Left Tackle Thayer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 262 pages of information about Left Tackle Thayer.

Left Tackle Thayer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 262 pages of information about Left Tackle Thayer.

He had never been enthusiastic about going North to school.  It had been his mother’s idea.  Mr. Thayer was willing that Clint should prepare for college in his native state, but Clint’s mother had other ideas.  Mr. Thayer had graduated from Princeton and it had long been settled that Clint was to be educated there too; and Clint’s mother insisted that since he was to attend a Northern college it would be better for him to go to a Northern preparatory school.  Clint himself had not felt strongly enough about it to object.  Several of his chums had gone or were going to Virginia Military College; and Clint would have liked to go there too, although the military feature didn’t especially appeal to him.  Brimfield Academy, at Brimfield, New York, had finally been selected, principally because a cousin of Clint’s on his father’s side had once attended the school.  The fact that the cousin in question had never amounted to much and was now clerking in a shoe store in Norfolk was not held against the school.

So far the boy had liked what he had seen of Brimfield well enough.  The thirty-mile journey from New York on the train had been through an attractive country, with now and then a fleeting glimpse of water to add variety to the landscape; and the woods and fields around the Academy were pretty.  From where he sat at the east end of the athletic field he could look along the backs of the buildings, which ran in a row straight along the edge of a plateau.  Nearest at hand was the gymnasium.  Then came Wendell and Torrence, the latter having the honour of being Clint’s abode for the ensuing nine months.  Next was Main Hall, containing recitation rooms, the assembly room, the library and the office; an older building and built all of brick whereas the other structures were uniformly of stone as to first story and brick above.  Beyond Main Hall were Hensey and Billings, both dormitories, and, at the western end of the row and slightly out of line, The Cottage, where dwelt the Principal, Mr. Fernald, of whom Clint knew little and, it must be confessed, cared, at the present moment, still less.  In front of the buildings the ground fell away to the country road over which Clint had that morning travelled behind a somnolent grey horse and a voluble driver, to the last of which combination he owed most of his information regarding the Academy.

Behind the buildings—­in school parlance, the Row—­lay the athletic field, almost twelve acres in extent, bordered on the further side by a rising slope of forest.  Here there were football grid-irons—­three of them, as the six goals indicated—­quarter-mile running-track, a baseball diamond and a dozen tennis courts.  The diamond was most in evidence, for the grand-stand stood behind the plate and the base paths, bare of turf, formed a square in front of it.  Even the foul lines had not been utterly obliterated by sun and rain, but were dimly discernible, where the mower had passed, as yellower streaks against the vivid green. 

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Left Tackle Thayer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.