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*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TALES OF ST. AUSTIN'S *** Etext produced by Suzanne L. Shell, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team HTML file produced by David Widger








TALES OF ST AUSTIN'S By P. G. Wodehouse 1903 β€”







PREFACE

Most of these stories originally appeared in The Captain. I am indebted to the Editor of that magazine for allowing me to republish. The rest are from the Public School Magazine. The story entitled 'A Shocking Affair' appears in print for the first time. 'This was one of our failures.'

P. G. Wodehouse







DEDICATION AD MATREM





CONTENTS PREFACE DEDICATION 1 β€” HOW PILLINGSHOT SCORED 2 β€” THE ODD TRICK 3 β€” L'AFFAIRE UNCLE JOHN PART OF LETTER FROM RICHARD VENABLES 4 β€” HARRISON'S SLIGHT ERROR 5 β€” BRADSHAW'S LITTLE STORY 6 β€” A SHOCKING AFFAIR 7 β€” THE BABE AND THE DRAGON 8 β€” THE MANOEUVRES OF CHARTERIS 9 β€” HOW PAYNE BUCKED UP 10 β€” AUTHOR! 11 β€” 'THE TABBY TERROR' 12 β€” THE PRIZE POEM 13 β€” WORK 14 β€” NOTES 15 β€” NOW, TALKING ABOUT CRICKET 16 β€” THE TOM BROWN QUESTION













1 β€” HOW PILLINGSHOT SCORED

Pillingshot was annoyed. He was disgusted, mortified; no other word for it. He had no objection, of course, to Mr Mellish saying that his work during the term, and especially his Livy, had been disgraceful. A master has the right to say that sort of thing if he likes. It is one of the perquisites of the position. But when he went on to observe, without a touch of shame, that there would be an examination in the Livy as far as they had gone in it on the following Saturday, Pillingshot felt that he exceeded. It was not playing the game. There were the examinations at the end of term. Those were fair enough. You knew exactly when they were coming, and could make your arrangements accordingly. But to spring an examination on you in the middle of the term out of a blue sky, as it were, was underhand and unsportsmanlike, and would not do at all. Pillingshot wished that he could put his foot down. He would have liked to have stalked up to Mr Mellish's desk, fixed him with a blazing eye, and remarked, 'Sir, withdraw that remark. Cancel that statement instantly, orβ€”!' or words to that effect.

What he did say was: 'Oo, si-i-r!!'

'Yes,' said Mr Mellish, not troubling to conceal his triumph at Pillingshot's reception of the news, 'there will be a Livy examination next Saturday. Andβ€”' (he almost intoned this last observation)β€”'anybody who does not get fifty per cent, Pillingshot, fifty per cent, will be severely punished. Very severely punished, Pillingshot.'

After which the lesson had proceeded on its course.

'Yes, it is rather low, isn't it?' said Pillingshot's friend, Parker, as Pillingshot came to the end of a stirring excursus on the rights of the citizen, with special reference to mid-term Livy examinations. 'That's the worst of Mellish. He always has you somehow.'

'But what am I to do?' raved Pillingshot.

'I should advise you to swot it up before Saturday,' said Parker.

'Oh, don't be an ass,' said Pillingshot, irritably.

What was the good of friends if they could only make idiotic suggestions like that?

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