School Stories P. G. Wodehouse (easy readers TXT) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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Shieldsâ occupied a unique position at the School. It was an absolutely inconspicuous house. There were other houses that were slack or wild or both, but the worst of these did something. Shieldsâ never did anything. It never seemed to want to do anything. This may have been due in some degree to Mr. Shields. As the housemaster is, so the house is. He was the most inconspicuous master on the staff. He taught a minute form in the junior school, where earnest infants wrestled with somebodyâs handy book of easy Latin sentences, and depraved infants threw cunningly compounded ink-balls at one another and the ceiling. After school he would range the countryside with a pickle bottle in search of polly woggles and other big game, which he subsequently transferred to slides and examined through a microscope till an advanced hour of the night. The curious part of the matter was that his house was never riotous. Perhaps he was looked on as a noncombatant, one whom it would be unfair and unsporting to rag. At any rate, a weird calm reigned over the place; and this spirit seemed to permeate the public lives of the Shieldsites. They said nothing much and they did nothing much and they were very inoffensive. As a rule, one hardly knew they were there.
Into this abode of lotus-eaters came Clephane, a day boy, owing to the departure of his parents for India. Clephane wanted to go to Donaldsonâs. In fact, he said so. His expressions, indeed, when he found that the whole thing had been settled, and that he was to spend his last term at school at a house which had never turned out so much as a member of the Gym Six, bordered on the unfilial. It appeared that his father had met Mr. Shields at dinner in the townâ âa fact to which he seemed to attach a mystic importance. Clephaneâs criticism of this attitude of mind was of such a nature as to lead his father to address him as Archibald instead of Archie.
However, the thing was done, and Clephane showed his good sense by realising this and turning his energetic mind to the discovery of the best way of making life at Shieldsâ endurable. Fortune favoured him by sending to the house another day boy, one Mansfield. Clephane had not known him intimately before, though they were both members of the second eleven; but at Shieldsâ they instantly formed an alliance. And in due seasonâ âor a little laterâ âthe house matches began. Henfrey, of Dayâs, the Wrykyn cricket captain, met Clephane at the nets when the drawing for opponents had been done.
âJust the man I wanted to see,â said Henfrey. âI suppose youâre captain of Shieldsâ lot, Clephane? Well, youâre going to scratch as usual, I suppose?â
For the last five seasons that lamentable house had failed to put a team into the field. âYouâd better,â said Henfrey, âwe havenât overmuch time as it is. That match with Pagetâs team has thrown us out a lot. We ought to have started the house matches a week ago.â
âScratch!â said Clephane. âDonât you wish we would! My good chap, weâre going to get the cup.â
âYou neednât be a funny ass,â said Henfrey in his complaining voice, âwe really are awfully pushed. As it is we shall have to settle the opening rounds on the first innings. Thatâs to say, we can only give âem a day each; if they donât finish, the winner of the first innings wins. You might as well scratch.â
âI canât help your troubles. By rotten mismanagement you have got the house-matches crowded up into the last ten days of term, and you come and expect me to sell a fine side like Shieldsâ to get you out of the consequences of your reckless act. My word, Henfrey, youâve sunk pretty low. Nice young fellow Henfrey was at one time, but seems to have got among bad companions. Quite changed now. Avoid him as much as I can. Leave me, Henfrey, I would be alone.â
âBut you canât raise a team.â
âRaise a team! Do you happen to know that half the house is biting itself with agony because we canât find room for all? Shields gives stump-cricket soiriees in his study after prep. One every time you hit the ball, two into the bowl of goldfish, and out if you smash the microscope.â
âWell,â said Henfrey viciously, âif you want to go through the farce of playing one round and making idiots of yourselves, youâll have to wait a bit. Youâve got a bye in the first round.â
Clephane told the news to Mansfield after tea. âIâve been and let the house in for a rollicking time,â he said, abstracting the copy of Latin verses which his friend was doing, and sitting on them to ensure undivided attention to his words. âWanting to score off old Henfreyâ âI have few pleasuresâ âI told him that Shieldsâ was not going to scratch. So we are booked to play in the second round of the housers. We drew a bye for the first. It would be an awful rag if we could do something. We must raise a team of some sort. Henfrey would score so if we didnât. Whoâs there, dâyou
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