The Young Pitcher, by Zane 
Grey 
 
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Title: The Young Pitcher 
Author: Zane Grey 
Release Date: September 11, 2006 [EBook #19246] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
YOUNG PITCHER *** 
 
Produced by Justin Gillbank and the Online Distributed Proofreading 
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The Young Pitcher 
By Zane Grey
1911 
 
CONTENTS 
I. The Varsity Captain 
II. A Great Arm 
III. Prisoner of the Sophs 
IV. The Call for Candidates 
V. The Cage 
VI. Out on the Field 
VII. Annihilation 
VIII. Examinations 
IX. President Halstead on College Spirit 
X. New Players 
XI. State University Game 
XII. Ken Clashes with Graves 
XIII. Friendship 
XIV. The Herne Game 
XV. A Matter of Principle 
XVI. The First Place Game 
XVII. Ken's Day
XVIII. Breaking Training 
 
I 
THE VARSITY CAPTAIN 
Ken Ward had not been at the big university many days before he 
realized the miserable lot of a freshman. 
At first he was sorely puzzled. College was so different from what he 
had expected. At the high school of his home town, which, being the 
capital of the State, was no village, he had been somebody. Then his 
summer in Arizona, with its wild adventures, had given him a 
self-appreciation which made his present situation humiliating. 
There were more than four thousand students at the university. Ken felt 
himself the youngest, the smallest, the one of least consequence. He 
was lost in a shuffle of superior youths. In the forestry department he 
was a mere boy; and he soon realized that a freshman there was the 
same as anywhere. The fact that he weighed nearly one hundred and 
sixty pounds, and was no stripling, despite his youth, made not one 
whit of difference. 
Unfortunately, his first overture of what he considered good-fellowship 
had been made to an upper-classman, and had been a grievous mistake. 
Ken had not yet recovered from its reception. He grew careful after that, 
then shy, and finally began to struggle against disappointment and 
loneliness. 
Outside of his department, on the campus and everywhere he ventured, 
he found things still worse. There was something wrong with him, with 
his fresh complexion, with his hair, with the way he wore his tie, with 
the cut of his clothes. In fact, there was nothing right about him. He had 
been so beset that he could not think of anything but himself. One day, 
while sauntering along a campus path, with his hands in his pockets, he 
met two students coming toward him. They went to right and left, and, 
jerking his hands from his pockets, roared in each ear, "How dare you
walk with your hands in your pockets!" 
Another day, on the library step, he encountered a handsome 
bareheaded youth with a fine, clean-cut face and keen eyes, who 
showed the true stamp of the great university. 
"Here," he said, sharply, "aren't you a freshman?" 
"Why--yes," confessed Ken. 
"I see you have your trousers turned up at the bottom." 
"Yes--so I have." For the life of him Ken could not understand why that 
simple fact seemed a crime, but so it was. 
"Turn them down!" ordered the student. 
Ken looked into the stern face and flashing eyes of his tormentor, and 
then meekly did as he had been commanded. 
"Boy, I've saved your life. We murder freshmen here for that," said the 
student, and then passed on up the steps. 
In the beginning it was such incidents as these that had bewildered Ken. 
He passed from surprise to anger, and vowed he would have something 
to say to these upper-classmen. But when the opportunity came Ken 
always felt so little and mean that he could not retaliate. This made him 
furious. He had not been in college two weeks before he could 
distinguish the sophomores from the seniors by the look on their faces. 
He hated the sneering "Sophs," and felt rising in him the desire to fight. 
But he both feared and admired seniors. They seemed so aloof, so far 
above him. He was in awe of them, and had a hopeless longing to be 
like them. And as for the freshmen, it took no second glance for Ken to 
pick them out. They were of two kinds--those who banded together in 
crowds and went about yelling, and running away from the Sophs, and 
those who sneaked about alone with timid step and furtive glance. 
Ken was one of these lonesome freshmen. He was pining for
companionship, but he    
    
		
	
	
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