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Harper's Round Table, August 20, 1895 By: Various |
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Copyright, 1895, by HARPER & BROTHERS. All Rights Reserved. PUBLISHED WEEKLY. NEW YORK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1895. FIVE CENTS A COPY. VOL. XVI. NO. 825. TWO DOLLARS A YEAR.
[Illustration] BRADDY'S BROTHER. BY JULIANA CONOVER.
[Illustration: Decorative I] t was the ending of the ninth inning; the score stood 8 to 7 in
Princeton's favor, but Harvard had only one man out, and the bases were
full. Was it any wonder that the Freshmen couldn't keep their seats, and that
the very air seemed to hold its breath while Bradfield, '98, twisted the
ball? In the centre of the grand stand, where the orange and black was
thickest, but the enthusiasm more controlled, stood a boy, his whole
body quivering with nervous excitement, his eyes glued as were all
others to the pitcher's box. "Come in, now! look out! lead off!" the Harvard coach was saying, as the
umpire's "one strike, two balls, two strikes, three balls," raised and
dashed again the hopes of Princeton. Then came a moment of horrible
nerve destroying suspense, and then the umpire's calm and
judicial "striker out." Above the cheers, which literally tore the air, the shrill discordant
note of the boy's voice could be heard, yelling like mad for Princeton
and '98. "Who is that little fellow?" said a girl, just behind him to her
companion. The boy turned like a flash. "I'm Braddy's brother," he said, his chest still heaving, and his cheek
glowing. "He's struck out seven men!" The girl smiled, and an upper classman, who was next to him, patted him
on the back. "It's a proud day for Braddy's brother," he said, "and for '98 and
Princeton, that is, if Harvard doesn't " For a moment it looked as if
Harvard would, for the regular thud of the ball against the catcher's
glove was interrupted by the ominous crack of the bat, and the men on
bases ran for their lives on the bare chance of a hit, or possibly an
error. But '98 was not going to let a hard earned victory slip between her
fingers like that; the short stop fielded the swift grounder
beautifully, and the runner was out at first. There was a short cheer, then a long wordless, formless burst of triumph
swelling out from a hundred throats. The crowd swarmed on the diamond,
the Freshman nine was picked up and carried off the field, "Braddy"
riding on the crest of a dangerous looking wave which was formed by a
seething, howling mob. "Well," said the Senior, turning to his small neighbor, "how does
'Braddy's brother' feel now?" But "Braddy's brother's" feelings were too deep for utterance; besides,
he was trying to remember just how many times the Princeton Freshmen had
won from Harvard in the last six years. "Hullo, Dave! Dave Hunter!" called Bradfield, as a small boy passed near
the group on the front campus. "Don't you want to take my brother off
for a little while, and show him the town?" Dave came up blushing with pleasure at having the man who had just
pitched a winning game single him out. "This is Dave Hunter, a special friend of mine, Bing," Braddy continued,
turning to the little chap who was lying stretched out on the grass
beside him, and who felt by this time as if he owned the whole campus
and all the college buildings, for hadn't he been in the athletic
club house, the cage, and the 'gym.'? and wasn't he actually going to
eat at a Freshman club, and sleep up in a college room? It was the
greatest day of his life, his first taste of independence; and the glory
of being "Braddy's brother" seemed to him beyond compare. "Don't keep him too long, Dave," said Bradfield, as the two boys started
off; "we'll have to get through dinner early if we want to hear the
Seniors sing." Young Bingham Bradfield nodded and blushed and smiled all the way down
to the gate, as men in the different groups which they passed called
out: "There goes 'Braddy's brother,'" or, "Hullo, little Brad," or, "What's
the matter with '98?" and one who knew him at home sang out,
"B I N G O Bingo !" It was awfully exciting... Continue reading book >>
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