THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF KEITH MALCOLM HUNT
Part Two
I was now moving up to middle school, in the Church of England educational system, that is ages 7 to 11.
I have told you how I found nature all around me fascinating.
I entered the class room, we all sat down. We were all handed a book; the lady teacher said this was the Holy Bible. She told us to open to page one. She began to read….. “IN THE BEGINNING GOD CREATED THE HEAVENS AND THE EARTH.”
Wow….. my mind; it was like a switch had been turned on—— there’s my answer to the wonderful creation all around me—— a being called “God” had made it all!
As the teacher continued to read Genesis chapter one and also chapter two, my mind was in utopia. Yes a being, greater than anything, made all there was, and made the first human beings called Adam and Eve.
I BELIEVED IT!
I knew it had to take a being of unreal reality, so powerful the human mind could not come close to the reality of such a being.
BUT I BELIEVED FROM THAT DAY—— GOD DOES EXIST!
AND in believing God could make all I could see and even things I could not see, there was no problem for me to believe the book I held, the Holy Bible, was the inspired WORD of that God tell us about Himself, and to instruct us how to love and serve Him.
I WAS IN JOY!
That first year in middle school was fantastic in learning more about this God.
Then within weeks of that school year, there was this neighbor girl, a little older than me who invited me to Sunday school, at a nearby church. It was “Congregational” church by its official name; they still had the priest/minister with the “dog-collar” as we kids called it; so it was also for the priests of the Church of England. The Church of England was a break-away from the Roman Catholic church; it was Henry V111 who took England out of the Roman Catholic domain.
In Sunday school I soon learnt about Jesus the Christ. I had no problem accepting Jesus as the Son of God, for I already believed the Bible was fully inspired as the word of God the Father.
I also remember our lady teacher of my class, being super good at teaching us to write; her drawing of how the letters should connect with each other in writing was beautiful, real artistic, and I tried my best to copy her. As the days went on I could match her and began to discover I had some artistic talent. Those were the times when you had an ink-well in your desk-top, and used a reed type pen; some years later I did that fancy pen work….I think called calligraphy [yes look it up] and was pretty good at it.
Through years 7, 8, 9, and 10, I was always entered in the 100 years dash come inter-school competitions in the summer time, just weeks before be broke up for the holidays. I never lost a race, in my heats and then the final. My Dad told me once when he came out to watch me run, this man was standing nearby, who did not know my Dad was there next to him; this man with amazement said, “Look at that boy go, his feet don’t touch the ground.”
There are three other things I clearly remember—- (1) It was when I was in the second year, so aged 8. It was had a man teacher, and a class of 44 students. One thing I both hated and dreaded—— reading out loud through a book, yes for our age, but I was a terrible sight read, just terrible. I would, when it was getting close to my turn, try to figure which paragraph I would have to read—— I usually got it right, and I would be busy reading it over a few times before I had to read it, yes out loud in front on 44 students. Yes forgot to tell you this was an all boys school, and it was so embarrassing not to read well with 44 lads hearing you. So sight reading for me was very difficult. I do not know why, just hadn’t got my mind around the English language to read smoothly. I struggled for some years with it.
Once I remember the man teacher wanting to do a little front of the class “play”—— not long. Of course he chose the top of the class boys in reading; guess he thought being so fluent in reading they would make great actors. Well did he ever have a surprise—— they were 100 percent hopeless, actually embarrassing for them; got embarrassing for us listeners also. I was just itching to put my hand up to give what they had to say, a try—- actually I kinda knew I could do it 100 times better than those kids—- but never got the chance.
Another great memory was, I met this kid my age, and me being outgoing, I think he thought I could be the leader of the good side in his pantomime play he would invent for our play-ground play time. So he approached me on the idea—— I said ya why not. Well this kid, I mean was a marvel at making up stories, and directing them. He’d tell us the story and the ending, and I was always to play fight him and kill him for the end of the show. O it was just great fun. Then a little later he invited me to his home on Saturday. He’d made some simple costumes and sticks for sword; there’d be maybe 4 of us. He would always be the villain, and me the super hero. We had some wonderful times. This friend was talented at script writing and directing; he should have grow up to be a movie writer and director. After middle-school I lost touch with him as he moved you another school.
After about a year in middle school, the teachers sorted out the quick bright learners and the ones….. wellll….. no so quick in learning; I was in the latter group. They did correct by moving us into classes that were more suited for our learning abilities. And I was actually very glad, a slower pace with more basics. It was the answer for me, and was soon moving along much better, and near the top of my class, but still not a good sight-reader.
I only remember two other things about my last year in middle school.
It was time to do the dreaded “Eleven-plus Exam”— this one really divided the sheep from the goats. Everyone in Britain had to take this exam. If you passed you went on to “Grammar Schools”— if you failed you stayed in “the regular schools.” Now Grammar schools were the stepping stone to Oxford and Cambridge. The problem with this exam was simple, it was not based on your school work, but on a crazy stupid “IQ” exam, where 3/4 of the questions made no sense to me and to many more. Needless to say most of us did not pass, and I was in the most of us.
Some few years later when I discovered what these “Grammar schools” were like I thanked the Lord I did not pass that exam, I would have been a fish out of water, and would have hated every minute. But in the “regular” school I was at home, and loved every minute. And by age 12 the end of the first year was moving educationally very well, and was always in the top 8 of the 40 student class.
O Yes, some years after I had left for Canada at age 18, Britain “did away” with “Eleven Plus Exams.” I shouted out ABOUT TIME! But is was good for me they had it so I could fail and stay in a “regular” school. I was a cowboy and the next Roy Rogers, so did not want a stuck-up-nose grammar school.
One more big thing for me, and a learning curve, was the last “final” one hundred dash race, for 11 year olds. I had never lost a 100 yard sprint. What starters did black then was to have an even count to fire the gun. There was just this “on your marks” “get ready” “fire”—— all just smooth. So some worldly wise kids knew things, there’s always some who can figure things to get that head start. I’m down waiting for it, the one, two, and three, all nice and even—— two kids knew it; they started just that split second before the gun— they got the two strides advantage.
Of course the starter wasn’t going to call us back, or disqualify them….. I mean to him this was just a kids race, whose bothered who wins attitude. I gained a stride, but came in third.
It was again some years later I found out the sprinters were doing this in the Olympic games for the 100 metre sprint.
Then this was noticed—— and by then they had fancy machines to see how long the top world Sprinters would take to get out of their starting blocks when the gun sounded. They got whatever it is, and knew no Sprinter could do it any faster, if they did it was a science “false start” for them, and two false starts and you were out, off the field, disqualified. Now to make it even fairer the starters deliberately hold the firing of the gun for ex seconds, no longer a one, two, three rhythm. None of the racers know when that gun is going to be fired.
Could I have won my last final race in the middle-school competition that summer, with todays starting methods—— and have been undefeated, maybe, a good chance, but yes it would have been a close race.
The summer was over, and time to head to the Church of England High School. Four years of school was in front of me. We would normally finish High School at nearly 16 years of age. In Britain back then you started grade one at age 5.
My Granddad on my father’s side was slowly dying of cancer in South Wales. The day before school we received word he had died; it was a rush to get to our village of Crynant. By then Dad had a car. The driving down to Crynant was 220 miles; no large Interstate Highways then. Winding roads, having to go over the Yorkshire Moore, which could be fogged in and slow driving, then the city of Manchester, a real mess to get through in the early 1950s. It was an 8 hour drive, stoping for lunch along the way.
We arrived; had the funeral. Back to Halifax, Yorkshire. I was a few days late in school. A Scottish lad was also late. David was his name, a very nice lad. He became by best school buddy, though we did hardly anything together after school. Him and I were put in the C class lower than B which was lower than the A class. Within half a term, up to Christmas and the first exam,
the lady teacher said to David and I, “Boys you have shown we need to put you in class A. After the Christmas break.”
You know in such a situation, with such a huge jump up, I think we were both a little intimidated as what we would find—— like we would end up near the bottom of the class. I admit I was a little scared on that first day in the A class. The man teacher [maybe with help from our previous teacher] did not put David and I on the front row, but actually not far from the back.
It was not long for David and I to realize we belonged up near the top of the class. And when the first exam test came around, we had placed ourself in the top 10 of 44 students.
Now began a wonderful 4, well as we shall see, actually 5 years of High School—— and I enjoyed every minute of it; Studies, Athletics, and now learning to play FOOTBALL [you in North America— SOCCER]; and learning CRICKET! Look it up, a great game.
Obviously my male teacher had my background from middle school years. He already knew I could run like a bullet.
Before the Inter-school Athletic Competition came just at the end of the school year. My teacher tells me to meet him on the huge grass playing field Saturday coming at such and such a time. Thought I was going to practice 100 yard sprints. But here I find about 100 kids from my age of 12 to age 15, again some looking 12 inches tall than me.
My teacher say, “Keith this is a 3 mile cross-country race; you live around here so this is where you’ll be going.” I knew exactly the route from playing all over that area.
I could not believe he had entered me in a long distance race. I protested, “Sir, I’m a sprinter not a distance runner; never ran any distance race; why are you entering me?”
He said nothing but, “Keith, just get in line and do your best.”
It was READY——GO!
Well everyone shot off like a bull was chasing them; I’m way behind, near the end runners, saying to myself, “I just can’t believe he put me in a cross-country race, this has to be crazy, I’m a sprinter.” I was shaking my head as I ran along, thinking I would probably be in the last 40 runners, even lower down than that I thought to myself.
About half way many dropped out; they probably had come for the lark of it, to see how far they could get, many just not trained distance runners. Knowing the area, I knew there was this one real steep hill, a cobble road hill, it was horribly steep. I was able to run up it with the pace I was setting for myself. There were lads 1/4, 1/2, way up holding the side of their chests, some bend over, just about stopped, with faces in total agony.
I passed them all, and headed for the school yard we were to finish in for the end of the race. There was this man standing at the entrance and telling everyone their position.
“Ya, you bet” I thought, get ready to hear somewhere around 50th or 60th.
I JUST ABOUT FELL TO THE GROUND IN A FAINT WHEN HE CALLED OUT TO ME—— 6TH!
“Whatttt….. I finished 6th out of at least a hundred runners—
I could not believe what I heard him say, I was 6th, but I was!
Again my teacher said nothing to me. A week or so later he did come to me and told me he entered me in a cross-country race for my age group. I was still taken back some—— still trying to convince myself I was only a sprinter.
The day came, nice and mild and sunny. We were off, I was staying up to the leaders this time; then I moved into the lead; made a wrong turn and so the judges had to call be back. I was about 60 yards back; I had to put on a sprint to get up with the leaders again; I made it. We turned the last bend and I saw the finish line. It was time—— my kick snapped in and I was gone—— won the race quite easily.
Don’t as me why but that teacher never entered me in a long distance race ever again. Maybe he was just trying to see if I had some legs and heart that could do moderate distance. And I guess he had his answer.
Another shock in athletics came at the end of my first year High School and once more the Inter-School Athletics Competition.
I was fully expecting I would be entered in the 100 yard dash. What did my teacher do? He enters me in the 220 yard race.
“Sir, Sir, I’ve never run such a race; I’ve only done 60 and 100 yard dashes.”
Once more he said nothing; he was a somewhat quite man out of the class room.
So now I’m in a race I know nothing about running, and you have no straight starting line— it was the strangest position start I’d never done.
So here I was again—— we were off, I ran what I thought I should run, until you get around the bend and get to see where you are, who might be in front of you or behind you. I just put myself into high gear and went for it; I had no trouble winning and beat the record time by 4 seconds. Then as I thought afterwards there probably had been no good 220 yard runner, if I could beat it by 4 second.
THAT WAS IT—— my teacher never entered me again for the 100 yard dash—— from now on out I was the 220 yard runner for my school, and for the team 440 yard relay.
I was thinking by now that maybe I did have the gift of running fast. I never allowed myself to get vain about it; that was through my number of years now reading the Bible and attending without fail [but for holidays in South Wales or some other place Dad and Mom would take me] the Sunday school classes, and going through the Gospels.
Dad, Mom, and I went off to visit relatives in London. My cousin who was my age, had a few friend in the neighbourhood; we were out on the street playing; someone said “Let’s race back to that wall over there.” Off we all went—— well I was surprised that this one friend of my cousin was neck and neck with me; I was actually stunned some. I requested we do that again, and all agreed. This same lad was neck and neck with me once more right to the wall. I realized there were indeed lads that could run as fast as me.
Then that summer there was an open-air fun day in one of the nice parks near by to where we lived. I was there, and heard they had a foot race for kids ages such and such; I fell into that age group. There was just one other lad to race against. Off we both shot and once more this other kid was right up with me. The judges could not decide who won; they had us do it all over again. Still the second time, the other boy was right next to me. I personally did not know who was the winner. I would have called it a tie once more. I think the judges were still undecided; there were shouts from the spectators—— “the boy with the Holy Trinity vest on is the winner.” Holy Trinity was the Church of England school I attended. They gave the victory to me…but I sure did not know if I won, looked to me like a draw. It was now the first experience of meeting a lad that had a hard time with not winning. When it was time to give out the prizes, he stood with me and said, “I think I won that race.” I realized this really bothered him, kinda felt sorry for him, and looking back now, I should have taken the price they gave me and I should have given it to him. I was a Christian lad and winning was not a big deal, I mean I was not ever going to do anything with my running and athletic ability after High school—— I was a cowboy at heart and the next Roy Rogers.
Being in High school it was now time to put my energy into learning to play Football [Soccer] and Cricket, and learning to swim, as once a week we boys and girls had a swimming class; the boys went on one day and the girls on another day.
Our main teacher was also our gym and sports teacher, well he over-sighted us, never was much good at being a coach of anything, as what coaches usually do. He was a nice guy but basically just watched as we taught ourselves how to play Soccer and Cricket, and learnt to swim. He did have a good eye to see who was doing good at those sports.
Because of my speed he thought I would do good on the “wing” playing Soccer. I did good but for one thing, I could not yet lift the ball up in the air for a corner kick. He soon decided that position was not for me. He could also see I had a natural aptitude to defend; so I was put as “right-half-back” as it was called then; now I think it is mid-field. It was the right position for me, and I stayed as mid-field-man for the rest of my High school days—— O yes within another year I did learn to lift the ball up very well and accurate to the front line players.
Now of course when in grade 9 I was now and again put on the school’s Soccer team, but did not do very much, the other kids were older, taller, and more skillful; but I enjoyed and was determined to get better and better. So it was for Cricket and swimming—— getting better and better. Then they started to develop Soccer teams in age groups for all the schools in town.
I practiced and practiced, often by myself, with the Soccer ball, kicking it against a wall and learning to control it. We kids who loved Soccer played it in the school yard at each break time, morning break, lunch break, and afternoon break. We got better and better each week and each month.
Our teacher was watching, as I said he had a good eye, he knew the best kids with the skills for the different positions on a Soccer team. Soon he had our team picked out. We would as class A, B, and C, have an afternoon of Soccer once a week. From there he could make sure who he picked for each position was the correct one.
I like may Dad had a natural leadership ability; I was picked as “captain” of the team, and stayed captain all through High school in our now “Soccer age group teams.” Our team got better and better. The last year of school, grade 12, we were beating just about every team we played against. Unknown to us the powers that be had a knock out time for teams, so the two top teams would play for the championship. Could never figure why all this was never told us, but back then things were done different than schools in North America. Well we got to the semi-final. Now we were told that if we beat the next team we were in the final. Word got around, we’d never played this team. Other kids not in our school would tell us we had no chance of beating them. We were most definitely the under-dog.
The day arrived to play. Half way into the game our team realized the other team was not that super great. Our defence was holding up good; our forwards were doing nicely. I kicked the ball up and out to a forward, our striker was in the correct position, the ball was passed to him; he had a break-away and SCORED— the ball was in the goal net. Our defence held strong—— WE WON THE GAME one goal to nothing! Wow I thought as captain, we showed all those who said we had no chance of beating this team, that we were good and deserved to be in the final.
So we got to the final—— no we did not win, the team we played did have a real coach who taught them, as I said our teacher-coach was good at picking the right lads for the right positions but he was not a good coach. I look back now and can see that as captain I should have taken more charge in sitting down with the players and going over the art of positioning and playing as a team. We were honored by the Headmaster for getting to the final, and the whole school gave us a big clapping of hands.
Well time to back up now some. I was about 13, and had learnt to swim. I was very good at the “breast-stroke” but did not know how good per se. There was one lad who was a super swimmer, he was not much good at any other sport, but he was a fish in the water. Our teacher did enter him in competitions both in the “free-style” and in “diving.” He always won; I used to love to see him swim and dive, and would go to see him when the competition was local.
We were at our weekly swimming lesson and our teacher said to us, “We are going into a competition; I know who 3 of the team will be; but the 4th….. Keith and….. [forgot the name of the lad]….you will now race for the 4th position on the team.”
My fastest stroke was the breast-stroke, all others did the crawl as it was called then, feel-style it is called today.
We were off, and I was doing my stroke and actually beat the other lad. I was on the swim team.
The day of the event. Our team led off with our great never loose boy, we had a good distance out front; but our next two swimmers, well they just could not keep us out front. Coming up to my turn, the 4th of the team, we were behind about ten feet. I dove in and swam as fast as I could. I was catching up to the front swimmer; those from our school were shouting “Go Keith, go Keith!” Yes I was catching up but just not enough length left; we came second in the competition. Now if the age grouping had been 15 year olds, I probably would not have made it on the team. For boys there is quite the body change from age 13 to age 15. But it was fun for me—— me doing the breast-stroke against the free-style, must have looked odd.
With the sport Cricket, we did not have any inter-school competitions, it was just all the boys divided into what was called “houses”—— so there was the “York house” and the “Barry house” etc. We would then play against each other; so a mixture of ages from 12 to 15 in each “house,”
My local friend of the neighborhood and I would play and play lots of Cricket over the summer times. I got not too bad at batting, but I did great at “bowling”—— you may have to go on the Internet Youtube and see what I’m talking about. I delivered a good fast ball with a spin. I got very good at fielding, diving and catching Cricket balls being hit by the batting person.
It was in the last year of school that our same man teacher put a team together to play another school team at Cricket. I was again picked as captain. It was a good fun game that we did not win. I was happy to give another lad the bowling job, and did not take him out so I could do it.
There was one running event I was really practicing hard for. I was in grade 11. A grade 12 lad had been the champion for two years at the 1/2 mile. He was tall, and pretty vain about it all. I had never entered the 1/2 mile race in our school June track and field competitions. This year our teacher, same man, wanted many of us grade 11 lads to enter. So I was practicing every school noon lunch break. I would run home, it was about 1 mile, and sprint like crazy the last 200 yards or so. Then run back to school. I did this for about two months. I was feeling really great when the day and time came for this 1/2 mile race. The vain champion said, “Is this 4 times around the rack?” He was told no it was twice around [the track was a 1/4 mile]. He looked like….. this is easy, only twice around, a breeze.
As I knew he would do, no sooner were we off, he jumped out and into the lead like there was no tomorrow; I sprang into action and did the same, right on his heels. Lap one, I kept on his heels, we had left the other runners well behinds. Now into lap two; around the first bend and down the straight, on his heels. Coming towards the final 220 yards, my domain for four undefeated years in inter-school competitions. I knew I had him; I was still full of packed up energy. This was it….. I said to myself….. time to fly Keith—— and away I went passing him and leaving him in the dust. It was for me the greatest win in my years of track and field. I worked real hard, real hard for it and it payed off.
I’ll finish this part of my sporting life in school with our last inter-school Athletics competition. I was still the school’s 220 yard dash lad. Just before my race was called, this lad walked in front of me with a few buddies of his. He muttered, “We’re coming after Hunt today.”
I knew what he was meaning—— of course he was trying to mentally psyche me out. I knew he had practiced hard for this race, just as I had practiced hard to win that 1/2 mile race.
For the first time I was on the outside lane. You do not see the other runners till the straight-away, and so do not know how the stagger will form as you head for the finish line. We were around the bend and heading for the tape. I could see he was right up with me….. 30 yard to go…..20 yards to go…..10 yards to go….. he was right up with me. All I could do now was to move my legs as fast as I could, and only a yard from the tape push out my chest….. I broke the tape before he did; I had won, but just, only just….. it was the closest 220 yard dash I had ever been in during all the years in High school.
I had to admit I kinda felt sorry for him; no doubt he had worked and worked hard to beat me; he just about did it. I know he must have felt terrible to come so close and not win the race. I was going to do my best, as I do in all things I’m doing, but if he did beat me I was okay with that. My school life was just about over, and my next phase was soon to begin; I was a cowboy at heart and the next Roy Rogers; running and racing for me was now over, it did not matter for me if I lost or won. All my sporting stuff was fun while I had to put in time to grow up and head out West, but my goal in life from age 7 was to be the next Roy Rogers.
Time to move back to my younger years.
………………..
To be continued
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