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<h2> CHAPTER XV. A MODEL LETTER TO A FRIEND </h2>
<p>On Monday morning Penrod's faith in the coming of another Saturday was
flaccid and lustreless. Those Japanese lovers who were promised a reunion
after ten thousand years in separate hells were brighter with hope than he
was. On Monday Penrod was virtually an agnostic.</p>
<p>Nowhere upon his shining morning face could have been read any eager
anticipation of useful knowledge. Of course he had been told that school
was for his own good; in fact, he had been told and told and told, but the
words conveying this information, meaningless at first, assumed, with each
repetition, more and more the character of dull and unsolicited insult.</p>
<p>He was wholly unable to imagine circumstances, present or future, under
which any of the instruction and training he was now receiving could be of
the slightest possible use or benefit to himself; and when he was informed
that such circumstances would frequently arise in his later life, he but
felt the slur upon his coming manhood and its power to prevent any such
unpleasantness.</p>
<p>If it were possible to place a romantic young Broadway actor and athlete
under hushing supervision for six hours a day, compelling him to bend his
unremittent attention upon the city directory of Sheboygan, Wisconsin, he
could scarce be expected to respond genially to frequent statements that
the compulsion was all for his own good. On the contrary, it might be
reasonable to conceive his response as taking the form of action, which is
precisely the form that Penrod's smouldering impulse yearned to take.</p>
<p>To Penrod school was merely a state of confinement, envenomed by
mathematics. For interminable periods he was forced to listen to
information concerning matters about which he had no curiosity whatever;
and he had to read over and over the dullest passages in books that bored
him into stupors, while always there overhung the preposterous task of
improvising plausible evasions to conceal the fact that he did not know
what he had no wish to know. Likewise, he must always be prepared to avoid
incriminating replies to questions that he felt nobody had a real and
natural right to ask him. And when his gorge rose and his inwards
revolted, the hours became a series of ignoble misadventures and petty
disgraces strikingly lacking in privacy.</p>
<p>It was usually upon Wednesday that his sufferings culminated; the nervous
strength accumulated during the holiday hours at the end of the week would
carry him through Monday and Tuesday; but by Wednesday it seemed
ultimately proven that the next Saturday actually never was coming, "this
time", and the strained spirit gave way. Wednesday was the day averaging
highest in Penrod's list of absences; but the time came when he felt that
the advantages attendant upon his Wednesday "sick headache" did not
compensate for its inconveniences.</p>
<p>For one thing, this illness had become so symmetrically recurrent that
even the cook felt that he was pushing it too far, and the liveliness of
her expression, when he was able to leave his couch and take the air in
the backyard at about ten o'clock, became more disagreeable to him with
each convalescence. There visibly increased, too, about the whole
household, an atmosphere of uncongeniality and suspicion so pronounced
that every successive illness was necessarily more severe, and at last the
patient felt obliged to remain bedded until almost eleven, from time to
time giving forth pathetic little sounds eloquent of anguish triumphing
over Stoic endurance, yet lacking a certain conviction of utterance.</p>
<p>Finally, his father enacted, and his mother applied, a new and distinctly
special bit of legislation, explaining it with simple candour to the
prospective beneficiary.</p>
<p>"Whenever you really ARE sick," they said, "you can go out and play as
soon as you're well—that is, if it happens on Saturday. But when
you're sick on a school-day, you'll stay in bed till the next morning.
This is going to do you good, Penrod."</p>
<p>Physically, their opinion appeared to be affirmed, for Wednesday after
Wednesday passed without any recurrence of the attack; but the spiritual
strain may have been damaging. And it should be added that if Penrod's
higher nature did suffer from the strain, he was not unique. For,
confirming the effect of Wednesday upon boys in general, it is probable
that, if full statistics concerning cats were available, they would show
that cats dread Wednesdays, and that their fear is shared by other
animals, and would be shared, to an extent by windows, if windows
possessed nervous systems. Nor must this probable apprehension on the part
of cats and the like be thought mere superstition. Cats have
superstitions, it is true; but certain actions inspired by the sight of a
boy with a missile in his hand are better evidence of the workings of
logic upon a practical nature than of faith in the supernatural.</p>
<p>Moreover, the attention of family physicians and specialists should be
drawn to these significant though obscure phenomena; for the suffering of
cats is a barometer of the nerve-pressure of boys, and it may be accepted
as sufficiently established that Wednesday—after school-hours—is
the worst time for cats.</p>
<p>After the promulgation of that parental edict, "You'll stay in bed till
the next morning", four weeks went by unflawed by a single absence from
the field of duty; but, when the fifth Wednesday came, Penrod held sore
debate within himself before he finally rose. In fact, after rising, and
while actually engaged with his toilet, he tentatively emitted the series
of little moans that was his wonted preliminary to a quiet holiday at
home; and the sound was heard (as intended) by Mr. Schofield, who was
passing Penrod's door on his way to breakfast.</p>
<p>"ALL right!" the father said, making use of peculiar and unnecessary
emphasis. "Stay in bed till to-morrow morning. Castor-oil, this time,
too."</p>
<p>Penrod had not hoped much for his experiment; nevertheless his rebellious
blood was sensibly inflamed by the failure, and he accompanied his
dressing with a low murmuring—apparently a bitter dialogue between
himself and some unknown but powerful patron.</p>
<p>Thus he muttered:</p>
<p>"Well, they better NOT!" "Well, what can I DO about it?" "Well, I'D show
'em!" "Well, I WILL show 'em!" "Well, you OUGHT to show 'em; that's the
way <i>I</i> do! I just shake 'em around, and say, 'Here! I guess you
don't know who you're talkin' to like that! You better look out!'" "Well,
that's the way <i>I</i>'m goin' to do!" "Well, go on and DO it, then!"
"Well, I AM goin'—"</p>
<p>The door of the next room was slightly ajar; now it swung wide, and
Margaret appeared.</p>
<p>"Penrod, what on earth are you talking about?"</p>
<p>"Nothin'. None o' your—"</p>
<p>"Well, hurry to breakfast, then; it's getting late."</p>
<p>Lightly she went, humming a tune, leaving the door of her room open, and
the eyes of Penrod, as he donned his jacket, chanced to fall upon her
desk, where she had thoughtlessly left a letter—a private missive
just begun, and intended solely for the eyes of Mr. Robert Williams, a
senior at a far university.</p>
<p>In such a fashion is coincidence the architect of misfortune. Penrod's
class in English composition had been instructed, the previous day, to
concoct at home and bring to class on Wednesday morning, "a model letter
to a friend on some subject of general interest." Penalty for omission to
perform this simple task was definite; whosoever brought no letter would
inevitably be "kept in" after school, that afternoon, until the letter was
written, and it was precisely a premonition of this misfortune that had
prompted Penrod to attempt his experimental moaning upon his father, for,
alas! he had equipped himself with no model letter, nor any letter
whatever.</p>
<p>In stress of this kind, a boy's creed is that anything is worth a try; but
his eye for details is poor. He sees the future too sweepingly and too
much as he would have it seldom providing against inconsistencies of
evidence that may damage him. For instance, there is a well-known case of
two brothers who exhibited to their parents, with pathetic confidence,
several imported dried herring on a string, as a proof that the afternoon
had been spent, not at a forbidden circus, but with hook and line upon the
banks of a neighbouring brook.</p>
<p>So with Penrod. He had vital need of a letter, and there before his eyes,
upon Margaret's desk, was apparently the precise thing he needed!</p>
<p>From below rose the voice of his mother urging him to the breakfast-table,
warning him that he stood in danger of tardiness at school; he was pressed
for time, and acted upon an inspiration that failed to prompt him even to
read the letter.</p>
<p>Hurriedly he wrote "Dear freind" at the top of the page Margaret had
partially filled. Then he signed himself "Yours respectfuly, Penrod
Schofield" at the bottom, and enclosed the missive within a battered
volume entitled, "Principles of English Composition." With that and other
books compacted by a strap, he descended to a breakfast somewhat
oppressive but undarkened by any misgivings concerning a "letter to a
friend on some subject of general interest." He felt that a difficulty had
been encountered and satisfactorily disposed of; the matter could now be
dismissed from his mind. He had plenty of other difficulties to take its
place.</p>
<p>No; he had no misgivings, nor was he assailed by anything unpleasant in
that line, even when the hour struck for the class in English composition.
If he had been two or three years older, experience might have warned him
to take at least the precaution of copying his offering, so that it would
appear in his own handwriting when he "handed it in"; but Penrod had not
even glanced at it.</p>
<p>"I think," Miss Spence said, "I will ask several of you to read your
letters aloud before you hand them in. Clara Raypole, you may read yours."</p>
<p>Penrod was bored but otherwise comfortable; he had no apprehension that he
might be included in the "several," especially as Miss Spence's beginning
with Clara Raypole, a star performer, indicated that her selection of
readers would be made from the conscientious and proficient division at
the head of the class. He listened stoically to the beginning of the first
letter, though he was conscious of a dull resentment, inspired mainly by
the perfect complacency of Miss Raypole's voice.</p>
<p>"'Dear Cousin Sadie,'" she began smoothly, "'I thought I would write you
to-day on some subject of general interest, and so I thought I would tell
you about the subject of our court-house. It is a very fine building
situated in the centre of the city, and a visit to the building after
school hours well repays for the visit. Upon entrance we find upon our
left the office of the county clerk and upon our right a number of windows
affording a view of the street. And so we proceed, finding on both sides
much of general interest. The building was begun in 1886 A.D. and it was
through in 1887 A.D. It is four stories high and made of stone, pressed
brick, wood, and tiles, with a tower, or cupola, one hundred and
twenty-seven feet seven inches from the ground. Among other subjects of
general interest told by the janitor, we learn that the architect of the
building was a man named Flanner, and the foundations extend fifteen feet
five inches under the ground.'"</p>
<p>Penrod was unable to fix his attention upon these statistics; he began
moodily to twist a button of his jacket and to concentrate a new-born and
obscure but lasting hatred upon the court-house. Miss Raypole's glib voice
continued to press upon his ears; but, by keeping his eyes fixed upon the
twisting button he had accomplished a kind of self-hypnosis, or mental
anaesthesia, and was but dimly aware of what went on about him.</p>
<p>The court-house was finally exhausted by its visitor, who resumed her seat
and submitted with beamish grace to praise. Then Miss Spence said, in a
favourable manner:</p>
<p>"Georgie Bassett, you may read your letter next."</p>
<p>The neat Georgie rose, nothing loath, and began: "'Dear Teacher—'"</p>
<p>There was a slight titter, which Miss Spence suppressed. Georgie was not
at all discomfited.</p>
<p>"'My mother says,'" he continued, reading his manuscript, "'we should
treat our teacher as a friend, and so <i>I</i> will write YOU a letter.'"</p>
<p>This penetrated Penrod's trance, and he lifted his eyes to fix them upon
the back of Georgie Bassett's head in a long and inscrutable stare. It was
inscrutable, and yet if Georgie had been sensitive to thought waves, it is
probable that he would have uttered a loud shriek; but he remained
placidly unaware, continuing:</p>
<p>"'I thought I would write you about a subject of general interest, and so
I will write you about the flowers. There are many kinds of flowers,
spring flowers, and summer flowers, and autumn flowers, but no winter
flowers. Wild flowers grow in the woods, and it is nice to hunt them in
springtime, and we must remember to give some to the poor and hospitals,
also. Flowers can be made to grow in flower-beds and placed in vases in
houses. There are many names for flowers, but <i>I</i> call them "nature's
ornaments.—'"</p>
<p>Penrod's gaze had relaxed, drooped to his button again, and his lethargy
was renewed. The outer world grew vaguer; voices seemed to drone at a
distance; sluggish time passed heavily—but some of it did pass.</p>
<p>"Penrod!"</p>
<p>Miss Spence's searching eye had taken note of the bent head and the
twisting button. She found it necessary to speak again.</p>
<p>"Penrod Schofield!"</p>
<p>He came languidly to life.</p>
<p>"Ma'am?"</p>
<p>"You may read your letter."</p>
<p>"Yes'm."</p>
<p>And he began to paw clumsily among his books, whereupon Miss Spence's
glance fired with suspicion.</p>
<p>"Have you prepared one?" she demanded.</p>
<p>"Yes'm," said Penrod dreamily.</p>
<p>"But you're going to find you forgot to bring it, aren't you?"</p>
<p>"I got it," said Penrod, discovering the paper in his "Principles of
English Composition."</p>
<p>"Well, we'll listen to what you've found time to prepare," she said,
adding coldly, "for once!"</p>
<p>The frankest pessimism concerning Penrod permeated the whole room; even
the eyes of those whose letters had not met with favour turned upon him
with obvious assurance that here was every prospect of a performance that
would, by comparison, lend a measure of credit to the worst preceding it.
But Penrod was unaffected by the general gaze; he rose, still blinking
from his lethargy, and in no true sense wholly alive.</p>
<p>He had one idea: to read as rapidly as possible, so as to be done with the
task, and he began in a high-pitched monotone, reading with a blind mind
and no sense of the significance of the words.</p>
<p>"'Dear friend,"' he declaimed. "'You call me beautiful, but I am not
really beautiful, and there are times when I doubt if I am even pretty,
though perhaps my hair is beautiful, and if it is true that my eyes are
like blue stars in heaven—'"</p>
<p>Simultaneously he lost his breath and there burst upon him a perception of
the results to which he was being committed by this calamitous reading.
And also simultaneous the outbreak of the class into cachinnations of
delight, severely repressed by the perplexed but indignant Miss Spence.</p>
<p>"Go on!" she commanded grimly, when she had restored order.</p>
<p>"Ma'am?" he gulped, looking wretchedly upon the rosy faces all about him.</p>
<p>"Go on with the description of yourself," she said. "We'd like to hear
some more about your eyes being like blue stars in heaven."</p>
<p>Here many of Penrod's little comrades were forced to clasp their faces
tightly in both hands; and his dismayed gaze, in refuge, sought the
treacherous paper in his hand.</p>
<p>What it beheld there was horrible.</p>
<p>"Proceed!" Miss Spence said.</p>
<p>"'I—often think,'" he faltered, "'and a-a tree-more th-thrills my
bein' when I REcall your last words to me—that last—that last—that—'"</p>
<p>"GO ON!"</p>
<p>"'That last evening in the moonlight when you—you—you—'"</p>
<p>"Penrod," Miss Spence said dangerously, "you go on, and stop that
stammering."</p>
<p>"'You—you said you would wait for—for years to—to—to—to—"</p>
<p>"PENROD!"</p>
<p>"'To win me!'" the miserable Penrod managed to gasp. "'I should not have
pre—premitted—permitted you to speak so until we have our—our
parents' con-consent; but oh, how sweet it—'" He exhaled a sigh of
agony, and then concluded briskly, "'Yours respectfully, Penrod
Schofield.'"</p>
<p>But Miss Spence had at last divined something, for she knew the Schofield
family.</p>
<p>"Bring me that letter!" she said.</p>
<p>And the scarlet boy passed forward between rows of mystified but
immoderately uplifted children.</p>
<p>Miss Spence herself grew rather pink as she examined the missive, and the
intensity with which she afterward extended her examination to cover the
complete field of Penrod Schofield caused him to find a remote centre of
interest whereon to rest his embarrassed gaze. She let him stand before
her throughout a silence, equalled, perhaps, by the tenser pauses during
trials for murder, and then, containing herself, she sweepingly gestured
him to the pillory—a chair upon the platform, facing the school.</p>
<p>Here he suffered for the unusual term of an hour, with many jocular and
cunning eyes constantly upon him; and, when he was released at noon,
horrid shouts and shrieks pursued him every step of his homeward way. For
his laughter-loving little schoolmates spared him not—neither boy
nor girl.</p>
<p>"Yay, Penrod!" they shouted. "How's your beautiful hair?" And, "Hi,
Penrod! When you goin' to get your parents' consent?" And, "Say, blue
stars in heaven, how's your beautiful eyes?" And, "Say, Penrod, how's your
tree-mores?" "Does your tree-mores thrill your bein', Penrod?" And many
other facetious inquiries, hard to bear in public.</p>
<p>And when he reached the temporary shelter of his home, he experienced no
relief upon finding that Margaret was out for lunch. He was as deeply
embittered toward her as toward any other, and, considering her largely
responsible for his misfortune, he would have welcomed an opportunity to
show her what he thought of her.</p>
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