading; but to do it under
pretence of advancing their moral welfare—to
preach in jest—this is perilously akin to profanity.
Only a vitiated spirit of secularism can explain so
gross an action. My heart bleeds when I think
upon your parents, Richmond minimus, and upon
your brothers who worthily upheld the honour
and dignity of Merivale, and now, in the wider
field of life, are bringing forth the good fruit sowed
within these scholastic cloisters."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor always spoke like this about chaps
who had left.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Then," said Richmond minimus, "the usual
event happened and, as you know, on the next
morning I had, in addition, to tell Browne I was
sorry publicly after prayers."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"One thing," I said. "What was that 'fifthly
and lastly' that you were prevented from preaching?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Richmond didn't remember; so it was lost.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Shall you ever preach again here?" I asked him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said not. He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No. On the whole it isn't good enough. And
yet you mustn't think I mind the martyrdom.
Only of course I don't want to be utterly martyred
and done for before I grow up."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He evidently meant to be a martyr in rather a
biggish way in foreign parts, like the Germans in
China; because when they are bashed by the
heathen, Germany always gets a few miles of China
as payment. And so Germany is proud of her
martyrs, and the Emperor too.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>What did become of Richmond minimus I can't
tell you. He ran away once, to do good on a large
scale, but he was captured and brought back before
he had time to do much worth mentioning. He'll
tell you that story himself. Anyway, he never
preached again, and the whole affair, if it did
nothing else, helped to show what Stopford was.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-bolsover-prize"><span class="bold x-large">THE 'BOLSOVER' PRIZE</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">No. VI</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">THE 'BOLSOVER' PRIZE</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">I</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>There was once a chap at Dunstan's, ages and
ages ago, called Bolsover, who turned into a
novelist afterwards; and he was so frightfully keen
about other chaps turning into novelists too that
he gave a prize for composition. It was a book
worth a guinea, and Dr. Dunstan had to choose it
each year, and only the junior school was allowed
to enter for it, according to the conditions made by
the chap who gave it. Gideon calculated it out,
and said that as twenty pounds is about good for
one pound at simple interest in an ordinary way,
the novelist chap must have handed twenty pounds
over to Dr. Dunstan; and Steggles said he rather
doubted if the novelist chap would have much cared
for the books that Dr. Dunstan chose for the prizes;
because they were not novels at all, but very
improving books—chiefly natural history; which
Steggles said was not good for trade from the
novelist chap's point of view.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>No doubt old Dunstan ought to have bought
stories; and Steggles went further and said that it
would have been a sporting thing for Dr. Dunstan
to get the novelist chap's own books, of which he
wrote a great many for a living. Steggles had
read one once in the holidays, but he didn't tell me
much about it, excepting that there was a man
who appeared to have about four wives in it, and
that it had three hundred and seventy-five pages
and no pictures.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Anyway, the composition prize always interested
us in the lower school, and it interested me
especially once, because the subject was 'Wild
Flowers,' and my cousin, Norman Tomkins,
happened to be a frightful dab at them. When he
heard about it, Tomkins went instantly to Gideon,
who lends money at usury, being a Jew, and said,
"Look here, Gid., I'll sell you the 'Bolsover' prize
for ten shillings now on the spot. As it's worth a
pound, you'll make fifty per cent. profit." And
Gideon said, "The profit would be about right, but
where's the prize?" And Tomkins said, "I've got
to write for it on Monday week; but it's as good as
mine, because nobody in the lower school knows
anything about wild flowers excepting me, and I
can tell you the name of thirty-four right off the
reel; so there's an end of it, as far as I can
see." Which shows what a hopeful sort of chap Tomkins was.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But unfortunately Gideon knew the great
hopefulness of Tomkins about everything, and also
knew that it did not always come off. He said,
"Who are in for the prize?" And I said, "First
Tomkins, then Walters, then Smythe, and also
Macmullen."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"There you are," said Tomkins. "Just take
them one by one and ask yourself. If it was wild
animals, or queer old customs, Smythe might run
me close, or even beat me; but in the subject of
wild flowers he is nothing. Then young Walters
doesn't know anything about anything, and his
English is frightfully wild, owing to his having
been born in India. Well, that only leaves
Macmullen, and Macmullen's strong point is
machinery. He never looked at a flower in his
life. When we went out of bounds on the railway
embankment, he simply sat and watched the signals
work, and took down the number of a goods engine
that was new to him. And when he got up, I
discovered that he'd actually been sitting on a bee
orchis—one of the rarest flowers in the world!
When I showed him what he'd done, he merely
said, 'A bee orchis? Lucky it don't sting!' So
that shows he's no use. In fact, when he hears
the subject hasn't got anything to do with steam
power, I doubt if he'll go in."</span></p>
<div class="align-center auto-scaled figure margin" style="width: 82%" id="figure-86">
<span id="we-went-out-of-bounds-on-the-railway-embankment"></span><ANTIMG class="align-center block" style="display: block; width: 100%" alt=""WE WENT OUT OF BOUNDS ON THE RAILWAY EMBANKMENT."" src="images/img-137.jpg" />
<div class="caption centerleft figure-caption margin">
<span class="italics">"WE WENT OUT OF BOUNDS ON THE RAILWAY EMBANKMENT."</span></div>
</div>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Gideon knew Macmullen better.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"He'll go in," he said. "His age is just right,
and he won't be able to try again. He's not the
chap to throw away the chance of getting a pound
book just because the subject doesn't happen to
be steam power. Besides, there's always time
allowed to swat up the thing. I bet by Monday
week Mac. will know as much about wild flowers as
you do—perhaps more."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Of course, as a chum of his, you say that,"
answered Tomkins. "But I've made a lifetime
study of wild flowers, and it's childish to think
that Macmullen, or anybody else, is going to learn
all I know in a week."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"He can spell, anyway," said Gideon, "which
is more than you can."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>In fact, Gideon didn't seem so hopeful about
Tomkins getting the prize as you might have
thought, and it surprised Tomkins a good deal.
Gideon had a right to speak, because in his time
he'd won this prize himself. When he won it, the
subject happened to be 'Postage Stamps'; which
was, of course, like giving the prize to Gideon,
owing to his tremendous knowledge about money
in every shape.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The time was July, and so next half-holiday
Tomkins and me went into the country for a walk,
for Tomkins to freshen up his ideas about the wild
flowers.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He certainly knew a lot, but several things that
I picked bothered him, and once or twice, I think,
he was altogether wrong about them. He also
picked a good many that he evidently didn't know
at all, and carried them back to school to ask
Mr. Briggs the names of them and anything worth
mentioning about them.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then, coming back through Merivale, who
should we see but Macmullen, with his nose flat
against the window of an old book shop there!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Look here," he said, "there's a second-hand
botany in here for sevenpence, and I've only got
fivepence. I tried the man by showing him the
fivepence all at once, but he wouldn't come down.
Can one of you chaps lend me twopence till next week?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He looked at the flowers Tomkins had picked as
he spoke.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"D'you know many of them?" said Tomkins,
knowing well that Mac. wouldn't.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Only that—that nettle," said Macmullen rather
doubtfully.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It isn't a nettle," said Tomkins. But he was
so pleased to see what a frightful duffer Macmullen
really was, that he lent him twopence on the spot.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I thought he was rather a fool to increase
Macmullen's chances like this; but Tomkins said, in
his large way, that a few facts out of a botany book
wouldn't help Macmullen now, especially if he
didn't know the difference between sage and nettles.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"By Jove, I don't believe he knows the difference
between sage and onions, for that matter!"
said Tomkins.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then Mac. came out with the book, and we all
went back together.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">II</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>It was frightfully interesting to see the different
ways those four chaps went about trying for the
'Bolsover' prize. Tomkins got special leave off
games, and spent his spare time in the lanes. He
confessed to me that he was frightfully ignorant
about grasses, and thought, on the whole, that it
would be safer to leave them out of the essay.
Macmullen told me that the whole subject bored
him a good bit, but he thought he could learn
enough about it to do something decent in a week,
because a pound book was worth the fag. He was
always pulling flowers to pieces, and talking about
calyxes and corollas, and seed-cases and stamens,
and other wild things of that sort. I asked
Tomkins if it promised well for Macmullen to learn
about stamens and so on, and how to spell them;
and Tomkins thought not.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Tomkins said, "Briggs may very likely favour
him, as we know he has before, owing to his
feeling for everything Scotch, from oatmeal
downwards; but, all the same, the subject is wild
flowers, not botany. It's rather a poetical subject
in a way, and that's no good to Macmullen. No,
I don't think Mac. has any chance, though he did
ask old Briggs to lend him the number of the
</span><em class="italics">Encyclopædia Britannica</em><span> with 'Botany' in it, to
read in playtime."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I believe Briggs was pleased, though," I said,
"for I heard him answer that Mac. was going the
right way to work. Anyway, Mac. read quite half
the article and copied some out on a bit of paper
before he chucked it in despair."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Tomkins nodded, and I think he saw that it was
rather a grave thing for Macmullen to have done.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I might read it myself," he said. "I'm a little
foggy between genera and species, and varieties
and natural orders, and so on. Not that all that
stuff matters. What you want is really the name
of the wild flowers themselves and their colours and
ways. Do you happen to know any poetry about
flowers of a sort easily learned by heart?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I didn't; but young Smythe, who was there,
answered that he did.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said, "What you say about poetry is awfully
interesting to me, Tomkins, because I had thought
the same. And I know many rhymes of a queer
sort, and I can make rhymes rather well myself,
and I had an idea I would try and do the whole
of my composition in rhyme."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Like your cheek," said Tomkins. "My dear
kid, it will take you all your time to write prose.
And what do you know about flowers, anyway?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I do know something," said Smythe, "owing
to my father, who collects odd rhymes and things.
It's called folklore. It includes queer names of
plants and animals; also about remedies for warts,
and the charms for curing animals from witches,
and overlooking, and suchlike. I know some
awful funny things, anyway, that my governor has
told me, though they may not be true."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Tomkins was a good deal interested in this.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Fancy a kid like you knowing anything at all
about it!" he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There was only Walters left, but he was no good
at all, and he'd simply gone in for it because his
people insisted upon his doing so. I asked Walters
if he knew much about wild flowers, and he
answered something about cucumber sandwiches,
which he had once eaten in large quantities owing to
being forgotten at a lawn-tennis party. He seemed
to think because a cucumber was a vegetable,
and a flower was a vegetable, that a cucumber was
a flower. He said that was all he knew about the
subject, excepting that dogs ate grass when not
feeling well. So I told Tomkins he needn't bother
about Walters.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Tomkins, however, assured us that he wasn't
bothering about any of them. He said that facts
were the things, and not theories. So while
Macmullen swatted away at his botany, and Smythe
collected rhymes and offered anybody three links
of a brass chain for a word that rhymed with
toad-flax, and Walters merely waited for the day, and
made no effort as far as we could see, Tomkins
poked about, and went one evening out of bounds,
with Freckles and young Corkey, into the famous
quarry at Merivale Great Wood. They were
chased, but escaped owing to the strategy of
Freckles; and Tomkins felt the 'Bolsover' prize
was now an absolute cert for him, because in the
preserves he had met with an exceedingly rare
flower—at least, he said so; and he believed that by
mentioning it, and making a sketch of it in his
paper, he would easily distance Macmullen, who
did not so much as know there was such a flower.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>As far as ages went, I must tell you that Tomkins
was thirteen and two weeks, and Macmullen
thirteen and seven months, while Smythe was ten and
Walters merely nine and a half.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>All four put on a little side about it the Sunday
before, and a good many other fellows wished they
had gone in, because the papers had to be written
in the Doctor's own study, and there are some
magnificent pictures and marble statues in that
room such as are very seldom seen by the lower
school.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I asked each one after breakfast on the appointed
day how he felt; and Tomkins said, "Hopeful";
and Macmullen said, "Much as usual"; and
Smythe said, "Sleepy, because I've been awake
nearly all night remembering rhymes I've heard
my father say"; and Walters said he had a sort
of rather horrid wish that </span><em class="italics">his</em><span> father had died the
term before, because he didn't think his mother
would ever have made him go in for a thing he
hated so much as this.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">III</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Two hours were allowed for the essay, and by
good luck I happened to meet the four chaps just
as they came out. So I got their ideas fresh on
what they'd done. Curiously enough, all four
were hopeful. Tomkins, of course, I knew would
be, and probably also Macmullen, but Smythe and
even Walters seemed to fancy they had a chance
too. This astonished me a good deal. So I said
to Smythe—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"How the dickens d'you think any stuff you
can have done would be near to what my cousin
Tomkins has done?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Because of the rhymes. I was quite astonished
myself to find how they came; and I also
remembered a charm for nettlerash, and some awfully
peculiar sayings just at the right moment."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And Walters also declared he'd done better than
he expected to do. He seemed rather flustered
about it, and wouldn't give any details; but he was
highly excited, and inked up to the eyes, as you
might say. He gave me the idea of a chap who'd
been cribbing.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Macmullen looked rather a pale yellow colour,
which he always does look at moments of great
excitement, especially just before his innings at
cricket. He wouldn't say a word to a soul until
he'd gone to his botany book and read up a lot of
stuff. Then he felt better.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>As to Tomkins, he told me privately, as his
cousin, that he had got in the names of no less than
forty-five plants and seven grasses.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"That </span><em class="italics">must</em><span> settle it," he said. And I said I
thought so too.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Mr. Briggs corrected the essays that night, and
prepared some notes upon them for the Doctor to
read when the time of announcing the winner came.
We all stared jolly hard at Briggs during prep. the
next day, and Steggles, who has no fear of old
Briggs, asked him who had won. But Briggs
merely told him to mind his own business.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>After prayers the next day the Doctor stopped in
the chapel, which was also a school-room, and told
everybody to remain in his place.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he whispered to Corkey major, and Corkey
went off, and presently came back with a very
swagger book bound in red leather and having a
yellow back with gold letters upon it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor dearly likes these occasions; and so
do we, because it means missing at least one class
for certain. When he once fairly begins talking,
he keeps at it. Now he had the four essays on the
desk in front of him, and the prize; and then he
spoke to Briggs, and Briggs led up Macmullen
and Tomkins and Smythe and Walters.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>They knew this was coming, and had all prepared
to a certain extent. I noticed that Smythe had
borrowed a green tie from Webster, and that
Mac. had turned his usual hue at times of excitement.
Walters was still inky, despite pumice stone.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"We have now, my boys, to make our annual
award of the 'Harold Bolsover' prize for English
composition," began the Doctor. "Mr. Bolsover,
whose name is now not unfavourably known to his
countrymen as an ingenious fabricator of romance,
was educated at this seminary. To me it fell to
instruct his incipient intellect and lift the vacuity of
his childish mind upwards and onwards into the
light of knowledge and religion.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The art of fiction, while it must not be
considered a very lofty or important pursuit, may yet
be regarded as a permissible career if the motives
that guide the pen are elevated, and a high morality
is the author's first consideration. Lack of leisure
does not permit me to read story books myself; but
I have little doubt that Mr. Bolsover's work is all
that it should be from the Christian standpoint, and
I feel confident that those lessons of charity,
patience, loyalty, and honour, which he learnt from
my own lips, have borne worthy fruit in his
industrious brain.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The work I have selected for the 'Bolsover'
prize is </span><em class="italics">Gilpin on Forest Scenery</em><span>—a book which
leads us from Nature to the contemplation of the
Power above and behind Nature; a book wherein
the reverend author has excelled himself and
presented to our minds the loftiest thoughts, and to
our eyes the most noble scenes, that his observance
could record, and his skill compass within the
space of a volume.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"For this notable reward four lads have entered
in competition, and their emulation was excited by
the theme of 'Wild Flowers,' which your senior
master, Mr. Briggs, very happily selected. Wild
flowers are the jewellery of our hedgerows, scattered
lavishly by Nature's own generous hand to gladden
the dusty wayside—to bring a smile to the face of
the wanderer in the highway, and brightness to the
eyes of the weary traveller by flood and field. None
of you can have overlooked them. On your road to
your sport—even in the very grass whereon you
pursue your pastimes—the wild flowers abound.
They deck the level sward; they smile at us from
the cricket-field; they help to gladden the hour of
mimic victory, or soften the bitter moment of
failure, as we return defeated to the silent throng at
the pavilion rails.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Now, I have before me the thoughts of Nicol
Macmullen, Norman Tomkins, Huxley Smythe,
and Rupert Walters on this subject; and I very
much regret to say that not one of them has
produced anything which may be considered worthy of
Merivale, worthy of Mr. Bolsover, or worthy of
themselves. I do not overlook their tender years;
I am not forgetting that to a mind like my own or
that of Mr. Briggs—richly stored with all the best
and most beautiful utterances on this subject—the
crudities of immaturity must come with the
profound and pitiful significance of contrast. No,
no—I judge these four achievements from no
impossible standard of perfection. I know too well how
little can be expected from the boy who is but
entering upon his teens—I am too familiar with the
meagre attainments of the average lad of one decade
to ask for impossible accuracy, for poetic thought,
or pious sentiments; but certain qualities I have the
right to expect—nay, demand——"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Here Steggles whispered to me—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Blessed if I don't think he's going to cane them!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Certain qualities Mr. Harold Bolsover has also
the right to expect and demand. Do we find them
in these essays before us? Reluctantly I reply, we
do not. But in order that you may judge whether
your head-master is unreasonable, that you of the
upper school may estimate the nature of the efforts
upon which I base this adverse criticism, I propose
to read brief extracts from each and from all of them.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The initial error of the boy Nicol Macmullen
appears to be a total misconception of the theme he
was invited to illuminate. He begins his essay as
follows."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor made a frightful rustling among
Mac.'s papers, and everybody looked at Mac. He
had not expected this, and his mouth worked very
rummily, and his head went down between his
shoulders, and he showed his under teeth and
stared in a frightfully fixed way at the boot of
Smythe, who sat next to him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then Dr. Dunstan began—</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span>"'WILD FLOWERS.</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span>"'By Nicol Macmullen.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"'The vegetable kingdom is a very large one.
John Ray, a native of Sussex, did much to advance
the study of it. He was born in 1628, and died in
1705. There was a history of plants written three
hundred years before Christ. Linnæus was the man
who invented the sexual system—a very useful
invention. It is a stepping-stone. He first mentioned
it in 1736. Seaweeds are also a part of the
vegetable kingdom, but they have no flowers, and
so may be dismissed without further mention. Also
Algæ. Of leaves, it may be said that some fall and
some do not. At least, speaking strictly, all fall,
and this is called a deciduous tree; but not all at
once, and this is called an evergreen. Glands occur
in the tissue of the leaves, and they also have hairs.
Buds also have hairs. The organs of plants is
almost the largest subject in the vegetable
kingdom, but I have no time to mention more than one
or two organs to-day. The root descends into the
soil, the stems rise aloft, and the flowers bud out at
the ends of them. Mistletoe and broom-rape are
called parasites, because they live on other trees,
instead of being on their own.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"'Coming now to flowers, we find that they may
be divided into two main families: wild and garden.
We shall dismiss garden flowers, as they do not
belong to our subject, but wild flowers are the most
beautiful things in the vegetable kingdom. Especially
honeysuckle and blackberries. Many others
will occur to the reader also. The flower is the
</span><em class="italics">tout ensemble</em><span> of those organs which are concerned
in reproduction.'"</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>The Doctor stopped and put down Macmullen's
essay. For my part, I was simply amazed at the
amount Mac. knew, and I think everybody else
was; but, strangely enough, the Doctor didn't
like it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"From this point our author quotes verbatim
out of the pages of the </span><em class="italics">Encyclopædia Britannica</em><span>,"
continued Dr. Dunstan. "As an effort of memory
the result is highly creditable, and Macmullen
will have acquired a great deal of botanical
knowledge which may possibly be of service to him
in his future career; but as an essayist on wild
flowers he is exceedingly evasive, and his effort fails
radically and fundamentally. The subject is
obviously not one that appeals to him. There is no
sympathy, no love of his theme; above all, no moral
deductions. Macmullen's mind has not been
uplifted. He has, in fact, failed."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Mac. didn't seem to care as much as you
would have thought. He told me afterwards he
felt so thankful when the Doctor shut up about him
and turned to Tomkins, that he forgot everything
else but relief.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Tomkins became red when the Doctor picked up
his essay; but it soon faded away—I mean the
redness.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Now here," said Dr. Dunstan, "we are met by
an attempt of a very different character. The boy
Tomkins appears to think that there is nothing
more to be said about the flowers of the field than
to utter their names. His prose lacks dignity;
there is a feverish desire to tell us what everything
is called. There is no poetry, no feeling. Vagueness,
indeed, we have, but vagueness is not poetry,
though to uncritical minds it may sometimes pass
for such. This is how Tomkins approaches his
subject. There is a breathlessness, a feeling of
haste, as if somebody was chasing Tomkins along
the road while he was making his researches. This,
unless Tomkins has been guilty of trespass—an
alternative I refuse to consider—is difficult to
explain."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor then gave us a bit out of Tomkins—</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"'As one walks down a country lane, one can
often hardly see the leaves for the flowers. They
burst upon the view in millions. The hedges are
thronged with them; the scent is overpowering.
Turn where you will, they greet the bewildered eye.
They hang from the trees and spring from the
earth; they twine also—as, for instance, briony
and convolvuluses. At a single glance I take in
dog-roses; campions of several sorts, including
white; shepherd's purse—a weed; strawberry, primroses,
cuckoo-flower, violet, bugle, herb robert, and
also other wild geraniums of various kinds. They
are in a crowded mass, all struggling for life.
Stitchwort, nettle, archangel, cock's-foot grass,
clematis, dock, heath, furze, bog-moss, darnel,
dandelions, daisies, buttercups of sorts, marshmallow,
water-lilies, rushes and reeds, poppies and
peppermint, also ferns—one sees them all at a
glance. Then, as one hastens swiftly onwards——'</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"I gasp for breath," said the Doctor; "I absolutely
refuse to hasten swiftly onwards with Tomkins.
At this breakneck pace he drags us through
that portion of the British flora at his command.
There is doubtless knowledge here; there is even
reflection, as when he says, at the end of his paper,
that wild flowers ought to make us thankful for our
eyesight and for the lesser gift of smell. But, taken
as a whole, we have no balance, absolutely no
repose, no light, and no shade. There is too much
hurry and bustle, too little feeling for the beauty
attaching to English scenery or English prose;
too eager a desire to display erudition in the empty
matter of floral nomenclature."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So that was the end of Tomkins. He was frightfully
disappointed; but he felt so interested to know
what wretched chaps like Smythe and Walters had
done that was better, that he forgot even to be
miserable about losing until afterwards.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then the Doctor went for Smythe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Huxley Smythe next challenges our attention,"
he said. "Now, here we are confronted with a
still more amazing misunderstanding. Smythe
appears to know absolutely nothing whatever
concerning wild flowers; but he has seized this occasion
to display an extraordinary amount of peculiar
information concerning other matters. He evidently
imagines that this will answer his purpose equally
well. Moreover, he endeavours to cast his work
in a poetic form—with results that have bewildered
even me, despite my half-century of knowledge of
the </span><em class="italics">genus puer</em><span>. I do not say that rhyme is
inadmissible. You shall not find me slow to
encourage originality of thought even among the
least of you; but Smythe trusts too little to himself
and too much to other rhymsters—I will not call
them poets. He has committed to memory many
verses of a trivial and even offensive character.
He has furnished me with a charm or incantation
to remove warts. Elsewhere he commits himself
to sentiments that may be described as flagrantly
irreligious. It is true he glances obliquely at his
subject from time to time; but not in a spirit which
can admire or commend. We have, for instance,
these lines—</span></p>
<blockquote>
<div>
<div class="line-block outermost">
<div class="line"><span>"'Put yarrow under your pillow, they say,</span></div>
<div class="line"><span>You will see your true love the very next day.'</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>"'For pain in the stomach an excellent thing</span></div>
<div class="line"><span>Is tea made of mint and sprigs of ling.'</span></div>
<div class="line"> </div>
</div>
<div class="line"><span>"'If you wash your clothes on Good Friday, someone</span></div>
<div class="line"><span>Will be certain to die ere the year is done.'</span></div>
<div class="line"> </div>
</div></div>
</blockquote>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"Whence Huxley Smythe has culled these
pitiful superstitions I know not," continued the
Doctor; "but he appears to be a veritable
storehouse and compendium of them. They remind me
only too painfully of a certain tiger's tail, though
that incident is closed, and I desire to make no
further mention of it. Had our theme been
folklore, or those crude, benighted and indelicate
fancies still prevailing among the bucolic population,
Smythe must have conquered, and easily conquered.
It is not so, however. He has chosen the
occasion of the 'Bolsover' competition to reveal
no little fantastic knowledge; but its lack of
appropriate and apposite qualities effectually disposes of
his claim. I will give you a last sample of his
methods. </span><em class="italics">A propos</em><span> of absolutely nothing, on page
four of his dissertation, Smythe submits this
impertinence. He appears suddenly to have
recollected it and inserted it in the body of his work,
without the least consideration for its significance
or my feelings.</span></p>
<blockquote>
<div>
<div class="line-block outermost">
<div class="line"><span>"'There was an old man who lived in a wood</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>As you may plainly see,</span></div>
</div>
<div class="line"><span>And said he could do more work in a day</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>Than his wife could do in three.'"</span></div>
<div class="line"> </div>
</div></div>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p class="pfirst"><span>The Doctor looked awful sternly at Smythe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"This fragment—from some coarse old ballad, I
suspect—is thrust upon me, as one might brandish
a club in the face of an unoffending citizen. Smythe
must chasten his taste and study the rudiments of
logic and propriety before again he ventures to
challenge our attention with original thoughts.
Silence! Silence!" thundered the Doctor in
conclusion; because Smythe's stuff made Steggles
laugh out loud. Then several other chaps laughed,
and in trying not to laugh, Wolf minor choked and
made a noise, like a football exploding, that was
far worse than laughter.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"There remains the effort of Rupert Walters,"
went on Dr. Dunstan. "He is the youngest of the
competitors, and I find but little to praise in his
achievement; yet it indicates a shadow of promise
and a shade of imagination. Indeed, Mr. Briggs
at first suspected that Walters had availed himself
of secret and dishonest assistance; but this, I rejoice
to know, is not the case. Walters has yet to learn
to control the discharge of ink from his pen, and
in matters of orthography also there is much to be
desired for him—a remark which applies to all the
competitors save Macmullen—but he possesses a
dim and misty nucleus of feeling for the dignity of
his native tongue. There is in his attempt a
suggestion that at some distant date, if he is spared,
and if he labours assiduously in the dead languages,
Rupert Walters may control his living speech with
some approach to distinction. I select his most
pleasing passage."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor regarded young Walters over his
spectacles for a moment with a frightfully encouraging
expression that he sometimes puts on when
things are going extra well. Then he read the
pleasing passage, as he called it.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"'Often, walking in the country far from home,
you may see the briars falling over the sides of the
lanes, and the may trees white with bloom. They
look lovely against the blue sky; and a curious
thing is that the distant trees also look blue, and
not green, by reason of distance. Near at hand,
yellow and red flowers may be dotted about; but
when you look along the lane, you only see haze,
which is beautiful. If there is a river flowing near
by, it is also very beautiful indeed, especially with
water-lilies on it. And clouds are lovely too, if
reflected in a sheet of water beside which yellow
irises spring up, and their foliage looks rather
bluish. If a trout rises, it makes white rings on
the water.'</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"Now, here," said the Doctor, "is a humble
effort to set down what the eye of this tender boy
has mirrored in the past. I need not tell you how
he spells 'irises,' or 'curious,' or 'beautiful.' The
fact remains that he has distanced his competitors
and achieved the 'Bolsover' prize. Come hither,
Rupert Walters. Let me shake your hand, my lad!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So that was the end of it, and Walters seemed
more frightened than anything. But he took his
book, and the matter ended, and the four chaps had
their essays back, with Briggs's red pencil remarks
on them, to send home to their people.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The extraordinary truth only came to me three
days later, when I happened to be having a talk
with Walters and looking at his prize, which was
duller even than most prizes. I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"How the dickens did you remember that trees
look blue seen a mile off?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I didn't remember it. If you'll swear not to
tell, I'll explain. I shall be rather glad to tell
somebody."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So I swore. Then Walters said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I was just sitting biting my pen and drawing
on the blotting-paper and casting my eyes about
and wondering what on earth to say, when I saw
right bang in front of me a great picture—a whacker—full
of trees and a lane, and water and hills, and
every mortal thing, even to the flowers dabbed about
in front. Well—there you are! I just tried to put
down what I saw. And I did it only too well, if
anything. Of course, in a sort of way, it was
cribbing; but then, of course, in another sort of way,
it wasn't. Anyway, you've sworn not to tell—not
even Tomkins; so of course you won't tell."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And of course I didn't.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-case-for-fowle"><span class="bold x-large">THE CASE FOR FOWLE</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">No. VII</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">THE CASE FOR FOWLE</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">I</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>It's awful difficult to understand why some boys
are liked and some utterly barred. I'm nearly
sixteen now, and I've been at Merivale for years,
but still I can't see it. All I know is that the chaps
most boys like, I don't, and the very few chaps
I like, nobody else does. At first I thought it was
hampers and asked my mother to send me extra
large ones, which she did; and such hampers as
mine were never seen before in any school, I should
think. But the boys ate my water-melons and
peaches and many such unusual things, just as if
they were the wretched windfalls that Masters gets
from his father's orchards, or the feeble home-made
jam and common or garden cakes that come to
other fellows on their birthdays. Then the very
chaps that guzzle my rare things pretend afterwards
I've tried to poison them, and so on; and young
Gregson, who once ate half a bruised pineapple of
mine that was a bit off, got ill; and after that only
certain chaps would take the things I offered. And
nobody once, all the time I've been here, has ever
offered me as much as a dry biscuit out of their
beastly hampers.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I pointed this out to Travers, who, though no
friend of mine, always appeared to have more sense
in a general way than most fellows; and he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You sneer so at chaps. You always make it
so jolly clear your hampers are the best in the
world, that naturally they think you wouldn't care
about their things. Besides, Steggles did offer
you three ripe pears, for I saw him do it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," I said, "he did—just because he knew
they were over-ripe and thought to score off me.
I knew why he had done it, and told him so."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Then he offered them to me," said Travers,
"so I can tell you that you are quite wrong. I
took them and ate them on the spot, and they were
perfectly good, decent pears. For once in a way
Steggles was quite straight and meant no harm
at all."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Well, I saw after a bit that it wasn't hampers,
or anything of that sort; and then I thought it
was games. But I wasn't going to make a fool
of myself at footling games for anybody, and I
always did get out of them when I could. However,
it wasn't altogether games either, though certainly
more games than hampers. Still, there were
chaps who didn't play games any better than
me—such as Richards, who always went to matches
and was keen about games, though useless himself,
and Ford, who made peculiar knots in rope, and
Jameson, who drew pictures in the chaps' Latin
grammars of the remarkable things mentioned in
syntax. Then another great thing, showing what
mean beasts most boys are, is the fact that if
certain masters like certain boys, then other boys also
like them.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Once, and only once, I got jolly friendly with a
master who was very much disliked indeed by
everybody else. I mean Browne. I never found
him bad at first, and he used me a good bit in
many ways and nearly always gave me full marks.
But he changed frightfully over the business of
the blackboard, and it happened like this. You
see, as Browne thought well of me, he confided in
me a bit out for walks; and I confided in him;
and he asked me a lot of questions concerning a lot
of boys; and, as I hated them all, I told him what
he wanted to know. He was frightfully obliged
and said I was a power for good in the school; and
also said that such a boy as I am, without silly
ideas about sneaking, may be of the greatest use
to masters if he really has the welfare and interest
of the school at heart. He also gave me a knife
and seemed pretty sure I should win several prizes
at the end of the term. In fact, we got very
friendly and I certainly did him a very good turn
by helping him to understand why some boys
didn't like him, and telling him what they said
about him behind his back. He was greatly
obliged to me, and used the things I told him, and
scored pretty badly off some chaps as a result. It
rather surprised them to find how much he knew;
but it didn't make them like him any better. Then
they began to try and score off him, and finally,
owing to an unfortunate accident, I got mixed up
in it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Steggles did an unusual thing to young Frost.
Steggles had borrowed the matron's scissors to cut
his toe-nails, which were turning in and tearing
his toes and making them pour with blood. And
after he had used them and shortened his toe-nails
by about half-an-inch or so, he kept them and told
the matron that he had lost them. Then came
young Frost, who was a sort of relation of
Trelawny, who was at that time easily the
best-liked chap at Merivale.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Well, Steggles got young Frost up into the gym. alone,
as he thought, and told him it was the rule
for new boys to have their hair cut close to their
heads, because they often brought infection to
Merivale in that way. So he cut all young Frost's
hair off; and I was there, hidden in a corner
reading a grown-up novel that I had found in Browne's
room. Because Browne, as a great favour, used
to allow me in his study to see the remarkable
things he has there—chiefly on the mantelpiece,
including photographs of well-known actresses,
said to be signed by themselves. So I saw
Steggles cut off Frost's hair, and I did not know
Steggles had seen me, but he had. And he made
me swear not to tell, which I did; but knowing
that an oath is not binding when the good of the
school is involved, I told Browne about it, and he
took the credit to himself over it and taxed Steggles
with it. Of course Steggles denied it, and it
couldn't be proved, because young Frost had a
rotten idea it would be unsportsmanlike to sneak.
So it came about that Browne couldn't do anything
without getting me into a row, and accordingly
nothing was done to Steggles. But Steggles did a
lot to me, because of course he knew I was the only
person who could have told Browne the truth, as
young Frost hadn't.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then a rather clever beast called Macmullen
wrote a piece of poetry with rhymes, and after
about twenty copies of this poetry had been sent
to me anonymously written round picture-postcards,
Macmullen got Travers to print it up on
the blackboard just before Browne's mathematical
lesson came on.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So when he arrived, there it was staring at him;
and it was so exceedingly well printed that he could
not possibly tell who had done it.</span></p>
<blockquote>
<div>
<div class="line-block outermost">
<div class="line"><em class="italics">There is a young sneaker called Fowle</em></div>
<div class="line"><em class="italics">Who ought to be made to howl,</em></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><em class="italics">For the things that Browne knows,</em></div>
<div class="line"><em class="italics">Which you would not suppose,</em></div>
</div>
<div class="line"><em class="italics">All come from that blighter called Fowle.</em></div>
<div class="line"> </div>
</div></div>
</blockquote>
<p class="pfirst"><span>I wanted to rub it out before Browne came, but
of course the chaps wouldn't let me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Browne read this carefully and took such a long
time looking at it, that Steggles said he was
learning it by heart. Then he picked up the duster and
slowly rubbed it out. He made no remark whatever,
and for the time being the score rather missed
fire on Browne. But it didn't miss fire on me,
because the next day, when I was passing his
study, Browne called me in and asked me about
it. He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Who wrote that piece of impertinence on the
blackboard yesterday?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Macmullen invented it, sir, and Travers
printed it up; but I don't know who told them
there was a sort of understanding between us."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then Browne was greatly enraged and said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"How dare you say there is any understanding
between us, Fowle? Such impertinence I never
heard! What do I know about you and your
affairs, excepting that you are deservedly a very
unpopular boy! And I'll thank you not to bring
any more of your mean tales to me. A tale-bearer
is an odious thing; so remember; no more sneaking,
or it will be very much the worse for you!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I was so astonished that I couldn't do anything
but stare.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Now be off about your business," said Browne,
and I went.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>That shows pretty well what Mr. Browne was,
I should think. The beastly ingratitude of the
man seemed to me the most extraordinary thing
that had ever happened; and after that I never
could do right with Browne, and he sided against
me and never would listen to me, even when I had
to tell him things in self-defence.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I could easily show again and again that I was
in the right and other chaps were in the wrong,
or masters too, for that matter; but it was not much
good trying to convince people with the whole of
them against me. There was always a proper
religious reason for the things I did, and though
sometimes they looked queer until explained, I
always could explain them. But after I got to be
hated, nobody would so much as stop to listen to
the explanations—not even the Doctor.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Everybody said he was just and fair, though an
old footler; but I know very well he wasn't, owing
to the time when Corkey minimus dropped a
shilling in the playground and I found one there.
Well, how could I know that because Corkey mins. had
lost a shilling and I had found one, the one I
had found was bound to be the identical same
shilling that Corkey had lost? I shall always say
it was frightfully unfair to me to order me to give
up the shilling as the Doctor did, and then jaw me
before the whole school.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Once my father said to me, "Always act from
high motives, Roger," and I always did; but
nobody ever gave me any credit for doing so; and
when I told the Doctor over the affair of Gurney's
tame white rabbit, which I found wandering alone
in the playground after dark and killed with a
cricket stump, for fear that it should starve to
death, and was seen doing it by Gurney, who came
to look for it—when I told the Doctor I had done
this from the best motives and not because Gurney
had taken me down in class the day before—he
said that I was deceiving myself and told me that
Satan had put it into my heart to kill Gurney's
rabbit. Really I had only done it out of fear that
a poor dumb creature would suffer; and yet the
Doctor misunderstood me in such a wicked and
spiteful way, that he caned me and made me dig
a grave and bury the brute in front of the whole
school as a punishment.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>As to my feelings, which are frightfully keen,
nobody cares a button about them and I have to
do things, simply in self-defence, that I should
never do if I was treated fairly. Even Tin Lin
Chow when he was here had a better time than me,
and I could tell you a lot of things you wouldn't
believe in the matter of tortures, simply invented
by Steggles and others in order to be applied to
me. Steggles has invented two sets of tortures
called 'mind tortures' and 'body tortures';
and the mind tortures are babyish, but the body
tortures are well worth avoiding. So I always
pretend the mind tortures are the worst, whereas
really only a fool would care for them, as they
mean nothing to anybody who is religious.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But what I meant to tell you was a fair case of
the sort of things that happen to me and I have
to endure. I was told that I was to be tried by
court-martial, and I said "Why?" and Trelawny,
the champion fighter of the school, put the case
before me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It is well known in the lower school that you
have got up more fights between kids than any
other chap."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He then mentioned seven fights which he had
written down.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Now," he said, "did you or did you not
arrange those seven fights?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He had a lot of witnesses present and so I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Five of them I arranged, because I wanted to
see if——"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He interrupted me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You go about asking chaps if they give one
another 'best,' and when they say 'no,' though
they may be perfectly friendly, you go on at them
till you work up a fight."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I denied it, and he said, "You can reserve your
beastly defence for the court-martial. I've only
got one more question to ask you at present,
namely, Have you ever fought anybody yourself?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No, Trelawny, I never have, because it would
be contrary to my opinions."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he merely said I was a sticky and noxious
worm that wanted poisoning with rat poison, and
that nothing more need be said before the court-martial.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">II</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Well, the court-martial, though held by the
sixth, was grossly unfair, and the thing they
decided to do was simply cruel bullying in a
superior form. To begin with, Macmullen, who
is the champion speaker at our debates, was the
leading witness against me; whereas I had nobody
to speak for me, because though I was told three
days before the trial to get somebody to speak for
me, of course nobody would; and I had to stick
up for myself, which was a thing I never could do.
So I went down, and the fools pretended to prove
that I had arranged hundreds of fights and been
second at scores. And yet, somehow, I had never
fought a single fight myself from the time I came
there. Dozens of kids were called to witness at
the court-martial that I had given them 'best'
rather than fight them; and many were much
younger than me, and one, called Foster, was only
eleven, though certainly he was a great fighter, and
many boys of fourteen had to give him best in
the long run, though not till after they had fought
him and been licked. Well, just because my
religious opinions kept me from fighting anybody, and
especially Foster, they called me an insect and a
coward and a disgrace to the school and so on.
Then Trelawny, as the head of the court-martial,
gave a verdict and I was sentenced to have a fight,
whether I liked it or not. Inquiries were made
and finally the court-martial found a chap called
Andrews, who was in my class and whose age was
just one week less than mine. This Andrews and
me they decided must fight; and when it was
known, everybody wanted to be second for Andrews
and nobody wanted to be second for me.
Trelawny said we might have a week to train, and
then the court-martial broke up. It was a brutal
bit of work altogether, and I found rather an
interesting thing, which was that Andrews felt quite
differently to the affair to me. I talked to him
privately as soon as I could, and pretended it was
all rot and laughed at the whole thing. But he
said it wasn't rot at all as far as he was concerned.
He was a new boy and rather keen to make friends
and be well thought of; so he considered this a
jolly good opportunity and began to train as well
as he knew how. I saw at a glance that he could
lick me, for I'd never learned fighting and hated
hurting anything, I'm sure, always; and I argued
a good deal with Andrews about it. He said that
his father had told him that a chance to make
friends and distinguish himself would be sure
to come. And Andrews said no doubt his father
was right, and that the chance had come and that
he was going to distinguish himself as much as
he could on me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Well, of course I saw what had to be done. Just
at that time I was rather unfairly hated by
Dr. Dunstan, because of an affair in the playground.
There was a fir-tree in it at one corner, and I had
found that turpentine came out if you cut notches
in it. Well, into this turpentine I stuck live ants
and then burnt them up with a burning-glass. It
was nothing; but old Briggs, the writing master
and natural history master, discovered me doing it
and must needs make a ridiculous fuss. He told
the Doctor and the Doctor made a ridiculous fuss
too and turned against me and hated me. So
Dunstan was out of the question, and there was
only one other master I could tell, and that was
Monsieur Michel, the French master. But he was
weak and useless in an emergency like this; so
finally I decided that the proper person to approach
would be Andrews himself.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>That much was pretty easy to decide, but then
came the question what to say to him, and I was
helped in this matter by a very lucky thing. It
came out in class that Andrews was an absolute
flyer at geography, and though not as good as
me—me being head of the class in that subject—still
he jolly soon got second to me and stopped
there. I am a tremendous dab at geography
myself; and if I knew as much about other things I
should be in the sixth; and if a good many things
I know—especially about religious saints—were
regular subjects in school, instead of being barred
altogether, I should also be in the sixth.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And finding out the greatness of Andrews at
geography gave me the idea I wanted, which
happened only just in time; because the day I spoke
to him was a Wednesday and the next Saturday
was the day we had to fight.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Aren't you looking forward to Saturday?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, I am."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"So am I, because I'm in training too; and I
find that I fight tremendously well, and I'm only
sorry I hadn't to fight a lot sooner."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But I couldn't deceive him with this, for a
moment; so I soon changed the subject.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I introduced prizes and said that the Doctor was
particularly keen about the subject of geography
and always gave the best prizes for that.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I know," he said, "and I should have had a
jolly good chance if it hadn't been for you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You would," I said. "In fact, but for me
you would be a snip for it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We talked a bit and then I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I wonder if your father would rather you made
your mark by fighting me, or by winning the
geography prize in your first term? Of course, to
win any prize in your first term is a great score
for a chap."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said that he hadn't thought of it, and after
I pressed him a lot, he admitted that there was
no doubt the prize would suit his mother best, but
he thought very likely if he won a fight it would
suit his father best.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"My father's a soldier, and I'm going to be
one; and so, naturally, fighting is more in my line
than geography."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But I doubted this, and, in fact, I proved that a
mere fight was nothing, whereas geography was
a great deal and at least as much use to a soldier
as fighting—especially after he had lost a battle.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Finally he said that I might be right, but that
it didn't much matter as I was bound to win the
geography prize, and he was equally bound to lick
me next Saturday.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then I made my great offer.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Look here; I'm not afraid of fighting, or anything
like that; but I've got religious objections
to it and, in fact, though your father might like
you to fight, my father would get into a frightful
bate if I did. Really it might be jolly serious for
me, and it would not matter to my father in the
least whether I won the fight or lost it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Andrews said that had nothing to do with him;
so I went on and explained how it might have a
great deal to do with him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You see, if you lost the fight, your father would
very likely be very sick about it, and instead of
getting rewarded, you might get nothing; whereas,
if the fight fell through and you merely said
firmly you had no reason for fighting me, and
were not going to do it just because you were
ordered to, and then went and won the geography
prize, that would be a much greater score for you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He admitted it might be, but didn't see how he
could beat me at geography.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If you refuse to fight me, you shall get the
geography prize, because I need not put down
anything like all I know and can boss a lot of
questions purposely."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It would please my mother and might do me
a lot of good with my grandmother."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It certainly would; and next term, if you still
want a fight, I'll easily arrange one for you with
somebody else, and then you can make it all right
with your father."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Will you solemnly swear on human blood that
you will boss the geography paper and let me get
the prize?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And to show him how much in earnest I was,
I took out my knife there and then, and he pricked
his finger and I pricked mine, and then I swore
that I would let him have the geography prize,
and he swore that he would refuse to fight me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I felt that was a pretty good day's work, and
so did he; but I felt it all the time, whereas Andrews
only felt it in stray moments and, between whiles,
was jolly savage with himself for swearing the
blood oath. He was frightfully scorned for not
fighting me, and the only thing that comforted
him, and that only in secret, was that his mother
and grandmother would be full of rejoicing in the
holidays and richly reward him for winning the
geography prize.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>In fact, he kept on so obstinately about his
mother, that I began to think about mine, and
the sad grief it would be to her if I did not win
this prize as usual. After a time I realized that I
had actually put Andrews before my own dear
mother, and I felt very shocked to think of what
I had done.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The end of the term began to get nearer and
nearer, and the exams. were going to begin soon.
I tried hard not to think about geography and not
to think about my mother, but Andrews found the
only subjects that interested him were these
subjects; and at last I simply had to avoid Andrews,
because he kept on to such a sickening extent
about what a score it would be to win it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Very strange thoughts came over me during
those days and I got more and more undecided as
to what was right to do. There was my duty to
Andrews, who, in a vague sort of way, had got
the right to win the geography prize, and there was
my duty to my father, who paid Dr. Dunstan a
lot of money for letting me come to Merivale and
naturally expected me to do my best; which I
always did do, I'm sure. Then there was my duty
to Dr. Dunstan; and to deceive him deliberately
about my knowledge of geography was, of course,
a very wrong thing to do. And, greatest of all, there
was my own conscience, which is the 'still small
voice' of the Bible. Besides, I'd been very
careful to say that Andrews should have the geography
prize, not that he should win it. No chap ever
tried harder than me to do the right thing, and
what made it so difficult was that my conscience
and my duty to everybody but Andrews was on
one side, while the stupid affair with Andrews was
on the other side. Of course a blood oath is all
nonsense if you are a Christian, and not in the
least binding to a religious person. In fact, only
savages believe in it at all. Therefore, as far as
that went, I did not feel in the least bound to
Andrews. If I had not been coming back the next
term, I should have seen my way clearer very
likely; but I was; and so was Andrews.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Somehow I couldn't decide till the actual day
of the geography exam., and then, strangely
enough, the paper seemed simply to have been
made for me. I knew the answer to everything,
and question No. 6 gave me a chance of saying
some jolly good and peculiar things about Spain
and the Holy Inquisition not generally known at
all. Probably not a soul at Merivale but the
Doctor and me knew them.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Somehow I felt it would be mean and wicked to
pretend not to know all these things. My
conscience simply cried out to me to do the paper as
well as possible and leave the result in Higher
Hands, because if Providence meant Andrews to
win, he would win. So I did my best, as I usually
do; and when the result was put up it was found
that I had beaten Andrews by one hundred and
ten marks, and Andrews was a long way ahead of
everybody else.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Naturally Andrews, not understanding what it is
to have such delicate feelings as me, was a good
bit annoyed; but I was ready for him, and though
I did not tell of my secret struggles to do right,
which he would not have understood, I did explain
that I had acted from proper motives.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I promised that you should have the geography
prize, not that you should win it. You shall have
it, and the minute I get it on prize day, I shall
hand it over to you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Andrews did not fall in with this, and I
felt, somehow, that he wouldn't. He said several
revengeful things about next term; but he may be
dead before then, and anyway, much will happen
in the holidays to make him forget this affair, or
take a better view of it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I only mention the thing, in fact, to show how
hard it is to make chaps understand you if you
always try to do right as much as you can. I
should clearly like to leave Merivale, but there
seems to be no chance of it at present.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>My father often says, rather unkindly, that
nobody ever wanted honour and truth and decency
and manliness licked into them worse than I do;
but my mother, who always understands me much
better than him, says that many of the best and
most famous men in the world have looked back to
their school-days with hatred and loathing; and
so I must no doubt be one of them; because nobody
ever hated boys and masters and school in general
worse than me. It will be very different when I
get away from them all and go into the world;
because there I shall meet plenty of nice people who
think the same as I do.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="cherry-ripe"><span class="bold x-large">'CHERRY RIPE'</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">No. VIII</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">'CHERRY RIPE'</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">I</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>This is an awful rum story about the
extraordinary cunning of a man generally known as
'Cherry Ripe,' from selling cherries; and to tell
it right I must first explain about our cricket
ground and a wood and a field. After the cricket
ground comes a narrow wood, well known as the
place for fights, and also wood-pigeons' nests,
which breed there in great quantities. It is a long
and narrow wood, and then comes a field, also
long but not so narrow. This field is a very
up-and-down field, with hollows in it, and at the
bottom, in one corner, a drinking-place for cows
has been arranged, where yellow irises grow in
summer, and where most of our tame frogs come
from. There is a clump of trees in this field, and
a hawk once built in them; but Freckles found
the nest and took the eggs, so the hawk did not
build there again. After the up-and-down field
there comes an old, rather broken wall, and
inside the wall is the orchard and nursery garden
of Cherry Ripe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Needless to say his real name was not 'Cherry
Ripe' but Jenkins—not any relation to the
Jenkins at Merivale, though chaps who wanted to rot
Jenkins always pretended that Cherry Ripe was
his father, which much annoyed Jenkins. Because
this Cherry Ripe was a fierce and a common man,
and had been known to be dismissed with a caution
for ill-treating a horse, and was no friend to us
either.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He made his living by fruit and vegetables; and
at the right season of the year sold cherries, of
which he had many fine trees in his nursery
garden. He also had apples and pears and
gooseberries in great abundance. He also laid out large
pieces of his nursery garden in spring flowers for
market, and he grew onions and turnips and
rhubarb, and many other uninteresting things.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We naturally went there to see how it looked
from time to time, and he chased us a good deal
over the field; but, when we were once in the wood,
he was of course powerless. In fact, he never
caught anybody in fair hunting except Chilvers,
who was once down by the pond collecting waterman
beetles in his shoe, having nothing else to do
it with. But Chilvers had never been in the
nursery garden in his life, and told Cherry Ripe
so. Only he refused to believe Chilvers, and said
that he was trespassing just as much in the field
as he would have been in the orchard. Which, in
its paltry way, was true. Chilvers then offered him
a penny and an Indian coin for twelve waterman
beetles; and all he did was to say "No cheek!"
and box Chilvers on the ear and tell him to be
off. So he made a bitter enemy of Chilvers.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This Cherry Ripe was old and ugly. He never
seemed to shave, and yet his beard never seemed
to grow. What there was looked a mangy grey
streaked with brown. He wore an old hat that had
once been black, but was now rather inclined to
turn green, and he had glittering eyes, one of
which watered. He had also a curious way of
lifting up and down his eyebrows, which young
Smythe said showed a bad disposition, and was
common to gorillas. He had been heard to laugh
when picking apples with his daughters. But he
never laughed at us, and when we took to calling
him 'Cherry Ripe,' he hated us, and often shook
his fist at us from a distance.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So we then felt something had to be done against
him to score off him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>When this was decided upon, Steggles and
Methuen and Pedlar and myself—me being Weston
minor—and Chilvers went into committee, as
it is called, and in fact we had a regular meeting.
Many others wanted to join, but we felt five was
enough, and we all had a jolly special private good
reason for going into committee against Cherry Ripe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Chilvers of course had been licked by Cherry
Ripe, because to box one's ears is the same as
licking one in a very insulting manner. Pedlar
also had been insulted, and a good deal hurried
twice by Cherry Ripe, when he found him catapulting
quite harmlessly in his orchard in December,
when of course there was nothing to take but
vegetables; and Methuen and Steggles once meeting
Cherry Ripe going the rounds with his cart and
fruit and scales for weighing things, had politely
stopped him and asked to buy two pennyworth of
pears. And Cherry Ripe had the frightful
impertinence to say that "No chap wearing them hats"
should have so much as a spring onion of his
growing, which was not only turning away business,
but cheeking the school colours openly. So
it seemed about time to do something, and we
accordingly did. I may say that I had no
particular grudge against Cherry Ripe, but I was well
known at being better at wall-climbing than any
chap who ever came to Merivale. Climbing had
always been my strong point, and, as I was also
going to be a missionary later in life, I kept it up,
because you never know—not if you are a missionary.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The committee merely decided that as the cherry
season was now near, we had better wait for it, and
then, at the first opportunity, make a 'Jameson
raid.' This is a particular sort of raid invented
by the great Dr. Jameson of South Africa, and it
consists of doing something so suddenly that
nobody is ready. A Jameson raid is useless if the
other side is prepared; it is also useless if you are
not prepared yourself. The great thing is to be
first, and also an important point is to commit the
raid where and when it will be least expected.
Therefore we gave it out, hoping that it would
somehow get to Cherry Ripe, that we meant to
make a raid on his young apples on Wednesday,
being a half-holiday; whereas the truth was we
were going to have a dash at his cherries on the
Saturday. There was a cricket match on that day,
and Steggles arranged details.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I won't say much about what happened, because
the thing failed even more fearfully than Dr. Jameson's
affair long ago. We were deceived in a most
peculiar manner, owing to the deliberate cunning
of Cherry Ripe; and afterwards, talking it over
while we wrote two thousand Latin lines each, we
came to the conclusion that there was a traitor at
work. Naturally we thought of Fowle, but Fowle
knew nothing; besides, he was in the hospital at
the time with something the matter with his knee.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>To go back, I must explain that all went well
until we got on the top of Cherry Ripe's wall.
Then what should we see but Cherry Ripe up a
cherry tree and his daughters down below! They
were a long way off, and we saw at a glance that
it would take Cherry Ripe about a year to climb
down from his tree, even if he saw us. As for his
daughters, seeing our ages were fifteen and
upwards, except Chilvers, who was certainly only
thirteen, but could run faster than his sister, who
was seventeen, we did not fear them.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>As Cherry Ripe was picking cherries, we went
for the green gooseberries. I dropped down first
in a very stealthy manner, that Freckles had taught
me before he went home to Australia; then Pedlar
and Methuen dropped, and then Chilvers. He fell
rather awkwardly and smashed off a large purple
cabbage, and was glad of it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Steggles stopped on the wall, for some
private reason. He said afterwards, when taxed
with treachery, that it wasn't so in the least; but
that from the very beginning he had had a curious
feeling when he woke up that day. It is the
feeling you get when you wake up on a day that you
are going to be flogged; and you have the same
feeling, only far, far worse, on the day when you
are going to be hung. All criminals know this.
Steggles certainly shouted "Cave!" as soon as
the horrible moment came; but when he did finally
drop off the wall, it was on the other side. In
fact, he escaped and left us to our fate. Nothing
could be done to Steggles, but we never felt the
same to him again.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>What happened was this. We were just eating
a few gooseberries rather fast, before settling down
steadily to fill our pockets, when Steggles gave the
alarm. But it was too late. Suddenly there
sprang up from their hiding-places no less than
three men—the youngest not less than twenty years
old; and the eldest was Cherry Ripe himself. This
so much horrified us, as we had seen him at the
top of a high cherry tree two hundred yards away
only a second before, that we lost our instinct of
self-preservation and fell a prey to the enemy. We
were all caught, in fact, except Steggles, and we
were then marched down to Cherry Ripe's house,
and then along the road, and so back to Merivale.
His hateful daughters stood and sniggered at us
as we were taken past them; and then we saw that
the whole thing was a mean plot, and, in fact, a
swizz. A swizz is a chouse, and a chouse is the
same as a sell. It was a scarecrow in the tree and
not Cherry Ripe at all! The scarecrow wore his
green hat, and his daughters pretended to be
talking to him. As Peters said afterwards, Sherlock
Holmes himself would have been almost deceived
by such a deadly plot. Afterwards we found, curiously
enough, that we had collected exactly thirteen
gooseberries before the crash came, which shows
that thirteen is an unlucky number, whatever
scientific people may say against it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Cherry Ripe brought us back to Merivale, and
came to the front door and asked to see the Doctor.
He gave his name as 'Mr. Jenkins, of the
Merivale and District Fruit Farm,' and said it in a
very grand tone of voice, as if he was somebody.
But the Doctor, little knowing what was going to
happen, sent out to tell Mr. Jenkins to walk in.
Pedlar said he thought that the Doctor probably
hoped Cherry Ripe had come with an advantageous
offer to supply Merivale with green stuff at low
prices; but of course this was not so.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Dr. Dunstan received us in his study, and he
was much surprised to see Chilvers appear after
Cherry Ripe, and still more surprised to see the
rest of us come behind.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And what may be the meaning of this deputation?"
said the Doctor. "Perhaps you, Methuen,
will explain."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Cherry Ripe said that he had come to do
the explaining. Certainly he told the truth, but he
told it in a beastly mean way.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"There's times when a man has got to stand
up for his rights, mister"—meaning the Doctor—"and
this is one of 'em. These here young rips
be always driving my life out of me, and an
example must be made. I was half in a mind to
send for a policeman; but I thought as I'd give 'em
one more chance for their parents' sakes, so
brought 'em to you, because no doubt you be paid
very well for larning 'em their lessons and keeping
'em out of mischief. I've two things against 'em,
and one is that they bawl 'Cherry Ripe' after me
morning, noon, and night, and take sights at me,
and do many other rude things; and the other is
that now, this minute, I've catched 'em red-handed
in my gooseberry-bed, tucking down my fruit for
all they were worth. That's trespass and it's also
theft, and I don't want no more of it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Thank you," said the Doctor. "You have
stated your case with a lucidity and force that does
you no little credit, Mr. Jenkins. Now the accused
and the accuser may freely speak, whilst I, as
arbiter between them, reserve the last word, and
I fear the last action also." His eyes roamed over
to the corner where the canes were kept. Then he
went on—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Your indictment consists of three articles, and
we will take them in your own order. You submit
that these youths have insulted you, have
trespassed on your private property, and have stolen
your goods. Now, boy Pedlar, have you or have
you not, at any time and in any public place,
addressed Mr. Jenkins, of the Merivale and District
Fruit Farm, as 'Cherry Ripe'?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, sir," said Pedlar.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Methuen?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, sir."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Weston?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, sir."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Chilvers?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, sir."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor seemed disappointed, and Cherry
Ripe smiled with a grim and scornful smile.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"To accost an honest purveyor of the fruits of
the earth with words which, in the nature of his
calling, it is necessary that he should himself
loudly repeat at intervals—to do this is a senseless
and offensive act," said the Doctor. "Nothing
can be said in favour of it. No earthly benefit—not
even the meretricious semblance of benefit—can
accrue to the boy who bawls 'Cherry Ripe!'
after somebody else. The operation shows a lack
of mental balance that may make us fear for the
sanity of the performer, and regard the probable
course of his future with dismay and the liveliest
foreboding. But now we are faced with accusations
of a very different character. It is asserted
that you four boys have gone out of bounds,
and disobeyed me; that you have trespassed on
another's private property, and so made of no
account the laws of man; and, lastly, that you have
taken fruit that did not belong to you—that you
have broken the eighth Commandment, and thus
shattered the sacred edict of your Maker!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor worked this up, as only he can, till
we saw what an immense number of laws we had
broken all at once—like you do when you begin to
play golf—and, of course, it was a very solemn
moment for everybody. Even Cherry Ripe looked
rather frightened. The Doctor rolled it out, and
shook his finger at Cherry Ripe as much as at us.
Then came the questions.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Is this infamous imputation true, Edgar Methuen?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, sir."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And you, Harold Pedlar?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, sir."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Weston?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, sir."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Chilvers?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Chilvers, like a little fool, tried to hedge against
the future.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, and I'm very sorry, sir," he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The Doctor looked at us as if we were some new
sort of animals, and he didn't know how we had
got in. He gave a tremendous snort, and took off
his glasses. Then he turned to Cherry Ripe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"To attempt any analysis of my personal emotions
at this juncture would be vain," he said.
"In these cases introspection may well be left for
a subsequent occasion. For the moment justice
cries with trumpet tongue. And be under no
apprehension, Jenkins, that justice will miscarry
on this occasion. As an agriculturist——"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Here the Doctor forgot us, and talked like
anything to Cherry Ripe about growing vegetables,
and Ceres and Pomona and Horace and Virgil, and
other well-known people out of school books. He
fairly terrified Cherry Ripe, I believe. Anyway,
Cherry Ripe kept creeping nearer and nearer to the
door. Then, at last, he got in a word.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Don't be too hard on 'em this time, your
honour. Just one, two, and another on the place
that's made for it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Pardon me," answered the Doctor, raising his
hand. "You now trench on my prerogative,
Jenkins. The question of what is to follow may
very well be left with the preceptor of these fallen
boys. Have no fear for that. And to plead for
leniency before the breaking of a Commandment is
to admit a personal laxity of view that I, for one,
am bound to deplore."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Cherry Ripe had now reached the door, and I
believe he thought that if he stopped another
moment the Doctor would cane him too. So he
began to clear out. But first he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, good-evening, all!" Then he hooked
it—rather thankfully. And we wished we could.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We got four on each hand, and two thousand
lines each, and to stop in for two half-holidays.
So that, as Methuen very truly remarked, was first
blood for Cherry Ripe.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">II</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Of course, this was merely the beginning of the
great anti-Cherry Ripe feeling, and next term we
were planning a deadly revenge with regard to
Cherry Ripe's Kentish cobnuts, which were
remarkably fine, when a great assistant came to
our aid in the shape of Trelawny. This was that
Trelawny who had such a terrible end in the matter
of the protest of the wing dormitory. But many
things happened first. He was fourteen, and a
fighter from the beginning. All his relations were
also fighters, and poetry had been made about one,
who was condemned to death for magnificent fighting
in historic times. This Trelawny, by the most
curious accident, proved to know an immense deal
about Cherry Ripe. And it came out that
Trelawny's father, who was a retired soldier and only
a colonel, though Trelawny said that if justice had
been done he would be a general at least, actually
owned miles of land about Merivale, including
Cherry Ripe's nursery garden and the field.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The beggar merely rents it from my father for
so many pounds a year," said Trelawny. "Why,
if I said a word to my father, I could have the man
turned out altogether, and his daughters and
everybody. I'll jolly soon teach him!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This was a pretty good score for us, and we soon
arranged to show Cherry Ripe that things were
changed. Trelawny took to strolling about in
Cherry Ripe's field as if it belonged to him; and,
of course, as I pointed out to Trelawny, when his
father died, though I hoped it would not be for
ten years at least—still he had to—and when he
did, the field and the orchard and everything would
actually be Trelawny's own, to do what he liked
with. He said it was so; and he said that he
should jolly soon clear Cherry Ripe out, and build
almshouses for old soldiers broken in the wars,
when he came to have the ground. He wouldn't
take nuts or anything. He said that was paltry;
but he had a fixed idea that he ought to be
perfectly free of the place, and he went on strolling
about in it till at last Cherry Ripe surprised him
down at the pond in the field. I was there, too, but
Cherry Ripe didn't recognize me, which, no doubt,
was lucky.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He seemed to have something on his mind, for
he didn't get into a bate, but merely said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Now, you boys, you slope off to your
playground—can't have you messing about here."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Perhaps you don't know who you're talking
to, Mr. Jenkins," said Trelawny in a frightfully
grand tone of voice.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then Cherry Ripe jumped.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Lord, the sauce of your nippers now-a-days!
Why can't your old gentleman over there teach
you manners as well as figures and all the rest of it?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Clearly he meant no less a person than Dr. Dunstan.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"My name is Trelawny," began Trelawny.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"A very fine name too," said Cherry Ripe.
"Take care you never bring no discredit on it,
there's a good boy."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"My father is your landlord," said Trelawny.
"And I'll thank you not to call me 'boy'!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Cherry Ripe was by no means so much struck by
this as you might have expected.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You're the Colonel's young shaver—eh?
Well, I hope you'll turn out as sensible a
man—though I do wish me and him saw alike on the
subject of a new tomato house. However,
everybody's a right to his own opinion."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Trelawny was fuming, like a train wanting to
start.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You don't seem to understand," he said,
"that this very field we're in at this moment will
be mine before long!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The Colonel's not ailing, I hope?" said Cherry
Ripe very civilly.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I could now see that Mr. Jenkins was laughing
at Trelawny, but, luckily, Trelawny did not see
this, or he might have taken some very desperate
step.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And I want to say further," went on Trelawny,
not answering about his father, "that as this land
will be mine sooner or later, I have a perfect right
to walk on it when and where I choose."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Agreed," said Cherry Ripe; "and as I'm
renting the land, and don't like rude little boys
poking about where they've no business, I've got
a perfect right to pull their ears for 'em when I
catches 'em. So that's settled. Now we know
where we are. Be off with you both, or I'll begin
this minute!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Trelawny was as furious as a grown man. He
turned a sort of colour like stewed fruit; but, of
course, we had to go. There was nothing else we
could do—for the moment.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I shall write to my father about this, and you'll
soon find out you can't insult your own landlord's
son with impunity," Trelawny shouted, as we got
through the hedge back into our wood.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Can't do better. And tell him what I said,"
answered Cherry Ripe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he seemed to forget us, and stood quite still
looking into the pond. Evidently he had other
things on his mind besides Trelawny; but
Trelawny didn't think so, and believed that Jenkins
was standing like that in a frightful funk to think
of the dangerous thing he'd done.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"However, it's too late now; I shall write to my
father next Sunday," said Trelawny; and he did,
and he got a letter back.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We were rather keen to hear what his father
was going to do about it, and expected he would
read it out to us. But he tore the letter up small,
and chucked it away, and merely said he was
surprised to find his father didn't agree with him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"But I'll make it clear that the man ought to
be sacked when I go home," said Trelawny.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Funnily enough, though he'd torn this letter
up so small and flung it scornfully away, we found
out afterwards what was in it; because Peters, who
hoped to be a detective of crime when he grew up,
always collected anything with writing on it to
decipher mysteries; and it was him who found out
what Johnson's pet name at home was, and how
many sisters West had, and other things not
generally known. He said if a letter was once torn up
and flung away, that it was public property for a
detective; and so when Trelawny had gone, Peters
collected the bits of his letter, and pieced it
together after taking frightful trouble. It was a
detective-like thing but not a sportsmanlike thing
to do, and Trelawny, when he came to hear of it,
challenged Peters. In fact, they fought, and
Peters was badly licked. Still, the letter certainly
was rather curious, considering it came from
Trelawny's own father.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It read like this—</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"DEAR TEDDY,</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I've got your letter, and I've dropped a
line to Jenkins, directing him to give you and
any of your friends a real good hiding every time
he catches you on his ground.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em"></div>
<dl class="docutils">
<dt class="noindent"><span>"Your affectionate father,</span>
<br/><p class="first last noindent pfirst"><span>"TRELOAR TRELAWNY."</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Of course, the thing couldn't be allowed to stop
there. We were all on Trelawny's side, though
his father wasn't. In fact, Pedlar and Methuen
and me were rather vexed with Trelawny's father;
and we told Trelawny so; and he said he was too.
He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"We'll be revenged next term, as it is too late
this. We must all think of a heavy score against
Jenkins"—he never called Cherry Ripe anything
but Jenkins for some reason—"and the best idea
is the one we'll carry out."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And everybody interested in the matter quite
agreed; but Steggles did not come into it, because
Trelawny utterly barred Steggles from the first.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">III</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Next term the great idea of how to crush Cherry
Ripe came to me out of the Bible. I let everybody
speak first, and then, as nobody had said anything
like as good, I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"We will do what the enemy did in the New
Testament, and sow tares in his ground."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Everybody thought the idea fine but jolly difficult,
and Chilvers asked—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What are tares?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said I wasn't exactly sure, and Methuen said
it was a sort of grass, and Trelawny said it was a
parable. Anyhow, we didn't know where to buy
them. Finally we decided not to ask for tares,
but some sort of seed that would grow quickly,
and get a deep hold of the ground, and ruin
anything else for yards round. Unfortunately we
didn't know much about wild things in general,
and we asked Tomkins, who is our champion
botanist, and he said "Willow herb." But there
were no seeds about at that time of the year, it
being February, and so Trelawny said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"We will confide in Batson, who is well known
to be the son of a greengrocer and seedsman."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But it happened that Batson, who was the
gardener's boy at Dunstan's, was leaving to better
himself. However, there was just time before he
went, and we let him into our secret score against
Cherry Ripe, and gave him two shillings with
which to buy some seed of some vigorous growing
thing to sow in Cherry Ripe's nursery garden and
choke his vegetables when they came up. Batson
said that he would do his best. He said it might
have to be grass seed or clover, but he promised
it should be a good choking thing.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Certainly it looked hopeful, because he soon
brought a bag of seeds and said they were a kind
of clover that, if once sown, could not be got out
of the ground again without ploughing. Then
came the question of the time, and we decided that
next Saturday was the day. There happened to
be a big game at football, but not a little one, so
we were all free excepting Methuen, who kept goal
for the first.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>All went well, and when the match began to get
exciting owing to hands being given against Bray
in our 'twenty-five,' Trelawny and Pedlar and
Chilvers and I went into the wood unseen and
got to the Cherry Ripe side of it. Chaps had been
in his field a good deal lately, hunting for a very
beautiful red fungus that was to be found in the
hedges, on dead sticks, and Cherry Ripe had been
a good deal worried by them.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then came the first surprise of that day. There
was a huge board stuck up in the field facing
our wood with these remarkable words on it—</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="literal-block"><br/>
<span>+-----------------------+<br/>
| |<br/>
| DANGER! |<br/>
| BEWARE OF THE BULL! |<br/>
| |<br/>
+-----------------------+</span><br/></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Our first step was to get back into the hedge.
The field seemed to be quite empty, but there are
many hollows in it, and a bull might easily have
been sitting down quite near us. Or it might have
been hidden in the cluster of trees in the middle.
One thing was clear. It was not at the pond.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Trelawny said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"This man is worth fighting. I'm glad he's
got a bull, because it makes more strategy
necessary for us."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And Pedlar said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And I'm glad too."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But I was not glad, and so I didn't say so;
and as for Chilvers, he went further and openly
said that he thought a bull altered everything.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It was about a hundred and fifty yards across
the field from the wood to Cherry Ripe's wall, and
it is well known that a bull can run three times
as fast as a man and five times as fast as a boy.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I reminded Trelawny of this, and he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I know all that; it is a question of strategy."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, but strategy won't alter facts."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He thought a bit and said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You chaps stop here and I'll reconnoitre."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Pedlar, who was nearly six months older
than Trelawny, said he ought to reconnoitre too.
Finally they both went to reconnoitre in different
directions and came back in five minutes. Neither
had seen the bull.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"There's no bull!" said Trelawny. "It's a
subterfuge. Come on."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Wait," said Chilvers. "I have a feeling it's
not a subterfuge. Something tells me there is a
bull."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Trelawny said it was cowardice, and Chilvers said
it was a presentiment. Anyway, no time could be
lost, and Chilvers was firm, so we left him. He
was half inclined to come, but said that an uncle
of his had once been gored by a buffalo, or some
such thing, in America, and somehow he felt that
this particular adventure would not suit him,
though he would have feared nothing else. Of
course Trelawny explained that this was no excuse,
even if true. But though white and very worried,
Chilvers was firm. He refused to follow, so we
went alone.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We made a detour of the trees in the middle of
the field and crept forward in Indian file. Fifty
yards from the wall Pedlar whispered that he saw
something red in a hollow, which might easily be
a bull's back; so Trelawny said "Sprint!" and
we threw off caution to the winds and sprinted.
So we got to the wall in safety, and, as if to reward
us for the effort, what should we see on the other
side but a beautiful bit of ground all prepared for
seeds! It was smoothed and arranged, and little
narrow trenches had been drawn in it about an
inch deep—evidently for seeds. It was frightful
luck and playing into the hands of the enemy as
Trelawny said. He instantly gave the word and
we dropped. There was not a soul in sight—only
a spade and two rakes, where the man who had
been working had left them.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"A commander always seizes any chance the
enemy offer," said Trelawny. "Pour the seed
pretty thick along the drills and everywhere else,
then take the rakes and rake it all over until
everything is quite smooth!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So all Cherry Ripe's arrangements for planting
seed were used by us to sow a particularly deadly
sort of clover. We worked jolly hard, and in
about five minutes the thing was done by me and
Pedlar while Trelawny mounted guard.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then the exciting work began and Trelawny shouted—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Take cover! They're coming!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But there was no cover, and so we all got back
the way we had come, and just as Cherry Ripe
and a man ran up from another part of the garden
we reached the top of the wall and prepared to leap
down. But luckily we didn't. In fact, even as
it was we only just saved Pedlar and lugged him
back in time.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The bull had arrived!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He was there, not more than twenty yards from
the wall, and he was a whacker. He had an
enormous body and head, and his forehead was
curly, and his eyes fierce, and his horns rather
short but very thick. A copper ring was in his
nose, and his hoofs turned up rather curiously,
like Turkish slippers. There was some hay flung
down in front of him, and he was smelling it. He
was evidently a large and fierce bull, and him being
on one side of the wall and Cherry Ripe on the
other made it a very tricky position for us on the top.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Trelawny said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"This is critical!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And Cherry Ripe said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Hullo, my brave chap, how d'you find your
future property is looking? I hope you're pretty
well satisfied?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Trelawny said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"This is a case for a parley."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Cherry Ripe did all the parleying. We sat
down on the wall, which was easier and safer than
standing on it. We sat with our faces to Cherry
Ripe and our backs to the bull.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"This is an ambuscade in a way," said
Trelawny. "In fact, we are rather scored off. In
war we should be shot. Not that it would matter,
as we have done our work.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Now, my young shavers," began Cherry Ripe,
"I see you've been very busy down here on your
own account, so perhaps you'll just step off that
wall and do a bit of work for me. You can take
your choice. Either we'll all go straight along to
your old gentleman, and see what he'll say and do
about it, or you can step down here—all three of
you—and set to work over a bit of weeding. Take
your choice and be quick."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"We'll confer," said Trelawny.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Which we did do; and Pedlar and I thought
one thing and Trelawny thought another. He said
that it would be far more dignified to go back and
suffer from Dr. Dunstan as an equal; but Pedlar
and I had done that before, and we didn't care
in the least about the dignity. We said that to do
a bit of weeding for Cherry Ripe would be mere
child's play to four on each hand and perhaps more,
not to mention a few thousand lines chucked in,
and a couple of half-holidays gone.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So Trelawny said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'm out-voted in the conference."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he got down and we got down also.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Cherry Ripe seemed rather pleased at what we
had decided to do, because I don't think he wanted
to have another talk with the Doctor any more than
we did. But he certainly had arranged rather a big
job for us.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You've got to pick it clean, mind you—roots
and all," he said. Then he divided the bit of land
into three with sticks, and it seemed to us that
we had to weed about as much as a cricket pitch each.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You shall have the biggest job, young master,"
he said to Trelawny. "And that's only right and
fair, because you're such a big man and take such
big views."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Trelawny did not answer, but he was evidently
in a very proud frame of mind. He seemed
determined to show Cherry Ripe something, if it was
only how to weed.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We worked jolly hard, and Cherry Ripe kept us
at it. Then in the distance went up three cheers,
and we knew the match was over; and, from the
sound of the cheers, it looked as if we'd won,
because after a match we always cheer the enemy,
and we always cheer him heartier if we've beat him—not
intentionally, but still the sound is different.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Now you can all nip back," said Cherry Ripe.
"Better go the way you came—through the wood."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And be killed by your bull, I suppose," said
Pedlar. "Not likely!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"We have accepted your terms," said Trelawny,
"and if you are an honourable foe, you'll
let us out by the gate."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Better go through the wood," answered Cherry
Ripe. "It's a lot shorter, and as to the old bull,
you needn't mind him. He's my daughter's pet.
He wouldn't hurt a daddy-long-legs, much less a
nice young chap like you. Tame isn't the word
for him. A pet lamb's fierce to him. Come on.
I'll go as far as the wood with you if you're
frightened."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>All this was true. And when we got back into
the field, Cherry Ripe scratched the bull's curly
head and the bull almost purred. It was the
mildest and humblest sort of a bull you ever saw,
though so huge; and to see such an enormous and
happy bull so close was rather interesting in its
way. In fact, we all gave it a pat, just to be able
to say in after life that we had patted a monstrous bull.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"My youngest daughter often sits on his back,"
said Cherry Ripe. "This here bull has got a
heart of gold, I do assure you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Another strategy," said Trelawny to me.
"Certainly the man's cunning is frightful. I
think I shall tell him about the seed—just to show
him we've scored a bit too."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I advised not, but Trelawny was so stung by
the way we'd been defeated all round by the
wretched Cherry Ripe, that, as we were leaving
him, he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It may interest you to know that we've sowed
that patch of your beastly ground under the wall
with weeds of the deadliest sort. In fact, you'll
never get them out again. So that's one for us,
anyway."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well done!" said Cherry Ripe. "Where did
you get the seed from?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"That's our business," answered Trelawny.
"Anyway, you'll find it out presently."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well," answered Cherry Ripe, "I know where
you got the seed. It was from my good friend,
Batson. And his boy be coming here to work
next week. He's learned all your gardener at the
school can teach him, and that wouldn't sink a
ship. He brought the tale to his father, and his
father brought it to me; and so I got the ground
ready for you, knowing what a dashing fellow you
are, and what a hurry you'd be in."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"More fool you then," said Trelawny.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Not so fast. The seed you sowed was lettuce
seed! Good-evening, my dears, and when you say
your prayers afore you go to sleep to-night, you
can all thank the Lord that you've done a bit of
honest, useful work for once in your lives!"</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span>* * * * *</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>We talked it over during prep., and Pedlar said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"On the whole, we'd better keep this afternoon's
work to ourselves."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"We were overreached by superior cunning,
and we'd better give Cherry Ripe best in future."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And Trelawny said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Wait! This, in a way, is a defeat. But I'll
arrange a jolly good Waterloo for Cherry Ripe yet."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Meaning, of course, that he would be Wellington,
and that Cherry Ripe would be merely Napoleon.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>However, though I didn't say it to Trelawny, I
doubt very much if he is clever enough to score off
Cherry Ripe till he grows up. Then, of course,
Cherry Ripe will find him a bitter and relentless foe.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-qwarry"><span class="bold x-large">THE QWARRY</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">No. IX</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">THE QWARRY</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>If your parints happen to live in India, of corse
holidays are not all they might be. Becorse India
is too far off to go to often, and such relations as
aunts and uncles don't seem much to care to have
you if you are the son of an Indian soldier. But
grandmothers always seem to want to have you; at
leest they do in the case of Travers; but his parints
are ded. Anyway me and Morris have to stop at
Dr Dunstan's for holidays, and so we have to be
friends at those times. I am eleven and he is
twelve and we are very diffrent, him being never
knone to lose a conduct mark, and me being
ordinry. I am called Foster and the hapiest day of
my life was when I got ten shillings all at once,
being my ninth birthday in a postal order from
my father. The first fealing was one of shere joy,
and the second fealing was that if it had been a
pound it would have been better.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I remember the birthday only too well, though
nearly two years ago, because immedeetly after
getting the money I wrote to Mr Gammidge—the
grand toy and games man—for some important
things wanted by me and my chum, Smythe—him
that cut off the Doctor's tiger's tail with such
disasterous results. And by grate ill-luck that beest
Steggles looked over my sholder and saw how I
had begun my letter. I had asked Smythe how to
begin it in a very respectful way, so as to please
Mr Gammidge, and Smythe had said, "I should
make it as friendly as you possibly can;" and I
had said, "yes." Then I thort that as the friendliest
letters I ever write are to my mother, I would
begin it like that; and I had written down
"Darling Mr Gammidge, I shall be very grately obliged
by your sending me if you have time by return
of post"—certain things. Becorse Mr Gammidge
was quite as much to me as my mother in those
days, if not more.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Well, the beestly Steggles saw this and set up
a loud and hideous yell of laughter which was
very paneful to me and Smythe. And presently,
when he had drawn the attenshun of many chaps
to the letter, he told us on no account to send it,
but to write in a firm and manly tone and </span><em class="italics">order</em><span>
the things. He said when you are sending postal
orders you have always the rite to be firm and
manly; and when you are asking for them, that
is the time to be affecshunite. So we wrote
the letter again and merely said, "Dere Mr
Gammidge," and sined ourselves, "yours truly,
Arnold Foster and Huxley Smythe."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I must now return to Morris, who was left at
Merivale with me during the grate summer
holiday last year. In a way his luck was friteful
although he had nowhere to go in holidays. Even
his amusements were such that they turned into
marks and pleesed the masters, such as natural
history; and his conduct marks were so exstraordinry
that he never lost any at all without an effort.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>In face he was nothing, being sandy-haired and
pail with a remarkably small mouth and watery
eyes. He had not much courage but was fond
of chaps who had, and he liked me and Smythe
more for our courage than anything. We tried
without success to increese his courage, and he
helped us a lot with work that didn't want courage
but only intelleck, of which he had a grate deal.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It was reely owing to my courage that the
adventure of the old slate qwarry happened. You
see the holiday competishun for that year was a
colleckshun of insect life, such as beetles, moths
and butterflies, and as Merivale happened to be
a fine place for insect life in general, Morris
determined to win the prize if he could.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>When the Doctor and his family went off to the
seaside, the last thing he said to me and Morris
was this—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Farewell, my dear lads. Persue all innocent
pleasures and give no corse of offence during the
vocation. The Matron will be at your service and
she has the key of the liberary. The playing field
is also open to you, and having regard for the
seeson I relax a little of the riggid discipline of time
and place, of hours and bounderies, proper to the
term. But I put you on your honour in this
matter and feal that the chastening influenze of
Morris will possibly serve to restrain the native
exooberance of Foster. Lastly I have directed
that the comissariat shall be ordered on a
generous—nay, lavvish skale. Good-bye, my dear
boys, and God bless you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We said "good-bye," and I hoped that the
Doctor and Missis Dunstan and the gurl Dunstans
would have a good time; and the Doctor thanked
me and said he was glad I had the grace to make
that wish; and after he had gone, Morris said that
he very nearly said "God bless you" to the
Doctor, but staid just in time. And I said it was
jolly lucky he had, for it certainly would have been
friteful cheek to do it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then two cabs rolled away with the Doctor and
his luggage and his family, and me and Morris
were left. We found what 'comissariat' ment
at dinner, and I will say that the food was
magnificent, and the Matron was a brick all through
the holidays—very diffrent to what she is in term
time; and she told us a lot about her private life,
which turned out that she was a widow Matron
with a son. And Morris said "Why don't you
bring your son here, Matron?" And I said "Of
corse, why don't you?" And Morris said "It
would hurt the Doctor's fealings a good deal if he
knew you had a son being educated somewhere
else." And she said it was all right and the
Doctor was as kind as any man could be, and that
the son was working hard and was a very good
son, being an office-boy in a lawer's office in
London.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then came the qwarry and my temptashun of
Morris, which ended in Morris going to the qwarry.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The qwarry was certainly out of bounds, and it
was when out of bounds in secret with Freckles
and other big chaps that I found all the wonders
of it. It was a stone qwarry in Merivale Grate
Wood, and there were game preserves near by,
where Freckles hunted and practiced to be a
bush-ranger when he went home to Australia. But of
course Morris had never seen the place, because
he never went out of bounds at all, from fear and
also from goodness, but cheefly from fear.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said to Morris on a fine day in the middle of
August—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Have you got any draggon-flies in your collectshun?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"There are no draggon-flies in Merivale."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You're a liar."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, anyway, I never saw one."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"In the old qwarry in Merivale Grate Wood
there are billions."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"They can't live without water to cool their tails."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Any fool knows that. There's a stream and
a pond in the qwarry and the draggon-flies and
blackberries and butterflies, including peacocks and
red admirals, are all as common as dirt."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It's a friteful pity it's out of bounds," said
Morris to me, and I explained that, though out of
bounds in term time, yet, owing to the Doctor's
speshul words to us before he went on his holiday,
every thing was free now.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then Morris said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"He put us on our honour."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I've got just as much honour as you for that
matter. But my honour covers the hole of
Merivale Grate Wood, and if your honour doesn't do
the same, you'll loose the draggon-flies."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Morris thought over this a good deal.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>At last he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"There's no doubt that Slade and probably
Thompson minor will get draggon-flies in their
collectshuns, owing to their living by swamps and
rivers."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Do what you like, only it happens I'm going
to the qwarry to-morrow for the hole day, and
Matron is going to make me sandwiches to take."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If you honestly think it is an honourable thing
to do——" said Morris.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I honestly do think so," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I believe you're right," he said. Then rather
a footling idea struck him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"How would it be if we wrote a polite letter
to the Doctor?" he asked.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Not me," I said. "You may be sure that
the Doctor, in his hard-eerned vocation, doesn't
want polite letters from me or even you. In fact,
it might so much anoy him that he might change
his mind all together and not put us on our honour
at all, but merely say we were to keep bounds,
which would be deth to me. Not that I should do
it in any case."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So after a lot more rot and jaw about his blessed
honour, Morris came, and the day was jolly fine
to begin with, and we went well armed for sport
in genral. He had his butterfly-net and
killing-bottle—a beestly thing full of cemicals but merciful
in its way, becorse when you put a butterfly in
and shut down the cork the butterfly becomes
unconshus without pane and dies pretty
cumfortably. All the same, as Morris said to me while
we watched a lesser tortussshell passing away,
"deth is deth," and the killing bottle was the only
part of natural history he did not care about.
Before we got to the qwarry he was wondering if
the cemicals in the bottle would be strong enough
for a draggon-fly.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You've got to jolly well catch them first."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I had the sandwiches and a sling made of lether,
which hurls a stone friteful distances. I had
also got in secresy a packet of 'Windsor Pearl'
cigarets and a box of matches. These I did not
intend to show to Morris, because it wood have
upset his honour again; but I had been a smoaker
for years, having been tought by Steggles, and it
seemed to me if I couldn't have a cigaret in the
summer holidays now and then, I might as well
give up smoaking all together.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There were tongue sandwiches, and bread and
butter ones, and two hard-boiled eggs each, and
two large lumps of carraway seed cake. It seemed
a good deel to carry and yet not much to eat. I
also took an india-rubber cup for water; but Morris
said the water in the qwarry was no doubt where
the draggon-flies lived in the first stages of their
careers, and he douted if we could drink it with
safety. He littel nue that he would soon drink it
whether it was safe or not.</span></p>
<div class="align-center auto-scaled figure margin" style="width: 77%" id="figure-87">
<span id="at-one-spot-the-descent-was-very-perilous"></span><ANTIMG class="align-center block" style="display: block; width: 100%" alt="AT ONE SPOT THE DESCENT WAS VERY PERILOUS." src="images/img-223.jpg" />
<div class="caption centerleft figure-caption margin">
<span class="italics">AT ONE SPOT THE DESCENT WAS VERY PERILOUS.</span></div>
</div>
<p class="pnext"><span>There was only one way into the qwarry and that
was down a very steep and dangerous place. The
opening into the qwarry was all filled up and there
were raillings all round it to keep anybody from
falling into it by night. Morris funked getting
down for some time; then a draggon-fly actually
sored past and so much excited him that he said
he was reddy if I went first. I told him to see
exactly what I did and then I went down. At one
spot the dissent was very perilous owing to a huge
stone that stuck out in the middle of the cliff. You
had to curl over it and feal with your feet for a
tree-root below, then, for one grate moment, you
had to let go with your hands and cluch at a
pointed stone on the right hand side. This stone
was allways loose and wanted very delicate
handling. To me, with years of practice, it was eesy;
but I fealt sure it would be a bit of a twister for
Morris.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He lowered down his killing-bottle and net and
caterpillar-box, then he began to slowly dissend.
But at the critikal moment he stretched for the
pointed stone before he had got his foot on the
root and all his wait came on the stone with the
terrible result that the stone gave way. And when
the big stone gave way, about a million other
stones gave way also, so that Morris fell to the
ground in an avvalanch of stones and the woods
resounded with the sound. My first thort was
keepers and my second thort was Morris.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He was alive and hardly hurt at all more than
a spraned ankle. He went very white and sat
down and shivered and felt his bones and limbs
one by one. He said it was his first great escape
from deth.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You may not have escaped all the same, becorse
you've pulled down the cliff in your dissent,
and that was the only way out of the qwarry, and
now there isn't any way out at all!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Which was perfectly true and not said to friten
Morris. Getting out of the qwarry was far far
worse than getting in and wanted a nerve of iron,
which I hadn't mentioned to Morris till I got him
safely in; but now he'd pulled down the place
compleatly and left a naked precipice, and my nerve
of iron was no good. In fact we were evidently
going to have a grate adventure, and so I told
Morris.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It certainly spoilt the day for him, becorse
you can't very well have a ripping good picknick
if you don't know how the picknick is going to end.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It's a fine place for natural history no doubt,"
he said; "but we can't pretend we're going to
have a good time now."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"We're going to have a long time anyway," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He smiled in rather a gastlie way and said he
hoped not, becorse the weather was changeing and
it might rain later on.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then I told him that wether didn't matter as
there was a pretty dry cave where Freckles used to
do his cooking of rabbits on half-holidays. Morris
seemed glad about the cave. He rubbed his ankle
and said, so far as that went, he fealt pretty right.
Presently he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"There are certainly red admirals here in grate
quantities and also draggon-flies, but somehow I
don't feel I've got the heart to kill annything for
the moment, espeshully after what I've just eskaped
myself. Deth is deth."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You'll be better after food," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But he wouldn't hear of food.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"We must face the possishun," he said. "Here
we are in a qwarry and we can't get out."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Very well. Then, there being no food in the
qwarry except what we have brort with us, we shall
soon be hungry."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," I said. "I am now."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Morris went on trying to be calm, but I could
see the more he explained the situashun the more
fritened he got. His voice shook when he said
the next thing.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You can't go on being hungry for more than
a certain time. After you reech a certain pich,
you die."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, there you are," he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He figetted about with his killing-bottle and
things, then made a hopeless sort of a sound like
an engine letting off steem.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"We must consider meens of eskape," I said.
"People come here sometimes, no doubt.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Only boys out of bounds," said Morris faintly.
"Oh, what would I give to see the face of Freckles
peep over the top!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It's impossible," I told him. "Freckles is
spending the holidays with some cousins in
Norfolkshire. But there are often keepers in the
woods to look after the game."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Then we must shout at intervals, night and
day—as long as we've got the strength to do it,
said Morris.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Before each shout we will eat a sandwich to
increese our strength," I said. But Morris fancied
half a sandwich would be safer.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I thort it wasn't much good beginning by
starving ourselves. In adventures nobody begins by
starving—they end like that; but Morris, who has
a watch, looked at it and said the time was only
half-past ten and that, even if we were safe and
within reach of food, we should not eat any for two
hours and a half. But I said planely I could not
waite that time and it ended by our dividing the
food into two heaps of exactly the same size to a
crumb. And I eat a sandwich boldly and fearlessly,
but Morris shook his head and said it was
foolhardy.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He took a very hopeless view from the first, and
even thort that perhaps, when my food was all
gone and his hardly begun, I should turn on him
with the feerceness of starvashun and tare his food
away from him. But I said, "No, Morris. What
ever tortures I may suffer, I am a gentleman, and
I would rather die a hundred times than take as
much as one seed out of your peece of cake."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This comforted him rather. He put his hand on
his chin and stared before him in a very feeble
manner.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Deth is deth," he began again.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"That's the third time you've said that," I told
him, "and if you say it once more, I'll punch
your head. Now, I'm going to utter the first grate
shout, and I hope it may bring a keeper—not
Thomas or Waxy West, for they are both very
hard and beestly men, and very likely wouldn't
rescue us even if they new we were here; but the
under-keeper, Masters. He will certainly save us,
and if he does, I'll give him my packet of cigarets."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I shouted six times; then I shouted six more
times; then I told Morris to have a shot. But he
made such a piffling, feeble squeak that you could
hardly have heard him a quarter of a mile off.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Lucky I can howl," I said, "or we should
both be done for without a dout. Why, a lamb
that has lost its mother would get up more row
than that."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Morris was rather hurt at this. Me explained
that he was making an Australian sound tought
him by Freckles.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It may not be loud," he said, "but it is a
well-none sound in Australia and travel grate
distances espeshully over water."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The menshun of water made us go and look
at the pond. I was fritefully thirsty by now and
drank some. It was grey in colour but clear when
seen in my india-rubber cup and quite holesome
to the taste. Morris douted, but still he drank.
I advised him to catch some draggon-flies and he
said he would after the next time for shouting
had come. We arranged that I should shout
every half-hour, and Morris wanted to give me
one sandwich from his store as payment for the
exershun of shouting; but I skorned it and told
him I would not think of doing so.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>After the second shouting, which did nothing,
used my sling a bit and neerly hit a bird, and
Morris cought a draggon-fly and let it go out of
pitty, and then he cought another and kept it to
see if the killing-bottle would kill it. It did.
After about half a minute in the bottle the draggon
was gone, and we shook him out and examined
his butiful markings of yellow and black and his
transparent wings, that had the colours of the
rainbow on them when the sun fell on them in a
particular manner.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Morris stroaked it in a sorroful way.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It is out of its missery now. I wish me and
you were," he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said we hadn't begun our missery yet. I
advised him to eat a sandwich and he did, but very
reluctantly.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said that water would keep life in the human
frame for many weeks. He also said that he fealt,
in a damp place like this, we might eesily get
pewmonia. He wondered if I hadn't better shout
every quarter of an hour. He also thort his
watch was going far too slow owing to his fall
down the side of the qwarry. The sun had gone
behind some rather dark clouds and we couldn't
be sure where it was.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The only thing that happened during the next
hour was that the draggon-fly came to again, not
being ded but merely incensible. It lifted a paw
rather feebly to its forehead and evvidently had a
headacke. Then it took a step or two and shivered
a lot. Somehow it grately cheered Morris the
draggon-fly recovering. He sed it had come out of
the jaws of deth and so perhaps we should. He
gave it an atom of tongue out of a sandwich, but
it was not up to eating, and turned away from it.
Then Morris got it some water to wet its glittering
tail. This certainly refreshed it and so Morris
dashed a few drops on its head which refreshed it
still more. At half-past two it rose and flew several
inches and at three it disappeered.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>By this time I had eaten all my sandwiches and
drunk tons of water and was pealing my first
hard-boiled egg.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Suddenly Morris had an idea. He had only eaten
one sandwich and was of course famishing with
hunger. He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If you was to write a message and tie it round
a stone and sling it into space, it might be found
and red. Then a resque party would be arranged
and we should be saved."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It was pretty good for Morris, and I took out
my pocket-book instantly and wrote three messages.
And he wrote three. He sed it was like men on
sinking ships, who send off messages in bottles that
are found many years afterwards in Iceland. And
I said it was. Of corse we hoped one at leest of
the six messages might be found pretty soon.
Years afterwards was no good to us.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I merely wrote—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Lost in Grate Wood Qwarry and unable to
get out. Arnold Foster. Come at once."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And Morris wrote—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"At the point of deth in Grate Wood Qwarry.
No eskape. Food neerly done. A handsome
reward will be given. William Arkwright
Henderson Morris."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I asked him how he nue a handsome reward
would be given, and he said he didn't, but that
he felt it was a safe thing to say and might make
all the diffrence to anybody finding the message.
Then I shot off the six messages rapped round
stones, and they eesily flew over the edge of the
qwarry. I then shouted again and eat my first egg.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Just when it began to rain Morris had another
grate idea. He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Didn't you say something about a packet of
cigarets some time ago?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, and I am glad you reminded me about
them, becorse I just feal that one will do me a lot
of good."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then I pulled them out and opened the packet
and took one and lit it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It is very restful in such an adventure as this,"
I told Morris.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he explained his idear. It is well none
that when you are learning to smoak, your appetite
is often spoilt for a time. Now Morris thort that
if he smoaked, he would not want food, and so
much valuable food might be saved, and life
prolonged if necessary.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"To you, who smoak so eesily, no dout it is no
good, but I have never smoaked, and if I took a
cigaret and went through with it, it might turn me
off eating for some time."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This was true, but I pointed out a grate danger
that Morris had forgotten.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"That is all right and I will of corse share
my cigarets with you, and as there are twenty, that
will be ten each," I said; "but I must seeriously
warn you, Morris, that to a perfect beginer, like
you, many things might happen besides merely a
fealing against tongue sandwiches. You might be
absolutely sick and then——"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"All the food in me would be wasted," said
Morris in a very tragick tone.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He turned quite white at this idea. He said it
would be madness to do anything to weaken his
system at such a critikal time, and I said so too.
Then he asked me to go and smoak further off,
because the very smell made him feal rather strange
after what I had told him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I smoaked three cigarets bang off and they only
made me hungrier than ever. Then the rain
became rather bad and at four o'clock we entered
the cavern. At least I did, but Morris stood at the
door ready to run out and shout if by a lucky
chance anybody came in sight on the edge of the
qwarry. But nobody came and the next serious
thing was that my voice began to get husky after
so much shouting. Morris said it was the cigarets,
but I told him it was owing to yelling all day every
half-hour, which undoubtedly it was.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>At six I went to sleep for some time in the cave
and Morris did not wake me, because he said that
I was gaining strength by it. When I woke it
was getting darkish and I thort it would be a good
thing to make a fire. Morris thort so too and we
made one reddy with a lot of ded fern that Freckles
had put long ago into the cavern. We took the
paper that had rapped up our lunch, and put it
under the fern, and covered it with my coat to keep
it dry; and after dark we lighted it, and it made a
good blaze for a minute but unfortunately went
out owing to the rain.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The rain, in fact, began to pour steddily and it
was a partickularly dark evening. Morris became
a simple worm after dark. He took a small bite out
of a sandwich and said his prayers from end to end
every half-hour. I had only got my cake left now,
and it seemed to me better to have one good meel
and have done with it than keep messing about like
Morris was. So I finished my cake and tried to go
to sleep again.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We found that water came through the roof of
the cavern in rather large quantities, and Morris
had a new terror. He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If we can't get out of the qwarry, then I don't
see how water can get out, and so, if it rains more
than a certain amount, the qwarry will get full and
we shall be drowned."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Which showed what a footling state of mind
Morris had got into.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Presently I sneezed and he said of corse that
it was the beginning of pewmonia. Then he asked
for a match to see the time and it was six minutes
past ten. Then I shouted again at the cavern
entrance without result.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He kept on asking for matches to see the time
until there were only five left, and I said we must
keep these for immergencies, and he said he
supposed we must.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>At last he went into a sort of sleep after shedding
some teers and pretending it was a cold in his head.
Then I lighted a cigaret and found much to my
supprise that I was beginning to feal queer myself
with a new sort of queerness quite new to me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I woke Morris and told him that I was sorry to
say I was ill; and he said he was undoubtedly very
ill too and had been dreeming of his mother, which
he only did when frightfully ill. He also asked
me if I believed in ghosts and I said I thort I did.
And he said he always did.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There were some awfully strange noises happening
outside at this time, and I sakrificed another
match and found it was neerly one o'clock. Then
we went to the mouth of the cavern and listened to
a peculiar creepy sound far off. The rain had
stopped and a sloppy looking moon was coming
up. Morris shivered.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"That might be the mournful yell of some
wretched ghost," he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It's owels," I said, but he did not think so.
He thort it was too miserable for owels.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It came neerer and certainly was not owels.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then a thort struck me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It's a resque party!" I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We shouted with all our might and screamed and
yelled, and presently there was an ansering yell
and we fealt that with any luck we were now saved.
Soon toarches gleemed through the trees, and there
were sounds of human feet and langwidge.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said to Morris—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"We are now saved, Morris, and if you are not
going to eat your piece of carraway seed cake, I
should very much like to."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You can eat everything. I have such a fealing
of thankfulness to be saved, that I couldn't eat for
the moment, empty as I am. Besides there will
be supper provided."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>A man shouted above us and I heard the hated
voice of Waxy West.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Be you little devils down there?" he cried out.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, we are, Mr West," I answered him very
loud. "We're doing no harm at all—merely
waiting quietly to be resqued. We only came for
draggon-flies, and the side of the qwarry gave way
unfortunately, or we shouldn't have had to trouble
you at such a late hour."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He growled in rather an unkind tone of voice,
and we saw there were two other men with him.
Then they began to make arrangements for the
resque and one was told to go and get a rope.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If ever I catch you in this place again, I'll
break both your necks," said Waxy West; and
though this was rather strong, it comforted Morris
in a way, becorse it showed that West hadn't found
his messages offering a handsome reward. If there
had been any question of that, he would have been
polite and kringeing; but he was just as usual.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>We found out, after, that Matron had got in a
funk and gone to the big house, where the people
belonging to Merivale Grate Wood live; and the
people had sent their keepers in all directions to
save us.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>These keepers got a rope and made knots in it
and lowered it down, and told us that we must
climb up it. And I let Morris go first, which he
did; and then I went up, and the keepers saw us home.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I told Waxy West that I should mention the
subject to my parints in India and that I hoped
they might send at least a pound to him, and he
said it wasn't likely, becorse he'd done them the
worst turn any man could. And he said that if I
wanted to reward him, I would never go into
Merivale Grate Wood again; and I promised I wouldn't
go in again for a full month. Which he evvidently
didn't believe.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There was fritefully good tuck waiting for us at
school, and the Matron, who had been blubbing,
said a grate many rather unkind things while we
eat it. But she promised not to tell Dr Dunstan
and he does not no even to this day.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Morris didn't win the holiday competishun
becorse, as he expected, both Slade and Thompson
minor brort back draggon-flies. We might eesily
have gone to the qwarry again, after the month I
promised Waxy West was over, but nothing would
tempt Morris to go, though I bought ten yards of
good rope for my own use. However, he paid me
sixpence for getting him back his killing-bottle and
his butterfly-net and his caterpillar-box, which
were forgot in the excitement of the resque; and
that was all to the good.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="richmond-and-the-major-general"><span class="bold x-large">RICHMOND AND THE MAJOR-GENERAL</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">No. X</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">RICHMOND AND THE MAJOR-GENERAL</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>The fellows talk such a lot of absolute piffle
about what I did, and tell such a frightful number
of regular right down lies about it, that I have
decided to write out the whole thing myself from
the beginning, that the truth shall be known.
There is nothing like truth really, and it is the
only thing that lasts, and I am going to tell the
truth fearlessly, because honesty is the best policy,
however hard it may be at the time.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Well, after I gave up preaching to the chaps at
Merivale, owing to the row about Browne and
Stopford and all the unpleasantness afterwards, I
felt that my occupation was gone in a sort of way;
and it so weighed on my mind that I was one
of the first to get German measles and one of the
last to recover. I was shut up in the hospital and
had a great deal of time on my hands for thought,
and the more I thought, the more I felt that my
preaching gift ought not to be wasted like this.
I tried preaching to myself once or twice, to keep
my hand in, and I found that I was clean out of
practice and couldn't work up to "thirdly and
lastly" without getting regularly tied in a knot.
Then I tried to preach to the matron, and she said
it was morbid and told the doctor (for I heard her
through the door) that I was very low and taking
a most unhealthy interest in religion. After which
I had a lot more most uncalled for and beastly
medicine, and was isolated for three more days;
because the doctor said it might be something else
threatening. What was threatening really was my
conscience. I was perfectly well and frightfully
eager to be doing good in the world; and as it
seemed simply useless to try to do any more good
at Merivale, chiefly owing to that son of Belial
called Stopford, I came to the terrific resolve of
going. I decided to leave quietly. I thought on
the last day of being isolated I would steal out
into the world in a spirit of calm courage, and
try to do good, and leave the rest to Providence.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I did nothing rashly, because it is well known
that Heaven helps those who help themselves, and
we must not throw all the burden on Providence,
however much inclined we may feel to do so. We
are given our talents to use, not to put under a
bushel. I had ten shillings and a telescope, worth
eight-and-six. I had nothing else but my volume
of Skeleton Sermons. It seemed enough.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>One is bound to be worldly-wise up to a certain
point; and this is right and proper. If you have
a mission, you must use the best means for
carrying it out, and even money may be put to very
proper purposes if it is spent with a high object.
Besides, the labourer is worthy of his hire.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>With my money I determined to use artificial
means for getting as far from Merivale as possible.
For ten shillings you can go an immense distance
by train, though a half-ticket was no longer
possible for me, as I was over twelve; but a train is
far too public and I should have been discovered.
Therefore I decided upon the simple plan of hiring
a bicycle. The time was May and the evenings
were long. Therefore I determined to hire the
bicycle during the hour when everybody would be
in chapel for evening prayer. Being isolated I
could do this.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The eventful night was fine and warm. I
slipped out unperceived, but I had taken the
precaution not to wear my hat with the school colours,
as that would have been instantly observed. So I
went to my private box and took out my round
bowler hat, which could not lead to detection. I
then got over the hedge into the main road,
because to have walked out of the gate by the lodge
would have much decreased my chances of escape.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>All went well. The people at the bicycle shop
raised no difficulty, and for five shillings they let
me have a machine for two hours—also matches to
light the lamp. It was put into their minds to
trust me, and I saw from the first that Providence
was going to help me. The man even shortened
the steps a little as I am unusually stumpy in the
legs.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I gave him five shillings and set off. Pursuit
would not begin till my supper was brought by the
matron, and I had a clear hour before that time.
Then I knew what would happen; because two
terms before, young Watkinson, who was
homesick, had run away and tried to walk from
Merivale, in Devonshire, to Edinburgh, where his
grandmother lives; but he had been taken by
Mannering riding that way on his bicycle, two
miles out of Merivale. So I knew that the masters
on bicycles and policemen on foot would soon be
after me, and I intended to avoid the main roads
and spend the night in some harmless and
wholesome cowhouse on a bed of sweet meadow hay.
Then in the morning I should rise, get a drink of
milk and a little bread-and-butter from some simple
and kind-hearted housewife, and leave the bicycle
with her to be returned by train to the bicycle shop
at Merivale. What would happen after that I left
entirely to Providence.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>A telescope and a rather fat book are awkward
things on a bicycle, and they bumped me rather
heavily, one on each side, as I started. So after
riding a few miles I dismounted, slung the
telescope over my back and buttoned the Skeleton
Sermons to my chest. Though not comfortable,
they did not bump, and I went steadily on my
way. At a quarter to nine I lighted my lamp
and well knew that Mannering and Chambers
had started, and that many telegrams, including
one to my father, had probably been sent off
by Dr. Dunstan from Merivale. For the first
time I considered what view my father would
take of my action, and I was bound to feel that
he might not care much about it. My father,
though a good father to me, has never trusted as
much in Providence as I could have wished; which
is curious, seeing that he is not only a clergyman
but also a rural dean. He wants me to go into
some lucrative business, but I never will, for I have
no feeling for it. My father thinks that money is
everything, and I know well it is not. He said to
me once that you can always tell a gentleman by
his neckties and the cigars he smokes. Which is
childish, because many perfect gentlemen never
smoke cigars at all.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I got rather depressed after dark—entirely owing
to thinking about my father. I also got strangely
hungry and was beginning to wonder whether I
had better try for some supper anywhere, or just
leave nature to settle that. Then a most serious
and unforeseen thing happened and the hind tyre
of the bicycle went off with a loud explosion, like
a pistol. I dismounted instantly. I kept my
nerve and quietly considered the situation. For a
moment it looked as if Providence was against me,
but I could not be sure of this yet. I wheeled the
bicycle to a gate and sat on the gate and
considered. Then, far down the road I had come, I
saw a light and instantly perceived that another
bicycle was approaching at quite twenty miles an
hour. To drag my bicycle through the gate into
the field, to shut the gate, extinguish the lamp, and
crouch in the hedge motionless and silent, was the
work of an instant. The bicycle flew past and the
man on it grunted with little grunts. It was, in
fact, the well-known grunt of Mannering—a sound
he always makes at footer and hockey. So I
saw that Providence was still with me and felt very
much cheered; because, if the lyre had not burst,
I should have been quietly riding along not
thinking of Mannering, and he would have overtaken
me and all would have been over.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>My resolutions were soon made. I left the main
road, which was evidently now no place for me,
and wheeled the bicycle down a lane near a farm.
I felt that it would be necessary to my health to
eat something before sleeping, but cared little what
it was, and decided that I would just take the fruits
of the earth—corn or a few turnips, or anything.
In the morning I should mention it to the farmer's
wife and ask her to change my five-shilling piece.
For the change from my ten-shilling piece, after
paying for the bicycle hire, was a five-shilling
piece.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I now became conscious of the fact that the
bicycle was a hindrance rather than a help. To
leave it behind was, therefore, the work of a
moment. But first I took a leaf out of my
pocketbook and wrote on it these words—</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"</span><em class="italics">Kindly return this bicycle to the shop of
Messrs. Jones and Garratt, bicycle works, Merivale,
and all will be well. The hind wheel is
punctured. The finder will probably be rewarded.</em><span>"</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>To show, however, that I was not careless for
the bicycle, I may say that I went on till I found
a cowshed, so that the machine might be dry and
not suffer from night dew or possible rain. It
was not the sort of cowshed that I meant to sleep
in myself, being evidently used purely for cows,
and having no fragrant, clean hay or anything of
the kind in it; but it was good enough for the
bicycle; so I left it there and went on my way.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There are very peculiar and creepy sounds to be
heard in the country at night, and I heard them
all. Everything, in fact, is quite different to
what it is by day. Especially the colours of things.
There was a watery sort of moon, and it made all
the leaves on the trees look as if they were cut out
of dirty white paper. And it made gate-posts and
tree-stems look as if they were alive. I got a
curious sort of feeling about this time and lit a
match and read a couple of Skeleton Sermons.
This put me absolutely all right, and I went to seek
some of the fruits of the earth. But May is
evidently a bad time for that purpose. In fact, there
were simply no fruits of the earth to eat anywhere,
so I had to trust to young leaves. Beech leaves are
all right in a way, but you soon have enough.
That was all I could get, however, and I washed
them down with a drink from a brook, but
unluckily slipped in while filling my bowler hat with
water. Then the thing was to find a comfortable
place with sweet, snug straw; and I crept down
to a farmhouse; and, hearing me creeping down
unfortunately upset a dog so much that it barked
steadily for half-an-hour and woke many other
dogs for miles round.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>At last I found a poorish sort of shed which
had no sweet, fragrant hay but only a cart with
sacks in it. The sacks had been used for guano.
Still they were better than nothing, and I got into
the cart and pulled the sacks over me, having first
taken off my socks and hung them on the edge of
the cart to dry. I slept, but not well, and when
morning came I found myself deeply scented with
guano and starving for food, but otherwise all
right and still free. So I read a bit, and put on
my socks, and set out boldly down a lane to the
farm. But, after all, I did not go to this particular
farm, because, instead of a motherly woman or
some beautiful young girl standing at the door
feeding chickens and pigeons, there were two men
in a corner killing a pig, and the pig simply
hated it; and to see this done on an empty stomach
is very trying to the nerves. So I went hastily
and boldly on, and at last found a quiet and
humble cottage and a woman in it. I don't think
she would have given me food for nothing; but
when I said I would pay her a shilling for a breakfast,
and showed her my five shillings to prove it,
she met my views gladly and gave me three pieces
of bread-and-butter, an egg, that was not laid
yesterday, and some tea. Then she changed the
five-shilling piece and gave me back four shillings.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Much refreshed and with nothing to trouble me
but a cold in the head, doubtless owing to getting
my feet wet, I went on my way. My idea was to
get to Exeter and then boldly take my stand in
the cathedral yard and try to begin doing good
and arresting the careless passer-by, and leaving
the rest to Providence. I did not know whether
it might be possible to get to Exeter by lanes and
footpaths over fields. Nothing happened except
that I gave away two shillings in charity to a blind
woman with four children. I also said a few
encouraging words to her. And then, being now
in the middle of a very lonely common covered with
yellow gorse and white may, I came suddenly upon
a man sitting under a bush smoking a cigarette.
He was evidently not a happy man, being very
ragged and with one laced boot and one elastic
one. His hair was long, partly yellow and partly
grey; his face was as brown as leather; and he
had little rings in his ears. His clothes were faded
and a good deal patched. He evidently did not
mind what he wore. His eyes were blue and
bright, but rather kind on the whole. There was
a paper opened beside him. It was a bit of
newspaper and contained bones and the sort of food
you give to dogs. His nails were long and black,
and some of his fingers perfectly yellow from
smoking cigarettes.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Good-morning! Can you kindly tell me the
distance to Exeter?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'm going there myself after I've finished my
breakfast. It's about ten miles from here."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I thought very likely that Providence had thrown
this rather unsuccessful man into my path for a
good purpose; so I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"As we are both going to Exeter, we might
perhaps walk part of the way together. Only I
like the quiet lanes and field-paths best—not the
high road."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He seemed to think the idea quite possible. He
said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Can't be too quiet for me."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I cannot tell you my history, but I may tell
you this much: I am quite determined to do some
good in the world."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Funny you should say that. I'm just the
same. I'm nuts on doing some good myself. In
fact, I was sitting here this minute wondering what
the dickens it should be."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The truest way to make yourself happy is to
set to work to make other people happy."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And he said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Righto! I've always stuck to that. And I've
been so busy lately, trying to make other people
cheerful, that I've got rather down on my own luck."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He offered me the remains of his repast, which
I declined. Then I told him that I had two
shillings and that, if he was still hungry, he might
share my lunch with me when we came to some
quiet inn. He thanked me heartily and fell in
with this. He said he wasn't hungry but was
suffering from an agonizing thirst. He said that
thirst was a disease with him, also smoking; and I
told him that it was a terrible mistake to become
the victim of a habit; and he said he knew only
too well that it was.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I improved his mind a good deal before we came
to an inn, and then, not wishing to be seen, I gave
him one of my shillings and told him to spend
sixpence on himself and sixpence on me. I merely
wanted sixpennyworth of good, wholesome
bread-and-cheese; and I went behind some haystacks and
waited for him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He was a long time coming, and, when he did
come, I was surprised to find how little
bread-and-cheese he brought for sixpence. Me admitted
frankly that it was very little; but he said the
landlord was a hard man and he would not give a
crumb more for the money.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>While I ate, Marmaduke FitzClarence Beresford—for
that was this friend's name—told me something
of his life. He was a gentleman by birth
and also by education. He had, in fact, been to
Eton and Oxford and also in the army. He had
won the Victoria Cross and been mentioned several
times in dispatches. He had even shaken hands
with the King and been thanked by the House of
Commons for his services in the Boer War. But
then, at the very height of his worldly prosperity,
a bank had broken and he had suddenly found
himself quite ruined and penniless. Of course he
had to leave the army, for in the position he had
now reached, which was that of major-general,
his mess bill alone ran into gold every week. A
major-general has to buy champagne every day of
his life, whether he drinks it or not. It is a rule
in the British army and very important. But he
said that nothing mattered as long as one tried to
do good in the condition in life that one found
oneself in. He said I was perfectly right to carry
my Skeleton Sermons with me, and that the first
thing he was going to do, when he had saved a
little money, was to buy a volume himself. But,
if anything, he was still more interested in my
telescope. He said that it was good for five
shillings and advised me to sell it. He explained that
it was useless to me if I was going to devote the
rest of my life to doing good; and of course this
was true.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said we had better stop where we were till
dusk, and that there was a small town, two miles
off, where it might be possible for him, as a favour
to me, to get a friend of his to buy the telescope.
So we sat a good many hours in this quiet field;
and he smoked thousands of cigarettes, and I told
him many things that it was useful for him to
know; and he told me many things that it was not
particularly useful for me to know, yet interesting.
He was a well-meaning and religious officer, but
he was rather soured, naturally enough, owing to
the utter breaking of his bank and the loss of his
hard-earned savings.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He admitted that I had made him see several
things in a very new and different light, and then,
towards evening, he said we might now start to
sell the telescope. He said with a part of the
proceeds I might get a fairly clean bed at the little
town, and that he hoped, after a comfortable
night's rest, I should be able to start refreshed and
strong to do good at Exeter. I asked him where
he was going to sleep, and he said in some ditch,
because, for the moment, he was absolutely
without means, having given away his last shilling to
a poor tramp who was even worse off than himself.
I told him he might be very sure that he would
never regret that shilling; and he said probably
not in the long run, but, just for the moment,
as it was going to be a wet night and he had a
bad cold on his chest developing into bronchitis,
he felt a little weak and regretful. Then I said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You shall share this telescope with me, Major-general
Beresford, and if you like to throw in your
lot with me, we will take a humble lodging for the
night and start to do good to-morrow."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said it was almost more than he had a right
to expect; and yet it showed how wicked he had
been to doubt Providence for a moment. He
almost cried, and I cheered him up and told him
to be courageous and hopeful. Then he said he
would try to be; and then he went off with the
telescope, while I waited just outside the small
town behind a hoarding. The major-general had
said that he should be about an hour, as a thing
of this kind wanted a good deal of doing; but he
wasn't: he came back in twenty minutes, and he
brought the telescope with him, and he was in a
frightful rage and spoke several soldierly words
that were not at all right to use for a man who
wanted to do good.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Me said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The blighters won't let me pop it! They all
want to know how I came by it! Dash their
infernal impudence! Why, they'd have had the
cops on me if I'd stopped to argue about it! You'd
better take it yourself. But I'll be even with some
of 'em yet, clash and bash them! I'll burn their
very bad-word houses down about their ears before
they're much older!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>In this dreadful way he went on for some time;
then I tried to calm him down and told him he
must not feel too much hurt because common,
crafty men in shops regarded him suspiciously. I
said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You evidently lost your temper with them, and
that is never right or wise. It was your boots that
made them doubt you. You ought quietly to have
told them who you are, and about the King
shaking hands with you, and the bank breaking, and
so on. Then they would have understood, and if
they had been Christian men, they would have
sympathized with you and very likely have given
six or seven shillings for the telescope."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said, rather foolishly—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Given six or seven grandmothers for the telescope!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he seemed to grow suddenly suspicious of
me and he asked—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Where did </span><em class="italics">you</em><span> get it from anyhow? If I
thought you'd sneaked it, I'd——"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I got it from my Uncle Horace," I said. "He
is an amateur astronomer and understands the stars."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, I ought to understand three balls by this
time," answered the major-general, though what
this meant I have never understood myself to this day.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then he began to make me rather uncomfortable,
and I detected a good deal of vulgarity in
him. But doubtless it often turns people vulgar
and brutal to come down in the world, owing to
having to mix with their inferiors and suchlike.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now he began to ask me about myself in a very
cross-questioning manner, and at last it seemed
to me that I must tell him the truth. In fact, he
kept on so about who I was and where I had come
from, that it got to be a simple question between
telling him the truth and telling him a lie.
Therefore, of course, I told him the truth, and said that
my name was Richmond and that I had lately
changed my way of life by leaving school in order
to do some public work in the way of goodness.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He seemed much surprised.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You've run away from school then?" he exclaimed.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," I said; "but of course I am telling you
this in the strictest confidence."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He quite saw that, and said that he regarded the
confidence as a great compliment to him. He
became perfectly friendly again and said that, when
a boy, he had run away from school also, and that
most boys of spirit did so—in fact, nearly every
boy who ever made much of a mark in the world
began in that manner. I reminded him that he
had been to Eton and Oxford, and he admitted it.
It was from Eton that he had run away, but he had
been subsequently captured and taken back.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Now you have confided in me," he said, "I
think I can really be of some practical use to you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He guessed at the time and said, that if we put
our best foot foremost, we ought to be in Exeter
by midnight. I remember, curiously enough,
wondering which was his best foot—the one in the
lace-up boot, or the one with elastic sides.
Anyway, we set off after I had shared my last shilling
with him. This he changed into food and drink
at a small public-house by the wayside.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"At Exeter," he said, "I am widely known and
respected. When we get there, certain people
will welcome me in a friendly spirit, and I am
quite sure they will welcome you too. In fact,
I can promise you a very warm welcome and a good
night's rest."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Will they take the telescope?" I asked.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No," he said. "They are not people like
that. When they understand the situation, they
will be perfectly well satisfied with you as you are."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I was glad that the major-general had come back
to this quieter and wiser frame of mind, and
thanked him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I hope it may be in my power to do you a
service some day," I said; and then, in his turn,
he thanked me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You never know," he replied. "You may be
able to do me a good turn even sooner than you
think for."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He smoked thousands more cigarettes, and asked
me about my home and my family. He was rather
interested to hear that my father was a rural dean,
and kindly hoped that he made a good thing out
of it. I told him that I believed he did; but I
explained to him that money was not everything—indeed,
far from it—and that too much is a great
temptation. He said that he had never had
enough, even in his palmiest days, to judge; and I
said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"There are many precious things that money
will not buy, major-general. You must admit that.
It won't buy affection, for instance."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He sniffed and evidently doubted this. He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It will buy all the affection I want—and a bit
over."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then the lights of Exeter at last appeared and I
was frightfully exhausted by now and jolly glad
to see them.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Here we are at last, thank the Lord," said
my companion, though not in a very pious tone.
Then, at the outskirts of the town, we came to a
building with a light outside, and the
major-general pushed me in in front of him—rather
roughly, I thought. The inside was brightly
illuminated with gas and, to my amazement, the
building contained nothing but policemen. One
of these was much astonished to see us.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Hullo, Slimey Sam!" he said to my companion.
"'Tisn't often you give us a call without
a little help from behind!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then, to my horror, the major-general cast
subterfuge to the winds and appeared in his true
character.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No," he said. "It took four of you blue
worms to carry me in last time I was here; but
this is just a friendly visit. I've been doing a bit
of your work, in fact."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Instantly I perceived my position and made a
dart for the door; but my faithless companion was
too quick for me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No, you don't, my little man!" he cried out,
and grabbed me by the collar as he did so. "This
is the missing link," he said to the policemen,
and they were much interested instantly.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The boy from Merivale?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Several policemen hastened to the telephone, and
one hurried off to the main police-station of
Exeter, and all was excitement, disorder and
confusion. Slimey Samuel—for this was the real name
of the treacherous and unfeeling man—told them
the whole story in my hearing; but he omitted the
part about not being able to sell the telescope, and
the only thing that interested him personally was
the question of the reward.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And really there is not much more to add,
because what my father said, and what Dr. Dunstan
said and did, and what Mannering said, and what
the bicycle people said, and what the other chaps
said when I went back, is none of it particularly
interesting in a general way.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>In fact, the only thing that would have been very
interesting and that I should really like to be able
to tell, is what Slimey Samuel said when he got
his blood-money for giving me up to justice. He
declared to the police in my hearing that it ought
to be good for a hundred quid at least. But his
nature was far too hopeful, and as a matter of fact
he only got two pounds from my father and an
offer of honest work. He only took the money;
and I expect he felt rather bitter about it; and I
felt rather bitter about it in secret also; because it
seemed to show that my father did not put much
value on me. Two pounds for a human life—let
alone your own son—is really rather little. No
doubt my father will go on thinking nothing of me
till I am a man. Then, perhaps, the day may
come when I shall be able to show him that, after
all, money is mere dust in the balance against a
son, who can do the sort of things I hope and
intend to do, when I grow up into manhood.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-good-conduct-prize"><span class="bold x-large">THE GOOD CONDUCT PRIZE</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">No. XI</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">THE GOOD CONDUCT PRIZE</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">I</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Going through the school-room of the third,
which is my own form, I chanced to see Saunders
minor and Fowle there; and, just as I passed them,
Saunders minor said that he wished he was dead.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This, from Saunders minor, was a bit out of the
common, so I stopped and asked him why. He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It's only a manner of speaking, Thwaites; but,
all the same, I do, because of the Good Conduct
Prize."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well," I said, "you're a snip for it; everybody
knows that."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Not now," he answered. "In fact, it's all
up, and the silver watch and chain are gone."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Of course, when young Saunders talked about
a silver watch and chain, he didn't mean
Dr. Dunstan's footling Good Conduct Prize, which is
always a book of a particularly deadly kind, such
as </span><em class="italics">Lays of Ancient Rome</em><span>; but he meant the special
prize his father had promised him if he won the
highest marks for good conduct in his class. And
he was simply romping home when this happened.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Of course, it's that beast Foster," said Fowle.
"I always hated Foster, and now, knowing he
couldn't win by fair means, he made that peculiar
face at Saunders just as the Doctor came in to
say prayers last night; and Saunders laughed, not
knowing the Doctor had actually come in; and the
Doctor took off five conduct marks at one fell
swoop."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Foster must win now," said Saunders. "But
it's a blackguard thing."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And if Foster doesn't win, you will," said
Fowle to me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Curiously enough, this was true. I had been
going rather strong on good conduct this term for
private reasons. In fact, my father had promised
me—not a silver watch—but a flogging, or very
likely two, if I came home again with a holiday
punishment.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>You must know that at Merivale there was a
putrid system called 'holiday punishments,' and
if you didn't get a certain number of good conduct
marks in the term, instead of going home in glory
with a good report, you went home with a holiday
punishment. Well, owing to one thing and
another, I had taken home a holiday punishment
four terms running; and my father began to get
rather nasty about it. As a rule, he is a sort of
father who talks very ferociously but doesn't do
much; therefore, when he actually does flog me,
which happens now and then, it comes as a great
and unpleasant surprise. And I felt, in the matter
of the good conduct marks, that if I went back
with another holiday punishment, he would
certainly keep his word and flog me to the best of
his power. Therefore, I bucked up in a very
unusual way, and though miles behind Saunders
minor and Foster, was miles in front of the others;
and when suddenly Fowle said this to me, that if
Foster also smashed up as Saunders had done, I
must get the Good Conduct Prize in the third, I
felt quite giddy. Needless to say, I had never
taken home a prize in my life. In fact, it seemed
almost too much. My people would never believe it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Of course, if such a thing really did happen, it
would be a frightful score off my father; but then
there was Foster. He stood six clear marks ahead
of me, and unless some awful catastrophe
overtook Foster, it was impossible for me to catch
him. Then it seemed to me as Foster, in the most
unsporting manner, had made his well-known
comic face that always forced Saunders minor to
laugh, and so he had got ahead of Saunders by a
paltry trick, therefore it was only right that Foster
should be scored off too. Needless to say, I was
quite prepared to score off Foster myself; but then,
very likely that would end by smashing me up, so
it seemed to me that the thing to do was to try
and get some outside person to score off Foster,
like he had scored off Saunders minor.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I thought a lot about it, but I couldn't see any
way that was perfectly sportsmanlike. Then Fowle,
who is not sportsmanlike but very cunning, said
there was a way. I felt pretty certain his way
must be mean and piffling; but for once he thought
of rather a good way. At least, it seemed good
to me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I can't do anything myself," Fowle said,
"because the last time I was interested in a fight,
you will remember, the result was very unpleasant
for me; but all the same, in a case like this, there
ought to be a fight, and very likely if you explained
in a perfectly friendly spirit to Saunders minor
that he owes it to himself to fight Foster, he will
be much obliged to you, and so into training for it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Well, I was bound to admit that for once Fowle
seemed to be right. Because, if Saunders minor
fought Foster, the marks of battle would appear
on Foster, even if he won; and they would be
noticed by Browne, who hates fighting, and always
takes off half the term's good conduct marks when
he finds a chap who has clearly had a fight.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So I put it to Saunders minor.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I said, "I come in a perfectly friendly spirit,
Saunders minor, and I don't want to put you to
any inconvenience with Foster. But, as he's
knocked you out of the Good Conduct Prize and
your silver watch, which your father may never
offer again, as they often change their minds, you
have a frightful and bitter grievance against
Foster."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You may also add that Queen Anne is dead,"
said Saunders minor.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I know," I said. "But the point is that I'm
rather worried to see you taking this lying down.
It isn't worthy of the third. We've always been
a fighting form, and, in fact, you ought to resist
this tooth and nail; and I'd be your second like
a shot; and West, the champion of the lower
school, would referee—to oblige me."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Saunders minor was a good deal interested.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"D'you think I ought to lick him?" he asked.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I think you ought to try," I said; "and you
might even succeed if you went into training, and
had a bit of luck."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Saunders minor thought. He was a pale,
putty-coloured chap, and when he thought, he frowned
terrifically till his forehead got quite wrinkled and
old. There was also a very peculiar vein on his
temple you could see when he was thinking extra
hard, but not at other times.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The question is what I should gain," he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Also what he would lose," I said. This was,
of course, Fowle's idea, but it came in jolly handy
here.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What can he lose unless I lick him?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, the beauty of it would be," I explained,
"that if you licked him, or if he licked you, it
would be all the same as far as the Good Conduct
Prize is concerned. If you knock him about a bit
and black an eye or so, Browne will pounce upon
him for certain, as well as you, and away go half
his conduct marks for the term, and bang goes the
Good Conduct Prize."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Saunders minor nodded.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Did you think of this?" he asked.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," I said; "with help from Fowle."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"As a matter of fact, if this happened you'd
get the Good Conduct Prize, Thwaites," said
Saunders minor.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It seems rather a wild idea," I answered, "but
as a matter of fact I should—unless, of course, I
come to grief myself before the end of the term.
I've had to be awful keen on conduct this term,
owing to my father, who has rather overdone it
about conduct lately; and so I've been piling up
marks in a small way, but of course such a thing
as a good conduct prize is bang out of my line."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Or any prize," added Saunders minor thoughtfully.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Or any prize, as you truly say," I answered.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, we've always been friendly enough,"
kindly remarked Saunders minor.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Needless to say I agreed.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It would, of course, be a terrific act of kindness
on your part to me if you knocked Foster out,"
I said; "and also it would be an act of justice to
yourself; and also it would be what is expected of
third form chaps."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You speak as a fighter yourself," said
Saunders minor.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I am, of course, a great fighter," I said, "and
have only once been beaten, and that by West,
who is a champion and nearly two years older
than me. But I believe you would be a very good
fighter if you cared about it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I never should care about it," said Saunders
minor. "But the point is Foster. Supposing he
refuses to fight?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"My dear chap," I said, "he couldn't. You've
got a frightful grievance against him. The sixth,
when they heard, would mighty soon make him fight."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You'll second me, Thwaites, if it comes off?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes," I said. "Certainly I will."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Saunders minor began to think again, and his
forehead became much furrowed.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'm just wondering, if I explained to my father
about it, whether he'd still give me the watch if
I succeeded in licking Foster," he said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I told him that from what I knew of fathers like
his it was very unlikely, and he'd better not hope.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I have heard you say that your father is a
clergyman," I said. "Don't buoy yourself up to
think that he'll give you the watch if you lick
Foster. Far from it. In the case of Morrison it
was very different. His father always gave him
half-a-crown if he went home with a black eye, and
Morrison generally managed to do so; but then his
father was a royal sea captain, and had commanded
a first-class battleship. Your father is religious,
naturally, and against fighting for certain."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It happened that just at this moment Foster and
some other chaps, including his chum, Tin Lin
Chow—commonly called 'Tinned Cow'—the
Chinaman, came by, and Saunders minor, in the
excitement of the moment, stopped Foster and
spoke—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He said, "I've been thinking over losing the
Good Conduct Prize, Foster; and as it was your
fault, something must be done."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Foster said, "I've apologized. Nothing more
can be done."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Saunders minor said, "Much more can be
done. In fact, I challenge you to fight; and
Thwaites is my second, and West will referee."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Foster was much astonished at this.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'm bigger than you," he said. "It wouldn't
be fair. I'm bound to lick you if we have a real
serious fight."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You might lick me, no doubt," said Saunders
minor. "But I shall do a bit first: and I dare say
you'll know what'll happen then."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The only thing that can happen is that you'll
have to give in," said Foster.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Something else will happen besides that,"
answered Saunders minor. "However, you'll see.
To-morrow week in the wood, if that will suit you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He mentioned a half-holiday, and as the first
had no match on, West would be able to referee
comfortably, while everybody was looking at the
second eleven match fixed for that day.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Saturday week in the wood; but you'd better
think twice," said Foster.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I have," said Saunders minor.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And then Foster himself appeared to think
twice. At least, Tin Lin Chow reminded him of
something, and he came back rather mildly to us
after he had walked away in a very cold and
haughty manner.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Look here, Saunders," he said; "would you
mind putting off this fight till next term? I'm not
in the least anxious not to oblige you; but for
private reasons I would rather not fight this term."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Yes, I know," said Saunders minor; "and for
private reasons I rather would. You've knocked
me out of the Good Conduct Prize when it was a
dead certainty for me; and now——"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Foster went away to think; but, needless to say,
his thinking didn't get him out of the mess. In
fact, the fight had to come off, though Foster met
Saunders minor three times before the day, and
once actually sank to offering him a valuable and
remarkable knife if he would put off the fight till
the next term.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Saunders minor jolly well scorned to do so.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">II</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>What Foster did in the matter of training I
don't know, but Saunders minor had rather bad
luck. We sat together, and I gave up my meat at
meals to him in exchange for his pudding. Well,
of course, to eat all my meat as well as his own
ought to have made him strong. But, unfortunately,
it didn't. He seemed to miss his puddings
frightfully, and his tongue went white the day
before the fight, and he got a headache. The
matron spotted him looking a bit off, and then a
frightful thing happened, for the very night before
the fight she made him take a huge dose of some
beastliness, and of course, instead of being full of
solid meat and strength for the fight, when the
time came Saunders minor was quite the reverse.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Needless to say, he gave up all hope, and at
dinner wouldn't eat any meat worth mentioning,
and wouldn't give up his apple tart to me, but ate
it himself. He said he was bound to lose, so it
didn't matter, especially as apple tart was his
favourite food.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The time came, and those in the fight sneaked
off to the great wood that runs by Merivale
playing-fields, and everything went very smoothly indeed.
Saunders minor had me and Saunders minimus for
his seconds, and Foster had Tin Lin Chow and
Trelawny. And West not only was referee, but he
wrote a magnificent description of the fight, like a
newspaper. He had read about thousands of
proper prize fights in a book of his brother's at
home; so he understood everything about it. And
he and Trelawny rather hoped that Masterman, who
is the editor of our school magazine, would put the
fight in; and if he had, it would have been far and
away the best thing that he ever did put in. But
Masterman wouldn't, though he was jolly sorry
not to. He said—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You see, West, the people who read the
magazine most are the parents, and they like
improving articles about foreign travel and what old
boys are doing, and poetry, and so on. If I
published this fight, the Doctor would get into an awful
bate, because it would be too ferocious, and very
likely frighten the parents of future new boys away
when they read it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Certainly it was a very horrid account written as
West wrote it; but as he most kindly let me have
the description to copy, I shall write it out again
here; because certainly I couldn't do it half so well
as him—him being champion of the lower school,
and champion of the upper school, too, when
Trelawny goes.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This is word for word what West wrote—</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"Description of the fight between Foster and
Saunders minor, written by Lawrence Basil West,
Esquire, Champion of the Lower School of
Merivale, and brother of Lieutenant Theodore
Travers West, Middle-weight Boxing Champion of
the Army.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The men came into the ring in pretty good
condition, though Foster had the advantage
owing to Saunders minor getting a set back
in his training the day before the battle. The
ring was cleared, and the combatants shook hands for</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span>"THE FIGHT.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"Round 1.—Some cautious sparring ended by
Saunders letting fly with the right and left, and
missing with both. Foster then steadied his
antagonist with a light blow on the chest. More
sparring followed, then, with a round-arm blow,
Saunders got home on Foster's ear, and the men
closed. They fell side by side, and on rising
instantly prepared to renew the battle; but as the
round was over, the referee (Lawrence Basil West,
Esquire) ordered them to their corners.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Round 2.—The men were very fresh and eager
for business when time was called. There was
some good counter hits, and then Foster received
a prop on the nose which drew the claret. First
blood for Saunders minor claimed and allowed.
The fighting became rather unscientific towards the
end of this round, and finally Foster closed and
threw Saunders minor with a cross-buttock. Both
men were rather exhausted after this round.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Round 3.—Foster, using his superior height,
landed with his right on Saunders minor's kisser.
Then he repeated the dose, and in return caught it
on the left optic. Some good milling followed,
with no advantage to either side. Saunders minor
got pepper towards the end of the round, and when
he was finally thrown, his seconds offered to carry
him to his corner; but he refused, and walked
there.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Round 4.—Foster came first to the scratch.
Both cautious, and Saunders minor very active on
his trotters. But he gave some good blows, and
managed to hit Foster again on the left peeper.
Foster in return landed with the right on Saunders
minor's smelling-bottle, and liberated a plentiful
supply of the ruby. A good round. At its
conclusion, Thwaites and Saunders minimus wanted
Saunders minor to give in; but as he was far from
beaten, he very properly refused to do so.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Round 5.—In this round Saunders minor was
receiver general, and received heavy punishment.
It was claimed that Foster hit him a clean knock-down
blow, but the referee would not allow it. In
the wrestle at the close Saunders minor got the
best of it, and fell on Foster, much to Foster's
surprise.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Round 6.—Saunders minor was badly cut up
in this round, and received heavy blows on the
potato trap and olfactory organs. The fighting
was very wild and unscientific, and both men fell
exhausted towards the finish.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Round 7.—Nothing done. Both fell exhausted.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Round 8.—Some good in-fighting. Saunders
minor got his second wind, and, making useful
play with his left, landed on Foster's throat and his
right eye. It was nearly a case of shutters up with
Foster. They fell side by side with the ruby
circulating freely. The sight of so much gore upset
Saunders minimus, and he had to leave the
ensanguined field. Fortescue took his place by
permission of the referee. But the end was now
near at hand.</span></p>
<div class="align-center auto-scaled figure margin" style="width: 84%" id="figure-88">
<span id="the-fighting-was-very-wild-and-unscientific"></span><ANTIMG class="align-center block" style="display: block; width: 100%" alt=""THE FIGHTING WAS VERY WILD AND UNSCIENTIFIC."" src="images/img-278.jpg" />
<div class="caption centerleft figure-caption margin">
<span class="italics">"THE FIGHTING WAS VERY WILD AND UNSCIENTIFIC."</span></div>
</div>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Round 9.—Both very weak. Referee had to
caution both combatants for holding. Nothing
much done, except that Saunders minor lost a
tooth, said to be loose before the fight.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Round 10 (and last).—Foster came first to the
scratch, and managed to get home on Saunders
minor's forehead and left aural appendage.
Saunders minor was almost too tired to put up his
hands. He tried to fight, but nature would not be
denied, and Saunders minor fell in a very done-up
state. He was counted out by the referee, and
Thwaites flung up Saunders minor's sponge in
token of defeat.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"When Foster discovered that he had won, he
shed tears. But Saunders minor, though defeated,
was quite collected in his mind. The men then
shook hands and left the field with their friends.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Remarks—</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"We have seen better fights, and we have also
seen worse ones. Foster has some good useful
blows, but he wants patience and practice. He is
not a born fighter, but might improve if he took
pains. He had much the best of it in height and
weight, including age, being a good deal older
than his redoubtable antagonist. Though defeated,
Saunders minor was by no means disgraced. He
put up a very good fight, and at one time looked
like winning; but luck was against him. Saunders
minor, however, might give a very good account
of himself with a man of his own size, and we hope
soon to see him in the ring again. He has the
knack of hitting hard and getting away. He was
very little marked at the end of the battle, whereas
his opponent's right eye will long bear the marks
of his prowess.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em"></div>
<dl class="docutils">
<dt class="noindent"><span>(Signed) "LAWRENCE BASIL WEST, Esquire,</span>
<br/><p class="first last noindent pfirst"><span>"Referee."</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>I read this to Saunders minor, and he agreed
with it all, except the bit about being in the ring
again soon. He assured me he did not care about
fighting in a general way, or want to live for it,
like West and me, but only now and again for
some very special reason, as in the case of Foster.
At any rate, though the loser, he had done all he
wanted to do, and Foster had a caution of an eye
that went on turning different colours, like a
firework, till the very end of the term.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Such a wonderful, bulgy and curious eye could
not of course be overlooked even by such a blind
bat as old Briggs; and, needless to say, Browne
jolly soon saw it. Then the truth came out, and
that was the end of the Good Conduct Prize as
far as Foster was concerned. He was frightfully
sick about it; and when it began to appear that
owing to these extraordinary things I, of all people,
must get the Good Conduct Prize, he was sicker
still, and called it a burlesque of justice, whatever
that may be.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Anyway, it actually happened, and when prize
day came, it was a clear and evident thing that I,
Thwaites, had got the Good Conduct Prize in the
third form. The Doctor began to read out the
name; then, evidently under the idea that he had
got it wrong, stopped and whispered to Mr. Warren,
our form master; and Mr. Warren nodded,
and the Doctor put on a puzzled look. Then he
dashed at it and read out my name, and I had
to go up and get the prize.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"A pleasing and unexpected circumstance,
Geoffrey Thwaites," said the Doctor. "To be
frank, that you should achieve this palm of victory
causes me no little astonishment; but I can assure
you that my surprise is only equalled by my
gratification. You have not forgotten what I said to
you last term, and I hope this satisfactory
amelioration of manners may, when we reassemble, be
followed by a corresponding increase of scholastic
achievement. It will be no small gratification to
your father, Geoffrey Thwaites, to welcome you
under these conditions, instead of with the usual
melancholy addition of a holiday punishment."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then the Doctor picked up the Good Conduct
Prize with a sort of innocent, inquiring air that he
always puts on when giving the prizes. He
pretends to be frightfully astonished at the beauty and
magnificence of each book in turn; which,
considering he chooses them all himself, is fearful
bosh, and deceives nobody but a few mothers, who
sometimes come if their sons happen to have pulled
off anything.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now Dr. Dunstan picked up a tidy-looking book,
as far as its outside was concerned.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What have we here?" he said, as if he had
just found a bird's nest. "Why, no less a classic
than Bunyan's </span><em class="italics">Pilgrim's Progress</em><span>! Fortunate
boy! Here, bound in scarlet and gold, and richly
illustrated, is a copy of that immortal work. Know,
Thwaites, that in receiving the </span><em class="italics">Pilgrim's Progress</em><span>
you become enriched by possession of one among
the noblest and most elevated and improving
masterpieces in the English language. Take it and
read it again and again, my lad; and when you
shall have mastered it, lend it to those less fortunate,
that they, too, may profit by the wisdom and piety
of these luminous pages."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then the chaps clapped and stamped, and I
bowed and took the book, and shook hands with
the Doctor and cleared out.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Needless to say, my father was even more
astonished than Dr. Dunstan. I came into his study
to wish him good-evening when I got home, and
he said, "Well, boy, holidays again? How have
you got on? Don't—don't tell me there's any
more trouble!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Far from it, father," I said. "I've got a prize."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Good Heavens!" said my father. "You—a
prize. What on earth for?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You mightn't think it, but for good conduct,"
I said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Good </span><em class="italics">what</em><span>?" cried out my father.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Good conduct," said my mother. "I always
told you there was a mistake. A beautiful,
expensive-looking book with his name in it, written
by Dr. Dunstan himself—the name I mean—not
the book."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Wonders never cease," said my father. Then
he added, "Well done, capital! I'm more pleased
to hear this than you've any idea of. You must
keep it up through the holidays, though."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If Saunders minor had won it, his father
was going to give him a silver watch and chain,"
I said, just to see how that would strike my
father.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No doubt Saunders minor's father felt perfectly
safe," said my father.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Which shows how people misunderstand.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>However, my father was jolly decent about it;
and, in fact, so was everybody.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>My sister asked me if I should read the Good
Conduct Prize.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The pictures are ripping," she said. "Giants
and all sorts of things."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"The pictures, as you say, are ripping," I told
her; "but, unfortunately, the story itself is far
from ripping."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"How do you know if you haven't read it?"
she said.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"By what the Doctor told me," I answered. "It
is one of the noblest and most improving masterpieces
in the English language, so, needless to say,
I've got no use for it."</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="tomkins-on-tinned-cow"><span class="bold x-large">TOMKINS ON 'TINNED COW'</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">No. XII</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">TOMKINS ON 'TINNED COW'</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Tin Lin Chow was his proper name, but we
called him 'Tinned Cow,' though he never much
liked it, and said that his father would have made
it hot for us if we had been in China. But we
were at Merivale School in England, so we reckoned
that Tinned Cow was near enough, that being
good English anyway.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The chap was exactly the same colour as the
stomach of the guinea-pig of Vincent Peters; and
his father was allowed to wear a gold button in his
hat, so he said, that being a sign of a man who
wrote books in China. He wrote Chinese books
for a living, and when we asked Tinned Cow if
his father could turn out stuff a patch on Henty or
Mayne Reid, he said much better. But he had
to confess afterwards that his father was only doing
a history of China in a hundred volumes, or some
such muck; so evidently he was no real good, for
all his gold button.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>When the kid first came to learn English and
get English ideas—owing to his father having
convinced himself that Chinese ideas were rotten—he
rather gave himself airs, and seemed to think
because he was somebody at Pekin he must be at
Merivale; but the only person who made anything
of him was the Doctor. He used to bring
everything round to China—even arithmetic, and he
evidently thought it was rather fine to have a
mandarin's son in the school. Especially as
Tinned Cow had brothers coming on, who might
follow. What a mandarin is exactly, Tinned Cow
didn't know himself; but he seemed to think they
were about equal to dukes, which, of course, must
be nonsense, because dukes can become kings in
time, whereas mandarins can't be emperors. In
fact, the only mandarins I ever heard of till then
were oranges.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He was a frightful liar, but good as a maker
of kites. And Browne, the master in the lower
fourth, said that both things were common to the
Chinese character. For mere lies we had Fowle
and Steggles, and others, even better than Tinned
Cow, because his knowledge of English wasn't up
to lying without being found out for some terms;
but at kites he could smash anybody. His kites,
in fact, were corkers, and he taught us to
kite-fight, which is not bad sport when there's nothing
better on. Chinese kites are very light, and all
made of tissue-paper and cane, or bamboo, split
up fine. For a cane, Tinned Cow had the beautiful
cheek to go into Dr. Dunstan's study, when he
was reading prayers in the chapel, and rout about
in the cane corner and steal a good specimen, and
hide it in the gym. That was the first thing that
made me like the kid. But he said it was nothing,
and seemed surprised that I thought much of it.
He also said that over the pictures in a huge
volume of Shakespeare the Doctor had, was
tissue-paper of such a choice kind that it must
undoubtedly be Chinese, and that, if so, it was the best
in the world for kites. He said that if I would
allow him to be my chum, he would get several
sheets of this paper in a quiet moment, and make
me the best kite he had yet made. Well, I never
guessed then what a Chinese kid really is in the
way of being a worm; so I agreed, provided he
made two kites and put my initials on them in
silver paper from a packet of chocolate—the
initials, of course, being N.T. They stand for
Norman Tomkins—merely Tomkins now, but
Tomkins major next term, when my young brother
comes to Merivale.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The chap was so frightfully keen to become my
chum (my being captain of the second footer
eleven) that he agreed to the two kites without a
murmur, and stole the tissue paper and used the
cane for the framework. So, rather curiously, the
tissue paper from a swagger Shakespeare and a
bit of one of old Dunstan's canes soared up to a
frightful height over the school; and it happened
that the Doctor saw it, and, little dreaming of what
was soaring, patted Tinned Cow on the head, and
greatly praised him, and said that the art of
kite-flying in China was tremendously ancient, and that
in the matter of kites, as well as many other more
important things, China had instructed the world.
Yet, when Fuller tried to sneak a quill pen for a
private purpose, believing the Doctor was not in
the study at the time, whereas he had merely gone
behind a screen to find a book, Fuller got five
hundred lines and the eighth Commandment to
translate into Latin and Greek, and French and
German. Which shows that to be found out is
its own punishment, as Steggles told Fuller afterwards.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Well, I let Tinned Cow be my chum, and found
him fairly decent, considering he was a Chinaman,
for two terms. Then he began to settle down
and learn English and football, and say that
Merivale was better by long chalks than China. In
fact, he rather hated China really, and said, except
for toys and sweets and fireworks, that England
was really far better. I may mention that his feet
were small, but not like pictures, and he said that
only wretched girls had their feet squashed in his
country. He had a sister whose feet were
squashed, and he said that she was pretty, which
must have been another lie, because pictures show
all Chinese women to be exactly and hideously all
alike. But he had to admit that English girls were
prettier, because Trelawny made him, and also
said that he'd tattoo a lion and unicorn on the
middle of his chest if he didn't. So he yielded;
in fact, he always yielded very readily to force,
though Fowle often tried, unknown to me, to
arrange a fight for him. He had no idea even of
doubling a decent fist, and said that only wild
beasts fight without proper weapons. But once he
took on Bray with single-sticks, and they chose a
half-holiday and went into the wood by the cricket
ground and fought well for two hours and a half;
and a bruise on a Chinese skin is very interesting
to see. Bray turned yellow, then blue, that
deepened to black on the fourth day; but Tinned Cow,
from the usual putty-like tint of his body, went
lead-colour where Bray whacked his arm and leg.
And Tinned Cow's bravery surprised me; but it
was a draw, and he assured me that he didn't care
a bit about being alive, and would have gone on
hammering and being hammered until Bray had
killed him if necessary. He said that in his
country, when two chaps are going to fight, they
begin by cutting frightful attitudes, and standing
in rum and awful positions, and sticking out their
muscles and making faces, like Ajax defying the
lightning in the Dictionary of Antiquities. This
the idiots do, each hoping to terrify the other chap,
and funk him, and so defeat him without striking
a blow. Tinned Cow said that most battles were
settled in this way; and once, when Martin
minimus called him a yellow weasel, he puffed out
his cheeks and frowned, as well as you can without
eyebrows, and crooked his hands like a bird's
claws and tried to horrify Martin minimus, which
he did; but it was young Martin's first term, and
the kid was barely eight years old.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now I come to that little brute Milly Dunstan,
the Doctor's youngest daughter. She didn't care
much about Tinned Cow at first, for she always
takes about three terms to see what a new chap's
like; but after the mandarin in China had sent
Dr. Dunstan a gift of some rusty armour and
screens and old religious books—more like
window-blinds than decent books—and a live
Chinese dog with a tongue like as if it had been
licking ink, then Milly, who's the greediest little
hateful wretch, even for a girl, I ever saw,
suddenly dropped Blount, whose father was merely a
lawyer, and began to encourage Tinned Cow like
anything. He didn't understand her character as
I and a few other chaps did. Bruce and Mathers
and Fordyce knew her real nature, because she
had pretty well absorbed all their pocket-money
for term after term; and so I told Tinned Cow
that her blue eyes and curls and little silly ways
generally were simply a whitewashed sepulchre,
and certainly wouldn't last longer than a hamper
from Pekin; which, I told him, he'd jolly soon
find out. But there's nothing so obstinate as the
Chinese nation; and if she'd asked him for his
pigtail, I believe Tinned Cow would have chopped
it off for her, though he would not have dared
to go home to his father after that till he'd grown
a new one.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It seemed rather a horrid thing, Mathers said,
a Christian girl to encourage a chap the colour
of parsnips, not to mention his eyes, which were
like buttonholes; but that was only because Milly
had chucked Mathers; and we all knew what she
really was; and, as Steggles said, she'd have
sacrificed her whole family for a new sort of lemon
drop; and of course when Tinned Cow found out
how mad she was after sweets, he wrote to China,
to his mother, for the best sweets in Pekin; which
she sent. But while he was waiting for them, the
Chinese dog got homesick, or something, and bit
the boot-boy and was poisoned painlessly. Still
Milly stuck to Tinned Cow, and walked openly
about the playing-fields on match-days with him.
And silly grown-up women, little knowing the
bitter truth, said it was just like Dr. Dunstan's
dear little girl to encourage a poor lonely foreign
kid; but we knew what she was encouraging him
for well enough.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>In fact, Tinned Cow had translated part of his
letter home to me. It was in Chinese characters,
and went down the paper instead of along, and
looked as if you'd dipped a grasshopper in ink
and then put him out to dry. But his mother
evidently understood, and sent such sweets as were
never before sucked in England—since the
Christian era very likely. And Tinned Cow had also
asked for one of his mother's precious rings for
Milly; but this he didn't much expect her to send;
and she didn't. So he bought Milly a ring from
a proper ring-shop with three weeks' pocket-money;
which, seeing that he had the huge sum
of five bob a week, amounted to fifteen shillings;
and it had a real precious stone in it, though no
one, not even Gideon, exactly knew what.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Anyway, Milly wore it at chapel, and flashed it
at Tinned Cow when the Doctor had his back
turned saying the Litany. And Blount said the
flash of it was like a knife in his heart. Which
shows what a footling ass Blount was over this
wretched girl. I warned Tinned Cow, all the
same, that he'd simply chucked fifteen bob away;
because she'd change again the moment his
Chinese sweets were finished. And she never gave
back presents when she changed; as Millbrook
had found to his cost, being an awfully rich chap,
who gave her a bracelet that cost one pound
ten—so he said. And when she threw him over and
wouldn't give it up, Millbrook, who was certainly
rich but a frightful hound, went to the Doctor.
So he got his bracelet and left soon afterwards;
and Milly, much to her horror, was sent to a
boarding school for a term or two. But then old
Dunstan, who is simply an infant in Milly's hands,
gave way and let her come home again because she
cried over a letter and splashed it with tears, or
more likely common water, and told him that
nobody in the world could teach her Greek but him.
Which shows the cunningness of her. And many
suchlike things she did.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Myself, though I despise all girls, I never hated
one worse than this. The best a girl can be at
any time is harmless; but Milly Dunstan was
brimful of trickery, and, just because her eyes were
accidentally blue, thought she could score off
everybody and everything. Not that she ever
scored off me. She knew that I barred her
altogether, and scorned me in consequence, and called
me "Master Tomkins" to make me waxy, me
being only about four months younger than her.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>She got his mother's pet name for him out of
Tinned Cow, and called him by it in secret. Not
that I ever heard it, or wanted to. And she also
gave out that anybody calling him Tinned Cow
any more would be her enemy; and one or two
chaps were feeble enough actually to stop.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>She utterly wrecked his character. Before, he'd
been as keen as knives about sport and so on,
and there is no doubt that he would have got into
the second footer team next term if Gregson
minor had passed his exam. for the army. But
Milly Dunstan didn't care a straw about footer,
though she understood cricket fairly well for a
girl; and so Tinned Cow, like a fool, gave up
all hope of getting on at footer, at which he
promised to be some use, and went in like mad
for cricket, at which he never could be any earthly
good whatever. And that made another row,
because Milly promised to walk twice round old
Dunstan's private garden with Street, the captain
of the third eleven (cricket), if he'd give Tinned
Cow a trial in an unimportant match; and Street
said "Right." And they went, during prep., and
it happened that the Doctor, coming out of his
greenhouse, caught them; and Street got five
hundred lines; which naturally made him in such
a bate, thinking it was a trap, that he refused to
try Tinned Cow for ever.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I'm sure I did all I could, for, though I'd lost
any feeling for him since he let this girl sit on
him, still I was his chum once. And I tried to
save him, and asked him, many a time and oft,
why he let himself go dotty about a skimpy girl.
And he said that it was her skimpiness he liked,
for she put him in mind of his sister—only his
sister was smaller, and, of course, had squashed
feet. To see a girl who can walk about seems to
be a fearful treat to the Chinese; so what they let
theirs all squash their feet for, the Lord knows.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Tinned Cow confessed to me that Milly Dunstan
was pretty sharp, and had been reading up
all about China in one of the Doctor's books. In
fact, he confessed also that she knew a lot more
about China in general than he did. And some
things she liked, and some she hated; and especially
the marriage customs she hated; and she told
Tinned Cow that unless he let her father marry
them in a proper Christian church when the time
came, it was off. So he promised; and he also
promised, though very reluctantly, not to say a
word about it to Dr. Dunstan until he got to be
head of the sixth and the school. But he knew
that at the rate he was going, he would never get
there till he was at least fifty years old. And sons
of mandarins marry very early indeed in their own
country, so he said—as soon as they like, in
fact—so Tinned Cow promised about getting to the
top of the sixth reluctantly. Then he took to
working and swatting; yet all his swatting only got
him into the lower fourth in three terms. Then,
seeing what a lot it meant getting into the sixth,
and what a frightful hard thing it was, especially
for a foreigner, to do it, Tinned Cow fell back
upon the customs of his country; and his methods
of cribbing were certainly fine and new. But they
couldn't get him into the sixth, let alone to the
top of it; and he tried still other Chinese customs
in an arithmetic exam, and attempted to bribe
Mr. Thwaites with four weeks' pocket-money—a pound,
in fact—if he would arrange to let him get enough
marks to go up a form. Of course, everybody
knew that Mr. Thwaites had a wife and hundreds of
small children at Merivale, and, though a sixteenth
wrangler in olden times, was at present frightfully
hard up. But what is a paltry pound to a
sixteenth wrangler? Anyway Mr. Thwaites raged
with great fierceness and took Tinned Cow to the
Doctor; and as the Doctor hates strategy of this
kind, he made it jolly hot for Tinned Cow and
flogged him pretty badly. I asked if it hurt, being
the first time the Doctor had ever flogged him,
and he said the only thing that hurt was the horrid
feeling that he'd offered too little to Thwaites.
He said that in his country, and especially among
mandarins, offering too little was almost as great
a crime as offering too much, and that he deserved
to be flogged on the feet as well as elsewhere. He
said that his father was such a good judge of
people that he always offered just the right sum;
and he felt certain that in the case of Thwaites not
a penny less than ten pounds ought to have been
offered. It was the well-known hard-upishness of
Thwaites that made him think a pound would do;
but now, seeing what a little way money seemed
to go with a man, he felt about the only chap
within reach of being bribed was the drill sergeant;
and of course he couldn't help Tinned Cow to get
into the sixth. Besides, the drill sergeant had
fought in China in his early days, and he had a
sort of warlike repugnance against Tinned Cow
that would have taken at least several pounds to
get over.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So things went on until the arrival of the sweets
from China; and they were all right, though
Tinned Cow told me that Milly wasn't as keen
about them as he expected, or at any rate she
pretended not to be. The truth is that some of the
very swaggerest Chinese sweets take nearly a
lifetime thoroughly to like; and by the time that Milly
began to feel the remarkable splendour of this sort,
she'd finished them. However, she was fairly
just—for her, and didn't throw the beggar over
before the taste of the last sweet was out of her
mouth, as you might have expected. In fact,
she kept friendly for a matter of several weeks;
and then she began to get rather sick of his Chinese
ways—so she said—and cool off towards him, even
though in his despair he promised to become a
Christian and get her idols and fireworks and many
other curiosities that probably wouldn't have been
sent even if he'd written home for them.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Chinese chaps have quite different ideas to
English chaps, owing to their bringing-up; and
things we utterly bar and consider caddish, such
as sneaking, a Chinese chap will do freely without
the least idea he is making a beast of himself. I
didn't know this, or else I should never have
allowed Tinned Cow to be my chum, but at last
I discovered the fatal truth; and the worst of it
was that he sneaked against my bitterest enemy,
called Forrester, thinking that he was doing a right
and proper thing towards me.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This chap Forrester I hated for many reasons,
but chiefly because he'd beaten me, by about ten
marks only, in a Scripture exam, owing to
knowing the names of the father and mother of Moses,
which are not generally known. I always had a
fixed idea, funnily enough, that Moses was the son
of Pharaoh's daughter; and I said so, and I added,
as a shot—for shots often come off, though they are
dangerous—that Holy Writ was quite silent
concerning the father of Moses. And the Doctor
frightfully hates a shot that misses, so I had to
write out the whole business of Moses fifty times,
till I was sick of the very name of the man;
whereas Forrester won the prize. Well, this Forrester
kept sardines in his desk and ate them freely during
Monsieur Michel's class. But one tin, already
opened, he forgot for several weeks, owning to its
getting hidden behind his paint-box and
caterpillar cage. And these sardines—being rather
doubtful of them when he found them again—he
gave to Milly Dunstan's Persian kitten; and
Tinned Cow saw him do it. Well, the kitten
showed that Forrester was quite right to be
doubtful about the sardines by dying. It disappeared
from that very hour, and was believed to have
gone next door to die, as cats are generally very
unwilling to die in their own homes, and always
go next door to do so, curious to say. And Milly
was in an awful bate when Tinned Cow told her,
thinking it would please me; whereas, if anything
could have made me get friends with Forrester
again, it would have been to know he'd got this
terrific score off Milly Dunstan. But her rage
against Forrester was pretty frightful—especially,
she said, because a boy whose strong point was
Scripture could have done this thing; and she
made Tinned Cow tell the Doctor; and such was
his piffling weakness where she was concerned, that
he did. But old Dunstan, who hated cats, and did
not mind the kitten going in the least, said it was
a case of circumstantial evidence—whatever that
is—and the proofs of the cat's death were too
slight, seeing the body couldn't be found, and also
remembering a cat's power of eating sardines, even
when a bit off. Then he turned against Tinned
Cow, and told him that the character of an
informer ill became any pupil of Dunstan's, and that
to try and undo a fellow-student might be Oriental
but was far from English, and so on—all in words
that you can find in dictionaries, but nowhere else
that I ever heard of.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Which showed the Doctor wasn't so keen about
Tinned Cow as he used to be; and that was chiefly
because Tinned Cow's younger brother was not
coming to be educated in England after all, as
Dr. Dunstan had hoped, but was going to
Germany instead.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Anyway, when it was found out that Tinned
Cow was a sneak—by birth, as you might say—chaps
naturally flung him over; and Maynard
refused to let the kid fag for him any more; and I,
of course, told him that I was no longer his chum.
He made a frightful fuss about this, and implored
me to go on being his chum, and offered me a
Chinese charm that had undoubtedly been the eye
of a Buddhist idol in its time; but he was such an
utter worm, and took such a Chinese view of
things, that I had to refuse the charm and let him
go. He was frightfully down about it, and slunk
about in corners and offered to make kites for the
smallest kids in the school—simply that he might
have somebody friendly to him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then, when I think he was beginning to change
his mind about England being better than China,
the last straw came in the shape of a new boy called
Vernon Vere—a chap of a good age—sixteen at
least. He was the nephew of a viscount, or a
marquis, or some such person, and he explained
that with any luck he would be a marquis
himself some day, because his only brother, though
older, having shaky lungs, for which he was in
the Canary Islands at that moment, might pass
away and lose his turn.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I heard what followed from Corkey minimus,
who was Milly's spy and carrier, for which he got
a peach from the Doctor's orchard-house now and
again in summer; but only ones that fell off. He
told me that Milly received no less than three
letters from Vernon Vere before he'd been at
Merivale a month. And the third she answered.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So we knew that Tinned Cow was done for; and
very soon he found it out himself, and then he
turned several shades yellower and moped in the
gymnasium for hours together, and lost all hope
of doing any good at work, and sank down to the
bottom of the lower fourth and spent all his spare
time doing impositions. He went about like a
dog that's frightened of being kicked; and many
chaps did kick him, out of sheer cheerfulness,
because he seemed as if he only wanted a kick to
complete the picture. Then, one day, very civilly,
he asked Freckles for his celebrated
bowie-knife, that he goes bush-ranging with on
half-holidays, and Freckles very kindly lent it, after
Tinned Cow had promised not to cut anything
harder than wood with it. Then Tinned Cow
thanked him and went into the gym., saying that
he only wanted to cut something soft. He didn't
come back, and when the bell rang, Freckles and
I—he being rather anxious about his bowie-knife—went
up to the gym. to see what Tinned Cow
was after. Suddenly Freckles shouted out from
the shower-bath room, and, hearing him yell, I
rushed in. And there was the wretched Tinned
Cow in a most horrible mess. He'd taken off his
shirt and given himself a dig in the ribs, or
possibly two, and he was lying in a comfortable
position bleeding to death. At least, so he hoped;
and he begged us earnestly to mind our own
business and leave him to 'salute the world,' as he
said, without any bother. But we hooked it for
Thwaites and Browne and Mannering; and they
came and carried him in; and ruined their clothes
with Chinese gore.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Of course we all thought Tinned Cow was
booked, and Freckles, knowing the deadly sharpness
of his knife, said the kid must kick to a
certainty if he'd used the knife with proper care.
Yet, strange to relate, he didn't die, but lived;
which seemed to show that the knife of Freckles
wasn't nearly such a fine one as he fancied. But
he said that it only showed Tinned Cow had lost
his nerve, and funked what he was doing at the
critical moment.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Two mornings afterwards Dr. Dunstan told us
all about it after prayers.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"This unhappy Asiatic," he said, "this young
Celestial, from the pagan fastnesses of his native
land, despite months not a few of tuition in this
our manly and civilized atmosphere of Merivale,
has relapsed upon the degraded and barbaric
customs of a great but benighted country—a proof of
the natural cowardice and baseness of the human
heart when unillumined by the light of Christianity.
The vain folly, which led him to his rash
act is not for your ears. Let it suffice that Tin
Lin Chow in a fit of mental infirmity, not to say
active insanity, sought to deliver himself from
imaginary miseries by the act of self-destruction—the
'hari-kari,' or 'happy dispatch,' as we
translate it, of the Chinese. Thanks to fear at the
crucial moment, or an ignorance of his own
anatomy, or, as we should rather believe, the direct
interposition of a merciful Providence that still has
work for him to do, Tin Lin Chow failed of his
fearful project and is now out of danger. For the
rest, I may inform you that your comrade, when fit
to travel, will return to his native land, and I can
only hope and pray that the traditions of Merivale,
its teaching and its tone, will cleave to him
and leave their mark upon his character."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Of course the thing that was not for our ears
was the reason why this little Chinese idiot had
tried to kill himself. And that was because Milly
Dunstan and everybody else had chucked him, but
especially Milly. Anyway, his vitals healed up in
a fortnight, and after six weeks or so had passed
by, he was back at school again. But only for a
few days. Then a ship sailed from London for
China and, as Steggles very truly said, the only
'happy dispatch' that Tinned Cow got was a
dispatch back to his native land. And probably
he liked it better than England, when all was said
and done; because the schools out there have got
no sixth forms, so he told us. Therefore he'll be
all right very likely—and live to thank his stars
that he didn't kill himself after all. Though
myself, I think he honestly tried and the fault was
in the knife. Still, after two such sickening
failures—I mean Milly Dunstan, and the attempt
to hari-kari himself—I expect the kid won't ever
want to make friends with girls again, or try to
gash open his stomach, but just lead an ordinary
sort of life without fuss, like other people do.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>I made it up with him in a sort of way after
his attempt to kill himself failed; and he explained
to me how he ought to have done it; but the details
were no use to me, because I wouldn't do it myself
for all the girls in the world. Then Tinned Cow
left, and he seemed sorry to go at the last moment;
and he promised to send me some chopsticks and
some chrysanthemum and other flower seeds of
beautiful plants—knowing how frightfully keen I
was about flowers—and materials for birds'-nest
soup and other interesting things. But he never
sent one of them; and I never thought he would,
and didn't count upon it in the least, because, once
back in his own country, where everybody tells
lies from morning till night, simply from the habit
of centuries and centuries, owing to China being
the birthplace of civilization, you couldn't expect
the beggar to keep his word.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And I expect nobody in this country will ever
hear of him again. Not that that matters. But if
I ever go to China, which I very likely shall do
when I have time, I may look him up, I think—just
to see if he got any good from coming over
here. But I shouldn't think he really did.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="small">THE END</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="small">RICHARD CLAY & SONS, LIMITED,
<br/>BREAD STREET HILL, E.C., AND
<br/>BUNGAY, SUFFOLK.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span>* * * * * * * *</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold x-large">Chapman & Hall's New Novels</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">The Death Man</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By BENJAMIN SWIFT</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Author of "Nancy Noon," "The Tormentor," "Life's Questionings," etc.</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">Sally: a Romance</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By E. TEMPLE THURSTON</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Author of "The Apple of Eden," "The Evolution of Catherine," etc.</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">The Watchers of the Plains</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">A Story of Western Canada</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By RIDGWELL CULLUM</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Author of "The Devil's Keg," "The Night Riders," etc.</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">Imperial Brown of Brixton</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By REGINALD TURNER</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Author of "The Comedy of Progress," "The Steeple," etc., etc.</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">Seed on Stony Ground</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By U. L. MORICHINI</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">A plain-spoken religious novel, dealing critically with the Roman
Church, which has had a very great success in Italy.</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">The White Cat</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By GELETT BURGESS</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Author of "The Lively City o' Ligg," "A Little Sister of Destiny," etc.</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">The House on the Borderland</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By WILLIAM HOPE HODGSON</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Author of "The Boats of the 'Glen Carrig,'" etc.</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">The Human Boy Again</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By EDEN PHILLPOTTS</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Author of "The Whirlwind."</em></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Illustrated by L. Raven-Hill.</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">The Mystery of Myrtle Cottage</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By OSWALD CRAWFURD</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Author of "In Green Fields," "The Revelations of Inspector Morgan," etc.</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">A New Novel of Strong Human Interest</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By ARNOLD BENNETT</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Author of "Sacred and Profane Love," "Anna of the Five Towns,"
"A Man from the North."</em></p>
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<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">The Shadow of the Unseen</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By BARRY PAIN & JAMES BLYTH</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">Heart's Banishment</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By ELLA MACMAHON</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Author of "The Other Son," "Jemima," "Oxendale," etc.</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">The Fashionable Christians</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By VINCENT BROWN</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Author of "A Magdalen's Husband," etc.</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">The Thinking Machine</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="medium">Being a true and complete statement or several intricate
mysteries which came under the observation of Professor
Augustus S. F. X. Van Dusen, F.R.S., M.D.</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By JACQUES FRUTELLE</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Author of "The Chase of the Golden Plate," "The Haunted Bell," etc.</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">The Boats of the "Glen Carrig"</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="medium">Being an Account of their Adventures in the Strange Places
of the Earth, after the foundering of the good ship </span><em class="italics medium">Glen
Carrig</em><span class="medium"> through striking upon a hidden rock in the unknown
seas to the Southward. As told by John Winterstraw, Gent.,
to his Son James Winterstraw, in the year 1757, and by him
committed very properly and legibly to manuscript.</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By WILLIAM HOPE HODGSON</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">Ashdod</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By AGNES FARLEY</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="bold large">The Elixir of Life</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span class="bold">By WILLIAM SATCHELL</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics small">Author of "The Toll of the Bush," "The Land of the Lost," etc.</em></p>
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<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold">DICKENS FOR THE PLATFORM</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">Readings from the Works of Charles Dickens</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold">As Arranged and Read by Himself</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span>With Portrait of Dickens giving a public
reading, by Alfred Bryan, and an Introduction
entitled "Dickens as a Reader," by
the late John Hollingshead.</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span>Crown 8vo. 2s. 6d. net</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span>In issuing in a convenient form the readings from the Works
of Dickens which the novelist himself arranged and used
at all his public recitals in this country and in America, the
publishers are conforming to a repeated demand from admirers
of Dickens's writings and from elocutionists in general.</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span>These readings were issued some years ago, but have long
been out of print.</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span>The unique value of the works of England's most popular
novelist for platform recital is becoming more and more
generally realised, and no better guide for this purpose can
be found than these extracts arranged especially for public
performance, and used before so many thousands by their
"only begetter" himself.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold">TO HELP THE CRIPPLES</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold">Lord Mayor Treloar's Edition of</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">A Christmas Carol</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold">By
<br/>CHARLES DICKENS</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold">IN PROSE</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold">Being a Ghost Story of Christmas</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><em class="italics">With 13 Coloured and other Illustrations by</em><span> JOHN LEECH
</span><em class="italics">and</em><span> FRED BARNARD </span><em class="italics">and an Introduction by</em><span> SIR WILLIAM
TRELOAR, BART., </span><em class="italics">Lord Mayor of London</em><span>.</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span>Crown 8vo. 2s. 6d. net</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span>This is a special edition of "A Christmas Carol," the
profits on which will go to the Lord Mayor of London's
fund for establishing a permanent Home for Crippled
Children. It is especially printed by Messrs. T. and
A. Constable, of Edinburgh, on antique paper, and contains
reproductions of Leech's famous pictures, printed in colour,
alter the style of the originals. In addition, Fred Barnard's
charming drawings, which he did for the Household Edition,
carefully reduced to suit the page, are included, and the
volume is appropriately bound, with a figure of Scrooge on
the back and that of Bob Cratchit carrying Tiny Tim home
from church on the front cover, both executed in gold.
There is an introduction from the pen of the Lord Mayor,
and there can be no doubt that for such a deserving object
such an appropriate undertaking will meet with the success it
deserves.</span></p>
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