ld have preferred to leave a more dignified memorial of
ourselves, forgetting, perhaps, that it is a Cloaca which is the most
impressive witness to the civilised resources of an ancient king. So an
offer was made to the proprietors that, if they would find the tools and
directors of the work, the school would provide the labourers for the
making of a road between the village and the church, an interval of a
furlong of marshy land, bridged at that time by a makeshift causeway.
They did not, however, see their way to accept our amateur industry, and
the project fell through.
With the arrival of the boys came also news, that on the day before,
September 14th, the engineers had broken ground at Uppingham:
_Ea vox audita laborum_
_Prima tulit finem_.
We had waited not without some impatience for the first sound of the
pickaxe; and its echoes were welcomed as promising an end to our exile.
The new term opened smilingly. The smooth working order into which
everything fell at once contrasted pleasantly with the anxious bustle of
the entry in April. A glorious autumn was settling on the hills, draping
them from head to foot with a red mantle of the withering bracken, which
slowly burnt itself out along their slopes. There was sun and daylight
enough for many rambles along old paths or new ones before the year was
fairly dead.
Our prosperity was suddenly staggered. Just five weeks after the return
a case of scarlet fever occurred, followed in the course of the week by
half-a-dozen more. An outbreak of this kind is too common an incident in
a large school to merit much surprise or great alarm. But then our
circumstances were exceptional. If the infection spread, it might be
difficult to find hospital room; to communicate it to the villagers, as
might easily befall, would be an unhappy return for their own ready
hospitality; and then how miserable to have fled from sickness at
Uppingham, and find it had followed us to Borth, as if, like the haunted
family of the poem, "we had packed the thing among the beds." Already
there came news which raised unspoken doubts of our returning home after
Christmas. How, then, if we could not stay here? The question was hard
to answer.
It is, however, a well-recognised fact that epidemics of this kind are
very much under the control of scientific precautions, and as we had good
advice on the spot, no time was lost in stamping out the plague. War is
not made with ro
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