Alger Horatio Jr.

Frank's Campaign; Or, The Farm and the Camp


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Haynes turned pale, and then red, with anger and vexation. He scowled darkly while the rest of the boys were applauding, and persuaded himself that he was the victim of a great piece of injustice.

      Frank’s face flushed with pleasure, and his eyes danced with delight. He had made a great effort to succeed, and he knew that at home they would be very happy to hear that the prize had been awarded to him.

      “Frank Frost will come forward,” said Mr. Rathburn.

      Frank left his seat, and advanced modestly. Mr. Rathburn placed in his hand a neat edition of Whittier’s Poem’s in blue and gold.

      “Let this serve as an incentive to renewed effort,” he said.

      The second prize was awarded to one of the girls. As she has no part in our story, we need say nothing more on this point.

      At recess, Frank’s desk was surrounded by his schoolmates, who were desirous of examining the prize volumes. All expressed hearty good-will, congratulating him on his success, with the exception of John Haynes.

      “You seem mighty proud of your books, Frank Frost,” said he with a sneer. “We all know that you’re old Rathburn’s favorite. It didn’t make much difference what you wrote, as long as you were sure of the prize.”

      “For shame, John Haynes!” exclaimed little Harvey Grover impetuously. “You only say that because you wanted the prize yourself, and you’re disappointed.”

      “Disappointed!” retorted John scornfully. “I don’t want any of old Rathburn’s sixpenny books. I can buy as many as I please. If he’d given ‘em to me, I should have asked him to keep ‘em for those who needed ‘em more.”

      Frank was justly indignant at the unfriendly course which John chose to pursue, but feeling that it proceeded from disappointed rivalry, he wisely said nothing to increase his exasperation. He put the two books carefully away in his desk, and settled himself quietly to his day’s lessons.

      It was not until evening that John and his father met. Both had been chafed—the first by his disappointment, the second by the failure of his effort to prevent the town’s voting bounties to volunteers. In particular he was incensed with Mr. Frost, for his imputation of interested motives, although it was only in return for a similar imputation brought against himself.

      “Well, father, I didn’t get the prize,” commenced John, in a discontented voice.

      “So much the worse for you,” said his father coldly. “You might have gained it if you had made an effort.”

      “No, I couldn’t. Rathburn was sure to give it to his favorite.”

      “And who is his favorite?” questioned Squire Haynes, not yet siding with his son.

      “Frank Frost, to be sure.”

      “Frank Frost!” repeated the squire, rapidly wheeling round to his son’s view of the matter. His dislike of the father was so great that it readily included the son. “What makes you think he is the teacher’s favorite?”

      “Oh, Rathburn is always praising him for something or other. All the boys know Frank Frost is his pet. You won’t catch him praising me, if I work ever so hard.”

      John did not choose to mention that he had not yet tried this method of securing the teacher’s approval.

      “Teachers should never have favorites,” said the squire dogmatically. “It is highly detrimental to a teacher’s influence, and subversive of the principles of justice. Have you got your essay with you, John?”

      “Yes, sir.”

      “You may sit down and read it to me, and if I think it deserving, I will take care that you sha’n’t lose by the teacher’s injustice.”

      John readily obeyed. He hurried up to his chamber, and, opening his writing-desk, took out a sheet of foolscap, three sides of which were written over. This he brought down-stairs with him. He began to hope that he might get the boat after all.

      The squire, in dressing-gown and slippers, sat in a comfortable armchair, while John in a consequential manner read his rejected essay. It was superficial and commonplace, and abundantly marked with pretension, but to the squire’s warped judgment it seemed to have remarkable merit.

      “It does you great credit, John,” said he emphatically. “I don’t know what sort of an essay young Frost wrote, but I venture to say it was not as good. If he’s anything like his father, he is an impertinent jackanapes.”

      John pricked up his ears, and listened attentively.

      “He grossly insulted me at the town meeting to-day, and I sha’n’t soon forget it. It isn’t for his interest to insult a man who has the power to annoy him that I possess.”

      “Haven’t you got a mortgage on his farm?”

      “Yes, and at a proper time I shall remind him of it. But to come back to your own affairs. What was the prize given to young Frost?”

      “A blue-and-gold copy of Whittier’s Poems, in two volumes.”

      “Plain binding, I suppose.”

      “Yes, sir.”

      “Very well. The next time I go to Boston, I will buy you the same thing bound in calf. I don’t intend that you shall suffer by your teacher’s injustice.”

      “It wasn’t so much the prize that I cared for,” said John, who felt like making the most of his father’s favorable mood, “but you know you promised me twenty-five dollars if I gained it.”

      “And as you have been defrauded of it, I will give you thirty instead,” said the squire promptly.

      John’s eyes sparkled with delight. “Oh, thank you, sir!” he said. “I wouldn’t change places with Frank Frost now for all his prize.”

      “I should think not, indeed,” said the squire pompously. “Your position as the son of a poor farmer wouldn’t be quite so high as it is now.”

      As he spoke he glanced complacently at the handsome furniture which surrounded him, the choice engravings which hung on the walls, and the full-length mirror in which his figure was reflected. “Ten years from now Frank Frost will be only a common laborer on his father’s farm—that is,” he added significantly, “if his father manages to keep it; while you, I hope, will be winning distinction at the bar.”

      Father and son were in a congenial mood that evening, and a common hatred drew them more closely together than mutual affection had ever done. They were very much alike—both cold, calculating, and selfish. The squire was indeed ambitious for his son, but could hardly be said to love him, since he was incapable of feeling a hearty love for any one except himself.

      As for John, it is to be feared that he regarded his father chiefly as one from whom he might expect future favors. His mother had been a good, though not a strong-minded woman, and her influence might have been of advantage to her son; but unhappily she had died when John was in his tenth year, and since then he had become too much like his father.

      CHAPTER III. FRANK AT HOME

      Mr. Frost’s farm was situated about three-quarters of a mile from the village. It comprised fifty acres, of which twenty were suitable for tillage, the remainder being about equally divided between woodland and pasture.

      Mr. Frost had for some years before his marriage been a painter, and had managed to save up from his earnings not far from a thousand dollars. Thinking, however, that farming would be more favorable to health, he purchased his fifty-acre farm for twenty-eight hundred dollars, payable one thousand down, and the rest remaining on mortgage. At the date of our story he had succeeded in paying up the entire amount within eight hundred dollars, a mortgage for that amount being held by Squire Haynes. He had not been able to accomplish this without strict economy, in which his wife had cheerfully aided him.

      But his family had grown larger and more expensive. Besides Frank, who was the oldest, there were now three younger children—Alice, twelve years of age; Maggie, ten; and Charlie, seven.

      The