The Grammar School Boys in Summer Athletics eBook

H. Irving Hancock
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 193 pages of information about The Grammar School Boys in Summer Athletics.

The Grammar School Boys in Summer Athletics eBook

H. Irving Hancock
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 193 pages of information about The Grammar School Boys in Summer Athletics.

Five minutes later there were more than thirty boys at the corner, and still others were in sight, coming from both ways.

“Say, get busy, Prescott!” called some of the newer corners.

“Let the crowd all get here,” Dick insisted.

Presently the crowd numbered more than fifty a lot of their elders, seeing such an unusual crowd of youths on one corner, halted curiously near by.  Then Reporter Len Spencer came along.

“What’s all the excitement?” demanded Len, ever keen for local news.  One of the boys exclaimed to him what was in the wind.

“Then you’d better hurry up with your statement, Dick,” Len advised.  “There’ll be a riot here soon.”

“Five o’clock was the time named,” Prescott rejoined.

Just then the town clock began to strike.

“It’s five o’clock now, Dick,” called Greg.

“Yes,” nodded Dick, “and I’m ready at last to redeem my promise.”

“He’s going to tell us!”

“Hurrah!”

“Shut up!  We want to hear.”

“You are all assembled here,” Prescott continued, “to hear just what it was that the man on the clubhouse steps said.”

“Cut out the end-man explanations.  Give us the kernel!” shouted one boy.

“What the man on the clubhouse steps said,” Dick went ahead, “should be a model to everyone.  It is of especial value to all who are tempted to talk too fast and then to think an hour later.”

“Yes, but what did he say—–­the man on the clubhouse steps?” howled Harry Hazelton.

“You will know, in a minute,” Dick assured his hearers.  “Yet, before telling you, I want to impress upon you that, whenever you are tempted to be angry, to be harsh in judgments, or when you can think only ill of your neighbor, then you should always hark back to just what the man on the clubhouse steps said.”

There was a pause and silence, the latter broken by Danny Grin demanding impatiently: 

“Well, what did he say?”

“You see,” Dick explained, “the man was all alone on the clubhouse steps.”

“Yes, yes.”

“And he wasn’t exactly sociable by nature.”

“Go on!”

“As I have explained,” smiled Dick Prescott, “the man on the clubhouse
steps was alone, and-----”

“Get ahead faster!”

“So, being alone, he just naturally said-----”

“Well?” breathed the auditors.  “Well?”

“He just naturally said—–­nothing!”

“What?”

Dick dodged back, laughing.  There were a few indignant vocal explosions among the assembled youngsters, followed by dangerous calm and quiet.

“Whenever you find yourself under trying circumstances, or when anger is surging within you, fellows, believe me, you’ll always find it wiser to say just what the man on the clubhouse steps said—–­which was nothing,” Dick urged.

“And you got us all the way up here, at an appointed time, just to hear that?” demanded Spoff Henderson.

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Project Gutenberg
The Grammar School Boys in Summer Athletics from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.