School Stories P. G. Wodehouse (easy readers TXT) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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Later on in the afternoon, Montgomery of the Sixth happened to be passing by the infirmary, when Fate, aided by a sudden gust of wind, blew a piece of paper at him. âGreat Scott,â he observed, as his eye fell on the words âOde to the College.â Montgomery, like Smith, was no expert in poetry. He had spent a wretched afternoon trying to hammer out something that would pass muster in the poem competition, but without the least success. There were four lines on the paper. Two more, and it would be a poem, and capable of being entered for the prize as such. The words âimposing pile,â with which the fragment in his hand began, took his fancy immensely. A poetic afflatus seized him, and in less than three hours he had added the necessary couplet,
How truly sweet it is for such as me
To gaze on thee.
âAnd dashed neat, too,â he said, with satisfaction, as he threw the manuscript into his drawer. âI donât know whether âmeâ shouldnât be âI,â but theyâll have to lump it. Itâs a poem, anyhow, within the meaning of the act.â And he strolled off to a neighbourâs study to borrow a book.
Two nights afterwards, Morrison, also of the Sixth, was enjoying his usual during prep siesta in his study. A tap at the door roused him. Hastily seizing a lexicon, he assumed the attitude of the seeker after knowledge, and said, âCome in.â It was not the Housemaster, but Evans, Morrisonâs fag, who entered with pride on his face and a piece of paper in his hand.
âI say,â he began, âyou remember you told me to hunt up some tags for the poem. Will this do?â
Morrison took the paper with a judicial air. On it were the words:
Imposing pile, reared up âmidst pleasant grounds,
The scene of many a battle, lost or won,
At cricket or at football; whose red walls
Full many a sun has kissed âere day is done.
âThatâs ripping, as far as it goes,â said Morrison. âCouldnât be better. Youâll find some apples in that box. Better take a few. But look here,â with sudden suspicion, âI donât believe you made all this up yourself. Did you?â
Evans finished selecting his apples before venturing on a reply. Then he blushed, as much as a member of the junior school is capable of blushing.
âWell,â he said, âI didnât exactly. You see, you only told me to get the tags. You didnât say how.â
âBut how did you get hold of this? Whose is it?â
âDunno. I found it in the field between the Pavilion and the infirmary.â
âOh! well, it doesnât matter much. Theyâre just what I wanted, which is the great thing. Thanks. Shut the door, will you?â Whereupon Evans retired, the richer by many apples, and Morrison resumed his siesta at the point where he had left off.
âGot that poem done yet?â said Smith to Reynolds, pouring out a cup of tea for the invalid on the following Sunday.
âTwo lumps, please. No, not quite.â
âGreat Caesar, man, whenâll it be ready, do you think? Itâs got to go in tomorrow.â
âWell, Iâm really frightfully sorry, but I got hold of a grand book. Ever readâ â?â
âIsnât any of it done?â asked Smith.
âOnly the first verse, Iâm afraid. But, look here, you arenât keen on getting the prize. Why not send in only the one verse? It makes a fairly decent poem.â
âHum! Think the Old âUnâll pass it?â
âHeâll have to. Thereâs nothing in the rules about length. Here it is if you want it.â
âThanks. I suppose itâll be all right? So long! I must be off.â
The Headmaster, known to the world as the Rev. Arthur James Perceval, M.A., and to the School as the Old âUn, was sitting at breakfast, stirring his coffee, with a look of marked perplexity upon his dignified face. This was not caused by the coffee, which was excellent, but by a letter which he held in his left hand.
âHum!â he said. Then âUmph!â in a protesting tone, as if someone had pinched him. Finally, he gave vent to a long-drawn âUm-m-m,â in a deep bass. âMost extraordinary. Really, most extraordinary. Exceedingly. Yes. Um. Very.â He took a sip of coffee.
âMy dear,â said he, suddenly. Mrs. Perceval started violently. She had been sketching out in her mind a little dinner, and wondering whether the cook would be equal to it.
âYes,â she said.
âMy dear, this is a very extraordinary communication. Exceedingly so. Yes, very.â
âWho is it from?â
Mr. Perceval shuddered. He was a purist in speech. âFrom whom, you should say. It is from Mr. Wells, a great College friend of mine. Iâ âahâ âsubmitted to him for examination the poems sent in for the Sixth Form Prize. He writes in a very flippant style. I must say, very flippant. This is his letter:â ââDear Jimmy (really, really, he should remember that we are not so young as we were); dearâ âahemâ âJimmy. The poems to hand. I have read them, and am writing this from my sickbed. The doctor tells me I may pull through even yet. There was only one any good at all, that was Rogersâs, which, thoughâ âerâ âsquiffy (tut!) in parts, was a long way better than any of the others. But the most taking part of the whole programme was afforded by the three comedians, whose efforts I enclose. You will notice that each begins with exactly the same four lines. Of course, I deprecate cribbing, but you really canât help admiring this sort of thing. There is a reckless daring about it which is simply fascinating. A horrible thoughtâ âhave they been pulling your dignified leg? By the way, do you rememberââ âthe rest of the letter isâ âerâ âon different matters.â
âJames! How extraordinary!â
âUm, yes. I am reluctant to suspectâ âerâ âcollusion, but really here there can be no doubt. No doubt at all. No.â
âUnless,â began Mrs. Perceval,
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