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Read Ebook: Forward Pass: A Story of the New Football by Barbour Ralph Henry

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Ebook has 1463 lines and 74470 words, and 30 pages

"He did start to," answered Dan, "but--I don't know. I guess he didn't like it."

"Didn't like it, eh? Did he tell you so?"

"Well, he said it was pretty hard work; said the store was awfully hot and his mother was afraid he'd take sick."

Mr. Vinton grunted.

"All those boys in your class next fall?"

"Yes, sir."

"Which one is your especial chum?"

"'Chad,' I guess. I like him better than the others."

"What is it you like about him, son?"

"Oh, I don't know. He's a good baseball player, and a dandy half-back; you know he played half on the team last fall, sir."

"Did he? I'd forgotten. Well, any other good points you can think of, son?"

Dan hesitated. He didn't like his father's tone. It was a tone which Mr. Vinton was likely to use when, to use Dan's expression, he was "looking for trouble."

"He--he's just a good fellow, sir, and we get on pretty well together."

"I see. Ever hear of him doing anything worth while?"

"He won the game for us last Thanksgiving Day," answered Dan doubtfully, pretty certain that the feat mentioned wouldn't make much of a hit with the questioner.

"Ever hear of him doing anything helpful, anything kind, anything useful to himself or anyone else?" pursued Mr. Vinton remorselessly. Dan was silent for a moment.

"I guess he would if he got the chance," he replied finally.

"Well, did you ever see him shading his eyes with his hand and looking for a chance?"

"John, don't talk such nonsense," expostulated Mrs. Vinton, glancing at Dan's troubled countenance.

"'Chad' and Billy and Frank never did anything mean that I know of," answered Dan resentfully.

"Did you ever know any of them to do anything fine?" asked his father. "Outside of winning a football game, I mean?"

Dan was silent, looking a trifle sulkily at his plate. There was a moment's pause. Then Mr. Vinton said more kindly:

"Well, I'm not finding fault with you, son. Maybe the boys here are pretty much alike; and as I come to think about it I guess they are. But it's going to make a difference with you what sort of friends you have during the next five or six years. And if you can't find the right sort here in Graystone, why--"

But Mr. Vinton paused there and relapsed into a thoughtful silence that neither Dan nor his mother nor even his sister Mae, who was the privileged member of the family, cared to disturb.

MR. FINDLAY SETTLES THE QUESTION

Nearly a week later the conversation bore fruit.

"Son," asked Mr. Vinton, "do you still want to go to boarding-school?"

Dan's heart leaped.

"Yes, sir," he answered.

"Well, your mother and I have been talking it over and we've about concluded that a change of scene for the next three or four years won't do you any harm. What do you say to the Brewer School?"

Dan hesitated. The Brewer School was in the southern part of the state and had quite a local reputation, but Dan was certain that it wasn't the school he wanted. So he took his courage in hand.

"I'd rather go East, sir," he said.

"Would, eh? Well, maybe you might as well. I tell your mother that as long as you have to go away it don't make much difference how far it is. Takes all day to go to Brewer, anyway; put a night on top of that and you're pretty well East. Any special school you've got in mind?"

"N-no, sir. I didn't think you'd let me go, and so I haven't thought about any special place."

"Hm! Well, I dare say the old Academy is still running back in Russellville, but--I don't know, son, that it would just suit you. What do you think?"

"If you don't mind I'd like to go to one of the big schools, sir," answered Dan.

"All right, all right, son," said Mr. Vinton cordially. "You put your thinking cap on and study up on schools. When you find one you think you'd like you tell me and I'll get particulars."

For the next fortnight Dan perused the advertisements of eastern preparatory schools, sent for catalogues, read them, made up his mind and changed it at least once a day. It seemed that just as soon as he had settled upon one school as being the very place for him the postman tossed another catalogue in at the gate and Dan speedily discovered his mistake. He discovered several other things during that period, one of which was that you can't always safely judge an article by its advertisement. There was one school in particular which won his admiration early. It was advertised in a magazine all across the top of a page. The picture gave a panoramic view of the grounds and buildings and Dan held his breath as he looked. At first glance there seemed to be at least a quarter of a mile of study halls and dormitories; by actual count the buildings in the picture numbered eleven; and, as Dan pointed out to his father, they were all of them "jim-dandies." Mr. Vinton allowed that they were. He appeared rather aghast at the magnificence of the place; perhaps he was silently contrasting it with Russellville Academy as he remembered the latter institution. But when the forty-page catalogue came and Dan set out to identify the different buildings in the picture by means of the explanatory text he found to his dismay that only three of them were mentioned. This puzzled him until he came across a casual paragraph stating that "the grounds of the State Normal School adjoined the Academy on the east." After that Dan viewed with suspicion all pictures until the text of the catalogues made good the pictorial claims.

In the evenings he showed his day's "finds" to his father; Mrs. Vinton was practically exempt from the evening conferences, since she was called upon at all hours of the day for her opinions; and under the study lamp Mr. Vinton and Dan looked at pictures, read descriptions and weighed the merits of the different institutions under consideration. Of course Dan started out with a pronounced leaning toward the military schools; most every boy will own to the fascination exerted by stirring pictures of long lines of youths in trim uniforms drawn up in battalions on an immaculate parade ground, or dashing recklessly over four-rail gates on splendid white horses, or grouped with stern authority about a field-gun from whose muzzle a puff of white smoke hints stirringly of the aspect of war. But Dan's father was very discouraging on the subject of military schools.

"If you want to be a real soldier, son," he said, "I've no objection if you can get your mother's permission. I guess I could get you appointed to West Point in the next year or two. But if you don't want the real thing I wouldn't monkey with the imitation. From what I can learn about most of these military academies they're either play schools or else they're reform schools in disguise. Of course there may be some very excellent ones, but I don't believe you stand in need of a military training, son."

After all Dan was going to school to prepare for college, probably Yale, and, recollecting that, he dropped the military schools and a good many others from consideration. What, he asked himself, was the good of learning to jump a horse over a four-rail fence or make pontoon bridges? He had never heard that equestrianism or bridge-building was required at Yale. And if it was merely a matter of physical exercise he guessed he could get all he needed of that from baseball, football and tennis. He was an enthusiastic lover of athletics; played a fair game of tennis, was an excellent baseman and had captained last year's football team at the grammar school. And so, naturally enough, he was looking for a school where athletics flourished. But nevertheless one school, which advertised that "Blank Academy has turned out five victorious football teams in the last six years" earned only his contempt. For he shrewdly argued that a school which sought to attract students on the strength of its athletic success must be sadly deficient in other and more important departments. Football and baseball and things like that, thought Dan, were important adjuncts to education, but they weren't what a fellow went to school for.

In the end, and that was along towards the third week in August, the choice, by an exhaustive process of elimination, was narrowed down to two schools, one in New Hampshire and one in Connecticut. I think all the other members of the family were heartily glad when the end was reached, but Dan had enjoyed it all hugely. He would have felt sorry for the boy whose school is selected by his parents. "Why, just think of all the fun he has missed!" Dan would have exclaimed. It was hard work making the final decision. The New Hampshire school, Phillips Exeter, appealed to him strongly. In Graystone a building thirty years old was considered venerable; one fifty years old--and there was only one such--was absolutely archaic. And Phillips Exeter Academy was a century and a quarter old; was turning out students years before the State of Ohio entered the Union! That appealed to Dan's imagination. And Dan liked what the catalogue said about the school's purpose: "The object of the Academy is to furnish the elements of a solid education. The discipline is not adapted to boys who require severe restrictions, and the method of instruction assumes that the pupils have some power of application and a will to work. The purpose of the instructors is to lead pupils to cultivate self-control, truthfulness, a right sense of honor, and an interest in the purity of the moral atmosphere of the school." I think Dan's final choice would have fallen on the New Hampshire school had not Congressman Findlay happened in one day to dinner while the decision was still in abeyance. The Congressman was very large and very deliberative, and when in the course of the conversation the subject of Dan's choice of schools was brought up and his advice requested he demolished two of Mrs. Vinton's excellent lemon tarts before he replied. Then:

"Both fine schools," he said. "Not much to choose, Mr. Vinton. Don't know as I ought to advise you, sir. I'm prejudiced."

"Eh?" inquired Mr. Vinton. "How's that?"

"Yardley man myself, sir," replied Mr. Findlay.

Well, that settled it. Mr. Findlay was one of the State's best citizens, a man admired by all, even his political enemies. Dan, who was always somewhat in awe of him, liked him thoroughly, and was convinced that a school which could turn out men like the Congressman was all right. After dinner some of Dan's awe wore off, for Mr. Findlay told about Yardley Hall School and indulged in reminiscences of his own four years there and he and Dan became very chummy. When Dan went up to his room that night he had the Yardley Hall School catalogue in his hand and before he went to sleep he had read it through from front cover to back, word by word, three times.

The following month had been an exciting period in his life. There were so many jolly things to attend to. Of course the first of all was to apply for admission to Yardley Hall, and until the reply was received Dan was on tenter-hooks of suspense. For the catalogue plainly stated that the enlistment was restricted to two hundred and seventy students, and Dan feared that he was too late. But fortune was with him and he learned later that his application was the last but one to be accepted that year. Then came a brushing up on one or two studies in which he felt doubtful of satisfying the examiners. And after that there were clothes to buy, and to this task Mrs. Vinton lent herself with an ardor and enjoyment that for the while soothed her sorrow over her son's prospective departure. And then, quite before anyone realized it, it was the Day Before, and Dan was listening to a few words of advice from his father.

"I don't know that I've got much to say to you, son," said Mr. Vinton. "We've let you choose your school and after you get there you'll find that you've got to choose lots of other things for yourself. We've started out by letting you have your own say, pretty much, and I guess we'll keep it up. So far you've shown pretty fair sense for a youngster. If you want advice about anything, why, you know where to come for it, but unless you ask for it neither your ma nor I will interfere with you. You're getting along towards sixteen now, and at that age every boy ought to have a mind of his own. You'll make mistakes; bound to; everyone makes mistakes except a fool. Just so long as you don't make the same mistake twice you'll do well enough. You're going to a pretty expensive school, son. I don't object to the cost of it, but I want you to see that you get your money's worth. The extravagant man isn't the man who pays a big price for a thing; he's the man who doesn't get what he pays for. So you'll have to work. You'll find all sorts and kinds of boys there, I guess, and I want you to use good sense in picking out your friends. A whole lot depends on that. A fellow can know other fellows that will be good for him if he goes about it right. Don't make your friendship too cheap; if a fellow wants it let him pay your price; if he has the making of a real friend he will do it. Of course I expect you to behave yourself; but I'm not worried much about that. I've never seen anything vicious about you, son, and if you choose your friends right I don't ever expect to. I might tell you not to do this and not to do that, but I guess if you'll just make up your mind not to do anything you wouldn't be afraid of telling your ma or me about you'll keep a pretty clean slate."

Next day had come the final frenzied excitement of packing, succeeded by an interminable wait for the moment of departure. Dinner that evening had been an uncomfortable meal, with only Mae looking cheerful or eating anything to speak of. And afterwards how the hours had crawled until it was time to get into the surrey and drive to the station! Dan had felt pretty miserable several times before the carriage came around and his mother spent much of the time out of the room, returning always with suspiciously moist eyes and smiling lips. Then had succeeded the drive to the train through the silent streets, past the darkened houses--for Graystone retires early to bed--with everyone by turns unnaturally animated or depressingly silent. And now here he was whizzing away through the moonlight, leaving Graystone farther and farther behind, the great adventure really and truly begun!

THE FIRST ACQUAINTANCE

Dan's train rolled into the station at Wissining, Connecticut, at a few minutes before five. All the way from New York, and more especially since the Sound had suddenly flashed into view, he had been vividly interested in the view from the window of the parlor car, so palpably eager, in fact, to see this new country through which he was traveling that a kind-hearted, middle-aged gentleman whose seat was on the shoreward side of the car and across the aisle from Dan had insisted on changing chairs with him. Dan had at first politely refused the offer, but the gentleman had insisted with a little tone of authority in his voice and in the end Dan had accepted the coveted seat.

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