Grenfell: Knight-Errant of the North. Fullerton Leonard Waldo

Grenfell: Knight-Errant of the North - Fullerton Leonard Waldo


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last, when his strength was all but gone, he caught up with it, and clutched the feathery prize. Then he swam with it to the shore.

      Panting and happy, he lay down on the bank a moment to rest.

      "The family won't have to go without dinner after all!" he laughed.

      He grabbed the duck by the feet, flung it over his shoulder, and trotted back to his clothes and the gun. It was fun to go home with the bird that he had shot himself. But if there had been no bird, he would have been whistling or singing just as happily.

      On one of his birthdays he was out in the wide, lonely marshes five miles from home. It was more fun for him to go hunting, barefoot, than to have a party with a frosted cake and twinkling candles. So, as the nicest kind of birthday present, he had been given the whole day, to do just as he pleased.

      To-day, as there was still on the ground the snow of early spring, he wore shoes, but it was cold work plashing about in those slimy pools and the slippery mud among the sedges.

      The birds he was after especially were the black-and-white "oyster catchers," which when it was low tide would always be found making a great racket above the patches of mussels which formed their favorite food.

      They were handsome birds, with gay red bills, and a bunch of them made a fine showing when the little hunter carried them home over his shoulder.

      This time he had shot several of the birds, and then the problem was to get them and bring them in.

      There they lay—away off yonder, on a little tuft of, the coarse green meadow-grasses, but between the hunter and the game was a swirling inlet of salt water, and he couldn't tell by looking at it how deep it was.

      So, gun over shoulder, he started cautiously to wade out toward that birthday dinner he meant to bring home.

      First it was calf-deep—then knee-deep—then nearly waist-deep.

      The cold water made his teeth chatter, but he didn't care about that. All he thought of was the precious gun. That was his chief treasure, and his first joy in life.

      Deeper he went, and nearer he got—the gun now held in both hands high over his head, as he floundered along.

      And just then a dreadful thing happened.

      He stepped into a hole, and it suddenly let him down so that the water was over his head, and his up reached arms, and the precious gun too!

      In the shock and the surprise, he let go of the weapon, and it sank out of sight. He had no fear of drowning, and he struck out manfully when he found himself in the deep water.

      But he had to give up the idea of finding the gun, and the birds were left where they lay on the farther side of the treacherous channel.

      It was a long, hard run home, over those five wet and freezing miles, and the boy's heart was heavy because of the loss of that pet gun.

      All the while he was learning everything that outdoors could teach him, and he owes to that breezy, sun-shot, storm-swept gipsying during the summer vacations the beginning of the stock of good health that has made him such a strong, useful, happy man, able to do no end of hard work without getting tired, and always finding it fun to live.

      II

      SCHOOL—AND AFTER

      This Robin Hood kind of life in the open went on till Wilf was fourteen. Then he was sent away to Marlborough College—a boy's school which had 600 pupils. Marlborough is in the Chalk Hills of the Marlborough Downs, seventy-five miles west of London. The building, dating from 1843, is on the site of a castle of Henry I.

      The first day Wilf landed there he looked about him and felt pretty forlorn.

      "I wonder if I'll ever get to know all those boys?" he asked himself.

      When he was at home, he had a room all his own or shared one with his brother. Here it was so different.

      He counted the beds in his dormitory. There were twenty-five of them. "How can a fellow ever get to sleep in such a crowd?" he wondered. "Perhaps they'll toss me in a blanket, the way they did in 'Tom Brown at Rugby.' Well, if they try anything like that, they'll find I'm ready for them!"

      He felt the mattress. "Pretty hard compared with the beds at home, but no matter. Let's see what the schoolroom is like."

      So he went into the "Big School" as it was called. Three hundred boys were supposed to study there.

      "Gracious!" exclaimed Wilf. "Don't see how a fellow ever gets his lessons in a place like this."

      It was as busy and as noisy as a bear-garden. Here and there a boy with his hands over his ears was really looking at a book. But most of the boys were talking, laughing, singing as if there were no such thing as lessons.

      Sometimes a master might look in, or a monitor would wander down the aisle. But most of the time there was nothing to keep a boy from following his own sweet will.

      "I say, Smith!" one called out, "lend me a shilling, will you? I want to buy Grisby's white rat, and I haven't got enough." A fat boy who looked as if he thought mostly of meal-times was telling everybody in his neighborhood: "I've just got a box from home. Jam and fruitcake and gooseberry tarts. Come and see me to-night in the dormitory, you fellows."

      Somebody else called out: "My knife's so dull I'll never get my name carved on this desk. Give me your knife, Willoughby: it's sharper."

      There were boys having fencing-matches with rulers across the aisle. There were others who took no end of pains to make paper arrows, or spitballs that would stick to the ceiling. In the corners of their desks might be bird's eggs in need of fresh air. Some of the boys were reading adventure stories, covered up to look like school-books.

      In the midst of this Babel, you were expected to get your lessons as well as you could.

      When it came to meal-times, you went into what was called "Big Hall," where four hundred boys ate together.

      The beef was tough enough to make a suitcase: the milk was like chalk and water: the potatoes would have done to plaster a ceiling or cement a wall. How different it all was from the good though simple fare at home!

      "Want to join a brewing company?" asked the boy across the table.

      "What's a brewing company?" inquired Wilf.

      "We buy sausages and cook 'em in saucepans over the fire—when we can find a fire."

      "Yes, you can count me in," said Wilf. So it didn't make so much difference after that, if he couldn't eat what was set before him at the table.

      But usually the boys brought robust appetites to their meals, for they went in heavily for all forms of athletics. The boys who didn't make the teams had to drill in the gymnasium or run round and round an open air track a mile and a half long. If you shirked, the boys themselves saw to it that you got punished.

      When Wilf came home to Cheshire for the long vacations he found some poor little ragamuffins who had no fun in their lives, and started a club for them in his own house. There were no boy scouts in those days, when Sir Robert Baden-Powell and Ernest Thompson Seton were little boys themselves. It was just taken for granted that boys would be boys, and it was hoped that they would grow up to be good men, if after school hours they were allowed to run loose in the streets. But Grenfell had a different idea.

      He turned the dining-room on Saturday evenings into a gymnasium.

      He pushed aside the table and chucked the chairs out of the window.

      "Now any of you fellows who want to can get busy on the parallel bars," he told them, "or if you like you can go out into the back yard and pitch quoits. I'll take on anybody who wants to box with me."

      The boys thought it was heaps of fun. They could hardly wait for Saturday night to come, because it meant the rare sport of banging another boy in the nose, which was much more satisfactory than throwing stones at a policeman.

      After he was big enough, he used to go to lodging-houses where men slept who were down and out. He knew that drink had brought them low, and he wanted to show them better things to do.

      The saloon-keepers


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