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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch or the London Charivari, Vol. 158,
+March 24, 1920., by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch or the London Charivari, Vol. 158, March 24, 1920.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: May 27, 2005 [EBook #15912]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Sandra Brown and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH,
+
+OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 158.
+
+
+
+March 24, 1920.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHARIVARIA.
+
+"Nobody knows," says a Berlin message, "how near the KAPP
+counter-revolution came to being a success." A kind word from
+Commander KENWORTHY, it is believed, would have made all the
+difference.
+
+ ***
+
+It is reported that Miss ISOBEL ELSOM, the cinema star, tried to get
+knocked down by a taxi-cab for the purposes of a film, but failed. We
+can only suppose that the driver must have been new to his job.
+
+ ***
+
+A vicar has written to the Press complaining indignantly of a London
+firm's offer to supply sermons at five shillings each. We are not
+surprised. Five shillings is a lot of money to give for a sermon.
+
+ ***
+
+The Llangollen Golf Club has decided to allow Sunday golf. In
+extenuation it is pointed out that the Welsh for "stymied" does not
+constitute a breach of the Sabbath, as is the case with the Scots
+equivalent.
+
+ ***
+
+At Caterham a robin has built its nest in a bully beef tin. These are
+the little things that give the Disposals Board a bad name.
+
+ ***
+
+A North of Ireland man who has just died at the age of 107 boasted
+that he had never had a bath. This should silence the faddists who
+pretend that they can hardly wait till Saturday night.
+
+ ***
+
+The ruins of Whitby Abbey, it is announced, are to be presented by
+their owner to the nation. On the other hand, the report that Mr.
+LLOYD GEORGE intends to present the ruins of the Liberal Party to
+Manchester City is not confirmed.
+
+ ***
+
+The latest information is that the recent German revolution had to be
+abandoned owing to the weather.
+
+ ***
+
+From a weekly paper article we gather that the trousers-crease will be
+in its accustomed frontal position this year. It is unfortunate that
+this announcement should have clashed with the attempted restoration
+of the Monarchy in Berlin.
+
+ ***
+
+Hot Cross Buns will probably cost threepence this year. An economical
+plan is for the householder to make his own hot cross and then get the
+local confectioner to fit a bun to it.
+
+ ***
+
+"There will be no whisky in Scotland in the year 1925," says a
+Prohibitionist speaker. He did not say whether there will be any
+Scotsmen.
+
+ ***
+
+No arrangement has yet been made for the carrying on of the Food
+Ministry, though it is said that one food profiteer has offered to buy
+the place as a memento.
+
+ ***
+
+"All the great men are dead," states a London newspaper. This sly dig
+at Mr. CHURCHILL'S robust health is surely in bad taste.
+
+ ***
+
+We are glad to hear that the strap-hanger who was summoned by a
+fellow-passenger on the Underground Railway for refusing to remove his
+foot from off the plaintiff's toes has now been acquitted by the jury.
+It appears that he was able to prove that he was not in a position to
+do so as his was not the top foot of the heap.
+
+ ***
+
+According to a trade journal the latest fashion in umbrellas is a
+pigeon's head carved on the handle. This, we understand, is the first
+step towards a really reliable homing umbrella.
+
+ ***
+
+The appearance of a hen blackbird without any trace of feathers on its
+neck or back is reported by a Worcester ornithologist. The attempt
+on the part of this bird to follow our present fashions is most
+interesting.
+
+ ***
+
+So much difficulty is being experienced in deciding whose incendiary
+bullet was the most effective, that it is thought possible that the
+Government may arrange for the Zeppelin raids to be revived.
+
+ ***
+
+A society paper reports that a large number of millionaires are now
+staying on the Riviera. It is not known where the other shareholders
+of COATS'S are staying.
+
+ ***
+
+In order to influence the exchange a contemporary suggests that we
+should sell our treasures to America. We understand that a cable to
+New York asking what they are prepared to pay for Mr. RAMSAY MACDONALD
+remains unanswered.
+
+ ***
+
+An egg weighing nine-and-a-half ounces has been laid at Bayonne,
+France. It looks like a walk-over unless _The Spectator_ has something
+up its sleeve.
+
+ ***
+
+"One hears the crying of the new-born lambs on all sides," writes a
+Nature correspondent. On the other hand the unmistakable bubbling note
+of the mint-sauce will not be heard for another month or so.
+
+ ***
+
+Will the A.S.C. private who in 1917 was ordered to take a mule to
+Sutton Coldfield please note that the animal has been sighted in
+California still chewing an army tunic, but the badges are missing?
+
+ ***
+
+"So many letters are being lost in the post nowadays," states a
+daily paper, "that drastic action should be taken in the matter." We
+understand that the POSTMASTER-GENERAL has expressed his willingness
+to be searched.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Hygienist_. "FEELING THE COLD, EH? AHA--LOOK AT ME. I
+DON'T KNOW WHAT COLD IS."
+
+_Normal Individual_. "THEN N-NATURALLY YOU D-DON'T FEEL IT."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A VULNERABLE SPOT.
+
+ "Lady, a word--but oh, beware!
+ And prithee do not slight it--
+ If you will have your back so bare,
+ Someone is sure to bite it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "An official of the Coal Controller's Department said that
+ everything possible would be done to relieve the situation.
+
+ 'No stone will be left unturned,' he said, 'to ease the
+ position.'"--_Daily Paper_.
+
+This accounts, no doubt, for the stuff in our last half-hundredweight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A JUNKER INTERLUDE.
+
+ Once more the Militant Mode recurs
+ With clank of sabre and clink of spurs;
+ Once more the long grey cloaks adorn
+ The bellicose backs of the high-well-born;
+ Once more to the click of martial boots
+ Junkers exchange their grave salutes,
+ Taking the pavement, large with side,
+ Shoulders padded and elbows wide;
+ And if a civilian dares to mutter
+ They boost him off and he bites the gutter.
+
+ Down by the Brandenburger Thor
+ Kitchens are worked by cooks of war;
+ Loyal moustaches cease to sag,
+ Leaping for joy of the old war-flag;
+ Drums are beating and bugles blare
+ And passionate bandsmen rip the air;
+ Prussia's original ardour rallies
+ At the sound of _Deutschland über alles_,
+ And warriors slap their fighting pants
+ To the tune _Heil dir im Siegeskranz_.
+
+ Life, in a word, recalls the phase
+ Of the glorious Hohenzollern days.
+ What if a War's meanwhile occurred
+ And talk of a humbling Peace been heard?
+ Treaties are meant to be torn in two
+ And wars are made to be fought anew.
+ _Hoch_! for the _Tag_, by land and main,
+ When the Monarchy comes to its own again.
+
+ Surely tho wind of it, faint but sweet,
+ The Old Man sniffed in his Dutch retreat;
+ Surely it gave his pulse a jog
+ As he went for his thirteen thousandth log,
+ Possibly causing the axe to jam
+ When he thought of his derelict Potsdam,
+ Of his orb mislaid and his head's deflation,
+ And visions arose of a Restoration.
+ (If not for himself, it might be done
+ For LITTLE WILLIE or WILLIE'S son).
+
+ Alas for the chances of child or sire!
+ The _coup_ went phut, for the KAPP missed fire.
+
+O.S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A FLAT TO LET.
+
+It was twelve o'clock (noon) and I was sitting over the fire in our
+squalid lodgings reading the attractive advertisements of country
+mansions in a weekly journal. I had just decided on a delightful Tudor
+manor-house with every modern convenience, a nice little park and
+excellent fishing and shooting, when Betty burst upon me like a
+whirlwind.
+
+Her face was flushed and a fierce light shone in her usually mild
+blue eyes. She looked like a Mænad or the incarnation of Victory at a
+bargain sale.
+
+"Come on," she gasped, seizing me by the arm. "Hurry."
+
+"Good heavens! Is the house on fire? My child! Let me save my child."
+
+"Oh, do come on," cried Betty; "there's not a moment to be lost."
+
+"But how can I come on in slippers?" I demanded. "If I may not save
+the young Henry Augustus, at any rate let me put on my boots."
+
+Betty's only reply was to drag me from the room, hustle me through the
+hall, where I dexterously caught my hat from the stand in passing, and
+thrust me into the street.
+
+"I've got a flat," she panted. "That is, I've got it if we're quick
+enough. Hi, taxi!"
+
+"But, my dear," I remonstrated as the taxi-driver, cowed by the look
+in her eye, drew up to the kerb, "if we take a taxi we shan't have
+anything left to pay for the flat."
+
+"Victory Mansions, Trebarwith Road. Drive fast!" shouted Betty as she
+pushed me into the cab.
+
+"Now you've done it," I said bitterly. "Do you know I've only five
+pounds ten on me at the moment? We shall lose the flat while we're
+quarrelling with the driver."
+
+"Oh, dear," cried Betty, "can't you see that this is serious? It was a
+wonderful piece of luck. I was passing the mansions and I happened to
+look up just as someone was sticking up a notice, 'Flat to Let,' in
+one of the windows. There was a beast of a man on the other side of
+the street and he simply leapt across the road. I slipped, or I should
+have beaten him. As it was he got to the door a yard ahead of me. We
+looked over the flat together, but of course he was first, and he
+said he was sure it would suit him, only he must ask his wife. It was
+awful! I felt as if I must kill him."
+
+"So you followed him out and pushed him down the lift-shaft? My dear
+brave girl!"
+
+"No, but I heard him say he could be back in half-an-hour. I knew I
+could do it in twenty-five minutes. Look!" Betty crushed my hand as in
+a vice. "There he is."
+
+As we took a corner on two wheels I looked out and saw a man running.
+"Taxi!" he shouted in the hoarse voice of despair. Our driver sat like
+a graven image and we swept on in triumph.
+
+"Oh!" cried Betty suddenly, "suppose that, after all, somebody
+else----" She choked on a sob.
+
+"Courage, dear heart," I said. "All is not yet lost."
+
+A moment later we had reached Victory Mansions and made a dash for the
+flat.
+
+"Are we in time?" asked Betty as the door was opened.
+
+"I think so, Ma'am," said the smiling maid and ushered us into the
+presence of the out-going tenant. A tour of the rooms at express speed
+showed the flat to be a desirable one enough. There were three years
+to run and the rent was not extortionate--for the times.
+
+"I'll sign the agreement now," said I.
+
+"Half-a-minute," said the out-going tenant as he produced the
+documents; "I'll get a pen and ink."
+
+The whirr of an electric bell resounded through the flat.
+
+"Quick!" panted Betty. "Your fountain pen." I produced it and wrote my
+name with a hand trembling with eagerness.
+
+"A gentleman about the flat, Sir," said the maid, and, haggard, pale
+and exhausted, our defeated rival staggered into the room.
+
+He looked at us with a dumb agony in his eyes, and neither of us two
+men had the courage to deal the fatal blow. It was Betty who spoke.
+
+"I'm sorry, but we've just taken this flat," she said sweetly, and
+added with true feminine cruelty, "I saw it first, you know."
+
+The stranger lost control and crashed badly on the hearth-rug.
+
+"Poor man," said Betty to the late tenant. "Be kind to him for our
+sakes." Then she led the way to our cab.
+
+"Hotel Splendid!" I said magnificently to the driver.
+
+"Wot," he growled, "not in them slippers?"
+
+"True," I said, with what dignity I could muster, and gave him the
+address of our lodgings.
+
+"None the less," I said to Betty, "you shall lunch among the
+profiteers. This is a great day, and it is yours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE INTER-UNIVERSITY SPORTS.
+
+ Great interest is being taken in the plucky attempt of Cambridge
+ to beat America, Africa and Europe (with Oxford).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: WHAT'S IN A NAME?
+
+MATE. "WHILE WE _ARE_ DOIN' HER UP, WHAT ABOUT GIVIN' HER A NEW NAME?
+HOW WOULD 'FUSION' DO?"
+
+CAPTAIN. "'FUSION' OR 'CONFUSION'--IT'S ALL ONE TO ME SO LONG AS I'M
+SKIPPER."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _First Juvenile Spectator (as the Oxford crew go out
+to practice)_. "THERE Y'ARE, 'ERR--WOT DID I TELL YER? THEY '_AVE_ GOT
+ONLY ONE OAR EACH!"
+
+_Second ditto_. "YOU WAIT TILL THE DAY OF THE RACE!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LAST OF THE WATCH DOGS.
+
+MY DEAR CHARLES,--In all the stirring history of the War I don't know
+which has been the most moving sight: the War Office trying to get me
+to be a soldier, or the War Oflice trying to get me to stop being a
+soldier.
+
+Before the late Summer of 1914, England had evinced no burning
+interest in its Henry. It had, in fact, left me to make my own way,
+contenting itself with cautioning me if I didn't stick to the right
+side of the road, or to fining me if I exceeded the speed limit. In
+August of that memorable year it got, you will remember, mixed up
+in rather a nasty bother. Searching for friends to get it out, it
+bethought itself of Henry, along with 499,999 others whose names for
+the moment I do not recall. Between us (with subsequent assistance) we
+set things to rights, and nothing remained for Old England save to rid
+itself gracefully of what remained of its few millions of new-found
+friends. There was, however, no shaking off its bosom pal, Henry. I
+am one of those loyal characters whose affection, once gained, nothing
+can undo. No use saying to me: "Well, old man, it's getting late now;
+you must come and see us again some other day." I am one of the sort
+who answer: "Don't you worry yourself about that. I'm going to stay
+and go on seeing you now."
+
+In the early days of demobilisation there was, I think, a certain
+novelty and attraction about my attitude to the problem. In contrast
+to the impatient hordes crowding the entrance of the War Office,
+ringing the front-door bell violently, tapping on the window-panes
+and generally disturbing that serene atmosphere of peace which was the
+great feature of the War in Whitehall, it was refreshing to think
+of Henry, plugging quietly away elsewhere at his military duties,
+undeterred by armistices, peaces and things of that kind. I fancy I
+was well thought of in those days at the War House.
+
+"Say what you like about him," I can hear A.G.4 remarking to M.S.19
+(decimal 9 recurring) as they met in the corridor on their way to
+lunch, "but I find him a patient, well-behaved young fellow."
+
+"Yes," would be the thoughtful answer, "it seems almost a pity we are
+going to lose him."
+
+Speaking strictly between ourselves, I have never thought much of the
+Military Secretary branch. What made them think they were going to
+lose me as easily as all that?
+
+What I said to myself was: "Henry, my lad, thirteen shillings and
+elevenpence a day is thirteen shillings and elevenpence a day; now
+isn't it? And war isn't war when there is a peace coming on. Why then
+throw up a fat income just for the sake of getting into long trousers?
+You stay where you are till they come and fetch you."
+
+So I just stayed where I was, and I conducted the operation with such
+ability and tact that Whitehall came to forget all about me. My name
+went on appearing, with ever-increasing dignity and beauty, in the
+Army List; but that made no difference. You see, though lots of people
+write the Army List, no one ever reads it; only from time to time
+a man will surreptitiously turn up his own name, just to renew his
+feeling of self-importance, or in an emergency he will look up the
+name of a friend in order to get the right initials after it and not
+risk giving that personal offence which may prevent the loan....
+
+But when I say that I stayed where I was I don't mean to suggest that
+I didn't go on leave in the usual way. Indeed I often came home, in
+full regimentals, too, partly to impress you and partly to travel
+first-class at your expense. Fellow-passengers never thought of
+turning on me and rending me, as being the cause of
+six-shillings-in-the-pound. They would be extremely polite and make
+friendly conversation with me, leading up to the point that they had
+been soldiers themselves once, but had given it up, owing to having
+been told that the War was finished.
+
+I would be just as polite to them, telling them they might count on
+me to return to the discomforts and risks of civil life as soon as I
+could be spared from the front. They had never the intelligence, or
+daring to ask, "The front of what?"
+
+Now the climax has arrived; I am asked if they must throw me out or
+will I go quietly? I fancy I have been caught by one of those
+card-indexes. I suspect some Departmental General of showing off to a
+friend. "This is my IN basket," I can hear him explaining as he shows
+his audience his office; "every letter which comes in goes into the
+IN. That is my OUT basket, and every letter which goes out goes out of
+the OUT.
+
+"And then, Sir, we have the Card Index. A complete record of every
+officer in the Army, permanent or temporary."
+
+"Are there still temporary officers in the Army?" asks the audience,
+not being able to think of anything better to ask, and clearly being
+called upon to ask something.
+
+"Sergeant-Major, turn up 'Officers, army, temporary, the, in,' for
+this gentleman."
+
+And thus the shameful truth comes out. One card only--mine.
+
+Exit audience wondering what manner of intrepid man this Henry might
+be.
+
+Originally the W.O. had had a great idea; they caused my regiment
+softly and silently to vanish away, thinking that I would vanish with
+it. But I had been too sharp for them. Learning that they were bent
+on "disembodying" me, and not liking the sound of the word, I had very
+quietly removed myself from my regiment to the Staff. Thus for a few
+happy months we see the W.O. rendered inert.
+
+My final defeat was due to a chance remark of my own, made to one of
+the fifty-nine officers under whose direct command I served. Upon
+my first arriving on his Staff he had said to me, "Oh, by the way,
+P.S.C., of course?" Quite affable, frank and to the point; "P.S.C., of
+course?"
+
+Not knowing the language, I could not make an equally affable answer.
+I asked him to repeat the question, but to change the code.
+
+"You have Passed Staff College, of course?" he said a little less
+affably.
+
+I then had the misfortune to answer: "Why, of course, if you mean that
+tall building on the right as I came up here from the station?"
+
+He then made up his mind that I was not only wanting in essential
+parts, but was also the sort of person who jested on religious
+subjects. He never forgot the matter; indeed, when applied to (under
+"Secret and Confidential" cover) to suggest a means of getting rid of
+me, he very clearly remembered it. At once every department in the War
+House got busy; the interest of the Secretary of State was enlisted,
+and the War Cabinet decided that for permanent purposes my post
+must necessarily be held by a P.S.C. man. Done in by what was little
+better, when you come to think of it, than a mere postscript.
+
+Please understand that there was no talk of discharging me; no talk
+of demobilising me; no talk even of disembodying me. Without any
+reflection on my conduct and merely upon the grounds that, not being
+P.S.C., I could not be regarded as quite right in the head, they
+intimated their intention of vacating my appointment by the simple
+process of an advertisement in the fashionable columns of _The London
+Gazette_.
+
+"What happens next?" I asked.
+
+"You will return to regimental duty," they said.
+
+"But there isn't any regiment," I pointed out triumphantly, "therefore
+there won't be any duty."
+
+They didn't seem to mind that, and for some time I wondered why. Then
+a thought occurred to me.
+
+"But here, I say, what about my pay?"
+
+"Ah!" said they unhelpfully....
+
+And that, my dear Charles, is why, if you keep your eye on the
+journals of (say) the Summer of 1925, you will read in the Stop-press
+Column an urgent telegram from the W.O.: "On April 1st, 1920, the
+following relinquishes his appointment
+
+(Remaining, however,
+ Yours always), HENRY."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ANOTHER IMPENDING APOLOGY.
+
+ "MOTHERS' UNION.-- ... A helpful discussion followed on 'How
+ to Deal with Unworthy Members.' There were about 50
+ present."--_Parish Magazine_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Old Lady_. "WILL YOU PLEASE PUT ME DOWN AT THE SAME
+PLACE AS YOU DID LAST FRIDAY WEEK?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PRACTICE OF THE CREWS.
+
+(_Ballad after C.S.C._)
+
+ The reporter aired his aquatic lore
+ (_Popply water in Corney Reach_,)
+ A thing he had yearly essayed before;
+ And a rowing jargon obscured his speech.
+
+ The coach he coached with a megaphone
+ (_Crabtree, Craven and Chiswick Eyot_)
+ Till the crew were prone to emit a groan,
+ And the Cox said nothing but "Bow, you're late."
+
+ The Stroke he quickened to thirty-four
+ (_In the first half-minute struck seventeen_)
+ Some clocks returned it a trifle more,
+ Which wasn't so good as it might have been.
+
+ The towpath critic he shook his head
+ (_Thornycroft's, where they began to row_):
+ "Hung over the stretcher" was what he said,
+ And "missed the beginning," and "hands too slow."
+
+ The towpath critic, whoe'er he be
+ (_A tug and some barges blocked the way_),
+ For thirty odd years, it seems to me,
+ Has never found anything else to say.
+
+ The towpath critic's remarks are trite
+ (_Off Ayling's Yard in a stiffish breeze_),
+ Yet I study religiously morn and night
+ Whole columns consisting of words like these.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: MANNERS AND MODES.
+
+THE COMPANY-PROMOTER'S PROBLEM--HOW TO UTILISE THE BOOM IN SPRING.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GENIUS OF MR. BRADSHAW.
+
+(_By our Literary Expert._)
+
+No one will be surprised to hear that the Christian name of Mr.
+BRADSHAW was George. Indeed, it is difficult to think what other name
+a man of his calibre could have had. But many people will be surprised
+to hear that Mr. BRADSHAW is no longer alive. Whatever one thinks
+of his work one is inclined to think of him as a living personality,
+working laboriously at some terminus--probably at the Charing Cross
+Hotel. But it is not so. He died, in fact, in 1853. His first book--or
+rather the first edition of his book[1] was published in 1839; yet,
+unlike the author, it still lives. He is, in fact, the supreme example
+of the posthumous serial writer. I have no information about Mr.
+DEBRETT and Mr. BURKE, but the style and substance of their work are
+relatively so flimsy that one is justified, I think, in neglecting
+them. In any case their public is a limited one. So, of course, is Mr.
+BRADSHAW'S; but it is better than theirs. Mr. DEBRETT'S book we read
+idly in an idle hour; when we read Mr. BRADSHAW'S it is because we
+feel that we simply must; and that perhaps is the surest test of
+genius.
+
+It is no wonder that in some circles Mr. BRADSHAW holds a position
+comparable only to the position of HOMER. I once knew an elderly
+clergyman who knew the whole of Mr. BRADSHAW'S book by heart. He could
+tell you without hesitation the time of any train from anywhere to
+anywhere else. He looked forward each month to the new number, as
+other people look forward to the new numbers of magazines. When it
+came he skimmed eagerly through its pages and noted with a fierce
+excitement that they had taken off the 5.30 from Larne Harbour, or
+that the 7.30 from Galashiels was stopping that month at Shankend. He
+knew all the connections; he knew all the restaurant trains; and, if
+you mentioned the 6.15 to Little Buxton, he could tell you offhand
+whether it was a Saturdays Only or a Saturdays Excepted.
+
+This is the exact truth, and I gathered that he was not unique. It
+seems that there is a Bradshaw cult; there may even be a Bradshaw
+club, where they meet at intervals for Bradshaw dinners, after which
+a paper is read on "Changes I have made, with some Observations on
+Salisbury." I suppose some of them have first editions, and talk about
+them very proudly; and they have hot academic discussions on the best
+way to get from Barnham Junction to Cardiff without going through
+Bristol. Then they drink the toast of "The Master" and go home in
+omnibuses. My friend was a schoolmaster and took a small class of boys
+in Bradshaw; he said they knew as much about it as he did. I call that
+corrupting the young.
+
+But apart from this little band of admirers I am afraid that the book
+does suffer from neglect. Who is there, for example, who has read
+the "Directions" on page 1, where we are actually shown the method
+of reading tentatively suggested by the author himself? The ordinary
+reader, coming across a certain kind of thin line, lightly dismisses
+it as a misprint or a restaurant car on Fridays. If he had read the
+Preface he would know that it meant a SHUNT. He would know that a
+SHUNT means that passengers are enabled to continue their journey by
+changing into the next train. Whether he would know what that means I
+do not know. The best authorities suppose it to be a poetical way of
+saying that you have to change--what is called an euphemism.
+
+No, you must not neglect the Preface; and you must not neglect the
+Appendix on Hotels. As sometimes happens in works of a philanthropic
+character, Mr. BRADSHAW'S Appendix has a human charm that is lacking
+in his treatment of his principal theme, the arrival and departure
+of trains. To the careful student it reveals also a high degree
+of organisation among his collaborators, the hotel-managers. It is
+obvious, for example, that at Bournemouth there must be at least one
+hotel which has the finest situation on the South coast. Indeed
+one would expect to find that there was more than one. But no;
+Bournemouth, exceptionally fortunate in having at once the most select
+hotel on the South coast, the largest and best-appointed hotel on the
+South coast and the largest and most up-to-date hotel on the South
+coast, has positively only one which has the finest position on
+the South coast. Indeed, there is only one of these in the whole of
+England, though there are two which have the finest position on the
+East coast.
+
+How is it, we wonder, that with so much variation on a single theme
+such artistic restraint is achieved? It is clear, I think, that before
+they send in their manuscripts the hotel-managers must meet somewhere
+and agree together the exact terms of their contributions to the book.
+"The George" agrees that for the coming year "The Crown" shall have
+the "finest cuisine in England," provided "The George" may have "the
+most charming situation imaginable," and so on. I should like to be at
+one of those meetings.
+
+This is the only theory which accounts for the curious phrases we
+find so frequently in the text:--"_Acknowledged_ to be the finest";
+"_Admittedly_ in the best position." Who is it that acknowledges or
+admits these things? It must be the other managers at these annual
+meetings. Yes, the restraint of the collaborators is wonderful, and in
+one point only has it broken down. There are no fewer than seventeen
+hotels with an Unrivalled Situation, and two of these are at
+Harrogate. For a small place like the British Isles it seems to me
+that this is too many.
+
+For the rest, what imagery, what exaltation we find in this Appendix!
+Dazed with imagined beauty we pass from one splendid haunt to another.
+One of them has _three_ golf-courses of its own; several are _replete_
+with every comfort (and is not "replete" the perfect epithet?). Here
+is a seductive one "on the sea-edge," and another whose principal
+glory is its sanitary certificate. Another stands on the spot where
+TENNYSON received his inspiration for the _Idylls of the King_, and
+leaves it at that. In such a spot even "cuisine" is negligible.
+
+On the whole, from a literary point of view, the hydros come out
+better than the mere hotels. But of course they have unequalled
+advantages. With such material as Dowsing Radiant Heat, D'Arsonval
+High Frequency and Fango Mud Treatment almost any writer could be
+sensational. What is High Frequency, I wonder? It is clear, at any
+rate, that it would be madness to have a hydro without it.
+
+Well, I have selected my hotel--on purely literary grounds. Or rather
+I have selected two. One is the place where they have the Famous
+Whirlpool Baths. I shall go there at once.
+
+The manager of the other is a great artist; alone among the
+collaborators he understands simplicity. His contribution occupies
+a whole page; but there is practically nothing in it, nothing about
+cuisine or sanitation, or elegance or comfort. Only, in the middle, he
+writes quite simply THE MOST PERFECT HOTEL IN THE WORLD.
+
+A.P.H.
+
+[Footnote 1: "Bradshaw's General Railway and Steam Navigation Guide
+for Great Britain and Ireland."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A ZOOLOGICAL CURIOSITY.
+
+ "The complaint made was that men came to the district and
+ asked inflated prices for shares, far above the market value,
+ and it was argued that the new exchange would tend to obviate
+ this system of sharks feathering their nests."--_Lancashire
+ Paper_.
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: BEHIND THE SCENES IN CINEMA-LAND.
+
+"THAT'S FINE. BUT, AS I HAVEN'T GOT ANY FILMS LEFT, I SUPPOSE THERE'S
+NO USE STAYING HERE."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN INTER-SERVICE MATCH.
+
+(_With the British Army in France_.)
+
+Frederick entered the Mess with a decided sea-roll, hitched his slacks
+and berthed himself on the starboard settee.
+
+"Cheerio, my hearties," said he breezily. "Everybody on the old lugger
+still luffing along all serene?"
+
+"Why so oppressively nautical?" inquired Percival. "You haven't been
+on the leave-boat lately."
+
+"'Tis true, old messmate. I'm under the influence of my new batman,
+one 'Enery 'Enson. After a lifetime in the Marines he's now spending
+his declining days in the Army, and he's terribly infectious. I found
+myself saying, 'Ay, ay, Sir,' when the C.O. spoke to me."
+
+"I think I've noticed your 'Enery," said Percival. "Isn't he about
+ten feet high by six broad, tattooed all over like a circulating art
+gallery, and addicted to chewing quids and swabbing out your hut in
+his bare feet?"
+
+"My cabin, you mean. And says he's going ashore when he takes a trip
+down the village. That's 'Enery."
+
+"Incidentally he's a confirmed bath-lifter," interjected Binnie.
+"Yesterday morning my batman prepared me a tub, and while he was
+fetching me along your hulking pirate boosted out my sponge and towels
+and installed your lily-white self in it. You were so busy wallowing
+in my hot water that you never heard my protests on the door. You
+really must curb his buccaneering instincts, old Tirps."
+
+"I accept no responsibility for his methods," said Frederick
+haughtily; "I merely profit by them. In any case I didn't _take_ your
+hot water; I simply used it. You should live near the bath-house and
+get up promptly when you are called, as I do."
+
+"Well, I don't mind the British Navy ruling the waves," grumbled
+Binnie, "but I object to its extending its sphere of influence over my
+bath-water."
+
+"It jolly well doesn't extend over mine," said Percival with pride.
+"Frederick's 'Enery doesn't get the better of my Elfred. This morning
+a queue, consisting of two perfectly good Loots, a really excellent
+Skipper and a priceless Major were waiting for vacant baths. But was
+Elfred Fry dismayed? To forestall an answer that might possibly be
+wrong I may say that he wasn't. He promptly appropriated a cubicle
+that happened to be unoccupied--"
+
+"Really, my frowsty old Camembert, don't ask us to believe that they
+had _all_ overlooked it," expostulated Frederick.
+
+"Not for worlds would I endeavour to impose on your gentle trusting
+natures. So far from their overlooking it the bath had been the
+subject of earnest scrutiny, and they had all regretfully come to
+the conclusion that it lacked one important attribute of a bath--it
+wouldn't hold water. The plug was missing."
+
+"And by a singular chance the plug happened to be in the possession of
+your Elfred?"
+
+"That is my case, me luds," said Percival simply. "If the silent Navy
+wants to beat my Elfred it's got to rise very early in the morning."
+
+"We shall see," said Frederick darkly. "I'm going to tell this tale to
+the Marines."
+
+That evening the troops had organised a stupendous boxing tournament
+in the Recreation Hut. Binnie by invitation combined the offices
+of referee, M.C. and timekeeper, and Frederick and Percival at the
+ring-side unanimously disagreed with his verdicts.
+
+"Most appalling decision," said Percival in a loud whisper. "The
+referee has obviously been got at."
+
+"Sh!" replied Frederick. "He hasn't been told it's a boxing contest.
+He thinks it's a clog-dancing competition and is giving the points for
+footwork."
+
+Unfortunately the M.C. did not hear. He was speaking himself.
+
+"The next bout should conclude our programme," he said, "but I am
+asked to announce that Private Henson challenges Private Fry to box
+six two-minute rounds, backing himself for five francs against a small
+article of no intrinsic value."
+
+Enthusiastic applause greeted the announcement. A disturbance in the
+rear of the hut indicated that Elfred was heading for cover.
+
+"'E 's twice my size," he wailed as strong hands hauled him back.
+
+"The challenger admits that he holds a slight advantage in weight,"
+continued the M.C., "but considers that is counterbalanced by his
+advanced years."
+
+"This is _your_ fiendish work," hissed Percival to Frederick.
+
+"Not a bit of it, old sportsman," replied Frederick cheerfully. "The
+patent rights are held by 'Enery. I merely mentioned to him that
+Elfred possessed a desirable bath-plug that it might be useful to
+acquire."
+
+Percival left his seat to confer with the shrinking Elfred.
+
+"'E can 'ave the old bath-plug an' welcome, Sir, as far as I'm
+concerned," said the latter.
+
+"Tut, tut!" said Percival. "You must make a fight for it. The honour
+of the Army is at stake."
+
+"I ain't all that set on the honour of the Army," said Elfred. "But
+'im being the challenger, shouldn't I be justified in putting the plug
+in one of my gloves?"
+
+"The rules don't provide for such a contingency. Hurry up now and get
+stripped, and I'll give you twenty francs if you win."
+
+Both combatants were warmly received. 'Enery's decorative tattooing
+was much admired, and Elfred was urgently requested not to spoil
+the pictures. By desire of the referee the stakes were handed to
+him--Frederick producing the five francs for 'Enery--and the battle
+commenced.
+
+It was early evident that the Navy intended shock tactics, while the
+Army favoured a system of elastic defence. A salvo of short-arm jabs
+by 'Enery was answered by long-range sniping on the part of Elfred,
+no direct hits being recorded. Towards the end of the round 'Enery
+attempted to approach under cover of a smoke screen, but action was
+broken off at the sound of the gong.
+
+The second round opened sensationally. Elfred, on the advice of his
+seconds, was "making use of the ring" when he accidentally collided
+with his opponent coming in the reverse direction and gave him a
+violent thump without return. There seemed every prospect of trouble,
+but clever footwork prevented the incident developing into a _fracas_.
+Round two concluded with Elfred leading handsomely by one point to
+nothing.
+
+"Two to one on Elfred," said Percival excitedly.
+
+"Take you--in bath plugs," answered Frederick, carefully entering the
+bet.
+
+'Enery equalised in the third round, Elfred having incautiously
+wandered into the track of a stray upper-cut and bounced off. More
+footwork followed, Elfred winning by about two yards. Both were
+breathing heavily when time was called, and 'Enery was complaining
+about his bronchitis.
+
+Skirmishing tactics in the fourth round resulted in Elfred having
+a narrow escape from being torpedoed beneath the belt, and during
+several subsequent clinches he was requested to stop studying the
+pictures and get on with the business.
+
+The fifth and sixth rounds were marked by the departure of most of the
+spectators, and in the end a draw was the only possible verdict.
+
+"But what about the plug, old scout?" asked Percival, as they wandered
+back to their quarters.
+
+"As referee," answered Binnie, "I gave a draw; as Battalion Boxing
+Board of Control I order the match to be re-fought in six months'
+time, to give the men a chance to get into condition; and meanwhile as
+stakeholder I continue to hold the five francs and the bath-plug."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Profiteer_ (_to M.F.H._). "LOOK 'ERE!--THIS IS THE
+THIRD TIME I'VE BEEN OUT WITH YOUR CROWD, AN' Y' 'AVEN'T CAUGHT A
+FOX. BEST THING _YOU_ CAN DO IS TO GIMME BACK ME 'SUB' AN' SELL YER
+BLOOMIN' DOGS!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[ILLUSTRATION: _BLUSTEROUS PERSON_ (_WHO HAS FORCED A CIGAR ON
+UNWILLING CLUB ACQUAINTANCE_), "THERE MY BOY--YOU DON'T OFTEN SMOKE A
+THING LIKE THAT! THAT'S SOMETHING LIKE A CIGAR, EH?"
+
+_The Victim_. "YES--SOMETHING. WHAT IS IT?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TRUE SONG-STUFF.
+
+ [A writer in an evening paper describes a certain song as
+ being sung, "sometimes with a lump in the throat and a tear in
+ the eye," all over England.]
+
+ If you wish to succeed as a writer
+ Of songs that undoubtedly count,
+ By making the atmosphere brighter,
+ The moral barometer mount,
+ Then be it your aim and endeavour to try
+ For the lump in the throat and the tear in the eye.
+
+ SCRIABINE and STRAVINSKY may flatter
+ The ears of the brainy _élite_,
+ But the musical numbers that matter
+ Express what is simple and sweet;
+ You may easily miss, by aspiring too high,
+ Both the lump in the throat and the tear in the eye.
+
+ Though cynics conspire to repress it,
+ To sentiment, "heavenly link"
+ (As the Bard of Savoy would address it),
+ With joy "I eternally drink;"
+ For it gives us the key, which no science can buy,
+ To the lump in the throat and the tear in the eye.
+
+ But, if you are anti-Victorian
+ And, scorning the coo of the dove,
+ Hold the roar of the primitive Saurian
+ The final expression of love,
+ You may have, if you choose, an alternative shy
+ At a tear in the throat and a lump in the eye.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "For 70 years Regent Street has basked in sunshine, and now
+ it is to be cast into shadow again. It will be like a gloomy
+ canon between dour stone walls."--_Daily Chronicle_.
+
+We have heard of a gloomy Dean, whose habitat answers to the
+description given. Can this be his understudy?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The 'brasses' worn by the modern cart-horse are a direct
+ survival of the amulets which bedecked the horses of the time
+ of Julius Cæsar. They are worn on the farthingale as charms
+ against the Evil Eye."--_Daily Paper_.
+
+You should see our Clydesdale in her crinoline.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: AN UNPOPULAR REVIVAL.
+
+FRITZ. "THIS IS NO GOOD TO ME NOW. YOU WANT A SWELLED HEAD FOR THIS
+SORT OF THING."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+_Monday, March 15th_. The great Food-prices debate hardly justified
+its preliminary advertisement. Mr. MCCURDY took sure ground when he
+argued that high prices were mainly due to world-shortage; and,
+though he entered more disputable territory when he declared that the
+Profiteering Act was not primarily intended to punish profiteers,
+Mr. ASQUITH did not seriously attempt to dislodge him. Indeed, the
+EX-PREMIER'S speech was mainly composed of truisms, his only excursion
+into the speculative being an assertion--with which not all economists
+will agree--that inflation of currency is a consequence and not a
+cause of high prices.
+
+An ex-Food Controller, Mr. GEORGE ROBERTS, defended the Government
+against charges of extravagance, and ventured to remind Labour--as
+THOMAS DRUMMOND reminded Irish landlords--that it had duties as well
+as rights.
+
+Early in the evening the PRIME MINISTER, who had sat through many
+speeches in readiness for the threatened attack, folded his notes and
+silently stole away.
+
+On the adjournment General PAGE CROFT accused the Ministry of
+Munitions of unfair treatment to one of its employees. The peroration
+to Mr. KELLAWAY'S spirited defence deserves quotation: "The decision
+taken by the Ministry is a decision that will stand." That's the stuff
+to give 'em.
+
+_Tuesday, March 16th_.--"The LORD CHANCELLOR was so unusually
+apologetic in his exposition of the War Emergency Laws (Continuance)
+Bill that none of the Peers had the heart seriously to oppose him.
+Lord SALISBURY took note of the Government's admission that they
+were anxious to say Good-bye to D.O.R.A. and only complained that the
+farewell ceremony was so long-drawn-out. Lord BUCKMASTER failed to
+understand why D.O.R.A. should have a longer life in Ireland than in
+England, and was so carried away by his own eloquence as to declare
+that all the crimes attributed to the Sinn Feiners had been due
+"to misguided attempts to enforce special legislation against a
+misunderstood and a gallant people." Lord BIRKENHEAD replied that
+there was at least a plausible case for the contention that the boot
+was on the other leg.
+
+[Illustration: "CONTROLLERS" CONTROLLED.
+
+MR CLYNES. MR. MCCURDY. MR. G. ROBERTS.]
+
+It is unusual to find Members of the House of Commons objecting to
+their speeches being reported, but apparently some of them do--when
+the reporters are police constables. The HOME SECRETARY thought it
+quite possible that if Members attended certain meetings the official
+stenographers might think it worth while to take down their utterances
+but I gathered that he was not prepared to give any guarantee on the
+subject, and that Colonel WEDGWOOD and Lieut.-Commander KENWORTHY must
+not count too confidently on having a further road to fame opened to
+them.
+
+[Illustration: THE CORNUCOPIA, OR HORNE OF PLENTY. SIR ROBERT HORNE.]
+
+Mr. BONAR LAW read a telegram from Lord KILMARNOCK regarding the
+situation in Berlin. As it was already a day old, was admittedly based
+on a _communiqué_ from _Wolff's Bureau_, "censored" by Mr. TREBITSCH
+LINCOLN (late Liberal Member for Darlington), and had in the meantime
+been officially contradicted by the old Government, it did not add
+much to our knowledge.
+
+Time was when it was usual to move to reduce a Vote by a hundred
+pounds if you wanted to defeat the Government. But such paltry figures
+are no good in these spacious days. Sir DONALD MACLEANS'S proposed
+reduction in the Vote on Account for the Civil Services was the
+much more mouth-filling morsel of one hundred million pounds. Mr.
+CHAMBERLAIN considered it very handsome of the Opposition, on the
+eve, he understood, of coming into office, thus to cut off its own
+supplies. Nevertheless he declined to accept the generous offer. Our
+finances would be all right if the House would back the Government by
+practising economy as well as preaching it. As it was, he thought the
+worst was over, for--strange and agreeable phenomenon--the floating
+debt was sinking.
+
+After this it was, perhaps, not very complimentary'of Mr. J.W. WILSON
+to urge the Government to put forth their best speakers. The PRIME
+MINISTER was still coy, but Sir ROBERT HORNE, in virtue of his new
+office as President of the Board of Trade, stepped nimbly into the
+breach, and made a speech so cheerful both in substance and delivery
+as to justify the hope that in him the Government have found the HORNE
+of Plenty.
+
+_Wednesday, March 17th_.--Seventeen years ago Lord BALFOUR OF
+BURLEIGH, as a hard-shell Free Trader, sacrificed office sooner than
+bow the knee to the new gods of Birmingham. This afternoon he brought
+in a Bill (to safeguard "key industries" and counteract "dumping")
+which would have gladdened the heart of Mr. JOSEPH CHAMBERLAIN. Some
+of the other Free Trade Peers were still unrepentant. Lord BEAUCHAMP,
+for example, declaring that shipping was our real "quay-industry" and
+needed no protection, announced his intention of moving the rejection
+of the Bill; and Lord CREWE, although one of the authors of the Paris
+resolutions, on which the measure was ostensibly based, thought that
+it went far beyond present necessities. The only dumps with which
+Germany was likely to be associated for some time to come were
+doleful, not aggressive.
+
+The Report of the Supplementary Estimates furnished the Commons with
+abundant points for criticism. In protesting against an increase in
+the remuneration of the Law Officers, Mr. HOGGE revealed a hitherto
+unsuspected admiration for the PRIME MINISTER, whose services, he
+considered, were most inadequately rewarded with five thousand pounds
+a year and no pension. If anyone deserved an increase of salary it was
+he.
+
+Mr. TYSON-WILSON had the temerity to complain that the Government were
+not finding work for all the disabled ex-Service men whom they trained
+in the technical schools, and laid himself open to a damaging "_tu
+quoque_" from Sir ROBERT HORNE, who pointed out that this lack of
+employment was largely due to the trade unions, which refused to admit
+these men as "improvers."
+
+In introducing the Naval Estimates for eighty odd millions Mr. LONG
+was almost apologetic for not having made them larger. The _personnel_
+has been drastically reduced, and parents are actually being offered a
+premium of three hundred pounds to remove their sons from Osborne. On
+the other hand promotion from the lower deck was to be encouraged, and
+in future every youngster entering the Navy would metaphorically carry
+a broad-pennant in his ditty-box.
+
+_Thursday, March 18th_.--A proposal to erect a military monument on
+a hill near Jerusalem was adversely criticised by Lord TREOWEN. Lord
+SOUTHBOROUGH, as a recent visitor to the Holy City, thought that the
+Government would be better advised to demolish some of the recent
+buildings, including the ex-Kaiser's ridiculous clock-tower, which had
+not even the negative merit of telling the time.
+
+In consequence of his rather exhausting séance with the Liberal
+Party the PRIME MINISTER was looking a little jaded. But he perked
+up wonderfully when Mr. WILL THORNE, _à propos_ of a story that
+the Russian Soviet Government had introduced martial law into the
+workshops, asked whether he did not think that all able-bodied people
+ought to be compelled to work. There was the old twinkle in his eyes
+as he replied that it would be very interesting to know if that was
+the view of the trade unions. From recent information I gather that
+the bricklayers, at any rate, would not subscribe to it.
+
+Upon the further consideration of the Navy Estimates General SEELY
+urged the re-establishment of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Mr.
+LONG said the Admiralty were most anxious for it. Mr. ASQUITH also
+approved, but from his ten years' experience as its President entered
+a _caveat_ against expecting the Committee to take upon itself
+executive functions. "Had it done so," he observed, "there would have
+been collisions, cross-purposes, waste of application, and in many
+cases something approaching to administrative confusion." Which
+things of course never occurred under his _régime_ of--shall I
+say?--expectant watchfulness.
+
+The rest of the debate was chiefly remarkable for Lady ASTOR'S bold
+declaration, "The sea belongs to England, and it could not be in
+better hands." Coming from a country-woman of Mr. DANIELS it was
+doubly exhilarating.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Captain_. "'ERE LET'S PACK UP NOW; IT'S GETTING LATE.
+BESIDES, THE KID WANTS HIS SHIRT BACK."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "DIRECT ACTION" AT PUTNEY.
+
+ "When the Light Blues went out a second time R.C. Barrett, of
+ the winning trial eight crew, was at strike,--_Daily Paper_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NEMESIS.
+
+ Kindly the dentist was, for he
+ Had obviously sought
+ To keep his waiting victims free
+ From apprehensive thought,
+ Providing for those souls in fear
+ The Comic Press of yesteryear.
+
+ I read those jests of days agone,
+ Those jibes at folly flown,
+ And wondered should I light upon
+ Some trifle of my own,
+ A par well pointed in its time
+ Or fragment of reputed rhyme.
+
+ Could I retrieve some sparkling fytte
+ Bedecked with _jeux de mots_,
+ I fancied that the sight of it
+ Might soothe my present woe,
+ Reminding me how once I had
+ Been quite a jocund kind of lad.
+
+ Lo, what a foolish hope was this!
+ I realised too soon
+ The special form of Nemesis
+ That waits on the buffoon:
+ _The joke I found concerned the gloom
+ Inside a dentist's waiting-room_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "HE HADN'T BEEN DEAD A WEEK WHEN THEY STARTED
+QUARRELLING OVER HIS ESTATE."
+
+"DID HE LEAVE MUCH?" "NO--ONLY THREE GALLONS."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LATEST PARTY.
+
+(_Being the Diary of a well-intentioned Voter_.)
+
+_Monday_. Important article in my morning paper on the serious
+political outlook. Recommends the formation of a new party to carry
+out progressive reforms and combat the forces of Revolution and
+Anarchy. Sounds excellent. The new party is to be called the People's
+Party. I decide to join it.
+
+_Tuesday_.--By a fortunate mistake my newsagent placed wrong paper on
+my step to-day. Find I was being misled by the sheet I usually take.
+A new party to carry out progressive reforms and combat the forces
+of Revolution and Anarchy has already been formed. It is called the
+National Party. I decide to join it.
+
+_Wednesday_.--Attended public meeting advertised as being in support
+of the new party. Expected to hear all about the programme of the
+National Party. Instead was urged to join the Modern Party, to carry
+out progressive reforms and combat the forces of Revolution and
+Anarchy. Signed card before leaving the hall pledging my support.
+
+_Thursday_.--Dined with Brooks, who takes very grave view of the state
+of the country. Said what we really want is a new party. Went on
+to outline some urgent progressive reforms and mentioned one or two
+necessary steps for combating the forces of Revolution and Anarchy.
+Suggested that he and I should try to start a local branch of the
+Britannic Party. Seemed so enthusiastic that I hadn't the heart to
+refuse him.
+
+_Friday_.--Johnson called at the office during my busiest hour. Wanted
+to enrol me as a member of a new party, to be known as the Efficiency
+Party. No time to go into it properly, so agreed, to get rid of him.
+Anyhow, the object's a good one. It was something about progressive
+reforms and combating the forces of Revolution and Anarchy.
+
+_Saturday_.--Heard at the Club that if the Coalition is not better
+supported in their attempts to carry out progressive reforms and
+combat the forces of Revolution and Anarchy, they will form themselves
+into a new party and go to the country. Locally we are to have, in
+addition to the retiring Coalitionist, a Free Liberal candidate, a
+Labour Party candidate, a couple of Independent candidates, a People's
+Party candidate, a National Party candidate, a Modern Party candidate,
+a Britannic Party candidate, and an Efficiency Party candidate. Afraid
+this would make my position extremely complicated. Decide to give
+undivided support to the Coalition in the hope of averting a General
+Election.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AT THE PLAY.
+
+"THE TRUTH ABOUT THE RUSSIAN DANCERS."
+
+With that uncanny tuition of his Sir JAMES BARRIE has, of course, hit
+on the precise truth. Russian dancers are not born but made--by the
+_Maestro_, which I take it is (broadly speaking) Italian for Producer
+and Presenter.
+
+When _Karissima_ goes on a visit to the stately home of the _Veres_
+the peace of that ancient haunt of the conventionally correct is
+queerly broken. Young _Lord Vere_ loses his heart. However, that might
+just as easily or more easily have happened if the Gaiety had been
+invited. But a dreadful change comes to _Uncle Bill_--he buys his
+clothes ready-made (at _La boutique fantasque_, for a guess, or
+possibly Mr. MALLABY-DEELEY'S), grows dundrearies and goes hopelessly
+off his game at golf.
+
+_Karissima_, poor dear, can't walk or talk or putt, for that matter,
+except with her toes. _Bill_ calls this last cheating, but young
+_Vere_ thinks it simply adorable--as do we all. _Lady Vere_, his
+mother, can't get used to being kissed by _Karissima_, who _will_
+stand upon her lightly with one foot, oddly waving the other
+meanwhile in the air. Besides it takes too long and _is_ rather too
+demonstrative. And couldn't _Karissima_ dear just try to walk with
+her soles really flat on the ground in the solid English county way?
+Certainly. _Karissima_ will try, to please Madame, and with painful
+effort achieves a half-dozen clumsy steps till unconquerable habit and
+Mr. ARNOLD BAX'S allusively witty music lift her on tiptoe again. And
+really she is such a darling that the once reluctant dowager finally
+consents to the marriage; wedding bells forthwith (within); a
+white-haired clergyman, surprised at nothing, as becomes the very
+best type of padre, appears; follow _corps de ballet_ bridesmaids; and
+_Bill_ gives her away.
+
+_Karissima_, says _Vere_ to _Maestro_ later in the evening, is
+depressed. Because she hasn't a child. They both tremendously want a
+child. _Maestro_, silently showing his watch-dial, would seem to wish
+to suggest that they were unreasonably impatient. _Karissima_ also
+pleads. Well, he will see what he can do. But there's an awful
+penalty. For a new Russian dancer cannot be made unless another
+surrenders life. Anyway he fetches his black bag. And _Karissima_
+dances down the main staircase with her babe, who grows apace and is
+shortly seen prancing in the garden (on his toes--"Thank Heaven!" says
+the _Maestro_).
+
+And _Karissima_ dies and is brought in on her bier, and dances (she
+_would_!) her own funeral service. _Maestro's_ heart is touched; he
+lies down in her stead, and she, dancing on a carpet of thistle-down
+shot with stars (I think), and her lord (I am sure), perpetually
+exclaiming, "How perfectly topping!"--both achieve an enviable
+immortality.
+
+Madame KARSAVINA is exquisite; she is well supported by Mr. C.M.
+LOWNE (_Hon. Bill_), Mr. HERMAN DE LANGE (_Maestro_), Miss G.
+STERROLL(_Dowager_), and Mr. BASIL FOSTER (_Lord Vere_). And I
+thought I detected Mr. DU MAURIER'S appreciation of the bizarre in his
+production. But the triumph is the triumph of the whimsical author. I
+don't think he has ever done anything better; more ambitious things,
+yes, but nothing so free from flaw.
+
+Isn't it more than possible that just three-score years ago, on a May
+day (see _Who's Who_), some Maestro of Fantasy slipped into a little
+house in Kirriemuir, N.B., with a black bag? Wouldn't that explain the
+otherwise inexplicable, the unwearying resourcefulness, the unabashed
+playfulness of this impenitent youth?
+
+T.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DRAM.BAC.
+
+A suggestion has been put forward, with the support of the British
+Drama League and others, for the establishment at our universities of
+a "Faculty of the Theatre and Dramatic Degree." Heartily applauding
+the proposal, we append a typical examination paper for the final
+school:--
+
+(1) Sketch briefly the progress of amateur acting in this country,
+from the impersonation of a Danish minstrel by ALFRED THE GREAT, to
+the Victory Varieties Matinée arranged by Lady Eve Tatlery.
+
+(2) Arrange, in order of probability, the first fifty authors of
+SHAKSPEARE.
+
+(3) "The Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing-fields of Eton."
+Estimate the rival claims of the Windsor Strollers.
+
+(4) Indicate your make-up for ROMULUS, HENRY THE EIGHTH, ABRAHAM
+LINCOLN.
+
+(5) What is a point, and how made? A "straight" line lies evenly
+between any good points; give instances.
+
+(6) Under what dramatic conditions can a part be greater than the
+whole? Cite the authority of any two actor-managers for this theory.
+
+(7) Explain, with diagrams, (a) The Eternal Triangle; (b) Squaring the
+Upper Circle.
+
+(8) Illustrate the axiom that the length of a run varies with the
+breadth of the dialogue.
+
+(9) What proportion of the music-hall comedians of Great Britain is
+supplied by (a) Lancashire; (b) Scotland?
+
+(10) Which European drama requires most doors for its honeymoon
+farces?
+
+(11) "What Manchester thinks to-day England will think next
+Sunday evening." Analyse this statement in its bearing upon the
+play-producing societies.
+
+(12) "Let who will make a nation's laws so that I make its songs."
+Discuss the ethical and sociological significance of this with regard
+to (a) "Where do flies go in the winter-time?" (b) "I _do_ like-an egg
+with my tea."
+
+In the _vivâ-voce_ portion of the examination, candidates for Honours
+will be required to satisfy the examiners (to the point of actual
+tears) by their recital of selected passages from prepared books.
+They may offer any two of the following: "Buckingham's Farewell;" "The
+Signalman's Daughter;" "The Death of Little Nell" (_with voices_).
+
+For candidates not seeking Honours a passable imitation of Mr. GEORGE
+ROBEY will entitle to one group.
+
+A.E.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO VIEWS.
+
+ There was a high priest of illusion
+ Who rose by his leader's extrusion;
+ By way of amends
+ He invites his old friends
+ To extinguish their prospects by Fusion.
+
+ There was a great foe of delusion,
+ Who came to the honest conclusion
+ That Socialist Labour
+ Plays beggar-my-neighbour
+ And sought to defeat it by Fusion.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A LEAP-YEAR RECORD.
+
+ "CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY SPORTS.--H.M. Abrahams winning the
+ long jump with a distance of 22yds. to his credit."--_Picture
+ Paper_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "THE PREMIER AND HIS FUTURE.
+
+ WHITHER GOETH THOU?"--_Headings in Daily Paper_.
+
+Answer adjudged correct: "I knowest not."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ 'Wanted, a Horse for its keep. Excellent cuisine."--_The Times
+ of Ceylon_.
+
+_À la_ cart, we presume.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A roof garden for cats is included in the scheme for
+ the extension of the premises of Our Dumb Friends'
+ League."--_Evening Paper_.
+
+We have heard the nocturnal cat on the tiles called many names, but
+never a "dumb friend."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The Police announce that dogs without dollars found wandering
+ after 10 p.m. are liable to be destroyed."--_Hong Kong Paper_.
+
+We understand, however, that in China dogs are almost invariably
+provided with taels.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: TRIALS OF THE FISH-TRADE.
+
+"CLOTHES, MY DEAR! DON'T MENTION CLOTHES. YOU OUGHT TO BE IN THE FISH
+LINE, WHY, I RUNS THROUGH A SET O' FURS IN ABOUT A MONTH!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A NOTE TO NATURE,
+
+_accounting for my previous silence in an unusually temperate March
+and also presenting an ultimatum._
+
+ Ye great brown hares, grown madder through the Spring!
+ Ye birds that utilise your tiny throttles
+ To make the archways of the forest ring
+ Or go about your easy house-hunting!
+ Ye toads! ye axolotls!
+
+ Ye happy blighters all, that squeal and squat
+ And fly and browse where'er the mood entices,
+ Noting in every hedge or woodland grot
+ The swelling surge of sap, but noting not
+ The rise in current prices!
+
+ But chiefly you, ye birds, whose jocund note
+ (Linnets and larks and jays and red-billed ousels)
+ Oft in those happier springtides now remote
+ Caused me to catch the lyre and clear my throat
+ After some coy refusals!
+
+ Ay, and would cause me now--I have such bliss
+ Seeing the star-set vale, the pearls, the agates
+ Sown on the wintry boughs by Flora's kiss--
+ Only the trouble in my case is this,
+ I do not feed on maggots.
+
+ Could I but share your diet cheap and rude,
+ Your simple ways in trees and copses lurking;
+ But no, I need a pipe and lots of food,
+ A comfortable chair on which to brood--
+ Silence! the bard is working.
+
+ Could I but know that freedom from all care
+ That comes, I say, from gratis sets of suitings
+ And homes that need not premium nor repair
+ Except with sticks and mud and moss and hair,
+ My! there would be some flutings.
+
+ So and so only would the ivory rod
+ Stir the wild strings once more to exaltation;
+ So and so only the impetuous god
+ Pound in my bosom and produce that odd
+ Tum-tiddly-um sensation.
+
+ And often as I heard the throstles vamp,
+ Pouring their liquid notes like golden syrup,
+ Out would I go and round the garden tramp,
+ Wearing goloshes if the day were damp,
+ And imitate their chirrup.
+
+ Or, bowling peacefully upon my bike,
+ Well breakfasted, by no distractions flustered,
+ Pause near a leafy copse or brambled dyke,
+ And answer song for song the black-backed shrike,
+ The curlew and the bustard.
+
+ But now--ah, why prolong the dreadful strain?--
+ Limply my hand the unstrung harp relaxes;
+ The dear old days will not come back again
+ Whatever Mr. AUSTEN CHAMBERLAIN
+ Does with the nation's taxes.
+
+ Lambs, buds, leap up; the lark to heaven climbs;
+ Bread does the same; the price of baccy's brutal;
+ And save (I do not note it in _The Times_)
+ They make exemptions for evolving rhymes,
+ Dashed if I mean to tootle!
+
+EVOE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Sportsman_ (_just emerged from the brook_). "FOUR IN,
+DID YOU SAY? DASH IT ALL--JUST MY LUCK. GOT MY GLASSES ALL MUD AND
+CAN'T SEE THER FUN."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE METHODS OF GENIUS.
+
+(_BY OUR SPECIAL LITERARY PARASITE_.)
+
+The public already know something of the painful difficulties under
+which novelists labour at the present moment owing to the paper
+shortage and the enhanced cost of book production. But "the economic
+consequences of the Peace" by no means exhaust the handicaps of the
+conscientious and sensitive novelist. We are glad therefore to note
+the efforts of _The Daily Graphic_ to enlist the sympathy of the
+public on behalf of this sorely tried and meritorious class. Our
+contemporary tells us, for example, of one momentous writer who was
+reduced to dictating blindfold "because the facial peculiarities of
+first one and then another amanuensis" upset her equanimity. Then
+there is the tragic story of Mr. R.L. HITCHENS, who, being engaged
+to write an article against time, sent out for a stenographer, who on
+arrival proved to be a man with a large black beard of so sinister
+an aspect that Mr. HICHINS was forced to dismiss him and write the
+article in his own hand. Yet Mr. HICHENSis not easily put off, for we
+learn that he finds he works best in big hotels and not, as we might
+have guessed, in the sequestered tranquillity of a minaret.
+
+To some writers solitude is the true school of genius. Yet Sir
+LEWIS MORRIS found some of his happiest thoughts come to him while
+travelling in the underground, while Mr. W.B. YEATS records a similar
+experience as the result of a journey on the top of a tram-car. Your
+advanced modernists, with MARINETTI at their head, find their best
+stimulus to creative effort in the clang and clatter of machinery.
+_per contra_, to return to _The Daily Graphic_, Mrs. C.N. WILLIAMSON
+must have pretty things to look at "in business hours." But the
+happiest of all our authors is Madame ALBANESI, who "finds her
+brain-spur in a blank sheet of paper, and not the ghost of an idea
+what she is going to write about." Less fortunate writers labour
+assiduously only to leave the minds of their readers a blank, without
+the ghost of an idea of what the author has been writing about.
+
+It is a pity that Mr. W.L. GEORGE, in his interesting survey of modern
+writers of fiction in the _English Review_, has told us nothing
+about the methods of the "Neo-Victorians" and "Semi-Victorians,"
+the "Edwardians" and "belated Edwardians," and the "Georgians" and
+"Neo-Georgians." With all these classes he deals faithfully. But his
+criticism is purely literary. He fails to tell us the things that
+every reader wants to know. It is all very well to say that the
+neo-Georgians "paint in ink," but he ought to have mentioned whether
+it is green or red. Does Miss DOROTHY RICHARDSON dictate to the sound
+of trumpets, garbed in crimson trouserloons? Does Mr. ARNOLD BENNETT
+cantillate his "copy" into the horn of a graphophone or use a
+motor-stylus? Does Mr. SIEGRIED SASSOON beat his breast with one hand
+while he plays the loud bassoon with the other? Does Mr. ALEC WAUGH
+use sermon-paper or foolscap? Does Mr. ALDOUS HUXLEY keep a tame
+gorilla? These are the really illuminating details that we hunger for.
+Without them it is impossible to appreciate the artistry of our young
+Masters. Mr. W.L. GEORGE has given us a glimpse of the working of
+their brains; let him now reveal to us the secrets of their workshops.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "THERE'S THAT DASHED BULL OF YOURS IN MY FIELD AGAIN!
+ONE OF THSES DAYS I'LL--I'LL--WRING ITS CONFOUNDED NECK!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+(_By Mr. Punch's Staff of Learned Clerks._)
+
+_After the Day: Germany Unconquered and Unrepentant_ (JENKINS) is
+the kind of thesis-book which it is wise to read in a deliberately
+incredulous mood. Mr. HAYDEN TALBOT is an American newspaper man of
+immense resourcefulness but, I should judge, of a not conspicuously
+judicial habit of mind. That, perhaps, is hardly a newspaper man's
+business. He is after copy, and certainly there's good enough copy in
+his interviews with Count BERNSTORFF and Dr. RATHENAU, and one
+must admire his feat of getting out of these and seven other German
+publicists, including MAXIMILIAN HARDEN, the draft of a manifesto to
+the people of America, composed in the hope, vain as it happened,
+that the KAISER would break his long silence and sign it. It is the
+author's theory that it is the inner camarilla, working for a speedy
+restoration of the monarchy, that is responsible for the certainly
+uncharacteristic reticence of Amerongen. Mr. TALBOT also interviewed
+HINDENBERG, whom he found a "broken-down, inconsequential, garrulous
+example of senility" LUDENDORFF, who was very stiff and proud and
+rude; and the _fiancée_ of the man who sank the _Lusitania_. His
+general idea of Germany is summed up in the remark of Mr. MANDELBAUM,
+of New York: "All this talk about Fritz being down and out is all
+bunk!" Germany is full of energy and hate; she will soon be a monarchy
+again; will undersell the world; is assiduously preparing for air
+supremacy as the way to _revanche_. I take it that this is not so
+much a book as a _réchauffé_ of newspaper articles, which alone
+will account for its formlessness and frequent changes of plane. Mr.
+TALBOT, confessing to a total ignorance of the German tongue, seems
+quite unconscious that this imposes certain limitations on his
+capacity to make an adequate survey of a difficult problem.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I may confess at once that I finished the first chapter of _The Woman
+of the Picture_ (HODDER AND STOUGHTON) in a mood of slight derision,
+induced by Mr. G.F. TURNER'S allowing one hero to say of the other
+that he had "the interminable limbs" of an aristocrat. To the end of
+the book indeed I was uncertain whether such occasional lapses were
+meant to illumine the character of the supposed speaker or were
+unintentional. But again to quote, this time a phrase in which Mr.
+TURNER clearly shares my own delight, "before we were through with
+the affair" such details had ceased to be of moment. The plain fact is
+that _The Woman of the Picture_ is the most breathless, irresistible
+piece of convincing impossibility you have read for ages. I decline to
+struggle with any transcription of the plot. On the wrapper you
+will observe the woman stepping bodily out of the picture, like the
+ancestors in the whisky advertisement; this, however, is a symbolic
+rather than an actual presentment. But there is plenty without it:
+a rightful heir, mountain castles amid the eternal snows, a villain
+(with sorceries), half-a-dozen attempted murders and the most
+hair-lifting duel imaginable. Soberly considered the whole business is
+a riot of delirium, belonging flagrantly to that realm where all the
+world's a screen, and all the men and women merely movies. But the
+unexpected charm of the book is that with the possible exceptions
+noticed above) it is told with a touch of distinction, even of
+subtlety, that invests its wildest audacities with an atmosphere of
+fantastic truth. In short, if Mr. G.F. TURNER has done nothing else he
+has at least enabled the fastidious to enjoy the thrills of a shocker
+while retaining their self-respect.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the first of the three stories, each about a hundred pages in
+length, which make up _Gold and Iron_ (HEINEMANN), it is hard to
+escape the conviction that Mr. JOSEPH HERGESHEIMER between the lines,
+"So you thought that CONRAD was the only JOSEPH who could throw a
+man and woman together on a mysterious coast in the most strangely
+romantic circumstances, and provide a thoroughly groolly scrap into
+the bargain. Well, here's another little _Victory_ for you." He
+seems definitely to challenge that air of the extraordinary and the
+inevitable combined which Mr. CONRAD so subtly conveys. It is a big
+effort, and I don't feel that the author quite brings it off, yet I
+cannot think of anyone but Mr. CONRAD who would have come nearer to
+doing so, and the fight in the dark in this story is one that even
+after the War will make a reader catch his breath for half-a-dozen
+pages at least. In the second and third stories, which actually deal
+with gold and iron (the first of the three is called "Wild Oranges,"
+though perhaps "Blood Oranges" would have been a better title),
+the writer returns to a happier _métier_, and deals with an America
+remarkably interesting and wholly novel to me, an America where
+foundries and railways are in their infancy and crinolines are worn.
+Saloons, bowie knives and bags of gold-dust are all too familiar to
+us, but who, on this side of the Atlantic at any rate, ever remembers
+the quiet towns with Victorian manners to which the diggers belonged
+and returned? Both "Tubal Cain" and "The Dark Fleece" are excellent
+yarns and wonderful pieces of pictorial reconstruction as well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After reading _The Searchers_ (HODDER AND STOUGHTON), I seriously
+think of myself joining His Britannic Majesty's Secret Service.
+All the fun and firearms, and ever, at the conclusion, a startling
+surprise for your friends and admirers, among whom you stand cool,
+calm and collected. _Anthony Keene-Leslie_ did not deceive me
+when, upon his first introduction as a secret servant, he modestly
+disclaimed the thrills and excitements commonly attributed to his
+trade. I knew that many pages would not be turned before he would
+land us in the middle of some crimson intrigue; mysterious strangers,
+disguises, cryptic and invaluable manuscripts, urgent telegrams,
+codes, Italian hidden hands, Scotland Yard, pseudo-taxicabs, clues
+and things. But let others beware of Mr. JOHN FOSTER, a most ingenious
+manipulator of the old stock-in-trade and possessing a rare sense of
+humour. For the reader to pit his wits against the author's is,
+in this instance, to be completely "had" and to become under the
+necessity (about page 265) of taking off his hat, not only to the
+secret servant but to a mere minion of the "Yard" also. Two minor
+points emerge from a close study of the book. The first is that the
+author is undoubtedly a barrister himself; if I am wrong on this point
+I finally withdraw my threat to join the Service. The second point is
+that he knows his Scotland even as well as he loves it. In the result
+you have two merits, which together amply discount the element of
+cheap sensationalism: one merit is the logical development of the
+story, and the other is its beautiful setting. I don't know whether
+it is due to the Scottish climate or to the legal atmosphere that
+the author omits all reference to the feminine sex or affairs of the
+heart; but anyhow it seemed right and meet that women should be
+left at home when men were engaged upon such violent and dastardly
+business.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From certain internal evidences, mainly orthographical, I am led to
+suppose _The Branding Iron_ (CONSTABLE) to be of Transatlantic origin.
+This, no doubt, explains my unfamiliarity with the name of Miss
+KATHARINE NEWLIN BURT, also certain minor points, notably the fact
+that the story, though by no means badly told, suffers from what I can
+only call a plethora of plot. As I followed the developments of its
+intrigue and tracked the heroine from untutored savage, wife of the
+wild Westerner whose excusable suspicions caused him to brand her as
+private property, to the moment of her triumph as the bejewelled idol
+of theatrical New York, the conviction grew upon me that here was a
+tale surely predestined to be the screen that covers a multitude of
+melodramatics. Presently indeed the suggestion became so insistent
+that I went further and began to wonder whether I was not in fact
+reading a "story-form" of some already triumphant film. Certainly
+the resemblance is almost too pronounced to be fortuitous; from the
+sensational branding scene, through cowboy stunts, to the up-town
+playhouse, where a repentant and wife-seeking hero recognises his mark
+upon the shoulder of the leading lady--and so to reconciliation, slow
+fade-out, and the announcement of Next Week's Pictures. But though it
+is impossible not to suspect Miss BURT of having an eye to what poetic
+journalism calls the Shadow Stage, this is by no means to belittle
+her mastery of the colder medium of print; and I hasten to acknowledge
+that, upon me at least, _The Branding Iron_ has left a distinct though
+possibly fleeting impression of good entertainment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE RELUCTANT PEGASUS.
+
+A YOUNG SPRING POET HAS TROUBLE WITH HIS MOUNT.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ CANE OR BIRCH?
+
+ "House Porter wanted, to live in or out, able to manage
+ beating apparatus.--Apply, Stating wages required, to
+ Headmaster, ----- school."--_Local Paper_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The total cost of the British delegation to the Peace
+ Conference at Paris from December, 1918, to 31st September was
+ £503,368."--_Liverpool Paper_.
+
+But it is only fair to say that in the last month they seem to have
+put in a bit of overtime.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch or the London Charivari, Vol.
+158, March 24, 1920., by Various
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch or the London Charivari, Vol. 158,
+March 24, 1920., by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch or the London Charivari, Vol. 158, March 24, 1920.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: May 27, 2005 [EBook #15912]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Sandra Brown and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <h1>PUNCH,<br />
+ OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.</h1>
+
+ <h2>Vol. 158.</h2>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <h2>March 24, 1920.</h2>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page221"
+ id="page221"></a>[pg 221]</span>
+
+ <h2>CHARIVARIA.</h2>
+
+ <p>"Nobody knows," says a Berlin message, "how near the
+ <span class="sc">Kapp</span> counter-revolution came to being a
+ success." A kind word from Commander
+ <span class="sc">Kenworthy</span>, it is believed, would have
+ made all the difference.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>It is reported that Miss <span class="sc">Isobel
+ Elsom</span>, the cinema star, tried to get knocked down by a
+ taxi-cab for the purposes of a film, but failed. We can only
+ suppose that the driver must have been new to his job.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>A vicar has written to the Press complaining indignantly of
+ a London firm's offer to supply sermons at five shillings each.
+ We are not surprised. Five shillings is a lot of money to give
+ for a sermon.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The Llangollen Golf Club has decided to allow Sunday golf.
+ In extenuation it is pointed out that the Welsh for "stymied"
+ does not constitute a breach of the Sabbath, as is the case
+ with the Scots equivalent.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>At Caterham a robin has built its nest in a bully beef tin.
+ These are the little things that give the Disposals Board a bad
+ name.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>A North of Ireland man who has just died at the age of 107
+ boasted that he had never had a bath. This should silence the
+ faddists who pretend that they can hardly wait till Saturday
+ night.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The ruins of Whitby Abbey, it is announced, are to be
+ presented by their owner to the nation. On the other hand, the
+ report that Mr. <span class="sc">Lloyd George</span> intends to
+ present the ruins of the Liberal Party to Manchester City is
+ not confirmed.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The latest information is that the recent German revolution
+ had to be abandoned owing to the weather.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>From a weekly paper article we gather that the
+ trousers-crease will be in its accustomed frontal position this
+ year. It is unfortunate that this announcement should have
+ clashed with the attempted restoration of the Monarchy in
+ Berlin.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Hot Cross Buns will probably cost threepence this year. An
+ economical plan is for the householder to make his own hot
+ cross and then get the local confectioner to fit a bun to
+ it.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>"There will be no whisky in Scotland in the year 1925," says
+ a Prohibitionist speaker. He did not say whether there will be
+ any Scotsmen.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>No arrangement has yet been made for the carrying on of the
+ Food Ministry, though it is said that one food profiteer has
+ offered to buy the place as a memento.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>"All the great men are dead," states a London newspaper.
+ This sly dig at Mr. <span class="sc">Churchill's</span> robust
+ health is surely in bad taste.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>We are glad to hear that the strap-hanger who was summoned
+ by a fellow-passenger on the Underground Railway for refusing
+ to remove his foot from off the plaintiff's toes has now been
+ acquitted by the jury. It appears that he was able to prove
+ that he was not in a position to do so as his was not the top
+ foot of the heap.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>According to a trade journal the latest fashion in umbrellas
+ is a pigeon's head carved on the handle. This, we understand,
+ is the first step towards a really reliable homing
+ umbrella.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The appearance of a hen blackbird without any trace of
+ feathers on its neck or back is reported by a Worcester
+ ornithologist. The attempt on the part of this bird to follow
+ our present fashions is most interesting.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>So much difficulty is being experienced in deciding whose
+ incendiary bullet was the most effective, that it is thought
+ possible that the Government may arrange for the Zeppelin raids
+ to be revived.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>A society paper reports that a large number of millionaires
+ are now staying on the Riviera. It is not known where the other
+ shareholders of <span class="sc">Coats's</span> are
+ staying.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>In order to influence the exchange a contemporary suggests
+ that we should sell our treasures to America. We understand
+ that a cable to New York asking what they are prepared to pay
+ for Mr. <span class="sc">Ramsay MacDonald</span> remains
+ unanswered.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>An egg weighing nine-and-a-half ounces has been laid at
+ Bayonne, France. It looks like a walk-over unless <i>The
+ Spectator</i> has something up its sleeve.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>"One hears the crying of the new-born lambs on all sides,"
+ writes a Nature correspondent. On the other hand the
+ unmistakable bubbling note of the mint-sauce will not be heard
+ for another month or so.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Will the A.S.C. private who in 1917 was ordered to take a
+ mule to Sutton Coldfield please note that the animal has been
+ sighted in California still chewing an army tunic, but the
+ badges are missing?</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>"So many letters are being lost in the post nowadays,"
+ states a daily paper, "that drastic action should be taken in
+ the matter." We understand that the
+ <span class="sc">Postmaster-General</span> has expressed his
+ willingness to be searched.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:300px;">
+ <a href="images/221.png"><img width="300"
+ src="images/221-sm.png"
+ alt="Hygienist. 'Feeling the cold, eh? Aha&mdash;look at me. I don't know what cold is.'" />
+ </a>
+
+ <p><i>Hygienist</i>. <span class="sc">"Feeling the cold,
+ eh? Aha&mdash;look at me. I don't know what cold
+ is."</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Normal Individual</i>. <span class="sc">"Then
+ n-naturally you d-don't feel it."</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>A Vulnerable Spot.</h4>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"Lady, a word&mdash;but oh, beware!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And prithee do not slight it&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>If you will have your back so bare,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Someone is sure to bite it."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p>"An official of the Coal Controller's Department said
+ that everything possible would be done to relieve the
+ situation.<br />
+ 'No stone will be left unturned,' he said, 'to ease the
+ position.'"&mdash;<i>Daily Paper</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>This accounts, no doubt, for the stuff in our last
+ half-hundredweight.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page222"
+ id="page222"></a>[pg 222]</span>
+
+ <h2>A JUNKER INTERLUDE.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Once more the Militant Mode recurs</p>
+
+ <p>With clank of sabre and clink of spurs;</p>
+
+ <p>Once more the long grey cloaks adorn</p>
+
+ <p>The bellicose backs of the high-well-born;</p>
+
+ <p>Once more to the click of martial boots</p>
+
+ <p>Junkers exchange their grave salutes,</p>
+
+ <p>Taking the pavement, large with side,</p>
+
+ <p>Shoulders padded and elbows wide;</p>
+
+ <p>And if a civilian dares to mutter</p>
+
+ <p>They boost him off and he bites the gutter.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Down by the Brandenburger Thor</p>
+
+ <p>Kitchens are worked by cooks of war;</p>
+
+ <p>Loyal moustaches cease to sag,</p>
+
+ <p>Leaping for joy of the old war-flag;</p>
+
+ <p>Drums are beating and bugles blare</p>
+
+ <p>And passionate bandsmen rip the air;</p>
+
+ <p>Prussia's original ardour rallies</p>
+
+ <p>At the sound of <i>Deutschland über alles</i>,</p>
+
+ <p>And warriors slap their fighting pants</p>
+
+ <p>To the tune <i>Heil dir im Siegeskranz</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Life, in a word, recalls the phase</p>
+
+ <p>Of the glorious Hohenzollern days.</p>
+
+ <p>What if a War's meanwhile occurred</p>
+
+ <p>And talk of a humbling Peace been heard?</p>
+
+ <p>Treaties are meant to be torn in two</p>
+
+ <p>And wars are made to be fought anew.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Hoch</i>! for the <i>Tag</i>, by land and
+ main,</p>
+
+ <p>When the Monarchy comes to its own again.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Surely tho wind of it, faint but sweet,</p>
+
+ <p>The Old Man sniffed in his Dutch retreat;</p>
+
+ <p>Surely it gave his pulse a jog</p>
+
+ <p>As he went for his thirteen thousandth log,</p>
+
+ <p>Possibly causing the axe to jam</p>
+
+ <p>When he thought of his derelict Potsdam,</p>
+
+ <p>Of his orb mislaid and his head's deflation,</p>
+
+ <p>And visions arose of a Restoration.</p>
+
+ <p>(If not for himself, it might be done</p>
+
+ <p>For <span class="sc">Little Willie</span> or
+ <span class="sc">Willie's</span> son).</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Alas for the chances of child or sire!</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>coup</i> went phut, for the
+ <span class="sc">Kapp</span> missed fire.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="center">O.S.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>A FLAT TO LET.</h2>
+
+ <p>It was twelve o'clock (noon) and I was sitting over the fire
+ in our squalid lodgings reading the attractive advertisements
+ of country mansions in a weekly journal. I had just decided on
+ a delightful Tudor manor-house with every modern convenience, a
+ nice little park and excellent fishing and shooting, when Betty
+ burst upon me like a whirlwind.</p>
+
+ <p>Her face was flushed and a fierce light shone in her usually
+ mild blue eyes. She looked like a Mænad or the incarnation of
+ Victory at a bargain sale.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come on," she gasped, seizing me by the arm. "Hurry."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good heavens! Is the house on fire? My child! Let me save
+ my child."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, do come on," cried Betty; "there's not a moment to be
+ lost."</p>
+
+ <p>"But how can I come on in slippers?" I demanded. "If I may
+ not save the young Henry Augustus, at any rate let me put on my
+ boots."</p>
+
+ <p>Betty's only reply was to drag me from the room, hustle me
+ through the hall, where I dexterously caught my hat from the
+ stand in passing, and thrust me into the street.</p>
+
+ <p>"I've got a flat," she panted. "That is, I've got it if
+ we're quick enough. Hi, taxi!"</p>
+
+ <p>"But, my dear," I remonstrated as the taxi-driver, cowed by
+ the look in her eye, drew up to the kerb, "if we take a taxi we
+ shan't have anything left to pay for the flat."</p>
+
+ <p>"Victory Mansions, Trebarwith Road. Drive fast!" shouted
+ Betty as she pushed me into the cab.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now you've done it," I said bitterly. "Do you know I've
+ only five pounds ten on me at the moment? We shall lose the
+ flat while we're quarrelling with the driver."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, dear," cried Betty, "can't you see that this is
+ serious? It was a wonderful piece of luck. I was passing the
+ mansions and I happened to look up just as someone was sticking
+ up a notice, 'Flat to Let,' in one of the windows. There was a
+ beast of a man on the other side of the street and he simply
+ leapt across the road. I slipped, or I should have beaten him.
+ As it was he got to the door a yard ahead of me. We looked over
+ the flat together, but of course he was first, and he said he
+ was sure it would suit him, only he must ask his wife. It was
+ awful! I felt as if I must kill him."</p>
+
+ <p>"So you followed him out and pushed him down the lift-shaft?
+ My dear brave girl!"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, but I heard him say he could be back in half-an-hour. I
+ knew I could do it in twenty-five minutes. Look!" Betty crushed
+ my hand as in a vice. "There he is."</p>
+
+ <p>As we took a corner on two wheels I looked out and saw a man
+ running. "Taxi!" he shouted in the hoarse voice of despair. Our
+ driver sat like a graven image and we swept on in triumph.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!" cried Betty suddenly, "suppose that, after all,
+ somebody else&mdash;&mdash;" She choked on a sob.</p>
+
+ <p>"Courage, dear heart," I said. "All is not yet lost."</p>
+
+ <p>A moment later we had reached Victory Mansions and made a
+ dash for the flat.</p>
+
+ <p>"Are we in time?" asked Betty as the door was opened.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think so, Ma'am," said the smiling maid and ushered us
+ into the presence of the out-going tenant. A tour of the rooms
+ at express speed showed the flat to be a desirable one enough.
+ There were three years to run and the rent was not
+ extortionate&mdash;for the times.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll sign the agreement now," said I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Half-a-minute," said the out-going tenant as he produced
+ the documents; "I'll get a pen and ink."</p>
+
+ <p>The whirr of an electric bell resounded through the
+ flat.</p>
+
+ <p>"Quick!" panted Betty. "Your fountain pen." I produced it
+ and wrote my name with a hand trembling with eagerness.</p>
+
+ <p>"A gentleman about the flat, Sir," said the maid, and,
+ haggard, pale and exhausted, our defeated rival staggered into
+ the room.</p>
+
+ <p>He looked at us with a dumb agony in his eyes, and neither
+ of us two men had the courage to deal the fatal blow. It was
+ Betty who spoke.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sorry, but we've just taken this flat," she said
+ sweetly, and added with true feminine cruelty, "I saw it first,
+ you know."</p>
+
+ <p>The stranger lost control and crashed badly on the
+ hearth-rug.</p>
+
+ <p>"Poor man," said Betty to the late tenant. "Be kind to him
+ for our sakes." Then she led the way to our cab.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hotel Splendid!" I said magnificently to the driver.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wot," he growled, "not in them slippers?"</p>
+
+ <p>"True," I said, with what dignity I could muster, and gave
+ him the address of our lodgings.</p>
+
+ <p>"None the less," I said to Betty, "you shall lunch among the
+ profiteers. This is a great day, and it is yours."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <h4>The Inter-University Sports.</h4>
+
+ <p>Great interest is being taken in the plucky attempt of
+ Cambridge to beat America, Africa and Europe (with
+ Oxford).</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page223"
+ id="page223"></a>[pg 223]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:400px;">
+ <a href="images/223.png"><img width="400"
+ src="images/223-sm.png"
+ alt="WHAT'S IN A NAME?" /></a>
+
+ <h3>WHAT'S IN A NAME?</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Mate</span>. "WHILE WE <i>ARE</i> DOIN'
+ HER UP, WHAT ABOUT GIVIN' HER A NEW NAME? HOW WOULD
+ 'FUSION' DO?"</p>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Captain</span>. "'FUSION' OR
+ 'CONFUSION'&mdash;IT'S ALL ONE TO ME SO LONG AS I'M
+ SKIPPER."</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page224"
+ id="page224"></a>[pg 224]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:400px;">
+ <a href="images/224.png"><img width="400"
+ src="images/224-sm.png"
+ alt="First Juvenile Spectator (as the Oxford crew go out to practice) 'There y'are, 'Err--;wot did I tell yer?'" />
+ </a>
+
+ <p><i>First Juvenile Spectator (as the Oxford crew go out
+ to practice)</i>. "<span class="sc">There y'are,
+ 'Err&mdash;wot did I tell yer? They '<i>ave</i> got only
+ one oar each</span>!"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Second ditto</i>. "<span class="sc">You wait till the
+ day of the race</span>!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE LAST OF THE WATCH DOGS.</h2>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">My dear Charles</span>,&mdash;In all the
+ stirring history of the War I don't know which has been the
+ most moving sight: the War Office trying to get me to be a
+ soldier, or the War Oflice trying to get me to stop being a
+ soldier.</p>
+
+ <p>Before the late Summer of 1914, England had evinced no
+ burning interest in its Henry. It had, in fact, left me to make
+ my own way, contenting itself with cautioning me if I didn't
+ stick to the right side of the road, or to fining me if I
+ exceeded the speed limit. In August of that memorable year it
+ got, you will remember, mixed up in rather a nasty bother.
+ Searching for friends to get it out, it bethought itself of
+ Henry, along with 499,999 others whose names for the moment I
+ do not recall. Between us (with subsequent assistance) we set
+ things to rights, and nothing remained for Old England save to
+ rid itself gracefully of what remained of its few millions of
+ new-found friends. There was, however, no shaking off its bosom
+ pal, Henry. I am one of those loyal characters whose affection,
+ once gained, nothing can undo. No use saying to me: "Well, old
+ man, it's getting late now; you must come and see us again some
+ other day." I am one of the sort who answer: "Don't you worry
+ yourself about that. I'm going to stay and go on seeing you
+ now."</p>
+
+ <p>In the early days of demobilisation there was, I think, a
+ certain novelty and attraction about my attitude to the
+ problem. In contrast to the impatient hordes crowding the
+ entrance of the War Office, ringing the front-door bell
+ violently, tapping on the window-panes and generally disturbing
+ that serene atmosphere of peace which was the great feature of
+ the War in Whitehall, it was refreshing to think of Henry,
+ plugging quietly away elsewhere at his military duties,
+ undeterred by armistices, peaces and things of that kind. I
+ fancy I was well thought of in those days at the War House.</p>
+
+ <p>"Say what you like about him," I can hear A.G.4 remarking to
+ M.S.19 (decimal 9 recurring) as they met in the corridor on
+ their way to lunch, "but I find him a patient, well-behaved
+ young fellow."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," would be the thoughtful answer, "it seems almost a
+ pity we are going to lose him."</p>
+
+ <p>Speaking strictly between ourselves, I have never thought
+ much of the Military Secretary branch. What made them think
+ they were going to lose me as easily as all that?</p>
+
+ <p>What I said to myself was: "Henry, my lad, thirteen
+ shillings and elevenpence a day is thirteen shillings and
+ elevenpence a day; now isn't it? And war isn't war when there
+ is a peace coming on. Why then throw up a fat income just for
+ the sake of getting into long trousers? You stay where you are
+ till they come and fetch you."</p>
+
+ <p>So I just stayed where I was, and I conducted the operation
+ with such ability and tact that Whitehall came to forget all
+ about me. My name went on appearing, with ever-increasing
+ dignity and beauty, in the Army List; but that made no
+ difference. You see, though lots of people write the Army List,
+ no one ever reads it; only from time to time a man will
+ surreptitiously turn up his own name, just to renew his feeling
+ of self-importance, or in an emergency he will look up the name
+ of a friend in order to get the right initials after it and not
+ risk giving that personal offence which may prevent the
+ loan....</p>
+
+ <p>But when I say that I stayed where I was I don't mean to
+ suggest that I didn't go on leave in the usual way. Indeed I
+ often came home, in full regimentals, too, partly to impress
+ you and partly to travel first-class at your expense.
+ Fellow-passengers never thought of turning on me and rending
+ me, as being the cause of six-shillings-in-the-pound. They
+ would be extremely polite
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page225"
+ id="page225"></a>[pg 225]</span> and make friendly
+ conversation with me, leading up to the point that they had
+ been soldiers themselves once, but had given it up, owing to
+ having been told that the War was finished.</p>
+
+ <p>I would be just as polite to them, telling them they might
+ count on me to return to the discomforts and risks of civil
+ life as soon as I could be spared from the front. They had
+ never the intelligence, or daring to ask, "The front of
+ what?"</p>
+
+ <p>Now the climax has arrived; I am asked if they must throw me
+ out or will I go quietly? I fancy I have been caught by one of
+ those card-indexes. I suspect some Departmental General of
+ showing off to a friend. "This is my <span class="sc">in</span>
+ basket," I can hear him explaining as he shows his audience his
+ office; "every letter which comes in goes into the
+ <span class="sc">in</span>. That is my
+ <span class="sc">out</span> basket, and every letter which goes
+ out goes out of the <span class="sc">out</span>.</p>
+
+ <p>"And then, Sir, we have the Card Index. A complete record of
+ every officer in the Army, permanent or temporary."</p>
+
+ <p>"Are there still temporary officers in the Army?" asks the
+ audience, not being able to think of anything better to ask,
+ and clearly being called upon to ask something.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sergeant-Major, turn up 'Officers, army, temporary, the,
+ in,' for this gentleman."</p>
+
+ <p>And thus the shameful truth comes out. One card
+ only&mdash;mine.</p>
+
+ <p>Exit audience wondering what manner of intrepid man this
+ Henry might be.</p>
+
+ <p>Originally the W.O. had had a great idea; they caused my
+ regiment softly and silently to vanish away, thinking that I
+ would vanish with it. But I had been too sharp for them.
+ Learning that they were bent on "disembodying" me, and not
+ liking the sound of the word, I had very quietly removed myself
+ from my regiment to the Staff. Thus for a few happy months we
+ see the W.O. rendered inert.</p>
+
+ <p>My final defeat was due to a chance remark of my own, made
+ to one of the fifty-nine officers under whose direct command I
+ served. Upon my first arriving on his Staff he had said to me,
+ "Oh, by the way, P.S.C., of course?" Quite affable, frank and
+ to the point; "P.S.C., of course?"</p>
+
+ <p>Not knowing the language, I could not make an equally
+ affable answer. I asked him to repeat the question, but to
+ change the code.</p>
+
+ <p>"You have Passed Staff College, of course?" he said a little
+ less affably.</p>
+
+ <p>I then had the misfortune to answer: "Why, of course, if you
+ mean that tall building on the right as I came up here from the
+ station?"</p>
+
+ <p>He then made up his mind that I was not only wanting in
+ essential parts, but was also the sort of person who jested on
+ religious subjects. He never forgot the matter; indeed, when
+ applied to (under "Secret and Confidential" cover) to suggest a
+ means of getting rid of me, he very clearly remembered it. At
+ once every department in the War House got busy; the interest
+ of the Secretary of State was enlisted, and the War Cabinet
+ decided that for permanent purposes my post must necessarily be
+ held by a P.S.C. man. Done in by what was little better, when
+ you come to think of it, than a mere postscript.</p>
+
+ <p>Please understand that there was no talk of discharging me;
+ no talk of demobilising me; no talk even of disembodying me.
+ Without any reflection on my conduct and merely upon the
+ grounds that, not being P.S.C., I could not be regarded as
+ quite right in the head, they intimated their intention of
+ vacating my appointment by the simple process of an
+ advertisement in the fashionable columns of <i>The London
+ Gazette</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"What happens next?" I asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"You will return to regimental duty," they said.</p>
+
+ <p>"But there isn't any regiment," I pointed out triumphantly,
+ "therefore there won't be any duty."</p>
+
+ <p>They didn't seem to mind that, and for some time I wondered
+ why. Then a thought occurred to me.</p>
+
+ <p>"But here, I say, what about my pay?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah!" said they unhelpfully....</p>
+
+ <p>And that, my dear Charles, is why, if you keep your eye on
+ the journals of (say) the Summer of 1925, you will read in the
+ Stop-press Column an urgent telegram from the W.O.: "On April
+ 1st, 1920, the following relinquishes his appointment</p>
+
+ <p>(Remaining, however,<br />
+ <span style="margin-left:10em;">Yours always),</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left:15em;"
+ class="sc">Henry."</span></p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <h4>Another Impending Apology.</h4>
+
+ <p>"<span class="sc">Mothers' Union.&mdash;</span> . .
+ . A helpful discussion followed on 'How to Deal with
+ Unworthy Members.' There were about 50
+ present."&mdash;<i>Parish Magazine</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:296px;">
+ <a href="images/225.png"><img width="296"
+ src="images/225-sm.png"
+ alt="Old Lady. 'Will you please put me down at the same place as you did last Friday week?'" />
+ </a>
+
+ <p><i>Old Lady</i>. <span class="sc">"Will you please put
+ me down at the same place as you did last Friday
+ week?"</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page226"
+ id="page226"></a>[pg 226]</span>
+
+ <h2>THE PRACTICE OF THE CREWS.</h2>
+
+ <p class="center">(<i>Ballad after C.S.C.</i>)</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The reporter aired his aquatic lore</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">(<i>Popply water in Corney
+ Reach</i>,)</p>
+
+ <p>A thing he had yearly essayed before;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And a rowing jargon obscured his
+ speech.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The coach he coached with a megaphone</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">(<i>Crabtree, Craven and Chiswick
+ Eyot</i>)</p>
+
+ <p>Till the crew were prone to emit a groan,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And the Cox said nothing but "<span class="sc">Bow</span>, you're
+ late."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The Stroke he quickened to thirty-four</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">(<i>In the first half-minute struck
+ seventeen</i>)</p>
+
+ <p>Some clocks returned it a trifle more,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Which wasn't so good as it might have
+ been.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The towpath critic he shook his head</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">(<i>Thornycroft's, where they began to
+ row</i>):</p>
+
+ <p>"Hung over the stretcher" was what he said,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And "missed the beginning," and "hands
+ too slow."</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The towpath critic, whoe'er he be</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">(<i>A tug and some barges blocked the
+ way</i>),</p>
+
+ <p>For thirty odd years, it seems to me,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Has never found anything else to say.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The towpath critic's remarks are trite</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">(<i>Off Ayling's Yard in a stiffish
+ breeze</i>),</p>
+
+ <p>Yet I study religiously morn and night</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Whole columns consisting of words like
+ these.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:284px;">
+ <a href="images/227.png"><img width="284"
+ src="images/227-sm.png"
+ alt="MANNERS AND MODES." /></a>
+
+ <h3>MANNERS AND MODES.</h3>
+
+ <p>THE COMPANY-PROMOTER'S PROBLEM&mdash;HOW TO UTILISE THE
+ BOOM IN SPRING.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE GENIUS OF MR. BRADSHAW.</h2>
+
+ <p class="center">(<i>By our Literary Expert.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p>No one will be surprised to hear that the Christian name of
+ Mr. <span class="sc">Bradshaw</span> was George. Indeed, it is
+ difficult to think what other name a man of his calibre could
+ have had. But many people will be surprised to hear that Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Bradshaw</span> is no longer alive. Whatever
+ one thinks of his work one is inclined to think of him as a
+ living personality, working laboriously at some
+ terminus&mdash;probably at the Charing Cross Hotel. But it is
+ not so. He died, in fact, in 1853. His first book&mdash;or
+ rather the first edition of his book<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ was published in 1839; yet, unlike the author, it still
+ lives. He is, in fact, the supreme example of the posthumous
+ serial writer. I have no information about Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Debrett</span> and Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Burke</span>, but the style and substance
+ of their work are relatively so flimsy that one is
+ justified, I think, in neglecting them. In any case their
+ public is a limited one. So, of course, is Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Bradshaw's</span>; but it is better than
+ theirs. Mr. <span class="sc">Debrett's</span> book we read
+ idly in an idle hour; when we read Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Bradshaw's</span> it is because we feel
+ that we simply must; and that perhaps is the surest test of
+ genius.</p>
+
+ <p>It is no wonder that in some circles Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Bradshaw</span> holds a position comparable
+ only to the position of <span class="sc">Homer</span>. I once
+ knew an elderly clergyman who knew the whole of Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Bradshaw's</span> book by heart. He could tell
+ you without hesitation the time of any train from anywhere to
+ anywhere else. He looked forward each month to the new number,
+ as other people look forward to the new numbers of magazines.
+ When it came he skimmed eagerly through its pages and noted
+ with a fierce excitement that they had taken off the 5.30 from
+ Larne Harbour, or that the 7.30 from Galashiels was stopping
+ that month at Shankend. He knew all the connections; he knew
+ all the restaurant trains; and, if you mentioned the 6.15 to
+ Little Buxton, he could tell you offhand whether it was a
+ Saturdays Only or a Saturdays Excepted.</p>
+
+ <p>This is the exact truth, and I gathered that he was not
+ unique. It seems that there is a Bradshaw cult; there may even
+ be a Bradshaw club, where they meet at intervals for Bradshaw
+ dinners, after which a paper is read on "Changes I have made,
+ with some Observations on Salisbury." I suppose some of them
+ have first editions, and talk about them very proudly; and they
+ have hot academic discussions on the best way to get from
+ Barnham Junction to Cardiff without going through Bristol. Then
+ they drink the toast of "The Master" and go home in omnibuses.
+ My friend was a schoolmaster and took a small class of boys in
+ Bradshaw; he said they knew as much about it as he did. I call
+ that corrupting the young.</p>
+
+ <p>But apart from this little band of admirers I am afraid that
+ the book does suffer from neglect. Who is there, for example,
+ who has read the "Directions" on page 1, where we are actually
+ shown the method of reading tentatively suggested by the author
+ himself? The ordinary reader, coming across a certain kind of
+ thin line, lightly dismisses it as a misprint or a restaurant
+ car on Fridays. If he had read the Preface he would know that
+ it meant a <span class="sc">shunt</span>. He would know that a
+ <span class="sc">shunt</span> means that passengers are enabled
+ to continue their journey by changing into the next train.
+ Whether he would know what that means I do not know. The best
+ authorities suppose it to be a poetical way of saying that you
+ have to change&mdash;what is called an euphemism.</p>
+
+ <p>No, you must not neglect the Preface; and you must not
+ neglect the Appendix on Hotels. As sometimes happens in works
+ of a philanthropic character, Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Bradshaw's</span> Appendix has a human charm
+ that is lacking in his treatment of his principal theme, the
+ arrival and departure of trains. To the careful student it
+ reveals also a high degree of organisation among his
+ collaborators, the hotel-managers. It is obvious, for example,
+ that at Bournemouth there must be at least one hotel which has
+ the finest situation on the South coast. Indeed one would
+ expect to find that there was more than one. But no;
+ Bournemouth, exceptionally fortunate in having at once the most
+ select hotel on the South coast, the largest and best-appointed
+ hotel on the South coast and the largest and most up-to-date
+ hotel on the South coast, has positively only one which has the
+ finest position on the South coast. Indeed, there is only one
+ of these in the whole of England, though there are two which
+ have the finest position on the East coast.</p>
+
+ <p>How is it, we wonder, that with so much variation on a
+ single theme such artistic restraint is achieved? It is clear,
+ I think, that before they send in their manuscripts the
+ hotel-managers must meet somewhere and agree together the exact
+ terms of their contributions to the book. "The George" agrees
+ that for the coming year "The Crown" shall have the "finest
+ cuisine in England," provided "The George" may have "the most
+ charming situation imaginable," and so on. I should like to be
+ at one of those meetings.</p>
+
+ <p>This is the only theory which accounts for the curious
+ phrases we find so frequently in the
+ text:&mdash;"<i>Acknowledged</i> to be the finest";
+ "<i>Admittedly</i> in the best position." Who is it that
+ acknowledges or admits these things? It must be the other
+ managers at these annual meetings. Yes, the restraint of the
+ collaborators is wonderful, and in one point only has it broken
+ down. There are no fewer than seventeen hotels with an
+ Unrivalled Situation, and two of these are at Harrogate. For a
+ small place like the British Isles it seems to me that this is
+ too many.</p>
+
+ <p>For the rest, what imagery, what exaltation we find in this
+ Appendix! Dazed with imagined beauty we pass from one splendid
+ haunt to another. One of them has <i>three</i> golf-courses of
+ its own; several are <i>replete</i> with every comfort (and is
+ not "replete" the perfect epithet?). Here is a seductive one
+ "on the sea-edge," and another whose principal glory is its
+ sanitary certificate. Another stands on the spot where
+ <span class="sc">Tennyson</span> received his inspiration for
+ the <i>Idylls of the King</i>, and leaves it at
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page227"
+ id="page227"></a>[pg 227]</span> <!-- page 228 blank-->
+ that. In such a spot even "cuisine" is negligible.</p>
+
+ <p>On the whole, from a literary point of view, the hydros come
+ out better than the mere hotels. But of course they have
+ unequalled advantages. With such material as Dowsing Radiant
+ Heat, D'Arsonval High Frequency and Fango Mud Treatment almost
+ any writer could be sensational. What is High Frequency, I
+ wonder? It is clear, at any rate, that it would be madness to
+ have a hydro without it.</p>
+
+ <p>Well, I have selected my hotel&mdash;on purely literary
+ grounds. Or rather I have selected two. One is the place where
+ they have the Famous Whirlpool Baths. I shall go there at
+ once.</p>
+
+ <p>The manager of the other is a great artist; alone among the
+ collaborators he understands simplicity. His contribution
+ occupies a whole page; but there is practically nothing in it,
+ nothing about cuisine or sanitation, or elegance or comfort.
+ Only, in the middle, he writes quite simply
+ <span class="sc">The Most Perfect Hotel in the
+ World</span>.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">A.P.H.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1"
+ name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>"Bradshaw's General Railway and Steam Navigation Guide
+ for Great Britain and Ireland."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <h4>A Zoological Curiosity.</h4>
+
+ <p>"The complaint made was that men came to
+ the district and asked inflated prices for shares, far
+ above the market value, and it was argued that the new
+ exchange would tend to obviate this system of sharks
+ feathering their nests."&mdash;<i>Lancashire Paper</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:400px;">
+ <a href="images/228.png"><img width="400"
+ src="images/228-sm.png"
+ alt="BEHIND THE SCENES IN CINEMA-LAND." /></a>
+
+ <h3>BEHIND THE SCENES IN CINEMA-LAND.</h3>
+
+ <p>"<span class="sc">That's fine. But, as I haven't got any
+ films left, I suppose there's no use staying
+ here</span>."</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>AN INTER-SERVICE MATCH.</h2>
+
+ <p class="center">(<i>With the British Army in France</i>.)</p>
+
+ <p>Frederick entered the Mess with a decided sea-roll, hitched
+ his slacks and berthed himself on the starboard settee.</p>
+
+ <p>"Cheerio, my hearties," said he breezily. "Everybody on the
+ old lugger still luffing along all serene?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why so oppressively nautical?" inquired Percival. "You
+ haven't been on the leave-boat lately."</p>
+
+ <p>"'Tis true, old messmate. I'm under the influence of my new
+ batman, one 'Enery 'Enson. After a lifetime in the Marines he's
+ now spending his declining days in the Army, and he's terribly
+ infectious. I found myself saying, 'Ay, ay, Sir,' when the C.O.
+ spoke to me."</p>
+
+ <p>"I think I've noticed your 'Enery," said Percival. "Isn't he
+ about ten feet high by six broad, tattooed all over like a
+ circulating art gallery, and addicted to chewing quids and
+ swabbing out your hut in his bare feet?"</p>
+
+ <p>"My cabin, you mean. And says he's going ashore when he
+ takes a trip down the village. That's 'Enery."</p>
+
+ <p>"Incidentally he's a confirmed bath-lifter," interjected
+ Binnie. "Yesterday morning my batman prepared me a tub, and
+ while he was fetching me along your hulking pirate boosted out
+ my sponge and towels and installed your lily-white self in it.
+ You were so busy wallowing in my hot water that you never heard
+ my protests on the door. You really must curb his buccaneering
+ instincts, old Tirps."</p>
+
+ <p>"I accept no responsibility for his methods," said Frederick
+ haughtily; "I merely profit by them. In any case I didn't
+ <i>take</i> your hot water; I simply used it. You should live
+ near the bath-house and get up promptly when you are called, as
+ I do."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I don't mind the British Navy ruling the waves,"
+ grumbled Binnie, "but I object to its extending its sphere of
+ influence over my bath-water."</p>
+
+ <p>"It jolly well doesn't extend over mine," said Percival with
+ pride. "Frederick's 'Enery doesn't get the better of my Elfred.
+ This morning a queue, consisting of two perfectly good Loots, a
+ really excellent Skipper and a priceless Major were waiting for
+ vacant baths. But was Elfred Fry dismayed? To forestall an
+ answer that might possibly be wrong I may say that he wasn't.
+ He promptly appropriated a cubicle that happened to be
+ unoccupied&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Really, my frowsty old Camembert, don't ask us to believe
+ that they had <i>all</i> overlooked it," expostulated
+ Frederick.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not for worlds would I endeavour to impose on your gentle
+ trusting natures. So far from their overlooking it the bath had
+ been the subject of earnest scrutiny, and they had all
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page229"
+ id="page229"></a>[pg 229]</span> regretfully come to the
+ conclusion that it lacked one important attribute of a
+ bath&mdash;it wouldn't hold water. The plug was
+ missing."</p>
+
+ <p>"And by a singular chance the plug happened to be in the
+ possession of your Elfred?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That is my case, me luds," said Percival simply. "If the
+ silent Navy wants to beat my Elfred it's got to rise very early
+ in the morning."</p>
+
+ <p>"We shall see," said Frederick darkly. "I'm going to tell
+ this tale to the Marines."</p>
+
+ <p>That evening the troops had organised a stupendous boxing
+ tournament in the Recreation Hut. Binnie by invitation combined
+ the offices of referee, M.C. and timekeeper, and Frederick and
+ Percival at the ring-side unanimously disagreed with his
+ verdicts.</p>
+
+ <p>"Most appalling decision," said Percival in a loud whisper.
+ "The referee has obviously been got at."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sh!" replied Frederick. "He hasn't been told it's a boxing
+ contest. He thinks it's a clog-dancing competition and is
+ giving the points for footwork."</p>
+
+ <p>Unfortunately the M.C. did not hear. He was speaking
+ himself.</p>
+
+ <p>"The next bout should conclude our programme," he said, "but
+ I am asked to announce that Private Henson challenges Private
+ Fry to box six two-minute rounds, backing himself for five
+ francs against a small article of no intrinsic value."</p>
+
+ <p>Enthusiastic applause greeted the announcement. A
+ disturbance in the rear of the hut indicated that Elfred was
+ heading for cover.</p>
+
+ <p>"'E 's twice my size," he wailed as strong hands hauled him
+ back.</p>
+
+ <p>"The challenger admits that he holds a slight advantage in
+ weight," continued the M.C., "but considers that is
+ counterbalanced by his advanced years."</p>
+
+ <p>"This is <i>your</i> fiendish work," hissed Percival to
+ Frederick.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not a bit of it, old sportsman," replied Frederick
+ cheerfully. "The patent rights are held by 'Enery. I merely
+ mentioned to him that Elfred possessed a desirable bath-plug
+ that it might be useful to acquire."</p>
+
+ <p>Percival left his seat to confer with the shrinking
+ Elfred.</p>
+
+ <p>"'E can 'ave the old bath-plug an' welcome, Sir, as far as
+ I'm concerned," said the latter.</p>
+
+ <p>"Tut, tut!" said Percival. "You must make a fight for it.
+ The honour of the Army is at stake."</p>
+
+ <p>"I ain't all that set on the honour of the Army," said
+ Elfred. "But 'im being the challenger, shouldn't I be justified
+ in putting the plug in one of my gloves?"</p>
+
+ <p>"The rules don't provide for such a contingency. Hurry up
+ now and get stripped, and I'll give you twenty francs if you
+ win."</p>
+
+ <p>Both combatants were warmly received. 'Enery's decorative
+ tattooing was much admired, and Elfred was urgently requested
+ not to spoil the pictures. By desire of the referee the stakes
+ were handed to him&mdash;Frederick producing the five francs
+ for 'Enery&mdash;and the battle commenced.</p>
+
+ <p>It was early evident that the Navy intended shock tactics,
+ while the Army favoured a system of elastic defence. A salvo of
+ short-arm jabs by 'Enery was answered by long-range sniping on
+ the part of Elfred, no direct hits being recorded. Towards the
+ end of the round 'Enery attempted to approach under cover of a
+ smoke screen, but action was broken off at the sound of the
+ gong.</p>
+
+ <p>The second round opened sensationally. Elfred, on the advice
+ of his seconds, was "making use of the ring" when he
+ accidentally collided with his opponent coming in the reverse
+ direction and gave him a violent thump without return. There
+ seemed every prospect of trouble, but clever footwork prevented
+ the incident developing into a <i>fracas</i>. Round two
+ concluded with Elfred leading handsomely by one point to
+ nothing.</p>
+
+ <p>"Two to one on Elfred," said Percival excitedly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Take you&mdash;in bath plugs," answered Frederick,
+ carefully entering the bet.</p>
+
+ <p>'Enery equalised in the third round, Elfred having
+ incautiously wandered <span class="pagenum"><a name="page230"
+ id="page230"></a>[pg 230]</span> into the track of a stray
+ upper-cut and bounced off. More footwork followed, Elfred
+ winning by about two yards. Both were breathing heavily when
+ time was called, and 'Enery was complaining about his
+ bronchitis.</p>
+
+ <p>Skirmishing tactics in the fourth round resulted in Elfred
+ having a narrow escape from being torpedoed beneath the belt,
+ and during several subsequent clinches he was requested to stop
+ studying the pictures and get on with the business.</p>
+
+ <p>The fifth and sixth rounds were marked by the departure of
+ most of the spectators, and in the end a draw was the only
+ possible verdict.</p>
+
+ <p>"But what about the plug, old scout?" asked Percival, as
+ they wandered back to their quarters.</p>
+
+ <p>"As referee," answered Binnie, "I gave a draw; as Battalion
+ Boxing Board of Control I order the match to be re-fought in
+ six months' time, to give the men a chance to get into
+ condition; and meanwhile as stakeholder I continue to hold the
+ five francs and the bath-plug."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:400px;">
+ <a href="images/229.png"><img width="400"
+ src="images/229-sm.png"
+ alt="Profiteer(to M.F.H.) 'Look 'ere!&mdash;thie is the third time I've been out with your crowd, an' y' 'aven't caught a fox.'" />
+ </a>
+
+ <p><i>Profiteer</i> (<i>to M.F.H.</i>).
+ <span class="sc">"Look 'ere!&mdash;this is the third time
+ I've been out with your crowd, an' y' 'aven't caught a fox.
+ Best thing <i>you</i> can do is to gimme back me 'sub' an'
+ sell yer bloomin' dogs!"</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:400px;">
+ <a href="images/230.png"><img width="400"
+ src="images/230-sm.png"
+ alt="Blusterous Person (who has forced a cigar on unwilling Club acquaintance) 'There my boy&mdash;you don't often smoke a thing'" />
+ </a>
+
+ <p><i>Blusterous Person</i> (<i>who has forced a cigar on
+ unwilling Club acquaintance</i>). "<span class="sc">There
+ my boy&mdash;you don't often smoke a thing like that!
+ That's something like a cigar, Eh</span>?"</p>
+
+ <p><i>The Victim</i>.
+ "<span class="sc">Yes&mdash;something. What is
+ it</span>?"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>THE TRUE SONG-STUFF.</h3>
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p>[A writer in an evening paper describes a
+ certain song as being sung, "sometimes with a lump in the
+ throat and a tear in the eye," all over England.]</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>If you wish to succeed as a writer</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of songs that undoubtedly count,</p>
+
+ <p>By making the atmosphere brighter,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The moral barometer mount,</p>
+
+ <p>Then be it your aim and endeavour to try</p>
+
+ <p>For the lump in the throat and the tear in the
+ eye.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p><span class="sc">Scriabine</span> and
+ <span class="sc">Stravinsky</span> may flatter</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The ears of the brainy <i>élite</i>,</p>
+
+ <p>But the musical numbers that matter</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Express what is simple and sweet;</p>
+
+ <p>You may easily miss, by aspiring too high,</p>
+
+ <p>Both the lump in the throat and the tear in the
+ eye.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Though cynics conspire to repress it,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To sentiment, "heavenly link"</p>
+
+ <p>(As the Bard of Savoy would address it),</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With joy "I eternally drink;"</p>
+
+ <p>For it gives us the key, which no science can
+ buy,</p>
+
+ <p>To the lump in the throat and the tear in the
+ eye.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>But, if you are anti-Victorian</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And, scorning the coo of the dove,</p>
+
+ <p>Hold the roar of the primitive Saurian</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The final expression of love,</p>
+
+ <p>You may have, if you choose, an alternative shy</p>
+
+ <p>At a tear in the throat and a lump in the eye.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p>"For 70 years Regent Street has basked in
+ sunshine, and now it is to be cast into shadow again. It
+ will be like a gloomy canon between dour stone
+ walls."&mdash;<i>Daily Chronicle</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>We have heard of a gloomy Dean, whose habitat answers to the
+ description given. Can this be his understudy?</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p>"The 'brasses' worn by the modern
+ cart-horse are a direct survival of the amulets which
+ bedecked the horses of the time of Julius Cæsar. They are
+ worn on the farthingale as charms against the Evil
+ Eye."&mdash;<i>Daily Paper</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>You should see our Clydesdale in her crinoline.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page231"
+ id="page231"></a>[pg 231]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:317px;">
+ <a href="images/231.png"><img width="317"
+ src="images/231-sm.png"
+ alt="AN UNPOPULAR REVIVAL." /></a>
+
+ <h3>AN UNPOPULAR REVIVAL.</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="sc">Fritz</span>. "THIS IS NO GOOD TO ME
+ NOW. YOU WANT A SWELLED HEAD FOR THIS SORT OF THING."</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page233"
+ id="page233"></a>[pg 233]</span>
+
+ <h2>ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.</h2>
+
+ <p><i>Monday, March 15th</i>. The great Food-prices debate
+ hardly justified its preliminary advertisement. Mr.
+ <span class="sc">McCurdy</span> took sure ground when he argued
+ that high prices were mainly due to world-shortage; and, though
+ he entered more disputable territory when he declared that the
+ Profiteering Act was not primarily intended to punish
+ profiteers, Mr. <span class="sc">Asquith</span> did not
+ seriously attempt to dislodge him. Indeed, the
+ <span class="sc">ex-Premier's</span> speech was mainly composed
+ of truisms, his only excursion into the speculative being an
+ assertion&mdash;with which not all economists will
+ agree&mdash;that inflation of currency is a consequence and not
+ a cause of high prices.</p>
+
+ <p>An ex-Food Controller, Mr. <span class="sc">George
+ Roberts</span>, defended the Government against charges of
+ extravagance, and ventured to remind Labour&mdash;as
+ <span class="sc">Thomas Drummond</span> reminded Irish
+ landlords&mdash;that it had duties as well as rights.</p>
+
+ <p>Early in the evening the <span class="sc">Prime
+ Minister</span>, who had sat through many speeches in readiness
+ for the threatened attack, folded his notes and silently stole
+ away.</p>
+
+ <p>On the adjournment General <span class="sc">Page
+ Croft</span> accused the Ministry of Munitions of unfair
+ treatment to one of its employees. The peroration to Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Kellaway's</span> spirited defence deserves
+ quotation: "The decision taken by the Ministry is a decision
+ that will stand." That's the stuff to give 'em.</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:265px;">
+ <a href="images/233-1.png"><img width="265"
+ src="images/233-1-sm.png"
+ alt="'CONTROLLERS' CONTROLLED." /></a><br />
+ "CONTROLLERS" CONTROLLED.
+
+ <p class="sc">Mr Clynes.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Mr. McCurdy.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Mr. G. Roberts.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><i>Tuesday, March 16th</i>.&mdash;"The <span class="sc">Lord
+ Chancellor</span> was so unusually apologetic in his exposition
+ of the War Emergency Laws (Continuance) Bill that none of the
+ Peers had the heart seriously to oppose him. Lord
+ <span class="sc">Salisbury</span> took note of the Government's
+ admission that they were anxious to say Good-bye to D.O.R.A.
+ and only complained that the farewell ceremony was so
+ long-drawn-out. Lord <span class="sc">Buckmaster</span> failed
+ to understand why D.O.R.A. should have a longer life in Ireland
+ than in England, and was so carried away by his own eloquence
+ as to declare that all the crimes attributed to the Sinn
+ Feiners had been due "to misguided attempts to enforce special
+ legislation against a misunderstood and a gallant people." Lord
+ <span class="sc">Birkenhead</span> replied that there was at
+ least a plausible case for the contention that the boot was on
+ the other leg.</p>
+
+ <p>It is unusual to find Members of the House of Commons
+ objecting to their speeches being reported, but apparently some
+ of them do&mdash;when the reporters are police constables. The
+ <span class="sc">Home Secretary</span> thought it quite
+ possible that if Members attended certain meetings the official
+ stenographers might think it worth while to take down their
+ utterances but I gathered that he was not prepared to give any
+ guarantee on the subject, and that Colonel
+ <span class="sc">Wedgwood</span> and Lieut.-Commander
+ <span class="sc">Kenworthy</span> must not count too
+ confidently on having a further road to fame opened to
+ them.</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:240px;">
+ <a href="images/233-2.png"><img width="240"
+ src="images/233-2-sm.png"
+ alt="THE CORNUCOPIA," /></a><br />
+ THE CORNUCOPIA,<br />
+ <span class="sc">or Horne of Plenty.<br />
+ Sir Robert Horne.</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Mr. <span class="sc">Bonar Law</span> read a telegram from
+ Lord <span class="sc">Kilmarnock</span> regarding the situation
+ in Berlin. As it was already a day old, was admittedly based on
+ a <i>communiqué</i> from <i>Wolff's Bureau</i>, "censored" by
+ Mr. <span class="sc">Trebitsch Lincoln</span> (late Liberal
+ Member for Darlington), and had in the meantime been officially
+ contradicted by the old Government, it did not add much to our
+ knowledge.</p>
+
+ <p>Time was when it was usual to move to reduce a Vote by a
+ hundred pounds if you wanted to defeat the Government. But such
+ paltry figures are no good in these spacious days. Sir
+ <span class="sc">Donald Macleans's</span> proposed reduction in
+ the Vote on Account for the Civil Services was the much more
+ mouth-filling morsel of one hundred million pounds. Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Chamberlain</span> considered it very handsome
+ of the Opposition, on the eve, he understood, of coming into
+ office, thus to cut off its own supplies. Nevertheless he
+ declined to accept the generous offer. Our finances would be
+ all right if the House would back the Government by practising
+ economy as well as preaching it. As it was, he thought the
+ worst was over, for&mdash;strange and agreeable
+ phenomenon&mdash;the floating debt was sinking.</p>
+
+ <p>After this it was, perhaps, not very complimentary'of Mr.
+ <span class="sc">J.W. Wilson</span> to urge the Government to
+ put forth their best speakers. The <span class="sc">Prime
+ Minister</span> was still coy, but Sir <span class="sc">Robert
+ Horne</span>, in virtue of his new office as President of the
+ Board of Trade, stepped nimbly into the breach, and made a
+ speech so cheerful both in substance and delivery as to justify
+ the hope that in him the Government have found the
+ <span class="sc">Horne</span> of Plenty.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Wednesday, March 17th</i>.&mdash;Seventeen years ago Lord
+ <span class="sc">Balfour of Burleigh</span>, as a hard-shell
+ Free Trader, sacrificed office sooner than bow the knee to the
+ new gods of Birmingham. This afternoon he brought in a Bill (to
+ safeguard "key industries" and counteract "dumping") which
+ would have gladdened the heart of Mr. <span class="sc">Joseph
+ Chamberlain</span>. Some of the other Free Trade Peers were
+ still unrepentant. Lord <span class="sc">Beauchamp</span>, for
+ example, declaring that shipping was our real "quay-industry"
+ and needed no protection, announced his intention of moving the
+ rejection of the Bill; and Lord <span class="sc">Crewe</span>,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page234"
+ id="page234"></a>[pg 234]</span> although one of the authors
+ of the Paris resolutions, on which the measure was
+ ostensibly based, thought that it went far beyond present
+ necessities. The only dumps with which Germany was likely to
+ be associated for some time to come were doleful, not
+ aggressive.</p>
+
+ <p>The Report of the Supplementary Estimates furnished the
+ Commons with abundant points for criticism. In protesting
+ against an increase in the remuneration of the Law Officers,
+ Mr. <span class="sc">Hogge</span> revealed a hitherto
+ unsuspected admiration for the <span class="sc">Prime
+ Minister</span>, whose services, he considered, were most
+ inadequately rewarded with five thousand pounds a year and no
+ pension. If anyone deserved an increase of salary it was
+ he.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. <span class="sc">Tyson-Wilson</span> had the temerity to
+ complain that the Government were not finding work for all the
+ disabled ex-Service men whom they trained in the technical
+ schools, and laid himself open to a damaging "<i>tu quoque</i>"
+ from Sir <span class="sc">Robert Horne</span>, who pointed out
+ that this lack of employment was largely due to the trade
+ unions, which refused to admit these men as "improvers."</p>
+
+ <p>In introducing the Naval Estimates for eighty odd millions
+ Mr. <span class="sc">Long</span> was almost apologetic for not
+ having made them larger. The <i>personnel</i> has been
+ drastically reduced, and parents are actually being offered a
+ premium of three hundred pounds to remove their sons from
+ Osborne. On the other hand promotion from the lower deck was to
+ be encouraged, and in future every youngster entering the Navy
+ would metaphorically carry a broad-pennant in his
+ ditty-box.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Thursday, March 18th</i>.&mdash;A proposal to erect a
+ military monument on a hill near Jerusalem was adversely
+ criticised by Lord <span class="sc">Treowen</span>. Lord
+ <span class="sc">Southborough</span>, as a recent visitor to
+ the Holy City, thought that the Government would be better
+ advised to demolish some of the recent buildings, including the
+ ex-Kaiser's ridiculous clock-tower, which had not even the
+ negative merit of telling the time.</p>
+
+ <p>In consequence of his rather exhausting séance with the
+ Liberal Party the <span class="sc">Prime Minister</span> was
+ looking a little jaded. But he perked up wonderfully when Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Will Thorne</span>, <i>à propos</i> of a story
+ that the Russian Soviet Government had introduced martial law
+ into the workshops, asked whether he did not think that all
+ able-bodied people ought to be compelled to work. There was the
+ old twinkle in his eyes as he replied that it would be very
+ interesting to know if that was the view of the trade unions.
+ From recent information I gather that the bricklayers, at any
+ rate, would not subscribe to it.</p>
+
+ <p>Upon the further consideration of the Navy Estimates General
+ <span class="sc">Seely</span> urged the re-establishment of the
+ Committee of Imperial Defence. Mr. <span class="sc">Long</span>
+ said the Admiralty were most anxious for it. Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Asquith</span> also approved, but from his ten
+ years' experience as its President entered a <i>caveat</i>
+ against expecting the Committee to take upon itself executive
+ functions. "Had it done so," he observed, "there would have
+ been collisions, cross-purposes, waste of application, and in
+ many cases something approaching to administrative confusion."
+ Which things of course never occurred under his <i>régime</i>
+ of&mdash;shall I say?&mdash;expectant watchfulness.</p>
+
+ <p>The rest of the debate was chiefly remarkable for Lady
+ <span class="sc">Astor's</span> bold declaration, "The sea
+ belongs to England, and it could not be in better hands."
+ Coming from a country-woman of Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Daniels</span> it was doubly exhilarating.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:400px;">
+ <a href="images/234.png"><img width="400"
+ src="images/234-sm.png"
+ alt="Captain. 'Ere let's pack up now; it's getting late." />
+ </a>
+
+ <p><i>Captain</i>. "<span class="sc">'Ere let's pack up
+ now; it's getting late. Besides, the kid wants his shirt
+ back</span>."</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+
+ <h4>"Direct Action" at Putney.</h4>
+
+ <p>"When the Light Blues went out a second time R.C.
+ Barrett, of the winning trial eight crew, was at
+ strike,&mdash;<i>Daily Paper</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page235"
+ id="page235"></a>[pg 235]</span>
+
+ <h3>NEMESIS.</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Kindly the dentist was, for he</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Had obviously sought</p>
+
+ <p>To keep his waiting victims free</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From apprehensive thought,</p>
+
+ <p>Providing for those souls in fear</p>
+
+ <p>The Comic Press of yesteryear.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>I read those jests of days agone,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Those jibes at folly flown,</p>
+
+ <p>And wondered should I light upon</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Some trifle of my own,</p>
+
+ <p>A par well pointed in its time</p>
+
+ <p>Or fragment of reputed rhyme.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Could I retrieve some sparkling fytte</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Bedecked with <i>jeux de mots</i>,</p>
+
+ <p>I fancied that the sight of it</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Might soothe my present woe,</p>
+
+ <p>Reminding me how once I had</p>
+
+ <p>Been quite a jocund kind of lad.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Lo, what a foolish hope was this!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I realised too soon</p>
+
+ <p>The special form of Nemesis</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">That waits on the buffoon:</p>
+
+ <p><i>The joke I found concerned the gloom</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Inside a dentist's waiting-room</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:208px;">
+ <a href="images/235.png"><img width="208"
+ src="images/235-sm.png"
+ alt="'He hadn't been dead a week when they started quarrelling over his estate.'" />
+ </a>
+
+ <p class="sc">"He hadn't been dead a week when they started
+ quarrelling over his estate."</p>
+
+ <p class="sc">"Did he leave much?" "No&mdash;only three
+ gallons."</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>THE LATEST PARTY.</h3>
+
+ <p class="center">(<i>Being the Diary of a well-intentioned
+ Voter</i>.)</p>
+
+ <p><i>Monday</i>. Important article in my morning paper on the
+ serious political outlook. Recommends the formation of a new
+ party to carry out progressive reforms and combat the forces of
+ Revolution and Anarchy. Sounds excellent. The new party is to
+ be called the People's Party. I decide to join it.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Tuesday</i>.&mdash;By a fortunate mistake my newsagent
+ placed wrong paper on my step to-day. Find I was being misled
+ by the sheet I usually take. A new party to carry out
+ progressive reforms and combat the forces of Revolution and
+ Anarchy has already been formed. It is called the National
+ Party. I decide to join it.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Wednesday</i>.&mdash;Attended public meeting advertised
+ as being in support of the new party. Expected to hear all
+ about the programme of the National Party. Instead was urged to
+ join the Modern Party, to carry out progressive reforms and
+ combat the forces of Revolution and Anarchy. Signed card before
+ leaving the hall pledging my support.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Thursday</i>.&mdash;Dined with Brooks, who takes very
+ grave view of the state of the country. Said what we really
+ want is a new party. Went on to outline some urgent progressive
+ reforms and mentioned one or two necessary steps for combating
+ the forces of Revolution and Anarchy. Suggested that he and I
+ should try to start a local branch of the Britannic Party.
+ Seemed so enthusiastic that I hadn't the heart to refuse
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Friday</i>.&mdash;Johnson called at the office during my
+ busiest hour. Wanted to enrol me as a member of a new party, to
+ be known as the Efficiency Party. No time to go into it
+ properly, so agreed, to get rid of him. Anyhow, the object's a
+ good one. It was something about progressive reforms and
+ combating the forces of Revolution and Anarchy.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Saturday</i>.&mdash;Heard at the Club that if the
+ Coalition is not better supported in their attempts to carry
+ out progressive reforms and combat the forces of Revolution and
+ Anarchy, they will form themselves into a new party and go to
+ the country. Locally we are to have, in addition to the
+ retiring Coalitionist, a Free Liberal candidate, a Labour Party
+ candidate, a couple of Independent candidates, a People's Party
+ candidate, a National Party candidate, a Modern Party
+ candidate, a Britannic Party candidate, and an Efficiency Party
+ candidate. Afraid this would make my position extremely
+ complicated. Decide to give undivided support to the Coalition
+ in the hope of averting a General Election.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page236"
+ id="page236"></a>[pg 236]</span>
+
+ <h2>AT THE PLAY.</h2>
+
+ <h4 class="sc">"The Truth About The Russian Dancers."</h4>
+
+ <p>With that uncanny tuition of his Sir <span class="sc">James
+ Barrie</span> has, of course, hit on the precise truth. Russian
+ dancers are not born but made&mdash;by the <i>Maestro</i>,
+ which I take it is (broadly speaking) Italian for Producer and
+ Presenter.</p>
+
+ <p>When <i>Karissima</i> goes on a visit to the stately home of
+ the <i>Veres</i> the peace of that ancient haunt of the
+ conventionally correct is queerly broken. Young <i>Lord
+ Vere</i> loses his heart. However, that might just as easily or
+ more easily have happened if the Gaiety had been invited. But a
+ dreadful change comes to <i>Uncle Bill</i>&mdash;he buys his
+ clothes ready-made (at <i>La boutique fantasque</i>, for a
+ guess, or possibly Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Mallaby-Deeley's</span>), grows dundrearies
+ and goes hopelessly off his game at golf.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Karissima</i>, poor dear, can't walk or talk or putt, for
+ that matter, except with her toes. <i>Bill</i> calls this last
+ cheating, but young <i>Vere</i> thinks it simply
+ adorable&mdash;as do we all. <i>Lady Vere</i>, his mother,
+ can't get used to being kissed by <i>Karissima</i>, who
+ <i>will</i> stand upon her lightly with one foot, oddly waving
+ the other meanwhile in the air. Besides it takes too long and
+ <i>is</i> rather too demonstrative. And couldn't
+ <i>Karissima</i> dear just try to walk with her soles really
+ flat on the ground in the solid English county way? Certainly.
+ <i>Karissima</i> will try, to please Madame, and with painful
+ effort achieves a half-dozen clumsy steps till unconquerable
+ habit and Mr. <span class="sc">Arnold Bax's</span> allusively
+ witty music lift her on tiptoe again. And really she is such a
+ darling that the once reluctant dowager finally consents to the
+ marriage; wedding bells forthwith (within); a white-haired
+ clergyman, surprised at nothing, as becomes the very best type
+ of padre, appears; follow <i>corps de ballet</i> bridesmaids;
+ and <i>Bill</i> gives her away.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Karissima</i>, says <i>Vere</i> to <i>Maestro</i> later
+ in the evening, is depressed. Because she hasn't a child. They
+ both tremendously want a child. <i>Maestro</i>, silently
+ showing his watch-dial, would seem to wish to suggest that they
+ were unreasonably impatient. <i>Karissima</i> also pleads.
+ Well, he will see what he can do. But there's an awful penalty.
+ For a new Russian dancer cannot be made unless another
+ surrenders life. Anyway he fetches his black bag. And
+ <i>Karissima</i> dances down the main staircase with her babe,
+ who grows apace and is shortly seen prancing in the garden (on
+ his toes&mdash;"Thank Heaven!" says the <i>Maestro</i>).</p>
+
+ <p>And <i>Karissima</i> dies and is brought in on her bier, and
+ dances (she <i>would</i>!) her own funeral service.
+ <i>Maestro's</i> heart is touched; he lies down in her stead,
+ and she, dancing on a carpet of thistle-down shot with stars (I
+ think), and her lord (I am sure), perpetually exclaiming, "How
+ perfectly topping!"&mdash;both achieve an enviable
+ immortality.</p>
+
+ <p>Madame <span class="sc">Karsavina</span> is exquisite; she
+ is well supported by Mr. C.M. <span class="sc">Lowne</span>
+ (<i>Hon. Bill</i>), Mr. <span class="sc">Herman de Lange</span>
+ (<i>Maestro</i>), Miss G.
+ <span class="sc">Sterroll</span>(<i>Dowager</i>), and Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Basil Foster</span> (<i>Lord Vere</i>). And I
+ thought I detected Mr. <span class="sc">Du Maurier's</span>
+ appreciation of the bizarre in his production. But the triumph
+ is the triumph of the whimsical author. I don't think he has
+ ever done anything better; more ambitious things, yes, but
+ nothing so free from flaw.</p>
+
+ <p>Isn't it more than possible that just three-score years ago,
+ on a May day (see <i>Who's Who</i>), some Maestro of Fantasy
+ slipped into a little house in Kirriemuir, N.B., with a black
+ bag? Wouldn't that explain the otherwise inexplicable, the
+ unwearying resourcefulness, the unabashed playfulness of this
+ impenitent youth?</p>
+
+ <p class="author">T.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>DRAM.BAC.</h2>
+
+ <p>A suggestion has been put forward, with the support of the
+ British Drama League and others, for the establishment at our
+ universities of a "Faculty of the Theatre and Dramatic Degree."
+ Heartily applauding the proposal, we append a typical
+ examination paper for the final school:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>(1) Sketch briefly the progress of amateur acting in this
+ country, from the impersonation of a Danish minstrel by
+ <span class="sc">Alfred the Great</span>, to the Victory
+ Varieties Matinée arranged by Lady Eve Tatlery.</p>
+
+ <p>(2) Arrange, in order of probability, the first fifty
+ authors of <span class="sc">Shakspeare</span>.</p>
+
+ <p>(3) "The Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing-fields of
+ Eton." Estimate the rival claims of the Windsor Strollers.</p>
+
+ <p>(4) Indicate your make-up for <span class="sc">Romulus,
+ Henry the Eighth, Abraham Lincoln</span>.</p>
+
+ <p>(5) What is a point, and how made? A "straight" line lies
+ evenly between any good points; give instances.</p>
+
+ <p>(6) Under what dramatic conditions can a part be greater
+ than the whole? Cite the authority of any two actor-managers
+ for this theory.</p>
+
+ <p>(7) Explain, with diagrams, (<i>a</i>) The Eternal Triangle;
+ (<i>b</i>) Squaring the Upper Circle.</p>
+
+ <p>(8) Illustrate the axiom that the length of a run varies
+ with the breadth of the dialogue.</p>
+
+ <p>(9) What proportion of the music-hall comedians of Great
+ Britain is supplied by (<i>a</i>) Lancashire; (<i>b</i>)
+ Scotland?</p>
+
+ <p>(10) Which European drama requires most doors for its
+ honeymoon farces?</p>
+
+ <p>(11) "What Manchester thinks to-day England will think next
+ Sunday evening." Analyse this statement in its bearing upon the
+ play-producing societies.</p>
+
+ <p>(12) "Let who will make a nation's laws so that I make its
+ songs." Discuss the ethical and sociological significance of
+ this with regard to (<i>a</i>) "Where do flies go in the
+ winter-time?" (<i>b</i>) "I <i>do</i> like-an egg with my
+ tea."</p>
+
+ <p>In the <i>vivâ-voce</i> portion of the examination,
+ candidates for Honours will be required to satisfy the
+ examiners (to the point of actual tears) by their recital of
+ selected passages from prepared books. They may offer any two
+ of the following: "Buckingham's Farewell;" "The Signalman's
+ Daughter;" "The Death of Little Nell" (<i>with voices</i>).</p>
+
+ <p>For candidates not seeking Honours a passable imitation of
+ Mr. <span class="sc">George Robey</span> will entitle to one
+ group.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">A.E.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>TWO VIEWS.</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>There was a high priest of illusion</p>
+
+ <p>Who rose by his leader's extrusion;</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">By way of amends</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">He invites his old friends</p>
+
+ <p>To extinguish their prospects by Fusion.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>There was a great foe of delusion,</p>
+
+ <p>Who came to the honest conclusion</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">That Socialist Labour</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">Plays beggar-my-neighbour</p>
+
+ <p>And sought to defeat it by Fusion.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+
+ <h4>A Leap-Year Record.</h4>
+
+ <p>"<span class="sc">Cambridge University
+ Sports</span>.&mdash;H.M. Abrahams winning the long jump
+ with a distance of 22yds. to his credit."&mdash;<i>Picture
+ Paper</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <h4>"THE PREMIER AND HIS FUTURE.</h4>
+
+ <h5 class="sc" style="margin-top:-1.5em">whither goeth thou?"</h5>
+
+ <p style="text-align:right; margin-top:-1em"><i>Headings in Daily Paper</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>Answer adjudged correct: "I knowest not."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p>'Wanted, a Horse for its keep. Excellent
+ cuisine."&mdash;<i>The Times of Ceylon</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p><i>À la</i> cart, we presume.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p>"A roof garden for cats is included in the
+ scheme for the extension of the premises of Our Dumb
+ Friends' League."&mdash;<i>Evening Paper</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>We have heard the nocturnal cat on the tiles called many
+ names, but never a "dumb friend."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p>"The Police announce that dogs without
+ dollars found wandering after 10 p.m. are liable to be
+ destroyed."&mdash;<i>Hong Kong Paper</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>We understand, however, that in China dogs are almost
+ invariably provided with taels.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page237"
+ id="page237"></a>[pg 237]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:400px;">
+ <a href="images/237.png"><img width="400"
+ src="images/237-sm.png"
+ alt="TRIALS OF THE FISH-TRADE." /></a>
+
+ <h4>TRIALS OF THE FISH-TRADE.</h4>
+
+ <p>"<span class="sc">Clothes, my dear! Don't mention
+ clothes. You ought to be in the fish line, Why, I runs
+ through a set o' furs in about a month</span>!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>A NOTE TO NATURE,</h2>
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p class="center"><i>accounting for my previous silence in an
+ unusually temperate March and also presenting an
+ ultimatum.</i></p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Ye great brown hares, grown madder through the
+ Spring!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ye birds that utilise your tiny
+ throttles</p>
+
+ <p>To make the archways of the forest ring</p>
+
+ <p>Or go about your easy house-hunting!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ye toads! ye axolotls!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Ye happy blighters all, that squeal and squat</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And fly and browse where'er the mood
+ entices,</p>
+
+ <p>Noting in every hedge or woodland grot</p>
+
+ <p>The swelling surge of sap, but noting not</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The rise in current prices!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>But chiefly you, ye birds, whose jocund note</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">(Linnets and larks and jays and
+ red-billed ousels)</p>
+
+ <p>Oft in those happier springtides now remote</p>
+
+ <p>Caused me to catch the lyre and clear my throat</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">After some coy refusals!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Ay, and would cause me now&mdash;I have such
+ bliss</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Seeing the star-set vale, the pearls, the
+ agates</p>
+
+ <p>Sown on the wintry boughs by Flora's kiss&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Only the trouble in my case is this,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I do not feed on maggots.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Could I but share your diet cheap and rude,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Your simple ways in trees and copses
+ lurking;</p>
+
+ <p>But no, I need a pipe and lots of food,</p>
+
+ <p>A comfortable chair on which to brood&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Silence! the bard is working.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Could I but know that freedom from all care</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">That comes, I say, from gratis sets of
+ suitings</p>
+
+ <p>And homes that need not premium nor repair</p>
+
+ <p>Except with sticks and mud and moss and hair,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">My! there would be some flutings.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>So and so only would the ivory rod</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Stir the wild strings once more to
+ exaltation;</p>
+
+ <p>So and so only the impetuous god</p>
+
+ <p>Pound in my bosom and produce that odd</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Tum-tiddly-um sensation.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And often as I heard the throstles vamp,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Pouring their liquid notes like golden
+ syrup,</p>
+
+ <p>Out would I go and round the garden tramp,</p>
+
+ <p>Wearing goloshes if the day were damp,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And imitate their chirrup.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Or, bowling peacefully upon my bike,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Well breakfasted, by no distractions
+ flustered,</p>
+
+ <p>Pause near a leafy copse or brambled dyke,</p>
+
+ <p>And answer song for song the black-backed
+ shrike,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The curlew and the bustard.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>But now&mdash;ah, why prolong the dreadful
+ strain?&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Limply my hand the unstrung harp
+ relaxes;</p>
+
+ <p>The dear old days will not come back again</p>
+
+ <p>Whatever Mr. <span class="sc">Austen
+ Chamberlain</span></p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Does with the nation's taxes.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Lambs, buds, leap up; the lark to heaven climbs;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Bread does the same; the price of baccy's
+ brutal;</p>
+
+ <p>And save (I do not note it in <i>The Times</i>)</p>
+
+ <p>They make exemptions for evolving rhymes,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Dashed if I mean to tootle!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="center"><span class="sc">Evoe</span>.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page238"
+ id="page238"></a>[pg 238]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:400px;">
+ <a href="images/238.png"><img width="400"
+ src="images/238-sm.png"
+ alt="Sportsman (just emerged from the brook)." /></a>
+
+ <p><i>Sportsman</i> (<i>just emerged from the brook</i>).
+ <span class="sc">"Four in, did you say? Dash it
+ all&mdash;just my luck. Got my glasses all mud and can't
+ see ther fun."</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>THE METHODS OF GENIUS.</h3>
+
+ <p class="center">(<i>By our Special Literary
+ Parasite</i>.)</p>
+
+ <p>The public already know something of the painful
+ difficulties under which novelists labour at the present moment
+ owing to the paper shortage and the enhanced cost of book
+ production. But "the economic consequences of the Peace" by no
+ means exhaust the handicaps of the conscientious and sensitive
+ novelist. We are glad therefore to note the efforts of <i>The
+ Daily Graphic</i> to enlist the sympathy of the public on
+ behalf of this sorely tried and meritorious class. Our
+ contemporary tells us, for example, of one momentous writer who
+ was reduced to dictating blindfold "because the facial
+ peculiarities of first one and then another amanuensis" upset
+ her equanimity. Then there is the tragic story of Mr.
+ <span class="sc">R.L. Hitchens</span>, who, being engaged to
+ write an article against time, sent out for a stenographer, who
+ on arrival proved to be a man with a large black beard of so
+ sinister an aspect that Mr. <span class="sc">Hichins</span> was
+ forced to dismiss him and write the article in his own hand.
+ Yet Mr. <span class="sc">Hichens</span> is not easily put off,
+ for we learn that he finds he works best in big hotels and not,
+ as we might have guessed, in the sequestered tranquillity of a
+ minaret.</p>
+
+ <p>To some writers solitude is the true school of genius. Yet
+ Sir <span class="sc">Lewis Morris</span> found some of his
+ happiest thoughts come to him while travelling in the
+ Underground, while Mr. <span class="sc">W.B. Yeats</span>
+ records a similar experience as the result of a journey on the
+ top of a tram-car. Your advanced modernists, with
+ <span class="sc">Marinetti</span> at their head, find their
+ best stimulus to creative effort in the clang and clatter of
+ machinery. <i>Per contra</i>, to return to <i>The Daily
+ Graphic</i>, Mrs. <span class="sc">C.N. Williamson</span> must
+ have pretty things to look at "in business hours." But the
+ happiest of all our authors is Madame
+ <span class="sc">Albanesi</span>, who "finds her brain-spur in
+ a blank sheet of paper, and not the ghost of an idea what she
+ is going to write about." Less fortunate writers labour
+ assiduously only to leave the minds of their readers a blank,
+ without the ghost of an idea of what the author has been
+ writing about.</p>
+
+ <p>It is a pity that Mr. <span class="sc">W.L. George</span>,
+ in his interesting survey of modern writers of fiction in the
+ <i>English Review</i>, has told us nothing about the methods of
+ the "Neo-Victorians" and "Semi-Victorians," the "Edwardians"
+ and "belated Edwardians," and the "Georgians" and
+ "Neo-Georgians." With all these classes he deals faithfully.
+ But his criticism is purely literary. He fails to tell us the
+ things that every reader wants to know. It is all very well to
+ say that the neo-Georgians "paint in ink," but he ought to have
+ mentioned whether it is green or red. Does Miss
+ <span class="sc">Dorothy Richardson</span> dictate to the sound
+ of trumpets, garbed in crimson trouserloons? Does Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Arnold Bennett</span> cantillate his "copy"
+ into the horn of a graphophone or use a motor-stylus? Does Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Siegried Sassoon</span> beat his breast with
+ one hand while he plays the loud bassoon with the other? Does
+ Mr. <span class="sc">Alec Waugh</span> use sermon-paper or
+ foolscap? Does Mr. <span class="sc">Aldous Huxley</span> keep a
+ tame gorilla? These are the really illuminating details that we
+ hunger for. Without them it is impossible to appreciate the
+ artistry of our young Masters. Mr. <span class="sc">W.L.
+ George</span> has given us a glimpse of the working of their
+ brains; let him now reveal to us the secrets of their
+ workshops.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page239"
+ id="page239"></a>[pg 239]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:400px;">
+ <a href="images/239.png"><img width="400"
+ src="images/239-sm.png"
+ alt="'There's that dashed bull of yours in my field again!" />
+ </a>
+
+ <p class="sc">"There's that dashed bull of yours in my
+ field again! One of thses days I'll&mdash;I'll&mdash;wring
+ its confounded neck!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.</h2>
+
+ <p class="center">(<i>By Mr. Punch's Staff of Learned
+ Clerks.</i>)</p>
+
+ <p><i>After the Day: Germany Unconquered and Unrepentant</i>
+ (<span class="sc">Jenkins</span>) is the kind of thesis-book
+ which it is wise to read in a deliberately incredulous mood.
+ Mr. <span class="sc">Hayden Talbot</span> is an American
+ newspaper man of immense resourcefulness but, I should judge,
+ of a not conspicuously judicial habit of mind. That, perhaps,
+ is hardly a newspaper man's business. He is after copy, and
+ certainly there's good enough copy in his interviews with Count
+ <span class="sc">Bernstorff</span> and Dr.
+ <span class="sc">Rathenau</span>, and one must admire his feat
+ of getting out of these and seven other German publicists,
+ including <span class="sc">Maximilian Harden</span>, the draft
+ of a manifesto to the people of America, composed in the hope,
+ vain as it happened, that the <span class="sc">Kaiser</span>
+ would break his long silence and sign it. It is the author's
+ theory that it is the inner camarilla, working for a speedy
+ restoration of the monarchy, that is responsible for the
+ certainly uncharacteristic reticence of Amerongen. Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Talbot</span> also interviewed
+ <span class="sc">Hindenberg</span>, whom he found a
+ "broken-down, inconsequential, garrulous example of senility"
+ <span class="sc">Ludendorff</span>, who was very stiff and
+ proud and rude; and the <i>fiancée</i> of the man who sank the
+ <i>Lusitania</i>. His general idea of Germany is summed up in
+ the remark of Mr. <span class="sc">Mandelbaum</span>, of New
+ York: "All this talk about Fritz being down and out is all
+ bunk!" Germany is full of energy and hate; she will soon be a
+ monarchy again; will undersell the world; is assiduously
+ preparing for air supremacy as the way to <i>revanche</i>. I
+ take it that this is not so much a book as a <i>réchauffé</i>
+ of newspaper articles, which alone will account for its
+ formlessness and frequent changes of plane. Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Talbot</span>, confessing to a total ignorance
+ of the German tongue, seems quite unconscious that this imposes
+ certain limitations on his capacity to make an adequate survey
+ of a difficult problem.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>I may confess at once that I finished the first chapter of
+ <i>The Woman of the Picture</i> (<span class="sc">Hodder and
+ Stoughton</span>) in a mood of slight derision, induced by Mr.
+ G.F. <span class="sc">Turner's</span> allowing one hero to say
+ of the other that he had "the interminable limbs" of an
+ aristocrat. To the end of the book indeed I was uncertain
+ whether such occasional lapses were meant to illumine the
+ character of the supposed speaker or were unintentional. But
+ again to quote, this time a phrase in which Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Turner</span> clearly shares my own delight,
+ "before we were through with the affair" such details had
+ ceased to be of moment. The plain fact is that <i>The Woman of
+ the Picture</i> is the most breathless, irresistible piece of
+ convincing impossibility you have read for ages. I decline to
+ struggle with any transcription of the plot. On the wrapper you
+ will observe the woman stepping bodily out of the picture, like
+ the ancestors in the whisky advertisement; this, however, is a
+ symbolic rather than an actual presentment. But there is plenty
+ without it: a rightful heir, mountain castles amid the eternal
+ snows, a villain (with sorceries), half-a-dozen
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page240"
+ id="page240"></a>[pg 240]</span> attempted murders and the
+ most hair-lifting duel imaginable. Soberly considered the
+ whole business is a riot of delirium, belonging flagrantly
+ to that realm where all the world's a screen, and all the
+ men and women merely movies. But the unexpected charm of the
+ book is that with the possible exceptions noticed above) it
+ is told with a touch of distinction, even of subtlety, that
+ invests its wildest audacities with an atmosphere of
+ fantastic truth. In short, if Mr. G.F.
+ <span class="sc">Turner</span> has done nothing else he has
+ at least enabled the fastidious to enjoy the thrills of a
+ shocker while retaining their self-respect.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>In the first of the three stories, each about a hundred
+ pages in length, which make up <i>Gold and Iron</i>
+ (<span class="sc">Heinemann</span>), it is hard to escape the
+ conviction that Mr. <span class="sc">Joseph Hergesheimer</span>
+ between the lines, "So you thought that
+ <span class="sc">Conrad</span> was the only
+ <span class="sc">Joseph</span> who could throw a man and woman
+ together on a mysterious coast in the most strangely romantic
+ circumstances, and provide a thoroughly groolly scrap into the
+ bargain. Well, here's another little <i>Victory</i> for you."
+ He seems definitely to challenge that air of the extraordinary
+ and the inevitable combined which Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Conrad</span> so subtly conveys. It is a big
+ effort, and I don't feel that the author quite brings it off,
+ yet I cannot think of anyone but Mr.
+ <span class="sc">Conrad</span> who would have come nearer to
+ doing so, and the fight in the dark in this story is one that
+ even after the War will make a reader catch his breath for
+ half-a-dozen pages at least. In the second and third stories,
+ which actually deal with gold and iron (the first of the three
+ is called "Wild Oranges," though perhaps "Blood Oranges" would
+ have been a better title), the writer returns to a happier
+ <i>métier</i>, and deals with an America remarkably interesting
+ and wholly novel to me, an America where foundries and railways
+ are in their infancy and crinolines are worn. Saloons, bowie
+ knives and bags of gold-dust are all too familiar to us, but
+ who, on this side of the Atlantic at any rate, ever remembers
+ the quiet towns with Victorian manners to which the diggers
+ belonged and returned? Both "Tubal Cain" and "The Dark Fleece"
+ are excellent yarns and wonderful pieces of pictorial
+ reconstruction as well.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>After reading <i>The Searchers</i> (<span class="sc">Hodder
+ and Stoughton</span>), I seriously think of myself joining His
+ Britannic Majesty's Secret Service. All the fun and firearms,
+ and ever, at the conclusion, a startling surprise for your
+ friends and admirers, among whom you stand cool, calm and
+ collected. <i>Anthony Keene-Leslie</i> did not deceive me when,
+ upon his first introduction as a secret servant, he modestly
+ disclaimed the thrills and excitements commonly attributed to
+ his trade. I knew that many pages would not be turned before he
+ would land us in the middle of some crimson intrigue;
+ mysterious strangers, disguises, cryptic and invaluable
+ manuscripts, urgent telegrams, codes, Italian hidden hands,
+ Scotland Yard, pseudo-taxicabs, clues and things. But let
+ others beware of Mr. <span class="sc">John Foster</span>, a
+ most ingenious manipulator of the old stock-in-trade and
+ possessing a rare sense of humour. For the reader to pit his
+ wits against the author's is, in this instance, to be
+ completely "had" and to become under the necessity (about page
+ 265) of taking off his hat, not only to the secret servant but
+ to a mere minion of the "Yard" also. Two minor points emerge
+ from a close study of the book. The first is that the author is
+ undoubtedly a barrister himself; if I am wrong on this point I
+ finally withdraw my threat to join the Service. The second
+ point is that he knows his Scotland even as well as he loves
+ it. In the result you have two merits, which together amply
+ discount the element of cheap sensationalism: one merit is the
+ logical development of the story, and the other is its
+ beautiful setting. I don't know whether it is due to the
+ Scottish climate or to the legal atmosphere that the author
+ omits all reference to the feminine sex or affairs of the
+ heart; but anyhow it seemed right and meet that women should be
+ left at home when men were engaged upon such violent and
+ dastardly business.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>From certain internal evidences, mainly orthographical, I am
+ led to suppose <i>The Branding Iron</i>
+ (<span class="sc">Constable</span>) to be of Transatlantic
+ origin. This, no doubt, explains my unfamiliarity with the name
+ of Miss <span class="sc">Katharine Newlin Burt</span>, also
+ certain minor points, notably the fact that the story, though
+ by no means badly told, suffers from what I can only call a
+ plethora of plot. As I followed the developments of its
+ intrigue and tracked the heroine from untutored savage, wife of
+ the wild Westerner whose excusable suspicions caused him to
+ brand her as private property, to the moment of her triumph as
+ the bejewelled idol of theatrical New York, the conviction grew
+ upon me that here was a tale surely predestined to be the
+ screen that covers a multitude of melodramatics. Presently
+ indeed the suggestion became so insistent that I went further
+ and began to wonder whether I was not in fact reading a
+ "story-form" of some already triumphant film. Certainly the
+ resemblance is almost too pronounced to be fortuitous; from the
+ sensational branding scene, through cowboy stunts, to the
+ up-town playhouse, where a repentant and wife-seeking hero
+ recognises his mark upon the shoulder of the leading
+ lady&mdash;and so to reconciliation, slow fade-out, and the
+ announcement of Next Week's Pictures. But though it is
+ impossible not to suspect Miss <span class="sc">Burt</span> of
+ having an eye to what poetic journalism calls the Shadow Stage,
+ this is by no means to belittle her mastery of the colder
+ medium of print; and I hasten to acknowledge that, upon me at
+ least, <i>The Branding Iron</i> has left a distinct though
+ possibly fleeting impression of good entertainment.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:300px;">
+ <a href="images/240.png"><img width="300"
+ src="images/240-sm.png"
+ alt="THE RELUCTANT PEGASUS." /></a><br />
+ THE RELUCTANT PEGASUS.<br />
+ <span class="sc">A young Spring poet has trouble with his
+ mount.</span>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <h4>Cane or Birch?</h4>
+
+ <p>"House Porter wanted, to live in or out, able to manage
+ beating apparatus.&mdash;Apply, Stating wages required, to
+ Headmaster, &mdash;&mdash;- school."&mdash;<i>Local
+ Paper</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="note">
+ <p>"The total cost of the British delegation
+ to the Peace Conference at Paris from December, 1918, to
+ 31st September was £503,368."&mdash;<i>Liverpool
+ Paper</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>But it is only fair to say that in the last month they seem
+ to have put in a bit of overtime.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch or the London Charivari, Vol.
+158, March 24, 1920., by Various
+
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+</body>
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@@ -0,0 +1,2148 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch or the London Charivari, Vol. 158,
+March 24, 1920., by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punch or the London Charivari, Vol. 158, March 24, 1920.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: May 27, 2005 [EBook #15912]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Sandra Brown and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH,
+
+OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
+
+VOL. 158.
+
+
+
+March 24, 1920.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHARIVARIA.
+
+"Nobody knows," says a Berlin message, "how near the KAPP
+counter-revolution came to being a success." A kind word from
+Commander KENWORTHY, it is believed, would have made all the
+difference.
+
+ ***
+
+It is reported that Miss ISOBEL ELSOM, the cinema star, tried to get
+knocked down by a taxi-cab for the purposes of a film, but failed. We
+can only suppose that the driver must have been new to his job.
+
+ ***
+
+A vicar has written to the Press complaining indignantly of a London
+firm's offer to supply sermons at five shillings each. We are not
+surprised. Five shillings is a lot of money to give for a sermon.
+
+ ***
+
+The Llangollen Golf Club has decided to allow Sunday golf. In
+extenuation it is pointed out that the Welsh for "stymied" does not
+constitute a breach of the Sabbath, as is the case with the Scots
+equivalent.
+
+ ***
+
+At Caterham a robin has built its nest in a bully beef tin. These are
+the little things that give the Disposals Board a bad name.
+
+ ***
+
+A North of Ireland man who has just died at the age of 107 boasted
+that he had never had a bath. This should silence the faddists who
+pretend that they can hardly wait till Saturday night.
+
+ ***
+
+The ruins of Whitby Abbey, it is announced, are to be presented by
+their owner to the nation. On the other hand, the report that Mr.
+LLOYD GEORGE intends to present the ruins of the Liberal Party to
+Manchester City is not confirmed.
+
+ ***
+
+The latest information is that the recent German revolution had to be
+abandoned owing to the weather.
+
+ ***
+
+From a weekly paper article we gather that the trousers-crease will be
+in its accustomed frontal position this year. It is unfortunate that
+this announcement should have clashed with the attempted restoration
+of the Monarchy in Berlin.
+
+ ***
+
+Hot Cross Buns will probably cost threepence this year. An economical
+plan is for the householder to make his own hot cross and then get the
+local confectioner to fit a bun to it.
+
+ ***
+
+"There will be no whisky in Scotland in the year 1925," says a
+Prohibitionist speaker. He did not say whether there will be any
+Scotsmen.
+
+ ***
+
+No arrangement has yet been made for the carrying on of the Food
+Ministry, though it is said that one food profiteer has offered to buy
+the place as a memento.
+
+ ***
+
+"All the great men are dead," states a London newspaper. This sly dig
+at Mr. CHURCHILL'S robust health is surely in bad taste.
+
+ ***
+
+We are glad to hear that the strap-hanger who was summoned by a
+fellow-passenger on the Underground Railway for refusing to remove his
+foot from off the plaintiff's toes has now been acquitted by the jury.
+It appears that he was able to prove that he was not in a position to
+do so as his was not the top foot of the heap.
+
+ ***
+
+According to a trade journal the latest fashion in umbrellas is a
+pigeon's head carved on the handle. This, we understand, is the first
+step towards a really reliable homing umbrella.
+
+ ***
+
+The appearance of a hen blackbird without any trace of feathers on its
+neck or back is reported by a Worcester ornithologist. The attempt
+on the part of this bird to follow our present fashions is most
+interesting.
+
+ ***
+
+So much difficulty is being experienced in deciding whose incendiary
+bullet was the most effective, that it is thought possible that the
+Government may arrange for the Zeppelin raids to be revived.
+
+ ***
+
+A society paper reports that a large number of millionaires are now
+staying on the Riviera. It is not known where the other shareholders
+of COATS'S are staying.
+
+ ***
+
+In order to influence the exchange a contemporary suggests that we
+should sell our treasures to America. We understand that a cable to
+New York asking what they are prepared to pay for Mr. RAMSAY MACDONALD
+remains unanswered.
+
+ ***
+
+An egg weighing nine-and-a-half ounces has been laid at Bayonne,
+France. It looks like a walk-over unless _The Spectator_ has something
+up its sleeve.
+
+ ***
+
+"One hears the crying of the new-born lambs on all sides," writes a
+Nature correspondent. On the other hand the unmistakable bubbling note
+of the mint-sauce will not be heard for another month or so.
+
+ ***
+
+Will the A.S.C. private who in 1917 was ordered to take a mule to
+Sutton Coldfield please note that the animal has been sighted in
+California still chewing an army tunic, but the badges are missing?
+
+ ***
+
+"So many letters are being lost in the post nowadays," states a
+daily paper, "that drastic action should be taken in the matter." We
+understand that the POSTMASTER-GENERAL has expressed his willingness
+to be searched.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Hygienist_. "FEELING THE COLD, EH? AHA--LOOK AT ME. I
+DON'T KNOW WHAT COLD IS."
+
+_Normal Individual_. "THEN N-NATURALLY YOU D-DON'T FEEL IT."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A VULNERABLE SPOT.
+
+ "Lady, a word--but oh, beware!
+ And prithee do not slight it--
+ If you will have your back so bare,
+ Someone is sure to bite it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "An official of the Coal Controller's Department said that
+ everything possible would be done to relieve the situation.
+
+ 'No stone will be left unturned,' he said, 'to ease the
+ position.'"--_Daily Paper_.
+
+This accounts, no doubt, for the stuff in our last half-hundredweight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A JUNKER INTERLUDE.
+
+ Once more the Militant Mode recurs
+ With clank of sabre and clink of spurs;
+ Once more the long grey cloaks adorn
+ The bellicose backs of the high-well-born;
+ Once more to the click of martial boots
+ Junkers exchange their grave salutes,
+ Taking the pavement, large with side,
+ Shoulders padded and elbows wide;
+ And if a civilian dares to mutter
+ They boost him off and he bites the gutter.
+
+ Down by the Brandenburger Thor
+ Kitchens are worked by cooks of war;
+ Loyal moustaches cease to sag,
+ Leaping for joy of the old war-flag;
+ Drums are beating and bugles blare
+ And passionate bandsmen rip the air;
+ Prussia's original ardour rallies
+ At the sound of _Deutschland ueber alles_,
+ And warriors slap their fighting pants
+ To the tune _Heil dir im Siegeskranz_.
+
+ Life, in a word, recalls the phase
+ Of the glorious Hohenzollern days.
+ What if a War's meanwhile occurred
+ And talk of a humbling Peace been heard?
+ Treaties are meant to be torn in two
+ And wars are made to be fought anew.
+ _Hoch_! for the _Tag_, by land and main,
+ When the Monarchy comes to its own again.
+
+ Surely tho wind of it, faint but sweet,
+ The Old Man sniffed in his Dutch retreat;
+ Surely it gave his pulse a jog
+ As he went for his thirteen thousandth log,
+ Possibly causing the axe to jam
+ When he thought of his derelict Potsdam,
+ Of his orb mislaid and his head's deflation,
+ And visions arose of a Restoration.
+ (If not for himself, it might be done
+ For LITTLE WILLIE or WILLIE'S son).
+
+ Alas for the chances of child or sire!
+ The _coup_ went phut, for the KAPP missed fire.
+
+O.S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A FLAT TO LET.
+
+It was twelve o'clock (noon) and I was sitting over the fire in our
+squalid lodgings reading the attractive advertisements of country
+mansions in a weekly journal. I had just decided on a delightful Tudor
+manor-house with every modern convenience, a nice little park and
+excellent fishing and shooting, when Betty burst upon me like a
+whirlwind.
+
+Her face was flushed and a fierce light shone in her usually mild
+blue eyes. She looked like a Maenad or the incarnation of Victory at a
+bargain sale.
+
+"Come on," she gasped, seizing me by the arm. "Hurry."
+
+"Good heavens! Is the house on fire? My child! Let me save my child."
+
+"Oh, do come on," cried Betty; "there's not a moment to be lost."
+
+"But how can I come on in slippers?" I demanded. "If I may not save
+the young Henry Augustus, at any rate let me put on my boots."
+
+Betty's only reply was to drag me from the room, hustle me through the
+hall, where I dexterously caught my hat from the stand in passing, and
+thrust me into the street.
+
+"I've got a flat," she panted. "That is, I've got it if we're quick
+enough. Hi, taxi!"
+
+"But, my dear," I remonstrated as the taxi-driver, cowed by the look
+in her eye, drew up to the kerb, "if we take a taxi we shan't have
+anything left to pay for the flat."
+
+"Victory Mansions, Trebarwith Road. Drive fast!" shouted Betty as she
+pushed me into the cab.
+
+"Now you've done it," I said bitterly. "Do you know I've only five
+pounds ten on me at the moment? We shall lose the flat while we're
+quarrelling with the driver."
+
+"Oh, dear," cried Betty, "can't you see that this is serious? It was a
+wonderful piece of luck. I was passing the mansions and I happened to
+look up just as someone was sticking up a notice, 'Flat to Let,' in
+one of the windows. There was a beast of a man on the other side of
+the street and he simply leapt across the road. I slipped, or I should
+have beaten him. As it was he got to the door a yard ahead of me. We
+looked over the flat together, but of course he was first, and he
+said he was sure it would suit him, only he must ask his wife. It was
+awful! I felt as if I must kill him."
+
+"So you followed him out and pushed him down the lift-shaft? My dear
+brave girl!"
+
+"No, but I heard him say he could be back in half-an-hour. I knew I
+could do it in twenty-five minutes. Look!" Betty crushed my hand as in
+a vice. "There he is."
+
+As we took a corner on two wheels I looked out and saw a man running.
+"Taxi!" he shouted in the hoarse voice of despair. Our driver sat like
+a graven image and we swept on in triumph.
+
+"Oh!" cried Betty suddenly, "suppose that, after all, somebody
+else----" She choked on a sob.
+
+"Courage, dear heart," I said. "All is not yet lost."
+
+A moment later we had reached Victory Mansions and made a dash for the
+flat.
+
+"Are we in time?" asked Betty as the door was opened.
+
+"I think so, Ma'am," said the smiling maid and ushered us into the
+presence of the out-going tenant. A tour of the rooms at express speed
+showed the flat to be a desirable one enough. There were three years
+to run and the rent was not extortionate--for the times.
+
+"I'll sign the agreement now," said I.
+
+"Half-a-minute," said the out-going tenant as he produced the
+documents; "I'll get a pen and ink."
+
+The whirr of an electric bell resounded through the flat.
+
+"Quick!" panted Betty. "Your fountain pen." I produced it and wrote my
+name with a hand trembling with eagerness.
+
+"A gentleman about the flat, Sir," said the maid, and, haggard, pale
+and exhausted, our defeated rival staggered into the room.
+
+He looked at us with a dumb agony in his eyes, and neither of us two
+men had the courage to deal the fatal blow. It was Betty who spoke.
+
+"I'm sorry, but we've just taken this flat," she said sweetly, and
+added with true feminine cruelty, "I saw it first, you know."
+
+The stranger lost control and crashed badly on the hearth-rug.
+
+"Poor man," said Betty to the late tenant. "Be kind to him for our
+sakes." Then she led the way to our cab.
+
+"Hotel Splendid!" I said magnificently to the driver.
+
+"Wot," he growled, "not in them slippers?"
+
+"True," I said, with what dignity I could muster, and gave him the
+address of our lodgings.
+
+"None the less," I said to Betty, "you shall lunch among the
+profiteers. This is a great day, and it is yours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE INTER-UNIVERSITY SPORTS.
+
+ Great interest is being taken in the plucky attempt of Cambridge
+ to beat America, Africa and Europe (with Oxford).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: WHAT'S IN A NAME?
+
+MATE. "WHILE WE _ARE_ DOIN' HER UP, WHAT ABOUT GIVIN' HER A NEW NAME?
+HOW WOULD 'FUSION' DO?"
+
+CAPTAIN. "'FUSION' OR 'CONFUSION'--IT'S ALL ONE TO ME SO LONG AS I'M
+SKIPPER."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _First Juvenile Spectator (as the Oxford crew go out
+to practice)_. "THERE Y'ARE, 'ERR--WOT DID I TELL YER? THEY '_AVE_ GOT
+ONLY ONE OAR EACH!"
+
+_Second ditto_. "YOU WAIT TILL THE DAY OF THE RACE!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LAST OF THE WATCH DOGS.
+
+MY DEAR CHARLES,--In all the stirring history of the War I don't know
+which has been the most moving sight: the War Office trying to get me
+to be a soldier, or the War Oflice trying to get me to stop being a
+soldier.
+
+Before the late Summer of 1914, England had evinced no burning
+interest in its Henry. It had, in fact, left me to make my own way,
+contenting itself with cautioning me if I didn't stick to the right
+side of the road, or to fining me if I exceeded the speed limit. In
+August of that memorable year it got, you will remember, mixed up
+in rather a nasty bother. Searching for friends to get it out, it
+bethought itself of Henry, along with 499,999 others whose names for
+the moment I do not recall. Between us (with subsequent assistance) we
+set things to rights, and nothing remained for Old England save to rid
+itself gracefully of what remained of its few millions of new-found
+friends. There was, however, no shaking off its bosom pal, Henry. I
+am one of those loyal characters whose affection, once gained, nothing
+can undo. No use saying to me: "Well, old man, it's getting late now;
+you must come and see us again some other day." I am one of the sort
+who answer: "Don't you worry yourself about that. I'm going to stay
+and go on seeing you now."
+
+In the early days of demobilisation there was, I think, a certain
+novelty and attraction about my attitude to the problem. In contrast
+to the impatient hordes crowding the entrance of the War Office,
+ringing the front-door bell violently, tapping on the window-panes
+and generally disturbing that serene atmosphere of peace which was the
+great feature of the War in Whitehall, it was refreshing to think
+of Henry, plugging quietly away elsewhere at his military duties,
+undeterred by armistices, peaces and things of that kind. I fancy I
+was well thought of in those days at the War House.
+
+"Say what you like about him," I can hear A.G.4 remarking to M.S.19
+(decimal 9 recurring) as they met in the corridor on their way to
+lunch, "but I find him a patient, well-behaved young fellow."
+
+"Yes," would be the thoughtful answer, "it seems almost a pity we are
+going to lose him."
+
+Speaking strictly between ourselves, I have never thought much of the
+Military Secretary branch. What made them think they were going to
+lose me as easily as all that?
+
+What I said to myself was: "Henry, my lad, thirteen shillings and
+elevenpence a day is thirteen shillings and elevenpence a day; now
+isn't it? And war isn't war when there is a peace coming on. Why then
+throw up a fat income just for the sake of getting into long trousers?
+You stay where you are till they come and fetch you."
+
+So I just stayed where I was, and I conducted the operation with such
+ability and tact that Whitehall came to forget all about me. My name
+went on appearing, with ever-increasing dignity and beauty, in the
+Army List; but that made no difference. You see, though lots of people
+write the Army List, no one ever reads it; only from time to time
+a man will surreptitiously turn up his own name, just to renew his
+feeling of self-importance, or in an emergency he will look up the
+name of a friend in order to get the right initials after it and not
+risk giving that personal offence which may prevent the loan....
+
+But when I say that I stayed where I was I don't mean to suggest that
+I didn't go on leave in the usual way. Indeed I often came home, in
+full regimentals, too, partly to impress you and partly to travel
+first-class at your expense. Fellow-passengers never thought of
+turning on me and rending me, as being the cause of
+six-shillings-in-the-pound. They would be extremely polite and make
+friendly conversation with me, leading up to the point that they had
+been soldiers themselves once, but had given it up, owing to having
+been told that the War was finished.
+
+I would be just as polite to them, telling them they might count on
+me to return to the discomforts and risks of civil life as soon as I
+could be spared from the front. They had never the intelligence, or
+daring to ask, "The front of what?"
+
+Now the climax has arrived; I am asked if they must throw me out or
+will I go quietly? I fancy I have been caught by one of those
+card-indexes. I suspect some Departmental General of showing off to a
+friend. "This is my IN basket," I can hear him explaining as he shows
+his audience his office; "every letter which comes in goes into the
+IN. That is my OUT basket, and every letter which goes out goes out of
+the OUT.
+
+"And then, Sir, we have the Card Index. A complete record of every
+officer in the Army, permanent or temporary."
+
+"Are there still temporary officers in the Army?" asks the audience,
+not being able to think of anything better to ask, and clearly being
+called upon to ask something.
+
+"Sergeant-Major, turn up 'Officers, army, temporary, the, in,' for
+this gentleman."
+
+And thus the shameful truth comes out. One card only--mine.
+
+Exit audience wondering what manner of intrepid man this Henry might
+be.
+
+Originally the W.O. had had a great idea; they caused my regiment
+softly and silently to vanish away, thinking that I would vanish with
+it. But I had been too sharp for them. Learning that they were bent
+on "disembodying" me, and not liking the sound of the word, I had very
+quietly removed myself from my regiment to the Staff. Thus for a few
+happy months we see the W.O. rendered inert.
+
+My final defeat was due to a chance remark of my own, made to one of
+the fifty-nine officers under whose direct command I served. Upon
+my first arriving on his Staff he had said to me, "Oh, by the way,
+P.S.C., of course?" Quite affable, frank and to the point; "P.S.C., of
+course?"
+
+Not knowing the language, I could not make an equally affable answer.
+I asked him to repeat the question, but to change the code.
+
+"You have Passed Staff College, of course?" he said a little less
+affably.
+
+I then had the misfortune to answer: "Why, of course, if you mean that
+tall building on the right as I came up here from the station?"
+
+He then made up his mind that I was not only wanting in essential
+parts, but was also the sort of person who jested on religious
+subjects. He never forgot the matter; indeed, when applied to (under
+"Secret and Confidential" cover) to suggest a means of getting rid of
+me, he very clearly remembered it. At once every department in the War
+House got busy; the interest of the Secretary of State was enlisted,
+and the War Cabinet decided that for permanent purposes my post
+must necessarily be held by a P.S.C. man. Done in by what was little
+better, when you come to think of it, than a mere postscript.
+
+Please understand that there was no talk of discharging me; no talk
+of demobilising me; no talk even of disembodying me. Without any
+reflection on my conduct and merely upon the grounds that, not being
+P.S.C., I could not be regarded as quite right in the head, they
+intimated their intention of vacating my appointment by the simple
+process of an advertisement in the fashionable columns of _The London
+Gazette_.
+
+"What happens next?" I asked.
+
+"You will return to regimental duty," they said.
+
+"But there isn't any regiment," I pointed out triumphantly, "therefore
+there won't be any duty."
+
+They didn't seem to mind that, and for some time I wondered why. Then
+a thought occurred to me.
+
+"But here, I say, what about my pay?"
+
+"Ah!" said they unhelpfully....
+
+And that, my dear Charles, is why, if you keep your eye on the
+journals of (say) the Summer of 1925, you will read in the Stop-press
+Column an urgent telegram from the W.O.: "On April 1st, 1920, the
+following relinquishes his appointment
+
+(Remaining, however,
+ Yours always), HENRY."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ANOTHER IMPENDING APOLOGY.
+
+ "MOTHERS' UNION.-- ... A helpful discussion followed on 'How
+ to Deal with Unworthy Members.' There were about 50
+ present."--_Parish Magazine_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Old Lady_. "WILL YOU PLEASE PUT ME DOWN AT THE SAME
+PLACE AS YOU DID LAST FRIDAY WEEK?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PRACTICE OF THE CREWS.
+
+(_Ballad after C.S.C._)
+
+ The reporter aired his aquatic lore
+ (_Popply water in Corney Reach_,)
+ A thing he had yearly essayed before;
+ And a rowing jargon obscured his speech.
+
+ The coach he coached with a megaphone
+ (_Crabtree, Craven and Chiswick Eyot_)
+ Till the crew were prone to emit a groan,
+ And the Cox said nothing but "Bow, you're late."
+
+ The Stroke he quickened to thirty-four
+ (_In the first half-minute struck seventeen_)
+ Some clocks returned it a trifle more,
+ Which wasn't so good as it might have been.
+
+ The towpath critic he shook his head
+ (_Thornycroft's, where they began to row_):
+ "Hung over the stretcher" was what he said,
+ And "missed the beginning," and "hands too slow."
+
+ The towpath critic, whoe'er he be
+ (_A tug and some barges blocked the way_),
+ For thirty odd years, it seems to me,
+ Has never found anything else to say.
+
+ The towpath critic's remarks are trite
+ (_Off Ayling's Yard in a stiffish breeze_),
+ Yet I study religiously morn and night
+ Whole columns consisting of words like these.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: MANNERS AND MODES.
+
+THE COMPANY-PROMOTER'S PROBLEM--HOW TO UTILISE THE BOOM IN SPRING.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GENIUS OF MR. BRADSHAW.
+
+(_By our Literary Expert._)
+
+No one will be surprised to hear that the Christian name of Mr.
+BRADSHAW was George. Indeed, it is difficult to think what other name
+a man of his calibre could have had. But many people will be surprised
+to hear that Mr. BRADSHAW is no longer alive. Whatever one thinks
+of his work one is inclined to think of him as a living personality,
+working laboriously at some terminus--probably at the Charing Cross
+Hotel. But it is not so. He died, in fact, in 1853. His first book--or
+rather the first edition of his book[1] was published in 1839; yet,
+unlike the author, it still lives. He is, in fact, the supreme example
+of the posthumous serial writer. I have no information about Mr.
+DEBRETT and Mr. BURKE, but the style and substance of their work are
+relatively so flimsy that one is justified, I think, in neglecting
+them. In any case their public is a limited one. So, of course, is Mr.
+BRADSHAW'S; but it is better than theirs. Mr. DEBRETT'S book we read
+idly in an idle hour; when we read Mr. BRADSHAW'S it is because we
+feel that we simply must; and that perhaps is the surest test of
+genius.
+
+It is no wonder that in some circles Mr. BRADSHAW holds a position
+comparable only to the position of HOMER. I once knew an elderly
+clergyman who knew the whole of Mr. BRADSHAW'S book by heart. He could
+tell you without hesitation the time of any train from anywhere to
+anywhere else. He looked forward each month to the new number, as
+other people look forward to the new numbers of magazines. When it
+came he skimmed eagerly through its pages and noted with a fierce
+excitement that they had taken off the 5.30 from Larne Harbour, or
+that the 7.30 from Galashiels was stopping that month at Shankend. He
+knew all the connections; he knew all the restaurant trains; and, if
+you mentioned the 6.15 to Little Buxton, he could tell you offhand
+whether it was a Saturdays Only or a Saturdays Excepted.
+
+This is the exact truth, and I gathered that he was not unique. It
+seems that there is a Bradshaw cult; there may even be a Bradshaw
+club, where they meet at intervals for Bradshaw dinners, after which
+a paper is read on "Changes I have made, with some Observations on
+Salisbury." I suppose some of them have first editions, and talk about
+them very proudly; and they have hot academic discussions on the best
+way to get from Barnham Junction to Cardiff without going through
+Bristol. Then they drink the toast of "The Master" and go home in
+omnibuses. My friend was a schoolmaster and took a small class of boys
+in Bradshaw; he said they knew as much about it as he did. I call that
+corrupting the young.
+
+But apart from this little band of admirers I am afraid that the book
+does suffer from neglect. Who is there, for example, who has read
+the "Directions" on page 1, where we are actually shown the method
+of reading tentatively suggested by the author himself? The ordinary
+reader, coming across a certain kind of thin line, lightly dismisses
+it as a misprint or a restaurant car on Fridays. If he had read the
+Preface he would know that it meant a SHUNT. He would know that a
+SHUNT means that passengers are enabled to continue their journey by
+changing into the next train. Whether he would know what that means I
+do not know. The best authorities suppose it to be a poetical way of
+saying that you have to change--what is called an euphemism.
+
+No, you must not neglect the Preface; and you must not neglect the
+Appendix on Hotels. As sometimes happens in works of a philanthropic
+character, Mr. BRADSHAW'S Appendix has a human charm that is lacking
+in his treatment of his principal theme, the arrival and departure
+of trains. To the careful student it reveals also a high degree
+of organisation among his collaborators, the hotel-managers. It is
+obvious, for example, that at Bournemouth there must be at least one
+hotel which has the finest situation on the South coast. Indeed
+one would expect to find that there was more than one. But no;
+Bournemouth, exceptionally fortunate in having at once the most select
+hotel on the South coast, the largest and best-appointed hotel on the
+South coast and the largest and most up-to-date hotel on the South
+coast, has positively only one which has the finest position on
+the South coast. Indeed, there is only one of these in the whole of
+England, though there are two which have the finest position on the
+East coast.
+
+How is it, we wonder, that with so much variation on a single theme
+such artistic restraint is achieved? It is clear, I think, that before
+they send in their manuscripts the hotel-managers must meet somewhere
+and agree together the exact terms of their contributions to the book.
+"The George" agrees that for the coming year "The Crown" shall have
+the "finest cuisine in England," provided "The George" may have "the
+most charming situation imaginable," and so on. I should like to be at
+one of those meetings.
+
+This is the only theory which accounts for the curious phrases we
+find so frequently in the text:--"_Acknowledged_ to be the finest";
+"_Admittedly_ in the best position." Who is it that acknowledges or
+admits these things? It must be the other managers at these annual
+meetings. Yes, the restraint of the collaborators is wonderful, and in
+one point only has it broken down. There are no fewer than seventeen
+hotels with an Unrivalled Situation, and two of these are at
+Harrogate. For a small place like the British Isles it seems to me
+that this is too many.
+
+For the rest, what imagery, what exaltation we find in this Appendix!
+Dazed with imagined beauty we pass from one splendid haunt to another.
+One of them has _three_ golf-courses of its own; several are _replete_
+with every comfort (and is not "replete" the perfect epithet?). Here
+is a seductive one "on the sea-edge," and another whose principal
+glory is its sanitary certificate. Another stands on the spot where
+TENNYSON received his inspiration for the _Idylls of the King_, and
+leaves it at that. In such a spot even "cuisine" is negligible.
+
+On the whole, from a literary point of view, the hydros come out
+better than the mere hotels. But of course they have unequalled
+advantages. With such material as Dowsing Radiant Heat, D'Arsonval
+High Frequency and Fango Mud Treatment almost any writer could be
+sensational. What is High Frequency, I wonder? It is clear, at any
+rate, that it would be madness to have a hydro without it.
+
+Well, I have selected my hotel--on purely literary grounds. Or rather
+I have selected two. One is the place where they have the Famous
+Whirlpool Baths. I shall go there at once.
+
+The manager of the other is a great artist; alone among the
+collaborators he understands simplicity. His contribution occupies
+a whole page; but there is practically nothing in it, nothing about
+cuisine or sanitation, or elegance or comfort. Only, in the middle, he
+writes quite simply THE MOST PERFECT HOTEL IN THE WORLD.
+
+A.P.H.
+
+[Footnote 1: "Bradshaw's General Railway and Steam Navigation Guide
+for Great Britain and Ireland."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A ZOOLOGICAL CURIOSITY.
+
+ "The complaint made was that men came to the district and
+ asked inflated prices for shares, far above the market value,
+ and it was argued that the new exchange would tend to obviate
+ this system of sharks feathering their nests."--_Lancashire
+ Paper_.
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: BEHIND THE SCENES IN CINEMA-LAND.
+
+"THAT'S FINE. BUT, AS I HAVEN'T GOT ANY FILMS LEFT, I SUPPOSE THERE'S
+NO USE STAYING HERE."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN INTER-SERVICE MATCH.
+
+(_With the British Army in France_.)
+
+Frederick entered the Mess with a decided sea-roll, hitched his slacks
+and berthed himself on the starboard settee.
+
+"Cheerio, my hearties," said he breezily. "Everybody on the old lugger
+still luffing along all serene?"
+
+"Why so oppressively nautical?" inquired Percival. "You haven't been
+on the leave-boat lately."
+
+"'Tis true, old messmate. I'm under the influence of my new batman,
+one 'Enery 'Enson. After a lifetime in the Marines he's now spending
+his declining days in the Army, and he's terribly infectious. I found
+myself saying, 'Ay, ay, Sir,' when the C.O. spoke to me."
+
+"I think I've noticed your 'Enery," said Percival. "Isn't he about
+ten feet high by six broad, tattooed all over like a circulating art
+gallery, and addicted to chewing quids and swabbing out your hut in
+his bare feet?"
+
+"My cabin, you mean. And says he's going ashore when he takes a trip
+down the village. That's 'Enery."
+
+"Incidentally he's a confirmed bath-lifter," interjected Binnie.
+"Yesterday morning my batman prepared me a tub, and while he was
+fetching me along your hulking pirate boosted out my sponge and towels
+and installed your lily-white self in it. You were so busy wallowing
+in my hot water that you never heard my protests on the door. You
+really must curb his buccaneering instincts, old Tirps."
+
+"I accept no responsibility for his methods," said Frederick
+haughtily; "I merely profit by them. In any case I didn't _take_ your
+hot water; I simply used it. You should live near the bath-house and
+get up promptly when you are called, as I do."
+
+"Well, I don't mind the British Navy ruling the waves," grumbled
+Binnie, "but I object to its extending its sphere of influence over my
+bath-water."
+
+"It jolly well doesn't extend over mine," said Percival with pride.
+"Frederick's 'Enery doesn't get the better of my Elfred. This morning
+a queue, consisting of two perfectly good Loots, a really excellent
+Skipper and a priceless Major were waiting for vacant baths. But was
+Elfred Fry dismayed? To forestall an answer that might possibly be
+wrong I may say that he wasn't. He promptly appropriated a cubicle
+that happened to be unoccupied--"
+
+"Really, my frowsty old Camembert, don't ask us to believe that they
+had _all_ overlooked it," expostulated Frederick.
+
+"Not for worlds would I endeavour to impose on your gentle trusting
+natures. So far from their overlooking it the bath had been the
+subject of earnest scrutiny, and they had all regretfully come to
+the conclusion that it lacked one important attribute of a bath--it
+wouldn't hold water. The plug was missing."
+
+"And by a singular chance the plug happened to be in the possession of
+your Elfred?"
+
+"That is my case, me luds," said Percival simply. "If the silent Navy
+wants to beat my Elfred it's got to rise very early in the morning."
+
+"We shall see," said Frederick darkly. "I'm going to tell this tale to
+the Marines."
+
+That evening the troops had organised a stupendous boxing tournament
+in the Recreation Hut. Binnie by invitation combined the offices
+of referee, M.C. and timekeeper, and Frederick and Percival at the
+ring-side unanimously disagreed with his verdicts.
+
+"Most appalling decision," said Percival in a loud whisper. "The
+referee has obviously been got at."
+
+"Sh!" replied Frederick. "He hasn't been told it's a boxing contest.
+He thinks it's a clog-dancing competition and is giving the points for
+footwork."
+
+Unfortunately the M.C. did not hear. He was speaking himself.
+
+"The next bout should conclude our programme," he said, "but I am
+asked to announce that Private Henson challenges Private Fry to box
+six two-minute rounds, backing himself for five francs against a small
+article of no intrinsic value."
+
+Enthusiastic applause greeted the announcement. A disturbance in the
+rear of the hut indicated that Elfred was heading for cover.
+
+"'E 's twice my size," he wailed as strong hands hauled him back.
+
+"The challenger admits that he holds a slight advantage in weight,"
+continued the M.C., "but considers that is counterbalanced by his
+advanced years."
+
+"This is _your_ fiendish work," hissed Percival to Frederick.
+
+"Not a bit of it, old sportsman," replied Frederick cheerfully. "The
+patent rights are held by 'Enery. I merely mentioned to him that
+Elfred possessed a desirable bath-plug that it might be useful to
+acquire."
+
+Percival left his seat to confer with the shrinking Elfred.
+
+"'E can 'ave the old bath-plug an' welcome, Sir, as far as I'm
+concerned," said the latter.
+
+"Tut, tut!" said Percival. "You must make a fight for it. The honour
+of the Army is at stake."
+
+"I ain't all that set on the honour of the Army," said Elfred. "But
+'im being the challenger, shouldn't I be justified in putting the plug
+in one of my gloves?"
+
+"The rules don't provide for such a contingency. Hurry up now and get
+stripped, and I'll give you twenty francs if you win."
+
+Both combatants were warmly received. 'Enery's decorative tattooing
+was much admired, and Elfred was urgently requested not to spoil
+the pictures. By desire of the referee the stakes were handed to
+him--Frederick producing the five francs for 'Enery--and the battle
+commenced.
+
+It was early evident that the Navy intended shock tactics, while the
+Army favoured a system of elastic defence. A salvo of short-arm jabs
+by 'Enery was answered by long-range sniping on the part of Elfred,
+no direct hits being recorded. Towards the end of the round 'Enery
+attempted to approach under cover of a smoke screen, but action was
+broken off at the sound of the gong.
+
+The second round opened sensationally. Elfred, on the advice of his
+seconds, was "making use of the ring" when he accidentally collided
+with his opponent coming in the reverse direction and gave him a
+violent thump without return. There seemed every prospect of trouble,
+but clever footwork prevented the incident developing into a _fracas_.
+Round two concluded with Elfred leading handsomely by one point to
+nothing.
+
+"Two to one on Elfred," said Percival excitedly.
+
+"Take you--in bath plugs," answered Frederick, carefully entering the
+bet.
+
+'Enery equalised in the third round, Elfred having incautiously
+wandered into the track of a stray upper-cut and bounced off. More
+footwork followed, Elfred winning by about two yards. Both were
+breathing heavily when time was called, and 'Enery was complaining
+about his bronchitis.
+
+Skirmishing tactics in the fourth round resulted in Elfred having
+a narrow escape from being torpedoed beneath the belt, and during
+several subsequent clinches he was requested to stop studying the
+pictures and get on with the business.
+
+The fifth and sixth rounds were marked by the departure of most of the
+spectators, and in the end a draw was the only possible verdict.
+
+"But what about the plug, old scout?" asked Percival, as they wandered
+back to their quarters.
+
+"As referee," answered Binnie, "I gave a draw; as Battalion Boxing
+Board of Control I order the match to be re-fought in six months'
+time, to give the men a chance to get into condition; and meanwhile as
+stakeholder I continue to hold the five francs and the bath-plug."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Profiteer_ (_to M.F.H._). "LOOK 'ERE!--THIS IS THE
+THIRD TIME I'VE BEEN OUT WITH YOUR CROWD, AN' Y' 'AVEN'T CAUGHT A
+FOX. BEST THING _YOU_ CAN DO IS TO GIMME BACK ME 'SUB' AN' SELL YER
+BLOOMIN' DOGS!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[ILLUSTRATION: _BLUSTEROUS PERSON_ (_WHO HAS FORCED A CIGAR ON
+UNWILLING CLUB ACQUAINTANCE_), "THERE MY BOY--YOU DON'T OFTEN SMOKE A
+THING LIKE THAT! THAT'S SOMETHING LIKE A CIGAR, EH?"
+
+_The Victim_. "YES--SOMETHING. WHAT IS IT?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TRUE SONG-STUFF.
+
+ [A writer in an evening paper describes a certain song as
+ being sung, "sometimes with a lump in the throat and a tear in
+ the eye," all over England.]
+
+ If you wish to succeed as a writer
+ Of songs that undoubtedly count,
+ By making the atmosphere brighter,
+ The moral barometer mount,
+ Then be it your aim and endeavour to try
+ For the lump in the throat and the tear in the eye.
+
+ SCRIABINE and STRAVINSKY may flatter
+ The ears of the brainy _elite_,
+ But the musical numbers that matter
+ Express what is simple and sweet;
+ You may easily miss, by aspiring too high,
+ Both the lump in the throat and the tear in the eye.
+
+ Though cynics conspire to repress it,
+ To sentiment, "heavenly link"
+ (As the Bard of Savoy would address it),
+ With joy "I eternally drink;"
+ For it gives us the key, which no science can buy,
+ To the lump in the throat and the tear in the eye.
+
+ But, if you are anti-Victorian
+ And, scorning the coo of the dove,
+ Hold the roar of the primitive Saurian
+ The final expression of love,
+ You may have, if you choose, an alternative shy
+ At a tear in the throat and a lump in the eye.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "For 70 years Regent Street has basked in sunshine, and now
+ it is to be cast into shadow again. It will be like a gloomy
+ canon between dour stone walls."--_Daily Chronicle_.
+
+We have heard of a gloomy Dean, whose habitat answers to the
+description given. Can this be his understudy?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The 'brasses' worn by the modern cart-horse are a direct
+ survival of the amulets which bedecked the horses of the time
+ of Julius Caesar. They are worn on the farthingale as charms
+ against the Evil Eye."--_Daily Paper_.
+
+You should see our Clydesdale in her crinoline.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: AN UNPOPULAR REVIVAL.
+
+FRITZ. "THIS IS NO GOOD TO ME NOW. YOU WANT A SWELLED HEAD FOR THIS
+SORT OF THING."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+_Monday, March 15th_. The great Food-prices debate hardly justified
+its preliminary advertisement. Mr. MCCURDY took sure ground when he
+argued that high prices were mainly due to world-shortage; and,
+though he entered more disputable territory when he declared that the
+Profiteering Act was not primarily intended to punish profiteers,
+Mr. ASQUITH did not seriously attempt to dislodge him. Indeed, the
+EX-PREMIER'S speech was mainly composed of truisms, his only excursion
+into the speculative being an assertion--with which not all economists
+will agree--that inflation of currency is a consequence and not a
+cause of high prices.
+
+An ex-Food Controller, Mr. GEORGE ROBERTS, defended the Government
+against charges of extravagance, and ventured to remind Labour--as
+THOMAS DRUMMOND reminded Irish landlords--that it had duties as well
+as rights.
+
+Early in the evening the PRIME MINISTER, who had sat through many
+speeches in readiness for the threatened attack, folded his notes and
+silently stole away.
+
+On the adjournment General PAGE CROFT accused the Ministry of
+Munitions of unfair treatment to one of its employees. The peroration
+to Mr. KELLAWAY'S spirited defence deserves quotation: "The decision
+taken by the Ministry is a decision that will stand." That's the stuff
+to give 'em.
+
+_Tuesday, March 16th_.--"The LORD CHANCELLOR was so unusually
+apologetic in his exposition of the War Emergency Laws (Continuance)
+Bill that none of the Peers had the heart seriously to oppose him.
+Lord SALISBURY took note of the Government's admission that they
+were anxious to say Good-bye to D.O.R.A. and only complained that the
+farewell ceremony was so long-drawn-out. Lord BUCKMASTER failed to
+understand why D.O.R.A. should have a longer life in Ireland than in
+England, and was so carried away by his own eloquence as to declare
+that all the crimes attributed to the Sinn Feiners had been due
+"to misguided attempts to enforce special legislation against a
+misunderstood and a gallant people." Lord BIRKENHEAD replied that
+there was at least a plausible case for the contention that the boot
+was on the other leg.
+
+[Illustration: "CONTROLLERS" CONTROLLED.
+
+MR CLYNES. MR. MCCURDY. MR. G. ROBERTS.]
+
+It is unusual to find Members of the House of Commons objecting to
+their speeches being reported, but apparently some of them do--when
+the reporters are police constables. The HOME SECRETARY thought it
+quite possible that if Members attended certain meetings the official
+stenographers might think it worth while to take down their utterances
+but I gathered that he was not prepared to give any guarantee on the
+subject, and that Colonel WEDGWOOD and Lieut.-Commander KENWORTHY must
+not count too confidently on having a further road to fame opened to
+them.
+
+[Illustration: THE CORNUCOPIA, OR HORNE OF PLENTY. SIR ROBERT HORNE.]
+
+Mr. BONAR LAW read a telegram from Lord KILMARNOCK regarding the
+situation in Berlin. As it was already a day old, was admittedly based
+on a _communique_ from _Wolff's Bureau_, "censored" by Mr. TREBITSCH
+LINCOLN (late Liberal Member for Darlington), and had in the meantime
+been officially contradicted by the old Government, it did not add
+much to our knowledge.
+
+Time was when it was usual to move to reduce a Vote by a hundred
+pounds if you wanted to defeat the Government. But such paltry figures
+are no good in these spacious days. Sir DONALD MACLEANS'S proposed
+reduction in the Vote on Account for the Civil Services was the
+much more mouth-filling morsel of one hundred million pounds. Mr.
+CHAMBERLAIN considered it very handsome of the Opposition, on the
+eve, he understood, of coming into office, thus to cut off its own
+supplies. Nevertheless he declined to accept the generous offer. Our
+finances would be all right if the House would back the Government by
+practising economy as well as preaching it. As it was, he thought the
+worst was over, for--strange and agreeable phenomenon--the floating
+debt was sinking.
+
+After this it was, perhaps, not very complimentary'of Mr. J.W. WILSON
+to urge the Government to put forth their best speakers. The PRIME
+MINISTER was still coy, but Sir ROBERT HORNE, in virtue of his new
+office as President of the Board of Trade, stepped nimbly into the
+breach, and made a speech so cheerful both in substance and delivery
+as to justify the hope that in him the Government have found the HORNE
+of Plenty.
+
+_Wednesday, March 17th_.--Seventeen years ago Lord BALFOUR OF
+BURLEIGH, as a hard-shell Free Trader, sacrificed office sooner than
+bow the knee to the new gods of Birmingham. This afternoon he brought
+in a Bill (to safeguard "key industries" and counteract "dumping")
+which would have gladdened the heart of Mr. JOSEPH CHAMBERLAIN. Some
+of the other Free Trade Peers were still unrepentant. Lord BEAUCHAMP,
+for example, declaring that shipping was our real "quay-industry" and
+needed no protection, announced his intention of moving the rejection
+of the Bill; and Lord CREWE, although one of the authors of the Paris
+resolutions, on which the measure was ostensibly based, thought that
+it went far beyond present necessities. The only dumps with which
+Germany was likely to be associated for some time to come were
+doleful, not aggressive.
+
+The Report of the Supplementary Estimates furnished the Commons with
+abundant points for criticism. In protesting against an increase in
+the remuneration of the Law Officers, Mr. HOGGE revealed a hitherto
+unsuspected admiration for the PRIME MINISTER, whose services, he
+considered, were most inadequately rewarded with five thousand pounds
+a year and no pension. If anyone deserved an increase of salary it was
+he.
+
+Mr. TYSON-WILSON had the temerity to complain that the Government were
+not finding work for all the disabled ex-Service men whom they trained
+in the technical schools, and laid himself open to a damaging "_tu
+quoque_" from Sir ROBERT HORNE, who pointed out that this lack of
+employment was largely due to the trade unions, which refused to admit
+these men as "improvers."
+
+In introducing the Naval Estimates for eighty odd millions Mr. LONG
+was almost apologetic for not having made them larger. The _personnel_
+has been drastically reduced, and parents are actually being offered a
+premium of three hundred pounds to remove their sons from Osborne. On
+the other hand promotion from the lower deck was to be encouraged, and
+in future every youngster entering the Navy would metaphorically carry
+a broad-pennant in his ditty-box.
+
+_Thursday, March 18th_.--A proposal to erect a military monument on
+a hill near Jerusalem was adversely criticised by Lord TREOWEN. Lord
+SOUTHBOROUGH, as a recent visitor to the Holy City, thought that the
+Government would be better advised to demolish some of the recent
+buildings, including the ex-Kaiser's ridiculous clock-tower, which had
+not even the negative merit of telling the time.
+
+In consequence of his rather exhausting seance with the Liberal
+Party the PRIME MINISTER was looking a little jaded. But he perked
+up wonderfully when Mr. WILL THORNE, _a propos_ of a story that
+the Russian Soviet Government had introduced martial law into the
+workshops, asked whether he did not think that all able-bodied people
+ought to be compelled to work. There was the old twinkle in his eyes
+as he replied that it would be very interesting to know if that was
+the view of the trade unions. From recent information I gather that
+the bricklayers, at any rate, would not subscribe to it.
+
+Upon the further consideration of the Navy Estimates General SEELY
+urged the re-establishment of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Mr.
+LONG said the Admiralty were most anxious for it. Mr. ASQUITH also
+approved, but from his ten years' experience as its President entered
+a _caveat_ against expecting the Committee to take upon itself
+executive functions. "Had it done so," he observed, "there would have
+been collisions, cross-purposes, waste of application, and in many
+cases something approaching to administrative confusion." Which
+things of course never occurred under his _regime_ of--shall I
+say?--expectant watchfulness.
+
+The rest of the debate was chiefly remarkable for Lady ASTOR'S bold
+declaration, "The sea belongs to England, and it could not be in
+better hands." Coming from a country-woman of Mr. DANIELS it was
+doubly exhilarating.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Captain_. "'ERE LET'S PACK UP NOW; IT'S GETTING LATE.
+BESIDES, THE KID WANTS HIS SHIRT BACK."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "DIRECT ACTION" AT PUTNEY.
+
+ "When the Light Blues went out a second time R.C. Barrett, of
+ the winning trial eight crew, was at strike,--_Daily Paper_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NEMESIS.
+
+ Kindly the dentist was, for he
+ Had obviously sought
+ To keep his waiting victims free
+ From apprehensive thought,
+ Providing for those souls in fear
+ The Comic Press of yesteryear.
+
+ I read those jests of days agone,
+ Those jibes at folly flown,
+ And wondered should I light upon
+ Some trifle of my own,
+ A par well pointed in its time
+ Or fragment of reputed rhyme.
+
+ Could I retrieve some sparkling fytte
+ Bedecked with _jeux de mots_,
+ I fancied that the sight of it
+ Might soothe my present woe,
+ Reminding me how once I had
+ Been quite a jocund kind of lad.
+
+ Lo, what a foolish hope was this!
+ I realised too soon
+ The special form of Nemesis
+ That waits on the buffoon:
+ _The joke I found concerned the gloom
+ Inside a dentist's waiting-room_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "HE HADN'T BEEN DEAD A WEEK WHEN THEY STARTED
+QUARRELLING OVER HIS ESTATE."
+
+"DID HE LEAVE MUCH?" "NO--ONLY THREE GALLONS."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LATEST PARTY.
+
+(_Being the Diary of a well-intentioned Voter_.)
+
+_Monday_. Important article in my morning paper on the serious
+political outlook. Recommends the formation of a new party to carry
+out progressive reforms and combat the forces of Revolution and
+Anarchy. Sounds excellent. The new party is to be called the People's
+Party. I decide to join it.
+
+_Tuesday_.--By a fortunate mistake my newsagent placed wrong paper on
+my step to-day. Find I was being misled by the sheet I usually take.
+A new party to carry out progressive reforms and combat the forces
+of Revolution and Anarchy has already been formed. It is called the
+National Party. I decide to join it.
+
+_Wednesday_.--Attended public meeting advertised as being in support
+of the new party. Expected to hear all about the programme of the
+National Party. Instead was urged to join the Modern Party, to carry
+out progressive reforms and combat the forces of Revolution and
+Anarchy. Signed card before leaving the hall pledging my support.
+
+_Thursday_.--Dined with Brooks, who takes very grave view of the state
+of the country. Said what we really want is a new party. Went on
+to outline some urgent progressive reforms and mentioned one or two
+necessary steps for combating the forces of Revolution and Anarchy.
+Suggested that he and I should try to start a local branch of the
+Britannic Party. Seemed so enthusiastic that I hadn't the heart to
+refuse him.
+
+_Friday_.--Johnson called at the office during my busiest hour. Wanted
+to enrol me as a member of a new party, to be known as the Efficiency
+Party. No time to go into it properly, so agreed, to get rid of him.
+Anyhow, the object's a good one. It was something about progressive
+reforms and combating the forces of Revolution and Anarchy.
+
+_Saturday_.--Heard at the Club that if the Coalition is not better
+supported in their attempts to carry out progressive reforms and
+combat the forces of Revolution and Anarchy, they will form themselves
+into a new party and go to the country. Locally we are to have, in
+addition to the retiring Coalitionist, a Free Liberal candidate, a
+Labour Party candidate, a couple of Independent candidates, a People's
+Party candidate, a National Party candidate, a Modern Party candidate,
+a Britannic Party candidate, and an Efficiency Party candidate. Afraid
+this would make my position extremely complicated. Decide to give
+undivided support to the Coalition in the hope of averting a General
+Election.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AT THE PLAY.
+
+"THE TRUTH ABOUT THE RUSSIAN DANCERS."
+
+With that uncanny tuition of his Sir JAMES BARRIE has, of course, hit
+on the precise truth. Russian dancers are not born but made--by the
+_Maestro_, which I take it is (broadly speaking) Italian for Producer
+and Presenter.
+
+When _Karissima_ goes on a visit to the stately home of the _Veres_
+the peace of that ancient haunt of the conventionally correct is
+queerly broken. Young _Lord Vere_ loses his heart. However, that might
+just as easily or more easily have happened if the Gaiety had been
+invited. But a dreadful change comes to _Uncle Bill_--he buys his
+clothes ready-made (at _La boutique fantasque_, for a guess, or
+possibly Mr. MALLABY-DEELEY'S), grows dundrearies and goes hopelessly
+off his game at golf.
+
+_Karissima_, poor dear, can't walk or talk or putt, for that matter,
+except with her toes. _Bill_ calls this last cheating, but young
+_Vere_ thinks it simply adorable--as do we all. _Lady Vere_, his
+mother, can't get used to being kissed by _Karissima_, who _will_
+stand upon her lightly with one foot, oddly waving the other
+meanwhile in the air. Besides it takes too long and _is_ rather too
+demonstrative. And couldn't _Karissima_ dear just try to walk with
+her soles really flat on the ground in the solid English county way?
+Certainly. _Karissima_ will try, to please Madame, and with painful
+effort achieves a half-dozen clumsy steps till unconquerable habit and
+Mr. ARNOLD BAX'S allusively witty music lift her on tiptoe again. And
+really she is such a darling that the once reluctant dowager finally
+consents to the marriage; wedding bells forthwith (within); a
+white-haired clergyman, surprised at nothing, as becomes the very
+best type of padre, appears; follow _corps de ballet_ bridesmaids; and
+_Bill_ gives her away.
+
+_Karissima_, says _Vere_ to _Maestro_ later in the evening, is
+depressed. Because she hasn't a child. They both tremendously want a
+child. _Maestro_, silently showing his watch-dial, would seem to wish
+to suggest that they were unreasonably impatient. _Karissima_ also
+pleads. Well, he will see what he can do. But there's an awful
+penalty. For a new Russian dancer cannot be made unless another
+surrenders life. Anyway he fetches his black bag. And _Karissima_
+dances down the main staircase with her babe, who grows apace and is
+shortly seen prancing in the garden (on his toes--"Thank Heaven!" says
+the _Maestro_).
+
+And _Karissima_ dies and is brought in on her bier, and dances (she
+_would_!) her own funeral service. _Maestro's_ heart is touched; he
+lies down in her stead, and she, dancing on a carpet of thistle-down
+shot with stars (I think), and her lord (I am sure), perpetually
+exclaiming, "How perfectly topping!"--both achieve an enviable
+immortality.
+
+Madame KARSAVINA is exquisite; she is well supported by Mr. C.M.
+LOWNE (_Hon. Bill_), Mr. HERMAN DE LANGE (_Maestro_), Miss G.
+STERROLL(_Dowager_), and Mr. BASIL FOSTER (_Lord Vere_). And I
+thought I detected Mr. DU MAURIER'S appreciation of the bizarre in his
+production. But the triumph is the triumph of the whimsical author. I
+don't think he has ever done anything better; more ambitious things,
+yes, but nothing so free from flaw.
+
+Isn't it more than possible that just three-score years ago, on a May
+day (see _Who's Who_), some Maestro of Fantasy slipped into a little
+house in Kirriemuir, N.B., with a black bag? Wouldn't that explain the
+otherwise inexplicable, the unwearying resourcefulness, the unabashed
+playfulness of this impenitent youth?
+
+T.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DRAM.BAC.
+
+A suggestion has been put forward, with the support of the British
+Drama League and others, for the establishment at our universities of
+a "Faculty of the Theatre and Dramatic Degree." Heartily applauding
+the proposal, we append a typical examination paper for the final
+school:--
+
+(1) Sketch briefly the progress of amateur acting in this country,
+from the impersonation of a Danish minstrel by ALFRED THE GREAT, to
+the Victory Varieties Matinee arranged by Lady Eve Tatlery.
+
+(2) Arrange, in order of probability, the first fifty authors of
+SHAKSPEARE.
+
+(3) "The Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing-fields of Eton."
+Estimate the rival claims of the Windsor Strollers.
+
+(4) Indicate your make-up for ROMULUS, HENRY THE EIGHTH, ABRAHAM
+LINCOLN.
+
+(5) What is a point, and how made? A "straight" line lies evenly
+between any good points; give instances.
+
+(6) Under what dramatic conditions can a part be greater than the
+whole? Cite the authority of any two actor-managers for this theory.
+
+(7) Explain, with diagrams, (a) The Eternal Triangle; (b) Squaring the
+Upper Circle.
+
+(8) Illustrate the axiom that the length of a run varies with the
+breadth of the dialogue.
+
+(9) What proportion of the music-hall comedians of Great Britain is
+supplied by (a) Lancashire; (b) Scotland?
+
+(10) Which European drama requires most doors for its honeymoon
+farces?
+
+(11) "What Manchester thinks to-day England will think next
+Sunday evening." Analyse this statement in its bearing upon the
+play-producing societies.
+
+(12) "Let who will make a nation's laws so that I make its songs."
+Discuss the ethical and sociological significance of this with regard
+to (a) "Where do flies go in the winter-time?" (b) "I _do_ like-an egg
+with my tea."
+
+In the _viva-voce_ portion of the examination, candidates for Honours
+will be required to satisfy the examiners (to the point of actual
+tears) by their recital of selected passages from prepared books.
+They may offer any two of the following: "Buckingham's Farewell;" "The
+Signalman's Daughter;" "The Death of Little Nell" (_with voices_).
+
+For candidates not seeking Honours a passable imitation of Mr. GEORGE
+ROBEY will entitle to one group.
+
+A.E.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO VIEWS.
+
+ There was a high priest of illusion
+ Who rose by his leader's extrusion;
+ By way of amends
+ He invites his old friends
+ To extinguish their prospects by Fusion.
+
+ There was a great foe of delusion,
+ Who came to the honest conclusion
+ That Socialist Labour
+ Plays beggar-my-neighbour
+ And sought to defeat it by Fusion.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ A LEAP-YEAR RECORD.
+
+ "CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY SPORTS.--H.M. Abrahams winning the
+ long jump with a distance of 22yds. to his credit."--_Picture
+ Paper_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "THE PREMIER AND HIS FUTURE.
+
+ WHITHER GOETH THOU?"--_Headings in Daily Paper_.
+
+Answer adjudged correct: "I knowest not."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ 'Wanted, a Horse for its keep. Excellent cuisine."--_The Times
+ of Ceylon_.
+
+_A la_ cart, we presume.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A roof garden for cats is included in the scheme for
+ the extension of the premises of Our Dumb Friends'
+ League."--_Evening Paper_.
+
+We have heard the nocturnal cat on the tiles called many names, but
+never a "dumb friend."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The Police announce that dogs without dollars found wandering
+ after 10 p.m. are liable to be destroyed."--_Hong Kong Paper_.
+
+We understand, however, that in China dogs are almost invariably
+provided with taels.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: TRIALS OF THE FISH-TRADE.
+
+"CLOTHES, MY DEAR! DON'T MENTION CLOTHES. YOU OUGHT TO BE IN THE FISH
+LINE, WHY, I RUNS THROUGH A SET O' FURS IN ABOUT A MONTH!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A NOTE TO NATURE,
+
+_accounting for my previous silence in an unusually temperate March
+and also presenting an ultimatum._
+
+ Ye great brown hares, grown madder through the Spring!
+ Ye birds that utilise your tiny throttles
+ To make the archways of the forest ring
+ Or go about your easy house-hunting!
+ Ye toads! ye axolotls!
+
+ Ye happy blighters all, that squeal and squat
+ And fly and browse where'er the mood entices,
+ Noting in every hedge or woodland grot
+ The swelling surge of sap, but noting not
+ The rise in current prices!
+
+ But chiefly you, ye birds, whose jocund note
+ (Linnets and larks and jays and red-billed ousels)
+ Oft in those happier springtides now remote
+ Caused me to catch the lyre and clear my throat
+ After some coy refusals!
+
+ Ay, and would cause me now--I have such bliss
+ Seeing the star-set vale, the pearls, the agates
+ Sown on the wintry boughs by Flora's kiss--
+ Only the trouble in my case is this,
+ I do not feed on maggots.
+
+ Could I but share your diet cheap and rude,
+ Your simple ways in trees and copses lurking;
+ But no, I need a pipe and lots of food,
+ A comfortable chair on which to brood--
+ Silence! the bard is working.
+
+ Could I but know that freedom from all care
+ That comes, I say, from gratis sets of suitings
+ And homes that need not premium nor repair
+ Except with sticks and mud and moss and hair,
+ My! there would be some flutings.
+
+ So and so only would the ivory rod
+ Stir the wild strings once more to exaltation;
+ So and so only the impetuous god
+ Pound in my bosom and produce that odd
+ Tum-tiddly-um sensation.
+
+ And often as I heard the throstles vamp,
+ Pouring their liquid notes like golden syrup,
+ Out would I go and round the garden tramp,
+ Wearing goloshes if the day were damp,
+ And imitate their chirrup.
+
+ Or, bowling peacefully upon my bike,
+ Well breakfasted, by no distractions flustered,
+ Pause near a leafy copse or brambled dyke,
+ And answer song for song the black-backed shrike,
+ The curlew and the bustard.
+
+ But now--ah, why prolong the dreadful strain?--
+ Limply my hand the unstrung harp relaxes;
+ The dear old days will not come back again
+ Whatever Mr. AUSTEN CHAMBERLAIN
+ Does with the nation's taxes.
+
+ Lambs, buds, leap up; the lark to heaven climbs;
+ Bread does the same; the price of baccy's brutal;
+ And save (I do not note it in _The Times_)
+ They make exemptions for evolving rhymes,
+ Dashed if I mean to tootle!
+
+EVOE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Sportsman_ (_just emerged from the brook_). "FOUR IN,
+DID YOU SAY? DASH IT ALL--JUST MY LUCK. GOT MY GLASSES ALL MUD AND
+CAN'T SEE THER FUN."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE METHODS OF GENIUS.
+
+(_BY OUR SPECIAL LITERARY PARASITE_.)
+
+The public already know something of the painful difficulties under
+which novelists labour at the present moment owing to the paper
+shortage and the enhanced cost of book production. But "the economic
+consequences of the Peace" by no means exhaust the handicaps of the
+conscientious and sensitive novelist. We are glad therefore to note
+the efforts of _The Daily Graphic_ to enlist the sympathy of the
+public on behalf of this sorely tried and meritorious class. Our
+contemporary tells us, for example, of one momentous writer who was
+reduced to dictating blindfold "because the facial peculiarities of
+first one and then another amanuensis" upset her equanimity. Then
+there is the tragic story of Mr. R.L. HITCHENS, who, being engaged
+to write an article against time, sent out for a stenographer, who on
+arrival proved to be a man with a large black beard of so sinister
+an aspect that Mr. HICHINS was forced to dismiss him and write the
+article in his own hand. Yet Mr. HICHENSis not easily put off, for we
+learn that he finds he works best in big hotels and not, as we might
+have guessed, in the sequestered tranquillity of a minaret.
+
+To some writers solitude is the true school of genius. Yet Sir
+LEWIS MORRIS found some of his happiest thoughts come to him while
+travelling in the underground, while Mr. W.B. YEATS records a similar
+experience as the result of a journey on the top of a tram-car. Your
+advanced modernists, with MARINETTI at their head, find their best
+stimulus to creative effort in the clang and clatter of machinery.
+_per contra_, to return to _The Daily Graphic_, Mrs. C.N. WILLIAMSON
+must have pretty things to look at "in business hours." But the
+happiest of all our authors is Madame ALBANESI, who "finds her
+brain-spur in a blank sheet of paper, and not the ghost of an idea
+what she is going to write about." Less fortunate writers labour
+assiduously only to leave the minds of their readers a blank, without
+the ghost of an idea of what the author has been writing about.
+
+It is a pity that Mr. W.L. GEORGE, in his interesting survey of modern
+writers of fiction in the _English Review_, has told us nothing
+about the methods of the "Neo-Victorians" and "Semi-Victorians,"
+the "Edwardians" and "belated Edwardians," and the "Georgians" and
+"Neo-Georgians." With all these classes he deals faithfully. But his
+criticism is purely literary. He fails to tell us the things that
+every reader wants to know. It is all very well to say that the
+neo-Georgians "paint in ink," but he ought to have mentioned whether
+it is green or red. Does Miss DOROTHY RICHARDSON dictate to the sound
+of trumpets, garbed in crimson trouserloons? Does Mr. ARNOLD BENNETT
+cantillate his "copy" into the horn of a graphophone or use a
+motor-stylus? Does Mr. SIEGRIED SASSOON beat his breast with one hand
+while he plays the loud bassoon with the other? Does Mr. ALEC WAUGH
+use sermon-paper or foolscap? Does Mr. ALDOUS HUXLEY keep a tame
+gorilla? These are the really illuminating details that we hunger for.
+Without them it is impossible to appreciate the artistry of our young
+Masters. Mr. W.L. GEORGE has given us a glimpse of the working of
+their brains; let him now reveal to us the secrets of their workshops.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "THERE'S THAT DASHED BULL OF YOURS IN MY FIELD AGAIN!
+ONE OF THSES DAYS I'LL--I'LL--WRING ITS CONFOUNDED NECK!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+(_By Mr. Punch's Staff of Learned Clerks._)
+
+_After the Day: Germany Unconquered and Unrepentant_ (JENKINS) is
+the kind of thesis-book which it is wise to read in a deliberately
+incredulous mood. Mr. HAYDEN TALBOT is an American newspaper man of
+immense resourcefulness but, I should judge, of a not conspicuously
+judicial habit of mind. That, perhaps, is hardly a newspaper man's
+business. He is after copy, and certainly there's good enough copy in
+his interviews with Count BERNSTORFF and Dr. RATHENAU, and one
+must admire his feat of getting out of these and seven other German
+publicists, including MAXIMILIAN HARDEN, the draft of a manifesto to
+the people of America, composed in the hope, vain as it happened,
+that the KAISER would break his long silence and sign it. It is the
+author's theory that it is the inner camarilla, working for a speedy
+restoration of the monarchy, that is responsible for the certainly
+uncharacteristic reticence of Amerongen. Mr. TALBOT also interviewed
+HINDENBERG, whom he found a "broken-down, inconsequential, garrulous
+example of senility" LUDENDORFF, who was very stiff and proud and
+rude; and the _fiancee_ of the man who sank the _Lusitania_. His
+general idea of Germany is summed up in the remark of Mr. MANDELBAUM,
+of New York: "All this talk about Fritz being down and out is all
+bunk!" Germany is full of energy and hate; she will soon be a monarchy
+again; will undersell the world; is assiduously preparing for air
+supremacy as the way to _revanche_. I take it that this is not so
+much a book as a _rechauffe_ of newspaper articles, which alone
+will account for its formlessness and frequent changes of plane. Mr.
+TALBOT, confessing to a total ignorance of the German tongue, seems
+quite unconscious that this imposes certain limitations on his
+capacity to make an adequate survey of a difficult problem.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I may confess at once that I finished the first chapter of _The Woman
+of the Picture_ (HODDER AND STOUGHTON) in a mood of slight derision,
+induced by Mr. G.F. TURNER'S allowing one hero to say of the other
+that he had "the interminable limbs" of an aristocrat. To the end of
+the book indeed I was uncertain whether such occasional lapses were
+meant to illumine the character of the supposed speaker or were
+unintentional. But again to quote, this time a phrase in which Mr.
+TURNER clearly shares my own delight, "before we were through with
+the affair" such details had ceased to be of moment. The plain fact is
+that _The Woman of the Picture_ is the most breathless, irresistible
+piece of convincing impossibility you have read for ages. I decline to
+struggle with any transcription of the plot. On the wrapper you
+will observe the woman stepping bodily out of the picture, like the
+ancestors in the whisky advertisement; this, however, is a symbolic
+rather than an actual presentment. But there is plenty without it:
+a rightful heir, mountain castles amid the eternal snows, a villain
+(with sorceries), half-a-dozen attempted murders and the most
+hair-lifting duel imaginable. Soberly considered the whole business is
+a riot of delirium, belonging flagrantly to that realm where all the
+world's a screen, and all the men and women merely movies. But the
+unexpected charm of the book is that with the possible exceptions
+noticed above) it is told with a touch of distinction, even of
+subtlety, that invests its wildest audacities with an atmosphere of
+fantastic truth. In short, if Mr. G.F. TURNER has done nothing else he
+has at least enabled the fastidious to enjoy the thrills of a shocker
+while retaining their self-respect.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the first of the three stories, each about a hundred pages in
+length, which make up _Gold and Iron_ (HEINEMANN), it is hard to
+escape the conviction that Mr. JOSEPH HERGESHEIMER between the lines,
+"So you thought that CONRAD was the only JOSEPH who could throw a
+man and woman together on a mysterious coast in the most strangely
+romantic circumstances, and provide a thoroughly groolly scrap into
+the bargain. Well, here's another little _Victory_ for you." He
+seems definitely to challenge that air of the extraordinary and the
+inevitable combined which Mr. CONRAD so subtly conveys. It is a big
+effort, and I don't feel that the author quite brings it off, yet I
+cannot think of anyone but Mr. CONRAD who would have come nearer to
+doing so, and the fight in the dark in this story is one that even
+after the War will make a reader catch his breath for half-a-dozen
+pages at least. In the second and third stories, which actually deal
+with gold and iron (the first of the three is called "Wild Oranges,"
+though perhaps "Blood Oranges" would have been a better title),
+the writer returns to a happier _metier_, and deals with an America
+remarkably interesting and wholly novel to me, an America where
+foundries and railways are in their infancy and crinolines are worn.
+Saloons, bowie knives and bags of gold-dust are all too familiar to
+us, but who, on this side of the Atlantic at any rate, ever remembers
+the quiet towns with Victorian manners to which the diggers belonged
+and returned? Both "Tubal Cain" and "The Dark Fleece" are excellent
+yarns and wonderful pieces of pictorial reconstruction as well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After reading _The Searchers_ (HODDER AND STOUGHTON), I seriously
+think of myself joining His Britannic Majesty's Secret Service.
+All the fun and firearms, and ever, at the conclusion, a startling
+surprise for your friends and admirers, among whom you stand cool,
+calm and collected. _Anthony Keene-Leslie_ did not deceive me
+when, upon his first introduction as a secret servant, he modestly
+disclaimed the thrills and excitements commonly attributed to his
+trade. I knew that many pages would not be turned before he would
+land us in the middle of some crimson intrigue; mysterious strangers,
+disguises, cryptic and invaluable manuscripts, urgent telegrams,
+codes, Italian hidden hands, Scotland Yard, pseudo-taxicabs, clues
+and things. But let others beware of Mr. JOHN FOSTER, a most ingenious
+manipulator of the old stock-in-trade and possessing a rare sense of
+humour. For the reader to pit his wits against the author's is,
+in this instance, to be completely "had" and to become under the
+necessity (about page 265) of taking off his hat, not only to the
+secret servant but to a mere minion of the "Yard" also. Two minor
+points emerge from a close study of the book. The first is that the
+author is undoubtedly a barrister himself; if I am wrong on this point
+I finally withdraw my threat to join the Service. The second point is
+that he knows his Scotland even as well as he loves it. In the result
+you have two merits, which together amply discount the element of
+cheap sensationalism: one merit is the logical development of the
+story, and the other is its beautiful setting. I don't know whether
+it is due to the Scottish climate or to the legal atmosphere that
+the author omits all reference to the feminine sex or affairs of the
+heart; but anyhow it seemed right and meet that women should be
+left at home when men were engaged upon such violent and dastardly
+business.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From certain internal evidences, mainly orthographical, I am led to
+suppose _The Branding Iron_ (CONSTABLE) to be of Transatlantic origin.
+This, no doubt, explains my unfamiliarity with the name of Miss
+KATHARINE NEWLIN BURT, also certain minor points, notably the fact
+that the story, though by no means badly told, suffers from what I can
+only call a plethora of plot. As I followed the developments of its
+intrigue and tracked the heroine from untutored savage, wife of the
+wild Westerner whose excusable suspicions caused him to brand her as
+private property, to the moment of her triumph as the bejewelled idol
+of theatrical New York, the conviction grew upon me that here was a
+tale surely predestined to be the screen that covers a multitude of
+melodramatics. Presently indeed the suggestion became so insistent
+that I went further and began to wonder whether I was not in fact
+reading a "story-form" of some already triumphant film. Certainly
+the resemblance is almost too pronounced to be fortuitous; from the
+sensational branding scene, through cowboy stunts, to the up-town
+playhouse, where a repentant and wife-seeking hero recognises his mark
+upon the shoulder of the leading lady--and so to reconciliation, slow
+fade-out, and the announcement of Next Week's Pictures. But though it
+is impossible not to suspect Miss BURT of having an eye to what poetic
+journalism calls the Shadow Stage, this is by no means to belittle
+her mastery of the colder medium of print; and I hasten to acknowledge
+that, upon me at least, _The Branding Iron_ has left a distinct though
+possibly fleeting impression of good entertainment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE RELUCTANT PEGASUS.
+
+A YOUNG SPRING POET HAS TROUBLE WITH HIS MOUNT.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ CANE OR BIRCH?
+
+ "House Porter wanted, to live in or out, able to manage
+ beating apparatus.--Apply, Stating wages required, to
+ Headmaster, ----- school."--_Local Paper_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The total cost of the British delegation to the Peace
+ Conference at Paris from December, 1918, to 31st September was
+ L503,368."--_Liverpool Paper_.
+
+But it is only fair to say that in the last month they seem to have
+put in a bit of overtime.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch or the London Charivari, Vol.
+158, March 24, 1920., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH ***
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