o decide. The umpire made his sweeping wave of hand and the
breathless crowd caught his decision.
"Out!"
In action and sound the circle of bleachers resembled a long curved
beach with a mounting breaker thundering turbulently high.
"Rob--b--ber--r!" bawled the outraged fans, betraying their marvelous
inconsistency.
Old Well-Well breathed hard. Again the wrestling of his body signified
an inward strife. I began to feel sure that the man was in a mingled
torment of joy and pain, that he fought the maddening desire to yell
because he knew he had not the strength to stand it. Surely, in all
the years of his long following of baseball he had never had the
incentive to express himself in his peculiar way that rioted him now.
Surely, before the game ended he would split the winds with his
wonderful yell.
Duveen's only base on balls, with the help of a bunt, a steal, and a
scratch hit, resulted in a run for Philadelphia, again tying the score.
How the fans raged at Fuller for failing to field the lucky scratch.
"We had the game on ice!" one cried.
"Get him a basket!"
New York men got on bases in the ninth and made strenuous efforts to
cross the plate, but it was not to be. Philadelphia opened up with two
scorching hits and then a double steal. Burt came up with runners on
second and third. Half the crowd cheered in fair appreciation of the
way fate was starring the ambitious young outfielder; the other half,
dyed-in-the-wool home-team fans, bent forward in a waiting silent gloom
of fear. Burt knocked the dirt out of his spikes and faced Duveen.
The second ball pitched he met fairly and it rang like a bell.
No one in the stands saw where it went. But they heard the crack, saw
the New York shortstop stagger and then pounce forward to pick up the
ball and speed it toward the plate. The catcher was quick to tag the
incoming runner, and then snap the ball to first base, completing a
double play.
When the crowd fully grasped this, which was after an instant of
bewilderment, a hoarse crashing roar rolled out across the field to
bellow back in loud echo from Coogan's Bluff. The grand stand
resembled a colored corn field waving in a violent wind; the bleachers
lost all semblance of anything. Frenzied, flinging action--wild
chaos--shrieking cries--manifested sheer insanity of joy.
When the noise subsided, one fan, evidently a little longer-winded than
his comrades, cried out hysterically:
"O-h! I
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