“Boom! Boom!” thundered the big drum.
“Tootle-toot!” shrilled the fife.
“Tarum! Taroom!” growled the horns.
The Harwell band marched through the
archway and defiled on to the platform. The college
marched after. Well, perhaps not all the college;
I have heard that a senior living in Lanter was too
ill to be present. But the incoming platform
was thronged from wall to track, so it was perhaps
as well that he didn’t come, because there positively
wasn’t room for him.
“What is it?” asked a
citizen in a silk hat of a gayly decorated youth on
the outskirts of the crowd. The latter stared
for full a minute ere the words came. Then he
cried:
“Here’s a fellow who wants
to know what we’re here for!” And a great
groan of derision went up to the arching roof, and
the ignorant person slunk away, yet not before his
silk hat had been pushed gently but firmly far down
over his eyes. Punishment ever awaits the ignorant
who will not learn.
“Glory, glory
for the Crimson,
Glory, glory for
the Crimson,
Glory, glory for
the Crimson,
For
this is Harwell’s day,”
sang the throng.
“Boom! Boom! Boom!” thundered
the big drum.
“Tootle-toot!” shrilled the fife.
“Now, fellows, three times three,
three long Harwells, and three times three!”
shouted the master of ceremonies hoarsely.
“Rah-rah-rah, Rah-rah-rah, Rah-rah-rah,
Harwell! Harwell! Harwell! Rah-rah-rah,
Rah-rah-rah, Rah-rah-rah, Harwell!” shrieked
the crowd.
“Louder! Louder!”
commanded the remorseless youth on the baggage truck.
“Nine long Harwells! One, two, three!”
“Har-well! Har-well!
Har-well! Har-well! Har-well! Har-well!
Har-well! Har-well! Har-well!” The
sound crashed up against the vaulted station roof
and thundered back. And none heard the shriek
of the incoming train as it clattered over the switches
at the entrance of the shed, and none saw it until
it was creeping in, the engineer leaning far out of
the cab window and waving a red bandanna handkerchief,
a courtesy that won him a cheer all to himself.
Then out tumbled the returning heroes,
bags in hands, followed by the head coach and all
the rest of the attendant train. And then what
a pushing and shouting and struggling there was!
There were forty men to every player, and the result
was that some of the latter were nearly torn limb
from limb ere they were safe out of reach on the shoulders
of lucky contestants for the honor of carrying them
the first stage of the journey to college.
There were some who tried to hide,
some who tried to run, others who enjoyed the whole
thing hugely and thumped the heads of their bearers
heartily just to show good feeling.
Joel was one of the last to leave
the car, and as he set foot on the platform a hundred
voices went up in cheers, and a hundred students struggled
for possession of him. But one there was who from
his place of vantage halfway up the steps repelled
all oncomers, and assisted by a second youth of large
proportions seized upon Joel and setting him upon
their shoulders bore him off in triumph.
“Boom! Boom!” said
the big drum. And the procession started.
Down the long platform it went, past the waiting room
doors where a crowd of onlookers waved hats and handkerchiefs,
and so out into the city street. Joel turned
his head away from the observers, ashamed and happy.
There was no let-up to the cheering. One after
another the names of the players and substitutes,
coaches and trainer, were cheered and cheered again.
“Out of the way there!”
cried Joel’s bearers, and the marching throng
looked about, moved apart, and as Joel was borne through,
cheered him to the echo, reaching eager hands toward
him, crying words of commendation and praise into
his buzzing ears.
“Rah-rah-rah, Rah-rah-rah, Rah-rah-rah, March!”
“One!” shrieked a youth
near where Joel soon found himself at the head of
the procession, and the slogan was taken up:
“Two! Three! Four!
Five! Six! Seven! Eight! Nine!
Ten! E-lev-en!”
“Now give me your hand, Joel!”
cried the youth upon whose left shoulder he was swaying.
Joel obeyed, smiling affectionately down into the
upraised face. Then he uttered a cry of pain.
One of the fingers of his left hand was bandaged,
and Outfield West dropped it gingerly.
“Not not broke?” he
asked wonderingly. Joel nodded.
“Aren’t you proud of it?”
whispered his chum.
“Yes,” answered Joel simply and earnestly.
“May I take it, too?”
asked the other youth. Joel started and looked
down into the anxious and entreating face of Bartlett
Cloud. He grasped the hesitating hand that was
held up.
“Yes,” he answered smilingly.
And the big drum boomed, and the shrill
fifes tootled, and the crimson banners waved upon
the breeze, and every one cheered himself hoarse, and
thus the conquering heroes came back to the college
that loved them.
And Joel, a little tearful when no
one was looking, and very happy always, was borne
on the shoulders of West and Cloud, friend and enemy,
at the very head of the procession, honored above all!