Complete Works of Rudyard Kipling (Illustrated) (839 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of Rudyard Kipling (Illustrated)
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Behold him, then, in their only arm-chair, a bent briar between his teeth, chin down in three folds on his clerical collar, and blowing like an amiable whale, while Number Five discoursed of life as it appeared to them, and specially of that last interview with the Head — in the matter of usury.
“One licking once a week would do you an immense amount of good,” he said, twinkling and shaking all over; “and, as you say, you were entirely in the right.”
“Ra-ather, Padre! We could have proved it if he’d let us talk,” said Stalky; “but he didn’t. The Head’s a downy bird.”
“He understands you perfectly. Ho! ho! Well, you worked hard enough for it.”
“But he’s awfully fair. He doesn’t lick a chap in the morning an’ preach at him in the afternoon,” said Beetle.
“He can’t; he ain’t in Orders, thank goodness,” said McTurk. Number Five held the very strongest views on clerical head-masters, and were ever ready to meet their pastor in argument.
“Almost all other schools have clerical Heads,” said the Reverend John gently.
“It isn’t fair on the chaps,” Stalky replied. “Makes ‘em sulky. Of course it’s different with you, sir. You belong to the school — same as we do. I mean ordinary clergymen.”
“Well, I am a most ordinary clergyman; and Mr. Hartopp’s in Orders, too.”
“Ye — es, but he took ‘em after he came to the Coll. We saw him go up for his exam. That’s all right,” said Beetle. “But just think if the Head went and got ordained!”
“What would happen, Beetle?”
“Oh, the Coll. ‘ud go to pieces in a year, sir. There’s no doubt o’ that.”
“How d’you know?” The Reverend John was smiling.
“We’ve been here nearly six years now. There are precious few things about the Coll. we don’t know,” Stalky replied. “Why, even you came the term after I did, sir. I remember your asking our names in form your first lesson. Mr. King, Mr. Prout, and the Head, of course, are the only masters senior to us — in that way.”
“Yes, we’ve changed a good deal — in Common-room.”
“Huh!” said Beetle with a grunt. “They came here, an’ they went away to get married. Jolly good riddance, too!”
“Doesn’t our Beetle hold with matrimony?”
“No, Padre; don’t make fun of me. I’ve met chaps in the holidays who’ve got married house-masters. It’s perfectly awful! They have babies and teething and measles and all that sort of thing right bung
in
the school; and the masters’ wives give tea-parties — tea-parties, Padre! — and ask the chaps to breakfast.”
“That don’t matter so much,” said Stalky. “But the house-masters let their houses alone, and they leave everything to the prefects. Why, in one school, a chap told me, there were big baize doors and a passage about a mile long between the house and the master’s house. They could do just what they pleased.”
“Satan rebuking sin with a vengeance.”
“Oh, larks are right enough; but you know what we mean, Padre. After a bit it gets worse an’ worse. Then there’s a big bust-up and a row that gets into the papers, and a lot of chaps are expelled, you know.”
“Always the wrong un’s; don’t forget that. Have a cup of cocoa, Padre?” said McTurk with the kettle.
“No, thanks; I’m smoking. Always the wrong ‘uns? Pro-ceed, my Stalky.”
“And then” — Stalky warmed to the work — ”everybody says, ‘Who’d ha’ thought it? Shockin’ boys! Wicked little kids!’ It all comes of havin’ married house-masters,
I
think.”
“A Daniel come to judgment.”
“But it does,” McTurk interrupted. “I’ve met chaps in the holidays, an’ they’ve told me the same thing. It looks awfully pretty for one’s people to see — a nice separate house with a nice lady in charge, an’ all that. But it isn’t. It takes the house-masters off their work, and it gives the prefects a heap too much power, an’ — an’ — it rots up everything. You see, it isn’t as if we were just an ordinary school. We take crammers’ rejections as well as good little boys like Stalky. We’ve got to do that to make our name, of course, and we get ‘em into Sandhurst somehow or other, don’t we?”
“True, O Turk. Like a book thou talkest, Turkey.”
“And so we want rather different masters, don’t you think so, to other places? We aren’t like the rest of the schools.”
“It leads to all sorts of bullyin’, too, a chap told me,” said Beetle.
“Well, you
do
need most of a single man’s time, I must say.” The Reverend John considered his hosts critically. “But do you never feel that the world — the Common-room — is too much with you sometimes?”
“Not exactly — in summer, anyhow.” Stalky’s eye roved contentedly to the window. “Our bounds are pretty big, too, and they leave us to ourselves a good deal.”
“For example, here am I sitting in your study, very much in your way, eh?”
“Indeed you aren’t, Padre. Sit down. Don’t go, sir. You know we’re glad whenever you come.”
There was no doubting the sincerity of the voices. The Reverend John flushed a little with pleasure and refilled his briar.
“And we generally know where the Common-room are,” said Beetle triumphantly. “Didn’t you come through our lower dormitories last night after ten, sir?”
“I went to smoke a pipe with your house-master. No, I didn’t give him any impressions. I took a short cut through your dormitories.”
“I sniffed a whiff of ‘baccy, this mornin’. Yours is stronger than Mr. Prout’s.
I
knew,” said Beetle, wagging his head.
“Good heavens!” said the Reverend John absently. It was some years before Beetle perceived that this was rather a tribute to innocence than observation. The long, light, blindless dormitories, devoid of inner doors, were crossed at all hours of the night by masters visiting one another; for bachelors sit up later than married folk. Beetle had never dreamed that there might be a purpose in this steady policing.
“Talking about bullying,” the Reverend John resumed, “you all caught it pretty hot when you were fags, didn’t you?”
“Well, we must have been rather awful little beasts,” said Beetle, looking serenely over the gulf between eleven and sixteen. “My Hat, what bullies they were then — Fairburn, ‘Gobby’ Maunsell, and all that gang!”
“‘Member when ‘Gobby’ called us the Three Blind Mice, and we had to get up on the lockers and sing while he buzzed ink-pots at us?” said Stalky. “They
were
bullies if you like!”
“But there isn’t any of it now,” said McTurk soothingly.
“That’s where you make a mistake. We’re all inclined to say that everything is all right as long we aren’t ourselves hurt. I sometimes wonder if it is extinct — bullying.”
“Fags bully each other horrid; but the upper forms are supposed to be swottin’ for exams. They’ve got something else to think about,” said Beetle.
“Why? What do you think?” Stalky was watching the chaplain’s face.
“I have my doubts.” Then, explosively, “On my word, for three moderately intelligent boys you aren’t very observant. I suppose you were too busy making things warm for your house-master to see what lay under your noses when you were in the form-rooms last week?”
“What, sir? I — I swear we didn’t see anything,” said Beetle.
“Then I’d advise you to look. When a little chap is whimpering in a corner and wears his clothes like rags, and never does any work, and is notoriously the dirtiest little ‘corridor-caution’ in the Coll., something’s wrong somewhere.”
“That’s Clewer,” said McTurk under his breath.
“Yes, Clewer. He comes to me for his French. It’s his first term, and he’s almost as complete a wreck as you were, Beetle. He’s not naturally clever, but he has been hammered till he’s nearly an idiot.”
“Oh, no. They sham silly to get off more tickings,” said Beetle. “
I
know that.”
“I’ve never actually seen him knocked about,” said the Reverend John.
“The genuine article don’t do that in public,” said Beetle. “Fairburn never touched me when any one was looking on.”
“You needn’t swagger about it, Beetle,” said McTurk. “We all caught it in our time.”
“But I got it worse than any one,” said Beetle. “If you want an authority on bullyin’, Padre, come to me. Corkscrews — brush-drill keys — head-knucklin’ — arm-twistin’ — rockin’ — Ag Ags — and all the rest of it.”
“Yes. I do want you as an authority, or rather I want your authority to stop it — all of you.”
“What about Abana and Pharpar, Padre — Harrison and Craye? They are Mr. Prout’s pets,” said McTurk a little bitterly. “We aren’t even sub-prefects.”
“I’ve considered that, but on the other hand, since most bullying is mere thoughtlessness — ”
“Not one little bit of it, Padre,” said McTurk. “Bullies like bullyin’. They mean it. They think it up in lesson and practise it in the quarters.”
“Never mind. If the thing goes up to the prefects it may make another house-row. You’ve had one already. Don’t laugh. Listen to me. I ask you — my own Tenth Legion — to take the thing up quietly. I want little Clewer made to look fairly clean and decent — ”
“Blowed if
I
wash him!” whispered Stalky.
“Decent and self-respecting. As for the other boy, whoever he is, you can use your influence” — a purely secular light flickered in the chaplain’s eye — ”in any way you please to — to dissuade him. That’s all. I’ll leave it to you. Good-night,
mes enfants
.”
“Well, what are we goin’ to do?” Number Five stared at each other.
“Young Clewer would give his eyes for a place to be quiet in.
I
know that,” said Beetle. “If we made him a study-fag, eh?”
“No!” said McTurk firmly. “He’s a dirty little brute, and he’d mess up everything. Besides, we ain’t goin’ to have any beastly Erickin’. D’you want to walk about with your arm round his neck?”
“He’d clean out the jam-pots, anyhow; an’ the burnt-porridge saucepan — it’s filthy now.”
“Not good enough,” said Stalky, bringing up both heels with a crash on the table. “If we find the merry jester who’s been bullyin’ him an’ make him happy, that’ll be all right. Why didn’t we spot him when we were in the form-rooms, though?”
“Maybe a lot of fags have made a dead set at Clewer. They do that sometimes.”
“Then we’ll have to kick the whole of the lower school in our house — on spec. Come on,” said McTurk.
“Keep your hair on! We mustn’t make a fuss about the biznai. Whoever it is he’s kept quiet or we’d have seen him,” said Stalky. “We’ll walk round and sniff about till we’re sure.”
They drew the house form-rooms, accounting for every junior and senior against whom they had suspicions; investigated, at Beetle’s suggestion, the lavatories and box-rooms, but without result. Everybody seemed to be present save Clewer.
“Rum!” said Stalky, pausing outside a study door. “Golly!”
A thin piping mixed with tears came muffled through the panels.
  “‘As beautiful Kitty one morning was tripping — ’”
“Louder, you young devil, or I’ll buzz a book at you!”
  “‘With a pitcher of milk — ’
  Oh, Campbell,
please
don’t!
  ‘To the fair of — ”
A book crashed on something soft, and squeals arose.
“Well, I never thought it was a study-chap, anyhow. That accounts for our not spotting him,” said Beetle. “Sefton and Campbell are rather hefty chaps to tackle. Besides, one can’t go into their study like a form-room.”
“What swine!” McTurk listened. “Where’s the fun of it? I suppose Clewer’s faggin’ for them.”
“They aren’t prefects. That’s one good job,” said Stalky, with his war-grin. “Sefton and Campbell! Um! Campbell and Sefton! Ah! One of ‘em’s a crammer’s pup.”
The two were precocious hairy youths between seventeen and eighteen, sent to the school in despair by parents who hoped that six months’ steady cram might, perhaps, jockey them into Sandhurst. Nominally they were in Mr. Prout’s house; actually they were under the Head’s eye; and since he was very careful never to promote strange new boys to prefectships, they considered they had a grievance against the school. Sefton had spent three months with a London crammer, and the tale of his adventures there lost nothing in the telling. Campbell, who had a fine taste in clothes and a fluent vocabulary, followed his lead in looking down loftily on the rest of the world. This was only their second term, and the school, used to what it profanely called “crammers’ pups,” had treated them with rather galling reserve. But their whiskers — Sefton owned a real razor — and their mustaches were beyond question impressive.
“Shall we go in an’ dissuade ‘em?” McTurk asked. “I’ve never had much to do with ‘em, but I’ll bet my hat Campbell’s a funk.”
“No — o! That’s
oratio directa
,” said Stalky, shaking his head. “I like
oratio obliqua
. ‘Sides, where’d our moral influence be then? Think o’ that!”

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