Frank Merriwell at Yale, by Burt 
L. Standish 
 
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Title: Frank Merriwell at Yale 
Author: Burt L. Standish 
Release Date: February 16, 2004 [EBook #11115] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FRANK 
MERRIWELL AT YALE *** 
 
Produced by Steven desJardins and Distributed Proofreaders 
 
[Illustration: "He finally found himself slugged under the ear and sent 
flying over a chair."]
FRANK MERRIWELL AT YALE 
BY 
BURT L STANDISH 
 
1903 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER 
I 
--Trouble Brewing II--Challenged and Hazed III--The Blow IV--The 
Fight V--The Finish VI--A Fresh Council VII--A Surprise VIII--The 
"Roast" at East Rock IX--The Duel X--At Morey's XI--"Lambda Chi!" 
XII--Freshman Against Sophomore XIII--Jubilant Freshmen XIV--The 
Rush XV--On the Ball Field XVI--To Break an Enemy's Wrist 
XVII--Talking it Over XVIII--Merriwell and Rattleton XIX--Who is 
the Traitor? XX--A Hot Chase XXI--Roast Turkey XXII--A Surprise 
for Frank XXIII--The Yale Spirit XXIV--Gordon Expresses Himself 
XXV--The Traitor Discovered XXVI--The Race XXVII--A Change of 
Pitchers XXVIII--The Game Grows Hotter XXIX--The End of the 
Game XXX--Rattleton is Excited XXXI--What Ditson Wanted 
XXXII--Ditson is Trapped XXXIII--"Play Ball" XXXIV--A Hot Finish 
 
FRANK MERRIWELL AT YALE, 
CHAPTER I. 
TROUBLE BREWING. 
"Here's to good old Yale--drink it down! Here's to good old Yale--drink
it down! Here's to good old Yale, She's so hearty and so hale-- Drink it 
down! Drink it down! down! down!" 
From the open window of his rooms on York Street Frank Merriwell 
heard the distant chorus of a rollicking band of students who had been 
having a merry evening in town. 
Frank had passed his examinations successfully and had been admitted 
as a student at Yale. In order to accomplish this without taking a 
preparatory course at Phillips Academy, he had found it necessary to 
vigorously "brush up" the knowledge he had acquired at the Fardale 
Military Academy which was a college preparatory school. 
Professor Scotch, Frank's guardian, had been of great assistance to him, 
for the professor knew just about what would be required at the 
entrance examination, and he had kept the boy digging away away at 
the propositions in the First Book of Euclid, had drilled him in Caesar, 
caused him to spend weary hours over Virgil and the Iliad, and made 
him not a little weary of his Xenophon. 
As he passed without a condition, although he had been told again and 
again that a course at Phillips Academy was almost an absolute 
necessity, Frank was decidedly grateful to the professor. 
Professor Scotch's anxiety had brought him to New Haven, where he 
remained "till the agony was over," as Frank expressed it. The little 
man bubbled over with delight when he found his protégé had gone 
through without a struggle. 
Having secured the rooms on York Street, the professor saw Frank 
comfortably settled, and then, before taking his departure, he attempted 
to give the boy some wholesome advice. 
"Don't try to put on many frills here the first year," he said. "You will 
find that freshmen do not cut much of a figure here. It doesn't make any 
difference what you have done or what you have been elsewhere, you 
will have to establish a record by what you do and what you become 
here. You'll find these fellows here won't care a rap if you have
discovered the North Pole or circumnavigated the globe in--er--ah--ten 
days. It will be all the better for you if you do not let them know you 
are rich in your own name and have traveled in South America, Africa, 
Europe, and other countries. They'd think you were bragging or lying if 
you mentioned it, and--" 
"You know well enough that I am not given to boasting about myself, 
professor, and so you are wasting your breath," said Frank, rather 
resentfully. 
"Hum! ha! Don't fly off the handle--keep cool. I know you have sand, 
and you're made of the right kind of stuff; but you are the greatest hand 
to get into scrapes I ever saw, and a little advice won't do you any harm. 
You will find that in many things you cannot do just as you would like, 
so you must--" 
"I'll get into the game all right, so don't worry. You will remember that 
I did fairly well at Fardale, and you should not worry about me while I 
am here." 
"I will not. You did well at Fardale--that's right. You were the most 
popular boy in the academy; but you will find Yale is far different from 
Fardale." 
So    
    
		
	
	
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