“You don’t mind doing what Bobby tells you to, somehow. But Foote—oh, I don’t know; you always feel like worrying him; and he’s not a half bad sort, either. Bobby, though, seems more like one of us fellows; I guess he understands what a fellow wants and—and all that, you know.”
The sun was pretty warm on the way back, and when they left the road to take the well-worn path across the green—a route which cut off a full quarter of a mile of the distance between village and school—some one proposed a halt for rest before they tackled the slope.
“That’s a good suggestion,” answered Mr. Ames, seating himself on the grass in the shade and fanning himself with his hat. “I wanted to make it myself, fellows, but I was afraid you’d think I was getting old and infirm.”
[38]
The fellows followed his example and threw themselves down on the grass out of the sunlight, all save one or two who roamed away into the little patch of forest across the dusty road to see how the chestnut9 crop was coming along. For a time the conversation, what little there was, was half-hearted and desultory10. The explorers returned with an encouraging report, and proceeded to cool off. Presently, one of the older boys sat up and turned to the instructor11.
“Tell us a story, Mr. Ames,” he said, and there was an immediate12 and unanimous indorsement of the request. Mr. Ames smiled and looked at his watch.
“I guess you fellows have heard all of my yarns,” he answered.
“No, sir, I haven13’t!”
“Nor I, sir!”
“I’d like to hear them all over,” added a third.
“Well, I won’t inflict14 that calamity15 on you,” laughed the instructor. “But let me see. What sort of a story do you want?”
“A funny one, sir.”
“Tell us about the time you went to New[39] Haven as sub and got in in the last half and won the game.”
“Come now, Strafford, I never did that! You’ve let your imagination run away with you. I’ll not tell you anything more except fairy stories if you twist things around that way.”
“Mr. Ames,” answered the boy earnestly, “you did win that game, sir. I heard a man at home telling all about it last summer. He said Harvard was going all to pieces when you went in at quarter and that you just shook the men right together and just made them score that time. He said if it hadn’t been for you the game would have ended nothing to nothing.”
“Oh, I guess he was just having fun with you,” said Mr. Ames somewhat embarrassedly. “I don’t remember anything like that.”
“He wasn’t telling me about it at all,” protested the boy. “I was just there and heard it. I wanted to tell him that you were our coach here, but I didn’t know him.”
“It was just as well, then, under the circumstances,” laughed the instructor. “What was the chap’s name; do you know?”
“Yes, sir, it was Higgins; a big, tall——”
[40]
“Mortimer Higgins! Is that so? I haven’t heard of him for a long time. We called him ‘Mort’ at college. And, by the way, if you still want a story I can tell you one, and it’s about this same Mort Higgins. It isn’t exactly a funny story, but it’s a true one; and if you don’t believe it, why, Strafford here will show you the hero!”
“That’s fine!”
“Go ahead, sir!”
“Shut up, you fellows! Mr. Ames is going to tell a story!”
“Well, I’ll try and make it short,” began the instructor, “for it’s getting along toward dinner time. Let’s see, now. Mort was in the class ahead of me, and I never knew him until my sophomore16 year. He was a junior then. I wonder if I can describe him to you, so that you’ll see him as I did. He was tall—a good six feet, I guess—and a bit lanky17 and ungainly. He came from one of the Carolinas—North, I think, and was sort of slow and careless in his movements, used to throw his shoulders all around when he walked, and when he shook hands with you, you felt as though your fingers[41] were tied to a pump handle and the pump was going until it ran down. He had black hair, coarse and long and all rumpled18 up. It used to fall down over his forehead, and he had a way of brushing it aside with his big hand as though he was trying to dash his brains out. He had a long nose and a long neck, and he always wore those turndown collars that made his neck look longer than it really was. His eyes were gray, I think, and were always laughing at each other; at least, that’s what I used to think. His mouth was big and sort of—what shall I say?—sort of loose, and altogether he was about as homely19 a chap as there was in college. But his homeliness20 was of the kind that attracted you. When you first saw him you said to yourself: ‘My, isn’t he homely! Talk about your mud fences—’ Then you looked again and began to think: ‘Well, now, he may be homely, but bless me if it isn’t becoming to him!’
“He had a queer sort of a drawl that made his most serious remarks sound funny; Mort only had to open his mouth to start you smiling. He was awfully21 good-hearted and good-natured; he’d do anything for you if he didn’t[42] absolutely dislike you; and I don’t believe Mort Higgins ever really disliked anyone. He was one of the sort that can always find good in folks. No matter how mean a chap was, Mort could always point out a few good things about him. And, on the other hand, I don’t suppose there was a fellow in college who didn’t like Mort—whether they knew him or not. But most everybody did know him. Mort never waited for introductions. If he ran up against a fellow and had anything to say he said it; and no one ever resented it; you couldn’t with Mort Higgins. You only had to glance at him to see that he was simply bubbling over with human kindness.
“He was a smart scholar; did all kinds of things in his last year, and graduated with honors. But that isn’t what I started out to tell about. There used to be lots of stories around Cambridge in those days about Mort. Some of them were true, I guess, and a good many of them weren’t. One of them was about Mort and his school club.”
“Tell it, sir, please,” said Harry Folsom.
“Well, at Harvard we had a good many[43] clubs and societies, you know. If you were from the South, you joined the Southern Club; if from California, you joined the California Club. If you went to school at Exeter, you belonged to the Exeter Club; and so on. Every school, pretty near, was represented by a club, which met once a month or once a fortnight, as the case might be. I think Mort belonged to the Southern Club, but that wasn’t enough for him. His friends all had their school societies, and so Mort thought he ought to have his. It seems that he was prepared for college—or so he said; I have my doubts—at Turkey Creek22 Academy. I suppose it was some little village school in the backwoods of Mort’s native State. Wherever it was, it soon began to become celebrated23. One day there was a notice in the Crimson24—that’s the college daily, you know—saying that it was proposed to start a social club of Harvard men who had attended Turkey Creek Academy, and that a meeting for that purpose would be held that evening in Parlor25 A of one of the hotels in town. Well, for a couple of days everybody was talking and joking about Turkey Creek Academy; it got to be a byword.[44] A week later there was another notice in the Crimson announcing a meeting of the Turkey Creek Club in Mort’s room. Then came the announcement the next day—of course it was a paid advertisement—that at a meeting of the Turkey Creek Club Mortimer Higgins had been elected president, Mort Higgins secretary, and M. Higgins treasurer26. And then Mort appeared, wearing a green, yellow, and purple hatband on his old gray felt hat, and a pin about as big as a half dollar on the front of his vest. He said they were the insignia of the Turkey Creek Club. He had a grip, too, and he’d show it to you by shaking hands with himself. For, of course, Mort was the only member.
“Well, he had lots of fun, and so did everyone else. ‘Turkey Creek’ spread through college until you heard it everywhere. The principal drug store got up a ‘Turkey Creek College Ice,’ and a quick-lunch place advertised a ‘Turkey Creek Egg Sandwich.’ Mort got the name of ‘Turkey’ for a while, but it didn’t stick, probably because ‘Mort’ was shorter. He kept up the Turkey Creek game all the rest of the year. Every now and then there’d be a notice[45] in the Crimson; and everyone used to watch for them. Finally, though, it dawned on the Crimson that it was being used to perpetrate a joke, and it turned Mort down; the Crimson, you know, is the most serious paper in the world outside of the Congressional Record! After that he used to post his notices up on the notice board in the union and the gym. One day there was a notice saying that at half-past twelve the Turkey Creek Club would have its photograph taken on the steps of Matthews Hall. Of course everyone who could get there was on hand, and sure enough there was the photographer waiting. And pretty soon Mort steps up, dressed in his best clothes and wearing his green and yellow and purple hatband and his club pin, and stands on the top step and folds his arms. You can imagine the howl that went up as Mort faced the camera as serious as a judge!”
“I thought you said it wasn’t a funny story!” gurgled one of the audience when the laughter had died down.
“That’s so, but that wasn’t the story I started out to tell,” answered Mr. Ames. “I was going[46] to tell about Mort’s baseball experience, but I guess I’ve wasted too much time and we’ll have to let that go until another day.”
“Oh, go ahead, sir! It isn’t late!” The instructor looked at his watch.
“Well, maybe there’s time if I hurry up with it. When Mort came to Harvard he’d never seen a game of baseball played, and he fell in love with it right away and went out to try for his freshman27 team. He didn’t make it, but he wasn’t discouraged, and the next year he made the sophomore team; they let him play at right field, I think. The next year he went out for the varsity nine. He slipped up on that, but he made the second. And somehow he began to get a reputation as a heavy hitter, and, as the varsity was weak at batting, they nabbed Mort and took him to the varsity training table. But he spent most of that spring on the bench, for while at times he’d just about knock the cover off the ball, he wasn’t a bit certain, and there was no telling whether he’d make a home run or strike out; and usually it was a case of strike out with Mort. And in the field—they tried him at left and then at right, and it didn’t seem to make[47] any difference to Mort—he was a good deal of a failure. If he ever got his mitten28 on the ball he clung to it, but he didn’t seem to be able to judge the direction of flies, and like as not would be four or five yards out of the way when the ball came down. But he tried terribly hard, and everyone liked him, and so he stayed with the team, even though he didn’t get into any of the big games.
“In his senior year he was out again, and the coach, who was a new man, got it into his head that Mort could be taught to field. And he was taught, after a fashion. At least, he did a whole lot better that spring and only disgraced himself a couple of times. But those times were enough to queer him, and back to the bench he went. Now and then, when the varsity was up against a weak team, they’d let Mort take a hand, and it was a pretty sure thing that he’d stir up some excitement by getting a couple of two-baggers or a home run before he was through with the enemy’s pitcher29. We used to laugh and cheer like anything when Mort went to bat. But the real fun came when he got to base. At base running he was like an elephant[48] in a forty-yards sprint30. To see him try to steal was more fun than a circus. He’d get the signal and start off at a lope for second. The batsman would strike at the ball without hitting it, the catcher would throw down to second, and second baseman would stand there with the ball in his hand and wait for Mort to come galloping31 up to be tagged out. Oh, it was beautiful! And Mort would come ambling32 back to the bench smiling and unruffled.
“Well, that’s the way things stood when the team went to New Haven for the second Yale game. We’d won the first at Cambridge, and if we could get this one we had the series. I was playing short. It was a pitchers33’ battle all through. We managed to get two runs in the second inning, and after that there was nothing doing until the sixth, when Yale’s first man was hit with the ball and stole second on a bad throw down. The second man went out on a pop fly, and the third struck out. The next man got his base on balls, and then there was a three-bagger that brought in two runs. So the score stood two to two until the last of the eighth. Then came a bunch of errors—I had a hand in it myself—and[49] finally a squeeze that brought in another run. We settled down then and our pitcher struck out the next two men, and we went to bat in the first of the ninth with the score three to two against us.
“I was first up and managed to get a scratch hit, beating the ball to first by about an inch. I had my instructions to wait for a sacrifice and I waited. But the next man was struck out. Then came a long fly into the left-fielder’s hands, but I managed to sneak34 down to second on the throw-in. There were two out and it looked as though there was going to be a third game to the series that year. The Yale stands were cheering incessantly35 and beating drums and having a high old time. The next man up was our first baseman. He was the slugging kind of a batter36; if he hit the ball he made good, but he was easily fooled. Well, this time he wasn’t fooled. He cracked out a clean base hit over second and I started home. But there was a fine, swift throw to the plate and I had to go back to third—and I didn’t get there any too soon! And meanwhile the other fellow had got to second. And there we were; a man on third[50] and a man on second, two runs needed to win, and the weakest batter on the team up! That was our pitcher. He was a bully37 pitcher, but, like nine pitchers out of ten, he couldn’t bat a little bit. I was feeling pretty sore when I saw him pick up his bat and start for the plate. But he didn’t get there, for the coach called him back, and suddenly there was a burst of cheering from the Harvard section. They were sending Mort Higgins in to bat for him.
“Well, that was all right, thought I, for Mort couldn’t do any worse than the man whose place he had taken. But I didn’t look for any luck, for the Yale pitcher was one of the best on the college diamond that year, and we had made only four hits off him in the whole game. I wondered whether I could make a sneak for the plate and tie the score. Mort struck at the first ball and missed it. He looked surprised, and the Yale crowd howled. Then he let the next one go by and the umpire called it a strike. My heart went down into my boots. Then Mort refused the next one. I can still remember the feeling of relief with which I heard the umpire say ‘Ball’! The Yale pitcher tied himself up again[51] and unwound and the ball shot away. And then there was a nice, clean-sounding crack, and I was racing38 for the plate. The ball went whizzing by my head along the base line, but I didn’t stop to see whether it was going to be fair or foul39. And neither did the man behind me. We put out for the plate like sixty, and we both made it ahead of the ball, which had struck about a foot inside the line. There were things doing in the Harvard section about that time, I tell you, fellows!”
“And did Mort get in, too?” asked some one eagerly. Mr. Ames laughed.
“No,” he answered, “Mort didn’t score. Catcher threw the ball back to second, and second ran half way over to first and met Mort coming along like a human windmill, waving his arms and pawing the earth.”
“And Harvard won?”
“Yes, four to three. We shut Yale out in her half of the inning. And that’s how Mort Higgins saved the day. Come on, fellows; we’ll have to hurry or we’ll be late for dinner.”
“Gee!” said one of the boys, as they scrambled40 to their feet and started up the path, “that[52] was bully! I’d like to have been there, Mr. Ames!”
“Well, I was rather glad to be there myself,” answered the instructor with a reminiscent smile.
After dinner Hansel met Bert and Harry in front of Weeks, and the latter called to him to join them in a walk. Bert didn’t look as though he was especially pleased with Harry’s procedure; since their discussion of ethics41 the evening before, he had treated Hansel rather coldly. But Hansel went along, and presently Bert forgot his resentment42 and the three spent a very pleasant two hours along the bank of the lake. Naturally, the talk soon got around to the subject of football, and the team’s chances of success in the final contest of the year—that with Fairview—were discussed exhaustively. As though by tacit consent, both Bert and Hansel avoided a reopening of the controversy43 regarding Billy Cameron. On the way back to school, Harry Folsom let fall an allusion44 to the “raid,” and Hansel asked for information.
“Oh, you’ll know all about it in a day or two,” laughed the football manager. “It’s due[53] to happen either to-morrow or Tuesday night. You want to get into your old clothes and be prepared for trouble in bunches.”
“But what is it?” insisted Hansel.
“It’s when the Towners come up here after supper and try to get on to the steps of Academy Building and cheer. I don’t know when the thing started, but it’s been the custom for years. They try to take us Schoolers by surprise and rush the steps before we can stop them. Our play is to keep them away, or, if they get there, to put them off. But if they once make the steps they’re pretty sure to stay there. It’s a lovely rough-house, isn’t it, Bert? Last year they did about as they liked with us, and all we could do was to bother them. They stood there on the steps and cheered for themselves for about half an hour. When they started home, though, we got at them in fine style and chased them all the way back to the town.”
“I got a peach of a crack on the side of the head last year,” said Bert, with a trace of pride in his voice.
“Well, some of the Towners got a heap worse,” laughed Harry. “Simpson had most of[54] his clothes torn off him before he got home. Simpson was their leader,” he explained for Hansel’s enlightenment.
“And Poor! Do you remember?” cried Bert. “He lived at Mrs. Hyde’s, and two of us fellows chased him inside the yard and he tried to dive through an open window and the window came down on him when he was half way through and pinned him there. We didn’t do a thing to him!”
“But how do you know when the raid’s going to occur?” asked Hansel.
“We don’t,” Harry replied. “We only know that it usually comes the first of this week. We have to be on guard. But we’ve got a dandy scheme fixed45 up for this time. I’d tell you, Dana, but it’s a sort of a secret; we don’t want it to get out, you know.”
“That’s all right,” said Hansel. “I suppose I’ll learn about it in time.”
“I wouldn’t be surprised,” said Bert, “if you learned about it to-morrow evening. I have an idea that they mean to raid then, for Royle told me yesterday that young Gates, one of the Towners, told him that it was going to come off[55] Tuesday. That looks to me as though they wanted to put us off the track.”
“Sure! That’s just what it means,” Harry answered with conviction. “Anyhow, we’ll be ready for them whenever they come. They won’t find us asleep the way they did last year, you can bet on that!”
And, as it proved, they didn’t.
点击收听单词发音
1 coaxed | |
v.哄,用好话劝说( coax的过去式和过去分词 );巧言骗取;哄劝,劝诱 | |
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2 hermit | |
n.隐士,修道者;隐居 | |
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3 coaxing | |
v.哄,用好话劝说( coax的现在分词 );巧言骗取;哄劝,劝诱;“锻炼”效应 | |
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4 thither | |
adv.向那里;adj.在那边的,对岸的 | |
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5 squads | |
n.(军队中的)班( squad的名词复数 );(暗杀)小组;体育运动的运动(代表)队;(对付某类犯罪活动的)警察队伍 | |
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6 squad | |
n.班,小队,小团体;vt.把…编成班或小组 | |
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7 restrictions | |
约束( restriction的名词复数 ); 管制; 制约因素; 带限制性的条件(或规则) | |
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8 harry | |
vt.掠夺,蹂躏,使苦恼 | |
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9 chestnut | |
n.栗树,栗子 | |
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10 desultory | |
adj.散漫的,无方法的 | |
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11 instructor | |
n.指导者,教员,教练 | |
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12 immediate | |
adj.立即的;直接的,最接近的;紧靠的 | |
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13 haven | |
n.安全的地方,避难所,庇护所 | |
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14 inflict | |
vt.(on)把…强加给,使遭受,使承担 | |
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15 calamity | |
n.灾害,祸患,不幸事件 | |
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16 sophomore | |
n.大学二年级生;adj.第二年的 | |
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17 lanky | |
adj.瘦长的 | |
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18 rumpled | |
v.弄皱,使凌乱( rumple的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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19 homely | |
adj.家常的,简朴的;不漂亮的 | |
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20 homeliness | |
n.简朴,朴实;相貌平平 | |
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21 awfully | |
adv.可怕地,非常地,极端地 | |
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22 creek | |
n.小溪,小河,小湾 | |
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23 celebrated | |
adj.有名的,声誉卓著的 | |
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24 crimson | |
n./adj.深(绯)红色(的);vi.脸变绯红色 | |
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25 parlor | |
n.店铺,营业室;会客室,客厅 | |
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26 treasurer | |
n.司库,财务主管 | |
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27 freshman | |
n.大学一年级学生(可兼指男女) | |
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28 mitten | |
n.连指手套,露指手套 | |
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29 pitcher | |
n.(有嘴和柄的)大水罐;(棒球)投手 | |
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30 sprint | |
n.短距离赛跑;vi. 奋力而跑,冲刺;vt.全速跑过 | |
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31 galloping | |
adj. 飞驰的, 急性的 动词gallop的现在分词形式 | |
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32 ambling | |
v.(马)缓行( amble的现在分词 );从容地走,漫步 | |
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33 pitchers | |
大水罐( pitcher的名词复数 ) | |
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34 sneak | |
vt.潜行(隐藏,填石缝);偷偷摸摸做;n.潜行;adj.暗中进行 | |
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35 incessantly | |
ad.不停地 | |
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36 batter | |
v.接连重击;磨损;n.牛奶面糊;击球员 | |
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37 bully | |
n.恃强欺弱者,小流氓;vt.威胁,欺侮 | |
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38 racing | |
n.竞赛,赛马;adj.竞赛用的,赛马用的 | |
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39 foul | |
adj.污秽的;邪恶的;v.弄脏;妨害;犯规;n.犯规 | |
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40 scrambled | |
v.快速爬行( scramble的过去式和过去分词 );攀登;争夺;(军事飞机)紧急起飞 | |
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41 ethics | |
n.伦理学;伦理观,道德标准 | |
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42 resentment | |
n.怨愤,忿恨 | |
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43 controversy | |
n.争论,辩论,争吵 | |
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44 allusion | |
n.暗示,间接提示 | |
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45 fixed | |
adj.固定的,不变的,准备好的;(计算机)固定的 | |
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