chapter 6

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Peace had deserted Devon. Although not in the look of the campus and village; they retained


much of their dreaming summer calm. Fall had barely touched the full splendor of the trees, and


during the height of the day the sun briefly regained its summertime power. In the air there was


only an edge of coolness to imply the coming winter.


But all had been caught up, like the first fallen leaves, by a new and energetic wind. The Summer


Session-a few dozen boys being force-fed education, a stopgap while most of the masters were


away and most of the traditions stored against sultriness-the Summer Session was over. It had


been the school's first,' but this was its one hundred and sixty-third Winter Session, and the


forces reassembled for it scattered the easygoing summer spirit like so many fallen leaves.


The masters were in their places for the first Chapel, seated in stalls in front of and at right angles


to us, suggesting by their worn expressions and careless postures that they had never been away


at all.


In an apse of the church sat their wives and children, the objects during the tedious winter


months of our ceaseless, ritual speculation (Why did he ever marry her? What in the world ever


made her marry him? How could the two of them ever have produced those little monsters?). The


masters favored seersucker on this mild first day the wives broke out their hats. Five of the


younger teachers were missing gone into the war. Mr Pike had come in his Naval ensigns


uniform; some reflex must have survived Midshipman's School and brought him back to Devon


for the day His face was as mild and hopeless as ever; mooning above the snappy, rigid blouse, it


gave him the air of an impostor.


Continuity was the keynote. The same hymns were played the same sermon given, the same


announcements made. There was one surprise; maids had disappeared "for the Duration," a new


phase then. But continuity was stressed, not beginning again but continuing the education of


young men according to the unbroken traditions of Devon.


I knew, perhaps I alone knew, that this was false. Devon had slipper' through their fingers during


the warm overlooked months. The tradition's had been broken, the standards let down, all rules


forgotten. In those bright days of truancy we had never thought of What We Owed Devon, as the


sermon this opening day exhorted us to do. We had thought of ourselves, of what Devon owed


us, and we had taken all of that and much more Today's hymn was Dear Lord and Father of


Mankind Forgive Our Foolish Ways; we had never heard that during the summer either. Ours


had been a wayward gypsy music, leading us down all kinds of foolish gypsy ways, unforgiven. I


was glad of it, I had almost caught the rhythm of it, the dancing, clicking jangle of it during the

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