POINT
OF VIEW
Boyhood
is the longest time in life for a boy. The last term of the school-year
is made of decades, not of weeks, and living through them is like
waiting for the millennium. But they do pass, somehow, and at
last there came a day when Penrod was one of a group that capered
out from the gravelled yard of "Ward School, Nomber Seventh,"
carolling a leave-taking of the institution, of their instructress,
and not even forgetting Mr. Capps, the janitor.
"Good-bye, teacher! Good-bye, school! Good-bye, Cappsie,
dern ole fool!"
Penrod sang the loudest. For every boy, there is an age when he
"finds his voice." Penrod's had not "changed,"
but he had found it. Inevitably that thing had come upon his family
and the neighbours; and his father, a somewhat dyspeptic man,
quoted frequently the expressive words of the "Lady of Shalott,"
but there were others whose sufferings were as poignant.
Vacation-time warmed the young of the world to pleasant languor;
and a morning came that was like a brightly coloured picture in
a child's fairy story. Miss Margaret Schofield, reclining in a
hammock upon the
front porch, was beautiful in the eyes of a newly made senior,
well favoured and in fair raiment, beside her. A guitar rested
lightly upon his knee, and he was trying to play--a matter of
some difficulty, as the floor of the porch also seemed inclined
to be musical. From directly under his feet came a voice of song,
shrill, loud, incredibly piercing and incredibly flat, dwelling
upon each syllable with incomprehensible reluctance to leave it.
"I have lands and earthly pow- wur.
I'd give all for a now-wur,
Whi-ilst setting at MY-Y-Y dear old mother's knee-ee,
So-o-o rem-mem-bur whilst you're young----"
Miss Schofield stamped heartily upon the musical floor.
"It's Penrod," she explained. "The lattice at the
end of the porch is loose, and he crawls under and comes out all
bugs. He's been having a dreadful singing fit lately--running
away to picture shows and vaudeville, I suppose."
Mr. Robert Williams looked upon her yearningly. He touched a thrilling
chord on his guitar and leaned nearer. "But you said you
have missed me," he began. "I----"
The voice of Penrod drowned all other sounds.
"So-o-o rem-mem-bur, whi-i-ilst you're young,
That the day-a-ys to you will come,
When you're o-o-old and only
in the way,
Do not scoff at them BEE-
cause----"
"PENROD!" Miss Schofield stamped again.
“You DID say you’d missed me,” said Mr. Robert
Williams, seizing hurriedly upon the silence. “Didn’t
you say——”
A livelier tune rose upward.
“Oh, you talk about your
fascinating beauties,
Of your dem-O-zells,
your belles,
But the littil dame I met,
while in the city,
She’s par excellaws the queen of all the swells.
She’s sweeter far——”
Margaret rose and jumped up and down repeatedly in a well-calculated
area, whereupon the voice of Penrod cried chokedly, “QUIT
that!” and there were subterranean coughings and sneezings.
“You want to choke a person to death?” he inquired
severely, appearing at the end of the porch, a cobweb upon his
brow. And, continuing, he put into practice a newly acquired phrase,
“You better learn to be more considerick of other people’s
comfort.”
Slowly and grievedly he withdrew, passed to the sunny side of
the house, reclined in the warm grass beside his wistful Duke,
and presently sang again.
“She’s sweeter far than the flower I named her after,
And the memery of her smile it haunts me YET!
When in after years the moon is soffly beamun’
And at eve I smell the smell
of mignonette
I will re-CALL that——”
“Pen-ROD!”
Mr. Schofield appeared at an open window upstairs, a book in his
hand.
“Stop it!” he commanded. “Can’t I stay
home with a headache ONE morning from the office without having
to listen to—I never DID hear such squawking!” He
retired from the window, having too impulsively called upon his
Maker. Penrod, shocked and injured, entered the house, but presently
his voice was again audible as far as the front porch. He was
holding converse with his mother, somewhere in the interior.
“Well, what of it? Sam Williams told me his mother said
if Bob ever did think of getting married to Margaret, his mother
said she’d like to know what in the name o’ goodness
they expect to——” Bang! Margaret thought it
better to close the front door...
from PENROD
By Booth Tarkington
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