Ramsey Milholland eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 162 pages of information about Ramsey Milholland.

Ramsey Milholland eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 162 pages of information about Ramsey Milholland.
family affairs, and business, and so on, have got ’em tied up so it’s hard to go—­and of course there’s plenty that just can’t, and some that aren’t husky enough—­but the rest of us are going to have the big time in our lives.  We got an awful lot to learn; it scares me to think of what I don’t know about being any sort of a rear-rank private.  Why, it’s a regular profession, like practising law, or selling for a drug house on the road.  Golly!  Do you remember how we talked about that, ’way back in freshman year, what we were going to do when we got out of college?  You were going to be practising law, for instance, and I—­well, f’r instance, remember Colburn; he was going to be a doctor, and he did go to some medical school for one year.  Now he’s in the Red Cross, somewhere in Persia.  Golly!”

He paused to digest this impossibility, then chattered briskly on.  “Well, there’s one good old boy was with our class for a while, back in freshman year; I bet we won’t see him in any good old army!  Old rough-neck Linski that you put the knob on his nose for.  Tommie Hopper says he saw him last summer in Chicago soapboxin’, yellin’ his head off cussin’ every government under the sun, but mostly ours and the Allies’, you bet, and going to run the earth by revolution and representatives of unskilled labour immigrants, nobody that can read or write allowed to vote, except Linski.  Tommie Hopper says he knows all about Linski; he never did a day’s work in his life—­too busy trying to get the workingmen stirred up against the people that exploit ’em!  Tommie says he had a big crowd to hear him, though, and took up quite a little money for a ‘cause’ or something.  Well, let him holler!  I guess we can attend to him when we get back from over yonder.  By George, old Ram, I’m gettin’ kind of floppy in the gills!” He administered a resounding slap to his comrade’s shoulder.  “It certainly looks as if our big days were walking toward us!”

He was right.  The portentous days came on apace, and each one brought a new and greater portent.  The faces of men lost a driven look besetting them in the days of badgered waiting, and instead of that heavy apprehension one saw the look men’s faces must have worn in 1776 and 1861, and the history of the old days grew clearer in the new.  The President went to the Congress, and the true indictment he made there reached scoffing Potsdam with an unspoken prophecy somewhat chilling even to Potsdam, one guesses—­and then through an April night went almost quietly the steady work:  we were at war with Germany.

The bugles sounded across the continent; drums and fifes played up and down the city streets and in town and village squares and through the countrysides.  Faintly in all ears there was multitudinous noise like distant, hoarse cheering... and a sound like that was what Dora Yocum heard, one night, as she sat lonely in her room.  The bugles and fifes and drums had been heard about the streets of the college town, that day, and she thought she must die of them, they hurt her so, and now to be haunted by this imaginary cheering—­

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Ramsey Milholland from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.