But, whatever you have been doing,
you have broken the rules, and you must be taught that the rules have to be
kept. Stand still!"
Mr.
Horbury went to the bookshelf and drew out the object. He stood at a little
distance behind Meyrick and opened proceedings with a savage cut at his right
arm, well above the elbow. Then it was the turn of the left arm, and the master
felt the cane bite so pleasantly into the flesh that he distributed some dozen
cuts between the two arms. Then he turned his attention to the lad's thighs and
finished up in the orthodox manner, Meyrick bending over a chair.
The
boy's whole body was one mass of burning, stinging torture; and, though he had
not uttered a sound during the process, the tears were streaming down his
cheeks. It was not the bodily anguish, though that was extreme enough, so much as a far-off recollection. He was quite a little
boy, and his father, dead long since, was showing him the western doorway of a
grey church on a high hill and carefully instructing him in the difference
between "billetty" and "chevronny."
"It's
no good snivelling, you know, Ambrose. I daresay you think me severe, but,
though you won't believe me now, the day will come when you will thank me from
your heart for what I have just done. Let this day be a turning-point in your
life. Now go to your work."
It
was strange, but Meyrick never came in the after days and thanked his uncle for
that sharp dose of physical and mental pain. Even when he was a man he dreamed
of Mr. Horbury and woke up in a cold sweat, and then would fall asleep again
with a great sigh of relief and gladness as he realised that he was no longer
in the power of that "infernal old swine," "that filthy,
canting, cruel brute," as he roughly called his old master.
The
fact was, as some old Luptonians remarked, the two had never understood one
another. With the majority of the boys the High Usher passed for a popular
master enough. He had been a distinguished athlete in his time, and up to his
last days at the school was a football enthusiast. Indeed, he organised a
variety of the Lupton game which met with immense popularity till the Head was
reluctantly compelled to stop it; some said because he always liked to drop
bitter into Horbury's cup when possible; others—and with more probability on
their side—maintained that it was in consequence of a report received from the
school doctor to the effect that this new species of football was rapidly
setting up an old species of heart disease in the weaker players.
However
that might be, there could be no doubt as to Horbury's intense and deep-rooted
devotion to the school. His father had been a Luptonian before him. He himself
had gone from the school to the University, and within a year or two of taking
his degree he had returned to Lupton to serve it as a master. It was the
general opinion in Public School circles that the High Usher had counted for as
much as Chesson, the Headmaster, if not for more, in the immense advance in
prestige and popularity that the school had made; and everybody thought that
when Chesson received the episcopal order Horbury's succession was a certainty.
Unfortunately, however, there were wheels within wheels, and a total stranger
was appointed, a man who knew nothing of the famous Lupton traditions, who (it
was whispered) had been heard to say that "this athletic business"
was getting a bit overdone. Mr. Horbury's friends were furious, and Horbury
himself, it was supposed, was bitterly disappointed. He retreated to one of the
few decent canonries which have survived the wave of agricultural depression;
but those who knew him best doubted whether his ecclesiastical duties were an
adequate consolation for the loss of that coveted Headmastership of Lupton.
To
quote the memoir which appeared in the Guardian soon after his death, over some well-known initials:
"His
friends were shocked when they saw him at the Residence. He seemed no longer
the same man, he had aged more in six months, as some
of them expressed themselves, than in the dozen years before. The old joyous
Horbury, full of mirth, an apt master of word-play and logic-fence, was somehow
'dimmed,' to use the happy phrase of a former colleague, the Dean of
Dorchester. Old Boys who remembered the sparkle of his wit, the zest which he
threw into everything, making the most ordinary form-work better fun than the
games at other schools, as one of them observed, missed something indefinable
from the man whom they had loved so long and so well. One of them, who had
perhaps penetrated as closely as any into the arcana of Horbury's friendship (a privilege which he will ever esteem
as one of the greatest blessings of his life), tried to rouse him with an
extravagant rumour which was then going the round of the popular Press, to the
effect that considerable modifications were about to be introduced into the
compulsory system of games at X., one of the greatest of our great Public
Schools. Horbury flushed; the old light came into his eyes; his friend was
reminded of the ancient war-horse who hears once more the inspiring notes of
the trumpet. 'I can't believe it,' he said, and there was a tremor in his
voice. 'They wouldn't dare. Not even Y. (the Headmaster of X.) would do such a
scoundrelly thing as that.
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