The home of Scouting in Central
and Northern New York
Stories
submitted by: Walter MacPeek
A Scoutmaster Saves the Day
For weeks the troop has been engaged
in expectant preparation for its Parents' Night program. Everything
was in order. The walls were filled with displays, the scouts with
enthusiasm and the tables with good things to eat. The toastmaster
was well under way. The crowd sang with that respectably restrained
enthusiasm that typified a Parents' Night program.
Then Jimmie Davis arose to give his oration. This was the moment
he had looked forward to for many weeks. As he arose, he caught
a glimpse of his mother's beaming face and his father's stolid assured
countenance. He started with a great burst of enthusiasm. He waxed
more eloquent, conscious that his listeners were paying a high tribute
to him by their careful attention.
Then something happened. The world seemed to swim before him. He
slowed down - faltered - stopped. His face flushed, his hands sought
each other frantically and in desperation he looked helplessly toward
his scoutmaster. And ever prepared, having heard that boyish masterpiece
rehearsed again and again, the boy's leader supplied the missing
words and the lad went on.
But somehow it was different now. The masterpiece had been marred.
Jimmie paused again - and the scoutmaster prompted him again. For
the remaining two minutes, the oration seemed more the scoutmaster's
than the boy's. But Jimmie finished it. In the heart of the lad
who sat down, knowing that he had failed, there was a heavy load.
Chagrin was plainly written on the face of the boy's mother, and
a twitch of the father's face indicated a pained consciousness of
shame. The audience applauded in a perfunctory way, sorry for and
pitying the boy who they thought had failed.
But the scoutmaster was on his feet. His quiet eyes twinkled. All
listened tensely, for he did not talk loudly. What was he saying?
"I am more happy than any of you can possibly understand because
of what has just happened. You have seen a boy make a glorious victory
out of what might have been a miserable failure. Jimmie had his
chance to quit. To have quit would have been easy. But to finish
the job even in the face of 200 people required the highest kind
of bravery and courage I know. "You may someday hear a better oratorical
effect, but I am confident that you will never see a finer demonstration
of the spirit of our troop than Jimmie has just given you - to play
the game even under difficulties!"
The people thundered their applause now. Jimmie's mother sat straight
and proud. The old look of assurance was back on the face of the
boy's father. The entire group was enthusiastic again and Jimmie,
with a lump in his throat, said something to the friend beside him
that sounded like, "Gee, if I can be that kind of scoutmaster someday."