Tramping on Life - An Autobiographical Narrative by Harry Kemp
page 59 of 737 (08%)
page 59 of 737 (08%)
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teaching myself."
"Well, you _are_ a queer fish ... there never was anyone like you in the family, except your mother. She used to read and read, and read. And once or twice she wrote a short story ... had one accepted, even, by the _Youth's Companion_ once, but never printed." * * * * * Though it was some months off till the Fall term began, on the strength of my desire to return to school my father let me throw up my job.... But we soon found out that, brother in the bond, or not, Principal Balling could not get me into high school because I was not well enough prepared. My studying and reading by myself, though it had been quite wide, had also been too desultory. The principal advised a winter in the night school where men and boys who had been delayed in their education went to learn. I ran about that summer, with a gang of fellow adolescents; our headquarters, strange to say, being the front room and outside steps of an undertaker's establishment. This was because our leader was the undertaker's boy-of-all-work. Harry Mitchell was his name. Harry, a sort of young tramp, fat and pimply-faced, had jaunted into our town one day from New York, and had found work with the undertaker. Harry had watery blue eyes and a round, moon face. He was a whirlwind fighter but he never fought with us. It was only with the leaders of other gangs or with strangers that he fought. Harry continued our education in the secrets and mysteries of life, in |
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