The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Country School, by Martha Russell Orne This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Title: The Country School An Entertainment in Two Scenes Author: Martha Russell Orne Release Date: September 13, 2018 [EBook #57893] Language: English Character set encoding: UTF-8 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE COUNTRY SCHOOL *** Produced by Stewart A. Levin
The dress may be left largely to individual taste. Short pantaloons, jumpers, long-sleeved tires, caps, broad-brimmed straw hats, heavy cowhide boots, are suggested for the gentlemen; while short dresses, the historic pantalette, sun-bonnets, tires, aprons, etc., are proposed for the ladies. The latter should have their hair braided or hanging in long curls. All should be neatly dressed in “ye olden time” costumes, except one or two, who may represent the tatterdemalion fraternity. One of these may be the bright boy of the class, the other the dullard, who stumbles through his lessons, loses his place, has a passion for catching flies, throwing spit-balls, etc. One boy may have a penchant for drawing pictures on his slate or the blackboard, in which his teacher and mates play a prominent part as models. One girl a proneness for chewing gum, another for large pickles; another thinks herself smart, but generally manages to give wrong answers. A few names have been suggested in the dialogue, but they may be easily varied. Where a name is not necessary, the author has used the word “Pupil,” so that the parts may be distributed according to the number of performers.
The by-play that goes on among the scholars who are not reciting must be of such a nature that it will not attract the attention of the teacher unless it is a part of the programme.
The motion song can be introduced elsewhere in the dialogue if advisable.
As a rule, pupils should raise hands (at the same time saying “Huh! huh!” or snapping thumb and finger), and obtain permission before speaking; but where the dialogue becomes spirited, this rule may be broken.
An indefinite number can take part in this entertainment.
BOY. Say, Seth, old Hickory’s coming! Got your hands all waxed, sonny? ’Cause you’ll have to ketch it hot and heavy this morning. Teacher’s awful mad about your stealing Squire Green’s apples.
SETH CRANE (who has book-bag, etc.). Don’t care. I ain’t going to school to-day, anyway. I’m going to play hookey.
BOY. Did your ma say you might?
SETH. Bet your life she didn’t. I’m not tied to my ma’s apron strings, Bubby; I’m no baby!
BOY. Here he comes! Run, Seth, or he’ll ketch you.
(SETH runs off. Teacher passes along saying “Good-morning” etc., to children.)
BOY. (still whittling, to group which comes up). Say, boys, Seth Crane’s going to play hookey. Let’s pay, him back for saying we stole Squire Green’s apples, will you, and tell his mother? She’s a daisy, though, ain’t she?
SECOND BOY. Agreed! But who’ll tell the old lady?
BOY. Let Daniel. He’s teacher’s pet anyway, and if he’s late, nothing’ll be said. Will you go, Dan?
DANIEL. Yes. The old lady’ll give me some of her nice doughnuts. (Smacking lips, he runs off. Boys pass off in other direction, crying, “Save some for us, Dan,” etc.)
The above merely serves to indicate the general nature of the dialogue that may be characteristically employed, the precise points to be made depending for their humorous value so entirely upon the identity of the actor in each case and their contradiction of his well-known character and dignity, that they must be left to the invention of the players. The dialogue, whatever its nature, should be accompanied by an incessant pantomimic action of characteristic boyish antics and practical jokes, made inexpressibly ludicrous by whiskers, bass voices, and other personal anachronisms.
At the close of this introductory part, and while the curtain is rising on the school scene, a large bell should be rung vigorously.
SCENE.—The interior of the little red schoolhouse
of our grandfathers. Teacher’s desk at R., stove L.,
chair for committee man in front of stove, desks at back,
leaving an open space in front for classes, etc.
Blackboard and map at back. Blackboard down in R. corner,
by teacher’s desk, facing house. Door at back, C.
As pupils enter they courtesy to the teacher,
and after hanging hats and bonnets on nails, take their seats.
One pupil is granted the privilege of ringing the bell at the door,
whereupon the rest enter.
The school is them called to order and the roll is read.
Each answers “here” or “present” to his name.
When the name of “James Peters” is read there is no reply.
At length one of the girls explains that he “had to stay to hum to
mind the baby.” Another scholar reports that “the reason Molly Jenkins
didn’t come was because she hadn’t no shoes.”
TEACHER. I see a few new scholars here. I will now take their names. What name do you call yourself, sir?
J. C. SMITH. I don’t call myself any names! But Nappy Jones does, and ef he ever does it again (doubling up his fists and threatening the same, who returns the compliment ), I’ll lick him, see ef I don’t! My name is Julius Caesar Smith, and don’t you forget it.
TEACHER. How old are you, Julius Caesar?
J. C. S. I’m five years old next Christmas.
TEACHER. That will do. The next scholar.
J. CALL. I’m Jule Call, and my brother’s name is Bill Call.
TEACHER. Your brother can speak for himself. It is very improper to say “Jule” and “Bill;” you should say Julius. Now, what is your name?
J. C. Julius Call, sir.
TEACHER. Next?
B. CALL. Bilious Call, sir.
TEACHER. What, sir!
B. C. Bilious Call. (In surprise.)
TEACHER. There is no such proper name as “Bilious.” Your name is probably William.
J. C. He’s my brother Bill anyway, and ef I’m Julius he’s Bilious, ain’t we?
TEACHER. Silence I want no impudence from any of my pupils. (JULIUS, silenced but not convinced, shakes his head and gesticulates to his friends, all of whom show him their sympathy with his views.) What is your name, my dear?
Z. S. Zenobia Snellings, may it please you, sir. (Makes low courtesy.)
TEACHER. Are you a native of this place?
Z. S. Yes, sir—part of the year.
TEACHER. Part of the year! What do you mean?
Z. S. Vacations I spend with Aunt Nancy at __________ . (Supply a neighboring town.)
(Interruption in the shape of DANIEL WEBSTER TOMKINS, who rushes in out of breath and trips over the threshold, upsetting lunch basket, revealing contents.)
D. W. T. Has bell rang?
TEACHER (severely pointing to the door). Try that again, Daniel.
D. W. T. I got enough of it that time. Let some other feller try it. (Rubbing knees and elbows.)
TEACHER. Sit down, sir.
D. W. T. Wait till I pick up some of these cold wittles round here.
TEACHER (resuming). Next, what shall I call you?
V. M. W. Venus Matildy Weeks. I’m her sister. (Pointing.)
TEACHER. Her name’s Snellings and yours Weeks; how’s that?
V. M. W. Well, we didn’t used to be any relation, but we married her mother—me and my father.
TEACHER. Oh, I see a second marriage. Who are you? (Silence.) I mean the boy with red hair. (Boys nudge and girls giggle.)
C. C. F. (rising slowly.) C-C-C-Christopher C-C-C-Colum-b-b-b-bus F-F-Fitts. I st-st-st-stutter! (Sitting.)
TEACHER. Ah! do you?
C. C. F. (rising slowly). Ye-ye-yes, sir! s-s-s-s-sometimes. (Sitting.)
TEACHER. Next!
B. F. S. (drawling). My father knows you. He used ter go to school with you. Says you and him played hookey one day and tumbled inter the mill-pond—and—he! he! ye both got a flogging!—My name’s Benjamin Franklin Squeers, like my father’s. (Scholars titter.)
TEACHER. That will do, Benjamin Franklin. Your father evidently had some one else in mind. The class may sing the multiplication table. (Class sing “Five times one are five,” etc., to the tune of Yankee Doodle.)
TEACHER. You may now all take your books and slates. The infant class may pass out on the floor. You may look at the words on the board and get ready to read them. (Class forms a semicircle in front of teacher’s desk or board. Teacher writes the following on board:)
1. Herod the tetrarch.
2. This is a worm; do not tread on it.
3. This is the heir; come, let us kill him.
FIRST BOY (reads slowly). He—rode—the—Don’t know that word.
TEACHER. Didn’t I tell you to study while I was writing?
BOY. Yes, sir. (Crying.)
TEACHER. Then go on.
BOY. Boo-hoo! I can’t read it.
TEACHER. Try it again immediately.
BOY. He (boo-hoo! ) rode—the—tater—cart! (Weeps profusely.)
TEACHER. Next scholar read it.
GIRL. Herod—the—the—the (is prompted by someone ) the tetrarch.
TEACHER. Very good. Next boy, the second sentence.
BOY. This—is—a—warm—This—is—a—warm—doughnut—tread on it.
TEACHER (presenting dunce cap). Put that on and stand in the corner. (Boy scuffs to corner, where he spends his time throwing spitballs and eating doughnuts, thrown him by pupils when the teacher is not looking.) Next read. (Boy steps up to ask teacher about an example.)
GIRL (prompted by one of the boys). Thith ith a wurrum. Be—careful—not—to—tread—on—it (again prompted ), or it will bite you.
TEACHER (to boy). You have multiplied wrong. Let me see: five times nine are forty-five, put down the five and carry the four, etc. (Class push and pull, but straighten into line when the teacher looks up). Next read.
BOY. This—is—the—hair—comb. Let—us—kill—him!
TEACHER. I am ashamed of you. Does c-o-m-e spell comb? (Sends boy with slate to his seat.) Hands up—those who can tell me what it does spell. Well, John?
JOHN. It spells come.
TEACHER. Right. You may read it.
JOHN. This—is—the—hair. Come—let—us—kill—him. Ow-oo-oo! (Dancing round.)
TEACHER. Well, John! What’s the matter?
JOHN. Somebody pulled my hair!
TEACHER (severely). Who pulled John’s hair?
PUPIL. I did; I couldn’t help it. (Hanging head.)
TEACHER. Couldn’t help pulling hair! That is a likely story. You may pass to the foot.
PUPIL. No, I couldn’t. I went to raise my hand and his hair was right in the way. (Scuffs to foot.)
TEACHER. I will try you on one more sentence, and if you cannot read that properly you must take your seats and study. (Writes: “Stephen says that the girls are knitting.” ) Next read.
PUPIL. Step-hen! (Hands of class go up.)
TEACHER. Wrong! Next! (Is interrupted by boy who wants a drink. Two boys are appointed to get a bucket of water and pass it to the others in tin cups.)
NEXT PUPIL. Stephen—says—that—the—girls—are—kissing. (Boys laugh.)
GIRL (indignantly). He didn’t read that right!
TEACHER. Very well. You may read it.
GIRL (still unmollified ). Stephen says that girls are kittens.
(Teacher sends class to seats in disgrace to study their lesson.)
BOY (in seat). Teacher, how many is five less one?
TEACHER. Think that out yourself. If there were five crows in Squire Green’s field and you should shoot one, how many would there be left?
BOY. Only one.
TEACHER. What? Think again.
BOY. The other four would fly off, wouldn’t they?
GIRL (raising hand ). How many scruples are there in a drachm?
TEACHER. Jonathan, tell Maria how many scruples there are in a drachm.
JONATHAN. Don’t know, only that ma said as how pa took his dram every morning without any scruples. I guess some drams don’t have no scruples.
TEACHER. Both of you refer to your tables.
GIRL (raising hand ). Teacher, why does an elephant have a trunk?
BOY (raising hand ). So’s’t he’d be an elephant, of course!
TEACHER. I will now hear the class in history. (They pass out to places, the boys trying to get a drink on the way.) The first scholar may tell me something about Christopher Columbus.
FIRST GIRL. Christopher was once a little boy like me—no, I mean he was a little girl like me—no, I don’t!—well, he went to school like me anyway. His mother’s name was Geneva.
BOY. Hoh! It wasn’t either. That was his father’s name.
ANOTHER GIRL. Teacher, wasn’t Geneva where he was born?
TEACHER. Yes, Mary, go on.
MARY. Somebody bought him a yacht or a steamer, I believe, and one Friday he sailed over here to America and asked us if we had been discovered yet, and we told him “No.” “All right,” he said, “you have.” So he took some of our Indians home with him to tell the king that they had been discovered, and we named the United States after him.
TEACHER. That is right in the main. One or two points I might take exceptions to. The next may take George Washington and tell us about him. (Is interrupted by a boy in seat who raises his hand and asks how many days there are in a year.) Who can tell Julius how many days in a year?
VENUS. Three hundred and sixty-five days and a fourth.
BOY. What d’ye mean by “a fourth”?
DANIEL. Fourth of July, of course!
TEACHER. We will hear the next scholar.
PUPIL. George was born in Washington, D.C., and was named for that city.
C. C. FITTS. W-w-what d-d-does d-d-d-D.C. m-mean?
PUPIL. Down South, don’t it, teacher?
TEACHER. Go on with your recitation. You ask too many questions.
PUPIL. His mother’s maiden name was Miss Hatchet—and his father’s maiden name was George.
TEACHER. Next, go on.
SECOND PUPIL. When Washington wasn’t fighting he lived on the top of Mount Vernon, and his tomb is in one side of the mountain.
TEACHER. What day is celebrated as his birthday?
ALL (eagerly). The Twenty-second of February!
TEACHER. Why should his birthday be celebrated any more than mine?
(Thoughtful silence.)
GIRL (raising hand triumphantly). Because he never told a lie!
TEACHER. You may take your seat until you can be more respectful to your elders.
SCHOLAR (at back of room, or near door). Say, teacher, there’s somebody knocking at the door. I guess it’s the committee!
TEACHER. Class, toe the line! Scholars, if any one of you gets out of order while the committee is here I’ll flog you! Do you understand?
CHORUS. Yes, sir!
TEACHER. Martha Washington Hibbs, you may open the door.
MRS. CRANE. I’ve brought him, Mr. Snodgrass! Neow, Seth Crane, you miserable little truant you, jest go and set deown in that ere seat and behave yourself as ef you hed some bringing-up, or you’ll get it when you get home—and you sha’n’t go out to play for a week. Do you hear?
SETH (boo-hooing). ’Tain’t my seat! It belongs to a gerrul! My seat’s over there.
MRS. CRANE. You go set deown, or I’ll put ye deown. (SETH sits.) Neow, Mr. Snodgrass, I jest want you tu make my son behave, and ef he don’t, I want yeou to flog him!—not enough to hurt him, for he’s a very delicate child, and I wouldn’t hev the dear boy hurt for nothing; but easy like, just enough to make him mind. (Wiping her eyes.) He is a most affectionate boy—Seth, dear, go right to studying (to SETH, who growls, “I won’t” )—and more easily led than driven. But he’s so nervous! I’m afraid he’ll never live to grow up. Whenever you see him whispering or playing in school, Mr. Snodgrass, you may be sure it’s all nervousness. He was a-goin’ to play truant to-day, because he thinks you don’t like him! What a be-u-tiful school you have—sech handsome-looking boys and girls.
TEACHER (offering chair). Yes, a very fine school for these parts. Won’t you be seated?
MRS. CRANE. Mercy sakes alive! no. My punkin pies’ll be burned to cinders, all on account o’ that vagabond a-settin’ there and grinnin’ (shaking a warning finger at him)—ef I don’t give you a walloping when you get hum!—Call reound, Mr. Snodgrass, and git some o’ eour new apple juice. Jeremiah’ll be glad tu hev ye. Good-mornin’.
TEACHER. I thank you, ma’am. I will with pleasure. Good-morning.
(Exit MRS. CRANE, with a card reading “BACK SHORTLY” pinned on her back by some mischievous scholar.)
BOY (in seat ). What does c-u-t-i-c-l-e mean?
TEACHER. What have you all over your hands and face?
BOY. Freckles.
TEACHER. Well, that is not what I was thinking of Christopher!
C. C. FITTS. I g-g-guess it’s d-d-dirt!
TEACHER. There’s a dictionary somewhere in the schoolhouse. You may hunt it up and look for that word. (The two boys, appearing tired and discouraged, start on their quest, looking in the most unlikely places, even on the nails where pupils’ garments are hung. The quest should be a quiet one, the fun lying in its utter hopelessness.)
BOY (in seat ). I don’t understand this question. (Reads.) A milkman spilled a pint of milk out of an eight-gallon can, how much milk was left?
SECOND BOY (in seat ). Hoh! that’s easy. There wasn’t none left.
TEACHER. Explain.
SECOND BOY. ’Cause the rest was water.
TEACHER (resuming). The next may tell me about some Bible character. Who was Esau?
PUPIL. Esau lived six hundred years before Christ. He wrote fables for a living, and sold the copyright of them for a bottle of potash.
GIRL (raising hand ). I thought it was Æsop that wrote fables.
BOY (raising hand ). And didn’t Esau sell his birthright, or was it copyright?
BOY (in seat, raising hand ). It says in my book that some of the stars are bigger’n the earth; ’tain’t true, is it?
TEACHER. Certainly. Why not?
BOY. ’Cause why don’t they keep the rain off, then?
C. C. FITTS. ’C-c-cause they’re round and the r-r-r-rain s-s-slides off onto us!
GIRL. What’s the capital of Turkey?
TEACHER. Can you answer that, John?
JOHN (who has been inattentive). It hasn’t any capital. Pa says it’s bankrupt.
BOY. If you multiply forty-two apples by six pounds of beef the answer’ll be mince pies, won’t it?
TEACHER (to scholars in seats). Class, can two concrete numbers be multiplied together?
CHORUS. No, sir!
BOY. I don’t see anything concrete about apples, or beef either.
GIRL. Does the Isthmus of Panama connect the north and south pole?
TEACHER. Look at your map and see.
GIRL. Does s-l-o-u-g-h spell slough?
TEACHER. Yes.
GIRL. Then c-o-u-g-h spells cow, doesn’t it?
TEACHER. No, that spells cough.
GIRL. B-o-u-g-h spells buff, then, and p-l-o-u-g-h, pluff?
TEACHER. No, bough and plough are the words you have spelled.
GIRL. Then does d-o-u-g-h spell dow, or duff, or doff?
TEACHER. It spells neither; your last word is dough.
GIRL. Is r-o-u-g-h row, or row, or roff? [o as in mow, o as in how]
TEACHER. None of them. It is rough.
GIRL (in despair). Well, how can you tell?
SCHOLAR (near door). Teacher, I just seen the committee, Squire Small, coming down the hill past Squire Green’s barn. (Laughing.) He tried to jump the wall and tumbled over it. I guess his rheumatiz caught him.
TEACHER (hastily). This class may take their seats. (Rap at door.) All who are out of their seats may return to them. Remember what I said about disorder. Heads erect. Remember your manners. Maria Sophrony, the door. (Enter COMMITTEE-MAN; all rise.)
CHORUS (drawling). Good-morning—Mr. Committee-man!
COM. Good-mornin’, boys and gals! Good-mornin’, Mr. Snodgrass. (Shakes hands.) Thought I’d jest drap in to examine ye, bein’ the deestrict committee, an’ see how the edification was gettin’ on. I spose ye hev ’ritin’ an’ riffentick an’ readin’ every day?
(A boy begins to draw a caricature of the visitor on black board at back.)
TEACHER. Oh, yes, yes, every day,—that is, we shall after we get fully started; but it’s rather early in the term to examine, isn’t it?
COM. No!—no!—an’ histery, an’ filoserpy, an’ quotations, an’ flirtations, an’ kerdrilles, an’ all them things.
TEACHER. Yes, yes; that is, most of them.
COM. (severely). Most on ’em, Mr. Snodgrass? Don’t ye hev ’em all?
TEACHER. Oh, yes! all you would approve of.
COM. Wal, s’pose ye call out a class and let me examine ’em. (Takes off coat and seats himself, placing his hat on floor.)
TEACHER. What will you have, geography or spelling?
COM. Wal, yeou jest hand me a spellin’-book an’ I’ll put ’em through a course o’ sprouts on that.
TEACHER. First class in spelling, rise and take places. (A general scramble for places.)
FIRST PUPIL. Teacher, I’m head. I got above him yesterday.
SECOND PUPIL. He didn’t. I spelled catalepsy first and got above him. (Trying to pass.)
TEACHER. Thomas Henry, take the head; the other two may go to the foot. (Both go down and scramble for the foot.)
THIRD PUPIL. Thomas Henry pinched me.
TEACHER. He may go to the foot also.
THIRD PUPIL (dancing on one foot, holding the other in his hands ). Ow! he trod on my foot.
THOMAS HENRY. He shouldn’t have such big feet. I couldn’t stop to go round.
TEACHER. Thomas Henry, you may stop after school and I’ll remind you of a little promise I made a while ago. (ONE and TWO rejoice in dumb show over THOMAS HENRY’S downfall.) Julius, stand erect. Mary, take that gum out of your mouth. Bring that apple to me. All, toe the line. Attention!
COM. Neow, scholars, there is one thing I’m very pertickler ’bout, and that is pronouncé-ation. I want every one on ye tu be keerful on that one p’int. The fust word is charitable.
HEAD PUPIL (slowly). C-h-a-i-r, char—i-t, it—charit—t-a, ta—charita—b-u-l, ble—charitable.
COM. (examining book closely). Wrong! Next!
SECOND PUPIL (with spirit ). C-h-a-i-r spells chair, and t-a-b-l-e spells table, and i-t spells it; therefore, c-h-a-i-r-i-t-t-a-b-l-e spells charitable.
COM. (doubtfully). Wal, that’s putty straight reasonin’, an’ I reckon you’re right, though ’tain’t jest like the book. Take your place. Next, merlasses.
THIRD PUPIL. M-e-r, mer.
FOURTH PUPIL (raising hand ). ’Tain’t merlasses; it’s it molasses.
COM. (examining book ). I reckon I’ve seen more merlasses than you ever seen an’ oughter know what it is by this time. Merlasses, I said, an’ merlasses it shall be.
THIRD PUPIL. Please, sir, I can’t spell it.
COM. Why not?
THIRD PUPIL. I ain’t got no book.
COM. Where is your book?
THIRD PUPIL. I dropped it into a mud-puddle on the way to school, and the lesson come out.
COM. Next.
FOURTH PUPIL. M-o-l-a-s-s-e-s, molasses.
COM. That don’t sound jest right, but you’ve got the book on your side, so I s’pose it’s all right. Take yer place! (NUMBER FOUR is tripped by NUMBER THREE.) Neow I’d like tu see a leetle writin’. The next may take the word “squanders” and put it in a sentence on the blackboard.
(NUMBER FIVE writes in a legible schoolboy hand, “The boy squanders round a good deal.” FIFTH PUPIL reads what he has written.)
COM. Very good. The next may take “cornice” in the same way. (After a good deal of erasing he writes: “I will meat you on the cornice.” SIXTH PUPIL reads what he has written.)
COM. The next ken take “lionized,” and the next “spinster.”
SEVENTH PUPIL (writes and reads). “Daniel was lionized in the lions’ den.”
EIGHTH PUPIL (writes and reads). “Seth Crane is a spinster.”
COM. Wall, I hed an idee that a spinster was allus a woman. (Scratching his head.)
EIGHTH PUPIL. My book says that er means one who, and anyway baker means one who bakes, and builder means one who builds—and—
FIRST PUPIL. Does Quaker mean one who quakes?
COM. That ain’t to the p’int, as I ken see!
EIGHTH PUPIL. Well, a spinster is one who spins, ain’t it?
COM. Mebbe, mebbe! But heow ken ye say that of Seth Crane, that never did a useful thing in his life?
EIGHTH PUPIL. I should think that any fellar that spins a top ’ud be a spinster.
COM. Wal, you’ve got me there, youngster. I reckon ye’re right. Next, tell me the meaning of excruciating.
GIRL (glibly). Excruciating means that natural and peculiar prohibition of undulatory and molecular attraction which encompasses the plausibility of capillary promulgation and gelatinous hyperbole, while giving an enallage of paradigms.
COM. That’s a likely gal. You’ll make a good housekeeper one of these days. Ef my wife hed sech a mem’ry as that, I shouldn’t carry her letters in my pocket tu weeks before mailin’ ’em.
SAME PUPIL. Yes, sir; thank you, sir. But I don’t quite understand what it means by “encompassing the plausibility of capillary promulgation”!
COM. Oh—ahem!—that is very simple—ahem! ahem! in fact it is simplicity itself. It means—it means—well, I don’t want to overtax your young brain, my dear, so I will not explain now; but one of these days, when you are as wise as me and your teacher, you will understand all these profound thoughts. Hain’t that so, Mr. Snodgrass? Next, terbacker.
SEVENTH PUPIL. T-e-r, ter—b-a-c-k, back—terback—k-e-r, ker—terbacker. A poisonous leaf with niggertine in it; and ef the niggertine gets into the cistern, it’ll kill a man quicker’n a dog.
FIRST PUPIL. I don’t believe it’s a poison. My brother smokes and he ain’t dead; ’nd my father’s fifty years old ’nd he’s smoked for most forty years ’nd he ain’t dead yet.
FOURTH PUPIL. Pooh! That’s nothing. Ef your father hedn’t smoked, he mighter been a hundred by this time.
EIGHTH PUPIL. My grandfather’s ninety years old and he’s smoked too!
FOURTH PUPIL. Well, and ef my grandfather was alive he’d be a hundred and fifty years old! So that don’t prove nothing.
THIRD PUPIL. Tobacco ain’t no poisoner nor pickles, anyhow. (Groan from the girls.) I went into the store t’other day to get some pickles for ma, and a feller—he was one o’ them city chaps that sells things—and he said, “You ain’t going to eat them sour green things, are you?” and I said, “No, I hain’t; why?” And he told me of a girl seventeen years old who eat pickuls and died! (Horrified look on girls’ faces.) And they opened her stummick and them pickuls had turned everything in it tu glass!! (Confusion and whispering among the girls. They indignantly shake their heads and say, “I don’t believe it,” etc., etc.)
COM. Order! (Pounding table.) Order! The next may explain “phenomena.”
GIRL (glibly). Phenomena is that immaculate preponderance of preternatural possibility as to make an exaggerated conception of auxiliary precedents, and oleaginous metamorphosis into an indivisible synthetical analysis.
COM. That’s putty good. You hev exceeded my suspicions and I am disguised that yu should du so well. This is the most supernatural class I ever seen. Mr. Snodgrass, I congratterlate you on sech ambiguous pupils. Gee there now and take yer seats. (Class pass to seats.) Neow yeou ain’t got no little song you can sing, hev ye?
CHORUS. Yes, yes, our Motion Song!
COM. Wal, I wouldn’t mind hearing it, Mr. Snodgrass, ef it’s conwenient.
TEACHER. You may all put away your books.
BOY (laughing). He! he! he!
TEACHER. Robert, stand! Explain what you were laughing at.
ROBERT (half laughing and half crying). Nappy Jones says that Seth Green’s striped stockings make him look like a barber’s pole!
COM. (laughing). Wal, he’s only a leetle shaver, anyhow! Ain’t that so, Seth?
SETH. Yes sir! (Doubling up fists and threatening N. JONES.) You jest wait till I ketch you after school! (Said in an undertone.)
TEACHER. Robert, go out in the shed and chop to-morrow’s wood. I’ll excuse you the rest of the morning. (Exit ROBERT.)
SETH. Teacher, can I help him?
TEACHER. Yes. (Exit SETH, who grimaces at JONES as he goes out.)
(The TEACHER now takes tuning-fork and gives the pitch. The new scholars, without creating any disturbance, can make ludicrous attempts to take the movements with the others. As the singing begins the COMMITTEE-MAN rises, whereupon a boy immediately takes his hat from the floor and puts it in the chair he has just vacated.)
MOTIONS.
(1.) School rise and stand erect.
(2.) Raise hands ready to strike.
(3.) Clap hands in correct time.
(4.) Turn round twice while repeating this line.
(5.) Tread, left and right foot.
(6.) Right arm across waist, left at side.
(7.) Touch right hand to forehead, like military salute.
(8.) Keep marching time with feet.
(9.) Raise hands, palms out, spread fingers.
(10.) Hands on hips, elbows out, look sideways at each other.
(11.) Make a low bow.
(12.) Hop lightly on each foot.
(13.) Let arms hang and swing.
(14.) Fold arms, grow sleepy.
(15.) Drop heads.
(16.) Glide into seats, sing slowly and softly, nodding heads,
and diminishing tone gradually to last note,
finally resting arms on the desks and supporting heads
asleep. After a moment of dead silence, teacher may strike bell suddenly,
when all must raise heads
(17.) and hands as if frightened and go on (all seated).
(18.) Rub eyes with knuckles.
(19.) Take books hurriedly.
(20.) Turn leaves quickly with thumbs.
(21.) Throw heads from side to side with careless good-nature.
The last line of every verse should be repeated.
(1.) With shoulders erect and toes turned out,
Hurrah! Hurrah!
Now let us in unison gayly shout,
Hurrah! Hurrah!
(2.) With hands upraised as we sing the rhyme,
(3.) We strike them together to keep the time,
||: (4.) And we’ll wheel quite round while singing our motion song. :||
(5.) Now left and right we’ll march along,
Hurrah! Hurrah!
We fill the air with our merry song,
Hurrah! Hurrah!
(6.) We carry our muskets like heroes of old,
(7.) Saluting our captain so brave and so bold,
||: (8.) And we march, march, march while singing our motion song. :||
(9.) Our fingers and thumbs are eight and two,
Hurrah! Hurrah!
There’s plenty of work for them to do,
Hurrah! Hurrah!
(10.) With elbows akimbo and looks so shy,
(11.) We bow to our partners so gracefully,
||: (12.) And we hop and dance while singing our motion song. :||
(13.) As back and forth our arms we throw,
Heigh-ho! Heigh-ho!
It’s pretty hard work now, you may know,
Heigh-ho! Heigh-ho!
(14.) For trying our best our eyes open to keep,
(15.) We drop all our heads as if going to sleep,
||: (16.) And we nod, nod, nod, while singing our motion song. :||
(17.) What terrible noise is that we hear?
Dear me! Dear me!
(18.) We’ve all been snoozing, that’s quite clear.
Dear me! Dear me!
(19.) So let us take books and be ready for work,
(20.) For we are not willing our lessons to shirk,
||: (21.) Though it’s jolly good fun, when singing our motion song. :||
COM. Very good, children, very good.
Yew hev a very well behaved school, Mr. Snodgrass.
(Sits down on his hat, crushing it all out of shape. Pupils all laugh.
COM. picks it up and points at it indignantly.
TEACHER apologizes in pantomime.
COM. resentfully turns and starts to set it on the stove,
but burns himself in so doing. Pupils laugh. COM. shakes his fist
at them and exit[s] angrily.)
BOY (raising hand ). Teacher, Matildy Weeks keeps laughing at me.
TEACHER. You shouldn’t look at her, then.
BOY. She’ll laugh to some other feller ef I don’t. (Grins.)
(GIRL near CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS FITTS laughs aloud.)
TEACHER. Mehitable, was that you laughed?
MEHIT. Yes, sir. I couldn’t help it. (Laughs.) Christopher Columbus asked me if I loved carrots. (All look at C. C., who is vainly trying to hide an immense carrot by putting it in his pocket.)
TEACHER. Bring that this way, sir.
C. C. F. (presenting the carrot ). Y-y-you c-c-c-can h-h-have it! I d-d-d-don’t want it!
TEACHER. I think the best punishment I can give you, Christopher, for your disobedience is to make you eat it before the class.
CHRIS. (in dismay). I d-d-didn’t b-b-b-b-b-bring it t-t-to eat m-m-myself. The d-d-doctor s-s-s-said I m-mustn’t eat one more c-c-c-c-carrot. If I d-d-did I would d-d-die! I d-d-don’t want to d-d-die! (Crying.)
TEACHER. I’ll let you off on one condition, and that is that you’ll bring a cabbage to-morrow morning to go with it.
CHRIS. Y-yes, s-sir. I’ll bring t-t-t-two! (Is sent to seat, rejoicing.)
BOY. Is Squire Small’s cane a piece of the North Pole?
TEACHER. Joseph, when will you ever learn anything? If you studied your lessons you never would ask such a question.
JOSEPH. I didn’t see nothing ’bout Squire Small’s cane in my book.
TEACHER. I told you to prepare a composition for to-day.
How many are ready?
(No response for a second; then boy near JONES
points at him and says, “Nappy Jones has.”
JONES shakes his head and pretends that he hasn’t,
until called out by the teacher,
when he produces from his pocket a strip of paper
about two yards long which he proceeds to unroll.
The top is tied with a strip of bright-colored calico
in imitation of graduation essays.
He makes an awkward bow to the audience and reads: )
’Tain’t so with girls. Everything girls does is right. I wish’t I was a girl. I’m the only boy in our family, ’nd it’s a awful responsibility to be the only boy. I’ve got three sisters, but they’re all girls. Sis and Tom Golder took me to the city t’other day, and we took our dinner at a bang-up hotel, I tell you. When the waiter arsked me ef I’d hev the bill of fare I said, “Thank you,” jest as perlite as I knew how, but it made Sis mad b’cause I told him “Only a little piece, please.” How’d I know what it was, when they hev sech outlandish names fur things! Tom larfed and larfed; but I told the waiter he mustn’t mind him; he was my sister’s feller, and I guessed he warn’t used ter city ways; but he was all right and as rich as a Jew. Everybody but Sis at that was hotel seemed good-natured. The waiter was orful jolly, too. I pointed out to him a sickly-looking chap—Tom said he was a dude—at an opposite table and told him that dude was eating the bouquet, and how that feller larft! He said it was only celery, and wouldn’t I like some, but I told him, “No, thank you, I’d ruther hev my greens cooked.” On the way home Sis took off her hat and put it on the seat in front of her, without saying anything to me about it. Ov course when I sot down that hat was right under me and feather ’nd all was jambed flatter’n a pancake. Tom larfed, but Sis didn’t. He said he guessed I thort I was a-sittin’ on the style. When I got home I felt’s if I’d been a-settin’ on a hornet’s nest. Pa’s the most onreasonable man I ever seen! He told me one day not ter pick another flower outer the garding without leave; so next time I was jest as keerful as I could be ’nd picked ’em all with leaves. Perhaps you won’t believe it, but I got a thrashing fur that. Then one dark night, as pa and me went out ter the barn, pa run against a post, and he said he wished that darned post was in the lower regions; but I told him he’d better not wish it there, fur he might run into it again. But what’s the use o’ trying to help your relations? I hed to go to bed a week right after supper, jest fur that. But I’d ruther do that than hev ma talk to me, she’s so orful sober about it. She finished up a long talk last Sunday night with, “I hev tried to give you every advantage, Napoleon, and this is how you treat me;” and I said, “Of course I wouldn’t take advantage of my ma,” ’nd I vum ef she didn’t tell pa of that. It’s orful discouraging to be a boy. I sha’n’t try very much longer. I shall be glad when I’m a lawyer, ’cause then I can be as wicked as I want to. (Bows and returns to seat.)
(School then sings “Auld Lang Syne,” and having been dismissed by TEACHER, exeunt with characteristic noise.)
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