Left Tackle Thayer
A boy in a blue serge suit sat on the second tier of seats of an otherwise empty grand-stand and, with his straw hat pulled well over his eyes, watched the progress of a horse-drawn mower about a field. The horse was a big, well-fed chestnut, and as he walked slowly along he bobbed his head rhythmically. In the seat of the mower perched a thin little man in a pair of blue overalls and a shirt which had also been blue at one time, but which was now faded almost white. A broad-brimmed straw hat of the sort affected by farmers, protected his head from the noonday sun. Between the overalls and the rusty brogans on his feet several inches of bare ankle intervened, and, as he paraded slowly around the field, almost the only sign of life he showed was when he occasionally stooped to brush a mosquito from these exposed portions of his anatomy. The horse, too, wore brogans, big round leather shoes which strapped over his hoofs and protected the turf, and, having never before seen a horse in leather boots, the boy on the grand-stand had been for a while mildly interested. But the novelty had palled some time ago, and now, leaning forward with his sun-browned hands clasped loosely between his knees, he continued to watch the mower merely because it was the only object in sight that was not motionless, if one excepts the white clouds moving slowly across a blue September sky.
Now and then the clouds seemed to shadow the good-looking, tanned face of the youth, producing a troubled, sombre expression. The truth is that Master Clinton Boyd Thayer was lonesome and, although he would have denied it vigorously, a little bit homesick. (At sixteen one may be homesick even though one scoffs at the notion.) Clinton had left his home at Cedar Run, Virginia, the evening before, had changed into a sleeper at Washington just before midnight, and reached New York very early this morning. From there, although he had until five in the afternoon to reach Brimfield Academy, he had departed after a breakfast eaten in the Terminal and had arrived at Brimfield at a little before nine. An hour had sufficed him to register and unpack his bag and trunk in the room assigned to him in Torrence Hall. Since that time--and it was now almost twelve o'clock--he had wandered about the school. He had peeped into the other dormitories and the recitation building, had explored the gymnasium from basement to trophy room and, finally, had loitered across the athletic field to the grand-stand, where, for the better part of an hour, he had been sitting in the sun, getting lonelier every minute.
Ralph Henry Barbour
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Left Tackle Thayer
RALPH HENRY BARBOUR
LEFT-END EDWARDS, LEFT GUARD GILBERT, ETC.
CHARLES M. RELYEA
1915
CONTENTS
ILLUSTRATIONS
LEFT TACKLE THAYER
A NEW BOY AND AN OLD ONE
CAPTAIN INNES RECEIVES
AMY AIRS HIS VIEWS
CLINT CUTS PRACTICE
ON THE SECOND
THE RUNAWAY WHEEL
LOST!
THE MYSTERIOUS AUTO
UNDER SUSPICION
BURIED TREASURE
BRIMFIELD MEETS DEFEAT
PENNY LOSES HIS TEMPER
AMY WINS A CUP
THE TEAM TAKES REVENGE
A BROKEN FIDDLE
AMY TAKES A HAND
A STRANGER INTERRUPTS
A RAID ON THE SECOND
MR. DETWEILER INSTRUCTS
'VARSITY VS. SECOND TEAM
THE LETTER THAT WASN'T WRITTEN
DREER LOOKS ON
CLINT HAS STAGE-FRIGHT
IN THE ENEMY'S COUNTRY
VICTORY!
THE END