登陆注册
15449900000015

第15章 IV(1)

Sawston School had been founded by a tradesman in the seventeenth century. It was then a tiny grammar-school in a tiny town, and the City Company who governed it had to drive half a day through the woods and heath on the occasion of their annual visit. In the twentieth century they still drove, but only from the railway station; and found themselves not in a tiny town, nor yet in a large one, but amongst innumerable residences, detached and semi-detached, which had gathered round the school. For the intentions of the founder had been altered, or at all events amplified, instead of educating the "poore of my home," he now educated the upper classes of England. The change had taken place not so very far back. Till the nineteenth century the grammar-school was still composed of day scholars from the neighbourhood. Then two things happened. Firstly, the school's property rose in value, and it became rich. Secondly, for no obvious reason, it suddenly emitted a quantity of bishops. The bishops, like the stars from a Roman candle, were all colours, and flew in all directions, some high, some low, some to distant colonies, one into the Church of Rome. But many a father traced their course in the papers; many a mother wondered whether her son, if properly ignited, might not burn as bright; many a family moved to the place where living and education were so cheap, where day-boys were not looked down upon, and where the orthodox and the up-to-date were said to be combined. The school doubled its numbers. It built new class-rooms, laboratories and a gymnasium. It dropped the prefix "Grammar." It coaxed the sons of the local tradesmen into a new foundation, the "Commercial School," built a couple of miles away. And it started boarding-houses. It had not the gracious antiquity of Eton or Winchester, nor, on the other hand, had it a conscious policy like Lancing, Wellington, and other purely modern foundations.

Where tradition served, it clung to them. Where new departures seemed desirable, they were made. It aimed at producing the average Englishman, and, to a very great extent, it succeeded.

Here Mr. Pembroke passed his happy and industrious life. His technical position was that of master to a form low down on the Modern Side. But his work lay elsewhere. He organized. If no organization existed, he would create one. If one did exist, he would modify it. "An organization," he would say, "is after all not an end in itself. It must contribute to a movement." When one good custom seemed likely to corrupt the school, he was ready with another; he believed that without innumerable customs there was no safety, either for boys or men.

Perhaps he is right, and always will be right. Perhaps each of us would go to ruin if for one short hour we acted as we thought fit, and attempted the service of perfect freedom. The school caps, with their elaborate symbolism, were his; his the many-tinted bathing-drawers, that showed how far a boy could swim;his the hierarchy of jerseys and blazers. It was he who instituted Bounds, and call, and the two sorts of exercise-paper, and the three sorts of caning, and "The Sawtonian," a bi-terminal magazine. His plump finger was in every pie. The dome of his skull, mild but impressive, shone at every master's meeting. He was generally acknowledged to be the coming man.

His last achievement had been the organization of the day-boys.

They had been left too much to themselves, and were weak in esprit de corps; they were apt to regard home, not school, as the most important thing in their lives. Moreover, they got out of their parents' hands; they did their preparation any time and some times anyhow. They shirked games, they were out at all hours, they ate what they should not, they smoked, they bicycled on the asphalt. Now all was over. Like boarders, they were to be in at 7:15 P.M., and were not allowed out after unless with a written order from their parent or guardian; they, too, must work at fixed hours in the evening, and before breakfast next morning from 7 to 8. Games were compulsory. They must not go to parties in term time. They must keep to bounds. Of course the reform was not complete. It was impossible to control the dieting, though, on a printed circular, day-parents were implored to provide simple food. And it is also believed that some mothers disobeyed the rule about preparation, and allowed their sons to do all the work over-night and have a longer sleep in the morning. But the gulf between day-boys and boarders was considerably lessened, and grew still narrower when the day-boys too were organized into a House with house-master and colours of their own. "Through the House," said Mr. Pembroke, "one learns patriotism for the school, just as through the school one learns patriotism for the country.

Our only course, therefore, is to organize the day-boys into a House." The headmaster agreed, as he often did, and the new community was formed. Mr. Pembroke, to avoid the tongues of malice, had refused the post of house-master for himself, saying to Mr. Jackson, who taught the sixth, "You keep too much in the background. Here is a chance for you." But this was a failure.

Mr. Jackson, a scholar and a student, neither felt nor conveyed any enthusiasm, and when confronted with his House, would say, "Well, I don't know what we're all here for. Now I should think you'd better go home to your mothers." He returned to his background, and next term Mr. Pembroke was to take his place.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 黑道王者公主(1)

    黑道王者公主(1)

    她是天使界的守护者,是黑道上的冰美人,是善良无比的人,是……。无论舞,吉他,钢琴,网球,F1赛车,唱歌,抬拳道,柔道,……就连学习都很厉害!学什么都那么的认真。就算不经常上课。看看书就可以考试。她是一个平凡的女孩却有着不平凡的超强力“第六感”,能预言着身边的好坏。有着坚人的意志力,有着别人看不到的光芒。因为有她。秦氏的家世变得威力无比。任着小小年纪的她,家业变得无比的强大。……
  • 梨香童话

    梨香童话

    有一座山,叫作云山,云山脚下有一个小镇,叫作梨香湾,梨香湾里有一个园子,叫作梨香园。有一天,梨香园来了一群客人......本故事中的人、事、物、地点、历史纯属虚构,就把它当作一个童话来看吧!
  • 吸血十字夜

    吸血十字夜

    一群不知名的生物来袭你会觉得可怕,不是的,这里讲的是一个浪漫的爱情故事。生死契约,与子携手,即使我们不是人类!
  • 行者风云录

    行者风云录

    携萌宠,踏青峰,行者孤胆闯天下。为红颜,敢上九天摘星;为苍生,敢下九泉喋血。天下乱,山河变,一身修为捅破天;闯妖界,入魔道,直叫天地换新颜。
  • 绝世宠爱:乖我疼你

    绝世宠爱:乖我疼你

    “只有我可以亲你”“只有我可以和你在一起”“我只亲你”“我只会和你在一起”我很专一的哦!
  • 娇妻易被鬼上身

    娇妻易被鬼上身

    一场车祸改变了阴九九的命运,一觉醒来她能看见鬼魂!夜晚来临之际,总会有死不瞑目的小鬼前来纠缠她。直到那个叫君婳的女鬼,因为是处、女鬼不甘心然后缠着她,想要借她的身上了那个叫苑璟泽的男人,阴九九直接无语的两眼一闭晕了过去。可是,却也因此让她碰见了那个叫君临的男人。第一次,他见到她,她被附身晕倒在他怀里,反倒骂他吃她豆腐。第二次,他们再次遇见,两人更是不欢而散!第三次,她更是不要脸的勾引她的好哥们!当真相被揭开,原来真正的她竟然这般令他着迷,当他打算爱上这个女人的时候,“苑璟泽!你爱的人是我妹妹!不是我女人啊喂!”附身的女鬼是君临的妹妹,君婳。喜欢苑璟泽。但女主喜欢的是君临,不要搞混淆哦。
  • 何事悲风秋画扇

    何事悲风秋画扇

    若人生是一场初相遇,在素年锦时,我与你共一场胭脂醉,不醉不休,不停不止,爱仿佛一扇旋转门,找到一个入口,等待我们的必然是一个出口。身边会有一个又一个人不停地经过,无论爱过谁,终究会渐渐走散。
  • 那年秋天有你

    那年秋天有你

    你的生命中,一定会出现某个人,他会改变你对这个世界的认知。那年沈雨桐就认识了这样的一个人,和他在一起,她就会感到十分开心。她所遇到的不开心的事情都被他一语点破。只是相处不过一个月,那个人就走了,并且再也没有出现过。
  • 悬挂的魂灵

    悬挂的魂灵

    这是一部重新连接“革命”与“日常生活”的大书,并因此颠覆和瓦解了种种“文革”叙事。“革命”和“人性”,“权力”和“命运”,“政治”与“乡村”,“欲望”与“爱情”等早已被我们习以为常的主题在这部小说被重新演绎,民间“革命”的正经与荒诞凸现了那个重大历史事件的肌理与脉络。小说以死始、以死终,那个悬挂的魂灵逼视着一个年代,逼视着一个仍然没有完整答案的历史之迷。在多年的沉潜之后,陈占敏从他理解的历史哲学出发,在一个新的通道中抵达了历史的深处。
  • 快穿之半醉半浮生

    快穿之半醉半浮生

    大改中,原章节逻辑不通处当笑话看就行。改完后才会重新开更。过程会很久,如果作品状态一直是在连载中的话,最好不要点开,会被坑。作者在成长,带着这篇文一起。