Stalky & Co. by Rudyard Kipling (sad books to read txt) đ
But it was characteristic of the boy that he did not approach his allies till he had met and conferred with little Hartopp, President of the Natural History Society, an institution which Stalky held in contempt, Hartopp was more than surprised when the boy meekly, as he knew how, begged to propose himself, Beetle, and McTurk as candidates; confessed to a long-smothered interest in first-flowerings, early butterflies, and new arrivals, and volunteered, if Mr. Hartopp saw fit, to enter on the new life at once. Being a master, Hartopp was suspicious; but he was also an enthusiast, and his gentle little soul h
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âYou owe us something,â said Stalky, with meaning.
âIâm âighly grateful, Muster Corkran. Iâve âad to run against you pretty hard in the way oâ business, now and then, but I will say that outside oâ businessâbounds anâ smokinâ, anâ such likeâI donât wish to have a more trustworthy young gentleman to âelp me out of a hole. The way you âandled the drill was beautiful, though I say it. Now, if you come regular henceforwardââ
âBut heâll have to be late three times a week,â said Beetle. âYou canât expect a chap to do thatâjust to please you, Foxy.â
âAh, thatâs true. Still, if you could manage itâand you, Muster Beetleâit would give you a big start when the cadet-corps is formed. I expect the General will recommend it.â
They raided Keyteâs very much at their own sweet will, for the old man, who knew them well, was deep in talk with Foxy. âI make what weâve taken seven and six,â Stalky called at last over the counter; âbut youâd better count for yourself.â
âNoâno. Iâd take your word any day, Muster Corkran.âIn the Pompadours, was he, Sergeant? We lay with them once at Umballa, I think it was.â
âI donât know whether this ham-and-tongue tin is eighteen pence or one anâ four.â
âSay one anâ fourpence, Muster Corkran⊠Of course, Sergeant, if it was any use to give my time, Iâd be pleased to do it, but Iâm too old. Iâd like to see a drill again.â
âOh, come on, Stalky,â cried McTurk. âHe isnât listeninâ to you. Chuck over the money.â
âI want the quid changed, you ass. Keyte! Private Keyte! Corporal Keyte! Terroop-Sergeant-Major Keyte, will you give me change for a quid?â
âYesâyes, of course. Seven anâ six.â He stared abstractedly, pushed the silver over, and melted away into the darkness of the back room.
âNow those twoâll jaw about the Mutiny till tea-time,â said Beetle.
âOld Keyte was at Sobraon,â said Stalky. âHear him talk about that sometimes! Beats Foxy hollow.â
The Headâs face, inscrutable as ever, was bent over a pile of letters.
âWhat do you think?â he said at last to the Reverend John Gillett.
âItâs a good idea. Thereâs no denying thatâan estimable idea.â
âWe concede that much. Well?â
âI have my doubts about itâthatâs all. The more I know of boys the less do I profess myself capable of following their moods; but I own I shall be very much surprised if the scheme takes. Itâit isnât the temper of the school. We prepare for the Army.â
âMy businessâin this matterâis to carry out the wishes of the Council. They demand a volunteer cadet-corps. A volunteer cadet-corps will be furnished. I have suggested, however, that we need not embark upon the expense of uniforms till we are drilled. General Collinson is sending us fifty lethal weaponsâcut-down Sniders, he calls themâall carefully plugged.â
âYes, that is necessary in a school that uses loaded saloon-pistols to the extent we do.â The Reverend John smiled.
âTherefore there will be no outlay except the Sergeantâs time.â
âBut if he fails you will be blamed.â
âOh, assuredly. I shall post a notice in the corridor this afternoon, andââ
âI shall watch the result.â
âKindly keep your âands off the new arm-rack.â Foxy wrestled with a turbulent crowd in the gymnasium. âNor it wonât do even a condemned Snider any good to be continual snappinâ the lock, Mr. Swayne.âYiss, the uniforms will come later, when weâre more proficient; at present we will confine ourselves to drill. I am âere for the purpose oâ takinâ the names oâ those willinâ to join.âPut down that Snider, Muster Hogan!â
âWhat are you goinâ to do, Beetle?â said a voice.
âIâve had all the drill I want, thank you.â
âWhat! After all youâve learned? Come on! Donât be a scab! Theyâll make you corporal in a week,â cried Stalky.
âIâm not goinâ up for the Army.â Beetle touched his spectacles.
âHold on a shake, Foxy,â said Hogan. âWhere are you goinâ to drill us?â
âHereâin the gymâtill you are fit anâ capable to be taken out on the road.â The Sergeant threw a chest.
âFor all the Northam cads to look at? Not good enough, Foxibus.â
âWell, we wonât make a point of it. You learn your drill first, anâ later weâll see.â
âHullo,â said Ansell of Macreaâs, shouldering through the mob. âWhatâs all this about a giddy cadet-corps?â
âIt will save you a lot oâ time at Sandburst,â the Sergeant replied promptly. âYouâll be dismissed your drills early if you go up with a good groundinâ beforeâand.â
âHm! âDonât mind learninâ my drill, but Iâm not goinâ to ass about the country with a toy Snider. Perowne, what are you goinâ to do? Hoganâs joininâ.â
âDonât know whether Iâve the time,â said Perowne. âIâve got no end of extra-tu as it is.â
âWell, call this extra-tu,â said Ansell. ââTwonât take us long to mug up the drill.â
âOh, thatâs right enough, but what about marchinâ in public?â said Hogan, not foreseeing that three years later he should die in the Burmese sun-light outside Minhla Fort.
âAfraid the uniform wonât suit your creamy complexion?â McTurk asked with a villainous sneer.
âShut up, Turkey. You arenât goinâ up for the Army.â
âNo, but Iâm goinâ to send a substitute. Hi! Morrell anâ Wake! You two fags by the arm-rack, youâve got to volunteer.â
Blushing deeplyâthey had been too shy to apply beforeâthe youngsters sidled towards the Sergeant.
âBut I donât want the little chapsânot at first,â said the Sergeant disgustedly. âI wantâIâd like some of the Old Brigade the defaultersâto stiffen âem a bit.â
âDonât be ungrateful, Sergeant. Theyâre nearly as big as you get âem in the Army now.â McTurk read the papers of those years and could be trusted for general information, which he used as he used his âtweaker.â Yet he did not know that Wake minor would be a bimbashi of the Egyptian Army ere his thirtieth year.
Hogan, Swayne, Stalky, Perowne, and Ansell were deep in consultation by the vaulting-horse, Stalky as usual laying down the law. The Sergeant watched them uneasily, knowing that many waited on their lead.
âFoxy donât like my recruits,â said McTurk, in a pained tone, to Beetle. âYou get him some.â
Nothing loath, Beetle pinioned two more fagsâeach no taller than a carbine. âHere you are, Foxy. Hereâs food for powder. Strike for your hearths anâ homes, you young brutesâanâ be jolly quick about it.â
âStill he isnât happy,â said McTurk.
âFor the way we have with our Army Is the way we have with our Navy.â
Here Beetle joined in. They had found the poem in an old volume of âPunch,â and it seemed to cover the situation:
âAnâ both of âem led to adversity, Which nobody can deny!â
âYou be quiet, young gentlemen. If you canât âelpâdonât âinder.â Foxyâs eye was still on the council by the horse. Carter, White, and Tyrrell, all boys of influence, had joined it. The rest fingered the rifles irresolutely. âWait a shake,â cried Stalky. âCanât we turn out those rotters before we get to work?â
âCertainly,â said Foxy. âAny one wishful to join will stay âere. Those who do not so intend will go out, quietly closinâ the door beâind âem.â
Half a dozen of the earnest-minded rushed at them, and they had just time to escape into the corridor.
âWell, why donât you join?â Beetle asked, resettling his collar.
âWhy didnât you?â
âWhatâs the good? We arenât goinâ up for the Army. Besides, I know the drillâall except the manual, of course. âWonder what theyâre doinâ inside?â
âMakinâ a treaty with Foxy. Didnât you hear Stalky say: âThatâs what weâll doâanâ if he donât like it he can lump itâ? Theyâll use Foxy for a cram. Canât you see, you idiot? Theyâre goinâ up for Sandhurst or the Shop in less than a year. Theyâll learn their drill anâ then theyâll drop it like a shot. Dâyou suppose chaps with their amount of extra-tu are takinâ up volunteerinâ for fun?â
âWell, I donât know. I thought of doinâ a poem about itârottinâ âem, you knowââThe Ballad of the Dogshootersââeh?â
âI donât think you can, because Kingâll be down on the corps like a cartload oâ bricks. He hasnât been consulted, heâs sniffinâ round the notice-board now. Letâs lure him.â They strolled up carelessly towards the honse-masterâa most meek couple.
âHowâs this?â said King with a start of feigned surprise. âMethought you would be learning to fight for your country.â
âI think the companyâs full, sir,â said McTurk.
âItâs a great pity,â sighed Beetle.
âForty valiant defenders, have we, then? How noble! What devotion! I presume that it is possible that a desire to evade their normal responsibilities may be at the bottom of this zeal. Doubtless they will be accorded special privileges, like the Choir and the Natural History Societyâone must not say Bug-hunters.â
âOh, I suppose so, sir,â said McTurk, cheerily. âThe Head hasnât said anything about it yet, but he will, of course.â
âOh, sure to.â
âIt is just possible, my Beetle,â King wheeled on the last speaker, âthat the housemastersâa necessary but somewhat neglected factor in our humble scheme of existenceâmay have a word to say on the matter. Life, for the young at least, is not all weapons and munitions of war. Education is incidentally one of our aims.â
âWhat a consistent pig he is,â cooed McTurk, when they were out of earshot. âOne always knows where to have him. Did you see how he rose to that draw about the Head and special privileges?â
âConfound him, he might have had the decency to have backed the scheme. I could do such a lovely ballad, rottinâ it; and now Iâll have to be a giddy enthusiast. It donât bar our pulling Stalkyâs leg in the study, does it?â
âOh, no; but in the Coll. we must be pro-cadet-corps like anything. Canât you make up a giddy epigram, _aâlaCatullus_, about King objectinâ to it?â Beetle was at this noble task when Stalky returned all hot from his first drill.
âHullo, my ramrod-bunger!â began McTurk. âWhereâs your dead dog? Is it Defence or Defiance?â
âDefiance,â said Stalky, and leaped on him at that word. âLook here, Turkey, you mustnât rot the corps. Weâve arranged it beautifully. Foxy swears he wonât take us out into the open till we say we want to go.â
âDis-gustinâ exhibition of immature infants apinâ the idiosyncrasies of their elders. Snff!â
âHave you drawn King, Beetle?â Stalky asked in a pause of the scuffle.
âNot exactly; but thatâs his genial style.â
âWell, listen to your Uncle Stalkyâwho is a great man. Moreover and subsequently, Foxyâs goinâ to let us drill the corps in turnâprivatimet_seriatim_âso that weâll all know how to handle a half company anyhow. Ergo, anâ propterhoc_, when we go to the Shop we shall be dismissed drill early; thus, my beloved âearers, combininâ education with wholesome amusement.â
âI knew youâd make a sort of extra-tu of it, you cold-blooded brute,â said McTurk. âDonât you want to die for your giddy country?â
âNot if I can jolly well avoid it. So you mustnât rot the corps.â
âWeâd decided on that, years ago,â said Beetle, scornfully. âKingâll do the rottinâ.â
âThen youâve got to rot King, my giddy poet. Make up a good catchy Limerick, and let the fags sing it.â
âLook here, you stick to volunteerinâ, and donât jog the table.â
âHe wonât have anything to take hold of,â said Stalky, with dark significance.
They did not know what that meant till, a few days later, they proposed to watch the corps at drill. They found the gymnasium door locked and a fag on guard. âThis is
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