Reading Memorial High School - Pioneer Yearbook (Reading, MA)

 - Class of 1892

Page 27 of 62

 

Reading Memorial High School - Pioneer Yearbook (Reading, MA) online collection, 1892 Edition, Page 27 of 62
Page 27 of 62



Reading Memorial High School - Pioneer Yearbook (Reading, MA) online collection, 1892 Edition, Page 26
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Reading Memorial High School - Pioneer Yearbook (Reading, MA) online collection, 1892 Edition, Page 28
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Page 27 text:

THE PIONEER. 29 I had decided that vanilla custard would he the only thing available and brought out my materials, when I discovered that the vanilla bottle was nowhere to be found. After a protracted search it was found scattered around behind the flour barrel, having fallen from the shelf and broken. As I was minus vanilla I had to take lemon, and snatching 7 c the bottle for fear that it might get away, I hastily turned out a tea spoonful and then set it away. I had been in hopes that the washerwoman would arrive early, but luck was against me and it was eight before she appeared with a strong aroma of whiskey clinging to her dress to inform me in unsteady tones that little Tommy had turned the faucets and tilled the tub with cold water and it would be half an hour before she could begin. Smothering a strong inclination to cry I told her to begin as soon as she could and went to get the custard to hake it. Upon entering the pantry I saw a furry tail disappear through the open window and a plate fly onto the floor. On further inves¬ tigation I found that the family cat had taken a mean advantage of the open window to steal in and get on the outside of the plate of carefully reserved ham. But if in her flight she had not knocked a cupful of yeast into the custard I would not have felt so bad, but this was the unkindest cut of all. It seemed to me that the family reputation was lost, for I well knew that Aunt Jane would note all defects and noise them abroad, supple¬ menting in a pitying tone “I always told James that Louisa Jones wouldn’t be no kind of a manager, none of them Jones’s ever was.” But I put a brave face on for I knew that my action must be prompt and I must not lose my wits at this critical moment, so I resolved to go down town, buy a spring chicken (how many springs better be left unsaid) and some fruit (which would probably be stale) for dessert, so I swiftly put on my hat and jacket and started. I purchased the chicken (called so by courtesy only) and the fruit and was returning home thinking that my difBculties were beginning to lessen when the clock in the church near by struck ten. This startled me so that I almost dropped my basket, for this was the time at which the carriage should have been sent. Visions of Aunt Jane sitting up in awful dignity waiting tor the carriage, and the thinly veiled contempt with which she would regard the excuse for leaving her which I should be obliged to make in order to pre¬ pare dinner, poured in upon me until I would fain have found a hole, crawled into it and let Aunt Jane shift for herself. But I did not give up to these reflections long, the car¬ riage must get there sometime, so I hurried home and ordered the horse harnessed. With a sigh of relief I saw the horse trot¬ ting down the walk ten minutes later, and turning from the window I sat about fixing the chicken. The morning wore on, the washerwoman cleared up and departed, the chicken roasted in the oven and I had time to cool my heated face and tidy my dis¬ hevelled hair. Eleven struck and then the half hour, by this time I was getting worried, visions of John’s being drunk and letting the horse run away flashed through my brain when to add to my fears the bell was rung and a telegram was handed me. I paid the boy and col¬ lapsed into the nearest chair to read. It read thus :— Detained on account of Bobby’s illness. Expect us next week. Wicked as it may seem I was so thankful when Bobby’s illness took a turn for the worse and prevented Aunt Jane from leaving him for a month, that I wished I could find some way in which to celebrate the joyful occasion.

Page 26 text:

28 THE PIONEER. Alcalde. This Alcalde was a greedy, avari¬ cious man, and when he heard that a trav¬ eller, as he supposed, had been made way with, he wished to gain possession of the money, for which he thought the Moor had been murdered. By means of a little bluster and a few threats, he forced the water-carrier to relate all the particulars of the death of the way¬ farer. When he found that nothing was to be gained, he allowed the frightened Peregil to go, but took his beloved donkey. Peregil was very despondent for a while, and was much upbraided by his wife, but at last he thought of the box bequeathed to him, and, opening it, found that it contained a paper by which he might gain possession of a great treasure hidden in a cave. He, in company with another Moor, carried out the direc¬ tions, and suddenly the little water-carrier was a rich man. Now Peregil would have been free from harm, if he had not com¬ mitted an indiscretion, which men are prone to do ; he told his wife. She was seen by the meddlesome barber one morning, parad¬ ing in her room covered with jewels, and off he went again to the Alcalde. When that officer was told about it, lie straightway posted himself to Peregil’s house, and forced him to tell where he had gained possession of so much wealth. Doubtless the Alcalde would have imprisoned them, and confiscated their property, had he not been desirous of securing all that was left in the cave. They went to the place, and the water-carrier and his companion went down into the cavern, and brought up as much as they could carry. But the Alcalde was not satisfied with this and resolved to bring up the contents of an iron box, which had been described by the others. As soon as he, his assistant, and the meddlesome barber had entered the cave, the spell was broken which kept it open, and there they were, and there they probably are to this day. The water-carrier and his friend returned home, and lived in luxury for the rest of their lives. “The Alhambra” was probably written both for entertainment, and as a description of the Alhambra and its occupants. The author asks the reader to use much imagina¬ tion, and makes the narrative very interest¬ ing with his artistic hand. Irving especially excels in descriptions of scenery, and is noted for his simplicity of style. Bernard Barrows, ’ 92 . THE PIECE. The boy stood by the master’s desk, His piece lie could not speak And when he essayed an attempt, Ilis voice seemed strangely weak. The master took him by the sleeve And led him from the floor, And it was very late that night Before he reached his door. A MONDAY VISITOR. In the first place it was on Saturday night that I received a letter from Aunt Jane announcing that she and Bobby would be here on Monday morning by ten, and if we would kindly send the carriage to meet the train she would be very much obliged. Now to any one who does not keep a ser¬ vant, company on washing day means gen¬ eral discomfort and the old remains of yes¬ terday’s leg of lamb, but to have Aunt Jane, who was the terror of the whole family was even worse than ordinary circumstances of this kind. But what must be, must be, so I accepted the inevitable and saved the best portion of the boiled ham for Monday’s din¬ ner, and made everything ready for the washerwoman. On Monday I arose early and went into the pantry to make something for dessert.



Page 28 text:

30 THE PIONEER. But of one thing I am sure that if, when Aunt Jane sets the next date for her arrival, if it he a wash day I shall not take the trouble that I did this time, for even Aunt Jane’s inucndoes and sneers are preferable to such another day as that. A. D. E. A WORD OF ADVICE. “I’m getlin ' old—an’ that’s a fact, It ' s queer how time does fly, A mail don’t quite learn how to live Before he has to die. “But gettin’ old and bein ' old Are two quite different things, An ' any man that’s got good health Aint sighin’ after wings. “So keep your health, good friends, I say, No matter what the cost, The time and money spent that way, You ' ll find is never lost.” A VISIT TO A ROMAN CAMP. (Selected from Class Work.) One morning, the first rays of the sun stealing through my closed blinds, found me seated at a small table, earnestly studying the Ctesar lesson for the day ; the text had been nearly mastered and all the difficult construc¬ tions explained, when, yielding to an irrisist- ible impulse to let my head drop, sleep soon overpowered me. Under the influence of that mysterious power that had closed my eyes, I was transported, in my thoughts, to that part of Gaul and to those scenes of mili¬ tary activity of which I had been reading. I saw before me a smooth hill, on the gently sloping side of which was an exten¬ sive encampment, with its rear on the sum¬ mit and before its front, a portion of the de¬ scent. On its westerly side was a small stream and behind, were woods. The camp, which was rectangular in shape, was well fortitied by a wall or rampart of earth strengthened by logs and bundles of brush extending entirely around it. On the top of the rampart, with wide gaps be¬ tween, were placed pinnacles, and at inter¬ vals, towers of wood. At the foot of the wall was a ditch or fossa, I should judge about nine feet in width and seven in depth, with sloping sides. I recognized before me a Roman camp, the exact counterpart of the one of which I had been studying in the early morning. While looking for an entrance, in the hope of ob¬ taining admission, I heard voices, and pres¬ ently two men came into sight, one of whom as I afterwards found out, was Titus Labi- enus, a legatus of Caesar ; the other I inferred was a Gaul recently enrolled in the service of the Roman army. The two men, speaking in the Latin tongue, were interestedly engaged in conver¬ sation, and, my attention being attracted, I found to my great delight, that I could un¬ derstand what they said. Taking my Ctesar note-book, which was already well-tilled with Latin discourses and the results of my inductive work, I record ed the substance of their remarks which, when translated are something as follows : Labienus was saying, “Yes, this is the favorite position for a Roman camp, on the side of a hill, loco super- iore, where wood and water, both so essen¬ tial to the soldiers, arc near at hand; but suppose we enter now, here by this gate, which we call the porta principalis sinistra.” Accordingly the two went in, I, having received permission, following. When we entered, 1 found myself on a broad street, which 1 afterwards learned was the via prin¬ cipally, whence I could look over the entire camp. Men were mounting the wall by means of steps made of brush. Around the camp and at the foot of the rampart, was a thoroughfare more than a hundred feet wide. On each side of the street on which I stood

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