Elliot Campbell came down the main
staircase of Marwood College and found himself caught
up with a whoop into a crowd of Sophs who were struggling
around the bulletin board. He was thumped on the
back and shaken hands with amid a hurricane of shouts
and congratulations.
“Good for you, Campbell!
You’ve won the Fraser. See your little name
tacked up there at the top of the list, bracketed off
all by itself for the winner? ‘Elliott
H. Campbell, ninety-two per cent.’ A class
yell for Campbell, boys!”
While the yell was being given with
a heartiness that might have endangered the roof,
Elliott, with flushed face and sparkling eyes, pushed
nearer to the important typewritten announcement on
the bulletin board. Yes, he had won the Fraser
Scholarship. His name headed the list of seven
competitors.
Roger Brooks, who was at his side,
read over the list aloud:
“‘Elliott H. Campbell,
ninety-two.’ I said you’d do it, my
boy. ’Edward Stone, ninety-one’ old
Ned ran you close, didn’t he? But of course
with that name he’d no show. ‘Kay
Milton, eighty-eight.’ Who’d have
thought slow-going old Kay would have pulled up so
well? ’Seddon Brown, eighty-seven; Oliver
Field, eighty-four; Arthur McIntyre, eighty-two’ a
very respectable little trio. And ’Carl
McLean, seventy.’ Whew! what a drop!
Just saved his distance. It was only his name
took him in, of course. He knew you weren’t
supposed to be strong in mathematics.”
Before Elliott could say anything,
a professor emerged from the president’s private
room, bearing the report of a Freshman examination,
which he proceeded to post on the Freshman bulletin
board, and the rush of the students in that direction
left Elliott and Roger free of the crowd. They
seized the opportunity to escape.
Elliott drew a long breath as they
crossed the campus in the fresh April sunshine, where
the buds were swelling on the fine old chestnuts and
elms that surrounded Marwood’s red brick walls.
“That has lifted a great weight
off my mind,” he said frankly. “A
good deal depended on my winning the Fraser.
I couldn’t have come back next year if I hadn’t
got it. That four hundred will put me through
the rest of my course.”
“That’s good,” said Roger Brooks
heartily.
He liked Elliott Campbell, and so
did all the Sophomores. Yet none of them was
at all intimate with him. He had no chums, as
the other boys had. He boarded alone, “dug”
persistently, and took no part in the social life
of the college. Roger Brooks came nearest to being
his friend of any, yet even Roger knew very little
about him. Elliott had never before said so much
about his personal affairs as in the speech just recorded.
“I’m poor woefully
poor,” went on Elliott gaily. His success
seemed to have thawed his reserve for the time being.
“I had just enough money to bring me through
the Fresh and Soph years by dint of careful management.
Now I’m stone broke, and the hope of the Fraser
was all that stood between me and the dismal certainty
of having to teach next year, dropping out of my class
and coming back in two or three years’ time,
a complete, rusty stranger again. Whew! I
made faces over the prospect.”
“No wonder,” commented
Roger. “The class would have been sorry
if you had had to drop out, Campbell. We want
to keep all our stars with us to make a shining coruscation
at the finish. Besides, you know we all like
you for yourself. It would have been an everlasting
shame if that little cad of a McLean had won out.
Nobody likes him.”
“Oh, I had no fear of him,”
answered Elliott. “I don’t see what
induced him to go in, anyhow. He must have known
he’d no chance. But I was afraid of Stone he’s
a born dabster at mathematics, you know, and I only
hold my own in them by hard digging.”
“Why, Stone couldn’t have
taken the Fraser over you in any case, if you made
over seventy,” said Roger with a puzzled look.
“You must have known that. McLean was the
only competitor you had to fear.”
“I don’t understand you,” said Elliott
blankly.
“You must know the conditions of the Fraser!”
exclaimed Roger.
“Certainly,” responded
Elliott. “’The Fraser scholarship, amounting
to four hundred dollars, will be offered annually
in the Sophomore class. The competitors will
be expected to take a special examination in mathematics,
and the winner will be awarded two hundred dollars
for two years, payable in four annual instalments,
the payment of any instalment to be conditional on
the winner’s attending the required classes
for undergraduates and making satisfactory progress
therein.’ Isn’t that correct?”
“So far as it goes, old man.
You forget the most important part of all. ’Preference
is to be given to competitors of the name Fraser,
Campbell or McLean, provided that such competitor makes
at least seventy per cent in his examination.’
You don’t mean to tell me that you didn’t
know that!”
“Are you joking?” demanded Elliott with
a pale face.
“Not a joke. Why, man, it’s in the
calendar.”
“I didn’t know it,”
said Elliott slowly. “I read the calendar
announcement only once, and I certainly didn’t
notice that condition.”
“Well, that’s curious.
But how on earth did you escape hearing it talked
about? It’s always discussed extensively
among the boys, especially when there are two competitors
of the favoured names, which doesn’t often happen.”
“I’m not a very sociable
fellow,” said Elliott with a faint smile.
“You know they call me ‘the hermit.’
As it happened, I never talked the matter over with
anyone or heard it referred to. I I
wish I had known this before.”
“Why, what difference does it
make? It’s all right, anyway. But it
is odd to think that if your name hadn’t been
Campbell, the Fraser would have gone to McLean over
the heads of Stone and all the rest. Their only
hope was that you would both fall below seventy.
It’s an absurd condition, but there it is in
old Professor Fraser’s will. He was rich
and had no family. So he left a number of bequests
to the college on ordinary conditions. I suppose
he thought he might humour his whim in one. His
widow is a dear old soul, and always makes a special
pet of the boy who wins the Fraser. Well, here’s
my street. So long, Campbell.”
Elliott responded almost curtly and
walked onward to his boarding-house with a face from
which all the light had gone. When he reached
his room he took down the Marwood calendar and whirled
over the leaves until he came to the announcement
of bursaries and scholarships. The Fraser announcement,
as far as he had read it, ended at the foot of the
page. He turned the leaf and, sure enough, at
the top of the next page, in a paragraph by itself,
was the condition: “Preference shall be
given to candidates of the name Fraser, Campbell or
McLean, provided that said competitor makes at least
seventy per cent in his examination.”
Elliott flung himself into a chair
by his table and bowed his head on his hands.
He had no right to the Fraser Scholarship. His
name was not Campbell, although perhaps nobody in
the world knew it save himself, and he remembered
it only by an effort of memory.
He had been born in a rough mining
camp in British Columbia, and when he was a month
old his father, John Hanselpakker, had been killed
in a mine explosion, leaving his wife and child quite
penniless and almost friendless. One of the miners,
an honest, kindly Scotchman named Alexander Campbell,
had befriended Mrs. Hanselpakker and her little son
in many ways, and two years later she had married him.
They returned to their native province of Nova Scotia
and settled in a small country village. Here
Elliott had grown up, bearing the name of the man
who was a kind and loving father to him, and whom he
loved as a father. His mother had died when he
was ten years old and his stepfather when he was fifteen.
On his deathbed he asked Elliott to retain his name.
“I’ve cared for you and
loved you since the time you were born, lad,”
he said. “You seem like my own son, and
I’ve a fancy to leave you my name. It’s
all I can leave you, for I’m a poor man, but
it’s an honest name, lad, and I’ve kept
it free from stain. See that you do likewise,
and you’ll have your mother’s blessing
and mine.”
Elliott fought a hard battle that spring evening.
“Hold your tongue and keep the
Fraser,” whispered the tempter. “Campbell
is your name. You’ve borne it all
your life. And the condition itself is a ridiculous
one no fairness about it. You made
the highest marks and you ought to be the winner.
It isn’t as if you were wronging Stone or any
of the others who worked hard and made good marks.
If you throw away what you’ve won by your own
hard labour, the Fraser goes to McLean, who made only
seventy. Besides, you need the money and he doesn’t.
His father is a rich man.”
“But I’ll be a cheat and
a cad if I keep it,” Elliott muttered miserably.
“Campbell isn’t my legal name, and I’d
never again feel as if I had even the right of love
to it if I stained it by a dishonest act. For
it would be stained, even though nobody but
myself knew it. Father said it was a clean name
when he left it, and I cannot soil it.”
The tempter was not silenced so easily
as that. Elliott passed a sleepless night of
indecision. But next day he went to Marwood and
asked for a private interview with the president.
As a result, an official announcement was posted that
afternoon on the bulletin board to the effect that,
owing to a misunderstanding, the Fraser Scholarship
had been wrongly awarded. Carl McLean was posted
as winner.
The story soon got around the campus,
and Elliott found himself rather overwhelmed with
sympathy, but he did not feel as if he were very much
in need of it after all. It was good to have done
the right thing and be able to look your conscience
in the face. He was young and strong and could
work his own way through Marwood in time.
“No condolences, please,”
he said to Roger Brooks with a smile. “I’m
sorry I lost the Fraser, of course, but I’ve
my hands and brains left. I’m going straight
to my boarding-house to dig with double vim, for I’ve
got to take an examination next week for a provincial
school certificate. Next winter I’ll be
a flourishing pedagogue in some up-country district.”
He was not, however. The next
afternoon he received a summons to the president’s
office. The president was there, and with him
was a plump, motherly-looking woman of about sixty.
“Mrs. Fraser, this is Elliott
Hanselpakker, or Campbell, as I understand he prefers
to be called. Elliott, I told your story to Mrs.
Fraser last evening, and she was greatly interested
when she heard your rather peculiar name. She
will tell you why herself.”
“I had a young half-sister once,”
said Mrs. Fraser eagerly. “She married
a man named John Hanselpakker and went West, and somehow
I lost all trace of her. There was, I regret
to say, a coolness between us over her marriage.
I disapproved of it because she married a very poor
man. When I heard your name, it struck me that
you might be her son, or at least know something about
her. Her name was Mary Helen Rodney, and I loved
her very dearly in spite of our foolish quarrel.”
There was a tremour in Mrs. Fraser’s
voice and an answering one in Elliott’s as he
replied: “Mary Helen Rodney was my dear
mother’s name, and my father was John Hanselpakker.”
“Then you are my nephew,”
exclaimed Mrs. Fraser. “I am your Aunt
Alice. My boy, you don’t know how much it
means to a lonely old woman to have found you.
I’m the happiest person in the world!”
She slipped her arm through Elliott’s
and turned to the sympathetic president with shining
eyes.
“He is my boy forever, if he
will be. Blessings on the Fraser Scholarship!”
“Blessings rather on the manly
boy who wouldn’t keep it under false colours,”
said the president with a smile. “I think
you are fortunate in your nephew, Mrs. Fraser.”
So Elliott Hanselpakker Campbell came
back to Marwood the next year after all.