第27章 THE THIRD(13)

Britten groaned aloud and every one regarded him."Greek epigrams on the fellows' names," he said." Small beer in ancient bottles.

Let's get a stuffed broody hen to SIT on the magazine.""We might do worse than a Greek epigram," said Cossington."One in each number.It--it impresses parents and keeps up our classieal tradition.And the masters CAN help.We don't want to antagonise them.Of course--we've got to dcpartmentalise.Writing is only one section of the thing.The ARVONIAN has to stand for the school.

There's questions of space and questions of expense.We can't turn out a great chunk of printed prose like--like wet cold toast and call it a magazine."Britten writhed, appreciating the image.

"There's to be a section of sports.YOU must do that.""I'm not going to do any fine writing," said Shoesmith.

"What you've got to do is just to list all the chaps and put a note to their play:--'Naylor minor must pass more.Football isn't the place for extreme individualism.' 'Ammersham shapes well as half-back.' Things like that."

"I could do that all right," said Shoesmith, brightening and manifestly hecoming pregnant with judgments.

"One great thing about a magazine of this sort," said Cossington, "is to mention just as many names as you can in each number.It keeps the interest alive.Chaps will turn it over looking for their own little bit.Then it all lights up for them.""Do you want any reports of matches?" Shoesmith broke from his meditation.

"Rather.With comments."

"Naylor surpassed himself and negotiated the lemon safely home,"said Shoesmith.

"Shut it," said Naylor modestly.

"Exactly," said Cossington."That gives us three features,"touching them off on his fingers, "Epigram, Literary Section, Sports.Then we want a section to shove anything into, a joke, a notice of anything that's going on.So on.Our Note Book.""Oh, Hell!" said Britten, and clashed his boots, to the silent disapproval of every one.

"Then we want an editorial."

"A WHAT?" cried Britten, with a note of real terror in his voice.

"Well, don't we? Unless we have our Note Book to begin on the front page.It gives a scrappy effect to do that.We want something manly and straightforward and a bit thoughtful, about Patriotism, say, or ESPRIT DE CORPS, or After-Life."I looked at Britten.Hitherto we had not considered Cossington mattered very much in the world.

He went over us as a motor-car goes over a dog.There was a sort of energy about him, a new sort of energy to us; we had never realised that anything of the sort existed in the world.We were hopelessly at a disadvantage.Almost instantly we had developed a clear and detailed vision of a magazine made up of everything that was most acceptable in the magazines that flourished in the adult world about us, and had determined to make it a success.He had by a kind of instinct, as it were, synthetically plagiarised every successful magazine and breathed into this dusty mixture the breath of life.

He was elected at his own suggestion managing director, with the earnest support of Shoesmith and Naylor, and conducted the magazine so successfully and brilliantly that he even got a whole back page of advertisements from the big sports shop in Holborn, and made the printers pay at the same rate for a notice of certain books of their own which they said they had inserted by inadvertency to fill up space.The only literary contribution in the first number was a column by Topham in faultless stereotyped English in depreciation of some fancied evil called Utilitarian Studies and ending with that noble old quotation:--"To the glory that was Greece and the grandeur that was Rome."And Flack crowded us out of number two with a bright little paper on the "Humours of Cricket," and the Head himself was profusely thoughtful all over the editorial under the heading of "The School Chapel; and How it Seems to an Old Boy."Britten and I found it difficult to express to each other with any grace or precision what we felt about that magazine.