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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 152,
+June 27, 1917, by Various, Edited by Owen Seaman
+
+
+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. 152, June 27, 1917
+
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Owen Seaman
+
+Release Date: June 23, 2005 [eBook #16113]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI,
+VOL. 152, JUNE 27, 1917***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Jonathan Ingram, Keith Edkins, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 16113-h.htm or 16113-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/6/1/1/16113/16113-h/16113-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/6/1/1/16113/16113-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI
+
+VOL. 152
+
+JUNE 27TH, 1917
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHARIVARIA.
+
+The favourite reading of the Sultan of TURKEY is said to be criminal
+literature. A gift-book in the shape of a new Life of the KAISER is about
+to be despatched to him.
+
+* * *
+
+KING ALEXANDER of Greece originally proclaimed that he would "carry out his
+father's sacred mandate." But when it was pointed out to him that, if this
+was really his desire, an opportunity of following in his father's
+footsteps would doubtless be granted him, he tried again.
+
+* * *
+
+During the last air raid we are told that the employees of one large firm
+started singing "Dixie Land." We feel, however, that to combat the enemy's
+aircraft much sterner measures must be adopted.
+
+* * *
+
+"The Huns' diet is low," says a correspondent of _The Daily Mail_. But then
+their tastes are low too.
+
+* * *
+
+Writing of the recent Trentino offensive, Mr. HAMILTON FYFE says that
+several Austrian forts captured by the Italians were built of solid ice. It
+is time that London had some defences of this character.
+
+* * *
+
+The arrival of ex-KING TINO at Lugubrioso, on the Swiss-Italian frontier,
+has been duly noted.
+
+* * *
+
+The LORD MAYOR of London has decided in future to warn the City of
+impending air raids. Ringing the dinner-bell at the Mansion House, it is
+thought, is the best way of making City men take to their covers.
+
+* * *
+
+A new epidemic, of which "bodily swellings" are the first symptom, is
+reported by the German papers. And just when the previous epidemic of
+head-swellings was beginning to subside.
+
+* * *
+
+A Marylebone boy, arrested for forgery, told the police that he had made
+two complete L1 notes out of paper bags. Is this the paper-bag cookery of
+which we have heard so much?
+
+* * *
+
+A market gardener told the Enfield Tribunal that a conscientious objector
+whom he had employed was found asleep at his work on two successive days.
+People with highly-strung consciences very rarely enjoy this natural and
+easy slumber.
+
+* * *
+
+The American scientist who claims to have invented a substitute for tobacco
+cannot have followed the movement of the age. We have been able to obtain
+twopenny cigars in this country for years.
+
+* * *
+
+An applicant who said he had six children has been given six months'
+exemption. A member of the Tribunal remarked that the exemption would mean
+one month for each child. This great discovery proved too much for the poor
+fellow, who is said to have collapsed immediately.
+
+* * *
+
+A new ship is being fitted out for Captain AMUNDSEN, who is to proceed
+shortly with an Arctic exploration party. In case he should discover any
+new land, arrangements have been made to hold a flag-day for the
+inhabitants, if any.
+
+* * *
+
+Judging by the latest reports the Stockholm Conference is like the gun that
+they didn't know was loaded.
+
+* * *
+
+Because his wife accused him of not loving her, a farmer of Husavik,
+Manitoba, assaulted her with a pen-knife just to show that he did.
+
+* * *
+
+Special "storm troops"--men picked for their youth, vigour and daring, to
+carry out counter-attacks--are now a feature of the German Armies. Even our
+ordinary British soldiers, who are constantly compelled to take these brave
+fellows prisoners, bear witness to the ferocity of their appearance.
+
+* * *
+
+Taxes on watering-places, it is announced, will be a feature of the new
+French Budget. It is feared that this will bear hardly on breweries and
+dairies.
+
+* * *
+
+We are not permitted to publish the name of the Foreign Office official who
+strolled into a Piccadilly Bar last week and ordered a Clam-Martinic
+cocktail.
+
+* * *
+
+According to a report of the National Physical Laboratory the Tower of
+London is moving towards the Thames. The hot weather is thought to have
+something to do with it.
+
+* * *
+
+The Board of Agriculture advises the killing of all old cocks and hens.
+Lively competition between the railway refreshment rooms and the tyre
+factories should ensure a satisfactory price.
+
+* * *
+
+The High Court at the Hague has ordered a new trial in the case of the
+Editor of the _Telegraaf_, who was sentenced for referring to "a group of
+rascals in the centre of Europe." The rascality of the persons in question
+is now deemed to be proved beyond the shadow of a doubt.
+
+* * *
+
+The announcement that there will be no more Sunday music at the Zoo has
+been received with satisfaction by the more conservative residents, who
+have always complained that the presence of a band tended to reduce the
+place to the level of a mere circus.
+
+* * *
+
+A well-known inn at Effingham having changed its name from the Bluecher to
+the Sir Douglas Haig, it is further suggested that the name of the village
+should be changed to Biffingham.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "AY, POOR OLD BEN'S ROOINED BY THE WAR. ALL 'IS YARNS WOS
+ABOUT _ABOVE-SEA_ PIRATES!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOW TO CURE A WOUND.
+
+"A wounded soldier jumped or fell from a passing S.E.R. Red Cross train
+between Swanley Junction and Bromley to-day. The train was running at about
+twenty miles an hour. When picked up the man was found to be uninjured."--
+_Evening Paper._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TITLE AND HALF-TITLE PAGES.
+
+With a view to economy of paper, the title and half-title pages of the
+Volume which is completed with the present issue are not being delivered
+with copies of _Punch_ as hitherto; they will however be sent free, by
+post, upon receipt of a request.
+
+Those readers who have their Volumes bound at the _Punch_ Office, or by
+other binders in the official binding-cases, will not need to apply for
+copies of the title and half-title pages, as these will be bound in by the
+_Punch_ Office or supplied direct to other binders along with the cases.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ALGY.
+
+Algy, it must be admitted, is no Adonis, but at least there is something in
+his great round pudding-face and his cheery idiotic smile which gives one
+the impression of a warm and optimistic nature.
+
+Algy is humble and not ambitious; but for all that he is doing his bit,
+just as you and I are doing. He never goes on strike, and if he had any
+money, which he never does have, I know he would invest it in War Loan.
+Above all he is not a food-hog; not for him the forbidden potato or the
+millionaire's beer--no! Against all luxuries Algy has resolutely steeled
+his voluminous tummy. He has turned into the strictest of teetotalers, and,
+though a glass of Scotch may bring a wistful look into his eyes, yet he
+remains captain of his soul, unbroken as ST. ANTHONY.
+
+His job is war-work of the steeliest order, such as very few men would care
+to undertake. All for the cause he stands, day after day, with a little
+band of comrades, facing uncomplainingly the most terrible buffetings, so
+that men may learn from him how to strike terror into the heart of the Hun.
+
+Needless to remark, he is beloved by all the Tommies who inflict such pain
+upon the region of his gaudy blue waistcoat; he never seems to care and
+never grouses, but beams down on them undaunted with that quaint old grin
+of his.
+
+'Twas a great and solemn day when we installed him. Conspicuous by
+his horrible suit of reach-me-downs, supported on one side by the
+sergeant-major, on the other by the sergeant, he was led gently but firmly
+out of his billet and initiated into his honourable task.
+
+Algy has but one grievance. He wants badly to sport a few golden stripes on
+his cuff. He is modest and does not push himself forward, but as he has
+several times been severely wounded be thinks it only fair that he should
+receive the coveted distinction. But the authorities will not grant his
+simple request because, they say, he has shed no blood.
+
+He has outlived all his compeers; lesser men may succumb but Algy goes on.
+One day, I suppose, he will meet the common fate; but may that sorry day be
+far ahead. For we could ill spare our Algy--our dear old bayonet dummy!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "INDIAN WAR LOAN.--The amount applied for in Rangoon yesterday was Rs.
+ 00,000, making the progressive total Rs. 00,00,000."--_Rangoon Times._
+
+Nothing to boast about.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BAN ON RACING.
+
+Dear MR. PUNCH,--In this bitter controversy I hope that a few moderate and
+impartial words from one, like myself, who sees clearly both sides of the
+question, may not be out of place. In any case I feel it is incumbent upon
+me to do all I can to avert the dire consequences of the frightful
+catastrophe that has fallen upon us through the mad act of an insensate War
+Cabinet. I can only say that if this is to be our spirit we are indeed
+defeated. Where is our devotion to manly sports, so potent in the moulding
+of our National character? What has become of our immemorial Right to Look
+On? Where is our boasted liberty, deprived as we are now to be of a chance
+to find the winner? What did WELLINGTON say of Waterloo? and MARLBOROUGH of
+Blenheim? and BOTTOMLEY of the Battle of the Somme? By what perversity of
+reasoning are we thus to asphyxiate the best instincts of our race?
+
+We are said to be fighting for all that we hold sacred. Yet there is
+nothing that is held more sacred in every cottage home throughout the land
+than the Preservation of our Bloodstock. Let us not deceive ourselves. It
+is our supremacy in Bloodstock alone that makes possible the governess car,
+the milk van, the brewer's dray, the very plough itself. These are
+fundamental facts.
+
+It has been suggested that, in order to avoid the assembling of frivolous
+crowds in war-time, races might be run in private. But that is quite
+impracticable. Only on the public racecourse can the lofty virtues of our
+British Bloodstock be displayed. The exciting presence of the crowd is
+absolutely essential to tune up its nerve and temper. Already our
+Bloodstock has suffered cruelly from gaps in the Grand Stand.
+
+Then again there are some who actually complain that petrol is consumed in
+large quantities by those attending race meetings. Are we to put new heart
+into our enemies by letting it be known that we are short of petrol?
+
+And finally there are some who so little understand the qualities of the
+Thoroughbred as to suggest that gambling should be stopped in war-time. The
+horse, unlike the Cabinet, is intelligent. Can he be expected to exhibit
+his priceless qualities of speed and stamina if no one puts his money up?
+
+I need say no more. Such flippant legislation is bad enough at any time;
+during the Armageddon period it is little short of treason. One wonders
+when our Government will begin to realise that we are at war.
+
+ I am,
+ Yours helpfully, as usual,
+ STATISTICIAN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE DIARY OF A CO-ORDINATOR.
+
+_June 17th._--Flew in an aeroplane to Los Angeles and correlated the
+industrial functions of the East and West. Returned to the White House for
+dinner, and co-ordinated grape juice with lemonade and Perrier.
+
+_June 18th._--Breakfasted with HEARST and co-ordinated him for half-an-hour
+with the editor of _New York Life_, a task needing the highest diplomatic
+qualities. Flew to Harvard and delivered lecture on Mr. BALFOUR'S Theology
+as correlated with his style in golf. A great reception. Despatched report
+by wireless to London, Paris and Petrograd. Returned to New York in the
+afternoon and co-ordinated UPTON SINCLAIR, Colonel ROOSEVELT, TUMULTY and
+CHARLES DANA GIBSON.
+
+_June 19th._--In the morning dictated articles for the _Novoe Vremya_,
+_Matin_ and _Corriere della Sera_, emphasizing the need of co-operative
+cosmopolitan co-ordination. Flew to Chicago to deliver supplementary
+lecture to that given by ARTHUR BALFOUR on ARISTOTLE. Took for my subject
+"Aerial Trade Routes, as co-ordinated with Terra-firma Routes for
+Motor-lorries." Enthusiastic reception. Co-ordinative cold collation at 9
+P.M. at Philadelphia with GOMPERS, ROCKEFELLER, Mrs. ATHERTON and BILLY
+SUNDAY.
+
+_June 20th._--Dictated article on the New Diplomacy for _The New York
+Journal_. In the afternoon co-ordinated the tenets of Shin-Toism, Christian
+Science and Mormonism. A heavy day.
+
+_June 21st._--Much annoyed by report of CURZON'S extraordinary speech in
+the House of Lords. Called at the White House and the British Embassy to
+put matters right, and sent wireless to CURZON: "Nothing 'succeeds' like
+success."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "'Another medical certificate, Sir; you can't read them,' remarked a
+ solicitor to the chairman at the Devon Appeal Tribunal (Exeter Panel),
+ as he sought to decipher the hand- [Inverted: writing on one of those
+ documents. Previously in the day a certificate had been handed to
+ Lieutenant Stirling with the remark, 'You won't be able to read it.'
+ The] resourceful military representative, however, thought he might
+ succeed, and made the attempt."--_Exeter Express and Echo._
+
+Standing on his head, we suppose.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Extract from a report of a sermon by Father BERNARD VAUGHAN:--
+
+ "They might as well go on to one of the main lines and attempt to stop
+ one of the engines gorging from Euston to Edinburgh."--_Express and
+ Echo_ (_Exeter_).
+
+Perhaps it would be wiser to refer the matter to the FOOD-CONTROLLER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A GOOD RIDDANCE.
+
+(The KING has done a popular act in abolishing the German titles held by
+members of His Majesty's family.) ]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Bluejacket_ (_on torpedo-boat that has only just avoided
+collision with a neutral steamer_). "I KNOW YOU LOVE ME, ALFONSO, BUT
+THERE'S NO BLINKIN' NEED TO TRY AND KISS ME EVERY TIME WE MEET."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JUST SAILORS.
+
+Betty, having made an excellent breakfast, thank you, slipped from her
+chair and sidled round the table to me. Her father's guests are, naturally
+and without exception, Betty's slaves, to do with as she deems best. To her
+they are known, regardless of age, either by their Christian names or as
+"Mr. --er." I had enjoyed the privilege of her acquaintance for five years,
+but was still included in the second category.
+
+Betty has an appealing eye, freckles, and most fascinating red-gold hair,
+and on the morning of which I write, after preparing the attack with the
+first, she gently massaged my face with the second and third, the while
+insinuating into my own a small hand not innocent of marmalade. Betty is
+seven or thereabouts. "Mr. --er," she said, "what shall we be to-day?"
+
+"Let us," I replied hastily, "pretend to be not quite at our best this
+morning, and have a quiet time in the deck-chairs on the lawn." Betty very
+naturally paid no regard whatever to this cowardly suggestion.
+
+"I'm not quite sure," she said, "if we will be pirates or soldiers or just
+sailors. What do you think?"
+
+Pirates sounded rather strenuous for so hot a day. Soldiers, I felt sure,
+involved my becoming a German prisoner and parading the garden paths with
+my arms up, crying "Kamerad!" while Betty, gun in hand, shepherded and
+prodded me from behind. Just sailors, on the other hand, smacked of gentle
+sculling exercise in the dinghy on the lake, so I said, "Let's be just
+sailors."
+
+But a sailor's life, as interpreted by Betty, is no rest cure. On land it
+includes an exaggerated rolling gait--itself somewhat fatiguing--and
+intervals of active participation in that most exacting dance, the
+hornpipe, to one's own whistling accompaniment. At odd moments, also, it
+appears that the best sailors double briskly to such melodies as
+"Tipperary" and "Keep the Home Fires Burning."
+
+It was only when we arrived by the lake-side that Betty observed my
+gumboots; instantly a return to the house in search of Daddy's nautical
+footgear was necessitated. This, though generous in dimensions, was finally
+induced to remain in position on Betty's small feet, her own boots being,
+of course, retained.
+
+The dinghy was launched and, after a little preliminary wading in the
+gum-boots, the crew embarked. Betty's future profession will, I am sure, be
+that of quick-change artist. In less than ten minutes she had risen from
+cabin-boy to skipper, _via_ ordinary seaman, A.B., bo'sun and various
+grades of mate. My rank, which had at the outset been that of admiral, as
+speedily declined, until I was merely the donkey-engine greaser, whose
+duties appeared to include that of helmsman (Betty is not yet an adept with
+two sculls).
+
+Our vessel also changed its character with lightning rapidity. It was in
+turn a ferry-boat--imitation of passengers descending the gangway by
+rhythmical patting of hand on thwart; a hospital ship chased by a
+submarine--cormorant's neck and head naturally mistaken for periscope; a
+destroyer attacking a submarine--said cormorant kindly obliging with quick
+diving act when approached; a food-ship laden with bananas represented by
+rushes culled from the banks; and a smuggler running cargoes of French wine
+contained in an elderly empty bottle discovered in the mud above high-water
+mark. It was breathless work.
+
+The disaster occurred when Betty, against my maturer judgment, insisted
+upon the exploration on foot of a mangrove swamp on the shore of a
+cannibal-infested South Sea island. The immediate cause was a suddenly
+developed attachment on the part of one of Daddy's sea-boots to the mud on
+the lake-side. The twain refused to be parted, and the youthful explorer
+measured her length in the mire.
+
+Generously overlooking my carelessness in not warning her that we were
+traversing a quicksand, Betty, rather shaken, very muddy and with a
+suspicion of tears in her voice, bound me by a blood-curdling nautical oath
+not to breathe a word of the mishap to Mummy, Daddy or Miss Watt, her
+governess. The pledge having been given, Betty, the offending boots
+discarded, fled to her own room by way of the back-door.
+
+It was then twelve o'clock, and in the hour that remained before luncheon I
+was fertile in excuses for Betty's absence from the scene; in fact, the
+necessity for concealing the calamity quite marred what should have been a
+time of well-earned relaxation.
+
+At last we sat down to the midday meal, and the members of the house-party
+began to relate their morning's adventures. Finally some thoughtless person
+said, "Well, Betty, and what mischief have you been up to?"
+
+Betty, quite recovered and with a radiant smile, replied, "Oh, Mr. --er and
+I had a scrumptious time on the lake. We were sailors--just sailors--and
+did all sorts of lovely things, didn't we, Mr. --er?"
+
+I agreed, and Betty went on to her peroration:
+
+"And at the very end Mr. --er was a tiger and I was a little small boy, and
+he jumped on me out of the bushes and knocked me down in the mud" [O Betty!
+O unjust sailor!], "and Miss Watt came in as I was changing my things. It
+_was_ splendid, wasn't it--Reggie?"
+
+_Per ardua ad astra._ I had won my promotion to the commissioned ranks of
+the Christian names.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WIMMIN.
+
+ Behind wi' the sowin',
+ An' rent-day to meet,
+ For first time o' knowin'
+ John Buckham was beat;
+ Torpedoed an' swimmin'
+ An' fairly done in,
+ When someone said, "Wimmin
+ Would suit ye at Lynn."
+
+ Dal Midwood, at Mutcham,
+ Who runs by old rules,
+ Said, "John, don't 'ee touch em--
+ A pa'sel o' fules
+ Aye dabbin' an' trimmin'
+ Wi' powder an' pin;
+ No, don't 'ee have wimmin,
+ John Buckham, at Lynn."
+
+ Well, back wi' the sowin',
+ An' rent-day to meet,
+ I had to get goin'
+ Or own I were beat.
+ The banks needed trimmin';
+ The roots wasn't in;
+ 'Twas either take wimmin
+ Or walk out o' Lynn.
+
+ They came. They was pretty
+ An' white o' the hand,
+ But good-heart an' gritty
+ An' chockful o' sand;
+ Wi' energy brimmin'
+ Right up to the chin--
+ An' that sort o' wimmin
+ Was welcome at Lynn.
+
+ At ploughin' they're able,
+ Or drainin' a fen,
+ They'll muck out a stable
+ As well as the men.
+ Their praises I'm hymnin',
+ For where would ha' bin,
+ If it weren't for the wimmin,
+ John Buckham, at Lynn?
+
+W.H.O.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Mrs Green. to Mrs. Jones_ (_who is gazing at an
+aeroplane_). "MY WORD! I SHOULDN'T CARE FOR ONE OF _THEM_ FLYING THINGS TO
+SETTLE ON ME."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The Cairo Governorate has engaged white-washers to whiten plate-forms
+ of points from which streets branch which will be compelled by the end
+ of next week, before the commencement of the gaz lanterns decrease take
+ place."--_Egyptian Gazette._
+
+The Sphinx has been requested to furnish an explanation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR INDOMITABLES.
+
+"THE ENGLISH GIRL.
+
+"STANDING IN WITNESS-BOX WITHOUT A QUIVER.
+
+ "Rose ----, sixty-seven, ---- road, South Tottenham, a young girl, was
+ a witness in a London county court when the boom of guns and detonation
+ of bombs were heard."--_Daily Paper._
+
+Our English girls to-day are only as old as they feel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Mrs. A. Thomson writes a vigorous protest against the carelessness
+ with which the W.F.L. resolution urging the Prime Minister to make
+ Woman Suffrage an integral part of the Bill, was acknowledged on his
+ behalf. The acknowledgment was as follows:--
+
+ "'I am directed by the Prime Minister to acknowledge the receipt of the
+ resolution which you have forwarded on the subject of the formation of
+ a Maternity Department in the new Ministry of Health.'"--_The Vote._
+
+But was it carelessness, or humour?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HEART-TO-HEART TALKS.
+
+ (_Herr Schultze and Herr Mueller, privates in a Prussian regiment of
+ Infantry._)
+
+_Schultze._ Leave will soon be over now and we shall have to go back to the
+fighting.
+
+_Mueller._ Yes; it is not a very cheerful prospect.
+
+_Schultze._ No; that is a very true saying. And, what is more, there seems
+no possible end to this War, though (_dropping his voice and looking
+round_) we all hate it from the bottom of our hearts.
+
+_Mueller._ Yes, we all hate it. Indeed the hatred between me and the War
+gets worse and worse every day. I don't care who hears me.
+
+_Schultze._ Don't be too bold; one never knows who may be listening.
+
+_Mueller._ It is to become mad. Why did we ever let the ALL-HIGHEST MAJESTY
+begin such a war? We were all so comfortable, and then suddenly the
+Austrian ARCHDUKE gets himself murdered and, piff-paff, we Germans must go
+to war against Russia and France and England. I am very sorry for the
+ARCHDUKE, but there were other Archdukes to supply his place, and even if
+there had not been I do not think he himself was worth the four millions of
+killed, wounded and prisoners whom we have lost since the guns began to go
+off.
+
+_Schultze._ It is terrible to think of. And the sausages get worse and
+worse, and the beer costs more and more and is not like beer at all.
+
+_Mueller._ And the English have good guns and plenty of them, and know
+colossally well how to use them; and they have millions of men--more than
+we have; and their soldiers are brave--almost as brave as our own soldiers.
+They have certainly won some victories, it seems.
+
+_Schultze._ So it seems; but our Generals have not told us much about it.
+
+_Mueller._ And we all thought they had only a contemptible little army.
+
+_Schultze._ Yes, that was what the ALL-HIGHEST said.
+
+_Mueller._ The ALL-HIGHEST has also said several times that our soldiers
+would be back in their homes before the leaves fell from the trees, and
+here are you and I doomed to go away from our homes in the third year of
+the war. It would be better, I think, if the ALL-HIGHEST did not always
+speak so much and tried honestly to bring us a good solid peace.
+
+_Schultze_ (_with a deep sigh_). Peace? I do not think we shall ever have
+peace again. And the winning of victories seems to push it always further
+away from us. At that rate what is the use of victories?
+
+_Mueller._ Then you don't believe that the U-boats can starve England into
+surrender?
+
+_Schultze._ Certainly I don't. Do you know anyone that does believe in that
+fairy story? All that the U-boats have really effected up to the present
+has been to bring in America on the side of our enemies.
+
+_Mueller._ That doesn't matter. The Americans have no army.
+
+_Schultze._ Wasn't that what we said about the English? You yourself said
+it as loudly as anyone else at the beginning.
+
+_Mueller._ The fact is this War has gone on too long. A war for six weeks,
+that one can endure; but when it goes on for years--
+
+_Schultze._ Yes, that is not so pleasant, though the KAISER is always
+talking about hacking through and having an iron fist and being a wall of
+steel and other things of that sort.
+
+_Mueller._ Oh, he! I'm tired to death of his speeches and his prancing
+about. Again I say I don't care who hears me. We have done enough for
+glory; isn't there something we can do for peace?
+
+_Schultze._ No, nothing--and you know it. It is more likely we shall end in
+prison if we talk like this.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "I WARN YOU, SIR! THE DISCOURTESY OF THIS BANK IS BEYOND ALL
+LIMITS. ONE WORD MORE AND I--I WITHDRAW MY OVERDRAFT."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"NAVAL APPOINTMENTS.
+
+"ROYAL NAVAL RESERVE.
+
+ "Mr. J.R. MACDONALD entered as Skipper (temp.)"--_The Times._
+
+If this is how the Government hopes to get the Member for Leicester to
+Petrograd there is still the difficulty of enlisting a crew (temp.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Successful raids were carried out by us during the night east of
+ Lagnicourt (two or three metres south of Bullecourt)."--_Evening Times
+ and Echo._
+
+For the sake of precision we could have wished that the measurement had
+been worked out to inches.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Thousands on foot and in every kind of vehicle visited the grisly
+ relic. A Sunday school teacher marched the girls of her class to the
+ place. Some 80ft. of her nose-end is stuck aslant in the air."--_Daily
+ Mail._
+
+Not every woman is so well-equipped for showing contempt of the enemy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Wanted, Coachman-Chauffeur, 'Over-land' Car (Protestant), over
+ military age."--_Londonderry Sentinel._
+
+Whatever its religion a car of this age must be almost past praying for.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The sort of women who literally make ducks and drakes of their duty as
+ the family administrator."--_Spectator._
+
+Having regard to the high price of poultry might not the new
+Food-Controller get these women to explain how they do it?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BUFFER'S VINDICATION.
+
+ I haven't fought, I haven't dug, I've worn no special caps,
+ Too little has my country, sure, had from me;
+ _But_ I've never talked of "strafe-ing" anyone for any lapse,
+ And I've never called a fighting man a "Tommy."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Old Soldier_ (_trying to "swing the lead"_). "WELL, SIR, I
+CAN'T NEITHER EAT, SLEEP NOR DRINK, SIR."
+
+_M.O._ (_in a spasm of enthusiasm_). "MY GOOD MAN! THE ARMY WANTS A
+BATTALION LIKE YOU!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WATCH DOGS.
+
+LXII.
+
+MY DEAR CHARLES,--I've become so artful these days in disguising identities
+under assumed names that I'm hanged if I can remember myself which of my
+people is which. Still I daresay your own memory isn't too good, so we'll
+call him Ross this time, and trust to luck that that is what we called him
+last time. He is that one of my friends and fellow sinners who was plugging
+along nicely at the Bar in 1914, and was just about to take silk, when he
+changed his mind, came to France and got mixed up in what he calls "this
+vulgar brawl on the Continent." After nearly three years of systematic
+warfare in the second line he has at last achieved the rank of full
+lieutenant, which is not so bad for a growing lad of forty-five; and is
+running one of those complicated but fascinating side-shows which, to
+oblige Their Exigencies, we have to label Queer Trades, and leave at that.
+
+Whether his department is or is not making history it is certainly one
+which calls for a vast amount of special knowledge in its _personnel_.
+Ross, having been at the Bar, knows nothing and knows that he knows
+nothing, but is able to pretend to know just enough to keep his end up with
+Thos. J. Brown, who, disguised as a corporal, really runs the business.
+"Our Mr. Brown," as Ross calls him, is one of those nice old gentlemen who
+wear large spectacles and cultivate specialist knowledge on the intensive
+system. Owing to his infallibility in all details and upon all occasions he
+was much sought after in peace time by the larger commercial houses. When
+War broke out our Mr. Brown disdained peace. He made at once for the Front;
+but his aged legs, though encased in quite the most remarkable puttees in
+France, were found to be less reliable than his head, and he was held up on
+his way to the trenches and diverted to the stool of Ross's office.
+
+He began by putting some searching and dreadfully intelligent questions to
+Ross; dissatisfied with Ross's answers, he concentrated his mind on the
+business for twenty-four consecutive hours, at the end of which period he
+was the master of it in more senses than one. Since that time Ross has
+ensured the efficient running of his office by keeping out of it when it is
+busy. When for appearance sake he has to be there he does as his Mr. Brown
+tells him, and never wastes the latter's time by arguing.
+
+In the Army, all fleas have bigger fleas upon their backs to bite 'em. Were
+this not so somebody would have to act upon his own responsibility, and
+that, as you will admit, would make war an impossibility. Accordingly in
+every department there is a series of authorities, starting with "other
+ranks" at the bottom, proceeding in an ascending scale of dignity and
+worth, and disappearing through a cloud of Generals into an infinite of
+which no man knoweth the nature. Thus, with Ross's business (to take the
+tail end of it) the letter which the Corporal writes the Lieutenant signs
+on behalf of the Major. It is when the Major wants to do something more
+active that trouble arises. Let us take an incidental matter of
+administrative detail for example, setting it forth, as all military
+matters should be set forth, in paragraphs, separately numbered:--
+
+1. Lt. Ross possessed a bicycle, motor, one. No. 54321 L/Cpl. Burt
+possessed feet, two, only. Ross had no occasion, ability or disposition to
+ride a motor bicycle. No. 54321 could neither do his business nor enjoy
+life afoot. Accordingly, No. 54321 rode the bicycle, while, for the
+purposes of what is known to better people than ourselves as Establishment,
+Ross owned it. But that was in the good old days, before Traffic and Police
+and all the Others interested themselves.
+
+2. The first thing Traffic did was to say that all owners of motor bicycles
+must own cards, and produce them when demanded. That was easy: No. 54321
+got the card. Then Police issued some vague but menacing literature with
+regard to the fate of people who stole other people's property or failed to
+stick to their own. There was no difficulty about this; Ross publicly
+fathered the thing.
+
+3. Traffic, issuing new cards, said next that all owners of cards must also
+own bicycles. Realising the quandary, Ross was for saying he wouldn't play
+any more, but would declare a separate peace. His Mr. Brown however got up
+a long and intricate correspondence, at the end of which Ross was still
+owner and No. 54321 was still rider; both had cards, and all the
+authorities had, unknowingly, made themselves parties to the fraud.
+
+Suddenly the Major declared his intention of putting the whole of Ross's
+establishment (including bicycle) on what he called a satisfactory basis by
+a series of orders which he proposed to draft himself. Ross, always ready
+to be put on a satisfactory basis by anybody, took note of the draft, and
+laid it before his Mr. Brown. The latter was aghast, and proved, by
+infallible reasons, the fatal results which would follow if the matter was
+stirred up. Ross made a careful note of the reasons, and laid them before
+the Major. The Major explained gently that discipline was discipline. And
+so Ross went to and fro between the two, until the Major said, "Really,
+Ross!" and his Mr. Brown said, "I'm very sorry, Sir, but there it is;" and
+yet Ross couldn't sack his Major, and he couldn't break away from his Mr.
+Brown.
+
+He was between the Devil and the Deep Sea. What was he to do about it?
+Well, he just told the Deep Sea to keep calm a little longer, and went and
+waited outside the Devil's Mess. He saluted and asked the Devil if he'd
+care to come for a walk, and, the latter consenting, he led him to the Deep
+Sea. Then, when the Devil himself had been introduced to the Deep Sea
+itself, Ross slipped off and left them in his office to fix it up between
+themselves.
+
+Ross dined with the Major that night, and the latter said he wasn't feeling
+at all well. The way Ross's Mr. Brown had licked his thumb and the
+lightning speed with which he had turned up exactly the right
+correspondence, office minute or Routine Order, had nearly given the Major
+heart disease. Besides, he'd lost the argument. "I was too heavily
+handicapped from the start," said he, "by not being in a position to lick
+_my_ thumb or to stick _my_ pencil behind my ear."
+
+It was a good idea to introduce the Major and Mr. Brown, wasn't it,
+Charles? The Major says he was the first to suggest it, and Ross is careful
+to leave the credit with the Major, because he is sure that the idea really
+originated in the fertile and masterful brain of his Mr. Brown.
+
+Yours ever,
+
+HENRY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: MISS DAISY DIMPLE, THE REVUE FAVOURITE, SELLS FLAGS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ANOTHER IMPENDING APOLOGY.
+
+From a South African Parish Magazine:--
+
+ "Many thanks to the Rev. ---- and the Rev. ---- for coming to St. ----
+ during the past month. The Rector went off to Clifton and Park Town,
+ and enjoyed the change almost as much as the congregation."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A bird flew into Willesden Court yesterday and perched above the
+ magistrate's head.
+
+ "Alderman Pinkham: 'It's not often we 'get the bird' on the bench.'"
+
+But the "Beak" is there all the time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE JUDGMENT OF PARIS: LATEST INVERSION.
+
+{CONSERVATISM, LIBERALISM, LABOUR.}
+"DON'T FORGET, DEAR LADY, WHEN THE TIME COMES, THAT IT
+WAS _I_ WHO GAVE YOU THE APPLE."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ESSENCE OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+_Monday, June 18th._--Arising out of the dethronement of TINO a cloud-burst
+of questions descended upon Lord ROBERT CECIL, who took refuge under a
+wide-spreading umbrella of official ignorance. Mr. LYNCH was annoyed
+because his question whether the Allies would oppose the foundation of a
+Greek Republic was dismissed as "hypothetical," but Lord ROBERT assured him
+that there was "nothing abusive" in the epithet. But is that so? Suppose he
+were to describe Mr. LYNCH as a "hypothetical statesman"?
+
+A detailed history of a Canterbury lamb, from its purchase in New Zealand
+at 6-3/8_d._ a pound to its sale to the British butcher at 10-1/2_d._, was
+given by Mr. GEORGE ROBERTS. He threw no light, however, on the problem why
+it should double in price before reaching the consumer. This is engaging
+the anxious consideration of Lord RHONDDA, who declares that there is no
+adequate economic reason why Little Mary should have only a little lamb.
+
+In the House of Commons as in a music-hall you can always get a laugh by
+referring to "the lodger." Whether the lodger, who is considered quite good
+enough to vote for a mere Member of Parliament, should also be allowed a
+voice in the election of really important people like town councillors was
+the theme of animated discussion. It ended ultimately in the lodger's
+favour, with the proviso that the apartments he occupies should be
+unfurnished. On such niceties does the British Constitution depend.
+
+_Tuesday, June 19th._--Mr. BALFOUR received a warm welcome from all
+sections of the House on making his first appearance after his return from
+America. Even the ranks of Tuscany, on the Irish benches, could not forbear
+to cheer their old opponent. Besides securing American gold for his
+country, he has transferred some American bronze to his own complexion, and
+has, if anything, sharpened his faculty for skilful evasion and polite
+repartee by his encounters with Transatlantic journalists.
+
+In the course of the daily catechism on the subject of air-raids Mr.
+MACMASTER inquired, "Why is it that Paris appears to be practically immune,
+while London is not?" The answer came, not from the Front Bench, but from
+the Chair, and was delivered in a tone so low that even the Official
+Reporter failed to catch it. That is a pity, because it furnishes a useful
+hint for Ministers. In future, when posed with futile or embarrassing
+questions about the War, let them follow the SPEAKER'S example, and simply
+say, "You must ask the KAISER!"
+
+[Illustration: THE BETTER PART OF VALOUR.
+
+_Sir Frederick Smith._ "WHAT'S THE GOOD OF STRUGGLING?"]
+
+[Illustration: _Literary Dame_ (_at bookstall_). "HAVE YOU ANY BOOKS BY
+THAT RISING YOUNG NOVELIST, LORD HUGH CECIL?".]
+
+In a perfectly free division, in which Ministers and ex-Ministers were
+mixed up together in both Lobbies, woman's right to be registered as a
+Parliamentary elector was affirmed by 385 votes to 55. Some capital
+speeches were made on both sides, but if any of them turned a vote it was
+probably the cynical admission of the ATTORNEY-GENERAL that he was as much
+opposed to female suffrage as ever, but meant to vote for it because it was
+bound to come. This probably had an even greater effect upon the average
+Member, who is not an idealist, than the nutshell novelette in which Lord
+HUGH CECIL lightly outlined the possible future of the female politician.
+
+_Wednesday, June 20th._--Military metaphors come naturally to the Duke of
+MARLBOROUGH. Yet I cannot think he was happily inspired when, in reminding
+the farmers of their duty to put more land under the plough, he compared
+the compulsory powers of the Board of Agriculture to a sword in its
+scabbard, and hoped there would be no necessity to rattle it. Everybody
+knows that the sword in question is a converted ploughshare, and that it
+rests with the War Office to turn it back again.
+
+Last night fifty-five Members resisted Votes for Women. By this afternoon
+twenty-five of them had so far changed their minds as to protest against
+the limitation of the privilege to women over thirty. Major ROWLAND HUNT,
+convinced that women would soon vote themselves into the House, expressed a
+naive preference for "young 'uns."
+
+_Thursday, June 21st._--During Sir EDWARD GREY'S long tenure of the Foreign
+Secretaryship he rarely visited the House of Commons more than twice a
+week. Until his voyage to the United States, Mr. BALFOUR was even less
+attentive to his Parliamentary duties and left most of the "donkey-work"--
+if one may so describe the business of answering the questions of curious
+Members--to Lord ROBERT CECIL. Since his return Mr. BALFOUR has developed a
+new zest for this pastime, and to-day for the third time in succession
+appeared in his place. Everybody is pleased to see him there, except
+perhaps the curious Members aforesaid, who find him even more chary of
+information than his deputy. Had not the PRESIDENT of the United States
+said something about Alsace-Lorraine? ventured Corporal LEES-SMITH. Mr.
+BALFOUR, fresh from the White House, blandly replied, "I do not propose to
+discuss President WILSON'S Notes."
+
+The notion, prevalent at the beginning of the War, that every German waiter
+was an emissary of the KAISER, only awaiting "The Day" when he should
+return to take a full revenge for meagre gratuities, still subsists in
+certain minds. Mr. BROOKES was manifestly disappointed when Dr. MACNAMARA
+assured him that the aeronaut captured in the recent raid was not, as he
+supposed, one of these returned Ganymedes, but was making his first
+appearance on English soil.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A small fire at a variety theatre burnt some dresses all up, but the
+ revue went on as usual."--_Berrow's Worcester Journal._
+
+No need to worry over little things like that.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: _Long-suffering Sergeant._ "WE GOT ANOTHER ARF-HOUR TO GO
+YET. _I_ DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO WITH YER."
+
+_Rookie_ (_suggestively_). "THERE'S SOME TREES OVER THERE, SERGEANT."
+
+_Sergeant._ "YES, I KNOW. BUT THERE AIN'T ANY ROPES."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO FIELD-MARSHAL SIR DOUGLAS HAIG.
+
+JUNE 19TH, 1917.
+
+ Sir, though in dealing with the strong and straight
+ Of sentiment one cannot be too thrifty,
+ Still, after reading your despatch--the date
+ Chimes with your birthday, _aetat_ six-and-fifty--
+ A humble rhymer, though denied by fate
+ Possession of the high poetic "giftie,"
+ May yet express the hope it won't displease you
+ To see yourself as one plain person sees you.
+
+ Some call you cold, because you are not prone
+ To bursts of eloquence or flights of feeling;
+ You do not emulate the fretful tone
+ Of those who turn from boastfulness to squealing;
+ Your temperament, I am obliged to own,
+ Is not expansive, Celtic, self-revealing;
+ But some of us admire you none the less
+ For your laconic simple truthfulness.
+
+ No doubt you would provide far better "copy"
+ To the industrious drivers of the quill
+ If you were more emotional and sloppy,
+ More richly dowered with journalistic skill;
+ To make despatches blossom like the poppy
+ You never have essayed and never will;
+ In short, you couldn't earn a pound a week
+ As a reporter on _The Daily Shriek_.
+
+ Frugal in speech, yet more than once impelled
+ To utter words of confidence and cheer,
+ Whereat some dismal publicists rebelled
+ As premature, ill-founded, insincere--
+ Words none the less triumphantly upheld
+ By Victory's verdict, resonantly clear,
+ Words that inspired misgiving in the foe
+ Because you do not prophesy--you _know_;
+
+ Steadfast and calm, unmoved by blame or praise,
+ By local checks or Fortune's strange caprices,
+ You dedicate laborious nights and days
+ To shattering the Hun machine to pieces;
+ And howsoe'er at times the battle sways
+ The Army's trust in your command increases;
+ Patient in preparation, swift in deed,
+ We find in you the leader that we need.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The temperature in Berlin yesterday was 131 degrees Centigrade, which
+ is the highest temperature since 1848."--_Daily Dispatch._
+
+Equal to about 268 degrees Fahr. and quite hot enough to keep the Imperial
+Potsdam boiling.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A correspondent who knows a great deal about the coat trade says there
+ is going to be great difficulty in obtaining coal during the coming
+ winter."--_Torquay Times._
+
+This will confirm the belief that the shortage of fuel is not unassociated
+with the vested interests.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "We, on the other hand, are just as much entitled, under any sane code
+ of morals, to bombard Kerman towns as to shoot German soldiers on the
+ field."--_The Globe._
+
+We think, however, that the inhabitants of these Persian towns might
+reasonably object to such vicarious reprisals.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR BOOKING-OFFICE.
+
+(_By Mr. Punch's Staff of Learned Clerks._)
+
+Our moorland novelists are of two schools. One of them depicts the dwellers
+on these heights as a superior race, using a vocabulary half Biblical, half
+minor-poetic, in which to express the most exalted sentiments; the other
+draws a picture of upland domesticity comparable to that found in a cage of
+hyenas. Mr. HALLIWELL SUTCLIFFE, though he is too skilled an artist to
+overdo the colouring, inclines (I am bound to say) so much towards the
+former method that I confess to an uneasy doubt, at times, whether any
+human families could maintain existence on the same plane of nobility as,
+for example, the _Holts_ in his latest romance, _Lonesome Heights_ (WARD,
+LOCK). These _Holts_ were a race of farmer-squires, and in the book you see
+their development through two generations: the masterful old man and his
+twin sons. This is all the tale; a simple enough record, but full of the
+dignity and beauty which make the reading of any story by this author a
+refreshment to irritated nerves. Towards the end some space is devoted to
+the fight to abolish child-labour in the dale mills; there is also a
+scandal, and the fastening of blame upon the wrong brother; no very great
+matter. It is for such scenes as that of the death of old _Holt_, and his
+last words to the horse that has thrown him, that _Lonesome Heights_ will
+earn its place on your library list.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_The Dice of the Gods_ (HEATH, CRANTON) is not, as the title suggests,
+something rather thrilling in the way of romantic fiction, but one of those
+dispassionate novels in which the author, through the medium of his
+puppets, gently scourges the follies of society. _William van der Beck_,
+whose fictional house of clay very obviously clothes the spiritual essence
+of the author, Mr. LUCIAN DE ZILWA, returns to his native Colombo with a
+liberal education, to find that the life and thought of the strange
+Indo-European bourgeoisie to which he belongs by birth present no alluring
+features. In point of fact the ambitions and hypocrisies, pretences and
+prejudices of the Cingalese "burgher" with the tell-tale finger-nails are
+merely those of Bristol or Amsterdam evolved under Colonial conditions.
+_Jack van der Beck_, for example, the pompous medical ass with a
+flourishing practice among the local nabobs, can be found in every
+provincial town in Europe. _The Dice of the Gods_ has no plot worthy of the
+name, but Mr. DE ZILWA has both satire and philosophy at his command, and a
+flair for atmosphere. His scenery and "props" too will be new even to the
+most hardened novel-reader. He paints a vivid Oriental background with
+which the semi-Western civilization of his characters alternately blends
+and contrasts rather effectively.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. TRESIDDER SHEPPARD'S _The Quest of Ledgar Dunstan_ (DUCKWORTH) is one
+of those half-sequels of which, while it remains true that You Can Start
+Here, you will get a better grip with some previous knowledge of the
+earlier story about the same people. Not that your hold upon the present
+book will, even then, be other than slightly precarious. For my own part I
+seldom met anything so elusive. I freely grant that it is original,
+thoughtful and provocative, but the effect it produces is rather like that
+of _Jaberwocky_ upon _Alice_ ("It fills me with ideas, only I don't know
+what they are!"). At first one seemed in for a comedy of disillusion.
+_Ledgar_ and _Mary_, united, are met with in the process of living
+unhappily ever after. This is clear enough, human (unfortunately) and
+amusing. It was, for one thing, _Mary's_ habit of misquotation that got
+upon _Ledgar's_ nerves. "Alas, poor Garrick!" was one of her typical
+lapses. Nor was _Ledgar_ himself more of a success with _Mary_, who found
+him (and here my sympathies went over to her) lacking in force and
+coherence. But as _Mary_ eloped with somebody else at the end of part one
+she hadn't my prolonged experience of _Ledgar's_ incomprehensibility. Nor
+did the question of his semi-lunatic friend worry her, or the whole problem
+of what, if anything, was the motive of the book. Eventually he is shown
+pairing off with his earlier love, _Winnie_; and I am bound to say that she
+too has my sympathy. I should sum up by saying that the analysis of
+introspective egotism, however subtly done, can make at best only an
+exasperating story.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In _By the Waters of Africa_ (ROBERT SCOTT) Miss NORMA LORIMER has
+described her British East African travels in a series of letters, in which
+she shows a very real sense of style and a delightful assumption of her own
+unimportance. To people suffering from the books of travellers who seem
+more anxious to air themselves than to give impressions of the countries
+through which they have passed, it will be a pure relief to find an author
+who suppresses herself and really gets on with her business. Thanks to her
+friends, whose kindness she frankly acknowledges, Miss LORIMER was able to
+see native life under conditions impossible to a less privileged traveller,
+and she misses no feature in it that is either humorous or enlightening. It
+is a model book of its kind, valuable up to a certain point and always
+pleasant to read. Some of the author's adventures might easily have excused
+a reckless use of notes of exclamation. But only once does she give way to
+this weakness, and this I pardon her, for I should always use one myself on
+the eve of starting for the Mountains of the Moon.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: NEW SPORTS FOR OLD.
+
+SNAIL-STALKING IN THE SUBURBS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FOR THE HONEYMOON?
+
+ "Lady wants quiet summer accommodation; near bees."--_Scotsman._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: Epilogue]
+
+MR. PUNCH IN RUSSIA.
+
+In the last Epilogue, where Mr. Punch was described as paying a call upon
+our brave soldiers in a German prison-camp, I confessed that I didn't
+understand how he got there in the body. To-day I have to report a far
+simpler enterprise. This time he has merely been on a mission to Russia.
+Anybody can do that, unless the Sailors' and Firemen's Union mistake him
+for Mr. RAMSAY MACDONALD and no one has yet made this error in respect of
+Mr. Punch.
+
+His brilliant mastery of the Russian language is a harder thing to believe;
+but, as nothing is said of an interpreter, I must suppose that he had been
+quietly and painfully taking lessons in this very difficult tongue. Anyhow,
+you must picture him, at some spot not specified, addressing a concourse of
+enthusiastic Revolutionaries. I propose to give a brief summary of his
+speech, from which you will gather that he spoke to them like a father, and
+that, while he showed a cordial sympathy with the cause of Russian freedom,
+he did not hesitate to deliver himself of some very straight home-truths.
+
+"Friends, Russians, Allies," he began; "I come on behalf of my
+fellow-countrymen" (you know his touching way of regarding himself as the
+medium of the best intelligence to be found in the British Empire) "to
+convey their affectionate sympathy with you in your triumph over the
+tyranny of Tsardom. At first we took the natural and hopeful view that your
+Revolution, supported by all that was noblest in all ranks of your society,
+was the result of bitter dissatisfaction with the conduct of the War, and
+with the secret and sinister enemy influences which were at work to ruin
+your chances in the common fight against Kaiserism.
+
+"Yet it was immediately followed by wholesale desertions from the
+firing-line and a general disintegration of military discipline. It seems,
+then, that we were wrong; for otherwise it would be a curious irony that a
+movement designed for the better conduct of the War should produce a
+complete stagnation on your fighting fronts; or, to look at it from another
+point of view, that a Revolution which owed its success to the War, since,
+in such a war as this, the Army and the nation are one, should have, for
+its immediate consequence, an apparent failure on your part to remember the
+purpose for which the War is being fought.
+
+"No doubt many motives were at work, and it was perhaps natural that in the
+joy of your new-found freedom you should be tempted to forget the
+conditions that had made it possible, and to regard the War as something
+outside and remote, and its importance as small compared with the
+achievement of internal liberty.
+
+"Well, we have tried patiently to see things with your eyes, and now you in
+your turn must please make an effort to see them with ours. From the first,
+when we in England took on this War, we recognised that the country which
+was bound to get most good out of it was Russia. For her we hoped that it
+was to be in the fullest sense a War of Liberation. Your Allies would win
+liberty from external menace, but you would also see the bonds of internal
+tyranny broken. The TSAR, the little father of his people, had a chance,
+such as falls to few, of giving to his nation something of the true freedom
+that we in England know.
+
+"He missed his chance. We will not ask why, but he missed it. Yet by other
+means the War has been for you a War of Liberation, and, if you break your
+pledge to see it through, you do not deserve your freedom. Nay more, you
+run the risk of losing it; or, if, through the steadfastness of your sworn
+Allies, you keep it, then you keep it at the cost of sacrificing the
+friendship and sympathy of all free nations who are fighting in the cause
+of liberty; and, on those terms, your own freedom is not worth having.
+
+"Some of you argue that Russia's pledge to her Allies was an Imperialist
+pledge and that you have the right to ignore it. Have you forgotten so soon
+that the prime cause of Russia's entry into this quarrel was that Austria
+had threatened to crush a free nation, Serbia, whose race and faith are
+yours? Besides, a pledge like that is still a pledge, though governments
+may change. Would you have it so that no people, from this time on, shall
+trust the word of Russia for fear that a new _regime_ might repudiate it?
+
+"We have been patient and made allowances. We know that a great nation like
+yours cannot overthrow an age-long tyranny without being shaken through
+every fibre of its being. Time was needed for you to recover your balance
+and to resume a sane view of your obligations to others than yourselves. So
+we have been patient, and are patient still, though the inaction on your
+Front and your withdrawal from your part in the common struggle have made
+our burden in France far harder to bear.
+
+"If you fail us, we shall no less fight on, we others. 'We shall march
+prospering--not through your presence.' We shall fight on till the ideals
+of Kaiserism, your worst enemy, are crushed. America, that great Republic
+that loves peace as passionately as you, will take your place, will fill up
+the gap that you leave in the ranks of those who fight for freedom. And we
+shall fight till we get the true peace that we want--not the peace which
+some of you have advocated, fraternising with the common foe, listening to
+the specious pleas of those who shirk the one test of their honesty when
+they are asked to revolt against a tyranny as least as deadly as that which
+you have yourselves overthrown.
+
+"But you will not fail us, I know. Your hearts, as a nation, were once in
+this War; heavy as our sacrifices have been, yours have been heavier still.
+Why should you change? Why should the birth of your own freedom be the
+death of your sympathy with the cause of the freedom of the world? No, you
+cannot fail us; you are too great for that.
+
+"Forgive me," Mr. Punch concluded, "if, in speaking from a full heart, I
+have allowed myself an excess of candour. At home they have always been
+very kind and let me have a charter to say just what I think; and I have
+been doing it, without much distinction of persons, for seventy-five years
+and more. If to you, who have been dumb so long, this seems beyond belief,
+permit me to offer you, with sincere affection and regard, a visible proof
+of my privilege in the shape of my
+
+ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY-SECOND VOLUME."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: INDEX]
+
+CARTOONS.
+
+ PARTRIDGE, BERNARD.
+ Against Tyranny, 369
+ Also Ran, 157
+ Answer to Peace Talk (An), 9
+ Blighted Prospects, 109
+ Breath of Liberty (The), 211
+ Cancelled, 183
+ Catch of the Season (The), 225
+ Comfort in Exile, 401
+ Dawn of Doubt (The), 25
+ Dead Frost (A), 77
+ End of the Thousand-and-One Nights (The), 289
+ Erin takes a Turn at her own Harp, 353
+ For Services Rendered, 337
+ Greater Need (The), 171
+ His Latest, 321
+ "I am the Man", 58-59
+ Judgment of Paris: Latest Inversion (The), 417
+ Last Throw (The), 125
+ Price of Victory (The), 305
+ Road to Victory (The), 93
+ Snowing him under, 41
+ "Swooping from the West", 257
+ Victory First, 241
+ Waning of Faith (The), 273
+ Who Follows?, 141
+ Word of Ill Omen (A), 385
+
+ PEGRAM, FRED.
+ Plain Duty (A), 87
+
+ RAVEN-HILL, L.
+ Alimentary Intelligence, 235
+ Bad Dream (A), 315
+ Breaking of the Fetters (The), 179
+ Cannon-Fodder--and After, 267
+ Central Isolation, 167
+ Common Ideals, 379
+ Donnerwetter, 299
+ Dynastic Amenities, 251
+ Freedom of the Sea (The), 151
+ Good Riddance (A), 411
+ Great Uncontrolled (The), 347
+ Hoist with his own Petard, 395
+ Hypnotist (The), 331
+ Invaders (The), 191
+ Playing Smaller, 363
+ Rational Service, 103
+ Retort Celestial (The), 135
+ Rumourists (The), 219
+ Self-Protection, 283
+ Short Way with Tino (A), 19
+ War-Savings, 119
+ White House Mystery (The), 3
+
+ TOWNSEND, F.H.
+ Apple of Discord (The), 51
+ Bankrupt Bravos (The), 35
+ Unmade in Germany, 71
+
+ARTICLES.
+
+ ALLEN, INGLIS.
+ Adjutant on Leave (The), 292
+
+ ANDERSON, Miss E.V.M.
+ Way not to pay Old Debts (A), 52
+
+ BARFIELD, A.O.
+ Air-Castles, 101
+
+ BERKELEY, Capt. R.C.
+ Jollymouse, 259
+
+ BIRD, Capt. A.W.
+ Edward, 79
+ Fruit Merchant (The), 214
+ More Discipline, 1
+ New Danger (A), 108
+ Over-weight, 24
+ Tragedy of the Sea (A), 134
+
+ BLAIKLEY, Miss Editha L.
+ Gems from the Juniors, 282
+
+ BLAIR, Miss F.K.
+ Romance of Rations (A), 150
+
+ BRAHMS, Miss M.
+ National Service, 317
+
+ BRETHERTON, CYRIL
+ Back to the Land, 254
+ Charivaria, weekly
+ Food Question (The), 272
+ His Master's Voice, 10
+ Oxford Revisited, 130
+ Plot Precautionary (The), 187
+ Reventlow Ruminates, 334
+ To Smith in Mesopotamy, 373
+ To Towser, 92
+
+ BROWN, A. HILTON
+ Tyrtaeus, 327
+
+ BROWNE, Miss
+ Forward Minx (A), 113
+
+ BROWNLEE, LEIGH D.
+ Signs of the Times, 123
+
+ BRYMER, CECIL J.
+ Two Constables (The), 318
+
+ CHANDLER, Miss BLANCHE W.
+ Hardships of Billets (The), 82, 122, 215
+
+ CHAYTOR, Rev. H.J.
+ Autre Temps--Autres Moeurs, 237
+ Fore and Aft, 276
+
+ CHERRILL, Miss A.L.
+ Lucid Explanation (A), 64
+
+ CLARKE, E.F.
+ Infantryman (The), 76
+
+ COBB, THOMAS
+ Broken Soldiers (The), 134
+
+ COLEMAN, R.
+ Most important Thing (The), 268
+
+ DARK, RICHARD
+ Emily's Mission, 358
+
+ DARLINGTON, W.A.
+ De Profundis, 213
+ Three Augusts, 74
+ Ways and Means, 346
+
+ DENNIS, G.P.
+ Diplomatic Notes, 298
+
+ DOWN, Capt.
+ Personal Pars from the Western Front, 50
+
+ DRENNAN, MAX
+ Meditations of Marcus O'Reilly, 372
+ Recent Truce (The), 112
+
+ DRENNAN, W. ST. G.
+ On the Spy-Trail, 316
+
+ DU CANN, C.G.L.
+ As Others see Us, 102
+
+ ECKERSLEY, ARTHUR
+ Choking them off, 12
+ Docking the Drama, 301
+ New Note in Theatrical Advertising (The), 269
+ Problems for Petroleuses, 139
+ Seasonable Novelties, 74
+ Spoop, 238
+
+ ELIAS, FRANK.
+ Fashions in Book-wear, 37
+ Our New Army of Women, 78
+ War's Romances, 107
+
+ ELLIOT, W.G.
+ Weighed in the Balance, 254
+
+ ELLIS, D.C.
+ Lions at Play, 62
+
+ FARJEON, MISS ELEANOR.
+ Nursery Rhymes of London Town, 11, 26, 79, 106, 121
+
+ FISH, W.W. BLAIR.
+ Cautionary Tales for the Army, 252, 309, 387
+ Co-operative Advertisements, 228
+ Herbs of Grace, 165, 178, 212, 227, 240
+ Mab Dreams of May, 276
+ Songs of Food Production, 86, 105, 129, 150, 355
+ Wars of the Past, 8, 29, 54
+
+ FOX-SMITH, MISS C.
+ Admiral Dugout, 224
+ 'Ead-work, 55
+ "In Prize", 404
+ Jolly Bargeman (The), 320
+ "Let her go!", 205
+ Short way with Submarines (A), 378
+ Song of the Mill (The), 155
+ Tale of a Coincidence (A), 90
+
+ FYLEMAN, MISS ROSE.
+ Best Game the Fairies Play (The), 377
+ Fairies, 341
+
+ GARSTIN, CROSBIE.
+ Chateau in France (A), 318
+ Dream Ship (A), 46
+ Mud Larks (The), 86, 178, 218, 308, 330, 364, 382
+ Regimental Mascot (The), 21
+
+ GARVEY, MISS INA.
+ Blanche's Letters, 234, 396
+
+ GLASGOW, EDWIN.
+ Personal Triumph (A), 278
+
+ GLASGOW, MRS. ROBERTSON.
+ Winged Victory, 184
+
+ GRAVES, C.L.
+ At Rest, 272
+ Booming of Books (The), 122
+ Classical America, 160
+ Diary of a Co-ordinator (The), 410
+ Flapper (The), 30
+ Fritz's Apologia, 222
+ Good old Gothic, 97
+ Hot Weather Correspondence, 362
+ House-Master (The), 357
+ Jill-of-all-Trades and Mistress of Many, 323
+ Joy-rider at the Front (The), 182
+ Maxims of the Months, 243
+ Ministerial Wail (A), 307
+ Missing Leader (The), 138
+ Musings of Marcus Mull (The), 381
+ My Watch, 162
+ Piccadilly, 384
+ Purified Prussian (The), 56
+ Random Flights, 330
+ Smile of Victory (The), 75
+ Song of Food-Saving (A), 173
+ Spiritual Sportsman (The), 14
+ Strife of Tongues (The), 278
+ To F.-M. Sir Douglas Haig, 419
+ To Mr. Balfour on his Return, 404
+ To my Godson, 193
+ Topical Tragedy (A), 213
+ To Stephen Leacock, 114
+ Travel without Trains, 81
+ 'Twas Fifty Years Ago, 295
+ War's Surprises, 40
+
+ HARRIS, A.
+ Double Entente, 277
+
+ HERBERT, A.P.
+ Ballade of Incipient Lunacy, 382
+ Open Warfare, 400
+ Zero, 336
+
+ HOLMES, W. KERSLEY.
+ Apology of a Warrior Minstrel, 149
+ Only Steggles (The), 30
+ Vicarious Reprisals, 368
+
+
+ HOWELL, E.B.
+ Muscat, 6
+
+ IMAGE, MRS.
+ Rations, 190
+
+ INCE, R.B.
+ Paper Problem (A), 275
+
+ JAY, THOMAS.
+ Charivaria, weekly
+
+ JENKINS, A.L.
+ Inn o' the Sword (The), 66
+
+ LANGLEY, CAPT. F.O.
+ Watch Dogs (The), 4, 72, 120, 154, 192, 236, 286, 348, 415
+
+ LEHMANN, R.C.
+ Fate of Umbrellas (The), 66
+ Francis Cowley Burnand, In Memoriam, 288
+ From Lord Devonport's Letter-Bag, 230
+ German Measles, 246
+ Hat and the Visit (The), 406
+ Heart-to-Heart Talks, 18, 70, 102, 118, 162, 185, 250, 356, 414
+ Helping Lord Devonport, 146
+ Hexameters, 375
+ Peas and Pledges, 342
+ Proper Proportion (A), 266
+ Recognised (The), 215
+ Recognition, 34
+ School, 310
+ Tasty Dishes, 326
+ Tipinbanola (The), 98
+ Ultimus, 13
+
+ LETTS, MISS W.M.
+ General Post, 294
+
+ LIPSCOMB, W.P.
+ Lessons of the War, 394
+ Weather-Vanes, 136
+
+ LOCKER, W.A.
+ Essence of Parliament, weekly during Session
+
+ LOUIS, EDWARD.
+ Follow-up Method (The), 44
+
+ LUCAS, E.V.
+ Art of Detachment (The), 128
+ Compliment (The), 144
+ Dissuaders (The), 398
+ Earlier Food Problems, 229
+ Ella Reeve, 180
+ Everlasting Romance (The), 169
+ Favorite (The), 194
+ Fifteen Tridges (The), 359
+ First Lines, 253
+ God-Makers (The), 388
+ Hints to Grosvenor House, 302
+ Italian in England (The), 244
+ Law Courts Theatre (The), 334
+ London's Little Sunbeams, 6
+ Loss (A), 222
+ Misgivings, 46
+ Misnomer (A), 270
+ More News from the Air, 277
+ One of our Difficulties, 324
+ Our Correspondence College, 80
+ Political Notes, 53
+ Revivals and Revisions, 284
+ Solace (The), 152
+ Taxis and Talk, 94
+ Three Dictators (The), 104
+ What did Mr. Asquith do?, 28
+ Who shall decide?, 370
+
+ LAFONE, H.C.
+ Just Sailors, 412
+
+ MCCLELLAND, W.E.
+ Letters from Macedonia, 38, 64, 88
+
+ MCKAY, HERBERT.
+ Children's Tales for Grown-ups, 154, 173, 177, 193, 222, 240, 270, 288,
+ 310
+
+ MACLEOD, L.R.
+ Charivaria, weekly
+
+ MANDERS, MRS.
+ Old Rhymes for Ration Times, 221
+
+ MARTIN, N.R.
+ Current Event (A), 260
+ Extra Special (An), 2
+ Great Investment (The), 130
+ Local Food-Controller (A), 398
+ Whitehall Whisperings, 304
+
+ MENZIES, G.K.
+ General (The), 258
+ Scotland Yet, 214
+ Super-Char (The), 90
+
+ MILNE, A.A.
+ From a Full Heart, 285
+ Gold Braid, 181
+ Hereinafters, 314
+ Miniature (The), 36
+
+ MITCHELL, MISS G.M.
+ "It", 254
+
+ MORROW, GEORGE.
+ Privilege, 161
+
+ NAISMITH, J.K.B.
+ Acting-Bombardier, 140
+
+ OGILVIE, W.H.
+ Bunny's Little Bit, 139
+ Call to the Cow Ponies (A), 349
+ Comrades, 237
+ First Whip (The), 168
+ Song of the Woodland Elves (A), 97
+ Top-o'-the-Morning, 22
+ Troop Horses, 302
+ Wimmin, 413
+
+ OVERTON, JOHN.
+ Pan Pipes, 398
+
+ PING, MISS LILIAN G.
+ Dolls that did their Bit (The), 340
+ Mon Soldat et mon Cure, 170
+ Tactics, 13
+
+ PLATT, F.W.
+ To France, 269
+
+ PLUMBE, C.C.
+ My American Cousins, 339
+ Sherwood Foresters (The), 351
+
+ POSTLETHWAITE, H.A.
+ Secrets of Heroism (The), 351
+
+ PRESTON-TEWART, A.
+ Emergency Rations, 244
+ Fleeting Detachment (A), 61
+
+ PUCKRIDGE, W.H.
+ Poultice (The), 205
+
+ RIGBY, REGINALD
+ Petherton and the Pluralist, 42
+ Petherton's Donkey, 106
+ Petherton's Publications, 350
+
+ ROBERTS, P.V.
+ Algy, 410
+
+ ROBERTS, R.H.
+ Flowerless Future (The), 220
+ Seed Potatoes for Patriots, 175
+
+ SEAMAN, OWEN
+ At the Play, 96, 186, 261, 326, 390
+ Faith and Doubt in the Fatherland, 34
+ Food of Love (The), 166
+ Golfer's Protest (The), 50
+ Great Sacrifice (The), 266
+ Hohenzollern Prospect (The), 218
+ Little Willie's Opinion of Father, 362
+ Mr. Punch in Russia, 421
+ Place of Arms (A), 330
+ Potsdam Altruist (The), 282
+ Prophetic Present (The), 346
+ School for Statesmen (A), 250
+ Stomach for the Fight, 298
+ Symposium of the Central Weaknesses, 234
+ Tactless Tactics, 102
+ T.M.G., 394
+ To Germania, 134
+ To Paris by the "Hindenburg Line", 190
+ To the German Military Picture Department, 70
+ To the Kaiser for his New Year, 2
+ Vienna-Bound: A Reverie en Route, 18
+ William _v._ the World, 118
+
+ SHIRLEY, J.
+ Vision of Blighty (A), 248
+
+ SMITH, BERTRAM
+ Ban on Racing (The), 410
+ Hindenburg Line (The), 256
+ Little Rift (The), 27
+ More or Less, 150
+ Not Wisely but too Well, 366
+
+ SMITH, C.T.
+ Wobbler (The), 239
+
+ STEIN, CAPT. E. DE
+ Sick, 291
+
+ SWINHOE, R.
+ Mammal-Saurian War (The), 145
+
+ THOMAS, R.W.
+ Infanticide (The), 405
+ Told to the Marines, 300
+
+ THOMPSON, PATRICK
+ Appropriator of Tubers, 374
+
+ THORP, JOSEPH
+ At the Play, 14, 114, 174, 186, 292
+
+ TWEEDDALE, MISS D.M.
+ Knight-errant (A), 20
+
+ WILKES, HENRY E.
+ Excelsior, 270
+
+ WILLIAMS, MISS HELEN
+ Funeral of M. de Blanchet (The), 378
+
+ WILLIAMS, R. LL.
+ Convert (The), 38
+
+ WOODWARD, MISS BARBARA
+ National Sky-scraper (A), 166
+
+PICTURES AND SKETCHES.
+
+ ARMOUR, MAJOR G.D., 12, 31, 83, 99, 131, 163, 231, 263, 293, 311, 327,
+ 341, 371, 389, 407
+
+ BATEMAN, H.M., 39, 199, 210, 303, 356, 367
+
+ BAUMER, LEWIS, 15, 23, 42, 61, 121, 140, 153, 170, 182, 193, 256, 287,
+ 352, 368, 384, 416
+
+ BELCHER, GEORGE, 7, 29, 37, 65, 111, 147, 161, 214, 261, 323, 351, 403,
+ 413
+
+ BIRD, W., 10, 64, 173, 201, 208, 278, 281, 312, 344, 345
+
+ BRIGHTWELL, L.R., 52, 223, 246, 406
+
+ BROCK, H.M., 47, 53, 94, 104, 129, 136, 185, 200, 220, 247, 279, 285,
+ 343, 370, 381, 405
+
+ BROCK, R.H., 245
+
+ BROOK, RICARDO, 4, 16, 28, 33, 49, 101, 120, 133, 188, 216, 217, 244,
+ 260, 297, 316, 329, 358, 372, 408, 409
+
+ COBB, RUTH, 236
+
+ COLLER, H., 137
+
+ COTTRELL, TOM, 98, 364
+
+ DOWD, J.H., 67, 89, 115
+
+ DOWD, LEONARD P., 116
+
+ "FOUGASSE", 69, 97, 265, 284, 301, 313, 360
+
+ GHILCHIK, D.L., 392
+
+ GRAVE, CHARLES, 79, 373, 387, 412
+
+ HARRISON, CHARLES, 20, 80, 112, 294, 377
+
+ HART, FRANK, 88, 127, 200, 288, 340
+
+ HASELDEN, W.K., 14, 96, 114, 174, 186, 262, 292, 326, 390
+
+ HEATHCOTE, C.N., 17
+
+ HELPS, H., 396
+
+ HENRY, THOMAS, 117, 310, 348
+
+ JENNIS, G., 13, 139, 176, 228, 252, 276, 357
+
+ LUNT, WILMOT, 78, 230
+
+ MILLS, A. WALLIS, 258, 277
+
+ MORELAND, ARTHUR, 72, 107
+
+ MORROW, EDWIN, 44, 105, 144, 173, 213, 308, 332
+
+ MORROW, GEORGE, 32, 48, 68, 84, 100, 113, 132, 148, 164, 175, 204, 248,
+ 264, 280, 296, 309, 319, 328, 335, 375, 383, 393, 420
+
+ NORRIS, ARTHUR, 232
+
+ PACKER, E.A., 85
+
+ PARTRIDGE, BERNARD, 1
+
+ PEGRAM, FRED, 195
+
+ PRANCE, BERTRAM, 233, 342
+
+ RAVEN-HILL, L., 36, 128, 196, 197, 206, 207, 271, 422
+
+ REYNOLDS, FRANK, 8, 21, 40, 56, 81, 91, 108, 123, 143, 155, 175, 181,
+ 197, 203, 209, 215, 259, 307, 320, 404
+
+ ROUNTREE, HARRY, 178, 414
+
+ SHEPARD, CAPT. E.H., 166, 227, 240
+
+ SHEPHEARD, G.E., 213
+
+ SHEPPERSON, C.A., 5, 24, 45, 76, 92, 110, 124, 156, 174, 187, 190, 253,
+ 272, 325, 336, 359, 365
+
+ STAMPA, G.L., 26, 43, 73, 145, 159, 181, 201, 221, 237, 249, 275, 291,
+ 300, 324, 339, 380, 400
+
+ TENNANT, DUDLEY, 376
+
+ THOMAS, BERT, 55, 95, 160, 168, 180, 192, 205, 229, 243, 349, 388, 397,
+ 419
+
+ THORP, J.H., 75, 268
+
+ TOWNSEND, F.H., 11, 27, 63, 126, 142, 152, 158, 169, 172, 177, 184, 194,
+ 198, 202, 212, 224, 226, 239, 242, 255, 269, 274, 290, 295, 304, 306,
+ 317, 322, 333, 338, 354, 355, 361, 386, 391, 399, 402, 403, 415, 418
+
+ WILSON, DAVID, 189
+
+[Illustration: FINIS]
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI, VOL.
+152, JUNE 27, 1917***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 16113.txt or 16113.zip *******
+
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