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It was all over at last; and then followed that wonderful event, the speech-day dinner, when boys and visitors all sat down promiscuously to the festive board and celebrated the glories of the day with a still more glorious spread.
Arthur and Dig were in high feather. They had, I am sorry to say, "shunted" their progenitors up to the doctor's table, and, in the congenial society of some of their own "lot," were jammed in at one of the side tables, with just elbow-room enough to do execution. Arthur was comfortably packed between Sherriffs sister and Maple's second cousin, and cheered by game pie and mellowed by ginger ale, made himself vastly agreeable.
"See that chap with the sandy wig!" said he to Miss Sherriff, "he's a baronet—Sir Digby Oakshott, Baronet, A.S.S., P.I.G., and nobody knows what else—he's my chum; aren't you, Dig? Sherriff's sister, you know, make yourself civil, can't you? Dig can make you laugh sometimes," added he, aside, to his fair neighbour.
Then his genial eye roamed up and down the room and lit up suddenly as he perceived, with their backs to him, Railsford and Daisy dining happily at the next table.
He gave a whistle to Dig, and pointed with his thumb over his shoulder. Dig, who was in the middle of a pull at the ginger ale, put down his tankard suddenly and crammed his handkerchief into his mouth.
"Such a game!" said Arthur to Maple's second cousin on his right. "Look round, behind you. Do you see them?"
"See whom?" asked the young lady.
"Those two. Regular pair of spoons; look at him helping her to raspberry pie. Oh, my word!"
"Who are they?" asked his neighbour, laughing.
But Arthur was at that moment busy attracting the attention of all his friends within call, and indicating to them in pantomimic gesture what was going on.
"Oh," said he, hearing the question at last, "that's Marky, our house- master, you know; and he's spoons on my sister Daisy—just see how they're going it. Do you want to be introduced to my sister? I say, I'll—"
"Oh, no indeed, not yet," said the young lady in alarm, "presently, please."
"All right. Dig, I say, pass the word down to those fellows to fill up their mugs, do you hear? And fill up Sherriffs sister's mug too, and all those girls' down there. Look out now, and keep your eye on me."
Whereupon he rose and made a little speech, partially audible to those immediately round him, but supremely inaudible to the two parties specially concerned behind.
"We're going to drink a toast," said Arthur. "I vote we drink the health of jolly old Marky and my sister Daisy; there they are behind, going the pace like a house on fire. Gentlemen and ladies, I vote we drink their very good health, and the sooner Daisy's the dame of Railsford's the better larks for us."
The toast was honoured with much enthusiasm; and there were loud cries for a speech in return. But the Master of the Shell was making speeches of quite another kind, and utterly unconscious of the flattering little demonstration which was taking place behind him; he was telling Daisy in whispers the story of the term, and feeling himself rewarded for all he had gone through by her sympathetic smile.
The dinner ended at last, and but one more ceremony remained. This was the time-honoured cheering with which speech-day at Grandcourt always came to an end.
Smedley and the prefects walked in procession to the head table and ranged themselves behind the head governor's chair, while everyone stood up.
"Three cheers for Grandcourt!" called the captain.
And you may fancy the earthquake that ensued.
Then in regular order followed—
"Three cheers for the doctor!"
"Three cheers for Miss Violet!"
"Three cheers for the governors!"
Then again, in regular order, the captain of each house stepped forward and called for three cheers for his own house, all of which were vigorously given—each house being on its mettle to drown all the others.
Last in the list Ainger stepped forward and called for "Three cheers for Railsford's!"
Then Arthur and Dig and the rest of the house got upon their chairs and put their backs into the shout; and everyone allowed that, whatever else Railsford's wasn't first in, it could carry off the palm for noise. At the end of the third cheer a voice called out,—
"One more for the cock house!"
Whereat Arthur and Dig and the rest of them got on their chairs again and yelled till the roof rang.
Then amid a multitude of promiscuous cheers for "the captain," "the prefects," "the cook," "Jason," "the school cat," "Thucydides!" and finally for "Dulce Domum!" Grandcourt broke up for the holidays.
Let you and me, friendly reader, say good-bye here amid all the cheery bustle and excitement of the crowded quadrangle. It is better to part so than to linger about talking morality till the great square is empty—till the last of the cabs has rumbled away out of hearing—till the echoes of our own voices come back and startle us from behind the chapel buttresses... If we wait till then, we part sadly and miss the promise of a meeting again. But if we part now, while Arthur, on the box of his cab, with his "people" safely stowed inside, is whooping his noisy farewells right and left—while Smedley, with his Balliol scholarship in his pocket, is leaving Grandcourt for good, and casting his last shy look up at the doctor's window—while Messrs. Roe, Grover, and Railsford are talking cheerfully of their Highland trip in August— while monsieur, humming Partant pour la Syrie, is hurrying away to his own dear France and his still dearer little girls—while Ainger and Barnworth, the old and the new captains of Railsford's, are grasping hands at the door—if we part now, we part not as those who bid a long farewell, but as those who think and talk of meeting again.
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