Joy in the Morning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 227 pages of information about Joy in the Morning.

Joy in the Morning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 227 pages of information about Joy in the Morning.

David Lance sat wondering.  He was not due at the office till ten this Saturday night and he was putting in a long and thorough wonder.  About the service in all its branches; about finance; about the new Liberty Loan.  First, how was he to stop being a peaceful reporter on the Daybreak and get into uniform; that wonder covered a class including the army, navy and air-service, for he had been refused by all three; he wondered how a small limp from apple-tree acrobatics at ten might be so explained away that he might pass; reluctantly he wondered also about the Y.M.C.A.  But he was a fighting man par excellence.  For him it would feel like slacking to go into any but fighting service.  Six feet two and weighing a hundred and ninety, every ounce possible to be muscle was muscle; easy, joyful twenty-four-year-old muscle which knew nothing of fatigue.  He was certain he would make a fit soldier for Uncle Sam, and how, how he wanted to be Uncle Sam’s soldier!

He was getting desperate.  Every man he knew in the twenties and many a one under and over, was in uniform; bitterly he envied the proud peace in their eyes when he met them.  He could not bear to explain things once more as he had explained today to Tom Arnold and “Beef” Johnson, and “Seraph” Olcott, home on leave before sailing for France.  He had suffered while they listened courteously and hurried to say that they understood, that it was a shame, and that:  “You’ll make it yet, old son.”  And they had then turned to each other comparing notes of camps.  It made little impression that he had toiled and sweated early and late in this struggle to get in somewhere—­army, navy, air-service—­anything to follow the flag.  He wasn’t allowed.  He was still a reporter on the Daybreak while the biggest doings of humanity were getting done, and every young son of America had his chance to help.  With a strong, tireless body aching for soldier’s work, America, his mother, refused him work.  He wasn’t allowed.

Lance groaned, sitting in his one big chair in his one small room.  There were other problems.  A Liberty Loan drive was on, and where could he lay hands on money for bonds?  He had plunged on the last loan and there was yet something to pay on the $200 subscription.  And there was no one and nothing to fall back on except his salary as reporter for the Daybreak. His father had died when he was six, and his mother eight years ago; his small capital had gone for his four years, at Yale.  There was no one—­except a legend of cousins in the South.  Never was any one poorer or more alone.  Yet he must take a bond or two.  How might he hold up his head not to fight and not to buy bonds.  A knock at the door.

“Come in,” growled Lance.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Joy in the Morning from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.